Daily Reflector, September 22, 1983


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





INSIDE TODAY

INblUt IVJUMT

JHAT DWII AMf

N.C. courts and law enforcement agencies are bracing for major legal changes, the driving-whil-impaired law that takes effect on October 1. (Page 8)

SPORTS TODAY

PHQNg RATE<

Consumers may be facing increases in local phone bills, but they are also going to receive major reductions in long distance calls (Page 11)

FRQSH RULP

Both ECUs Ed Emory and Charlie Harrison favor retention of the freshman eligibility rules by the NCAA. Page 13.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 209

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 22, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

! |

NEW JERSEY .ATTORNEY... Vernon Clash

TWISTED WRECKAGE - Firefighters pour water on the wreckage of a portion of the National Starch and Chemical Co. plant in Salisbury Wednesday. They were pouring foam on a tank of

chemicals because they feared the fire which followed four explosions would spread. (AP Laserphoto)

Twenty-Six Were Injured

c>ms (9Vi

LEE PASCASIO... testified this morning.

JACKIE MOYE... former Pitt deputy.

In Salisbury Explosions

ByELISSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer SALISBURY, N.C. (AP) - Workers mixing chemicals may have set off four sulfuric acid explosions that injured 26

, destroyed part of their factory and chased about 75 irhoi

families from their homes, fire officials said.

But a company spokesman said it was too early to tell what caused Wednesdays blasts and fire at Proctor Chemical Co. in downtown Salisbury, 22 miles north of Charlotte.

Witness said one big explosion and three smaller ones blew off a section of the roof and ignited flames that shot 200 feet in the air.

Half a dozen plant workers escaped from a small building flattened by the blast, said Henry Barry, a spokesman for the company which is a division of National Starch and Chemical Co. and makes chemicals for the textile industry.

The company initially said five people were killed, but no bodies were found and authorities concluded none of the 60 employees had died. Firefighters had controlled the late-morning fire by early afternoon but continued pouring foam on the rubble.

State and local officials planned to continue their investigation today, said Tom Lowman, assistant fire chief.

When we have daylight on our side, well be able to learn more, said Lowman early this morning. We have the area secured and there seems to be no danger of further explosions. Everything seems to be under control.

Four workers were treated at Rowan Memorial Hospital for burns or cuts, while at least 21 firefighters and one police officer were treated for burns, smoke inhalation or chemical irritations, said Mary Davis, hospital patient representative.

Salisbury Fire Chief Fred Shipton said Wednesday he believed employees mixing chemicals had caused the explosion.

But Bill Powell, the companys vice president for domestic manufacturing, said the only certainty so far is that part of our plant was totally destroyed.

Powell, who flew in from the companys New Jersey headquarters, said a one-story, 50-by-l00-foot brick building was demolished. Hundreds of barrels of chemicals had lined the walls, he said.

Russ Edmonston of the state Department of Crime Control and Public Safety said there appeared to have been no

Testimony In Parker Case Resumed In Court Today

(Please turn to Page 6)

By ROY HARDEE

Testimony in the Dwight Parker murder trial began once again this morning aftr being bogged down for more than a day and a half as lawyers argued on the admissibility of evidence and statements made by Parker after his arrest in New Jersey in February.

PCMH Vice President For Nursing Suspended

KKH.K(;roK

flOTLItlC

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Mrs. Betty Trought, vice president for nursing at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, was suspended from her post Wednesday afternoon. She has headed nursing services at the medical facility for the past four years.

Im not sure I understand what happened yesterday, Mrs. Trought said this morning.

I was called in at 10 (a.m.) and told a decision had been made about the

vice president for nursing position and asked for my resignation. I couldnt understand why that was happening, and asked for some time, and was given two hours to make a decision, she said.

At a noon meeting, Mrs. 'Trought said she refused to give my resignation and was suspended by PCMH President Jack Richardson.

She said the meetings involved herself, Richardson and Fred Brown, senior vice president at PCMH.

Richardson was unavailable for comment this morning.

However, Brown, who would not comment on the suspension, said a public statement on the suspension was being prepared and would be released later today.

"I dont really understand whats happening... whether it is personal or professional. she said.

I have nothing in writing, Mrs. Trought said.

(Please turn to Page 5)

Parker is charged with murder in connection with the mid-February deaths of the Rev. Leslie Thorbs, 31, of Grifton and Anthony Ray Herring, 27, of Goldsboro.

Late Wednesday afternoon, presiding Judge David E. Reid cleared the way for the jury to return today and begin hearing evidence as he ruled that the statements of Parkers involvement in the killings were freely and voluntarly made without threat or reward.

As testimony resumed this morning, former Pitt Deputy Sheriff Lee Pascasio read statements made by Parker in which he confessed to the killings.

Copies, one eight pages long and the other a one-

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.

paragraph statement, were given to members of the jury.

Tuesday, the jury was removed from the courtroom twice during the morning session while admissibility of testimony and evidence was considered. Jury members returned after the noon recess only to be dismissed for the remainder of the day.

Once again, Wednesday morning, the jury was dismissed due to the length of time needed to continue the hearings.

During the nearly two days of arguments without the jury, former Pitt Deputy Jackie Moye and Pascasio repeatedly stressed that the two signed confessions made by Parker were made without any threats or offers of rewards and that at no time was Parker abused.

In earlier testimony, and again during the hearings Tuesday and Wednesday, Essex County (N.J.) Sheriffs Investigator Santos Madica, told the court that he struck Parker during the arrest as Parker made a move towards a coat about three or four feet away. An eight inch fixed blade knife was later found in a pocket of

the coat.

Wednesday, Vernon Clash, a New Jersey attorney, testified that the Parker situation was unusual and he

(Please turn to Page 5)

WEATHER

fair .lad umi tonight with    ii! iiiid-iDs,

.''unti\ 111! Frahiv uith high's III the rnui-!i(ly. It's the first lias of autumn

Looking Ahead

Fair and awl .''aturdas through Mondas ssith chance of r.un on ^l(mda\. llighs ssill be in the losser 7l)s and loss s in the (Us

Inside Reoding

Page 10 (tbiluaries Page 18 \rea Items Page 20- PCt dean's list

7.52-1336

Rescheduling Announced By Sunbird Airlines

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

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

DIAL-A-FRIEND I would like to get an elderly friend of mine on a list to be called each day by someone to make sure shes OK. She lives alone. I call her when I can, but Im out of town a lot. M.D.

In Greenville, call 752-4137, Ext. 246, or 752-1717 and give your friends name; in Bethel, 825-9471; in Farmville, 753-4111, and in Grifton, 524-5072.

Sunbird Airlines Tuesday afternoon announced the rescheduling of its Greenville flights, effective Oct. 1, to take advantage of a joint venture with New York Air designed to enhance service at the Pitt-Greenville Airport.

Hugh Bingham, executive vice president of Sunbird, said the retiming of service will allow Greenville area travelers to fly Sunbird to Raleigh-Durham Airport and connect with New York Air flights to cities in the Northeast, such as Washington, D.C., New York, Newark, Boston, Cleveland and Detroit.

Bingham and Jan Bennett, Sunbirds director of sales, said the joint fare from Greenville would be the same as passei^ers driving to Raleigh-Durham and taking New York Air flints there would pay. And Ms. Bennett noted that Pitt-GreenvUlehas free {rking.

In fact, Ms. Bennett said, the joint Sunbird-New York Air fares "are competitive with anything in the area.

Bingham said the new scheduling will allow business

travelers to conduct their business and return to Greenville on the same day.

John Reggio, New York Air staff vice president of marketing, described the partnership between New York Air and &inbird as a natural step for better serving both airlinesdestinations.

Reggio said the Sunbird-New York Air venture at Pitt-Greenville should provide a very very beneficial service to the community and to the individual paassenger.

Reggio also said Sunbird passengers will be able to enjoy New York Airs Apple Club at Ralei^-Durham, which features a relaxed setting for passengers in transit.

Bingham and Reggio said another bonus for Sunbird passengers connecting to New York Air flights will be the receipt of 500 miles toward TravelBank - New York Airs Frequent Flyer program. Operated in conjunction with Continental Airlines, the Frequent Flyer program offers passengers an oppmtunity to earn free flights to various

%

locations, including Fiji and Australia.

For example, Reggio said Sunbird passengers would receive 500 miles credit for the trip to Raleigh, and another 1,000 miles credit for the New York Air flight to their final destination. He noted that the free flight would be available when a passenger accumulates 10,000 miles credit.

Bingham said a program started by Sunbird on Sept. 12 -the Valued Passenger program - allows Sumbird passengers to earn credit toward free Sunbird flights. Passengers, he said, receive one credit for each flight coupon purchased. Twelve flight credits entitles passengers to one free roundtrip ticket anywhere on Sunbirds route system.

Based in Denver, N.C., Sunbird began operations in November 1979, serving four cities with 13 flights daily. The airline started serving Pitt-Greenville Airport with commuter service in August 1980.

It now serves eight cities in North Carolina, two in South (Please turn to Page 12)

mi





The Daily Retleclof. Greenvitle N.C

Thursday. September 22,1983

Perfectly

Beautiful,

Beautifully

Perfect.

$2.000

LAUTARES

JEWELERS

DIAMOND SPECIALISTS

Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologists 414 Evans Street We do not sell discount or promotional lewelry

EARTHQUAKE DRILL - First graders at Coalinga, Calif, kneel under their desks facing away from windows with hands covering their necks earlier this week during an earthquake drill during the first day of school. The community was rocked by a 6.7 temblor May 2.IAP Laserphoto)

(jarden Cluh Has Luncheon Meet

A luncheon at the Greenville Country Club highlighted the meeting of the Greenville Garden Club Friday.

Club officers were presented by President Mrs. H. Lindy Edwards. New members recognized were Mrs. R.H. McLawhorn Jr. and Mrs. Albert E. Youmans.

New yearbooks were distributed and overviews were

Camper

Jump into comfort with these two great camp moccasins. Soft leather uppers on a flexible comfort sole.

Lt. brown color. Sizes 6-9 Narrow,

5 to 10 Medium.

Rangerly

September is Shoe Month at Brody

A Water Pistol Is His Alarm Clock

By Abigail Van Buren

* 1983 by UniverMi Press Syndicste

DEAR ABBY: After reading the letter signed Mornings Are Murder from the wife who couldnt drag her husband out of bed, I had to let you know how 1 solved the same problem.

For months my husband would go back to sleep after I had awakened him, then hed get mad at me because I didnt get him up again in time for work. So heres what I did; I shot him right between the eyes! No, not with a real gun they make too much noise; besides, it would get my bedspread all bloody. I used a water pistol, confiscated from my young son.

Just one squirt usually did the trick. Sometimes he would cover his head with a pillow, but since he sleeps in the nude, finding another target area was no problem. He never gets angry about being shot he just wakes up laughing. Perhaps you could pass this along.

My name is Edna, but sign me ...

PISTOL PACKIN MAMA, GRETNA, LA.

DEAR ABBY: This is the second marriage for both of us, and I havent the courage to face my family and friends and admit that it was a mistake. I feel like Im just a cook, housekeeper and sex partner whenever my husband is in the mood. I am starved for sonr.e real affection. All he wants is a five-minute sex affair with no hugging, kissing or sweet words. When we first met he was very passionate, and insisted on going all the way on our second date. I should have known he wasnt a real lover that all he wanted was sex.

I am 74 and he is 80, and weve been married for five years. I had been a widow for three years, and he had recently lost his wife before he gave me the grand rush.

I dont need his money and he doesnt need mine our lawyers drew up a prenuptial agreement. We appear to be an ideal couple. If we were to divorce, our children wquld be shocked and our pastor would be surprised. Dont recommend a marriage counselor, Abby. This man would never listen to anybody. I just know that I would be so much happier if I didnt have to keep putting on a front. What should I do?

MADE A MISTAKE

DEAR MADE: All the worlds a stage, and this is no dress rehearsal, so dont worry about what your friends, family or pastor will say. Tell your husband where he has disappointed you. If he wants a chance to win you by changing his ways, give him a limited probation period. And if he doesnt shape up ship him out. Life is too short.

DEAR ABBY: Id like to correct Old Retired Banker From Dallas, who objected to the phrase safety deposit box on the grounds that nouns dont modify nouns. In countless phrases such as alarm clock, mountain goat, baseball bat and weather report, nouns do act as modifiers. Imagine saying "alarming clock, mountainous goat, baseballish bat or weathery report.

If our retired banker insists on saying safe deposit box, let him also shave with a safe razor, fasten diapers with safe pins and wear a safe belt aboard an airliner.

Furthermore, if safety cannot modify deposit, how can deposit (also a noun) modify box? Should we call it a safe depositing box? He may if he chooses, but he will not be speaking English.

LAURENCE SHATKIN, PRINCETON, N.J.

DEAR LAURENCE: Hooray for our side! As Waldo Cohen from Oak Ridge, Tenn., pointed out: The English language is replete with nouns serving as adjectives. Is not Old Retired Banker a letter writer, and are you not a newspaper columnist?

For Abbys updated, revised and expanded booklet, How to Be Popular for people of all ages send $2, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

The teddy bear is believed to have been inspired by President Theodore (Teddy) Roosevelt, who once refused to shoot a young brown bear.

WhiteWestingho^

Appliances

New and Used

White Weitinghouse

SENIOR SPECIALS

NEW YORK (AP) - Reduced air fares and special travel package deals are bringing remote parts of the world within reach of 23 million Americans.

Senior citizen discounts are now available for in-country travel throughout Europe. These discounts go into effect for travelers ranging in ae.^ from 60 to 67 and older. In' many cases they provide substantial savings of as much as 35 percent to 50 percent.

According to a new book, Europe 83, by Steve^ Birnbaum, Switzerland provides the most benefits for the older traveler - with half-fare transportation on rail, motorcoaches and lake steamers and reduced rates at hundreds of hotels.

given by committee chairman.

The annual meeting of District 12 will be held in Ahoskie Oct. 19 and a flower arrangement workshop will be conducted by Mrs. Teg Steig at the Oct. 21 meeting. The club wiJl participate in a charity bazaar at Carolina East Mall Oct. 29.

Potted plants, which decorated luncheon tables, were given to members by hostesses, Mrs. Howard Burns, Mrs. R.A, Davis and Laura Haskins.

Birth

Cratt

Born to* Mr. and Mrs. James Alton Cratt, Williamston, a son, Matthew Justin, on Sept. 14, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Now Open Saturdays! 10 4 P.M.

2 More Workshops

Sat.. Sept. 24th 1:30-3:30 iPiUouj cMa^ing Mon., Sept. 26th 1:30 3:30

ciRaffU

$5.00 Fee For Both Workshops

Qulh & Gilt Shop Weekdays 10-5: Sat.

805 S. Evans . Across From Tfc Museum Oi ^ 758-43fcT

I fOUDij

it at

Downtown

I was shopping (jowntown at Brodys just the other day, and saw lots of fashion clothes I really love at TERRIFIC Prices!

Tell us all about it! You know how we love to shop!

Well, ladies, if you are looking for style & fashion, Brodys Downtown is the place to go! Anne Klein II is in Greenville and is what everyone is talking about! It is a new line, and Brodys Downtown is one of only 200 stores in the country that has it! It nnust be one of the most exciting groups Ive seen! Now we can be dressed in the smartest fashions designed by one of the worlds most famous designers: Anne Klein, an opportunity to really take advantage of!

A dress is always a good investment, and there seems to be much emphasis on career dresses today. I bought a very good-looking dress by Leslie Fay, but the decision was hard to make with other dresses by R & K, Henry Lee, Executive Dress, Patty ONeil, Etc. Its fun just to browse through the new dresses that are arriving daily downtown and to take your time to try them on. The sales people can be so helpful in helping to pick the right one for you!

\

Dont forget about the suit, girls! We are finally moving into the mans world of business and success and the look of a well-.tailored suit cannot be matched! The selection at Brodys is fantastic, with styles to fit into everyones lifestyle and budget. If its a little fashion you want, this Suits Galore is the one, with sizes up to 18! the basic looks of Kirkland Hall and Mort Schrader are for everyone! You can look professional as well as feminine in a suit from Brodys Downtown.

Its time to pick a fall coat, and there is no other place to go! The selection at Brodys has always been good, but this year, its at its best! Ive never seen such styling and designs! The one I picked is a full-length wool by Al in red and black, one of the falls smartest color combination. (I want to mention that my choice is the countrys most popular coat this year. You should see it! It also comes in beige & cocoa, grey and black.) The down and poly-filled coats in short and long lengths are going to be easy to wear and the colors are so good-looking! Mauve, plum, red, silver, etc. I also saw some high fashioned coats that are simply gorgeous!

A last bit of advice, ladies... dont forget about textured and colored hosiery for fall. Hanes Coloralls and Oleg Cassini Thoroughbreds are the perfect finishing touch for the "finished look youve read so much about. A very smart, pulled together look is yours for fall! The sales clerks at downtown Brodys are the most helpful and can put you into the outfit you need. Its always a pleasure to shop in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere. See you at Downtown Brodys!

Eastern

Electrolysis

133 OAKMONT DRIVE. SUITE 6 PHONE 756.4034. GREENVILLE. NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL

CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST

Sales and Service

Smith Electric Company

Since 1918 415 Evans Street Mall

Mon.-Fri. 8-5

752-2114

On Sale Now At

Downtown Pitt Plaza





Couple Weds In Recent Ceremony

At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Gjoristeen Hooks and William Thomas Wilkes were united in marriage in a double ring ceremony Sept. 9 at 6 p.m. The ceremony was held on the front lawn of the home of Mrs. Annie L. Langley. The Rev. David Godley officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Roger Hooks of Greenville. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Novella Peterson and John W. Wilkes Sr. of Greenville.

The bride, given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father, wore a street length white dress that featured a pleated front overlay with long sleeves. She carried a bouquet of yellow and white daisies and babys breath tied with white and yellow streamers.

Pamela Randolph of Greenville, niece of the bridegroom, was the honor attendant. Ocalas Randolph of Greenville, brother of the bridegroom, was best man.

The wedding was directed by Mrs. Langley and Shirley M. Williams of Greenville.

WMim

Mrs. William Thomas Wilkes

A reception was held at Green Springs Park.

After a wedding trip to unannounced points the couple will live in Greenville.

Newman Born to Mr. and Mrs. James Hurlbert Newman, Ayden, a son, Seth Walker, on Sept. 15, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Davis

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Mack Davis Sr., Farmville, a son, Kelvin Marcel, on Sept. 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Lloyd

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robby Dean Lloyd, Route 4, Greenville, a daughter, Robin Michelle, on Sept. 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Gaskins Born to Mr. and Mrs. Barry Griffin Gaskins, Win-terville, a son, Simon Page, on Sept. 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Durham

Born to Mr. and Mrs. David Earl Durham, Robersonville, a daughter, LaTeah Chenelle, on Sept. 17, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Hopkins

Born lo Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edwards Hopkins, Conetoe, a daughter, Clarissa Jean, on Sept. 17, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Berry

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy James Berry, 304-A Azalea Gardens, a daughter, Shamia Royelle, on Sept. 17,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital. "Mrs. Berry is the former Daphne Moore of Greenville.

When I entertain, I do it with all the charm of a charging rhino.

I do not have time for superfluous conversation like hello and goodbye. The only time I mingle with my guests is when one wanders into the kitchen looking for the bathroom. And my dinner partner remembers me as a blur.

I honestly dont know how other women do it. I do everything they do. Set the table the day before. Chop all morning. Have the dessert in the freezer. The coffee pot ready to plug in. The main casserole draped in foil. The moment the doorbell rings announcing the arrival of the first couple, I panic.

A friend once told me the first recollection she had of meeting me was when she and her husband were invited to our house for dinner. The door swung open and as she extended her hand to me, I turned to my husband and said, Check the hall bath. Make sure the boys flushed!

The problem is I am reluctant to let people see how we really live. Its not easy being a phony. I want them to think that we always have fresh flowers from the florist on the dining room table. One afternoon, I picked a bouquet from the yard that made a breathtaking centerpiece. By the time the guests sat down to dinner the blossoms had tightened up into little knobs that looked like bait.

What kind of flowers are they? asked one of the guests.

Theyre African daisies, I said. However, in Africa, they

eat before the sun goes down.

I want them to think we always serve soup from a tureen even though the price tag glows like it had a light over it.

I want them to think I always cook in something long and flowing even if it has a tomato seed lodged in the cleavage and a hot mitt tucked in the belt.

I know a lot of women who are as insecure as I am about entertaining, were the women who put off having a few friends in until we get the sofa covered, the kids are married, the kitchen has new wallpaper, the toilet stops running, the big tree in the front yard blooms,^oysters are in season, the annual reports are out at the office, we get our tax refund, weve seen the last of the roaches, or we get 12 iced tea glasses that match.

My husband said the other day, When are we going to have some people in for dinner?

Im working on a big party with a theme and the timing has to be right, I said.

Whats the occasion? he asked.

Haileys Comet in May 1986.

'I

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When Josephs has finished | cieaning, oiiing, and puiiing _

preventive maintenance on a

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C  Tnursday September 22. 1983    3

customer-owned IBM typewriter, I they say...    H

No one has taken it apart like that to clean it!    

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mmmmmmmmm

Goats milk is naturally homogenized.

Removable Braces

for Adults & Children

Kenneth Perkins DeD.S. P.A.

Family & General Dentistry

563 Evans Street    Main    Street

Greenville, N.C.    Vanceboro,    N.C.

752-5126    244-1179

NANTUCKET DIRECT CHANTS STORE

NANTUCKET is pleased to announce the GRAND OPENING of its Direct Merchants Store GIVING YOU the same great savings offered at our warehouse sales.

OPENING Friday, September 23rd

Monday thru Saturday 9:30-5:30 Corner Evans & 5th Street Greenville, N.C.

DIRECT MERCHANT

Evans Street Mall

757-0337

greenville

WILLIAM C. WOOD, SPECIALIST PEWTER DESIGNER FOR ONEIDA, LTD. SILVERSMITHS WILL BE DEMONSTRATING PEWTER SPINNING AT BELK TYLER, GREENVILLE ON

Friday September 23 From 10: AM until 2:00 PM

and

.    4:00    PM    until    8:00    PM

and    ,

Saturday September 24 From 10:00 AM until 2:00 PM

Pewter spinning is an art that was developed with the introduction of Britannia Metal around the year 1825. Prior to this time, all pewter was cast of an alloy that contained varying degrees of lead. Britannia Metal, a harder, lead-free alloy annendable to spinning, made it possible to produce lighter, completely safe pewter goods in a greater variety of shapes.

In the spinning process, the craftsman places a pewter disc on the lathe and carefully shapes it with special forming tools. Great skill is required to transform the shapeless pewter disc into graceful, useful household objects. Spun pewter goods made it possible for many more people to enjoy the rich, warm look of this metal. Although the use of pewter declined after 1850 with the introduction of inexpensive chinaware, the remarkable intrinsic beauty of pewter assured its recent resurgence in popularity.

Today, Oneida Ltd. manufactures an outstanding collection of pewter inspired by the classic, uncluttered lines of the works of the 18th century master craftsmen of the Hudson Valley area. Each piece bears the Hudson Valley touchmark, a symbol of pride in craftsmanship and design. A former mechanical engineer with Oneida Silversmiths, Mr. Wood is now combining his skills in mechanics with his talent in sculpturing as an apprentice in the pewter design program.

and

4:00 PM until 6:00 PM

ONEIDA

IhesiKervuhe f)ur s^Urrsml^h^ mark .>ltii,.clkiivv

UNDER $15.00

A.    7/2 Scroll Candy Dish .....$20    00

B    Chippendale'- Compote  20    00

C. 6 Paul Revere Bowl ....... 25.00

D    Bell Trivet ............. 19    00

E,    Salt & Pepper Set.......... 22    50

UNDER $20.00

A 12 Chippendale Tray B 10 Chippendale Bowl C Party Set D Relish Dish

E 3^8 Console Candlesticks

Reg $30 00 28 00 25 00 30 00 25 00

UNDER $25.00

Reg

A,    ^2W^ Pierced Serving Tray..    37.50

B    15 Round Tray............$45.00

C.    10" Paul Revere Bowl...... 45 00

D.    Butler Dish............... 33.50

E.    11 Vi" Fluted Serving Dish    ...    40.00

UNDER $30.00

A. 13 Gallery Tray .

B. 9 Hostess Bowl

C. Buffet Caddy

D. 14" Oblong Tray .

E. 0" Candlesticks. Pair

Reg SALE $55.00 $29.88

40.00

40.00 4500 42.50

27.88

26.88

27.88

28.88

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





Ediforials

Evidence Being Seen

Gradually some evidence of the construction of the new U.S. 264 freeway from Greenville to Wilson is being seen.

Contracts for the first portion of the work,including the new bypass of Farmville, have been let. The new highway will be dual laned and from Greenville to Farmville it will follow a straighter route than that of the present U.S. 264 which runs by way of Ballards Cross Roads.

The development of the highway is exciting to those of us who make trips to Raleigh and west... and that is most of us at one time or another. It is also exciting to leaders who are concerned with industrial and business development. It is well known that adequate highways are essential to attracting new industries.

Travelers from Farmville, Greenville and points east are already aware of what the new highway can mean since a freeway has already been constructed from Wilson to a point east of Raleigh. The contrast between that section and the old U.S. 264 east of Wilson is most evident.

We trust additional sections of the freeway from Wilson to Greenville will be put out for bids without delay and in an acceptable time the freeway will be in full use. The completion date will be a great day for eastern North Carolina.

Improvement Needed

The state of education in the nation and North Carolina in particular is constantly being debated.

The National Commission on Excellence in Education warned of a rising tide of mediocrity.

A spokesman for Gov. Hunts office, however, said North Carolinas public education is among the best. Were way ahead of most other states, Mrs. Betty Owen, a Hunt education advisor, said.

She acknowleged, however, that the public education system could be better. That is the key. Certainly there are many areas where improvement can be made in the education of our young people and we must strive for superior schools.

James Kilpatrick

Writing Poetry Is No Easy Task

SwlS?^

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Political Cowboys

WASHINGTO.N - A political ritual of no small significance is scheduled to take place this weekend in nearby Landover. Md.: The president, his Cabinet and much of official Washington will attend a rodeo.

On Saturday afternoon, courtesy of the Pro-Rodeo Cowboy Association, the president and friends will witness a special exhibition of bull-riding, steer-wrestling and barrel-racing not often seen in these parts. For kicks. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige. a Pro-Rodeo Cowboy himself, will even mount up for a special team-roping event*

While a few hours of rough-and-ready recreation may seem an innocent diversion, it brings to mind an important lesson for students of political culture: One can't go too far in electoral politics without a bit of that 'ol cowboy spirit.

This theory rests not on our most recent president's habit of donning tooled boots and a crusty denim jacket. Instead, it derives from a hunch that, more than a century after the cowboys passing, the cowboy myth all but defines our notion of leadership.

Time was when cowboys held a place in society only slightly higher than that accorded to blacks and women. First sighted in South Texas around 1860, cowpunchers shepherded cattle north to railheads in Kansas for about $1 a day. They never carried guns, and rarely owned horses. They performed monotonous tasks on the trail and usually worked as dishwashers or bartenders in the off seasons. Nearly half of all cowboys were black or Mexican; many had to retire prematurely because of malnutrition-related illnesses.

These disillusioning truths are the discoveries of two Library of Congress historians. Lonn Taylor and In-

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grid Maar. Authors of a new book, The American Cowboy." Taylor and Maar say that cowboys were really just pawns in a latter-day multinational game of beef and profit. Hired to rustle other firms' cattle, many were abandoned upon arrest.

How then, did a distinctly questionable character become a national hero of epic proportion? Maar and Taylor say that urbanization, industrialization and immigration of the late 19th century led many Americans to yearn for a simpler America (sound familiar?). Not surprisingly. plenty of myth-makers were happy to oblige.

Owen Wister of Philadelphia was a big help. His 192 book The Virginian" was an immediate hit and eventually transposed for stage, screen and television. The books nameless hero was a slim, young giant, more beautiful than pictures," whose sense of honor and many daring feats in the name of God, country and Woman were unsurpassed.

Buffalo Bill Cody (and proprietors of some 50 other imitation wild West shows) transformed the cowboy from laborer to entertainer and gave way to such cool hands as Tom Mix and will Rogers. (Later, Hollywood would come of age via this simple formula, as would Ronald Reagan in such films as The Santa Fe Trail.) Dime novels and illustrated magazines further chronicled the cowboys lifestyle and gave young Americans something to dream about. Wrote Larry Chittenden, the prairie poet";

He is loyal as steel, but demands a square deal And he hates and despises a coward

Yet the cowboy youll find unto woman is kind Though hell fight till by death overpowered.

It was only a matter of time before politicians cashed in on the cowboys political currency. Despite his swank Long Island roots, Theodore Roosevelt positioned himself as an outdoorsmans politician, and regularly ventured west for trail rides and hunting trips. He organized the cowboy cavalry, known as the Rough Riders, and was later called the Cowboy President. In less than 40 years the cowboy had completed the journey from rowdy to national leader.

The image has plagued us ever since. Calvin Coolidge filled his closet with Western-style duds; Eisenhower and LBJ each preferred his farm or ranch to the White House. Even German-born Henry Kissinger has said that he regards himself as a cowboy ... alone astride his horse, who packs a gun but doesnt like to use it. And everybody knows that John Glenn is a space cowboy.

Perhaps thats why Saturdays pilgrimage to the rodeo strikes us as a matter of political necessity. If voters believe that anyone who wears jeans deserves Wranglers label of one tough customer, we may be seeing a lot more denim before the long campaign is finished.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.    ^

A letter came the other day, bearing the signature of a woman. I inferred from the handwriting that she probably is a very young woman. She wanted my opinion she emphasized that she wanted my honest opinion of her poetry, and she enclosed several samples for inspection. This was a stanza from Missing You.

Youre my friend/one of the best/Youre nice and kind/and better than the rest.

The other samples were perhaps not so artistically composed. My honest opinion is that (1) by no stretch of the imagination could these lines be termed poetry; (2) these quatrains are at best verse; and (3) even as verse, they are dreadful. Yet I applaud the young womans spunk in trying her hand at a rhymed and metrical composition. At her tender age 12 or 13, maybe? she has hit upon one of the best of

all disciplines for a writer.

I have told this tale before, but tell it again. Some years ago I was invited to lecture at a Southern school of journalism. I invited the students of editorial writing to send me a sample editorial, and also to write a sonnet on the love affair of Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Only five students, as I recall, took up the challenge to write a sonnet; the others begged off. Four of the efforts were awful, but the fifth was a little jewel. It was the work of a young woman who had her rhyme scheme right and her iambic feet all in step. I made a silent guess that her accompanying editorial would reflect her talent, and so it turned out. Her editorial was a crackerjack.

Even the writing of doggerel teaches us a few tricks of compression and some uses of cadence. Young writers will grow up to be good writers or at least better writers than they otherwise might

have been if they will try their hand at quatrains in the fashion of Housman, or narrative verse in the fashion of Service, or sonnets or limericks or rondeaux, or anything that has a defined structure of rhyme and meter. Try blank verse if you must, but free verse, no. It was Robert Frost who said that writii^ free verse is like playing, tennis without a net.

I have written some dreadful verse myself, and turned out some marshmallow sonnets of a terrible gooiness, but I know my early essays into prosody have helped my later essays in prose. My young friend in Ohio has a long way to go, but she gets an A for Effort.

Dark days at The Miami Herald; On Sept. 5, this cheerful headline: Those Drawing a Paycheck on Labor Day are Greatful. On Aug. 31, over a story about the tearing down of a building in Lake Worth: Lake

Worth Orders One Building Be Raised. Well, we all have our bad daze.

Verb of the week, invented by William F. Buckley Jr. to anachronize. He had written a column about the downed Korean airliner on Sept. 2 for release Sept. 8. It is possible, he remindea his editors, that events over the weekend ... would anachronize it. I cant find anachronize in any dictionary, but as hostile as I am to most of these ize formations, this one seems useful.

Blunder of the week, from Nicholas Ruwe, chief of staff to former President Nixon. He sent a Mailgram to those who had received advance copies of Nixons new book, Real Peace, saying that by error the copywrite notice was inadvertently omitted. Please be advised, he said, that the work is a copywrited work and as such is protected under the copywrite laws of the United States. Copyright on!

Paul O'Connor

Guidelines. Eliminate Most Areas

RALEIGH - Reid Meredith thought he had a pretty good idea. Through the Scotthurst Foundation and the Association of Retarded Citizens (ARC), he wanted to build a group home for five mentally retarded adults a few miles outside of Thomasville in Davidson County.

The house wouldnt have been placed in an established neighborhood and, in that respect, Meredith saw an advantage for his home. In many communities, such homes are not welcome. Neighbors complain that they will be physically and financially endangered. Here, Meredith felt he was far enough away from other area residents that they wouldnt mind. Some had said as much.

Also, putting a home for the mentally retarded in a rural area makes sense when the people wholl be living in that home are from rural areas. Thered be plenty of room to take walks and plant a garden.

The federal government didnt like Merediths idea and in the process they shocked state officials with some blatent prejudices against the establishment of such homes in any rural area. In a predominantly rural state, the federal guidelines essentially eliminate most of North Carolina from a program for building group homes for the mentally retarded.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development finances construe^ tion of intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded, Meredith sought such a loan to build its group home but was turned down by HUDs Greensboro office.

Dan McCandless, HUDs chief for multi-family housing, says Merediths project was rejected because it was not only rural, it was remote. He and Meredith could probably get into a long argument over whether the land and road to it were suitble for such a project. But even if the topography of Merediths site was perfect, it would have been rejected because it was rural.

McCandless wrote to Meredith saying HUD wouldnt place such a home too far from the necessities and conveniences of life. He said HUD doesnt finance projects where there are neither sewer lines nor municifwl water. In an interview, he said the idea behind the homes is to place the mentally retarded in communities and let them work in that community. He said that from a financial standpoint, HUD doesnt lik^ septic tanks and wells because they can lead to unexpected expenses and it doesnt like houses in really remote areas because they are difficult to resell in caseJohn Cunniff

of default.

Dr. Sara Morrow, state secretary of human resurces, sees an anti-rural bias in those regulations. She thinks rural areas would be ideal for the location of these homes and raised the issue at a recent cabinet meeting with Gov. Jim Hunt. I feel, and the governor feels, that (because) there is so much resistance to getting these placed in neighborhoods because people are worried that it will depreciate the value of their property and present a risk to their family and because theres plenty of (rural) places for good ICFMRs ... we dont see why rural areas create such a problem.

McCandless says theres no bias against rural sites. They simply have to have municipal water, sewer lines and meet other standards. DHR officials beg to differ. They say HUD offices around the country show a strong bias against rural sites for these homes.

In the end, state officials think, the mentally retarded will lose. Meredith was trying to put some of these people on farms where lifes not so bad. Theyd be shucking corn and raising tomatoes. In the city homes, you see them come home at night from a sheltered workshop and they sit around watching TV, one state official said.Public Forum

Numbers Don't Add Up Sometimes

NEW YORK (AP) What do you do when two and two equals three, or seven or even ll, except contemplate the mystery - and maybe wait for a revision?

In this day of instant, computer-derived numbers, it seems a lot of statistics dont add up, which isnt at all the way its supposed to be in a world already sufficiently confusing.

You may recall that when big com-)uters were first employed to track the )illions of pieces of data that government uses to build a picture of the economy, it was thought that numbers were hard things that wouldnt bend.

Maybe they dont, but something happens to them that cant always be explained easily, and the consequences add up to more than a mere entertaining riddle. Decisions, big fast ones, are made on the basis of numbers.

There are some obvious explanations. Early reports of retail sales, for examine, are subject to revision because of additional data. And data on jobs are subject to seasonal adjustments by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Such things are well understood, however.

Those who follow retailsales know that

f

one months rise may occur only because the rate for the previous month was simultaneously revised lower.

And those who follow job statistics know that the number of people actually employed can fall, while the seasonally adjusted jobless rate also falls. That is, they know the job picture can weaken while the statistic strengthens.

Rather than dwell upon these eccentricities, which are well understood by professionals, just remember what statistician Albert Sindlinger likes to say: that seasonally adjusted. Lake Erie never freezes over.

But what do you do, other than scratch your head, when you are presented with these statistics, as you were during the past month?

-An 8.4 percent rise in August housing starts to the highest level in nearly five years, despite a simultaneous rise iii mortgage rates that almost everyone had concluded would bring homebuilding to its knees.

-A sharp increase in the amount of automobile credit outstanding in August at the same time that auto sales declined.

The ubiquitous and often anonymous "analysts, who seem to be quoted all the time these davs, are dwlging in

terviews as they seek to determine what to make of these apparently conflicting bits of information.

. There is, however, a type of statistics watcher who is accustomed to conflicts and mysteries and who, nevertheless, remains on the battle front. He is the Fed Watcher, the person who each week awaits the Federal Reserve report on the nations money supply, hoping to find in the numbers some guidance to the economys direction over the weeks to follow.

That he receives conflicting reports never seems to daunt him, nor does it discourage the millions of people who avidly follow the reports on whether Ml and other symbols of money in circulation have risen or fallen.

Its all done in an attempt to understand - to create order where no order^can otherwise be discerned.

But when you consider that sometimes the numerical symbols mi^t be wrong, and that some of them will be revised or adjusted, and that some of them also are derived from subjective assumptions, you are entitled to wonder.

To wonder, for example, if the numbers really clarify, or if, perhaps, they might not add to ^ confusion.

To the editor:

Good music, regardless of type, played by a good band is worth listening to, especially if its our National Anthem, performed by the incomparable East Carolina University Marching Band.

Therefore, I am puzzled when people continue walking, talking, yelling, laughing and just plain raising sand at ball games, when the best band Ive ever heard, plays the best rendition of a song that belongs to all of us.

Jerry Phillips Simpson

Letters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves the right to cut longer letters.

Elisha DouglassStrength ForToday

The poet, Irene Carlisle, has | written:    

Somehow an old road never quite goes back to wilderness or woods or meadow grass.

When once men made a highway through a forest or wilderness, that highway will forever be discernible. It was a mystery for generations how the ancient Druids erected their temple of hugh stones in Britain called Stonehedge. But when airplanes came into existence, the tracks over which these ancient worshippers had dragged the huge rocks were clearly visible from the air.

You and I were put into the world to blaze new highways.

They may not be wide, four-lane roads; maybe only narrow little paths. But they will be ours. Perhaps as far as we personlly are concerned, the most important roads we make are those which take the form of our habits good and bad. First a little pathway, then a well-marked road. And, in this connection, Somehow an old road never quite goes back. ^





Testimony...

(Continued from Page 1) was asked to represent' : Parker at an extradition ' hearing three days after Parker s arrest.

Clash said he was told that

Parker claimed to have been

beaten when taken into custody and he was terrified to death.

"I told him (Parker) I would do what I could to protect him from further assaults.

Later Wednesday, Parker I took the stand and said both - Move and Pascasio kicked 1 and punched him and both pointed their weapons at him and threatened to blow his brains out. He said that at times, they threatened to hang him, throw him out the window, place his hand in a tMster oven, and connect him to an electric socket to simulate a heart attack.

Parker said it was b^ause of the abuse and threats that he hand wrote the two confessions, which he said were dictated by officers.

Marie Watts, a nurse at the Essex County Jail, said Parker mentioned nothing about being beaten or needing medical attention when given a medical check.

George McGrath, an investigator with the Essex County prosecutors office said Parker told him the statements were beaten from him, but he said later investigation made by Essex officers found no basis to the allegations.

Parker testified that he did not tell the nurse he was beaten because he didnt know he had any injuries as he had not looked into a mirror.

The motive for the slayings, according to confession statements read at the hearing, was Thorbs 1980 Cadillac and money. But only $35 in cash and a diamond ring were taken from the bodies of the two men.

In his statement, Parker said we thought he (Thorbs) would have as much as $150.

Statements read to the court during the absence of the jury said that codefendant Carolyn Pippins,

20, of Route 4, Greenville, knew of the planned slaying of Thorbs at his Grifton home and that she drove Parker there.

The plan had been, according to the confession, to kill and rob Thorbs and burn

bis home. But the fH^nce d Herring there prompted Parker to have the two drive him to a point near Ms. Pippins home near the Pitt-Greenville Airport, where he shot both men, the Parker statement said.

Later, according to the confession, Parker got Ms. Pippins to help dispose of the bodies by throwing them into the Tar River.

Ms. Pippins is charged with two counts of murder and one count of armed robbery in connection with the case.

Sheriffs officers began a search for Thorbs and Herring after information from Ms. Pippins said the two men had been murdered and their bodies dumped into the river.

No Settlement For Symphony

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Negotiators for the North Carolina Symphony and its musicians failed to reach a settlement on a new contract Wednesday.

Symphony Director Thomas H. McGuire and musician representative Patricia W. Banko declined to comment on the issues still separating the two sides after seven months of bargaining.

The negotiations have led to the cancellation of several performances throughout the state, including two this week.

No more talks are scheduled this week, but negotiators said informal discussions could be held. They said they are still optimistic a settlement can be reached.

'Threw A Fit' Over Computer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)-Richard Rambeaut, 26, of Johnston County has been charged with damage to public property after punching a computer terminal at the Wake County Courthouse.

We do have people who get irritated with the computers, said Barbara H. Mobley, assistant to the Clerk of Superior Court. But this is the lirst time we ever had somebody throw a fit like that.

(CoBtfaiuedfrom Pagel) but I believe I was told the suspension was for 30 days. She said there was no discussion about what her duties would be when she returned to work at the end of the suspension.

Mrs. Trought said she did not know if the action was based on the discord voiced in the community for the past several weeks over changes in the utilization of nursing personnel at the hospital.

Saying she was not provided with specifics, Mrs. Trou^t said Richardson told her the action was based on her (lack of) credibility with the medical staff, the board of trustees and other groups.

She noted that if the suspension was based around the changes (in staffing patterns), they were changes I perceived he (Richardson) approved of and recommended me to make.

Mrs. Trought said she attended the hospital board meeting Tuesday night as

usual, but I was asked to leave the board meeting when they wait into executive session to discuss a

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N_C_

Jhursday September 22 1983 5

She said that lata*, Brown told her that the situation had been discussed by the board, but the board made nodecisiim.

Mrs. Trought said Its unclear to me what my rights are within the situation. We have very strong grievance procedures for employees, which Ive always supported. But she said it is less clear when you get to the administrative level.

For that reason^ Mrs. Trought said, she has hired a Chapel Hill attorney to represent her.

Harry Leslie, chairman of the hospitals board of trustees confirmed this morning that questions concerning Mrs. Trought were discussed by the board Tuesday night, but said no actioi was taken. He declined to say what the discussions involved.

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6 The Dait Retlectpr. Greenville N C

Thursday. September 22,1983

Marcos Is Threatening Martial Law's Return

BvMIGlELC.SL.AREZ Associated Press Writer M.A.MLA. Philippines (AP) - President Ferdinand E. Marcos today raised the threat of reimposing martial law and ordered his troops to shoot if necessary to counter anti-government rioting that left 11 dead and 200 wounded.

But he said he was not thinking of reimposing martial la Wright now."

The street violence Wednesday - exactly one month after the assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino - was the bloodiest in Marcos' 18-year rule.

"I warn the opposition -do not force my hand, do not compel me to extremes that you already know of," Marcos said in a nationally televised address today. The "extremes" were an apparent reference to the imposition of martial law in 1972.

Although Marcos lifted martial law in 1980. strict controls remain.

He said an order he had given to the military to observe "maximum tolerance" with demonstrators, including banning anti-riot troops from carrying guns, was being reversed.

"Henceforth, we will be firm," Marcos said. "... now that the opposition radicals and activists have destroyed.

maimed, killed. I am now in the process of consulting with the military establishment regarding this policy. We may have to return the arms of our military personnel and Im ordering them to defend themselves with these guns. In a followup TV interview with CBS-News, Marcos was asked if he would try to reimpose martial law. "No, Im not thinking of that right now, he answered. What Im thinking of is the radicals have attempted to exploit and manipulate the peaceful rallies, here in Manila. There are no rallies, demonstrations of any incidents anywhere else."

Asked what might cause him to reimpose martial law, Marcos said, A rebellion, which I dont see at all. We have only a few hardcore radicals trying to convert a peaceful rally into some kind of violent demonstration. I don't see reason for imposing martial law."

It was the slaying of Aquino Aug. 21 as he returned from three years of self-imposed U.S. exile that spurred the series of antigovernment demonstrations in Manila and other Filipino cities.

Aquinos widow. Corazon, who led the main rally

Wednesday in an oath to freedom, independence and democracy, decried the violence.

I sincerely hope no more of these tragic occurrences will take place, she said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

Manila Archbishop Jaime L. Sin criticized the Marcos government for what he said are its Nazi-like practices and also faulted demonstrators for resorting to violence.

As though by magic, all the peaceful intentions of the demonstrators disappeared ..., Sin said in an address today at a local civic club.

Sin, the nations only Roman Catholic cardinal, referred without elaboration to government adherence to practices that bring back memories of Mr. Goebbels of Nazi Germany and said it must share the blame.

Marcos, meanwhile, in his television appearance here, said. I might at this time announce that the gov

ernment holds the opposition and its leaders responsible for the unfOTtunate incidents last night and early this morning.

He then banned civilians from carrying guns outside their homes and said those caught defying the order would be prosecuted.

Marcos said 59 of the injured were government anti-riot personnel and included Brig. Gen. Tomas Dumpit. Marcos said Dumpit was in critical condition after being hit by shrapnel from a grenade.

About 1,000 demonstrators marched to the presidential palace Wednesday after the main rally by an estimated 500,000 people at the post office. Police withdrew behind three buses blocking a street to the palace, then charged the demonstrators after they burned the buses and set off explosives.

Wednesdays rallies, which spread to other major Philippine cities, were held to mark what the opposition called a Day of National Sorrow one month after the Aquino slaying. It also was the nth anniversary of Marcos declaration of martial law,'which lasted eight years - a day the government celebrates as Thanksgiving Day.

Explosions...

((ontinuedlrom Pagel)

violations of state laws on chemical handling.

"I was lying in the bed and 1 heard something go kaboom,"' said Anthony Wallace, 21, who said he was awakened at his home about two miles from the plan. "I ran out here, looked up at the plant and saw barrels on fire."

A plant employee who asked not to be identified said employees "heard a big boom, then we were told to leave the plant."

"We didn't know what was going on." she said. "We were all scared and we could smell smoke. We got out of there in a hurry."

Police evacuated residents of a five-block area bordering downtown Main Street. All the residents were back home by Wednesday night.

Patty Morgan, supervisor at Rowan Memorial Hospital, said Samuel Howard, 42, and Michael Hill, 27, both of Salisbury, were admitted with second-degree burns. Ronnie Kesler. 29, of Salisbury was treated for cuts and Kenneth Kluttz. 38, of Salisbury was treated for first-degree burns.

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    Six Mishaps

Delay Vole in Cify's Traffic

ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP) - Elizabeth City of-fcials agreed Wednesday to delay the Oct. 11 municipal election pending U.S. Justice Department review of four annexations that some black residents say diluted black voting strength.

Attorneys representing the city and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People agreed in U.S. District Court in Ralei^ to postpone the election just before a three-judge panel was to hear arguments on whether the NAACP should be panted a preliminarv injunction blocking the election.

Under a consent agree-

ilayed indefinitely the city submits for U.S. Justice Department review the annexations approved by the city council in 1969,1973, 1974 and 1975.

The NAACP and the Pasquotank County Improvement Association filed suit in an attenipt to force the city to revamp its municipal elections. The suit seeks to change the council election from an at-large system to a

A bicycle rider was reported injured and an estimated $18,500 in property damage resulted from a series of six traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.

Officers said Susan Carol Hagmann of Greenville received a broken leg when the bicycle she was riding was involved in a collision with a car driven by Dennis Allen DeHaan of Cincinnati, Ohio, about 9:06 p.m. at the in-

ward system.

Although Elizabeth Citys population is 47 percent black, there is only one black on the eight-member council, and that member was appointed after the death of an elected member.

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tersection of Greenville BtHilevard and Red Banks Road.

Police said there were no lights on the bicycle and DeHaan did not see the bicycle as he made a left turn onto Greenville Boulevard.

Hubert Kermit Leggett of 2008 Fern Drive was charged with failing to stop for a stop sign following investigation of an 11:14 p.m. collision at

the intersection of Evans and 13th Streets.

Investigators said the Leggett car collided with a velcle driven by Michael Eddie Bennett of Route 2, Greenville, causing an estimated $2,500 damage to the Leggett car and $4,500 damage to the Bennett car.

A 7:20 p.m. collision at the intersection of Reade Circle and Cotanche Street involved a car driven by Steven Dail Harris of 114 Jarvis Hall and a car driven by Teresa Marie Simonowich of 1303B E. First St.

Police, who charged Harris with failing to stop for a red light, estimated damage at $2,000 to the Harris truck and

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

$1,800 to the Simonowich car.

Vehicles driven by Glwia Wilson Alford of 618E Hudson St., Gregory Lee Roberson of Route 1, Bethel, Owen Burney of Route 11, Greenville, and Dennis Harris of Route 5, Greenville, were involved in a 4:17 p.m. collision on Greene Street, 20 feet north of the First Street intersection, officers reported.

Damage was estimated at $1,500 to the Burney truck and $2,000 to the Harris car.

Police, who said no damage resulted to the Alford and Roberson cars, charged Harris with failing to reduce his speed enough to avoid a collision.

Cars driven by Artis Lee Whitford of 105 Briarwood Drive and Eva Lovelle Harrison of Winterville collided about 12:35 p.m. on Greenville Boulevard, 68 feet west of the Evans Street intersection, resulting in an estimated $2,000 damage to the Whitford car and $1,000 damage to the Harrison auto.

A 6:10 p.m. collision on Memorial Drive, 20 feet north of the Arlington Boulevard intersection in-

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Courts, Lawmen Brace For NewDWI Enforcement

By MARY A.NNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) - North Carolina court officials and law enforcement agents are bracing for what may be the ' biggest legal change in a decade - a driving while impaired law that takes effect Oct. 1.

Judges, magistrates, court clerks, police and Highway Patrol troopers are attending special classes on the law nacted earlier this year by the General Assembly.

This is the biggest educational project the Administrative >>!fice of the Courts has ever undertaken, said Franklin i'reeman, AOC director, who calls the new law perhaps the t'iggest legal change in 10 years.

The public is going to be looking at the judicial system ander a microscope. It is important we be as ready as we can." he said.

Meanwhile, the Department of Crime Control and Public M^ety is sending humireds of thousands of brochures about *(' law to colleges and universities.

The public still has no concept of how tough this law is," atorney General Rufus Edmisten said. They do not realize ^ do not want to contemplate the very serious provisions of 'nis law. They better realize if you're going to drink you better get your buddy to drive."

The Safe Roads Act will replace all drunken driving laws vith a single driving-while-impaired offense beginning Oct. 1. The law will:

- - Raise the drinking age from 18 to 19..

Eliminate plea bargaining.

- Automatically revoke a driver's license for 10 days for : efusing to take a blood-alcohol test.

Require judges to consider aggravating and mitigating ' (tors that determine one of five levels of punishment I :inging from at least 14 days in jail and a fine up to $2,000 to ! hours in jail, 24 hours of community service, a 30-day loss u driving privileges or a combination of the three.

- Impose a one-year license revocation for underage t'ople who try to buy alcoholic beverages, help someone else

'0 buy alcohol or try to use a fake identification to buy .ilcoholic beverages.

- Re.strict who can obtain limited driving privileges.

- Allow law-enforcement agencies to set up roadblocks to check for impaired drivers.

- Allow magistrates to hold impaired drivers until they are '^ober or until a sober adult takes responsibility for them.

- Require some people convicted of impaired driving while 'heir license is revoked for an earlier impaired driving offense to forfeit their vehicle.

Make sellers of alcoholic beverages liable for drinking-lelated damages caused by underage people to whom they -old alcohol.

The AOC and the Institute of Government have held eight da\ -long seminars across the state to explain the new law to al.'out 2.000 of the 2,500 court officials who will deal with it.

The major effect I see is that the law completely takes out retion," said Buncombe County prosecutor Ron Brown, head of the state district attorneys organization, "Because of I hat I tend to believe we will have a great increase in trials. There is no incentive to offer a defendant to plead guilty."

He said District Courts with 100 to 150 cases a day may not he able to stand- the added burden of 10 or 20 more .irunken-driving cases. Freeman, however, said he does not er.'see a long-lasting backlog of cases.

'.Viiile district attorneys say they may have more paperwork, some law enforcement officials are adopting new . methods to build drunken driving-casess

Greensboro police will videotai suspects performing sobriety tests immediately after their arrest. The tapes may be replayed in court.

Hickory Police Chief Floyd Lucas, president of the N.C. Chiefs of Police Association, said his officers have been experimenting with videotapes for two years.

He said lawyers often ask to see the tape before the case goes to trial and the tapes seldom are needed for a cwiviction in the courtroom.

Freeman said District Court judges will have to change their whole way of thinking about drunken-driving cases. After finding a person guilty under the new law, the judge must hold a detailed sentencing hearing to consider the aggravating and mitigating factors.

The chief District Court judges also have appointed community service coordinators to match convicted oninken drivers with agencies that need volunteer help. An estimated 50,000 people will do community service work under the law during the next year, say state officials.

The Division of Victim and Justice Services was established in the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety to train and guide workers in the community service prc^rams.

Anita Munns, an administrative officer in the division, said there are 55 coordinators across the state, at least one per judicial district. She said the uniform system will allow a driver convicted in Charlotte to perform community service in his hometown of Goldsboro, for example.

Freeman said there will be a great deal of added responsibility for magistrates, appointed officials who do everything from set bond to conduct marriages.

It is the magistrates who have authority to detain a person charged with driving while impaired and to revoke a drivers license.

"It is a very heavy decision for anybody to make, Freeman said. But they are very much aware of it, I think, and are intent on trying to strike the right balance.

Lewis White, Vance County chief ma^strate and president of the N.C. Magistrates Association, said the law will not be too complicated to administer once magistrates get used to the new forms.

"I hope the Legislature realizes how much responsibility weve got and makes sure were compensated for it, he said. Magistrates earn between $10,000 and $16,200 a year.

Under the new law, beer and wine vendors have more responsibility for damages in an accident caused by an underage person who was sold alcoholic beverages negligently,

The Alcoholic Board of Control licenses stores to sell beer and wine. Tom Zweigart, an ABC Commission hearing officer, said the agency is trying to prevent illegal sales before they take place.

He said ABC representatives have met with deans, dormitory counselors and fraternity advisors of private and public colleges and universities to explain the law,

"We are trying to administer the law in such a way that people understand what their responsibilities are, Zweigart said "It is our feeling that through preventive training measures we can avoid difficulties.

Russ Edmonston of the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety said his office has printed 500,000 summaries of the law and is sending them to colleges and high school drivers education teachers.

The higher drinking age, which will affect many college students, will give Alcohol Law Enforcement agents more possible violations to watch, said ALE Director Don Murray.

He said publicity surrounding passage of the law already has

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Lt. Col. J.F. Cardwell of the state Highway Patrol said that drunken driving arrests also have declined since e Legislature enacted the law but said no statistics have been compiled to illustrate the trend.

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RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -The Department of Natural Resources and Community Development has received a grant of $1.25 million to acquire land on the Currituck Outer Banks for the states, estuarine sanctuary system.

The states proposed sanctuary on Currituck covers about 750 acres of beach, marsh, islands and some 2,000 acres of surrounding water in the Currituck Sound, DNR Secretary Joe Grimsley said Wednesday.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced in August it plans to establish a new wildlife refuge on the Currituck Banks that includes some of the land within the states sanctuary site.

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U. S. Warships Shell Druse Batteries

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C_Thursday,    September    22.1983 g

ByFAROUKNASSAR

Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -U.S. warships shelled Druse batteries in the central mountains today and the Druse struck back. One rocket blew up the main ammunition dump of Italian peacekeepers, another wounded four French soldiers and a grenade wounded two more, military spokesmen said.

The Lebanese army, meanwhile, said it repulsed a new attack by the Syrian-backed Druse fighters on the strategic town of Souk el-Gharb. The army said 25 attackers were killed and seven Druse armored vehicles destroyed.

One Druse rocket struck a French position in west Beiruts Kaskas neighborhood on the edge of the French headquarters at the mid-city horse race

track, wounding four French soldiers. Two other Frenchmen were wounded in a grenade assault on a truck, according to a French spokesman who declined to be identified.

The U.S. and British contingents of the 5,400-man peacekeeping force said they were untouched by the bombardment.

Italian spokesman Capt. Corrado Cantatori said the Italian compound near Palestinian refugee camps came under rocket fire. He said at least two rockets struck an ammunition dump close to the Christian neighborhood of Hazmieh.

We lost almost all our stores, Cantatori said. He said no Italians were injured.

The latest American naval barrage was unleashed about 3 a.m. to silence mountaintop Druse batteries that had rained shells overnight

m.

SEARCH An anti-riot member of the Philippine armed forces carrying M-16 rifle searches a student on the road leading to the Presidential palace after a violent confrontation between youthful demonstrators and anti-riot police. Officials claim the police and soldiers do not carry any firearms, contrary to this picture. (AP Laserphoto)

around the presidential palace, the Defense Ministry and the nearby U.S. ambassadors residence east of Beirut, the state radio reported.

U.S. Embassy spokesman John Stewart said shells fell close but not in the compound at the ambassadors residence. Unlike the previous night, he said, there was no evacuation of the residence.

Nearly five hours later, the capital was shaken by thunderous blasts, and local radio stations said the citys Christian sector was under renewed bombardment from Druse positions in the Syrian-controlled Upper Metn mountains.

The Civil Defense Corps broadcast appeals for people to stay indoors as shells and rockets slammed into the Christian neighborhoods of Ashrafiyeh, Ein el-Rummaneh, Museum and Tayyouneh. Several fires were reported.

A Lebanese army communique said its embattled garrison of the U.S.-trained 8th Brigade repulsed another onslaught by Druse and Palestinian guerrillas on Souk el-Gharb before dawn.

The U.S. destroyers John Rodgers and Arthur Radford sent shells whizzing over Beirut toward the mountains before dawn to try to halt artillery attacks on the suburbs.

A Western military source said about 360 rockets hit the suburbs but there were no reports of the presidents or ambassadors residence being hit.

During a similar assault, the John Rodgers and the* U.S. cruiser Virginia fired a heavy barrage late Tuesday and early Wednesday. U.S. ships also fired Monday to repel a Druse assault on Lebanese troops in Souk el-Gharb, which overlooks the U.S. Marine compound at Beiruts international airport.

The Reagan administration has stressed the importance of the defense of Souk el-Gharb. Officials in Washington said its loss

could be a fatal setback to the Lebanese armys attempt to extend its auiority outside Beirut and could threaten the Gemayel government.

The Syrian government newspaper Tishrin accused the United States of expanding its involvement in the .war and said this could lead to clashes between American and Syrian forces.

In Aley, Druse spokesmen claimed at least 400 Druse had deserted the Lebanese army since early September and that others would like to leave but cannot reach Druse lines.

As the fighting continued, official sources in Damascus said Saudi Arabian mediator Prince Bandar bin Sultan was due in the Syrian capital today to renew efforts to arrange a ceasefire.

U.S. presidential envoy Robert C. McFarlane flew from Saudi Arabia to Syria on Wednesday with Bandars chief aide, Rafik Hariri. McFarlane met briefly with Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul-Halim Khaddam, but no statements were made about the session.

Bandar is proposing a ceasefire policed by U.N. observers, to be followed by a reconciliation dialogue among various Lebanese leaders under King Fahds auspices in Saudi Arabia.

Official sources in Beirut said all sides have agreed to the ceasefire arrangements but there was disagreement over who would attend the reconciliation talks.

In Washington, two Democrat-dominated committees of the House were at odds over U.S. policy in

Lebanon. One threatened to cut off funds for Marines in Beirut and the other was ready to extend their stay by 18 months.

The Appropriations Committee voted Wednesday to choke off money for the Marines on Dec. 1 unless President Reagan accepted a 90-day War Powers Act limit

on his power to keep troops on a battlefield without congressional approval.

The party-line vote came as inembers of the House Foreign Affairs Committee predicted easy approval by that panel of a compromise 18-month authorization agreed to by Reagan and most congressional leaders.

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NewMilesfone For State Zoo

Obituary Column

ASHEBORO, N.C. (AP) -A 40-acre interim facility that has housed animals since 1974 will be closed Oct. 3, another milestone in the life of the North Carolina Zoological Park, says zoo director Bob Fry.

The interim zoo. located one mile from the main park, was built to hold animals temporarily while permanent exhibits were constructed. It served as the official state zoo until 1979. when the first sections of the new "Africa area were opened.

"The interim zoo is so old and rundown. It doesnt even meet the handicapped codes. said Fry. It consists of paddocks, or small pieces of land, cages and exhibit buildings.

Closing the older facility is "part of the growing pains," Fry added. "Those facilities just dont fit into any of our philosophy of not keeping animals in pens and cages. We are building the largest planned natural habitat zoo in the world.

An estimated 400 new animals and 4,000 plants will be brought to the zoo in the next few months in preparation for the opening of the African Pavilion and African Plains. Fry said.

The Pavilion is a 45.000 square foot building covered with an innovative glass fiber roof. It will house 25 different animal species in a series of cg,ntrolled environment exhibits representing the various regions of Africa.

The Plains, where a variety of hoofed animals will be

displayed, will be an outdoor area representing the African tundra.

Some of the interim zoos wddocks and barns will will used to house the newly-arriving stock until theyre moved to Africa, Fry said. The building that now houses a number of indoor exhibits will be converted into a medical facility. The zoo recently hired ils first staff veterinarian.

Animals currently in the interim zoo that dont fit into the African setting will be traded or placed on longterm loan and could go to nature science centers in Greensboro, Durham and .\sheville. Fry said.

Among the animals that will be sent away are camels, kangaroos, otters, some snakes and a number of small creatures.

Of special concern is the zoos lone Siberian tiger, named Tigger. A native of Mongolia, the big female will not be part of the African exhibits. It could be years before the zoos Asian exhibits are built. Fry said.

Fry said the zoo will keep Tigger until a zoo can be found that will provide her with a comfortable home and a mate.

Also to be closed is the "petting zoo. an area that contained a number of gentle animals such as rabbits and llamas that visitors could touch. The zoo will compensate by setting up several small, mobile exhibits in the African area that will allow close contact with small animals, Frv said.

Phillips Offers Six-Point Plan

WILMINGTON. N.C, (.AP) - State School Superintendent Craig Phillips today called for a 15 percent salary increase for teachers next school year and additional bonuses for select teachers the following year.

The time for talk and study is over," Phillips said in prepared remarks delivered at a breakfast with community leaders. "We know what needs to be done, what can be done and what it will take to do the job.

Phillips said the public now has a clearer understanding of the needs of schools and is united in a-call for major improvements in education. He said he senses an unprecedented willingness to provide the large amounts of money needed for the schools to succeed.

Phillips outlined a six-point plan for improving the schools. The plan calls on the state to:

- Provide $200 million, or $200 per pupil, in 1984-85 to raise teachers salaries by about 15 percent to offer base salaries of $16,000 to $27,000.

- Provide $50 . million more in 1985-86 to provide salaries of up to $35,000 for about 10 percent to 20 percent of the states teachers who are willing to assume special roles and who demonstrate excellence.

- Offer about $150 million a year in new resources for school construction and renovation.

- Increase the number of teaching positions to lower student-teacher ratios.

- Invest in on-the-job training for teachers by spending $100 per teacher each year to strengthen their academic background.

- Develop model day-care programs for 3- and 4-year-olds in 16 schools in 1985-86.

The proposal comes as a result of long-time concerns and the recent impact of national and state studies

calling for dramatic improvement in the quality of education, primarily through significant improvement of performance and recognition of that improved performance of those who educate 1 million students in North Carolina," Phillips said.

Gaskins

Mr. Clyde R. Gaskins, 70, died Tuesday in Craven County Hospital. The funeral service wil be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro by the Rev. Richard C. Hill and the Rev. Blanche Pollard. Burial will be in Epworth Church Cemetery.

Mr. Gaskins, a resident of Vanceboro, spent most of his life in the Epworth Community and was a member of Epworth United Methodist Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Helen C. Gaskins; a daughter, Mrs. Robert E. Lane of Hartsville, S.C.; a brother, Earl Gaskins of Vanceboro; three sisters, Mrs. Nina Banks of Kinston, Mrs. Sue Oglesby of Morehead City and Mrs. Pearl Stokes of Ayden; and two grandsons.

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

(iodley Mr. Johnnie E. Godley, 77, retired employee of Nabisco, died Wednesday. Funeral arrangments will be announced later by Wilkerson Funeral Home.

Johnson MACCLESFIELD - Mr. Dennis Ray Johnson, 31, died Tuesday in Edgecombe Gen-eral Hospital. Funeral services will be held Satuday at 2 p.m. at Dildy Chapel Free Will Baptist Church near Fountain with Dr. Robert Gorham officiating. Burial will follow in the Mark Sharp Cemetery near Pinetops.

He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Doretha Harris Johnson of Macclesfield; one stepdaughter, Miss Wanda Harris of Macclesfield; one sister, Mrs. Evangeline J. McDowell of Tarboro; two brothers. Alfonzo Johnson and Desmond Johnson, both of the home; his grandfather, Julius Wilson of Fountain; and his grandmother, Mrs. Carrie Johnson of Macclesfield.

The body will be at the

YOULL BE WELL satisfied with the ser\'ice our classified staffers provide. Try us!

Hemby Memorial Funeral Chapel in Fountain after 6 p.m. Friday until one hour before the funeral. Family visitaton will be Friday from 7:30-8:30 p.m. at the funeral chapel.

Jones

Mr. Ray Edison Jones, 58, died Wednesday at Riverside Hcepital in Newport News, Va. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro and burial will be in Celestial Memorial Gardens in Vanceboro.

Mr. Jones, a native of Vanceboro, lived in Philadelphia prior to moving to Newport News four months ago.

He is survied by two sis-ters, Mrs. Margaret Seymour of Newport News and Mrs. Helen Williams of New Bern; and a brother, Alvus Jones of Philadelphia.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday and at other times will be at the home of Henry Ellis on Mill Avenue in Vanceboro

, Pollock

Mrs./Roslynd Windley Pollock, 80, died Tuesday in Lumberton. The funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Friday at the graveside in the Trenton Cemetery.

Mrs. Pollack lived most of her life in Trenton, spent

several year? in Greenville and for the past five years had been a resident of Wesley Pines Retirement Home in Lumberton. She was a member of the Trenton United Methodist Church.

She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Walter E. Carson of Greenville; a sister, Mrs. Homer Lewis of Lumberton; two brothers, B.E. Windley Jr. and'Neil Windley, both of Beaufort; two grandchildren; five step-grandchildren; three great-grandchildren and five step-great-grandchildren.

The family requests that those desiring to make memorial contributions consider the Supplemental Assistance Fund in care of St. James United Methodist Church.

The family will be at the home, 1202 Crestwood Drive, Greenville.

Savage SPEED - Mr. Frank Edward Savage died Wednesday in Edgecombe General Hospital. He was the father of Mrs. Hattie Ellison of Tarboro.

Funeral arrangements are

The Greenville Police Department's Crime Prevention Officer will provide a security inventory at your home on request. You will be advise on proper locks, burglary prevention and safety measures. Call 752-3342 for more information.

incompete at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary.

Staton

Mrs. Emily Staton died Tuesday in New Jersey. She was the mother of Mrs. Catherine Baker of Pinetops.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Hemby Funeral Home in Fountain.

Woolard

GRIMESLAND - Funeral services for Mrs. Sarah J. Woolard will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church in Simpson with the pastor. Elder Elmer Jackson Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in the Sweet Hope Church Cemetei7.

She is survived by her husband. S.L. Woolard of the

home; three daughters, Mrs. Jean Hardison of Grimesland, Mrs. Essie Reese .and Mrs. Melba Hardison, both of Patterson, N.J.; two foster daughters, Mrs. Beulah Norfleet of Grimesland and Mrs. Ophelia Dennis of New Haven, Conn.; three sisters, Mrs. Lula Pearson of Bethel, Mrs. Mildred Smallwood of

New York ar^ Mrs. Nellie Faye Bumgardner of Washington, D.C.; two hers, Ho^e Black of Irvin, N.J. and John He Black of Ayden; 11 grar children and eight greatgrandchildren.

The family will receive friends Friday from 8-9 p.m. at Mitchells Funeral Home inWinterville.

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Reg. Sale .03 Ct. . $104.00 ^72 .07 Ct.. $159.00 M27 .13 Ct. . $295.00 ^206 .25 Ct.. $595.00 M15 .50 Ct.. $1296.00 ^900**

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Local Telephone Rates To See Increase

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

Thursday. September 22.1983 ) 1

By NORMAN BLACK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP),-Consumers may be facing increases in their local phone bills, but they also are going

to receive a major reduction in interstate long-distance

rates, according to the American Telephone & Telegraph

Co.

AT&T announced Wed-

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nesday it would file a request on Oct. 3 with the Federal Communications Commission to reduce its longdistance rates by $1.75 billion annually.

If the FCC aKiroves, the rate reductions would be

Sees Incentive

To Seek Care

WINSTON-SALEM,- N.C. (AP) - Kenneth G. Tom-berlin, an orthop^c surgeon, said that medical plans lowering the patient's costs for seeing a physician like one being initiated by Hanes Corp. will be an incentive for patients to seek unnecessary medical care.

That (the medical plan) has taken away the patients incentives to try to conserve resources and I think this plan goes further toward this first-dollar type of coverage: For $10 you can get anything.

The Hanes plan, which begins Sept. 30, enables a covered employee or de-pendent to go to a participating doctor for a flat fee of $10. Eighty-six physicians have contracted with the PRO (the Hanes program) to provide their services and to charge Hanes no more than the median fees among doctors in Winston-Salem.

Tomberlin said tht PPOs will limit patients freedom to choose their physicains and thus disrupt doctor-patient relationships.

CHARGE TORTURE GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - P^x Christi, an international Catholic rights group, alleges that El Salvadors security forces tortured and killed Salvadoran rights activist Marianella Garcia Villas last March.

implemented on Jan. 1, the same day AT&T is to be brcAen a^rt to comply with an antitrust settlement, the company said.

AT&T declined Wednesday to spell out how calling rates would fall with the $1.75 billion reduction, saying such details would be unveiled later. The company has already informed the commission, however, it expects calling rates to fall between 10 percent and 15 percent and spokesman Pic Wagner said Wednesdays announcement was consistent with that projection.

Morris Tanenbaum, chairman of the AT&T unit that will provide longdistance service after the breakup, also described the planned reductions as amounting to the largest rate cut in telecommunications history.

According to Wagner, AT&Ts revenues for all interstate services - including regular long-distance calls, WATS service and private business line service totaled $21.4 billion in 1982.

On the surface, a rate reduction totaling $1.75 billion would thus appear to reduce AT&Ts revenues by 8.2 percent. Wagner pointed out, however, that lower rates tend to stimulate more calling and thus no prediction can be made about how AT&Ts overall revenues will be affected.

As previously, AT&T made clear Wednesday the proposed rate reductions are dependent on an FCC decision to impose what are known as access charges on telephone customers.

The FCC has decreed that starting next year, residential customers will pay $2 a month for the right to use the interstate long-distance network and businesses will pay $6 a month. Those flat fees, to be paid regardless of whether any long-distance calls are placed, are the first step in an agency plan to eliminate a subsidy for local

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telephone service that is now built into interstate rates.

The FCC has projected the subsidy will total $10.7 billion in 1984, and argues more of that amount should be collected directly from all telephone customers instead of through artificially high long-distance rates.

The commission also maintains that with the breakup of AT&T and growing competition, all longdistance phone companies should be placed on an equal footing. That is not the case now, the agency says, because most of the long

distance subsidies are built into AT&Ts rates and not those of competitors like MCI Communications.

The new access charges are scheduled to be implemented Jan. 1, but Congress has begun considering legislation that would alter the new regulatory scheme and require the subsidies to remain within long-distance rates.

Wagner acknowledged Wednesday that AT&T decided to release some details of its plans for interstate rate reductions in response to that congressional debate.

The Grapes Are Ripe!

DIXIEGREENE

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HWY. 903 BETWEEN SNOW HILL & MAURY HOURS: DAILY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.-SUNDAY 1:30-6:00

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standard

Reg. $80. Soft, all-down pillow for head cradling comfort Down-proof cotton coverSale ^8

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Reg. $16. Plump bedpillow gets its firm comfort from whole waterfowl feathers Cotton cover.

Queen. Reg, $20 Sale S10

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Reg. $29. Shantung-weave polyester shower curtain with fringed valance and liner. Color coordinated bath mats, hampers and accessories also bn sale.

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20% Off Priscillas

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Shop 9;30-9:30-Phone 756-1190-Pitt Plaza

I

mm





Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 1.25 lower. Kinston 44.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-biirg and Benson 44.50, Wilson 44.50, Salisbury 43.50, Rowland unreported, Spivey's Corner 44.50. Sows: all weight MK) pounds up; Wilson 40.00, Fayetteville 39.00. Whiteville 39.00, Wallace 40.00, Spiveys Corner 39.00. Rowland unreported. Durham 39.00.

Poultrv

RALEIGH. .C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this week has been re-evaluated to 44.75 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 lower and the live supply is moderate for a moderate demand. Weights desireable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina T^rsday was 1.800,000, compared to 1,791,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK I API - The stock market gave ground again today, continuing the retreat it began on Wednesday.

the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 1.62 to 1.241.67 in the first half hour.

Losers held a 4-3 lead over gainers in the early tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

On Wednesday the government issued an estimate of economic growth at a 7 percent annual rate, after adjustment for inflation, for the third quarter .That provided evidence * that the recovery from the recession was still proceeding at a brisk pace.

But it also helped nudge inte.'est rates higher in the credit markets. And the slock market showed no follow-through to the advance that carried the Dow Jones industrials to a record high on Tuesday.

Today's early prices included General .Mills, up '4 at 52\s; Revlon, unchanged at 31''j. and .Merrill Lynch, down'A at 39U.

On Wednesda\- the Dow Jones industrial average fell 3.90tnl,2!3.29 '

Declines held a small edge on advances at the .NYSE.

Big Board volume totaled 91.28 million shares, against 11J3.5 million in the previous session

The NYSE's composite index lost .42 to 97 46. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 117 at 236,46.

NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks:

High Low Last

AMR Corp AbbtLabs Allis Chaim .Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am .Motors AmStand Amer T4T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden

Burlngi Ind CSX <^n) CaroPwLt

Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CockCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl DnwChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s-Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot Fuqua s GTE Corp GnDynam GenlEleci s Gen Food Gen .Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParLs GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace-Co GtNor Nek . Greyhound Gulf Oil Hercule.slni Honevwell HospiCp s Ing Hand IBM

Intl Harv Int Paper Int Kectil Int TiT K mart KaisrAlum KanebSvc KrogerCo laKkhed s Masonite McDrmlnt n McKesson .Mead Corp Minn.MM Mobil Monsanto NCNBCp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill

NorflkSou    61

OlinCp    3:

imenslil    3;

Penney JC

PepsiCo    3-

Phelps Dod    Z

PhilipMorr    6;

PhillpsPel    ,K

Polaroid    2i

ProetGamb s    5<

Uuaker Oat

RCA    31

RalstnPur    25

Repub.Air    4

Republic StI    26

Revlon    31

Revnldlnd    56

Rockwl s        26

StRegisCp    :i(i

Scott Paper    27

SearsRiK'h    3

Shaklet' s    2H

Skyline Cp    I6

Soiiv Corp    15

Southern Co    16

Sjierry Cp    4,5

SldOiICal    ;i

Stdoillnd    51

SldOilOh    56

Steverus .IP    21

TRW Inc

Texaco Inc    :tf

TexEastn , 5t CMC Ind    1;

Cn Camp

Cn Carbide    7(i

Cniroval    17

CS St'eel    26

Cnocal    31

Wachoy t'p    45

Wal.Mart s    40

WestPlPep    47

Westgh m    47

Weyerhsr    35

WiiinDix    55

Woolworth    35

Xerox Cp    44

Following are selected market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power 4 Light

Collins & Aikman

Conner

Duke

Eaton

Eckerd's

Exxon .

Fieldcrest

Halteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe s .

McDonald's Mctiraw Piedmont Pi2za Inn. .

P4G

TRW. Inc I mted Tel Dominion nesources

THl KSI) \V

6:30 pm - Jaycee.s meet at Rotary [lldg 6 30" p m meets .00 p m

Exchange Club

Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers 7 30 p m Gvereaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church

B:(K) p m - Chapter 13iiK of the Women of the .Moose 8:(K) p.m VFW Auxiliary fnets at Post Home

FRIDAY

7:30p m. Red Men meet

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31'

49-S.

18',

45*2

16

57

43',

54".

22,

7.

32',

67".

29',

25".

42

39'2

56',

40".

74',

23',

74",

14",

24'.

28".

51

23",

26'v

30".

46",

35

36'-,

52',

23S.

6\

67".

42',

71".

37's

20",

:t7".

19".

6:!

34',

44

50

53

72".

35',

44',

26

36".

31

46';

31".

49'.

18',

45".

16

56".

43

54',

22',

7",

32',

66",

29',

24',

41",

39',

56',

40',

74

23'.

74".

14",

24 28', 50". 23', 26". 30'. 46", 34", 36", 52'-, . 23', 6'.

67'.

42',

71',

37',

20',

37',

16',

62",

34',

43",

.54",

50',

49"4

52".

72".

35',

44',

25 36'. 30", 49', .50',

31".

49'.

18'.

45".

16

56",

43

54',

22'4

32',

66".

29-',

24",

41".

39',

56',

40".

74',

23',

74",

14",

24

28".

50",

23".'

26".

30".

46",

34",

36".

23". 6', 67'; 42'; 71'; 37', 20". 37", 16". 62". 34'j 43", 55

50',

49",

53 .

72",

35',

44'::

26

:t6".

30H

46'.

,50',

Wachovia..........................................44".

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation.......................-,-r.........17'rl7",

Branch.....................  X'^-Z

UttkMint........................................VT

Planters Bank............................19',-20',

Female Doctors On Next Flights

SPACE CENTER, HoiBton (AP) - The crews of two space shuttle flights next summer will include female physicians who had babies in 1982 and are married to other astronauts, NASA says.

Dr. M. Rhea Seddon, 35-year-old wife of astronaut Robert Gibson, and Dr. Anna L. Fisher, 34, the wife of Dr. William Fisher, will be mission specialists on flights in June and August, respectively. the National Aeronautics and Space Administration announced Wednesday. Astronaut Judith Resnick was earlier picked to fly early next year.

Sally Ride became the first American woman in space on the seventh. buttle mission.

NASA also announced that a military shuttle mission carrying a secret cargo has been rescheduled for July, instead of this year.

E.^STERNSTAR

Susanna Council No. 161 of the Order of the Eastern Star, Pactolus, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Bessie Hyman asked all members to attend the meeting as elections will be held.

Lost Indian Town Site Believed To Be Found

Sunbird.....

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Archaeologists say they may have discovered one of the few remaining Indian village sites in North Carolina still untouched by relic hunters.

The site is believed to be that of the Occaneechi village near present-day Hillsborough, described as prosperous in 1701 by explorer and botanist John Lawson. The village had disappeared by the 1750s and the fate of the tribe remains a mystery.

The site has eluded searchers since the 1930s, said Roy S. Dickens, director of the Research Laboratories of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

If we havent found Occaneechi, we are very close, because we have been able to date trade goods found in burial pits at the site to the proper period, Dickens said. At the very least, we have an outlying settlement.

Revealing artifacts were discovered during a dig on private property near the Eno River this summer, he said. Dickens declined to reveal the exact spot, saying that that relic hunters may pillage the site although the artifacts would bring little money.

By The Associated Press Following are gross sales figures for flue-cured tobacco reported by the Federal-State Market News Service for Wednesday:

Eastern Belt

.Market    Daily    Daily Daily

Site    Pounds    Value    Avg.

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

Clinton.........................................363.451    678,037    186.56

Dunn...........................................309,760    579.503    187,08

Farmvl........................................361.703    708,379    195.85

Gldsboro............................. 748,298    1.433.486    191.57

Greenvl..................................... 1,053.185    2.052,878    194.92

Kinston......................... ,.1,048.167    2,015,231    192.26

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

Rockv Mt.....................................358.492    670,933    187.15

Smithfld......................................438,266    844,925    192,79

Tarboro.......................................243,912    449,848    184.43

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

Washngtn .............................................................no    sale

Wendell.....................................................................no    sale

Willmstn......................................363,839    713,353    196.06

Wilson..................   1,805.891    3,485,658    193.02

Windsor.......................................352.906    663,760    188.08

Total.........................................7,147,870    14,295.991    191.95

Season Total ..........................199,876,188    363,010,.589    181.62

Average for the day of $191.95 was up 66 cents from the previous sale.

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This is an exciting and very unusual find, because the site has never been looted by relic collectors, said Dr. Trawick Ward, senior staff archaeologist at UNC-CH. It is unique in the Piedmont of North Carolina where treasure hunters have virtually destroyed some sites,

Among the artifacts found this summer are a rum bottle made in England between 1680 and 1700, scissors, copper buckles, a pewter porringer, glass beads, spoons, a rare pewter pipe and lead shot.

The discoveries suggest that the Occaneechi Indians had more contact with whites than was previously believed and were affected by the influx of Europeans into North Carolina, said Dickens.

Stewart Floys Leadership

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Former state House Speaker Carl J, Stewart Jr. Tuesady sharply criticized the leadership in the state Senate, over which he wants to preside as lieutenant governor.

I believe we have come to a time when the leadership in the N.C. Senate has resolved itself into a very small clique of people, the good old boys club - no girls included, Stewart told a forum for Democratic candidates for the lieutenant governors nomination.

Stwart said if he were elected, he would decentralize power in the Senate and open leadership positions to talented young senators.

MEETING SET Pride of the East No. 524 will hold a regular meeting today at 8 p.m., according to Daisy Spain, worthy matroOj

While digging this summer at a site first opened in 1938, archaeologists and graduate students found a burial pit from the colonial period. Later excavations uncovered other pits and artifacts.

Litte is known about the Occaneechi Indians, Ward said. They are believed to have moved from Virginia around 1680. and a few returned to Virginia within 50 years.

Some of them may have gone west to join the Cherokee or south to join up with the Catawba Indians, but for the most part their society was wiped from the face of the earth by 1720, Dickens said.

(Continued from Pagel)

Carolina, as well as Atlanta, Richmond and BaltimoreAVashington, with 30 flights each day.

New York Air b^an operations in December 1980. and flies to Orlando, Savannah, Greenville/Spartanburg, and Knoxville, as well as to cities in the Northeast. Its service to Raleigh-Durham, which began in April 1982 with four flights daily, now includes 18 flights.

As part of the Sunbird-New York Air joint venture, Greenville will be listed in New York Airs system timetable.

Reggio described New York Air, which is growing and profitable, as a businessmans air line. Businessmen are the most demanding travelers, and if we can satisfy businessmen, we can satisfy anyone.

Pitt-Greenville Airport Manager Jim Turcotte termed the announcement of the joint venture very exciting and said the commuter passenger service offered by Sunbird links our local citizens to anywhere in the world.

Greenville Mayor Percy Cox expressed thanks to the two airlines for their foresight in planning the joint schedule, saying that this is the place its happening.

Cox told Reggio that our biggest drawback has been transportation.

Under the new schedule, Sunbird flights will leave Greenville at 6 a.m., 1 p.m. and 4:45 p.m. Flights will arrive in Greenville at 11:25 a.m., 4:35 p.m. and 8:50 p.m.

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 22, 1983Rampants Open Big East Conflicts

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer When the Rose High School Rampants open the 1983 Big East 4-A Conference cam-

i

Roswell Streeter

paign against Northern Nash Friday, their offensive weaknesses will have to become strengths and their strengths will have to become stronger.

The Rampants, ranked fifth in this weeks Associated Press High School Football Poll, have had little success running the football this season, with only 72 of their 281 total yards on the ground against Eastern Wayne last week. Rose quarterback Battle Emory connected on 11 out of 24 passes for 209 yards against the Warriors to lead the Rampants to a 14-7 victory, but he also threw five interceptions.

A couple of those came when the line didnt hold and he let it go when he should have eaten it, Rose Coach Ronald Vincent said. I felt like our receiving corps played w'ell; we had four different people catch passes

against Eastern Wayne. Considering the unsettled situation last week with all the sickness, I thought that we played pretty well.

Billv Michel

Emory, senior tight end Billy Michel and linebacker David Lineberry missed practice most of the week with a virus, but all three were ready by Friday. Linebacker Edward Farley and tackles Brian Bridges and Sterling Edwards all missed the game.

Tyrone Smith caught a pair of Emory touchdown passes, one of 16 and the other 54 yards, for three on the night. Michel caught four passes for 66 yards, while Roswell Streeter grabbed three for 53 yards.

Smith continues to lead the Rampants with 10 receptions for a 23.4 yard average. Senior Reggie Smith leads the runners with 227 yards for a 6.5-yard average.

Weve got several guys who can really catch the football, Vincent said. What really concerns me is our lack of a solid ground game. Weve done a lot of work on it this

week. But Northern Nash has a pretty good defense. Theyve been able to shut down the run with and eight-man front.

The Knights were picked to

Robert Joyner

win the Big East title in a pre-season poll of the coaches even with a new head coach. Operating from the I-formation. Northern Nash has posted a 2-1 record through the non-conference portion of the slate, including a 10-0 shutout of cross-county rival Southern Nash.

Their first three opponents didnt throw the ball very often, Vincent said. They really have four good linebackers who can cover the field. Theyre quick on defense. The big ones you can know where they are, but quick players on defense cause problems.

Vincent is also concerned with the Rampants punting game, as Arthur Brown had one blocked by the Warriors. Only a clipping penalty on first down saved the mistake from disaster.

It was just a missed block on the line, Vincent said.

We were fortunate they couldnt move the ball. We've worked on our punt protection and coverage this week. Running back Jarrod Moody

Butch Haskins

State's Reed Has Own Frosh Plan

is the Knights' top threm out of the backfield. tlghe managed just 45 yafe on N carries against Souttrew Nash. Moody bolted over from nine yards out to give Northern Nash the lead late in the first half. Kicker Brad Rice added a 37-yard field goal for the final margin.

.Moody is on of the best prospects in the east this vear at running back," Vincent said. "He's a good open field runner. They have a sophomore at quarterback, but he's beginning to come around,''

The Rampants will have to do without the services of senior guard Butch Haskins I6-. 180). who is out in-definately with a dislocated knee.

"We're having to make some adjustments." Vincent said. This should be a good game. It's the start of our conference schedule - everything counts from here on out."

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

They didnt need to form a committee to propose to the NCAA that freshmen be made ineligible for football and basketball - North Carolina States Tom Reed had a plan all along.

A blue-ribbon committee, known as the Select Committee on Athletic Problems and Concerns in Higher Education, has suggested to the NCAA that freshmen no longer be allowed to play varsity football and basketball.

Its not an old idea, but it's not a popular one. either.

While some coaches welcome it as necessary in the fight to raise academic standards in the athletic community, there are some who believe it will just bring about greater expenditures to provide sports on a junior varsity level.

They could have asked Reed.

I think were foolish to have our freshmen play, said Reed, first-year Wolfpack coach. I think we are bucking the odds. We are not being intelligent and we are putting the kids in a very difficult situation.

Just how difficult that role is became apparent to Reed

when he surveyed the results of two recent freshman reading tests given four weeks apart.

This includes 400 athletes. The only ones who did not improve are the football players, he said, That, to me. is an alarming fact. We demand a lot out of them.

Reeds proposal would be to provide, for example, 100 grants to potential collegiate athletes and at the same time allow the football program to keep another 25 people on some sort of partial grant.

Currently, the NCAA allows schools to hand out 30 schol

arships annually and a total of 95.

A young man comes out and he works out with the football team, you give him a room scholarship, Reed said. Maybe you give him a board scholarship the next semester.

Reeds idea has a stipulation. Before the student can receive a partial grant, he must be enrolled for one full year and take a full class load.

"You would reward your walk-ons, you would increase your numbers and eliminate freshmen playing, which has gotta be done if were gonna

get the sanity back in the game.

University of Virginia athletic director Dick Schultz hasnt fully reviewed the report. but he is not convinced the rule is necessary and doesn't think it will ever pass.

1 haven't seen any data to indicate that the freshman eligibility rule has been detrimental. Schultz said. The biggest argument for it would be eliminating some pressures of competition for the athlete just starting out.

University of North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith has never been eager to insert freshmen into his starting

EC Coaches Want No Change

When it comes to the freshman eligible rule. East Carolina football coach Ed Emory and basketball coach Charlie Harrison would just as soon leave things as they are, thank you.

Emory, who is carrying only three freshmen on the varsity squad this year, doesnt feel

that it is fair to legislate freshman out of a role in Division I-A football as a general rule.

If a kid is ready to play when he comes to college, mentally and physically, then he should be allowed to play, Emory said. If hes not, then redshirt him for a year and

get him ready during that year. I feel like if a kid is mature enough to make a Division I college football team, then hes mature enough to make it through school, too. Why should he have to stand on the sidelines for a year if hes ready to play"?

Manning Makes Kansas His Choice

By The Associated Press

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -High school basketball star Danny Manning is following his father to the University of Kansas, where the elder Manning will coach while his son plays for the Jayhawks.

The 6-foot-ll teen-ager, who has one year of high school left, scheduled a news conference today to make an official announcement.

His father, Ed Manning, moved his family to Lawrence from Greensboro, N.C., last month amid rumors that he would be hired by Head Coach

Larry Brown.

Ed Manning, who played professional basketball for six years and coached for one year at North Carolina A&T in 1977-78, was named to the Kansas job Tuesday. He most recently was employed as a truck driver in North Carolina.

Its been between North Carolina, North Carolina State and KU all along, Danny Manning told the Lawrence Journal-World. I narrowed it to three. Then my family moved here. I always wanted my family to be able to see me play.

Manning averaged more than 18 points a game last year in leading Greensboro Page High School to an undefeated state championship season.

I like Kansas, young Manning said in an interview in the Jayhawks field house. I feel we have a lot of talent here, and the future will be bright. This is a nice arena, and Ill enjoy playing here.

Manning will not be able to sign a letter of intent until Nov. 9 during the second annual early signing period.

Emory said that there is no rule that forces coaches to use freshmen right away. Our freshmen practice only two days a week and (work) light another day. We have no night meetings with them.

We spend a lot of time trying to get them off to a good start. Every kid weve got has to go to study hall when they have free periods during the day. They report in for up to ten hours of study work with the tutors during the week. Last years freshman class averaged over 2.0 and we're hoping that this years class will do even better.

Emory said that in the past, freshman teams worked harder than the varsity in preparing for their games, and coaches have tended to forget that. Not only that, it will cost a tremendous amount of money and youll have to raise the scholarship limit,

It goes back to the kid. If hes ready to take advanced math when he gets to college, he should be allowed to. If hes ready to play football, he should be allowed to also.

Sports Calendar

Meanwhile, Harrison, who will rely heavily on freshmen players after graduation and a transfer left his team gutted, says he has mixed emotions about the proposed changing of the rule. It (the change) has good iwints about it, with the maturing factor and everything else. But I dont think its fair to tell a kid he cant play just because hes a freshman. In basketball 1 kid can play a lot easier than he can in football.

Harrison also expressed worry about the financial cost of not allowing freshmen to compete on varsity teams. Im sure that the bigger schools will go along with it, but (having freshmen play) is essential for us. If they are good enough to play (as freshmen), thats one of the things that we can do to recruit them.

I just wish theyd leave it alone. Weve actually found that our kids grades drop when they have idle time, as compared to when they are practicing or traveling. I dont think its hurt that many kids to have played.

. iiA

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

Today's Sports Football

West Craven at Farmville Central JV Southern Nash at Ayden-Grifton JV

Roanoke at Plymouth JV Rose at Northern Nash JV (7 p.m.)

Nash Central at E.B Aycock <4 p.m.)

Vollevball Ayden-Grifton, Farmville Central at Greene Central (4 p.m.)

Havelock, White Oak at Conley I4

p.m.)

Southern Nash, North Pitt at Southwest Edgecombe (4 p.m.)

East Carolina at North Carolina (7 p.m.)

Tennis

Edenton at Roanoke Washington at Bertie Kinston at Rose (3:30 p m.)

Greene Central at Charles B. Aycock

Soccer Kinston at Rose (4 p.m )

Softball Fall League Vermont-American vs. Bailey's Thomas Mobile Homes vs. Sun-nyside Eggs Mike's Party Center vs Jimmy s

66

Grogs vs. 14th Street Spirits vs. State Credit J.D. Dawson vs. Morgan Printers Friday's Sports Football Chocowinity at Columbia (8 p.m.) Jamesville atCreswell (8 pm.) Greene Central at North Pitt (8 p.m.)

Farmville Central at West Craven (8 p.m.)

Ayden-Grifton at Southern Nash (8p.m.)

Plymouth at Roanoke (8 p.m. ) Edenton at Washington (8 p.m.) Bertieat Williamston (8 p.m.) Northern Nash at Rose (8 p.m.) Soccer

Ridgecroft at Greenville Christian (4 p.m.)

Volleyball East Carolina at N.C. State Invitational

Tennis

East Carolina at UNC Wilmington Invitational

I

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five, although hes been successful when hes resorted to it. Hes convinced the idea of freshman ineligibility is righV and that money shouldnt be at the root of the issue.

Were not talking much money at all, Smith said. But if it's for the good of the student-athlete, then its worth it.

Smith said under current conditions, its hard for the upperclassmen to meet schedules because of the demands on their time. For freshmen its worse, and the new rule would eliminate that hardship, he says.

We think the freshman should be aware the reason hes going to college is academic and to spend time adjusting, Smith said. "A lot of thought was given this. With the help of the college presidents, this will pass.

Reed isnt betting on approval by the full NCAA convention, which meets in

January. He claims the money that officials say will be lost in additional coaches and other incidentals will^be repaid by decreased class time in trying to bring athletes up to academic minimums. But he says as soon as you mention money, the tide changes.

1 say it has a very slim chance! Reed lamented. "Any time people see something as a cost factor, it usually loses.

N.C.' State basketball coach Jim Valvano said factors such as scheduling, cost and travel for junior varsity teams would have to be considered. But he added, "If you're strictly speaking of freshman eligibility. then yes. 1 always have been (against it).

Notre Dame basketball coach Digger Phelps, in Raleigh for a clinic, said he backed the proposed rule change. But East Carolina football coach Ed Emory said he preferred leaving things as thev are.

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Botched Squeeze May Kill Braves

Look...Up In The Sky!

Toronto Blue Jay Cliff Johnson is joined by Seattle Mariners catcher Rick Sweet and umpire George

Maloney in watching Johnson's foul ball during American League baseball action in Toronto Wednesday night. (AP Laserphoto)

Birds Sweep Detroit

By The Associated Press

It was business as usual for the Baltimore Orioles.

Rookie Mike Boddicker calmly quieted the whooping fans at Tiger Stadium with a first-game shutout, and then John Lowenstein blasted a two-out grand slam to cap a six-run rally in the ninth inning of the second game to complete a sweep of Detroit in their Wednesday twi-night double-header

"They go about their jobs so well, it's hard to say where they won it." said Tigers Manager Sparky Anderson after absorbing 6-0 and 7-3 losses.

Detroit had blasted Baltimore 14-1 Tuesday night to pull within 6'j games of American League East Orioles. The Tigers already faced an uphill battle, and a crowd of 32.198 turned out Wednesday, hoping to see the team continue its climb.

When the night ended, however. Baltimore had reduced its magic number to three and led the second-place Tigers by 8>2 games. The Orioles have 11 games remaining. Detroit has 10 left.

That's a pretty good baseball team over there." Anderson said.

In other AL games. Chicago swept a twi-nighter from

Minnesota, winning 2-1 and 7-6; Toronto beat Seattle 4-3; Boston downed New York 3-1; Milwaukee clubbed Cleveland 10-7; California blanked Kansas City 3-0, and Texas defeated Oakland 4-2.

Boddicker. 15-7, pitched a five-hitter and struck out a career-high 12. including the side in the ninth. It was his fifth shutout, tops in the .AL.

Lowenstein, Eddie Murray and Cal Ripken each homered in the first game to pin the loss on Jack Morris, 19-12.

The second game was going Detroit's way until the ninth inning. Rick Leach's two-run homer had offset Murray's 30th homer and the Tigers led 3-1 before Baltimore loaded the bases against reliever Dave Gumpert,.0-2, on a walk to pinch hitter Jim Dwyer and singles by John Shelby and Dan Ford.

Reliever Aurelio Lopez came in and threw a wild pitch, making it 3-2. Cal Ripken then popped up, Murray was intentionally walked, reloading the bases, and Mike Young fanned for the second out.

But Lowenstein, who had entered the game in the eighth inning as a pinch hitter, blasted an 0-1 pitch into the upper deck in right field, his 14th home run of the season.

SPORT

LINE

To The Sports Editor:

Weekend after next when the ECU Pirates are playing the Univeristy of Missouri some of us will be in Williamsburg at the annual out-of-town planning conference, of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce. Last year the Chamber had an idea-seeking trip to Missouri built around the game.

The situtation this year presents a dilemma to those of us who want to follow the game on radio in Williamburg. The nearest station on the Pirate network is Chesapeake, Va., 50 miles away, 3,000 watts FM, with a 300-foot tower. In view of this, we proposed the following:

1. Move the conference from Williamsburg to Columbia, Missouri.

2. Take a tractor-trailer truck with us, with a 100-foot tower and FM antenna to receive the station.

3. Tommy Snowden investigated the possibility of running a phone line from Chesapeake to Williamsburg.

4. Take a super-sensative FM radio and portable antenna to stick out of the window.

We were shot down on numbers one, two and three, but number four is in the making. We wrote the manager of the hotel and told him to put us in his highest room at the end so we could put the antenna out. No answer yet.

As a last resort, we will get in the car and drive toward Chesapeake until we get a signal. Just want to let you know about some avid Pirate fans.

Jack Edwards

(

and Joe Nolan followed with his fourth homer.

Sammy Stewart, 9-3, went the final three innings for the win.

"We have a decent bench. We have a pretty good platoon system. We like our setup," said Baltimore Manager Joe Altobelli. "I don't think you can get this far without talent -and we do have that."

Said Lowenstein: "When I .I it. I knew it was over (right iielder) Rick Leachs head. But I didnt think it was over the fence. It was a very pleasant sight to see it disappear,"

White Sox 2-7. Twins 1-6 LaMarr Hoyt won his 11th consecutive game in the opener and now leads the majors with 22 victories.

Hoyt, 22-10, allowed seven hits and Chicago won it when Harold Baines ripped an RBI single in the seventh to snap a 1-1 tie.

The nightcap in Chicago was tied 6-6 in the ninth inning when Tom Paciorek walked, took second on Ron Kittles single and scored on Scott Fletchers one-out single.

Baines now has a 17-game hitting streak and Paciorek has hit in 16 straight.

Blue Jays 4, Mariners 3 Doyle Alexander, who lost his first eight decisions of the season, continued his resurgence with his fifth consecutive victory. Alexander, 5-8, gave up eight hits and struck out five in pitching his fourth complete game of the season.

Visiting Seattle scored three runs in the first inning on a two-run single by A1 Cowens and an RBI single by Dave Henderson before Toronto struck for four runs in the third, keyed by RBI singles by Alfredo Griffin and Jesse Barfield.

Red Sox 3, Yankees 1 Boston led 2-1 when New York loaded the bases with one out in the top of the eighth inning.

Butch Wynegar then flied out to right fielder Reid Nichols, whose throw to the plate nailed Dave Winfield, ending the inning.

Tony Armas belted his 34th

home run in the bottom of the eighth, giving him 100 RBI this season.

Bob Ojeda, 11-7, got the win in Boston and Bob Stanley got his 31st save.

Brewers 10, Indians 7 Don Sutton won his first-game since July 14 - breaking his eight-game losing string.

Sutton, 8-13, gave up two runs and left with two outs in the seventh inning after pulling a muscle in his left leg while stretching for Jack Percontes infield hit.

Rookie Randy Ready drove in three runs with a triple and a single as visiting Milwaukee took a 9-2 lead. Cleveland rallied with five runs in the eighth, capped by Alan Bannisters grand slam.

Angels 3, Royals 0 Geoff Zahn pitched a five-hitter for the victory, which broke his six-game losing string. Zahn is 9-11. Gaylord Perry, 7-14, took the loss.

Gary Pettis tripled and scored two of Californias runs in Kansas City. Juan Beniquez drove in one run and scored another.

Rangers 4, As 2 Mike Smithsons five-hitter helped Texas beat Oakland for the 11th time in 13 tries this season. Smithson, 9-14, retired the first 11 As batters.

Mickey Rivers doubled and scored the Rangers first run and drove in the second with a groundout.

Bill Stein and Pete OBrien delivered consecutive sacrifice flies in the sixth to pin the loss on Chris Codiroli, 12-12.

By The Associated Press A botched suicide squeeze play by the Atlanta Braves may have kiUed their chances to catch Los Angeles in the National League West pennant race.

The Braves, who'already had beaten Cincinnati 9-1 in< the first game of the double-header Wednesday, had Dale Murphy on third, Chris Chambliss on first and Rafael Ramirez at the plate with no outs in the eighth inning of the second game with the score tied 3-3.

Ramirez blooped the ball down the first-base line and Reds first baseman Dan Driessen made a diving catch that was disputed by the Braves. Driessen threw to third to easily double off Murphy and kill the threat.

In the top of the ninth, Ron Oester hit a sacrifice fly to give the Reds a 4-3 victory. The split, combined with the Dodgers 2-1 triumph over Houston, dropped the Braves four games behind.

When you go at the ball straight on like that, it sometimes is hard to tell if its trapped or not, Driessen said. It was very close.

"I swear he trapped it, said Atlanta Manager Joe Torre. But my decision is not the one that counts. We havent bunted well lately anyway. Its too late with 12 games left to have extra bunting practice.

In other NL games, Chicago beat Pittsburgh 7-6 to knock the Pirates 2>/2 games off the pace in the East, San Francisco edged San Diego 5-4, St. Louis clubbed New York 9-3 and Philadelphia at Montreal was rained out. The Expos are two games behind the first-place Phillies in the East.

Cincinnatis Gary Redus led off the ninth of the nightcap with a double off reliever Steve Bedrosian, 9-9. After Dave Concepcion struck out, Driessen and Paul Householder walked to load the bases, setting the stage for Oestersflytoleft.

The Braves took a 3-1 lead in the second game as pitcher Phil Niekro had a two-run single and Glenn Hubbard a run-scoring double.

But the Reds tied the game in the eighth against reliever Terry Forster on a walk to Driessen, a double by Householder and a two-run single by Dann Bilardello.

The Braves won the first game behind the five-hit pitching of Craig McMurtry and the power hitting of Chambliss and Murphy.

Murphy hit his 35th homer, a three-run blast that chased Cincinnati starter Charlie Puleo, 5-11, in the third inning. Chambliss followed with his 19th, against reliever Rich Gale. Chambliss added a three-run homer in the fourth. Today we had to win a double-header, said the Braves Jerry Royster. You dont know if any one game is the must game until the seasons over, and even then you cant always tell. Last year it went down to the last game, and it might again this time.

Dodgers 2, Astros 1 Los Angeles increased its lead over the Braves as

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Fernando Valenzuela earned his first victory since Aug. 20, snapping a personal four-game losing streak with a six-hitter.

Yes, I feel very much relieved, said Valenzuela, 14-10. I couldnt win for a long time, I couldnt finish for a long time.

Bill Russell doubled home Steve Sax with two outs in the seventh to break a 1-1 tie. Sax had two singles, two stolen bases and scored both Dodger runs.

The only run for the Astros, who lost the season series with the Dodgers 12-6, came on a sixth-inning single by Bill Doran, his stolen base and a single by Dickie Thon.

Cubs 7, Pirates 6

Pittsburgh missed a chance to pick up ground on Philadelphia when Chicago

scored the tying and winning runs in the seventh inning on Jody Davis sacrifice fly and Larry Bowas infield single.

If the Pirates fail to come back and win the East Division flag, they will look at Chicago as the place where they lost it. Wednesdays defeat was their 10th straight loss at Wrigley Field, including eight this season.

Fergie Jenkins, 6-9, posted his 284th career victory with relief help from Lee Smith, who now has 28 saves.

Giants 5, Padres 4

San Francisco won the fifth game in its last six starts when Dave Bergman, a late-inning defensive replacement, belted a two-out, two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth.

Bergman connected for his sixth homer of the season

following a two-out single by Chili Davis off Floyd Chiffer. Padres relief ace Gary Lucas, 5-8, took over and gave up the game-winning hit.

Gary Lavelle, 7-4, wJio gave up a run-scoring double to Luis Salazar in the top of the ninth to put San Diego ahead 4-3, was the winner.

Cardinals 9, Mets 3

St. Louis, which fell out of serious contention with a seven-game losing streak, broke the skein against New York as John Stuper pitched a five-hitter and drove in two runs with two singles.

Stupers first hit gave the Cards a 2-1 lead in the fifth and he foiled an intentional-walk stragegy by the Mets in the sixth with another single that made it 4-1. David Green added three hits and three RBI for St . Louis.

Offensive Changes Have Been Pleasing To Vann

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer He was recruited by one East Carolina University head coach and soon found he would be playing for another.

Three offensive coordinators and two offenses later, Norwood Vann is making noise as the Pirates veteran tight end.

With his 57 yards receiving Saturday against Murrayi State, the Magnolia native tallied 663 career yards to move into ninth place ahead of Bob Grant on the ECU list and needs just 60 more to take over eighth.

But life at tight end was not so glamorous when Vann arrived at ECU. The wishbone offense made his position similar to a down lineman and took away opportunity for glory. _

The insertion of the option-I under coordinator Larry Beckish and its refinement this year under Art Baker have put Vann at the top of the receiver statistics list.

Before, it was basically a blocking position covering for the option outside, Vann said. Now its a skill position. Both (Beckish and Baker) were good coordinators; they both deserve a lot of credit for what this teams done so far.

Coach Baker has helped a lot with good play selection. Hes gotten us out of binds a couple of times already by calling the right play when our backs were to the wall.

Pat Dye, now head coach at Auburn, recruited Vann out of James Kenan High School. Competition for the young quarterback/defensive end was fierce, with most Atlantic Coast Conference schools along with Texas, Pittsburgh

and Florida showing interest.

Coach Dye sold me on the program they were building here. Vann said. I was looking for a place where I could come in and play. He tried to get me to go to Wyoming when he left, but I decided that was too far away.

With the new coaches coming in, 1 had some doubts at first. Now Im glad I stayed.

Things were rough in the first two years of the Ed Emory regime. The 1980 ECU squad finished with a 4-7 mark - the first losing record at the school since 1971. A 63-7 trouncing at the hands of nationally-ranked Flordia State added insult to injury.

The 1981 unit improved, but still finished below .500 with a disappointing 5-6 record via a 31-21 loss at Ficklen Stadium to William and Mary in the final game of the season. A 56-0 loss to North Carolina in the final meeting of the two schools marked the first time the Pirates had been shut out since the opening game of the 1971 season. .

Last season the Pirates improved to a 7-4 record, winning four of the last five games.

This year when we went down to Florida State, we had the 63-7 game in the corner of our minds, Vann said, but the Pirates dropped a narrow 47-46 decision. We should have won that game. It was an offensive battle; they have some great receivers. We had confidence in our offenses ability to score.

The next week, the Pirates rallied for a 22-16 victory over N.C. State before the largest crowd to witness a game in

this state.

With that loss behind us, we had extra incentive. Vann said. "We wanted to be 1-1. We lost a close one there last year (33-26). but we held on this time."

After two televised games, the latter on Ted Turners WTBS cable network, the Pirates came back to Greenville to host Division I-AA Murray State in the home opener. Students and supporters worried of a letdown by the Pirates.

"Against Murray State, we knew we had to keep that same state of mind we had in the first two games," Vann said. For all we had established, it all would have been down the drain if wed had a letdown."

The Pirates face highly-touted Missouri of the Big Eight Conference and Florida during October, but Vann thinks the schedule will give ECU a better chance of a towl berth.

"To go to a bowl you have to play big-name schools, he said. 1 think we have a pretty good chance. Playing in my senior season. I know now what its like to have to leave. Its all swept by so fast."

Don McGlohon INSURANCE

Hines Agency, Inc.

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shop on Friday, September 23rd, from 8 AM to 5 PM, and wish him well during his retirement.

HENDRDi-BARNHIU,

Memorial Drive * Greenville

INC.





SCOREBOARD

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Thursday. September 22.1983    15

Baseball Standings

Baltimore

Detroit

New York

Toronto

Milwaukee

Boeton

Cleveland

GB

599 -.483 17>,4 .480 18 .451 Hir .441 24 .428 26 .371 34'i

fflssgEr

EAST DIVISION W L Pet.

94    57    623

86    66    .566    84

84    67    .556    10

84    69    .549    11

81    71    .533    134

74    79    .484    21

66    85    .437    28

_    WEST DIVISION

x-Chicago    91    61

Kansas City    73    78

Texas    73    79

^nd    69    M

California    67    85

Minnesota    65    87

Seattle    56    95

x-clinched division title _ ... Wednesdays Games Baltimore 6-7, Detroit 0-3 _    ^

California 3. Kansas City 0 Texas 4, Oakland 2 Milwaukee 10, Cleveland 7 Boston 3, New York 1 Toronto 4, Seattle 3 Chicago 2-7, Minnesota 1.6 niursdays Games Baltimore (Flanagan 12-3) at Detroit (Wilcox 10-10), (n).'

Milwaukee (Candiotti 4-2) at Cleveland (Sorensen 10-10), In)

Minnesota (Filson 2-1) at Kansas City (Rasmussen3-5) (n)

Seattle (Beattie 9-13) at Texas (Darwin 7-12), (n)

Chicago (Koosman 10-7) at California (Forsch8-ll),(n)

Only games scheduled

Friday s Games Boston at Detroit, (n)

Clevelandat New York, (n)

Baltimore at Milwaukee, (n)

Minnesota at Kansas City, (n)

Seattle at Texas, (n)

Chicago at California, (n)

Toronto at Oakland. (n)

..HITS; Boga. Boston, 191; Ripken, Baltimore, 1^ Whitaker, Detroit, 192; Cooper, Milwaukee, 185; Rice, Boston, 180.

DOUBLES: Boggs, Boston. 44; Ripken. Baltimore, 44; Parrish, Delroit, 41^ McRae, iunsas City, 39; Hrbek, Minnesota 38' Yount, Milwaukee, 38.

TRIPLES; Griffin, Toronto, 9; Gibson, Detroit, 9; Yount, Milwaukee, 9; Franco, Cleveland, 8; Gantner, Milwaukee, 8; Herndon^ Detroit 8;iVfflfiel4 Newjfork, 8.H0ME RUN: Rice, tostdn, ITT Armas, Boeton, 34; Kittle, Chicago, 33; Murray, Baltimore, 30; Luzinski, ClticaaoJO; Winfield, n/ew York, 30.

STOQnv BASES; lienderson. Oakland, 103; R. Law, Chicago,'^2;-J, Cruz, Chicago, 54; Wilson, Kansas ray, 53; Sample, Texas, 41 PITCHING (14 decisions): Haas. Milwaukee. 13-3, .813, 3.27; Flanagan, Baltimore, 12-3, 800, 3.07; McGregor, Baltimore, 17-6, .739, 3.07; Dotson, Chicago, 19-7, .731, 3.M; Gossage, New YorlU2-^ .7(16,2.35.

STRIKEOUTS: Morris, Detroit, 221; Bannister, Chicago, 184; Stieb, Toronto, 176; Righetti. New Yoik, 169; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 151 SAVES: (Juisenberry, Kansas City, 41; Stanley. Boston, 31; R. Davis, Minnesota, 28; Caudill, Seate, 23; Ladd, Milwaukee. 22.

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

L

70

72

73

--------    78

Chicago    68    84

New York    62    90

WEST DIVISION

Philadelphia Montreal Pittsburgh St. Louis

W

81

79

79

74

GB

Pet.

.536 -523    2

.520    24

.487 74 .447 134 .408 194

Los Angeles    87    65    . 572    -

Atlanta    82    68    . 547    4

Houston    79    72    .523    7    4

San Diego    76    76    500 11

San Francisco    73    79    . 480    14

Cincinnati    69    82    . 457 174

Wednesday's Games Chicago?, Pittsburgh 6 San Francisco 5. San Diego 4 Atlanta 9-3, Cincinnati 1-4 St. Louis 9, New York 3 Philadelphia at Montreal, ppd., rain Los Angeles 2. Houston 1

Thursdays Games Pittsburgh (Tunnell 9-5) at Chicago iReuschel 1-0)    ,

Philadelphia (Hudson 7-7 and Denny

16-6) at Montreal (Lea 15-9 and Rogers

17-101,2,1 t-n)

Cincinnati (Russell 3-3) at Atlanta (Dayley4-6), (n)

New York (Darling 0-2) at St. Louis (Cox 2-5), (n)

Only games scheduled

Fridays Games New York at Chicago Pittsburgh at Montreal, (n)

San Diego at Cincinnati, in)

Los Angeles at Atlanta, (n)

Philadelphia at St. Louis, (n)

San Francisco at Houston. (n)

League Leaders

Bv The Associated Press

American league BATTING (370 at bats): Boggs, Boston, 360; Carew, California, 345; Moseby, Toronto, 320; Whitaker, Detroit, 317; McRae Kansas City .315 RUNS: Ripken, Baltimore, 114; Mur-r^, Baltimore. Ill; Moseby, Toronto, 10, Henderson,Oakland, 99; 4 are tied with 95.

RBI: Rice, Boston, 120; Cooper, Milwaukee, 117; Winfield, New York, 107; Parrish, Detroit. 106; Murray, Baltimore, 103: Simmons. Milwaukee. t(rl

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (370 at bats): Cruz, Houston, 325, Madlock, Pittsburgh, .325; Hendrick, St. Louis, .315; Lo. Smith, St. Louis, .313; Murphy, Atlanta, .313.

RUNS: Murw, Atlanta, 128; Raines, Montreal, 121; Dawson, Montreal. 103; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 93; Evans, San Francisco, 91.

RBI: Mui^y, Atlanta, 116; Dawson, Montreal, 110, Schmidt. Philadelphia, 102; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 94; Kennedy, San Diego, 92.

HITS: Dawson, Montreal, 184, Cruz, Houston, 180; Oliver, Montreal, 175; Ramirez, Atlanta, 173; Murphy, Atlanta, 171.

DOUBLES: Oliver, Montreal, 38; Buckner, Chicago, 36; Dawson, Montreal, 35; Carter, Montreal, 35; Ray, Pittsburgh 35, Kni^t, Houston, 35 TRIPLES: Butler, Atlanta. 13; Dawson, Montreal, 9; Green, St. Louis, 9; Redus, Cincinnati. 9; Thon, Houston, 9.

HoMe RUNS: Schmidt. Philadelphia, 37; Murphy, Atlanta. 35; Dawson. Montreal, 32, Guerrero, Los Angeles, 30; Evans, San Francisco. 28.

STOLEN BASES. Raines, Montreal, 80; Wiggins. San Diego, 59; Wilson, New York, 50; S. Sax. Los Angeles. 49; Lo. Smith, St. Louis, 40 PITCHING (14 decisions): Denny, Philadelphia. IM. ,727,2.34; McWilliams. Pittsburgh, 156, .714, 3.14;Orosco, New York, 13-7, .650, 1.47, Scott, Houston, 9-5, 643 , 3.68; Tunnell, Pittsburgh, 9-5, .643, 395

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 256; Soto, Cincinnati, 226, McWilliams. Pittsburgh, 190: Ryan, Houston, 174; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 174.

SAVES: Le. Smith, Chicago, 28; Holland. Philadelphia. 22: Reardon, Montreal 20; Bedrosian, Atlanta,    19;

DiPino, Houston, 19; Minton, San Francisco, 19;Sutter,St Louis, 19,

NFL Standings

By The Associated Press American Conference East

W L T Pet. PF PA 2 I 0    .667 38    41

.667    60    51

.333    62    68

.333    70    76

.333    64    69

2    1    0

1    2    0

1    2    0

1    2    0

Central

2    1    0    667    69    60

2    1    0    .667    75    63

0    3    0    .000    23    47

.000 72 101

Buffalo Miami Baltimore New England N Y Jefe

Cleveland

Pittsburgh

Cincinnati

Houston

L A Raiders Denver Seattle Kansas City San Diego

National Conference East

Dallas    3    0    0    1.000    93    60

Philadelphia    2    1    0    667    48    50

Washington    2    1    0    667    80    56

0    3    0

West

3    0    0    1.000    67    30

2    1    0    .667    41    33

1    0    667    64    58

.333 43    57

.333 77    89

2 0 2 0

Neither Fighter Fears The Other

CLEVELAND (AP) -Michael Dynamite Dokes doesnt think much of Gerrie Coetzees bionic right hand, while the challenger doesnt believe the champions punching power lives up to his nickname.

His power doesnt seem to be a problem for me, said Dokes, who will make a scheduled 15-round World Boxing Association heavyweight title defense against the top-ranked Coetzee Friday night at the Coliseum in Richfield, Ohio.

Hes a devastating puncher, but devastating punchers never really intimidate me, Dokes said 'Tuesday at a news conference here. Guys with one punch never knock me out.

Coetzee has scored 17 knockouts in winning 28 fights against three losses and a draw. But his power failed him in two bids for the WBA title.

He hurt John Tate with a right hand in the fourth round, iHit was unable to follow it up and lost a unanimous 15-round decision at Pretoria, South Africa, Oct. 20, 1979, for the title made vacant by Muhammad Alis retirement.

He had Mike Weaver in serious trouble in the eighth round, but let him off the hook and got knocked out in the 13th round Oct. 25,1980, at Johannesburg.

It was after Coetzee knocked out Leon Spinks in the first round to earn the fight against Tate that a publicist tagged Coetzee with the bionic hand because he had had bone-fusion surgery on it.

While the hand is not bionic, it certainly had been brittle. The South African has broken it five times, most recently last October.

Coetzee said he favored his right in fighting a 10-round draw against Pinklon Thomas Jan. 22 at Atlantic City, N.J., but that the hand is fine know.

But Jackie McCoy, a veteran California trainer who is working with Coetzee for this fi^t, doesnt feel that the ctellenger is a one-handed fighter. McCoy feels Coetzee has a good left jab and left hook.

That would be the only chance he has, if hes developed his Idt hand for this

fight, and I dont think he has, said Dokes.

Coetzee said his loss to Weaver was a matter of fatigue. But he hits hard ... harder than Dokes. Dokes is a better boxer and ring technician, but doesnt have the punch.

Dokes, who at 25 is three years younger than Coetzee, won the title last Dec. 10, at Las Vegas, Nev., when he knocked down Weaver, then stopped him with the fight just 63 seconds old. In a rematch, ordered by the WBA because of widespread criticism of referee Joey Curtis for prematurely stopping the fight, Dokes kept the title on a 15-round draw at Las Vegas May 20.

That draw gave Dokes a 26-0-2 record, with 15 knockouts.

While both men claim to be disdainful of the others power, each is predicting he will win by a knockout.

The fight, which will be televised live by Home Box Office, is scheduled to start at 10:22 p.m., EDT.

Dokes is reportedly getting $750,000, while Coetzees purse is $250,000.

The night Dokes kept the title on the draw with Weaver, Tim Witherspoon tried to win the World Boxing Council heavyweight championship from Larry Holmes and lost a 12-round split decision.

Witherspoon, who is 16-1 with 11 knockouts and is ranked No. 2 by the WBC and No. 4 by the WBA, will appear on the card in a sch^ed 10-rounder against James Quick Tillis, who is ranked ninth by the WBC and No. 8 by the WBA.

Tillis, 24-3 with 18 knockouts, lost a unanimous 15-round decision to Weaver in a title bid in 1981.

The winner could get a match against Dokes if Dokes is successful. He said he plans to fight again in December and en in February.

In another 10-round heavyweight bout, Renaldo Snipes, rated No. 4 by the WBC and sixth ^ the WBA, will fight Alfredo Evangelista.

Baseball research has established that 1983 is the 100th anniversary of professional umpiring.

N Y. Gianb    1    2    0    .333    35    57

St. Louis    0    3    0    .000    61    104

Cmtrsl

Green Bay    2    1    0    .667    89    87

MinnesSa    2    1    0    .667    63    85

Chicago    1    2    0    .333    65    64

Detr^    1    2    0    .333    51    61

Tampa Bay    0    3    0    .000    26    47

West

AUanU    2    1    0    .667    63    47

L.A. Rams    2    1    0    .66?    70    60

New Orleans    2    1    0    .667    89    78

San Francisco    2    1    0    .667    107    66

Monday's Game Los Angeles Raiders 27, Miami 14 Sunday. Sept. 25 New Orleans at Dallas Detroit at Minnesota St. Louis at Philadelphia Houston at Buffalo Kansas City at Miami Cincinnati at Tampa Bay New England at Pittsburgh Chicago at Baltimore aevebnd at San Diego Washington at Seattle AtlanU at San Francisco Los Angeles Raiders at Denver Los Angeles Rams at New York Jets Monday Sept. 26 Green Bay at New York Giants. (n)

Transactions

By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League

CALIFORNIA ANGELS-Signed a working agreement with WaterWy of the Class AA Eastern League.

National League

president and chief executive officer. BASKETBALL National Baiketbali Associathm

CLEVEUND CAVALIERS-Cut John

J BUCKSAnnounced the retirement of Brian Winters,

Lucas, guard.

MILWAUKEE I

itirement of Brian WinterSiBuard. WASHINGTON BULLETS-Signed Mike Wilson, guard.

FOOTBALL Canadian Footbail League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS Traded Dieter Brock, quarterback, to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats for Tom aements, quarterback

National Football League LOS ANGELES RAMS-Signed Richard Bishop, defensive lineman, to a free-agent contract. Placed Myron Lapka, nose tackle, on the injured reserve list.

NEW YORK GIANTS-Signed Paul Davis, linebacker.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Cut Theotis Brown, running back, and signed Zachary Dixon, running back.

WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Signed Quentin Lowry, linebacker.

HOCKEY National Hockey League NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Signed Brent Sutler, center.

N.C.Scoreboard

By The Associated Press Mens (

NL-Announced tliOT have upheld the suspension of Dave Concepcion, Cincinnati Reds shortstop, for three games beginning Friday.

CHICAGO CUBS-Named Jim Finks

Rose Statistics

Rushing

Att

Gn

Ls

Net

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

....................35

237

10

227

Blackwell..................

....................43

132

42

90

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

.................... 4

37

0

37

Green.......................

................. 6

19

1

18

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

................... 8

13

1

12

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

.................. 1

7

0

7

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

.................. 2

K 7

0

7

Daniels

..... 1

6

0

6

Best...

1

2

0

2

Streeter

,, 5

9

20

-11

Team..

1

0

22

22

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

..................107

469

96

373

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

471

118

353

Passing

Att

Cmp

Int

Yds

Emory

50

24

5

432

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

.................... 5

1

2

7

Best.........................

................... 2

0

0

0

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

.................... 1

0

0

0

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

25

7

439

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

...................58

16

5

204

Total Offense

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

RSmith.............................................. 36

Martin........................................................7

Best......................................................... 3

(Others same as rushing)

Totals.......................................................165

Opp.........................................................167

Plays Rush 58    12

227 7

2

373 353

Receiving

No

Yds

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

..........................................10

234

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

............:............................7

95

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

......................................... 5

73

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

..........................................2

25

MSmith.................

........................................ 1

12

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

...................;.....................25

439

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

.......................................16

204

Field Goals

11-20 21-30 31-40 41-1- '

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

........ 0-0 1-1 0-0

0-1

Punting

No

Yds

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

........................................10

300

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

...................................... 1

0

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

300

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

........................................14

472

Punt Returns

No

Yds

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

....................................... 6

118

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

....................................... 1

0

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

....................................... 1

0

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

........................................ 8

118

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

12

Kjckoff Returns

No

Yds

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

......................;.................. 2

34

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

.......................................... 2

32

MSmith.................

....................................... 1

5

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

........................................ 5

71

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

.......................................11

140

Interceptions

No

Yds

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

........................................... 4

0

TVines...................

......................................... 1

3

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

......................................... 5

3

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

........................................ 7

56

6.5 2.1

22.0

3.0

1.5

7.0

3.5

6.0 2.0 0.0 0.0

48.0

20.0 00.0 00.0 43.1 27.6

Pass

432

0

7

0

439

204

23.4

13.6

14.6

12.5 12.0

17.6 12.8

Total

1-2

3

0

0

0

3

1

Tot

444

227

14

2

812

557

TD

3

0

0

0

0

3

1

BIk

0

30.0    1

0,0    -

27.3

33.7

19.7 0,0 0.0

14.8 1.7

5.0    0

Scoring

RSmith

TD

..... 4

Kick

0-0

Run

(M)

Pass

0-1

FG

0-0

TSmith

..... 3

(M)

04)

04)

04)

Blackwell....................

..... 2

(M)

1-1

04)

04)

Bridges

..... 0

4-5

04)

04)

0-0

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

..... 0

(M)

04)

0-2

0-0

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

..... 9

4-5

l-l

0-3

0-0

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

..... 4

4-4

0-0

0-0

1-2

First Downs

Rush Pass

Pen

Rose...

17 18

2

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

21 8

7

Fumbles No Lost

Penalties

No

Rose 11 3

Rose

20

OPP 12 7

OPP

26

TP

24

18

14

4

0

60

31

238

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18 Tha Dally Reflector. Greenville, N C.

Co VS Test Wolfpack

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer Virginia, off to its best start in 31 years, meets North Carolina State Saturday afternoon to try and get the upper hand in the Atlantic Coast Conference football title chase.

In Chapel Hill, fifth-ranked North Carolina goes for its fourth straight victory Saturday against William & Mary, while Georgia Tech officially opens its ACC competition with Clemson at Death Valley.

In other games involving ACC teams, Pittsburgh is at Maryland and Wake Forest goes to Richmond.

Duke, which has lost its first three games, has the weekend off.

The Cavaliers are 3-0 and with an opening-night victory over Duke hold sole possession of first place. A victory against the Wolfpack will give them a half-game lead over the winner of the Yellow Jackets-Tigers showdown.

But Virginia will be without flanker Quentin Walker, who suffered a broken bone in the victory over James Madison last weekend.

Walker gave us a deep threat and was such a threat on counter plays, Virginia coach George Welsh said.

People feared him.

Walker will be replaced by Nick Merrick, who has caught three passes in a backup role.

Virginia is first in rushing offense at 285.3 yards per game and third in scoring offense at 28.7 points per game.

N.C. State thrashed The Citadel 45-0 last Saturday as tailback Joe McIntosh rushed for two touchdowns and quarterback Tim Esposito passed for two more. Coach Tom Reed is concerned about his defense and its ability to stop a team on a roll.

They give us a problem Im not sure were capable of handling, Reed said. Virginias exactly what we dont need right now.

It looks like an easy time for the Tar Heels in Kenan Stadium, but don't tell it to coach Dick Crum, who said a victory for the Indians can be their season. For that reason, weve got to work and prepare. We will still have the utmost respect for them.

Georgia Tech is still looking for answers in last weekends 17-14 loss to Division I-AA Furman. Kevin Esval's field goal in the final minute sent the Jackets to an 0-2 start.

"Theres no explanation, tight end Ken Whisenhunt said. "We blew it.

"1 think everyone is really looking forward to Clemson. added defensive back Jack Westbrook. We all want to redeem ourselves.

Clemson is looking for a victor, after a loss and a tie and coach Danny Ford said his teams problem right now is "making the big plays.

"We need to break down on the" ball quicker and knock down a third-down pass or jar the ball loose. Ford said. Offensively, we are not getting the big run in the fourth quarter or the big pass completion.

Maryland saw an early 10-0 lead disappear against West Virginia and eventually dropped a 31-21 decision to the Mountaineers. The loss tumbled Maryland from The Associated Press tqj 20. The last time the Terrapins and the Panthers tangled, Pitt claimed an easy 38-9 victory.

Thursday, September 22,1983

Australia Still In Race

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Resilient Australia II stayed alive in the Americas Cup battle thanks to a must-win, comeback victwy.

That meant she needed only two more must-win victories.

Still, Aussie skipper John Bertrand, who conquered criK)led Liberty in Wednesdays fifth race, says the tide is flowing his way.

We certainly have momentum now, Bertrand said after Australia II sailed to a one-minute, 47-second victory that cut Libertys lead in the best-of-seven series to 3-2. Now, weve got two races to win.

I think we could win 50 in a row with this yacht, said Australia II syndicate chief Alan Bond, whose boats won just one of 13 races in his three previous Cup campaigns. The victory today proves we can win in any wind conditions.

Winds in the 10-20 knot range were forecast for todays sixth race.

Australia II was thought to be vulnerable in the fairly strong winds of 16-18 knots and choppy seas on Rhode Island Sound Wednesday. But it charged ahead of Liberty late on the first of six legs and never trailed again.

A victory by Australia II today would send the Americas Cup to a seventh race for the first time. A victory by Liberty would make Americas 25th defense of the Cup, which it has held since the first competition in 1851. a successful one.

I wont feel comfortable until we win, but Id rather be three wins and two losses than two wins and three losses, said Liberty skipper Dennis Conner. Obviously, Australia IPs a very good boat and very strong in all wind conditions. The pre-series predictions Australia IPs superi(Hity upwind and in light to moderate airs and Libertys superiority downwind and in stiffer breezes - have not held up. The series has been unpredictable.

So was Wednesdays race. Australia II, plagued by equipment failures the first two races, seemed to be in control when one of Libertys two hydraulic jumper struts, V-shaped sup^rts for the mast, bent and collapsed about an hour before the race. Then, as Libertys crew tried to set its jib to start the first leg, a luff tape on it tore, forcing Conner to use his second choice for the headsail.

But Liberty seized on Bertrands second consecutive poor start to grab a whopping 37-second advantage.

Finally, good fortune and the winds shifted back to Bertrand, who rode on a directional change in the breeze to a 23-second lead at the first mark.

When the jumper strut collapsed, Liberty crew members Tom Rich and Scott Vogel went up the mast to dismantle it and replace it with another one that had been rushed in from shore. The job was done two minutes before starting maneuvers

were to b^n. But about three minutes into the race, the replacement collapsed.

We would have been faster if we had had no problems, Conner said. Certainly, isychologically it takes a litUe >it out of you to have the roblems we had for a half KHir prior to the race.

Soon, however, it was Bertrand who had -^a )sychological letdown. His )oat was about two feet across the starting line when the race began, forcing him to circle back and start again.

We were down three races to one. We went for broke and I got a little too greedy, he said. Having to return in a yacht race like that is hard to take and, as a result, you have to lift yourself up very quickly.

The lift came soon when Bertrand tacked to the left, and Conner failed to block the Aussies wind.

We hooked into a five-degree wind shift on the lef-thand side and that got us back, Bertrand said. We were obviously surprised but also delighted that Liberty didnt tack over to cover us. We chose not to cover them because we felt that, being crippled, our best chance was to gain some distance on a shift and we thought the wind might go to the right, Conner said. Instead, it really didnt change and the next time we came back together the boats were basically even.

But not for long.

Australia IIs edge stayed at 23 seconds after the second

leg, dropped to 18 second^ at the third mark, then grew to 1:11 after the fourth ik, and Liberty was finished - fw the day.

Conner bounced back from his other setback, a 3:14 whipping Sunday, to win by 43 seconds Tuesday.

The competition from Dennis Conner is very tight, said Bond.

We got off to a good start in an important race, but I never underestimated them, Conner said.

GGO Lost Money

GREENSBORO (AP)-The rain-plagued Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournament lost money this year for the first time since 1940, says Art Winstead, president of the sponsoring Greensboro Jaycees.

We took a beating, Winstead said Wednesday. We have learned to cry down here.

Nearly every shot of this years tournament was made in cold, rainy April weather. Rain forced officials to extend the tournament by one day, resulting in a $24,946 loss compared with the $137,024 profit it made in 1982.

Crowds were thinner than usual, as is evidenced by the $80,000 decrease in concession and ticket revenues, said Winstead.

Member-Member Winners

The team of Greg Hardison (left) and Gary Hobgood (left center) captured first place in the Farmville Golf and Country Clubs Member-

Member tournament last weekend. Finishing second were Nelson 'Tugwell (right) and Dannie Langston (right center).

Wake Forest is looking for its third straight victory, but has to pin its hopes on an ailing quarterback Gary Schofield. Also, linebacker Danny Rocco is out after knee surgery on Sunday following the victory over Western Carolina.

Richmond is 0-3, but coach A1 Groh said the Demon Deacon^ must work with our secondary. We need to take some of the thrill out of the deep pass. We need to improve our open-field tackling.

Golfing pro Andy Bean had a great background for the game. When he was 15 his father bought a golf course.

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Strange Bedfellows Over IMF

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C TTiursday September 22. 1983    -|7

By SLSANNEM. SCHAFER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A curious coalition has banded together to fight President Reagans plan to get $8.4 billion in new funds for an institution that has become a chief manager of the world debt crisis, the International Monetary Fund.

The grouping reflects the colorings of a political rainbow - it includes consumer advocate Ralph Nader, conservative financial adviser Howard Ruff, environmentalists, budget

conscious taxpayer advocacy groups and even representatives from the United Methodist Church.

It's true, we are a bit bizarre, said John Houston, a lobbyist for Ruffs political action committee, Free TTie Eagle. But we have had an effect. We have been able to deliver the votes.

Members of the coalition, in separate interviews, contend their lobbying efforts have been so successful that they not only have been able to help stall, but may yet halt, the controversial legis-

NU ENTRANCE A U.S. Marine Guard on duty at th^ residence of the American Ambassador refuses entry to journalists Wednesday at the home, located in Yarze, east of Beirut. The residence compound was hit by a rocket fired by Syrian-backed Druse militiamen last Tuesday night, during rocket duels with Lebanese army troops. There was minor damage to the residence itself. (AP Laserphoto)

lation in its passage through Congress.

Its a tough issue to explain, said Nader, It is very complex, but if you go around the country like we do, youd be surprised how many pwple - workers in California or farmers in Oklahoma - know about it. They are drawn to the image of Washington bailing out the big banks.

Major hurdles still remain for the legislation, even though both the House and the Innate have passed bills authrizing the increase. It passed the House on a razor-thin six vote margin, but still faces a conference committee and money must be appropriated in separate legis ation.'

The lobbyists, like Nader, are supporting those legislators who argue that the measure is a big bank bailout.

They maintain that the financially-strapped developing nations, given the IMF funds, will use them to pay back shaky loans obtained from large international banks. They also contend the IMF imposes strict economic conditions upon the nations, which make it difficulf for them to import goods that would translate into U.S. jobs.

This coalition is really is an example of an explosion of grass-roots populism, directing their furor at the old bogeyman, the big banks, said a World Bank official, who has been following the IMF negotiations closely.

The IMF, set up after World War II to help stabilize international finances, is little known to the average citizen. In recent years, however, it has become a major force in keeping developing nations like Mexico from going bankrupt.

As part of its campaign to make the IMF a household word. Free The Eagle in coming weeks plans to let loose about 3 million letters on the legislation, each one pre-addressed so constituents can contact their rep

resentatives with relative ease.

Richard Viguerie, the maior-d(Mno of mass mailers and a prominent figure in the New Right, has weighed in with a letter-writing cam-pai^, advertisements and radio commercials. He seeks support for IMF opponents in Coiijgress, such as Rep. Tom Corcoran, R-Ill., one of those who spearheaded the battle against the bill in the House.

They are bucking President Reagan, Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan, and the leadership of both parties, all of whom argue that the IMF should be supported because it is helping solve the international debt problem and will bolster U.S. markets abroad by strengthening the international economy.

Often, our coalition is presented as a bunch of right-wing isolationists, but were not, said Jeff Stant, of the National Taxpayers Union. We just believe that this is a question of imprudent international loan practices that ends up placing an unfair burden on the U.S. taxpayer.

Brent Blackwelder, a spokesman for the Environmental Policy Center, said his group opn poses the IMF increase because the bank has made loans to nations that have pursued development projects that have proven disastrous to the local environment.

Anita Anand, a lobbyist for the United Methodist Church,

INTERCEPTION

ROME (AP) - The Defense Ministry says two Italian jet fighters intercepted two Soviet-made Libyan bombers being flown from the Soviet Union to Libya and escorted them out of Italian air space Wednesday.

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said she has questions whether the $8.4 billion is really needed and believes that the expansion of funds benefits primarily the banking interests and... does not effectively work to eliminate debt or ^verty in Third World countries.

Other developments have also hobbled chances for the bill.

One was a Republican-sponsored letter, which quoted freely from Rep. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, accusing about 20 Democrats of supporting communism because they had voted against his amendment to ban IMF loans to communist nations. The reason the Democrats are so angry is that the same amendments were also voted down by many Republicans, such as Rep. Bob Michel of Illinois, who are not mentioned in the letter.

The key thing is. a lot of things are happening that will make passage of this bill less likely, said Nader. "We have a good coalition going.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO CONSIDER LEVY OF 1/2% SUPPLEMENTAL innAi GOVERNMENT SALES AND USF TAV

the following time, date and place TIME

7:30 oclock P.M.

DATE

October 6,1983

PLACE

COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ROOM Second Floor County Office Building West Fifth Street Extension Greenville. NC

toihP RoIm    attend    and    present their views

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(Published by order of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners)

Donald L. Davenport

Clerk to Pitt County Board of Commissioners

W.H. Watson County Attorney Speight. Watson and Brewer P.O. Drawer 99 Greenville. NC 27834

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In The Area

JA Chairman Named For Pitt

John McConney. general manager at Burroughs-Wellcome Co. here, has been named the 1983-84 fund-raising chairman for Junior Achievement (JA) in Pitt County.

Junior Achievement is the nations oldest youth economic education organization. JA helps high school students in Pitt County develop an understanding of business fundamentals by setting up their own companies. Under the guidance of advisors, who are volunteers from business and industry, the students produce and market a product or service that they select.

This year's budget of $14,065 includes a one-time cost to relocate and set up a modular office being donated by Burroughs-Wellcome to provide a permanent home for JA. The Pitt County Board of Commissioners has donated the use of land near the county offices for placement of the modular office.

Over 800 letters have been mailed to area businesses and individuals soliciting funds to help meet the 1983-84 budget.

To Speak At ECAF Banquet

Automotive Machine Shop Foreign-Domestic Engines Rebuilt

Auto Spocialty Co.

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FIRE DAM.AGE ROME (AP) - A fire gutted part of the stage of the Rome opera house and damaged several rows of seats Wednesday during remodeling work. Nobody was injured.

Mutter D. Evans, a Williamston native and owner-general manager of Winston-Salem radio station WAAA, will be the guest speaker at a banquet of the Eastern Caroina Advertising Federation today at the Greenville Country Club.

Evans topic will be How to Reach the Black Consumer.

The banquet, scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m., will be preceeded by a miniseminar on computer graphics lead by Janet Gaino of Diversified Media of Greenville at6:30p.m. The mini-seminar and

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banquet will be open to members of the Eastern Carolina Advertising Federation and their guests.

Friday Services Are Planned

Elder Betty Rinehart and the congregation of Guiding Light Temple will have special services at New Hope Holiness Church, 403 Brown St., Friday at 8 p.m.

Harvest Day Activities Set

Winterville Free Will Baptist Church will hold a Harvest Day crafts and baked goods sale Saturday at the Winterville Fire Station.

The crafts and baked goods sale will begin at 10 a.m. and chicken pastry dinners will be sold from 11:30 a. m. to 1 p.m.

At 6 p.m. the Oak Grove Boys of Elm City will provide entertainment and at 7 p.m. there will be an auction.

Laboratory To Provide Meals

The Pitt Community College Preschool Laboratory will offer meals to enrolled children at the center and homes at no separate charge as determined by family size and income, lab directors have announced.

The meals will be provided regardless of race, color, national origin, sex or handicap.

Named An Associate Attorney

Attorney General Rufus Edminsten announced the appointment of Debra Kay Gilchrist of Greenville to the staff of the Department of Justice as an Associate Attorney in the Human Resources Division.

A 1973 graduate of J.H.

Rose High School, she attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from 1973 until 1976. where she received a bachelors degree with honors in psychology.

From 1976 until 1978, sne attened UNC and NCSU as a graduate student in psychiatry and statistics.

In 1989, she entered the Campbell University School of Law and was awarded her law degree in 1983.

Prior to accepting the job with the Department of Justice, Gilchrist served as an adult probation and parole officer in Durham, and was a legal intern with the North Carolina Justice Academy at Salemburg. She also worked as a law clerk with Williamson, Herrin, Stokes and Heffelfinger of Greenville.

Gilchrist is the daughter of Highway Patrol Captain Carl Gilchrist and Betty Gilchrist of Greenville.

Weekend Services Scheduled

The following worship services will be held at Mills Chapel Free Will Baptist Church this weekend:

Today, 7:30 p.m., Eldress Cora Cox will be the speaker;' Friday, 7:30 p.m., a regular service will be held.

The services are open to the public.

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Yard Sale To Benefit Program

The first yard sale sponsored to raise funds for scholarships in rehabilitation counseling at East Carolina University will be held (rain or shine) at the former Kings Department Store garden shop across U.S. 264 By-pass from Krogers, two consecutive Saturdays and Sundays.

Sept. 24 and Oct. 1 the yard sale will be held from 8 a.m.-6 p.m. and Sept. 25 and Oct. 2 from 3-6 p.m.

Persons having items they wish to contribute may call 355-2211.

August Fire Activity Reported

During August the rural fire departments in Pitt County answered 119 alarms and responded to 102 fires, according to Bobby Joyner, Pitt County Fire Marshall.

The fires consisted of the following: seven houses, five house trailers, 14 buildings, 10 autos, 19 grass or wood fires, two false alarms, 45 other and 17 mutual aids.

According to Joyner, $495,050 of property was invoved in the fires and $1,876,499 was exposed to fire. Joyner said $291,200 was lost to fire and $2,080,349 was saved by rural fire departments.

The Stokes and Staton House fire departments had the most fires with 14.

Holly Hill Honoring Pastor

Holly Hill Free Will Baptist Church will celebrate its pastors anniversary beginning today and continuing through Sunday.

Today at 7:30 p.m. the Rev. Lonnie Tillary and the Christ Temple choir and ushers in charge. On Friday at 7:30 p.m. the Rev. James Moore of Ernul will be the guest. Sunday at 2 p. m. the anniversary will close out.

Church To Sell Dinners

Fried chicken and chitterling dinners will be sold at the Nazerene Church of Christ, 205 W. Skinner St., on Friday from 11 a.m. until sold out.

The cost will be $2.50 per plate and beverages are included.

Seminar Scheduled At ECU

ATTHEALLDAVSKAIE! Hairbreadth

L,. Robert S. Bly of the University of South Carolina will present a seminar in the department of chemistry at East Carolina University at 2 p.m. Friday. His topic will be Competitive Hydrogen Abstraction and Redox-Catalyzed Migratory Carbonyl Insertion in Iron Alkyl Complexes. The seminar, one of a series sponsored by Union Carbide Corp is open to the interested public. It will be held in Room 201 Flanagan Building.

Decision Due

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - The future of N.C. A&T State Univesitys School of Nursing rests on a fraction of a percent.

According to figures released Tuesday by A&T chancellor Edward B. Fort, 69.76 percent of the schools graduates taking licensing exams in the past two years have passed. The N.C. Board of Nursing two years ago promised to cancel A&Ts nursing program unless it acheived a 70 percent passing rate. It is scheduled to decide Thursday whether to continue the pro^am.

Fort announced Sept. 8 that the school had achieved an overall 71 percent passing rate during the two years and had met the Nursing Boards mandate. At the time he did not know tha one A&T student tested out of state in July had failed. Fort said Tuesday.

Raymond Dawson, vice-president for Academic Affairs for the UNC system, said Tuesday that he is confident A&T will keep its nursing program.





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C_Thursday.    September    22.1983    19

11^        i\^iicv/ivn. wiPCIIVmg. 1^-0._I    uuiauay.    ocpieiiiuer    iPredictions For The Emmy Awards

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - To paraphrase Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca," At least NBC will have Sunday night. Thats Emmy-award night, the third-rated netwoHcs annual evening of ecstasy.

CBS can crow about being No. 1 in prime time, ABC can boast the most profits, but NBC can be proud that its best programs are, by far, the classiest the industry has to offer.

So, here are some predictions on the glamour awards for the 1982-83 season;

-Outstanding Comedy Series Nominees: Buffalo Bill" (NBC), "Cheers" (NBC), M-A-S-H (CBS), Newhart (CBS), Taxi (NBC).

M-A-S-H will get the sentimental vote for finally en ling the war, while keeping its standards high through 11 seasons. But well toast Cheers,, the freshest comedy on TV. A barroom

Phillips Is Suspended

LOS/ANGELES (AP) -Actress Mackenzie Phillips has been suspended indefinitely from CBS One Day at a Time because of a health problem that has made her thin and tired, a spokesman for Embassy Television says.

Prince Makes Appearance

Miss Phillips is suffering from hypoadrenia, a malfunction of the adrenal gland, spokesman Barry Stagg said Tuesday.

Stagg said the 23-year-old actress taped three shows in her role as Julie Cooper Horvath, playing the elder daughter of Bonnie Franklin, before she went on sick leave.

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - Prince Claus and his wife Quwn Beatrix rolled into Parliament Square in a gold horse-drawn coach flanked by army bands and marching troops to the cheers of onlookers and legislators.

Mackenzie Phillips has been suspended indefinitely, which is a legal term, but basically shes on sick leave, said Stagg. We dont need her back until mid-November, when shes due to make her next appearance in an episode.

comedy can be claustrojrfiobic just look at Archie Bunkers Place. Yet Cheers never stopped delighting us and shooting knowing glances at our foibles, vulnerabilities and emotions.

-Outstanding Drama Series Nominees: Cagney & Lacey (CBS), "Fame (NBC), Hill Street Blues (NBC), Magnum, P.I." (CBS), St. Elsewhere (NBC).

What does it say about television that two of the nominees, Cagney & Lacey and Fame, were canceled? What does it say about ABCs series that the network cant boast a single nominee here, or for b^t comedy? What does it say about Hill Street Blues that we care so deeply about 14 disparate characters, who are turned into the merest of mortals by the most clever writing on TV? Hill Street is easily tops for the third straight season.

-Outstanding Limited Series Nominees: Nicholas Nickleby (syndicated), "Smileys People (syndicated), The Thorn Birds (ABC), To Serve Them All My Days (PBS), Winds of War (ABC).

This is where ABC often shines. Although Winds of War was a wooden soldier, The Thorn Birds was beautifully filmed and dramatically involving. This ABC miniseries should win, since members of the Academy of Television Arts

It was the first public appearance of the 57-year-old prince, who suffers recurring depressions, in almost a year.

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribun Company Syndicata, Inc

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pionships. In so doing, the Brazilians qualified to represent their zone in the World Championships, about to start in Sweden.

On this hand from the final, Argentina had the upper hand. A fairly straightforward auction saw Argentinas South become declarer at a contract of four hearts, which is in jeopardy because of the prospect of losing three spade tricks and a diamond.

West was reluctant to make an aggressive lead for fear that it might cost a trick, so he settled on a trump. Declarer drew all the outstanding trumps, then led a low club. When the king appeared, he took three rounds of clubs and then ruffed a club to set up a long club in dummy. Now he exited with a spade.

If West played a spade honor, he would be forced to return a diamond, and the same position would result as described below. Instead, he opted to play low, and East won the ten of spades.

The best East could do was to cash the ace of diamonds and continue with the queen. But declarer countered neatly by refusing to ruff, instead discarding a spade from his hand. East had nothing left but diamonds, and his forced continuation of that suit permitted declarer to pitch his remaining spade as dummys jack won the trick. Declarer lost only one spade trick and two diamonds.

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& Sciences are biased toward the commercial networks.

Nicholas Nickleby was emotionally effective, but it

iiy

was a play and not an original TV production. The

outstanding limited series for TV was Masterpiece Theatres To Serve Them All My Days. The weekly story of a World War I veteran's education as a teacher at an English private school could give soap opera a good name.

Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Program Nominees: Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts (CBS), "Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever (NBC), "SCTV Network (NBC), "Tonight (NBC), Tony Awards (CBS).

The Motown special was a joy and great nostalgia. Michael Jackson was the definitive show-stopper. But SCTV gets the nod for

FOCUS

SHINE ON...

Tomorrow is the Autumn Kcjuinox. Kquinox, which means equal ni^ht," marks the time of year when day and night are the same length at the Equator. Kach year the full moon closest to the Autumn Kquinox is called the llarve.st moon. It is given this name because it often shines so brightly that farmers in the Northern Hemisphere can stay out late at night to tiike in the fall harvest.

DO YOU KNOW - When does the vernal Kquinox oceur.^

WEDNESDAY'S ANSWER - Ice cream is believed to have first appeared in Italy around 1550.

!l 2' H;I

Klli)wli'il,;r liiiliislrii'S. Ilir l(l.''.l

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES; It is important to concentrate on your instincts today. They are right on the mark. Con-cenatrata on career goals which seam to be shaping up wall for you at this time.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Higher-ups expect a lot from you at this time. Make sure your day-t04lay routines are in good, working order.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A new situation has arisen which r^uires some looking into on your part before acting on it.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Exercise more patience and cooperation with co-workers. Loved ones need more of your attention also.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Confer with associates for better results in the future. It is important to reach agreements.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Plan to get your activities in order so you can gain the benefits involved. Concentrate on being more efficient.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Plan your weekend social events from the point of view of cost. It is important for you to exercise thrift.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Domestic affairs require more attention from you than youve been exercising. Extend social invitations.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Handle correspondence early in the day. Later, devote your energies to smoothing over bad feelings with co-workers.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Pay all outstanding bills today in order to clear up messy accounting. Later, be with good friends.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Look around your abode for possible improvements to be made, then do them. Use caution in motion.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Outside influences are dangerous at this time. You need to be by yourself and get things on a firmer basis.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Spend time showing devotion to friends who've been neglected recently. Handle career matters also. .

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will be one of those charming young persons born with a natural ability to lead. There is a tendency toward rash judgments, so teach early to be more thoughtful and to think ahead. There is some talent here for music.

The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983 McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

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sustained excellence, tweaking TV where it deserves to be tweaked: in its brain drain. In the ultimate TV parody, SCTV was canceled by NBC for - what else? - low ratings. NBC, which will televise the Emmys, plans to do live iromotions throughout the broadcast, touting its winners. Will it be made speechless by an SCTV Emmy?

-Outstanding Drama Special Nominees: Little Gloria ... Happy at Last (NBC), M.A.D.D.: The Candy Lightner Story (NBC), Scarlet Pimpernel" (CBS), Special Bulletin (NBC), Who Will Love My Children? (ABC).

There were some good movies here, but only one

broke new ground. Special Bulletin had the look and

TV Log

feel of a network news broadcast covering events on the run. That its story was about nuclear blackmail made Special Bulletin even more timely and.gripping. The behind-the-scenes look at network news may have been overly sensational, but it never ceased to be fascinating.

In other awards, Dabney Coleman of Buffalo Bill gets our vote for lead actor in a comedy series, over the also-deserving Ted Danson of Cheers and Alan Alda of M-A-S-H. More than the other two, Colemans despicable Buffalo Bill had to carry that show.

Ed Flanders of "St. Elsewhere deserves best lead in a dramatic series for

conveying dignity, charm and patience. Shelley Long of Cheers should win ^t lead actress in a comedy. She plays the intelligent fish out of water with uncanny intelligence.

For complete TV programming inlor-metion, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

THURSDAY

^ 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Magnum P I 9:00 Simon &

10:00 K Landing 11:00 News 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch FRIDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Press Your 11:00 Price Is

12 00 News 12 30 Young 8.

1 30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guilding L

4 00 Waltons

5 00 A Gritfitn 5:30 MASH 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 News 9 11 30 Movie 2-00 Niohtwatch

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9 00 We Got It 9.30 Cheers 10:00 Hill 51 11:00 News

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12 30 Lelterman 1:30 Overnight 2 30 News

FRIDAY 5:00 Jimmy S

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7 25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News

8 30 Today

9:00 R Simmons 9:30 All in the

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10:30 Sale of the 11.00 Wheel of 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days of Our 2:00 Another Wor 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the

4 30 Brady Bunch

5 00 Gomer Pyle

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m

20 -^he Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C    Thursday.    September    22.    1983

ft

I

PEANUTS

NW'RE ATTACHING WIRES TO MV HEAP?!

WHAT HAPPENS IFMV HEAP LIGHTS UP? I WASN'T BORN TO BE A 6HTH0U5E!

/just A little mumor\

THERE, SIR, TO PUT

Vj'OU AT ease,..

-J

m^rs

?22

a ervavit whpse Height to 39-7 iv\chs.

NUBBIN

a. \K\K I SSK U.S. Navv Lt. Tim Trainer flies a ': liiopter near one of the .American vessels assisting in II h lor wreckage of the downed Korean Airlines Boeing !ia ouisiile ilie territorial waters of the U.SSR Thiirsdav

near Moneron Island, north of Japan. Trainer, 26. of Durham, Ct.. flies off the USS Wichita, an oiler and replenishment ship supporting the search. (AP Laserphoto)

Students On PCC Dean's List For Summer Quarter Named

i'he following students ir,-'fe the dean's list (3,5 to 4II grade point average) at Fitt.roinmunity College for Ilie 1983 siininier quarter: iirtctivillf: Catherine Adler. Iai.'W Ashworth, Stephen Baile\. I.'iiei.i Beatv. Sharuii Braswell. 1 line Brown, \'alerie Burney.

Byiiui. Kvelyn Campbell, i '"r i.'iaik, I.i.sa Conner, Martin i",-.ird. .Jetlrey Cox. . Delmar '. r.iiiie, ..lelinda Crawlord. Charles Stanley Davis, Annie Dixon,

u-ha

! Di.ike, Bronzie Fain Jr, roiintam. Don (jolden. lira ham, Robert Gray, li-euory. Sandra Hayes, Heath. Lisa Hedgepeth. Hi-mhv, Stacev Hihbard,

William Hudson Jr, Lloyd .laekson, Mary .Jaeohs Frederick .lames .Ir. Sherry .lories, ('ynlhia .loyner P'renda Langley, Dt'br.i Leathers, Donna lee. Karen lewis, Ann Me Conney, Rohm Moore. Timothy D.Connor. Karen teaden ,\licia Pleasant. Canssa Ray, Rohert Saieed ,!r. D.ivid Scoti Patricia Short, Terry Simpson, .Mliert Sloan Jr, Barbara Smith, .Marcia Smith, .Sherry Smith, Rohert Sutton Jr. Robert Taylor, Kathleen Teal, Penny Twitord. Kdilh Wilbournt*. Leslie Williams, P.ittie Williams. Fmily Wilson. .laiiies Winboiirne. Lisa Wright, Debra Zieniba ,\yden: Debra CraddiKk, Ton\ Dixon, (iroier D.irris Kddie Henderson. Renee .Iones, Jetlrey King. Cindy Meadows, Natalie .Meadows, Jasper Nichols .Ir . Royclte Nobles,

Ingram Orders Reduced Rates

KAI.KIGH, \,C. <AF) -I iniprehensive and collision ciitoinohile insurance rates Hiid decrease under a cut tcdtred by state Insurance I np.imissioner .John Ingram,

1.11 li.ihiliiy rates wouldn't be L'tecti i. >av industry of-

ICilds

Ingrani'issued last week an icd"!' -.uiuld reduce col-('    .a.-.uiaiice rates by 11.4

r..e'it and comprehensive \)\ 8.4 percent.

! ) lowered would be ^    paid by drivers covered

ti.r agh the .N'orth Carolina 'D'lnsur.'ince Facility, an dnary pool that provides la'll'., to high-risk drivers . ' . 1 iiiinpanies wouldn't I!' ''unariiy. i.olrs :or such drivers . o'.ilii icii'i 13 7 percent for , v:'ia ity damage liability I'. I rage- and 9 4 percent for 111) iiiedical payments, die order would not affect I dr-ivers' liability insur-' v\ hu ll all motorists are .a td liy law to carry, ' r'aul .Mr/e. general ,.jta r of til" \C Kate ' a. and manager of the ra" facility,

1 o.Uicrs are not re-"d to carry com- I -ive and collision in-iice. although most len

ders require it tor borrowers to qualify for car loans

Mize said he wouldn't comment on Ingram's order, filed Saturday, until it's reviewed by rate bureau lawyers.

The industry may appeal the order to the N'.C, Court of Appeals. II so. existing rates would continue ptending a decision, said -Mize, in the meantime, industry probably would f)e required to pay into a special account the difference between current rates and the reduced rates that would result from Ingram's order. i:

Insurance industry representatives questioned the need for the reductions.

"All of the data that 1 have seen would tend to indicate that the 'Current I rates are not excessive," said .Steven Short, operations manager for the eastern regional office of State Farm Insurance Companies.

The reinsurance facility's itoard of governors will review Ingrams order at its Oct. 12 meeting, said Bernard Parker, chairman of the facility and southeast regional manager for Nationwide Insurance Co.

Roo.'.cvelt OlcD, Susan Riggs, Sti'phon Whaley Lillie Whiehard, B(il)bie Whitaker, Bethel: Craig MeLawhoii. Susan Webster; Farmville: Itenee BriR'k, George Dupree, Tammy Fri/.z.elle, Susan Grilfis, .lay Griffith, Helen James. I.ilneia Mainhart, William Meeks. Debra Iadgell, Kim Fallon. Helen Stru'kliiatl, Sharon Vandiford.

Fduniain: William Owens, Bobby Williams; (iriftoii: William talletle. Michael MeLawhorn, Teresa MeLawhorn, April Mullen; (liniesland: Tina Dixon. Gasper Galloway, Virgil Hatch, Bonita Henderson, Mark Majette, Stokes: Ralph Harrison, Linda Jones. Waller Nelson, (iary Whiehard; Winierville: Frankie Daniels, Sharon Fvans, Danny Keel. Trent Knight. Deborah Reece. Karen Ryhanyeh. Regina Smith, Kim Winstead The following students made the honor roll J.d to 3.. grade point average at Rilt Community College for the 198J summer quarter: f.reeiuille: Mark Alcock, Ethan Bet'son. l.on Bovydcn, Gilbert Bouen Jr . Catherine Clark. Gregory Conner. Susan Creech. Alisan i)ale. Jesse Daniels, Merle Dennis, Anita Desolo. Lori Dickens, Donna Diehl. Daniel Dinardo Sylvi Klk.s. Judith Emery. CyTifhia Faireloth. Jeffery Foreman. Cheriia Foy, Cindy Fullenkamp, Sheryl Gladson. Geraldine Gowen, .Marsha Graham, Helen Guiletle, Dilton Haddock. Howard Harper,

No Disaster Loans 'Til After Harvest

KAl.KlGll, N.C, (API -North Caroliiui farmers shouldn't expect to receive federal drought assistance soon even if the state is declared a disaster area this week, a Farmers Home Administration official says.

Larry W Godwin said Wednesday that damage

Complaint By Six Women

ASTRONAUTS - Dr. Anna L. Fisher. 33, of San Pedro. Calif, (left) and Dr. Rhea Seddon, 35, of Murfreesbro, Tenn. (right) are the third and fourth women named to fly on the space shuttle. Fisher and Seddon will be members of the five-member crews whose major tasks will be deployment of commercial communications satellites and medical and scientific experiments. (AP Lasrphoto)    4

SCOTLAND NECK, N.C,

' A P I - Six female employees of Halifax Hosiery Company have charged that male employees are treated better than women by the company.

The womeiL who have formed a group called United Women Workers, have filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, charging that men working for the company get vacation pay, holiday pay and raises that are denied to women.

Lll tell you, I dont feel comfortable. You feel like you hate to go back to that job," said Madline Battle, 41, of Tarboro. It's not that you hale to work, its the environment, how people feel about you."

Mrs, Battle has been a seamer with the companv for _ X 'v'l'irs. Another semn'' anti four knitters have also joined in the discrimination complaint.

Greensboro attorney Michael Kelly, who repre- sents Halifax Hosiery and its owner, Annedeen Hosiery Mills, Inc., would not comment on the complaint,

"That matter is before the .commission, and we have no ^comment, he said.

assessment reports from all counties in the state will have to be studied and the years harvest completed before any low-interest loans can be awarded.

Losses will be compared to normal production for each crop. A county must have experienced at least a 30 percent loss to be eligible for disaster aid, said Godwin.

The drought relief issue took on political overtones this week. Gov. Jim Hunt chided the Reagan administration for what he called its slow response to the situation. The next day, U.S Sen. Jesse Helms said he had been told that North Carolina would be declared a disaster area this week and chided Hunt for failing to consult with him before complaining.

Hunt, a Democrat, is expected to seek Republican Helms seat in next years election.

Godwin said it would be irresponsible for any official to decide on disaster designation without properly analyzing the county reports.

"This serious situation in our farming community is being exploited, thereby diverting attention from the actual efforts underway in the USDA to make accurate assessments and final decision in accordance with existing laws,he said.

IFV! rii: vn'HGENCY .')C\ JUbE, Costa Rica (AP) - The government has declared a national health emergency to combat the spread of diseases brought into the country by ptriitical refugees from Nicaragua.

TOP QUALITY, fuel-economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified.

BLONDIE

.Norma Jackson, Stephanie Jackson

Karen Kalas, Karen Lloyd, Karen Mathews, Barbara McClenny, Sylvia Mills, Priscilla Moore, Deborah Mozingo, Scott Murphy, Rebecca IVelms, Frances Parrish, Donna Pate, Amy Perry, Annette Perry. James Peszko, Corinth Rogers, Steve Saieed, Donna Sexton, Lynne Siddal), Christine Smith, Sharon Smith, Lee Swofford, Dorothy Tripp, Richard Uhlman Jr, Alton Wadford, John Walker, Raymond Warren, Alyson Watson, Patricia Weisenberger, Earl White, Brenda Whitford, Brian Williams.

Ayden: Penny Butler. Jeffrey Cannon, Lerry dwards, Catherine Forrest, Donald Gilliam, Ronnie Holland, Wanda Marlowe, Celestine Move, Thomasine .Nichols, Carolyn Rouse, Benjamin Whaley; Bethel: Joyce Dixon, Gregory Roberson; Falkland: Betty Casper; Farmville: William Baker Jr., Rose Beasley, Drew Bynum, Jonsi Erwin, Lynette Harris, Roy Johnson, John Jones 111, Royce Richardson Jr.. Archie Spruill, Millie Suggs.

Fountain. Gayle Pettway; Griflon: Leo Edwards Jr, Debra Koon, Karen MeLawhorn, Judith Thomas; Grimesland; Alton Gardner, Frances Pender; Stokes: Amanda Holliman; Winterville: Katherin Braswell, Anthony Carmon, Louise Heath, Cynthia Keel, Luis Ochoa.

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MacDonald Avers Book Is Absvnl

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -An author who claims Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald killed his pregnant wife and two daughters because he hated women distorted the facts to boost sales of a book about the case, MacDonald says.

In a telephone interview Wednesday from a federal prison in Bastrop, Texas, MacDonald said he had read Joe McGinniss Fatal Vision and found it totally absurd. MacDonald is serving three consecutive life terms.

The overriding thing is the book is not based on the facts of the case, he said. Joe has tended to gloss over the facts and has come up with his own really bizarre theory. Its a theory put together to sell the book. McGinniss contends that MacDonald was suffering from pathological narcissism and that he covered up a deep insecurity over women by being a ' charmer and macho man. This is really asinine, said MacDonald, 39. Joe didnt even have the courtesy or honesty to interview the women in my life - my mother, sister, my secretary for nine years or any of the women he correctly or incorrectly associates with me romantically.

The book does include quotes and court statements from MacDonalds mother, sister and other women. It also includes testimony from psychiatrists and MacDonalds own taped accounts of his love life.

MacDonald claims that four hippie-like intruders stabbed and bludgeoned his wife. Collette. 26. and their daughters Kimberly, 5, and Kristen, 2, at their Fort Bragg apartment on Feb. 17, 1%9.

McGinniss said Wednesday in an interview in Raleigh that MacDonald put on a performance after the slayings and during his trial that convinced many he was innocent.

Hes a very sick man, McGinniss said. Its a real Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde case.

McGinniss said MacDonald made notes for his attorneys implying that he could have been under the influence of psychosis-inducing diet drugs. But MacDonald said Wednesday he had taken only three to five such pills in the month before the slayings.

When the Supreme Court turned down his latest appeal in January, the former Green Beret doctor said his lawyers would file for a new trial based on new evidence.

But McGinniss said MacDonald and his lawyers have no chance of getting a new trial.

Wheres the evidence? he said. "If they are so sure they have new evidence, why are they putting ads in the paper asking for information?

We have a very significant amount of new evidence, MacDonald said, adding that his attorneys would seek a new trial this, fall.

He said the motion for a new trial would say that there were about 20 new witnesses, along with additional physical evidence.

I have to be optimistic, he said. Im in prison for something I didnt do. Im a physician and I deserve to live a decent life.

McGinniss, who lived with MacDonald and his lawyers in a fraternity house in Raleigh during the 1979 trial, said he became convinced during the trial that MacDonald was guilty.

Life Sentence

WILKESBORO, N.C. lAP) - A Wilkes county man has been sentenced to life in prison in the death of his son.

After deliberating for several hours the jury found 50-year-old Paul Whitley of Hayes guilty of first-degree Qiurder in the shooting of 20-year-old Billy Joe Whitley May 7 during a domestic disturbance.

' Judge William Freeman of the Wilkes Superior Court sentenced him to the life term. Prosecutor did not seek the death penalty.

^ Whitley turned himself in a week later after authorities I had posted a $1.000 reward. I'n defense did not give an appeal.

i notic^f:

The Daily Reflector, Greenville N C

PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Ora T. Flanagan late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this

is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said

deceased to present them to the

igi

March 1, 1984 or this notice or same

undersigned Executrix on or before

will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment, this 26th day of August, 1983. Aileen F. Jefferson 229 Country Club Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Ora T. Flanagan, deceased September 1,8, 15, 22, 1983

NOTICE

North Carolina Pitt County Having this day oualitied as Administrator ot the Estate of Mary Reeves Fleming, late ot Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administrator or his attorney on or before the 1st. day ot. March, 1984, or this notice wili be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate wiii please make immediate settlement.

This the 26th dy ot August, 1983. Christopher Fleming, Administrator 1304 Colonial Avenue Greenville, NC 27834 William I. Wooten, Jr., Attorney Greenviile, N.C. 27834 September 1,8, 15, 22. 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix ot the estate of Alex Bryan Hill late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate ot said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before March 1, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 30th day of August, 1983. CallieJ.Hill Lot 2, White's Tr. Court Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutri X of the estate ot Alex Bryan Hill, deceased. September 1,8, 15,22, 1983

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

GRAND OPENINGII September 19, 1983. M & W's Country Crafts and Gifts. '/ mile from PItf CoonW Fairgrounds on Ram Horn Road. All kinds of craft items tor home, special gifts for friends free gift wrapping. Hours: 9 to 5. 7S8-404S

LIVE INSTANTwEATMER 24 Hours PHONE 975-2013

WE PAY CASH tor diamonds. Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans AAall, Downtown Greenville.

010

AUTOMOTIVE

RECARPET you entire car tor less than $20. Original outomotive factory equipment on sale this Wednes day and Thursday only. Alpha Phi House, Tenth Street, (bottom of the hill).

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar.

GOOD USEDCARS

Call

Don Williams 756 1135

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Deaier in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114.

013

Buick

1978 BUICK CENTURY

Stationwagon. Air, AM-FM, tilt, cruise. One owner. Call 758-0374 after 6 p.m.

1980 BUICK REGAL, blue, air, stereo, cruise, tilt wheel, new tires. High mileage but in excellent condition $4950. 756 8997 after 6

1982 REGAL. 21,000 miles. Diesel. $10,700. Call 746 4143.

014

Cadillac

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF

PROCESS BY PUBLICATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICTCOURT DIVISION FILE NUMBER83CVD 1210 Geraldine Taft Green Plaintiff vs.

Noah Green, Jr.

Defendant

To; Noah Green, Jr.

TAKE NOTICE THAT a pleading seeking relief has been tiled against you in the above entitied action The nature of the relief being sought isasfoilows:

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

You are required to make defense to such pleading not iater than Oct 26, 1983, said date being forty (40) days from publication. Upon your taiiure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The relief sought This the 12th day ot September, 1983.

Gwynett Hilburn Attorn^ for Plaintiff 113 W. Third Street P.O Box 5063

Greenville, North Carolina 27834

September 15, 22, 29, 1983

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator ot the Estate ot Annie Lee Whittord, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to .notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned within six months from the date of the first publication ot this Notice, and by March 22, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay ment.

this the 19th day ot September, 1983

William E. McDonald Administrator of the Estate ot Annie Lee Whittord Post Office Drawer 2429 Greenville, North Carolina 27834

Speight, Watson and Brewer Attorneys for Estate Post Office Drawer 99 Greenville, NC 27835 1161 Telephone: (919 ) 758 1161 September 22, 29; October 6, 13, 1983

1976 CADILLAC, good condition. Gas heater, five brick. Call 752-0773 anytime.

1977 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille, like new with every available option. Only 48,000 original miles. Must see, $4500. 756 5555, extension 403.

015

Chevrolet

CASH FOR your car. Barwick Auto Sales.756 7765.

1968 NOVA. 4 door, needs some work. $350. Call 758 6986anytime.

1973 MALIBU

Drives good. 752 6852.

- 2 door hard top. Runs quiet. $450.

1973 MONTE CARLO LANDAU.

Fully equipped. New paint. Good conditon 825 2831 or 758 1539 ask tor John.

1974 NOVA. 4 door, needs work. $500 negotiable. Call 752 8619after 3.

1975 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC 9

passenger wagon. Full power. Priced to sell I 756 8444 days.

1975 VEGA stationwagon, 2nd owner car. Automatic. New engine, tires, and inspection. Reai clean. $850 or best offer. 757 3762.

1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2 + 2, 5

speed, good mechanical condition. $1500 758 2300 days.

1976 CHEVY MONZA, great condi tion, 3 speed With stereo cassette included. $2200. 758 4799.

1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Good condition. Consider trade, help finance. $3595, Call Henry, 752-4332.

1981 CORVETTE, navy and silver, excellent condition. 10,000 miles, loaded. Call946 8565.

1983 CHEVROLET CAMARO Z 28.

Loaded, 6,000 miles. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Ayden, 746 3141.

017

Dodge

1976 DODGE COLT, air, 5 spwd, AM/FM radio, very good condition, $1,300. Call 756 5866after 6 p.m.

018

Ford

FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON.

1979. Fully loaded, new tires. Excellent condition. Low mileage. $4200. Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights.

READVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Sealed bids will be received by Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board ot Trustees in the Office ot Vice President, Facilities Manage ment until 2:00 P.M., Friday, Sept. 23, 1983 and immediately thereafter publicly opened and read for two (2) double wide moduiar units ot 24' X 56' dimensions, to be placed on the hospital site

Pians and specifications are available in the Office ot Ralph R. Hall, Jr., Vice President, Facilities Management, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Greenville, N.C. Tele phone No, 919 757 4587. Each bid Submitted must cover all portions ot the work.

The Hospital reserves the right to reject any or all bids and waive informalities.

Jack W. Richardson, President September 20, 21, 22, 1983

RESOLUTION NO. 796

RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE DECLARING ITS INTENT TOCLOSE APORTIONOF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE WHEREAS, the City Council has received a petition that a portion of Pennsylvania Avenue be closed; and

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

NOW, THEREFOR, BE IT RE SOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL that it Is the intent ot the City Council to close the following de scribed portion ot 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 ot Fourteenth Avenue and abutting the Sadie Saulter School property on the north, south and west, and lying within the corporate limits of the City ot Greenville BEGINNING at the intersection of the northern right-of-way line ot Pennsylvania Avenue, and the east ern line of the portion of Pennsylvania Avenue closed, as recorded in Book F45 page 388 of the Pitt County Registry; thence S 82 05' E., 45 feet along said right-of-way line; thence, S 07 55' W., 45 feet to the southern right-of way line ot Pennsylvania Avenue; thence, N 82 05' W., 45 feet along said right-of-way line of eastern line ot the aforesaid cisoed portion; thence, N 07 55' E., 40 feet along said line of 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 advisability of closing the aforesaid portion of Pennsylvania Avenue. At such

public hearing, all objections and suggestions will be duly considered.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED tht a copy of this resolution be published once a week for tour (4) successive weeks in the Daily Reflector; that a copy of this resolution be sent by certified mail to the owners of proiperty adjoining the aforesaid portion of Pennsylvania Avenue as shown on the County tax records; and that a copy of this resolution be prominently posted in at lest two (2) places along the aforesaid portion of Pennsylvania Avenue.

Duly adopted this 8th day ot September, 1983.

PERCY R. COX, AAAYOR LOIS D. WORTHINGTON,

CITY CLERK September 22,29; October 6,1983

1971 FORD PINTO, good trans portation for $500. Call 756 3517 after 6 p.m.

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

1982 FORD EXPLORER Truck. Low Mileage, Fully Equipped. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Ayden, 746 3141.

021

Oldsmobile

1977 OLDS CUTLASS. Loaded with extras. $1600 firm. Can be seen at 107 Columbia Avenue.

1978 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition. 758 0778 days; nights 756-8604.

022

Plymouth

1975 DUSTER, 6 cylinder, good condition, new paint job, air, AM/FM stereo radio, $1200. Call anytime after 4, 752-9486.

024

Foreign

DATSUN 280ZX - 2 + 2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition. $7700. Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights.

MGB-GT, 1974. Black, 43,000 miles, AM FM, new upholstery, clean. Good condition. Phone 758 8662.

MUST SELL Like new 1983 Honda Prelude. Still under warranty. Very nice car. Loaded. Must see. Price negotiable. Call 756 8532after 7 p.m.

PEUGEOT 505 S Turbo Diesel. July 1981. Show room condition in and out. Absolutely crash-free, 1 owner. Highway miles only. Has to be seen to be appreciated. 37 miles per gallon (highway). 752-4856.

TOYOTA SERVICE. 4 cylinder tune special, $20. 4 cylinder valve adjustment, $14. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage. 756 3796.

1973 MG MIDGET Good condition. Best otter. 810 College View. 752 2296.

1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT. High miles, but good condition. Many extras. Call 946-6025 after 5.

1978 280Z $6,600. Serious inquiries only. Call after 5 p.m., 756 0873.

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe. Air conditioning $3400. Call 355-6713.

1980 TOYOTA CORONA Deluxe stationwagon, liftback with automatic transmission, air, tilt wheel, stereo, wire wheel covers, buckets seats, blue, excellent con dition $4500. 795 3690 after 6 p.m.

1981 SUBARU GL, 4 door sta tionwagon, air, cruise. Fully loaded. 1 owner. $4950. 355-2445.

1982 DATSUN 280 ZX Loaded with all options. T top, AM/FM stereo. Priced to sell. William Handley, BB&T, 752 6889.

1982 MAZDA, 4 door sedan, excellent condition, asking $5995. Call after 6 p.m., 752 5008.

1983 NISSAN Sentra Stationwagon. 5 speed, AM/FM, luggage rack, 9,000 miles. $6,000 or best otter. 756 2488 until 7:30 p.m., ask for Doug.

029 Auto Parts & Service

TOYOTA AUTHORIZED SERVICE

4 cylinder tune-up $19.95. Oil and filter change $12.99 (most models). We're keeping your Toyota "Cheap Toyota East, 109 Trade

To Keep". Street, 756-:

032

Boats For Sale

INBOARD-OUTBOARD

1974 Fiberform V-hull, 6 cylinder Volvo engine, completely rebuilt. All new upholstery. E-Z load trailer all In excellent condition. $3,100.00. Call Ayden 746-6133 days; 746-2204 nights, ask for Robert.

U' ALUMINUM Runabout, condition, $200. Call 758-0587.

Good

14' GRADY WHITE. 85 horsepower Evinrude boat motor and trailer. $1500.1 524-4247 after 5.

032

Boats For Sale

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.

1974 COBIA 18' open boW, 115 Evinrude with trailer and accessories. Immaculate. 1-946-8475.

1974 WESTWIND BOAT, 165 horsa-

power Mercruise, new Cox trailer. Electric winch. 758-3839 or 752-2065.

1977 SEA CREST bass boat. Fore and Aft pedestal seats, make otter. Call 756 4913.

1982 21' Dixie, Inboard/outboard 470 Mercrulser, less than 40 hours. Extras. $13,000.355-2166 after 4 p.m.

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

034 Campers For Sale

JAYCO POP-UPS. Seahawk and Cobra truck covers. Camptown RV's, Ayden, NC. 746-3530.

TRUCK COVERS - All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N. C. 834 2774.

034

Cycles For Sale

XL 250, On and off road. 1000 miles. Like new, $1000. Call 758 3169.

1972 HONDA 350. Needs good home and owner with time to ride. 13K miles. Garaged. $250.752-4440.

1974 HONDA XR75, $150 negotiable. 1978 Kawasaki KE175, street and dirt bike, $500 negotiable Call 355-6976.

1977 YAMAHA. Good condition. $475. Call 758 6679.

1981 HONDA Custom. Drive shaft, cruise control, sissy bar and rack. Excellent condition, $1500. 756 1259.

1981 HONDA PASO. Excellent con dition. Low mileage. Call 757-1590 after 5 p.m.

Specii

miles. 752-7373 days, 752 1076 nights

1982 750 NIGHT Hawk, low mileage, excellent condition. $2300. Call 756 5386 after 5:30.

1983 V45 HONDA. $600 down and take up payments of $127 monthly. Call 758 0860.

039

Trucks For Sale

FORD SUPER CAB, 1975. 752 0840.

Call

Thursday September 22. 1983    21

044

PETS

LAB PUPS, Field and Bench Champion produced, AKC registered, top bloodline tor hunting and show. Excellent pedigree with 30 Field Champions in 5 generations, including National Derby Winner and Dual Champion. Call 793-3336

MUST SELLI Registered Cocker Spaniel, 4 months old, $65. Call atter 6, 752-3969.

NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND pups. AKC registered, 6 weeks old. Parents on premises Males, $125. Females, $100. Call evenings, 795-4649, Robersonville.

REGISTERED COLLIE PUPPIES.

9 weeks old. Beautiful markings (Sable, white, and tri-colored). Ideal tor breeders or children's pet $100    $125 with AKC Registered

papers. Call 756 1788.

051

Help Wanted

ACCOUNTING MANAGER tor CBS

attillate TV station in Greenville, NC. 4 year accounting degree and a minimum of 2 years accounting lired. Prior broad

ot responsibility will include gener al ledger, accounts receivable and payable, payroll, financial state ment preparation, budgeting, credit and collections, special projects as well as supervisen of accounting personnel. No phbne calls. Please send resume with salary history to the General Manger, WNCTTV, Box 898, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE/M F.

BACKSTAGE Hair Studio now ac cepting applications for empl'oy ment. Call 752-9578 for appointme '

BRODY'S DOWNTOWN has

opening tor salesperson tor better sportswear and ready-to-wear. E^ perience preferred. Congenial co-workers. No night work. Apply Brody's Downtown, Mrs. Bailey.

COUPLE NEEDED: For HUD

subsidized apartments iocated in N. C. Experience preferred in some office and maintenance work. Ad ditional training wili be given as needed. Apartment furnished with small salary. One person may work outside job provided the property is maintained. Send resume

W. Management Co., P.O. Box 1254, Dunn, N.C 28334

1973 DATSUN PICKUP. Good con dition. $1300. 757 1173 after 7 p.m.

1974 K10 BLAZER 4 wheel drive, all accessories, like new. Asking $4900. Cail anytime 825 1728.

1978 GMC pickup. Automatic V-8, clean. 756 5518atter 6p.m.

1979 F350 ONE-TON Ford Dually. Excellent condition. $6,000.975-3308.

1979 GMC 4 wheel drive. Extra clean, low mileage. $5895. Call 756 8339.

DIRECTOROF PHYSICAL THERAPY

Excellent career opportunity in 450-bed acute care hospital tor licensed Physical Therapist with minimum five years experience (preferably in hospitai). Experi ence in management required. At tractive salary and benefits. Submit resume by October 1, 1983 to: (turtis Copenhaver, Associate Director, Cabarrus Memorial Hospital, 920 Church Street North, Concord, N.C. 28025. An Equal Opportunity Employer,

1981 CJ5 JEEP. 6 cylinder Good condition. 746-2062.

1983 DODGE VAN. Air, automatic, power steering and brakA, AM/FM. 2 customized captain's chairs and 2 barrei chairs. Excellent condition. $9300. 757 0416.

1983 JEEP WAGONEER Ltd., dark blue, dark tan Interior. Loaded completely less sun root. 5800 miles, brand new. 752-7950

040

Child Care

CHRISTIAN CARING and loving person to care tor infant in my home or your home (near Carolina East, Lake Ellsworth). Letter about self, experience, salary desired to TLC, P Box 1967, Greenville, NC

I WOULD LIKE to babysit in my home tor $25 a week. 756-3575.

WEEKLY CHILD CARE tor

anytime. Located In CBntentnea Trailer Park, Farmville. Call 753-2404.

WILL KEEP children in my home Winfervillearea. Call 756 3603.

044

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups Champion Pedigree. Wormed, shots. 1 792 7495, Wilmington.

Wormed, all shots. $100. 75^^92 or 753 3958.

AKC REGISTERED German Shep herds, good breed. Call 758-3693.

ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniel male puppy. 10 weeks old. Liver and white, AKC registered. $100. 746 6903.

FREE PUPPIES to good home! Part Chow artd part Lab. 6 weeks old. 757 1755 anytime.

Sell ,    .

Classified way

our used television

. Call 752 6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

DISPATCHER WANTED for local Concrete Company. This position will require a good knowledge of Greenville and surrounding areas. Salary depended upon educational background and ability. Call tor appointment Monday through Friday, 8 to 5, 756 0782.

ENDtCOTT SHOES at the Carolina East Mall is now accepting applications for part tine employment. Apply in person oi ly. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

ESTABLISHED ARCHITECTURE,

engineering, and surveying firm has following positions open for qualified personnel: Survey Party Chief, Techniciarv/Draftsman, and Construction Inspector. Send re sume and salary requirements to Olsen Associates Inc., PO Box 93, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE.

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.

Joe Pecheles Volkswaqen, Inc. Greenville Blvd.,    Greenville

EXPERIENCED FABRICATORS

needed. 3 years minimum experience in miscellaneous and structural fabrication required. Call tor appointment Monday through Friday 8 to 5, 756 2376.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

OPPORTUNITY

REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON interested in making a positive change for the future. Don't pass this one up. Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355-2020.

SALESMAN OF THE MONTH

Harry Hastings, President of Hastings Ford is pleased to announce that Earl Edmondson is winner of the Saiesman of the Month Award. Eari won this award for his outstanding saies performance during the month of August.

H

ASTING

FORn <^>

s

Uw'd Om Company Tenth S..eel&?64 By Pass

758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO EXPBRIBNCE 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 $2500 per month If So....

You Own It To YewrMlf To Oivo I# A Try.

Apply in person only.

Absolutely no phone calls.

See E.J. Lacoste or Rickie Moore.

HastingC

IFORD <^0

( .11 (

Tenth Sireel S 264 By Pas& 758-0114 Greenyiile N C 27834

051

Help Wanted

051

HelpWal

EXPERIENCED SHEET ROCK

finisher*. 4 year* or more experi ence. Call 756-0053.

FLORAL DESIGNER. Experience preferred Apply in person at Julieene's Florist, 1703 West 6th Street, Greenville. Nu phone calls please

FUNI PART TIME. Nation's#! Toy Party Compatw now hiring de ator*. Free $300 kit.

No

collecting, no delivery. No experience needed Toys sail themselves. Call 756-6610or 753 2534.

FURNITURE SALESPERSON

needed for local firm. Mature Individual encouraged to apply. Call Gloria, Heritage Personnel, 355 2020

HELP WANTED immediately. Kitchen experience Apply daify between 3 and 5 at 205 East 5th Street, Blue Moon Cafe.

IMMEDIATE OPENING for Off Set Press Operator. Salary based on ability. Advance to management tor the right person! Send resume to Matthews Whittord Co , PO Box 67, Washington, NC 27889 or call for appointment at 1-946-2410.

MAID WITH experience in housecleaning. References desired. Call 752 1117.

MATURE, reliable lady to babysit i day a week tor 2 month old. References required. 752-1535.

MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have tools. Excellent company benefits. Apply to Robert Starling/or Bill Brown, Brown & Wood, inc. 1205 Dickinson Avenue.

MECHANIC WANTED - Preferably with Ford experience. Front End experience helpful. Must have>own tools. Excellent benefits. Call 756-8432.

NEEDED SHEET METAL workers tor installation ot duct work. Will take experienced and non experienced applicants between 8 and 9 a.m. at Larmar Mechanical Contractors, 756-4624.

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.

PART TIME PERSON to work 4 nights and 1 weekday tor Nichols Shoe Department. Apply in person to Shoe Department Manager, Thursday and Friday.

PERSONS NEEDED for 2nd and

3rd shifts. Apply in person only at Sav A Ton, 612 West Greenville Boulevard.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

REAL ESTATE Did you want to know more about real estate? Sales, management, and career op portunTtles for now and the future Call Red Carpet, Steve Evans & Associates, Inc. 355 2727

REPRESENTATIVE NEEDED for

unique home improvement product Leads provided, excellent com mission structure, growth potential and rewarding service Need out side sales experience, good closing skills, willingness to learn, destre to be a leader and excel Call Mr Anderson, 757 3355 Monday RN, LPN positions available Full time and part time, 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts. 75 bed ICF. Oak Manor, Inc., Snow Hill, 747 2868

RN's AND LPN's. Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact Barbara McDonald. RN. Director of Nursing, 943 2111,

ROOFING MECHANIC wanted Experience is required Must have tools. Inquire at 752 6116

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed Auto sales ex perience preferred Excellent company benefits Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-AAERCURYGMC

756-4267

For Appointment

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

051

Help Wanted

PART TIME truck driver needed I for long distance hauling of boats. ! Must have 3 5 years experience and I good driving record. Apply in I person at Grady White Boats be tween 9 a m 4 p m

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

needed for Eastern NC Travel I required Knowledge of *ire appara I tus and equipment a must Send resume to Triad Fire Inc., PO Drawer M, Attention: Gerald Sapp, Kernersville, NC 27284

SECONDARY PART TIME

Orchestra Position and Elementary General Music Teacher position available with The Greenville City Schools. Call 752 4192

SHARP INDIVIDUAL to train as keyboard salesman Largest dealer in NC Hard worker with expansion potential Excellent income Piano & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville 355 6002.

I

SOCCER INSTRUCTORS needid"

Must know the game Call Alice or Barry at 752 6106.

WAITRESS NEEDED from 11 a m to 3 p m Apply in person at The New Deli, 513 Cotanche Street

WANTED: BODY Mechanic Expe rience only Must have own tools. Apply in person to Earl Moore at Holt Oldsmobile, 101 Hooker Road

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE BY OWNER 198 ACRE FARM

Suited for Peanuts and other row' crops. 43,245 pounds of peanuts. Located in Williamston Township, V4 mile west of Williamston on State Road 1444. Owner financing available. For further information call:

Federal Land Bank Association Of Washington 946-4116

VOLKSWAGEN ^

1983 GUIIMIICE SUE

Jeiia 4 Door

Scirocco

UP TODISCOIMIS

All 1983 models must de sold this month

Limited Supply Remaining

loe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.

Greenville Blvd.    756-11.'^5

Serving Greenville To The Coast For 19 Years

?

fiNidaVMaUM

4 Big Days- 3 Great Nights

AT THE SURFSIDE INN OR PIRATE'S COVE IN BEAUTIFUL DAYTONA BEACH

I

Vacation Good For One Year!

(A Limih'J Otiet)

With The Purchase Of Any New Pontiac, Cadillac Or Isuzu At Close Out Prices During September

HERE'S WHAT YOU'LL GET...

* FREE! Deluxe Accomodations For A Family of 4 (2 Adults & 2 Children Under 17)

FREE' Split Of Champagne Upon Arrival

FREE' Welcome Continental Breakfast

FREE $250.00 Worth Ot Discount Coupons For

Restaurants, Stores & Attractions

FREE! All Day Unlimited Rides Pass to Disney

World.

FREE' A Certificate That Makes Your Trip

Transferable To Relatives Or Friends NO GIMMICKS * NO LAND TOURS JUST FUN IN THE SUNIII

THINK

Dickinson Ave.

Brown & Wood, Inc.

and you will buy

752-7111

ISUZU

II_______

[





22 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C    F    hursaay.    September    22.    19H3

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

051

Help Wanted

W-A-N-T-E-D!

Experienced TV Repair Person for established television and appliance firm. Excellent opportunity and good benefits.

Call 756-3240 For Interview

WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open ing for an experienced Real Estate Broker For more Information or an appointment, call Rod Tugwell at Century 21 Tipton & Associates, 7S6810

1ST CLASS AUTO Mechanic 1st class pay for 1st class work 8 to 5, five days a week. Please afly at Chuck Autry Paint, Body & Repair Shop, 1806 Dickinson Avenue. 752 3632

059

Work Wanted

059

Work Wanted

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752-5583.

LADY AVAILABLE for day

weekly house cleaning. Good references. Call Judy, 752-2326.

MOVING AND BUSH-HOG work. Lots and fields. 752 6522 after 5.

NEED A MAIDr For more in formation, call 757 0032.

PAINTING Interior an<f exterior. Free estimates. References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience. 756 6873 after 6 pm.

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, 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

BRICK OR BLOCK WORK Addi tions or repairs 11 years experi ence Call 825 6591 after 7 p.m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

liZ

[qrr'.

lU

P.T.A. Needs a Few Good People

Pizza Makers & Pizza Drivers

Need Money?

5 and '6 an hour is not out of the ordinary

This can mean 200-240 or more tor 40 hours per week

We guarantee at least $3.35/hour

Delivery people keep their tips

Nightly, weekly and monthly bonuses are offered

Car expenses are paid by mileage reimbursement

On a Tight Schedule?

Part time, full time opportunities

Day or night work

Flexible hours can be scheduled

Want Responsibility? '

Management opportunities (Just let us know you re interested)

Interested?

If you are, and you have a car, come by today to apply at

405 East 14th Street

(Behind Kash & Karry Building)

Apply Between 2 And 4 P.M.

757-1955

WANT 3-4 YEAR olds to keep in my home. Constructive play and preschool instruction available. 757 0558.

WOULD LIKE TO do house clean ing. Call 746 2747 between 9and 5.

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P Stancil, 752 6331

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready to go Call 752-6420 or 752 8847 aHer 5 p.m

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752-1359 or 758 5590.

065

Farm Equipment

AUTO SUPPLIES: Automotive batteries 27-6MF 95 amp. $52.49, 24 3AAF 55 amp. $35.49. Marine batteries deep cycle 24DC 6 80 amp. $56.95, 27 DC 6 90 amp $62.95. Lawn mower battery $31.49. Many others in stock. Oil: Warren hydraulic oil $15 49 for 5 gallon We carry Pennzoil products by the quart or case. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC

1 SET OF COMBINE dual wheels, 23.1 X 26 Tires like new Call 752 9585.

066

FURNITURE

SOFA AND CHAIR for sale, $200. 1-524 4851 anytime.

067    Garage-Yard Sale

BIG MULTI FAMILY Yard Sale. Sofa, chair, appliances, children's clothes, and much more! Parking lot of The Deli Kitchen, Raleigh and Dickinson Avenue. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

jy SChoi

gigantic yard sale, September 24, until 11:30 at school gym near Sunnyside Egg on Highway 1708.

CHURCH BAZAAR and Auction

Saturday, September 24. Bazaar at 2 p.m.. Auction at 7 p.m. Crafts, baked goods, games, bingo, hot

dogs, chicken and pastry dinner, and more! Arthur Christian Church, Bell Arthur, NC.

FINAL YARD SALE. Moving out. Saturday and Sunday. Mechanics tool cabinet and chest, $165. Teakwood bed, $140. Tuner amp and speakers, $300. 1802 A East 3rd.

FLEA MARKET. Bargain hunters wanted Saturday morning at Paladin Drive In to buy and sell. Largest Flea Market down east, next to Pitt Community College.

074

Miscellaneous

AIR CONDITIONER. 9,500 BTU, no volt. Excellent condition. $150 752-3619.

ATLANTA GAS HEATER, 30,000 BTU. 6' or 8' drink box, select from 4. Call 752-0840

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

BUNDY ALTO SAX. $350 Spinet piano. $650. Both excellent condition. Walnut cabinet Magnavox stereo, AM/FM, good condition $250. 756 8677after4p.m.

GARAGE AND yard sale, Satur day. Route 3, Box 112 C, Highway 33, Hardee Acres on main highway.

LAKE ELLSWORTH Community Yard Sale. Saturday, 9 to 12, at the entrance to Lake Ellsworth (across from Kittrell's Nursery.) Lots of families, loads of bargains!

YARD SALE. Saturday 7 until 12 Household items, clothing, some antiques, used tires, and many other items VOA Road oft Stan tonsburg Road.

YARD SALE. Saturday, October 1. Corner of Dickinson Avenue and Clark Street Old Taxi Stand.

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran feed lowest prices Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds. $149 Factory Mat tress & Waterbeds next to P Plaza 355 2626.

CRAFTIQUE 4 POSTER Kin%ize bed Mattress and box springs Excellent condition. $1,(X)0. Call 753 5973

Need part time work from now until ilday Classifieo.

the hoTdays? You'll find a position in

YARD SALE, 305 Lindell Road, Saturday, 8 to 12. Furniture, clothes, etc.

YARD SALE, 212 Eleanor St.. Cherry Oaks, Saturday, Sept. 24, 8 am until 12:30 pm.

CRAFTIQUE TWIN BEDS

including mattress and springs, night table and dresser. All in excellent condition, $1500 2 marble top tables, $250 each. Call 753 2400 after 5 p.m. weekdays, weekends anytime

FRENCH DIRECTOR SOFA and

two chairs. Excellent condition Price reasonable 756 1075.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price S259.00

Special Price

M 79

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 Evans SI    752-21    75

ilfu

3 FAMILIES. Saturday, September 24. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m 1110 Greenville Boulevard Baby items, swing, carriage, household items, washing machine, and clothes.

068 Heavy Equipment

KG BLADE AND C FRAME. $8.000 negotiable. 2 years old. Call 1 638 8918 after 4 p.m.

072

Livestock

ENTIRE STABLE for lease. 7 stalls and tack room. 20 acres pasture. Automatic water tank. Call 756 9315 or 756 5097.

FOR SALE quarter horse, 15.3 hands, 8 year old Bay. Call 757 0592 after6:30p.m,

HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237.

074

Miscellaneous

SACRIFICE, repossession sale on video game cartridges. Atari, Im agic, Activision, Apollo, and others at 35% below cost, $14 to $15 each. Also Frigidare microwave ovens, $150 under dealer cost. Call 758 0110 from 8 to 6 daily.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

BUYING-LOANS INSTANT CASH

TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold 8, 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. 752-2464.

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

From the oldest, most reliable buyer of gold, silver and any items of value.

COIN&RING MAN

On The Corner

DINING ROOM, Queen Anne Williamsburg, solid cherry, new $7,000, will sell for $3500 or best otter 756 7297 or 756 3613.

FOR SALE: Harvest gold 17.8 cubic toot Hotpoint frost tree refrigerator with icemaker, 5 years old, $385. 752 1488.

FOR SALE: Craft woodstove fireplace insert, large size, used 2 seasons, original cost over $800; will sell tor $395 complete. 758 5705.

FURNITURE STRIPPING and re

finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden jCenter. 756 9123.

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture. Stripping, Repairing 8. Refinishing. (Formerly of East Carolina Vocational Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway. 752-3509.

GIGANTIC TRUCKLOAD carpet sale. Indoor/Outdoor and waterproof carpet. Great tor bathroom, bedroom, apartments, dorm rooms, etc. Average $9 to $12 per roll. On sale this Wednesday and Thursday only. Alpha Phi House, Tenth Street, (bottom of the hill).

GREEN HIOEABED. Good condi tion. $75. Call after 6, 752 3969.

HAND CRAFTED CHESTS,

bookcases, coat racks, and nov elties Carolina East Mall, Sep tember 22, 23and24.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.

074

Miscellaneous

THREE STORY doll house, wallpapered, $100 Furnishings avaifable 752 2270.

TSR 80 MODEL I, Level II 16K computer and software. Call 758-3162.

UTILITY TRAILER for sale, $105 Call 756-1444.

WASHER - Heavy duty. Very good condition. $125. 746-2073.

1 NELCO sawing machine,.757 0307.

30" APACHE insert woodstove with blower. Excellent condition. Used l'/5 seasons. Asking $600 or best otter. 756-693lt.e^O'' 5 pm.

50" BIG SCREEN GE TV, remote control. Quartz tuning, cabinet model. Call Glenn at 756 9842.

742 REMINGTON 30 06 rifle with 3 9 Weaver scope and sling. $325 or best offer. Call 758 4523.

8,000 BTU AIR conditioner, new GE, $2<K). 20 cubic foot GE freezer, $75. Mini bike, $125. Go cart, $75. 2 wheel chairs(will make one good one altoget|ier) $25 for both. Call 758 4576.

075 /Mobile Homes For Sale

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, under pinning. 12x65. 1973, good condition. $5500. Call Williamston 1 792 2859 or 1 792-6668.

DOUBLE WIDE FOR Sale 24 X 64, excellent condition. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, electric baseboard heat, wood burning fireplace, stove, refrigera tor, dishwasher, dryer, centra! air. To be moved. 756 5646 after 5:30 and on weekends.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

1972 12x53 HATTERAS. Excellent

condition. Fully furnished Reduced for quick salel Call 753-7233. _

1976 Conner Mobile Home, tall Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333.

1*71 GUARDIAN 13x40. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, partially furnished, air condition, deck, under pinned. Located in Branches Estates. $1400 down and assume $109.72. Call 756 8145 days 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., nights from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m., Monday. Wednesday, and Friday, and anytime weekends._

197* CONNER Mobile Home. 65'x 12'. Take over payments of $199.16 per month. Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333.

1*79 TAYLOR. Owner must sell! 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, new carpet, new furniture, central heat and air. This home is nice Was asking $14,500. Will sacrifice now tor $11,500. Call 752 2366 or 757 0451.

198! 14x60 2 bedroom Oakwood mobile home. $1,000 down and assume loan. Call 756 1377 anytime.

1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91, At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068.

1984 HORTON doublewide 24x60, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with den. $20,900 Come by and see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, 756 9841.

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOME for sale. Located In Washington. 2 bedrooms, appliances. Call 756 5588.

MUST SELL! 1971 Ritzcraft 12x65. 2 bedrooms, good condition. Needs carpet and curtains. $3950 cash. 752 3619

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

NO MONEY DOWN VA 100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

SMH LISTING SERVICE wilL list your mobile home, advertise it, sell It, and finance the transaction all at a LOW COST to you See George King, SMH Listing Service, Hiway 11 Ay den, 746 2078.

SPECIAL FOR YOUNG couples or college students. For only $700 down, $160 month you can now own a 1984 Horton. Come by and see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass. Greenville, (We have lots avalla ble) . 756 9841.

LIKE NEW, World Book En cyclopedias with all year books, $300. Call Mary days 752 3000, nights 756 1997.

SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue Prices start at $69 88

SOLID BRASS BED Best otter accepted. Call 758 6765 or 756 3543.

SUPER DEAL!

FOR THE BEST deals around on TVs and appliances. Call Robert at Bob's TV and Appliance, ask about our additional $100 discount. 756 8830.

LOST OR GAINED WEIGHT???

Are you in need of an inexpensive wardrobe until you reach your goal? Transition Wardrobes has beautiful previously owned large size women's clothing at reasonable prices. Clothing accepted on con signment, purchased, and sold in sizes 14 and up. Call 355 2508.

MATCHED COMPONENT Stereo Technics. $1400 firm. Call from Noon fo3p.m. 752 5207.

NEW AND USED walk in coolers, pizza ovens, chairs, ice machines, deep tat fryers. We install! Greenville Restaurant Equipment. Call 758 7042.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furniture Refinishing and repairs. 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. 13 758-4188    8AM-4:30PM

Greenville, N.C.

JP

NEW SLEEPING BAG. Good quali ty. Reasonable 756 2879.

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

OLD TOBACCO BASKETS tor sale Call 756 2927.

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques...anything of vallue.

COIN&RINGAAAN

On The Corner

SHARP COPIER machines, sell, lease and rent, large selection of used copiers. Call 756 6167.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TWO ATLANTIC HOUSE trailers, 10 & 45. Converted to office trailers. Call 752-1171.    i

USED 12x48 CONNER, 1 bedroom. $500 down; $96 month. Call 756 9841, Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass. Greenville.

USED 12x65 CONNER, 3 bedrooms $700 down; $145.52 month. Call 756 9841, Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass. Greenville.

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.

077 Musical Instruments

ANTIQUE UPRIGHT Piano Beautiful wood. Good condition. Best offer 1 825 0765.

CLARINET FOR SALE. Almost new! 752 3499 after 5 30p.m.

PIANO & ORGAN Distributors All major brands at discounted prices. 329 Arlington Boulevard. 355-6002.

078

Sporting Goods

1 PAIR of Cypress Gardens water skis, good condition. $50. 825-2831 or 758 1539, ask tor John.

080

INSTRUCTION

NOW ACCEPTING PRIVATE

piano students. 756 8461 after 5 p.m.

SINGING LESSONS. Professional singer seeks voice students. Works with all levels of experience Call 758 7285.

082 LOST AND FOUND

BULL DOG PUPPY, fan with white markings Missing since Friday in the St. John's Community between Ayden and Griffon. Reward ottered Call 524 5705 anytime

LOST: Prescription sunglasses in cream colored case. Call 757 3517.

MISSING FEMALE ESKIMO Spitz (white). No collar. Name is Lady, Reward! Missing in Ayden area 746 4844

093

OPPORTUNITY

We Love America Special NO MONEY DOWN!

SINGLE WIDE $8,495

DOUBLE WIDE...$17,995

(Loaded)

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

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

705 West Greenville Boulevard

12.75% FINANCING on selected homes Call Conner Homes, 756 0333.

1964 MIDWAY, 10x45, 2 bedrooms, partially furnished, air, good loca tion. 758 4857

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 6735 or 1 586 5049.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

with high financial rewards!! Be your areas first representative, revolutionary break through, high tech. water purification product. This once in a life time opportunity requires small initial investments. Serious inquiries only. Call 1 919 426 7535.

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business (or sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758 0702

HALLMARK CARD & GIFT SHOP.

Parkhill Shopping Center, Tarboro. Good owner financing Exclusively through NEWGROWTH, LTD, Raleigh, 1 872 8600

LAUNDROMAT FOR SALE. Good location Reasonable rent. Call 756 6890 after 5 p m

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co . Inc Financial 8. Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N.C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

1971 12x60 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, refrigerator, stove, air, and deck. Good condition. $6500. 758 0646.

1973 CHARMER. 12x64, 3 bedrooms, I'-z baths, unfurnished except for gas range and refrigerator, washer/dryer hookups. Partially remodeled. Asking $7000.756-2818.

NATIONAL FRANCHISE AVAILABLE Weight Loss Industry Financing Training Exceptional Financial Return

Contact: FRANCHISE DIVISION Collect (216) 666 7952 8a m. 5pm.

095

PROFESSIONAL

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

JARMAN AUTO SALES

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

102 Commercial Property

COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE

for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court Building has 9(X)0 square feet with 5400 carpeted tor office space, 12 month lease re quired Call Clark Branch, Real tors, 756 6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147

NEW RENOVATION downtown, office or retail Economical to heat and cool. A must see if you need space. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 7741

Farms For Sale

1 982 PONTIAC J-2000J(, . ::h , h ,

i-g Pdy'Iir't r $1000 '1' /.I' J-Hi.-IM, 15' A' nua: Rdte oiat Sb-J-.C

f

^,950.00

*143.91'

1982 CHEVROLET S-10 PICKUP am fm s.ereo

wirewHeel air conoitior' Payment Cased on $1500 Oowr 48mon-ihly payments 15 0 Annual Percentage Rate Total noie $7605 60

00

*158.45

1981 BUICK REGAL ? door automatic air condition

sie'eo Aire A^peis Paymer^t based on $1500 down 42 monthly oayments '15 5 Annual Percentage Rate Total note $7634 34

*7150.00

*181.77

1981 CHEVROLET CAMARO. Payment oasea on

$1500 down 42 monthly payments 15 5 Annual Percentage Rate Total note $6823 /4 -

00

*162.47

1981 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO. Paymen.

based Oil $1250 down 42 monthly payments 15 5 Annual Pepcen p tage Rate Total note $7161 42

00

*170.51

1980 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC ::

AMiP-Afrid-o a-' ,i..-rrr,j!. i>dmfen! LdSH.j $ ,0' ; >. rr.' 'hi, ;ayme-!, in 5 An'.ua Pe-e- ag*- R^-. * t-

16 113 88

*5,650.00

*169.83

'1980 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO /r/M/

Mdio 34 00 m.ies ' -ydsr-i Ji , ' ;,

PHymf-s 16 5 Annual Pt;-"'''.I ,! Pd'- V. Ki

*6

*191.74

1979 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT :. . .. .

Speed d>( Priymyni pd'.fc; \r,'r i.a' -

16 5 Annual PerCfMdqt R.i'*-

*3,050.00

*94.35

1978 FORD THUNDERBIRD . m/im

Pavmen'based 0' llW : a- / * ,

nudi Per'.t-nr.tQt; Raf l.f '

*3,850.00

*122.45

1978 DATSUN B-210 y t. ; ;... amm

Paymen* bastrt on $a5C d ,/. . 4 n.-,'

Percentage Rate Tpiat nt/6 12387 76

*2795.00

*99.49

1978FIATi.;.Yi p...V.V.O-*. ..1/'B, 4" P<-. . -a:

*1,550.00

*58.45

1977 DATSUN B-210 ? a,.,, a., aotoma,,. amfm

'adto Payment baasa or JBOO A' oaymenis 195 Annual Pefcantagt Rate 'oai tpoie 1?3*.5 6C

*2700.00

*98.15

1977 CHEVROLET CUSTOM DELUXE

,' S'yv, V i' ................... IS,

.a.,.-P,..

*3,650.00

*123.98

1977 OLDS OMEGA , a. .u ,

. M.-e'-t , P.,ra-.f : $' J'.a ?4.....

; ,t' i a,Pe'

*2,950.00

*100.73

1977 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME Bmugaam

L taoea PiytTien. bjjea or $850 ao*n 74 monlhi, payments 19 5 Annual Percentage Rate rotai note $7951 44

*3150.00

1---

*118.81 '

FOR SALE: Tobacco pounds 3,299 Beaufort County William M. White, 3416, Windsor Drive, New Bern, 633 3721.

i 70 ACRES. New ottering AM cleared. 12,300 pounds of tobacco. Good land. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983; nights and weekends 758 2230

109

Houses For Sale

BARGAIN IN WHOLEII House for $2,000 or best offer. Partially burned Must be moved. 752 6852 or 752 5242 '

BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R. H McLawhorn, 756 2750 or 975 2688

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Prices Do Not Include N.C. Sales Tax Payments Include Credit Life Insurance

With Approved Credit 12 Months, 12,000 Miles Warranty Available

Grant Jarman-756-9542

Hwy 43 North 752-5237 Business

Edgar Denton-756-2921 Donald Garrls-7 58-0929 Bud LaCock

ROOFING

S^'ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

FOR LEASE

2500 sa FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

Ooen End Auto Leasing

No Down Payment Lower Monthly payments Any make or mode! New or UsediAulo Rentals daily Weekly. Monthly Low Hates

Mid-Eastern

Brokers

14 Pitl Pla/a 756-4254

1





< iutri cc. 1:700

109

Houses For Sale

BY OWNER

107 Azalea Drive, IIWAPR assumable loan. Living room, din Ing room, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, central air, natural gas heat, fenced backyard, patio Will consider another house as trade. 7S4 8281, it no answer 7S2 4844

109

Houses For Sale

Century 21

TIPTON .ASSOCIATES

756-6810

S20,000 LOT with mobile home.

$25,000 NICE 2 bedroom bungalow 8% FHA assumption

$35,000 3 BEDROOM home with upstairs apartment. Good invest ment property

$39,00 STOKES Farmers Home assumption. Two bedroom brick ranch with carport.

$41,500 FARMVILLE 3 bedroom, 1'j baths, brick ranch on large wooded lot. FmHA assumption.

$43,000 COUNTRY SQUIRE. 3

bedrooms, 1 bath, corner lot Assumable FmHA loan.

$44,900 COUNTRY 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge lot with fruit trees 11'j% FHA assumption.

$45,000 DUPLEX. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath each side Possible owner tinancing.

$49,000 STOKES AREA Brick ranch with double garage on 2 acres

$40,000 UNIVERSITY AREA Two

story home featuring over 1800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, I' j baths, carport.

NIGHTS CALL Al Baldwin Harold Hewitt Rod Tugweli

754 7836 .756 2570 753 4302

CHERRY OAKS $10,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3 bedroom. 2' a bath Owner 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 T 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

COUNTRY HOME 15 minutes west, three bedroom brick ranch with spacious kitchen, two baths, detached garage, fenced backyard with swimming pool Reduced to sell only $65,000 Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, Billy Wilson, 758 4476, Jarvis or Dorlis Mills, 752 3647

Century 21

TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

home on the Golf Course. Try to match this home for location, price

and condition. On the golf course with three bedrooms, two baths.

-.T.    iw wwi    ivww    waifia/

living room, dining room, family room with fireplace and wood burning stove insert, kitchen with breadfast area, double garage, patio, wood deck. Ayden. Only *59,900 Duffus Realty Inc. 756 5395.

NO MONEY DOWN

That's right! We will build on yoor lot. Plenty of mortgage money, no red tape Call 758 3171 for Darrell.

perfectly pleasing older

home in Ayden is conveniently located for the couple that work In opposite directions. Close to Highway 1) to Kinston or back to Greenville. Features include 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, living room with fireplace, dining room, eat in kitchen, fenced back yard and VA loan assumption with no qualifying and owner will finance equity. $36,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655.

PRICE REDUCEDII Owner says sell! You will appreciate this three bedroom home if like the following features: cleanliness, large corner

lot, one car garage, deck, patio, plus storage building. Only $47,900! Estate Realty Company, 752-5058; Billy Dorli

Realty Company, ________

Billy Wilson, 758-4476; Jarvis or lis Mills, 752-3647.

REDUCED AND ASSUMPTION.

This home has been reduced and could not be replaced at this low price. Additionally, the qualified buyer can assume the FHA loan and with a small down payment, the seller will finance part of the equity. Edwards Acres, three bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room, dining area, family room with woodstove, now only *52,900. Duffus Realty Inc., 756 5395.

WATERFRONT HOME on Pamlico River. 3 miles from Washington. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, large deck and porch, bulkhead, boat ramp, pier, 110 foot waterfront. Call 946-8565.

WINDY RIDGE. Excellent living for kids and adults. 3 bedrooms, I'h baths. Tennis Court, Sauna, Club House. Average monthly utilities, $65. 756 5385.

Ill I nvestment Property

DUPLEX TOWNSHOUSE Each side offers great room with dining area, kitchen with all appliances, laundry area, 2 bedropms, 1',^ baths, private deck and outside storage. Just reduced! *59,500.00. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655.

113

Land For Sale

WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank. Serious inquiries only. 746-4669.

115

Lots For Sale

CANDLEWICK ESTATES - Lot has

756-6810

$62,500 HORSESHOE ACRES.

Builder says sell this newly con structed traditional 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on large lot that features large den with fireplace, dining area, chair railing, crown molding and lots of extras.

$43,000 EASTWOOD. 11'2% loan assumption on this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch that features large lot, dining area, den, fireplace, large deck off den

$87,000 FARMVILLE. Excellent 4 bedrooms, 3 baths home on large, heavily wooded lot that features all formal areas. Lovely screened in porch

NEW CONSTRUCTION: Call today about our new construction in Club

Pines, Belvedere, Brentwood and Lynndale We also custom build quality homes Call one of our brokers today

NIGHTSCALL

Al Baldwin...................

Harold Hewitt.................

Rod Tugweli....................

.756 7836 756 2570 .753 4302

EASTERN STREET. 3 bedrooms, dining room den, fireplace Mint condition A must see with a VA loan assumption. Speight Realty 756 3220. nights 758 7741.

EXCELLENT VA LOAN Assump tion with no qualifying Down payment is only $5998.73 and pay ments ot $491.57 PITI Features include 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, galley kitchen, dining area, sunken great room with fireplace and sliding glass doors to patio, laundry area and fenced in back yard, *56,500. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655.

HEY GUYS - Lots of cabinets in the garage and storage room for 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.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Popular family neighborhood of fers pool and tennis court tor yearly fee, *9,000.00. For more details call Mavis Butts Realty , 758-0655.

LAKE FRONT LOT for sale. Located in Brook Valley with lots of trees Windsor Drive. 756 7654 days, 752 6913 nights.

MOBILE HOME LOTS - *96

ng:

will pay to move your mobile home

month (owner financing). Se

*5900, 758 7741 nights. Owner-Broker.

STOKES, 3 ACRES - Owner financ

ing. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights

I 7741

THE PINES In Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. *10,500.

Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details.

117 Resort Property For Sale

PAMLICO RIVER - 12x60 mobile home with large screened in porch, multi purpose room, electric and gas heat, air conditioning, boat shelter, pier and boat ramp priviledges. 756 0431.

RESORT PROPERTY for sale or trade 4 apartment complex. 3 bedrooms. 1'': 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 0310nights.

TIME SHARING Dis

neyworld/Epcot area. Private owner. Must sell. (919 ) 756-5990; (305) 281 1285

120

RENTALS

FOR RENT: Furnished apartment. Four girl or men students or couple. Also semi private room, kitcnen privileges, near college available. *60 a month each. 758 2201,

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call

Arlington Self Storage. Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

a)

121 Apartmtnts For Rent

AITRACTIV and energy afficit 1 bedroom apartments. $235 per month. Hooker Road, 'A mile from 364 By pass. Contact Tommy Williams, 756-7115.

AVAILABL CtBR I. *365 month. 3 bedrooms, roomy.

carpeted, washer/dryer hookups, heat pump. 758-8537 or 752-0180.

AYDEN. 1 bedroom duplex, stove, refrigerator, carpet, screened porch, *140 per month. 746-4474

AZALEA GARDENS

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

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, IW baths.

washer dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. *310 per month. 752-3040 or

Cherry Court

s 2 bedroom towi

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

compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner-dryer

hook-ups, room, sauna, tennis court, house and POOL. 752-1557

laundry duo

DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wooded lot at Frog Level. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and living room, no pets allowed. *265 per month. 756-4624.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. 4

blocks from campus. Immediate occupancy. Males only. Call 756-2352 after 6 p.m.

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

GRIFTON AREA. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Central air, carpet and drapes. Call 524-4239 or 524-4821. EHO.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

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

Call 752.3519

LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

At our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Iris Cannon at 758 6050 or 746 2639, Owen Nor veil at 758-6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758 7029.    i

MOORE & SAUTER 1)0 South Evans 758-6050

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hookups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1    -5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

READY CARS-USED CARS

19S2 Mazda RX-7 GLS - 5 Speed, air conditioning, power brakes, power windows, power steering, stereo cassette, leather interior, sunroof, 22,000 miles.

1982 Buick Regal automatic. Brown, 2 door, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, cruise, stereo cassette, 34,000 miles.

1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass - Brown, 2 door, utomatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, 27,000 miles.

1982 Buick Regal - Green metallic, 4 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, stereo cassette, 38,600 miles.

1981 Oldsmobile Regency - Blue Metallic, 2 door. Loaded! 38,000 miles.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - White with Blue landau root, automatic, air conditioning, tilt wheel, power steering, power brakes, wire wheels. 37,000 miles. 1981 Toyota Corolla Brown, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, 21,500 miles, AM/FM radio.

1980 Dodge Omni Creme color, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, AM/FM, 39,000 miles.

1980 Mercury Grand Marquis Black, 50,000 miles, Loaded!

1980 Plymouth Volare - Green, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, 50,000 miles.

1979 Buick Regal Regal Limited Silver and Gray, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control AM/FM stereo, 44,000 miles.

1976 Oldsmobile 98 - Creme color, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, power windows, power seats, AM/FM stereo; 82,500 miles.

1975 Volkswagen Bus - 7 passengers. Very Clean! 80,000 miles.

TRUCKS

1981 Chevrolet Silverado - air conditioning, automatic, power windows, power steering, tilt wheel. Black and Silver.

1978 Mazda Pick-up Camper Shell, 5 Speed, Good Condition!

Subaru Of Greenville

605 W. Greenville Blvd.

Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885

Greenville

121 Aparfments For Rent

NEW 3 BEDROOM duplex. Range, refirgerator, dishwasher

washer7dryer hook up*. Convenient location. Professionals preferred.

No pets. *330. 756-2121, ask for David.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, disposal included. We also have Cable TV. Very convenienf 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 complete. *79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Plac^To Live

TV

Office hours 10a.m. to^p.m. AAonday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

STUDIO APARTMENT near campus. *175 plus deposit. Call 355-6713.

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedro( hook-ups, cable \JV, house, playground,^ear ECU

s, washer dryer , club

Our Reputation Says If All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, nearly new, convenient location, professionals preferred, no pets, *330 per month. 756 7314; after 6 p.m. 756-4980.

TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Village. *350. Call Lorelle at 756-6336.

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, l',y bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

109B MEADE STREET, 3 bedroom duplex, central heat. Air condi tioner, range, frost tree refrigera tor, hookups. Married couple or small family preferred. *270. Lease and deposit required. No pets. Call 752 3282.

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT -

carpeted, central air and heat. *275. 758 3311.

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex. Uni versity area. No pets. *235 per month. 756 4277 or 752 8179

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space. Arlington Boulevard,

3,000 square feet. Only *3.60 per e f( "

square foot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348.

33,000 SQUARE FEET available Will subdivide. Call 756-5097 or 756-9315.

127

Houses For Rent

3 BEDROOM HOUSE near Greenville, electric heat, air, couple preferred. No pets. 756 0264 after 5

3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Living room, den, I'.j baths, dining area. Located on Vj of an acre. 5 minutes from Greenville. *400 per month Family preferred. Call 758 4693 after 6pm

4 BEDROOM RANCH Over 2000 square feet with workshop in Griffon. Available immediately for *425 per month. Call Realty World, Clark Branch, 756-6336 or Tim Smith, 752 9811.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

J

127

Houses For Rent

AYDEN. 3/4 large bedrooms, 2 baths. Rent with option to buy. *355. 756 8160.

CHARMING LARGE 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, study, 4 oak fireplaces, fenced yard, washer/dryer. Ayden, $360. 756-8160

HOUSES AND Apartments in country. 8 mniles south of Greenville. 746-3284 and 524 3180.

NEW 3 BOROOM, IW bath home *400 per month. Lynndale: 4 bedrooms, 3 baths *600 per month. MacGregor Downs: 5 bedrooms, 2/i baths *700. Lease and security deposit required. Duffus Realty, Inc. 756 0811.

TWO OR THREE bedroom near University. *350 per month, lease and security deposit required. Couple preferred. No pets. 756-6835.

2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Griffon. Phone 1-524 4147, nights 1 524 4007

129

Lots For Rent

BEAUTIFUL PRIVATE lot for

single or doublewide trailer. Septic tank and shallow well on site. C;

and shallow well on site, be hooked up to city water. Call 753-4631 after 6 p.m.

133 AAobile Homes For Rent

FOR RENT 2 bedroom trailer. Located two miles behind Pitt Community College. Call 756-8273.

12 X 60. 3 bedrooms, *150. Also 2 bedrooms, *135. No pets, no children. 758 0745.

12X65 2 bath, central air, screened back porch on corner lot in town. 756 7743.

2 BEDROOMS, 1</2 baths, no pets, no children. 756-6005.

2 BEDROOMS. *140 a month. Call 756 1900.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

2 MOBILE homes for rent. Furnished or unfurnished. 752-5635.

2 OR 3 BEDROOMS near Greenville Deposit. Call 746 6847 or 524 4349 from 6 to 9

135 Office Space For Rent

rent. 4 oil suite in Jeannette Cox AgenC^T Inc. building. Call Jeannette Cox, 756 1322

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

SINGLE OFFICE, 154 square feet, Joyner Lanier building, 219 Cotanche Street. Parking available. Call Jim Lanier at 752-5505.

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

138

Rooms For Rent

FURNISHED ROOM with air and refrigerator, across from college. Male student. 758 2585.

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge. Pool, tennis courts and sauna. Call 756 9491.

FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED

to share '/^ expenses. Birchwood Sands Mobile Homes, 752 3040.

ROOMMATE NEEDED. /2 rent, utilities. 758 6687.

ROOMMATE NEEDED. *75 plus </i utilities. Call 757 3918 after 4p.m.

144 Wanted To Buy

FARM TRACTOR. Call Seaton Howell, days 752-4470 or 757 0222 nights.

WANT TO BUY old Jerry Wallace tapes and records. 757 1451.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WOODWORKERS

WE ARE AGAIN EXPANDING OUR MILLWORK OPERATION AND ARE TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR EXPERIENCED WOODWORKERS WITH MINIMUM OF 2 YEARS EXPERIENCE.

1-Maintenance worker with experience in maintaining woodworking machinery.

2-Sash & Door workers experienced in operating Tenon & Mortising machines.

2-Cabinet-makers with experience in Custom Cabinet work.

2-Formica applicators with experience in applying & fitting plastic cabinet tops.

1-Moulder set-up and feeder for Woods Moulder with at least 3 years experience.

Wage compensurate with experience and ability to produce quality woodwork. Paid hospital & life insurance, holidays, vacation & profit-sharing.

STEPHENSON MILLWORK CO., INC. P.O. BOX 699    WILSON,    N.C.    27893

144

Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwooa timber Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 756-8615

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

148

Wanted To Rent

STUDIOUS STUDENT, 25. needs

room in quiet house year round, prefers cooking Peter. 756 5642

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN

Must be experienced in domestic as well as foreign cars and have own tools. Pay depending upon experience. Good fringe benefit package. Apply to: Steve Grant. Service Manager.^

TOYOTA

EAST

756-3228

109 Trade Streei Greenville, N.C.

the '84s , are IN!

CARSAND TRUCKS! 2^

1984 Tempo

INDUSTRIAUMANUFACTURING

ENGIMEER

Proven ability, minimum of 5 years metal working background including cutting, forming, finishing and welding. Methods/standard product development/standard costs/cost estimating/tool procurement/equipment development are basic areas of responsibility and a thorough working knowledge of each area is required. A 4 year Engineering degree a definite plus! There is growth potential for the right person. If you are not self motivated and aggressive, you need not apply. Salary commensurate with 'experience.

Send resume <nd salary history to:

ENGINEER

p. 0. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, NC 27835

1984F-100Styleside

We still have a few 83s left at tremendous savings!!

Amcnca s I Used Car Company (enlh Street & 264 By Pass

H

ASTING<

FORD

758-0114

Greenville N C 27&34

THE

REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

FOR RENT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL PARKTOWNHOMES

B'and new luury apa'tmenis located less than 1 miie behir-d st'gical cente-

Occupancy Mid-October

2 ..a'ge Bed'ooms r. 'jatns lef mopane Windows E-300 Ene'gy Ei cient Heal Pumps Patios with Private Fence Washe' Drye' hooa-ups Kitchen Appliances Custom Built Cabmets Beaulr'ui Individual Wili'ams&u'g Exlenots $340 Montn

CALL 752-6415 Mon Thru Fri 9-5

WYNNE

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

CHEVROLET

New 1 Bedroom Apartments 225.00 A Month/225.00 Deposit Contact Tommy Williams 756-7815 Or 758-8733

On The Corner, On The Square

IS ON THE MOVE

etheis 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 Malibu 4 door

1977 Chevrolet Camaro Blue, sharp car 1975 Mercury Blue, nice car 1975 Oldsmobile Convertible Silver 1975 Oldsmobile Convertible Maroon

1975 Ford Mustang

1974 Chevrolet Caprice Blue, one owner 1973 Dodge Rolara Priced to go!

1972 Chevrolet Impala 2 door hardtop, brown, one owner

1980 Chevrolet C-10 Scottsdale Pickup

1980 Datsun King Cab One owner. Priced to go!

1979 Chevrolet CK-10 Pickup Black, 4X4. Priced right!

1979 Dodge Adventurer Pickup Automatic, air condition

1976 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 1971 Ford Ton Pickup

RdfTion Latham Bonner Latham Joe Rawls J1 Biirnis Doug House

GMQUMJTY SERVICE PARTS

r

nGENERAL MOTORS FASTS DIVISION'

Lexington Square Townhomes

Near The Greenville Athletic Club

Model Open Daily 1-5 P.M.

Phase II, Unit 31

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.

355-2286

FOR LEASE

The former Bank of North Carolina building at Cotanche and Fourth Streets Over 150 square feet of modern space

DARDEN REALTY 758-1983

NIGHTS-WEEKENDS

758-2230

I





Crossword By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS 1 Bridge coup 5 Melville captain 9 Harem chamber

12 TV sheriff

13 lily type

14 Energy

15 Baseball error

17 Supplement

18 Turn against

19 Actress Sophia

21 Fashionable: coUoq.

22 Postulate

24 Andys *

partner

27 Spar

28 Quiet period

31 Gun the motor

32 Pub quaff

33 - Grande

34 Musical symbol

36 Relations

37 Pictured

38 Western roundup

40 Word before Olde

41 Not now

43 Stations

47 Flightless bird

48 Blunder

51 Melody

52 Surface the road

53 On the sheltered side

54 Corral

55 Ragout

56 Ooze

DOWN

1 Mannerless one

2 The Man I-

3 Aid

4 TV cat

5 Wan

6 That girl

7 Past

8 Some football games

9 Musical piece

10 Levee

Avg. solution time: 24 min.

mm

9-22

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

11 Sobe it

16 Beach shade

20 OPEC concern

22 FDRs affliction

23 Yoked beasts

24 Rainbow

25 Comic Brooks

26 Capsize

27 Use the oven

29 Untruth

30 Actor Chaney

35 Opponent

37 Old photo tints

39 Tears

40 Affirmative answer

41 Bound

42 French friend

43 Sketched

44 Flirt

45 Of-I sing

46 Rung

49 Tub

50 Vigil

CRYPTOQUIP X 9-22 UEMW JWWN UEYGWN YWWJF UDYJ-F D M U G

Yesterdays CryT)toquip - PREHIEST FABRIC FOR BRILUANT DANCE FROCKS : P01JA DOTS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: W equals E.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter u^ 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.

1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc

Witnesses Tell Of Vote-Buying

BRYSON CITY, N.C, t.AP.) - Clay County voters willing to cast a straight Democratic ticket could receive $50 to $150, witnesses testified in the vote buying trial of Sheriff Howard Barnard and three others

Witnesses said was said during the I S. District Court trial Wednesday that they were paid to vote, while others said an election supervisor marked their ballots for them.

Barnard. Glenn Martin, Harvey Alberry and Frankie Campbell are charged with 31 counts each of vote buying and aiding and abetting vote buying. They also face one count apiece of conspiracy, while Campbell is charged with voting more than once and Barnard is charged with obstruction of justice

Calvin Hooper of Hayesville, Linda Hooper, Paiiline Norton. Judy .Norton and Billy .Norton testified that they were told by service station owner Edgar Jones to go to the courthouse to vote.

Jones, of Hayesville, has pleaded guilty to 20 counts of

vote buying and conspiracy. He testified that he and the defendants bought votes from anyone willing to sell them at "the going price" of $50 to $150.

"I told them that if they'd furnish me the money. I'd furnish them the votes." he said.

Witnesses said Wednesday they were told to ask for Campbell, the Clay County Elections Board supervisor, whom some said accompanied them into the voting booth and marked their ballots.

The five testified that they were given a shoe tack which they were told to take to a shoe store or to a service station outside Hayesville where they would receive $50 to $T5 for voting.

Much of the alleged vote buying took place during one-stop voting. The one-stop system allows voters to vote in advance if they know they will be out of town on election day. Jones said he instructed voters to ask for Mrs. Campbell when they went into the Board of Elections office.

SHOP EZE

Mon.-Sat.8 A.M. -9 P.M. Sun. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

SPAINS

Mon.-Thurs. 8 A.M - 8 P.M. Fri.-Sat.8A.M.-8:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY

CORRECTION

The following item was incorrectly furnished to The Daily Reflector for the Wednesday, Sept. 21st, edition. It should have read as follows;

OSCAR MAYER

BEEF FRANKS 79

1 LB. PKG.

fRnK

WITH THE WICKER LOOK

SALE PRICE

NATURAL FINISH 26 X 16 X 19 ACCENTED WITH BRASS TRIM

M

95

SAVE $25.00 RETAIL VALUE $50.00

MAHOGANY FINISH GALLEY QUEEN ANNE ^LE TABLE

SALE

PRICE

$2500

Has the custom-touch of a handsome brass post gallery Rich mahogany finish.

Magaiine Rack Table

uersalihl^i, magnificenlly crafted, lasting beauty, all in one. to be admired for years to come

Compare At $50.00 & More

Sale $

Price

25

00

?! 15 2t, .H

Create a beautiful reading corner in any room of your home with this unique space-saving Magazine Rack Table

OUR

30-60-90

DAY

INTEREST

RATE

00%

NO FINANCE CHARGES OR INTEREST WHEN YOU SELECT BOSTIC-SUGGS 30-60-90 DAY CASH PLAN. PAY 1 /4 ON PURCHASE. 1 '4 30 DAYS. 1 4 60 DAYS & 1 4 90 DAYS. JUST LIKE PAYING CASH.

SOLID OAK

PORCH , ROCKERS ^ AT ^ HUGE SAVINGS

Retail 40.00 NATURAL FINISH STYLE 144 OAK PORCH ROCKER

Retail 52.50 STYLE 330 SOLID OAK PORCH ROCKERS IN NATURAL FINISH

Retail 65.00 JUMBO SOLID OAK PORCH ROCKERS

Style 430

RETAIL PRICE 55.00 30 TALL TRADITIONAL BRASS FINISH TABLE LAMPS

mmr

SALE

PRICE

$2750

^leafed Shades. 3 Way Switch. Antique Brass Finish.

11 .nil dndJUH

REPEAT OF A SELL OUT!!!

BRASS WALL SWINGER LAMPS

48 TO SELL

SALE PRICE

$

29

PLEATED SHADE

95

^ *95.00

VALUE. YOUR CHOICE DOWN BRIDE OR

SWING ARM

SALE

PRICE

$4400

Brass Plate Finish. PleaVd'Shades.

A

55%

OFF

Retail Price $85.00

Solid Pine Floor Lamps With Tray By George Bent

Sale Price

$QQOO

Rich warm honey-tone pine. 60" tall. Linen fabric shade. Tray is treated with protective stain resistant top.

SAVE *41.00

RETAIL PRICE *100 SOLID PINE TABLE FLOOR LAMP.

HONEY

PINE

FINISH

SALE PRICE

$5900

1/2 PRICE 100% NYLON COLONIAL BRAIDED RUG CLEARANCE

?rc'- *8.00 20x40 Size ............

*17.0030x50Size..prTe^S^

*72.00 5 Ft. 4 In. By 8 Ft. 6 In.. .pmcE

SALE

*36

*140.00 12 Ft.x9 Ft. Size pricI

SALE $^900


Title
Daily Reflector, September 22, 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.) - 30581
Date
September 22, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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