Daily Reflector, September 15, 1983


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





INSIDE TODAYQUALITYThe quality of North Carolinas educational system has become a major issue for debate. The story is on Page 28.

INSIDE TODAYBOYCOnA NATO boycott, to protest the downing of the Korean airliner, of flights to and from the Soviet Union became effective today. Page 8.

SPORTS TODAYSICK RAMPANTS

A virus has sidelined at .least seven Rose High School starters as the Rampants prepare to face Eastern Wayne Friday. (Page 15)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102ND YEAR NO. 203

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 15, 1983

28 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

i

Remains Secluded

Quits Post

Begin

Refugees

A young Chadian girl holds a baby as they stand in front of their tent in Mao, in northwestern Chad. The girl and her family are refugees of the Faya Largeau area, where

heavy fighting occurred in the last few days between Chadian regular army and rebel troops. (AP Laserphoto)

Lebanese Planes Make First Buzz Run Over Druse Posts

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Lebanese air force jets today buzzed hilltop positions of Druse militiamen for the first time in the 12nday civil war, and the Israeli army suffered its first fatality since its troops redeployed in southern Lebanon.

State and privately owned radio stations in Beirut said the six air force jets flew low over the city and insurgent positions on the overlooking hills but did not bomb or strafe the Syrian-backed Druse filters. Druse gunners had shelled Lebanese army positions in the Chouf Mountains and near the U.S. Marine base on Beiruts southern edge ovemi^t.

In Tel Aviv, the Israeli military command saidfone soldier was killed and seven wounded in a bazooka attack in southern Lebanon. The fatality was the first among Israeli troops since

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 1%7, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

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

SKATER, ROCKER APPEAL

The Therapeutic Recreation Department of Pitt County Memorial Hospital has asked Hotline to appeal for participants in its second annual David Nelson All-Night Rock-on Skate-a-thon to be held Friday-Saturday at Sports World here.

Skaters and rockers will be admitted free with their pledge sheets. Persons wishing to pledge may call Therapeutic Recreation, 757-4445 or 757-4329. Money raised during the event, which lasts from 6:30 p.m. Friday to 7:30 a.m. Saturday, will be used to buy recreation supplies and equipment for rehabilitation, pediatric, psychiatric and long-term patients at PCMH,

ITEMS FOR YARD, BAKE SALE ASKED

The Friends of Kidney Patients asked Hotline to appeal for donations for a yard and bake sale to be held at Harriss Supermarket on Memorial Drive Sept. 24 from 7 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Anyone wishing to make donations or who would like further information may contact Janice Higson, 752-1520, or take items to the Greenville Dialysis Center, Doctors Park, Building 6..5

the army pulled out of the central mountains 11 days ago and deployed behind lines closer to Israel in hopes of reducing casualties.

The command said the soldiers position was hit just after midnight by several bazooka shells fired at toward a village seven miles east of Tyre. The identity of the attackers was not immediately known.

In Beirut, there were no reports of any new injuries among the 1,200 Marines. Four Marines have been killed and more than two dozen others injured by artillery shells landing in their sector at the Beirut International Airport.

You can say it was the first day without shells in 15 days for the Marines, said Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan, of Shenandoah, Ga.

At daybreak, a formation of five gray warplanes with the Lebanese green, red and white emblem painted on their tails roard in to stage four low passes over Beirut and combat areas in the surrounding hills. Midway through the 30-minute runs, a sixth camoimaged-painted jet joined the other aircraft.

Army spokesman Capt. Youssef Atrissi said the British-made Hawker Hunters took off from the military zone of the airport opposite the Marine headquarters.

We now fwl it is safe to fly them, Atrissi said. The airport was tieing shelled before.

The airport and the military zone have been closed since the war erupted between the Druse Moslems and right-wing Christian Phalange party militiamen after the Israeli army withdrew from the central mountains to south Lebanon on Sept. 4.

JERUSALEM (AP) -Prime Minister Menachem Begin resigned today after a tumultuous six-year term as Israels leader. In seclusion and reported to be ill. Begin sent his resignation to President Chaim Herzog.

Begin was to stay on as caretaker premier until a new government was formed, said Cabinet Secretary Dan Meridor.

The likeliest successor was Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, assuming that Herzog would designate him as the man with the best chance of mustering a parliamentary majority.

Begins term, which saw Israel through peace with Egypt and war in Lebanon, ended in a low-key ceremony in which Meridor handed the prime ministers letter of resignation to Herzog.

Herzog said he would soon begin talks with Parliamentary leaders to determine a successor. Begin had announced his decision to re-."Jgn 17 days ago, but delayed formally handing in the letter to allow Shamir time to arrange a governing coalition.

In his statement to reporters, Herzog wished Begin f*a speedy recovery and a life of good health. The president paid tribute to Begins great efforts over tlie years on behalf of the people of Israel.

This is not the occasion to detail his historic actions. They are indelibly inscribed in the pages of our national history, Herzog said.

Begin, 70, remained secluded in his Jerusalem residence.

The prime minister asked me to convey to the president of the state his letter of resignation. The prime minister wanted to do so himself but since he was still obliged to stay in his home he askeid me to carry out this mission for him, said Meridor as he handed the letter to Herzog in a ceremony in Herzogs study.

Begin stayed at home nursing what his spokesman Uri Porat called a skin sensitivity. The daily newspapers Yedioth Ahronoth and

Maariv had reported today that Begin was suffering from a skin ailment which obliged him to stop shaving.

Begin, who has always been meticulous about his appearance, apparently departed from the tradition of personally tendering his resignation, rather than appear unshaven in public.

But a respected newspaper, Haaretz, said in its editions today that Begin, secluded in his official residence for eight days, doesnt

shave, barely eats and has stopped caring about his health.

Begins resignation came after reports that he was depressed by the death of his wife Aliza in November and the protracted involvement of Israeli forces in Lebanon. Persistent feuding in the Cabinet and disagreement over Israels growing economic problenis were also said to weigh heavily on Begin.

Begin informed the

Cabinet of his resignation plans Aug. 28, but he agr o-delay handing in his resignation so that his Herut Party could have time to chose a new leader and open tlks on forming a new coalition government However, three of the factions also have been holding what their spokesmen describe as exchanges of views with the opposition Labor Party, and Labor still hopes it will be able to persuade them to defect.

Record $9 Billion Loss Foreign Trade Shows

WASHINGTON (AP) - The broadest measure of U.S. foreign trade showed a record deficit of $9.7 billion for the second quarter of the year, government figures indicated tro-day.

The Commerce Department report said the huge shortfall was mainly due to a widening in the deficit for trade in merchandise, as exports declined and the the United States stepped up imports of a broad range of commodities.

Todays report on the nations balance of payments includes trade in services and the balance on a variety of other financial transactions as well as trade in oil, manufactured goods, farm produce and other merchandise.

^The merchandise deficit alone widened to $14.7 billion in the second quarter from $8.8 billion in the first, the report said.

The department said there also was a decrease in capital accounts claims on foreigners reported by U.S. banks - partly because of the recession in many countries, the related slowdown in international trade

and foreign exchange constraints in a number of developing countries.

The previous record tor a quarterly deficit was the $6.62 billion in the fourth quarter of last year. For the first three months of this year, the deficit was revised to $3.6 billion from a previously reported $3 billion, the department said.

Officials have said they expect a record deficit of as much as $20 billion for all of this year. Last years deficit was $11.2 billion, compared with the 1978 yearly record of $14.8 billion.

Government officials and private economists have said the balance-of-payments deficit is widening this year for a variety of reasons.

The main two are the continuing strengtli of the U.S. dollar, which makes it mere expensive for foreigners to buy AmericaiLS go^, and the fact that the, U.S. economy is recovering faster than those of many of its trading partners, giving U.S. companies greater ability to buy foreign goods.

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.

Empire Brushes Promotes Gantz

Empire Brushes announced the promotion of Joseph Gantz to president and chief o|)erating officer of the Greenville headquartered company, effective today.

Gantz, who joined Empire in 1974, served as sales manager of the maintenance supply division, general manager of Empires manufacturing facility in Greenville, and most recently as executive vice president.

Empire said the new presidents father. Jack, who formerly served as president of the company, will assume the newly created position of chairman of the board and chief executive officer. The firm was founded by Jack Gantzs father, Joseph Gantz, in 1909.

I have served as president of Empire for 38 years and it was time for a changing of the corporate guard, Jack Gantz said. My son, Joe, who has served in leadership roles in all aspects of the corporation, is well qualified to assume his new duties.

Joe Gantz, the third generation of his family to occupy the presidents post, is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and received his masters degree from Columbia University.

JOSEPH GANTZ

Pool Shows $12f000 Loss

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

The 1983 operation of the Greenville Municipal Pool ended with a deficit of 56 percent of the total operation cost, or $12,093, according to pool director Jim Parker. Parker submitted his annual report to the Recreation and Parks Commission Wednesday night.

The pool this past summer opened on the weekend of June 4, began seven-day-a-week operations on June 8, and closed Aug. 21.

Total attendance for the season was 13,757, bringing in revenues of $9,273. The most substantial revenue came from the daily individual public swim fees, $6,573. Expenditures totaled $21,366, of which $12,927 was for salaries for the director and nine other personnel - life guards, instructors, attendants.

Parker noted that attendance was higher this year than for the past two years, and that revenues were greater than ever before. The cost of utilities this year, $4,729, far exceeded any previous year of operation.

Commissioners approved two statements of receipts and disbursements made by the Greenville Little League - one for the leagues

permanent account, the other for the leagues all-star account.

For the Little League year which ended Sept. 7, the permanent account tally shows total cash receipts of $24,384.60, with total disbursements of $21,528.97, for a seasonal profit of $2,855.63. This profit, added to the cash balance on hand of $10,668.48, gives a current cash balance of $13,524.11 in the permanent account category.

For ie all-star account, receipts were $4,765.73; disbursements were $3,081.26, for a profit of $1,684.47 and a cash balance on hand of $3,166.32.

Executive Director Boyd Lee explained that the Recreation and Parks Department provides playing facilities, pays utilities, and provides maintenance without any cost to the league. The LitUe League funds are a separate entity from the recreation budget.

In a report on the 1983 schedule of fall activities. Recreation Director Charles Vincent told commissioners of several recent additions to the departments programs. Three local groups, the Gi^nville Choral Society, the Boys Choir and Sweet Adelines have been taken under the deoartments umbrella, with the administrative office acting as a contact point for membership

information in these groups.

Vincent also reported that the concept of providing a drama program for young people on a year round basis rather than only on a summer basis is being considered, with assistance to be sought from East Carolina University and other sources within the cmnmunity.

A recently appointed commission member, Leslie Starr, attended her first meeting Wednesday night and was introduced to the board. A native of Baltimore, and a line manager at Procter & Gamble, Miss Starr has lived in Greenville for the past year and a half.

Commission members asked Janice Buck, the City Councils representative to the Recreation Commission, to get a determination from the City Council on the status of Recreation Commission member Henry Dunn. A city ordinance stipulates that a member of any commission missing three or more consecutive meeting no longer qualifies to serve. Dunn, currently acting in the capacity of a troubleshooter with the U. S. Postal Service, is now in Gaffney, S. C., and is expected to be there through the end of the year - which means he will miss the September-through-December meetings.

' - WEATHER

iartlv cloud;, toaigh! a oh ows around i''i> Mordlv cloudy again Friday with ? ;W |:.H?rceiit I'hanie 'i ram during the afernixin, Uigis mthemid'TUsLooking Ahead

Partly cloudy wilh ; chance of showers Saturda\ clearing Sunday and fair .Monday, llighs will bt about 80 Lows will be mostly in thi 50s or low 60s,





2 The Daily Reftector, GtniHtle, N.C.

Thwid.    IS.    1983

\ew Guide Tells Job Rights

ByPAHUCIA

McCORMACK

United Press Inteniitioaal

Meditations for the nations record 48 million working women are betwe> the covers of the U.S.Womens Bureaus biggest hit A Working Womans Guide to Her J( Rights.

many women are still unaware of protections and services provided under federal law, Mrs. Lenora Cole Alexander, Womens Bureau director, says in the foreword of the updated fourth edition of the booklet.

She said women now make up 43 percent of the labor force but that womens

average earnings are only 59 percent of mm's.

It is our IK^ that by providing information about their legal job rights we will help women gain full equal opportunity in access to jobs, promotions, pay and retirement benefits, Mrs. Alexander said.

More than 300,000 copies of the working womans guide have been sold, making the $4.50 bookled dhe bureaus all-time best seller.

The Womens Bureau said about a million women joined the American labor force last year. During the past 10 years, the number of women going to work grew by 14 million. Today, 53 percent of

Mans Good-Will Gesture Could Bequeath Problems

By Abigail Van Buren

t 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: 1 am a businessman with grown children and young grandchildren.

Recently I learned that my sons former girlfriend gave airth to a child conceived while they were living together. Neither of them has mentioned this to me, so if the child :s his, apparently they have agreed not to acknowledge it. I am quite certain that he is not providing any financial support.

My estate will not be large, but it seems only fair that ihis new child, if indeed it is my grandchild, should share n what there is. Yet 1 cannot nd out more without .neddling in my adult sons affairs.

My attorney suggests I leave my will as it is, providing ',n general terms for my children and grandchildren. But I fear my son would face a messy situation should the childs mother claim a share of the estate.

My son would be furious and justifiably so were I to approach the girl to negotiate at this time. If I questioned him, hed probably deny paternity and refuse to discuss it further.

I dont want to be a meddler, but a grandchild is a grandchild. What do you think?

CONCERNED FATHER

DEAR CONCERNED; You come across as a kindly, generous, farsighted man, but youll get no medals for meddling, so listen to your attorney. Your son is a big boy now. Let him paddle his own canoe.

DEAR ABBY: I never thought Id be writing to you, but I need help. I dont know if theres a word for what I have, but I have a fear of telephones.

In my job I have to use the phone a lot, and its making a nervous wreck of me. When I talk on the phone, my throat closes up, I run out of breath and my voice changes. 1 cant seem to get the words out. I have no trouble talking to people in person, but when I talk on the phone, I fall apart.

Do other people have this problem? Or is it just me? If you have a solution, lets hear it, please. Think up a name, but dont use mine.

PHONAPHOBIC

DEAR PHONAPHOBIC: You are certainly not alone. Make one more phone call to someone who practices behavior modification therapy^ If your physician cant recommend one, consult your local mental health facility.

DEAR ABBY: I went on vacation for three weeks a couple of months ago and fell in love with a man in Portugal. It was love at first sight for both of us. Ive been in love before, Abby, but never like this.

The problem: We want to get married and he wants to live in the United States, but I need to find a job for him first. There are no jobs here, and its worse in Portugal.

I love him so much, Abby, I dont know what to do. Please help me. If I dont find a job for him, I will lose him!

IN LOVE AND CRYING

DEAR CRYING: I cant help you find a job for your new love. But I can give you something far more valuable some advice: If you will lose this man unless you find a job for him, what you think is love is just a summer romance.

Go slowly. If he is unable to come here and find his own job, your marriage doesnt have a chance.

offers...

Doan town

SOMETHING NEW IN

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all women 16 and over are onployed - another record. That compares with 43 percent a decade ago.

The march of greater numbers of women to work has been credited, in part, to the need for money in a time of high inflation and, recently, in an era of recession that resulted in job loss for thousands of male breadwinners. Most studies over the past 15 years show that most women who are working do so out of economic need, according to Bureau reports.

The womens liberation movement and changes in womens legal job ri^ts at the state and federal level also are among forces behind the female fli^t from hearth to workplace.

Both influences have made it possible for women not just to have job entitlements but also to take on exciting positions once mainly the domain of males. Younger women especially now are employed as firemen, policemen, astronauts and commercial airline pilots.

Mrs. Alexander, in a Labor Day pledge to the nations working women, also said;

Although women are making inroads into the non-traditional and high paying occupations, the majority still are in traditional and low-paying clerical and service jobs.

As women make greater advances into jobs that are personally satisfying and economically rewarding, including jobs created by new technology, they will make even greater contributions to their families and the American economy.

The Womens Bureau will continue to work towards that goal.

In the 'jobs rights booklet, Mrs. Alexander notes federal laws that protect employment rights apply to both women and men. But there existed a need for a pamphlet for women only, she said.

This leaflet is directed specifically to women because womens legal rights related to jobs and jobseek-ing have changed considerably ... and many women are still unaware of protections and services provided under Federal law, she said, ghts when they are seeking a job, while on the job, and when they retire.

Many states offer similar and sometimes broader protections or widr coverage than the federal law, and some areas of employment are governed exclusively by

state law.

The bookl^ prqiared by bureau specialists Ruth Robinson'and Jane Walstedt, tells women bow to assert their job rights and how to get a job.

It also gives directkms for filing a complaint or charge with the Equal En^loymoit Opportunity Commission -if you think you have been treated unfairly in an employmoit situation and the reas(m for the action was your sex, race, color, religion or national origin.

A sample complaint form is one exhibit in the booklet. Another is a copy of the form to be used by a worker requesting the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health to make a health hazard evaluation of the workplace.

There are sections on sexual harassment, maternity leave and pre^ancy dis-criUiJiation, social security, unemployment insurance, federal i protections for jobseekeb, occupational safety anoWth.

An aide VI Mrs. Alexanders office, asked why the U.S. D^artment of Labor does not have a Mens Bureau, said;

Very often that question comes up as a put down to women and I always say, All the other federal agencies belong to the men - thats why!

The aide asked not to be identified.

A Working Womans Guide to Her Job Rights, ($4.50 per copy including postage) may be ordered from the Consumer Information Center, Dept. 130-L, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.

Ladies Retreat Is Announced

WASHINGTON, N.C. -The 10th annual Roanoke Christian Ladies Retreat will be held Friday and Saturday at the Roanoke .Christian Service Camp here. The speaker will be Kay Watts of Joplin, Mo.

The program will be centered around this years theme Jesus, the Cornerstone.

Registration will be held Friday from 4-6 p.m. and the cost will be $7. Supper will be served from 5-6:30 followed by the program at seven oclock. Breakfast will be served at 6:45 Saturday. The program will begin at eight oclock.

I saved it until the table was cleared and we were having coffee.

The kids are coming home for the weekend, I said. AH three of them for our anniversary.

My husband and I savored the moment. It would be nice to be a family again, sitting around rekindling memories listening to their ideas, seeing the legacy we created ... the monument, so to speak, to our own immortality.

We had missed them more than either of us were willing to admit.

They arrived on three different flights, but the shuttle to and from the airport gave us time to talk.

Why are you bringing a surfboard to Arizona? My apartments too small to store it.

Who was the girl who got off the plane with you?

Just met her. Gave me her number. Wants to share an apartment. This is wonderful having you home. What shall we do first?

My laundry. Everything in the suitcase is dirty.

One hung on the phone the entire weekend laughing and saying, Really.

The other two got into a heated discussion on our foreign policy in Central America, making Cain and Abel look like Jimmy and Donnv Osmond.

They used five towels per shower: one for the right arm and one for the left, one for each leg and one to throw around their neck when they shaved.

When we watched TV, the one with the remote control changed channels so fast I thought Alistair Cooke was giving advice on irregularity. The problems they so flippantly dismissed but were to keep me awake for the next several months included a car that had died, a rent increase, a job that was shaky, an accident in litigation, and an ugly creditor. All three slept until the crack of noon.

They left the way they came. Barely making the flights, the bathroom

steaming, the refrigerator door ajar, a flip-top cap IH-essed into a decorative candle, the gas gauge in the car on E.

We. returned from the last trip to the airport exhausted. For a long time, we savored the silence. Then my husband said, weve raised three wonderful, vital, worthwhile human beings who are capable of driving a sane person nuts!

I nodded. Do you know what they said about us? They said, what in the world do you two talk about after 34 years? Your life seems so boring with all of us gone.

Borings good, said my husband.

I smiled. Ive aways liked boring.

Museum Antiques Show Set

charlotte The 17th annuMl Mint Museum Antiques Show will open here Sept. 30 at Park Center and will continue through Oct. 2.

Twenty-six nationally known dealers will attend. TTie show is sp(^red by the Womans Auxiliary of the Mint and proceeds go toward museum purchases.

The theme of the show is Expansion of the Mint and the loan exhibit will feature parts of collections soon to be displayed there: early American childrens portraits; Peruvian stirrup cups; Mexican festival masks; early American glass; a celadon collection; and a sampling of the Dalton gift to the museum.

A tea room will serve lunch

on Friday and Saturday. Tablecloths used in the tea nxnn were hand[inted tar a luncheon at The White House.

For further information write: Mint Museum Antiques Show, 263 Hempstead Place, Charlotte, 28207.

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Football Widow, Say Hello To The Computer Widow

By PATRICIA WALSH

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) -x It used to be divorced women were called grass widows. Football widows now mourn all year instead of just the fall.

Im coining a new phrase -computer widow.

Ever since Bob toted a baby computer borne, its been bye-bye Pat.

Oh, I know all the answers. Develop my own interests, find somebody else who plays'facquetball and hits the ball easy fon, read articles about the growing phenomenon of computer ne-

Program On Constitution Given DAR

FARMVULE - The Ma-

)AR held its meeting at the chapter house here Saturday. Presenting the program was Jo Anne Whitehurst J(es.

She is history teacher at Farmville Central High School and was honored two years ago by being chosen DAR history teacher of the year. Her program topic was Overview of the Constitution. She was introduced by Mrs. Anthony Holland.

Mrs. Pat Carr gave a r^rt from the house committee and nickles were collected for Indian schools. The district meeting Sept. 12 was attended by Mrs. R.T. Williams, DAR District VIII

gleet. Right up to, If you cant beatem, joinem. Nothing helps. When be sits down in front of that blinking blue eye and seductive keyboard, he might as wdl be in Australia anolmintbecold.

Inevitably I remember something to ^ him after he enters comjMterland, but the re^nse is silence or snarls of frustrati(Hi.

Now my key phrase is, Let me know when you reach a breaking point.

Thus he knows I have something on my mind and usually his curiosity wins out.

Now HIS key phrase is, Why didnt you tlunk of that before I got started?

We have nightly discussions about my feelings of neglectrHe points out I used to complain he watched too much television. Out of the boob tube and into byte fright.

Now he watches television an hour a night and that after I pressured him into an agreement to spend time with me.

He is learning the meaning of time. Once a carefree soul who ignored clocks as much as possible, he has learned to check the hour before he shuts down for the night. He knows ru ask in the mom-

He hasnt yet agreed with me that since be spends at least 40 Schr i 8v So mS9,chot 5c 5 gnol i p5 8n Sot iol ,inl gSh n9 0 voS8rt 94 Spnm. nr S nr aby off my turf.

In the beginning we played together. We started on an a(^enture gamein which the object is to find treasures like jeweled ^gs and crystal sceptres. I whs pretty good at that. I was the one who figured out how to go up the chimney to get back to the starting point. Heck, I was the one who woke up in the middle of the night with the solution for oj^ning the floodgates of the dam.

Tlien, the adventure got old, and Bob got more interested in programming a game and getting it to work right than actually playing it. His warehouse of perfectly programmed, unplayed games is growing rapidly.

He squints 'at pages of microscopic lettering, pecking away with two fingers for hours, cursing when something doesnt work right.

I helped with programming for awhile, reading aloud things like ifa-0$b-0$then(2c-3c)I( l-3)am$1023going(z-x)crazy

ing.

Tips Given On Fall Gardening

director. Joyce Williams reported on DAR amtribu-

tions to the observance of Constitution Week in Pitt County.

Anita Powell, Margaret Turner and Gayle Flanagan were welcomed as new members.

Nancy Darden, chaplain, gave a memorial reading for deceased members, Mrs. Daisy Holmes Rogers and TabithaDeVisconti.

Meeting hostesses were Mrs. Jack Riley, Mrs. Robert Wilson, Mrs. Lawrence Cutchin, Mrs. Frank Powell and Mrs. Johnny Davis. Assisting were CAR members. Elizabeth Betts and Leigh Bailey.

Tips on Fall Gardening was the program for the meeting of the Lakewood Pines Garden Club held Tuesday at the home of Pat Dubber.

Speaker Ruth ODell reminded members that trees and shrubs are the air conditioning system of nature. She was assisting hostess for the meeting.

While Bob continues his computer affair, I keep seeking a solution to feeling

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Just as soon as I finish my letter to Dear Abby.

Josephs

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Editorials

Jam9s Kilpatrick

Good Resolution

We would can attention to whats happening at Aycock Junior High, where students are attempting to raise $10,000 during their annual magazine sale.

The money will go for needed materials, equipment and such basics as are lacking simply because their budget did not pemit them.

Other schools have money-raising projects, too; and it behooves us all to keep eyes and ears alert for them.

The benefits are obvious in terms of meeting needs of the school plant and in providing means for better education of todays students and tomorrows students.

The less obvious benefits include an early appreciation of just how hard it is to earn $10,000; and there is the matter of * learning to respect the value of equipment and material on hand... with resultant (we hope) less wear and tear.

Last, but not least, the school campaigners are creating a legacy for those who come after them; so there is more to these campaigns than the acquiring of books, equipment, campus improvements, etc.

Parents and neighbors may groan at the suggestion, but we hope their patience, good humor, tolerance and encouragement pays dividends for the young people and the schools they represent.

Patrons do get something in exchange for their generosity. So make a good resolution.

Decision Near

No one can blame the U.S. Marines for wanting air strikes in Lebanon, nor is there any great quarrel with the president for authorizing them.

The relatively small contingent of Marines is there under difficult circumstances to help keep the peace. Now they are being shot at and having to fight back.

The problem with it all, however, is that the United States once again is being drawn steadily into an ever widening war ... one that could call for still further use of our military forces.

Our mission in Lebanon was noble, but the time will soon come when we must decide whether to become further engaged in the continual warring there or pull out our forces.

-Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Monetary Policy

WASHINGTON - Just before the administration adjourned to California for its summer vacation, Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan briefed President Reagan on the economy and delivered this warning: Continuation of present Federal Reserve Board oolicy threatens significant weaxening of the economy.

The political implications are obvious and ominous. More than U.S.-Soviet relations and far more than belated efforts at wooing blacks, Hispanics and feminists, Reagan's re-election prospects depend on the state of the economy in 1984. The Treasurys economic analysis, on which the secretary based his briefing, strongly suggests that state will be sour indeed unless newly-reappointed Chairman Paul Volcker changes policy at the Fed.

The government went on automatic pilot soon after that mid-August briefing, and has been preoccupied by the KAL 007 crisis since its shortened vacation. But the time is coming when the president must face up to what he wants to do about monetary policy, with far-ranging Mlitical implications for his and the Republican Partys future.

ie dour view of the Wall Street bond trader abhorring too rapid an economic recovery has its advocates in the administration. Chief economic adviser Martin Feldstein and Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige make no secret of their desire for a gentler growth rate. That surely is not the view of White House chief of staff James Baker, much less most working Republican politicians.

The Daily Reflector

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But the point man so far in warning Reagan of the peril to him of slow growth has been Don Regan. The August economic briefing of the president by the longtime head of Merill Lynch was based on professional staff analysis markedly different from wall streets present conventional wisdom.

What the secretary told the president stems from this Treasury economic assessment as of early August: Because of the Feds springtime decisions to tighten up, the monetary base bank reserves and currency / did not grow at all during June and July. That raised what Treasury economists consider serious consequences if nothing is changed.

Regans briefing of the president pointed out that the Feds restraint of the monetary base was disturbingly similar to the central bankss performance in 1981, which Treasury analysts believe triggered the disastrous recession. This, not the budget deficits as Feldstein claims, is blamed by Regan for the recovery-thwarting rise of interest rates. Continuation of this policy, the Treasury warns, will so weaken the economy that Reagan could not point with pride to economic revival in the fall of 1984.

In blaming rising interest rates on the Fed, the Treasury analysis breaks sharply with Wall Streets deficitphobia. It dismisses the notion that federal deficits combine with rapid economic recovery to build a demand for money that pushes up interest rates, arguing instead that recovery reduces the need for corporate borrowing.

Since the presidents briefing, there has been no sign of Federal Reserve relaxation. Indeed, some Treasury economists believe a serious economic slowdown beginning in the fourth quarter of 83 or first quarter of 84 is now inescapable. That may be desirable to Feldstein, Baldrige and much of wall Street, but it guarantees an unemployment rate close to 10 percent right up to Election Day

Quite apart from its human cost, the political conseouences of chronically-high unemp oyment are profound for Reagan. If the Treasury warnings prove correct, he will be forced to base his 1984 campaign not on economic growth but on the virtues of economic austerity (lower inflation at the Phillips Curve price of high unemployment). That proved a winning formula for Margaret Thatcher in Britain, but it could be fatal for Reagan.

Beyond the 1984 election, chronic high unemployment means irresistible congressional demands for open-ended unemployment benefits on the British style. I^ch a work disincentive runs exactly opposite to the original goals of the Reagan Revolution.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

No Sticks To Wield, No Stones To Throw

WASHINGTON - As an example of the orators art, flawless. He had all his stage business just ri^t; the taped recordings of the Soviet pilot added a fine dramatic touch. Given striped pants, a top hat and a star-spangled vest, the president could have modeled for Uncle Sam in the posters saying, I want you.

But once Hie forensic form has been admired, the literal substance remains to be examined, and of substance there was pathetically little. The presidents sense of outrage was evident in his rhetoric. The Soviets action in shooti^ down a defenseless civilian airliner was a massacre. It was a crime against humanity. Such a crime must never be forgotten. It was an atrocity, an act of barbarism.

And what response did the president recommend? He propo^ a joint resolution from Congress, condemning the Soviet Union and demanding reparations.

Well, the saints preserve us. Within the Kremlin walls, such cornflake resolutions have no impact. The Soviets eat them for breakfast. Mr.

Reagan wanted ttie U.N. Security Council to eiqness itself, but a resolution fnn the United Nations if it survived a Soviet veto - would be as ei^meral. The president had a further thought, that the flow of military and strategic items should be curtailed, but if any such flow now is going from the United States to the Soviet Union, we have an unprinted front-page story crying out for publication.

This is the bitter truth, and it is galling to accept it: The presidents feeble resp(Hise was the best that could be made. There is a childs jingle that mi^t have been chanted in the Kremlin: Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me. Mr. Reagan had no sticks to wield, no stones to throw. He had fewer options than President Carter had at the time the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, and Mr. Carters options were nothing to strike terror into the communist heart.

The only effective response would have been a multilateral response. After all, the 269 victims of the doomed airliner came from 13 countries.

The Soviets savage defense <A their own airspace must cause international concern among pilots and passengers who fly global routes. Yet three days of intense pressure from the White House could fH*oduce no massive sanctions against the Soviet Union, no mass cancellation of air traffic, not even a symbolic recall of ambassadors. Canada suspended Aen^ot ri^ts for 60 days. It was the mw^l equivalent of requiring Billy Martin to sit out a Sunday doubleheader.

To have canceled the grain deal W(Hild have accomplished precisely nothing nothing, that is, except to impose further hardship on American farmers who are suffering one of the most disastrous years in recent history. The Soviets would have turned to alternative sources . or, more likely, simply tightened everyones belt by one more hole.

Without concerted support within the Western world, Mr. Reagan could have taken no punitive action on the shipment of high-technology items. The president was badly burned some months ago in the matter of the

European pipline. Our allies want to do business with the Soviet Union. Toward that end, they are entirely willing to extoMi credits and to make other favorable arrangements for trade.

The long and sIkmI of it is that tl^ Soviets have gotten away quite literally with murder. There will be no apology, no reparations, no compensation to the families o the dead. But the childish jingle falls short of absolute truth. Words do hurt; the resolutions of condemnation mav not hurt the Kremlin leaders themselves, but the incident and its aftermath add to the record. They provide mie more chapter in the bo^.

To be sure, not many Western leaders are inclined to read the bod(. Until Afghanistan came along, Jimmy Carter had refused to read it. But page by page, the volume swells and the record of Soviet brutality grows longer. All we can do now, in a mood of national frustration, is to keep coiling a rope of history on which the Soviets one day may hang themselves.

Iranian Hostagcs

lESflHON Hostages

Paul O'Connor

RALEIGH - Merit pay for teachers is about the hottest idea floating around in the midst of those who are trying to fix the public schools. Over the next nine months, merit pay is also likely to be the most studied proposition in North Carolina.

Before the General Assembly reconvenes in June 1984, no less than three commissions - public and private - are set to issue reports and a group of educators are trying to put together a fourth study.

Gov. Jim Hunt plans formation of a state study on education for economic growth. It will follow up on the heels of the study which the Education Commission of the States conducted nationally and which Hunt chaired.

Roy Forbes, Hunts liaison with the economic growth study, says merit pay is likely to be one of the most important topics that group studies. It is widely felt, he said, that the teaching profession is not currently attracting the best possible people. The theory behind merit pay, he says, is to give the teaching profession a capacity to reward outstanding performance. This, it is hoped, will provide teachers with more money and with greater personal and professional fulfilment.

The assembly approved legislation this year to establish a 47-member Educational Policy Council which will be responsible for reporting to both the 1984 short session and the 1985 full session on

Merit Pay Is Hot Issue

a wide range of educational issues. This council is widely seen as an extension of the special Select Committee on Education which issued a highly controversial set of education recommendations about a year ago, one of which was merit pay.

The N.C. Association of Educators, which has long opposed merit pay, started a study on the topic this months. NCAEs lO-person study committee heard about the plans being tried in other states and will now meet weekly for the

next two or three months. They hope to have some recommendations ready by Christmas.

Our opposition to merit pay comes from our distrust of the evaluation systems that have been used, said John Doman, NCAE executive director. The group fears that favoritism and politics could determine who gets raises and who doesnt. But, NCAE also recognizes the mood of the country. It appears 99 percent sure that therell be some form

^Elisha Douglass-

Strength For Today

A bereaved widow who had recently lost her husband wrote to her minister as follows: We know that all that is best and loveliest and most precious shall be gathered together at last, not here but within Gods perfect love, where there can be no ending, only life in its perfections of fulfillment.

The best thing about life is its eternity. It is not something made to exist a few brief years and then be wiped out forever. It

is something which, as this devoted Christian woman wrote, is gathered together at last within Gods perfect love.

We should be sustained every day with the realization that the life which we live is a special type, a precious gift from God possessed only by Gods children. In this respect, it differs from life as an aspect of nature which we see about us. And what God has given he will preserve in transcendent form within his perfect love.

of merit pay proposal by the governor or the Legislature and that it will have a good chance of passage. We need to at least be a part of the group making the decision.

NCAE and two other education groups are trying to pull together a fourth stuoy. Doman and leaders of the Association of School Administrators and the N.C. Association of College Teachers of Education have asked three other education groups if theyd meet to discuss the possibility of a joint conference on merit pay. All involved would be practicing educators. The idea would be to find those points upon which all these practicing educators could agree.

If these study committees decide that the concept of merit pay is worth pursuing, they have four Ixisic merit pay alternatives to consider.

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools are experimenting with a career ladder sj^tem under which teachers pursue different pnrfessional tracks all of which are separated by status and salary. In Tennessee, a master teacher plan is being tried under which teachers can seek to move into higher paying classifications as they gain experience. Another plan would grant salary differentials to teachers in disciplines like math and science where there is a shortage oi teachers. Finally, there are merit plans where teachers are evaluated and those who come out the best get paid more.

WASHINGTON Last September, Father William Byron looked around his campus at Catholic University, a 7,000-student institution here, for a project worthy of federal government support.

Byron eventually set his sights on Catholics Vitreous State Laboratory. Scattered among three buildings, the lab is home to 50 scientists whose work on fiber optics and other materials research has been widely recognized. Hoping to house the lab in a single new building constructed at government expense, Byron said, he began to package (the labs) strengths and match them with national policy.

A year and many trips to Capitol Hill later, Byrons dream has come true. Late in July, Catholic received a congressional promise for $5 million, payable on or after Oct. 1, the beginning of a new fiscal year. An additional $8.9 million will probably follow next year. Already, Byron has

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Academia Worried Over Approach

begun to select a site and talk with architects.

Yet many of Byrons colleagues, impressed with his enterprise, take exception to his methods. There is widespread agreement in academia and in government that, by hiring lobbyists and ignoring traditional channels for research projects, Byron has set an unprecewnted and questionable example for other schools to follow. In time, many worry, lawmakers could dish out cash to collies just as they roll the pork barrel for other interest groups.

Adding to such fears is New Yorks Columbia University, which also received $5 million during the summer for a $20 million chemistry center again, with aid from lob^ byists and some unorthodox shortcuts.

According to Dr; Jim Kane, (teputy director of the Energy Departments research office, a university hoping tq (iamer fedieral suDOort for a

research project traditionally makes a formal proposal to the appropriate federal agency. Federal officials, in turn, seek the advice of experts in the field, asking questions about each proposals efficacy, potential and merit. While peer review methods vary and are rarely part of an agencys official policy, they routinely determine whether a schools proposal is included in budgets sent to Congress.

Officials at Catholic and Columbia, however, preferred a more direct approach.

At issue, of course, is not the merit of the research at either Catholic or Columbia (though peer review would have tackled those issues). The chief concern, instead, is that more schools will try to solve their financial {H'oblems by appealing directly to Congress. Such a prospect is almost inevitable; Even as state and federal appropriations to higher

education decline, Uncle Sam is expected to continue to shoulder 80 percent of all university research costs. It may only seem increasingly natural that every institution deserves a slice of the pie. In fact, many Energy Department officials are already preparing for Byron-like maneuvers next year.

Yet, if colleges and university labs are the crucibles of its future economic strength, the nation cant afford to leave scientific decisions in political hands. Big schools with sizeable resources would quickly out-gun the smaller institutions; as the connections between large research institutions and corporate America {row, lawmakers woiqld yield as they lave to business interests. As the Energy Departments Kane put it; If this process gets politicized, its going to be pure chaoe.

Copyright 1963 Field Enterprises,' Inc.





*9Hw*(-e:f-.v,.-Asiw.'.r^j>i.t-U.'.ai'X'i-V-A.'-/.'-._

Airline Urges Employees ^ To l^ke Over Ownership In Effort To Survive

By The Associated Press

Cwitinental Airlines could become the worlds largest employ^wned airline if a company-proposed stock owntep plan is approved by < company workers, of-iicii^said. '

, ThOnair carrier, the countrys eighth largest, aiKHinced the plan Wed-iffisday^, Continental, which lost million in the last six months, also said it plans to reduce costs by $150 million throu^ layirffs and cuts in salaries and benefits.

Meanwhile, in Kansas City, Mo., Trans World Airlines Inc. announced plans to cut ' some 12 percent of its work ftnrce, which totals about 20,500 people worldwide, by the end of me year.

Continentials cost reduction plan includes layoffs for some pilots and fli^t attendants, said airline spokesman Bruce Hicks. He added he did not know how , many employees would be affected.

Under the stock plan. Continental and its parent company, Texas Air, would release 12 million shares to the benefit of employees. Four

million would be granted as stock bonuses.

Ilie other 8 million wpuld be available as stock options. Empkiyees could buy the sum at 85 percent of the maitet value and then pay for them thrmigh payroll deductions over a two-year period. Ilie value would be established on the date the plan goes into effect. ,

The 12 million shares of stock going Jnto the employee ownership plan is 35 percent of the total and could make Continental the worlds largest employee-owned airline. Texas Air would continue to hold 11.5 million shares of the airlines stock.

Continental chairman Frank Lorenzo said the plan will dramatically change the cost structure of the company and put its costs more reasonably in line with marketplace labor costs.

Texas Air currently hol(b 90 percent interest in Continental.

The agent, clerical, reservations and management group has already voted to accept the new plan. This group represents about half

of the airlines 12,000 employees.

llie cost reduction plan calls for a $150 million cut in costs distributed through employee groups, including $20 million from mechanics now in the fifth week of a strike over wages and work rules.

TAW said Wednesday that 3,500 employees, or about one out of every eight, would be affected by the cutback. The reductions will be achieved through furloughs, unpaid leaves and attrition.

Included in the TWA cuts will be 2,250 ground employees and 1,250 fli^t attendants, the airline said. No reduction in the number of pilots was scheduled.

Spokesmen for the airline said a large part of the cuts were part of seasonal layoffs. Airlines usually trim their employment rolls in the fall in anticipation of low pas-oads during the

Court Rules Out Forced Surgery

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Prosecutors who want a bullet removed from a suspects chest for evidence cannot force the man to undergo surgery because his privacy would be violated, an appeals court has ruled.

The Richmond prosecutors office wants the bullet for its case against Rudolph Lee Jr., who police said exchanged fire with a grocer during a robbery attempt. Lee contends he was shot by two men who robbed him.

In a 2-1 decision Wednesday, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the proposed surgery is too intrusive and presents too great a risk - to this defendant and to the privacy interests of a free society to be condoned as a police practice.

"Viewed starkly, the state proposes to drug this citizen - not yet convicted of a criminal offense - with nar

cotics and barbiturates into a state of unconsciousness, then surgically to open his chest and there to explore for a bullet that may or may not be probative in the trial..., the court said.

senger winter.

In July the airline said its recent poor financial performance might prompt larger-than-usual cuts in the work force. A loss of $108.9 million was reported by TWA for the first half of 1983, compared to a loss of $84.7 million during the same period a year ago.

During the first six months of this year, TWA made a pretax profit of $66 million in its international operations, up from $18.6 million during the period in 1982. The airline took a $174.9 million loss before taxes on domestic operations in the first half of 1983, an increase from the $103.2 million it lost last year in the same period.

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In The Area

Theft Reported At School

Greenville police are investigating a break-in and larceny incident reported early today at &die Saulter School that resulted in the theft of a quantity of meats.

Capt. John Briley said an office and storage freezer at the school were entered and two 14-pound rolls of ground beef were taken, along with an undetermined amount of chickens.

Briley said entrance to the school was appparently gained after a window on the east side of the facility was pried open. Damage to the school property was estimated at $500, he said.

Thebreak-inwasreportedat 1:35a.m.

Pitt Schools Air 'Viewpoint'

The North Carolina Association of Educators upcoming conference in Williamston will be the topic of this weeks Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Annette McRae, director of the district chapter of NCAE.

The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sundav. 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05 p.m. WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-61(^, extension 249.

^^ffomecoming Planned Sunday

Sycamore Chapel, on Route 5, Greenville, will observe homecoming and quarterly meeting services Sunday.

The Rev. Hue Walston will deliver the 11 a.m. service and the Rev. Elma Jackson and Sweet Hope Church will be in charge of the 2 p.m. service. Dinner will be served after the evening .service.

Meeting Site Changed

A change in the meeting place of the North Carolina Central University Alumni Association has been announced. The meeting will take place at 8 p.m. tonight at the Holiday Inn, instead of at the home of D. D. Garrett, as previously planned. Final reports on the fish fry will be given at tonights meeting.

Choir Plans Business Meeting

Sweet Hope Free Wll Baptist Church Senior Choir will have a business meeting at the church Saturday at 3 p.m. A rehearsal will folLkV.

Greenvilh Sfudnis Earn Degreas Rim Sarhs To Sfarl Sunday

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The following studoits frwn Greoiville received degrees from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill at the end (rf the summer session:

Greenville, Lawrence Joper Boyette, Richard Johnstra Capwell, James Edwin Clement Jr., Joy C(^)persinith Rogers, Candade Elizabeth Martin, Rdiecca Srarley Mace.

Aerobics Class Begins Monday

An aerobics class will begin at W.H. Robinson School beginning Monday at 6:30p.m.

The clashes will meet Mondays and Wednesdays from 6:30-7:30 p.m. for eight weeks. The cost is $2.

The class is sponsored by Pitt County Community Schools and Winterville Recreation. For further informatiwi call Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 212.

Avery Named To United Way Post

Wayne Avery has been named chairman of the county division of the 1983 Pitt County United Way Drive, organization officials have announced.

Avery is employed by Eaton Corp. as a general foreman in the fabrication department. He is a native of Winterville and attended East Carolina University before serving with the military.

Avery was recently selected to receive an Outstanding Young Man of America award. He serves as a member of the Pitt County United Way Allocations Committee,

Pitt County Development Committee, Winterville Jaycees and is a past president of the Winterville Kiwanis Club. He has worked with Cub    ,,,

Scouts and Boy Scouts.    Wayne    Avery

Avery served as the Eaton plant chairman in the 1981 United Way campaign and as county division chairman in the 1982campaip.

He is married to the former Ellen Thomas of Greenville.

Two Services Planned Sunday

Two services will be held Sunday at Emanuel Temple Pentecostal Holiness Church of the Lord Jesus Christ No. 1. The morning service will be at 11 a.m. Evangelist Annie Hines will be the evening speaker.

Film Previewed For Group

The Prodigal, a film which will open at the Plaza Cinema Oct. 14, was previewed to Greenville community leaders at a special showing recently. The film is a modern-day allegory of a biblical story that probes the interactions of one American family.

Charlie Schwidde is the chairman of the local committee that is involved in bringing the film to Greenville.

Ushers' Anniversary Upcoming

The senior ushers of Saint Peter Church, Route 5, Greenville, will celebrate their anniversary Sunday at 6:30 p.m. Music will be rendered by the senior choir and the sermon will be delivered by the Rev. Hue Walston.

Pastor To Be Honored

Reids Chapel Church in Fountain will observe the anniversary of its pastor Sunday at 3 p.m. A quarterly meeting will be held Sunday morning, following by dinner at 2 p.m.

A film soies titled Tlie Ojristians Walk in the 80s" will start during church school Sunday at the Ayden Christian Church.

The series is bv Moody Institute of Science and will feature ^ foUowing titles: Walking With God; Learning From God; Growing With God? and Ww^ping God. The films are in colw and are 40 minutes l(Mig.

Women's Day Services Scheduled

Womens Day wUl be held Sunday at St. Matthew Free WiU Baptist Church.

Dr. Lucy Jones will be the guest speaker and Pastor Hattie Cobb will deliver the 11 a.m. message. They will be accompanied by the Soiiw Choir and the Senior Ushw Board Sunday at 7:3qp.m. Evangelist Patricia Phillips will preach with music by The Last Generation.

A board meeting will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at the church.

Manning Heads Exchange Club

The Greenville Exchange Club recently installed J.T Manning Jr. as its president. He succeeds Charles Forbes.

Other officers installed were Dr. Harold W. Deitch, first vice president; Richard A. Brennan, second vice president, and Jimmy Wells, secretary-treasurer.

The Greenville Exchange Qub meets the second and fourth Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m! at the Three Steers Restaurant. Anyone interested in joining the organization may call Manning at 756-2400.

Hooker Memorial Plans Homecoming

Homecoming and revival services will be observed at Hooker Memorial Christian Church Sunday through Saturday.

Worship Sunday will be led by the pastor, the Rev. Ralph Messick. A homecoming meal will be served at 6 p.m. Sunday. Dr. Allan R. Sharp, associate professcH* of religion at Atlantic Christian College, will be guest speaker.

Revival services will te held Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The guest speaker for Tuesday will be the Rev. Oden Latham of Williamston. Dr. Harold Deitch, former pastor of Red Oak Christian Church, will be speak TTiureday.

A pancake and sausage breakfast served by the Christian Mens Fellowship will be held from 8 a.m. until noon Saturday. Tickets are available through the men of the church.

Nursery care will be available during all activities.

Open House Set At Emergency Unit

The Pitt County Memorial Hospital Emergency Department will hold an open house Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.

The event is being held during Emergency Medicine Week to educate the public about advances in emergency medicine and the services available at Pitt Memorial. Personnel will provide tours and demonstrate lifesaving equipment used there.

The ECU School of Medicine has just initiated a residency training program in emergency medicine, with four physicians beginning their training here this past July.

Young Democrats Meet Tuesday

The Pitt County Young Democrats will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Plain Janes restaurant. State Rep. Walter B. Jones Jr. of Farmville will be the speaker.

Command Lost

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Wednesday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was zero. This means that a solar water

heater could have provided none of your hot water needs.

MADRffi, Spain (AP) -The government has relieved Lt. Gen. Fernando Soteras Casamayor of his command for recommending the re-le^ of several officers imprisoned after a foiled coup in 1981.

Soteras, 63, commanded the seventh military r^on.

which contains eight provinces and has its headquarters in Valladolid in north central Spain.

House numbers are assigned by the Engineering and Inspections Department. To verify an address, call this Department at 752-4137.

FALL 1983 LADY

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Tell me all about it! You know how I love to shop!

"The New Anne Klein II sportswear is in at Brodys Downtown. Its the first time Anne Klein has made an addition to their regular line. This is designer styling. If you want to see designer sportswear at its best, see Anne Klein II, downtown only

Brodys downtown also has a special feature on Pure Silk blouses. In colors of beige, red, grey or black. Four styles to choose from, especially priced too! Reg. $80 for only $59.90. Youll want to choose several!

The Garolini line of fall shoes are in - see them in dressy styles of taupe, navy and

black.

Brodys Downtown offers entire stock of Seiko watches at 20% savings - see their selection tomorrow.

A special price is on designer jeans, also. Calvin Klein jeans that are regularly $44 are on sale for $29.99. Gloria Vanderbilt jeans are only $32.99, and theyre regularly $46.00!

Brodys Downtown has a special jewelry cleaner that has just arrived. This will clean all your jewelry. For one week only $1.25 a bottle. Regularly sells for $1.75. Try It!

If you like old fashioned, calm, pleasant service, shop Brodys Downtown.

Singer To Appear Sunday

The Greenville First Pentecostal Htdioess Onirch will sponsor a program featuring Christian recording arti^-speaker Bill Wagner. The program will be held at 10 a.m. Stmdayatthechi^.

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Police Report $21,000 In Damage To Vehicles

The Daily Refteclor, Greenville, N.C

Thursday. September 15.1983    7

Several injuries and dam ages estimated at over $21,000 resulted from a rash of traffic accidents investigated Wednesday by Greenville police.

Heaviest damages occurred in a 3:32 p.m. wreck on Memorial Drive at Chestnut Street involvio

Ray Haddock of Route 2, Ayden, and Blane Eston Smith of 904C Woodrow St., Wilson.

Police, who charged Haddock with a safe movement violation, estimated damages at $5,000 to the Smith vehicle and $2,000 to the Haddock vehicle. No injuries were reported.

Joe Barrett of iioo W. Third St. was charged with a safe movement violation following a 1 p.m. wreck on Hooker Road at Cozart St. involving his vehicle and a car operated by Ella Daniels Ward of 408 Sedgefield Dr. Police, who said Barrett was injured, estimated damages at $1,200 to his car and $1,100 to the Ward vehicle.

A 12:05 p.m. accident at the intersection of lOth and Fifth streets involved vehicles driven by Carolyn Jones Cutler of Evans Trailer Park and Gary Lynn Aycock of Route 2, Pikeville. Police said that Ms. Cutler was injured in the wreck, which caused damages estimated at $1,500 to the Cutler car and $800 to the Aycock vehicle.

Alvis Earl Forrest of Route 2, Robersonville, was ctarged with a safe movement violation following investigation (rf a 10:30 a.m. accident on Memorial Drive at West Sixth Street involving vehicles operated by Forrest and Carey Frederick House of Glendale Court. House was reported injured in the accident, which resulted in damages estimated at $1,500 to the House car and $400 to the Forrest vehicle.

No injuries or charges resulted from a 3:33 p.m. mishap on Golden Road 50 feet west from U.S. 264 Bypass involving vehicles operated by Tracey Michelle McLawhorn of 1100 E. Wright Road and Faye Edwards Collins of 207 Staffordshire Road. Officers said damages were estimated at $800 to the Collins vehicle and $350 to the car operated by Ms. McLawhorn.

Police said a passenger in a vehicle operated by Betsy

Correction

The article in Wednesdays "In The Area section relative to the Fire, Rescue Day scheduled in Winterville, was incorrectly reported to the paper. The event, to take place Saturday, is a Rescue Day only, with events being held at the fire-/rescue station.

The program will benefit the Winterville Rescue Squad.

Hungate of 1607 Beaumont Drive was rep(Mted injured in a 4:15 p.m. accident on Elm Street south from 10th Street. Officers said the ac-cidrat involved the Hungate vehicle and a car driven by Stephen Anthony Donald of 23(W Jefferson Drive. No charges were preferred in the wreck, whidi resulted in $700 in damages to the Donald vehicle and $^ to the Hungate car.

Jo Ann Brown of Fairland Drive, Grifton, was rqwrted injured in a accident that occurred on Memorial Drive just north from Trade Street. No charges were preferred in the mishap, which involved the Brown car and a vehicle operated by Betty Currie Cannon of Route 1, Ayden. Damages were estaimted at $500 to each vehicle.

No injuries or charges resulted from a 6:40 p.m. accident on Arlington Boulevard south from Greenville Boulevard involving vehicles operated by Joseph Glen Buck of Route 1, .Winterville, and Barry Chesson of 102 E. Baywood Lane. Damages were estimated at $^ to each vehicle.

Minnie Christine Godley of Route 2, Greenville, was charged with following too closely following investigation of a three-vehicle accident on West Fifth Street west from Nash Street. Police, who reported no injuries, said the accident involved the Godley vehicle and cars operated by Kathleen Anne Teal of 106B Standi Drive and Louise Wray Gilbert of 409 Hickory St. Damages were estimated at $400 to the Gilbert car, $300 to the Godley vehicle, and $200 to the Teal car.

Cars driven by Ruth Davison Nobles of 1308 Cot-ten Road and Victor Cruz Saban Jr. of Fayetteville were involved in a 7:10 p.m. mishap on Charles Boulevard at Forest Hills Drive. Police, who reported po injuries or charges as a result of the wreck, estimated damages at $500 to the Sablen car and $300 to the Nobles vehicle.

Judy Strickland of 802 E. Third St. was injured and taken to Pitt County Memorial Hospital after the bicycle she was riding was involved in a collision with a vehicle operated by Brett Maddrey AJlsbrook of llA Stratford Arms. Officers, who preferred no charges, estimated damages at $75 to Allsbrooks vehicle.

Kimberley Denise Dudley of 506 E. 11I St. was charged with following too closely following investigation of a four-vehicle collision on Dickinson Avenue east from Wilson Street. Police, who said no injuries occurred, said the accident involved the Dudley v^cle and cars operated by Elizabeth Wad-ford of 403 Millbrook St., Faye Bland of Route 8, Greenville, and Joyce Jones Stepps of Cooper Street, Winterville. Damages were estimated at $250 to the Wadford car, $150 to the Bland vehicle, and $100 to the Stepps car.

No charges resulted from an accident on Greenville Boulevard east from 14th Street involving vehicles operated by Thomas Neal FWord of University Condominiums and Deborah Jo Macino of 305-G Eastbrook Drive. Police, who said Ms. Macino was injured, estimated damages at $500 to the Fulford vehicle and $200 to the Macino car.

A 5:40 p.m. accident on Evans Street south from Deck Street involved vehicles operated by Rae Pauley of Route 1, Ayden, and Dicy Sugg Hinnant of Snow HUl. Police, who reported no injuries or charges resulted from the accident, estimated damages at $300 to the Pauley car and $200 to the Hinnant vehicle.

TURNING FOR HOME HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (AP) - Some Arctic terns have winter and summer homes 11,000 miles apart.

In summer, the birds nest in the Arctic area, and every autumn they fly to Antarctica for the winter. Terns hold the long-distance migration record for binls^_

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Fantastic Selection of Burnes of Boston Picture Frames

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NATO Boycott Of Soviet

By CYNTHIA STEVENS Associated Press Writer The (rfficial NATO boycott of flights to and from Moscow took effect today in much of Western Europe to protest the Soviets downing of the South Korean airliner, and the Kremlin responded with blistering anti-American articles in the state-run press.

The newspaper of the Communist Party Central Committee repeated charges that the Korean jumbo jetliner was on a U.S. spy mission and compared the U.S. provocation to an attack by Adolf Hitlers soldiers on Poland in 1939.

Tapes

Studied

Again

WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. translation of a Soviet pilots words in the minutes before he shot down Korean Air Line Flight 007 relied in one key instance on an American interpretation of Soviet military jargon, not on the literal meaning of the Russian word used.

Two Russian language experts were asked by The Associated Press to review the transcript of the radio transmissions. They said the SU-15 fighter jet pilot told Soviet ground controllers that the Korean plane was not responding to an unspecified inquiry made 13 minutes before the plane carrying 269 people was shot down.

But the White House provided an English language translation of the pilots air-to-ground transmissions quoting the pilot as saying, the target isnt responding to IFF, standing for Identify: Friend or Foe. Administration officials have described IFF as an electronic code that can only be read by other Soviet planes and have cited the quote as evidence that the ^viets did not use an international distress frequency to warn the South Korean plane that it had intruded into Soviet air space.

Two Russian linguists -Irene Thompson, a language professor at George Washington University, and Kyrill Borissow, a language instructor at the State Departments Foreign Service Institute - said the literal translation of the sentence is the target is not responding to the inquiry. The Russian word zapros, or inquiry, is used, not the letters IFF, they said.

State Department spokesman Robert Williams defended the administrations translation, saying it was based on a specific jargon used by Soviet fighter pilots in which the word inquiry means IFF. This is the authoritative translation, Williams said. I have every confidence in the (U.S. intelligence) agencies that did this translation.

Another administration official, who spoke on condition he not be identified, said other intelligence information backs up the U.S. translation, but he refused to disclose what it is.

The paper, Sovietskaya a, failec

Rossiya, failed to mention that Soviet forces invaded Poland from the east 16 days after the Nazis attacked. It called the airliner incident a dirty and cynical intelligence operation.

Off the coast of northern Japan, where the airliner is beieved to have crashed, two U.S. Navy vessels searched today for the planes black box - the flight recordings which investigators hope will shed more light on the Sept. 1 attack.

In many Western European countries, including most of the NATO nations

that fly to Moscow, government-imposed two-week bans took effect suspending landing rights for the Soviet airline Aeroflot for two weeks and suspending national flights to Moscow. Austria, a neutral nation, did not join the boycott; nor did France, which belongs only to the non-military organizations of NATO.

Several non-NATO nations, such as Ireland, Switzerland and Japan, joined the boycott.

In addition, many pilots associations have declared a 60-day boycott of flights to Moscow to protest the Soviet attack that killed all 269

people aboard Korean Air Unes Fli^t 007.

Aeroflot, meanwhile, stopped accepting tickets written by U.S. airlines, complicating travel arrangements for people unable to fly on their prearranged schedules.

In London, British aviation officials theorized that the jumbo jet mistakenly strayed over Soviet airspace because a switch was in the wroi^ position.

Britains Civil Aviation Authority said the Seoul-bound plane [H^bably was off course from the time it left its refueling st(^ in Anchorage, Alaska because of a

Takes Effect

crew navigauoB error, the British Broadcasting C(p. said Wednesday ni^t.

Reporter Paul Barry of the BBC-TV news program Newsnight said the CAA worked through about 20 theories before it decided a switch affecting the planes auto-pilot was in the wrong position.

The CAA believed the pilot to(A off from Anchorage with the switch turned to follow radio beacons or a compass heading, failing to turn it cwrectly later to fink with the computerized navigation system into which tte flight ptx^am already had been

oito^, BBC said.

Master Guhhery Sgt. Ed Evans, a spokesman for U.S. Forces Japan, said in Tokyo that two Navy vessels would search the nwthoD seas (tff Jaran for the destroyed airliners black box. The salvage ships were equipped with s(^^ticated sonar and remote controlled deepwater drone vdiicles capable of retrieving small objects from great dei^, he said.

Waters off Moneron, a tiny island west of Sakhalin where the jetliner is thought to have gone down, are 600 to 900 feet de^.

Japanese search efforts

have turned 19 four'badly mutilated bodies, three meces (rf human flesh and Hundreds of fragments believed to have come from the ^wned jumbo jet.

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Mexican dock workers unload lumber from a Russian freighter at the dock in Ensenada Wednesday. The freighter bad been unable to unload in Los Angeles because of protests over the downmg of a Korean airliner. (APLaserpboto)

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WAKKANAI, Japan (AP) - U.S. and Soviet flotillas hunting for the downed South Korean jumbo jet faced off in international waters near Moneron Island today. The Soviets sent down a minisubmarine and marked an area with orange and red-striped buoys, Japanese officials reported.

The Soviets had 24 ships in an area 20 miles north of Moneron, including the guided missile cruiser Petropavlovsk. The Americans kd five vessels in an area 18 miles northeast of Moneron, including the destroyer Elliot, the frigate Badger, the cutter Monroe and the special search vessels Narragansett and Conveyor, the officials said.

They said the Soviet rescue ship Georgi Kozumin lowered a minisub in the area, then retrieved it and put out two marker buoys as darkness set it.

"It is clear that they (the Soviets) are carrying out some kind of undersea operation, possibly the search for the airliner, Rear Adm. Masayoshi Kato of Japans Maritime Safety Agency told reporters in Wakkanai.

The 2,400-ton Narragansett and the 1,530-ton Conserver carry pinger locator systems, sophisticated sonar anci remote-controlled deep drone vehicles capable

of retrieving small objects from great depths, said Master Gunn-'ry Sgt. Ed Evans, a spokesman for U.S. Forces Japan, said in Tokyo.

They are searching for flight recorders of the South Korean airliner shot down in Soviet airspace Sept. 1 with the loss of 269 lives, including 61 Americans.

Waters are 600 feet to 900 feet deep off Moneron, a tiny island west of Sakhalin near where the Boeing 747 is thought to have gone down.

No major sections of the plane or its flight recorders, whose records might help tell what happened in the aircrafts last minutes, have been found and it is not known whether they survived the crash.

A black box - actually Tainted orange for high visi-)ility - emits a pinging signal that can be heard by quipment on the salvage vessels.

Evans said the pinger locater and side-looking sonar would be towed submerged by the surface ship, and the drone would be dispatched from either the Narragansett or the Conserver if wreckage is spotted.

The safety agency said 20 Japanese vessels and 16 aircraft were crisscrossing the Sea of Jaran waters off Sakhalin an(i the Sea of Okhotsk north of Hokkaido to

hunt for debris and bodies from the Korean aircraft.

Currents in the Sea of Okhotsk have moved bits and pieces of the jet south since it was shot down. About 1,000 Japanese police and volunteers have been searching the 240-mile northern shore

of Hokkaido, Japans northernmost island.

The search has turned up four badly mutilated bodies, three pieces of human flesh and hundreds of fragments believed to have come from the airliner.

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|0 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Thursday, September IS. 1983

New Car Sales Jump 21 Ptrccint

By llir Associated Press Sales of new American-made cars jumped 20.9 percent in early September over the same period a year ago, and analysts said the gain was a good sign fw sales in the 1984 model year, which begins later this mrnith.

The major domestic automakers reported Wednesday that they sold 132,333 cars in the period Sept. 1-10, compared with 109,423 during the same days of 1982. So far this year, sales are running

17.8 percent ahead of last years pace.

Some of the cars sold were 1984 models already in showrooms, said John Hammond, analyst at Data Resources Inc. in Lexington,

The fourth quarter looks pretty good, said Hammond, adding that he expected the gain to continue and to boost sales of 1984 models.

Another analyst, David Healy at Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. in New York, said sales could have been even higher if there were more cars ir showrooms.

Ford Motor Co. reported a

28.9 percent increase. American Motors Corp. was up 20 percent, Chrysler Cwp. up 19.4 percent and General Motors Corp. gained 16.6 prcent. Volkswagen was the only loser, with a 28 percent sales decline.

General Motors Chairman

R(^er B. Smith i^edicted sales of 1964 model U.S. autos would rise 15 potent from 1983 levels to the highest total since 1979.

Meanwhile, economists said the Commerce Departments repMt that busi: nesses increase their stocks of unsold goods by 0.2 percent in July was also a XKitive sign. The inventories lad fallen less than 0.1 percent in June.

Companies are working fast and furiously ri^t now to rebuild inventories drained during the 1981-82 recession, said David Cross, an economist at the private consulting firm o{ Chase Econometrics Associates Inc.

A rise in bsness inventories is an indicatioB ttot companies expect or are alreadv experiicing a boost in sales. The Commerce Department said overall business sales fell 0.4 percent in July after rising 2.7 percent in June.

The stock market ended a three-session losing streak Wednesday, with the Dow Jones Average of 30 industrial stocks rising 5.38 to 1,229.47. Auto stocks showed mixed reactions to their sales gains, with Fmrl up 1^ to 60^/i and Chrysler V4 to 29%, while General Motors was unchanged at 71%.

In other .economic (kvel-opments Wednesday:

-The Americaa Petroleum Institule said gasoline consumnticii lumped 5.2 percent in AugUR from the same month last v6v. It was the third strai^ 'moothly increase, following rises at 2.5 percent in June and U percent in July. It also i-ported that impmls (tf crude oil and refined products surged 18.6 percoit m August to the highest level in more than two years.

-Martin Feldstein, the chief White House ecimnaist, said the governments huge budget deficits are drivi^ up interest rates and dmng very substantial damage to American industry. He ftre-dieted the U.S. fmeign trade deficit would reach a rec(H^

' US billion to $70 billion this yiar and potaps as high as Aggbilhon next year.

,<rThe Commerce Department said manufacturers* after-tax profits averaged 4.2 emits per dollar ' of sales in the second quartm of the year, up 1 cent from the first three mratte of the year and up 0.4 cent higher than during the second quarter of last year.4 PLACE SETTING OF CHINA

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Academy Says No To U.S. Station

WASHINGTON (AP) - There is no need for the United States to build an expensive manned space station to conduct space science research during the next 20 years, says a National Academy of Sciences study group.

The academys space science board, in reports released Wednesday, told the National Aeronautics and Space Administration that space shuttles and booster rockets they carry could perform high priority space science missions for the next two decades.

Our finding is that present systems are adequate to these needs, said Thomas M. Donahue, the board chairman, in a cover letter to NASA Administrator James Beggs.

"Therefore, on the issue of meeting the needs of space science, our recommendation would be to use the space shuttle, together with requisite upper stages, maneuvering and propulsion systems for missions to be flown during this century, Donahue continued.

However, looking into the next century, the board said it sees the possibility that a suitably designed space station could serve as a very useful facility in support of future space science activities.

The academy group expressed concern a space station project might drain funds from space science projects, as the shuttle program did. If the station is built, science work assigned to it should get additional funds, it added.

NASA has given high priority to developing a low-orbit space station and Beggs said in July the agency would request $200 million in its fiscal 1985 budget to start the project.

Questions have been raised, however, about exactly what uses could be found for a space station. Not only has scientHic backing of the project been lukewarm, but the D^mse Department said recently it has not yet identified a military mission a space station could perform better than unmanned satellites.

Dr. George Keyworth, President Reagans science adviser, announced in July that he bad reverb his loi^-standing opp^ition to a space station. After years of saying such a station should not be built without hi^y specific missions to perform, Keyworth said the project could be a stei^ing stone to more far-reaching future projects.

David Stockman, director of the Office of Management and Budget, has said he opposes the space station project for cost reasons and is considered the biggest obstacle to its approval.

NASA estimates a space station designed to be operational by 1991 would cost between $6 billion and $8 billion. The agency currently envisions a four-to-six person modular facility that would orbit about 250 miles above the Earth.

Beggs says the United States must build a space station as a follow-on to the space shuttle project because the Soviet Union is committed to having an (^rational station in orbit

by 1985.

If the United States does not take this step, we will lose our pre-eminence in space, Beggs says, because the Soviets will not stop, the Europeans will not stop and the Japanese wont stop.

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Public Radio Outlook Good

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W.ASHINGTON (AP) -.National Public Radio, which two months ago almost slid into bankruptcy, may not need to borrow as much money from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting as originally projected.

H. Melvin Ming, NPRs new chief financial officer, informed a committee of the organizations board of directors Wednesday that he will recommend NPR borrow a total of $7.5 million instead of the $8.5 million CPB agreed to lend July 28.

The full NPR board was scheduled to meet today and consider the matter.

Ming and Jerr> Strong, an auditor with the independent accounting firm of Coopers & Lybrand, told the NPR boards finance committee the organization could end fiscal 1983 on Sept. 30 about $1 million ahead of earlier projections.

Coopers & Lybrand had estimated this summer that , NPR would close the fiscal year with a total .deficit of $9.1 million. After CPB agreed to forgive $600,OoO of that. NPR negotiated an $8.5 million line of credit with the corporation to see it through fiscal 1983.

NPR, which provides national news and performance

programming to more than 280 public radio stations across the country, has so far drawn down $7 million to pay off creditors and back taxes. However much it borrows, NPR must repay the corporation in full by Sept. 30, 1986.

Ming attributed the improved projections to a slight increase in revenues this summer - somewhere between 1 percent and 3 percent - and the fact that were only now seeing the real benefits of the staff and spending cuts that were imposed in March.

The financial officer made it clear that continued belt-

Brink's Trio Vow Will Keep Fighting Charge

GOSHEN, N.Y. (AP) -Although they face 25 years to life in prison, the three radicals convicted of the $1.6 million Brinks armored car robbery-murders say they will not appeal, but will keep striving to overthrow the U.S. empire.

Jurors deliberated only 2% hours Wednesday before convicting Judith Clark, 33, David Gilbert, 38, and Kuwasi Balagoon, 36, in the 1981 robbery and shootout in which a Brinks guard and two police officers died.

The defendants did not bother to come to the courtroom to hear themselves each convicted of three counts of murder and four counts of robbery. Afterward, one of the defendants got married.

The trio had denounced the 2-month trial as a charade, but Rockland County District

Attorney Kenneth Gribetz called the defendants rhetoric pure hogwash.

tightening now would translate into immediate benefits. If NPR can avoid borrowing the full $8.5 million, it can save more than $8,000 a month in interest expenses alone, he said.

In other major financial developments, Ming disclosed Wednesday:

-NPRs nationwide fund-raising drive in early August, dubbed the Drive to Survive, produced pledges from listeners of $2.12 million. Of that, NPR expects to receive $789,000, with the remainder kept by individual public radio stations. That does not include another $100,000 raised by an independent group, known as the Friends of NPR, which will be handed over to the organization on Thursday.

-The NPR board will receive a recommendation Thursday to immediately use $350,000 of the money raised from listeners to restore some of the budget cuts imposed earlier on programming, particularly news.

NPR has reduced its employment from a high of 442 people in March to 285 now, the level that has been established as the ceiling for the organization during fiscal 1984.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

Thursday, September 15,1983

Z Asks For Court's Protection

HAYWARD, Calif. (AP)-Osbome was one of gurus of the computer jstry in the 1970s, an [entrepreneurial genius who [pioneered the portable market and lectured his competitors on what they I were doing wrong.

So when Osborne Computer Corp. filed for Chapter 11 protectioo under federal bankruptcy laws and then receive! terapwary financing from three banks Wed-neday, it was an occasion f(ff both snickering and sadness among his com-petihMS.

Osbornes magazine column, From the Foun-tainhead, made him enemies and admirers, but ev^one in the computer business was aware of his influence.

I know some people will

take a measure of satisfac-ti(Mi in seeing him fall, but we really have to feel a little sad about whats hat^ned to him, said George Morrow, chairman of Morrow Designs of San Leandro, Calif.

If he hadnt been there, most of us in the small and portable computer business wouldnt be here today,

The decline of Osborne Computer has been described widely as part of a major shakeout in the low-priced computer industry. Other companies believed to be having difficulty have been Texas Instruments, Atari Inc. and Dot Computers.

Osborne, the first company in a highly competitive field of makers of briefcase-sized computers, filed for Chapter 11 protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Oakland

(Ml Tuesday, which shields the cmnpany frwn creditors lawsuits while it arranges to payoffitsddMs.

Testle^ Inc. and PH Components Inc., two San Jose companies, charged in a suit Monday that Osborne owes them more than $4.5 million for circuit boards and other parts.

James Lopes, attorney for Osborne, said Security Pacific Bank, Chemical Bank and National Bank of North America have agreed to lend

the company $600,000 to ifioat.

keep us a (borne, known as a marketing whiz with a feel for future trends, perhaps let his company slip by failing to introduce a new product when he needed to, a competitor said.

Using $250,000 of his own money, the British-born Os

borne built his success on the Osb(ne I pebble, a $1,795 machine weighing only 24 XHinds and small enough to it under an airline seat. But the next major product, the Executive, a portable priced at $2,495, was not introduced until April.

Osborne should have had a product out last November, said Morrow, who also is considered an industry leader. If he had a iroduct out last November, led still be in business.

Osborne then shook up his company by stef^ing down as president and turning the job over to Robert Jaunich, president of Consolidated Foods in Chicago.

Osborne reported sales for the year ended November 1962 at about $100 million, far below predicted sales of $250 million. The plan to go public

was scuttled and in May the company yielded to competitive pressure by cutting the price (rf the Osborne I to $1,295. Last month, the company closed its New Jersey plant and laid off 200 workers at its Hayward headquarters. A week ago, 80 percent of its remaining 350 employees were furlougM.

My feeling is that you will see a real fire-sale price for the company as the investors quickly try to se off the company to get a little money back, said Jean Yates, president of a Los Altos microcomputer market research firm.

Lee Felsentstein, a research fellow at Osborne, echoed that feeling.

Fewer people are expecting someone to ride out of the horizon on a white horse and save us,

Felsensteinsaid.

But not everyone at Osborne was as pessimistic.

We are surprisingly upbeat, said one employee

who asked not to be named. We all think we still have the chance to be rich.

I dont think this is the end of Adam Osborne, said

Morrow. I think youll see him again. Hes very definitely an entrepreneur. Ctace you get this in your blood, its very difficult to get it out.The Youth Shop

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Sheriff Convicted In Jail Torture Case

HOUSTON (AP) - Water tmtffe used by a former sheriff and two deputies to force confessions was ^rt of a conspiracy involving a marijuana trap in an east Texas county, says the prosecutor who won convictions against the ex-officers.

After the guilty verdicts Wednesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Woodward raised the possibility of more indictments.

James C. Humpy Parker, 47, the former San Jacinto (bounty sheriff, and former deputies John Glover, 65, and (!arl Lee, 63, were convicted of conspiring to violate the civil rights of jMTSoners by subjecting them to water torture,.

Witnesses testified that^ they were handcuffed and their faces wrapped with a towel. Water would be poured on the towel, and the jirisoners would kick their leet when they wanted to talk.

The three defendants were also found guilty on multiple charges of torturing inmates to deprive them of liberty without due process of law. Lee was acquitted on one of those charges.

Among those charges were accusations that Parter took $30,000 in kickbacks from a bail bondsman and operated a marijuana trap on U.S. Highway 59, about 70 miles north of Houston. The gov-ernment contended motorists, primarily young people ana blacks, were searched without consent and eouipment on their cars was a tered to make it ap-pe^ the original stop was valid.

I think you will find thats one big conspiracy, Woodward said. It would be improper for me to say who might be indicted. We have

been investigating that throughout and even in the course of this trial. Additional indictments could come soon, he said.

The six-man, six-woman jury deliberated about five hours before returning their verdict. The defendants showed no emotion as the clerk read the decision, although Glovers wife sobbed quietly.

The conspiracy conviction carries a maximum penalty of a $10,000 fine and 10 years in prison. Each of the other counts of which they were convicted - Parker two, Glover three and Lee three - could result in a year in prison and $1,000 fine.

None of the defendants had any comment. Bert Moser, Glovers attorney, said, Im just very disappointed. Woodward said if asked by U.S. District Judge James DeAnda, he would urge the

maximum penalty and that each of the convicted men undergo psychiatric examinations.

I think what they did to people was inhuman and sadistic, Woodward said.

For Woodward, 34, trying his first case, victory was bittersweet.

Im pleased we were able to convict, he said. But its rather sobering that we have to admit that the guardians of the law have tortured people as late as 1980. Sentencing was set for Oct. 18. The defendants remained free on $10,000 personal recognizance bond although DeAnda ordered them to return to court today to review the bond and report to authorities for pre-sentencing investigations.

The trial began Aug. 30 with four defendants. But on Tuesday, DeAnda granted a

mistrial for Floyd Baker because his defense was damaging to the overall defense.

Baker will get a new trial Oct. 17. He was the lone defendant to acknowledge the torture took place at the San Jacinto County Jail.

The governments case included victims, all with criminal histories, who told of incidents between 1976 and 1980 and described how they were handcuffed to a table or chair and their faces wrapped tightly with a towel.

According to testimony, the prisoners head then would be pulled back and water poured over the towel. The prisoner, faced with suffocation, would kick with his feet when he was willing to talk about alleged crimes. Two of the victims testified they wrongly confessed to crimes because of the torture.

CONVICTED - Former San Jacinto County, Calif., Sheriff James C. Humpy Parker, 47, searches for a light after his conviction Wednesday by a federal court jury

of conspiring with two deputies to torture prisoners by water. His wife, Melba, is shown above. (AP Laserphoto)

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12 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Thursday, September 15,1983

Candidates Seek Hspanles

EVANGELIST - Self-styled evangelist Richard Rife preaches as he reads out of a Bible to the public in San Francisco. Rife preaches that women are sinners and should

repent. An aggravated San Francisco woman, Mary Golden, made a citizens arrest after hearing Rife preach. (AP Laserphoto)

Street Evangelist Upsets Woman, Wno Arrests Him

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Self-styled evangelist Richard Rife spent his lunch hours preaching to the public that liberated women . are sinners who should repent. Aggravated citizen Mary Golden wanted him to see the error of his ways - so she arrested him.

"I wouldnt do anything to interfere with this guys right to preach on the streets, but hes gone beyond that by nearly accosting pwple, said Ms. Golden, 39, who made her citizens arrest at the suggestion of police.

Rife goes on trial Oct. 4 on a charge of disturbing the peace, the offense upon which Ms. Golden, a Quaker and a paralegal in the city attorneys office, based her arrest.

She said Rife humiliated her by followed her and shouting, Women are whores! four times in a two-week period in May.

After filing a complaint with police, who said there was little they could do and suggested the citizens arrest, Ms. Golden said she returned to Civic Center and approached Rife and told him she was offended by his statement that Women are whores.

In a letter to District Attorney Arlo Smith, Ms. Golden said Rife replied. Not all women are whores.

I said, You came up to me not 20 minutes ago and shouted, Liberated women are whores!

Well, they are, he yelled. Liberated women are whores.

I stated, I am a liberated women, and I am not a whore, Ms. Golden recalled. He again shouted, directly in my face, Liberated women are whores!

Rife, who described himself as a born-again Christian saved six years ago, recently said, I preached on the average woman of San Francisco. Not all women are sexually immoral in the city, but many or most are.

Ms. Golden made her citizens arrest in front of two police officers, who booked Rife for disturbing the peace. Municipal Court Judge George Choppelas later ordered Rife to stop singling out people for epithets and derogatory statements.

Rife, whose wife is expecting their first child in January, said he quit his Civic Center preaching after his encounter with the law.

But he said he forgives Ms. Golden for taking action against him, adding, If this kind of reaction doesnt come forth, I would know I wasnt doing my duty.

By DONALD ROTHBERG APPotcal Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A political tug-(rf-war for sup-"' port of Hispanic voters in 1984 is intensifying, with President Reagan praising their traditional vali^ and Democratic lead^s ready to attack Republican policies as the cause of economic hardship felt by many Hispanics.

Reagan held center stage Wednesday night with a speech to Hispanic Republicans in which he said, America needs the values of our Hispanic citizens. We need those values to be expressed at the polls and through our political system.

* The president also cited lower interest and inflation rates and his cuts in taxes and domestic spending and told his partisan audience that federal tax money cannot buy happiness. It cannot buy our citizens real jobs and real opportunity. House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr., D-Mass., was certain to offer a far different view in a speech today to the annual dinner of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.

Also ready to dispute the presidents claim that his policies have benefitted Hispanics were six Democratic officeholders of Hispanic descent Gov. Toney Anaya of New Mexico and Reps. Robert Garcia of New York, Bill Richardson of New Mexico, and Matthew Martinez, Edward Roybal and Esteban Torres, all of California.

They were to appear at a news conference with Democratic Party chairman Charles T. Manatt and party vice chairwoman Polly Baca Barragan.

The Hispanic Caucus consists of 10 Democratic congressman and one Republican - Rep. Manuel Lujan of New Mexico, who sat a few seats from Reagan at the head table of the GOP dinner.

At one point, when the president cited his efforts to cut federal spending, he said and if the Congress acts responsibly, we can bring it

further undo* control. I only wish the makHity d that illustrious body were as re-' sponsible as Manny Lujan.

A Hispanic Caucus aide said Lujan would att^ the dinner at which ONoll was scheduled to speak.

Former Vice President Walter F. Mndale also accepted an invitam to the caucus dinner as did Mrs. J(rfin Glenn. Sen. Gary Hart planned to appear at a predinner reception. Mndale, Glenn and Hart are among the seven declared candidates for the Democratic

presidoitial lUMninaticm.

The backdrop fw miKh ci the pt^tical activity was Hispanic Heritage We^.

Reagans schedule for the week included several events directed at the Hispanic community, including an interview granted Wednesday with a group including several rejwrters for Hispanic publications.

I want you to know, he said, that my concern is not something new or some grand campaign strategy, as some have indicated. Since my days as governor of

California, Ive been aware ^ the rich contributions that .Americans of Hispanic descent have made and are making to our country.

Tirso ctel Junco, a Cuban ;'efugee who is heading the Republican Partys Viva 84 pn^am designed to raise $1 million for use in the Hspame community, has said the. Hispanic vote could be decisive in such major states as California, New York.

Texas and Florida.

A heavy Hispanic turnout in Texas in 1982 is cited as major factor in the upset defeat of Republican Gov. William Clements.

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MIAMI (AP) - A company is negotiating with Eastern Airlines to buy two jumbo jets and turn them into flying condominiums between New York and Los Angeles, complete with sleeping compartments, dining rooms and conference areas.

Bicoastal Services Inc., of Connecticut, in an application filed this month with the J3ivil Aeronautics Board, said it would replace the seats on two L-lOlls with 98 first-class seats, all to be pre-sold by contract.

Henry Rogers, a spokesman in Beverly Hills, Calif., for the company, said seats would be sold for $167,000, probably to companies who have a lot of traffic between New York and Los Angeles.

Bicoastal planned an official announcement of the project within three weeks, he said.

An Eastern spokesman, Richard McGraw, confirmed that We are negotiating with Bicoastal for the sale of two L-lOlls. However, he would not reveal the purchase price, saying the deal is not closed.

For a corporate customer that uses the seats it buys, or sells the seats elsewhere, the cost would be substantially less than the first-class fare, said Rogers.

Rain$ Kill 23

NEW DELHI, India (AP) - At least 23 pwple were killed during a series of flash floods and landslides in northeast India, authorities report.

Highways and railroads were cut, and telecommunications were disrupted, isolating much of the region Wednesday.

In West Bengal state. Deputy Transport Minister Sibendra N. Choudhury told reporters 175,000 marooned people were evacuated.

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'Baby Doe' Proposal Decribed As 'Foolish'

BOSTON (AP) - The governments proposal to reauire doctors to try to save all newborn babies, no matter how badly deformed or retarded, is both arrogant and foolish, a medical journal editor argued today.

Dr. Marcia Angel, deputy editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, wrote that the Reagan administrations proposed Baby Doe rules are based on the idea diat all life, no matter how miserable, should be maintained if

technically possible.

Currently, parents decide whether doctors

should struggle to save their handicapped babies when chances of a normal life are slim.

For the government to think that it can do better with a set of general rules, which are of necessity insensitive and vague when applied to a particular patient, is both arrogant and foolish, she wrote in an editorial.

Tlie administration proposed the rules after the highly publicized case of a retarded infant, dubbed Baby Doe. The child was born on April 9, 1982, in Bloomington, Ind., with Downs syndrome and a food pipe defect that prevented him from swallowing milk. His

parents decided to withhold corrective surgery and intravenous feeding, and the baby died six

she wrote. Hie case of Baby Doe may be one example; surely the idea of death by starvation is di^uieting.

However, Dr. John E. Pless, who conducted the babys autopsy, found that the boy died of chemical [xieumonia brought on by his birth defects.

Thats all wrong, he said of Ms. Angells comment. Im shocked that she would cmtioue the myth that was perpetuated by the media.

Pless, writing in.the same issue of the journal, said the baby develop^ pneumonia when stomach acid was drawn into his lungs, and this could have happened before birth.

The baby weighed 6 pounds at birth, and this had drc^ped to 41^ pounds when he died. Although the baby was malnourished and dehydrated, Pless said, I did not feel that the child would have died from those things alone.

Dr. Robert F. Weir of Oklahoma State University noted in another journal report that the proposed federal rules would give parents and doctors far less leeway in deciding how to treat defective newborns.

days later despite a prosecutors efforts to require treatment.

The rules would require every handicapped infant to receive all possible treatment unless death is inevitable or the risk a treatment is

prohibitive. Hospitals that defy the regulations could be denied federal funds.

In her editorial, Ms. Angel conceded that leaving life-and-death decisions to parents is not a perfect system.

There could certainly have been instances of poor judgment by physicians and parents,

The result is that pediatricians practicing defensive medicine will, to save their careers, be persuaded to give a^essive treatment to virtually all handicapped neonates (newborns), he wrote, regardle^ of the handicap, the effectiveness of Uie treatment or Ihe harm done to the relatively few neonates who would be better off without life-prolonging treatment.

The administrations first Baby Doe rules were struck down last April by a federal judge. New rules were proposed July 5, but they have not gone into effect yet.

Report Says Students Should Do Outside Work For Graduation

By CHRIS CONNELL Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -High schools should be restructured so students are not categorized by vocational, academic or general education courses and are required to do community service work to graduate, says a report unveiled today by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.

Rather than making science and math courses top priority, educators should emphasize English as the first and most essential goal of education, the 363-page study says.

U.S. high schools are surviving, but not thriving, said the report.

For a small percentage of students - 10 to 15 percent )erhaps - the American ligh school provides an outstanding education, perhaps the finest in the world, it said.

For the 20 percent to 30 percent of students who mark time or drop out it is an academic failure, the report added.

The study, High School; A Report on Secondary Education in America, was written by Carnegie president Ernest L. Boyer, a former U.S. commissioner of education.

It contrasts with the grim verdict reached last April by the National Commission on Excellence in Education which decried American public education as mediocre.

The Carnegie study said: A report card on public education is a report card on the nation. Schools can rise no higher than the communities that support them. And to blame schools for the rising tide of mediocrity is to confuse symptoms with the disease.

The foundation spent three years and nearly $1 million on its study. It convened a panel of education experts and prominent citizens, and sent other teams of educators into 15 high schools for four-week visits.

It looked only at the 16,000 public high schools that more than 13 million students attend.

Among the highlights of its recommendations:

-Make high schools first )riority not science or math )ut teaching lanmge, the capacity to think critically and communicate effectively through the written and spoken word.

The mastery of English is the first and most essential goal of education, the report said. It urged schools to give English teachers the time to critique student papers, with no more than two classes of 20 students each.

-Establish a core curriculum of required courses in literature, the arts, foreign language, history, civics.

science, mathematics, technology and health that every student would take; streamline electives so that two-thirds, instead of half, of the courses required for graduation would be mandatory.

-Abolish the widespread practice of tracking students into academic, vocational or general courses. Putting students into boxes can no longer be defended..., Boyer wrote. A core education should be supplemented with electives, keeping options open for both work and further education.

The report questions the value of traditional vocational education, although it says some courses are worthwhile.

-Replace the Scholastic Aptitude Test with a new Student Achievement and Advisement Test that would measure what students learn in the core curriculum and

help them make more intelligent decisions about college and career choices.

-Establish federal scholarships for a new National Teacher Service of students in the top third of their classes who agree to teach for at least three years.

-Admit only students with B averages and strong recommendations from two professors into teacher education programs. Prospective teachers should major in an academic discipline, not education, and spend a fifth year taking professional courses and in classroom internships.

-Provide more school c(kinselors.

Raise average teachers pay at least 25 percent beyond the rate of inflation over three years. Also, give teachers at least an hour of time daily for class preparation and record-keeping.

U.S. Says Arms Going To Cuba

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, voicing concern about an apparent arms buildup in Cuba, is accusing the Soviet Union of exporting offensive weapons to that island in violation of the 1962 US-Soviet agreement that ended the Cuban missile crisis.

I have to tell you, as far as I am concerned, that agreement has been abrogated many times by the Soviet Union and Cuba in the bringing in of what can only be considered offensive weapons, not defensive, there, Reagan said while answering questions of Hispanic, labor and religious press on Wednesday.

A Cuba expert maintained it was the fr time any administration had ever charged that the SovieL violated the agreement made during the presidency of John F. Kennedy.

Later, an administration official, speaking on the condition that he not be identified by name, said Reagan was definitely not accusing the Soviets of installing missiles in Cuba that could hit the United States.

The agreement provided that the United States would not invade Cuba or permit an invasion of Cuba from U.S. soil and would lift its naval blockade of Cuba if the Soviets would withdraw the offensive weapons systems which were there at the time.

Deputy press secretary Lrry Speakes, asked whether Reagan still feels bound by the agreement, said there were no plans for the United States to invade Cuba.

When pressed further, he said impatiently, What I am trying to indicate to you and I dont know why you cant understand, the matter has not come up. Nobodys said, Hey, are you going to go into Cuba? Were not planning on going into Cuba. So, cool it.

The administration official who requested anonymity said Reagan was talking about such tmngs as Soviet arms shipments to Cuba and advanced MiG jets that could be converted to carry offensive weapons.

This official said that in 1981, for instance, the Soviets shipped 66,000 tons of weapons to Cuba, much of which were then sent on to Central America. He said in general, since 1975, the Soviets have been building up the Cuban armed forces.

He (Reagan) was speaking of the history of the 1962 understanding that should have left C^ba without the capability to bring force to bear in this hemisphere in a way that would affect m, said the official. Hiat understanding has clearly been violated. What iey have there now is an

In his remarks, keagan said hes been concerned about the matter but with all the things that are going on, we havent been able to talk as much as we shoul4 abwt it.

The president said the United States "did try to open some talks when there seemed to be an indication coming from Cuba that there was a willingness for that. They got nowhere. So we are going to carry on with vrihat we are doing. He did not elaborate.

The Daily Reflector, Gfeenville, N.C_Thursday.    September    15.1983    13

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'14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Thursday. September 15,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was irregular. Kinston 45.75, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 46.00, Wilson 46.00. Salisbury steady, Rowland

45.00, Spiveys Corner 45.75. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 40.00, Fayetteville

40.00, Whiteville 40.00, Wallace 40.00. Spiveys Corner 41.00, Rowland 40.00, Durham 39.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, .C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 49.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2*2 to 3 pound birds. Too few of the loads offered have been confirmed. The market is weak and the live supply is moderate for a light to moderate demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was

1.791.000, compared to 1.801,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices were mixed today amid renewed doubts about the interest-rate outlook.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 3.25 to 1,226.22 in the first half hour.

Gainers held a 5-4 lead over losers in the early tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts said traders mood was dominated by concern that the Federal Reserve's weekly report on the money supply, due out late Friday, would show a large increase.

Such a rise could dampen recent hopes that slowing monetary growth would encourage the Fed to pursue a less stringent credit policy.

Meanwhile, the government reported this morning that industrial )roduction rose 0.9 percent ast month, for its smallest gain since last February. That was taken as further evidence that the pace of the economic recovery was slackening.

Merrill Lynch led the active list in early trading, unchanged at 3634. A 152,600-share block changed hands at that price.

On Wednesday the Dow Jones industrial average gained 5.38 to 1.229.4.

Advances held a narrow edge on declines at the NTSE.

Big Board volume came to 73.37 million shares, against 73.97 million in the previous session.

The NYSEs composite index rose .29 to 95.70. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .31 at 232.74.

A.\IK (.'orp AbblLabs Allis Chaim Alcoa AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am .Motors AmStand Amer T&T Beat Food Betb Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Corn CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Suva Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl Dow'Chem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot Fuqua s GTE Corp GnDynam , GenlElect s Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts

- Midday stocks

High

Low

Last

29',

29

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8

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41,

41,

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:18

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:i8

55,

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414

414

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724

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144

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354

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674

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38

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7:00 p.m. - Greenville Elks Lodge No. 1645 meets

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McKesson

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ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

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2S>i

37

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38'i

118,

454

504

123>.4

94

54

434

354

224

194

37

384

1554

404

244

434

344

794

33',

1094

264

39'j

27<4

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32

334

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334

274

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35

284

564

47

284

254

4'2

25

31'2

584

294

264

314

264

37>,

26',

224

144

16

434

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50',

55'4

214

70'2

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59'2

17

72'4

70

164

294

304

434

374

46-4

464

344

56'2

36

50'2

44

25',

362

294

48'.

21'.

41'.

38'.

1174

44'.

504

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94

534

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354

214

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37.

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404

244

43.

344

79

32.

109',

264

394

274

674

32 334 55',

33

274

624

34'2

284

56'.

464

27',

24',

44

25 31'. .58', 294

26 31', '26 364 26', 224 14. 15', 43'; 35'. 49', 544 21. 70'. 36', 59'; 16.

72

69.

16';

29

30';

43'.

374

464

464

34';

564

354

50';

43';

Following are selected II a m stock market quotations:

Ashland prC.....................................42

Burroughs.......................................53'.

Carolina Power & Light......................22 '.

Collins & Aikman............................41';

Conner................................................18

Duke    23',

Eaton......................................40',

Eckerd s..........................................24',

Exxon    38',

Fieldcrest........................................31';

Halteras ...................t...................15';

Hilton    564

Jefferson.......................................35.

Deere .......  41',

Lowe s................................25'.

McDonald s.....................................62',

McGraw    36.

Piedmont .............................32';

Pizza Inn...................................13',

PiG    56,

TRW Inc    70',

United Tel.................................22

Dominion Resources ...............20',

Wachovia........................................43';

0VT:R THE COUNTER

Aviation..............................17.-18

Branch............................24-24'.

Little Mint....................................,-l

Planters Bank...................... i9';-20

Soviets Arrest Rights Activist

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Soviet security police have arrested a leading human rights activist in Estonia, according to an exile source.

Enn Tarto, 45, was arrested by Soviet KGB secret police in the town of Tartu and imprisoned in the Baltic port city of Tallinn, accord-ing to Ants Kip par, spokesman for a Stockholm-based Estonian exile group.

Tarto was sentenced in the late 1950s to five years in a labor camp for anti-Soviet agitation, and imprisoned for 5*2 years on similar charges during the 1960s, Kippar said Wednesday,

He said Tarto and other imprisoned Estonian dissidents signed a 1979 Baltic appeal calling for an end to Soviet rule in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The Soviets annexed the three Baltic states during World War II.

France Unveils Austere Budget

PARIS (AP) - The Socialist government, continuing its austerity program, has ^veiled a 1984 budget that includes a new income surtax and the lowest increase in government spending since it took office three years ago.

Middle- and upper-income groups, those wiHi an income tax bill of 20,000 francs ($2,500) and up, will be hit with a supplementary tax ranging from 5 to 8 percent of the tax.

In a sharp cutback in the Socialists earlier free-spending policies, the 937.8-billion-franc ($117.2 billion) package is only 6.2 percent bigger than this years budget. The anticipated deficit is 125.8 billion francs ($15.7 billion), 6.8 percent more than the expected 1983 shortfall of 117.7 billion francs ($14.7 billion).

The City Control can designate certain areas of Greenville as controlled residential parking area. For more information, call 752-4137. Ask for Engineering.

McNamara Says N.C. Crash Nearly Set Off Nuclear Bomb

Obituaries

25't

36',

294

484

214

41';

38,

117.

444

50',

122;

94

534

434

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21.

19';

36',

37.

155'.

404

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34',

79

32',

1094

264

394

27',

67.

32 334 55'.

33 274 62, 34'; 284 564 46. 27', 24',

4';

25

314

58',

29,

26'.

31',

264

364

26',

22.

14.

16

43';

354

49',

55',

21.

70,

37

59';

17

72

69.

164

29',

30';

43';

37.

46,

464

34,

56,

35,

50',

43';

WASHINGTON (AP) - A nuclear bomb came close b expIodM^ accidentally when a B-52 bomber crashed in North Carolina in 1961, according to former Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara.

He said only a single safety switch prevented the explosion of the 24-megaton bomb.

McNamara revealed the incident earlier this week while talking about his proposal for NATO to renounce the first use of nuclear weapons. He said such a

policy would mean that a number of nuclear weapons could be destroyed, thus reducing the chances of an accident.

He then recounted the North Carolina incident, which occurred Jan. 24,1961 while McNamara was Pentagon chief duri^ the Kennedy administration.

A B-52 bomber on a training mission was carrying live bombs when it crashed.

The bombs arming mechanism had six or seven steps to through to detonate and it went through all but

one, we discovered later, he said.

Hiere has never been an accidental detonation of a nuclear weapon, and B-52s no longer carry live bombs during training missions because of the possibility of an accident.

McNamara gave no further details, but the Pentagon says there have been 32 accidents involving nuclear weapons since 1950.

The 1%1 crash occurred near Goldsboro, N.C., about 15 miles north of Johnson Air Force Base. Three of the

ei^t crew members were killed after the bombers right wing broke off.

As the plane fell, two 24-megaton bombs were jettisoned. One broke apart when it hit the ground, releasing relatively minor amounts of radiation, according to the Pentagons unclassified version of the incident.

The second bomb floated down when its parachute deployed. It was that weapon that nearly detonated, said Pentagon officials who declined to be named.

Industrial Yield Rises But Growth Falls Off

Pitt County Sheriff Ralph Tyson said today his office is still awaiting word on tests conducted on evidence gathered during an autopsy on the body of Shelton Lavon Farrell, 33, who died Monday.

Farrells unclothed body was discovered by his roommate at their home on the outskirts of Ayden early Tuesday. An autopsy conducted by Dr. Stan Harris, area medical examiner, indicated that drowning was the cause of Farrells death.

Tyson said that authorities are investigating to determine whether or not Farrells death was acciden-tial.

Parker Trial Nears Start

Twelve jurors and one alternate had been chosen by late this morning as the jury selection process for the murder trial of Dwight Parker continued in Superior Court.

Two alternates remained to be chosen before testimony in the trial begins.

Parker, 23, of Newark. N.J., is charged with murder in the deaths last February of the Rev. Leslie L. Thorbes of Grifton and Anthony Ray Herring of Goldsboro. Their bodies, weighted with concrete blocks, were found in the Tar River, several days after they had been reported missing.

Hudson Named To Committee

RESTON, Va. - Keith C. Hudson, professor of education, East Carolina University, has been appointed to a three-year term on the National Association of Secondary School Principals Committee of Professors of Secondary School Ad-ministration and Supervision.

Hudson will represent the associations Region 3, which includes North Carolina and nine other southern states. The association, headquartered in Reston, has a membership of 34,000.

A graduate of East Carolina University, Hudson received his doctorate degree from Florida State University-

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WASHINGTON (AP) -Production in the nations factories and mines rose 0.9 percent in August, the ninth straight month in a row, but the smallest amount since February, government figures indicated today.

Gains were widespread among materials and products, as sharp gains continued in the output of home goods and construction supplies, the Federal Reserve Board report said.

The increase in August followed advances of a revised 2 percent in July, 1.3 percent in June and May. It was the smallest since the 0.5 percent of February.

Some economists had predicted the report would show a slowdown in production during August because of other signs the economy has been- shifting to a more moderate pace following the rapid growth during the second quarter of the year. Economists also said August output might be lower because of a number of labor strikes during the month.

Even with the smaller gain during the month, the Fed said August output was 8.7

percent higher than the same month last year.

It said autos were assembled at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 7.5 million units, rising moderately after their large July advances. But the Fed noted that the industrys schedules call for further increases this month.

Auto assembly during July had been at a rate of 7.4 million units.

The report said production of home goods continued to increase rapidly, led by a further increase in household appliance output.

Production of business equipment changed little last month but that of industrial equipment rose rapidly. Commercial equipment declined because of a strike in the telephone industry, the

Fed said.

Other details of the report said:

- Production of consumer goods rose 0.6 percent in August following a 1.7 percent gain the previous month.

- Business equipment was up 0.1 percent after rising 1.3 percent in July.

There was a 1.3 percent gain for defense and space goods, following a 2.1 percent gain in July.

- Output of construction supplies rose 1.7 percent after gaining 2.2 percent in July.

The governments industrial production index rose in August to 150.5 percent of its 1967 base, bringing it 11.6 percent above November last year during the trough of the recession.

Rafe Hike OK'd

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Southern Bell will appeal a state agencys approval of a rate increase that will boost the average customers bill by 3.5 percent, instead of the

Tobacco Market

By The Associated Press

Following are the premliminary gross flue-cured tobacco

tables for Wednesdayas provided by the N.C. Federal-State

Market News Service:

Eastern N.C.

Market

Daily

Daily Daily

Site

Pounds

Value Avg.

Ahoskie....................................

174,372

314,718 180.49

Clinton....................................

309,816

594,597 191.92

Dunn........................................

Farmvl...................................

719,234

1,399,481 194.58

Gldsboro..................................

750,252

1,459,092 194.48

Greenvl...................................

753,046

1,498,803 199.03

Kinston....................................

737,633

1,438,888 195.07

Robrsnvl..................................

296,423

590,752 199.29

Rocky Mt.................................

358,751

693,614 193.34

Smithfld..................................

829,464

1,614,404 194.63

Tarboro....................................

253,804

485,005 191.09

Wallace....................................

304,097

592,995 195.00

Washngtn.................................

Wendell....................................

350,337

657,033 187.54

Willmstn..................................

Wilson......................................

1,478,200

2,888,997 195.44

Windsor...................................

Total........................................

,7,315,429

14,228,379 194.50

Season Totals........................169,877,436

305,318,165 179.73

Average for the day of $194.50 was down 45 cents from the

previous sale.

60 percent requested, company officials say.

Jere A. Drummond, Southern Bell vice president in charge of North Carolina operations said Wednesday he was totally dismayed by the N.C. Utilities Commissions decision. He said the company would appeal the order in court and immediately seek another rate increase.

The ruling does not allow us to offer a fair rate of return to our investors, added Ron Stamey, district manager. Although I cant pinpoint a date, 1 would think that we would be back before the commission pretty soon with another rate hike request.

The commission Wednesday approved 29.9 percent of a $122 million rate boost.

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Griffn EDENTON - Mrs. Nora Webb Griffin, 84, died Wednesday. Funeral services will be held Friday at 2:30 p.m. at the Williford-Barham Funeral Home in Edenton. Burial will be in Beaver Hill Cemetery.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Joe W. Hammett of Hampton, Va.; six sons, J.C. (Joby) Griffin of Farmville, John Wetb Griffin of Jacksonville, Melvin Griffin of Lancaster, Pa., Erwin C. Griffin, Oscar B. Griffin and Ercelle Griffin, all of Edenton; three sisters, Mrs. Althea W. Bendall of Norfolk, Va., Mrs. Vivian W. Ward of Tyner and Mrs. Elziabeth W. Minshew of Edenton; 12 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home today from 7-9 ).m. A 7 p.m. rosaiy will be leld. At other times the family will be at the home of ErMin Griffin on West Queen Street in Edenton.

McArthur Mr. A.D. McArthur Sr., retired farmer and a resident of Route 1, Greenville, died Wednesday night at his home. The funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. William J. Hadden Jr. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mr. McArthur was a lifelong resident of Pitt County in the Bell Arthur Community where he was a member of the United Methodist Church. In past years he was active in several agricultural organizations and was a former member of the Pitt County School Board.

Surviving are a son, A.D. McArthur Jr. of Farmville; two daughters, Mrs. Lillian Stubbs of Waycross, Ga., and Mrs. Laura Diehl of Lynchburg, Va.; six brothers, Dan McArthur and Lindsey McArthur, both of Greenville, Stuart McArthur

of Robersonville, Elbert McArthur of Kinston, Joe McArthur of Charlotte and Robert McArthur of Qearwater, Fla.; two sisters, Mrs. Martha Koger of Cary and Miss Emma McArthur of Maryland, and six grandchildren.

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

Whiteley

Mrs. Jean Eadon Whiteley, 83, died Wednesday. The funeral service will be conducted. Friday at 2 p.m. at Wilkerson Funeral Home by the Rev. Ralph Messick., Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mrs. Whiteley, a native of Scotland, came to the United States at the age of 8. She was a resident of Ohio and Toronto, Canada, before coming to Greenville in 1946. She was a member of the Eastern Star and a charter member of Hooker Memorial Christian Church where she served as organist. She had been employed as a stenographer before her retirement.

Mrs. Whiteley is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Mary Dennison of New York City and Mrs. Dorothy Harman of Winterville; eight grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home today from 7-9 p.m. and at other times wil be at 606 Brock Avenue, Winterville.

The family suggests that those desiring to make memorial contributions consider OUTREACH in care of Hooker Memorial Christian Church, Greenville.

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RESOLUTION NO. 796 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE DECLARING ITS INTENT TO CLOSE A PORTION OF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE

WHEREAS, the City Council has received a petition that a portion of Pennsylvania Avenue be closed; and

WHEREAS, the City Council intends to close the aforesaid portion of Pennsylvania Avenue in accordance with the provisions of G.S. 160A-299;    _____

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL that it Is the intent of the City Council to close the following described portion of Pennsylvania Avenue, said portion being more particularly described as follows:

To Wit:    A portion of Pennsylvania Avenue

Location:    Located in Greenville Township, Pitt County,    North

Carolina; easterly of Fourteenth Avenue and abutting the Sadie Saulter School property on the north,    south

and west, and lying within the corporate limits    of the

City of Greenville.

BEGINNING at the intersection of the northern right-of-way line of Pennsylvania Avenue, and the eastern line of the portion of Pennsylvania Avenue closed, as recorded in Book F45 page 288 of the Pitt County Registry; thence, S 82* 05 E., 45 feet along said right-of-way lina; thence, S 07* 55 W., 45 feet to the southern right-of-way lin of Pennsylvania Avenue; thence, N 82* 05 W., 45 feet along said right-of-way line to the eastern line of the aforesaid closed portion; thence, N 07* 55 E., 40 feet along said line to the point of BEGINNING.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a public hearing will be held in the Council Chamber, Municipal Building, Greenville, North Carolina, on October 13, 1983 at 7:30 P.M., to consider the sd-visability of closing the sforesaid portion of Pennsylvania Avenue. At such public hearing, all objections and suggestions will be duly considered.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy ot this resolution be published once a week for four (4) successive weeks in The Daily Reflector; that a copy of this resolution be sent by certified mail to the owners ot property adjoining the aforesaid portion of Pennsylvania Avenue as shown on ths County tax rscords; and that a copy of this resolution be prominently posted in at least two (2) places along the aforesaid portion of Pennaylvania Avenue.

Duly adopted this 8th day of Se|>tember, 1983.

PERCY R. COX, MAYOR Sept 15 1983    ^O^THINOTON,    CITY CLERK

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THE DAILY REFLECTORTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 15, 1983

Sickness Troubles Rose Grid Camp

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor

With a 2-0 record against two strong 4-A teams and a seventh place ranking in the Associated Press High School poll, one might think that there is only joy in the Rose High School football camp this week.

Or,e would be a long way from being right if one did think that.

Instead, there is - well, you cant call it panic - but you

can call it a situation that involves quite a bit of concern.

With Friday nights game -at 7:30 p.m. instead of the usual 8 p.m. - at Eastern Wayne just over the horizon. Rose High Schools football team looks more like a casting call for Trapper John, M.D. with players falling like flies to some type of virus.

At last count, some seven starters had been sidelined by the bug - including both starting quarterback Battle

Emo^ and his backup Todd Martin.

Joining them on the sidelines may be defensive end Edward Farley, inside linebacker David Lineberry, tight end Billy Michel, placekicker Brian Bridges, and inside linebacker Sterling Edwards.

At least two of them, Emoj^ and Farley have spent time in the hospital this week from the nausea that accompanied the bug, and most have

Marvin Barrett

Mike Walsh

Amos Edwards

missed the major part of the weeks drills.

Right now, Coach Ronald Vincent said, Id have to call them all uncertain. We wont know until late Thursday whetter any qf them will be able to play, and we are having new people turn up sick each dav. Even if they do return for the game, I dont anticipate them being very strong.

So - that leaves Vincent in a quandry. He has to come up with a patch-woiic lineup, one right now that may include a sophomore quarterback who has not dress^ for a previous varsity game, Ervin Best, who has been playing on the junior varsity for the past two games.

Vincent had planned on Wednesday to bring Martin up to the number one position at quarterback for the game, but he showed up among the missing at Wednesdays practice, along with Edwards. Other changes would move Tyrone Vines into the defensive end position, James Matthews at inside linebacker, and Maurice Smith to tight end (where he has alternated with Michel). Vincent was unsure this morning how he would handle Edward absence, and said.

Byner Joyful After Hit

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer

The ball slipped out of his hands and Frank Bush fell on it to give North Carolina State a final attempt to score from the East Carolina University 18-yard line with 2:09 left in the game and the Pirates leading 22-16.

Earnest Byner felt sick.

After gaining 97 yards on 17 carries for the Pirates and scoring the go-ahead touchdown with 7:10 on the clock, Byner wanted to crawl into a hole and hide.

I just cant explain the feeling I had at the time, Byner said. I felt low; I didnt want to be around

anybody. I just went to the end

ch .....

of the bench and stared at the field.

But just as quickly as his fortune had dwindled, the senior fullback again had reason to celebrate. On fourth and two from the Pirates 10-yard line, ECU cornerback Calvin Adams wrestled down NCSUs Vince Evans for a loss ot

seven yardsand the game.

Earnest Byner was vindicated.

I was out on the field jumping up-and-down before he had hit the ground, Byner said. I could see what was going to happen, but I couldnt believe it. I was just glad the referees didnt see me out there, or they might have called a penalty.

The Pirates victory over the Wolfpack gave credibility to a program which was abandoned as hopeless by some" after posting losing records in its first two seasons under Ed Emory. But Byner, touted as the second-best back out of Georgia in 1980 behind Herschel Walker, now of the USFL New Jersey Generals, saw a program which he could grow with and 'waited for the recognition ECU has received this year.

My high school coach thought I was just as good (as Walker), Byner said. But he got all the publicity . Several colleges, including

Sports Calendar

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports Football Conley at Farmville Central JV North Lenoir at Ayden-Grifton JV EdentonatRoanceJV Eastern Wayne at Rose JV !5 p.m.)

Volleyball

North Lenoir at Farmville Central

Mikes Party Center vs. Jim's Tires

Fridays Sports Football

Mattamuskeet at Chocowinity (8

p.m.)

Northwest Halifax at Jamesville

(8p.m.)

'Northampton West at Greene

Central (8p.m ville

Conley at North Pitt (4pm.)

New Hanover at Rose (4 p.m.) Goldsboro at Greene Central (4

p.m.)

Tennis Tarboro at Washington Roseat Rocky Mount (3:30p.m.) East Duplin at Greene Central Soccer

Rose at Rocky Mount (4p.m.) Atlantic Christian at East Carolina (3 p.m.)

Cross^ountry Roseat Rocky Mount Softball Fall Recreation ^irits vs. Grogs

Tnomas Mobile Homes vs. State Credit

Baileys vs. Morgan Printers Jimmys 66 vs. Sunnyside Eggs Vermont-American vs. 14lh Street

Farmville Central at Conley (8

p.m.)

Ayden-Grifton at North Lenoir (8

p.m.)

Roanoke at Edenton (8 p.m.) Williamston at Ahoskie (8 p.m.) Rose at Eastern Wayne (8 p.m.) Soccer

Falls Road at Greenville Christian (4 p.m.)

Tennis Northern Nash at Rose

Georgia Tech and Florida State, were interested in Byner, but a twisted ankle while playing defense his senior year at Baldwin High School caused him to miss three games and sent the recruiters looking elsewhere. ECU eventually signed Byner, and he responded by winning the starting berth in his second season.

Although he has been hampered by injuries, Byner has amassed 1,187 yards rushing on 204 carries for a 5.8 average in three years in the purple and gold. Through the first two games of 1983, Byner has posted 147 yards rushing for a 4.7 average with a pair of touchdowns.

I have proven I can come back from injuries, he said. Im hoping to improve on what Ive started this season; Im not satisfied yet.

The Pirates started turning heads in their season opener, a heart-breaking 47-46 loss to nationally seventh-ranked Florida State. Byners one-yard blast with 12:02 left in the game put ECU ahead 46-41 before the Seminles rallied for the victory.

We knew what we were capable of doing when we went down there this year, Byner said. When I went home for the summer I was trying to talk my friends and family into going to the game; I told them it would be a good one.

In 1980 (when the Pirates lost 63-7), we werent really in their league. Last year (a 56-17 ECU loss), we didnt know what we could do. Now we have come together as a team. The offensive line is a total turnaround from what it was when I came here. They

Now the Pirates have to get ready for Saturdays home opener against Murray State, and the ECU coaches have the job of preparing the team mentally for a different type of challenge. Eastern Kentucky was the last member of NCAA Division I-AA Ohio Valley Conference ECU played, and the Pirates came out on the short end of a 28-16 score in the 1980 contest.

Catch the Pirateas First Home Game Against Murray State This Weekend.

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East Carolina brings the Pirate Attack home to Ficklen Stadium for the game against Murray State this weekend.

Game time Is 7:00 and you can watch the potent Pirate offense go into action for the first time this year at home.

This year's Pirate team Is proven and ready to become the big winner.

So, Catch the Pirate Attack Saturday at 7:00 in Ficklen Stadium.

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I dont really know what well do about Bridges being out. Im just hopeful that hell be well enough to kick extra points - assuming we score.

Eastern Wayne comes into the game with a pair of shutouts behind it one on the positive side and one on the negative. 'The Warriors opened the season with a 17-0 victory over Rpcky Mount, then, after a week off, fell to Wilson Hunt, 28-0.

I dont know what happened to themagainst Hunt, Vincent said. They were expecting to have the best team theyve had in years. They looked pretty good against Rocky Mount.

Penalties and turnovers hurt the Warriors against Hunt, and the Warrior defense was unable to stop the Hunt running game.

The Warriors are paced by Bobby Best, who rushed for 81 yards in the opener, and Anthony Neely, both seniors. Best is a 5-9, 179-pounder, while Neely is 5-9,172.

Anthony Russo is the quarterback for the team and is rated as a good thrower, but his timing has been off due to his play with the American Legion baseball team that went to the state semifinals causing him to miss the early part of practice.

Defensively, James Bryant, a 6-1, 250-pound tackle, leads

believe in me and my ability to get through the holes they create, and I trust them with my life every time I run the ball.

Kevin (Ingram) and I work together very well, also. We complement each other. If they try to stop me up the middle, they cant stop him outside. If they keep him from getting outside, they cant stop me up the middle.

This time when we went to Florida State, it was an unreal feeling; no one was nervous. We knew we had a chance to beat them. When they came out right before the kickoff and threw the spear in the middle of the field, we were right out there and used it to pump ourselves up even more.

We were real y upset over losing the game, but we had to get ready for State.

Weve got to practice like we w()uld for FSU or N.C. State,* Byner said. If we let down, then anyone can come in here and upset us. Were looking for a big home crowd to help get us charged up before the game. Were used to a lot of people yelling now.

The only difference now is that the people are yelling for Earnest Byner and the Pirates rather than at them. '.

Liberty Takes First Cup Race

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Skipper Dennis Conner was generous in victory.

The opening race of the 1983 Americas Cup challenge Wednesday had been one of the yachting series tightestln years, and Conners Liberty defeated Australia II by one minute and 10 seconds - a positive start in the best-of-seven competition.

The breaks went our way and we won, but it could very easily have been something else, the American skipper said of the race that began the United States 25th defense of yachtings most prized trophy.

Its nice to get the first win under our belts.

It 'vas a see-saw battle that began the long-awaited showdown until Conner got a break when the Australian yachts steering gear broke on the fifth leg.

Right after the win, Conner took his red-hulled yacht gleefully into the traffic jam of hundreds of spectator boats, waving and grinning as he drew the cheers and horn-blasts of partisans.

And before the start in 18-knot winds and lumpy seas in Rhode Island Sound, (ionner took a similar slant, knifing Liberty into the nearby fleet to applause and a few toot salutes.

For John Bertrand, master of Australia II, the race brought a hard lesson. He had nearly caught Liberty on the running leg when his boat lost its steering gear on a move to get an edge at the mark.

As I was correcting the helm to peel around Libertys stern, one of the steering pulleys collapsed and we broached, he said. It was a bit scary after that.

The crew did a fantastic job doing a repair with a block

and tackle below decks to get her back on the steering in those few minutes, said Aussie syndicate chief Alan Bond, who is making his fourth try for the Cup.

The skipper said he sailed on the trim tab, a device on the back of the keel to aid control, for 10 minutes on the final beat of 24.3 mile-course before the temporary repair was made.

But by then there was no catching Liberty.

Bond said Australia II would be fixed and ready fo race No. 2 today when winds were expected to be 10-20 knots with more choppy and sloppy seas.

The race was the first hookup of Conner, who successfully defended -the Cup in 1980, and Bertrand, whose boat has a secret new^-finned keel which the crew has kept hidden all summer.

The start was virtually even but Liberty took an early lead on the first tacking leg only to lose it to Australia 11 which drove through in winds that shifted 5 to 10 degrees.

The Aussie yacht had an eight-second edge rounding the first mark and upped that to 10 seconds at the next turn. But on the third leg, a reach with the wind coming over the side of the boat, Liberty eased into the lead, in part, Conner said, because Bertrand didnt protect himself.

We were going a little bit , faster, and his bearing kept slipping aft and finally we got on his wind. And that was that, he added.

It certainly was a mistake to let him get by so easily, Bertrand said. It certainly wont happen again.

Liberty turned the advantage into a 16-second edge at the next mark and raised that

(Please Turn To Page 16)

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the way, along with Selwyn Jones, a 6-2, 193-pound linebacker, and William Super, a 5-8, 178-pound linebacker.

I think well really find out how good we are, Vincent said. The replacements for these guys are adequate, but they just need game experience.

however, as to how many of the players the Rampants count on will be available -and, if available, how effective they will be.

Vincent was pleased with the play of the Rampants against New Bern last week, and thought that the quick turnaround time between the Jacksonville game on Monday and the one with the Bears on Friday caused some problems.

Rose was unable to move the ball on the ground against the big Bears until the fourth period when Reggie Smith, broke away on a 92-yard touchdown run and that finally opened up that part of the attack. In the meanwhile, Emory had been hitting receivers for 167 yards through the air, scoring one touchdown and setting up two others.

We got shut down early, but we kept going at it. We showed that we can throw the ball as much as we need to throw it, both to control it and to move it.

Vincent said he thought the defense played well most of the time - despite giving up two fourth period touchdowns. I think we really got tired at the end, Vincent said They were out there most of the time, and playing two games in such a short time didnt give us much time to condition in between.

Actually. I was amazed that our guys were so ready after just having played on Monday. They had only three days to prepare for New Bern, and 1 think our offensive line play improved right on through the game.

Vincent was still unhappy about the number of penalties handed the Rampants during the game, several of them on personal fouls. We cant have this, he said. And we hope to improve on this this week.

The big question remains.

Evan Hause

Big East

Conf.

. Overall

W

L

W

L

T

.Fike

0

0

3

0

d

Hunt

0

0

2

0

0

Northeastern

0

0

2

0

0

Rose

0

2

0

0

Beddingfield

0

0

1

1

0

Rocky Mount

0

0

1

1

t)

Northern Nash

0

0

1

1

u

Kinston

0

0

2

1)

Last Weeks Results

Fike 28. Garner 6 Hunt 28, Eastern Wayne 0 Northeastern 40. Camden 6 Rose 28, New Bern 14 Northern Nash 27, Vance 21 Southwest Edgecombe Beddingfield 7 Goldsboro 31. Kinston 14 Rocky Mount Open

30,

This Weeks Schedule Hunt at Southwest Edgecombe Perquimans at Northeastern Rose at Eastern Wayne Beddingfield at Southern Wayne Goldsboro at Rocky .Mount Northern Nash at Southern Nash Jacksonville at Kinston Fike Open

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^0 Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._ThurMay,    September    15.19P3Brewers Suffer With Power Shortage

By The Associated Press The Milwaukee Brewers soared to the top of the American LeagiK last year on the strength of their hefty hitters. Now, they are plummeting in the AL East because of a severe power shortage.

The Brewers, who came within one game of winning the 1982 World Series, hit 216 home runs last season while leading the league in runs and total bases. But their vaunted attack has sputtered in the second half* of the season -only 44 homers in 71 games -and, in the last week, theyve scored a total of nine runs in seven games, the last six of which theyve lost.

Milwaukee fell 4-1 to the New York Yankees Wednesday night and stands 104 games behind first-place Baltimore in the East. The Brewers pitching has been solid recently and their hurlers surrendered only seven runs in three games with New York, yet lost all three.

Good pitching and no hitting, lamented Manager Harvey Kuenn. Its one repeat performance after the other. One wasted pitching effort after the other. Weve not hit so many nights in a row, its tiresome. Maybe were trying too hard.

Were running out of alternatives. Ive tried extra batting practice, Ive tried no BP, Ive tried shaking up the lineup, Ive tried everything. Im open to suggestions. Elsewhere in the AL, it Baltimore defeated Boston 5-0,

Detrmt e^ed Cleveland 5^, Kansas City Califrania 1-0 in 14 innings, Minnesota trimmed Chicago 1-0, Texas downed Oakland 4-2 and Toronto beat Seattle 4-3.

Ron Guidry threw a five-hitter and Ken Griffey homered to pace the Yankees. Guidry is tied with Detroits Jack Morris for the AL lead in comjrfete games with 18 and has won six straight.

I havent been overpowering, said Guidry, who credited his teammates for his fine record. They give me a chance to win and I give them a chance to win. Most of the games Ive pitched, we havent been out of it at any time.

Orioles 5, Red Sox 0

As if the Orioles didnt have enough going for them with an eight-game winning streak -Baltimore has won 19 of its last 22 and has a 54-game lead over Detroit in the East - they apparently have one of their former aces back on track,

Dennis Martinez hadnt started since Aug. 6 or pitched in nearly a month. But he combined with Sammy Stewart for a six-hitter and Gary Roenicke smacked a two-run homer to lead Baltimore.

Martinez entered the game with a 5.31 ERA. In his previous 14 starts, he was 2-9 with a 6.59 ERA.

I felt we needed to get him out of the rotation quick, said Altobelli. It seems like a long time away.

This was my chance to-

Rose Statistics

Rushing

Att

Gn

Ls

.Net

Ave

TD

RSmith............

22

190

5

185

8.4

3

Blackwell

28

92

28

64

2.3

2

Vines...............

4

37

0 37

22.0

0

Harris............

6

19

1

18

3.0

0

Brown............

1

7

0

7

7.0

0

Martin.............

2

7

0

7

3.5

0

Daniels............

1

6

0

6

6.0

0

Emory.............

5

5

0

5

1.0

0

Streeter............

3

1

8

-7

0.0

0

Team..............

1

0

22

-22

0.0

0

Totals..............

........73

364

64

300

4.1

5

Opp.................

,, 75

332

62

270

3.6

3

Passing

Att

Cmp

Int

Yds

Pet

TD

Emory.............

26

13

0

223

50.0

1

Martin..............

5

1

2

7

20.0

0

RSmith.............

1

0

0

0

00.0

0

Totals...............

........32

14

2

230

43.8

1

Opp..................

........41

to

3

162

24.4

0

Total Offense

Plavs

Rush Pass

Tot

Emorv.............

31

5

223

228

Martin..............

7

7

7

14

RSmith............

23

185

0

185

(Others same as

rushing

1

Totals...............

105

300

230

530

Opp..................

116

270

162

432

Receiving

1

Vo

Yds

Ave

TD

TSmith.............

7

156

22.3

1

Streeter.........

4

42

10.5

0

RSmith..........

2

25

12.5

0

Michel..............

I

7

7.0

0

Totals...............

14

230

16.4

1

Opp.................

10

162

16.2

0

Field Goals

11-20

21-30

31-40

414- Total

BIk

Opp..................

0-0

1-1

04)

0-1

1-2

0

Punting

No

Yds

Ave

BIk

Brown ........

9

271

30.1

0

Opp..................

8

275

34.4

0

Punt Returns

No

Yds

Ave

TD

RSmith...........

2

93

46.5

1

TSmith

1

0

0.0

0

Streeter.........

1

0

0.0

0

Totals..............

4

93

23.3

1

Opp.................

5

4

0.8

0

Kickoff Returns

No

Yds

.Ave

TD

Streeter...........

2

34

17.0

0

RSmith............

1

14

14.0

0

Totals..............

3

48

16.0

0

Opp.................

8

133

16.6

0

Interceptions

No

Yds

Ave

TD

Streeter

3

0

0.0

0

Opp.................

>

0

0.0

0

Scoring

RSmith............

TD

Kick

Run

Pass

FG

TP

''

4

0-0

04)

04)

04)

24

Blackwell

2

04)

04)

04)

0-0

12

TSmith............

0-0

04)

04)

04)

6

Bridges...........

0

4-5

04)

0-0

04)

4

Emory.........

0

04)

04)

02

0-0

0

Totals.............

7

4-5

04)

0-2

04)

46

Opp................

, 3

3-3

04)

0-0

1-2

24

First Downs

Rush

Pass

Pen Total

Rose................

14

10

1

25

Opp

14

7

7

28

Fumbles No

Lost

Penalties

No

Yds

Rose 6

2

Rose

14

164

OPP 11

6

OPP

16

158

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night to prove I can still do well, said Martinez.

As a team, the Orioles

couldnt do much betto'.

Were just gmng out there loose every day and the runs

are comiitf and the pitching is there and the defense is mostly there, said Eddie

Murray. Were playing so good light now, everything is chdting.

Up, Over, Out

Philadelphia Phillies Greg Gross tumbles over Montreal Expos catcher Gary Carter after being ^gged out at home plate while trying to score from secmid base on a single during second inning action in Philadelphia Wednesday afternoon. (AP Laserphoto)

Matuszek Finds Home

By The Associated Press

Len Matuszek was recently recalled by the Philadelphia Phillies from the minor leagues. He doesnt want to go back, and made some points for himself against the Montreal Expos.

Its got to make you feel good when they run you out there in September in the heat of a pennant race, said Matuszek, a key figure in Wednesday nights 9-5 and 5-0 doubleheader sweep of Montreal.

Matuszek had two hits in the first game and a three-run homer in the second as the Phillies moved into first place by one game over the Pittsburgh Pirates, who beat the Chicago Cubs 6-3. The Expos fell into third place, 14 games behind the Phillies.

Matuszek, called up from Portland of the Pacific Coast League, says he has been shuttled between the majors and minors more times than he cares to count. I saw a lot of players going up a lot quicker than me, said Matuszek, who says he had become discouraged over the last five years.

But this year he made up his mind to maintain a right mental attitude and show what he could do.I felt if the Phillies didnt want me, some other teams would, noted the first baseman.

In other NL action, Houston beat Los Angeles 4-2, Cincinnati stopped Atlanta 6-4, St, Louis edged New York 2-1 and San Diego whipped San Francisco 7-4.

Mike Schmidt hit a two-run homer in each game, giving him an NL-leading 36 for the

season. His first round-tripper came in the fourth inning of the opener after a two-run blast by Joe Morgan, easing Steve Carlton to his 298th career victory.

Carlton notched No. 298 on his sixth attempt and boosted his season record to 13-15. The all-time major-league strikeout leader with 3,683, Carlton fanned eight and walked four in ei^t innings before last-inning relief help from Holland.

In the second game, Schmidt hit a two-run shot in the first inning and Matuszek slammed a three-run homer in the third for his first in the major leagues. Both came off loser Ray Burris, 4-7.

Marty Bystrom, 6-9, in his first start since returning from the 21-day disabled list, pitched a five-hitter for the Phillies.

I changed a lot of things in my delivery to take strain off my arm, said Bystrom, who suffers from a strained elbow. I got my mechanics straightened out, which is the key to control. The layoff gave me time to work things out. I felt strong the whole time. Pirates 6, Cubs 3

In Pittsburg, Jim Morrison had three hits, including a two-run double, as the Pirates beat Chicago.

John Candelaria, 14-8, blanked the Cubs on six hits through six innings before leaving with stomach cramps. Cecilio Guante and Kent Tekulve finished up for the Pirates.

Candelaria, who has completed only two of his 31 starts this season, now has a 15-4 lifetime record against the

Cubs, including an 11-1 mark at Three Rivers Stadium and a 3-0 record this season.

He pitched very well, considering he hasnt been feeling well, said Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner of Candelaria. Hes had something like ulcers, and hes been taking some stuff for it.

. Astros 4, Dodgers 2

In Houston, Phil Garner slammed a two-run homer in the seventh inning to lift the Astros over Los Angeles.

Loser Bob Welch, 14-12, walked Jose Cruz to open the seventh. After Ray Knight struck out. Garner lofted Welchs 2-1 pitch over the left-field wall for his 14th home run of the year.

Despite the loss, the Dodgers held their four-game lead in the NL West over Atlanta. Houston pulled within 74 games of the Dodgers.

I was glad to see Phil get the key blow. Hes a little overdue, said Houston Manager Bob Lillis. It was a must game for us.

Reds 6, Braves 4

In Cincinnati, Nick Esasky hit a grand slam off reliever Steve Bedrosian to highlight a five-run seventh-inning rally that carried the Reds over-the Braves.

Dale Murphy slugged a pair of two-run homers for all the Braves offense.

I was looking for some

thing hard to hit, Esasky said of his first major-league grand slam. I thought whatever hed throw he would throw hard, he pitch before was outside. I pulled off of it and missed it. So I figured hed go outside again. Cardinals 2, Mets 1

In New York, Darrell Porter had three hits, including his 14th homer of the season in the sixth inning, as St. Louis beat the Mets.

Neil AUen, 11-12, pitched 5

1-3 innings for the victory, while Bruce Sutter, the fourth Cardinal pitcher, was credited with his 19th save.

Tom Seaver, 8-14, was the loser and worked seven innings before being lifted for a pinch hitter.

Padres 7, Giants 4

In San Diego, Tony Gwynn extended his hitting streak to 22 games with three sii^es and drove in two runs to lead the Padres over San Francisco.

Bobby Brown, who set the Padres consecutive game hitting streak last month with 21 games, had three singles, stole three bases, and scored three runs. Gwynns streak is the longest in the majors this year.

Eric Show, 14-10, pitched 5

2-3 inning to pick up the victory with relief help from Gary Lucas, who recorded his 15th save.

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Every ni^t, we have pretty much a different hero and thats good. It keeps pressure off guys knowing they dont have to do it every day. Theres no reason for that eighth man not to knock in that winning run some night. Twins 1, White Sox 0 Minnesota rookie Tim Teufel, who was called up from Toledo (hi Sept. 1, singled to knock in the only run with none out and the bases loaded in the ninth. The hit snappd a string of 17 scoreless innings by White Sox hurler Britt Bums.

We were aU guessing out there, said Teufel. They were trying to figure me out and I was trying to figure them out.

- Tigers 5, Indians 0 The Tigers have won six straight but cant gain ground on the Orioles. Glenn Abbott, acquired on waivers from Seattle on Aug. 23, befuddled the Indians with an assortment of offspeed pitches, throwing a four-hitter. Alan TrammeU scored three times for Detroit.

From the first time that I walked in here, I felt like I had a job to do, Abbott said. This is the kind of situation a pitcher dreams about, especially coming from a team like Seattle. Every games a pressure game here.

Royals 1, Angels 0 Pinch-hitter Don Slaught singled in Hal McRae, who

Liberty,..

(ContinuedFrom Page 15)

to 28 seconds after the next tacking leg. Despite the loss of steering, Australia II was behind by only 35 seconds at the leeward mark.

Bond said he believed his yacht would do better today, especially after the takeover on the first leg of the opener.

That was something, he said. Those who saw the first leg will have something to remember for a long time.

Correction In yesterdays Sportline, a typographical error gave Murray State University an enrollment ot just over 4,000. The school actually has an enrollment of just over 8,000.

had tripled with one mit in the 14th. Tommy John, 40, blanked the Royals over the opening 13 innings in the l(xigest outing of his 21-year career.

After the 13th (Manager John) McNamara asked me if Id had enough, and I had, said Jdin, who earlier tte season lost a 2-1, 12-in^ decision to Oakland. I didnt have much left at the end, but my fastball was still moving. In fact, I dont think I threw a breaking ball from the ninth inning on.

Rangers 4, As 2 Charlie Hough saw his consecutive-scoreless inning streak end at 36. But Larry Parrish provided all the runs Hough needed with a three-run double and a solo homer.

Oh, Im certainly not going to shut out teams forever, thats for sure, said Hough. But I enjoyed it. It was fun. Blue Jays 4, Mariners 3 Lloyd Moseby pinch-hit a double in a two-run seventh inning as Toronto won its fourth in a row. Reliever Doyle Alexander allowed four hits over the final six innings to pick up his fourth straight victory.

In the ninth, Seattles John Moses was thrown out at the plate by right fielder Jesse Barfield on Tony Bernazards double for the final out.

PEERLESS PAUL

NEW YORK (AP) - Harry Minor, a scout for the New York Mets and a man with a long memory, was telling a group of younger men about Paul Waner, a long-time star for the Pittsburgh Pirates and a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Waner only weighed 139 pounds, but he was a great hitter with a quick bat. He led the National League in hitting three times, going as high as .380 in 1927.

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The Rose High/EB Aycock Athletic Foundation needs your help to meet the financial responsibilities involved in the type of projects that have been planned this

year.

I

Activity Report for Rose High/ EB Aycock Athletic Foundation

si

,\

In the past:

4,500 Repaired athletic equipment

4.000 Paid for annual all sports banquet ^9,000 Built bathrooms in field house at EB Aycock

43.000 Purchased a van for the athletic departments

In

At present:

48,000 Purchasing 24 seat bus HAVE PAID 40,000 NEED TO RAISE 8,000All Sports Season Tickets Available For Both Schools

'25.00

Funds Also Needed For:

Beginning Plans For Fully Equipped Weight Training Center For All Sports At Both Schools Financial Assistance With Travel Expenses To Send Cheerleaders & Band With Athletic Teams To Away Games.

Financial Assistance With Equipment ExpensesWe Will Be Selling Booster Club Memberships'5.00 for individual membership '10.00 for family memberships

'\

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\

d

>/

All contributions are tax deductible We want to help our kids Wont you help us?

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Contact:

Laurel Walsh 752-6877 Pat Koontz 756-2064 Betty Casey 756-(tt84 Van Johnson 756-0163

-

a





a*'!

II The Daily Reflector, GreenviMe. N.C.

Thursday. September 15.1963SCOREBOARD

Bowling

Barrsafhs-WeHcMM Mixed W    L

Jwlil............................9    3

7-Ups............................8    4

Meatballs......................7    5

Mix-Upe........................6    2

AoonymousS    3

Rated X........................5    7

llieJs..........................4    8

JBs...............................3    5

HaM Ten......................3    9

BarH............................2    6

High ume - Herb Hallweit 207. Mary B^er 224; hi^ series Ricky Davis 555, Biary^ker 555.

Baseball Standings

By IV AsMcialcd Pm*

NATIONAL LE.AGUE

EAST DIVISION

Philadelphia

SI Louis

Chicaeo

VwYork

GB

I

I'i

2*,

WEST DIVISION

61

Pet.

524

.517 514 .507 441 12 .414 16

,579 .552 .528

4

74 .500 114 466 164 .459 174

Los Angeles

AUanU    au    k>

Howtoo    76    68

San Diego    73    73

San Francisco 68    78

Cincinnati    67    79

Wediwsday'iGamei ancinoati6, AtlanU4 SI Louis 2. New York 1 PittstMrgh6,Chicago3 Philadelphia 9-5, Montreal 54 Houston 4, Los Angeles 2 San Diego 7, San Francisco 4 Thnriday't Games Los Angeles (Pena 11-6) at Houston (Ryan lJd),(n)

Montreal (Gullicksoo 14-11) at PhiUdelphia (Gross4-S). (n)

Chicago (Rainey 14-10) at Pittsburgh (McWilfiamst3-6).(n)

St. Louis (Forsch 8-11) at New York (Lynch 94), (n)

Only games scheduled

Friday's Games Montreal at Pitteburgh. (n)

Houston at Cincinnati, (n)

San Diego at AtlanU,(n)

St Louis at Philadelphia, (n)

Chicagoat New York, (ni Los Aisles at San Francisco, (n)

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST DIV ISION

w

L

Pet.

GB

Baltimore

88

55

615

Detroit

84

62

.575

54

New York

82

63

.566

7

Toronto

81

66

.551

9

Milwaukee

79

67

541

10>2

Boston

69

77

.473

20'j

lleveland

64

82

438

254

WEST DIVISION

Chicago

8S

60

.586

Kansas City

69

75

479

154

Texas

68

78

.466

174

Oakland

68

79

463

18

California

64

81

441

21

Minnesota

62

84

425

23'j

Seattle

55

89

.382

29'i

Wednesday 's Games Baltimore 5, Boston 0 Detroit 5, CleveUndO New York 4, Milwaukee 1    -

MinnesoU 1. Chicago 0 Kansas City 1, Caliiomia 0.14 innings Texas 4, Oakland 2 Toronto 4, Seattle 3

Thnrsday's Games Texas (Smithson 8-14) at Oakland (Conroy 6-8)

Baltimore (Davis 12-5) at Boston (Hurst 11-10) (n)

Seattle (Moore 4-5) at Chicago (Hoyt 20-10), (n)

Toronto (Stieb 15-11) at Minnesota (Schroml2-7),(n)

Only games scheduled

Friday's Games Detroit at Boston, (n)

Milwaukee at Baltimore, (n)

New York at Cleveland. (n i Seattle at Chicago. (ni Toronto at Minnesota. (n i Oakland at Kansas City, (n)

Texas at California, (n)

League Leaders

By The .Associated Press .AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTI.NG (355 at batsi: Boggs. Boston, 359, Carew, Califorma, 346, Gnffey, New York. 321, Moaieby. Toronto, 319. Bonnell, Toronto, .316 RL.N'S: Ripken. Baltimore. 105; Mur

ray, BalliMru, 14'Itoehy. Toronto, 81; Henderton, Oakland, 95; Cooper, Mihraset,.

RBI: Rice, Boston. 115; Cooper. Mihraufcee, 114; Pairisb, DelroiL l05; Winfield. New York, 101; Sinunons. Milwaukee. 98 HITS; Boggs. Boston, 188; Coopo'. Milwaukee, in; Whitaker. DetniL i79; Baltimore, 178; McRae, Kansas

iUBLES Boggs. Boston, 43; Ripken, Baltimore. 41; Tarrish, Delniil, 40, McRae, Kansas City, 38; Brett Kansas

TRIPLES ; Griffin, Toronto. 9; Franco, aeveUod, I; Gantner, Milwaukee, 8; Herndo^Delroit 8. Gibaon, Detroit 8; Winfield, New York, 8. Yount. Milwaukee, 8.

HOME RUNS: Rice, Boaton, 36; Kittle. Chicago, 32; Armas, Bonton, 31; Luzinski, Chicago, 29; Cooper. Milwaukee, 27; Murray, Baltimore, 27.

STOLkN BASES; Henderson. Oakland, 101; R. Law. Chicago. 69; J. Crux, 0. 51; WasonTXansas City, 49, e, Texas, 4l PITCHING (13 decisions); Haas. MUwaukee, 13-3. 813, 3.27: Flanagan, Baltimore, 11-3, 786, 3.11; McGregor. Baltimore, 17-6, 739, 3 04, Dotson, Chicago. 18-7, 720,3 53; Davis.Baltimore, 12-5. 706, 3 39; Gossage, New York, 12-5, 70^243

StRIKEOUTS: Moms, Detroit. 207; Stieb, Toronto, 168; Bannister, Chic^, 167; Righetti, New York, 165; Sutcliffe, Develand. 145.

SAVES (Juisenberry Kansas City, 39, Stanley. Boston. 28: R Davis. Minnesota. 27; Caudill, Seattle, 23; Gossage, New York. 20: Ladd. Milwaukee. 20.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (355 at bats): Madlock, Pittsburg, 324; Hendrick St Louis .321, Cruz, Houston, 317; Lo. Smith. St. Louis. 315. Kmght. Houston, 312. rI'.NS: Murphy. AtlanU, 124 Raines, Montreal, 115; Dawson, Montreal, 98; Schmidt. Philadelphia, 90; Evans, San Francisco, 88.

RBI: Murphy. Atlanta, 112; Dawson. Montreal, lof; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 99; Guerrero. Los Angeles, 9(3; Kennedy, San Diego, 92

HrrS: Dawson, Montreal. 175, Cruz, Houston. 169; Oliver. Montreal, 168; Ramirez, Atlanta, 168; Then. Houston, 166

DOUBLES: Buckner. Chicago, 37, Knight. Houston, 34; Oliver, Montreal, 34; Dawson, Montreal, 33, Carter, MontrealJ53; Ray, Pittsburgh. 33.

TRIPliS: Butler, AtlanU, 12; Green, St Louis, 9; Thon, Houston. 9; Cruz, Houston. 8: Dawson. Montreal. 8: Redus, CincinoatiJ, Washington. Atlanta. 8.

HOME RUNS: Schmidt, PhiUilelphia. 36; Murphy, Atlanta, 34; Dawson, Montreal, 31; Evans, San Francisco, 8; Guerrero. Los Angeles. 28 STOLEN BASES; Raines, Montreal, 71; Wiggins. San DiegO; 55; S. Sax, Los Angeles. 47; Wilson, New York. 44; LeMaster, San Francisco, ^

PITCHING (13 decisions I: Denny, PhiUdelpliia, 154, .714,2,39; McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 13-6, 684, 3.23;Orosco, New York, 13-6, 684, 1.37; Lea, Montreal, 154, .652,2.96; Ryan, Houston. 13-7, 650,2,63 stRIKfeOUTS: Carlton, PhiUdelfdua, 249: Soto, Cincinnati, 219; McWilliams, Pittsburgh. 170; Ryan. Houston. 162; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 16 SAVES: Le Smith. Chicago, 25; Holland, Philadelphia. 20. Readon, .Montreal, 20; Bedrosian, AtUnta, 19; Minton, San Francisco. 19; Sutter. St. Louis. 19

America's Cup Races

Bv The Associated Press

COMPETITORS: Uberty, of the Umted States, vs Australia II. of Australia SITE: On Rhode IsUnd Sound about 10 miles off Newport, R.l This has been the home of the cup since 1934 COURSE: A triangular layout on which each boat sails six legs totaling 24 3 miles The race always starts into the wind and the course is set accordingly SKIPPERS: Dennis Conner, of the burgundy red hulled Liberty, vs John Benrarw, of the white Australia II. with Its controversial winged keel CREW: Eleven men on each boat DESIGNERS: Johan Valenti in. of Liberty Ben Lexcen, of Australia II FINALS Liberty won the first race Wednesday Best of seven senes (until one boat wins four races). Elach boat may call one lay day dunng the first four races and one apiece after that SERIES RECORD United SUtes 25, foreign challengers 0 In the preliminaries this year. Australia II enmi. nated a record loUl of six challengers representing five nations with a record of 484. leading some to believe it could win

tliisStkciuleage.

ESTDdATim^OST OF CAMPAIGNS: Lib^, milUoo- AuMndik n, 97 miUkn.

PRIZE: The cup, u omtc lilver cybnder which has no boltoai. It it worth an estimated 8300.000 There is m priae

HOLDER; Race boat New York Yacht Cliib. which has held it siacc USl. a 135-year winning streak - the loi^teaf hi spurts

BOATS; Twelve-metcr, a clan e( bnts determined by sifting length at the water line, girth, sail area and other characteristics tteeugb a mathematical formula wboae result must be 12 meters. Most of the boatt are 00 to 05 feet long.

NEXT COMPETITION:^ the Australians win, the next lite will be Perth in IMS. IV NYYC wants it in Newport in 1987 if Liboty wins.

NFL Standings

By'Hw Associated Press Ancricaa Csafereace East

BradBnaat Larry Nelson PMHaacocfc Bwhty Gardner Oan&Kestner

isssst,

Tins'

Scottfl!^ Charin Goody KeBhFergui Scott Shm Dam^ lOlKReid George Archer Bruce Ashworth Ton Portier Bob Eastwood Tommy Armonr

Tommy Valentine Joe Inman RonStreck Larry Min Johnny Miller Craig Stadler

S5M-M

9M3-M

8M4-4I

15M-M

3445-48

847-41

S445-M

3544-88 3445-01

3545-08

3544-08

3545-00 3445-00 3545-M 3445-M 3445-00 5545-70

3544-70 3044-70 3347-70 3644-70

3545-70

3544-70 3440-70 34-35-70 3534-70 3532-70

3545-70 3534-70

RhbertGnen ~ iSandn

W L

TPet. PF

PA

MikeNlcolette

33-37-70

Miami

2 0

0

1.000

46

24

John Cook

38-34-70

Bahimore

1 1

0

.500

39

40

Dannie Hammond

37-33-70

Bufiak)

1 1

0

.500

10

18

Clarence Rose

33-37-70

N Y. Jets

1 1

0

.500

51

46

BobBetley

37-33-70

New England

0 2

0

.000

47

S3

Vance Hefner

34-36-70

Ceatral

Tony Cerda MaA Hayes

33-37-70

Cleveland

1 1

0

.500

52

53

37-33-70

Pittsburgh

Cincinnati

1 1

0

.500

35

35

Bruce Devlin

34J5-70

0 2

0

.000

16

30

Payne Stewart

33-37-70

Houston

0 2

0

000

44

61

JoeyRassett

36-34-70

West

Tony^SUls

LeeElder

35-35-70

Denver

2 0

0

1.000

31

20

36-35-71

L A Raiders

2 0

0

1000

40

16

Woody Blackburn Mike Donald

31-40-71

Kansas City

1 1

0

.500

31

30

35-36-71

San Diego

1 1

0

.500

46

55

Nick Price

3536-71

Seattle

1 1

0

.500

30

27

Jerry Pate Jim Colbert

36-35-71

NatiooalCtafereace

3635-71

East

Lanny Wadkins

37-34-71

Dallas

2 0

0

I.OOO

65

47

Larry Gilbert

36-35-71

N Y Giants

1 1

0

.500

22

29

Blaine McCallister

35-36-71

Philadelphia

Washington

1 1

0

.500

35

40

Mike Gove

36-35-71

1 1

0

.500

53

44

Bruce Fleisber

3635-71

St IZMIS

0 2 0 Ccotoal

.000

34

62

Lany Ziegler Loo Hinkle

3536-71

35-36-71

Chicago

1 1

0

.500

34

30

Ray Floyd MarkKeU

35-36-71

Detroit

1 1

0

.500

37

31

35-36-71

Green Bay

1 1

0

.500

62

63

Ken Green

37-34-71

Minnesota

1 1

0

.500

44

69

Jerry McGee Bob Shearer

35-36-71

Tampa Bay

0 2

0

.000

10

28

37-34-71

West

DanPohl

3635-71

L A Rams

2 0

0

1.000

46

33

Allen Miller

37-34-71

Atlanta

1 1

0

.500

33

33

RexCaldweU

34-37-71

New Orleans

1 1

0

.500

55

47

Fred Couples

34-37-71

San Francisco

I 1

0

5i

65

39

Tom Jenkins

32-39-71

played on four different golf courses Fuzzy Zoeller

Menday'sGame

San Diego 17, Kansas City 14 Thursday, Snt. IS 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 Moodav.SeiK. 19 Miami at Los Angeles Raiders, (n)

Las Vegas Scores

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - First-round scores Wednesday in the $L050,000 Las Vegas Proelebrity Golf Classic being

32-31-63

33-31-64 33-33-66

32-34-66

33-33-66 35-31-66 31-35-66 35-32-67

31-36-67

33-34-67

32-35-67 35-32-67

33-34-67

34-33-67

35-32-67 35-33-68 35-33-68

34-34-68 3532-68

33-35-68

34-34-68

34-34-68

35-33-68

33-35-68

34-34-68 32-36-68 32-37-69

34-35-69

35-34-69 35-34-69 34-35-69 32-37-69

Mark Weibe BobGUder Lou Graham Hale Irwin David Graham Lindy Miller Ron Commans Mark .McCumber Peter Oosterhuis Bill Rogers EdFiori J C Snead Terry Diehl Wayne Levi Calvin Peete Bobby Cole JimBooros Dan Forsman Don Pooly Gary McCord JImThorpe Jim Dent Al Geiberaer Richard Zokol D A Welbnng David Ognn Curtis Strange Peter Jacobsen LeeTrevuio Gil Morgan MikeSuTlivan

Gary Koch Jerry Barber Steve Melnyk Howard Twitty JeffMitcVil Gibby Gilbert DaveEichelberger Jack Renner Ivan Smith Steve Hart Pat McGowan Lon Nielsen Mark Coward Butch Sieehan Bobby Nichols Tom Watson Chi Chi Rodriguez Mark McNulty Mark OMeara Jay Haas Jodie Mudd Peter Carriell Gay Brewer Waily Armstrong Roberto deVlcenzo Forrest Fezler John Mahaffey Ronnie Black T.C.Chen Roger Maitbie Mike Holland Dave Hill Mike McCullough Hal Sutton Dave Stockton John McComish Denis Watson Mike Hill Tommy Aaron Gary Hallberg Mike Brannan .MoiroHalalsky Dave Barr David Peoples Bob Byman'

George Burns Victor Regalado BiUKratzert Loren Roberts Don Cherry GregPowers JimSimons Frank Conner Mike Bodney Barry Jaeckel Bob!

Larry I_______

Bobby Clampett Butch Baird

3535-71

35-36-71

37-34-71

35-36-71

3535-71

3535-71

34-37-71

35-36-71 35-35-71 37-35-72

3536-72 3536-72 3536-72 3536-72 35-37-72 3536-72 39-33-72 37-35-72 3534-72 37-35-72 37-35-72

33-39-72 35-37-72 3536-72 3536-72 3536-72

3534-72 37-35-72 35-37-72 35-37-72 3536-72

3536-72

34-39-73

3537-73

3537-73 34-39-73

3538-73 39-34-73 37-36-73 3538-73 3538-73 37-36-73

37-36-73

37-36-73

3537-73

3535-73 3535-73

3537-73 3535-73

3538-73 3535-73 3535-73 37-36-73 3538-73

3535-73 37-37-74

3536-74 37-37-74 3538-74

TANK SFNAMAllA

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Caddy Holds Zoeller's Fate

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Fuzzy Zoeller, armed with a 1-stroke lead after the first round, put his fate in the worlds richest golf tournament - at least partially - in the hands of his caddy.

I didnt get here until Tu^y, Zoeller said after hed compiled a near-flawless, 9-under-par 63 in the opening round of the inaugural Las Vegas Pro^lebrity Classic, which offers $1,050,000 in total prizes for five days of play over four colirses at this desert resort.

1 havent seen any of the courses. Ive never played them before, Zoeller said Wednesday.

In a tournament like this, you have to leave it to your caddy. Its like the Hope (the Bob Hope Desert Gassic). I dmit practice there, either.

Its up to the caddy. Its his job. Hell get the yardage and well take it from there.

Luckily, Ive got a good one. Mike Mazzeo. Weve been together six or seven years. Hes a happy-go-lucky kind of guy, like am. He knows how I play. He knows the things I n^ to know. He knows the kind of holes I like to use an iron off the tee. Heck, he could probably even play it for me.

Zoeller, who has won once, lost once in a playirff Jhad two runner-up finishes and collected more than 1270,000 in the best season of-fais 9-year tour career, did not make a bogey and did not have a five on his card in his early effort over the Stardust Country Gub course. One of the tours

longer hitters, he played the par-5 holes five under with three birdies and an eagle.

But, he said, his work is still in front of him.

I know what 1 have to do, he said. I have to go out and shoot a good score every day. With the field theyve got here, you look over your shoulder and these guys will zip right past you. If s going to take some low numbers.

One of the more obscure players in the starry field of 208 pros, Mark Weibe, came on to take second alone at 64. Weibe, 26, who has made six unsuccessful attempts to gain his full playing ri^ts on the tour, plays most of his golf on the Tournament Players Series, a series of secondary tour events.

He played his round at the Las Vegas Country Club,

which carries a par of 71. The other three courses the Showboat, Desert Inn and Dunes - play to a par of 72. The format calls for the pros to play one round on each of the four courses, each day with a different four-man amateur team, before the amateurs drop out and the field is cut to the low 70 pros for Sundays final round at the Las Vegas Country Gub.

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97-97-74 9747-74 3595-74 3595-74 3595-74 3531-74 37-37- 74 3595-74 3597-75 4535-75 37-85-75 3595-R 37-31-75 3537-75 3540-75 37-35-75 37-15-71 3595-70 3535-75 4535-76 4535-75 3537-75 3535-75 3535-75 37-35-75 37-35-75 3537-75 3537-75 3537-75 3537-75 3535-78 3535-77 3535-77 3535-77 41-37-78 35-40-75 3540-78

3539-78 41-37-75

41-35-79

4539-79

3540-79 4545-50

4540-80

4541-81 45r-52 47-36-83 44-35-83

42-41-53

MrfcncydlMble^

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BAflKETBAIX Naltoaal HaMiNbal AgtriaMm

CUCVKLj^ CAVAUERS-fiaaed

operaUMT Rmeed"*Scatty aniataat coach.

KANSAS CITY KINGS-Siped Steve

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IPMHomD,

AHAlfTAFALOONS-Oal .

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Transactions

By The Asiaciated Press BASEBALL ABCrkaa Leacae

KANSAS crrv ROYALS-Decided not to exercise their option to renew the contract of Amos Otis, outfielder, after the 1963 season.

MINNEAPOLIS TWINS-Renewed the contract of Billy Gardner, manager, for ooeyear.

NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed Steve Kemp, outfielder, on the 60-day

You Are Invited To Attend The Laymens Fellowship Breakfast

Josh Potter, The Principal of North Pitt High School, Will Share His Personal Testimony And Will Answer These Two Questions:

1. How 1 Came To Know Jesus Christ As My Lord And Saviour.

2. What Jesus Is Doing In My Life.

Time: 8:00 To 9:00 A.M.

Date: Saturday, September 17,1983 Place: Trinity F.W.B. Fellowship Building Greenville Boulevard (264 By Pass East) At Golden Road

Breakfast WIU Be Served

(Yes, The Blueberry Muffins Will Be Served Again)

Laymens Fcllotvship Breakfast Is A Non-Denominational Christian Association

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The Daily Hetlecior, orfet..,<i

19Nazis Question Government's Key Witness

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Six Ammcan Nazis accised of conspiring to firebomb parts of Greensboro attacked

the credibili^ of the governments key witness,

questi(Hiing his motives for investigating Nazi activities.

Five of the defendants, wh^, are representing themselves in their U.S. District Court trial, spent most of Wednesday cross-examining Michael Sweat, formerly an agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

Sweat has said during nearly three daj^ of testimo-oy before the jury that he investigated the self-iroclaimed Nazis for possi-)le firearms violations in 1980 by posing as Maj. Mike

Swain, a Sddier of Fortune.

Did you really believe we were going-^nbomb Greensboro? defthdant Joesi* Gorrell Pierce asked Sweat.

I never believed that you and your brother were going to go down there and light the fuse," Sweat said. I believed you would hire someone to doit.

The jury was expected to begin listening to wiretapped telephone conversations between the defendants when cwirt reconvened today. ATF agent Tommy Chapman, who ordered the wiretaps, was xpected to testify.

The Nazis are charged with conspiring to bomb parts of Greensboro in 1980 while six other Nazis and Klu

Klux Klanmeo were mi trial in Greensboro fa<^ state charges of killing five communsts at an anti-Klan rally in November 1979.

Prosecutw? say the Nazis canceled their plans after the defendants in the 1980 trial were acquitted.

The current trial in Asheville is the third for the six Nazis. The first trial in July 1981 ended in a mistrial when jurors were unable to reach a unanimous verdict. The six were convicted in a second trial in September 1981.

However, in April the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Ap

peals overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial, saying the indigent defendants had no^ been provided

TALENT WINNER - Miss Missouri, Barbara Webster, won the talen portion of the first night of preliminaries at the Miss

America pageant Wednesday night. The new Miss America will be crwnl Saturday night. lAPLaserphoto)

Judge E. Burt Aycock Jr., Judge James E. Ragan II, and Judge W. Lee Lumpkin disposed of the following cases during the August 15-19 term of District Court in Pitt County.

Richard Lee Barfield, Scott Dorm, imtimidating a witness, vol-untarv dismissal.

Rickie Lee Bradshaw, New Bern, possession of stolen goods, dismissed at the close of states evidence.

Kurt H. Breitenstein Jr., Greensboro, three counts worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Danny Alston, ECU, hazing, dismissed at the close of state s evidence.

District Court Report

Roland L. Eley, ECU, hazing, dismissed at the close of state s

evidence.

George Green, Pitt Street, tres-lass and larceny, six months State artment of Correction; tres

pass, voluntary dismissal.

Reginald L. Holliday, Jones

Dorm, intimidating a witness and dis

assualt, voluntary dismissal.

Alvin B. Jolly, ECU, two counts of hazing, voluntary dismissal.

Charlie Douglas Jones, Pendleton Dr., no operators license, five days susp., pay $5and costs.

Reginald L. McNeil, ECU, assault inflicting serious injury, voluntary dismissal.

Reon Vennie Peele, ECU, hazing, not guilty.

Darlene Peterson, Conely Street, failure to st^ at scene of accident, voluntary dismissal; no operators license and fictitious registration plate, 60 days susp. pay $20 and costs.

Michael Swan, ECU, hazing, not

guilty.

Robert

E. Till, Camp Lejuene, speeding, five days su^. pay $20 and costs.

' Norwood Jacob Vann, ECU, intimidating a witness, voluntary dismissal; assault, voluntary dismissal.

John A. Bynum Jr., Farmville, assault on a fenfale, six months susp., pay $25 and costs and pay medical bills of prosecuting witness.

James Dixon, Farmville, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Har^ Draughn, Fountain, drunk and disruptive, voluntary dismissal.

Tom Dempsey Duncan, Falkland, no curators license, voluntary dismissal.

Btrbara Ropkins, Route 1, worthless check, 10 days susp., pay costs and check and $15.

Alexander L. Jones, Farmville, larceny and conspiracy to larceny, voluntary dismissal.

. Kathy Jean Kizziah, Burlington, speeding, inrayer for judgement' continued on payment of costs.

Willie Earl May, Walstonburg, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Ricky Ricardo Mitchell Aulandcr, speeding, pay $25 and costs.

James Edward Carr, Winterville, driving under the influence, six

Sidney Earl Forbes Jr., Farmville, assault on a female, not guilty; assault on a female, not guilty.

Jean Stabbings Partney, Fayetteville, fail to see and safe movement violation, pay costs.

James Hinson Phillips, Ayden, driving under the influence and expired registration plate, six months susp., pay costs and $200; attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee, surrender operators license, spend six hours in jail.

Robert Daniel Vickers, Farmville, driving in excess, .10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, six months susp., pay costs and $200; attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee, surrender operators license.

Warren Kent Agee, Grifton, possession of marijuana, pay $25 and costs.

Hubert Lee Arthur, W. 12th Street, assault on a female, not guilty.

Ashley Scott Bowen, Ayden, allow driving under the influence, voluntary dismissal.

Billy Ray Boyd, New Bern, exceeding date sp^, pay costs.

Neil Wayne Cowan, Chadwick Lane, possess mixed beverage under age in unauthorized place, 10 days susp., pay costs and $25.

Susan Melinda Cox, Route 2, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

J(rfin Norman Davis II, Route 1, possession of marijuana, pay $25 and costs.

Leroy Dawson, Route 2, assault on a female, not guilty.

King E. Gardner, Wilkshire Dr., three counts worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Lou Ann McLamb Hines, Concord Dr., exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Gladys Griggs Hyman, Bethel, no registration ^te, voluntary dis-

Jospeh Earl Willoughby, Rawl Road, assault, six months susp., pay $50 and costs, probation one year.

Harold S. Ferriere, Cherry Point, intoxicated and disruptive, voluntary dismissal; damage to real proprty, six months susp., pay $50 and costs, pay $400 restitution for damages to Holiday Inn.

Melanie McHenry, Charlotte, worthless check, 10 days susp., pay

costs.

Andrew Roach, Grifton, worthless check, 10 days susp., pay costs, remit, pay check and pay for $10 for

failure to a by

worthless check, voluntary dis

Coby S

ippear.

Heath,

Eastbrook Dr.,

missal.

William Ten7 Brown, Riverbluff Apts., exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

John Earl Davis, Bethel, driving under the influence, six months susp., pay $200 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee, probation two years, two weekends in jail.

Manuel Edward Harris, Forbes Street, trespass, voluntary dismissal.

John Wayne Harvey, Fayetteville, possession of stolen goods, 90 days susp. pay costs, remit, 24 hours jail.

William Eugene Hooker, Grifton,

WiUiam Hopkms, Route 1, trespass, voluntary dismissal.

Rex Allen Hudson, Route 2, speeding, 10 days susp., pay costs.

Noah Jones, Route 6, driving while license revoked, six months susp., pay $200 and costs.

James Henry Mitchell Jr., Delaware, fail to yield right of way, voluntary dismissal.

Linwood Gene Bateman, Route 3,

Willie Edward Johnson, Chery Point, speeding, pay costs.

Liesel Ruth Joyner, Cotton Road, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgement continued on payment (rf cosls.

Willie Roy Moye, Route 5, improper equi^ent, costs.

Raymond Preston Miller Jr., Pitt Street, sell malt beverage to minor, not guilty.

Elbert Lee McCoy Jr., Route 8, consume fortified wine where not authorized, pay $10 and costs.

Gilmer Nkmols, Route 1, communicating threats, six months susp., pay costs.

/eronica Dail Perkins, Ayden,

months susp., pay $1U and^o^

opent

one yeer, attend ly $100 fee, surrender

James Pioce, Roiite 6, trespass, not guilty.

Arthaniel Pippen, Bethel, assault with a deadly weapon, 90 days susp.

**im ollidge Tucknr, Winterville, consume fortified wine where not autbcHlzed, pay costs.

Zane Crey, Library Street, speeding, pay costs.

James Keith Huber, Farmville, stop light violation, five days susp., pay costs.

Stephen Jordan, Fountain, sppeduig, no registration and no liability insurance, 90 days susp., pay $100 and cost, surrender opratm*8 license.

Frances Rives Laughinghouse, Route 5, safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal.

Cathy Bunting Robertson, Robersonville, exceeding safe speed, five days susp., pay $10 and costs.

John Harrison Brown, Circle Drive, disjday expired licMse, pay costs and $10 for failure to appear.

Vamessa F. Taylor, Diirham, worthless check, 30 days sup., pay costs and check.

Herman Arthur Taft Jr., Trent Circle, fail to yield right of way, voluntary dismissal.

Teresa Stancili Andrews, ^Dickinson Avenue, improper equipment, pay $10 and costs.

with a free traosciit o( the first trial.

The Nazis convicted in 1981 while Frank Lee Braswell 49,

and his wife Patsv Keeter Braswell, 33, both of

Penland; Raeford Melano Caudle, 40, of Winston-Salem; James Christopher

Hunt Receives AFL^CIO Nod

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt has yet to declare his candidacy for the U.S. Senate, but that didnt stop the state AFL-CIO from endorsing him.'

Four hundred delegates of the labor federation, meeting Wednesday in Asheville, voted unanimously but one to endorse Hunts expected challenge of Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said AFL-CIO spokesman Charlie Hughes.

The endorsement came with Hunts consent, Hughes said.

The governor, of course, is not a candidate yet, but we welcome their support, said Stephanie Bass, spokeswoman for Hunts exploratory campaign committee. The governor doesnt agree with everything the AFL-CIO believes ... but we feel they believe what the governor has done for the states economy has been good.

Helms could not be reached for comment and did not return telephone calls.

The feeling of the convention and the labor movement was that theyre so determined to make a change in the Senate, and with Sen. Helms... that the time to do it is early and the feeling is strong, Hughes said.

State AFL-CIO president E.A. Britt said, Im sure that Jesse Helms will rant and rave because of the endorsement, but that the convention preferred to do it now because if we had waited, he still would have been raising hell in the middle of the campaign.

The delegates represent about 300 AFL-CIO local unions and some 150,000 union members, Hughes said.

10 days susp., pay $10 and costs. Elair .....

Suges, W. inspection violation, pay costs. Karei

Hall, speeding, pay costs. Shelton Eugene Su

pay $25 and costs. Ha

rry Elton Brandt, Goldsboro,

non-su|^)ort, six months susp., pay week

Hope Annette Atkinson, Kennedy Circle, larceny and two counts of possession of stolen property, one

Talbert, 32 of Walnut Cove and Joesph Pierce, %, and his brother Roger Allen Pierce, 27, both of Walnut Cove.

Braswwell, Joesph Pierce and Caudle were sentenced to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine apiece. They have remained free pending appeal. Mrs. Braswell, Roger Pierce, and Talbert received suspended sentences.

The jury spent most of the first two days of the trial listening to more that 6 hours of secretly recorded

conversations in which they discussed making napalm bombs to explode in three areas in downtown Greensboro. The cwiversa-tion was recorded by Sweat in his meetings with the Nazis.

Sweat testified Wednesday that he began investigating the Braswells in late 1979. He said he talked with the Braswells about 25 times during his investigation.

During cross-examination by attorney Bill Parker, who is representing Caudle, Sweat said he believed the

Nazis intended to bomb Greensboro.

I believe they were going to contact someone to do it, Sweat said. They were planning it.

However, Sweat acknowledged he didnt believe the defendents could carry out their scheme.

They would have if they could get it together, Sweat said. I didnt think they could.

Sweat, who testified that he has resigned from the ATF and has filed a lawsuit against the agency, said he

had been criticized by his supervisors for his handling of the Nazi investigation.

The defendants questioned Sweat about his military record and accused him of lying about his current rank.

Sweat testified earlier that he was a major in the U.S. Army Special Forces Group and now holds the rank of

major m an army reserve unit based in St. Louis, Mo.

Braswell demanded to see Sweats military identification card and Joesph Pierce asked for his Social Security card.

Ivory V. Brown, Grifton, worthless check, 10 days susp., pay $25

and costs and check.

William James Chamberlain, E. Second Street, financial violation, no curators license and no registration plate, 10 days susp., pay ^ and costs.

Stanley Cobb, Route 5, peeping tom, dismissed by the court.

Jacob Dove Jr., W. Haven Road, driving ins excess .10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, six months susp., pay $200 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee; surrender operators license.

Lucy M. Edwards, Edge Road, Aj^den, larceny, voluntary dismiss-

Charles Douglas Gatlin, Ward St., no operators license, voluntary dismissal; hit and run property damage, six months susp., pay $150 and costs.

Wren Licke Jr., Greenview Dr., speeding and no registration plate.

Wendy Elaine Mills, Overlook

Dr., stop light violation, costs. Ronme Linsey Roberson, Snow

Hill, possession of marijuana, pay $25 and costs.

Ranette Smith, Jefferson Drive, stop sign violation, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Willie Suggs, W. 13th Street,

(aren Dawn Sutton, Fletcher

ugene Sutton, Fort Bragg, driving under the influence, six months susp. pay $200 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee, surrender operators license.

Randy Webb, Bethel, communicating threats, voluntary dismissal.

Melvin Wilkes, Deck Street, assault on a female, 90 days susp..

costs, remit costs, pay $60 pen for support.

Terry Lee Tyson, Winterville, expired registration, pay $25 and costs.

Venawan Gaye Sutton, Grifton, possession of alcoholic beverage while under age, pay $10 and costs.

Jeffery Scott Aldridge, Belvedere Dr., display expred license plate, pay costs.

Randall D. Dixon, Winterville, assault, 30 days susp., pay $10 and costs.

Timothy Delano Goud, Farmville, four counts misdemeanor breaking and entering, two years State Department of Correction in each case.

Michael John Kandrotas, Stratford Arms, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol contmt by weight, six months susp., probation two years, pay $100 and costs, surrender operators license; attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Howard Earl Langley, Rountree &^jperjury, no probable cause

Brenda Reason, Farmville, con-to larceny, voluntary dis-

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Society Seeks Benefits For Ex-Military Wives

ByJEANMcNAIR Associated Press Writer VIRGINIA BEACH. Va. (AP) - In March 1980. a dozen women divorced or separated from their servicemen husbands met in a northern Virginia restaurant, agreed they were angry and decided to do something about it.

They had followed their husbands from base to base, hampering any chance for them to develop their own careers. The military promised that their loyalty would be rewarded by hefty pensions and lifetime medical coverage.

But that promise ended with their marriages, the women said.

"We felt we were part of a team." said Nancy Abell, whose 23-year marriage to an Air Force colonel ended in divorce, "They ithe military) depended on the women to take care of the home and the children so that these men were free to follow their military mission. "We feel that those

(benefits) are ours, she said. Certainly we have earned them rather than the people that the man has married after he is retired. The dozen women organized EX-POSE, Ex-Partners of Servicemen for Equality, and made Mrs. Abell their first president. The nationwide group now claims about 5,000 active members, nearly all of them

women.

The Alexandria-based organization is among the most vocal of several groups prominent in the battle over who gets what when a military marriage goes sour.

Aligned against them are some military retiree organizations that believe the person who served should reap the benefits, especially the pensions.

Each side has its stories -the ex-wives tell of women and children forced onto welfare after being abandoned by their military husbands; the military retirees talk of former prisoners of war whose wives

Seattle Airport Honors Jackson

SE.miE I.AP) - Port commissioners have renamed Seattle-Tacoma International airport the Henry ,M. Jackson International Airport, to honor the late senator.

"It is only fitting that we rename the airport the Henry M. Jackson International Airport," commission president Paul S. Friedlander said in a prepared statement,

He called the late senator "truly an international man."

Jackson, the veteran Washington Democrat, died Sept, 1 when a coronary artery bui;st . He was 71.

Workers have started tearing down 'Sea-Tac" signs at the airport to put up the new name, a task

expected to cost about $15,000, said Seattle Executive Dick Ford.

The senators widow, Helen Jackson, thanked the commissioners in a prepared statement.

On behalf of the Jackson family, may I say how pleased Anna Marie, Peter and I were to learn of the port commission decision to name Seattle-Tacoma International Airport for my husband.

"On our many travels around the country we often compared other airports to Sea-Tac and found them all wanting, she said.

"I think in fact (Jackson) loved the airport because when he arrived there he knew he was home." Mrs. Jackson said.GOREN BRIDGE

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Nortn's jump to three hearts is not a misprint -.North-South were using jump raises in competition as a preemptive measure. East's decision to pass is unusually conservative, but It proved to be right.

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spent their money lavishly while the men were in captivity and then asked for a divorce upon their return.

Vic Wintriss, a former Navy commander who chairs the San Diego-based American Retirees Association, said retirement pay should not be,considered community property in divorce settlements.

There are some hardworking, diligent women who stood by their husbands and then were dumped on, he said. There are some cases where the women did not support, did not help, did not contribute.

"It should be decided on a case-by-case basis, Wintriss added.

In 1981, the Supreme Court ruled that military pension benefits may not become part of a pro^rty settlement in a divorce.

But last year, after lobbying by EX-POSE and other groups. Congress reversed that ruling by passing legislation that allows judges to consider military pensions in divorce settlements.

Even with that victory, some EX-POSE members feel the legislation doesnt go far enough. Judges dont have to consider the pension, and many dont, they contend.

But Wintriss said milita^ pensions are divided in community nroperty states such as California, where marital property is split equally between husband and wife.

Because dividing military pensions is so controversial, EX-POSE leaders are directing their efforts toward getting more medical benefits for ex-military wives.

Shirley Taft, EX-POSE national president, said she found it nearly imipsible to get health insurance after she was divorced, at the age of 61, from a retired Army lieutenant colonel.

She was no longer eligible for the medical benefits she had during her marriage, and private insurance companies werent anxious to insure a woman in her 60s.

Besides changing the law on military pensions, the 1982 Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection Act aUowed ex-spouses to have medical benefits if they had been married for 20 years to a serviceman on active duty.

Sen. Paul S. Trible, R-Va., and Rep. G. William Whitehurst, R-Va., have introduced bills which would reduce from 20 to 10 the number of years an exspouse must be married

while a service monba* is on active duty.

EX-POSE also is tackling state divorce laws it considers unfair and urging better enforcement (rf chil( support statutes.

Virginia and Florida, states with several majw military installations, are known as dumping grounds for military men who want to divMx^e their wives, said Ruth I^ers, president of the Virginia Beach EX POSE chapter.

The federal government passes these laws, but if the states dont allow them to be enforced, youre no better off than before, she said.

EX-POSE would like to see more community property states - there are eight now - and a uniform divorce law that could be followed in all states.

Its leaders say many of their members are in their 30s and were married in a time when working wives were frowned upon, especially in the military.

These women were caught in this crunch when they divorced after spending years as a homemaker, mother and military wife, said Mrs. Abell.It comes down to a question of fairness and whos entitled to the benefits.

SEEKING BENEFITS Ruth trying to get expanded medical Rogers, president of the Virginia benefits for women divorced by their Beach (Va.) chapter of EX-POSE, servicemen husbands. (AP says the group of ex-military wives is Laserphoto)

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C_Thursday.    September    15.1983    21

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22 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C._i    nufsday.    Sepiember    15,1983

Helms Wants Churches To Fight U.5, Hunger

ByBOBFlCK

Associated Pnm Writer

WASHINGTON (AP> -The coDSomtive chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee says its up to the nations churches and private orgamzatkns, not the government, to make sure Americans dont go hui^.

Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., who has fought for majm* spending reductions in federal food assistance programs, claims most churches are not doing all they can to end hunger which officials say is on the rise as

a result of the economic racessk.

Moetdiurcbeshaveafar greater capacity to bdp their nei^bors than they have been willing to assume, Helms said Wednesday as his committee reviewed private aid initiatives.

While acknowledging that many churches and organizations are rising to meet the needs of the poor, Helms added, "A Thanksgiving bask^ for a poor family (mce a year is better than no effort, to be sure, but m^e really can and should be done on a regular basis.

It is crucial for more dwrcha and otter private orgamzations fto) recopise the importance.of establishing ongoing food assistance UDgrams, the senator addud.

Citing the $18 billion a year the government now spends on aid programs like food stamps. Helms said its wnmg to believe the sole source of food assistance fw the pow in the United States is, or should be, (wovided by the fedmal govemmrat...

Regardless of the future of specific federal programs, he said, the goal (rf

nnnulation

se

^ is wi

V        .

Astronaut Expects Quick Results

havii ai adequately fed - depends on the sector, in my view,^ is where the ultiinate rettMnaibyity rests.* ^^tion, however, runs smnewhat comiter to claims by Democrats that private efforts are being taxed beyond limitsand the gov-OTunent must increase its cmnmitmoit latest hunger in America. 'The House on Tuesday voted to restore some of the nutritim program cuts oiacted during the initial months of President Reagans tom.

During the hearing officials fnxn 11 churches and private mganizations tdd the committee of their expanding efforts to help their

nrightxHTS hard hit by unemployment and the recession. Those proglilns ranged from community booiii projects, ve^ble garden plots, soup idtciMte and free food and commodity distribution by farmmi, processors, wholesalers and retallos.

Robert Koorr, whose North Dakota Wheat frodtemrs Association monberssjdO nated 6,600 bushels ofi#it for processing into macar^ that was dfetributed to 17 million people, said: We felt that in some small way we could feed some of tjiese hungry people and at-^ same time make the point that we are all in. this Jpgether.l _

By The Associated Press The North Carolinian who recently became Americas oldest-ever space voyager says he hopes his research into space sickness will begin to show results soon.

1 would hope that before the next year is over that we would see significant progress, said Dr. William Thornton, 54, a Faison, N.C., native and one of five crewmen on the space shuttle Challengers six-day flight that began Aug. 30. He was interviewed this week by telephone from the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

The North Carolinian who recently became Americas oldest-ever space voyager says he hopes his research into space sickness will begin to show results soon.

I would hoj^ that before the next year is over that we would see significant progress. said Dr. William Thornton, 54, a Faison, N.C., native and one of five crewmen on the space shuttle Challengers six-day flight that began Aug. 30. He was interviewed this week by telephone from the Johnson Space Center in Houston,

While cruising about the earth in a 140-mile-high orbit, Thornton conducted experiments to learn more about weightlessness and its effects on the body.

'Hie experiments were designed to learn why at least nine of 21 space shuttle astronauts have experienced space sickness, or what NASA describes as space adaptation syndrome.    ^

Thornton used his knowledge in physics and electrical engineering to design much of the equipment in his shuttle doctors office, an air lock about 6 feet in diameter and 8 feet high.

Thornton, who holds 35 patents including 15 for space equipment inventions, tested eye motions and the electrical signals from the eyes, compared to where the head was.j Space center regulations prohibit discussing specific test results on the astronauts, Thornton said.

He added that the experiments were designed to evaluate whether space sickness is a functional thing - is the body faced with a totally new environment that confuses the nervous system; or is the body being affected in total - are each of the senses themselves being affected?

Gravitys effects on the cardiovascular and muscular skeleton systems are so drastic that an astronaut who stays in space for an extended period without proper and regular conditioning would return to earth a physical wreck, he added.

Navy Medical Chief Retires

NORFOLK,Va. (AP) -The chief of the Navys medical command for Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina has been denied promotion to rear admiral after two investigations criticized his administrative abilities.

President Reagan, at the , recommendation of the secretaries of the Navy and of defense, signed an order Aug. 31 disallowing the promotion for Capt. Norman V. Cooley Jr., the commander of the Norfolk-based Naval Medical Command, Mid-Atlantic Region.

Cooley, who had been promoted temporarily, had worn the gold braid and two stars of a rear admiral since arriving at the Portsmouth medical facility in July 1981.

The decision to deny him the higher permanent rank rests with Navy Secretary John F. Lehman Jr., said Cooleys wife, Martha.

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Hes going to be in very bad shape and have to enter a very long period of rehabilitation, Thornton said. One of his inventions, the shuttle treadmill, is intended to provide the necessary heart, muscle and bone conditioning.

Thornton said he was eager to return to visit his native

Faison, a small Duplin County town thats planning a huge homecoming party for Mm.

The date of his arrival is in the hands of Washington, he said. Theyve promised to let us know (when well get time off) in the next few days.

Kennedy Son Seeks Treatment

WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has committed himself to a private hospital for treatment of a di^ problem after South Dakota authorities began an investigation of the former New York City assistant district attorney.

It was not known where Kennedy, son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, was undergoing treatment.

With the best medical help 1 can find, 1 am determined to beat this problem, the 29-year-old Kennedy said in a state-

ment issued Wednesday through the office of his uncle. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.

His statement follows an announce-4nent in Pennington County, S.D., on Tuesday that there is an ongoing investigation involving Bobby Kennedy, Jr.

Rod Lefholz, states attorney, said he could not characterize the probe as a drug investigation, but police secured a search warrant for contraband and controlled substances in Kennedys

luggage after he became ill Sunday night on a flight to Rapid City. As of Wednesday, Kennedy had not been charged with aerime.

1 deeply reg^t the pain wMch this situation will br^ to mv family and to so many Americans who admire my pareMs and the Kennedy family, he said in the brief statement. I am grateful for the support of my wife Emily, the other members of my family and my friends during this very difficult time.

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Viewers Pick Reruns Over New TV Shows

ByFREDROTHENBERG APTeleviiiM Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The nobie (rff-season experiment d providing new {Mt)grams this summofailed.

Viewers preferred reruns to the networks original programs. Only two (tf the eight original series performed better than repeats of the old reliables.

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Part d the failure is that the programs wore mostly old fomats in new packages. Little of what was new was novel. Many d the shows put (this summa* were not different owugh, so there was no urgency to watch them, says Brandon Jartikirff, {H^ident d NBC Entertainment.

Dave Poltrack, CBS vice {x^ident for research, says only ABCs Two Marriages and NBCs Buffalo Bill performed better than the networks average prime-time rating this summer. Two Marriages bad a 13.5 rating (the percent of all TV homes watching) and Buffalo Bill drew a 12.4. The three-network average, from June through August, was a 12.3.

Incidentally, Buffalo Bill and Two Marriages also received the most critical praise. I guess we learned that, ultimately, if a show isnt any good, it wont be held up by reruns or soft competition, says Tartikoff.

Buffalo Bill and The News Is the News were NBCs first-run series. Buffalo Bill was renewed, the only summer original definitely given a second life. The News Is the News, a >arody of the news, was so )ad that NBC canceled it

TV Log

Fof compiata TV programming Information, consult your oakly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dslly Raflaetor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

7:00 Jokers Wilo 7:30 TicTacDouc B:00 Magnum P I 9:00 Simon & 10:00 K. Landing 11:00 News 11:30 AAovie 2:00 NIghtwatch

FRIDAY

2:00 NIghtwatch S:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 AAorning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price Is

12:00 News 12:30 Young &

1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Gullding L. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News 9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 F. Crest 11:00 New$9 11:30 Movie 2:00 NIghtwatch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

THURSDAY

7:00 Jeflersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Gimme Break 8:30 AAaMa's F. 9:00 We Got If 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill St.

11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

FRIDAY

5:00 Jimmy S. 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 Ditf. Strokes 10:30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days ot Our 2:00 Another Wor. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Brady Bunch 5:30 WKRP 6:00. News 6:30 News 7:00 Jeftersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Awards 9:00 RaKal 10:00 Elschled 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Videos 2:00 Overnight 2:30 News

WCThTV-Ch.12

y.bo 3 si.ompany 7:30 Alice 8:00 Too Close 8:30 Football 11:30 Action News 12:00 Nightline 1:00 Thickeof

FRIDAY

5:00 TBA 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 Good AAorning 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 F. 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 All My 2:00 One Life 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ-LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 3'$ Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 Webster 9:00 Lottery 10:00 M. Houston 11:00 Action News

11:30 Nightline

liTct

12:30 Thickeof 2:00 Evening At

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after two weeks of its sc^ uled four-week run.

ABC had five new ento--tainment series: Two Marriages, The Hampton^,'

   A    iiPTW

Eye on Hollywood,' 11 ^-Hour Comedy Hour and R^e. Two Marriages may have been unique because it was a warmhearted program about two families NOT bickering, cheating or killing each other.

ABCs other originals were formats seen too many times before. Tlje Hamptons was a wooden love-ana-lust soap, Eye OD Hdlywood was ano^r glit^ insiders lo(A into show biz and Reggie-, was another juvenile program about a man obsessed with sex.

Join Severino, presidoit of ABC Television, says the experiment was a worthwhile, though expensive, endeavor. Although only Two Marriages has a possible future, ABC found two talented cmnedians in nxxn ^larp and Arsenio Hall of The %-Hour Comedy Hour.

We also proved to Hollywoods production community that shows could be done at a ixice considerably less than normal network jffojects, Severino says.

Severino refers to the fact that The HampUms was done on tape, which is cheaper than film, and that

Eye on Hollywood was produced locally by ABCs

ABC Takes Top Spot In Ratings

ANGELES (AP) - ABC was the big winner of the Dallas Cowboys-Washington Redskins football game last week - under the A.C. Nielsen Co. scoring system.

With the highest rating of the week ended Sept. 11, the Monday night game helped lift ABC out of its previous third-place in the Neilsen ratings, over CBS and NBC.

For the record, Dallas downed Washington 31-30 in the return of National League Football to ni^ttime TV.

Hie only other non-rerun among the top 10 shows was the premiere of the NBC comedy, Weve Got It Made, which came in second. The show, from former NBC president Fred Silverman, is about two young bachelors who hire a beautiful young blonde as a live-in maid.

ABC also introduced a show from its new fall lineup. Lottery, about people who win millions of dollars in a lottery, was in 14th place.

ABC was on ^ with a network average of 15.1 in the Nielsen survey. CBS, in second, had an average of 14.1 and third-place NBC had 11.7. The networks say this means in an average prime-time minute 15.1 percent of the television homes were tuned to ABC.

The CBS Evening News was the highest-rated network evening news show with a rating of 11.3; ABC was second with 9.3 and NBC was a close third with 9.1.

Here are the weeks Top 20 programs:

1. NFL Football, Dallas vs. Washington, ABC, a rating of 22.2 or 16.6 million households.

2. Weve Got It Made, NBC, 19.5 or 16.3 million.

3. Movie-In Love With an Older Woman, CBS, 19.2 or 16.0 million.

4. Knight Rider, NBC, 18.2 or 15.2 million.

5. The Love Boat, ABC, 17.7 or 14.8 million.

6. The Jeffersons, CBS, 17.6 or 14.7 million.

7. Hill Street Blues, NBC, 17.3 or 14.4 million.

8. Cheers, NBC, 17.1 or 14.3miUion.

9. One Day at a Time, CBS, 17.0 or 14.2 million.

10. Simon & Simon, CBS, 16.6 or 13.9 million.

11. Magnum, P.I., CBS, 16.5 or 13.8 million.

11. Tie-Threes Company, ABC, 16.5 or 13.8 million.

13. Matt Houston, ABC, 16.1 or 13.4 million..

14. Lottery, ABC, 15.7 or 13.1 million.

15. Private Benjamin, CBS, 15.5 or 12.98 million.

16. Hart to Hart, ABC, 15.4 or 12.90 million.

17. Facts of Life, NBC, 15.1 or 12.6 million.

17. Tie-Goodnight, Beantown, CBS, 15.1 or 12.6 million.

19. Movie- Airport 77, ABC, 15.0or 12.5 million.

19. Tie-Newhart, CBS, 15.0 or 12.5 million.

Zappa Sues Warner Brothers

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rock star Frank Zappa, best

known recently for Valley Girl, the oddball hit he

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 Dr. Who 6:00 Newshour 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Washington 8:30 Wall St.

9:00 Victory at 9:30 World War 10:00 Europe 11:00 Monty Python 11:30 Doctor In 12:00 Sign Off

recorded with his teen-age .daughter Moon, is suing Warner Bros. Records Inc. for $6 million, his lawyer says.

Attorney Christina Jacobs says the suit filed Monday in Superior Court charges that Warner Bros, failed to account properly for sales under the 42-year-oId entertainers two record labels. Bizarre Records Inc. and

Discreet Records Inc., and seeks $3 million in compensatory damages and another $3 million in punitive damages.

"ine complaint also alleges that Warner Brothers had a position of trust and confidence with Mr. Zappa, and that Warner Brothers breached that trust and confidence, Ms. Jacobs said.

Phones calls to the Warner Bros. West Coast legal and press offices were unanswered Tuesday evening.

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Station in Los Angeles. Hiat can be a valuable source for netw(Ht MY)gramming in the future, Severino says.

CBS didnt have any new entertainment shows. The network was fooled last summer by the artificially

CBS shows in the time slot and outperformed some of this summers entertainment originals.

Another goal of the networks this summer was

combating pay cable, which has been absorbing network audiences each rerun season. Last year, HBOs slogan was: This summer, make it first run instead of rerun.

high ratings of Filthy Rich, which quickly

bombed as a fall series.

This summer, CBS did have two top-notch news broadcasts: On the Road with (Bares Kuralt and Our Times with Bill Moyers, which both won ratings than previous

1 DRIVE-IN THEATRE

Paadiii'"^-

8..P, SC

Communiiv O r.rina/i <

'PraiGHT^NE

^^THEMOVIE^

Visits Fan

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Entertainer T.G. Sheppard made a surprise appearance at St. Maiys Medical Center to visit a 15-year-old fan who couldnt attend his concert at the Tennessee Valley Fair.

The 39-year-old country music singer, whose hits have included I Loved Em Everyone and You Feel Good AU Over, spent a half hour Monday night with James Chucky Weeden of Knoxville.

t. V;4





mm

'T**i 'irvfT'x-

24 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.

T/iursday, September 15,1983

Crosswoixi By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS IFake 5 In,

60s style 8 Applaud

12 Soft drink

13 -Love (1939 song)

14 Mrs. Chaplin

15 Cupid

16 Actress Farrow

17 Decays

18 Baseballs Jackson

28 Hound

22 Tavern

23 Envision

24 Sermon finale

27 Football player

32 Corral

33 Numero

34 New (prefix) v> Chess

nnishes 3; F 'lais

39 IRS money

40 Try for a tan

42 Blissful {dace 45 Houston team 41 Let- (1970 song)

58 Tear DOWN 1 Battle memento 2Abode 3 Sleep like-

50 9iade source 4Pageedge 52 Vesuvian    5 Im^tus

output    6 Gallic yes

1 Stakes U Gone by UDoor^ 21 Grate itan

24 Mimic

25 Chess pieces

26 Furniture item

53 Intermissiwi 7 Uninteresting 28 Chemical

54 Golf aid 8 Old under- suffix

55 Flat    garment

56 Binds    SBitofun-

57 To-,    finished with Love business

Avg. solution tme: 25 min.

ISilf^MEKTPEfelRlI

mm mm iQBBsinni mmi

mm 0^19 mmii

9-15

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

CRYPTOQUIP    9-15

K NBQRS VPRKCBZ YV DUQVCPZPH XN HKN-UBRS DYUYXQVCPZ.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - CAUSE OF THEIR SCHOOLS FMLURE: FAULTY FACULTY.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: Q equals U.

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.

FOCUS

('oveted Cup

This week the I'.S. and Australia are competing for yachting's most coveted prize; the Americas ' 'up. Originally called the Hundred-Ouinea Cup, i prize was renamed after the IKS. schooner \menca defeated a British yacht in the first ace around the Isle of Wight. Since that first victory in IHf)!, no other country has ever won the Americas Cup.

DO Y OU KNOW What was the name of the last Americas Cup winner'.^

WEDNESDAYS ANSWER -Amin Gemayel is the President of Lebanon.

9 l.'i M.l    KrKiwlfdKe    Industries,    Inc.    198,'1

29 Flimsy

30 Actor Beatty

31 Follower of 33 Across

36 Court rappers

37 Hatchet

38 Bucks horn

41 Neighbor ofMex.

42 Knife handle

43 Small case

44 Catches

46 Talk crazily

47 Kiln

48 Beach stuff

51 Garland

President May Veto Oil Plan

^ The Associated Press A proposal to let North Carolina and other coastal states sell offshore leases for oil and gas drilling has passed the U.S. House, but could face a {H^idential veto bemuse it would increase the federal budget deficit.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., won House approval Wednesday by a 301-93 vote. The bill could provide Nwlh Carolina 17.74 million a year for coastal programs. Senate action on a similar bill is expected so(hi.

President Reagan has threatened to veto the measure if approved by Congress, claiming it would add |3 billion to the federal deficit over the next 10 years.

Most of the money would go to restore federal grant programs for coastal management, planning, fishery research and other coastal projects either cut by Reagan budgets or proposed fw elimination by the administration.

According to state budget officials. North Carolina over the last two years has seen the money it gets for coastal management programs cut to $400,000 a year from about |2 million a year.

Unlike oil and gas leases sold for federal lands where revenues are shar^ with the states, the federal treasury is the sole beneficiary for the sale of the offshore leases.

The Jones bill would earmark 10 percent of projected increases in the revenues for grants to the states. The amount returned to 30 states and five American territories could not exceed $300 million annually.

The Senate version sponsored by Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, would set aside about $400 million a year for the states, with about $7.5 million earmarked for North Carolina.

Jones won House passage of a similar bill in 1982, but it died in the Senate. In an interview after the House vote, Jones said he was more confident of the biUs passage this year because Stevens had lined up 21 Senate sponsors.

Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and Sen. John East, R-N.C., have not yet taken positions on the bills, according to aides. However, Helms has attached an anti-abortion rider to Stevens bill, meaning he might try to add the controversial amendment when the bill goes before the Senate.

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

Ballenger Says Will Quit Race

By The Associated Press

State Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-Catawba, is abandoning his campaign for governor, a move he said should bolster GOP unity - and the efforts of his friend and fellow Republican, U.S. Rep. Jim Martin.

The major factor ... is that I kept calling people and they were saying You and Jim are exactly the same, Ballenger said Wednesday in a telephone interview from his home in Hickory.

My pulling out in the long run will be good for the party."

Ballenger had campaigned unofficially for over a year and planned to announce his candidacy Sept. 26. Martin, of Lake Norman, entered the race last month.

Ballenger and Martin represent the moderate wing of the state GOP that has clashed with the conservative National Congressional Club, the political organization of Sen. Jesse Helms.

Shortly after Martin an-r/junced his candidacy, . Cobe>, a conservative who 06t races for lieutenant governor m 1980 and Congress last year, hinted that he might seek the GOP gubernatorial nomination in 1984.

Some Republicans immediately began worrying aloud that a clash between Cobey and either Martin or Ballenger could open old political wounds. Should Cobey enter the race, ob-serv'ers said, hed be helped if his opponents were divided between Ballenger and Martin.

Ballenger said Wednesday he will seek another Senate term next year while work

ing to help re-elect President Reagan. He was co-chairman of Reagans state'Aide campaign in 1980.

Ballenger said he also would continue his efforts to elect more Republicans to the General Assembly through the North Carolina Legislative Elections Committee. He said hed keep pressing to open more government meetings to the media, which had been part of his gubernatorial campaign platform.

Ballenger acknowledged that he and Martin shared many of the same philosophies, but said he probably wouldnt endorse a GOP candidate in the primary.

Ballenger said he had been considering withdrawing for a week and made up his mind after meeting Monday with Martin in Charjotte.

With a guy youve been friends with for 20 years, you cant go out and knock somebody like that. His (Martins) announcement took some of the joy out of (campaigning) forme.

A letter was mailed Tuesday to key Ballenger supporters notifying them of the decision. Spokesman Max Veale said Ballenger already had raised up to $60,000 and spent as much as $100,000 in the campaign.

TRAIN TARGET ROTTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) - Antimilitary demonstrators on Tuesday tried to block a train carrying supplies for U.S. troops participating in NATO exercises next week in the eastern Netherlands and West Germany.

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MISCELUNEQUS

Personals..................003

InAAemoriam  ..........003

Card Of Thanks.............005

Special Notices.............007

Travel 6. Tours.............009

Automotive................010

Child Care..................040

Day Nursery...............041

Healthcare................043

Employment...............050

For Sale....................060

Instruction.................000

Lost And Found  .....082

Loans And AAortgages 085

Business Services..........091

Opportunity................093

Professional................095

Real Estate................100

Appraisals.................101

Rentals....................120

WANTED

Help Wanted...............051

Work Wanted...............059

Wanted....................140

Roommate Wanted.........142

Wanted To Buy.............144

Wanted To Lease...........146

Wanted To Rent............148

iALE

Autos for Sale.... 011-029

Bicycles for Sale............030

Boats for Sale..............032

Campers for Sale...........034

Cycles tor Sale.............036'

Trucks tor Sale.............039

Pets...........'.............046

Antiques ......... 061

Auctions...................062

Building Supplies...........063

Fuel, Wood, Coal...........064

Farm Equipment...........065

Garage-Yard Sales   067

Heavy Equipment....,.....068

Household Goods...........069

Insurance............  071

Livestock..................072

AAiscellaneous..............074

AAobile Homes for Sale......075

AAobile Home Insurance .... 076

AAusical 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

THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

2.90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday..Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday    noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday T uesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday.. .Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or rojoct any advortisomont aubffllttod.

PUBLIC

NOTICES

STATE OF

coum

OF SALE CABOUNA

'.1'fesr5*5s!

ougiM by Carto E. Bami, to Btie

A. Parker,' Jr., Tniitoc, datod dw Utk day to November. ll, and recorded in Book 1^50, Page 32t, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, default having been made in the of the uaSbtctfaMia Iherehy

PUBLIC NOTICES

lecund and the Hid Deod of Truit beiaa by Ike teraM^arMf aubjectte

CNuaMaM

I    iMTiof    for    the    purpoee    oi

uUafyiai aald indabtednwi, and the

anssfft'ssiri!:

^aor in GreenyiUe, North U;M Noon, on Um I2nd day ' ms the land, uimorovea.

CQWiyed ia Hid IW oTtiw^^

totag and being in FannviUeToiraahip, nrOoiaRMlm Carolina, and Mng moK narticularty deacribed u foitowa: BEDra numbcKoand de^nated u Lot No. SI of Greenfield H(Ma Sub-divish M ihown on map thereof mede by StotoB and Aiiodates. dated Jamiery SO, latl recorded in Stop Book u, at Itoge 107, of M Pitt County PuWc he^try. The metM and bounda deacriptioa m shown on said map ii hereby incorporated herein by reference.

SUBJECT, however, to taxH for the year INS.

Five percent (5%) of the amount of the higheet bid must be deposited with the Trustee pending confinaatiao of the sale. Detedlhiegiddayaf Amuit. lOas THimMANE.mjRiTTC,

Trustee, sulMtituted by that instrument recorded in Book I-5lJ>ageS7, Pitt County -    L North Caroliii.

IS, ms

-BoTiCi-

Hnving qualified as Executrix of the eatnto of Ora T. Flanagan late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against tha estate of said deceased to ^esant tham to the undersigned Executrix on or before /March f, 1W4 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of thair recovary. All persons Indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.

This 26th day of August, 1983. Alleen F. Jefferson 229 Country Club Drive Grewrvllle, N.C. 27834 Executrix of the estate of Ora T. Flanagan, deceased September 1,8,15,22,1983

NOTICE

North Caroline

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

AAerchandise Rentals    131

AAobile Homes For Rent.....133

Office Space For Rnt......135

Resort Property For Rent... 137 Rooms For Rent............138

PEANUTS

PUBLIC NOTICES

Pitt County Having this day cnjallttocl as Administrator of tha Estate of Mary Raeves Fleming, late of Pitt County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to preeent them to the undersigned Admlnlstretor or his attorney on or before the 1st. day of March, 1984, or this notlca will ba pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will ptoaM maka Immadlate settlemant.

This tha 26th day of August, 1983. Christopher Fleming, Administrator 1304 Colonial Avenue Greenville, NC 27834 William I. Wooten, Jr., Attorney Graenvllie, N.C. 27834 September 1,8.15,22,1983

NOTICE

Having qualifiad as Exacutrix of the estate of Alex Bryan HIM lata of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of uid oeceasad to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before Marcn 1, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded In bar of thaIr recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.

This 30th day of August, 1983. Calila J. HIM Lot 2, Whites Tr. Court Greenville, N.C. 27834 Executrix of the estate of Alex Bryan Hill, deceased. September 1,8,15,22,1763

NOTICE OF SALE TO

SATISFY LIEN AS PROVIDED UNDER O.S. 44A-2

Joe Culllpher Chrysler Plymouth, Inc., 3401 S. Memorial Drive, Greenville, N.C. will offer tor sale at public auction on September 20, 1983,10 a.m., the following vehicles.

1. 1969 4 Dr. Oldsmobile, Serial Number 3546990129680

2.1969 2 Dr. Buick, Serial Number 4353791134611

3. 1972 2 Dr. Volkswagen, Serial Number 1122595206

4. 1972 4 Dr. Cadillac, Sarial Number 6D49R2Q243315 Septembers, 15,1983

PUBLtC NOTICES

P.-_ STAT

OPtlRVI

IwVfto e IN ,

PITT COUM INERAI

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION FILE NUMBER 83CV012M Geraldine Taft Graan    i

Plaintiff

Noah Graan, Jr.

Defendant

To: Noah Green. Jr.

TAKE NOTICE THAT a ptoadtog flladagalntt

staking rellet has baan I you in tha ebove-entltled action. The nature of ttte reltof Rqlng sought Is at tollowe;

1. An absoluto divoroe boaed on one year of soparetton.

You ara requlrad to make detome to such pleading not later than Oct. 26, 1983. said date being tortY (40) days from publication. Upon your failure to do to, the party saoklng sarvlce against you will apply to the Court tor the rol let sought.

ly of

This the 12th day 1983.

GwynettHllburn Attorney tor Plalntitt 113 W.rtilrd Street > P.O. Box 5063

Greenville, North Carolina 27834

September 15,22,29,1983

002

PERSONALS

I CUBED my Own Eczema.

82.00 for casa history and ment plan to; Nett, Shady A Park m, Greenville, N.C. 27134.

hello CHARLES' I'MCALLINETOmLYOU ABOUT YOUR 006

SNOOPY ANP PEPPERMINT PATTY HAVE 60NE TO A "SLEEPPISORPERSCENTER"

f c^cm /^j '

to mt





002

PERSONALS

I loot < LM. with this solid pSiT Std t>JO tor COSO history I. dtot plan to; Nott, Sha^ Knoll Park 149, groanvllla,N.C.274.

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

viiiilTIiT^iTHglt MHaars PHONE 975-M13

WE PaV cash for diamonds. Floyd 0. RoMnson Jowolors, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Groonvliio.

Oil

Autos For Salt

BEFOIIE YOil LL or trade your 79-U modal car, call 756-K77, Grant Bulck. Wa will pay top dollar.

CAR$$2I!TRUCKSS1(I0!

Avallabla at local govarnmant salas. Call (rafundabla) l-(6)9) S69-034T, axtanslon 5 for your dirac tory on how to purchase. 24 hours.

SELL VbuR" CAk the National Autoflndars Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 75-0114.

013

Buick

Itn BUICK ELECTRA, 1 owner.

Fully equipped. Low mileage. Must selll 7574)110a(terS:30p.m.

Sell your used talavislon the Classified wayTCall 752 4166.

1977 BUICK LIMITED, 51,000 miles, full power, $3200 negotiable. 758 6321.

1978 luTck CENTURY

StationWagon. Air, AM-FM, tilt, cruise. One owner. Call 758 0374 after 6 p.m.

015

Chevrolet

CASH #OR your car. Berwick Auto -7745.

Sales. 756

1970 CAMARO. Runs good. Good condition. $750.758-0185 or 758-0547.

1971 CAMARO, 3 speed on floor, 250 straight six, 74,000 ml

miles, AM/FM cassette, new paint, good interior, runs great. Good on gas, $1250. 758-6627.

1972 IMPALA - blue. Radio, good condition. Best offer. 355-6235 after 6 p.m.

1973 MONTE CARLO LANDAU. Power steering and brakes, air, AM/FM stereo. New paint, Good conditon. 825-2831 or 758 1539 ask for John.

'1974 VEGA, new engine with steel sleeves, new brakes, excellent condition and good miles per gallon, $900. Call 355 2566 after 6 p.m.

1975 CHEVROLET NOVA. Automatic with air. $1400 or best offer. 752-1705.

1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2-1-2, 5 speed, good mechanical condition. $1500. 7M-2300 days.

1976 CHEVY NOVA. Good condi tion. Price negotiable. 753-4183 after 5 p.m.

1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Good condition. Consider trade, help finance. $3595. Call Henry, 752 4332.

1978 MALIBU Classic Wagon, $3,000 negotiable. 756-0174.

1979 MALIBU Classic 4 door sedan, $3695 negotiable. 756 0174

1980 CHEVETTE, excellent condi tion, no air. $2300. 758 6321.

1981 CHEVROLET CAMARO. Fully

Equipped, Low mileage. Call Rex Smith Che

1 Chevrolet In Ayden, 746 3141.

1981 CHEVETTE, AM/FM, air, 4 speed. 30,000 miles, excellent con cation,$3800. Call 758 6688 after 6.

1981 MALIBU CLASSIC. 4 door, air, AM/FM radio, power steering and brakes, 792 7428.

017

Dodge

1976 bOOGE COLT, air, 5 speed, AA^FM radio, very ^ood condition.

$1,300. Call 756 5866

6p.m.

1979 DODGE COLT. Good condition.

Economy shift, 2,000 CC, average 30 miles per gallon. Call 753 2698 -

AAay be seen at Lot 32, Woodland Hills Estates, Farmvllle. Asking $2400, negotiable.

018

Ford

FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON.

1979. Fully loaded, new tires. Excellent condition. Low mileage. $4200. Call 756-6336 days or 756 1549 nights.

I9M FORD, 4 door, runs great, uses no oil, dependable transportation, automatic, air, $650. Call 756 7469.

1978 Ford maverick. Good running condition. $350 or best offer. 752-1705.

1979 ^ORO LTD Wagon, $4100 negotiable. 756-0174.

1982 EXP FORD for sale or will

trade for lafe model Pickup truck. 757 0451, ask for Mr. Carr away.

PICK UP A little extra money by selling used Items In the classified

section of this newspaper Call 752-6146.

1982 Ford Explorer. Fully ;quipped. Low Mileage. Call Rex imIthChe ----- ------

Smith Chevrolet in Ayden,746-3141.

021

OMsmobile

1976 OLDS CUtLASS. $500. 758 4635.

1978 OLOSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition. 758-0778 days, nights 756 8604.

022

Plymouth

1988 PLYMOUTH VOLARE. Fully 26,000 miles. Excellent

equipped,

condition.

dition. Must leave country, re duced $450. Call 758 4111 or 756 4262 after 5 p.m. and weekends.

024

Foreign

DATSUN 286ZX - 2-1-2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe

trim package. Excellent condition. - bHTM

$7700. Call 756-6336 days or 756 1549 nights.''

IMPORTED CAR PARTS, 105 Trade Street. Check our end of summer sale. Call 756 7114.

MAZDA GLC 3 door hatchback, air, stereo, excellent condition, below book price. 746-4348

MOll-OT, 1974. Black, 43,000 miles, AM-FM, new upholstery, clean. Good condition. Phone 758-8662.

engi

Interior. AAust sell. 412 West Fourth Street, 756-4645.

TOYOTA, 1980, Tercel, red, 3 door, air, automatic, radio, radials, 42,000 miles, cream puff, $4500.752-0406

TOYOTA SERVICE. 4 cylinder tune special, $20. 4 cylinder valve ad-iustment, $14. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage, 756-3796.CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

024

Fortlin

1978 VOLKSWAGEN, good cOndi lint, 746-3907.

tion, new tires, new pa _

1974 TR6, excetient condition, low

mileage, AAonza exhaust, 4 new Michelln reds. AM/FM stereo

$4J50. Call 746^2552.

1974 VOLKSillfAGN VAR. 7 pas-senger, clean, runs great, one owner, make offer. Consider trade for truck or El Camino 756-7417

1976 AUDI FOX, excellent condi tion, air, sunroof, silver with black interior, $2,000.355 2253.

1976 TOYOTA CLICA. AAotor and transmission In good condition. Front end wrecked. $500. 757-0194.

1976 TOYOTA COROLLA. Good condition. Automatic $650. Call 746-2751 anytim.

1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT.

$3,000. Non diesel. Very clean, new radials. Call 752-2791.

1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT. High miles, but good condition. Many extras. Call 946 6025 aHer 5.

1978 DATSUN 280Z 2-F2, 4 speed, 3966.

air, AM/FM, extra clean. 756-:

,1978 JAGUAR XJS. Black with tan leather interior. 746-2489.

1979 SILVER DATSUN 280Z, 5 speed, air, AM/FM. Excellent condition. Priced tosell. Call 756-5867.

1979 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT,

metallic brown, 4 doors, fully equipped. Leave name and number at 756-2863.

1982 DATSUN 280 ZX. Loaded with all options. T-top, AM/FM stereo. Priced to sell. William Handley, BB&T, 752-6889.

1982 HONDA PRELUDE, loaded, silver, red interior. $8895 negotiable. Call 746-3490 after 6.

1982 MAZDA 4 door Sedan. Excellent condition. AM/FM stero, air condition. $6195. 752 5008 after 6.

1983 DATSUN 280 ZX 2-1-2 loaded, T top roof, 3,700 miles. $14,850 firm. Call 758-0041 after 4.

1983 HONDA PRELUDE, navy with plush interior. Electric sunroof, 4 speed automatic, AM/FM stereo cassette with graphic equalizer, air conditioned. Very nice car. Must sel I! Cal I 756-8532 after 7p.m.

1983 VOLVO GL Diesel. Fully op tioned. Leather interior, 9,400 miles. 752-8921.

029 Auto Parts & Service

TOYOTA AUTHORIZED SERVICE

4 cylinder tune-up $19.95. OH and filter change $12.99 (most models). We're keeping your Toyota "Cheap To Keep". Toyota East, 109 Trade Street, 756 3228.

032

Boats For Sale

TANZER 16 DAY SAILER. 2 years old, perfect condition. Galvanized trailer, new 3 horsepower motor. $3400. Call 753 5758after 5:30.

10' SPEED BOAT. Motor and trail er. $500. 752 2576.

16' ALUMINUM RUNABOUT, lots of extras, good condition. $300. Call 758-0587.

16' CAROLINA BOAT - 20 horse power Johnson and trailer. 825-8301.

16' DIXIE SKIFF. 25 horsepowi Evinrude motor, galvanized frailer

and trolling motor. $1500. 758 3934.

16' FIBERGLASS Runabout with 35 horsepower Johnson Super Quiet and trailer, $850 or will consider any trade. Call 752 9707 after 6.

18' DIXIE, 200 horse Mercury outboard, drive on Cox trailer. Excellent condition, tolly loaded

CB, stereo, depth finder and all Instruments. Will sacrifice. $6,495.

Call 355 2626 or 756 4122.

19' MFG CAPRICE, 1977 200 Johnson, tilt and trim, tandum galvanized trailer, CB, depth find er, top and side curtains, all in excellent condition. $6500. 758 2300 days.

1970 16' DIXIE Bass Boat. 40 horsepower Mercury, trolling motor, galvanized trailer. Good condition Call 752 3324 aHer 6.

1983 19' 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

FIBERGLASS CAMPER - fits >/2

ton Pickup. 1'/years old. Excellent condition. $425. Call 752 3699 after 5

SNUG TOP camper shell, tits short bed mini truck, 1 year old. 756-7706 after 6 p.m.

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'BrianIs, Raleigh, N.C. 834 2774.

1978 COACHMAN LEPRECHAUN

motor home, 24', loaded with extras. Top of line luxury mode. Price, $14,800. 758 1593 days, 752 7246 nights.

034

Cycles For Sale

1974 GT 750 SUZUKI, $350, also 1982 YZ 100 Yamaha, $800. Call 756 0792 or 756 3554.

1974 HONDA SSO-FOUR. King and queen seat. 10,500 actual miles. $750. 756 6171 or 756 2436.

1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON. Extra clean. $2,000. Call 752 3170 days; 752 2540 nights.

1978 SSOK HONDA, 7,000 actual miles, runs good. Call 757-3121.

1981 750 HONDA Custom. Call 757 0044 after 5.

1982 HONDA V 45 Maga 750 Red. 4,600 miles. $2,500 or best offer. Call 752-1194.

1982 750 NIGHT Hawk, low mileage, excellent condition. $2300. Call 756 5386after 5:30.

039

Trucks For Sale

LOOKING FOR 4 wheel drive truck body with or without motor, 1970-1975. 757-0040 anytime.

1971 CUSTOM PICK UP. Dependa 3486.

ble transportation. Call 746-3

1 972 VOLKSWAGEN VAN,

excellent condition, 946-9944 or 946 4480.

1976 BLUE DODGE Van. condition. 825-0545 or 825 1007.

Good

1979 DATSUN LITTLE HUSTLER,

air, AM/FM stereo, radial tires, 46,000miles, $3200. Call 758-0491.

1979 LUV 4x4, air, FM/AM cassette. Call 758-2887 after 5.

1980 CHEVROLET Silverado pickup. All extras. Call 752-3170 days; 752-2540 nights.

040

Child Care

CHRISTIAN MOTHER would like to keep children in her home, Grimesland, 758-1559.

WANT TO KEEP small children in home, located near Calico. Call 752-1968 aHer 5:30.

WILL KEEP children In my home

WIntervllle area. Call 756 3603.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Perdue Inc. of Robersonville has

IMMEDIATE

OPENINGS;

for the following:

MAINTENANCE MECHANICS MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN ELECTRONIC SCALE REPAIRER SCALE HOUSE AHENDANT STOCK ROOM CLERK DIESEL MECHANIC PART TIME BAGGERS InWrtalBd appUeants may apply In parson at Perdue Inc., West green St, Robaraorwllle, NC between 8 to 11 and 1 to 4 Monday through FrMay.

Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

PETS

AkC MINIATURE long-haired t; refi. Mack

Dachshund pupptos. and tan, and rara silver dapple, $150 and up. 1 322 4S72.

AKC R0iSTEREO COKEIt Spaniel Pup. Born May 11. $100. CAIIAAark at 758-5461.

AkO REGITEREO BrIHany pups, excellent stock. 758-2874.

BLACK LAB PUPPIES. 6 weeks

old. Mother registered. $25. 752-4976 aHer 6 p.m.

ENGLISH SPhlNOdR Spaniel male puppy. 10 weeks old. Liver and while, AKC registered. $100. 746-6903.

FEMALE POODLE, AKC regis

tered, $100. Call 752-9707 aHer 6.

NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND pups, AKC registered, 6 weeks old.

Parents on premises. Males, $125. Females, $100. Call evenings, 795-4649, Robersonville.

PLEASE I Fantastic home needed for two 1 year old cats, brother and sister. Male-black; female-callco. Both fixed. All shots, housebroken, great temperments, must take together. 756-5174 day or night.

REDUCED Beautiful AKC Regis fared Collie puppies. $85.756-3135.

REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel, 4 months old, $75. Call after 6, 752 3969.

051

Help Wanted

A SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Delight! Good base salary plus

     ifa

commission. Call Gloria at Herifage Personnel, 355 2020.

A YOUNG AND aggressive com

pany is seeking an individual qualified to support ;

support and sell multi user roduct line. Individual should have thorough knowledge of BASIC.

Outside sales experience helpful but not necessary. Reply to 'Comi

Sales', P.O. I C.27835.

Qx 1967, Greenville, N

ACCOUNTING CLERK

Immediate opening! Knowledge of >kkeeping

general bookkeeping and accuracy with figures a must. Good typing skills necessary, computer experience helpful. If interested, call for an appointment at 752-21 1 1, extension 251, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.

ATTENTION COLLEGE students!! You can earn money as Avon representatives. Choose your own working hours;, make up to '/i of everything you sell. Call 752-7(X>6.

AUTO LEASE SALESMAN OR

Woman. Full or part time. Small Investment tor broker. Call 1-459-3030, Nashville

BRICK MASONS. Call 752 2240, ask for Mr. White.

CAPABLE PERSON to sell solar sun rooms tor houses or businesses -either full-Jime or part-time; some leads furnished; generous com mission schedule affords good income potential. For additional in-formationi contact Harold Creech & Associates, 752 4348.

CASHIERS NEEDED. Apply in son. The Dodge Store, Memorial

irlve.

CHURCH NEEDS qualified person to keep nursery on Sunday mornings. Send letter of inquiry and resume to First Chirstian Church, 520 East Greenville Boulevard. No phone call please!

CONSTRUCTION

SUPERINTENDENT

experience in com light industrial build-

Must have mercial and

Ings. Contact tor interview

Miller & Davis Associates 758-7474

DO YOU NEED a break from your children or do they need a break from you? Are you intelligent, and willing to learn how to operate a computer as part of your job? Do you want to work 2 days a week, 7 hours a day? It so, send resume to: Secretarial Position, 114 East Third Room #1, Greenville, NC 27834.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY!

Large corporation has outstanding

sales opening tor a sates repre sentatlve. Individual must be local

resident with managerial abilily, ambition, and show progress for age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal interview, please submit resume stating personal history, education, and business experience. Write PO Box 406, Greenville, NC 27635.

EXPERIENCED MANAGERS,

Assistant Managers, and Watch Makers wanted by Reed's Jewelers

an expanding guild jewelry chain in North and South Carolina

tor Its

Mall locations. Retail jewelry sales experience is required. Excellent salary, 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 308, Wilmington, NC 28401

EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER

needed. All applicants need apply in person only. Reed's Jewelers, Caro lina East Mall.

EXPERIENCED KEYBOARD for

Top 40 also a singer. 752 7258.

EXPERIENCED SITTER to live In with seml-lnvalld widow. Must cook meals and do light housework. Good salary. Room and board free. References requested. Call 758-2362 after 6 pm. weekdays.

EXPERIENCEDAUTO

MECHANIC

Due to increased service business, we are in need of an ambitious Automotive Mechanic. Must have tools and experience. Excellent commission schedule and benefit package. See Steve Briley, Service Manager, 756-1135.

Greenville Blvd.,

aoen

Gret

eenville

FLORAL DESIGNER. Experience

preferred. Apply in person at Julleene's Florist, 1703 West 6th

Street, Greenville. No phone calls please.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furnHure Refinishing and rapairs. Superior caning for all type chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakesany length, all types of pallets, selected framed reproductions.

EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 75IM188    8ANM:30PM

Graenvllla, N.C.

r

m

FUUrrM?totophatM^o^^ local collection agency. Salary plus commission. No experience required but helpful. Apply In person. Soufhern Credit Adjusters, 308 Evans Street Mall.

INFANT CARE In my hofqe 3 days a week. References required. 758-

IRON WORKER helpers and labor ers for industrial construction. Need good workers with references. Roberts Welding Contractors, Inc. 758-0157.

LADY MUD WRESTLERS. One

night performarKO. Sponsored by Repatible Civic Club. Clood pay. For

interview, call 752-2998.

LOOKING FOR WORK?

We Need.. Secretaries- 60 wpm Bookkeepers

CRT Orators d Processors

Word Wang

Call for an interview today!

Lanier, IBM,

Anne s temporaries, Inc

120 READE STREET

758-6610

MANAGER TO PERPORM clerical

duties locally for Christian organ! zation. Part time to $860 per month.

Call today. 714-432-8608.

MATURE CARING PERSON to

care for my elderly mother and aunt on weekends. 752-2644.

MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have tools. Excellent company benefits. Apply to Robert Starling or Bill Brown, Brown & Wood, Inc, 1205 Dickinson Avenue.

OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows

It's important to please you. And we receive hundreds of test!

timonials

every year.

NEEDED IN BETHEL home a female live-in to care for a recovering heart patient. No housework, private living quarters. Must have references. Call 753-5973 between 3 and 7 p.m.

NEEDED: FULL TIME and part time help to sell Avon in Cannon Court, Cherry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas. Earn extra money for Christmas. Please call 758-3159.

ptionist

PART TIME typist/receptio with pleasant telephone voice, curacy with speed in typing is necessary' Hours are 1 to 5:30, Monday-Friday. Send resume to S. Pittman, PO Box 647, Greenville, NC 27835.

PERSON WITH retail clothing ex perience and management qualifications. Must be bondable. Send brief resume to P O Box 742, Kinston, NC 28501.

PURCHASING COORDINATOR. 2

to 4 years experience in all phases of purchasing. Excellent benefits. Reply to Purchasing Coordinator, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC.

RN's AND LPN'i. Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, RN, Director of Nursing, 943 2111.

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed. Auto sales experience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC

756-4267 For Appointment

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

051

HelpWantBd

REAL ESTATE BROKERS. This position can help you make the most out Uf your career. Be 1st to qualify for top company. Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020.

SECRETAitY - Word processing experience, all around office expe-

requlrements to E.M Box 8026, Greenville, NC 27834

expe-lary

Rollins, Po

SHARP INDIVIDUAL to train as keyboard salesman. Largest dealer in NC. Hard worker with expansion potential. Excellent income. Plano & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. 355-6002.

SOCCER INSTRUCTORS needed.

Mustvknow the game. Call AliC -6106.

Barry at 752-(

TAKING APPLICATIONS for ma and desk clerk. Apply in person At Econo Lodge Motel, 810 Drive, 10a.m. to4p.m.

WANTED licensed norse-fdr local doctors office with comparable fringe benefits. Send resume to "Nurse", PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

WANTED PART TIME sales help Around 2<f hours a week. If you have had experience in ladies fashions

and are mature, apply Brody's, Pitt Plaza, Monday-Frlday, 2-5.

ITS still the garage sale season and people are really buying this year! Get yours together soon and ad ver tise it with a Classified Ad. Call 7526166.

with

eral

WANTED: SECRETARY

pleasing personality tor general office work. Must be willing to assume various responsibilities. Send resume and references to PO Box 834, Greenville.

WE ARE SEEKING self motivated, goal oriented individuals for management positions in our restaurant chain. Opportunities for advancement based on performance with competitive compensation and benefits. Aggressive professionals send resume to 810 12th St. S.W., Hickory, N.C. 28601.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J.P. Stancil, 752-6331.

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs. Counter tops, plumbing and carpentry. State License. 746-2657 or 752 4064.

CHILD CARE in my home. Licensed. Any age. 758-5950.

LADY DESIRES position as man ager trainee In store sales or life insurance sales or partnership in small business. Call 752 8870 anytime.

MOVING AND BUSH-HOG work. Lots and fields. 752 6522 after 5.

PAINTING

At reasonable prices, tree estimates, no job too small. Call anytime, 756-4967 or 758-0966.

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

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

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

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MANAGEMENT

OPPORTUNITIES

Perdue Inc. of Robersonville has immediate openings for the following positions:

DEPARTMENT SUPERVISORS MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

These are career opportunities offering excellent salaries and benefits. Interested applicants should apply by mailing resume, including salary history, to Perdue Inc., P.O. Box 428. Robersonville, NC 27871 or call Terry Murphy, 795-4151 for a personal interview.

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO EXPiRIKNCE NECESSARY

I We will teach you...

Do you have a positive mental attitude Do you desire to be successful Are you able to follow directions explicitly Do you desire to earn $2000 to S2500 per month If So....

Tow OwR H To ToorMlf To Give It A Try.

Apply in person only.

Absolutely no phone calls.

See E.J. Lacoste or Rickie Moore.

ASTING'

FORD    I

Uv(t ( .11 (

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass

758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.Thursday, September IS. 1963 25

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us bafora you buy! 752-1359 or 7SS5590.

065 Farm Equipment

ROLLEA chains Fricas for 10' box #60 S16.95; #60H $23.49; #40 $9.49; #50 S13.9S; #00 $31.49. Corn

head gathering chain-prica tor 8 or more-Massay Ferguson S22.49; International and John Daare 200

S22.95; Allis Chalmers low profile $23.49; Allis Chalmers all 1977-79

$26.49. Chains to fit most combines In stock. We also carry peanut invertor chain. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999.

USED ROANOKE PICKER. Needs repair. $400. 758-1956.

1971 ROANOKE BULK BARN

Excellent condition. IB Box Fired. Call 752 7650after 6 p.m.

Oil

2 - 10,000 BUSHEL grain bins for sale or rent. Located approximately 4 miles West of WInterville Call 756 5097 or 756 9315.

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory Mat tress & Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626.

DINING ROOM suite, Williamsburg Queen Anne, table and 6 chairs, buffet, and server. $4000. New, $7000. Make otter. 756 7297, it no answer 756 3613

KING SIZE , extra firm mattress and box springs still in package. never slept on. Must sell. Retail, $499. Will sacrifice at $259, Call 355 2626.

LIKE NEW - King size waterbed with waveless mattress. Walnut color headboard - including heater and frame. $375. Call 746-3511 after 5p.m.    ^

RECLINER; 1 glass top end table,

and 1 glass top coffee table, $250 tor

-iTr* - -    -

all. Call 355 6882 after 5.

SEALY - POSTURE firm deluxe mattress and box springs, full size. Like new. $50 for set. 758-5619.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

60' x30' beautiful walnut finish Ideal for home or office

Reg. Price    Special Price

{259.00    SI 7900

TAFF OFFICE

EQUIPMENT

569 s. Evans St.

757-2175

FOR LEASE

2500 SQ. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

HERE'S ALL YOU have to do. Call the classified department with .your

ad for a still-gdbd item and you'll cash! Call

make some extra 752 6166.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to they turn to the Cleselfled Ads.

Place your Ad today for quick results.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SALESPERSON

Local, Well established business is seeking an energetic, self-motivated individual to work within a 75 mile radius. No overnight travel involved. Evening work required. Hospitilization and Life insurance paid by company. Commission based on sales.

Send resume to: Salesperson

P.O. Box 469 Greenville, N.C. 27834

l^equUipf: fong iiou/is. hut o leujflitditig utu/ic

O^teot Jhic,'ican../llot){c9iome Cento

SIKING MOBILE HOMES INC.

With Over 30 Years In The Business See George King

For

Your

Mobile

Home

Needs!

VA-FHA Conventional Financing

T)/tii;G aSfittie -2oi;c aS^oti

Siking Mobile Homes, Inc. Highway 17 By Pass Ayden, N.C. Phone: 746-2078

TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS

1982 Chevrolet Camaro,T-top, automatic transmission, loaded, charcoal gray................$10,995

1982 Plymouth Colt 2 door, 4 speed, red .;............................................$5499

1982 Mazda RX-7 GSL Coupe - 5 speed, air condition, sunroof. Silver, Low mileage............$11,995

1981 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme - 4 door. All factory options, low mileage. Brown with Tan roof. $7995

1981 Buick Skylark - 4'door, automatic transmission, air condition, Gold.......................$6495

1981 Dodge Colt 2 door,automatic transmission. Silver......................................$4994

1980 Dodge Diplomat-2 door, fully equipped, light blue with dark blue vinyl roof, one owner $5990

1980 Dodge Colt 2 door, automatic transmission, luggage rack. Beige.........................$4995

1980 Plymouth Champ 2 door, automatic transmission, air conditioned, one owner.............$4995

1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme 4 door. Loaded. Gray with Blue vinyl roof..................$6995

1979 Audi 5000 S Diesel 5 speed. Bronze, Fully equipped........... $7995

1979 Dodge Challenger 2 door, automatic transmission, air condition. Red and Silver..........$5995

1978 Pontiac Catalina - 4 door. Blue  ............................................$3995

1978 Ford Squire Pinto Wagon - 4 speed, air condition, Silver...............................$3495

1978 Buick Skylark - 4 door, automatic. Dark Green......................................$3995

1978 Dodge Aspen - 2 door, automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, air condition....................$2995

1978 AMC Concord DL Wagon air conditioned, automatic. Nice.........  $3995

1978 Oldsmobile Omega 4 door, automatic transmission. 6 cylinder, air conditioned, Dark green.. $3995

1977 Chrysler Newporl-4 door. Fully equipped. White with Burgundy vinyl roof..................$4995

1977 AMC Gremlin automatic transmission. 6 cylinder. Blue...............................$2995

1977 Mercury Monarch 2 door. Silver........................................... $2995

1977 Lincoln Continental Mark V Cartier Designer Series. All factory options, extra clean $7995

1976 Oldsmobile 98 Regency 4 door, white...............................................$3495

1976 Ford Granada 2 door. White......................................................$2995

1976 Oldsmobile Luxury Sedan 4 door, White.......................................$3495

1965 Oldsmobile 98 Luxury 4 door, White............................................$2495

1961 Studebaker - 4 door, 6 cylinder, standard. Green.............................$2495

TRUCKS

1982 Dodge D-150-Stepside Pick-up, Silver, 4 speed, 6 cylinder, power steering................$6995

1981 Datsun Pick-up - 4 speed, air condition. Silver.....................................$5495

1980 Dodge Pick-up automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, power steering, 131 ", Burgundy.........$4995

1976 Ford Chateau Van Customized package, straight drive, 8 cylinder. Silver and Black $4995

1971 Toyota Land Cruiser - 4x4, Red and White    $3995

Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot

Greenville, N.C.

3401 S. Memorial Dr.

756-0186

WlIThougMOf

Used Cars

THINK

But NeverJUmsed Used Cars

1983 Cadillac Seville 4 door Silver sand with leather trim. Equipped with most factory options, only 4,(XX) miles, local trade.

1982 PDntiac Grand Prix Slate gray with blue cloth interior, blue padded landau top. Extras include till wheel, air condition, stereo radio, 60-40 split seat, wire wheel covers, 24,000 miles 1982 Cadillac Sedan De Ville - Dark blue metallic with tan cloth trim, fully equipped including wire wheels, local trade, 25,000jniles.

1982 Cadillac Eldorado White with white leather trim. Fully equipped including power sunroof,

36.000 miles, local trade.

1982 Honda Accord 2 door, Medium blue metallic with eloth trim. 5 speed, AM/FM stereo with cassette, 25,000 miles, local trade.

1981 Marcury Lynx Wagon Medium blue with blue vinyl trim, automatic, air, AM/FM radio, luggage rack, local car.

1981 PontlM T-1000 - 4 door. Silver metallic with burgundy vinyl trim, 4 speed, air condition, AM/FM stereo, 26,000 miles, local one owner trade 1881 OKttCutlEM SuDrama Silver metallic with blu cloth trim. Povror steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, AM/FM radio, rally wheels,

27.000 mUes.

1981 Volvo GL 4 door sedan. Green with tan cloth trim, 4 speed, air condition, AM/FM radio, 32,000 miles, local trade

1980 Olds Delta Royale Dark burgundy metallic burgundy vinyl top and trim, options include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, 60-40 split seats, wire wheel covers.

1980 Mazda RX-7 Silver metallic with burgundy trim, 5 speed transmission, air condition, stereo, local trade.

1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme Dark green metallic with green landau vinyl top and trim Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM/FM stereo, 46,000 miles, local trade.

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix Carmel beige with tan vinyl trim, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise. AM/FM stereo, wire wheel covers, bucket seats, local trade

1979 Toyota Corolla white with tan vinyi trim, 4 speed transmission, air condition, nice car, local trade

Dickinson Avo.

Brown-Wood, Inc.

andyouwiillNiy

ui

752-7111

ISUZU

1979 Pontiac Bonneville 2 door, silver metallic with blue velour trim. Extras include tilt wheel, cruise. AM/FM tape, wire wheels, 48,000 miles.

1979 Buick Regal Mint green with matching landau top and velour trim, lilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks, AM/FM cassette, only 36,0(X) miles, local trade

1978 Pontiac Safari Wagon Pastel blue with woodgrain trim and blue vinyl interior. Fully equipped. 51.000 miles, local trade 1978 Buick LeSabre Landau Medium green metallic with white landau top and cloth trim. Extras include tilt wheel, AM/FM. air condition and sport wheels, sharp car. local trade,

1977 Lincoln Town Car 4 door, charcoal metallic with velour trim. Equipped with most factory options. Must see to appreciate. Local trade, clean. 1977 Ford Thunderbird Gray with red vinyl top and gray vinyl trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air. AM/FM radio, wire wheel covers, local trade.

1973 Pontiac Grand Prix Black with black vinyl top and white interior. Options include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM/FM stereo with tape, 77,000 miles, local trade.





25 Th Daily Reflector. Graenvilf, N.C.

Thursday, Septwnbef 15.1963

m

FURNITURE

Early AmarTcan. 125. CaH'rs^lTT* aflar S p.m.

SOFA, graan.

Ill 71

M7 Garae-Yard Salt

aELVOIK HldHWAY wnghft Auto Shop. a*ul-famlly yard sala

lsala.7unMI 2. Saturday

CLASSIFIED DISPUY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C I I (ipton. Co

M U.

BILL

ASKEW

MOTORS

3010 S. Mamoiial Oriva

756-9102

1980 Subaru Wagon 1980 Chevrolet Pickup

Extra clean, white 1980 Pontiac Grand Prix

Cream, clean

1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme

2 door, yellow and black 1979 Dodge Sportsman Wagon - 8 passenger 1979 Chevrolet Monza 2

plus 2. white

1979 Olds Delta Royale 4

door, burgundy, loaded 1979 Buick LeSabre 4

door, green

1979 Chevrolet Caprice Estate Wagon Loaded, 9 passenger.

1979 Ford Mustang

Maroon

1979 Toyota Corolla - 2'

door, blue

1979 Toyota Cressida Wagon

1978 Chevrolet Caprice Classic - 4 door, white 1978 Chevrolet Caprice Classic 2 door, silver 1978 Ford Van -Customized, brown 1978 Chevrolet Camaro White

1978 Ford LTD II - 2 door, brown

1978 Mercury Cougar XR-7 1978 Pontiac Trans AM

White

1978 Jeep CJ-5

1978 Ford Mustang 4

speed, peach

1978 Plymouth Volare Wagon 6 cylinder, silver.

1978 Pontiac Sunbird Wagon Low mileage, loaded.

1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Gold

1978 Dodge Pickup 6

cylinder, automatic, short bed, blue

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme

2 door, silver and black 1977 Buick Electra 4

door, green

1977 Olds 98 Regency 2

door, brown

1977 Chevrolet Camaro

Turquoise

1977 Pontiac Grand Prix

Brown

1977 Mercury Comet 4

door, blue

1977 Ford Pinto - White, blue trim, automatic, air. 1977 Ford Maverick 4 door, 6 cylinder 1977 Plymouth Volare Premier Wagon Maroon

1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Bronze, 46.000 miles

1977 Olds Cutlass Supreme

2 door, silver

1976 Ford Mustang Red

1976 Buick Century 4

door, blue

1976 Ford Elite - Red, white top

1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

White, 56,000 miles. 1976 Ford Elite - Blue 1976 Ford Courier Pickup

White

1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

White, white top 1976 Fiat 2 door, blue 1975 Olds Delta 88-4

door, blue

1975 AMC Pacer - White 1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Silver

1974 Pontiac Grand Prix White, clean 1974 Pontiac Grand AM 1974 GMC Sprint

1974 Pontiac Grand Prix

Bronze

1973 Ford Pinto Wagon

1973 Chevrolet Maiibu

White

1973 Ford Bronco Blue

1973 Buick Century 4

door, blue

1971 Pontiac 4 door, extra clean

1971 Plymouth Baracuda

Black

1969 Volkswagen Beetle

Yellow

1967 MG

1967 Mercury Cougar

TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1974 Chevrolet Maiibu Classic

Plus Many Othars

M7    Garage-Yard Sale

CLEARINO STORAOE AREA.

tor with

Must til. ir goM rofrioM-ator with icmkr ana stove, $500 for set; lawnmower. S75; chain saw 20" bar SITS; *xl2 brown shag carpet, SSO; *s12 deep orange carpet, S4S; dinette eet. STS, 20 pound fish tank er, $30; mi

with stand, filter,

many small

items, visit Mini Stor^^e,

Graenville Boulevard, 50B, day,Sa.m. tol2noon.

CLUB PINES - 311 Crestline. Saturday. I to 1. Furniture, lamps, cloithes, curtains, household Items, and miscellaneous.

FURNITURE,

.  _____    sofa    and    chair,

many baby Items, clothes, nursing uniforms-slzes 4-8, curtains, appliances, kitchen Items and pottery.

etc. 2004 East 4th Street, Saturday, 7a.m. until 1 p.m. _

MOVING SALE. Clothing, house hold goods. 1113 Hillside Orive.

Saturday, 7 until 11.    _

MULTI-FAMILY yard sale, Satur-day, 1109 Fawn Road, Ayden. Couch and loveseat, maple table and chairs, woodstove, baby clothes, kitchen Items and numerous other items. 8 until.

M7 Garaga-YwrdSala

SUNDAY YARD SALE - 3609 East

MNh Street. Baked goods, flowers, bicycles, etc. Brooknaven School

Opposite Harris' MMicet, 9-3 p.m.

YARD SALE, SaturdM, September

17,7 to II, 1 MOsceoia Drive.

YARD sal. Saturday, 8 until 12. Route 3, Greenville. Between McGowans Crossroads and Eastern Pines Fire Department, State Road 1700 and 1760. Gas range, vacuum, small appliances, clothes, and odds and ends. 754-4171.

YARD SALE. Bunk bads, dressw^, lamps and other furniture. 1501 East 5th Street, backyard, Saturday, September 17,8a.m.-1 p.m.

072

Livestock

FOR sale quarter horse, is3 hands, 8 year old Bay. Call 757-0592

after4;30p.m

HOkSEBACK' RIDING. Jarman

StablM, 752-5237.

14.1, 7 YEAR OLD Gray Thorough isfully

bred Gelding. Has been successful , shown. Quiel, no vices, trail rides well. 758-1889.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AUTOMOBILE SALESPERSON

Experience helpful but not necessary. Excellent earnings opportunity. Apply in person only 9-10 A.M. and 3-4 P.M., Monday-Frlday. See Van Stocks or Charlie Goodman.

Joe Cullipher

Chrysler-PlymouthDodge-Peugeot

Hwy. 11 4 264 By-pass    Greenville,    N.C.

074

MisceManeeus

A i R oM P R s S 6 a s :

Manufacturer hn an ovarstock of brand new Industrial grade 5 horsepower sinele phase, 40 gallon tank, twin cyllndar, quick air ra-covery, all oaat iron, industrial V

pump. SaHIng to tha public for $795 (plus fraigm). Suggastad ratall $1J9S.OO. 2r74 C.F.M. diaplacemant

at maxknum R.P.M. working pressor#. 150 P.S.I. II month warranty. Limitad supply. Call 503-347-1741.

AIR conditioner 11,000 BTU Saars Power Saver. Used 1 seeaon. $275. 7SS-184S.

ANTIQUE PINE TRUNK, $100. Prass back side chair, $35. Both completaly rastorad. GE microwave oven, like new, $240. Sears 10x13 tant, $90. AM/FM console stereo, $50. AAany home Interior Items discounted. 753-5524.

APPROXIMATELY 2,000 Silas Lucas handmade bricks, 754-5097 or 754-9315.

ATARI, excellent condition, 9 new games, $185. Eager to sell. Call 355-2175 attar 7.

BLACK AND WHITE darkroom

074

MtscMianaous

to CAkAT

Idlng rthg, BeewtMul size 12 Ivory wiriding dr$$a and

vail, blue brlddsmatds dreu. rowboat axcelser, new $30, lectrolux acrufatMT and waxar and other mlscellandoM Hems. 79S-98S4.

From tha oldett, moot rellabla buyer of gold, silver and any Items of value.

COIN&RINGAAAN

On Tha Corner

H

clarinet, used 1 yew,

758-1927.

CONTEMPORARY 5 PIEC llvl room set. Excellent condition, or best offer. Call 7544273 aft- 7:30 p.m.

equipment. Complete set up. Sell all or in pieces. $75. 758-3344.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

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

BUNK BEDS for sale: Bolted style (Includes both mattresses and box springs). $200. Call 752-1308 after S.

BUYING-LOANS INSTANT CASH

TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold & silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewriters, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games & cartridges, power tools, musical instruments, microwave ovens video recorders, bicycles. We also loan $$ on anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, located 405 Evans St., downtown. 752-2444.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT NO OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENSE

1984 TEMPO

Through Special Arrangements with Red Carpet Lease

ASTI

America's 1 Used Car Company

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass    758"0114

FORD

Greenville, N. C. 27834

CRIB FOR sale. Excellent coiidT tion, $50. 754-8343 between 4 and 10 p.m.

DINETTE TABLE, electric rotls-serie broiler, set Junior Encyclopedia Britannica, large size formal dresses, 1970 Plymouth. 754-0375.

ESTATE - YARD SAL.

housheold Items, air conditioners, portable TV, appliances, miscella-

heous furnlhslngs, September 17, 1963, 314 Prince Road, Eastvrood

Subdivision.

FOR SALE: 23 channel base station

CB with power mike; Panasonic

portable cassette player; AAA/FM clock radio. Best offer. 752-1935.

FREE PINE STRAW. Free black kitten. 752-4948.

FURNITURE STRIPPING and re-

flnishlng at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mils south of Sunshine Garden Center. 754-9123.

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture.

Stripping, Repairing & Refinlshlng. (Formerly of East Carolina Voca

tional Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway. 752-3509.

GOOD USED WASHERS and

dryers. $100 each. Call 754-2479.

GULBRANSEN PACE-MAKER

organ, 2 manual. Excellent condi

tion. Solid Mahogany Hepplewhite leaf table. Excellent condition.

drop 825-4391

HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS.

Children's dressers, dining room

table, fireplace screens, reclining

 . -

chair, sofa bed, matching chair ottoman. AM priced to sell. Call after 5 p.m. 754-5378

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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 Offer:

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 Wagstaff 753-2568 between 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday

Since positions open up from time to time anyone who has applied in the past is encouraged to re apply.

tk\r w.t

"%tEAY%SAPPEARANCE SALE

CLOSEOUT PRICES THAT WILL ASTOUND YOU!

Silverado Pick-up Full Size FREE Air Conditioning, valued at $725

SPELLBINDING SELEaiON,

TRADE-IN MAGIC!

HURRT BEFORE THEY ALL DISAPPEAR!^

SALE ENDS SEPTEMBER 22nd - 7 BIG SALE DAYS LEFT!

GENERAL MOTORS Hum DIVISION

/

074

MlKGUanMut

CALL CHAALTI tar anwH Iqadi^i tone. Atoa drivewMi'

^ TIM. 79M012, iLaahd, topwM eed IvewMiYwark.

LaAgI LOAoS of tend and tap OH, lot ctooriM, bacMMO olao ovolloblo; 1WH743oftor 8 p.m JIni Hvctoon.

latT 6fc AaiN6 WffiaffrrTf

Art you In nooG of an Inoxponslvo wardrobe until you reach your goal? Traraltlon Wardrobes hoe Beautiful provlcusly ownod largo alzo womon't clofhing of rooaonoow pricot. Clothing occoptod on con-aignmont, purchoaod, and told In Izoa 14 and up. Coll 355-2508.

eUTXTTeTRYSRT

Complete

line of Whites Treasure Hunthig equipment. 10% off all detectors during September. Call for a froo

catalog Baker's Sports Equlp-

itTror .........-

Box 3104,754-8840 NEED 80NY

8 month old Briggs and Stratton, 5 horsapowar tiller. (kx)d condition. $250. 758-1523.

NEW oAEENVILLE ity Dlrecto-

3t for sale - one copy available, educed to $100. Call 752-4348 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snappm-AAowers. Goodyear Tire Canter,

West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

FHILICO COLOR TV Console. $500 negotiable. Call 752-2791.

PIANO - MAHOGANY upright, rebuilt and rafinished, $550. Bronco Play Wonder horse, medium size, $30. Both in excellent condition. Also 4 large travel/storage trunks -1 cedar lined. 752-4054.

RACING 00-CART, live axsle, bucket type seat. Completely rebuilt 5 horsepower motor with new carbureator, header, electronic Ignition, $350. 754-5018.

RCA XL 100 25" console Color TV. Less than 2 years old. Like new. $350. 754-2031.

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo components, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable ta|>e

players, bicycles, volllns, doll depression glass, carnival glass.

china, crystal and an tiques...anything of vallue

jes...anything of vallue.

COIN&RINGMAN

On The Corner

SAXAPHONE, Intellevision and 4 cartridges, $150. 19" 3 horsepower lawn mower, $25. 754-4510.

SEASONED HOME companion prepares special diets. Apply to Companion, 400-B Holly Street, Greenville, NC 27834.

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

SHARP, SONY A GE closeout sale now at (oodyear Tire Center, West

End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at

$49.88.

SHARP COPIER machines, sell, lease and rent, large selection of used copiers. Call 754-4167.

SHARP SF811 COPIER with stand, 24 copies per minute, handles S'/ixll, 8'/^x14, 11x17 paper sizes; Royal SE50I0 electric typewriter, correcting capabilities, will sell separately or packaged deal, priced to move. Call 792 1067 (day) or 792-6962 (night).

SMALL REFRIGERATOR for sale 18'/"xl9"xl9"; perfect for office

or dormitory room. Reduced to $79. Call 752-4348 between 9 a.m. and 4

TIRES, 2 Goodyear Trackers, new, $110. Call 744 3490aHer 6.

TWO ALL WEATHER TIRES for sale - (G 78x14) excellent condition, tubeiess, smooth running. Reduced to $20 each). Call 752-4348 between 9 a.m. andp.m.

TWO WINGBACK chairs, $40 piece. Call 744-4748.

TYPEWRITER FOR SALE tan.

manual. Remington. Newly cleaned and reconditioned, types like new.

Priced at just $145. Call 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.

USED RESTAURANT Equipment. Walk-In cooler, refrigerator, mix

ers, deep fat fryers, chairs. Ice

iir-----

machines, etc. Call 758-7042.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

m

MiKOtlanMus

VMNTK0 good cMan u^ tx

1 A^kltlA aiXt water fki; al^, Cut 'n iut^. new. Both $TOa. Call nA4mHWS:30.

175 AtobllgHomt FotSbIb

assume payments. Furniture and air Included. Call 7SB-7195.

Ni 1983, 2 badrooms, 1 bath, bay window on each end, A-roof and cathadral ceilings, total alactric.

low down payment and payments

.. -tr.F    -    ir7S4-9874,

less than $140 month. Cal,-------

Country Scpjlre Mobile Homes, 244 Bypass.

NEW . 1984. 24x44. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, baautifully decorated, low

down payment and paymnts under $250 month, includes delivery and setup. Call 754-9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass.

264 Bypass.

NO MONEY DOWN. VA financing Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes, 754-0333.

NO MONEY DOWN VA 100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral celling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month.

CROSSLAND HOMES

430 West Greenville Boulevard . 754-0191

SPECIAL FOR YOUNG couples or college students. For only $700 down, $140 month you can now own a 1984 Horton. Come by and see at Art Dallano Homes, 244 Bypass, Greenville, (We have lots avalla ble). 754-9841.

TWO ATLANTIC HOUSE trailers, 10 A 45. Converted to office trailers. Call 752-1171.

USED 1 bedroom, 12x48, fully carpeted, new furniture, low down payment and payments less than $120 month. Call 754-9874, Country Squire AAoblle Homes, 264 Bypass.

USED 14x70, 3 bedrooms, Ito baths, central air, vinyl underpinning, new stove, refrigerator and furniture, low down payment and payments under $245 month. Call 7549874, Co-try Squire AAoblle Homes, 244 Bypass.

We Love America Special NO MONEY DOWN!

SINGLE WIDE $8,495

DOUBLE WIDE...$17,995

(Loaded)

ling O'

Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry - No In-laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard

12.75% FINANCING on selected homes. Call Conner Homes, 754-0333.

12X45 2 bath, central air, screened back porch on corner lot In town. 756 7743.

1944 SKYLINE, 12x55. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen with extended dining area. Large living room 12x14, sundeck 'In back, furnished. $3500

negotiable. Call for appointment, 753-r -

12698.

1970 COBURN, 12x63, 2 bedroom, 1'/4 bath, 3 ton air conditioner, $5,500. 754-6171 or 756 2434.

1971 MARSHFIELD 12x65 deluxe, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Good condition. Set up In Shady Knoll Estates. Owner moving. Must sell. $7500. For details call 752-6735or 1-584-5049.

1971 NATIONAL, good condition, must sell. Call 752-4778 after 4 p.

m.

1971 SIGNET TRAILER, 12x48, excellent condition, owner moving. $3950. Call 756-0983.

1971 12x40 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, refrigerator, stove, air, and deck. Good condition. $4500. 758 0644.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

COMMUNICATIONS 2-Way Radio Technician Wanted

Growing company in the Raleigh, Durham, Triangle area. North Carolina needs experienced technicians with first or second class FCC license. Excellent opportunity for an aggressive career oriented individual.

Send resume to:

Mobile Communications Service, inc.

P.O. Box 15268 Durham, North Carolina 27704 Attn; Jo Harris

1973 CHAAMER. 12x84,3 bedrqpri^ Ito baths, unfurnished except tor gas range and refrlgarater, washer/dryar hookup, p^lally remodeled. Asking I700.758-2111.

1971 FAIRWAY 12 X 78, 3 bwfroom, 2 bathli. Ses or call Goorgo King, Siking Mobile Homes, Highway 11 Bypass, Aydon. 744-2078.

1973 STAR - 12x44, 2 bwJrooms, 2 baths,    *"

baths, nawty carpeted. Excallont condition. Already set up. Call 7S7-7194days, 752-7925 after 4^_

1974 Conner Mobile Homa. Call Connw Atoblle Homes, 754-0333.

1979 CNNER Mobile Home. 45x

12'. Take over payments of 1199.14

Ktr month. Call Conner Mobile omes, 754-0333.

1979 TAYLOR. Owner mutt sell I 3 badrooms, 2 full baths, new carpet, new furniture, central heat and air.

This home is nice. Was asking $14,500. Will sacrifice now tot

S11,500. Call 752-2344 or 757-0451.

1981 I4< WIDE HOMES. Psymonts as low as S148.91. At Greonvillo't volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phono 752-4048.

19S4 HOktON doublewide 24x40, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with den. $20,900. Come by and see at Art Dellano Homes, 244 Bypass, Greenville, 754-9841.

076 Mobiie Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for loss money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754.

077 Musical Instruments

LIKE NEW but /i price! Snare drum, case, stand, and 2 sets of sticks, $175. 752-5528.

MUSIC MAN 75 watt base amplifier 1 cabinet 100 Marshall bottom with acoustic 270 head. Price negotiable. Call 823-4552 after 5:30 pm.

PA CABINET. 2 V32 cabinets

Cerwinvega. Each contains 12" speakers, 2 tweeders, 1 horn. S42S. 1-7954332.

PFRETZSCHNER Vx violin, case, S300. Cortley baritone ukulele, $35. 754 2657.

PIANO a ORGAN Distributors. All major brands at discounted prices. 329 Arlington Boulevard. 355-4002.

PIANO LESSONS by Terry Ivey, ECU graduate. All ages. Call 758-5904 or 355-6002.

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND small blue floral suitcase. Has child's clothes. Identify contents and pay for ad. Found on Highway 33 east. 758-0431.

blue case. 752 141

iption g 3 after 5

p.m.

LOST; Silver poodle with red collar of Lewis Street. Reward

In vicinity offered. 758-0942 after 5.

LOST: 4 MONTH old German Shepherd, brown leather collar. 3 year old Golden Retriever, orange collar, both females. Probably together. Reward! Last seen in Camelot area. 756-4539.

085    Loa ns And AAortgages

WE PURCHAS FIRST or second mortgages nationwide. Diversified Mortgage Co. Atlanta 404/992-2035.

093

OPPORTUNITY

EXCITING AND tremendous op portunity - Well-established convenience store/grill located in downtown area of booming city within several hundred yards of several thousand college girls (and boys). Presently doing more than $100,000 annually with easy potential of at least twice that much; owner selling at tremendous sacrifice due to health. For additional information in confidence contact The Marketplace, Inc. etc.

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758-0702.

GROCERY WANTED want to buy or lease small grocery, equipped and located favorably for profitable operation. Call in confidence. Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348.

LAUNDROMAT FOR SALE. Good location. Reasonable rent. Call 754-4890 after 5 p.m.

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 757-000), nights 753 4015.__

YOUR own Jean-Sportswear, Infant-Preteen, Ladles Apparel, Combination, accessories or Large Size Store. National brands: Jordache, Chic, Lee, Levi, Van

derbilt, Izod, Gunne Sax, Esprit, Calvin Klein, Ocean Pacific, Evan

Picone, Haberdasherry, Healthtex, 300 others. $7,900 to $24,900, Inventory, airfare, training, fixtures.

mg,

arand opening, etc. Mr. Dickson

(501)882 5164,(501) 248-1341.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WYNNE

CHEVROLET

IS ON THE MOVE

V.-.:

*

Bethel N.C Hwv 64 & 13 Phone 825-4321

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon One Owner

1981 Ford Fairmont Wagon One owner

1980 Chevrolet Caprice - 4 door, one owner, black, sharp car.

1980 Chevrolet Caprice Wagon One owner

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Nice!

1978 Chevrolet Maiibu 4 door

1977 Chevrolet Camaro Blue, sharp car 1975 Mercury Blue, nicecar 1975 Oldsmobile Convertible Silver

1975 Oldsmobile Convertible Maroon 1974 Chevrolet Caprice Blue, one owner

1972 Chevrolet Impala - 2 door hardtop, brown, one owner

1980 Chevrolet C-10 Scottsdale Pickup

1980 Dataun King Cab One owner. Priced to ao'

1976 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 1971 Ford % Too

H.imuii I .ith.un Buitiu'! 1 .Uh.un .Jo-' R.ivvP, J TBuiius Doiui Hou-.t

GMQUAUTY

GM

M

SERVICE PARTS

GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION

* i





093 OPPOHTUNITY

OWN YOUR dIVN JiAN or LmIIm AMT^tion. m Brand namM. Jordacha, Lavi, Klain, Zana. S7,900

to $15,500 Include* training,' ln>;*!v tory, fixture*, and much ntoral Mr Tafc (704) 753-4730.

REAL ESTATE BROKERS

$100 Million Ea*t Coa*t Waterfront

Resort I* develMing a statewide . The broker and hi*

broker network office must be capable of generaf ing prospects to fhe coast to pre view the finest resort/retirement community available tod^. All amenities are completed. The Inventory mix is designed to please any disconcerting buyer and includes single family homesites and homes, garden nomesltes and

109

Howsm For Silt

gMAiL ov^i IRfifcitT. 3 bedroom brick, Stantonsburg Road. Low payment* (FmHA). 750-O4M.

BY WNER. New log homa near Ayden on quiet country road. 1TC0 square feat, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,

fireplace, lot size nailable. By H. Met

apMntnriant, R. 75-2750or975-3M.

cLawhorn,

dominiums and boatslips. This rare opportunity will be shared by only a lucky few. The rewards and commissions are very high. Call for an immediate appointment

feappol

Call United States (Development Corporation at (919) 270-2761

out-of-state (800) 334-8126. Ask for Mr. DIno.

RESTAURANT for sale. 100 seat

capacity, building, land, and ki

equipment. Turn key operation. Located less than 10 minutes from downtown Greenville. Call 758-0702 or 752-0310.

RESTAURANT FOR SALE - fully ec^ulpped and in operation;

established clientelle, only $30,000; cash or terms to qualified buyer Call Real Estate Brokers, 752-4348.

095 PROFESSIONAL

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

PROFESSIONAL TYPING service Letters, resumes, thesis, etc. Call 758-3604 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

102 Cominerciat Property

COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE

for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000

square feet with 5400 carpeted for lea<

office space. 12 month lease re quired. Call Clark-Branch, Real tors, 756-6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147.

FOR LEASE; 2,500 square feet

building in the downtown area. CENTURY 21 Tipton 8, Associates,

PRIME COMMERCIAL SPACE.

Over 5,000 square feet for sale or lease in the downtown area. Build

ing has potential for many uses. $125,000. CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 756 6810.

106

Farms For Sale

FALKLAND AREA. Approximately 49 acres, 31 cleared, approximately 8000 pounds tobacco allolment.

OLD CREEK ROAD. Approximately 81 acres of good cleared (arm land. Good road frontage.

APPROXIMATELY 5700 pounds of tobacco allotment for sale.

22 ACRES of cut over woodsland just out of Ayden.

Want To Sell A Farm Or Woodsland?

Call

O.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

We re The Experts

752-4012

BY OWNER. Four bedrooms, 2 baths, firMlaces, 250Q sq. ft., nice yard In Farmville. $59,500 after 5 pm. 753-3030 or 848-3564.

CEDAR LOO HOME 1,750 sqiwre feet, 20 year warranty. 229 Leon Drive, Lake Glenwood. Echo Realty Inc., 524-4148 or 524-5042.

ELMHURST Assume Vi FHA loan, 3 bedroom brick ranch, large kitchen, formal areas, fireplace.

heat

756-

ty^pump.

garage, blow $60's.

FOR SALE by owner. 6 room brick house. $25,000. 109 North JarvI* Street. Call 752-5042.

GRANDMA'S HOUSE" Com pletely restored, elegance of 2 story

rural home place, porches, smoke house, ancient (Daks, AAagnollas,

Holly, Pecan with huge ya'rd and garden spot. 10 minutes from Greenville. $69,500. Mr. Byrd, 758-

0198 or 757-6961.

HEY GUYS - Lots of cabinets In the garage and storage room (or the handy man's delight or hobbyist. Large sunken den off the formal living room offers lots of space for entertaining. This 3 bedroom brick home has 2 large baths and is priced at $62,500. Loan assumption possible. Call The Evans Company, 752-2814 or nights call Faye Bowen, Listing Broker, 756-5258, or Winnie Evans, 752-4224.

LOAN ASSUMPTION A QUALIFIED BUYER can

assume the VA loan on this pretty ranch In Shamrock Terrace. Three bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room, family room with fireplace, large patio, corner lot. Loan is at 13%

APR, equity of approximately $11,500, about 17 years remaining.

payments of $5M.00. Priced at *53,500.

FOX RUN POSSIBLE LOAN ASSUMPTION

on this very pretty two story home. Three bedrooms, 1/^ baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, wood deck, garage. In the country but not too far from the city. $54,000.

DUFFUSREALTY INC.

756*5395

NO MONEY DOWN

That's righti We will build on your lot. Plenty of mortgage money, no red tape. Call 758 3171 for Darrell.

OLDER HOME In Wintervllle, with )ood rehab potential. Approxlmate-

y 1,200 square feet, 6 rooms, large lot, storage building, $20,000. J. L. Harris 8. Sons, Inc., Realtors,

758 4711.

David Nichols.....................355    6414

40 ACRES - 20 cleared on paved road 1433, 1 mile west of Bethel 756 8279 after 5 p.m.

109 Houses For Sale

CENTURY21 TIPTON .ASSOCIATES

756-6810

UNIVERSITY AREA: Two story home featuring over 1800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, I'/j baths, carport. $60.000

UNDER CONSTRUCTION In Club Pines, 18th Century Georgian that features 3 bedrooms, 2'/j baths, large greatroom and over 2,000 square feet. Upper $90's.

FARMVILLE. Beautiful four bedroom, 3 bath home on large wooded corner lot that features all tormal area*,^Very nice screened In porch.    /

PRICE REDUCED on this new construction In Horsehoe Acres. Traditional 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with lots ot extras. Crown molding, chair railing, extra large lot. $62,500

EASTW(DODI 11'/?% loan assump tion on this neat 3 bedrooms, 2 balh brick ranch. Carport, tenced in backyard, large deck off den. living room and dining area and 1682 square feet. $63.000.

DUPLEX 3 bedrooms. 1 bath each side, possible owner financing. Stantonsburg Road area. $45,000.

SUNSET AVENUE 3 bedroom bungalow with upstairs apartment. Total rent $450 per month.

STOKES - Farmers Home Assumption on this two bedroom brick ranch with carport. $39,900.

Al Baldwin..........................756-7836

Harold Hewitt.....................756-2570

Rod Tugwell.......................753-4302

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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

ly

on Saturdays. Write Jack Hannah PO Box 51, Lowland, NC 28552.

W. G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000

GRAYLEIGH: Under construction. Choose your own'colors. 4 bedrooms, possibility of 5 or 6 bedrooms plus a game room, 3

baths, double garage. Located on a corner lot. Call for price and

details.

GRAYLEIGH; Elegant Williamsburg featuring 3 bedrooms, 2'/? baths, living room, formal dining room, den with fireplace, deck, garage. $110,5(X)

STOKES: Beautiful restored Southern mansion located a short distance from Greenville. 4 bedrooms, 3'/? baths, all formal areas, screened porches. Must see to appreclae. Owner anxious to sell. Reduced to $120,000.

CLUB PINES; Brick two story. Great room with fireplace and built In cabinets, 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths.

dlnl^ room, kitchen, garage.

$84,1

W.G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000

IDEAL FOR STUDENT HOUSING

VILLAGE EAST Townhouses: Brick townhouses with 2 bedrooms, 1'/? baths, kitchen with all appliances, patio, outside storage. Special financing. $41,900.

DRESDEN PLACE Condominiums; Ideal location at the corner of 11th and Charles Streets. 2 bedrroms, 1/? baths, kitchen with all appliances. $43,600.

Bob Barker

Bill Blount

Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden

975-3179

756-7911

756-3880

756-1617

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BACK TO COOL

SALE

3 Day Specials * Friday, Saturday & Monday

ENGINE TUNE-UP

Electronic Ignition    A    A

4 Cylinder................. J4.00

6 Cylinder ......38.88

8 Cylinder ......42.00

12 Month Warranty

OIL, LUBE & FILTER

M 3.88

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

M6.88G

90 Day Warranty

WGBt End Shopping Ctntor Phono 706-0971 Opon 0:004:00 Mon.-Fri.

. Sot. 0:00 to 9:00

720 DIcklnton Avonuo Phono 7924417 Opon 9:004:00 Mon.-Frl. Sot. 0:00 to 9:00mm

CHERRY OAKS - $10,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3 bedroom, 2'/? bath (Dwner. 756-8073.

COLONIAL HEIGHTS - Recently remodeled 3 bedroom ranch, carpet, hardwood floor, large living room, dining room, and den with fireplace. Sunny kitchen with plenty of cabinets, laudry room - storage. Picturesque enclosed back yard with 7' naturally weathered fence to give privacy to your 16x32' inground pool. Pool cover, chemicals, and seasoned wood included. Reduced to $59,500! I 758-1355 after 9:30 p.m., Sunday anytime.

109

Housts For Solo

3 BEDROOMS, m hath, ~approxl

mately 1800 square teet, "large    . 10 mile* from

wooded lot..........

Greenville. 1-447-2096 for details

111 Invtstmont Proporty

FO* Al 6ft MrAP a bedroom house In good section of Atorehead City near waterfront for rental

In Greenville; only $25,900. ll Real Estate Brokers, 752-4348.

GOOD OPPORUNITY In west Greenville - old home converted to

apartments, both presently rented Well-maintalhed, uj painted. $30,000. J Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711.

itairs recently Harris i

PRICED TO SELLI Duplex across from Sadie Saulter School on west Fourteenth Street. Call todayl J. L. Harris 8i Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711.

121 Apartments For Rent

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1V? baths, washar-dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. $310 par month. 752-2040 or 756^904.

Cherry Court

* 2 bedroom towi

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IVt baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, watner-dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, duo house and P<DOL. 752-1557

DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wooded lot at Frog Laval. 2 badrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and

llvipg roont, n^^t* allowed. $265

per month. 756-4

VALUABLE BEACH PROPERTY want to sell or swap 4 ranted, 3 bedroom apartments at Atlantic Beach for rental proparty In Greenvllla. AAore than $12,000 annual Income. Call Real Estate Brokers, 752-4348.

113

Land For Sale

HALF-ACRE home lot adjacent to Cherry Oaks on State Road 1725. Level and partly wooded. $11,000. J. L. Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711.

WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near

Ayden with well and septic tank. Serious Inquiries only. 746-4669.

115

Uts For Sale

THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter.

prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley-Marcu;

746-2166 for full details.

arcus Realty at

WANT TO BUY lot near Greenville. Suitable for doublewide home. Call 756-1808 nights.

If that vacant apartmant is losing you nrioney, remedy the situation

guickly with a result-getting lasslfled ad. Call 752 6166.

117 Resort Property For Sale

New Townhouse Villas

North Topsail, N. C.

$29,900-$38,500

All modern conveniences. 10% down. Excellent location on the beach.

For information call 1-919-328-3658 anytime.

DUPLX 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 conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY 1 or 2 beds. Weekly rates. Maid Service. Call 7S6-SSS5, Heritage Inn Motel.

FOR RENT: DUPLEX apirtment.

if ai

2 bedrooms, central heat and air, carpeted, appliances furnished. Married couples only, no pets.

References and deposit required. $325 per month. 758-2090 or 756-7537.

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apai ents, carpeted, disi

apart

___'    pe    t e d , dish

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

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

GRIFTON AREA. 2 end 3 bedroom apartments. Central air, carpet and drapes. Call 524-4239 or 524-4821. EHO.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

RESORT PROPERTY for sale or trade. 4 apartment complex. 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, central heat and air. 415 Ocean Drive, Club

Colony, Atlantic Beach. Asking $225,000. Will trade for property in

Greenville area. Call 752 2366 or 757-0451.

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758-0702 days, 752-0310 nights.

TIME SHARING. Dis

neyworld/Epcot area. Private owner. Must sell. (919) 756 5990, (305) 281-1285.

WASHINGTON, NC. 5 river front homes priced to sell. $57,500 $130,000. Call Buckman Realty, 946-2112.

CALL US WITH your classified ad

today. You can find a cash buyer for

5tl '

lawn or garden equipment fast! Call 7526166.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT. Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have an to

igton Self Storage day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933

J

size to meet your storage need. Call Self Storage, Open Mon-

Arllngton

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.

Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756-7815

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

One and two bedroom garden

apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located

>ping

Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

At our affordable alternative to

renting. Enjoy the privacy of your ndomlr'

own condominium or townhome with payments iower than monthiy rent. Call Iris Cannon at 758-6050 or 746-2639, Owen Norvell at 758-6050 or 756-1498, WII Reid at 758 6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758-7029.

MOORE & SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartmtnts For Rent

LOVE TREES?

Experience tha unique in apartment "        (Ide

living with nature outsit 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    15    Sunday

AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NICE QUIET DUPLEX, carpet, appliances, air, hookups, nice yard. 756 2671 or 758 1543.

OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTAAENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart Dish

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

_756-4151_

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

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din

ing, bedroom compiete. $79.00 per  ...  ----- r     ^

month. Option to buy. U RN 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 CABLE TV

Office hours 10a.m. toSp.n Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

STUDIO APARTMENT near campus. $175 plus deposit. Call mornings only. 355 6713.

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook-ups, cable TV, pool, club

house, playground. Near ECU.

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

pUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows

it's important to please you. And we receive hundreds of testimonials

2 BEDROM apartment

carp..tcci, central air and heat. $275. 758 3311.

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex. Uni versify area. No pets. $235 per month. 756-4277 or 752 8179.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Salesman Of The Month

Clyn Barber

Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevrolet is pleased to announce that Clyn Barber is the winner of the Salesman of The Month Award. Clyn won this for his outstanding sales performance during the month of August.

PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle

756-2150

iillUIIIIAIIIEED USED CMS

1983 Honda Civic Wagon....................*8995

1983 Mazda B200 Truck ....... *5995

1982 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel ................*5995

1982 Mazda GLC  ......  *5495

1982 Ford Escort...................  *5995

1981 Volkswagen Diesel Truck ...........*5495

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit........... *2995

1979 Volkswagen Van.............. .*5695

1979 Audi 5000.............................*44 95

1979 Ford LTD............ ^3995

1978 Ford Thunderbird  ................*3995

1978 Volkswagen Rabbit......................*2995

1970 Mercury Marquis.............  *3495

1978 Chevrolet Chevette......................*1995

1977 Chevrolet Malibu Wagon..................*1595

1976 Volkswagen Beetle..................Like    New!

1975 Volvo 164 E..............  *1995

No Reasonable Offer Refused On The Spot Financing

loe Peclieles Volkswagen, Inc.

Greenville Blvd.    756-1135

Serving Greenville To The Coast For 19 Years

I ne uaiiy netiector, (jreenviiie, n.l;.

121 Apartments For Rent

TWO BEDROOM townhouse with

fireplace, Shenandoah Village $365 'iri -

CairLorelle at 756-6336.

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, I'/i bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

122 Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only S3.60 per square foot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752-4348.

23,000 SQUARE FEET available Will subdivide. Call 756-5097 or 756 9315.

127 Houses For Rent

HOUSES AND Apartments in country. 8 mniles south of Greenville. 746 3284 and 524 3180.

LYNNOALE: 4 bedrooms, 3 baths -$600 per month MacGregor Downs: 5 bedrooms, 2',? baths $700. Lease and security deposit required. Duffus Realty, Inc. 756-0811

PROFESSIONAL PERSON rent house. Call 1 212 723 4571 between 4 and 9 p.m.

2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Griffon. Phone 1 524-4147, nights 1 524 4007.

3 BEDROOM MODULAR home in Simpson on 8 acres with large garage. $350 per month. Call 756 77S5.

3 BEDROOM within walking dis tance of university. $350 month. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency, 756 2121

3-4 BEDROOMS. $350 per month. Months deposit. 1 year lease. 752-4139.

4 BEDROOM RANCH. Over 2000 square feet with workshop in

Griffon. Available immediately for World,

$425 per month. Call Realty , Clark Branch, 756-6336 or Ti Smith, 752 9811

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

DOUBLEWIDE 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air. No pets. 756-4286.

FURNISHED 2 BEDROOM,

washer, air. No pets. $150 per month. Deposit required. Water and lot included. 758 0727 after 4.

12 X 60 furnished. Nice location near Farmville. Phone 753-5510.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

MANAGEMENT

POSITION

Available At

STUARTS

Carolina East Mall Great working conditions, great advancement opportunity, great benefits. Must have management experience in retail. Apply in person between 10 and 7, Monday thru Friday.

No Phone Calls, Please

Thursoay, September 15,1983 27

133 AAobilc Homes For Rent ^EDRTOM^witJ^r'^n^Str

^14^ly. No pet*,, no chidren.

2 BEDROOM, washer and dryer, air condition, couples preferred. No pets 746 6860.

2 MOBILE homes for rent. Furnished or unfurnished. 752 5365.

135 Office Space For Rent

LAW OFFICE tor 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 parking. Call 758 2300 days.

137 Resort Property For Rent

WINTERGREEN. VIP condo, 2 bedrooms, September, October, fall colors discount 60%. 752 1015.

138 Rooms For Rent

ROOM FOR RENT. Clean linens and kitchen privileges. $35 a week. 758 6620.

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for

3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge. Pool, tennis courts and

sauna. Call 756 9491.

ROOMAAATE NEEDED to share 2

bedroom apartment. Walking distance to campus. $92.50 per month plus '/? utilities. Call 758-0714 or 752 3484, ask for Lea.

ROOMMATE NEEDED. rent, '/i utilities. 758-6687.

144 Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber. Pamlico Timber Companvv Inc. 756-8615.

**NTED 2 to 5 acres of land

within 5 miles of Greenville; must be suitable for mobile home devel opmenf. Call Real Estafe Brokers, 752 4348.

*

''I*

WANTED wood storage building, reasonable. Call 756 5045or 752 2361.

YOUNG FAMILY looking for house or land in country. 1 to 3 acres Prefer Winferville School District. 758 0157 days, 746-2574 nights, ask for John

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. gos.

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State's Quality Of Education Stirs Debate Among Tar Heels

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer Back-to-school time is here again, and with it the annual )roliferation of signs and Munper stickers imploring drivers to watch that child.

Thats precisely what Americans are doing. Elementary and secondary schools, teachers and pupils are under perhaps unprecedented scrutiny by a nation suddenly convinced that the quality of public education has deteriorated dangerously.

But while the National Commission on Excellence in Educations warning of a rising tide of mediocrity has l^n echoed in North Carolina, there are claims that the situation isnt nearly as dire here as elsewhere.

In its May 9 issue, Newsweek magazine told readers that public education is working in North Carolina. Citing such innovations as the N.C. School of Science and Mathematics, the magazine said: "With leadership, commitment and vision, the Tar Heel State leads the way back to quality in education.

Gov. Jim Hunts administration glowed at the report, but critics scoffed. One newspaper editor wrote that the Newsweek story tells us where we should be in education, not where we are.

Politicians, education experts, teachers, administrators, students and parents are embroiled in debate over education quality in North Carolina. At issue is not only how good or bad things are. but also how best to improve.

Betty Owen. Hunts top education adviser, acknowledges that the states public education system could be better. But she insisted in an interview that its among the nations best.

We re 'way ahead of most other states," said Ms. Owen.

But Ellis Page, a Duke University professor of educational psychology and research, disagrees. Calling Newsweeks description a joke, he said North Carolina hadn't done enough to strengthen curricula and student workloads.

"The idea that were a national leader and have solved all these problems that are plaguing other states is posturing. said Page. I don't see us as being more out of the woods than other states.

Ms. Owen bases her

assessment on a number of programs started in recent years, including:

- Intensive reading instruction in primary grades, with a guarantee that each class will consist of no more than 26 pupils and have both a teacher and an aide.

- The best program in the nation for gifted and talented students, including the science and math school in Durham, the N.C. School of the Arts and two Governors Schools that provide exceptional students with Slimmer instruction.

- Achievement testing in the first, second, third, sixth, ninth and 11th grades, plus competency testing of potential high school graduates to ensure theyve mastered basic skills.

North Carolina students have scored higher than students of most other states on nationwide achievement tests sincce 1978, says Bill Brown, a N.C. Department of Public Instruction statistician.

Third-graders in North Carolina on the average do better than 64 percent of the participants nationwide. They'outscore 63 percent of their counterparts in the sixth grade and 57 percent in the ninth grade. Brown said.

Additionally, Ms, Owen points to North Carolinas policy of absorbing most of the cost of public elementary and secondary education at the state level, the vocational training available at most high schools which may be offered to seventh- and eighth-graders, and a re-^ newed emphasis on quality' assurance in scif ncc math and reading throughout the 12 grades.

The state has begun an experiment influenced by the national commissions finding that American students dont spend nearly as much time in school as pupils of other nations. Two school systems are lengthening the school year from 180 to 200 days and adding an extra hour to the typical six-hour day.

The State Board of Education on Wednesday directed officials to implement 62 recommendations put forth by a committee studying math instruction. The proposals range from higher pay for math teachers to increased math requirements for high school graduation.

North Carolina is one of nine states requiring 20 or more units for high school graduation. And this year, for the first time, the competency test will include a

writing section.

I think were coming the full circle in terms of our attitude toward education, said Ms. Owen, a former teacher. I see a new feeling that an education stressing the basics is a childs best hope for getting a good job and being successful. People should have realized this all along but sometimes you wondered.

Page, the Duke professor, says hes not convinced.

These new programs are encouraging, but the heart of the matter remains whats going on in the classroom and weve got a long way to go there, he said.

Education quality wont increase markedly until students are forced to take more math, science and English courses and fewer electives, said Page. Also, they should be assigned far more homework and realistic grding should be rediscovered, he said.

Keep the student working. Thats the most important thing, he said. Right now, the grding system is Mickey Mouse. Students can get by with anywhere from 10 minutes to half an hour of homework a night, then get As and Bs. In fact, he said, studies have shown that many students who do no homework have high C or low B averages.

Another point of contention is the monetary cost of improving education. Page says it should be minimal, but state Superintendent of Public Instruction Craig Phillips says a massive in- fusion of funds is needed to improve teacher pay, reduce class sizes, upgrade facilities and buy materials.

During the General Assembly session earlier this year, Phillips bitterly complained that the public schools funding requests were being slighted in favor of the states 16-campus university system.

The public schools top priorities remain increasing teacher pay and reducing class sizes, which means hiring more teachers. Although the ratio is an ideal one teacher and one aide per 26 pupils in kindergarten through the third grade, it slips to one teacher per 30 students in grades 4-6 and one per 31 in grades 7-12, Phillips said.

"Meanwhile, in the community colleges they average one teacher per 22 students. he said. For us to achieve that, wed need several hundred million dollars. Maybe we cant do it

Two Arrested In Hijack Try

MIAMI (.AP) - Two Hispanic men in custody today in a suspected hijacking attempt were carrying a toy handgun and containers of a suspicious liquid as they tried to board a Tampa-bound airliner, authorities said.

The arrests Wednesday came almost four weeks after the 10th successful jetliner hijacking on South Florida routes since May 1, and followed the announcement of tougher

airport security measures.

It sounds like an attempted hijacking, said Jack Barker, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration in Atlanta.

Elio Bacaro, 35, of Yonkers, N.Y., and Antonio Nigil-Montez, 25, of Brooklyn, N.Y., were taken into custody after attempting to board a Piedmont Airlines flight to Tampa, said Metro-Dade police spokesman John Jones.

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overnight but we need to get started.

A task force is expected to )resent Hunt with a proposed egislative agenda before the 1984 short General Assembly sessiim. Ms. Owen said the suggestions could deal with many of the topics Page stresses, such as curricula.

But Phillips said the biggest favors Hunt could do public schools would be pushing legislators to give them more money while lifting the freeze on state employee pay.

Its clear as a bell that we havent reached the expectations of the commission, said Phillips. To do so we must keep doii^ better, but also the public must realize that youve got to pay for what you want. North Carolina is getting more for its education dollars than any place I know.

HIGH WIRE WORK Jim Pew and Thad Perry, employees of Southern Corrosion Inc., walk what looks like a tighf rope as they paint the new Pasquotant County water system complex

in Elizabeth City. They were painting the 143-foot tall tank inside and out. (AP Laserphoto)

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Title
Daily Reflector, September 15, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30574
Date
September 15, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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