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Quick To Solicit Backers Of Candidate Thornburg
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Campaign workers for Democratic gubernatorial candidates say they quickly picked up telephones last week to solicit backers of Lacy Thornburg when he dropped out of the crowded field.
Each candidate is claiming success in attracting those supporters but observers argue that Attorney General Rufus Edmisten and former Commerce Secretary D.M. Lauch" Faircloth may have the most to gain from Thornburgs exit, Thornburg, a former Superior Court judge, announced Wednesday he would abandon his race for governor in 1984 and seek the Democratic nomination for attorney general instead.
The resident of Sylva in mountainous Jackson County said It became clear that the issues he cared about most were those in the attorney generals race. Thornburg also said he seemed to have more support as a candidate for attorney general than as a gubernatorial candidate.
All of the candidates will gain to some extent, Thornburg said, "But those best known in the West stand to gain more.
He mentions haircloth, Edmisten and Charlotte Mayor Eddie Knox.
With the Democratic primary about nine months away, 'pokesmenn in several campaigns and candidates themselves said Thornburg leaves relatively few voters behind to divide among surviving candidates. But they say he left some respected community leaders and steady contributors who are worth fighting for.
Charlie Smith, administrative deputy attorney general and Edmisten strategist, said Thornburg's exit opens the door for Edmisten to campaign full force in the mountains. Smith said I:Mmisten, a Boone native, hesitated to hold major rallies in
Genealogy Class Offered
A class in local history and genealogy is being offered at Pitt Community College beginning Tuesday from 7-10 p.m. Ihe class will meet on 10 Tuesdays and will visit the State Archives in Raleigh on a Saturday.
The course will provide an introduction to the history of early Pitt. County. Recertification students will work on specific items of local history, culminating in a written paper. _
In the genealogy portion of the course, special attention will be given to the problems facing the beginning genealogist, how to develop a pedigree chart and how to make family charts. The class will visit the Pitt County Courthouse.
The instructoras Ralph W. Donnelly of Washington, D.C., who has conducted similar classes at both Pitt and Martin ' ommunity Colleges.
$10 registration fee will be charged and there is no fee for persons over age 65. A textbook is not required, but Searching For Your Ancestors. by Gilbert H. Doane, is recommended for background reading.
The course will carry three hours of continuing education units and public school teachers should check with their local administrative offices to determine if they can receive recertification credit.
For further information contact the college's continuing education division at 756-3130, exts. 2.38 or 266.
Thornburgs home areas while Thornburg was a candidate.
Smith said Thornburg and Edmisten also appealed to many of the same community leaders - judges, sheriffs and court officials - who are able to attract a number of other supporters.
Basically they were with us and when Lacy got in it, that
Man Missing
ROBERSONVILLE - Robersonville Chief of Police Eue Atkinson has said it is suspected foul play may be involved in the August 27 disappearance of a local man, Charles Winfield Johnson. Atkinson would not elaborate on his comment.
Johnson. 49, an employee of Robersonville Productions Company for the past nine years, was last seen at about 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 27.
At that time, Johnson told his wife he needed to make a trip back downtown (Robersonville) to pick up something he had forgotten, and that he would return in about half an hour to take their children to buy school clothes.
When he had not come back home by late afternoon, his wife reported him as missing.
The truck Johnson was driving, a 1981 Ford, has been located by Raleigh authorities, who discovered it in a parking lot behind the federal building in Raleigh. The truck contains about $1,000 in tools belonging to Johnson.
Investigation is continuing in the case.
Metal Rimless
Frames
with Single Vision
Lenses
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$75.00
Complete
GLASSOR PLASTIC LENSES IN ANY USABLE PRESCRIPTION
Complete Regular Bifocals $69.95 Complete Progressive No-Line Bifocals $109.95 (Tints Extra) (No Other Coupons Applicable)
THIS AD MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER (OFFER GOOD THRU SEPT. 30,1983
GREENVILLE STORE ONLY
Phone 752-1446
piicians
315 Parkview Commons Across From Doctors Park
Open9A.M.-5:30P.M.Mon.-Frl. Beecher KMiey Dispensing Optician
CAUUS FOR AN EYE EXAMINATION WITH THE DOCTOR OF YOUR CHOICE
Pictured at far left. S. Kevin Price; far right Governor Jay Rockefeller
WINTERPLACE
West Virginias Newest Resort Excitement Breaks Ground!
On Saturday August 13th. 1983. at 11:00 a.m., Greenville native. S. Kevin Price joined Governor Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia and staff of Highland Ski Area Ltd., developers of WinterPlace Resort, held formal ground breaking ceremonies atop the highest peak of WinterPlace mountain before 300 people dedicating what is fast becoming West Virginias most sought after resort.
Located just three hours north of the Greensboro/High Point. North Carolina market, WinterPlace is one of only Five Ski Resorts in the United States located directly on a major US highway. Interstate 77 just below Beckley, WVa.
The six (6) million dollar resort is scheduled for opening December 1, 1983 with the first season of operation to Include: 16 slopes with one over a mile long, three triple chair lifts, full snowmaking capacities niqht skiing, a large reservoir, luxury condominiums and more.
WinterPlaces first condominium pi^oject, WinterHaven, is being developed by Greenville, North Carolina resident Kevin Price of S.K. Price and Co. Said Price, WinterHaven is the answer to Virginia and Carolina residents who are looking for a quality resort vacation home at a premier mid-America ski resort thats so easy to reach by four-lane interstate highways and has skiing to challenge both the advanced an Intermediate ski enthusiast! Phase I is almost sold out and well be introducing Phase II soon.
Following speeches by Governor Rockefeller, Irv Freedman and Jack Beard of Southern Resorts Inc. (prin-)(.!* ijwriprs of the resort), and Mark Spiker, marketing director, all attending were treated to a grass skiing u.viiibition, hand gliders and an old fashioned barbecue.
Said Rockefeller, West Virginia is proud to have a summerplace, a fallplace, a springplace...WinterPlaceI
put them in a crack, Smith said.
Edmisten said hes heard from a number of Hiornburg supporters who are willing to help him now. But Edmisten said he never tried to convince Thornburg to leave the gubernatorial race,
There are others who argue that some people in western North Carolina turned to Thornburg because they couldnt support Edmisten. Many who believe that theory say Faircloth will pick up Thornburgs support.
Faircloth says he thinks Thornburg got so much support in the West because it was "a chance to give loyalty to a regional candidate. But Faircloth, who is from Sampson
County in the East, thinks he can appeal to the region because its needs for roads and industry are much like those in his hometown.
Others from the area say Faircloth is looked upon favorably because of his links with Gov. Jim Hunt and Hunts political backers.
None of the other candidates are giving up on attracting any contributions or votes Thornburg may have lined up.
His theme and my theme were the same, said Tom Gilmore of Guilford County. Gilmore cited Thornburgs efforts to open government meetings and campaign records to the public.
RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACIES*
2814 E. 10th STREET
WEST END SHOP. CTR.
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6REENVN.LE
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AVDEN
PHONE: 758-2181
PHONE: 756 1281
PHONE: 756-5120
PHONE: 746-3026
^ '-f
8 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Monday, September 12,1983
District
Report
Court
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Judge E. Burt Aycock Jr. and Judge James E. Ragan disposed of the following cases during the Aug. 22-26 term of district court in Pitt County.
Carlin Tatum, Memorial Drive, domestic criminal trespass, voluntary dismissal; assault on female, voluntary dismissal.
RoUand White, Fleming Street, driving under the influence and no operators license, six months jail suspended on payment of costs and
Clarence Wright, Hooker Road, $250, attend alcohol school, pay $100 communicating threats, voluntary fee and not operate a motor vehicle
dismissal
William Beauregard Young, Belvedere Drive, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.
Clarence Wright, Hooker Road, drunk and disruptive, 30 days jail suspended on pay ment of costs and $10.
Pattie Elizabeth Williams, Evanswood Drive, expired rems-tration plate, voluntary dismissal
for four years.
Peter Bradley Bokkean, Jacksonville, stop light violation, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.
Arleen Edwards Braxton, Stokes, st(m light violation, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.
Jackie Lee Dupree, Bancroft Avenue, no operator's license, 30
Marvin E Tyson Jr., Drum days jail suspended on payment of Avenue, assault, 30 days jail sus- $10 and costs
pended on payment of costs.
Martin Anthony Smith, Eastbrook Apartments, reckless driving, 60 days jail suspended on
Jeffrey
vood Drive, possession of
Wayne Hardee,
Personals..............
....002
InMemoriam..........
....003
Card Of Thanks.........
....005
Special Notices.........
....007
Travel 8i Tours.........
....009
Automotive............
....010
Child Care..............
....040
Day Nursery............
....041
Health Care.............
...043
Employment............
,...050
For Sale.................
...040
Instruction..............
...080
Lost And Found.........
...082
Loans And Mortgages ...
...085
Business Services.......
...091
Opportunity.............
...093
Professional.............
...095
Real Estate.............
...100
Appraisals..............
...101
Rentals.................
...120
WANTED
Wedgewi i^juai
Jose Guadalupe Hernandez,
marijuana, pay $50 and costs. nii
payment of $100 and costs, attend Evans Street, no registration plate
alcohol school and pav $100 fee. and liability insurance, 30 days jail
Stuart Wayne Rosner, Charlotte, suspended on payment of $25 and
exceeding safe sped, pay costs. costs.
William Roy Kittrell, Dickinson J Scott Larson, Golden Road, Avenue Extension, expired regis three counts of worthless checks, 30
tration plate, voluntary dismissal days jail suspended on payment of
Ronnie Carroll Greene, Stokes, costs and check
trespass, three days jail. Robert Scott Short, Raleigh,
Russell Farlow, Kinston, larceny driving in excess of .10 percent
by trick and larceny, two years blood alcohol content by weight, six
SDC suspended on payment of $200 months jail suspended on payment
and costs, $40 restitution, five days of $100 and costs, surrender opera
jail and probation two years.
)ye
Pearl Cassandra Daniels, Mc
Clellan St., exceeding safe speed, pay costs Joan Theresa Baltes, Winston-Salem, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.
Hayes Pettiway, Cherry Point,
Cherry
expired registration plate, five days lils
jail suspended on payment of costs Robert Lewis McRae, Virginia,
tors license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.
Paul Dalton Sutton Jr., Route 5, damage to personal property, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs, pay $230 restitution.
Nephia A. Thomas, Norcott Circle, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check
Lloyd George Davis Jr
Help Wanted...............051
Work Wanted...............059
Wanted....................140
Roommate Wanted.........142
Wanted To Buy.............144
Wanted To Lease...........145
Wanted To Rent............148
RENimSE_.
reckless driving and improper Washington, fail to drive on right of passing, 60 days jail suspended on highway, M days jail suspended on
payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee
Dennis Ray Carney, Winterville, le;
payment of $50 and costs.
Nathaniel Nix, East Orange,
exceeding safe speed, pay costs Ralph Stephen Bryant, Tarboro, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.
Roy Gray Briley Jr., Shady Knoll Trailer Park, fictitious registration plate, voluntary dismissal.
Phillip Brown. Bethel, three counts of worthless checks, voluntary dismissal.
Recita S. Williams, Washington,
speeding, 30 days jail suspended on ndc(
worthless check, 30 days jail sus-of
pended on payment of costs and check
Betty J. Robinson, Durham, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.
Donald Gray Silverthorne, Grimesland, two counts of larceny, voluntary dismissal.
Rodney Green Stokes, trespas
payment of $25 and costs
Henry A. Cates, Village Green Apartments, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.
Ronnie Douglas Brown, Route 6, Thomas Bryron Brown, Bethel, drunk and disruptive, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.
Cecil Dwayne Chandler, Greensboro, misdemeanor breaking and entering, six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation two years
Stanley Howard Cherry, Oak City, assault on female, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.,
Donald Alklen Collier, Heritage
Apartments For Rent.......121
Business Rentals...........122
Campers For Rent..........124
Condominiums for Rent.....125
Farms For Lease...........107
Houses For Rent............127
Lots For Rent..............129
Merchandise Rentals :131
Mobile Homes For Rent.....133
Office Space For Rent......135
Resort Property For Rent... 137 Rooms For Rent............138
SALE
30 days jail suspended on payment Inn, domestic criminal trespass, of $25 and costs, remain in jail until vohintary dismi^l
Dp.m
Gary Lee McIntyre, Ayden, driving while license revoked, not guilty.
George Bryan Ward Jr., Grifton, speeding on
Charlie Ray Daniels, Bethel, fail to report accident, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and
costs.
Gwendolyn Davis, Farmville, on
seeding, five days jail suspended speeding, 10 days jail suspended on s payment of $10 and costs. payment of $10 and costs.
Johnnie Dawson Smith, Sabrina M. DeJoatch, Ahoskie,
Grimesland, speeding, pay costs. Tammy Vandiford Miller, Snow
worthless check, 30 days jail sus-
Hill, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs
Walter Lyons, Ayden, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee
W Frank Keel, Grimesland, intoxicated and disruptive, 30 days jail suspended on pavment of costs.
Michaels Ralph Joyner, Robersonville, careless and reckless and no operator's license, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $75 and costs
Snodie Donovan Hardy, Azalea Street, driving in excess of .20 percent blood alcohol content by weight, six months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator s license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee
pended on payment and costs Andy D. Majette, Grimeslland,
careless and reckless driving, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee Johnny M. Brazton, Ayden. three counts of worthless checks, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check and write no worthless checks.
James Hardee, Greenville, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs, check and $25 fine Yancey McAden, Greenway Apartments, assault, 30 days jail suspended on paymnet of costs and $50.
Michael Earl Peaden, Route 4, exceeding safe speed, pay costs James C PerkinS, Arthur Street,
worthies check, 30 da^s jail sus-check
pended on payment of costs and
Tyrone Pratt, Bethel, fail to stop
Cynthis Goes. Ayden, exceeding af scene of accident, 90 days jail
safe speed, pay costs Velma Anne Branch, Winterville,
exceeding safe speed, pay costs. Warren Kent Agee, Grifton, ex
ceeding safe speed, pay costs Milton Williams, Ayden, assault, 30 days jail
suspended on payment of costs and $100,
Marie Rowe Ransome, Plymouth, improper passing, five days jail suspended on payment of costs.
Glenn Edward Scott, Bethel, careless and reckless driving, 60
Louise Sutton, Ayden, assault, 30 jail suspended on payment of days jail suspended on payment of costs and $100, attend alcohol
$25 and costs, pay $53 restitution
Alexander Jenkins Jr . Ayden, communicating threats, not guilty; trespass, not guilty.
Joseph Gardner, Ayden, assault on female, not guilty.
Christopher Allen Moore, Grifton, safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal.
Todd Maples, Grifton, assault on female, prosecution frivolous and malicious, prosecuting witness pay costs
Alvin Justin Huggins, Ayden, ficticious registration plate, voluntary dismissal.
William Jessie Junior Brock, Vanceboro, driving under the influence. six months jail suspended on payment of $300 and costs, probation two years, surrender opera-
schoolandpay$100fee Milton Smith, Route 2, no registration plate, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $50.
Ella Lavern Speight, Washington, shoplifting, one day jail.
Milton Warren, Snow Hill, worthless check (five counts), 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.
Raymond Earl Warren, Route 1, assault, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs, $40 and $10 restitution; intoxicated and disruptive. 30 days jail suspended on
payment of costs and $50 Jc
James Whitaker, Bethel, communicating threats, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
tors license, three days jail.
Roy R. Stocks, Grifton, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on
parent of costs and check.
akee Rahim, Ayden. assault on female, 30 days jail suspended on
payment of $10 and costs
bra Barfield, Ayden, assault, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.
Shiela Murphy, Washington, assault, not guilty James Lee Atkinson, Dudley Street, unauthorized use of con-
Federal Aid To Half Of Them
veyance, voluntary dismissal. Ca
Catherine Johnson, West Conley Street, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check
Donald L White, Greenway Apartments, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.
Thomas Ball, Greene Street, trespass, voluntary dismissal.
Henry W Clark, West Third Street, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.
Tommy Hales, Route 5, assault with deadly weapon, dismissed; damage to personal property, six months jail suspended on payment of costs and $50 and pay $4^ restitution to Wilbert Manning.
John Wayne Hannah, Jackson Avenue, damage to personal pro-pertv, dismissed; assault with deamv weapon, dismissed.
Autfrey Honea, Forbes Street, assault, voluntary dismissal; trespass, voluntary dismissal.
Linda Moore, West Conley Street, two oounts of wiHthless checks, 30 dayslaii suspended on payment of costjlnd checkin each case.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Half the students at cosmetology, business and secretarial schools get federal aid, but an indpendent commission says the profit making trade schools need more aid.
The National Commission on Student Financial Assistance recommended Wednesday that more pro-)rietary school students need lelp because a large percentage come from low-income families.
Wellford W. Wilms, who chaired the 12-member panel, said it may be even cheaper for the government to give proprietary school students grants instead of loans. The panel was asked to determine if trade school stirfents were getting their fair share of Guarantefd Student Loans.
Autos for Sale...........011-029
Bicycles for Sale............030
Boats for Sale..............032
Campers for Sale...........034
Cycles for Sale.............036
Trucks for Sale.............039
Pets........................046
Antiques....................061
Auctions........... .......062
Building Supplies,..........063
Fuei, Wood, Coai...........064
Farm Equipment...........065
Garage Yard Saies.........067
Heavy Equipment..........068
Househoid Goods...........069
Insurance..................071
Livestock..................072
Miscelianeous..............074
Mobile Homes for Sale......075
Mobile Home Insurance .... 076
Musical Instruments.......077
Sporting Goods.............078
Commercial Property......102
Condominiums for Sale.....104
Farms for Sale ......106
Houses for Sale.............109
Investment Property.......ill
Land For Sale..............113
Lots For Sale...............115
Resort Property for Sale.... 117
PUBLIC NbTICES
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
AND DEBTORS OF JOHN ROBERT HUNT, JR NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY All persons, firms and corporations having claims against John
tions having claims against Jo Robert Hunt, Jr. late of Pitt Coun
ity,
Ita
024
Foreign
MOB-OT, 1*74. Black, 43,000 miles, AM-FM, new upholstery, clean. Good condition. Phone 75I-M42.
SA
1973. New engine, tires and 4fJ West Fourth
Interior. Must sell. Street, 7S6-464S
are notified to exhibit them to Rl.. B. Hunt, Executrix on or before February 15, 1904, at 90 Lancaster Drive, Greenville, NC or be barred from their recovery. Debtors of the decedent are asked to make Im mediate payment to the dersigned.
This the 7th day of September 1903.
Rita B. Hunt 90 Lancaster Drive Greenville, NC 27034 Executrix of Estate of John Robert Hunt, Jr.
S^tember 12, 19, 26, October
002
PERSONALS
CURED MY Own Eczema. Send $2.(X) for case history and supplement plan to: Nett, Shady Knoll Park #49, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
TOYOTA SERVICE. 4 cylinder tune special, $20. 4 cylinder valve adjustment, $14. 5 jrears experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage, 756 3796.
"Red
TOYOTA TERCEL, 1900, Red^
door, air, automatic, radlals, radio.
Call 752-0406.
1970 VOLKSWAGEN, good condi tion, new tires, new painf, 746-3907.
1974 TR6, excellent condition, low mileage, AAonza exhaust. 4 new Michel In reds. AM/FM stereo. S4.850. Call 746-2552.
1974 VOLKSWAGEN VAN. 7 pas
senger, clean, runs great. One owner, make offer. Consider trade
tor truck or El Camino. 756-7417..
ttSI
HtlpMrBntBd
TTTHmXRnMC
FOR SUCCESS?
Can you begin right now on a career that will let you earn;
$15,000 to$25,000 first full yaar? ThaAtwtfli"YESI"
Through both boom and recession years, our formula has worked. The earnings above are typical,
And hundreds of our In Seles win advancement, income of
$20,000 to $40,000
You can qualify. Check;
( ) Age 21 or over ( ) High School or better
1976 TOYOTA CELICA. Motor and transmission in good condition. Front end wrecked. $500. 757-0194. VOLKSWAGEN
1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT.
$3,000. Non diesel. Very clean, new radlals. Call 752 2791.
1971 OATSUN 2tOZ 2-1-2, 4 speed, 163946.
air, AM/FM, extra clean. 756-;
197t JAGUAR XJS. Black with tan leather Interior. 746-2489.
197 TOYOTA SR-5 LIHback. Air, AAA/FM stereo, cruise control, 60,000 miles, new tires. $3200. Call 752 8909.
1979 HONDA CIVIC WAGON, 4
speed, air, AM/FM stereo, extra sharp.
harp. 752 3835.
1979 MGB, dark brown, excellent condition. New paint and new top. Call756-7694before3.
1979 SILVER OATSUN 280Z, 5 peed, air, AM/FM. Excellent con-ition. Priced to sell. Call 756-5867.
( ) Sportsmlndtd ( ) Ambitious, looking for
career, not just "work"
CONSIDER THESE FACTS: We've over a half century old organize tIon, with annual Income over half-bllllon dollars a year. We are TOP-RATED In our industry.
You will be guaranteed 2 weeks training, guaranteed immediate earning to start...Proven sales method (to business men and professional, business hours) ...Most of your day spent selling, not "prospecting."
YOU CAN ADVANCE faster . Salesi Your commissions build year
by year. We keep training you to move up. NO limit on how fast or
far you can progress.
Your career Is waiting. Call now tor a talk;
1979 TOYOTA COROLLA, am/fm track, air, $2950 or best otter 752 6855.
1981 MAZDA RX7 GS, manual
transmission, air, sunroof. Sliver with black velour interior. 1 owner 758-1508.
1982 OATSUN 280 ZX. Loaded with all options. T-top, AM/FM stereo Priced to sell. William Handley BB8.T, 752 6889.
1982 RABBIT DIESEL LS. Air
conditioner, AM/FM stereo, clinin 56 mi $7500 8817
imoner, /vi/rnn siereo, re ng front seats, 46 miles in city tiles on highway. 14,500 miles ) negotiable. Call after 6, 752
1983 OATSUN 280 ZX 2 + 2 loaded
T top roof, 3,700 miles. $14,850 firm Call 758 0041 after 4.
1983 VOLVO GL Diesel. Fully op tioned. Leather interior, 9,400 miles 752 8921.
029 Auto Parts & Service
LOST 65 LBS. with this solid plan. Send $3.00 for case history 8. diet plan to: Nett, Shady Knoll Park #49, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
RIDE NEEDED to Ashvllle, NC or or near September 17. Will provide gas. Call 757 3282.
Oil
Autos For Sale
TOYOTO AUTHORIZED SERVICE
4 cylinder tune-up $19.95. Oil and filter change $12.99 (most models)
We're keeping your Toyota "Cheap Toyoto East, 109 Trade
To Keep" Street, 756 3228
032'
Boats For Sale
SAILBOAT. Seafarer 22 Family cruiser, 6 horsepower outboard, sails. Fully equipped. 1 977 2242.
CARS $200! TRUCKS $100!
Available at local government sales. Call (refundable) 1 (619) 569-0241, extension 5 for your direc tory on how to purchase. 24 hours.
SELL YOUR, CAR the National Aufoflnders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.
013
Buick
1970 LaSabre BUICK. Good running condition. $350.752 3069.
015
Chevrolet
1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA, runs good, has good body, new tires. 1350. Call after 4 p.m. and anytime weekends, 746-2316.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID PROPOSAL
Seaied proposals win be received
by the Purchasing Department of Pitt County Memorial Ho and publicly opened at:
TIME: 2:00p.m DATE: September22, 1983 LOCATION: Conference Room no. 2, Intensive Care Area at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Greenville, North Carolina, on the purchase of the following:
Controlled Environment4l Walk In Room
Specifications and bid proposal forms are on tile In the office of the
Purchasing Department, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, and
may be obtained between the hours of
request :30 a m and
5:00p m., Monday through Friday. Pltf County Memorial Hospital
reserves the right to re|ect any and all proposals.
Jack W. Richardson President
September 2, 12, 1983
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIOS Sealed bids will be received by Pitt County Memorial Board of Trustees In the Office ot Vice President, Facilities Management until 2:00 P.M., Friday. September 14, 1983 and immediately thereafter publicly opened and read for two (2) double wide modular units ot 24' X 56' dimensions, to be placed on the hospital site. Plans and Specificafions are available In the oHice of Ralph R. Hall, Jr., Vice Presiden!, Facilities Management, Pitt County AAemorial Hospital, Greenville, N.C. Telephone no. 919-757 4587 Each bid submitted must cover all portions ot the work.
The Hospital reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities. *
Jack K Richardson, President September n, 12, 13, 1983
1971 CAMARO, 3 speed on floor, 250 straight six, 74,000 miles, AM/FM cassette, new painf, good interior, runs great. Good on gas, $1250. 758-6627.
1975 MONTE CARLO. Air, AM FM radio, power steering. Clean. 758-1683.
1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2 + 2, 5
speed, good mechanical condition. $1500. 758 2300 days.
1976 CHEVY NOVA. Good condi tion. Price negotiable. 753 4183 after 5p.m
TANZER 16 DAY SAILER. 2 years
old, perfect condition. Galvanized trailer, new 3 horsepower motor $3400. Call 753 5758 after 5:30.
19' MFC 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
19' WINCHESTER BOAT - 175
horsepower Mercury motor, Cox trailer, electric winch, all 75' model. Call 758-3766or 752 3208.
1 983 1 9' MASTER CRAFT
Tournament Ski Boat Gray and silver. Completely equipped. Drive-on trailer, 40 hours. Perfect condition. $14,500. (919 ) 435 6800.
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N. C. 834 2774.
036
Cycles For Sale
HONDA CB 360. $150 or best offer Call 756-6210after 5 p.m.
1974 HONDA S50-FOUR. King and queen seat. 10,500 actual miles $750. 756 6171 or 754 2436.
1978 5S0K HONDA, 7,000 actual miles, runs good. Call 757-3121.
1979 XR250 HONDA. Good condi tion. 756 9479. 758 2929, 756 0877.
1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Good
condition. Seeing is believing. New Henry, 752 4332.
tires. $3950. Call 1977 CHEVRLET Stationwagon
Good running condition, 1 owner. $1450.753 2381.
1979 CHEVETTE, one owner, excellent condition, asking $2,200. 752 1333.
1980 CHEVETTE, automatic, air, red, 2 door, low mileage, $4200. 758-1274 after 5 p.m.
1980 CHEVROLET MONZA, air
condition, AM FM stereo, power steering, 4 new tires. $3400. 758 4281.
1981 CHEVROLET Chevette, low mileage, automatic, air, $4500 756 7915.
1981 MALIBU CLASSIC. 4 door, air, AM/FM radio, power steering and brakes. 792 7428.
1983 CHEVETTE. 4 months old, loaded with extras.$600 down Take up payments of $189 per month. 756 4833.
017
Dodge
1976 DODGE COLT, air, 5 speed, AM/FM radio, very good condition. $1,300. Call 756 5866after 6 p.m.
1979 DODGE COLT. Good condition. Economy shift, 2,000 CC, average 30 miles per gallon. Call 753 2689 May be seen at Lot 32, Woodland Hills Estates, Farmville. Asking $2900, negotiable.
018
Ford
FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON.
1979. Fully loaded, new tires. Excellent condition. Low mileage. $4200 Call 756 6334 days or 756 1549 nights.
1973 FORD Galaxy 2 door sedan. Air, new raldal tires. Good condition. $700. 756 6985.
1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757 0451, ask for Mr. Carra way.
020
A^rcury
1973 CAPRI. $495 746 3764.
1979 MARQUIS BROUGHAM.
Extra clean. Loaded. Low mileage, two tone blue. Call 355 2009
021
Oldsmobile
1977 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme 2 door, air, power windows, AM/FM with tape Good condition. $2795 or reasonable offer. I'244 0450.
1971 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition. 758 0778 days, nights 756 8604.
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF
GREENVILLE SPINNERS, INC.
NOTICE is hereby given that Articles of Dissolution of GREENVILLE SPINNERS, INC., a North Carolina corporation, were filed In the office of the Secretary of State of North Carolina on the 30th day of August, 1983, and that all creditors of and claimants so that It can proceed to collect Its assets, convey and dispose ot its pro-<llcharge its liabilities and obligations and do all other acts required to liquidate Its business and affairs
This 8th day of September, 1983. L^SPINNERS,
GREENVILLt INC.
C O J. E. May, Trust Officer Wachovia Bank 8, Trust Company, N.A.
S. Washington Street
ihlngti. _____
Grdenvllle, NC 27834 Sewember 12, 19, 26,
i
October 3,
1979 CUTLASS CRUISER WAGON
yellow. AM/FM, air. Excellent condition. 756 0945.
022
Plymouth
1980 PLYMOUTH Volare Sta
tionwagon, automatic, air, AM FM, custom interior, 42,000 miles, extra clean. 756 7839after 6 p.m.
023
Pontiac
1976 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 2
door hardtop, power steering and brakes, air, cruise control, power windows, 48,000 actual miles, runs good. Call 757 3121.
024
Foreign
OATSUN 280ZX - 2 + 2, 1979. Blue, 584)00 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition. . Call 756
$7700
nights
16336 days or 756-1549
IMPORTED CAR PARTS, 105 Trade Street. Check our end of summer sale. Call 754-7114.
1983 HONDA V 45 Maga 750 Red. 4,600 miles. $2,500 or best otter. Call 752 1194.
1983 750 NiGHT Hawk, low mileage, excellent condition. $3300. Call 756 5386 after 5:30.
039
Trucks For Sale
1 973 VOLKSWAGEN VAN,
excellent condition, 946-9944 or 946 4480.
1974 TOYOTA TRUCK. Good condi tion. $1,500. 757-3014 after 4p.m.
1976 K10 BL.AZER 4 wheel drive, all accessories, like new. Asking $5500. Call anytime 825 1728.
040
Child Care
COLLEGE STUDENT will babysit late afternoons, evenings, and weekends. Call 752-9142.
WILL CARE for children home. Call 757 3542.
in my
WOULD LIKE SOMEONE to care for child In my or your home, Monday-Frlday. 756 7197after 6.
046
PETS
AKC REGISTERED GERMAN
Shepherd puppies. Sable and black, wormed by Vet. 756 6153.
AKC REGISTERED COCKER
Spaniel Pup. Born May 11. $100. Call Mark af 758 5461.
NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND pups, AKC registered, 6 weeks old. Parents on premises. Males, $125. Females, $100. Call evenings, 795-4649, Robersonville.
REDUCED. Beautiful AKC Registered Collie puppies. $85. 756 3135.
BIRDS FOR SALE COCKATEILS -Pearlyi, Pleds, Whites and Greys. $50 and $75 each. Call 291-0991 anytime.
051
Help Wanted
ATTENTION LADIES; Need 10 ladies for sales work from their homes. 10 hours per week. Can earn $70 to $150 per week. For interview call 753-3514 or 752-7321.
AVON HAS OPENINGS for rapre^ sentatives In the areas of Colonial Heights, Lake Ellsworth and ECU.
Earn up to 50% of everything you I Call 752-7006.
BRICK AAASONS. Call 752 2240, ask for Mr. White.
CHURCH NEEDS qualified person to keep nursery on Sunday mornings. Send letter of Inquiry and resume to First Chlrstlan Church, 520 East Greenville Boulevard. No phonacall please!
DENTAL ASSISTANT wanted. Ex
perience required. X-ray certlflca-tloi " ......
Mr. Johnson 758-3401
MONDAY, TUESDAY 4 WEDNESDAY
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
LADY MUD WRESTLERS. One night performance. Sponsored b> Repatible Civic Club. Good pay. For Interview, call 752-2998.
LADY TO CLEAN '/i day weekly couple. Referei
tor elderly
753 4539. _
LET US BUILD a home for you! We
can build to suit your individual needs at prices starting as low as $45,900. Beautiful V(i acre + - wooded lots conveniently located near Hos pital and Doctor's Park. Call and let one of our brokers personalize
mortgage plan to suit your financial Bi
needs. Call 758 0455
AAavIs Butts Realty.
LOOKING FOR WORK?
We Need....
Secretaries- 60 wpm Bookkeepers CRT Operators Word Procostors - Lanior, IBM, Wang
Call for an interview today!
Anne's Temporaries, Inc
120 REAOE STREET
758-6610
MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY. A career position with a large corporation. Retail sales experience or college degree preferred, but not necessary. Excellent fringe benefits. Call Judy, Hertiage
Personnel 355 2020.
MORTGAGE LOAN PROCESSOR. Excellent salary for experienced worker. Room for advancement. Call 355 2048.
NEED INTERIOR
Call 355 2250.
DESIGNER.
NEEDED: FULL TIME and part
time help to sell Avon In Cannon Court, Cherry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas. Earn extra money tor Christmas. Please call 758-3159.
PSRTTIME-
SERVICE ROUTE SALES 7 9 days per month servicing rental equipment In supermarkets and drug store accounts. Must have van and storage. Commission and vehi cle allowance. Reply to: Area Manager, Household Research In stitufe, 165 Blue Bell Road, Greensboro, NC 27406. EOE M-F.
PART-TIME, temporary workers
needed to sell newspaper subscrip . Must be 18 years
tions door-to-door _ ,____
old and have own car. Minimum wage and mileage paid. You must call for an Interview, 752-6166, extension 313. No interviews will be jiven without an appointment. Job hours are 5:00 p.m.-9.00 p.m. Monday-Frlday.
PLANT MANAGER Service Man. Major marketer ot LP gas seeking a plant manager. Experienced in service work to relocate for a NC operation. This is a perfect full time
josltlon with good starting salary. Excellent benefits and will pay
moving expense. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. Call Winnie Nelson, Manager Buckeye Gas
nager Buckeye Gas Procuts Company, Winterville, NC 756-0222.
PRESCHOOL DIRECTOR needed
Tarboro area. Apply In per 313 East 10th Street.
PRIOR AIR FORCE
If you have been honorably discharged within the last 5 years, and are qualified with a minimum AFSC Skill Level of 5, the Air Force Is looking for you! Openings available for - Munitions, Inte-, grated Electronics, Intelligence, Aircraft Maintenance - also, selected Electronics-Weather opportunities from other services. Call today! MSGT Ben Grady or TSGT Bruce Barry at 756-2194.
RECEPTIONIST POSITION
at
private physician's Please call 758-61 tor an
available office.
Interview. Applicant Most have irior experience In the medical
'leld.
RECEPTIONIST SECRETARY,
mature telephone skills required, 50 wpm typing desired, learn i selt-init
non-smoker only, $150 week salary, wrking provided, two weeks vaca Ion after probation period plui courthouse holidays. Reply to; Re sume, P O Box 154, Greenville, NC
c leiepnufw kiii9 required/ DU yping desired, opportunity to paralegal skills, requires Itlative without supervision,
051 HBtpWmlBd T*MKRRY^AFTii5rhei?
for office end clerical Work. Ploeao
apply In person to Groonvllle TV end Appliance, Greenville ilevard.
Bouk
WANTId ^i*N to do
. gonoral
nrielntonance work for mocnanlcal contractor. Apply botwoen 8 8nd 9 at Larmar Mechanical Contractors, Highway 264, 756-4624.
WE ARE SEEKING self motlvatod.
goal oriented Individuals for man-
agoment positions In our restaurant chain. C
Opportunities for advancement based on performance with
competitive compensation and benefits. Aggressive profes send resume to 810 12th St Hickory, N.C. 28601.
ofosslonals S.W.,
059
WorkWantqd
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.
fully
ming, cuttji^ and removal. Freo
estimates. J.P. Stencil, 752-6331.
BATH AND KitCHEN repairs. Counter tops, plumbing and State License. 746-2657
srpentry. r 752-4064.
GUITAR LESSS'S. For more in formation, call 746-3567.
074
MiKtlianwut
Tash
From the oldest, moot reliable buyer of gold, sllvor and any Itoms of valut.
COIN & RING AMN
On The Corner
CLARINET Used 1 year, 8195. 10
24" bicycle, good condition, Oaffort
S45.756-6840 after 6 p.m.
CLAklNET, used 1 year, 8335 Call
758-1927.
CONTEMPORARY S PIECE llvin
ving
room set. Excellent condition. tUO or bost otfor. Call 756-6273 attar 7:30 p.m.
blNtfti tALE, electric rotls-
serle broiler, set Junior Encyclopedia Britannica, large size formal dresses, 1970 Plymouth. 756-0375.
FOUR 13" wheels with used tires. Cell 756-3770.
FUkNITURE STRIPPING end ro-
finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 Sunshine Garden
mile south of Contar. 756-9123.
HAVE CERTIFICATE, will tutor first and second gradors. Experienced. Cali 756-3917.
McCARTER
Contractors. Quality work low pricesi Over 30
CEMENT very
years experi-
ence. Driveways, walkways, patios, car garages. 757-0533.
PAINTING - Interior and exterior. Free estimates. References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience.
1-6873 after 6 p.m.
PAINTING
reasonable prices, free TOO small. Call
estimates, no job anytime, 756-4967 or 758-0966
040
FOR SALE
044 FuL Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor sale. J. P. Stencil,752-6331.
COMPLETE LINE of woodstoves,
chimney pipe
Tar Road Antiques, Winterville
and accessories at
tiques,
756-9123, nights 756-1007.
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD, Call us before you buy! 752-1359 or 758-5590.
045 Farm Equipment
MASSEY FERGUSON 300 Combine both heads. Must see to appreciate. Call 756-6165, 756-3721 after 7 p.m.
GULBRANSEN
Miriaa
PACE-MAKER
Excellent condi-ewhlte
flon. Solid Mahogany Hepplewhltc ^CA^at table. Excellent condition
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.
MAONAVOX STEREO. Mahogany
console cabinet. Call 752-6515.
Movir
CAMERA - Model II Eastman Kodak, plus Sears Automatic 8 MM Projector, with Screen, Master Tripod and case of film holders. Low price $100 for entire set. Jones & Beasley -752-5794.
MOVING, must sell; kitchen table and 4 chairs, weight set end bench, twin bed frame and mattrassas. Early American sofa bed, chair and ottoman, harvest table, 9300 BTU Kerosun heater. All reasonably priced. Call aer 4,756-5378.
NflD"
MONEY - 6 month old Briggs and Stratton, 5 horsepower tiller. Good condition. $275. 756-1523.
CLEARANCE SALE on Snap
AAowers. Goodyear Tire Ceni^ West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.
OLYMPIC STEREO, cabinet style. 8 track AM/FM stereo, turntaole.
$150 or best oHer. 756-6210 anytime. ONE SIX month old male white
ROLLER CHAINS Prices for 10' box #60 $16.95; #60H $33.49; #40 $9.49; #50^ $13.95; #80 $31.49. Corn head gathering chain-price for 8 or more Massey Ferguson $32.49; International and John Deere 200 $22.95; Allis Chalmers low profile $23.49; Allis Chalmers all 1977 79 $36.49. Chains to fit most combines In stock. We also carry peanut invertor chain. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999.
1978 ROANOKE BULK BARN.
Excellent condition. 18 Box Oil Fired. Call 752-7650 after 6 p.m.
2 - 10,000 BUSHEL grain bins for
sale or rent. Located approximately iterville. Call
miles West of Win 756-5097 or 756-9315
ROW ROANOKE tobacco har vester with both heads Ready to go In field. 758-0702 days, 752-0310 nights.
044
FURNITURE
3EDDING&WATERBEDS
Shop now during Factory Mattress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one halt. Next to PIH Plaza. 355-2626.
DINING ROOM suite, Williamsburg Queen Anne, table and 6 chairs, buffet, and server. $4000. New, $7000. Make offer. 756-7297, It no answer 756-3613.
rabbit; seven 1 month old white rabbits. Pen suitable for breeding. AAake me an otter. 752-3069.
PERSONS INTERESTED In form
ing an adult figure drawing group, call 752-1333.
PHILICO COLOR TV Console. $500 negotiable. Call 752-2791.
CASH NOW
FOR
Electric typewriters, stdreo components, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voillns, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and antiques...anything of vallue.
COIN & RING MAN
On The Corner
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent
sharnpooers and vacuums at Rental Compai
Tool Company.
SHARP, SONY A GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88.
SHARP COPIER machines, sell, lease and rent, large selection of used copiers. Call 756-6167.
KINO SIZE waterbed, complete with heater, mattress and frame. Like new. $175. Call 756-0183.
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752-5237.
073 Fruits and Vegetables
APPLES FOR SALE. I'A miles north on Highway 33 Belvoir Road.
SHARP SFS11 COPIER with stand, 24 copies per minute, handles 8</^x11, 8'/^xl4, 11x17 paper sizes; Royal SE5010 electric typewriter, correcting capabilities, will sell separately or packaged deal, priced to move. Call 792-1067 (day) or 792-6962 (night).
SMITH CORONA TP-1 tatter quail ty printer. 5 months old. Used 1
month. In mint condition. S550. 752-3980 from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
074
Miscellaneous
IR COMPRESSORS: /Manufacturer has an overstock of brand new Industrial grade 5 horsepower single phase, 60 gallon tank, twin cylinder, quick air recovery, all cast Iron, Industrial V pump. Selling to the public for $795 ' ilus freight). Suggested retail ,895.00. 31.74 C.F./M displacement maximum R.P.M. working pressure. 150 P.S.I. 18 month warranty. Limited supply. Call 502-367 1741.
AIR CONDITIONER - 11,000 BTU Sears Power Saver. Used 1 season. $275.758-1845.
APPROXIMATELY 2,000 Silas Lucas handmade bricks, 756-5097 or 756-9315.
BICYCLE FOR TWO, good as new Been ridden less than 200 miles, $75.
Used GE dishwasher, under counter model, runs like new, $100,749-3146.
BLACK AND WHITE darkroom
equipment. Complete set up. Sell all In pieces. $75. 758 3366.
BOW ARCHERY SET. Polar LTD compound bow. Complete with hts and quiver and 5 arrows, 753-2666.
sight
$125.
BkUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 919-763-9734.
BUYING-LOANS INSTANT CASH
RELIABLE PERSON to live In with
82 year old lady. Must be able to cook
and have good references. Salary negotiable. 752-9929, 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. or 752-6692 after 7 p.m.
RN's AND
u .X - *-PH's. Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact
nospiTai needs y^ou. Contact Barbara McDonald, RN, Director of Nursing, 943-2111.
Seiei
MANAGER
TRAINEE
management position can be /ours after six months specialized raining. Earn $15,000 to $35,000 a year In management. We will send you to school expenses paid, train you In the field selling and servicing estabi ished accounts.
You to have a good car, be bondeble, be ambitious, and aggressive. Hospitalization, major medical and exceptional profit
sharing and savings program. Call now for an appointment
Ion. Call 756-5911.
EXPERIENCED MANAGERS,
Assistant Managers, and Watch /Makers wanted by Reed's Jewelers
an expanding guild jewelry chain In North and South C .....
---------------Carolina for Its
Mall locations. Retail jewelry sales :perlence Is required. Excellent jiary, profit sharing, life and health insurance and paid vacation. Please send resume in confidence to Jim Payne, Senior Vice President, Reed's Jewelers Associates, 414 Chestnut Street - Suite ''38, Wilmington, NC 28401.
XPklENCEO BOOKKEEPER
needed. All i
kll aMlicants need apply In ily. Reed's Jewelers, Caro-ina East/Mall.
EXPERIENCED KEYBOARD for
person only line
Top40-alsoa singer. 752-7258. HELP WANTED:
1983 HONDA .
plush interior, v. speed automatic
PRELUDE, navy with r. Electric sunroof, 4
latic, AM/FM stereo
cassette with graphic equalizer, air condition^. Very ^Ice car. /0)ust sell! Call 756-8532 after 7 p.m.
part time doughnut maker. Apply in person Jerry's Sweat Shoppe, Pitt Plaza.
Immediate bkENiNo tor person
for sales In carpet.
floor
covering 8, wall paper. Some light bookkeeping Involved. 40
week. Apply at Lowes Co.
vinyl 'omi hours ^
INf A$lf AkE In my home 3 days ^f eek. References required. 7M-
Chuck Carroll 919-758-3401 AAonday, T uasday 8, Wednesday 10a.m. - 5p.m.
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
SALES OPPORTUNITY
Salesperson needed. Auto sales experience preferred. Excellent company benaflts. Call:
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC
754-4247
For Appointment SALES PERSON needed. Must be
willing to leern. 752-2464.
SHARP INDIVlbUAL to train as
kai||^rd salesman. Largast dealer
Hard worker with expansion potential. Excellent Income. Pleno & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. 3S5-6002.
SHOW AND SELL: I5K. Repre sentative needed to call on grocery and retail accounts. Must be famil
iar in thasa areas. Car furnished. Excellent benefits! Cell Judy for Interview, 355-2020 Heritage Parsomtel.
^CER INSTRUCtOkS nee^ /Must know '
Barry at 752
TV's,
guns
Air Conditioners, Stereos, gold 8, silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewriters, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games 8, cartridges, power tools, musical instruments, microwave ovens video recorders, bicycles. We also loan SS on anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, located 405 Evans St., downtown. 752-2464.
STEREO SYSTEM with cabinet, $275. Console Color TV, $175. Washer and dryer, $300. Norltake China, $100. Solid brass bed, $250. AAovIng, must sell! 756-5546 late afternoon or nights.
USED REFRIGERATOR, $75 or
best otter. 752 5583.
USED RESTAURANT Equipment. Walk-In cooler, refrigerator, mix
ers, deep fat machines, etc. Cel
fryers, chairs, II758-7042.
ice
40" HOTPOINT electric range, used ^y^ears. Will sell for $300.
Call
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
Drive A Little Save A Lot! I
SINGLES
DOUBLES
NEW AND USED
MOBILE HOMES
SEE OR CALL GEOROE KINO
746-2078 SIKINGMOBILE HOMES
HIGHWAY 11 BYPASS AYDEN, NC
GOOD SELECTION of used homes at Azalea Mobile Homes. $495 down, 90 day warranty. See Tommy Williams, 756-7815.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CARPET, CARPET, CARPETI 2
rooms full of carpet - off white. Price negotiable. 758-3005.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FURNITURE STRIPPING
iV'jO/i ,ric1 f o'rTlf'
. (/I Dip A!':! Stnp A' fc'u'i
f"] vVilhin /i.i
TAP POAD ANTIQUES
' i| ( 'Jl t rf.,. [ ni,,!,.
7Sb-9123 0.iy'. 1007 NiqOts
WF INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
( I 1 iiptoii. (
CLERKS & ASSISTANT MANAGERS NEEDED
Express Way Foods, Inc. desires applications from energetic individuals desiring an exciting career in a young but developing company.
Experience in the convenience store or related retail industries preferred, but for motivated person, on-the-job training can be easily acquired.
We Otter:
Pay based on experience
Promotion opportunities Overtime pay Insurance plan Paid vacation Inter-company contests Pleasant working conditions Secure positions
All applicants should contact Jeff Wagitaff 7S3-2S68 between 9 a.m.-3 p.m, Mondey-Frldty
Since positions open up from time to time anyone who has applied in the past is encouraged to re-apply.
Mu*t know ^^ame. Calt Alice or
I
1
W-A-N-T-E4!
Experienced Appliance Repair Person for established television and appliance firm. Excellent opportunity and good benefits.
Call 756-3240 For Interview
SENT FOR AUTOPSY Japanese policemen carry out a coffin containing the unidentified body of a Caucasilan woman for an autopsy in Abashiri, a northern coastal town of Hokkaido, Sunday. Police said a factory workeiT who went fishing Sunday discovered the mutilated body washed up on the coast. It was believed to be a victim of the ill-fated Korean jetliner. (AP Laserphoto)
Two Fugitives Surrendered
WILKESBORO, N.C. (AP)
- Two Wilkes County men who had been hunted for 14 months on first-degree murder charges surrendered to Wilkes County authorities Sunday night, Sheriff Kyle Gentry said.
Tony Mitchell Sidden, 36, and his stepson, Anthony Ray Blankenship, 16, had
Winner In Baldieails
MOREHEAD CITY,. N.C. (AP) - A Tega Cay, S.C., man won top prize for having the prettiest bald head Saturday night at the Bald-Headed Men of America Clubs annual convention.
Nearly 300 men from six states, Canada and Sweden - all with nary a hair -attended the get-together sponsored by the club devoted to boosting baldheads pride.
I founded the club back in 1973, when everybody was organized for everything, said president John Capps of Morehead City. I felt bald-headed men needed to be organized, to instill pride and dignity at being baldheaded, to promotea positive image and outlook.
The club has right at 10,000 members from all 50 states and 26 foreign nations, said Capps in a telephone interview.
Automobile tire distributor Mark Adams, recipient of the prettiest head award, won a T-shirt and certificate.
Dean Kartalas of New York, N.Y., won the most kissable head award. Bill White of Raleigh, N.C., got the 1983 Crystal Chrome Dome Award, which Capps said was the second-highest honor.
been sought nationwide by the FBI. Sidden had also been on the states six most wanted list after being charged in the murder of his cousin, Garry Sidden.
They came to the jail and turned themselves in to me, Gentry said. I dont know why. They answered no questions. They had an attorney with them.
He said the two were being held without bond in the Wilkes County Jail.
Garry Sidden, 39, was killed by two shotgun blasts near his mobile home in Hayes on July 21,1982.
Garry Siddens two sons, Gany Sidden Jr., 16, and Galvin Sidden, 10, are still missing. They disappeared the night of the slaying. Gentry said.
Gentry said he believes the slaying was the result of a feud between Garry Sidden Sr. and Tony Sidden.
Garry Sidden Sr. had been charged in April 1982 with assault with a deadly weapon for shooting Tony Sidden in the arm and received a two-year prison sentence. The verdict was appealed and he was out on bona when he was killed.
Officials in the investigation of the killing aid there was a possibility Siddens two sons were kidnapped after seeing their father killed.
A nationwide search for the two boys has failed to turn up any clues.
Garry Sidden Jr.s ortho-)edic boots were found a few lundred yards from the scene of the shooting, leading officers to speculate that the shoes were taken off the boy by an assailant to keep him from running away.
Patricia Pruitt, Siddens former wife and the mother of the two boys, said her son wore the special shoes to keep his hip in place after he was injur^ in a 1980 accident.
T!CE OF APPLICATION .0R A LIMITED UlCE BRANCH BANK
t if.
it
Nj.Ic* ! hreby ghwn that Unitad Carolina Bank, Whiteville, No/th Carolina haa mada application to tha Fadaral Dapoait In-auranea Corporation tor Ita writtan conaant to aatabliah a Limitad Sarvica Branch Bank at which loana will ba mada at 200 East Arlington Boulavard, Graanvilla, Pitt County, North Carolina.
Tha application was filad with tha Atlanta Ragional Offlca of tha Fadaral Daposit Insuranca Corporation on Saptambar 12,1983.
Any parson wishing to commant on this apfriication may flla his or har commants In writing with tha ragional diractor of tha Fadaral Daposit Insuranca Corporation at Its ragional offlca, 233 Paachtraa Straat, N.E., Paachtraa Cantar - Harris Towar, Suita 2400, Atlanta, Qaorgia 30043, bafora procassing of tha application has baan complatad. Procassing will ba complatad no aarliar than tha 15th day following aithar tha data of tha last raquirad publication or tha data of raealpt of tha application by tha FDIC, whichavar Is latar. Tha parlod may ba axtandad by tha ragional diroctor for good causa. Tha nonconfldantlal portion of tha application flla is avaiiaUa for Inapaction within ona day following tha raquast tor such flla. It may ba inspactad In tha Corporations ragional offlca during lagular businaas hours. Photocoplas of Information in tha nonconfldantlal portion of tha application fUo will bo mada avallabla upon raquaat. A achadula of cfiargas for such coplas can ba obtalnad from Itia roglonal offlca.
TMs notica la puMlahad pursuant to Part 303.14(b) (3) of tha Rulaa and Ragulatlons o4 tha Fadaral Daposit Insuranca Corporation.
Unitad Carolina Bank Robart S. Howail Sanlor VIca Prosidant Saptambar 12,1083
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C_Monday. September 12,1983 5
Its our Stafford and Gentry' suit event! Save *30 on the first, *50 on each additional.
Sale *150
Save on our entire collection of Stafford"* and Gentry suits. Our Stafford"* 3-pc. suit features a traditional fit in an all-season blend of polyester and wool. For a trimmer fit, our Gentry 3-pc, suit. Also, in a year 'round polyester/wool blend. Both in a choice of solids, stripes, plaids and more. Men's regular, short and long sizes.
Suits shown here: Reg. Sale
1st purchase.............$180 $150
Each additional
purchase................$180 $130
Sale
13.99
Dress shirts.
Reg. $17 and $18. Classics tailored to the standards of today's well dressed man. Choose Stafford"* regular-cut or Gentry trim fit. Long sleeve oxfords, solids, stripes and plaids in polyester/cotton. Mens sizes. Stafford"* pure silk tie, 13.50 Silk/polyester tie, $10 Sale prices effective through Saturday.
Sale
ia99
Choose from the season's smartest In style. In comfort. In color. At this great sale price, its hard to stop at just one pair The Contour"* belted slack fits a young mans budget. Polyester/rayon/acrylic. Reg. $27 Sale 19.99 Cotier XR-88 belted slack. Texturized polyester with a natural worsted look. Young men's sizes. Reg. $25 Sale 19.99 Classic Directions slack has its own coordinating leather-tab belt. Polyester/acrylic/rayon flannel. Men's sizes. Reg. $27 Sale 19.99 Our own belted Sport Slack in free-moving texturized polyester. Men's sizes. Reg. $23 Sale 19.99 Levis Action Slacks. They follow your moves in texturized polyester. Mens sizes. Reg. |26 Sale 19.99
Sale prices effective through Saturday, September 17th.
Check the JCPenney Weekly Buying Guide for terrific values for the whole family.
Sale 17.99
Misses Motion* blouse.
Reg. $22. With detachable tie, this is one blouse that doesnt sacrifice femininity for professionalism. Concealed placket front. Polyester, Misses 6-18.
<10 off
Misses'Motion" blazer.
Sale. 39.99 Reg. $59. Classic tailoring with one big difference: the woven Dacron polyester conforms to your shape. Beautifully. Misses8-20. Womens sizes 38-44, Reg. $55 Sale 43.99
Sale 14.99
MissesMotion* pant '
Reg. $18. Proportioned fly front slack for average and short with the famous Motion"* fit. 100% woven polyester. 10 fall colors for misses 6-20.
Petite sizes, reg. $18 Sale 14.99 Womeri's sizes 32-40, Reg. $20 Sale 15.99
Sale 14.99
Misses Motion- shirt.
Reg. $19 100% stretch Ultressa" offers complete freedom of movement. With contrasting bow at neck in a variety of snappy stripes. Misses 8-18, Womens sizes 38-44,
Reg. $21 Sale 16.99
Sale 14.99
Misses Motion " skirt
Reg. $18. The exclijsive Motion"* waistband offers unequalled comfort With side pockets in 9 great colors. Polyester. Misses 6-20.
Sale 29.99
Womens 9-2-5 shoes
Reg. $38. Polished by day. Elegant for evening. Our 9-2-5 luxury leathers are right in step with every look shes after. In three updated styles; open-toe sling, closed-toe sling and open-toe pumps. Womens sizes.
20% to 30% Off
Womens blouses
Sale 14.40 to 19.99, Orig. $18 to $28. Group of misses and junior blouses in rich solids and dramatic stripes for fall.
Sale 104.99
Stafford sportcoat
Reg. $130. Harris Tweed sportcoat of handwoven Scottish wool, for mens sizes.
*15 Off
All Comfort Plus shoes
Sale 49.99 Reg. $65. Our finest leather dress shoes for men. Crafted of the softest leather, they never need breaking in. Cambrelle vamp linings keep feet dry and comfortable. Mens sizes.
VSA'
u
Shop 9:30-9:30-Phone 756-1190-Pitt Plaza
lO The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Monday, September 12,1983
Stock And Market Repprts
By The Associated Press Hogs
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP (NCDA) The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was steady to 75 cents lower. Kinston 46.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown. Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill. Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 45.50. Wilson 46.00. Salisbury 45.00, Rowland 45.00, Spivey's Corner 46.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 42.00. Fayetteville
40.00. Whiteville 42.00. Wallace 40.00, Spiveys Corner 41.00, Rowland 41.00, Durham 39.00.
Poultry
RALEIGH. .N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this week's trading was 55.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 24 to 3 pound birds. 93 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final w'eighted average of 55.17 cents f ob. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Average weights light to desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was
1.815.000. compared to 546.000 last Monday.
NEW YORK (,AP) - Stock prices staged a broad advance in heavy trading today, bidding to surpass record highs amid hopes for lower interest rates.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up almost 20 points in early trading, showed a 12,29-point gain at 1,252.03 by noontime.
Advancing issues outnumbered declines by more than 3 to 1 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
The Dow Jones industrials' record closing high is 1.248.30. set on June 16,
MONDAY
6:30p.m. RotaryClubmeets 6:30 p m Host Lions Club meets at Tom s Restaurant 6:30 p m. Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 pm - Sweet Adelines. Eastern Chapter meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:;30, p m. Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Javcee Park Bldg
8:00 p m. Lodge No 88,6 Loyal Order of the .Moose
TIESDAY
7:00 a m Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p m Down East ('hapter of Painting and Decorating Contractors of America meet at Three Steers
7:00 p.m., Family Support
Group at Family Practice Center 7 .30 pm Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. \'ernon Howard
Success Without Stress study group at HON. Warren St 7:30 p.m United (Jstomy
Association, Greenville Chapter meets in Conference Room A. room 124, Gaskins-Leslie Center 7:30 p.m. Toughlove parents suplfiort group at St Paul's
Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m. Withla Council Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club
8:00 p.m .Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church 8:00 p.m. Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous-at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy
NEW YORK i.VP'
AMR Corp AbblLabs Albs Chaim Alt(
Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmEamily Am Motohi AmSland Amer T&T Beal Food Beth Stwl Boeing Boise r'aseil Borden .
Burlngl Ind C.SX Corn CaroPwU Celanese Cent .So\a Champ Int Chrysler CiKaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti (iroup DeltaAirl Dow ('hem duPoni Duke Pow EaslnAirl.
East Kodak Esmark s Exxon Fireslone FlaPowU-, ElaProgress EordMol Euoiia s (ITE Corp (inl)Miam (icniElei't s Den E()d (len Mills tioii Motors (ien Tire GenuParts GaPaeil GiKKlnch GiKKlyear Grae Co GiNor Nek Greyhound Guli (111 tlereuleslne Honeywell HospiCp s Ing Rand ItftI
Inll tiarv Inl Pa|ier Int Reel if Inl T&T K mart Kaisr.Alum K.ineb.Sve Kroger( 'o l.iK'khed s l.in'ws Corp Masonite MeDrmInt n MeKesson Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNHCp N.ibiseoBrd Nat Divlill NorllkSou iilinCp I iweiislll leniie\ .11'
Pepsd'o Phelps llod
Philip.Morr PhillpsPel PoLiroid PriH'lGamh s .Uuaker Oal RCA
RalstnPur RepuliAir Hepulilie .Stl Revlon Heviildlnd Koi'kwl s Ro\ Crown StRegis( p .seolt Pa(K'r .Se.ildPwr s .SearsRoet)
Shaklee s Skyline Cp Soiiy Corp Soul hern Co sp<rr\ Cp stdiiilCal Stdilillnd Stdiiili ih Stevens .IP TRW Ine Texaco Ine l ex East n l.M( Ind I n Camp I n Cartiide ITiiroval t'S Sfeel fniK'al W'aehov Cp W'alMart s WestPtPen Wesigh El Weyerhsr WinriDi.x WiKilvyorth Xerox Cp
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LSHER.STO.MEET
The City Union Ushers will meet at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist church tonight at7:30p.m.
Important business will be discussed.
MASONIC NOTK E
Bright Star Lodge No. 385 will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
NOTICE OF SALE
The Board of Commissioners of Pitt County will offer for sale all tobacco allotments now held by the County of Pitt to the highest bidders for cash at public auction. The 1983 tobacco allotment is 38,015 pounds.
The sole is to take place in the Coen-ty Cooimissioner's Room, Second Floor, County Office Building, West Fifth Street, Oreenville, North Carolina, at lOtOO o'clock A.M., September 23, 1983.
The poundage will be sold in 2,000 pound lots; however, at the sale it will be announced the manner of sale if less than 2,000 pounds are wanted.
This the 7th day of September, 1983.
CHARLES P. GASKINS, Chairman Pitt County Board of Commissioners 9/12/83; 9/16/83; 9/20/83
T
Waste Management led todays active list, down 1 at 47. A 1.4 million-share block traded at that price.
The NYSEs composite index rose .75 to 97.29. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 1.57 at 236.58.
Volume on the Big Board reached 57.52 million shares at noontime, against 35.94 million at the same point Friday.
.Midday slovks High Low l.as! 21', 31',
49 49' I
19 19
47 47
17', 17'i
52^ 54
44', 44'-
8", 8' :i2; 22',
66. 28 25', 41',
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.54 \
Fmr Fires,
In New Bent
NEW BERN, N.C. (AP) -Four fires in the historic section of downtown New Bern Sunday night caused $150,000 in damage, fire officials said.
New Bern Fire Chief Doug Soltow said the fires were concentrated in two stores, while heavy smoke damaged two others. He said 65 firemen and five engines fought the fires until they were brought under control around 3:45 a.m. today
There were no injuries but several firefighters were treated for heat exhaustion.
Soltow said investigators were on the scene this morning in an attempt to find the cause of the blaze. Several firefighters on the scene said they suspected an electrical short as the cause.
Employees at a restaurant involved in the fires said they smelled smoke and didnt waste any time notifying firefighters housed just two blocks away.
*i wasnt going to waste time calling. I ran there, said David Roberson.
Fire alarms were reported at 8:17, 9:15, 9:51 and 11:17 p.m. Sunday, a New Bern Fire Department dispatcher said.
Congress...,
(Continuedfrom Page 1)
revenues in the form of higher taxes.
"I say it as (jandidly as 1 can. without the help of the president and the speaker. It's I deficit reduction measures I going nowhere. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole, R-Kan., said Sunday on NBCs ".Meet the Press.
Complicating the situation IS the approach of the 1984 elections and the reluctance ol Democrats or Republicans to allow themselves to be painted as the instigators of the politically unpleasant solutions for budget deficits - higher taxes or reduced domestic spending.
The deficit is forecast to surge to a record $209.8 billion by the end of the current fiscal year.
The most immediate fiscal concerns facing Congress re the annual appropriations bills that are supposed to be m place by the beginning of the fiscal year Oct. 1.
So far, only four of the 13 necessary bills have been passed by Congress and signed into law. Three more likely will be sent to Reagan for his signature soon.
Work on the remaining bills, including the two largest - for defense and labor, health and education pro-giains - will not be completed before the fiscal year begins, meaning a so-called "continuing resolution will be necessary to keep the affected departments and agencies operating until their regular appropriations are approved.
.MUDSLIDES
KLAGE.NFUHT, Austria lAPi - Four Auslrians were killed late Saturday and early Sunday, and three were injured, in a series of mudslides caused by heavy rains, the Austria Press Agency reported.
Soviets Charge U.S. Diplomat
Obituary Column
MOSCOW (AP) - A U.S. diplomat and his wife have been accused of spying in Leningrad and the diplomat was asked to leave the country, the KGB secret police said today.
The U.S. Embassy spokesman Mark Smith confirmed that the diplomat, Vice Consul Lon David Augustenborg, had been declared persona non grata. He is the third U.S. diplomat accused of spying this year by the Soviets.
The Soviet news agency Tass, in a report attributed to the KGB, said Augustenborg "and his wife, Denise Augustenborg, were detained flagrante delicto in the area of Leningrad on Sept. 11 as they were carrying out an act of espionage.
Smith would not say whether Augustenborg and
Heat Wave.....
(Continued from Page 1)
Mitchell James said. Corn has done all its going to do. and while this crop wasnt a total disaster, were predicting only 60-70 bushels per acre in contrast to a regular 90 bushels per acre harvested in this county, Soybeans, tobacco and peanuts, on the other hand, seem to be holding out despite a poor start. "The last rain we had seemed to bring the beans around apd we think we still have a chance provided we get some more rain and don't have an early fall. If we can keep the beans growing until about the middle of October well do fine, James said.
Since selling has picked up, James said he feels the tobacco farmers will not suffer too badly. "We think most of the tobacco farmers are going to come out fine even though a lot of them didn't get the pounds they expected. The selling has picked up and that will help out a lot to offset the poundage, he said.
The peanut crop appears to be doing well and should give normal yields. In fact, Greenville is sporting some "pretty good looking vines, which should produce rather well towards the end of September, James said.
According to the National Weather Service, the thermometer was at a warm 76 degrees Fahrenheit this morning at 8 a.m. and the Tar River level was 2.9 feet with no rain in sight. Sundays high-was 100 degrees and the low, 66 degrees,
Shot, Killed In An Argument
LENOIR, N.C. (AP - A Lenoir man was shot and killed in front of a pool hall after an argument Sunday afternoon, police said,
Lenoir police detective Derek Poarch identified the man as Wayne Bernett Horton, 24. who died of a single gunshot wound to the chest.
Poarch said Horton and an unidentified suspect were arguing in front of the pool hall when the shooting- occurred. The suspect has not been arrested, he said.
Mental
Health
Perspectives
Assertiveness Training
by Catherine Radecki
How do you usually express your needs, wants and desires':' Ij<j you find yourself dropping hints to get r^hers to notice what you want:' Do you have a hard time saying no" to requests or expressing your feelings? Do peo pie tell you that you come on too strong'' are too demanding?
loo aggresive?
Assi'rtivehess training is a behavior change technique designed to help people express their feelings more honestly, directly and appropriately It teaches hciw to communicate beliefs, preferences and requests in such a way that others rights are not violated This is ac
complished by learnjng verbal skills and n'on(verbal behaviors that make , others take your refusals and requests seriously. Assertiveness training helps modify attitudes which lead to guilt and anxiety about expressing needs Individuals are taught to recognize that-they are important and entitled to their emotions and beliefs
Pitt County Mental Health. Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Center will present a series of assertiveness train ing classes beginning September 26. For further information, call Scott Luce or Camille Harris at 752 7151
PImm MbaH 4mMom to Con Cwtoi. M6 StMMoMbwa Rd.. Gracmlll*, w c<n 752-0119
snilc. P1W Cmiiity Mmtol HmMi
his wife had been detained. He declined to provide any background information about the diplomat.
Tass said an investigation fully exposes the U.S. diplomat and his wife as being engaged in intelligence-gathering activities incompatible with their official status:
,The agency said Augustenborg "was declared persona non grata for his illegal acts of spying.
No other details of the allegations were provided in the three-paragraph Tass dispatch. The dispatch did not mention any connection with the recent downing of a Korean Air Lines jetliner by a Soviet fighter plane, an incident which has strained U.S.-Soviet relations.
The last U.S. diplomat expelled from the Soviet Union was embassy attache Louis Thomas, who was ordered out of the country last June.
At the time, Tass claimed Thomas had been nabbed red-handed by the KGB during an act of espionage.
Four Injured In Sun. Wreck
Four persons were injured and $2,400 in damages resulted from a 10:02 a.m. accident Sunday at the intersection of North Greene and Church Streets, police reported.
Investigating officers said the wreck involved vehicles operated by Shirley Hall Spain of 507 Mumford Road and Alton Carter of 307 Paige Drive.
Police, who said Ms. Spain and three passengers in her vehicle were transported to Pitt County Memorial Hospital following the accident, charged Carter with having improper brakes and with having no operators license.
Damages were estimated at $1,200 to each vehicle.
Bell
TARBORO - Mr. John B. (J.B.) Bell, 62, died Saturday. Funeral services were held at 2:30 p.m. today at Carlisle Funeral Home. Burial followed in the Bell Family Cemetery, Belvoir.
Mr. Bell is survived by his wife, Mrs. Gladys Hathaway Bell of the home; three sons, James, Bobby, and Leroy Bell, all of Tarboro; a brother, George B. Bell of Rocky Mount; six grandchildren, and one greatgrandchild.
Fornes
VANCEBORO - Mr. George Hubert Fornes, 59, of Rt. 2, Vanceboro, died Sunday in Craven County Hospital, New Bern.
A graveside service was held today at 3 p.m, in the Fornes Family Cemetery near here by the Rev. Hillary Gaskins.
A Craven County native who spent most of his life in the Vanceboro community, Mr. Fornes was a retired farmer and had worked at North Carolina Lumber Company here.
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. katie Mae Howell Fornes; three daughters, Mrs. Avent (Shirley) Willis of Rt. 2, Vanceboro, Mrs. Franklin (Dorothy) Cooke of Rt. 2, Vanceboro, and Mrs. Dalton (Betty Jean) Lewis of Rt. 1, Chocowinity; two brothers, James Oscar Fornes of Durham and Leslie Andrew Fornes of near Vanceboro; and one grandchild.
Arrangements are by Wilkerson Funeral Hoitie, Greenville.
Hall
Mrs. Alice Raspberry Hall of the Fort Barnwell community of Craven County, Route 1, Dover, died Sunday at Craven County Hospital in New Bern. She was thq*wife of Ruben Hall of the home. /Tuneral arrangements are jncgmplete at Norcott & Co. Fun^l Home in Ayden.
/ Hart
FARMVILLE - Mr. Julius Marvin Hart, 79. of
Farmville uiea early Monday morning at the University Nursing Center in Greenville. Mr. Hart was the brother of Mrs. Jesse A. Smith and Herbert E. Hart, both of Farmville. Funeral arrangments will be announced later by the Farmville Funeral Home.
Speight
ROCKY CROSS - Mrs. Artelia Strickland Speight, 78. of Rt. 3, Wilson died Sunday.
Her funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Rocky Cross Holiness Church by the Rev. Preston Massey and the Rev. Clyde Stewart. Burial will be in the Strickland Family Cemetery.
Mrs. Sepight was a homemaker and a member of the
Hocify Cross Holiness Church.
Surviving her are two sons, S.G. Strickland of Zebulon and Jimmy Lee Strickland of Elizabeth City; two daughters, Mrs. Marie Gay and Mrs. Katie Bell Avery, both of Ayden; one brother, Zable Strickland of Zebulon; one sister, Miss Margelia Strickland of Zebulon; and six grandchildren. The family will receive friends Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Hunt-Murray Funeral Home in Spring Hope.
Tune-Ups - Brake Jobs General Repairs
Aulo Specially Co.
917W 5th St
758-1131
RESCUE OAV '
SfMis^rrd
UDinterville Rescue Squad Sat., Sept. 17
All Day Evni * Startins Ai AM Paradr 660 (hirhtn Live Enirriainmeni AuctM
Sfrviny Oinnrrs From II AM tlH PM 5 PM tH 7 PM $3.00 A Platr At The (Dintrrullle Fire & Rescue Dept.
AHENTION K mart SHOPPERS
In our September 11. 1983 Dollar Days" sole advertisement on page 1, we have inadvertently advertised the 8 oz. White Crown Crushed Pineapple sale priced at 3 for $1.00. Intended item available for purchase is 20 oz. White Crown Crushed Pineapple sale priced at 2 for $1.00.
We regret any inconvenience this may have caused our customers.
Howtoh^gioup
lealthcoverage.
Since the cost of health coverage has been rising much faster than other business costs, business people have to become much more skillful at evaluating competitive health-benefit proposals.
Here are some of the issues youll want to consider.
Are the rate and cost containment strategies effective?
coxer- cosl-cmlammm agmumts with area providers? We do. And thats only
age IS related directly to strategies that enabled m to save our subscribers imre than $125 million last vear.
the cost of health services.
TTierefore, does the carrier have effective ways to contain both your groups need for health care and the price of that care?
For example, does the carrier have cost-containment agreements with area hospitals and physicians?
Can the carrier offer your employees built-in incentives to use medical services efficiently?
Is your carrier achieving the dream of paperless cUiitm processing? We are.
Can the carrier offer options that reduce both the incidence and severity of illness? Membership, for exan^le,inahealth maintenance organization?
Will the plan be affordable? Can you assume variable levels of risk?
Can payments be ge^d to your cashflows? Are a variety of financing arrangements available?
Will the service be rapid,accurate and trustworthy?
What is the carriers reputation for prompt, accurate payment? For adequate disclosure of claims paid or denied?
To what extent is the carrier achieving the dream of paperless processing? Can claims be filed by computer?
Will your employees appreciate the coverage as a true benefit, the way having our benefit plan is appreciated, or will they take it for granted?
To prevent problems for you down the road, will your carrier
make the plans provisions perfectly clear to them?
Take advantage of us.
All of these questions should enter any evaluation of alternative group-health plans.
The subject is complex, however, so please take advantage of our 50 years of experience. Just call your nearest service office, or write to: Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, Room 558,Post Office Box 2291, Durham, North Carolina 27702.
Why do we want you to become a better-informed customer?
Because the better you understand health coverage, the more youll prefer ours.
Blue Cross Bhie Shield
Ilie better you understand health cosoage the more yoifll prefer ours.
5PI8
.11.
mm
mm
INSIDE TODAY
SMALL STOCKPILE?
If this falls corn harvest Is as low as feared, the U.S. may wind up with smallest grain stockpile a year from now since October 1977, say experts. (Page 20)
INSIDE TODAY
QUICK REACTION
Campaign workers for gubernatorial candidates got on their phones to solicit backers of Lacy Thornburg when he dropped out of the crowded field. (Page 6)
SPORTS TODAY
EC^ HONORS
Earnest Byner and Clint Harris have heen honored for their efforts in ECUs 22-16 win over N.C. State Saturday, (Page 11)THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 200
GREENVILLE, N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 12, 1983
20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
Marine Lebanon Role, Anger Over Soviet On Congress' List
Lost His Wings
LOST WINGS Wes Winter, a stunt pilot flying in the 15th annual Plainview, Tex. Kiwanis Air Show was fatally injured after the wings tore off the twin engine P-68c he was flying. The plane crashed to the ground Sunday. The picture was taken by Jerry Mennenga, of the Plainview Daily Herald. Copyright 1983, The Plainview Daily Herald. (AP Laserphoto)
By CLIFF HAAS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislators are eagerly lining up to vent their anger at the Soviet Union for shooting down a South Korean jetliner and air their concerns about the continued presence of U.S. Marines in Lebanon as Congress gets back to w6rk after a five-week recess.
Anxieties about record budget deficits and. a crowded agenda of fiscal and domestic issues, including a list of money bills that require action before the Oct. 1 start of the new fiscal year, also faced members of the House and Senate gearing up today for a final legislative burst before the coming election year.
But the focus early this week will be on the Soviet Union and one of its interceptors that on Sept. 1 destroyed a South Korean jumbo jet carrying 269 people, including 61 Americans. Among the passengers was Rep. Larry McDonald, D-Ga.
Rhetoric is the most important thing we can do sometimes and our words, in this case, are our real instrument of retaliation,
Power Usage In August Soared Due Heat Wave
By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer Scorching days and hot confining nights drove August power usage to the
Crimestoppers
If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt County, call Crimestoppers, 758-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.
highest point Greenville Utilities has seen in several years, according to GUC spokesman Malcom Green.
Most of the days were hot with temperatures sometimes going into the hundreds. The nights were a shade cooler, but provided little relief, Green said.
Greenville Utilities customers have already seen the effects high temperatures have wrought with their bills, but could see still another increase on their August bills depending on whether conservation methods were used or not, he said.
REFLECTOR
HOTUfi
We compared our (GUCs) power bill from last year and found we ended up buying 7 or 8 percent more this month. This is the first time I ever remember us going over 70,000,000 kilowatt hours. Through August 29, we used 74,200,000 kilowatts, he said.
Thats a lot of power when you figure that a homeowner would regularly average 1,000 kilowatt hours per month, he said. Green predicted that homeowners used an average of 1,500 to 2,000 kilowatt hours in August.
But our main concern is for the customers, he said. We urge people to conserve as much as they can tolerate, because usage does catch up to you at the end of the month when the bills come out.
In correlation with the high temperatures wascorns poor-to-fair showing, Pitt County Extension Chairman
(Continued On Page 10)
Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., said Sunday. People (legislators) will be vying for the opportunity to be indignant, and they should.
Early business also included eulogies today for McDonald and Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., who had 42 years experience in Congress and died of a ruptured coronary artery at his home in Everett, Wash., a few hours after denouncing the Soviet attack at a news conference.
Dan Evans, former Republican governor of Washington, was to be sworn in today as Jacksons successor. Evans wasappointed by the states GOP governor, John Spellman, to serve until a special election Nov. 8 in which Evans will be a candidate.
Baker, speaking on CBS Face the Nation, also said a bipartisan statement of outrage and indignation agasinst barbaric actions by the Soviet Union would be introduced in the Senate and voted on Wednesday. A House vote also is expected this week.
Attention will be given to the lack of say from Congress in the deployment of 1,200 U.S. Marines in Lebanon and their recent casualties resulting from the continued civil war between religious factions there.
Some lawmakers have said President Reagan has failed to comply with the spirit of the 1973 War Powers Act that would limit the stay of the Marines to a maximum of 90 days - an initial 60 days and a possible 30-day extension -unless Congress approved.
Reagans allies in the Republican-controLed Senate are preparing legislation that would approve the presence of U.S. troops in Lebanon without making an issue of the War Powers Act. Reagan has sought to avoid a long congressional debate on U.S. involvement in Lebanon, arguing that the Marines are there in a defensive role as part of a peacekeeping force and are not engaged in combat.
Baker, who is expected to introduce the legislation approving the presence of the Marines said, In my opinion, it comes down to a question of whether or not we cut loose from that area or we resolve to do whatever is necessary to preserve the security and sovereignty of the state of Lebanon. Democratic leaders in the House and Senate, though, have indicated they want the
debate to take place under the War Powers Act.
I dont think theres any question but that the War Powers Act should be invoked. It is the law of the land.... The Congress should be brought more into the process to keep us from going overboard, Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said Sunday on ABCs "This Week with David Brinklev."
Byrd added that he has told Reagan personally that if the War Powers Act is invoked, 'you're going to get support as of now for what youre doing. The rug isn't going to be pulled out from under you."
Meanwhile, Congress is returning to lace a persistent legislative giidlock with the White House over how to reduce budget deficits.
Before the recess. Con
gress postponed from July 22 to Sept. 23 the deadlines, it had set for itself to achieve budget savings called for in the budget blueprint enacted earlier this .year - increased revenues of $73 billion over the next three years and spending cuts for existing programs by $12.3 billion over the same period.
But the tax-writing committees in the House and the Senate, responsible for the
bulk of the m'andated deficit-reductifin lueasiires. have balked.
, In'general, die pie.ddent is insisting on lurthei domestic spending cuts to pare deficits, while Deiiiocrals, led by House Speaker Tilomas P. O.Neill. Jr.. D-.\Iass.. argue that no further spending cuts are possible and the answer instead lies with increased
iContinued On Page 10)
Crash Injures Local Pilot
Staff and Wire Report WINTER HAVEN, Fla. - A twin-engine seaplane crashed in Lake Hamilton, killing a flight instructor and injuring a Greenville, N.C. pilot, sheriff's officials said.
Emerson Arthur Avery. 62. the flight instructor, was dead when a motor boat found the plane, upside down and partly submerged in the lake at 1 p.m. Saturday, said investigator Tom Brown.
The pilot, Thomas William Harwell, 46. of Greenville. N.C,, was found clinging to a life jacket near the plane,
If the boaters hadnt gotten there, and it the floating device didnt happen to be there, theres a good possibilitv he (Harwell) wouldnt have made it," Brown said.
Avery and Harwell has taken off from Brown Seaplane Base in Winter Haven at about 11:30 a.m.. Harwell told
police. He said the last thing he remembers is the seaplane was about 10 feet above the water approaching for a landing
Avery had taught at the base for manv vears and was instructing Harwell in flying a twm-engine seaplane Harwell already had his single-engine seaplane license.
A spokesman for Harwell's office, Carolina Beiiehmaik Engineers and Surveyors in Greenville, said this morning that Mrs, Harwell has joined her husband in Florida and reports that while he is being observed in a Winter Ha\en hospital, he appears to have only mino>' injuries. Harwtdl had gone to Florida for the weekend tor t .* express purpose ot taking seaplane lessons. John Prevaiie, one of his business partners said. "We just feel very fortunate that he's okav," Frevatte said, "We understand he'll be hack at work Friday,"
Third Bady Washed Ashare In Japan; NewSanctians Talked
By K.P. HONG Associated Press Writer WAKKANAL Japan (AP) - Gale winds washed a third body believed from the downed South Korean airliner onto Japans northeast coast today, and the- nations leaders warned of new sanctions unless Moscow admitted it should not have shot down the jumbo jet.
Police in Hokkaido, Japans northernmost main island, found the headless body on the Sea of Okhotsk coast near Monbetsu, 160 miles southeast of where the Boeing 747 is believed to have crashed into the sea off the Soviet island of Sakhalin.
The body was too mutilated for even the sex to be determined.
The Maritime Safety Agency reported a second find today, a piece of flesh believed to be from a human back that was found in a salmon fishermans net off Monbetsu. In all, searchers have retrieved more than 420
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those iten^ considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
ARTS FUNDS SOUGHT '
The Greenville City Schools must raise $4,550 in matching funds through community donations and grants to have an artist-in-schools program during the spring semester of this school year. The program, sponsored by the North Carolina Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts, places professional artists in residen^ in elementary and secondary schools to seiVe as educational and artistic resources. Local planners are interested in having the artist be able to lead activities in film-making and video arts for teachers and students throughout the system and refine film programs already underway.
Any individual, group or business interested in helping finance or otherwise support the program is asked to call Wende Allen in the school administrative office, 752-4192.
Jubilation Downtown In Wake Of ECU Victory
By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer Downtown Greenville literally overflowed with jubilant fans Saturday night celebrating the Pirates hair-tearing, heart-stopping victory over the N.C. State Wolfpack.
It was like wed won the national championship. Tons of people were in the street, blowing horns, screaming rebel yells... I think everyone in Greenville was fired up, Jim Rackley, a industrial technology major at East Carolina, said.
I went crazy, it was just great, Rackley said. Things did get pretty hairy there at the end though. I could just see State getting six then seven points after ECU fumbled the ball just seconds after recovering it. I thought here we go again, ECU is gonna lose by one point. But we didnt.
Rackley, like a lot of other Pirate fans, seems to be positive about the teams chance for succ^ this season, especially after two
exciting opening games. I looked over the schedule and think they could go 8-3. They might even go 9-2, but thats a long shot, he said.
Officers of the Greenville Police Department were on hand for the celebration, but no action was required, Chief John Briley said. "Everyone was well behaved; it was just a large crowd celebrating the victory. People were overflowing into the streets (downtown) so we blocked off the road and gave them plenty of room to celebrate.
It was an orderly crowd. Nothing occurred out of the ordinary except for hollering and celebrating. There were no fights and no instances of vandalism, he said.
The downtown streets stayed packed until about 2:30 a.m. when the team bus came through, Briley said. Everyone left then, and by 3:30 we had the streets cleared up and traffic flowing. ^
objects believed to have come from the destroyed Boeing 747.
In Washington, the State Department conceded that the attacking Soviet jet may have fired warning shots before launching a deadly missile. And in Moscow, Soviet general claimed the jet fighter's pilot could not have distinguished the airliner from a U.S. spy plane.
The Soviet fighter shot down Korean Air Lines Flight 007 on Sept. 1 off the Soviet island of Sakhalin, north of Japan's northernmost island of Hokkaido. 1^ 269 people aboard the airliner are presumed killed.
Today, a pack of six Soviet vessel's searched near Moneron, a tiny - island off southwest Sakhalin where the jumbo jet is believed to have gone down, the Japanese Maritime' Safety Agency said. The Soviets have not disclosed any details of their search and bar other vessels from Soviet waters.
In Tokyo, the lower house of Parliament unanimously adopted a resolution accusing the Soviet Union of inexcusable barbarism and demanding an official apology for the attack. Foreign Ministry officials said Soviet Ambassador Vladimir Pavlov was warned that Japan would impose new retaliatory measures if Moscow persisted in claiming it was not to blame for the attack.
Pavlov said Moscow regrets measures already taken and fears they will further strain Japan-Soviet relations, the officials said. The Soviets maintain the airliner was on a spy mission for the U.S. and ignored orders to land.
Japan last Friday banned for the time being charter flights by the Soviet airline Aeroflot. Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe, in a meeting this morning with Irish Foreign Minister Pet|r
Barry, said Japan was preparing to join European nations that have agreed to a two-week ban on all Aeroflot flights.
Today, Belgium became the latest European nation to agree to the two-week ban, which will affect the twice-weekly Aeroflot flights between Brussels and Moscow.
In Switzerland, however, the Swiss national airline Swissair and the Department of Transporation deferred a decision on joining the boycott pending action by other airlines. The delay left Swissair pilots angry but resigned to go ahead with flights today and Tuesday, according to a spokesman for the pilots.
In Washington, the State Department said a careful review of tape recordings revealed a Soviet pilot reported firing of bursts of what may have been of warning tracer shells minutes before the airliner was shot down.
The State Department announcement said the attack remained inexcusable. The fact is that it was an unarmed, civilian airliner, and it cost the lives of 269 innocent people, it said.
In Moscow, Col. Gen, Nikolai Moskvitilev claimed the Boeing 747 and U.S. RC-135 spy planes have "an identical form and geometric dimensions.
The RC-135 is 136 feet long while the airliner is 231 feet long. The spy plane also has a much narrower wing span, a sharper nose and lacks the 747s distinctive forward hump.
Moskvilitev, head of fighter aviation for the Soviet air-defense command, nonetheless insisted Soviet pilots could not distinguish between the two types of plane at night.
- Last Thursday, the badly mutilated body of a child was recovered along the Okhotsk coast of Hokkaido. On Sunday, a fisherman recovered theiaceless, legless corpse of
a Caucasian woman and two pieces of flesh were inund in t he area.
Authorities today said neither the child nor the woman had been identified, hut it was almost certain they we|-e among those aboard the plane when it was shot down.
About 8,50 police and volunteers are searching the shoreline, while 23 ve.^sels and 11 aircraft are scanning coastal waters, police and Maritime Safety Agency officials said. Plane parts, a blouse, pocketbook, shoes and an identification card lor a Canadian passenger, 25-year-old Mary Hendrie. are among the items found so far.
In Seoul, the South K'orean Foreign Ministry said representatives of "victimized countries" those with citizens aboard the airliner - have agreed to in-vididually press clims for compensation from the .Soviet Union.
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Moffitt's
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2803 Evans St. 756-8444
INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS
PHONE 75S-3183 313 Evans Mill
Qraanvllls, N. C.
W. R. Moffi
Country Coffee Shop
Open 5:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
...two locations...
Farmville And Ayden
Factory Storage
Linwood Meccer 264 By-Pass West
Farmville, N. C.
R
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Plaza Gulf
756-7616
llfder Truck Rentals
756^
Gulf
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Wrecker Service: Day, 756-7616; Night 355-6145 Box 2459 701 East Greenville Blvd.
Allen Adams Greenville, N. C.
SHORTEST ROUTE TO A BETTER CROP
(0,.
quality fertilizer
GREENVILLE, N.C.
rs Family
avorites
nston & Greenville
ried Chicken Sea Food
* Hot Dogs k Hamburgers
) Serving Breakfast
7 days a week
FIRST STA.TE BAISTKI
Greenville Winterville
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION OF Pin COUNTY
SERVING ALL OF PITT COUNTY Greenville, Farmville, Ayden and Grifton *
S. G. Wilkersonft Sons, Inc.
FUNERAL SERVICE 2100 East Filth.Street Telephone 752-2101
COMPLETE FUNERAL INSURANCE
pm COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR 9 OCCUPATIONAL EDUCATION , Mrs. Renetta Smith, J. H. Rose High School
Greenville City Schools, Director Entries In this department close Monday of Fair Week at 5:00 p.m. The purpose of these exhibits is to show the kinds of programs being taught with progressions through the Department of Vocational Education. The Greenville City Schools Occupational Education teachers will base their displays onthe subjects they are promoting:
FIRST PRIZE :........................................$100.00
SECOND PRIZE ................................ gooo
THIRD PRIZE............. .................................. 80 00
FOURTH PRIZE............................................ 70.00
Mrs. Dale Psnaro, 4-H Extension Agent Entries in this department will close on Monday of Fair week, at 5:00 p.m.
The purpose of these exhibits is to show the kind of community program carried on through County Youth Organizations. The displays will portray the many facets of the Youth Program today-its projects, activities, and organizations.
First Prize.........................................................$100.00
Second Prize....................................................... 90.00
Third Prize.......................... 80.00
Fourth Prize ................................................... 70.00
All others will be awarded $50.00 each if the judges consider them worthy.
Amount offered in this section (nine exhibits).......................$590.00
159. Youth Exdiibits
EXTENSION HOMEMAKERS CLUB Miss Addie R. Gore, Home Economics Extension Agent Mrs. Evelyn L. Spangler, Home Economics Extension Agent Directors
The home Economics Division of the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service. North Carolina State University at Raleigh, has grown from the original canning clubs to a broader adult education program for the homemaker. It reflects the needs of contemporary living, with emphasis on consumer education, management, and family economics. Included are all phases of homemaking: Foods and Nutrition, Clothing and Textiles, Housing and House Furmshings, Home Finances and Human Development. Each is equally import-Mt in develt^ing a well-balanced home in which happy, healthy people are to live. Emphasis is also being placed on Community Service, Safety, Citizenship, Educati^ Health, and Cultural Arts. The newest research findings in HOme Economics apply to both rural and urban h> makers. Educational ExhibiU this year are planned in an effort to promote oe total Home Economics Extension Program.
Organizatona connected with the Extension Homemaker Programs in Pitt County are eligible to have nine exchibits, each 8x8 feet.
IMPORTANT: Entries must be in by 3 p.m., Monday of Fair Week.
First Premium......................................................... ..
Second Premium................................................... gQ qq
ThirjJ Premium.......................................80.00
Fourth Premium.................................................... -jq qq
All others will be awarded $50 each if the judges consider them worthy.
Amount offered in this section.....................................$590.od-..-
160. Extension homemaker exhibits
DEPARTMENT "H
Clothing and House Furnishings
Mrs. Helen WaU. Director This department is open to all youths between the ages of 9-19, including FHA and 4-H Club entries.
YOUTH
Articles must be clean and new, and must be the work of the exhibitor, Articles must have been made between September, 1982, and September, 1983. Articles must be m place by 5 p.m. Monday of Fair Week and should be covered with a clear plastic bag. '
Score Card for Judging Clothing
General Appearance..............................................40 Points
Workmanship........................ 40 Points
Design in Relationship to Fabric................................ 20 Points
Total...........................................................100 Points
CLASS A: (Constructed by Youth from 9-13)
161. Bathing Suit.............................................3.00 2.00
162. Blouse,Top,Jacket...............................3.00 2.00
163. Skirt, Pants, Split Skirt. Shorts...........................3.00 2.00
164. Suit (Pant or Skirt)., ..................................5,00 4.00
165. Dress (Street).................................... 4.00 3.00
166. Dress-up Dress....................................... 4.00 3.00
167. Evening Wear.......... 4.00 3.00
168. Any Other Garment . ..................... 3.00 2.00
169. Coat....................................................7.00 5.00
Shoes, Clothing and Fabrics for the Family
DOWNTOim SHOPPING CENTEIt ^
607 DICKINSON AVE
FREE PARKING
The Trouble With Recipes
Pf>AM COVEH-LPS...can be made with hc .en mesh plastic canvas and then finished in needlef/^int
Pats Pointers
By Pat Trexler
Shov, (jfl your favorite plant--, in needlepoint (.over-up-., (juiek and easy t.o make from 7-rrifrsh coi-ored plastir- canvas .Make a (.orripl'd.ii set, or any part of the --.el/ for yourself and others for it.ifts
loach side of th- hangiri^ basket rneasure-v approximately ') inches hy f> in chf.-s while the t.ahle top
cov'(-r up sections are 4 iri(.'h(*s hy 'j inches and each plant c(;aster is '> inches srpjare 'I'he sizis can vary, however, to accommodate your plants 'Ihanks to de*si}^ner Sasari Stranjie of (Jak I^wn, 111 , lor shanrif' this (jriginal (jf'Sigri with LLS
To obtain dirf^-tioas for mauag the Neediepoinl ^ over-ups. send your re-(juest for Leaflet No. NL^/911 with $1 and a long. stamped, self-addressed envelope to Fat Trexler -The Daily Kefiectrjr F 0 Fox kio. North Mvrtle F>each. S C 290^7
Or you may order Kit No N-tt911 by sending a check or money order for $10.50 to Pat Trexler at the same address. Each kit contains full instructions, yarn, canvas, needle and hanging ring. The price includes shipping and handling charges.
One of the joys of working with plastic canvas is the ease of finishing. There is no blocking to concerned with and the putting together is truly f>eginner-easy
When you want to join two pieces together, the easiest and often most effective - way is with the basic overcasting stitch.
Simply hold the two pieces together with right sides out and wrong sides facing each other and with the holes of each piece lined up over one another. Then just whip or lace them together. To do this, bring the threaded needle up through one matching pair of holes, carry it over the edge and bring it up in the adjoining pair of holes. Continue along the edge or edges to be joined, taking an extra stitch or two in the corners, as needed, for good coverage.
In starting or finishing a yarn strand, always secure the ends under previously worked stitches or - if there are no stitches near the edge start by working over tail for the first inch or so.
For ease in securing the yarn, I recommend that you always work toward the open end of any boxlike shape. Here is the preferred working order l or joining the pieces of such a shape. First, join all side pieces to the bottom piece. Then join each of the sides to the adjoining piece, starling at the bottom and working to the top.
The same overcast, whipped or laced stitch carifbe used to cover any
raw edges that are not to be joined to any other edge You might want to try a couple of more advanced ediging and joining stitches, however To work either the picot or binding stitch, which I will describe, it helps to mentally number the holes along one edge For the picot stitch, bring the needle up in hole 1; take it to back of work and bring It up in hole .1 .Now, back up and bring it up in hole 2. which you skipped over in working the second stitch .Skip hole 4 and bring the needle up in hole 5; back up and bring it up in hole 4 Continue in this manner all around Often when working this stitch. I make no apeciaJ eftort to completely cover the corners as the stitch itself has a rather airy look about it By way of contrast, the binding stitch is a verv yjlid stitch, giving the best coverage of any finLshing .stitch It is also a little more involved To avoid a lot of repetition. I will just give you the sequence of hole numbers and you will know that I mean for the needle to te brought up in each hole in the order given. The sequence is as follows: 1,4,2,5,3,6,4,7,5,8 and so on in this manner. This is not quite as complicated as it may seem, but practice it on a scrap of canvas. Its a beautiful finishing stitch
BiEA.WELgE)l
PfFaaibEte
it's aaomatic m the food world that reataoraflt rec^ are dfkuk if not unpowihfo to adiapt to home me and faauJ} saeportMoi L'aflaire Fantastic Fudge Brownes IS a case in point.
We pobhstod that ream a couple ofeeks ago and our telephone hasn't st<q>ped nnging since .N'evspaiper food edtors have been ail-mg to say readers wto tried the recipe from a popular New York City restaurant said It dtdc t w ork It does, itt the results evidenl) are very (hfferent from roost readers' idea of a fudgy brownie Our direc-tKK said the dessert s consistency should be like candy with a crusty top "
We should have added, very goor. candy We should also have noted that the dessert needs to cool for seieral hours, or evi overnight to thicken prcr perly
For those of you who spent VrS7 on ingredients and were unhappy with the results, our sincere apologies And now. some .Monday rooming quarterbacking on what went wrong:
One reader said her version was like chocolate syrup with a crust Apparently it was underbaked The 4.5-.% minutes baking time suggested in the onginal recipe probably is Irxi short for home ovens, which may not maintain a steady temperature as well as pr(jfessional equipment does
Underbaking can also result from an inaccurate oven thermostat - we always keep a thermometer in the oven to make sure the temperature inside matches the dial outside.
We automatically addc^ an extra 10 minutes baking time to compensate for heal loss while we were placing the heavy pan in its waterbath on the oven shelf Twenty to .% minutes would have been
and well worth the effort on some projects I should add that it is a yarn-eater, though, taking about two and a half times as much yarn as the overcasting stitch ''Fat's Fointers: The Needlepoint Handbook " by Fat Trexler guides the needieworker from the begjnner-basic.s through more detailed instructions and projects This 2i/>-page book aiyj includes sections on counted cross-stitch and aids for the handicapped who wish to participate in needlecraft activities. To order, send $8.95 plus $1 postage and handling to Pats Pointers, in care of this newspaper, 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairy, Kan. 66205. Please make checks payable to Universal Press Syndicate.)
even better for our participar gat range oim Opeong tbe oren door to cbeck tKg progreai alw irngtbent hricfog tme. The temperatnre di^ 25-31 degrees F each time you the own - the actual depend on the size of tbe door and bov long It remains open
Heat recover}' tune also vanes An electric oven takes an average of $-3 miaAes to return to tbe correct temperature, say's Jean Hopvood. coosuroer affairs inana^ for General Electric's major appliance divtstoD. in Lomsviik. Ky She said recov try is quicker in self-cleaning ovens because they are better insulated Earl McGee, chairman of the tedmicai committee for the Gas .Appliance Manufacturers Associatioo 5 range division, theorized that a gas oven also averages 3-5 minutes for recovery McGee added it could take as long as 6-7 minutes, depending on the size of the door and the length of time it is left open Ail the figures, be said, are semi-precise "
Substitution of ingredients ' could result in recipe failure. .Neither cocoa dnnk mix nor unsweetened chocolate should be used Extra large or jumbo eggs would a^ extra liquid and call for longer baking time.
We baked the dessert in a very thick, ovenproof glass dish measunng about 9 x 13 x 2> inches and set in a shallow roasting pan containing water -that came about 'u inch up the side of the baking dish. By the time the dessert reached room temperature, the texture was that of a very thick, incredibly nch pudding with about', inch crust on top Fantastic Fudge Brownies are fork food, said June Jenkins, a partner in the Summerhouse restaurant where the dessert originated .Mrs, Jenkins suggested the name might be part of the problem Most people think of brownies as a cookie to be eaten out of hand. But not these.
.Maybe the dessert should be called twice-baked fudge We put our underdone, cooled version back into a waterbath in a preheated .306-degree F oven for F2 hours more. The first hour brought it back up to baking temperature and the last 30 minutes thickened the cuslardy part to the texture of the restaurants version,
-NEW YORK (UPD - The Summerhouse's Fantastic Fudge Brownies are more like gooey candy than regular cake brownies.
The recipe was among 30 selected by food critics for a new magazine, Fine Dining New York, as the best restaurant desserts in the city.
4 cups sugar 1 cup all-purpose flour 1 cup cocoa (do not sub-
Trunk Showing On Tuesday September 13, From 10 til 7
Informal modeling
Come and let Danny Taylor of A Taylor project for you his vision of forward elegance for the holiday season of 83 and the spring season.of 84. Exclusively at.
331 Arlington Blvd.
10-6Mon.-Sat.
756-5844
by, danny r. taylor
stftate d ma or wb-sveeteaeddbocniatei tbrgeem
Ipapdindledfaiita' 4teaspooosvaalla 2 caps dnpped pecans or vataols Mix sqgar, floor and cocoa togedier. to a large boiri. beat eggs wefl. Bat m dry iogredieals Beat to boUer gradualiy .Add vanilia and outs and mix veil Pour batter into an ungreased 9 x 13 X 2-incfa baking pan. preferably ov enproof glass On the kwest shelf of an oven preheated to 300 degrees F. set a largo- pan cootaining enough hot vato- to come aboto 4 inch tbe ades of tbe smaller pan Set batter lan m the water bath and lake 50 muHJtes or more, until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out with sticky chocolate clioging to It 1 liquid runs oil tbe 5-10 munites additKnal baking are needed Do not open the oven door during the first 50 mmutes When baking time IS up.'t>rernove baking pan to a rack to cool .At room terapwature. the part beneath the h inch thick crust should be like a very nch. very thick pudding. At refrigerator temperature, it resembles creamy fudge It should be spooned onto plates and sen ed with forks. .Makes 36 small semngs.
P.S You can halve all the ingredients and bake tbe batter in an 8 x 8 x 2-inch aluminum pan in a waterbath in the middle of a preheated 32.5-degree oven about 60 minutes, to make 18 small semngs
Cotillion Club
The first in a series of fall dances, sponsored by tbe Greenville Cotillion Club, will be held Sept 16 at the Greenville .Moose Lodge. Music will be presented by Jim Gregory and his orchestra
.Mr and .Mrs. Glenn Hardee are chairpersons of the dance. Hosts and hostesses are .Mr and .Mrs. Tom Carraway, Mr. and Mrs. Beverly Congleton, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ricks, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ellis, Mr and Mrs. Jim Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Hawley, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Haynie, .Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hamblin, .Mr. and Mrs. .Martin Sasser.
Mr, and Mrs. Wilbur Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. A.D. Hicks, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Frank, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Caraway, Mr. and Mrs. BUly Weston, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Anderson, Mr, and Mrs. Wilber Counterman, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Stocks and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Johnson,
Guests are permitted for the event but must be listed with Mr. and Mrs. Hawley at 756-5810.
Wedding Ring Buyers Look For Heavier, Higher Quality Bands
BvJEA.\M;LSEM
ITfFawKEiUr
.NEW YORK tlTi> -Couples tend to spend more mmv OD vcddmg rfogs for
But many vho are marry-mg for the first tinie also are tradkng up to fai^ gold karataga and heavier, more substantial styles, a recent survey shovs Tbe bride in a seoood
G>uple Marrie? In Conway Church
Robin Merrdl SpradHn of Milwaukee and Larry David Benjamin of Freeport were united in marriage in the Conway Methodist Church Juh 21 by the Rev C B Owens
Tbe bride is the daughter of .Mr and .Mrs Richard Thomas Spradlin of -Milwaukee and the bnde-groom is tbe son of .Mr and Mrs Enc Jcrfin Benjamin of England.
The couple lives in Freeport after a wedding trip to Lancaster . Pa
The bnde was formerly employed at East Carolina University.
Engagement
.\nnouneed
Walter Scott of Route 1. Oak City, announces the engagement of his daughter, .Amy Poiih, to Michael Anthony Pickle, son of Barah and Glenda Pickle of Hamilton The bnde is the daughter of the late Ruth Evelyn Scott The wedding will take place in late September.
.More than 40,000 visitors go scuba diving in the waters off the Cayman Islands every years. The British Crown Colony ranks as the fourth most popular scuba destination in the world.
marriage often opts for a heavier or higher karatage gold vedding band instead of an engagement ring and a lighter wedding band, says DetM-a Ueyer, marketing research manager for the Intematioaal Gold Corp Most American couples typically buy 144iarat gold vedding bands. Ms Meyer adds
When gold pnces first began soaru^ a few years ago. industry sources expected consumers to trade doim to 10 karat -- the minimum finroess for karat gold jewdry in the United States
Ms Meyer attnlxites the reversal to renewed consumer interest in quality proAicts dianges also are occumng in desigK Two-tone and tricolor - yellow. jHiik and wiute gold - nngs are pedlar. as well as satin-finished and sandblasted, matte surface finishes Unmatched gold bands for txide and groom are often fweferred to the traditional matching set. Ms .Meyer say^.
Contemporary designs include highly polished, sculptural, fiwform bands. They're (rflen sold with interlocking engagement nngs - nicknamed encagement nngs
Simple gold wedding bands have not disappeared altogether. In fact, some trendv stores around the
United States offer that classic design in pore, or 24 karat, gold.
Susan Kraljevic of the Gold Information Center, tbe corporatkm's public reUtiaos divisip>N^ys wider g(rfd bandfafe,We popular than ever before, and tnc<^ liands ar^a very strong 19S3 trend
'Fhe tj-icolor trend began in Italy, irobably in the early to mid- 71k, she said, reached the C S around the end of the decade, slowed briefly when gold prices rose, and came liack strongly early last year
.Mrs Kraljevic said wedding bands with a rugged. Western kxik - gold nugget patterns and rough bark finishes - basically grew up in Texas and California and stayed there
.A record 88 percent of new Amencan bndegrooms these days receive wedding rings, and a majority of them under age .3(1 wear weddi^ rings, u^ike their fathers generation.
Reaffirmation ceremonies b\ older couples also generate ring sales. .Ms. Meyer said. Those who restate their vows asually exchange new rings at the same time.
.Most wedding bands are bought in jewelry or department stores or catalog showrooms, where the average prices for 14 karat plain gold bands early this year were S130 for women's rings and S145 for men's.
DO II YOURSELF 48 HOUR CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING [.
605 Arlington Blvd. Telephone 755-7454 j
OPEN TONITE UNTIL 9 P.M. r,
NEED WHEELS? Call Rent A Wreck!
mmm
Rent yesterday's cars at yesterdays prices and save!
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GreenHlle'$ Hneat bakery for 63 yeara.
815 Dickinson Ave.
A Variety Of Breads Baked Fresh Daily
French. ChccM. RaUIn, German Rye, Whole Wheat 4k Butter Top.
752-5251
Family Room Sale
Sofa, Chair, Two End Tables Rockar & Parly Ottoman
Now 2 Locations 521 W. 10th SI.
Boside The Railroad Depot 752-3223
~FUHNimEDEPOT=^.
Anniversary Celebration Special
Lost 40 Lbs.
Lost 128 L|bs.
Join Carl Whitfield, Janet Gwalthey & Charles Overton in helping us in a celebration of 4 years of serving Greenville & Pitt County in the field of weight control.
This Certificate Is Worth ^30
! Lose 17 to 25 lbs. in just 6 weeks.
-ulttWTlgL^.
^DT CENTER >
No shots No drugs No contracts I *No prepackaged food
Professional Staff:
Present this certificate and | save $30 on a 6 week prepaid | program or $10 on a 2 week | prepaid program. |
Expires September 30, 1983 I
Linda Lynn Tripp B.S., M.A. Ed. (Coanacling)
Caroline C. Worthington B.S. (Foods A Nutrition)
Cookbook Users Are Young And Well-Educated
By JEANNE LESEM UPI Family Editor About 50 percent of cookbooks are bou^t as gifts and about 60 percent are bought on impulse, says a California publishing executive.
William A. Dinsmore, of Concord, Calif., estimates 30 percent of all books sold are cookbooks, which grew in sales by about-21 percent in 1982.
Dinsmores data is based on several surveys, one for his own Nitty Gritty Productions, which publishes paperback cookbooks selling for $5.95-56.95. ,
He said 70 percent of his firms books are sold in gourmet and housewares specialty shops, housewares-hardware stores, gift shops and department stores. *
In a tel^hone interview, Dinsmore said 75 percent of all cookbook purchasers are women, 90 percent of them 18 to 44 years old.
Seventy-three percent have family incomes of over $20,000 a year, and^ percent over $40,000.
Cookbook customers today are younger, better educated and more affleent than those of a few years ago, Dinsmore said.
He said 39 percent have had some college training and 24 percent are college graduates.
Sixty-four percent are employed either full-time or part-time.
Dinsmore said the most popular, fastest growing cookbook category is the under-$lO, paperback recipe collection for everyday meals.
The total number of cookbooks published annually is not really being tracked well, he said.
The merchandising director for the nations largest bookstore chain agreed.
Michael Meyer of Waldenbooks said he has seen about 1,000 new cookbooks so far this year, about 350 of them regional. The latter are often fundraising books published by charitable groups or loc people.
We just went to category buying, he said by telephone from his Stamford, Conn., headquarters, so he had no comparable figures for earlier years.
He said currently p<^ular cookbook subjects include cookies and ice cream, anything tied to a machine or a new cooking process, and guides to low-sodium or nosalt cookery.
Fall Tour Planned By Senior Citizens
A New England fall foliage tour, Oct. 8-16, is being sponsored by the Town and Country Senior Citizens Club.
For information and reservations call Sarah J. Ashton at 752-2912.
Wedding
Invitation
Mrs. Ada Gray Carmon of Farmville requests the honor of your presence at the marriage of her daughter, Terry Lynn^ Farmer, to James Ray Tyson, on ^pt. 17 at Dilda Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.
New appliance cookbooks generate big, big sales, Meyer said, much more than even long-time, best-selling basic cookbooks.
Hardcover books are increasingly expensive. They rarely cost less than $15 and many are $25 or more.
I sense a (sales) growth in both areas - high-priced and low, Dinsmore sa d, but peqple who buy an $18.95 cookbook, for example, make a more conscious decision than purchasers of cheaper books.
Whatever the subject, consumers want color photos and a wide variety of recipes, he said.
He sees a great need for recipes serving one and two peq)le, and not just for small households.
Even in large households there are broken eating patterns with people eating at different times, especially if both spouses work.
Two-, three-and four-person households buy most of the cookbooks, Dinsmore said. He said a survey done for his company in shipping malls in several states showed 26-28 percent of each of those groups said they had bought one or more cookbooks in the past year.
Only 7 percent of one-and five-person households and 4 )ercent of six-person or arger households had bought one or more cookbooks during the same period.
He said surveys indicate cookbook users want relatively simple, quick, healthful and delicious recipes using fresh, raw ingredients.
They also want, he said; -Ideas for using time-saving and woit-saving appliances such as food processors and microwave ovens.
-Compact book designs that wont bog counter space. -One reci]^ per page. -Books that lie flat when open, leaving both hands free for recipe preparation.
Metered Mail
STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) - Some 85 percent of all U.S. mail is business mail and almost all of this is metered, according to Pitney Bowes, a maker of mailroom equipment.
A. Dudley Johnson, a firm spokesman, estimates that 2 million postage meters are now in use in more than 100 countries.
Almost half of the worlds postal meters, 901,159, are used in the United States. West Germany is next in usage with 220, 637 (11 percent), followed by France with 154,420 (8 percent), the United Kingdom with 131,860 (7 percent) and Canada with 116,027 (6 percent).
Facts of Life
LEICESTER, England (AP) - People take for granted the miracle of human development and few understand how rapidly an embryo develops from the moment of conception, says Dr. Marjorie England, British embryologist and author.
In her book, The Color Atlas of Life Before Birth, she says a human embryos face is already beginning to form by day 32, by the eighth week all basic body systems have been laid down, by the ninth week the sex of the baby can be determined, and by week 10 the fingernails have formed.
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Parents And Students Should Say Thanks
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by UniverMi Press Syndicate *
DEAR ABBY: I direct a charitable organization thai provides full scholarships to deserving youths. 'These scholarships cover tuition, books, room, board, laundry, etc. for the duration of college. There are no repayment obligations of any kind.
Abby, dont you think the parents of our scholarship recipients should express a word of appreciation to our organization for the exceptional benefits their sons and daughters receive? An annual note, maybe Thanks for the $6,(XX) gift you gave our son (or daughter) this year?
Would you believe that we have spent as much as $30,0(X) to educate one youth whose parents have never once said thank you?
I predict that unless people begin to acquire a sense of gratitude for the generosity of others, the wells of charity are going eventually to dry up. Any comment?
CONCERNED
DEAR CONCERNED: An expression of gratitude from the parents of students who benefit from scholarships would seem minimal, and the students themselves should also thank their benefactors.
DEAR ABBY: My husband is a well-known professional man in our area. His secretary, who has been with him for four years, has asked him to give her 19-year-old daughter away in marriage. The secretary is divorced, and her ex-husband (a local resident) refuses to participate in or even attend his daughters wedding although his name is on the invitation.
No one even mentioned the above to me until all the plans were made. I know the secretary but have never met her daughter.
I feel very uncomfortable about this and have told my husband that it is bound to create some speculation as to what the relationship between him and his secretary really is.
My husband said he had no choice because they have no male family member to perform the duty. Am I wrong to be upset? And do you think I should attend the wedding?
WITHHOLD MY NAME IN FLORIDA
DEAR WITHHOLD: Are you wrong to be upset? No. Your husband should have discussed it with you first. Should you attend the wedding? Yes. It would look worse if you didnt.
DEAR ABBY: I am 17 and have been married a year and two months to a wonderful man. (Hes' 22 and we are in the military.)
We are very happy, but we have problems making love. I seem to hold back, and much as I want to, I cant seem to let myself go. My husband has been very patient with me, but I know he cant enjoy himself because of the way I am.
Weve discussed the problem together and think maybe I should seek professional help. Where should I go?
UPTIGHT IN CHICAGO
P.S. Dont tell me maybe its because I married young. Ive had a lot of trouble in my life. Ive been raped twice the first time by my father.
DEAR UPTIGHT: First you should be examined by a gynecologist to determine whether there is some kind of physical problem. If there is none, theres a strong possibility that you are uptight because of your rape experience. Go to your nearest rape crisis center. It doesnt matter how long ago the rape occurred, if it hasnt been dealt with and resolved, it needs to be.
For Abbys updated, revised and expanded booklet, How to Be Popular for people of all ages send $2, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
* 4 *
Problems? Everybody has them. What are yours? Write to Abby, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. For a personal reply, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
The collision of a TWA Super Constellation jet and a United Airlines DC-7 in 1956 over the Grand Canyon in Arizona killed 128 people.
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Area CWU Workshop Scheduled Tuesday
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
channel for setting goals, speaking and working together on common pro-
Monday, September 12,1983 3
blems and concerns of the community, nation and world.
WILLIAMSTON - Marcia Parker, national campaign staff director for Church Women United in the U.S., will be the guest resource leader for an area CWU workshop Tuesday.
Ms. Parker, whose office is in the national CWU headquartersin New York, is directing the womens organizations Fund for the Fifth Decade.
She will lead a three-hour workshop here which will include participants from-CWU units across eastern North Carolina. Martin Countys CWU unit will serve as host group for the training event to be held in the Cornerstone Baptist Church of Williamston. Registration and coffee hour will begin at 9:30 a.m. The workshop will start at 10a.m.
Lillian P. Peel, president of the Martin County CWU Unit, noted that the Fund for the Fifth Decade is a three-year capital campaign
Births
Kincaid Born to Mr. and Mrs. Theadore Edward Kincaid, Roanoke Rapids, a son, Joseph Andrew, on Aug. 31, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Crisp
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Laddie Moore Crisp Jr., Route 1, Greenville, a daughter, Mary Elizabeth, on Sept. 2, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Miller
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Uronus Miller, 104 Greenway Apartments, a son, Rashad Renold, on Sept. 2, 1983, In Pitt Memorial Hospital.
with a national goal of $4 million. It is a drive, Ms. Peel stated, to move the mission of CWU forward into the 1980s. The campaign is a national effort to continue giving so that CWU can be obedient to its calling in the future.
The purpose of CWU is to encourage women to come together in a visible community to witness to their faith and to go out into every neighborhood and nation as instruments or reconciliation. Some of the goals of the movement are: to grow in faith and to expand the vision of what It means to be a Christian women in todays society; to develop visible ecumenical communities; and to form an organized
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4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Monday. September 12.1983EditorialsThe Lions Are Missing
A wooded area near Durham has been converted into a make-belive battlefield. Not by the military, but by grownups who say they want to play games. The game theyre playing;
The Survi va 1 Game.
Bank tellers, telephone workers, sheriffs deputies they pay $20 for the right to crawl through the woods carrying a pistol that shoots paint pellets, in search of the enemy. ^
Granville County Deputy Tony Parrott, one of those who has taken on the contest, says he likes it because you get to be a kid again. Everybody used to play this when they were children, and its a good way of taking out frustrations.
The game, which is franchised by a New Hampshire company, has been described by the National Coalition on Television Violence as another escalation of entertainment violence and a significant threat to democracy and peace.
We dont really see the sport involved, but that criticism does go a little too far. The game is certainly better than the games of old, when they were played in the Coliseum at Rome,Making It Easier
Community volunteers of Pitt County received deserved honors at a reception last week hosted by the Pitt Board of County Commissioners and the Pitt Involvement Council.
Those honored provided widespread services ranging from individual human service to senior citizen volunteer service.
There were also group awards to clubs, organizations and businesses. The awards will actually be presented in Williamston on Oct. 24.
It is well to honor individuals and organizations that provide volunteer service to the community. Their efforts are most important to the community and what they do often makes life easier for those who are unable to do for themselves.
Public Forum
^How Many Planes Were Shot Down?^
To the editor:
I have read with interest Mr. Leutgens letter printed in the Sept. 7 issue of Daily Reflector. If I understood Mr. Leutgens point, it was, be fair, we dont have all the facts of the Soviet downing of the South K(mn plane. I totally agree, we do not have all the facts, and pro^bly never will.
I do take issue with Mr. Leutgens when he states, A Russian plane wouldnt stay airborne within 100 miles of Camp Lejuene ..., passengers or not. Let us remember that we are dealing with the same government that has given freedom to the people of Afghanistan!
If I may quote from the Sept. 12.1983. issue of Newsweek, it states, Aeroflot... has a habit of wandering over sensitive U.S. military facilities. In 1981 and 1982 alone, Aeroflots once-a-week flights went off course 16 times. On November 8. 1981, Aeroflot Flight 315, ... flew an unauthorized route over Pease Air Force Base near Plattsburgh, N.Y., then ovrflew additional sensitive facilities. The return flight ... flew the same unauthorized flight northbound. ... Another Soviet plane got lost over Otis
Air Force Base on Cape Cod. Another just happened to drift over Groton, Conn., at the precise moment when (the first Trident nuclear submarine was being launched).**
How many of these planes were shot down, Mr. Leutgens??
Richard D. Kieman Greenville
To the editor :
This is in response to James Leutgens' remarkably insular opinions and hazy facts which were expressed in Wednesdays Public Forum.
To begin with, the destruction of the unarmed airliner was certainly not a mishap - i.e., an unfortunate accident. The shape of a 747 is unique. When viewed from such a close distance and with navigation lights displayed - no pilot could possibly mistake it for anything other than an airliner.
Could the plane have been actually off course? Yes; computers fail. Pilots enter wrong coordinates. Even trusted professionals with years of experience can make mistakes entering numbers into the calculator-type device.
Why would the United States need a slow 747 to "slip in and take a few snapshots. as Mr. Leutgens suggest Why not, instead, use one of our suMr-speed reconnaissance aircraft (which would be in and out before Soviet fights could be launched) ... or perhaps high-resolution satellite photography?
Was the 747 contacted by Soviet radio and mtiered to land? On what frequency and in what language? I understand that Soviety aircraft are not equipped to use the internationally allocate emergency and guard frequency because that would be of aid to defecting Soviet pilots.
It is public record that Soviet and Cuban aircraft have overflown highly sensitive American bases. Have any of their Aeroflot planes been shot down by our Air Force?
A society that condones the wanton destruction of airliners and the murder of civilians perhaps should, indeed, be labeled as scum.
Upon rereading Mr. Leutgens letter -with a good deal of revulsion and disgust -1 wonder! Was he serious?
Dennis G. Brewer 204 Dellwood Drive Greenville
John Cunniff
Federal Agencies Make Shopping Easier
NEW YORK (AP) - As many a business person knows, the U.S. government is hardly up there with Procter & Gamble Co. in the packaging and presentation of products.
Its products are mainly services, and theyre rated highly, but try and find them. You wont, for example, find all of Uncle Sam's exporting services laid out in supermarket fashion where you can examine them together.
No, theyre listed by agency instead, which means you must first find the agency and then examine its products and, if you dont find if there, go to another bureaucratic supermarket, and even another if you are strong of faith.
That's the wayJhe bureaucracy works, you see - sort of the reverse of the private-sector marketplace, which makes it easy to shop - and it seems to be a big reason why information and assistance is left unused in the package.
But it's changing, in at least one area of business interest. Eight federal gen-cies have joined to produce a catalogue of everything in the store relating to foreign trade information and assistance, organized by product.
This unprecedented production, called Washington's Best-Kept Secret: A U.S. Government Guide to International Business, will be given a publication party Nov. l)i that would seem to exceed that
Donald RothbergNew Right Tensions
fora best-selling novel.
On that day, that is. the agencies will produce a two-hour video conference on doing business abroad, beamed from Washington to as many as 5,000 business people who are expected to pay $125 each for a seat in conference centers (mainly Hilton Hotels) in 50 major cities throughout the country.
Operation Opportunity, as it is called, is co-sponsored by several private-sector companies too, which makes it all the more remarkable a piece of cooperation, all in the interest of doing business abroad.
There are urgent '^asons for the efforts, as indicated by i government figures:
Each $1 billion of U.S. exports creates an estimated 40,000 U.S. jobs.
- Only 10 percent of the 250,000 manufacturing companies in the United States now export.
- In 1980, Germany exported about 24 percent of its gross national product, and Great Britain and Japan exported 22 percent and 13 percent, respectively. But^ the United States exported only 8 percent ofGNP.
An important reason for this relatively poor performance seems to be the lack of know-how by American companies, says William Delphos, OOs chairman, in spite of the fact that the U.S. government offers more business incentive programs than the Japanese and European governments.
Delphos formerly managed international matters for Gould Inc., including such things as exports" and licensingPaul O'Connor
agreements. Now vice president of one of the eight federal agencies, OPIC, he believes he knows one of the reasons why.
I had never even heard of OPIC when I was at Gould, he said. Spelled out, OPIC is the Overseas Private Investment Corp., which encourages private investment in developing countries by providing political risk insurance, finance services and pre-investment help. Substantial help, such as direct loans of $4 million or loan guarantees of up to $50 million.
He wasnt alone in having little knowledge of the assistance available. Too many business executives dont know what Washington has to offer, or they find it impossible to locate the right program or agency, he says.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Once again, the New Right is facing the frustrating reality that they can't live with Ronald Reagan and they cant live without him.
The latest flare-up of tension between the conservative president and the New Right centered on the administration's response to the Soviet downing of a Korean Air Lines plane with 269 people aboard including Rep. Lawrence McDonald, D-Ga., chairman of the ultraconservative John Birch .Swiety.
After Reagan's speech Monday night in which he denounced the Korean Air Line massacre" and then imposed only limited sanctions against the Soviet Union, Richard Viguerie, publisher of
The Daily Reflector
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Conservative Digest, said the president had "put Teddy Roosevelt in reverse. H speaks loudly but carries a small stick. Paul Weyrich, director of the Committee tor the .Survival of a Free Congress, said he was very disappointed that President Reagan missed this great opportunity to exercise decisive leadership.
Ironically, Viguerie, Weyrich and Howard Phillips, chairman of the Conservative Caucus, another disenchanted new righter, seem to face the same problem for which Viguerie denounced Reagan.
In fact, many of Reagans political advisers admit privately that they dont mind hearing thunder on the presidents right. ^
To these advisers, the greater problem is the lingering perception that Reagan is too much of anti-Soviet ideologue, and too strong an advocate of conservative positions on social issues such as abortion and school prayer. They fear that Jimmy Carter in 198 and Gerald Ford in 1976 had found a political vulnerability when they portrayed Reagan as too willing to resort to military force as a solution to world problems.
The louder the New Right complains, the easier it is for Reagan political aides to portray the president as a pragmatist, a man whose moderate actions as president are a more accurate measure than his conservative rhetoric.
The New Rights favorite threat is that they will look for another candidate for president in 1984,
I would think the conservative cause and the Republican Party would be better served if the president doesnt run for re-election, said Viguerie last January. '
Phillips took a similar line.
I think there will be an all-out effort to persuade him not to run in 1984, he said.
Closer to reality was John T. Dolan, head of the National Conservative Political Action Committee, who said, I obviously share their frustration, but I really dont know what we can do about it.
Population Growing Older
RALEIGH - The population of North Carolina is getting older every day and that means problems for government and medical planners. Medical science and other improvements in the quality of life are allowing people to live longer while birth rates have dropped off.
By the turn of the century, the baby boom generation will be approaching retirement age and the percentage of our population which is elderly will be considerably higher than today.
The NC 2000 Commission predicts that in the year 2000 the state will have one million residents aged 65 or older. That will amount to one in every eight North Carolinians.
This month, a subcommittee of the state Goals and Policy Board reported on the health care needs of our states elderly. The numbers in their report sound like a ticking time bomb for stgte budget planners.
For several years now, the fastest
growing portion of the state budget has been Medicaid, the federal-state program that provides medical aid to the poor, a gre^ portion of whom also happen to be elderly. This past year, the state had $575 million budgeted for Medicaid, about three-quarters of it federal money.
That budget has to be strained as the population gets older. The elderly tend to suffer more often from chronic ailments and disabling conditions. Arthritis strikes 44 percent of those over 65, heart problems affect, 20 percent, hearing impairments 29 percent and hypertension 35 percent.
Almost half of the Medicaid budget is spent on institutional care and the greatest portion of this goes to the elderly. And it should be increasing in years to come. The over-75 population is growing rapidly and it is this group that most needs institutional care.
Consider this national projection from
illsha Douglass
Strength For Today
Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? Or who shall stand in his holy place? He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart; who have not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully (Psalm 24:3-4).
Clean hands - acts that are honest and beyond reproach. A pure heart desires for those things in life which are just, honest, pure and righteous. We may be tempted, but there is still hope in us and for us if Ave desire
the better things.
If we are vain concerning our abilities, then we are misled and silly. If we are vain in the pursuit of wrong pleasures and aims, then we are mixed up and confused.
Deceit can eat into the mind and soul until life is ruined. It is like an acid which dissolves and destroys. We deceive ourselves, which is the worst of all fates -but we never deceive God.
the National Institute of Mental Health. In 1980, Medicaid cost taxpayers $8 billion. By 1990, the price tag should be up to $31 billion. Not all of that increase will arise from the aging of the population but a sizeable portion can be.
The state Goals and Policy Board also question whether the medical community is ready to treat a significantly larger elderly population. In many instances, the training of physicians, nurses and other caregivers does not adequately prepare them to meet the special needs of older persons, the board reports. In particular, the board complains that many doctors and nurses are unaware of the effects that social status can have on an older persons health and of the options for care open to older people after they leave a hospital.
In addition, the number of paraprofessionals who serve the elderly is insufficient. These people can be of great help to the elderly but, under current training programs and with the current salaries and benefits available, the shortage is not likely to be corrected, the board reports.
Finally, the board says the state isnt prepared to help families keep their elderly members at home. As the elderly require more help, family members often find themselves incapable of providing it. Hence, the elderly get shipped off to a nursing home and the state gets the bill. If training programs existed in the local social services de|rtments and schools, some of these family members could get the training they need to help keep their parents at home.
The board looks at the years ahead and it sees an immense future problem. But, the board members have some recommendations. Essentially, theyre saying that we need to rec(^nize now that, in a few vears, were all going to be older and wed better get the mechanisms in place to deal with^t fact..
To the editor:
What will the United States government do if history is any guide? will talk tough, but do little or nothing. The ruthless Communist munter (rf 269 innocent victims, including the worlds leading anti-Communist, might receive no more attention than other acts of Communist terrorism we have seen worldwide. United States Congressman Lawrence P. McDonald, national chairman of the John Birch Society, produced a film about Communist terrorism before he himself was a victim of it.
We need not see what the government will do; we can do something ourselves. Let this be the outrage which finally wakes up the American people to face Uk reality of the horrors of (Communism, and to act in their own defense. We must not wait until any more of us are murdered in cold blood. Rather, let us rally together in the organization which more than likely frightens the Communists so much that they would apparently commit such an atrocity to silence its leader.
We must demand that the complete text of all recorded communications relating to this mass murder be made public at once. Every American should view the anti-Communist program produced by Congressman McDonald and insist that they be given coverage in the broadcast media. Appropriately, the one on terrorism is named No Place To Hide.
Justice will come to the Communists when we elect hundreds of dedicated anti-Communists in our next election. Then perhaps we will have a government which will stop the sale of high-technology computer chips and other items which are now being used in the guidance systems of Communist missiles. Korean Air Lines flight 007 was shot down with a Soviet missile built with the help of U.S. aid and trade. If enough of us decide to live for freedom, perhaps we will not have to die for it.
Dr. Thomas B. Suiter Jr.
100 S. Taylor St.
Rocky Mount
To the editor;
I would like to see just one anti-freezenik address this fact: The United States and the Soviet Union have enough nuclear weapons to kill every Soviet and American citizen several times over and take the rest of the world with them. Senator John East and other sophisticates have no reason to believe they would be excluded.
No one can accuse me of being receptive to the official lies of Soviet leaders so perhaps I have the license to ask: How can the manufacture of more missiles be less provocative than agreeing to put a halt to it?
Unfortunately, some, without examining the available evidence, accept as simple truth the Soviet assertion that the South Korean passenger plane shot down over or near Sakhalin did not obey the demand to fly to a Soviet airfield and this makes the anti-freezers comfortable in their sophistry.
I read the transcript of the Soviet pilots conversations as published in its entirety in the News and Observer and could find no such demand or even of any attempt to communicate with the Korean plane.
Soviet brutality and evasions notwithstanding, I continue to believe in the feasibility of a mutual freeze. Spy satellites are making mutual surveillance more and more possible.
Ernest S. Silva Greenville
To the editor:
The Associated Press article in The Daily Reflector on deprogramming was quite interesting. McDonald is quoted as saying, Organized religion, the medical and legal profession dont know how to combat cults. They are simply not geared for it. Another is quoted as saying, Cults are not a religious problem. They are a mental health problem. This is exactly the history of deprogramming, properly referred to as kidnapping. By the way, kidnapping is illegal in the United States.
Deprogrammers, who charge anywhere from $10,000 to $30,000 for their services, first tried working through organized religion. This didnt last long; after all, it was from oi^anized religion that people were leaving. Also, many noted religious personalities such as Billy Graham openly condemned deprogramming.
Next, deprogrammers tried to get the legal profession to aid them. The legal profession couldnt help because kidnapping is illegal and with all the suits now being brought against the deprogrammers it became too hot an issue.
Now the kidnappers are trying to get the mental health profession to back them. I wonder how long this will last. They will stay involved until it begins to hurt their credibility. The problem with the mental health issue is that the deprogrammers, once they mentally terrorize someone into denouncing their association with a so-called cult, leave the victim without satisfying the needs that led to his joining the cult. He is now more confused than ever. In their book, The Cult Experience, J. Gordon Melton and Robert L. Moore write, For some, these needs are met by joining the d^Mtigrammers, who offer a sense of mission and purpose and a few commit suicide. This is a high price for the mental health profession to pay.
Mike Van Dyke
Letters to PubUc Foam should be limited to 300 woixb. The editar reserves the light to cut laager letters. ^
'14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Monday. September 12,1983
Ch>BS&on/ By Eugene Sxffer
ACROSS 1 Word with taftor
rally IChdbby fSeance sound
#Tlie-Man andthe Sea 41 Jewish month 43 Swglasses (coUoq.)
45 Take care!
UGreekpeak 47Hunteror Utfighborae Fleming 14 Eggs ttBeam
ISRoiefor eHamelins
Hayley Mills deliverer 17 Plead 54 Emplo>
U Charged S Follow
atom . Sllndian
UWhole STSonofOdin
21 Gettysburg. 58 Appoint
for one ments
24 Destroy Oub
25 Tribe in the
Cameroons 28 Fortify 28 California border lake 31 Arrividerci
DOWN
1 Great Expectations lad
2 Tokyo, once
3 -Joey 4CMdradio
schone 5 Theyre almost ringers, in horseshoes $ Footed vase
7 Qementines father
8 Goober
9 Legendary outlaw
Average sdubon time: 25 min.
18 Affirm 41 Actress Geraldine 18 Ignited 28l^[>anjsh aunts 21 Yeast on brewing liquors 22-ben Adhem 23 Huck Finns clHun 27 Bei-Bist DuSchoen 29Bandona shield 30 American
Deny Risks In Chemical
GOREN BRIDGE
33 Knights title 35 Rail bird 38 Bernsteins forte 38 Thing, Ln law
mil miX siiM Sia HHDl
lim
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Qll
Mil
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9-12
engineer 32 Verdi opera 34 Remainder 37 Quibbled 39 Forms 42 Queen, in Madrid
44 Cuckoo
45 Dry, of wine 48 Simple 50N.Y.time
51 Tavern
52 Greek letter
53 Soak flax
2T
36
45
48
57
46
23
Answer to Saturdays puzzle.
fs
32
26
37
49
55
58
33
27
42
38
50
34
28
43
47
20
35
39
14
I
44
40
56
59
10 11
29
30
52
53
By The Associated Press
Officials of the company that makes bacteria-killing chemicals found in North Carolina streams have disputed the states conclusion that the chemical is harmful.
Thompson Research Associates of Toronto said Friday the findings by the state Division of Environmental Management were based on shallow evidence and that the product is safe when used as directed.
Thompson manufactures and distributes a bacteria-killing compound - known as a biocide called Ultra Fresh 300DD. It is used by some hosiery manufacturers to slow the growth of odor-causing bacteria in socks. The active ingredient in Ultra Fresh is tributylin oxide, a potent chemical also called TBTO.
State environmental officials found toxic levels of TBTO in the discharges of two hosiery mills in Hildebran in Catawba County and Ossipee in Alamance County and have recommended that North Carolina companies stop using biocides with TBTO if they discharge biocide residues into streams.
We were getting extremely lethal conditions, said Steve Tedder, who led the 10-month investigation for the divisions water quality section. He said the concentrations were strong enough to kill minnows and water fleas, creatures used as sensitive indicators of water life.
BTOUUniSaOIER
ARDOIIJUISBJUOF
1963 TrIbunt Coinpiny SyndlcM*, Inc.
ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ
Q.l-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:
J7 ^A83 OK985 4Q1065
The bidding has proceeded: North East South 1 2 ?
What action do you take?
A. - We hope you didn't elect to bid two no trump. If partner is minimum you have game. However, you do have an excellent defensive hand against two clubs, and we would recollmend a double. If partner is better than minimum, it could be a massacre, and you should defeat the contract even if he has no extra values. And if, by some chance, the opponents should make two clubs doubled, you havent doubled them into game.
no need for a prepared" opening bid - bid one heart.
Q.3As South, vulnerable, you hold:
95 <;?1065 OKJ73 AKJ42 The bidding has proceeded: South West Ni^ Eut Pass Pass 1 <7 1
7
What do you bid now?
A.-East's overcall has made life difficult, especially since the fact that North opened in third seat increases the chances that his suit is only four cards long. Nevertheless, you have no better action than to raise to two hearts, even though you would like to have sturdier support.
Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold:
J94 ^AK106 0KQ7 4874
The bidding has proceeded: North East South Pass Pass ?
What is your opening bid?
A.-Since partner is a passed hand, your chances of having a game are almost nonexistent. Therefore, you are opening in an attempt to get a partscore and, unless partner makes a forcing response, you intend to pass at your next turn. So, there is
Q.4-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:
985 '^6432 0AQ6 #352 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West ! Pass INT Pass 2 Pass ?
What action do you take?
A. Fie on you for thinking that we are trying to trick you. You have a dead minimum response and you have located what is at least a 4-4 fit. Pass. There is no need to raise hearts or to take a false preference to spades.
Settlement
Speechcraft Course Set
CRYPTOQUIP 9-12
QOU DPNFU XOUJU QSIZ SILUFQ ASAIQ YSIA lUXL; YPZ DNDUJ . Saturdays Cryptoquip - THESE PIANO PLAYERS ARE
NOW CHARGED WITH GRAND LARCENY.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: I equals N.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
0 IH) King FcalurnSyndicate. Inc
Greenville Toastmasters Club No. 2595 will conduct a 10-week Speechcraft course through Pitt Community College beginning tonight.
The program will be offered each Monday from 7 to 10 p.m. in Room 113 of the Humber Building at PCC. Participants will learn impromptu speaking, various styles of speaking and how to listen and evaluate others communications.
For more information, contact Pitt Community College or Charlotte Flanagan, 756-7192.
SEVESO, Italy (AP) -The city council voted Sunday to accept a settlement equivalent to $7.4 million from a Swiss-based company, Givaudan, for the 1976 dioxin disaster in Seveso.
In a 15-12 vote the council agreed to accept the damage settlement and to seek no further compensation.
Givaudan, part of a pharmaceutical group, operated the ICMESA chemical plant where an explosion sprayed Seveso with dioxin on July 10, 1976, forcing evacuation of 700 residents. The toxic chemical killed hundreds of animals and caused skin disease among some residents.
Five company executives are on trial for criminal negligence.
Q.5 As South, vulnerable, you hold:
10954 7AK87 05 8654 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South
1 Dble Pass 1 ^
Pass 1 Pass ?
Wreck Occurs On First St.
'No injuries were reported and no charges were preferred as a result of a 2:30 a.m. wreck Saturday on First Street at its intersect tionwith Meade Street.
Police said the accident involved vehicles operated by Dalton Lilley Jr. of Greenway Apartments and Beth Ann Potts of 213 Glen Echo Drive, Norfolk, Va.
Damages were estimated at $450 to each vehicle.
Five Die in N.C. Traffic
^bODlA@
..^ By The .Associated Press Five people were killed on North Carolian highways during the weekend, bringing the state's highway death toll for the year to 818, the state Highway Patrol reported early today.
Amanda Jane Goad, 17. of Mayodan and Timothy Michael Martin. 22. of Sandy Ridge died at 11:20 p.m. Saturday after they were thrown from a car driven at high speed by Miss Goad. Troopers said the car ran off N.C. 704, about 8 miles north of Danbury Also Saturday, Audrey Johnson, 54, of St. Petersburg, Fla., died at 10:15 a.m. on N.C. 12 about 9 miles south of Nags Head when the car she was driving sideswiped another car, .^crossed a center line and struck a third vehicle head-on.
Anthony Wayne Durham, 23, of Clayton, was killed at 1:55 a.m. Saturday when the car he was driving at high speed ran off a rural road 6 miles east of Raleigh and overturned.
Jeffrey Allen Coe, 17, of Dobson, died at 1:15 a.m. Sunday when the car he was driving at high speed went out of control on a rural Surry County road 9 miles south of his hometown and and struck a tree.
At this same time last year, 847 people had died on the states highways.
Shop-Eze Foodland West End Shopping Center (Only) Double Savings Days With
Double Coupon Value
Tuesday And Wednesday September 13 & 14,1983
Clip The Manufacturers Cents Otf Coupons From The Mail, Magazines Or Newspaper Then Bring Them To Shop-Eze Foodland
On Tuesday and Wednesday, September 13 & 14. 1983 only. Shop-Eze Foodland, West End Shopping Center, Greenville, N.C. will redeem National Manufacturers Cents Off Coupons up to 50C, only tor double their value with purchase of the product in size specified. Foodland or other food retailer coupons not accepted.) Expired coupons will not be accepted. Coupons for free merchandise excluded from this offer. When the coupon value exceeds 50C this offer limited to SI .00 if double the value of a coupon exceeds the retail amount 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 at face value.
Double Savings With
Double Coupons
Value
Example
Solar Fraction
Offer Limited OnSIO.OO Or More Purchase
The solar fraction for this area yesterday, computed by ,, the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 99. This means that a solar water heater could have
fvided 99 percent of your water nels.
'OODUiiil
MAHKITS
What do you bid now?
A.-This is a matter of simple arithmetic. By first doubling and then introducing his own suit, partner has shown I hand of at least 16 points. In support of spades your hand is worth 10 points, and the total comes to
enough for game. Jump to four spades.
Q.6Both vulnerable, as South you hold:
A9B3 ^JIO? OAQJ976 The bidding has proceeded: South West North fUst 1 0 Paof 1 *7 Pass ?
What do you bid now?
A.-Your playing strength and fit Iw partners suit make your hand better than minimum, so you should delay raising partners suit with only three trumps. Bid out your shape. One spade is the clear choice.
RELAXING Shown during some free time on Sunday; at the Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City are State Misses (from left, top): Kristin Lowenberg, Neb.; Shari Moskau, Calif.; Becky Bush, III.; Dalia Garcia, S.C.;
and Stephanie Waymer. Ore., center seated; Lynn Lambert, Utah, in sweat shirt, and Tammy Aulwider. Miss Georgia, in foreground. (APLaserphoto)
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' The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Monday, September 12.1983
Reagan Nears Difficult Stage in Lebanon Poiicies
By JAMES GERSTENZANG reluctant to acknowledge on ferred with Mainrifv tion of tlw law that rpnnirc Rieht Ivliere we are is daneerniis if we null mit ho We feel were edine stahiH7o ho caiH on.
By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan, expecting greater pressure from Congress over the use of U.S. forces in Lebanon, is facing what a senior aide says could be the most difficult stage well have in the troubled Middle East nation. Were racing against time on the diplomatic front, said one White House official, referring to the intensive efforts of Reagans special Middle East envoy, Robert McFarlane, to bring about a de-escalation of the violence and then work out a withdrawal of Syrian and Israeli forces.
This official, who spoke on condition that he not ^ further identified, referred to the leader of the Druse militia, Walid Jumblatt, and said: We get a good signal from Jumblatt and then the Syrians sit down on him and he doesnt do what he said hed do.
Four U.S. Marines have been killed in recent weeks because of the violence. It was firing from Druse positions outside Beirut that landed on Marine camps near the Beirut airport last week and brought return fire from Marine artillery and U.S. Navy gunners stationed offshore.
Administration officials.
reluctant to acknowledge on the record that this meant the U.S. forces had entered a more active stage, conceded privately that it represented a stepped up role.
Meanwhile, said Larry Speakes, the chief White House spokesman, If we fight back, were starting a war. If we dont fight back, were not defending ourselves.
For his part, Reagan on Friday^ told a Republican group in Scottsdale, Ariz., via a closed-circuit television hookup:
We are not planning enlarging a war. We are not planning on expanding the forces that are ttere. But we have said... that were going , to protect our Marines that are being shot at.
Were not going to get drawn into some kind of a long-drawn conflict. But we ... do not see any necessity at the moment, or any good reason, for'withdrawing the multinational force. Meanwhile, Rep. Clarence D. Long, D-Md., chairman of the House appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations, announced he would try to cut off funding for the Marines in Lebanon until Reagan asks for specific congressional authorization for them to remain.
A week ago, Reagan con-
Nursing Home Bed Shortage
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Hospital officials in North Carolina say a moratorium on additional nursing home beds is creating a shortage that is forcing them to keep patients longer.
The state will need 1,166 new nursing home beds next year, say health care planners and administrators, but the legislative moratorium on nursing home construction may aggravate the shortage.
The moratorium, imposed in 1981 and extended this year to 1985, is designed to save money because state Medicaid reimbursements for nursing home care over the last five years increased by $70.4 million to $170.4 million this year.
But some health care spokesmen say the moratorium should have been lifteilaie last year. There are patients in hospitals that belong in nursing homes, said Craig Souza of the N.C. Health Care Facilities Association, a nursing home trade group. Were probably wasting millions of dollars in unnecessary costs and charging the wrong people, while we wait to get this moratorium over.
Dennis Barry, administrator of Moses Cone Memorial Hospital in Greensboro, originally favored the moratorium, but now he says it has gone on too long. He says the measures taken to reduce health care costs may increase costs to patients or employers who pay directly or through their insurance companies.
Barry and other administrators say hospitals
Leo Sayer Now Deputy Sheriff
VIRGINIA CITY, Nev. (AP) - If singer-songwriter Leo Sayer ever pulls you over on a Virginia City street, dont argue. He might mean business.
Sayer, 35, a native of Sussex, England, whose hits include You Make Me Feel Like Dancin and the Grammy Award-winning When I Need You, was recently sworn in as a badge-bearing Storey County deputy sheriff.
We dont want him to go out and arrest anybody, but technically I guess he could, says county Sheriff Bob Del Carlo.
It all started when sheriffs Deputy Roger Hartley met Sayer in a Virginia City saloon. The two became friends.
We decided to make him an official deputy instead of an honorary one because anyone could be an honorary one, Del Carlo said.
%
Thats the club that all my family and a lot of my friends went to and still do. I really am looking forward to that,^hesaid.
ferred with Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr., D-Mass., and other top congressional leaders. This week, Reagan is tentatively planning to meet with Republican congressional leaders on Tuesday morning, as Congress returns from its August recess.
Reagan has already reported to Congress under a provision of the War Powers Act of 1973 that requires such notice when American forces enter another nation equipped for combat.
But the president has refused to invoke another sec-
ti(Hi of the law that requires Congress to grant approval within 60 days if U.S. forces are introduced into hostilities or bnto situations where Imminent involvement in hostilities is clearly indicated by the circumstances.
Long has taken issue with the presidents refusal to invoke this section of the act, and .said last week the situation today in Lebanon can be described in no other words than one of hostilities.
As for Congress and the handling of the provisions of the War Powers Act, one administration official said well have to wait till they get back here.
Right ~^ere we are is right where we want to be and right where we have a consensus of support, said Speakes. We do believe we have a consensus from the congressional leadership.
Speakes pointed out that Baker said he opposed the use of the 1,200 Marines as part of the U.S., French and Italian multinational force when it was first introduced in Lebanon more than a year ago.
But he said the other day theyre there and I support you. Tip (ONeill) said the same thing, and (so did) Bob Byrd, Speakes said.
The message, and the public understands the consequences
ana me ; it, is that^ are ^
dangerous if we pull out, he said, agreeing that the multinational force would fall apart and the result is chaos.
Still, said one administration official who spoke on condition that he not be identified by name, We know theres going to be pressure when Congress returns and begins to focus on the stepped up fighting that has occurred in Beirut in the past month.
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We feel were going through a delicate stage right now, said another official, also speaking privately. It could be the most difficult stage well have. While it is hoped that the situation in Lebanon will
staoiiize, fie said "it could get worse. He added:
The idea now is to stick it out, stay with the policy and the presence (in Beirut), dont plan to put in more troops, and see if it will hold together.
Mattress Sale
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NATURAL HOLDING HAIR SPRAY
902
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are expected to shift Medicare costs not covered by the government to the paying and insured patients.
Ted Parrish, the new assistant secretary for long-term care in the state Department of Human Resources, acknowledged that there are people who are backed up, who are being pushed into levels of care they dont belong in.
But he said lifting the moratorium mi^t limit the states opportunity to develop alternatives to nursing -home care, such as home health care services that provide less expensive, minimal medical care.
State officials have expected the moratorium to spur more home health care services and construction of several hundred previously approved but unbuilt nursing homes.
However, critics such as Souza say nearly all those beds will nave been built and put to use by next year.
A new Medicare reimbursement plan this fall also could cause problems, health officials say.
Under the plan, hospitals, forced to care for patients more efficiently, could encourage earlier discharges. For many elderly and chronically ill patients, nursing homes become the next step in treatment after hospitalization.
Big Bash Given By Tom Jones
NEWPORT, Wales (AP) -Singer Tom Jones, returning to the Welsh mining valleys where he grew up, threw a party for the relatives and friends he left behind when he went to Hollywood, in search of stardom.
The onetime $22.50-a-week laborer, back in Britain for his first concert tour in 10 years, said it felt fantastic to be home with 150 aunts, uncles, cousins and friends at Saturdays bash.
As Jones walked into the party at a luxury hotel, he was serenaded by partygoers singing A Welcome in the -Hillside. He was covered with kisses from relatives, and it took 10 minutes for him to get a taste of the foaming brown beer he said he had missed so much.
The 43-year-oId singer said he also planned to sp^ time visiting old haunts, including a workingmens club in nearby Treforest.
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Lie. No. 1756PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL
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Iriah PotatoesPeck
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32. Red Bliss or other named red variety $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $100
Sebago, or other named white variety . .. 4.00 3.00 2.00 1 OO
OnionsPlate of Five or More
34. Yellow Globe Danvers, or other
named yellow variety...........................51 50
35. Silver Skin, or other named White variety 1.50
$1.25
$1.00
Peppers(5 Specimens)
36. Sweet Bell or Pimiento ..........$3.00
37. Banana..................... 300
38. Hot (Small) 3^00
39. Hot (Large)........................ 3 00
MISCELLANEOUS
60. Cucumbers.
65. Pumpkin, largest
DEPARTMENT "C
$2.00
$1.25
$1.00
2.00
1.25
1.00
2.00
1.25
1.00
2.00
1.25
1 00
$1.50
$1.25
$1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
1.50
1.25
1.00
Eggs
$3.00
82.00
$1.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
$1.00
1.00
Mrs. Betty Carraway, Director Back yard and farm class:
Judging of eggs:
Exterior quality........
Interior ...... I*
Totei ...................................
...........................................100 points
stale eggs, double yolk, blood or rmgs with clots, tinted eggs in white class a
any egg unfit for human use, eggs shown out of class.
SENIOR EGG SHOW
Best dozen white eggs;
69. Lar^ size (24 to 26 oz., per dozen)...........$3.00
70. Medium size (22 to 24 ozs. per dozen)......... 3.c
Best dozen brown eggs:
71. Large size (24 to 26 ozs. per dozen)........... 3.00
72. Medium size (22 to 24 ozs. per dozen)...... .. 3.00
JUNIOR EGG SHOW
73. Large size (24 to 26 ozs. per dozen) .....3.00
74. Medium size (22 to 24 ozs. per dozen) ...3.00
EGG SWEEPSTAKES
ir" Sweepstakes Ribbon
Ss dZ K Sweepstakes Ribbon
Best dozen broMm eggs m entire show. ..................Sweepstakes Ribbon
Amount offered m this sectiw ........ $36 00
You can expect more from the bank that wants to be the best bank In the neighborhood
Member FDIC
SportsTHE DAILY REFLECTOR
Connors Zips By Lendl
The double fault tournament and rP-ininrpH Hiirinft -----:-_
NEW YOi^ (AP) - Jimmy Connors was on the rop, like a boxer trying to roll with the punches His stomach was upset, his toe was hurting the heat was oppressive and Ivan Lendl was serving rockete at him. This clearly was not a verv eo^ situation for the defending U.S. Open Tennis champion. ,
Connors and Lendl had split the first two sets of me mens singles final Sunday, but the tide was rolling the Czechs way in the third one. After losing the first set 3-6, he had salvaged the second 7-6 winning the tiebreaker 7-2. Lendl had a 5-4 lead in the third and was serving for the set. One more game and he would be just one set away from his first grand slam victory.
It never happened.
Inexplicab y, Lendl committed a double fault Like a ballon that suddenly springs a leak, all of the air seeM out of the steely-eyed Czech. Connors suddenly had the opening he needed and the 31-year-old didnt miss it.
When he double faulted on set point, 1 said. Well, if hes going to do that, hes going to give me a chance, said Connors.
It was an invitation to take back the match and Lendl didnt have to ask Jimmy twice.
I started getting in there and jumping on my returns more, Connors said. I hit them more solid and started doing something with them instead of playing him back.
Connors won that game and the next one. taking the set that he had been just a Lendl serve away from losing, 7-5.
My spirits lifted about 50 or 60 percent and 1 think his dropped a little from that point. Connors noted. He played a pretty auful game to lose the set. He missed three or four balls for no reason.
Connors insight was on target. The double fault had taken its toll on Lendl,
T never really recovered from having set point and double faulting, he said. "If you make a mistake like that, you really don t deserve to win "
No problem there. He didn't win, Connors came out roaring in the fourth set. breaking Lendl's service in the second game.
I tried to jump on everything and get on top right away, said Connors, who now had his fifth U S Open title and the 100th singles championship of his brilliant career insight.
For rne to come out and break him right a wav (in the fourth set) was important. I played a pretty good game and he missed two backhands just for no reason. I felt at that time, 'Well, if you're going to do that, I m going to try to hit one by you.' 1 jumped on him right away and he kind of sank at that point "
In the third game, Connors blitzed Lendl with three of the six aces he had in the match. The Czech, who had not lost a single set in the tournament untii Sunday, simply folded, losing the set 0-6.
After double faulting. I never recovered men-tahy, hesaid, 1 should not have lost the third set ' Connors said he could understand the double fault Mthering Lendl but thought he could have come back.
You have to shake it off and go back and do it'' he said, You can't just fall apart. I double faulted a couple of times in the Wimbledon final last vear I thought about it. but you shake it out of your mind Lendl, however, never did.
A year ago, Connors came to the Open on a roll with the Wimbledon crown in hand. "This year 1 told myself, if I could have half the vear I had last year (I'd be happy). This is the half.''
It did not come easy, Connors was nursing a sore toe on his right foot which he injured early in the
tournament and re-injured during his semifinal victory ever Bill Scanlon. Then there was the upset stomach which forced jiim to leave the court during the second set. Then there was the punishing heat with temperatures at courtside reading 102 degrees And then there was Lendl, pursuing his lirst maior tournament victory.
But he overcame them all for his .second straight Upen crown.
Despite earning $657,(Xhj this year and more than $4 million in his career, Lendl has had to battle the stigma of never winning a major title.
"I will be back next year at Wimbledon and the French and here and I will be trying again." he .said Lendl s problem with winning a major is similiar to the one .Martina .Navratilova faced on the women s side of the Open, richest of all Grand I'rix tournaments.
Navratilova had won the other majors but never had claimed an Open title. That was whv her fi-l (i- j rubout of Chris Evert Lloyd m .Saturdav's women's final was so satisfying.
Everyone was putting pressure on me. but 1 kept, telling n)\selt that I was going to enjoy the tournament, win, lose, or draw .\nd 1 did." she said. "I was really intense during the whoie match and 1
wasn',t going to let It get away ."
There was no danger ol that happening as Navratilova dominated Lloyd and claimed the S120.000 first prize as well as a wdii.doo bonus from Playtex for winning her third title on three different surfaces this year.
Navratilova also shared the women s doubles crown with Pam .Shriver. beating Rosalyn Fairbank and Candy Reynolds (i-7, 6-i, d-.j, picking up an
additional $24,ddd for that title.
Championship Form
Jimmy Connors hits a return during his U.S. Open championship match against Ivan Lendl at Flushing
Braves Fall Behind By Three
Dodgers' Rookie Grows Up
Meadows Sunday. Connors defended his title with a 6-3, 6-7, 7-5, 6-0 victory over Lendl. (AP Laserphoto)
By The Associated Press A major league pennant race will make a rookie grow up quickly.
Los Angeles Manager Tommy tasorda banked on that Sunday in a crucial Na
tional League West game with Atlanta. His faith in Dodger youth paid off in a wild 7-6 victory that lifted LA three games ahead of the Braves.
Rookie R.J, Reynolds squeeze bunted home the
Carner Finally Gets Lead
IND, Ore. (AP) - to win in sudden-death that
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -JoAnne Carner was alone in the lead only once in the $150,000 Portland Ping LPGA golf tournament.
That was when she sank a 35-foot birdie putt on thp first playoff hole Sunday to defeat Charlotte Montgomery and capture the $22,500 first prize.
Long putts aren't supposed
to win in sudden-death playoffs, Carner said. Golfers are supposed to play cautiously, trying for pars and waiting for the other player to make a mistake.
You only go for a birdie when Its inside 15 feet, said Carner, a veteran of 14 such playoffs in her 13-year professional career. Other than
that you lag it (and go for par).
I lagged it very well, she said.
Carner, a winner for the second time this year and 39th time in her LPGA career, said she had trouble throughout the first few rounds with her putting and her husband stayed awake all Saturday
Lye Chases Rainbow To First PGA Victory
TTTAM /An. ____ i i M.. .
SUnON, Mass. (AP) - In a way, Mark Lye felt as if he were chasing a rainbow or a dream on the pro golf tour.
Sometimes winning feels out of reach and I felt that way starting today, Lye said Sunday.
However, for a change. Lyes feeling was wrong.
After seven years on the PGA tour, the last couple especially frustrating at times. Lye earned his first victory, winning the $350,000 Bank of Boston Classic.
However, it took a storybook finish, the biggest PGA comeback of the year, for the one-time San Jose State All-American to finally break
Sports Calendar
Editor's me: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Softball Fall Recreation Jims Tires vs. Thomas Mobile Homes
Grogs vs. Mikes Party Center Spirits vs. J.D. Dawson State Credit vs. Jimmys 66 Sunnyside Eggs vs. Morgan Printers 14th Street vs, Baileys Tennis
Greenfield Academy at Greenville (3:30 p.m.)
Tuesdays Sports Volleyball Ayden-Grifton at Conley (4 p.m.) Farmville Central at Eastern School for the Deaf North Pitt at Rose (4 p.m.)
West Craven at Greene Central (4 p.m.)
Tennis Roanoke at Bertie Northern Nash at Rose (3:30 p.m.)
Greene Central at North Duplin Currituck at Washington Soccer Goldsboro at Rose (4 p.m.)
dry
after
one
into the victory column It has been a long spell, Lye, 30, said firing a 7-under-par 64, shot off the course record, for a 72-hole total of 273 at Pleasant Valley Country Club..
Trailing by eight strokes as John Mahaffey threatened his tournament record with 201 after three rounds. Lye fashioned eight birdies, including three on the last four holes, and one bogey.
On the 72nd hole. Lye said, he was so pumped up that he shot a 240-yard 2-iron over the green. Then he chipped up to within five feet of the cup. ' A diabetic with jittery nerves on the course. Lye said that as he leaned over the ball, his hands shook and I thought it was the most important putt of my life.
The putt turned out to be just that. It put him 11-under for the tournament. Then came a long wait, more than an hour. He sweated it out in the clubhouse, eating fruit, hitting some balls on the practice range and then on the putting green.
I was getting ready for a possible playoff, but hoping all the time, Lye said. I was on
the putting green and someone told me Jim Thorpe had a short putt (just under five feet) on the final hole. Then I heard the moans, no cheers. I finally had won,
Then, looking at a huge blowup of his biggest check, for $63,(KX), Lye shook his head and said;
You know, one tournament Ive almost thought to be out of reach has been the Masters. Now Ive qualified for it. Mahaffey, winless since 1981, just missed on one of his favorite courses. After breaking a prolonged slump by capturing the 1978 PGA championship, he won won here a short time later.
However, he took a final-round 73 for a total of 274 failing to become the first player to win at Pleasant Valley since the tour first stopped in 1965.
Mahaffey finished in a tie with Thorpe and Sammy Rachels, each earning $26,133. Thorpe and Rachels each survived steamy and windy conditions with closing 69s.
Fuzzy ZoelleL who started he final round tied with Joe Inman at 204, three strokes behind Mahaffey, took a 71 for fifth place at 275.
night trying to find out why.
He concluded it milst be the pressure points on her putting grip. She said she made the adjustment and had only one bogey on the final round.
Meanwhile, she had a 25-foot birdie putt to go with her winning 35-footer.
Montgomery, who never had finished higher than sixth before Sunday, felt a mixture of disappointment and encouragement.
It is a good finish, she said. But its disapppointing not to win. I know I can win, I was awfully close today. Carner and Montgomery finished the regulation 54 holes at 4-under-par 212.
Montgomery, a 25-year-old from Stockholm, Sweden, had the lead to herself until her tee shot hit the water on the 17th hole.
I pushed my drive to the right and it went down a hill and into the water, she said.
She salvaged a bogey on the hole, but slipped into a tie with Carner.
Carner began the last round in a tie for fourth place, four shots behind Montgomery, the
second-round leader. Carner had three birdies on the first nine holels and finished with a .final round, 2-under-par 70 on the par-72, 6,233-yard Columbia-Edgewater Country club course.
Montgomery was 2-over 74 in the final round. She had started the day at 6-undef-par.
The 44-year-old Carner, born in Kirkland, Wash., and now living in Palm Beach, Fla,, boosted her 1983 earnings to $278,684. best on the tour. She won the Chevrolet World Championship three weeks ago.
Montgomery, a former Arizona State golfer who lives in Scottsdale, Ariz who had won only $12,500 this year before this tournament, won $14,700 by finishing second.
Sharon Barrett and Alice Miller finished tied for third at 2-under-par 214. Barrett could have found herself involved in the playoff. She was four under par through 17 holes, but hit her tee shot on the 18th too close to a tree trunk and wound up with a double bogey to fall out of contention.
Cannon To Begin Prison Sentence
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Billy Cannon, a Louisiana football star who was named the nations best college player in 1958, begins serving a five-year sentence for counterfeiting today at a federal prison in Texarkana, Texas.
Because Cannon has cooperated so far with authorities, U.S. marshals said he would be allowed to travel unescorted to the minimum-security prison, where he will have to serve
almost two years before becoming eligible for parole, must surrender by 2 p.m.
Cannon, 46, got the maximum punishment - five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine after pleading guilty.
winning, run in the ninth, capping a four-run Dodger rally to victory. Earlier in the inning, freshman Mike Marshall's two-run double tied the score.
"I don't ask kids how old they are," said Lasorda. who also used rookie first baseman Greg Brock and catcher Jack FimpJe. I just put them up and tell them to do the job. W'e're going to make men out of them real quick."
The Braves and Dodgers hav * m t in five series this season, with LA taking two-of-three each time.
Expos4. .Metso
Charlie Lea threw a six-hitter and set a team record with his eighth straight victory. Tim Wallach's two-run double was the biggest hit for Montreal, which leads the East by a half-game and finished it's most successful homestand ever with a 12-4 mark.
Lea. l,)-8, broke David Palmer's 1979 record for consecutive victories for a starter in to.ssing his fourth shutout this season,
"Baseball is such a game of luck, said Lea, "1 pitched some good games earlier in the year, probably as well as I have some of the games in this streak, and ended up losing," Phillies.'), Pirates;: Philadelphia staved on Montreal's heels when pinch-hitter Sixto Lezcano -who was acquired Sept. 1 from San Diego - broke a 3-3 tie with a single to right field, which Dave Parker booted to allow an insurance run to score. Someone from the stands then threw a battery at Parker.
Parker came running off the field as if to pull himself from the game, as he did when a similar incident occurred in a July 20, 1980 contest against Los Angeles. But first base umpire Dutch Rennert intercepted Parker, who apparently then changed his mind and decided to stay in the game.
"I've only got 19 or 20 days
left on my contract here and no one is going to intimidate me out there," said Parker, who is in the closing weeks ol a five-year contract.
Pittsburgh fell two games behind Montreal.
Cardinals 2, Cubs 1 Wilhe McGee's RBI single in the ninth - his second game^winning hit in three days of Cubs relief ace Lee Smith - was decisive, St. Louis is] ".games back.
"1 think Lee might be a little tired," said McGee. "But even if he is used a lot more often than not, he'll get you out."
Rick Reuschel. purchased by the Cubs two weeks ago from Class A (juad Cities and making his first major league start since the 1981 World Series - when he was with the Yankees - scattered six singles in six innings.
Reds 4, Padres 2
Cincinnati's Paul Householder homered and doubled to key the victorv. Rookie Jeff
Russell pitched a five-tiitter through 71-3 innings. Rus'^ell. who was called up from the minors on Aug, 9. had a no-hilter into the seventh inning-in his last outing against San Francisco but wound up losingonatwo-hitter.
Tony Gwynn rapped a first-inning single to extend his hitting streak to 20 games, one shy of the Padres dul) record set by Bobby Brown last month.
('iants3,.\stros2 Atlee Hammaker struck out 14 batters, a major-league season high and San Francisco rallied for its runs in tlio ninth.
Nolan Ryan, 13-7. struck out 11 and pitched four-hit ball until the Giants began their winning rally.
Pinch-hitter Bergman singled home two runs and Tom O'Malley drove in the winning run with a pinch-hit single.
Byner, Harris Barn Honors Against State
Earnest Byner, who carried the ball 17 times for 97 yards and the winning touchdown, was named the WTBS Most Valuable Player for East Carolina University in the Pirates 22-16 victory over North Carolina State Saturday.
A $1,000 scholarship will be donated to general scholarship fund at ECU in Byner's name.
Senior All-America candidate Clint Harris was named ECAC Division 1-A defensive player of the week for his performance against the Wolfpack. Harris recovered a furnbleat the Pirates' 10 vard
line with 2:46 lelt in the game to kill an NCSC scoring tin eat and finished the night with si.x tackles and six assists,
Byner was also named honorable mention offensive player of the week for the ECAC,
The Piratis open their home slate this weekend at Ficklen Stadium against Murrav State.
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TOBACCO
$5.00 $4.00
$3.00
$2.00
$1.00
5.00 4.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
5.00 400
3.00
2.00
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5.00 4,00
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4 PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR
DEPARTMENT A
Senior Field Crops
Ro^ Cobb, Agricnltartl EzteiwoD Agent, tnd Mrs. Betty Camway, Directors
2. Smoking Leaf (H)......... 5.00
3. Cutter (Cl........... 5.00
4 Lugs..................... 5.00
. . CORN -
Best 10 ears hybrid: 0 IBlrf
5 -Adapted yellow hybrid.............6.00 $5.00 M.OO $3.00 $2.00 SI.00
6. Adapted white hybrid.............. 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 1.00
Select uniform size ears with well filled tips, free of insect and weather
damage, and straight rows of well-developed kernels.
COTTON
Best three stalks of cotton, with open bolls attached;
7. Any adapted variety ...................$4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
SMALL GRAIN
One-half peck:
8. Oats, adapted variety..........................^ioO $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
9. VtTieat, adapted variety.........................$4.00 $3.00 $2.00 1.00
10. Rye. adapted variety...........................$4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
SOYBEANS
One-half peck:
11. Soybeans, adapted variety......................S4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
PEANUTS
One gallon in shell:
12 Any adapted variety....................$5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
HAY
One standard bale:
13. Lespedeza...........................................I3.O0 $2.00 $1.00
14. Peanut.............................................. 3 O0 2.00 1.00
15. Coastal Bermuda.................................... 3.OO 2.OO 1.00
JUNIOR FIELD CROPS
TOBACCO
Three bundles to be shown in each class:
16. Leaf (B)...........................$6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
17. Smoking Leaf (H)..... 6.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 1.00
18. Cutter (C).............. 6.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 1.00
19. Lug (X)........ 6.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 1.00
CORN
Best 10 ears hybrid:
20. Adapted yellow hybrid.............$6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00
21. Adapted white hybrid.................... 5.00 4.00 3.OO 2.00 1.00
Amount Offered This Section $299.00
DEPARTMENT B"Horticulture
N. Uzzell, Aaaosicate Agricnltaral EztensioD Agent, and Mrs. Betty Camway, Directors FRUITS AND NUTS
ApplesFive
22. Anv named variety
............$1.50
$1.25
$1.00
Pears-Five
23. Anv named variety
...j.....,... 1.50
1.25
1.00
Figg-Five
24. .Any named variety
............ 1.50
1.25
1.00
GrapeawPlaU Consisting of One Pint Berries
25. Scuppemong or other white variety
of muscadine grapes................ I'so....... 1.25
26. James. br other black variety
of muscadine grapes............... 1.50 1.25
27. Black walnuts, plate, one pound 1.50 1.25
Pecans-PlaU, One Pound
28. Stuart............................ j 50 1.25
29. Schley, or other named variety ],50 1.25
31. Jewel
32. Porta Rica
32A. Georgia Reds
Sweet PotatoesPeck
5.00 4.00 3.00
5.00 4.00 3.00
5.00 4.00 3.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
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{ PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR
When on exhibit in the ring, each animal must be under halter and in charge of owner or employee.
Each exhibitor may enter one animal per class to compete for premiums.
Premium money will be paid on Danish system of judging on a 4-2-1 basis.
Animals placing in the Uue ribbon group will receive premium money not to exceed $15.00. Animals placing in the red ribbon group will receive 50% of this amount. Animals in the white ribbon group will receive 25% of this amount.
139.
140.
141.
Steer1 year and under 2 years...................Premium and Ribbon
Steer6 months and under 1 year.................Premium and Ribbon
CowOver 2 years....................... Premium and Ribbon
142. Heifer1 year and under 2 years..................Premium and Ribbon
143. Heifer6 months and under 1 year. ..............Premium and Ribbon
SHEEP
Judging will beg g at 2:30 p.m., Tuesday,
Each exhibitor may enter one animal per class to compete for premiums. Premium money will be paid on Danish system of judging on a 4-2-1 basis. Aninuds placing in the blue ribbon group will receive premium money not to exceed $15. Animals placing in the red ribbon group will receive 50% of this amount. Animals in the white ribbon group will receive 25% of this amount.
144. Ram1 year and under 2.........................Premium and Ribbon
145. RamUnder 1 year..............................Premium and Ribbon
146. Ewe1 year and under 2.........................Premium and Ribbon
147. Eweunder 1 year........................... Premium and Ribbon
148. Pair of lambs under 1 year........................Premium and Ribbon
GOATS
Judging will begin on at 3 p.m., Tuesday,
Each exhibitor will be paid on Danish system of judging on a 4-2-1 basis.
Animals placing in the blue nbbon group will receive premium money not to exceed $15.00. Animals placing in the red ribbon group will receive 50% of this amount. Animals placing in the white ribbon group will receive 25% of this amount.
149. Junior KidBom after April 1,1983...........Premium and Ribbon
Senior Kid-Bom between Jan. 1,1983 and
March 31,1983................................Prmium and Ribbon
Junior Yearling-Bora between May 1,1982, and
December 31,1982............... Premium and Ribbon
Senior Yearling-Bom between October 18,1981 and April 30,1982............................Premium and Ribbon
150.
151.
152.
Educational Exhibits
Judges Will Determine The Worthiness Of All Educational Displays For Premiums No ready prepared exhibit that has been brought in and erected will be eligible to compete for premiums. Only those educational exhibits constmcted and erected by the various groups will be eligible for competition in this Fair.
Scot* Card Used In Determining Quality of Exhibit
1. Presentation la) SimpUdty
Is the theme and purpose of the exhibit easily
understood?........................................
(b) Urganization
(b) Is the objective of the exhibit defnitely
and clearly shown?.............. ....... ...........
Id Attractiveness abd General Appearance.............
Id) Originality.........................................
Educational Value
(a) Does the exhibit inspire, motivate and suggest
ways to take action?................................
(b) Does the exhibit stimulate thinking?.................
(c) Dbes the exhibit suggest change in attitude?.........
Total...........................................
The total of all points earned in an exhibit will be the score of the exhibit.
Vocational Occupations
PITT COUNTY SCHOOLS Carl Toot, Director
Entries in this department close Monday of Fair Week at 5:30 p.m. The purpose of these exhibits is to show the kind of community program being carried on through the Department of Vocational Education. The Pitt County occupational education teachers will base their displays on the subjects which they are promoting.
f'-st Prize........................................ 5100.00
Second Prize................................................ 90 6o
Third Prize.
80.00
Fourth Prize........................... ^OOO
Fifth Prize.................................. 60.00
Sixth Prize........................................... , 50 qq
All others will receive $45.00 if the judges consider them worthy.
Total offered in this section (six exhibits) .... $495.00
158. Vocational Education
MEMBER
NILS
mM
^AeSTATE
manNOHOiMl
riWTHlONIYOUWW
Estate Realty Co.
$
JARVIS J. MILLS DORLIS B. MILLS
1304 CHARLES ST.
GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834
PHONES 752-5058' 752-3647
H
Barnes Gulf Service
Complte Tun* Up and Air Condition Strvic*
DIESEL FUEL
Phone 756-2933 Hob*rt W. Barn**, Owner
2312 Memorial Drive Greenville, North Corolino 27834
281
DO^ McGLOHON
INSURANCE HINES AGENCY, INC. GREENVILLE, N. C.
Complimmtt off
PARKER'S BARBECUE
SOUTH MEMORIAL DRIVE
GREENVILLE
eo
O
o
(0
nEtAllYRtHEerOR
Pitt County's Home Newspaper" GREENVILLE, N. C.
Complimonts off
WHITE CONCRETE CO.
PHONE PL8-1181
GREENVILLE, N. C.
t
(0
Evans Seafood Market
Receiving Fresh N. C. Shrimp & Crabmeai
We Also Have Scallops Clams Soft Shell Crabs Lobster Tails King Crab Legs Jumbo Shrimp
Serving Pitt County 36 Years
203 W. 9th St.
752-2332
Kinsto
Fried S
I
Also Ser 7di
16 PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR
Greenville Tobacco Co.
513 W. 10th Street
Compliments of
Farley, Prescott, Mizelle & Co,
Greenville, N. C.
Stnviu
W. Second Street Ayden, N. C.
Briley's Exxon Service
Phone 756-1467
Greenville, N. C.
3213 S. Memorial Drive
SIMffiUFVRNiniREeO.
Furniture of Quality
AYDEN, NORTH CAROLINAPlanter National Bank & Trust Co.
Ardn. N. C.
EMBER FEDERAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
All Kinds of Building Materials Luml^r. DuPont Paints, Cement, Plaster Products UM V c 7Roofing, Windows, Doors, Hardware HWY.S ll Tel. 746 6116 AYDEN, N.C.
NORtNMtnNrs
VARIETY DEPARTMENT STORE, INC. 225 SOUTH LEE ST.
PHONE 746 3613 BOX 67
AYDEN, NORTH CAROLINA
WENUMNM$URMeEeO.,lM.
GENERAL INSURANCE Phone: Res. 746-6386-Office 746-3761 103 E. THIRD STREET AYDEN. N. C.
C/5
fi
s-
WGHB-WRQR
Farmville
it
B
S9
(JQ
it
Hi
(I
QC
it
it
Hargett's Drug Store
2500 Charles StreetOakmont Professional Plaza
Phormocist on duty six daysDUKE BUICK-PONTIAC INC
HIGHWAY 264 BY-PASS
BUSINESS PHONE 753-3137
Farmville, North Carolina
Res. 753-3140Shop-Eze FOODLAND
OREENVIUE, N. C.
WEST END SHOPPING CENTER
....... r
Greenvllle TV & Appliance, Inc.
"THE MONEY SAVERS"
200 East Greenville Blvd.
Greenville, N. C.
756-2616
W Pve oomplrte rvloe
_Malcolm Williams. Jr.. Vice PreslriftntDixie Queen Seafood~ Restaurant
WintervllU756-2333
George Hines, Owner
Coca Cola Bottling Co. of GreenvilleTucker Warehouse
Designation #514 753-4128
Farmvilla, N. C.
Ralph C. Tucker, Jr.
075 AAobil* Honrn For Sal*
NO DOWN PAYMENTr up
payments of SI94.79 on I9ii furnlshod Connor mobllt homo 12x60, 2 bedrooms. Must bo movod from present lot. Call 746-4971.
NO MONEY DOWN. VA financing Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes, 756-0333.
on OPPORTUNITY
TILIZER and. HAlkrAIIE
Complete term pply. Established 2t years.
mlly has other
Interests. Call 750-0702.
ruUR SEASONS IkEitAUkANt
NO MONEY DOWN VA 1M% Fiiuncing
New 1984 SInfllewide, 2 bedrooms bath, cathedral celling. Carpeted appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments less than $140 per month.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
We Love America Special NO MONEY DOWN!
SINGLE WIDE $8,495
DOUBLE WIDE...$17,995
(Loaded)
Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, AAonkeys Sorry No In laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard
12.75%
homes.
0333.
FINANCING on seli^ Call Conner Homes, 756-
12X65 2 bath, central air, screened back porch on corner lot in town 756-7743.
1952 SPARTAN TRAILER
aluminum, 1 bedroom, suitabie for
newly married couple. $1,600 cash 758 0183.
1970 COBURN, 12x63, 2 bedrooni V/2 bath, 3 ton air conditioner $5,500. 756-6171 or 756 2436.
NATIONAL, good condition 778 after 6 p. m
1971
must seil. Call 752-6:
1971 12x60 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, refrigerator, stove air, and deck. Good condition. $6500 758 0646
1973 CHARMER. 12x64, 3 bedrooms IW baths, unfurnished hook ups. Asking
$7500. Call 756 2818
1973 STAR - 12x64, 2 bedrooms, baths, newly carpeted. Excellent condition. Already set up 757 7194 days, 752 7925 after 6
Call
1976 Conner Mobile Home. Take over payments of $1 lO.OO per month Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333.
1979 CONNER Mobile Home. 65' 12'. Take over payments of $199.16 per month. Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756-0333.
1979 TAYLOR. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, new furniture, new
carpeLcentral heat and air, sun deck. $14,500. $2500 down Owner
will finance balance for 10 years $216.22 per month. Located In Shady Knoll Trailer Park Call 752 2366 or 757 0451.
1980 14X58 Champion mobile home 2 bedrooms. Good condition. Quiet private lot. 756-7077.
1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068
3 BEDROOM DOUBLEWIDE
AAarshfield trailer, 2 baths, living room, kitchen, dining area, den washer dryer, central air, furnished, anchor fenced backyard 6 years old. On 1 acre plus. State Road 1526. 752 7151 8 to 5, Mrs Braxton, 756 5348 6 to9p.m.
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.
077 Musical Instruments
DRUM REPAIR AND tuning. 756 7437.
Call
LIKE NEW but '/i price! Snare drum, case, stand, and 2 sets ot sticks. $175. 752 5528.
PIANO A ORGAN Distributors. All major brands at discounted prices. 329 Arlington Boulevard. 355 6002
078
Sporting Goods
RUGER SUPER Black Hawk 44 Magnum Best offer. 752 6706.
082 LOST AND FOUND
FOUND SIBERIAN
the vicinity of Winterville. 756 97.
KY mix in lord Street,
LOST: MALE ORANGE and white neutered cat (looks like Morris) Last seen in Lake Ellsworth. Re ward 11 756 3397 or 756 2041.
LOST; Silver poodle with red collar in vicinity of Lewis Street. Reward offered. 758 0962 after s.
MISSING; BLONDE MALE Cocker Spaniel. Closely groomed, last seen in Lake Ellsworth Subdivision on August 29. If found, please call 756 8577 after 5.
085 Loans And Mortgages
WE PURCHASE FIRST or second mortgages nationwide. Diversified AAortgage Co. Atlanta 404/992-2035
093
OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS & INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
GRILL/CONVENIENCE STORE
located on heavily traveled street. Attractive new facility, near 3,000 or more college girls.
EXERCISE A FIGURE SALON
located in good area of prosperous city. New facility with repeat cllentelle. Opportunity for second income.
INVESTMENT AND Development opportunity located in rapidly growing resort area, oceanfront to sound with highway access.
MOBILE HOME PARK located near progressive city, 15 acres, 27 developed and rented spaces with room for 28 more. Financing
available.
MODERN RETAIL CLOTHING
store located In thriving city, gross sales ot more than $100,0(X) annually. Tremendous growth potential.
THRIVING COUNTRY WESTERN
business located in progressive city with very little competition In the
ownerr'Downtown Grmvi le. 75 seat restaurant, 30
LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris A Co., Inc. Financial A
Marketing Consultants. Serving the United States, w^ville, N.C. 757-0001, nights
109 HoumbFotSaIb
IMMACULATE HOME IN CITY. 1 slory masonite. Carport, fenced In backyard. Convenient to shopping and schools. Assume 9Vk% loan.
ffiraLnss' i
bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, formal areas. Only $59,600. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, AAary 756-997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
MODULAR HOME IN COUNTRY.
Sapclous ta. Taste-
MOBILE home PARTS and
-Service business for sale - at a price anyone can afford. 756-7743. RESTAURANT for sale
100 sMt
capacity, boildVng, land, and equipment. Turn key operation. Located less than 10 minutes from downtown Greenville. Call 758-0702 or 752 0310.
095 PROFESSIONAL
chimney sweep. Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney
102 Commercial Property
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE
for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000
square feet with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month lease re
quired. Call Clark-'Branch,' Real tors, 756-6336 or Ray Holloman
753 5147.
Over 1,400 square feet. _ kitchen and breakfast area, fully decoratedi 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, front porch, good siie lot. Low SSO-S. Call Oavls Realty 752 3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
NEAT AND
WELL-KEPT older home. About 18 miles from Greenville. 3 bedroom starter home. Wooded lot. Remodeled kitchen, large front porch, quiet neighborhood. Only $23,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
NO MONEY DOWN
That's right! We will build on your iw of mortgage money, no . all 758-3171 for
115
Lots For Sal*
hanrahan maooWs. w ..
a'. On state Road 1110 between Ayden and Griffon. Septic tank permit. 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.
117 Rosort Property For Sale
RESORT PROPERTY for sale trade. 4 apartment complex. _ bedrooms, I'/i baths, central heat and air. 415 Ocean Drive, Club Colony, Atlantic Beach. Asking $225,<)00. Will trade for '
Greenville area 757-0451.
RIVER
le for property in Call 752-2366 or
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.
WASHINGTON, NC. 5 river front homes priced to sell. $57,500 $130,000. Call Buckman Realty.
lot. Plen red tape
Darrell.
OLD FARM HOME in the country. Needs love and tender care! Less than 10 miles from Greenville. 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, family room with fireplace, central heat. About '/i acre. Home appraised for $30,000. Call Oavls Realty 752-3000,
Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
OWNER MUST SELLI Quality can be detected in this custom built home on wooded corner lot. Winterville School District. Brick
106
Farms For Sale
100 ACRE FARM - 1 mile from Sunshine Garden Center. Suited for farm or development. 756-5891 or
752 3318.
109
Houses For Sale
ASSUMABLE 8Va% INTEREST bedroom brick, Stantonsburg Road Low payments (FmHA). 758-0495.
ASSUME FHA 11i/i% LOAN Payment $349.07 PITI, Well kept mmaculate Brick Veneer Ranch. Located near hospital. Approxi mately 1,260 square feet. Corner wooded lot, trees, deck, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, extra insulation added. You must see this attractive home. Only $52,900. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144.
ATTENTION INVESTORSI Brick
Veneer Duplex. Each side rents at $200. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen.
utility, family room, heat pump.
Da ----- -------
$48,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144
ATTENTION INVESTORS. Assume f'^% loan. Brick Veneer Ranch home has approximately 1,294 square feet. 3 bedrooms, I'/ij
; baths.
lots of storage, living room and Almost new gas heat-
dining room er. 1 car garage, Ian Ts Real
Call DavFs Realty 752 3000,'Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144
ge front porch. 752 --
ATTRACTIVE MASONITE HOME.
Excellent neighborhood, Winterville School District. Fenced In backyard, approximately 1,562 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, den with fireplace, kitchen with all extras, formal areas. Low $60's. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144.
BRICK VENEER RANCH
surrounded by trees. Established neighborhood, quiet and peaceful area Winterville School District. Approximately 1,375 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 1'/i baths, central heat and air, woodstove. Reduced $3500
to only $53,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746 6656 or 756 4144.
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, I'/j baths. Weathington Heights. 756-3968, 752 4661,756-3134.
BY OWNER. Extra nice with 1 grooms, 2 baths, family room and fireplace, fenced yard. 832 East Main Street, Winterville. $56,500. Appointments only. 756-7777. No Realtors.
CHERRY OAKS $10,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3 bedroom, 2'/j bath Owner. 756 8073.
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours! Assume loan. Payments less than $400 per month. 3 bedrooms, central heat, woodstove, deck, large lot. $34,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144.
ELMHURST - Assume S'/i FHA loan, 3 bedroom brick ranch, large kitchen, formal areas, fireplace, heat pump, garage. Low $60's. 756*4987.
FOR SALE by owner. 6 room brick house. $25,000. 109 North Jarvis Street. Call 752-5042.
FOUR BEDROOMS, two baths, formal dining, family room, corner lot all for $56,500. Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, nights 758-4476 - 752 3647.
GET AWAY FROM IT ALLI I Enjoy privacy and nature as you use your own creative ability to bring out the charm in this country home -setting on 1'/j acres with fruit and pecan trees. Garden galorel Over 1,800 squre fee), 4 bedrooms, family room, garage. $55,500. Call Oavls Realty 752 3000, Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144.
Veneer with double car garage. 3 bedrooms, 2 full bahts. $60's. No
reasonable offer refused. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
PERFECT IN EVERY detail de scribes this one of a kind home in Lynndale. Custom built cabinets, bookcases and molding. Hardwood floors, four large bedrdoms, tremendous playroom, formal living and dining, library, 3'/5 baths. $147,800.
THERE
IS STILL time to enjoy summer fun If you act now! This home on the river will delight your family and friends. Greatroom, four bedrooms, screened porch bulkhead, pier, and boat basin $140,000.
946-2112.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT. Also 2 and 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 day Friday 9-5. Call 756 '
6-9933.
121 Apartments For Rent
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.
UNIVERSITY AREA. Large corner lot with attractive brick home in excellent condition. Three bedrooms, one bath, living and dining areas, plus 2 glassed-in porches and circular drive. $59,900
RIVERHILLS. Enjoy country livin< in this quiet subdivision and sti send the children to city schools Three bedroqms, 2 baths, formal rooms and den. $62,900.
CLUB PINES. See this one of a kind home In this popular area. Coi lot and private back yard Greatroom, formal dining, four large bedrooms and double garage $89,900.
Jeannette Cox Agency
Inc
756-1322 Anytime!
SITUATED ON A BEAUTIFUL
wooded lot In the country. Quiet neighborhood. Home approximately 1,560 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious and gracious den with fireplace and dining area, deck. Tastefully deocrated In earth tones. Heat pump almost new! Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
SMALL 3 BEDROOM house, beach type cottage, 3 years old, lot size 165x144, near Ham's Crossroads on SR 1782. $18,000. Can only be seen on Saturdays. Write Jack Hannah PO Box 51, Lowland, NC 28552.
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE by owner - 4 bedroom, 2'/i baths, den with fireplace and kitchen combination with breakfast bar, formal areas $64,900 ( 97k loan assumable). Call 756-8745 after 5 p.m.
212 ARLINGTON
bedrooms, 1 bath, vestment or couple be Reduced to $29,500. Real Estate, 752-2615.
CIRCLE, 3
excellent In ginners home Bill Williams
BEDROOMS, I'/j bath, approxi mately 1800 square feet, large wooded lot. 10 miles from Greenville. 1-447-2096 for details.
113
Land For Sale
'/i ACRE plus wooded lot and house payed road in Grimesland
$5,500. 756-1795 after 5 p.m.
WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank Serious inquiries only 746-4669.
115
Lots For Sale
THE PINES In Ayden. 135" x llo corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Ml 746-2166 for
tight Aoseley-Ma -full details.
ircus Realty at
.07 ACRES, septic tank and well. 320.13' frontage. State Road 1765, 1766 - Loop Road oft Brick Kiln Road. Reduced to $10,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2615.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S'^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Luptoii. Co,
HOME ON THE GOLF COURSE
Try to match this home tor location, price and condition. On the golf course with three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, kitchen with breakfast area, double garage, patio, wood deck. Ayden. Only $59,900.
CLUB PINES
beautiful ranch on a beautifully wooded lot. Great floor plan, Im-jressive foyer, great room with ireplace, formal dining room, breakfast area, three bedrooms, two baths, spacious screened porch. *-,500.
$84.
DFFUS REALTY INC.
756-5395
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE
2500 SO. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
Contact J"T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815
BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths, washer-dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. $310 per month. 752 2040 or 756-8904.
Cherry Court
s 2 bedroom towi
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I/i baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer-dryer
hook-ups, laundr room, sauna, tennis court, house and POOL. 752 1557
ndry
duo
DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wooded lot at Frog Level. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, Kitchen and living room, no pets allowed. $265 per month. 756-4624.
DUPLEX NEAR ECU. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, no pets. $235 per month. 752-2040.
EASTBROOK
AND
VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom
garden and townhouse apartments.
featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCY 1 or 2 beds. Weekly rates. Maid Service. Call 756 5555, Heritage Inn Motel.
2 bedrooms, central heat and air, carpeted, appliances furnished. Married couples only, no pets. References and deposit required. $325 per month. 758 2090or 756 7537.
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart-ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located just off lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
121 Apartments For Rent
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 at 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.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hookups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insula tion.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd. 756-5067
NEW DUPLEX, 2 bedrooms, near hospital. Call 752 4159.
NICE QUIET DUPLEX, carpet, appliances, air, hookups, nice yard. 756 2671 or 758 1543.
OAKMONT SQUARE
APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse ments. 1212 Redbanks Road washer, refrigerator, range,
Included. We also have Cable
Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ONE bedroom, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy
Williams, 756 7815.
ONE BEDROOM, appliances furnished, 10th Street, $100 per month. Call Ervin Gray after 7 p.m., 524 5042.
RENT FURNITURE; Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862.
SPACIOUS 2 bedroom duplex, fireplace, carpet, range, refrigerator, dishwasher furnished. 355-2432 after 5 p.m.
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABl
ILETV
Office hours 10a.m. toSp m Monday through Friday
I lie uttiiy nBiieciof. utBuiiviiie, n.o. Monoay, September 12 1983
121 Apartments For Rent
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-i hook-ups, cable TV, pool, house, playground. Near ECU.
Our Reputation Says It All A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
lyiO BEDROOM townhouse with firMiace, Shenandoah Village. $365 Call Lorelle at 756-6336.
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT
carpeted, central air and heat. $275
758 3311.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex. Uni versify area. No pets. $235 per >2 8179.
month. 756 4277or 752
122
Business Rentals
for lease, PRIME RETAIL of
office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only $3 60 per e fr- ------- -
square toot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348
MO SQUARE FEET available Will subdivide Call 756-5097 or 756 9315.
127
Houses For Rent
HOUSE FOR RENT. 3 bedrooms, bath. $340. Call 756 4808.
HOUSES AND Apartments country. 8 mniles suth Greenville.
746 3284 and 524 3180.
PROFESSIONAL PERSON rent house. Call 1 212 723 4571 between 4 and9p.m.
2 AND
Griffon.
1 524 4007
3 BEDROOM houses in Phone 1 524-4147, nights
3-4 BEDROOMS, 2 baths. Large yard quiet neighborhood. $350 monthly. Call 756-8160.
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
DOUBLEWIDE - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air. No pets. 756-4286.
2 BEDROOMS with air. $140. Students only. No pets, no children. 758 0745.
135 Office Space For Rent
LAW OFFICE for rent across the street from the Courthouse. Three rooms. Call 752 1138.
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams, 756-7815.
5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park ing. Call 758-2300days.
137 Resort Property For Rent
WINTERGREEN. VIP condo, 2 bedrooms, September, October, fall colors discount 60%. 752 1015.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SPECIAL Executive Desks
Reg. Price $259.00
60 xJO' beautiful walnut finish Ideal lor home or office Special Price
$>17900 TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S. Evans St.
757-2175
^ . , CREDIT & COLLECTION MANAGER
America s leading manufacturer of household brushes is seeking a career minded individual for a key position in our corporate headquarters.
This person will report directly to the VP-Finance and should have experience with a consumer products manufacturer as follows: Customer credit review, limit and approval; collection techniques and agencies: A/R Trial balances, delinquency reports, and related computer reports; analyse financial statement; familiarity with lock box procedures and operations.
Salary commensurate to experience and responsibility; complete benefit package. F.dse send resume with salary listing and requirements to:
EMPIRE BRUSHES INC.
Attention: Personnel Manager U.S. Highway 13 North Greenville, N. C. 27834
P.O. Box 1606 919-758-4111
- An Equal Opportunily Employtr
MOBILE
HOMES
WELL ESTABLISHED BEAUTY
Shop. Beautifully decorated, excellent equipment. An experinced operator can do well here.
More Than 50 Other Business and Real Estate Opportunities priced from $10,000 up, some with owner financing. For additional informa-tIon, In confidence, contact Harold VCreech, Business S, Real Estate Broker.
The Marketplace/ Inc
752-3666
WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
! chhmcy comes firti, then the llteplace, woodstove. hcatlno systems, etc. My experience and knowlcdft comes from 25 yssrs al working on chlmntya and iliepleces. This knowlc^ Is an asset to oni business. This is no sUMhw or oraonllghling job for us. Cleaning chimneys. Installing screens and caps and solvlng chimney problems Is our only business. Our reputation for prompt nod professional servkc was mads ovar the years from sallsHed cnstomers. Just ask your neighbor or friends. We are Insured and our work Is guaranteed. Call:
Gid Holloman
North Carolina's Original Chimney Sweep 753-3503 Day Or Night
NO IXmilNCI NICIMANY
We will teach you...
Do you havB a positive mental attitude
Do you desire to be successful
Are you able to follow directions explicitly
Do you desire to earn $2000 to $2500 per month
Tm Own H To YooreoN To Moo H A Try.
Apply in person only.
Absoiutoly no phone calls.
See E.J. Lacoste or Rickie Moore.
ASTIIM
IFORD ^
s8
C<Nti|i<8ny Tenth Sirael 8 284 By Pass
758-0114 Greenriile N C 27834
ATTENTION
VETERANS
VA 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 tONNER HOMES Today!
'why buy from CONNER?
25 years in the Mobne Home Business, 20 Years in Mobile Home Manufacturing, Conner Financed, Conner Service, Conner Insurance, Free Delivery and Set Up.
Greenville,
1 (Open Weeknights Until 10 P.M.) /tall 4 (Week-Ends Until 8 P.M.)
N.C.
M
M
FREE SKIRTING
616 W. Greenville Blvd. Greenville. N.C.
756-03331
M
FREE STEPS
19
142 Roommate Wanted
QUIET.RESPONSIBLE roommate needed. $100 plus halt utilities. Call 758 6902 aHer 6:00.
FEAAALE ROOMMATE wanted fF
3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge. Pool, tennis courts and sauna. Call 756-9491.
FEMALE ROOMMATE to shari house. University area. Private bedroom. Clean, quiet, air condi tioned. 758-7026 after 6 p.m.
LOOKING FOR AAATURE male student to share room in nice home, shared bathroom. 2 blocks from
campus. Call Kyle, 758-6708 between 6 and 7 p.m. only.
$50 DEPOSIT, '/2 rent and utilities. Call Cindy 758-7042 until 3, 757 1073 nights.
144 Wanted To Buy
HOME OWNERS/BUILDERS
"Can't sell your house"? You talk, we listen. Private party. 752-4856.
^rchlng for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
144 Wanted To Buy
iiJERCEDES-SL 230, 250, 280, 350, or 450. Must be excellent with air. Send honest description; best price and picture fo: Mercedes, 6541 Raeford Road, Fayetteville, NC 28304
VOLKSWAGEN Rabbit Diesel wanted. Must be clean and well maintained. 752 4856.
WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 756 8615. '
YOUNG FAMILY looking for house w land in country. i fo 3 acres District.
758 0157 days, 746 2574 nights, ask for John.
148
Wanted To Rent
WANTED:
752 1333
2 car garage to rent
2 CHRISTIAN ladies seeking off campus housing References pr vided Reply to PO Box 36156, Fa NC 28303 or 919 484 2749 after 5.
-ay.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
W-A-N-T-E-D!
Experienced TV Repair Person for established television and appliance firm. Excellent opportunity and good benefits.
Call 756-3240 For Interview
WOODWORKERS
WE ARE AGAIN EXPANDING OUR MILLWORK OPERATION AND ARE TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR EXPERIENCED WOODWORKERS WITH MINIMUM OF 2 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
1-Malntenance worker with experience in maintaining woodworking machinery.
2-Sash & Door workers experienced in operating Tenon & Mortising machines.
2-Cabinet-makers with experience in Custom Cabinet work. *
2-Formica applicators with experience in applying & fitting plastic cabinet tops.
1-Moulder set-up and feeder for Woods Moulder with at least 3 years experience.
Wage compensurate with experience and ability to produce quality woodwork. Paid hospital & life insurance, holidays, vacation & profit-sharing.
STEPHENSON MILLWORK CO.. INC. P.O. BOX 699 WILSON. N.C. 27893
a
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FOR RENT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL
parktownhomes
Brand ne* lu<urv apa-tmenls located less than i mile iiehmd su'qical cenler
Occupancy Mid-October
2 Large Bedrooms r. balds Ther mooane Windows E 300 Ene-gy E'fi-cieni Heal Pumss Pabos Anth Pnvale Fence Washc" Drye- Hooi ub5. Kitchen Abpliances Cu-.lom Built Cabinets Beaun'ui I'jivdual Williamsburg Exleno's 53-10 M- th
CALL 752-6415
Mon. Thru Fri. 9-5
OnMiv,
ttZI,
iim
TIPTON & ASSOC.
UNIVERSITY AREA. Two story home featuring over 1800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, carport. $60,000.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION in
Club Pines, 18th Century Georgian that features 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, large great room and over 2000 square feet. 90s.
PRICE REDUCED on this home under construction in Horseshoe Acres. Traditional 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with lots of extras-crown molding, chair railing, extra large lot, $62,500.
EASTWOOD-105 Templeton. 11V2% VA loan assumption. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, new paint interior and exterior, new carpet. Better hurry on this one. $63,000.
756-6810
HOMES FOR SALE
264 By-pass West
Living room, large kitchen with eating area, den, 2 bedrooms, l'/!baths, screened porch, utility room, garage. Lot 125 x 210. $50,000
909 Forbes Street 3 bedrooms, living room, dm-ing pefit and
backVfpl, Vifrall heat and M)lli/olUM0
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
TURNASE
REAL ESTATE ANB INSURANCE AGENCY
Get More With Les Home 756-1179
m
REALTOe*
752-2715
or
752-3459
30 Years Experience
HOMESFOR SALE
SEVERAL NICE LOTS & TRACTS OF LAND TO BUY, SELL OR RENT CONTACT
D.D. Garrett Agency
752-4476
752-7756
752-1764
Lexington Square Townhomes
Near The Greenville Athletic Llub
Model Open Daily 1-5 P.M.
Phase II, Unit 31
2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered
J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.
355-2286
i
SCOREBOARD
TANKirWUlU
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Monday, September 12,1983 13by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Baseball Standings League Leaders
Bv The AfMclaied Preii AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pci. GB Baltimore 85 55 607
Detrwt 81 62 .566 5>j
New York 79 63 556 7
Milwaukee 79 64 .552 Vi
Toronto 79 66 545 8's
^ton 69 74 .483 17'j
Cleveland 64 79 448 22'j
WEST DIVISION Chicago 84 59 587 -
Kansas City 67 75 .472 164
Tern 67 77 .465 174
Oal^nd 67 78 462 18
California 64 79 .448 20
Minnesota 61 83 424 234
Seattle 55 87 385 28 4
Saturday's Games Toronto7, Oakland 5 Cleveland 8, Boston 6 Minnesota 6, Kansas City 3 Detroit 4. Mi^aukeeO Baltimore 8-3, New York 4-1 Seattle 4, Texas 2 Chicago7,.California6. Winnings Sunday's Games Toro>.',o 16, Oakland6 Baltimore 5, New York 3 Boston 4, aevelandl Kansas City 3. Minnesota I Mroit 6, Milwaukee 4 Texas 2, Seattle 1 Chicago 5, California 4.10 innings Monday's Games Cleveland (Blyleven 7-9) at Detroit (WCOX8-10), (n)
Baltimore (Palmer 4-4) at Boston (Eckerslev7-I2),(n)
Milwaukee (Porter 6-7) at New York (Fontenot 6-2), (n)
Only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games Baltimore at Boston, (n)
Cleveland at Detroit, (n)
Milwaukee at New York, (n)
Chicagoat Minnesota, (n)
Kansas City at California, (n)
Texas at Oakland, (n)
Torontoat Seattle, (n)
NATIONAL LE AGUE EAST DIVISION
Montreal Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicai
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GB
73
67
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73
68
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72
69
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63
79
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59
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83
60
.580
80
63
559
3
75
67
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7'2
71
73
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12'2
68
76
.472
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New
W
Los Angeles Atlanta Houston San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati
.Saturday's Games Chicago 8. St Louis 5 Houston 5. San Franciso 3 Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 5,10 innings Montrealio; New Yorx 9 Atlanta 6, Los Angeles 3,10 innings Only games scheduled
Sunday's Games Philadelphia 5. Pittsburgh 3 Montreal 4. New York 0 St. Louis 2, Chicago 1 Cincinnati 4, San Diego 2 Los Angeles 7, Atlanta 6 San Franciscos. Houston 2 Monday's Games Montreal (Rogers 17-9) at Chicago (Ruthven 11-11)
New York (Darling 0-1) at Philadelphia (Denny 14-6), (n)
SI. Louis (Cox 2-3) at Pittsburgh (Tunnell8-5),(n)
Only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games Montreal at Chicago New York at Philadelphia, (n)
St. Louis at Pittsburgh. (n)
Atlanta at Cincinnati, (n)
Los Angeles at Houston. (n)
San Francisco at .San Diego, (n)
By The AmcUlcd Press AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (355 at bats): Bo^. Beaton, .362; Carew, California, .348; TVammell, Detroit. 318; Moseby, Toronto, .315; Bonnell, Toronto, .314; Griffey, New York,.314.
RUNS: Ripken. Baltimore. 101; Murray, Baltimore, 99; Moaeby, Toronto, 97; Henderson, Oakland, 93; Cooper, Milwaukee, 92.
RBI: Rice. Boston, 114; Cooper, Milwaukee, 113; Parrish, Detroit, 102; Winfield. New York, 100; Simmons. Milwaukee, 98 HITS: Boggs, Boeton. 187; Cooper, Milwaukee, 177^; Whitaker Detroit, 174; Ripken, Baltimore, 172; McRae, Kansas City, 165; Simmons, Milwaukee, 165.
DOUBLES: Boggs. Boston, 43; Ripken, Baltimore, 40; Parrish, Detroit, 39; McRae, Kansas City, 38; Brett. Kansas
^Wles : Griffin, Toronto, 9; Franco, Cleveland, 8; Gantner, Milwaukee. 8; Winfield, New York, 8; Yount, Milwaukee, 8.
HOME RUNS: Rice, Boston, 35; Kittle. Chicago, 32; Armas, Boston, 31; Luzinski, Chicago, 29;Cooper, Milwaukee, 27; Murray, Baltimore, 27,
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakland, 98; R. Law, Chicago, 69; J. Cruz, Chicago, 49; Wilson, Kansas City, 48; Sample, Texas, 40.
PITCHING (13 decisions): Haas, Milwaukee, 13-3, .813, 3.27; Flanagan, Baltimore, 11-3, .786, 3.11; McGregor, Baltimore, 17-6, .739, 3.05; Dotson, Chicago, 17-7, .708,3.69; Davis.Baltimore, 12*5 /u6 3 39 StkllEbTS: Morris, Detroit, 203; Stieb, Toronto. 168; Bannister, Chicago, 167; Righetti, New York, 165; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 142.
SAVES: Quisenberry Kansas City, 38; Stanley, Boston, 28; R. Davis. Minnesota, 27; Caudill, Seattle, 23; Ladd, Milwaukee, 20.
NATIONAL LEAGUE BAITING (355 at bats): Madlock, Pittsburgh, .321; Cruz, Houston. .320; Hendrick, St. Louis, .319; Dawson, Montreal, .315; LoSmith, StLouis, .313.
RUNS: Muirphy^. Atlanta. 122; Raines, Montreal, ill, Dawson, Montreal, 96; Evans, San Francisco, 88; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 86.
RBI: Murphy, Atlanta, 108; Dawson, Montreal, 10; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 95; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 91; Kennedy, San Diego, 89
HITS: Dawson, Montreal, 172; Cruz, Houston, 169; Ramirez, Atlanta, 168; Thon, Houston,165; Oliver, Montreal. 164 DOUBLES: Buckner, Chicago, 36; Dawson, Montreal. 33; Knight, Houston, 33; Oliver, Montreal, 33; Carter, Montreal, 32; Ray. Pittsburgh, 32.
TRIPLfe: Butler, Atlanta, 12; Green, St. Louis, 9; Thon, Houston, 9; Cruz, Houston, 8; Redus, Cincinnati, 8; Washington, Atlanta, 8.
HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia. 34; Murphy. Atlanta, 32; Dawson, Montreal, 30; Evans, SanFrancisco, 28; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 28.
STOLEN BASES: Raines, Montreal, 70; Wiggins, San Diego, 53; S. Sax, Los Angeles, 45; Wilson, New York, 44; LeMaster, San Francisco, 39.
PITCHING (13 decisions): Denny, Philadelphia, 14-6, .700, 2.44; McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 13-6, .684, 3.23;Orosco, New York, 13-6, .684, 1.37- Rogers, Montreal, 17-9, .654, 2.90; Lea, Montreal, 15-8, .652, 2.96.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 241; Soto. Cincinnati, 210, McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 170; Ryan, Houston, 162; Valenzuela, Los Angeles. 160.
SAVES; Smith, Chicago, 25; Reardon, Montreal, 20; Bedrosian, Atlanta, 19; Holland. Philadelphia, 19; Minton, San Francisco, 19.
NFL Standings
By IV Auoclated Pres* Amerkaa Coaference East
W L TPct. PF PA
Miami 2 0 0 1.000 46 24
Baltimore 1 I 0 .500 39 40
Buffalo 1 1 0 .500 10 18
N.Y.Jets 1 1 0 .500 51 46
NewEngland 0 2 0 .000 47 63
Central
Geveland 1 1 0 .500 52 53
Pittsburgh 1 1 0 .500 35 35
Cincinnati 0 2 0 .000 16 30
Houston 0 2 0 .000 44 61
West
Denver 2 0 0 1.000 31 20
L.A.Raiders 2 0 0 1.000 40 16
Kansas City 1 0 0 1.000 17 13
Seattle 1 l 0 .500 30 27
SanDiego 0 1 0 .000 29 41
National Conference East
Dallas 2 0 0 1.000 65 47
N.Y.GianU 1 I 0 .500 22 29
Philadelphia 1 1 0 .500 35 40
Washington 1 1 0 .500 53 44
St. Louis 0 2 0 .000 34 62
Central
Chicago 1 1 0 .500 34 30
Detroit I 1 0 500 37 31
GreenBay 1 1 0 .500 62 63
Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 44 69
TampaBay 0 2 0 000 10 28
West
L.A.Rams 2 0 0 1.000 46 33
AtlanU 1 1 0 .500 33 33
New Orleans 1 1 0 .500 55 47
SanFrancisco 1 1 0 .500 65 39
Thursday's Games San Francisco 48, Minnesota 17 Sunday's Games Dallas 34, St. Louis 17 Pittsbui^ 25, Green Bay 21
Cleveland 31, Detroit 26 New York Giants 16, AUanU 13 (OT) Seattle 17 New York Jets 10 Los Angeles Raiders 20 Houston 6 Los Angeles Rams 30, New Orleans 27 Miami 34, New England 24 Denver 17, Baltimore 10
Monday's Games San Diego at Kansas City, (n)
Thursday, Sept, 15 Cincinnati at Cleveland, (n)
Sunday, Sept, 18 Chicago at New Orleans Los Angeles Rams vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee Pittsburgh at Houston ,, San Francisco at St . Louis New York Jets at New England Kansas City at Washington Atlanta at Detroit Baltimore at Buffalo Philadelphia at Denver San Diego at Seattle New York Giants at Dallas Minnesota at Tampa Bay Monday, Sept. 19 Miami at Lqs Angeles Raiders, (n)
Golf Scores
SUTTON, Mass. (AP) - Final scores and prize money in the 72-hole, $350,000 Bank of Boston Golf Classic at the par-71 Pleasant Valley Country Club course Sunday:
Mark Lye $63,000 69^9-71-64-273
John Mahaffey $26,133 65-69^7-73-274
Sammy Rachels $26,133 68-68-6949-274
Jim Thorpe $26,133 72-67-67-68-274
Fuzzy Zoeller $14,000 67-6849-71-275
Leonard Thmpsn $12,162 7045-7249-276
Ivan Smith $12,162 70494948-276
Joe Inman $9,800 694946-73-277
Dale Douglass $9,80(( 7(k494949-277
George Burns $9,800 72494749-277
Wayne Levi $9,800 66-70-70-71-277
David Peoples $7,700 70-7148 49-278
Nick Price $7,700 7048-72-68-278
Doug Tewell $6.650 71-724 9 47-279
Mark McCumber $5,425 6968-70-73-280
J.C. Snead $5.425 65-73-71-71-280
Ron Streck $5,425 6 970-71-70-280
Dana Quigley $5,425 79797149-280
Tim Simpson $5,425 6 972-7149-280
BillCalfee$5,425 72-7149 48-280
Rooaie Black $3,088 Gil Morgan $3,038 Allen Miller $3,038 George Archer $3.038 Lou Graham $3,038 Ed Dougherty $3,038 Dan Forsman $3,038 Brad Faxon $3,038 Joey Sindelar $3,038 D.A.Weibring $3,038 Jack Renner $3,038 Howard Twitty $1.778 BUI Britton $1.778 Jim Booros $1,778 Mac O'Grady $1.778 Peter Jacobsen $1,778 LeeElder$l.778 Dennis Watson $1,778 Curt Bynim $1.778 Donnie' Ham mond $1.778 Don Pooley $1,778 Lance Ten Broeck $1,126 Victor Regalado$I.126 Steve Melnyk $1,126 Joey Rassett $1,126 Phil Hancock $1.126 Jodie Mudd $1.126 Steve Hart $1,126 Lonnie .Nielsen $1,126 John McComish $844 Steven Liebler $844 Blaine McCaliister $844 Rod Curl (844 Ralph Landrum $844 Kermit Zarley $791 Thomas Gray $791 John Cook $791 Buddy Gardner $791 MUie Gove $791 Tony Sills $742 Jeff Sluman $742 Don Levin $742 Barrv Jaeckel $742 Loren Roberts $742 Terry Diehl $742 Antonio Cerda $742 Mike Reid $742 Rick Pearson $742 Thomas Lehman $700 Richard Zokol $700 Tom Jenkins $700 Hal Sutton $679 Ken Green $679 Allan Pate $679 Gavin Levenson $655 Joe Carr $655 Tommy Valentine $655 ChiChi Rodriguez $655 Tony DeLuca $637 Rex Caldwell $627 Pat Undsev $627 Dewitt Weaver $616
Cup's Winds Change
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - The winds of change have blown here all summer long. Now the winds on Rhode Island Sound figure to make the ultimate change the first Americas Cup triumph by a forfeigner - more likely.
Light to moderate winds, the kind Australia II sails best in, were expected for Tuesdays start of the Americas Cup best-of-seven finals between the Aussie powerhouse and U.S. defender Liberty.
Those conditions are even more likely Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, meteorologist Tony Mignone of the Newport Weather Center said Sunday.
The change that kicked up the biggest waves at the triennial event was Australia IIs innovative winged keel. At first, the Americans claimed that made the boat more than a 12-meter yacht and, therefore, ineligible to sail for the Americas Cup. The protest was dropped later.
Both boats do well" in all winds, but during a summer of trials with six other foreign contenders in which it posted an impressive 48-6 record, Australia II excelled in the kinds of breezes forecast for most of this week.
Mignone admitted that it was difficult to forecast Tuesdays conditions, but said strong 15-20 knot winds in the morning should taper off as race time approaches.
The 24.3-mile races eight miles out on Rhode Island Sound can start as early as 12:10 p.m. but no later than 2; 10 p.m.
Skipper Dennis Conner, winner of the last Cup competition in 1^ with Freedom, leads the United States 25th defense of the prize that it won in the first race in 1851 and has held ever since.
But the exceptionally maneuverable Australian yacht, with its mysterious keel that is kept covered by plastic when the boat is hauled out of the water, is seen by many as the most serious threat ever to the U.S. streak.
Mignone said a low pressure system moving across the area Tuesday could create changeable conditions that are difficult to predict. He added that a larger, more stable high pressure area will take over for the next three days, when more light to moderate winds, in the lO-to-15 knot range, are expect^.
If they (the Aussies) should take the first race they should be in pretty good shape...especially if there are heavy winds (Tuesday) and Australia does well, Mignone said. There really wouldnt seem to be much hope for the American boat.
The weather center, the official weather station for the
Smith, Cherry Set For NFL Matchup
competition, provides wind information to competitors before races.
It could be, actually, the weather forecaster who affects the race, Mignone said.
Pre-race wind information can influence a crews choice of mainsail, which cannot be changed once the race begins. Other sails can be replaced during the race as wind conditions warrant.
The choice of that (main) sail could be the difference between winning and losing, said Mignone.
The Australians check regularly with the weather center, which provides its service at no cost to the competitors, before going out on the water. Liberty uses several paid forecasters in addition to the Newport Weather Center.
Allison Adds Points With Wrangler 400
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)-Lucious Smith, meet Charlie Joiner. Deron Cherry, say hello to Kellen Winslow and the rest of an awe-inspiring San Diego offense that figures to come at you tonight like a blizzard howling across the prairie.
Smith and Cherry are re-icing All-Pro types in the nsas City secondary. There seemed little doubt they would draw plentv of attention when the Chiefs entertain the Chargers in Kansas Citys first Monday-night appearance in six years.
Smith, obtained in a trade with the Los Angeles Rams that also brought running back Jewerl Thomas to the Chiefs, is playing for Eric Harris, s thoroughbred cor-nerback who went to the Ram^
r
Cherry is standing in for All-Pro free safety Gary Barbaro, who may sit out the season in a contract dispute. Smith and Cherry spent a lot of time in the film room during the last week, studying rterback Dan Fouts and e rest of the Chargers offense.
Youve got to know them inside and out, Smith said. If you dont, its going to be a long night. They do so many things with the passing game that the amount of film work you do really increases. You have to understand everything thwareitoing.
Cfhiefs Coach John Mackovic, who had a sik-cessful head coaching debut last week in a 17-13 victory over Seattle, knows there arent many ways to subdue the Chargers.
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Bobby Allison says he isnt upset over the fact hes gained just 30 points over Darrell Waltrip in their battle for the Winston Cup Grand National stock car racing point championship even though hes won the last two races on the circuit.
We didnt lose any, the 45-year-old Allison said Sunday after he added 15 points to his lead to boost the margin to 71 with an eight-length victory in the Wrangler-Sanforset 400.
Really, if we can win the race, it doesnt matter where the other guy (Waltrip) is, Allison added. When we dont win, then its very important where the other guy is from a points standpoint.
Waltrip has come from behind to beat Allison for the K)int title the last two years. Hit he finished third behind the Buick driver last Monday in the Southern 500 at Darlington, S.C., and he was third again Sunday.
Between Allison, who is
Loftin Team Wins_Putt
Jake Loftin and Steve Silverthome beat the team of Robert and Henry Beacham in a sudden-deatb playoff to win the Sunday Night Bestball Tournament at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.
Both teams finished with a 79,29 under par, for the three rounds of play. Jeff Taft took third place with an 81.
The First Annual Danny Woods Memorial Tournament is scheduled for next Sunday at 6 p.m. The entry fee is $5, and (NToceeds go to the American Canpr Society.
making the ,542-mile Fairgrounds Raceway track almost as much a home as veteran Richard Petty did in the early 1970s, and Waltrip was Ricky Rudd, who trailed the last 114 laps and was the only driver in the lead lap with Allison at the finish.
It was going my way until the very last pit stop, Rudd said. But Bobby ran a very good race. It (our car) just wasnt quite good enough,
Allison, who now has won the Wrangler 400 two years in a row and four of the last five years, averaged 79.381 mph in a race in which there were just four caution flags for 28 laps.
Until Allison won the Southern 500, Waltrip had cut 161 points off his once imposing lead, but Allison said he thought that caused a lot of people to overreact.
Berean Blanks GCA.44)
LYNCHBURG, Va. -Berean Christian Academy of Roanoke, Va. scored two goals in the first period and added two more for insurance in the second to take a 4-0 victory over Greenville Christian Academy in the Lynchburg Invitational Tournament.
Mike Ellsworth scored the first goal just 3:15 into the game, while Eric Fogg added anonther at the 17:34 mark. Johnny Farmer put the ball in the goal with 6:18 elapsed in the second period, and Mike Haynes scored at the 32:09 mark.
Greenville, now 0-3 on the season, travels to Bethel Christian Tuesday.
$6kU-0UT, IkDW COME ArreMCWOCe 20 l6TMAKiCW^ITV ?
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7971-6969-282 6971-74-68-282 796972-69-282
7972-7967-282 697972-72-283 69797972-283
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72-797971-283 7971-6971-283 6971-7970-283 74-697970-'283 72-72-70-69-283
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me of a measw
$ m IKJ g^KJETi4AT"-
friiNGoT! ,
9-Q
Cindy Lincoln $1.U38 Cathy Hanlon $1,038 Lynn Stroney $1,038 ^
M.J. Smith $722 Robin Walton $722 Barbara .Moxness $722 Anne-Mari Palli $722 Gail HiraU$722 Sue Fogleman $722 Janet Anderson $722 Carole Charbonnier $480 Maiy Beth Zimmermn $480 Barbara Bunkowsky $480 Colleen Walker $480 JoAnn Washam $480 Debbie Austin $480 Jerilyn Britz$480 Carolyn Hill $480 Catherine Duggan $480 Jeannette Kerr $480 Rosie Jones $480 Marty Dickerson $480 Penny Pulz $375 Brenda Goldsmith $330 Pat Bradley $.330 Mari McDougall $330 Kathryn Young $330 Betsy Barrett $330 Pia Nilsson Deedee Lasker Kathy Baker Lauri Peterson Marianne Huning Lenore Muraoka
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Final scores and earning; after Sunday's third round at the $150,000 Portland Ping LPGA tournament on the par-72, 6.233-vard Columbia-Edgewater Country Cluh course:
x-JoAnne Carner $22,500 72-7970-212
Charlotte Montgmry $14,700 7 9 68-74-212 Alice Miller $9,(S00 73-7269-214
Sharon Barrett $9,000 746971-214
Amy Benz $5,625 72-73-70- 215
Bonnie Lauer $5,625 72-73-70- 215
AyakoOkamoto $4,080 74-7972-216
Donna Caponi $4,080 74-7972-216
Patti Rizzo $4,080 72-71-73-216
Mary Dwyer $4,080 7 972-74-216
LeAnnCassaday $4,080 697977-216
Juli Inkster $2,778 75-736 9217
Kathy Whitworth $2,778 74-7469217
Dianne Dailey $2,778 72-71-74- 217
Sandra Haynie $2,778 7468-75- 217
Joyce Kazmierski $2,085 74-73-71-218
M.Spencer-DevIin $2,085 75-71-72-218
Connie Chillemi $2,085 71-75-72-218
Jan Stephenson $2,085 68-75-75-218
HoUisSlacy $1,505 73-77-79-219
Beth Daniel $1,505 75-73-71-219
Vicki Tabor $1,505 75-72-72- 219
Sandra Palmer $1,505 74-73-72-219
Dot Germain $1,505 73-73-73-219
Linda Hunt $1,505 71-75-73-219
Alice Ritzman $1,505 71-74-74-219
Judy Clark $1,505 71-7978-219
Kathy Postlewait $1,038 74-76-70-220
LauneRinker $1,038 75-74-71-220
Janet Colest $1,038 74-75-71-220
Jane Crafter $1,038 74-73-73-220
Alison Sheard $1,038 73-74-73- '220
Judy Ellis KelWFuiks Ruth Jessen
Missie .McGeorge Heather Drew Julie Waldo Allison Finney x-won on first playoff hole
73-74-73-220 76-70-74- 220
74-72-74- 220 74-75-72- 221
74-74-73-221 72-74-75-221
72-74-75- 221
73-72-76- 221
73-71-77- 221
71-72-78- 221 7972-71-222 76-75-71-222 78-72-72-222
75-75-72-222
74-76-72-222
75-74-73- 222 73-7973- 222
72-77-73 - 222 698973-222
72-74-76- 222
73-72-77- 222
72-72-78-222 7868-77 - 223
78-73-73- 224
76-71-77 - 2-24
74-73-77 - 224
76-7978- 224 71-74-79- 224
73-78-74-225
75-74-76-225 80-71-75- 226
79-72-75-226
76-74-76- 226
74-71-81-226
77-74-76-227
77-74-76- 227 76-7:1-78-227
75-75-78- 228
76-75-78-229 74-74-81-229 71-79 82-232
Transactions
Bv The .Associated Press BASEBALL American League ,\EW YORK YANKEES- Recalled Brian Dayett. outfielder, from Columbus of the International League
NATIONAL LEAf.CE ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Called up Jeff Keener and Ralph Citarella. pitchers, Jeff Doyle and Jim Sexton, infielders, and Jim Adducci, outfielder, from Louisville of the American Associa tion
FOOTBALL National Football League LOS ANGELES RAIDERS Activated Don .Mosebar, lineman. Placed Johnny Robinson, defensive tackle, on the injured reserved list
I niled States Footiiall League OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS Signed Thomas Bailey and Fred Gordon, fullbacks, to two-year contracts Signed Tracy Smith, defensive back, to a one-v'ear contract
IlOtKEV National lloekev League HARTFORD WHALERS Signed Doug .Sulliman, right wing, to a four vear contract
NEW JERSEY DEVILS*Signed Hector Marini, right wing, and Ron l,ow. goaltender (JUEBEC NORDKjUES- Signed Michel Goulet, left wing, to a four year contract
Prep Top Twenty
KAI.EKill, N.C. ( API - Here is how
top 10 teams in The Associated Press' high school football poll fared in last week's action:
1-A
1 Gbo Page (2-0) did not play
2. Asheville (26) beat Clvde Erwin 316
3, (tie) Fay Bvrd (2-0) beat Terry Sanford 146
Jacksonville (1-1) did not play 5 Char Independence (1-1) lost to E. Mecklenburg 2919.
6. New Hanover (26i beat W Robeson 336.
7. Hend Vance i2-U lost to Northern Nash 27-21.
8. (tie) Rox Person (3-0) beat G Washington. Va , 31-28
N Durham 13H) > beat Cary 106
10 Gbo Smith (2-1) lost to Gbo Dudley
28-14
3-A
1 S Durham (:16) beats,Johnston28-14.
2 Kannapolis 136) beat E. Rowan 48-15
3 Ashe Reynolds (26) beat N. Buncombe 47-7
4 Thomasville i36i beat N Davidson 14-7
5 Brevard (1-11 did not play
6 W Henderson (36) beat Ednevville 37-12
7. (tie) Clinton i36i beat Cape Fear 35-13
SW Edgecombe (3-0) beat Wil Bed-dingfield:io-7
9 Concord (36) beat ,NW Cabarrus 32-13
10. (tie) Bertie '2-0) beat Farmville Central 20-3.
Ml Airv (2-11 beats Stokes 13-2 E Surry (26) did not play.
2-A-l-A
1 Randleman (2-0'did not play.
2 Robbinsonville i26) beat Murphy 26-14
3 N Duplin (26) didnotplav
4 Swain Co. (92-11 lost to Ttiscola 28-14.
5 Sylvia-Webster (36) beat Pisgah 17-7 6. (tie) Maiden i2-0-l) tied Lincotnton
1)6
F T Foard (2-0) beat E Lincoln 13-7.
8 Whiteville (l-l-l i beat Clarkton246
9 Fuquav-Varina (26) beat Northwood
3,5-8.
10 Bath (26) did not play
College Top Twenty
By The Associated Press How the top twenty teams in the Associated Press college football poll fared this weekend:
1 Nebraska i26-0i beat Wyoming, 56-20
2 Oklahoma ' 1-06) beat .SfanforJ, 27 14
3 Texas was idle
4 Auburn (l-o-Oi beat Southern Mississippi, 24-3
5. Notre Dame (16-0) beat Purdue, 526
6 Michigan (166) beat Washington .State, 2917
7 Ohio State (906) beat Oregon State, 316
8 .North Carolina (2-(Mii beat Memphis .State, 24-10
9. Southern California (0-(i-li tied Florida, 19-19
10 Georgia was idle
11 Arizona (2-90) beat Utah. 386
12 Florida State i l-o-oi beat LSU, 4935
13 LSU (0 16) lost to Florida State, 40-35
14 Alabama il-O-O) beat Georgia Tech. 297
15. .Southern Methodist (266) beat Grambling State, 2913
16, Iowa (0-96) beat Iowa State, 51-10
17 Maryland d-90) beat Vanderbilt.
21-14
18 Florida (1-0-1) tied Southern California, 1919
19 Washington 1I-O61 beat Northwestern. 346
20 Penn State (926) lost to Cincinnati, 14-3
College Scores
By The Associated Press E.A.ST
Boston College 31, Clemson 16 Cincinnati 14, Penn St 3 Colgate 15, Army 13 Holy Cross 14, Boston U 3 Pittsburgh 35, Temple 0 Rutgers Connecticut 5 Slippery Rock 34. Dayton 17 Syracuse 22, Kent St 10 W Virginia 48. Pacific U 7 SOUTH Alabama 20, Georgia Tech i Auburn 24, S. .Mississippi 3
E Carolina 22, N Carolina St, 16 Florida Si 40, LSU 35 Kentucky 31, Kansas St 12 Louisville 41, AY Kentucky 22 Maryland 21, Vanderbilt 14 N. Carolina 24, Memphis St. 10 NE Louisiana 31, SAA Louisiana 6 OhioU 17, Richmond 10 S. Carolina 24, Miami, Ohio 3 Southern Meth 20. Grambling St 13 Tennessee 31, .New .MexicoO Tulane 27, Mississippi 23 Virginia 27, .Navy 16 Wake Forest 13, Virginia Tech 6 MIDAAEST Akron 13. E Michigan 0 Ball St. 25, Wichita St 21"
Indiana 15. Duke 10 Iowa 51, Iowa St H)
Michigan 20, Washington St 17 Michigan St 23. Colorado 17 .Missouri 28. Illinois 18 .Nebraska 56, Wyoming 20 Notre Dame 52. Purdue 6 OhioSt,31.0regon6 Toledo 45. Massachusetts 13 Washington 34, Northwestern 0 Wisconsin 37, N Illinois 9 SOUTHWE.ST Arkansas 17, Tulsa 14 Baylor 40. Brigham Young 36 Idaho St 12 'rexas-EI Paso 10 Kansas 16, Texas Christian 16, tie Miami, Fla 29, Houston 7 Minnesota 21, Rice 17 ()klahomaSt.20.N Texas.St 13 FAR WEST Air Force 28, Texas Tech 13 Arizona 38. Utah ()
Arizona St 39, Utah St 12 Bowling Green 35, Fresno St 27 Florida 19. Southern Cal 19, tie Fullerton St 25, Ung Beach SI 19 Idaho 43. S Colorado 28 New Mexico St 15. Louisiana Tech 7 Oklahoma 27, Stanford 14 Oregon St 51, Portland St 14 SanDiego St 28. California 14 .San Jose St 31, Nev -Las Vegas 26
Wrangler 400 Results
RKHMOND, Va. (AP) - The unofficial order of finish in Sunday's W rangler 400 Grand National slock car at Fairgrounds Raceway yitith driver, make of car, laps completed and average speed of winner in mph:
1 Bobby Allisoiy Buick, 400,79.381
2 Ricky Rudd, (Chevrolet, 4(X)
3. Darrell Waltrip, Chevrolet, 399
4 Bill Elliott, Ford, 399
5 Terry Labonte, Chevrolet. 398 6, Richard Petty, Pontiac, 3%
7 Buddy Baker, Ford. 396
8 Neil Bonnett, Chevrolet. 396 9. Trevor Boys, Chevrolet. 392
10 D K Ulrich, Buick. 384
11 J.D McDuffie, Pontiac, 383
12 Kyle Petty, Pontiac, 353
13 Dick Broo'ks, Ford. .350
14 Bud^ Arrington. Dodge, 333 - .15 Joe Fields. Buick, 321
16 Morgan Shepherd. Buick, 314 17. Ronnie Thomas, Pontiac. 313.
18 Dave Marcis, Chevrolet, 304 19. Mike Potter, Pontiac, 287
20 Harrv Gant. Buick, 274
21 Geoff Bodine, Pontiac, 251
22 Dale Earnhardt, Ford, 181.
23 Tim Richmond, Pontiac, 174
24 Jimmy Means. Chevrolet, 144
25 Ron Bouchard, Buick, 89
26 SterlinglAlarlin,Pontiac.68
27 LenmePond, Buick, 53
28 Joe Ruttman, Pontiac, 50
29 Don Satterfield, Buick, 48
30 Tommy Gale, Ford. 39.
N.C.Scoreboard
.Men's Collegiate Soccer Duke 2. .Akron 0 N Carolina 7. Georgia St 0 N Carolina St L.NavvO N Carolina Weslevan. 1, William & Mary 0
AAake Foresl 3, Appalachian St, 1
Greenville Sports Club
The Greenville Sports Club will meet Tuesday at noon at the Ramada Inn with an East Carolina University assistant football coach as the guest speaker.
Members and guests are urged to attend.
Ready For Fall Wood Cutting! STIHL 028 Wood Boss W/20 Bar
plus bonus $QCQ95 package OUw
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OREENAflLLE: 324 S Evans St /768-2145 514 E Greenville Bivcl /756-6525 AYDEN: 107 W 3rd St (746-3043 FARMAALLE: 128 N Mam SI (753-4139 QRIFTON: 118 Queen St (524-4128
I
10 PITTCQUNTX AMERICAN LECION ACRtCULTURAL FAIR
CLASS B: Clothing [Constructed by Youth 14-19]
170. Bathing Suit 3 00
171. Blouse, Top, Jacket....................... 3.00
173. Skirt, Pants, Split Skirt, Shorts .................. 3.0
174. Dress (Street]................................... 4 OO
175. Church Dress 4 Oo
176. Party or Evening Dress .....4 oo
177. Pant Suit.................\ . 5 00
178. Skirt Suit................................. 5 00
179. Wool Suit (or Blend) ....... *. 00
180. Coat..........................
181. Wool Coat (or Blend)................. g 00
181A. Miscellaneous............................ 3 OO
CLC^ C; MisceUaneous ClothingAges 9-18
182. Pajamas or Nightgown 300
184. Hat ............................ 2 00
185. Pocketbook ............... 2 00
186. Toys for Children ......... 2 00
CLASS D: Home Furnishings [Constructed by ages 9-18]
187. Pot Holders.................................. 150
188. Hot Dish Mats ......................... 1 50
189. Curtains
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
3.00
3.00
3.00 4:00
4.00
4.00
5.00
6.00 2.00
2.00
1.00
1.50 1.50-
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
190. Luncheon or Bridge Set .....2.OO
191. Embroidery............................... .... 2.00
192. Crewel Embroidery.............................. 2.00
193. Sweedish Elmbroidery.......... 2 00
194. Needlepoint ........ 2 00
195. Bargello......................... 2.00
196. Pulled Thread.................... 2.OO
197. Cross Stitch (counted) ............................2.00
198. Miscellaneous_..........................' . 2.00
ADULT
Articles must be new and clean and must be the work of the exhibitor. Articles must be in place by 6 p.m., Monday of Fair Week.
Articles must have been made between September, 1982, and September, , 1983.
SCORE CARD FOR JUDGING
Suitability ........................................ 20 Points
General Appearance ........................................26 Points
Workmanship......................... 36
Economic Aspect.................... 20 Points
100 Points
CLASS E. INFANTSCLOTHING [Constructed by an adult]
199. Dress
203. Sacques or Sac<
204. Miscellaneous
205A. Blouse, Top, Jacket 206. Playsuit, Swim Suit
210. Childs Suit or Coat
211. Pajamas or Gown 212.. Housecoat ^ Robe
213. Pajamas or Gown
214. Smock, Housecoat, or Robe
215. Pocketbook
217. Blouse, Top
218. Sportswear
219. Street Dresi
220. Best Dress
221. Party or Ev<
225.
227.
1.50
1.50
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.00
an adult)
1.50
2.00
1.50
2.00
1.50
2.00
3.00
2.00
2.00
. 4.00
3.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
r an adult]
2.00
1.50 V
2.50
1.50
2.00
1.00
3.00
2.00
3.00
2.00
3.00
2.00
4.00
3.00
3.00
4:00
3.00
5.00
4.00
6.00
4.00
3.00
2.00
7:00
5.00
8.00
6.00
NEEDLEWORK: (Constructed by an Adult)
Suitability.......................................................20 Points
General Appearance..............................................25 Points
Workmanship.............. 35
Economic Aspect........................ 20 Points
100 Points
CLASS H; TABLE LINENS, BED LINENS, HOUSEHOLD furnishings [Constructed by an adult]
228. Dinner Cloth and Napkins
4.00
3.00
3.00
2.00
2.50
1.50
2.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
2.50
1.50
2.50
1.50
2.50
1.50
2.50
1.50
2.50
1.50
Open seven Ooys a Week
....serving....
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner Gourmet Solad Bor
SteaksSeafood ^ Fines WinesChampagne Brown Bagging Permit
2725 Memorial Dr.
for private porties
Greenville, N.C. 27834
Banquet Room
JANIE AND WOODY SMITH
756-2414
Old Fashioned Goodness ot Old Fashioned Prices
Diener's Bakery
Dickinson Ave.
752-5251
Greenville, N. C. Since 1919
OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.. INC
Your Office & School Supply Store M9 S. Etwn SUM CrMmil*, N.C 752-2175
Our 38th Year"
P.O. Box 6047
Greenville, N. C. 27834 '
Hwy. 284 by-pass
Call Today
756-3137 I
The Wash House
"A COMPLETE LAUNDRAMAT"
Eaat 10th St., Across from Krispy Kreme North Greene St., 514 E. 14th St., Greenville and South Main Street, Farmville
"Youll enjoy washing clothes at the Wash House Bring thia ad for one free wash
DUFFUS
REALTY, Hrel Inc.
REAlTOtl
Greenville, N. C. 27834 756-5395 e 201 Commerce Street e Greenville, N. C.
Frame-It Yourself
1 606 Arlington Blvd.
Shoppe, Inc.
H Greenville, NC 27834 U 756-7454
Frame It Yourself/Custom Framing ^-----
P(TT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR DEPARTMENT D
Crafts
Mn. (Aariotte McLawhon
Open to any residait of Pitt County
RULES
Exhibitors will diqilay in this department crafts or pn^ects thqr have constructed since the last Fair.
Hie exhibits will be divided into the following classifications and judged (m the basis of general quality and workmanship.
Framed paintings, drawings, etc., should be strung ready for hanging.
CLASS A. Adult Craft Show (CoMtrueted by Adult)
Jimmys Heater & Radiator Service
Recores/New and Used 1S03 South Lee Street Ayden, N. C.
84. Jewdiy,
94. String Art.
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.50
Tracys TV Service
Warranty Station For SONY SYIVANU PHILCO 1405 S. Evans Straat Qrafnvilla.N.C.
Tracy McLaurIn Owner
FARMVILLE IMPLEMENT CO.
FARMVILLE. N.C.
YOUR
DEALER
Alex Allen, Jr.
Alex Allen, III David Stowe
CLASS B: Junior Ouft Show (Age 8-19) (CoMtructed by Youth)
Jewdry
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.50
3.00
100
1.50
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.50
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
' 100
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
100
1.50
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
100
1.50
3.00
2.00
1.60
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
100
1.60
3.00
100
1.50
Tri-Oountf Wrecker Service
LwvmI Wradnr South ol OrawNW* JIMMY PIERCE Aydan,N.C.
Route 3-Box 2
NN074S472S Oi,74S47l1
You Hove A Personal Banker At Wachovia
WACHOVIA
WackmbMitTnntCt.
5 Offices in Greenville Member of FDIC
Vi
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QARMeMTCARECeNTEN
Dry Cleoning t Shirt LoundryAtlts Finest
Complete Alterations
622 E OanilfSlMl. GHEENVIILE.N,C 27834
Phone: (919) 755-5544
Amount offered in this section...........................S266.S0
DEPARTMENT E
Poultiy
Miriam Nance, Aaaistaat Agricultural ExtoMhm Agt Members of Pitt County Liveotock Development Aaoodatfam, Diieetan
Exhibitors ore encouraged to contact Miriam Nance, Agricultural Extension Agent, at 768-1197, to reserve pen pare Judging will begin at 8 a.m., Tuesday, September 27.
Please read rules carefully as they will be strictly enforced.
Exhibitors will be limited to two entries per
American Standard of Perfeconsha be the guide of the judges
in placing awards.
Judging wiUhe by comparison.
All stock must be entered in the nanw of the u<*tnl owner
No stock may be removed from the hall untfl after 9 a.m., Saturday October 1. j
Exhibitors will be required to certify that all birds shown were grown by exhibitor: '
Stock showing symptoms of disease will not be accepted.
Unless there are two or more enfries in each class, first place wiB be awarded and second place money paid.
SPECIAL NOTE-ALL CHICKENS AND TURKEYS for exhibition in North Carolina shall originate from U.S. puUoruhhtypboid ckan or equivalent flocks, or have a negaUve puUorum-typboid test within ninety (90) days of the date of exhibition.
Definitkms
I Deflnition of terms used in premium list:
PulletFemis bird less than <me year old CockerelMale bird lees than one year old.
Compliments of
Lucille Quinn
Post 151 Farmville, N. C.
Planters
Bank
Ayden Branch Ayden, N. C.
MEMBER FOK
Ayden Flower Shop
Say It With Flowers 202W.3rdSI. Aydw,N.C.
(919)746-3011
Water Sanitary Sewer and Storm Sewer
nWMK G. VAUGIW
COffTRACTOR
756-9393 Qffke
P.O. Box 2672 Greenville, nc 27834
ROEBUCK INSURANCE AGENCY
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10 I. CONTENTNEA STREET POST OFFICE BOX 82 farmville, north CAROLINA 278 TELEPHONE (19) 78i2244
Woody
Peele
Baltimore Fans Jeer Elway
It was perhaps ironic that a defensive play by East Carolina turned out to be the most fateful of those in Saturday nights ECU-N.C. State football game.
For most of the contest, the N.C. State attack, led by the rushing of Joe McIntosh, one of the nations best running backs, and the passing of Tim Esposito, a fine quarterback, stymied the Pirates. The defense, which seldom stopped Florida State a week ago, had somewhat better success, but still left a lot to be desired. A number of times, the Pirates would set State up in third and long situations, only to see the Wolfpack escape from those traps, thanks to Espositos passing or Mclnoshs running.
At the same time, it seemed the Pirates, when facing key situations on offense, couldnt get things clicking.
But in the closing minutes of the third quarter, the game suddenly shifted, and East Carolina began to click on offense, moving to score to pull within two at 16-14. Then, after stopping the Wolfpack despite a weird play that let State have two chances at a third down, the Pirates came back to score once more, boosted by the running of Earnest Byner and Kevin Ingram.
On that third down play, State threw an incomplete pass, only to have five yards marked off afterwards for delay of game, and the down replayed. Why the play went on to its conclusion before the whistle was blown is unknown. We didnt see any flags at all on the play.
At any rate, the Pack got a second third-down play from five yards further back and again failed to connect on a pass.
Following the Pirates taking the lead, 22-16, no scriptwriter, trying to make up a game for television to please the nationwide audience, could have come up with an ending such as the one which developed.
State got its offense clicking again and drove down inside the ECU 20, only to fumble at the five, where the Pirates recovered with 2:46 left.
But with 2:09 remaining, the Pirates fumbled it back, giving State one more chance. That evaporated when Calvin Adams pulled down Vince Evans for a seven yard loss on fourth and goal with nine seconds left, and it was all over but the shouting.
And there was plenty of shouting, ECU fans put on an exhibition like seldom seen by this writer in 20 years in Greenville.
Maybe the Pirates didnt play as well as they did against Florida State, but they did manage to pull it out the important thing.
The televised game will probably mean a payday for the Pirates of between $350,000 to $400,000. Most of that was unplanned in the budget for 1983-84, so the Pirates are off to a good start in having their program in the black again this season the second in a row. And, it will help in erasing the debts rolled up over the previous few years.
And who knows? With a victory this weekend over Murray State, the Pirates have a week off before facing Missouri. Depending on what Missouri does, that game too might b? a TV fare, or if the Pirates top the Tigers, the Florida-ECU game would then really be a delightful choice for the networks to telecast.
All-in-all, continued effort by the Pirates could lead toa banner year.
By The Associated Press
John Elway came home to Baltimore and was literally driven from the game by the boos and catcalls that Colt fans had promised him. But it was Elways backup Steve DeBerg and the Denver Broncos who had the last laugh.
Elway, picked No.l by the Colts in the National Football League draft, then traded to Denver after saying he wouldnt play in Baltimore, started Sunday but was lifted in the third quarter after being driven to distraction by crowd noise. He was replaced by DeBerg, who engineered the two touchdowns that gave the Broncos a 17-10 win.
I made the change strictly because we couldnt get the plays off, Denver Coach Dan Reeves said of the din from the 52,613 who booed and chanted obscenities. The crowd was very involved and every time we didnt get one off, they got more fired up.
Ive never heard anything like that. It was unreal.
The win put Denver at 2-0, one of only six undefeated teams in the NFL after only two weeks of action. The Colts dropp^ to 1-1, one of 16 teams with that record, including 10 of 14 in the NFC.
In other games Sunday, the Pittsburgh Steelers edged the Green Bay Packers 25-21 as Franco Harris went over the 11,000-yard mark for his career and the Seattle Seahawks extended their hex over the New York Jets, winning 17-10 for their seventh win against New York without a loss.
Elsewhere, it was Dallas defeated St. Louis 34-17, Chicago
edged Tampa Bay 17-10, Washington trimmed Philadelphia 23-13, Buffalo defeated Cincinnati 10-6, Cleveland beat Detroit 31-26, the New York Giants downed Atlanta 16-13 in overtime, the Los Angeles Raiders to[^ Houston 20-6, the Los Angeles Rams overcame New Orleans 30-27 and Miami tripped New England 34-24.
Last Thursday night, the San Francisco 49ers beat the Minnesota Vikings 48-17.
The Kansas-City Chiefs play host to San Diego tonight.
Pittsburgh 25, Green Bay 21 , The Steelers, l-l, rushed for 285 yards against the Packers, 1-1, as Harris led the way with 118 yards on 22 carries, the 43rd 100-yard game of his career. That moved his career yardage to 11,088, only 148 yards behind O.J. Simpsons 11,236, second on the all-time list.
We had just four healthy defensive linemen and we were committed to keeping them off the field as much as possible, said Pittsburgh Coach Chuck Noll. We were forced into this by circumstance.
Seahawks 17, Jets 10 Seattles victory was the product of seven Jet turnovers -four fumbles and three interceptions and rookie Curt Warners 128 yards in 25 carries and two touchdowns.
It was a typical Seattle game, said Jet Coach Joe Walton. You cant play winning football by turning the ball over that many times.
Redskins 23, Eagles 13 John Riggins gained 100 yards on 27 carries, including a
14-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter that snapped a 10-10 tie. It was Washingtons eighth straight road victory.
Mark Moseley kicked field goals of 36,24 and 23 yards and Joe Theismann completed 15 of 26 passes for 142 yards and one touchdown.
Cowboys 34, Cardinals 17 The Cowboys rebounded from a 10-0 deficit behind Ron Springs' two touchdown runs, Danny Whites passing and a defense that intercepted Jim Hart four time.
White completed 19 of 27 passes for 234 yards. Safety Dennis Thurman fell on a fumble following Bill Bates interception for another touchdown.
Giants 16, Falcons 13 Rob Carpenter picked up 111 yards in 28 carries, his second 100-yard game in a row. But A1 Richardsons interception of a Scott Brunner pass set up Steve Bartkowskis 6-yard scoring pass to Alfred Jackson that tied it at 13-13 with 3:36 left in regulation.
New Yorks Mike Dennis, however, returned the overtime kickoff 54 yards to the Atlanta 41 and rookie Ali Haji-Sheikh booted a 30-yarder to win it, his third field goal of the game.
Rams 30, Saints 17 Rookie Eric Dickerson scored his third touchdown on a 3-yard run with 1:22 left as the Rams ran their record to 2-0 and dropped New Orleans toll.
The score culminated a 60-yard drive after Saints punter Russell Erxleben took a safety with his team leading 27-21 rather than risk a punt from his end zone.
Dolphins 34, Patriots 24 David Woodley, held to just 40 yards last week, led Miami, 2-0, by passing for 218 yards and two touchdowns, including a 64-yarder to Duriel Harris. Andra Franklin had touchdown runs of 6 and 7 yards and Uwe von Schamann booted two field goals.
New England fell to 0-2.
Bills 10, Bengals6 A swarming Atlanta defense that hasnt allowed a touchdown in two weeks stopped Cincinatti on four plays from the 4-yard line in the final quarter.
Joe Fergusons 14-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Butler was the only touchdown of a game dominated by defense. The Bills are 1-1; the Bengals 0-2.
Raiders 20, Oilers 6 Jim Plunkett connected on 19 of 28 passes for 229 yards and Marcus Allen gained % yards on 17 carries to lead Los Angeles, which moved to 2-0.
The Oilers, 0-2, who played without Earl Campbell, were limited to two field goals by Florian Kempf.
Browns 31, Lions 26 Mike Pruitt rushed for 137 yards and Brian Sipe threw four touchdown passes and completed 18 of 29 passes for 234 yards for the Browns, 1-1. The Lions are also 1-1.
Bears 17, Bucs 1()
Terry Schmidts 32-yard return in the fourth quarter with an interception of a Jerry Golsteyn pass gave the Bears their victory and a 1-1 record as Tampa Bay fell to 0-2.
^Holmes Set Sights On Young Frazier
Crushing Blow
Neal Coizie of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers tackles Chicago receiver Ken Margerum after he caught a
pass from quarterback Jem McMahon for a first down during first quarter action Sunday in Chicago. (AP Laserphoto)
Martina Take Spot As Queen Of Women's Tennis Circuit
NEW YORK (AP) -Martina Navratilova was the acknowledged queen of tennis
Hoyt Becomes AL's First 20-Game Winner Of 1983
The \ssociaied Press Six times, says Chicago A.-ijle yjx pitcher LaMarr Hoyt, he shook off catcher CarJlon Fisk. And all six limes. Hoyt says, the California Angels got hits on the next pitch.
In spite of himself, Hoyt became the first American Leaguer to win 20 games in three seasons with a gutty complete-game effort Sunday in Chicagos 5-4 victory in 10 innings over the Angels.
'Im as happy as I can be, said the right-hander, now 20-10, after allowing 11 hits in the triumph, which was Chicagos seventh straight victory and 13th consecutive win at home.
Harold Baines RBI single with one out in 10th drove in Julio Cruz from second base with the winning run, making Hoyt the first AL pitcher to win 20 games since Steve Stone, Tommy John, Mike Norris, Deqnis Leonard and Scott McGregor each won 20 or more in 1980.
No White Sox pitcher has reached that mark since Jim Kaatwon20in 1975.
Orioles 5, Yankees 3 Todd Cruz and Rick Dempsey each drove in two runs during a five-run second inning for visiting Baltimore.
"The Orioles bunched six hits to knock out Dave Righetti, 14-7. Cruz, batting .197, doubled with the bases loaded and Dempsey, hitting .234, then singled. Cal Ripken later delivered an RBI single.
victory, Baltimores
lelwer
r
16th triumph in its last 19 games, enabled the Orioles to remain 5'2 games ahead of Detroit in the AL East while the third-place Yankees dropped to seven games back.
Red Sox 4, Indians 1 Bostons Jim Rice hit a looper into left field that turned into a bizarre two-run sacrifice fly as well as a double play, breaking a 1-1 tie in the seventh inning in Cleveland.
Lary Sorensen, 10-10, took a 1-0 lead into the seventh, but Rick Millers second home run tied it for the Red Sox.
Glenn Hoffman then singled, Dwight Evans walked and both runners moved up on a sacrifice. After Wade Boggs was intentionally walked. Rice hit a fly ball that left fielder Alan Bannister caught just before colliding with center fielder Gorman Thomas.
With both outfielders on the ground, Hoffman scored, as did pinch runner Lee Graham from second base. Boggs, however, was thrown out trying to reach third.
Tigers 6, Brewers 4 Enos Cabells two-run single capped a three-run fifth inning that pinned the loss on Pete Vuckovich.
Dan Petry, 17-8, got the win by allowing four hits and four runs over 5 2-3 innings. Aurelio Lopez got the final out for his 18th save.
Vuckovich, 0-2, was making bis third start of the season since coming off the disabled list. .
Blue Jays 16, As6
Willie Upshaw belted a grand slam and Jesse Barfield drove in three runs with a home run, triple and double to trigger host Toronto.
Upshaws blast, his 23rd homer, gave the Blue Jays a 4-1 lead in the first inning. Barfields two-run triple, one of four triples hit by the Blue Jays, came during a five-run fifth.
Royals 3, Twins 1
Willie Aikens two-run homer with two outs in the top of the ninth inning gave Kansas City the lead and reliever Dan Quisenberry pitched the bottom of the ninth for his 38th save, tying John Hillers all-time major-league record.
Rookie Jay Pettibone took the loss in his major-league debut. He gave up six hits.
Kansas Citys rookie Danny Jackson, making his first big-league appearance, went three innings for the win. He gave up one hit while striking out five.
Rangers 2, Mariners 1
Dave Stewart gave up five hits over 7 2-3 innings in raising his record to 3-1 since being dealt from Los Angeles to Texas.
Stewart struck out six and walked two. Dave Tobik got his sixth save.
Jim Beattie, 9-13, pitched a complete game for the host Mariners, allowing five hits.
Consecutive doubles by George Wright and Buddy Bell keyed Texas two-run seventh inning that br(d(e a scoreless
tf.
even before she won the U.S. Open womens single crown. Now, however, she has the crown she so earnestly desired.
Her name is now in the record book for all to see. And for Navratilova, a spot in the "champions corner is reward enough.
Not that she wasnt amply rewarded, of course. Her first U.S. Open singles title was worth $620,000 to her. And she added another $24,000 on Sunday by teaming with Pam Shriver to take the womens doubles.
But its the words U.S. Open champion behind her name that really count.
If I had been guaranteed that I would win here, I wouldnt need to win a dime, she said. I won a lot of money, but God knows it didnt make me any happier in the end.
I was just thrilled to have won this. You cannot buy the U.S. Open Championship -you have to earn it.
The U.S. Open - that gaudy, noisy 13 days of madness at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadow -
Softball Event Set For Chicod
The Chicod Booster Club will sponsor a softball tournament to be held Sept. 17-18 at Chicod Elementary School.
The registration fee is $60 and two new softballs. Trophies for first through fourth place will be awarded to teams, while there are 15 individual trophies for the champions and an MVP award.
For further information, contact Gerald Garner at 756-3440 or 758-6519, or Bruce Gray at 746-6742 pr 756-2744.
has finally acquiesced to one of the most dominating athletes of the 1980s. And, fittingly, the greatest triumph in her mind has come where so many big events in her life, both good and bad, have occurred.
It was during the 1975 U.S. Open when she defected from her native Czechoslovakia, saying the clamps imposed by her national tennis federation prevented her from developing into the best player she could become.
It was the 1981 U.S. Open, coming just U2 months after she beame an American citizen, where she was beaten in a third-set tiebreaker in the title match by Tracy Austin. But that also was the year the fans, that boisterous yet knowledgeable crowd that Jimmy Connors calls crazy, accepted her, even in defeat, and brought a flood of tears streaming down her face.
It was the 1982 U.S. Open that saw her being ousted by her doubles teammate and close friend, Pam Shriver, in the quarterfinals - an upset that sent both off the court crying.
But it was 1983 - on Saturday - where the U.S. Open
singles
hers.
title finally became
It wasnt enough that she had won 65 of her last 66 matches going into Saturdays final. It wasnt enough that she had 145 matches and lost just four since January 1982.
There still remained that one big challenge, that one goal, that one title that had eluded her grasp.
On Saturday, against^ the second-best woman player in the world, Chris Evert Lloyd, Martina Navratilova grabbed the winners trophy.
It means being up there with all those people who have won it before, she said.
GMU Boots Pirates, 4-0
FAIRFAX, VA. - The nationally-ranked George Mason Patriots soccer team defeated East Carolina University 4^) Saturday.
GMU improved its record to 2-1, while the Pirates slide to 0-2. The Pirates will host Atlantic Christian College Thursday at 3 p.m.
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J, (AP) Marvis Frazier is 23 today, and he will have youth on his side when he fights Larry Holmes on Nov. 25, only 22 days after tliv World Boxing Council heavyweight champions 34th birthday.
Scott Frank also had youth on his side when he challenged Holmes Saturday night. It was all he had.
The fight took place in a circus tent adjacent to Har-rahs Marina, and Holmes was the star marksman. Frank looked like an unwitting spectator called out of the audience to serve as a target.
The beating was not unexpected by most people, and by 1:28 of the fifth round referee Tony Perez had seen enough.
The 25-year-old Frank was unbeaten in 21 fights and ranked lOth going into the bout, but he had been fed a diet of club fighters.
Im improving with age, said Holmes.
The champion, who weighed 223 pounds, the heaviest of his 16-fight title reign, punched sharply and accurately. But it was apparent before the firsj, round that Frank, 211'4, did not have the skills to test Holmes.
Marvis Frazier and his father-manaager, Smokin' Joe, the former heavyweight champion, were at ringside, and they were unimpressed.
Marvis Frazier has won six fights this year and looked good in beating the much bigger James Broad and Joe Bugner, but he will go into the Holmes fight with only a 12-0 record. Holmes is 44-0.
I know when theyre going (slipping), said Joe Frazier, and looking at Larry, were going to have a damn picnic. Marvis Frazier still thinks he can whip me, but let him keep thinking that, Holmes said, and Marvis Frazier will get knocked out.
Holmes will get $3.1 million for fighting Frazier at a site to be named. He got $1.5 million for toying with Frank before a crowd of 5,187, who paid $580,000, and an NBC-TV audience.
At a pre-fight news conference, Frank said, Its hard for me to hit a guy whos made me so much money ($350,000).
Scott Frank barely laid a glove on Larry Holmes.
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20 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.
Monday, September 12,983U.S. Heading For Small Stockpile Of Feed Grain
By LEROY JAMES County Extension Chairman
Spending time before harvest to protect bins and then monitoring stored grain can greatly reduce losses from insect feeding.
With loss estimates ranging anywhere from five to 50 cents per bushel, damage can add up in a hurry, partially defeating the grower's aim of holding a crop for better prices later.
Another incentive to do a better job of managing storage is that the large amount of grain going in the bins under government loan must be protected against deterioration.
Weeds around bins need to be killed because they provide both a home and nourishment for certain insects. Many times, the weeds have originated from seed in spilled grain.
Clearing the refuse also prevents rodents from becoming a problem. Once the cleanup is finished and repairs are made we recommend growers use one of two residual insecticides in
order to create a barrier against pests.
Methoxchlor or premium grade malathion should be sprayed on every piece of machinery in which grain is going to be harvested or moved. The equipment can harbor insect buildups which can lead to infested grains.
It's important for the grain to be as free from trash as possible and dried down to the proper moisture level. Some piroducers use heat to dry grain in the bins.
Grain needs to be checked at least once every week or more if possible. The closer it is to 60 degrees and 12 percent moisture, the better off it is.
Four insects are primarily responsible for damage to stored grain in the Southeast; the lesser grain borer, maize weevil, rice weevil and aengoumois grain moth.
The remainder of the insects are considered secondary pests since they feed on dust or broken shell left by the other four insect types.
Urges Aid To Agribusiness
RALEIGH. N.C. (AFi -The federal government should help the U.S. agribusiness industry by^ increasing overseas sales of farm products instead of restricting farm production, says the president of Tex-asGulflnc.
Gino P. Giusti. president of the Stamford, Conn.,-based mining and chemcal company said although U.S. dependence on exports traditionally had been strong, recent reductions in U.S. production made other agricultural nations more competitive in the world market.
"The major problem in (U.S.) agribusiness is the lack of exports.' Giusti told about 375 members of the .North Carolina Agribusiness Council Inc.. at their annual meeting Saturday. "We must
have a long-term solution to < that problem."
He said any solution the government proposed should protect the farmers' income and expand overseas sales by making more foreign aid available in the form of farm commodities rather than money.
The government also should encourage foreign governments not to discriminate against U.S. farm products by restricting trade or by placing high tariffs on products coming into their country from U.S. farmers, said Giusti,
"When one combines the world's need for food with the fact that the United States has the world's most efficient farmers, you would think that' U.S. farming should be in its heyday," he said.
Probe Allegation Of Bribe Attempt
W.ASHl.NGTO.N, N.C. 'APi - Beaufort County officials are trying to find out whether federal officers attempted to trap the Beaufort sheriff into taking a bribe, a Durham newspaper reported Sunday The Durham Herald said District Attorney William C
Firm Obtains Bethel Option
BETHEL - Ramon Latham, chairman of the Economic and Industrial Development Committee, announced that the Phoenix Corp. of Raleigh has an option to build 40 apartments on the E.Rr Lewis land in Bethel.
Latham, speaking at the board meeting of the Bethel Council, Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce, said the Garden Apartments will provide eight one-bedroom units, designed for elderly occupants, and 32 one and two-bedroom units for families, He said the complex will include an office, recreational areas, landscaping, parking, and laundry room.
Latham said negotiations are under way for construction to begin in the near future.^
Danny Norris, community development chairman, said that representatives of the town boprd ii!'-; of i-'oir, ii< r.t !!,'
Thursday wiln ,vii . L,.. Charles Albritten, prospective builders of a aimed nursing home for Bl.
Griffin planned to meet with federal officials next week to discuss any role they might have had in an alleged attempt to bribe Sheriff Nelson Shepherd.
The Herald said Griffin and Shepherd apparently want information from the federal officials about their relationship with Maseo Evans Daniels of Belhaven.
Daniels was indicted Aug. 16 on charges of trying to bribe Shepherd on two occasions in return for large quantities of drugs to be smuggled into the county." Shepherd said.
Daniels, a grocery store operator and fisherman, is free on*'$25.000 bond. His arraignment is scheduled for Oct. 3,
According to an application for a search warrant on file at the Beaufort County Courthouse, Shepherd has said that Daniels told him that Daniels possessed a letter of immunity signed by-Douglas McCullough, assistant U.S. attorney for the Eastern District.
McCullough said he gave Daniels a letter of immunity so he could provide some information on drug trafficking. but said it did not involve an attempt to bribe Shepherd.
G\MBLI\G RAID
iiaihi.'! \P : ..,iM''i .
. .. i.LllliCii laiiicU a
gambling house on the edge of Bangkok, nettimg a record 247 suspected gamblers, authorities said.
By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Depending on the outcome of this falls corn harvest, there is a possibility that the United States will end up a year from now with the smallest stockpile of feed grain since Oct, 1,1977.
The Agriculture Department was to issue revised production estimates today for corn, soybeans and other crops.
A month ago, based on Aug. l indications, the com crop was estimated at 5.24 billion bushels, down 38 percent from the record 1982 harvest of 8.4 billion bushels. Soybeans were indicated at 1.84 billion bushels, down 19 percent from last year's record of 2.28 billion bushels.
Department experts said last month that the governments 1983 payment-in-kind program to curb crop acreages accounted for most of the production decline but that the drought in July had taken a savage toll.
Before the drought hit. USDA economists projected that 1983 corn production - assuming normal growing conditions - would have declined to around 6.2 billion bushels, a 26 percent reduction, because farmers idled so much land under the PIK program.
Under PIK, farmers get free surplus commodities to help compensate them for taking land from the the production of wheat, corn, sorghum, rice and cotton.
With heat and dry weather continuing through August, crop prospects declined further, with private forecasters predict-
Discrimination Suit By Six
SCOTLAND NECK. N.C. (APi - Six female employees of Halifax Hosiery Mill have filed federal sex discrimination charges alleging that mill management denied women vacation and holiday pay. raises and promotions.
The charges were filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in Raleigh, which enforces federal laws prohibiting race and sex discrimination in the workplace.
Company officials declined' comment.
ing that the com harvest might range between about 4.4 billion bushels and 4.8 billion bushels.
The private timates for soybeans hav ranged from 1.5 billion bushels to 1.7 billion bushels.
Based on USDA estimates, if the 1983 com harvest declines to around 4.4 billion bushels, there would be a total U.S. com supply for the 1983-84 marketing year of about 7.8 billion bushels. That would include about 3.4 billion bushels expected to be left over in the corn inventory when the new marketing year begins on Oct. 1,'
Total corn use in 1983-84 could be around 7.0 billion bushels, down slightly from 7.2 billion estimated currently for this season. That includes exports as well as domestic lise of corn.
Thus, the corn stockpile or carryover on Oct. 1,1984, could be reduced to around 800 million bushels - the first time the corn carryover has been less than a billion bushels since 1977 when it was reported at 886 million bushels.
No one has suggested that the United States will run out of corn before another crop is ready a year from now, but the declining supply will affect prices-of feed grains. Those, in
Rice Competition
WASHINGTON (AP) The Agriculture Department savs that U.S. rice continues to get stiff competition in world markets from other producers. >
Thailand, Taiwan, China and Pakistan are aggressively marketing their rice this year, selling at significantly lower prices than the United States, as a new outlook report on world agriculture,
Foreign competition has cut U.S. rice exports to Nigria, formerly one of our largest markets, the report said.
Rice exports in the marketing year which ended on July 31 are estimated at about 67 million hundredweight, down nearly a fifth from 82 million hundredweight in 1981-82, and are expected to be about the same in 1983-84.
turn, will bear heavily on decisions by livestock and poultry producers who already have seen profits crimped by rising feed costs.
After exports began climbing in the early 1970s, the corn carryover dropped sharply from more than 1.1 billion bushels in 1972 to a low of 361 million bushels on Oct. 1,1975.
But in those years, the corn crop was much smaller - it didnt hit 6 billion bushels until 1976 - and requirements were not as great. Total corn use didnt climb over 5 billion bushels annually until 1971.
According to USDA analysts, a soybean crop in the range of 1.5 billion to 1.7 billion bushels would mean a total bean supply of about 1.96 billion to 2.16 billion bushels in 1983-84, including a record carryover from previous crops of about 455 million bushels.
Private forecasts analyzed by department experts point to total soybean use in 1983-83 in a range of about 1.77 billion bushels to 1.95 billion bushels. That would leave an inventory of 190 million to 210 million bushels when the next soybean marketing year begins on Sept. 1,1984.
Cotton Meeting
WASHINGTON (AP) The International Cotton Advisory Committee, which includes representatives from 49 countries, will hold its annual meeting Oct. 24-29 in Memphis, Tenn.
An estimated 150 foreign delegates are expected to attend, says the Agriculture Department, which has been active in the organization since it was started in 1940.
The committee serves as a forum for international consultation and discussion on cotton, and collects and distributes statistical information on world cotton production, trade, use, stocks and prices.
Officials said that the annual meeting was last held in the United States in 1976 in San Francisco.
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FORECAtT RM TUESDAY, SOTEMBERII, IMS
JCNERALTEN0ENC8;Aday and vwiing whan you coniidaiabla anwunt o( ataly put your idaas acroas by concantrating upon tha
baal conalrucdva mannar avaNabta.
ARIES(^. 21 to Apr. 19) Think out how to gat your Waaa acoaplad by naw contacts and than carry right through with tham.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Show your trua davotlon to your lovad ona and coma to that fine undarstanding you
long for. Handling businass affairs wisely.
QEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Sit down with associates ^ show thto you are willing to be more cooperative and mistakes. Concentrate on present benefits. CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Study your job panafits and be more efficiant so you can have an increase m pay. Put naw ideas in affect.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) You are in tha mood for a good time but be sure it is with congeniis and do not overspend. Dont neglect loved ones.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Be more wining to do what kin wish of you and dont be so concerned with details, minutae. Attend family gatherings.
UBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) State your aims directly to those who can be of assistance to you and get good results. Take jime out to reflect.
SCORPIO (Od. 23 to Nov. 21) Get the infomation you need from the right source so that you can get your affairs in far better order.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Follow your intuition about adding to present interests and grow and davelop. A newcwner can give you information.
OPRKX)RN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Have those quiet talks with those who can assist you in business affairs and are experts. Clear up any moot points.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Be more cooperative with partners and friends and you can get better results in the future, as well as now.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Got your work done most efficiently and you gain the favor of highor-ups. Then make your surroundings most charming.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he Or she will be very capable at whatever interests have large scope to them and will get into positions of responsibility. So give the finest academic education you can to make the most of the natural ability here.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983 I^Naught Syndicate, Inc.
Universities See Investments Paying
FOCUS
PEANUTS
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Monday. September 12.1983 y
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Olympic Great
Today is Jesse Owens birthday. Jesse Owens was a great American athlete who captured four pld medals in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. He instantly became a world hero, humiliating Adolf Hitler who preached that blacks were inferior to whites. During one track meet in 1935, Owens broke five world records and tied a sixth in the space of 45 minutes.
DO YOU KNOW - Where will the 1984 Winter Olympics be held?
FRIDAYS ANSWER Alaska ranks last among the fifty states in population with fewer than one person per square mite.
^ KnowledKe Industries, Inc. 198.3
LOST THEIR POSTS
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP)-All 21 of Sri Lankas Supreme Court judges and 12 Appeals Court judges have lost their posts for failing to
take oaths before President J.R. Jayawardene pledging allegiance to the country, the presidents police said.
BLONDIE
North Carolina universities investing in the stock market say they are getting higher returns than they have in more than a decade.
In my experience, since 1971 ... this will be the biggest year ever for colleges and universities, said Abbott Wainwright, director of business affairs for the National Association of Ck)l-lege and University Business Officers in Washington.
The largest private foundation at UNC, the Institution Development Foundation, had an investment return of 69.1 percent for 1982-83.
The UNC Endowment, which was down 8.9 percent for 1981-82, had an investment return of 55.6 percent for 1982-83. TTie endowments largest stockholdings include American Express Co., American Telephone & Telegraph Co., Control Data C(MT)., (ieneral Motw^ Corp., IBM and NCR Corp. Its largest 1982-83 gain was 90 percent on stock in the Chrysler Corp.
The Duke University Endowment posted a 40 percent return for 1982-83 after suffering a "horrendous gain of 2/i percent in 1981-82, said
Louella Rutledge, assistant to the treasurer.
Among others, Duke hAs stock in Ford Motor Motorola Inc., Union Pacific and Digital Equipment Co.
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15 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
Monday, September 12.983
WTAIJKS LAST ROLE - Actress Natalie Wood, center. mu co-siar C hristopher Walken, left, listen to director Douglas 'Iriimbull during break in filming Brainstorm"..Miss Wood (irouned near Catalina Island off the California coast nearly
two years ago, jeopardizing completion of the film which was in production at the time of her death. The film will be released nationwide in October. (AP Laserphoto)__
French Directors Take Film Festival Honors
VENICE. Italy (AP) -an-Luc Godards film Frenom: Carmen" won the Colden Lion award for best j icture Sunday at the Venice i'ilm Festival.
Another P'rench director. Ceorges Rouquier, won the prize for best director for his iilm "Farrebique." a iwrtrait of changing family Mres in the French ' ntryside.
ciress Darling Legitimus (!: the best actress award )! lier role in the West .idics film Rue Cases '.vgre.s ' (Cases Negres >treer'i. while the best actor iward went to the entire leading cast of Robert Mtman's "Streamers."
V 12-member jury of iliiiinakers headed by taly s Bernardo Bertolucci lade the selections after -.ving 18 films.
ither jury members in-liided Frances Agne^ darda Japan's .Nagisa Os-.iima, Switzerlands Alain fanner and Bob Rafelson ol thel nited States.
Critics said Prenom; farmen" (First Name; Carmen") was a favored andidate or the Golden Lion award as soon as it was itra'iled earlier in the 12-dav
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festival. The film, starring 18-year-old Maruschka De-tmers of the .Netherlands, depicts the life of a modern-day girl called Carmen who is the reincarnation of an 18th-century heroine known by the same name.
But the best actor award came as a surprise, being awarded jointly to six people; .Matthew Modihe, Michael Wright, .Mitchell Lichtenstein. David Alan Grier, Guy Boyd and George Dundza. The actors play American recruits for the Vietnam war in 1965 who. housed together in a military barracks, fall victim to vio lence long.before approaching the battlefront.
Rue Cases Negres, " directed by French-Martinique Euzhan Falcy, also took the best first work award for its depiction of the life of plantation workers in Martinique in the 19.'5(is under French colonial rule.
The prize for best technical effects went to director of photography Raoul Coutard and soundman Francois .Musy for their work on "Prenom: Carmen
The Venice-De Sica prize for the best film by a
Liz Taylor 1$ Left Voiceless
CHlCACilO lAPi - .Actress Elizabeth Taylor has been left with virtually "no voice at all." and her performances m "Private Lives" have been canceled while her doctor maintains a day today check on her condition.
liliss Taylor, 51, was to have opened in the play at the Schubert Theater with her former husband, Richard Burton, on Sunday.
But the performance was called off after she developed a vocal cord and sinus infection which he doctor, George .Allen, described as severe.
new Italian director went to Massimio Mazzacucco for Summertime," his film about Italftin youth, and Claudio Caligari for "Amore Tossico" I "Poison Love).
The Award of International Film Critics, decided by a separate panel, was given to West German director Alexander Kluge for his film "Die Macht der Gefuehle" (The Power of Emotions"), for what was called its rational approach to analyzing human emotions."
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6 00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10 00 Pyramid
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Lubbock Honors Buddy Holly
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -This western Texas city made good on its promise to honor Buddy Holly, unveiling a plaque to be installed downtown near a bronze statue of the rock n roll star who grew up here.
The statue, commissioned in 1979 and erected in 1980, had until Saturday stood without any sort of identifying plaque.
Holly, whose hits "Peggy Sue." "Early in the Morning and Heartbeat rocketed to the top of the charts in the late 1950s, was killed in a plane crash on Feb. 3,1959, at age 22.
Hollys widow, Elena Holley Diaz, unveiled the plaque as 300 fans looked on. Lubbock Mayor Alan Henry proclaimed Sept. 10 as Buddy Holly Memorial Day" and gave copies of the proclamation to .Airs. Diaz and to Holly's father and mother, ,Mr. and .Mrs. L., Holley,
The weekend ceremony culminated a two-week celebration, held annually in honor of the singers Sept. 7 birthday, which also featured a 1950s dance contest, the finals of a Buddy Holly look-alike contest and memorabilia exhibits.
MONDAY
7 00 Jeffersons 7,30 Family Feud 8:00 Little House 9 00 Movie (1,00 News 11 30 Tonight 12:30 Le'tterman 1:30 Overnight 2 30 News
TUESDAY
5 30 Lie Detector
6 00 Almanac 7,00 Today
7 25 News
7 30 Today 8:25 News
8 30 Today
9 00 R Simmons 9:30 All in the
10 00 Diff Strokes
10 30 Sale of the "' 11:00 Wheel ol 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12 30 Search For 1 00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another WId 3:00 Fantasy 4 00 Whitney the 4:30 Brady Bunch 5:30 WKRP 6:00 News 6 30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8 00 A Team 9:00 Movie 11.00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman
1 30 Overnight
2 30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
MONDAY
7.00 3s Company 7,30 Alice
8 00 Incredible
9 00 Football
12 00 Action News 12 30 Nightline 1 00 Thicke of
TUESDAY
5.00 TBA
5:30 J Swaggart 6 00 AG Day 6 30 News
7.00 Good Morning 6:13 Action News
6 55 Action News
7 25 Action News
8 25 Action News
9 00 Phil Donahue
10 00 TBA 10:30 TBA
11:00 Too Close 11:30 Loving 12 00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2 00 One Life 3:00 Gen, Hospital 4:00 Carnival
4 :30 BJ LOBO
5 30 People's
6 00 Action News
6 30 ABC News
7 00 3's Company 7:30 Alice
8 00 Happy Days
8 30 Joanie L.
9 00 3's Company 9:30 9 to 5
10 00 Hart to Hart 11:00 Action News
11 30 Nightline 12:30 Thicke ol
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
MONDAY 4
7 00 Report 5 7 30 N C People 5 8,00 Shock 6
9 00 Performance; 7
10 00 Return From 7
11 00 Monty Pythor g
11 30 Doctor in o
12 00 Sign Olf ,q TUESDAY M
3 00 TBA 1)
3 30 Educational n
00 Sesame Street 00 Mr Rogers 30 Dr Who 00 News Hour 00 Report 30 Folkways 00 Nova 00 Lifeline 00 Ascents ot 00 Monty Python 30 Doctor in 00 Sign Off
The Greenville Police Department's Crime Prevention Officer will provide a sa'urity inventory at your home on request. You will be advise on proper locks, burglary prevention and safety measures. Call 752-3342 for more information.
New TV Season's Offerings Aren't Suited For John Wayne
TV Log
For complata TV programming inlor-mation, consult your waakly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Daily Ratlactor._^
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price is Right 12 00 News 9 12:30 Youngs,
1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding LI 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 Dougt 8:00 Special 11:00 News 9
11 30 Movie 2 00 Nightwatch
By FRED ROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - John Wayne would have turned off the new television season.
Male leads in new series for 1983-84 just aint what they used to be. They dont try to rearrange faces with their fists or let sidearms do their talking.
No sir. These sentimental types have feelings. They apologize. They turn the r other cheek. Sometimes, the cheek is even wet with tears. ^ Men are more vulnerable, says Alec Baldwin of CBS new medical show, Cutter to Houston. I think its more interesting to do things differently.
In the series, Baldwins character, Hal, wants to date the town bullys sister. The bully has other ideas and it looks like an old-fashioned barroom brawl is brewing, until Hal comes up with a novel suggestion:
If I strike you out, you leave your sister alone. Strikeouts rather than shootouts? If last years movie hit Tootsie could - have a man become a better nran by dressing as a woman, anythings possible.
Last year, I was supposed to be vulnerable. But this year I really am, says Bruce Boxleitner, whose last series about the adventures of animal trapper Frank Buck withered on the vine. Now hes a spy with a passive-resistance streak in CBS Scarecrow and Mrs. King.
On NBCs The Rousters, star Chad Everett says. We try to approach fisticuffs with tongue-in-cheek fervor. Only when the bad guy harasses a woman does Everetts Wyatt Earp III p'lt up his dukes.
The Duke, John Wayne, would approve of rescuing damsels in distress. Wayne would not, however, approve of the one western this season, NBCs Yellow Rose.
Instead of riding around on horses for 52 minutes, we only ride around for eight, says Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC Entertainment.
Yellow Rose, a beautifully filmed contemporary drama on a working ranch in Texas, 'has some fistfights, but Roy (David Soul) can also apologize to Chance (Sam Elliott) in a poignant moment. This may be the compelling soap opera that third-rated NBC has never had. It is so genuinely human that it may appeal to non-soap lovers. This ranch is noSouthfork.
NBC, which is making the only dramatic shows worth watching, is bringing reality to the 10 p.m. Eastern time slot. Besides returnees Hill Street Blues and St. Elsewhere and the new Yellow Rose, theres Bay City Blues, about the life an(j loves of young minor league baseball players in a working-class town, and For Love and Honor, about the life and loves of young paratroopers in training during peacetime,
For Love and Honor has the look, feel and barking-sergeant sound of last summers sleeper movie, An Officer and a Gentleman. Also in the military vein is Emerald Point N.A.S.. first titled Navy.'
BtoKttey T(M due.
9k %jiie gjwkrf 2eMce..
Mrs. Rae Brantley 1106 Treemont Rd., Wilson, N.C. 27893 Phone 291-9882 Collect
TOURS
Oct. 5-9... .CANADIAN FAIL FOIUGE, INC: Gettysburg Penn, Corning N.Y., and Niagara Falls, Canada,
_Penn-Dutch Tours and Amish Dinner
Oct. 13-16. .Nashville, Tenn., Inc.: Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Guided Tour, Grand Ole Opry, Opry Land _A Boots Rondolph Club
Nov. 10-13. .Florido: St. Augustine, Disney World and Epcot _ (Senior CHiien Speciol)
Dec. 3 CHINQUA-PENN - Christmos Tour in Reidsville, N.C.
and Four Seasons Mall, Greensboro, N.C.
i,n .'Tl'ii P'''"'iO(T'l''RORO Tnff>jvii-F ROTl''''k"jcto" d/s| c|qh
Also Booking
CHURCH, SCHOOL GROUPS, CIVIC & PRIVATE GROUPS
In this CBS prc^am, Dennis Weaver plays an on-base commander and a widower who worries about his sailors, his three daughters and the maneuvers all might perform. This show will have more beds than boats, and more soap than water.
ABC also has a new serial, Hotel, which is going the Disneyland route. In the pilot, for instance, the king of Portugal comes to the St. Gregory Hotel and leaves with a waitress. Fairy tale time.
Hotel stars Bette Davis, whose contract calls for limited appearances, and James Brolin, who may be remembered for his last goody-goody role on Marcus Welby,M.D.
TV doctors are fashionable again. Besides returnees Trapper John, M.D. and St. Elsewhere, CBS introduces Cutter to Houston and ABC has Trauma Center - two shows with strangely similar scripts.
On both pilot episodes, explosions cause serious arm injuries. The CBS limb is amputated, the one on ABC* is saved when Lou Ferrigno (formerly The Incredible Hulk) sticks it in a cooler for successful reconnecting surgery.
Both pilots also have the now-standard, gunman-in-the-operating-ro om scene. Even the dialogue of the doctors, when they are confronted by the intruders, is identical. Whoa! says Alec, the sensitive soul in Cutter to Houston who makes curveballs, not war, Whoa! says the doctor played by James Naughton in Trauma Center. (For the record, Naughton does a better job with the material.)
Both programs have doctors making helicopter calls, whenever the action slows down. In Trauma Center, a half dozen chop
pers come to the rescue when a hotel chandelier falls and ruins prom ni|ht
In me air, this is the year of the helicopter, which had a starring roe in the summertime movie, Blue Thunder. But, on land, the car remains kihg of the road. The new season has more car crashes than a demolition, derby.
In ABCs Hardcastle & McCormick, starring Brian Keith as Hardcastle, a judge bent on bringing to justice the criminals who got away, McCormick is a former convict and race-c^r driver who helps Hardcastle in his quest. That means steady work for the guy in Hollywood who can slip out of burning wrecks. Hes in practically every scene.
This seasons dramatic shows use machines for gimmicks. The comedies rely on ghosts, genies, talking orangutans and a OMe-
endangered species; the dumb blonde, a buxom live-in maid, sharing an apartment with two adolescent men in NBCs We Got It Made.
In contrast, the talking orangutan on NBCs Mr. Smith has a 256 I.Q. Somewhere between the blonde and the beast in intellect are Ann Jillian, who plays the ghost of a HoUywood actress in NBCs Jennifer Slept Here.
RISKY BUSINESS
7:20-9:1 M
TRADING PLACES
7:10-9:1(M
MR. MOM
7:30-9:204>Q
LADULTS SZOO TIL 30i
^^^^^BUCCANEER MOWIFR
1:20.3:20,5:20.7:20.9:20
1:10.3:10.5:10.7:10.9:10
1-3-5-7-9
CHEVY CHASE
ROONEY DANGERRELD
LOU FERIQNO
VACATION R
. EASY MONEY",
HERCULES PG
^ ^ CLIFFS ^
/j Seafood House and Oyster Bar
/) Washington Highway (N.C. 33 Ext.) Greenville, North Carolina
/ y Phone 752 3172
Mon. thru Thurs. Night
Popcorn grto-Shrimp.....
Utah Town Wants Everything
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Monday, September 12,1983 1 5
ByRARENM.MA6NUS0N MOAB, Utah (UPI) -Deep in southeast Utah, where red rock canyons crease the des(riate desert, a small (dorado River town is engaged in an economic jugging act probably unique in America.
Some townspeople want to bring about a revival of prosperity by inviting the federal government to set up a nuclear waste dump nearby. Others want to lure vacationers and retired people by enhancing the striking natural surroundings. Still others ask. Why not both?
Welcoming a repository for nuclear wastes may seem strange to other communities, but theres an indirect connection for Moab, and the promts of new
Tim have b^n tough for many of the towns 6,000 residents ever since local miners were thrown out of work by depressed uranium prices years ago. The areas unemployment rate is the highest in the state: 20 percent.
For Sale signs dot lawns on nearly every block. City boosdebs are desperate.
Banker Irving Ni^tingale, chairman of the Grand County Economic Development Commission, says the job scene will change if Moab can convince the federal government to locate the first nuclear waste repository at one of two proposed sites about 50 miles south of Moab.
The Department of Energy is iooking for a place to bury some of the 8,000 tons of spent radioactive fuel piled up in the nations nuclear power plants.
At the same time, city fathers believe they can build a nationally known haven for recreation enthusiasts and retirees. Moab has been touting 260 acres as a carrot for developers to establish a recreation and retirement community. Nightingale said.
The city simpiy has to do a better job of promoting its sunny climate, beautiful scenery and access to the Colorado River, he added, and people will move to Moab debite the prospect of living next to a nuclear waste dump.
Were trying to increase tourist activity, attract small conventions and increase the nations awareness that Moab, Utah, exists, Nightingale said. I think people would be afraid of the unknown (if the area is selected for a nuclear repository.) But I think it would have zero impact (on devel(^ment).
But others, particularly the river running operators, disagree. The repository is a hot topic that has bitterly divided the community.
The chamber has not taken a formal position on the nuclear waste repository because its split down the middle, said Dee Tranter, chamber of commerce president. "There are many people - es{^ially those in the tourist-oriented business -who feel a waste repository would be a deterrent to a retirement community and tourism.
Tranter said the chamber has focused its efforts on attracting the film industry
Camera Is Located
A Greenville man was arrested and charged with possession of stolen property after a camera allegedly taken from parked car at Krogers was sold at a local pawn shop, Capt. John Briley reported.
Briley said that Jerome Jenkins of 1809 Hopkins Drive was charged after a 35 millimeter camera, reported stolen Friday from a vehicle owned by W. H. Taft Jr. of 308 Granville Drive, was sold at Southern Pawn Shop on Evans Mall.
The spdcesman said the value of the camera was estimated at $350.
A hearing for Jenkins was set for Sept. 20 in District Court in Greenville.
IMPOSSIBLE?
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -Nigerian President Shehu Shagari on Sunday denied suggestions he is forging a one-party; state, calling it impossible to fuse Nigerias div^ political and cultural
instead. The canyon country serves as a scenic backdrop for many western and science fiction movies and television commercials.
Environmentalists, the most vocal opponents, argue a nuclear waste dump would mar that scenery and threaten the s(riitude of Ca-nyonlands National Park. The proposed sites are located two to four miles away from the parks borders.
Pete Parry, superintendent of Canyonlands for the U.S.
Forest Park Service, said a recent survey of visitors shows the proposed repository could trigger a reverse effect - and hurt the areas economy - by discouraging tourism.
Eighty-nine percent of the park visitors surveyed said they would be less likely to return if a rqxjsitory was located near Canyonlands, he said. About 98,000 people visited the park last year.
Youre playing around with the only thing we have left here - tourism, Parry
said. We have to be very careful not to discourage people from coming.
David Bretzke, director of the Grand County Water Conservancy District, has another idea for Moab to make money from the repository. He predicts the DOE will have to buy local water rights on the Colorado River to operate the dump.
Bretzke said the city could use the money to pay off a bond issue on a massive $4.3 million project that diverts water from Mill Creek
throu^ a red rock cliff for drinking water, irrigation and sewer.
If you can do something to help the economy of Moab, Im a 1 for it - even if it is a nuclear waste repository in the middle of Canyonlands National Park, Bretzke said.
The DOE plans this fall to recommend to President Reagan three proposed repository sites for detailed study. The president is scheduled to submit a site to Congress in 1987.
Dixie Queen Seafood Restaurant
Winterville 756-2333 We Now Have Banquet Facilities
Monday, Tuesday Wednesday, & Thursday Popcorn Shrimp........
53.25
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
Introducing
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PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR6KBIVIUtll.C.
NENOKMIDUVE
Harris No. 1 Momorlol Grivo Groanvllla Horrls No. 2 210 E. 10th St. Groanvllla Horrls No. 6 Aydon
Horrls No. 4 Main Stroot Bothol
Harris No. S North Groono Stroot Groonvlllo Harris No. 7 TarboroBOI^TV&AmiWeEKi-5oiiy-zfHiiiiin
Cnft
P
Wood
Stons
746-4021
and
756-8830
Complete line of WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES 8 TRACK TAPES AND PLAYERS SERVICE ON ALL TYPES OF APPLIANCES AND TV Two Location To Serve You Better AYDEN and GREENVILLEHOOKER & BUCHANAN, Inc.
Jimmy Brewer-Skip Bright-Donold Minges Gonorol Insuranco
1.
DOOK Darn
Books, Gifts, Cards
114 E. 5th St.Greenville, N.C. 27834
^ COME IN AND BROWSEPhone 758-3811
(919)752-1233
curryI]
COPY '
CENTER OF GREENVILLE
412 Evans Street Mall
Greenville., NC 27834
2.00
1.50
1.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.50
1.00
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1.00
.. 2.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
SENIOR POULTRY SHOW 110 V ... Bronze Turkeys
119. Young Tom Turkey 4.00 3.00
120. Young Hen Turkey 4.00 3 00
121. Drake................
122. Duck................. i
123. Rhode Island Reds or Parameter Reds
124. White Leghorns, White Cross, Hybrids
125. Other Standard Commercial Birds, Pullets............ 4.00 3,00
JUNIOR POULTRY SHOW Open to F.F.A. and 4-H Club Members of Pitt County Pannenter Reds
130. Pullets.................. 4.00 3.00 2.00 1.60
Amount offered in this section$73.00
DEPARTMENT "FLivestock
Miriam Nance, Assistant Agricultural Extension Agent Members of Pitt County Livestock Development Association, Directors
Amount offered in Department F ......................... $1180 00
Exhibitors are encouraged to contact Miriam Nance,' AgriculturalExtension Agent, at 758-1197 to reserve pen space.
OPEN TO PITT COUNTY ONLY
The directors reserve the right to reject and return entries after available space IS taken, or for any other reason.
Animals must be entered and in place by 6 p.m., Monday, Sept. 26.
Exhibitors will provide feed and care for animals on exhibit, otherwise a charge be made. Bedding will be furnished by the Fair, i Exhibitors wl be required to certify that livestock shown is owned by exhibitor and not purchased since August 1,1983.
SWINE RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR PITT COUNTY MARKET HOG SHOW AND SALE Tuesday, September 27
1. Any person who is a resident of Pitt County is eligible to compete for premiums in the show.
2. Competition wl be open to purebred and crossbred gts and barrows.
3. Hogs must weigh at least 180 pounds but not more than 240 pounds. Hogs weighing 180 to 210 pounds will show in heavyweight classes. Hogs weighing 211 to 240 pounds will show in heavyweight classes.
4. Classes in each division shaU consist of individuals (lightweight and heavyweight) and pens of 3 (lightweight and heavyweight).
5. All hogs must be free of disease and blemishes.
6. All hogs entered in the show must be approved by the Weighing and Penning Committee at the scale before they are penned. ^
7. No hog is eligible to compete in more than one class
8. All hogs must be owned and cared for by or under the supervision of the exhibitor for 60 days before the date of the show.
9. Each exhibitor may enter a maximum of two individuals and open pen of 3.
10. All hogs must be sold at auction for slaughter following the show.
11. Grand champion and reserve champion individuals and grand champion and reserve champion pen of 3 in each division will be sold separately. Each junior exhibitor will be allowed to sell one hog individually.
Remaining hogs wl be grouped and sold in lots.
12. Each exhibitor is responsible for providing feed and water for his animals
DAIRY CATTLE Judging will begin at 2 p.m., Tuesday, September 27.
Each exhibitor may enter one animal per class to compete for premium.
AGES: Age of animal shaU be reckoned from January 1, and June 30:
Junior Heifer Calf-January 1,1982, to Apr 30,1983.
Senior Heifer Calf-July 1,1982, to December 31,1982.
Senior Yearling Heifer-January 1,1981, to June 30,1982 Senior Yearling Heifer-July 1,1981, to December 30,1981.
Cows-Prior to July 1,1981.
Premium money wl be paid on Danish system of judging on 4-2-1 basis.
Animals placing in the blue ribbon group wl receive premium money not to exceed $15.00. Animals placing in the red ribbon group will receive 50% of this amount. Animals placing in the white ribbon group wl receive 25% of this amount.
132. Cow.............................................Premium and Ribbon
133. Senior Yearling Heifer......................... Premium and Ribbon
134. Junior Yewling Heifer............. Premium and Ribbon
136. Senior Heifer Calf.................................Premium and Ribbon
136. Junior Heifer Calf........................... Premium and Ribbon
137. Senior Steer Calf. ..........................Premium and Ribbon
138. Junior Steer Calf........................ Premium and Ribbon
BEEF CATTLE Judging W1 begin at 1 p.m., Tuesday, September 27.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR Thrill DrlvePS
PATRONS OF THE Pnr COUNTY FAIR ( a* r r -J
operate every afternoon and nigV__At rQIP rrluQY of the Fairgrounds, and buses wiH . \Buses from downtown will taking you right in front also operate from the Fairgrounds to downtown.
ADMISSION TO FAIR
Adult-$3.00, day and night, Maingate School Children admitted Free, Monday through Friday till 7:00 p.m. on School Paas.
CNIdren, uikI^IS, $1 .$0*aH other times.
Paiidng (on Fairgrounda) free.
Telephone service available in Manager's office in Exhi^ Building.
No Season tickets to the Fair are sold.
No "Pass Outs" permitted.
Every possible courtesy will be extended by our employees to all patrons.
RULES AND REGULATIONS of the
Pin COUNTY AGRICULTURAL FAIR Greenville, N. C.
Leroy James, Director of Exhibits, Men's Division
Evelyn Spangler, Director of Exhibits, Women's Division
1- The Pitt County American Legion Agricultural Fair, Inc., is not responsible for loss, injury, theft or damage by fire, lightning, wind, or any agency, for any exhibit made. All exhibits in all Departments and otherwise, are accepted only with that understanding.
2- Exhibitors in all departments must have their products entered and ready for exhibition in building by 5 p.m., Monday, Sept. 26, except in the Floral Department and Home Cooked Products as provided for.
3- No livestock or poultry exhibits can be taken from grounds until after 9 a.m., Saturday, October 1, except as is necessary to meet the Hog Cholera Eradication Program. This rule will be ridgidly enforced.
4. No exhibits in Exhibit Building can be taken out until after Saturday night. Exhibit Building will be open Sunday, October 2, from 2:00-5:00 p.m. for this put x)se.
5. Only products listed in the Department will receive premiums.
6- Produce or exhibits, except in the Livestock Department, that were exhibited at any previous Pitt County Fair will not be accepted.
7. No unworthy article will be awarded a premium. Where there is only one entry in a class, only second premium will be awarded.
8. All protests made by exhibitors will be considered by the Management, and its decision will be final.
9. All exhibits must be produced in Eastern North Carolina.
10. Only one entry per class will be accepted-except as provided in the Livestock and Poultry Departments.
11. No unworthy booth or exhibit will be awarded a premium.
12. Exhibitors will not be allowed in exhibit Hall during judging.
13. All exhibits must be picked up by Monday afternoon, 'October 3, by 5 p.m. Anything not picked up will be disposed of at the discretion of the Fair Manager.,Sam Pollard & Son
Plumbing, Heating and Air Conditioning 400W.1(MhSt. 752-3661
Qraenviiie, N. C.
\and'Saturday
It will be plenty of action and lots of thrills when the Fontosy on Wheels 'Hell Drivers' perform at the Fair Grounds on Friday and Saturday afternoon of foir week at 5 o'clock.
^ There will be no charge for the show, a presentotkxi of the American Legion Posts which own and operate the Agricultural Fair. President Les Tumage and AAonoger Sam Winchester said foir-goers and thrill-seekers hove on opportunity to see these drivers, and the Fair officials are delighted to bring the feature entertainment, without chorge.
Jack Piumsteod and Tonny Petersen will put a fleet of new Chrysler, Dodge, and Plynxxjth cars and trucks, riding on Cooper tires, throu^ their paces over lofty ramp elevations.
The big 28 high-sped event show promises a string of thrilling acts lasting wi hour and 15 minutes. They will balance and drive new autonfX)biles on the sidewalls of their Cooper tires, baloncing on two wheels as for as they con go.
A new Dodge pickup truck will shoot off 0 romp, soar 65 feet through spoce, and come floating down on o receiving platform.
Old automobiles will be demolished before your eyes, motorcycles will fly through spoce and the highly technical reverse spin.
Petersen hos a long and varied career in show business. He is 0 native of Copenhogen, Denmark, traveled throughout Europe with a prestigious circus. His specialty wos a triple somersault into a chair from a teeter-board.
While performing in this country in the late 50's, he sow his first automobile thrill show and originated the kJea of combining on ocrobatic oct with an outo-mobile stunt. One of his earliest stunts was doing a handstand on top of a car os it soared into spoce from a ramp elevation. He was 0 featured performer at New York's World Fair in 1964 and 1965.
Piumsteod is o 35-year veteran of playing major fairs, speedways and exhSxtions. So spectacular wos his oct at the New York World's Foir in 1964 and 1965 thot a tire company contracted with him to head its television compoign which ran for x years. He hos appeared on television in commercials and personol appearances more than any living stuntman.'
PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR
SPECIAL NOTICE TO FAIR PATRONS Wednesday, September 28,1983-9:30-11:30 A.M.
Senior Citizens DAY-AII senior citizens admitted free Special Program Thursday, September 29,1983-9:30-11:30 A.M. Handicapped Children's Day, Admitted free.
Special demonstrations, rides.
Friday, September 30,1983 Pre-School special day. Pre-schoolers, ages 4 & 5, admitted free. Special demonstrations, rides.
Pitt County Fair Officers
Lester E. Turnage, Jr................ President
Norman Wilkerson.........................Vice President
H. Chester Outland .......................Vice President
Herman E. Dail............................Vice President
James W. Langley, Sr.............. Secretary
EIvy K. Forrest....................... Treasurer
Sam C. Winchester..............................Manager
Lester E. Turnage, Jr. Herman E. Dail
Lester E. Adams Norman W. Wilkerson Ernest L. Avery Walter L. Tucker Harold D. Weaver Lester E. Turnage, Jr. W. Connor Eagles Oscar L. Moore Eugene M. Sutton Adrian Adams
Board of Diroctore
Norman Wilkerson H. Chester Outland
James W. Langley, Sr. Gilbert L. WhitleyMembership
EIvy K. Forest J. Howard Moye William S. Goodson Grimes Lewis Bill Dudley Roland Wooten Chester Outland Wilbur Counterman J. B. Hockaday Dr. J. L. Winstead
(Life Member)THE American LegionPost
Jerry W. Cox Elma Holloman
Victory Post No. 289 Farmville Post No. 151
Ayden Farmville
EIvy K. Forrest
Gilbert L. Whitley John Redden Lewis
C. B. Mashburn Harry Cleaton George Watson Wade McLamb Bruce Cox Vernon Warren Herman Dail
D. J. Whichard, Jr.
(Honorary Member)Commanders
Dave Sigmon
Pitt County Post No. 39
Greenville
Sam C. Winchester.. Ethel C. Winchester.
Manager
. Receptionist
The Management respectfully requests every patron to the Fair to visit the Exhibit Building, Livestock Building and the W. C. Eagles Farmstead Museum to see for yourself "PITT COUNTY ON PARADE."
Carolina Grill
Home Cooking Serving Breakfast and Lunch
Hours; 6 AM to 3 PM 907 Dickinson Ave.
752-1188
!^osis ]
store Hours: 9:30 a.m. til 9!00 p.m. (mon.-Sat.) Rosess Cafeteria opens daily for breakfast at 6:30 a.m.
Office Machinee Office Supplies & Furniture
CAROLINA OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY 510 S. Greene Street Greenville, N. C. (919)758-1148
itt County: of
Golden Opportunity
Premium List
Pitt County American LegionAgricultural FairSpt. 26 Oct. 1,1983
(Approved by N. C. Dept, of Agriculture)
-FEATURED FREE ATTRACTION-rAN?AW N WHEEU
Friday & Saturday 5 P.M.
New Locations New Buildiniss
Free Parking Viliage of Yesteiyear
New Midway Amusements
Martin School Budget Is Up
%ILLIAMSTON - Substantial increases in current expense and capital outlay funding from the Martin County Commissioners Im resulted in the Board of Eductions budget being up niftrly 17 percent over last years school buc^t.
The Martin County schools budget total of $14,710,116, which includes local, state and federal funding, is up percent over last years $13,646,812 budget.
County funding amounts to $3,077,452, an increase of $446,430 (16.9 percent) over the countys allocation of $2,631,011 for fiscal year 1982-83.
Total pupil enrollment in the county schools this year is 5,627.
Martin County Receives Funds
WILLIAMSTON Martin County has been awarded $10,000 in matching funds to continue its Land Records Management program. TTie grant is from the North Carolina Department of Administration.
The lands records program is now entering its fourth year; with completion expected during the current fiscal year.
The program is essentially one that (rffers an overall view of the county, the various parcels of land, and the identity of owners. It is being carried out by use of aerial photographs and documentation from local records.
Jury Selection Continues
Tte jury selection in the case of the trial of Dwight Parker continues for the fifth day today. Slection procedures began Tuesday, Sept. 6. As of 10 a.m. Monday, a total of eight jurors have been selected, with four more to be chten tefore the trial gets underway.
Parker, a 23-year old man of Newark, N.J. is to be tried on charges of murder and armed robbery in connection with the deaths of two area men - Rev. Leslie L. Thorbs, 31, of Grifton, and Anthony Ray Herring, 27, of Goldsboro.
The bodies of the two men, allegedly killed on Feb. 18, were found a few days after that date in the Tar River. The bodies of the two were weighted down by concrete blocks tied to their legs.
Judge David E. Reid is presiding over the special term of Superior Court.
Older Adults Swim Program Set
The Greenville Parks and Recreation Department announces the beginning of the Older Adults Swimming Pr^am on Friday at the ECU Memorial gym indoor pool. Swim days will be Mondays at 1 p.m. and Fridays at 4 p.m. The program is open to all interested persons 50 and older. For more information or to pre-register, call Margaret McGl(Aon at 752-4137, extension 259.
Views On Dental
Health
Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.PA
ARE DENTAL X-RAYS SAFE?
Sometimes, dentists wish they had the eyes of Superman but we dont. So we use X-rays. The X-ray is one of the dentists most useful diagnostic tools. Many defects of the teeth and the bone which surrounds them cannot be seen by the dentists eye. They are only visible on X-ray film. Before you ask -let me answer - dental X-rays are safe!
Millions of X-ray films have been taken by dentists without a factual report of injury to anyone. Exposures which used to take 6 or 8 seconds are
now made in a fraction of a second. Metal filters to keep back unwanted radiation are standard on all new model X-ray machines. Older machines are equipped with filters and electronic timing devices to enable them to use high-speed X-ray film for short exposure times.
The National Committee on Radiation Protection states: "There is no scientific evidence that the proper use of modern X-ray equipment for dental diagnostic purposes will be harmful to the patient.
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
GrcenvUlc 752-5126 Vancebofo 244-1179In The Area
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
Monday, September 12,1983 7
School Volunteers Discuss Goals
Parent volunteer coordinators for the Greenville schools met recently to discuss goals for their program this school year. Items discussed included needs assessment, recruiting and training school volunteers, and assigning volunteers to the classrooms.^
Persons interested in volunteer work for the city schools may call any of the following cowdinators or Carolyn Ferebee, system-wide volunteer coordinator, at 752-4192.
School coordinators, volunteers and phone numbers are:
Aycock Junior High - Linda Seykora, 752-7694, and Patricia Koontz, 756-2064.
Eastern - Lanie aiive, 758-5301.
Elmhurst - Cathy Mumford, 756-3774.
FuUilove School - Tony Gray, 758-8570.
Greenville Middle - Linda Hickman, 756-7579.
Rose High - Su Su Aldridge, 756-2807.
Sadie Saulter - Jon Shaw, 355-2737.
South Greenville - Ludie Smith, 756-7477.
Third Street - Harriet Davis, 758^)330.
Wahl-Coates - Phoebe Caldwell, 758-1735.
Woodmen Of The World To Meet
Unit 218, Woodmen of the World Insurance Society, will have its covered-dish meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. H.B. Randolph. A report on the Saturday workshop at Fort Barnwell will be given.
See Community Watch Growth
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolinas Community Watch program can be an effective law enforcement tool, but some officials say they must struggle to keep participants active in the program.
It works so well at the beginning that people are keyed up about it and crime goes down, said Lt. E.W. Floyd, crime prevention officer for th^ Wake County Sheriffs Department. Then they get complacent, figuring the problem has been taken care of. They dont remain observant.
Community Watch, with the support of Gov. Jim
Two Wrecks Are Reported
One person was injured and damages estimated at $2,500 occurred in two traffic accidents investigated Friday by Greenville police.
Officers said Willie Barfield of Route 1, Ayden, was injured in a 9:30 a.m. accident on Moye Boulevard 600 feet south from W. Fifth Street.
The wreck, which involved vehicles operated by Barfield and Jeremiah Wilkins of 707 Cherry Street, caused damages estimated at $1,000 to each vehicle.
No charges were preferred following investigation.
Officers preferred no charges following a 11:25 a.m. mishap Friday on South Memorial Drive 200 feet north from Trade Street, involving vehicles operated by Debra Worthington Tyndall of Route 2, Vanceboro, and Mamie Braswell Warren of Snow Hill.
Damages were set at $300 to the Warren car and $200 to the Tyndall vehicle.
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Hunt, was started in 1977. Its participants are asked to keep their eyes open and call law officers if they notice any suspicious activities in their neighborhood.
A survey by the state Office of Budget and Management showed that by the end of 1982, 43 percent of North Carolinians were participating in the program, compared to 36 percent in 1980, said J.W. Trivette, state Community Watch coordinator for the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety.
Each of the states 100 counties ^ias some sort of Coirimun-'y Watch program. Law enforcement officials help residents organize into neighborhood groups, which meet periodically to discuss crime problems and prevention.
Officials say the program is most effective in reducing residential break-ins. From 1981 to 1982 the state experienced a 14.6 percent drop in daylight residential break-ins, said Trivette.
But officials with the Raleigh Police and Wake County Sheriffs departments are discouraged because some participants dont remain active.
I think it has been effective in areas that remain active, said Raleigh police Lt. C.J. Williams. But some thought they could just hang their sign out and leave it at that. That doesnt help much.
Bloodmobile Collects 148 Pints
A Bloodmobile visit Friday at the Gaskins-Leslie Building at Pitt County Memorial Hospital netted 148 pints of blood, according to Mrs. Ruth Taylor of the Pitt Red Cross.
Mrs. Taylor said that 16 persons were deferred for various health reasons during the six-hour blood drive, coordinated by Craig Quick of the liospital staff.
The next area visit wi 1 be on Sept. 26 at the Moose Lodge, Mrs. Taylor said. She noted that donors are encouraged to call the Red Cross office at 752-4222 to schedule appointments for the drive.
Maye Named Assistant Principal
John W. Maye Jr. has been named assistant principal of the Albemarle Road Junior High School in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School system for this school term.
A Greenville native, he is the son of Mrs. Beatrice C. Maye, who lives here.
Firefighter Is Overcome
A Greenville home sustained extensive damage in a Sunday fire and a local firemen who helped fight the midday blaze was treated at Pitt County Memorial Hospital for dehydration, Chief Jenness Allen reported.
The 1901 S. Pitt St. home occupied by Mable Starkey was totally involved in flames when firemen arrived, Allen said. Minor damage also resulted to shingles on an outside wall of an adjoining house at 1903 S. Pitt St.
Allen said fireman Ricky Ellis was treated and released from Pitt Memorial.
He said the cause of the fire, reported around 12:33 p.m., has not been determined.
ARC Reunion Will Be Held
The 13th annual Patient-Staff-Alumni Reunion will be held at the Walter B. Jones Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center here Sunday.
With the theme, Were Glad We Came, the reunion begins with registration at 9 a.m. Highlights of the day include two open-speaker meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous, open house in dorms and in arts and crafts, a variety show, a festival of family-oriented films, and a picnic lunch on the grounds at 11:30 a.m. The price of lunch is $2 per persons, with a maximum of $8 for a family of four or more.
Fraternity House Theft Investigated
Greenville police are investigating the Sunday theft of $263 in property and $15 in cash from a fraternity house at 500 Elizabeth St., according to Capt. John Briley.
He said that George Steven Kalin and Harold Dean Quinby, members of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, reported the theft of a push button telephone and AM/FM receiver, and $15 in cash, respectively.
Kalin told officers that the telephone and receiver were removed from his bedroom at the fraternity house, Briley said, while Quinby reported his wallet, containing the cash and personal papers, was taken.
PUBLIC NOTICE
County of Pitt City of Greenvilie
NOTiCE OF ffEARtNG BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CiTY OF GREENViLLE A public hearing wili be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Kenneth Brown whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under section 32-56(f) in order to operate a rooming house/boarding house in a CDF Downtown Commercial Fringe zoning district located at 903 Dickinson Avenue.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday. September 22, t983, in the CHy Council Chambers of the Municipal Building. _
PUBLIC NOTICE
City of Greenville
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE *
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Bennie J. Anderson whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under section 32-6Sfe) in order to operate a flea market in a CH Highway Commercial located across from the Pitt-Greenville Airport on Airport Road at the old Pitt County Fairgrounds.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday. September 22, t983, in the CKy Council Chambers of the Municipal Building. _
County of Pitt PUBLIC NOTICE
CHy of Greenville ,
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Stuart S. Campbell and Michael Ertis whereby the peli-lloners desire to obtain a special use permit under section 32-S0(d) In order to operate a laundromat in an O&l Office and Institutional zoning district located at 2510 East Tenth Street.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, September 22, 1983, In the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building. _
County of PiM PUBLIC NOTICE
CHy of Greenville
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF Tf^ CITY OF GREENVILLE A public hearing will be conducfed by tite Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Gertrude Nichols whereby the petitioner desires to ob-Uin a variance from section 32-78<d) in order to operate a home occupation In an accessory building and a special use permit under section 32-41 (c) in order to operate a home occupation (flower arranging) in an R-9 zoning district located at 2821 Jefferson Drive.
The time, date, and place of fhe public hearing will be 7:30 PM. Thursday, September 22, 1983, in the CHy Council Chambers of the Municipal Buildlitg.
Lois D. Worthington September 12,19,1983 City Clerk
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-Pilofs Speculate 'Inattention' On Flight Of KAL
By CLAUDE E.ERBSEN Associated Press Writer ABOARD PAN AM CLIPPER MAYFLOWER (AP) The radar screen tucked near Capt. William Powers left knee clearly shows the tip of Kamchatka Peninsula and the Kurile islands to the right of the jumbo jets track.
In the co-pilots seat, First Officer Oscar Michael is preparing to make his ninth position report since passing Anchorage, Alaska, en route to Tokyo.
The aircraft is at 40,000 feet above Okkoe checkpoint, an arbitrary point at 48 degrees 47 minutes 8 seconds north latitude, 160 decrees 11 minutes 3 seconds eaStTongi-tude.
It is heading southwest on
a course of 233 degrees along international air corridor R80, parallel to and 60 miles south of the airway from which Korean Air Lines Flight 007 strayed on Sept. 1 before it was shot down by a Soviet interceptor several hundred miles west of its intended course.
Pan Am Flight 801 is about to leave Anchorages control area and enter Tokyos, and Michael makes his report to air traffic controllers in both locations. Tokyo is still about 1,050 miles away.
The air is filled with the crackle of half a dozen other aircraft reporting their positions. Most of the voices are male, all speak English, One voice is that of a woman controller, speaking English with a heavy Russian accent.
She is clearing a Scandinavian airliner to enter Soviet territory.
In the cockpit of Flight 801, nonstop from New York to Tokyo with 220 passengers and 17 crew menbers, it is business as usual.
There have been no operational changes since the downing of the Korean jetliner. Powers says.
The only change has been the closing of air corridor R20, and its replacement with corridor R80. As a result, planes stay at least 120 miles south of Soviet air space, clearly marked on the charts as closed to commercial traffic.
Flight 801 is on automatic pilot, guided by one of its three Inertial Navigation
Rising Number Of N.C Whooping Cough Cases
By The Associated Press
Fewer North Carolina children are getting preschool physicals and booster shots, leading to a rise in the number of cases of whooping cough, a pediatrician says.
School health records indicate the percentage of Gaston County children undergoing physicals before kindergaiten or the first grade declined from 70 percent in 1980 to 30 percent last year, according to Dr. George E. Prince of Gastonia, chairman-elect of
Aviation Course Set
Piti Community College is offering a 6(t-hoiir aviation ground school course on Tuesday and Thursday evemngs from 7-10 p.m in room li)3V\. The class begins Tuesda\
For further information call the college's division of continuing education at 756-3130, ext. 238.
the N.C. Pediatric Society.
A very frustrating result of this is that many children are not getting booster shots before they start school, said Prince. This could be the reason were again seeing cases of whooping cough.
Prince said talks with some of the 500 North Carolina pediatricians in his society have led him to conclude the rates have declined elsewhere in the state.
State Division of Health Services records show 51 cases of whooping cough were reported in 19t, compared to only 12 cases in 1981.
Price said although he could not explain why the checkup rate has fallen or why whooping cough cases have risen, he worried that fewer checkups may lead to fewer booster shots.
Three shots of combined whooping cough, diphtheria and tetanus vaccine, which are often given in the childs first year, are required under state law. "Two later booster shots are recommended but not required.
said Dr. John N. Mac-Cormack, head of the health services divisions communicable disease control branch.
While the severity of whooping cough decreases with age, doctors encourage the additional boosters to reduce the risk of that older children will carry infections to the very young who can be devastated by the disease.
According to statistics in MafCormacks office, the numbers of children receiving whooping cough-diphtheria-tetanus booster shots in public health clinics have been increasing in the last three years.
But Prince speculated the apparent booster increase may be artificial, showing only a switch by some parents to public health services because of a poor economy.
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System computers, similar to those aboard the Korean airliner.
Using a small keyboard similar to that on a desk calculator, the flight crew programs the computers prior to departure and at each stopover, with the latitude and longitude of the aircraft on the ground and the coordinates of the next eight checkpoints in the flight plan.
After the data has been entered, Powers explains, it is checked by another member of the flight crew using printed navigational charts to confirm each set of coordinates.
At least that is the procedure followed by Pan Am crews, according to Powers, of Charlotte, N.C. He says he assumes similar methods are used by other airlines,
This procedure is crucial, he says. If the wrong numbers are entered, the plane will fly to the wrong place. Thats why double-checking is so important.
The checking of position continues throughout the flight. Ten minutes before each checkpoint is reached, coordinates stored in the computer for the next checkpoint are verified by the crew, by calling up the data from the computer and comparing it with printed charts.
Ten minutes after every checkpoint and position re-3ort, the crew checks its ocation again on the computer and plots it on a navigational chart. Between
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checkpoints, instruments are constantly monitored to ensure that the plane is on course and at the right speed and altitude.
If we are going to be more than three minutes late at our next checkpoint, says Michael, of Boca Raton, Fla., we have to notify the controllers.
Powers and the other four pilots assigned to Flight 801 speculate about why the Korean plane, carrying 269 passengers and crew on a flight from New York to Seoul, deviated from its assigned flight path.
They feel that human error probably played a key role.
The machines make it easy to make mistakes, says Powers, a veteran of 20 years of flying. The biggest danger is complacency. Cockpit discipline and self-motivation are essential to safety.
The consensus of a lot of pilots, adds Pilot-Engineer Hank Hieftje, a 33-year flying veteran and retired Air Force colonel from Salt Lake City, is that someone was not paying attention.
Speculation about what went wrong with Flight 007 ranges from wrong computer input of starting coordinates when the plane refueled in Anchorage to incorrect data being programmed for subsequent checkpoints.
However, for the 747 to stray from its course as long and as far as it did. Powers said, it would have heen necessary for the intial input errors to be compound several times by failure to double-check data in the computer.
Another perhaps more plausible possibility is that the Korean pilot might have taken the plane off c(Hnputer control to get around a cloud or a thunderstorm - common practice, according to Powers.
It w(Hild still have been under automatic pilot, but in what we call the heading mode, rather than computer control.
A single switch in the center of the cockpit panel controls the mode in which the plane is operating, and if the crew neglects to flip the switch to reconnect automatic computer control, an aircraft will continue flying in the heading mode indefinately.
Powers and First Officer Roger Barous, of Ipswich, Mass., speculated that Flight 007s pilot may have taken the plane off computer control and neglected to put it back. Without subsequent checks of his actual position - available from the computer at any time at the push of a button - the plane could have flown for hours in the
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wrong direction with the crew unaware of it.
Reports that Fli^t 007 flew over Soviet territory in a straight line for more than two hours tend to support this theory, the Pan Am pilots said.
Its assigned flightpath along R20 was in a straight line, and in the absence of any expected computer-general^ change of course, the crew could have merely assumed that it was on the ri^t track. Powers said. Flight 007 never reached the critical checkpoint where it was to make a right turn over northern Japan and head for Seoul.
But we will never really know what happened, Powers said. Every airline has different procedures, he added, pointing to a section in the Pan Am cockpit manual which directs Uie crew to share information and constantly crosscheck flight and computer data.
As Powers and the others in the cockpit discussed the
fate of Fli^t 007, the radar screen continued to show the Kurile islands far to the right of their aircraft.
Thats where they belong, said Pilot-Engineer James Wilder, Roxbury, Conn. If they show up (m the left, you know youre in trouble.
According to tracking reports made public by the Japanese government, the Kuriles were to the left of the Korean jetliner aircraft fw about two hours before it was shot down.
In more than 80 flights between Anchorage and Tokyo, Powers said, he had never seen any Soviet aircraft on patrol. He and his fellow pi ots said they assumed that Soviet planes are often in the area but keep out of sight above and to the rear of conunercial jets.
The radar on commercial jets is designed to look forward and down, monitoring approaching terrain and weather conditions, and not to the rear.
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HOME-BAKED PRODUCTS (Vt cake or pie will be aufficient for judging)
CLASS 0; Pies-Youth Must be in place by 9:00 A.M. Tuesday of Fair Week. CAKES-COOKIES
327. Cheese Straws (6)...........................................2.00
328. Ice Box Cookies (3).......................... 1.50
329. Layer Cake ..................... ...4.00
320. Sinall Party Cakes (6).......................................2.00
331. Sugar Cookies (6)..................... 1.50
332. Any other cake............................... 2.50
333. Any other cookie ........................................2.00
BREADS-YOUTH
334. Biscuits....................................................2.00
335. Com Meal Muffins (6)........ 2.00
336. Yeast Bread (half loaf or 6 roUs)........................ 2.00
337. Any other kind.............................................2.00
CANDIES-YOUTH
338. Peanut Brittle (6)..................... 2.00
339. Chocolate Fudge (6 pieces)...................................2.00
340. Divinity........................................ 2.00
341. Taffy (6)........................ '........2.00
342. Any other kind (6) .......................................2.00
1.50 1.00
3.00
1.50
1.00
1.50 1.60
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
PIES-YOUTH
343. CustM-d.............. ;..2.00 1.50
344. Fruit................... 2.00 1.50
345. Pecan .............................................2.00 1.50
346. Any other kind.............................................2.00 1.50
ADULT DIVISION CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Score Card for Judging
1. Appearance.............................................30 points
a. Color-15
b. Clearness15
2. Texture.............................................;... 20 points
3. Uniformity..............................................25 points
a. Ripeness-10
b. Appropriate Size15
4. Pack Arrangement.................... 20 points
Total.............................. 100 points
CLASS R: Canned Fruits and VegetablesAdults 347. Apples......................................................2.25 1.50
348. Applesauce........................................ 2.25 1.50
349. Huckleberries..............................................2.25 1.50
350. Peaches........................................... 2.25 1.50
351. Blackberries............. 2.25 1.50
352. Beets................................................. 2.25 1.50
353. Cora, Cream Style..........................................2.25 1.50
354. Corn, Whole Kernel.............................. 2.25 1.50
356. Field Peas..................................................2.26 1.50
356. Green Peas............................... 2.26 1.50
367. Lima Beans......................-........................2.26 1.50
368. Okra.......................................................?-25 1.50
369. Pears......................................................2.26 1.60
360. Pimiento..................... 2.26 1.60
361. Squash.....................................................2.26 1.60
362. String Beans.........................2.....................2.26 1.60
363. Tomatoes ....... 2.26 1.60
364. Tomato Juice...............................................2.26 1.60
366. Any unlisted Fruits and Vegetables..........................2.26 1.60
PRESERVES Half-Pint and Pint Jars Score Card for Judging
1. Fruit ................................................66points
a. Shape-10
b. Flavor-16
c. Flavor-16 ,
d. Texture10
e. Pack-10
2. Syrup...................................................45 points
a. Clearness and Color10
b. Flavor-15
c. Consistency10
d. Proportion of Juice10 _
Total................................ 100 points
CLASS S; PRESERVES-Adults
366. Cherry........................................ 1.75 1.25
367. Fig ..............................................1.75 1.25
368. Grape ...............................................1.75 1.25
369. Peach............................ 1.75 1.25
370. Pear......................................... 1.75 1.25
371. Strawberry............................................ 1.75 1.25
372.......................................... 1.75 1.25
373. Any Marmalade or Unlisted Preserves............:..........1.75 1.25
Wainwright Auto Service
W. Wilton St. Farmvlllo. N. C.
753-4939
12 PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR
.40 points
2. Syrup.............................................
a. Cleamess and Color-15
b. Consistency15
c. Proportion of juice10
p, ..................................................100 points
llavor 18 very imporUnt. but cannot actually be judged since jars are not opened. Preserves should have an airtight seal (no paraffin) half pints or pint
jars
Expiation of Scm Card
be^lSneai
nearly as possible original in shape and ap-
ShapeFruits should pearance.
Clearness and ColorClear, and in some fruit transparent, not too dark. TextureTender, but firm and plump.
Pack-Arrangement of fruit with reference to symmetry, though not particularly fancy pack.
Consistency-Heavy but not enough to crystallize.
Proportion of juice- V, to 3 fruit.
292. Blackberry......
293. Blueberry.......
294. Damson..
295. Fig............
297. Huckleberry.....
298. Peach '......
299. Pear.............
300. Strawberry.......
301. Watermelon Rind.
CLASS M: PreservesYouth
1.75
1.75
1.75
1.75
1.76
1.75
1.75
1.75
1.75
302. Any Marmalade or Unlisted Preserve................. 75
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
Flavor.
JAM OR FRUIT BUTTER Score Card Judging
Smoothness ....... '.............................
Consistence and Texture f S
Color and Clearness................: : : "............'.....
Total..
. 20 points
, 100 points
James are made from the whole fruits, usually small ones, and are cooked to
a smooth jelly-like consistency. They should have an airtight seal. (No paraffin) nntjars. ^ r i-
CLASS N: Jam or Fruit Butter-Youth
303. Blackberry........
304. Blueberry.....!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!......175
305. Peach....................................................... 75
306. Strawberry ........................................ ..
307. Any Unlisted Jam..................................... 1 75
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
JELLY Score Card for Judging
1 General Appearance.....................................30 points
a. Color-10
b. Clearness-10
c. Lack of Crystals10
2 Tlavor!.................................................35points
3. Consistency.............................................35points
......................................-.............100 points
Shown in glasses of uniform shape and size practical for home use. Thin layer of paraffin.
CLASS 0: JeUy-Youth
308. Apple.........................................................
309. Blackberry ............................................... 75
310. Crabapple......................... 1 75
311. Grape................ !!.!..!!.!l.75
312. Quince.................................. 175
313. Plum.
,1.75
314. Any Unlisted Jelly. .............................. 175
PICKLES Score card for judging j
Size, Shape and Uniformity................................. points
.....................................................30 points
.............. 30 points
^ 16 points
Proportion of Pickles to Liquid................. 10 points
.....................................................100 points
Explanation of Score Card
TextureFirm, not tough, soft or flabby.
Color-As near a natural color as possible. No fruit coloring added. Containers-Pine or Quart Jars.
CLASS P; Pickles-Youth
315. Pear (Sweet)....................................... 1^5
316. Peach (Sweet)........................... I
317. Watermelon Rind............ ^........1 75
318. Bread and Butter ............................ .....1 75
319. Cucumber (sweet) ....................................... 75
320. Cucumber (sour).................................. .........i ^g
321. Cucumber (dill) ..... 175
322. Beet.........................
323. Chow-Chow ............................. 1 75
324. Sliced Green Tomatoes .......................1.7
326. Sweet Green Pepper................................L76
328. Any Unlisted Rehsh or Pickle..........................1,7
1.25
1.25
1.26
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
.1.75
1.26
,1.76
1.26
,1.76
1.26
1.75
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
1.76
1.26
HIGHWAY 33 EAST GREENVILLE 752-3172 Rt. 7, Box 201
Seoio^
Reds Radio & TV
Whirlpool
Appliances
Farmville
We Service What We Sell
Quasar
TV
Western Steer Family
Steak House
3005 East 10th St.
Near Hastings Ford
758-8550
Marlboro Inn
Hwy. 264 By-Pass West
Farmville
753-3145
^ Western Sizzling
Steak House
* 24-ltomManu
{
* 50-Item Salad Bar
Take Outs 2 Locations
1 1 Vis-
2903 E. 10th St. and
h . Aw
264 By-Pass
766-2712
I CATALOG SHOWROOM
More than 3,000 Items to Offer.
^wy.264ByPi._ALLEN & JONES, INC.
6E APPLIANCES - FURNITURE SALES A SERVICE 113 N. MAIN STREET pHONE SK3-3451
FARMVILLE, N. C.Pierce Tobacco WarehouseNo.su406 W. Wilson Sf. Farmville, N. C.
Li
14 PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIR
JAM AND FRUIT BUTTER
Score Card for Jndging
Smoothness............. ........
....................................... 25 points
....................................... 100 points
Explanation
, Jam s are made from whole fruit usually small ones, and are cooked to a smooth jelly-like consistncy.
Butters we made from fruits which contain a large portion of the fleshy mater^ and the seed are discarded. They should have a dirt-tight seal Do not cover jam with paraffin. Half-pint or pint jars.
CLASS T: Jam and Fruit Butter-Adult .....
376. gL .................................................
377. S:;;:;:;::;;;;;....... m
378. Pear............................... .............Ill f
379. Plum.................................. ..................
380. Strawberry................................^ ^ ^L75 125
381. Any Unlisted Jam or Butter........................... 175 125
Exhibits will be ruled out when not in size jar specified.
JELLY-Adult Score Card for Judging
1. Ger,d Appearance.....................................
a. Color-10
b. Clearness-10
c. Lack of Crystals-10
2. Flavor................... ...
3. conaisiency 36 Jit,
Total.................... . .
of shape and size practi^'for home. Skyer
CLASS U: JeUy-Adult
382. Apple...................................................
383. Blackberry or Dewberry.........
crabappie.........................!.............
5.Gr.pe....................;...................
386. Plum.............. ..............
387. Quince............... 'J
388. Other................... ^ ^^.'i.......... 75 25
ovw^kUy ' Thinlayer of paraffin
PICKLES Score Card of Judging
Sizeand Shape............ e
Flavor .... r" -
Taiture .......................................................
Color........................
Proportion of Picklea to Liquid ..................
Total............ ~ .
;........................ 100 pomts
Explanation of Scwe Card Texture-Firm, not tought, soft or flabby.
^lor-As near a natural color as possible. No food coloring added Proportion of pieles to liquid-Jar filled with pickles, liquid to cover and fill
Sp8C6S.
Container-Appropriate for pickles.
p K CLASS V:PicUes-Adult
389. Peach................. ,
390. Pear ^'26
391. Pear Relish.........................................
392. Watermelon Rind ....... ?"
393. Beet .........................................^-26
394. Bread and Butter ...... J'!
395. Chili Sauce.............. If
3%. Chow-Chow....................III
39T~ucumber (sweet) ......
398. Cucumber (soiir).............. ....................... I,
399. Cucumber (dill).................................17= 1
400. Pepper, Onion or Dixie Relish................................1 71; 1 ok
401. Sliced Green Tomato.................. .........., /ok
402. Sweet Green Peppers................. ................j 7, g
403. Any Unlisted ReUsh or Pickle.................... ......... 75 '^g
HOMECOOKED PRODUCTS..............
a m TwldaT ^ ^
A(\A 6 II D FV * CooUes-Adult
404. SmaU Party Cakes or Cup Cakes (6)......... 2 00 1 fin
5. IcBonCottonM.... ...... . .. ......................5 I
406. SugntCot*,,....................... ..... .......2.00 LM
406. Sut,n,C0kil6l....................... ...................?.00 LM
407.Ch,,.Str.( 6................. ..................?
408. A.,<AWkind(6l...........................
CANDY-Adnlt
409. Panut Brittle (6 pieces) ....... 9 nn i 1
410. Minu(2dozen)........................i:;;;;;;;;;;;;.......
411. Chocolate Fudge (6 pieces). .................... ...... 00 1 fin
412. Divinity Fudge (6 pieces)....................... 2 nn 1 ko
413. Any other kind (6 pieces)................ ................... on 1 fin
414. ^t Collection of home-made candies.................. 2 j50 160
416. Any other kind........... ..............Z
tland-aip^(Jhoclte Candy...'' ' 2.JJ {Jg
Cake Section
(Her Vi cake deaired)
Best of Show in Cakes - $6.00 Best of Show in Decorated Cakes $6.00
TUBE OR LOAF CAKE
417. Apple Sauce Cake...........................................4,00 2.76
418. Pniit Cake (white)..........................................g og 4.00
419. Fruit Cake (dark)..........................................g qq 4 qq
420. Angel Food Cake............................................ qq 2 75
421. Pound Cake ...... ...."4.00 2 76
422. Kentucky Pound Cake.................................... 4.00 2.76
423. Chocolate Pound Cake......................................4 qq 2 76
424. Sponge Cake....................................4.00 2 76
425. Chiffon Cake............................................... 2.76
426. Any Other........................... .....................4 qq 2 75
LAYERCAKES
427. Devs Food................................................. .. g QQ
428. Chocolate... .................... '6.00 3.00
429. Caramel....................................................g QQ ^q^
430. Coconut ^ g qq 3 qq
431. Japanes Fruit Cake.........................................g qq 4 qq
432. Spice....................................................... .. 2 7g
433. German Chocolate.................... gQQ qqq
- ^ , ..................6.00 lOO
435- Pineapple................... ..............................4 qq 2.7g
436. Any other filling............................ 4 00 2 7fi
437. Decorated Cake .....................g QQ q qq
PIES (ONE HALF)
438. Lemon.......................................... 00 1 fin !:
.............................. 2.00 1.60
.......... 2.00 1.60
, 2.00 1.60
443. Coconut.................................... ^ 2 0n ifin
444. Peach...................................; 2.00 IM
445. Cherry.......................................... ........^
.........
4.A,0tlr..................................................... j jq
Best of Show in Yeast Breads - $6.00
448. WWteLoaf.............................. ..................3.60 1 7fi
449. Rolls, white (Vi doxen).............................. 2 on 1 sn
460. Muffins (Vi dozen) ...................... 00 1 t
461. Com Sticks (Vi dozen)....'.......................... 2 00 1 60
452. Baking Powder Biscuits (Vi dozen)...........................2 00 1 sn
463. Buttermilk Biscuits (Vi dozen) ......... > /-a
4M.NutB.d..............................................
456. Miscellaneous.................................i.LoO 1 'm
466. (a) Best Yeast-raised Bread-Sweet Bread-Loaf.... .........2 50 1 7K
457. (b) Best Yeast-raised Bread-Sweet Bread-Rolls......... . . . .so 1 75
DEPARTMENT J
FLORAL DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Iris Taylor, Director Cut flowers must be placed by 9 oclock. Tuesday morning, of Fair Week Each arrangement must be the work of the exhibitor ATTENTION EXHIBITOR:
1. There will not be any residue on cut flowers or potted plants.
2. Cut flower speciment is one flower with foliage and no buds.
3. A display is three < more of the same kind of flower.
4. A collection is three or more of different varieties
6. M ma^ment is a pattern of flowers with a focal point.
6. Pmch off buggy, dead leaves and flowea.
7. Wash off dirt and dust.
8. Clean soil around roots of plants.
YOUTH CLASS X: Plants and flowoe
468. Specimen of foliage plant......................... ,
469. Specimen of flowering plant.................................j gQ , qq
460. Best arrangement of chrysanthemums ..............1 go ,
461. Best arrangement of dahlias............... .............I gQ ,
462. Best arrangement of marigolds............. ..............., ka ,
463. Best arrangement of zinnias................... ..........i ka ,
464. Best mixed flower arrangement...............1.6O 1 nn
466. Best harvest arrangementmay inrhide fiiiits,
vegetables, weeds, etc................................. jgQ ,qq
466. Cut roses, any variety exhibited in vases... Igo 1 qq
467. Planter..................................... .
468. Snake Plant.............. ...............!
469.Anyotherldn d.................iZ
Frankie Hardee, Jr. Electric
ContractorResidence & Commercial '
101 E. Berkshire Road Greenville, N.C.
Office: 752-4191 RQg_. 755.5770
470.
471.
472.
473.
474.
475.
476.
477.
478.'
479.
480.
481.
482.
483.
484. 486.
486.
487.
488.
489.
490.
491.
492.
493.
494.
495. 4%. 497.
ADULT
CLASSY
CoOectioo of Perns (3-51....... ......................... 2 50 1 00
lece Fern (Spedmen)..................................... j j qq
Specimen Boston Fm.............................. j 5q j qq
Asparagus phunee............ 150 100
A foliage plant............................................... 5q j qq
CoQectk of begonias....................................... jqq
BeetBegonias...................................!!.""!!!"l'50 Ioo
Collection of Roses............ .............................j 5q jqq
'Spec. Roee(white..............................!!"!!"!""l50 LOO
Spec. Rose (red).............................................. 5q j qq
Spec. Roee (pink) ........................... ...........j gQ jqq
Spec. Rt (yellow)........................................... 5q j qq
Any other kind.............................................. 5q j qq
An arrangement of flowers or fruit in pumpkin................2.50 1 50
An arrangement of pom^anates............................ go i oo
A basket of autumn foliage................................... go i.oo
Best arrangement of mixed flowers.......................... 1.50 1.00
Best arrangement of miniature flowers....................... 1.50 1.00
Best arrangement of Roses....................... .........1.50 i.OO
Best arrangement of large flowers................ ..........i.go 1.00
Best collection of dahlias (all types)..........................2.50 1.00
Collection of pompoms.......................................... 1,00
Spec, pink dahlias..........................................l.gO i.OO
Spec, yellow dahlias........................ ;....1.50 1.00
Spec, orchid dahlias.........................................1.50 i.OO
Spec, red dahlias................. .............. ...........1.50 i.OO
S|)oc. white dahlias.........................................1.50 1.00
Dahlias, any other kind.....................................1.50 1.00
PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION AGRICULTURAL FAIREdward's Pharmacy
SMtler CItlasfis Discount on Proscriptions Hoolth ContoR "Oot Well. Koop Weil, Look Well' Aydn, North Carolina TsI. 740-3126Southern Bank & Trust Co.
Aydon IrandiM
Moury Bronch
MtAAStt HDtAl DPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
BUM'S RESTAURANT
Woed-CookcdSarlO Homa Stylo Cooking Aydon, N. C.
FIRESTONE TIRES & TUBESSPEIGHT SERVICE CENTERUNION 76 PRODUCTS W. WILSON ST. PHONE SK34131FARMVILLE, N. C. Distributor Union 76 Products & Firtstono Tirw
MaJorfMlnor Tune^pt ^
Major-Minor Engine Repairs-Foreign ft Domestic
Chuck Autiens Paints Body Shop
leoeDIcWnMtiAw. Green.lll<i,N.C.
. 752-3632
Stroud Land Surveying Company
PO.emS7S
neiSwOittiMiivd.
.N.C.27SS4
Tsseris
Tssetoo
Ue.N&L2Sn
Pitt County Transportation Co.
Farmville, N. C. 753-3109
5a593a
Greenville Marine & Sports Center
DALER FOR DIXIE. BONITO, SEA OX BOATS
Joe Vemelson Owner
Hwy. 264 N.E. Rt. 5. 00x133 Greenville, N. C.
imported Car Parts
105 Trade St. 756-7114
(Beside Todd Stereo)
GREENVILLE, N.C.
Complete Line of Foreign Parts and Accessories
Oyster Bar
710 N. Greene St. Greenville, .N. C. 752-0090General Heating, Inc.
"Serving the area for over 36 years '
1100 Evans St Greenviile,N.C.Farmville Hardware Co.aulMIng SuppIlM
753-3169
Formvillo, N. C.
fH fl fin BUCK'S GULF STATION
foad& Wrecker Service (iSuIf) JaitranTnx*s*Trters ^CK'S RENTAL SERVICE .
OneWay Local
2704 E. lOTH STREET 752 3228
GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834 24 HR. 758 1033
t06 S. LEE STREET AYDEN. N. C. aaS13
AYDEN UPHOLSTERY SHOP
BUDDY
746-6482
FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED ALL WORK GUARANTEED PHONE 746-3700 PICK UP AND DELIVERY"A B C Moving & Storage, Inc.
NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES "Tlw QwilltmM of ttw Moving Industry Stantonsburg Road 752-4500Joe Cullipher
Eastern Carolinas Largest Chrysler, Plymouth and Dodge Dealer
* Chrylar * Plymouth
* OoclB ^ * DodgaTnicka
PauQMt
Salei, Senice, Parts Manorial Drin at 264 B^Pass Gnenvifla,II.C.-7564)186
Kitchen & Bath Designs
Mika Buck. Ownar SSSAiHngtonAva. 756-0315
QiaanvUla.N.C.Gay a Barber & Style Shop
113 So. Main St. Formville, N. C.
753-3593
COMPLIMENTS OFOVERTON'S SUPER MARKETGREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
233
239 231
236
237
238
240
241
245
246
247
248
249
250.
251. 252
253.
254.
255.
256
257
258
259
260 261. 262
263
264
265
266
267,
268.
269.
270.
271.
272.
PITT COUNTY AMERICAN LECION ACRfCULTURAL FAIR 11 5
Table Mata and Nqtkina.......................... 3.00 2.00
Bridge Table, Luncheon, or Dinner Cloth............ 2.00 1.50
Pillow Cases.................................... 2.00 1.50
Quilt-Appliqued or patchwork finish (new) 7.00 5.00
QuiltPatchworik or appliqued (old)................. 5.00 4.00
Bedspread...................................... 7.00 5.00
Draperies ...................................... 4.00 3.00
Any Unlisted Article............................. 2.00 1.50
CLASS I: RUGS (Constructed by an adult]
Braded................. 4.00 3.00
Woven .................... 4.00 3.00
Ho(Aed .............. 4.00 3.00
Any other kind hand-made......... 3.00 2.00
CLASS J: KNITTED & CROCHETED [Constructed by an adult]
PocketbookorHat............................... 2.00 1.50
Crocheted Baby Cap and/or Sacque Sets............ 2.50 1.50
Crocheted Baby Shoes. ........ 2.00 1.50
Crocheted Vest, Cape or Poncho.................. 2.50 1.50
Crocheted Suit or Dress............................ 4.00 3.00
Croch^ed Luncheon Cloth or Place Mats............ 2.50 1.50
Crocheted.Tablecloth......................... 5.00 4.00
Crocheted A^ian............................... 3.00 2.00
Crocheted Berread ....'...................... 4.00 3.00 '*
Knitted Baby C^> and/or Sacque Sets.............. 2.50 1.50
Knitted Vest, Cape or Poncho............... 2.50 1.50
Knitted Sweater................... 2.50 1.50
Knitted Suit or Dress. .4.00 3.00
Knitted Afghan ............. 3.00 2.00
CLASS K: GIFT SUGGESTIONS (Constructed by an adult)
Any Unlisted Crocheted or Knitted Article........... 2.00 1.50
Dish Towels (2)............ 2.00 1.00
Uti% Gifts...................................... 2.00 1.00
Pot Holders..................................... 2.00 1.00
Hot Dish Mats ....... 2.00 1.00
Gifts fwChildren ..... 2.00 1.00
Work Bag or Laundry Bag......................... 2.00 1.00
Clotiespin Bag or Apron...................... 2.00 1.00
Tatting......................................... 2.50 1.50
Any Other...................................... 2.00 1.00
DEPARTMENT
PANTRY
Mrs. ThooM H. Laagstoo, Director YOUTH DIVISION-8-19 Ym Canned goods must have been canned in the time period Oct. 1982 to Sept 1983. They must be the work of the exhibitor. Containers should be standard pint or quart jars. Others wiD not be judged. No sices, c(dor, or lemon peel should be added.
The Fair Aasodation reaovea the right to have all pickles, jama, jelliea, and preservas opmed for judging. All entries should be in by 6 p.m., Monday of Fair Week.
CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Seers Card For Jadgiag
1. ^ipearance....................................................30 points
a. Color-16
b. C3eanies8-15
2. Txture.................... 26 points
3. Uniformity .................... 26 points
a. Rqwneas10
b. Appropriate size16
4. Pack Arrangement..................................... .20 points
Total......................... 100 points
Fruits and tomatoes should be processed in boiling water. Low add vegetables prooeased in steam pesaure canner.
CLASS I: Caaaed Fraits and Vegetablea-Yoath
273. Apples^.....................................................2.26 1.60
274. Applesauce.................................................2.26 1.60
276. Bbckberriea........................... 2.26 1.60
276. Huckleberries...............................................2.26 1.60
277. Peachea....................................................2.26 1.60
278. Ptara...................................... ....2.26 1.60
279. Corn, cream style.................................. 2.26 1.60
280. Corn, whole Kernel..........................................2.26 1.60
281. Beets......................................................2.26 1.60
282. Field Peas ....... 2.26 1.60
283. Green Peas.................................................2.26 1.60
284. I JIM Beans................. 2.26 1.60
286. Pimiento...................................................2.26 1.60
286. Okra.......................................................2.26 1.60
287. Tomatoes........... 2.26 1.60
288. TunatoJuke........................ 2.26 1.60
289. SlVing Beans...................... 2.26 1.60
290. Squash......................................................2.26 1.60
291. AnyUnhsted................................. 2.26 1.60
PRESERVES Score Card For Jadging
1. Fruit...................................................60 points
a. Sluq>e-16
b. Ckiraen and C(dor-16
c. Texture and Flavor16 <L Paclu-16