Daily Reflector, September 23, 1983


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SPORTS TODAYTO THE WIRE

Australia II beat Liberty Thursday to tie the Americas Cup series at 3 wins each. The final race is set Saturday. Page 13.

INSIDE TODAYINACTON

Despite dire warnings by the White House, little apparently is being done to curb spiraling deficits. Door said open to darker budgetary future. (Page 9)

COMING SUNDAY

'    0^    State    nursing    examinations    taken    by ECU and

PCC nursing graduates.    ^    ^

'over me PM 50 yUfs.    ^    '^'*''"9

-A report on the continuing construction boom in Greenville.THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NOYEAR NO. 210

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 23, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

TORPEDO RECOVERED ... A Civil War torpedo has been recovered from the Northeast Cape Fear River at the Blossoms Ferry site. An ECU team discovered the relic on the river floor while carrying out research on ferries that formerly operated there. The 300-pound torpedo will be transferred to

Greenville this weekend for preservation measures by team members of ECUs Program in Maritime History and Underwater Research. The trio handling the torpedo are, (L-R) Rick Herron, Gordon Watts, and Wes Hall. (Photo by Stuart Morgan)

ECU Team Finds Civil War Torpedo

II By STU.ART MORGAN

WILMINGTON - A large Confederate torpedo, described as unique, has been recovered from the Blossoms Ferry site on the Northeast Cape Fear River near Wilmington by staff and students of East Carolina Universitys Program in Maritime History and Underwater Research.

It will be transported this weekend to Greenville for perservation measures by ECUs Maritime History and Underwater research team.

Ironically, the Confederate torpedo will probably undergo wet storage preservation alongside the anchor of the Union forces ironclad USS Monitor recovered just weeks ago.

The historic torpedo, first lifted to the rivers surface last week from the Castle Hayne marl river botton 20 feet below, was promptly returned to the rivers bottom following examination in order to make arrangements for its final recovery and removal to Greenville.

A five-member ECU team.

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currently surveying two 18th-century vessels at the Blossoms Fer|7 site in the Cape Fear, discovered the Civil War torpedo while conducting a reconnaissance of the river bottom in the immediate vicinity of the wrecked ferries.

I had no earthly idea that the torpedo was there, said Gordon Watts, director of Underwater Research in ECUs two-year graduate program. Watts described the Civil War projectile as a cast-iron. Confederate single frabe, one of a kind torpedo.

Its specifications are exactly those of a Confederate torpedo described in The Official Recorck of the Union and Confederate Navies, Watts explained. In fact, an illustration provided in those records, in Volume 16, page 394, matches those of the torpedo we have found.

The bullet-shaped torpedo weighs in excess of 300 pounds, with a height of 24 inches and a diameter of 12 inches.

According to Watts, the

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torpedo is not armed. Because the lifting eye ring, instead of a detonator, has been placed in the nose of the torpedo, we feel that it has never been armed. Watts added that precautions would be taken to ensure that the torpedo is inert before its transfer and preservation begins.    ,

The torpedo has four logs Icoated on its base that were used to attach it to a frame or piling, Watts explained. To destroy an enemy vessel, he added, it would be submerged just beneath the waters surface on a frame or piling so that the detonator would come in contact with the hull of the vessel operating in a river or channel.

Contact with the enemy vessels hull would smash the detonator and explode the torpedo, Watts said.

Historical records and archaeological evidence indicate that ferry service existed on the Northeast Cape Fear River with virtually no interruption from around 1733 to the establishment of a permanent bridge there in 1925. However, such evidence also suggests that the Confederate Navy may have been assembling framed torpedoes - such as the one found - in the vicinity of Blossoms Ferry during the Civil War. The torpedo, in fact, may have been lost while being transported across the Northeast branch of the river during that war, more than 115 years ago.

The torpedo was found

(PleaseturntoPageI2)

August Gain Of 0.4 Percent

Modest Rise In inflation

BySALLYJACOBSEN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Higher prices for gasoline and fresh vegetables pushed consumer prices up a moderate 0.4 percent in August,

matching the gain of the previous month, the government said today.

So far this year, prices have risen at an annual rate of just 3.4 percent. Over the last 12 months, the gain was

2.6 percent.

As for last month, the Labor Department said, gasoline prices rose a sharp l.l percent after a more modest 0.4 percent increase in July. Those prices, however, were

still 8.4 percent below their peak of March 1981.

The 5.8 percent rise in fresh vegetable prices reversed a 3.6 percent July decline and tioosted food prices overall a small 0.2

Pitt County Fair Gearing Up For Next Week's Fling

ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer The smell of cotton candy, hot dogs and popcorn wafts its way through the nippy night, tickling and tempting any nose within a half-mile.

The sounds of hobby horse music, barkers and delighted laughter blend with aromas and melt into the crisp night. Animals bleat, grunt, moo and crow, punctuating the darkness with their sounds.

The scene is the annual Pitt County American Legion Agricultural Fair, scheduled for Sept. 26-Oct 1 at the Pitt County Fairgrounds. In addition to the traditional rides that thrill the kids and the food, vegetable crafts and horticulture exhibits that delight the adults, country singer Ronnie Milsap will be in concert this Sunday and the Fantasy on Wheels Hell Drivers will perform Sept. 30 and Oct. 1.

Milsap will perform at the Pitt County Fairgrounds Sept. 25 at 1:30 p.m. Local singer-songwriter Nicky Harris will be a

special guest. Advance tickets are $10.50 and gate tickets are $12.50, Milsaps hits include Only One Love in My Life," Nobody Likes Sad Songs, and Sniokey Mountain Rain.

The Hell Drivers show will be held Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 at 4 p.m. daily. There will be no charge for the show. The show features 28 high-speed events and will last for one hour and 15 minutes. Drivers Jack Plumstead and Tony Peterson will perform highlights including balancing on two wheels and flying a truck 65 feet through the air.

Admission to the fair itself will be $3 for adults day and night. School children will be admitted free Monday-Friday until 7 p.m. on a school pass. Children under 12 years will pay $1.50 all other times. Parking is free.

The following special fair days have been scheduled throughout the week.

Wednesday, 9:30-11:30 a.m., senior citizens day, all senior

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Community College Trustees Endorse Boost For Soles Tax

The Pitt Community College Board of Trustees has endorsed the optional half-cent sales tax for Pitt County.

At its monthly meeting Thursday the board passed a resolution supporting tlje tax. The resolution cited the great need for significant capital funds for construction of critically needed facilities in order for PCC to maintain

its assigned mission of pro-viding quality technical/vocational education.

The resolution stated that there was a documented need for 149,000 square feet of additional facilities at the college necessary to meet state standards.

Board members elected Clifton Everett Sr. to his sixth term as chairman of

the Board of Trustees. Kay Whichard was also reelected as vice chairman and Mary Langston as secretary.

Ephraign Smith, recently appointed to the board by the Pitt County Commissioners for a full eight-year term, and Susan Creech, PCCs elected Student Government Association president and ex officio member of the board, took the oath of office at the

More Evidence Is Given In Double-Slaying Case

By ROY HARDEE The State, in the murder trial of Dwight Parker, continued today to introduce evidence found at three Pitt County locations and in Newark, N.J., during in-vestigtion of the killing of the Rev. Leslie Thorbs and Anthony Ray Herring in mid-February.

Two confessions signed by

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.

Parker, outlining how the two men were shot and their bodies dumped into the Tar River, were introduced Thursday.

Carolyn Pippins, who faces two murder indictments and an armed robbery charge in connection with the case, was in the courtroom audience Thursday, as she has been during much of the week. She has been free on bond since her arrest.

According to testimony earlier this week, it was her information which led officers to the bodies of Thorbs, 31, and Herring, 27, and later to Parker in New Jersey.

Detective Sgt. Terry Riley of the Essex County (N.J.) sheriffs office said he located Thorbs 1980 Cadillac in the Ivey Hill area of

Newark on Feb. 28., the same day that Parker's extradition hearing was being conducted. He said he looked into the car and saw bloodstained newspapers.

A series of photographs introduced in the trial showed stains in the car. which was impounded and later processed by officers from Pitt County.

SBI Agent Dennis Honeycutt testified that he was called to the Tar River Bridge on N.C, 222 between Falkland and Belvoir on Feb 22.

He said he found dark colored stains on the roadway and bridge columns on each side of the structure. Several hairs were also found at the bridge.

(Please turn to Page 5)

meeting.

A special board committee on facility needs chaired by Kay Whichard presented a report on facility needs, which was adopted by the board. The committee and Everett will meet in the future to develop recommendations for implementing the report findings.

A $6.9 million unified budget resolution containing state, county and federal funds, both revenue and appropriations. was approved by the board. Budget trnasfers of county and state funds were also approved.

The board was informed by the building committee that Greenville Utilities Commission has requested an easement to locate a high voltage transmission line across the south end of the PCC property. The board authorized Everett and the building committee to develop recommendations regarding an easement that are acceptable to the board.

The board formally approved the following bids and contracts: construction of a respiratory therapy unit by C.A. Lewis, Inc. for $29,000; extension of water and sewer lines by Roger Haddock for $18,275; rocked parking lot by E.R. Lewis Construction for $19,582 and land clearing for modular units by E.R. Lewis for R400. The total is $71,257.

Dr. Charles Russell, acting PCC president, reported that the fall quarter 1984 enroll-

(Please turn to Page 5)

percent.

Food prices, which had tallen in the two preceding months, are likely to rise at a steeper clip in the coming months as the effects of this summers drought r-d devastating heat Income more apparent,

Initially, though, the bad weather is bringing heafty meat price declines as producers sell off their herds rather than pay higher feedgrain prices. Beef and veal prices fell 0.7 percent in August; pork prices tumbled 0.6 percent.

The continued moderation in the overall Consumer Price Index bolstered economists predictions that inflation this year will better 1982s 3.9 percent clip. Indeed. some expect inHation could dip to roughly 3 percent, which would the lowest full-year rate since 1967.

Ironically, todays report said prices have tripled since that benchmark year. What cost $10 then cost $30.03 in August.

If last months 0.4 percent increase held steady for 12 straight months, the yearly advance would be 5.3 percent. The annual rate reported by the department is based on a more precise calculation of monthly prices than the figure made public.

All the calculations are adjusted for normal seasonal variations.'

In all, the CPI stood at 300.3 in August, meaning that goods costing $10 in 1967 would have cost $30.03 last month.

A companion index, the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, rose 0.5 percent in August. This index is widely used in calculating cost-of-living increases in collective bargaining contracts and government benefit programs.

In advance of todays new report, economists said inflation has been surprisingly well-behaved so far this year.

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WtATHER

Ciiurinu tiini'Ju wi'.h temperatures lu lnu ti)>, .Mosils' Minnv with hmh'- m upper ini'.

Looking Ahead

Fair .Sunday, inrreasinp cloudiness Mondax with chance of rain in liie east late .Monday or Tuesday, lliiths in hOs Sunday uarmini' into Ids hy Tuesday. Lows near jn on coast Sunday, and in that range during the period.

Inside Reading

Page6& 17 .\reailems Page 12 Obituaries Page IcS Few letters Page 24 Helpful rain

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 initia s will be used.

NATURE CENTER APPEAL The Greenville Recreation and Parks De> partment has asked Hotline to appeal for donations and loans of items to be used in its nature center at River Park North. Examples of items the center can use include mounted fish, birds and animals; arrowheads and other Indian artifacts, leaf and dried flower collections, old aquariums, L.nd the like. For information about what is needed or to offer a donation or loan, call Walter Stasavich, 752-4137, Ext. 264.

Unemployment In North Carolina Seeing Decline

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Unemployment in North Carolina dropped to 7.9 percent in August from 8.6 percent in July, the Employment Security Commission announced today.

Better economic conditions have had a major influence on the change, said Glenn Jernigan, ESC chairman. Apparently employers have confidence in solid economic improvement and are beginning to add workers to meet production needs.

Jernigan also announced today that North Carolina ranks first in the nation in finding

jobs for unemployed workers. The U.c,. Department of Labor determines the productivity ranking by dividing the total individual placements by the number of funded interviewer positions.

The ESC found jobs for more than 84,000 North Carolina workers during the nine-month period that ended June 1983. There were 390 interviewer positions that each averaged placing 227 people in jobs.

North Carolina was followed by Georgia, Louisiana, South Carolina and Kentucky.

North Carolinas August unemployment rate

means that 233,90 people were without jobs in a civilian labor force of 2,952,700. That means 21,000 workers found jobs or were otherwise removed from the jobless ranks since July.

The national unemployment rte was 9.2 percent in August, with more than 10.4 million people without jobs.

Jernigan said average weekly hours for manufacturing workers rose to 40.7 in August from 40.1 in July. That compares with 38.2 hours in August 1982.

The nonmanufacturing division showed employment gains especially in the trade

area, which the ESC attributed to seasonal activity in tobacco auction warehouses: Construction also continued to improve and 1,700 workers were added in that area.

In the manufacturing division, the ESC reported that electrical machinery jobs dropped by 2,600 in response to uncertainties related to labor negotiations.

Average hourly earnings in August were $6.66, a 3 cent dTop from hourly earnings in July and a 33 cent increase from earnings in August 1982.





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2 The Daly Ref lector, Greenvitle. N.C.

Friday, September 23.1983

MRS. SEYMOUR ARTHUR SUTORIUSII

District Officers Visit Eastern Star Chapter

District officers of the Seventh District, Grand Chapter of North Carolina, Order of Eastern Star attended the meeting of Eastern Star Chapter No, 149, here Tuesday night.

Bryce Tharp, Worthy Patron, and Margaret Schiller, Worthy Matron, called the meeting to order and presided, respectively. She welcomed members and visitors including Glenn Whitfield Garner, Past Worthy Grand Matron of North Carolina, Geradine Dotson, Goldsboro No. 54, Mebla Ingles, Kinston No. 53 and Mrs. Dodson, Neuse No. 347, Worthy Matrons, Phil Shoulars, Neuse No. 347, Worthy Patron.

Students Have Initial Meeting

.At organiianona! meeting Of -he Pitt County Community Coiiege Chapter of F'jrure Secreianes .Associa-tior. was held Monday even-mg

Jo Gillin presented the program "How to Keep Your Hat on the Hook." offering guidelines for maintaining a successful and productive working relationship.

Cathy Sanderson was elected president and will be assisted by: Dorothy Tripp, vice president; Betty Bogard, secretary; and Cynthia Cannon, treasurer. Committees were selected for the new year and plans are being made for the installation of new members and officers at the Oct. 12 meeting at PCCat2p.m.

Betty Thompson, CPS. conducted the meeting. Barbara Wilson. PCC faculty advisor for the group, and other guests were recognized

The Future Secretaries .Association is sponsored by Professional Secretaries International.

Ms Wilson can be contacted for further information

By(K(ILYBR()W\STO\E Associated Press Food Editor WEEKEND LUNCH Make-Your-Own Sandwiches Chocolate Mint Milk Shakes

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Couple Marries In Greensboro

Mrs. Johnson commended the chapter for its work and presented Helen Turner her 25 year membership certificate.

Mrs. Johnson and Glenn were presented gifts and honorary memberships by the Associate Patron and Associate Matron.

It was announced over $500 was made at the craft fair at Camp Rainbow last weekend by the Seventh District.

Mrs. Johnson presented sponsor certificates of recognition to Margaret Gray, Joe Harper, Mrs. Shciller, Gertie Andrews and Jean Tharp. Ruth Harris and Jane Adams will also receive certificates.

The good of the order was given by Gertie Andrews.

The chapter room was decorated carrying out the theme Friendship, Harmony and Love, Joe Sang presented several musical selections.

A social hour followed the meeting.

GREENSBORO - Laura Hetzler lacone of Greensboro and Seymour Arthur Sutorius II pf Greenville were united in marriage in a douUe ring ceremony peirfiMnned by Dr. Joseph MuUin in the First Presbyterial Church Thursday.

The bride is the daughter of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Hubbard Hetzler. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Grace Stewart Sutorius of Carrboro and the late Seymour Arthur Sutorius.

The bride was escorted by her cousin, James Addison Jones III. Her honor attendant was Laura Elizabeth Sutorius of Greensboro, daughter of the couple.

Arthur Andrew Sutorius of Rocky Mount, son of the bride^oom, was best man. Ushers included Leslie Stewart Sutorius of Long Island, N.Y., brother of the bridepoom, Clarence Ray Wiggins of Raleigh and Victor Russell Seymour of Atlanta, Ga., uncle of the bride.

A program of organ music was presented by J. Patrick Murphy.

The bride wore an ivory taffeta gown with a scooped neckline which featured a beaded alencon lace ruffle. The elbow length, shirred, puffed sleeves were underlined with beaded alencon lace ruffle and the fitted bodice featured a beaded alencon lace front panel. The full shirred skirt was edged at the hem with a border of scalloped alencon lace. The full cathedral train was at-

Enrollnient Event Held By Chapter

Ann Worley, enrollment chairman, opened the Passport to New Horizons for Pirate Charter Chapter members of the Ameican Business Women's Association and their guests.

Barbara Koenig gave a report on what members receive through their membership on the local and national levels. She spoke of the group insurance, discounts, national magazine, programs and educational workshops.

Pat Hardee, treasurer, discussed dues, use of fund raising and scholarships.

President Nina Redditt spoke of the national conventions which stress workshops for the business woman as do the regional meetings.

tached at the waist and had a scalloped alencon lace border. H full cathedral ivory illusioo veil was attached to a beaded alencm lace crown. Sie carried a cascade bouquet of pink roses, stqrfianotis and babys breath centered with gardenias.

The honor attendant wore an azure blue long satin dress with a long-sleeved jacket with a stand-up ruffled collar and cuffs. She carried a bouquet of pink sweetheart roses, white snow crystals and babys breath.

A reception was held in the garden room adjoining the church and was given by Mr. and Mrs. V.R. Seymour of Atlanta, aunt and uncle of the bride. Assisting were Jacqueline Quigley, Laura Elizabeth Quigley and Anne Johnson.

Die bride is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is a teacher in the Reidsville City Schools. The bridegroom is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and is cofounder and branch manager of Century Data Systems, Inc. in Greenville.

A rehearsal dinner was given by the Sutorius family Wednesday at Londons in Greensboro.

Bridal

Policy

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.

W'edding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

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Sept. 26 Oct. 8,1983

Mother Ignored By Children

By Abigail Van Buren

1983 by UniverMi Prei* Syndicate

DEAR ABBY; I am a widow of 70. My husband and I raised all our children with the same amount of love and understanding, but the only one who has shown any love and caring for me is Our youngest. If my husband knew how the other children ignore me, he would turn over in his grave.

Abby, the youngest telephones me every evening to chat for at least half an hour and visits me often. The others, I rarely hear from (unless they want something), and if I want to know how they or their children are, I have to do the calling. We are on friendly terms, but it is apparent that they couldnt care less if I were dead or alive. Of course if I invite them for dinner, they are all here to put their feet under my table and fill up. But they never invite me.

The big question: Do I treat them all alike in my will? My husband left me everything. I am thinking very strongly of leaving my estate to the one who deserves it.

If I tell the others now, they will probably treat me nicer only for the money, which is as empty as an upside-down bucket. That kind of love I dont need. What do you say, Abby?    -

HEARTBROKEN MOTHER

DEAR MOTHER: Where is it written that children should automatically get what their parents have worked and saved for? Tell your lawyer how you feel. Do exactly as you please, and surprise your heirs.

DEAR ABBY: Our daughter wants a big, fancy church wedding, plus a reception, band and everything that goes with it, but we cant afford it. Not only that, but she and her fiance have been living together as man and wife for two years already. Maybe were old-fashioned, Abby, but we dont think its right for a couple who have been living together that way to have that kind of wedding.

Our daughter is very upset with us and thinks we should try to find the money somewhere. Both she and her fiance work, and his parents are well-off financially. We are not. We love our daughter and want her to be happy. What should we do?

WEDDING WOES

DEAR WOES: If you cant afford to give your daughter the kind of wedding she wants, that should settle it.

Tell your daughter that you love her and want her to be happy, but she will either have to settle for a wedding thats within your means, or she and her fiance should try to find the money somewhere.

DEAR ABBY: My good-looking, 19-year-old son, John, was encouraged to go to modeling school here in our city.

Upon graduating he was accepted by a well-known modeling agency in New York.

My husband and I have been warned by someone in the fashion industry that most of the men in the modeling profession are homosexual. Since John expects to go to New York in a few months, do you or any of your readers have any advice for him other than to forget it? Do you think he can make it in that profession without being compromised or intimidated when he makes it plain that he is heterosexual?

Is a young mans sexual preference formed by this age, or is a man always vulnerare to try anything?

CONCERNED MOM^

DEAR MOM: I have no advice for John, since he has asked for none. But I have some for you,' Mom: If your son is heterosexual, you need not worry about the possibility of his being compromised or intimidated by homosexuals in the' modeling/fashion profession; his sexual orientation not preference will have been formed by that time.

And whether a man (or woman) is always vul-' nerable to try anything depends on the man or woman.

If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, HoUywood, Calif. 90038.

Sandra Gaskins To Give Talk

The Judicial System will be the topic for the Monday night meeting of the Greenville Chapter of Professional Secretaries International.

Sandra Gaskins, clerk of court, will be speaking. Dinner will be served at 6:15 and the program starts at seven oclock. The meeting, will be held at Western Sizzlin Steak House on 10th Street.

For information call Jo Gillin, president-elect, at 757-2814,

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The congressmans wife who s^ks her husbands job after his death is following a tradition as old as the womens vote. By offering herself as a candidate Wednesday, Kathryn McDonald shouldered *the widows mandate.

Thirty-two times in the last 60 years, women have been elected to their deceased husbands seats in the House of Representatives. Six times, women were appointed to spouses unexpired terms in the Senate; once, a woman filled out her fathers term in the House, and another became a delegate from Hawaii to replace her husband.

; Some stayed in Congress only long enough to wind up a husbands term. But many earved out distinguished political careers.

: Margaret Chase Smith, elected from Maines 2nd Congressional District in 1940 hfter the death of her husband Clyde, remained in Congress until 1973. She finished her husbands term, 4hen was re-elected for four hiore terms in the House and ."Went rti to four terms in the innate.

Following In Their Husbands Footsteps To U.S. Congress

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C

Coggins > Born to Mr. and Mrs. Troy Keith Coggins, Route 4, Greenville, a son, Troy Keith Jr., on Sept. 17, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

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%Jorn to Mr. and Mrs. B^by Thomas Sellers, 204 Pearl Drive, a son, Bobby Womas Jr., on Sept. 17,1983, ^itt Memorial Hospital.

I Hines : Corn to Mr. and Mrs. p'war Lee Hines, Fhrmville, a son, Floyd Joshua, on Sept. 18, 1983, in Pjtt Memorial Hospital.

Summerlin Born to Mr. nd Mrs. BT-uce Elliott Summerlin, Coute 9, Greenville, a daughter, Sharon Fay, on Sept. 18, H983, in Pitt Memorial Hospi-:tal.

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On the other hand, Elizabeth Hawley Gasque of South Carolina was elected, but not sworn or seated, because Congress was not in session between her election in September 1938 and the expiration of her term.

Mrs. McDonald, an enthusiastic partner in her husbands conservatism, talked as though she felt the widows mandate in her announcement in Marietta, Ga.

There was but one Larry McDonald, she said, but Im the most qualified to carry on his work.

- The congressman, who had represented his northwest Georgia district since 1975, died Sept. 1 on the Korean airliner shot down by the Soviet Union. I feel an obligation to carry Larrys banner, said his widow.

The 19th Amendment to the Constitution giving the right to vote to women was ratified in 1920, but Jeanette Rankin of Montana had been elected as the first congresswoman four years before.

The third woman in the House, Winnifred Huck of Illinois, started the chain of women as fill-ins. She was elected to her fathers unexpired term in 1922 - the only one ever to do that.

In the Senate, vacancies are filled by appointment; in the House by election. Congress is most solicitous of. widows; it pays them their husbands salary for a year

- $69,800 at present - tax-free.

The first woman senator was a substitute, but not for a family member. Rebecca Latimer Felton of Georgia

todt the oath Nov. 21,1922 to fill a vacancy. She was given just enough time in the job to take the oath and make a speech on the floor. Then her successor, Walter George, was sworn in.

All but two of the 15 women who have served in the Senate were originally selected by appointment or by special election to fill unexpired terms of senators who resigned or died in office - although less than half were family. In addition to Mrs. Smith, Hattie Caraway, appointed in 1931, was subsequently re-elected, and Maureen Neuberger was elected in 1960 to fill a vacancy and for a full six-year term.

When Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn., died of cancer in January 1978, his wife Muriel was appointed for the rest of his term. She did not seek election to her own term in the Senate.

Not until the election of Nancy Landon Kassebaum of Kansas in 1978, had a woman been elected to the Senate without first having filled an unexpired term. Paula Hawkins of Florida made it No. 2 in 1980.

The latest to assume her husbands seat in the House is Sala Burton, widow of Rep. Phillip Burton, D-Calif. She had 10 opponents in the special election last June, one of whom called her heir to the ideological coalition, Burton had built in California.

While the record is replete with wives who were truly handed a widows mandate by the voters and served.

however briefly, there are instances where she didnt.

The voters werent given a choice in Indiana after ,three-term congressman Adam Beniamin died of a heart attack last year. Benjamins widow wanted the job, the district Democratic chairman said no, and state senator Katie Hall won.

Some of the more successful widows include Lindy Boggs of Louisiana, who pinch-hit for her husband. Hale, then was re-elected five more times; Frances Payne Bolton of Ohio, who replaced Chester Bolton in 1940 and stayed through 1969; and Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts, who succeeded John Jacobs Rogers, then was re-elected 17 times until she herself died in office in 1960.

Any recounting of takeover wives must include the Byrons of Maryland.

Katharine Edgar Byron was elected in 1941 and served out the \^k years left in the term of her husband, William. Their son, Goodloe Byron, was elected from the same district in 1970. He died while jogging in 1978 and his widow, Beverly, was elected to his place. She still is in the House, serving the western Maryland area.

The congresswoman thus can claim that her father-in-law, mother-in-law and husband all were in Congress.

There are others, though, who kept it in the family. Sen. Howard Bakers mother served out the House term of his father. And his father-in-law was Everett Dirksen,

;agement Announced

GROSSIE ELLA SMITH...S the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Smith of Winterville, who announce her engagement to Anthony Dennis Jackson, Esq., son of Mr. and Mrs. Major William Jackson of Philadelphia, Pa. The wedding is planned for Oct. 15.

long-time Senate minority leader.

Sen. Russell Long is the son of two senators. Rose McConnell Long was appointed to fill the seat of Sen. Huey Long. Her widows mandate lasted 11 months.

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Rush Party Held By ESA Chapter

A rush party was held recently by Alpha Omega Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha at the home of Barbara Parker.

The program included an introduction to the ideals of ESA as a philanthropic organization.

Attending were Ann Daniel, Julia McLawhorn. Julie Howler, Rose Smith. Ann Davenport, Judy Smith

and Hi a no Pnrhin

Friday. September 23. 1983    3

Margaret Roberts was hostess for the business meeting of the group. President Nellie Taylor announced her theme for the year as "Bloom Where You Are Planted." She said the theme referred to the chapter as a whole as well as individual members.

Some of the groups projects are the United Cerebral Palsy Telethon, Camp Rainbow, hospital volunteer work and a charity bazaar planned in October'at Carolina East Mall,

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Editorials

Paul O'Connor

Worthwhile Labor

Schools Segregated By Computers Introduction

It has often been said that the housewife or sometimes these days househusband does not work, but rather stays home and keeps the house.

It may be comforting to those who keep house to know that their labors are valued at $7 per hour.

Cornell University researchers have calculated the value of household labor using a method which considers the lowest wage necessary to get a housewife out of the home and into the job market.

The concept of both husband and wife working is well established in our society. Frequently when both work they share the housework or hire outside help to keep the house in order.

Individually families often debate whether it is truly helpful to the family budget for the wife to seek employment rather than keep house and look after the children.

The answer varies with virtually every individual situation. One thing is certain, however. If either partner in a marriage stays home and keeps the house properly it is not a question of being non-productive. The work is worth a good $7 per hour and that is not something to be overlooked.

Optimism Helps

Tragedies have a way of repeating themselves all too often. A year ago this month it was the massacre of more than 460 Palestinians in Lebanon by militiamen who called themselves Christians.

And now, it is the Korean airliner just as much a massacre, with 269 passengers and crewmen falling victim to a Soviet missile. The Soviets, at least, dont profess Christianity.

One could easily ask, what next? Lebanon, again? Chad? Another airliner?

It truly takes an optimist to survive.

RALEIGH As American educators target deficiencies of public schools, some voices are warning that the availability of schoolroom computers might economically segregate those schools. In affluent school districts, money will be available to buy computers/to teach computer science. In poorer districts, that money wont be available. The result: The children of the affluent will be better prepared to meet the job market of the next decades.

Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green spoke of that segregation at the September meeting of the state Board of Education. He sees it as a real possibility for North Carolina and he wants the General Assembly to make sure it doesnt happen.

Green challenged the state board to begin lobbying right now for a special line item in the state budget for school computers. The Advisory Budget commission, which is already formulating a supplemental

budget for 1984-85, should put money aside solely for the purchase of instructional computers.

Hardly a day goes by that I dont talk to someone in business or industi7 who tells me that every child has to have an opportunity to become computer literate,-Green told the board. Every time I mention that around here Im told that were already doing that - im Mecklenburg and Wake and Guilford. Well, some schools have computers, those are in affluent areasPBut, a lot of them dont. The schools which dont have the computers, he said, are in poor and rural areas.

Green, a conservative spender who rarely recommends rapid fire spending to solve a problem, said its obvious that his suggestion would take millions of dollars to implement and that the computer purchases would have to be made over several years. A legislative committee is scheduled to study the need for

computer education in our schools and report to the 1984 short session in June. The board, he says, should quickly determine how many computers are already in state schools and how many North Carolina students are already computer literate.

Before the legislative committee reports, the ABC should be told to put aside money to buy com puters for our students.

Green said the state should have started purchasing computers this year but the tight budget eliminated the possibility. Next year, he says, Were going to have some money. How much? He wont predict. But, some figures floating around say the state might have as much as $200 million surplus in June. With the attention that public education is getting now and the 1984 elections, theres a good chance much of that money will go into teachers salaries and other help for the schools.

Greens proposal drew instant criticism from Jan Holem of the N.C. School Bwrds Associatioij. She said a specific line item fqr computer purchases would not be wise, that it would keep local school officials from spending money on what they feel are th greatest needs.

Any money in education would be welcome, she said. But, this is another case of trying to tie the hands of local school boards. There are a lot of things local systems need more than computers. Some need them. But, some have already spent local money to buy computers and this is an area where businesses are making donations. So, some school districts wouldnt be able to use this money.

But Jimmy Green thinks every child in the state should bi studying computer science whether or not his school has the money, or the interest, to buy the computers. In the Legislature, Green usually gets his way.

mm

Hugh Mulligan

Cleaning Up At Newport

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - Flotsam and jetsam found floating in Rhode Island Sound in the wake of the 1983 Americas Cup races:

- The ugly old urn bolted to an oak table in the trophy room of the New York Yacht Club (a half mile from the nearest sailabl water on W. 44th St. in Manhattan! contains only 134 ounces of silver, but its got to be the most expensive bit of bric-a-brac in the annals of sports hardware. And thats at yesterdays prices - and not withstanding the fact that in the original race around the Isle of Wight in 1851 it met the trophy requirements for "a cup of 100 guineas value."

- The schooner America, which gave her name to the cup after beating 15 of Britains best on that breeze-blessed August day 132 years ago, cost only $20,000. She was modeled after a New York Harbor pilot boat, but being a millionaire's toy was decorated below decks in Chinese white and gold and had a velet and mahogany sofa in the main cabin. Queen Victoria, watching from aboard the royal yacht in Cowes harbor, was not amused to see the Yankee upstart, which the Illustrated London News had called a violation of all established ideas of naval architecture, cross the finish line with nothing else in sight,

'Which boat is second*? she asked the weathered old quartermaster peering off into the nothingness through long binoculars.

"There is no second. Your Majesty, he glumly replied. The nearest competitor from the Royal Yacht Squadron was seven and a half miles, or more than an hour, astern.

- After that, prices kind of got out of hand, what with keen chaps like Cornelius Vanderbilt. J, Pierpont Morgan, Lord Dunraven. Sir Thomas Lipton, who made bundles from tea bags, and aircraft designer Thomas 0. Sopwith of Sopwith Camel fame forming syndicates to build bigger and faster boats. Todays sleek Cup sloops carry only an 11-man crew, but a century or so ago, when 20 men crawled out on the bowsprit just to haul in the jib topsail and aboard Lord Dunravens Valkvrie III in 1895. it took 30

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British tars to raise a half acre of mainsail. The British contender Galatea in 1886 was elegantly fitted out with heavy damask draperies, oriental rugs, a large dining room table and a fireplace. Besides the crew, she sailed with a monkey, a cat and several dogs aboard; Todays boats dont even have a head.

- Sir Thomas Lipton, who spent millions upon millions in five losing attempts at lifting the auld mug, was not much of a sailor, despite the natty nautical cap he sports on supermarket tea cartons. He usually watched the races from aboard his luxury steam yacht Erin.

- After the original regatta off the coast of England, the Cup races were held off the Atlantic Highlands, at the entrance to New York harbor. Near the turn of the century, huge spectator fleets of fishing smacks and charter boats came out to follow the millionaires at play. Passenger steamers like the Gen. Slocum, which later carried hundreds to their deaths in a fiery disaster, the City of Lowell and the Old Dominion Lines Yorktown charged boat race fans $2 to $5 to "go out with the swells (as Jackie Gleasons Ralph Cramden always promised Alice.) Soon the skippers, especially the losing ones, began to complain of a phenomenon called spectator chop. In 1930 the races were moved to the waters off Newport, R.I., with the Coast Guard officially on hand to keep anyone from getting close enough to watch. This year the Coast Guard budgeted $150,000 to fend off spectator chop.

- When Wall Street crashed in 1929, the tycoons braving the deep had to cut back to more economical toys and began drag racing their 120-foot long J-boats, which only cost in the neighborhood of $5 million to design, build and equip.

Soon the great mansions on the cliffs (known as cottages in the Gilded Age) were shuttered and taken over by the preservation societies, and it could no longer be said, as J.P. Morgan once did, that a man with a million dollars was as well off as if he were rich. Todays trim 12-meter yachts, which dont measure a dozen meters in any direction but conform to a complicated formula taking in the square root of this, that and a few other things, are only half as long as the magnificent J-boats but cost considerably more than half as much.

- How much does it cost now to enter this mildewed marathon off Newport? Figure about $4 million per boat answering the committee boat gun. This covers design, building and outfitting the 12-meter yacht, boatyard bills, docking fees, hiring a tow boat tohaul her to the starting line and a power cruiser to follow behind with the tool kit, the champagne and the box lunches, renting a cottage to house and feed the team, shakedown cruises for the taming of the crew, etc.

- Liberty, this years Americas Cup defender, wasnt always a popular name for a boat around this town. Back in 1769, four years before the Boston Tea Party (which had nothing to do with Sir Thomas Lipton), local rebels protesting King George Ills taxes, boarded and burned H.M.S. Liberty, a British man o war ancjiored in Newport harbor.

- The Associated Press made communications history in the 1899 Americas Cup series when it hired Guglielmo Marconi and his newly invented wireless to relay puff by puff details of the victory of J.P. Morgans Columbia over Liptons Shamrock. The copy flowed, despite heavy mists and fog, which as the New York Herald report^ baffled land observers, signal balloons and carrier pigeons alike.

CW, W SEZ,    IIK        !1*

Art Buchwald

The White House Spare Parts Garage Sale

The Pentagon was having a spare parts garage sale the other day, and I went over to see if I could pick up any bargains. There were spare parts spread all over the parking lot.

I picked up a Phillips screwdriver, and a colonel came over and warned me, If you break it you pay for it. How much is it?

The colonel looked in a book. Ill let you have it for $760.

Seven hundred and sixty dollars for a screwdriver?

We paid $990 for it. Its a heckuva bargain. This is not an ordinary screwdriver. It was made to screw bolts in F-16S.

Let me think it over. What else have you got?

Heres a chief petty officers flashlight that you cant pass up. Its yours for $230, without batteries. How much are the batteries? The colonel referred to his book. We paid $140 for two. Ill throw in the batteries for $50 if you take th flashlight for $220.

Youll be losing a lot of money on the deal.

This is a garage sale, and weve been told to get rid of our spare parts before Congress finds out how much weve been paying for them, the colonel said.

What are these little, black squares?

Theyre silicon chips for our night fighters. The aviation company who

made the fighters sold them to us for $1,500 apiece. But you can have a dozen for $999.

You can buy these chips in any Radio Shack for $4.95, I said.

We just found that out,, he replied. Thats why were selling them so cheap.

What are these tires over here? Theyre for mobile missile launchers. Theyre a steal. The defense contractor charged us $1,200 for each

tire, but weve reduced them to $600.

How can you afford a 50 percent markdown?

Were suing the contractor for overcharging us $900 a tire, and if we win well come out ahead.

And if you lose?

It doesnt matter because every time we fire a missle all the tires on the launcher blow out.

I really dont need any tires.

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

It is surprising that Jesus left the world without providing much of an organization to continue his work and teachings. To be sure, he left the twelve apostles. They were to be the nucleus about which all future effort was to be carried on.

But what perhaps makes up for this lack of formal organization was contained in his last statement to the disciples, Ye shall be my witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth (Acts 1:8).

on

While this witnessing went during the first three Christian centuries the Church had a vigor and a rich faith greater than it has ever had since. Neighbors witnessed to neighbors, merchants to fellow merchants, travelers to other travelers. The word grew and multiplied through witnessing.

The Church is highly organized today, but it is not the witnessing body it should be. We serve the Lord best by being witnessing followers of his wherever we are.

If you want a good buy you ought to take one of these* M-1 tank transmissions. We paid $400,000 for each one, but were letting them go for $50,000.

Do they work?

If they worked do you think wed be selling them for $50,000?

Are those Army pup tents over there?

You better believe it. Theyve* never been used. The list price was $6,000 for each one, but because its> General Pattons birthday, were giv-! ing them away for $4,000 today.; Youll never get to buy a pup tent at that price again.

Ive been to garage sales before,! I said, but this one beats them all.i The colonel said, The way we look at .it is the taxpayer paid for these things, so he should get first crack at buying them at a discount. Its our way of thanking him for supporting the military buildup.    I

There are so many bargains. Id like to buy everything in the parking lot.    ,

I wish you would. It would get me off the hook.    ;

Why?    >

I was the chief purchasing office^ for the Pentagon until they found out* this $5,000 walkie-talkie could be! bought at Sears Roebuck for $18.95.!

(c) 1983, Syndicate

Los Angeles Time$

John Cunniff

When Statistics Just Don't Add Up

NEW YORK (AP) - What do you do when two and two equals three, or seven or even 11, 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 compters were first employed to track the )illions of pieces of data that government uses to buUd 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 example, 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 retail sales know that 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 in 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 days, are dodging interviews 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 battlie front. He is the Fed

Watcher, the person who each week awaits the Federal Reserve report on thq nations money supply, hoping to find ii| the numbers some guidance to thq economys direction over the weeks to follow.    {

That he receives conflicting report never seems to daunt him, nor does i( discourage the millions of people whq avidly follow the reports on whether M^ and other symbols of money in circula* tion have risen or fallen.    !

Its all done in an attempt to unj derstand to create order where nd order can otherwise be discerned. | But when you consider that sometime^ the numerical symbols might be wrongi and that some of them will be revised oil adjusted, and that some of them also ard derived from subjective assumptions] you are entitled to wonder.    |

To wonder, for example, if the numj

bers really clarify, or if, perhaps, thCL might not add to the confusion. ^    '

m





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

. .w..ww>vi,    II    w-_t^nudy.    otpuSenate Votes Slash United Nations Contribution

Friday. September 23. 1983    5

ByTOMRAUM Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - Advocates of slashing U.S. payments to the United Nations by nearly half claim the ^nates passage of the dramatic cutback reflects national frustration with the international organization. But GOP readers are fighting to keep the action from ever becoming law, calling it a threat to world stability.

The 66-23 vote Thursday night, which enjoyed wide bipartisan support in the Republican-run chamber despite Reagan administration objections, would chop this nations monetary contribution to the United Natifms by nearly $500 million over the next four years.* The United States now contributes about 25 percent of the total U.N. budget.

It would reduce the U.S. payments by 21 percent in the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, then by another 10 percent in each of the next three years. By 1987, the U.S. payment would fall to $200 million - compared to the $363 million this nation is scheduled to contribute to the United Nations in 1984.

I think it was an unfortunate vote. But Im sure its not the last word well hear on the subject, said Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr.

White House spokesman Larry Speakes said today the administration hoped the money would be restored in later votes. When asked whether the vote would damage President Reagan when he visits the UN on Monday, Speakes pointed out the action is not final.

But backers of the move asserted it was high time the United States reviewed its commitment to the United Nations, which has had its headquarters in New York City since its creation in 1945.

Spending at the United Nations is out of control, said Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., authdr of the fund-cutting amendment.

Thirty-nine Republicans and 27 Democrats supported her proposal, tacking it onto a bill authorizing a variety of State Department programs.

The Senate was expected to give its approval to the overall bill later today, sending it to a House-Senate conference

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committee. The House version of the State Department legislation does not contain the U.N. cutback.

Baker and other opponents of the move indicated they were-hopeful the amendment could be killed in the conference panel.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who voted for the cut, said he did so out of frustration by the fact that a lot of members of the U.N. seem to think that the U.S. can do no ri^t and the Soviet Union can do no wrong ... We get criticized by everyone. Let somebody else pick up the tab.

But Sen. Charles Percy, R-Ill., chairman of the Senate

Dean Zallen Will Retire

Evidence I

DR. EUGENIA M. ZALLEN

ECU News Bureau Dr. Eugenia M. Zallen announced that she will resign as dean of East Carolina Universitys School of Home Economics effective at the end of the 1984 second summer session. She said she will devote her time to teaching.

Dr. Zallen joined the school of home economics as a professor and dean in July 1980.

A native of Jacksonville, Ala., she received her undergraduate degree at Auburn University. She received the masters degree at Purdue and her doctorate from the University of Tennessee. Her 3rofessional appointments lave included experience at Duke Medical Center, Emory University Hospital, Purdue, Aurburn and the University of Maryland.

The ECU School of Home Economics was recently reaccredited for the next 10 years by the Council for Professional Development of the American Home Economics Association.

(Continued from Pagel)

Another SBf agent, Jim Taub, said field tests indicated that the dark stains were blood.

The bodies of both Thorbs and Herring were thrown from the bridge into the rain-swollen river, their bodies weighted down by cinder blocks. The block attached to Thorbs body weighed 87 pounds, according to testimony.

Honeycutt said blood stains were also found in a trash barrel behind Ms. Pippins home, in a car belonging to Ms. Pippins sister, and at the end of a dirt path near Ms. Pippins home. Officers say the two men were slain there and their bodies transfered from Thorbs car to Ms. Pippins sisters car.

The SBI agent said he and Pitt Deputy Billy Tripp processed Thorbs car in Newark. He said numerous blood stains and newspapers -including a copy of The Daily Reflector dated Feb. 18, and a copy of the Newark Star-Ledger dated Feb. 19 were found in the car.

This morning expert witnesses from the SBI testified that blood stains found on the bridge, in the two cars and from the dirt path near Ms. Pippins home were from blood typing groups A and 0. Earlier testimony showed that Thorbs had type 0 blood, while Herring had type A.

SBI experts also said the bullets found in the two bodies were fired from a .38 caliber pistol.

Parker, in his confession, said he used a stolen .38 caliber pistol to shoot Thorbs and Herring and that he threw the pistol into the river.

Court observers said today that unless there is a surprise development, the trial will take most of next week, and some think even longer.

It took two weeks to seat the jury.

$55,000 Grant Is Announced

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The National Endowment for the Humanities has awarded a $55,000 grant to state preservationists to help support the compiling of a major study of the states historic buildings.

Tentatively titled The Buildings of North Carolina, the book is a joint project of the Federation of North Carolina Historical Societies, the National Society of Architectural Historians and the Survey and Planning Branch of the Archaeology and Historic

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The book is a pilot state project in a national series initiated by SAH entitled The Buildings of the United States.

Flooded After Conol 'Broke'

ANDERSON, Calif. (AP) - City officials declared a state of emergency after a 70-foot hole in an irrigation canals earthen walls sent water surging through streets, flooding 40 homes.

The hole grew in two hours to 200 feet, under the pressure of heavy rain, before the canal intake was shut off at about 5 a.m. Thursday, said ilice Officer Tim York. By nightfall the water had reced^ enough to let r^i-dents go home and a four-block area be reopened.

York said officials did not know the cause of the break. The irrigation system serves farms, ranches and small communities in southern Shasta County.

Reagan Picks Up Supporters

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Heagan has picked up support from more black Ikpublicans should he decide to seek re-election.

The endorsement came this week from delegates to a three-day National Black Republican Council committee meeting. The council is an organization affiliated with the Republican National Committee which focuses on the concerns of blacks within the party.

Foreign Relations Committee, said the vote sent the worst possible signal to the world in this time of heightened U.S.-Soviet tension.

This is a mistake. We are undercutting the very agency on which we depend to maintain peace and stability in the world, Percy said.

Mrs. Kassebaum conceded that this is a difficult time to raise this.

But, she told the Senate, It means that the U.N. will have to look to its budget just as we are struggling with our budget.

County Fair...

(Coniiiiued from Pagel) citizens admitted free and a special prorgam is planned.

Thursday, 9:30-11:30 a.m., handicapped chi drens day, all handicapped youngsters will be admitted free with special demonstrations and rides planned.

Friday, pre-school day, pre-schoolers age 4-5 years will be admitted at no charge and special demonstrations and rides are planned.

On Tuesday night The Pitt County Livestock Development Association will hold its annual Market Hog Show and Sale beginning at 7 p.m. in the Livestock Building. Competition will be held in both youth and adult categories.

Livestock of all types, including sheep, goats, hogs, and chickens will be on display in the Livestock Building throughout the fair.

In addition, entries in the horticulture, cooking, field crops, crafts, clothing and egg competition will be exhibited in the crafts building during the week.

Fifty-five education and commercial displays will be on exhibit in addition to the cooking, canning, sewing and crafts booths.

The W. Connor Eagles Farmstead and Village of yesteryear will be open throughout the week. The display is the largest of its type in the Southeast.

Pianist Aiding Polish Relief

LONDON (AP) -Australian pianist Alan Kogosowski, who refused to let a broken hand wreck his career, is helping raise funds for SOS Poland, an organization that sends provision to Poland in the winter.

The 30-year-old Kogosowski, who was in an auto accident when he was 21 and smashed all the bones of his right hand, gave an all-Chopin concert in a London church Thursday night.

The son of Polish migrants who went to Australia after World War II, Kogosowski performed before a full house at St. Peters in west Londons Hammersmith district.

The pianist, known to American audienced from The Ed Sullivan Show, told The Associated Press that after specialists saved

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The U.N. budget has become bloated." she said later in a session with reporters. We have international bureaucrats that were financing that are 25 percent above the salaries we pay our own bureaucrats... (But) We have lost a sense of voice and participation in the United Nations, vet we pav an inordinate amount of money (to finance it i."

Of the Democratic presidential candidates in the Senate, only Sen. Ernest F. Hollings of South Carolina voted, casting his ballot against the measure. Sens, John Glenn of Ohio. Alan Cranston of California and Garv Hart of Colorado all missed the late-evening vote.

greenviiit

his hand he exercised it to make it stronger than it had ever been.

Trustees...

(Continued from Pagel)

ment was approximately the same as in 1983. He also reported on the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools visiting committees report on reaffirmation of accreditation for PCC, the establishment of two new scholarships, special funding for a research project to develop a model on recruiting non-traditional students, and the status of planning for an engineering technology program.

Russell also announced that W.H. Howell, PCCs dean of fiscal affairs for 21 years, has announced his retirement effective Dec. 31. Plans for filling the position wil be announced later, said the acting president.

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6 The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.

Friday. September 23,1983

MRS. H.ATTIE THOMPSON

In The Area

Will Honor Retired Teacher

Mrs. Hattie Thompson, a retired Pitt County school teacher, will be honored by the O.A. Dupree Scholarship Fund at its annual fund raising banquet Saturday at 7 p.m. at the C.C.

Spaulding Gymnasium at Shaw University ip Raleigh.

Mrs. Thompson taught in Pitt County for 38 years.

She is secretary-treasurer of Simpson Senior Citizens Club, president of the Senior Ladies Auxiliary and secretary of Phiilippi Baptist Church.

She is a former member of the Pitt County Board of Health and serves on the advisory council for the Pitt County Council on Aging. In addition, the honoree is chairwoman of the Ministers Wives of the O.E.M.B. Association and a member of the National Association of University Women,

A bus will leave Phiilippi Church at 4 p.m. for the recognition service. For more information call 752-3688 or 752-6437.

Mallard Takes United Way Post

Larry Mallard will serve as assistant general chairman of the 1983 Pitt County United Way campaign, according to United Way officials,

-Mallard is vice president and city executive at NCNB ^ -National Bank. He serves on the Pitt County United Way Allocations Committee and is a member of the organization's board of-directors. In addition, he serves as a director of the Greenville Museum of Art and the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce.

-Mallard graduated from East Carolina University in 1972 with a bachelor's degree and has been amployed by NCNB since that time. In Raleigh he was branch manager, commercial loan officer and metro-director and in Wilson he was city executive until he moved to Greenville in 1981.

Mallard is a member of the ECU Planned Support Council, the Pirate Club and Alumni .Association, the Greenville .Noon Rotary Club and the Greenville Country Club.

He is married to the former Charlene Geiter of New Bern and they have two children. They attend Jarvis .Methodist Church where .Mallard is a member of the administrative board and finance committee.

Went To TEP Workshop Here

Elmhurst Elementary School teachers from all grade levels and principal Leslie Marshburn attended an in-service workshop luncheon on Tuesday. The purpose of the meeting was to provide further information concerning the Triad Enrichment Program being implemented at Elmhurst this year. Mary Holt Kitchin, the TEP teacher at Elmhurst, conducted the workshop. Volunteer parents prepared and served lunch.

Attended Leadership Symposium

Mrs Kim Wheat-Robinson. social worker for the Pitt County Department of Social Services, was selected to attend the National Leadership Symposium on Foster Care Review-held recently in Raleigh.

The symposium involved more than 150 participants from across the country.

Executive Board To Meet

The executive committee of the Pitt County Council on Aging. Inc.. will hold its regular monthly meeting Sept, 26 at noon in the Council's offices at 1717 W, Fifth St.

Robber, Lawyer Are Arraigned

CLI.N'TON, Tenn. 'APi -Convicted armed robber William T. Kirk and the female lawyer charged with helping him flee sat silent as their lawyers entered innocent pleas for them on charges of escape, aggravated kidnapping and armed robbery.

Kirk. 36, and his former lawyer. 26-year-old Mary Evans, ignored each other Thursday as they were arraigned on charges stemming from their alleged escape from a psychologist's office Authorities say they spent 139 days on the run in Florida and North Carolina

MODEL CODE

V.ATICAN CITY (APi - A family bill of rights has been drafted by the Vatican as a model for legislation and will be issued next week at the opening of the world synod of 209 Catholic bishops.

before FBI agents arrested them .Aug. 17.

A jury in April convicted Kirk in absentia of manslaughter in the deaths of two fellow inmates at Brushy Mountain State Prison.

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' ' ' I SEARCHING FOR DEBRIS - The frigate USS Badger, foreground, and salvage rescue ship USS Conserver patrol of{ Moneron Island. USSR, Thursday as efforts continue to find sunken wreckage of the Korean .Airlines jet shot down by the Soviets Sept. 1. This photo was taken from a U.S. Navy helicopter stationed on another ship supporting the searci

effort. (APLaserphoto)    J

Losing Jobs DueTo Exam Grades

The Grapes Are Ripe!

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Eighteen or more registered nurse applicants -spring graduates of two- or four-year programs - who did not pass the state nursing examination in Julv, will lose

their jobs at Pitt County Memorial Hospital in the near future.

PCMH Senior Vice President Fred Brown said Thursday that those who

Advised Avoid Any Comments

In a brief statement Thursday afternoon, Pitt County Memorial Hospital President Jack Richardson said he had been advised by attorneys not to make any comment about the suspension of Betty Trought as vice president for nursing services at the hospital.

Reading from a prepared statement, Richardson said' I'm in the process of reorganizing senior management responsibilities in nursing services and am advised by legal council that no other statements are appropriate at this time.

At a future date, an announcement will be made about this reorganization."

Asked if he would confirm that Mrs. Trought had, in fact, been suspended,, Richardson said I can not do that," and declined to make any other comments.

Mrs, Trought said Thursday morning that she had been placed on suspension Wednesday afternoon. She has headed nursing services at the hospital for the past four years.

Im not sure 1 understand what happened," Mrs. Trought said Thursday morning.

"1 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. She said she was given two hours to make a decision.

Mrs. Trought said she refused to resign at a noon meeting and was "suspended by Richardson.

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

Saying she was not provided with specifics, Mrs. Trought said Richardson told her the action involved problems with her credibility with the medical staff, the board of trustees and other groups.

Harry Leslie, PCMH board chairman said Thursday that questions concerning Mrs. Trought were discussed by the board, in an executive session, Tuesday night, but said no action was taken. He would not say what the discussions involved.

TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752-6166 and let a friendly Ad-Visor help you word vourAd.

DIXON, DUFFUS & DOUB

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did not pass the boards will not be kept on the payroll.

It was a tough decision to make, Brown said, but in light of budget restrictions and changes in the Medicare and third-party reimbursement systems, those people cannot function as registered nurses. Unfortunately, we dont have positions for them in a lesser capacity.

The employees being terminated were among a group of 100 or more registered nurse candidates hired in May, June and early July, before the state exam was given.

Brown said "at last count there were 18 persons affected by what he described as "a management decision.

Other sources at the hospital said the number of persons losing their jobs could be higher because documentation had not been received, earlier in the week, for seven or eight others who took the examination.

Brown said the decision to terminate those who did not pass the exam in July will not affect the status of those persons - about 25 - who graduated and were hired after the exam was given.

That group of registered nurse applicants will take the exam in February.

Brown said were working with (the hospitals) human resources (department) to work out a severance arrangement, and to help them find other positions.

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Life As If's Lived

Experience Teaches Us That 'Life Is Not Fair'

By GAIL MICHAELS

Zacharys two favorite expressions are its too hard and "its not fair. Phillip and I are cruel )arents; having heard it all )efore, we dont give mucli credence to his complaints. But this doesnt keep Zachary from applying them .with increasing infrequency W every situation which excites within him the least bit of revulsion.

When applicable, its too hard is usually his first line of defense against unreasonable demands. It is, for example, too hard to transfer the Loc-Blocs from his carpet to their bucket. (It was not, of course, particularly difficult to dump them out in the first pl^ce.)

Its no harder for him to pick them up than for me, I tell him. But he has an answer to this, too. Your hands are bigger, he explains.

Naturally, because of this enormous advantage on my part, my refusal to

leamedTo Kick Boots

CHICAGO (AP) - A few residents apparently have learned how to kick off the Denver Boot, a device city workers attach to a wheel of a car if the owner owes parking fines.

In the week since Chicago adopted the boot as a/solution to a multi-million dollar problem of unpaid parking tickets, two of the devices have been illegally removed, police say.

The boot, locked to the wheel to keep the vehicle from being moved, was introduced in Chicago with fanfare Sept. 13.

City officials said a boot could be removed only by a city worker with a key. They also said the worker would not remove the boot until the parking fine was paid.

That was the theory.

The first boot was missing last week - along with the Jeep to which it was attached. The mangled boot was found a day later in the rear of the Jeep, which the owner said had been stolen.

The second boot was clamped onto a station wagon in the downtown area. The owner said he had paid his $260 in parking tickets and the $35-debooting fee, but when he arrived Thursday with a city worker to , have the device removed, the boot was already gone.

; Streets and Sanitation workers said they didnt remove it. That boot is still missing.

participate in the clean-up is decidely not fair.

So is my insistence that he feed himself his vegetables. For some reason, peas are excruciatingly difficult to eat. Ice cream, on the other hand, is not hard at all. He has no trouble picking up a utensil meant for anything made with sugar. It must be the vitamins, then, that make those same utensils slip from his fingers and clatter to the floor when confronted with squash, okra or spinach.

My unfairness is compounded by my inclusion of him in distasteful activities that should have nothing to do with him at all. Going to the bank is one such activity. Going shopping for anything besides trucks, cars or candy is another. In these instances, I often pay dearly for my unsporting behavior.

Particularly galling to him is my determination to drag him along on my morning walks. Neither of my children has any use for exercise per se. They may find swinging on the chandelier or jumping on the bed great fun. but anything more strenuous or less free-form than these activities is unacceptable.

Now although I can understand this attitude, mainly because I shared it for the first 31 years of my life. I have recently discovered that in order to breathe,

I must get some regular

exercise. Walking seemed the less objectionable alternative, so another displaced North Carolinian and I, both of the opinion that talking makes exertion almost bearable, together began a daily round of the neighborhood.

Zachary, however, has gained no solace from our conversations. I hate to walk, he tells me each morning.

Then you dont have to. You can ride in your stroller.

But Heaven forbid that he humiliate himself at the advanced age of three by submitting. to such a conveyance. Instead, he drags along behind me moaning, Its too hard, during half the walk and begging, Pick me up, during the other half.

For the last time, no, I told hini yesterday. Youre too big and heavy.

But Im just a little boy. If youre too big to ride in a stroller, youre certainly too bigfor me to carry.

I dont feel too big.

Well you are.

He stamped his foot. But its not fair!

I had my pat answer ready. Life is not always fair. As you get older you have to learn to accept some things you dont like.

A big tear rolled down his cheek. I dont like getting older. Its too hard.

I know what he means.

FOUND GUILTY Dr. Edward F. Jackson stands impassively in an Akron, Ohio courtroom as a jury found him guilty of 60 felonies, including 21 rapes. The Columbus internist could receive a total of 1,370 years in prison if the maximum penalties for the crimes are imposed. (AP Laserphoto)

Taste is all it takes to switch to limBeam.

W N1UCKY SIRAIliH I BUUKBON YYMISK U PKI f DISIIIlfDANl)B0!TUD8Y)AMfSB BIAMOISIiniNOCO CtfRMNI SM BY

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C _Friday.    September    23.1983    7

Fall Sale

Savings on womens sportswear

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Orig. Sale

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Ruling Delayed On Jurors Opposed To Death Penalty

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Four convicted murderers are challenging North Carolinas practice of not letting death penalty opponents sit on juries that might be asked

Will Probe Allegations

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Police Chief Fred Hensley says he welcomes an investigation of allegations that he received loans from a gambler and will take a lie-detector test if asked.

District Attorney Ronald Brown said Thursday he would ask the State Bureau of Investigation to probe the allegations. Brown said he reached the decision after hearing a tape recording supplied by a city council member.

"I listened to the tape." Brown said. "Although its credibility is highly questionable, in view of the news coverage and furor it has created, 1 have asked the SBI to look into the allegations of corruption."

Pless produced the tape Wednesday, saying it was given to him by former Asheville police officers Miles Goforth and Bobby Medford who resigned about a month ago after serving 12 years apiece on the force.

The 20-minute tape has an interview between a man identified only as a "well-known gambler" and Goforth. Medford and a third unidentified police officer. Brown said.

The "gambler" says he occasionally would heed requests of Hensley and other high-ranking police officers for loans until payday. The reputed gambler says on the tape he feared arrest if he asked to be paid back.

Brown said that the SBI investigation will focus only-on the corruption allegations, not on department policies.

Hensley said Wednesday the allegations were "sour grapes" on the part of Goforth and Medford.

Fuel Oils Fall As Heat Source

R.ALEIGH, N.C. lAP) -Fuel oils have fallen in popularity as a home heating source in North Carolina while electrically-heated houses have grown rapidly, according to a recently released U.S. Census report.

^ While four out of 10 homes continue to use fuel oils for home heating, the number of homes using fuel oils has actually dropped from 930.000 in 1970 to 820,000 in 1980. Meanwhile, homes headed by electricity have grown from 160,000 to 600,000.

The pattern of energy use in North Carolina is markedly different now than 30 years ago. the report said. In 1950. the leading fuel source in the state was wood, followed by coal or coke and fuel oils.

The percentage of wood use dropped from 36 percent in 1950 to 4 percent in 1970, but by 1980 that figure had increased to 8 percent. In 1970, 61 percent of all households in the state used fuel oils as their primary heating source but that figure had dropped substanially by 1980.

to impose capital punishment.

U.S. District Judge James McMillan delayed indefinitely Wednesday a ruling on arguments by attorneys for the convicts that the practice violates defendants constitutional right to a fair and -impartial jury.

Deputy Attorney General Richard League, representing the state, responded that death penalty opponents might have such strong beliefs that theyd acquit defendants they believed were guilty just ,to ensure they wont get the death sentence.

Wednesdays hearing was the first challenge to the practice heard in federal court in North Carolina. State appellate courts have ruled against the convicts fighting the practice.

The U.S. Supreme Court has yet to rule on the issue, John Spenkelink, a Florida prisoner, raised a similar challenge, but the court refused to rule on it and allowed his 1979 execution with the question still unanswered.

The North Carolina cases involve the Mecklenburg County murder convictions of Charles Keeten in 1976 and Bernard Avery in 1978, and the Gaston County convictions of Ted Carter in 1975 and Larry Williams in 1980. Williams has been sentenced to death.

If McMillan rules for the prisoners and is upheld on appeal, the convicts would get new trials. Trial procedures of all death penalty cases would have to be changed, possibly to require separate sentencing juries.

Currently, prospective jurors \l'ho say they never could impose a death sentence are not allowed to serve in death-penalty murder cases.

In capital murder cases, a jury first must determine guilt or innocence and then decide on the punishment after a separate hearing. Attorneys for the prisoners acknowledge that anti-death penalty jurors could not fairly determine the issue of life or death, but they contend such jurors should be allowed participate in the

first part of the trial.

Sam Gross, lawyer and Stanford Uhiversity law professor, outlined the case for the prisoners. He presented studies concluding that jurors opposed to the death penalty are less likely to convict prisoners than jurors with other beliefs.

Gross said the exclusion of death penalty opponents deprives defendants of a jury that represents a true cross-section of community beliefs.

But League argued that staunch death-penalty opponents would be likely to nullify" the law by acquitting a guilty defendant to avoid the chance that another jury would sentence him to death.

"Hard-core (anti-death-penalty) jurors, although they say they can convict on sufficient evidence, are really lying about it," he said.

McMillan asked: How do you know when (jurors) lie? Could you possibly determine that the accused was just innocent rather than being acquitted by a hard-core nullifier?

Extension Of Benefits To Jobless Advancing

WASHINGTON (APi -People in states with unemployment rates of 5 percent or more could get a maximum 12 weeks of federal supplemental compensa-

Ptvgraiils

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - The North Carolina Nursing Board's decision to accredit N.C. A&T State Universitys nursing program is "a magnificent moment for this institution," says its chancellor.

The nursing board decided Thursday to give full accreditation to the program, which officials have struggled to upgrade because so few of its graduates passed the state nursing exam. At one point, the rate fell below 30 percent.

A&T officials learned last week that the overall passing rate for the last two years was 69.76 percent - just shy of the 70 percent the board said was needed to continue the university's nursing program. July's passing rate was nearly 80'percent.

The board's decision "signals the reality that the master plan which we began in 1981 is working, "said .A&T Chancellor Edward B. Fort at a news conference Thursday.

"We have labored tirelessly in vineyard of preparation ... to achieve the reality of this moment." Fort said. "The university family can be proud of that which has now been accomplished, and we fully intend to continue with this forward-moving program in the semesters and years ahead."

OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF

knows its important to please you. And we receive hundreds of testimonials every vear.

tion payments under a bill approved by the Senate Finance Committee.

The committee agreed Thursday to an 18-month extension of the program, which expires Sept. 30 unless Congress takes action.

Under the current program, there is a 14-week maximum period of payments for people who have exhausted their other benefits and live in states with at least 6 percent insured unemployment rates. The Senate bill would provide 12 weeks in states with a rateof5 percent or more.

The House Ways and Means Committee has approved a 45-day extension of the program and increased the maximum period of benefits to 16 weeks. Its version also contains a so-called reachback provision supplying benefits for some who have exhausted supplemental payments, a provision strongly opposed by the Reagan administration.

The Senate version, which does not contain a reachback provision, is supported by the administration. However, some members of the committee said they would attempt to add such a provision when the bill gets to the floor.

The reason the House version is for such a short period is that leaders hope to use a future extension bi 1 for the popular program as a vehicle for a tax-increase measure.

The Senate bill provides 10 weeks of benefits in states with an insured unemployment rate ranging from 4 percent to 5 percent; eight weeks in states with a rate from 3 percent to 4 percent and six weeks in all other states.

The Labor Department estimates that the supplemental program will pay some $5.6 billion in benelits to over 5 million people from Sept. 12, 1982, through Sept. 30, 1983. The 18-month extension is estimated to cost $3.75 billion.

The insured unemployment rate is determined by the numlier of people in a state claiming regular benefits divided by the number of people in jobs covered by the states unemployment insurance law.

The committee also approved extending for one year a provision of the Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act authorizing federal matching for payments made on behalf of children voluntarily placed in foster care.

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IMKWIEKS'NOTICE

TO GET READY FOR THE 9TH ANNUAL FALL FLEA MARKET ON THE DOWNTOWN MALL

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15TH, 1983

PICK YOUR SPOT - SIGN UP AT C. HEBER FORBES 419 EVANS MALL

THE YEARS GREAT CLEARANCE SALE - CLEAR OUT YOUR ATTIC, CELLAR AND

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PRESENT CHECK North Carolina House members, Walter Jones Jr. and Ed Warren (far right) present a $10,000 check from the state, to Kay Warren, executive director of the Southern Flu-Cured Tobacco hesiivai and me festivals president. Gene Akins, Thursday. According to Rep. Warren,

the money, appropriated by the 1983 General Assembly, will be matched by the tobacco festival to promote the annual event. The festival is held each year to promote the sale and use of tobacco in North Carolina. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Town Pays For Skunks

THERMOPOLIS, Wyo. (AP) - After a summer of unwelcome company, officials have found a professional to take care of their problem. And it hasnt been easy. It costs $35 for each dead skunk.

Cal King, a retired game and fish biologist, has been hired by the town to get rid of skunks. A spokeswoman at the police department said the program started in mid-August after officials were deluged with complaints from residents about hundreds of the bushy-tailed mammals The varmints are live-trapped and then disposed of, the spokeswoman said, adding that it was hard tracking down a professional who "does skunks.

Sandy Downs at the town clerks office said at last count 51 skunks have been caught, but an estimated 200 sku5is remain in the town.

Eleven animals were taken from just one building that was being torn down, she said.

Thermopolis is paying King $35 a skunk, and police say the effort apparently is paying off. Theyve had fewer complaints since the program has been in force. It is due to run until Oct. 1.

SNAPPER

FALL SPECTACULAR

FREE Grass Catcher Kit Worth $134

SNAPPER'S Fall Spectacular is now. Purchase a SNAPPER iiding mower at the regular retail price during our Fall Spectacular and we'll give you a six bushel rear mounted grass catcher kit FREE.

With this kit you'll enjoy the convenience of mowing large areas of grass without having to empty as often.

And whether you buy one of our standard riders or a Hi Vac* rider, you know you can rely on SNAPPER for durability and versatility. In fact, our Hi Vac rider will even vacuum up leaves and twigs for you.

So be sure to take advantage of this offer soon. Visit your SNAPPER dealer during our

Fall Spectacular.

hsasnapwith

GRASS CATCHER KIT

Retail Value S134.00

HURRY! OFFER ENDS SOON

Promotion And Credit Plan Available At Participating Dealers Only.

DISTRIBUTED IN THE CAROLINAS BY PORTER BROTHERS OF SHELBYITS A SNAP TO OWN A SNAPPER WITH OUR REVOLVING CREDIT PLAN





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C

Friday. September 23.1983 gNo Resolution To Budget Deficits Appears Ahead

WASHINGTON (i^) - Despite dire warnings from the White House, another congressional budget dparfiinp s passing with little apparent movement toward reducing record federal deficits.

Various legislative panels were to turn over to the House and Senate Budget Committees today their ouUines of how

they would translate into law the general spending cuts and tax increases mandated by the Budget Resolution houses approved earlier this year.

But the House wasnt even in session, and ie deadline appeared to be passing as quietly as an earlier one had last July.

P'Neill Puffing A Choke Hold On fiMove To Increase IMFSupporf

iySUSANNEM. SCHAFER 11 Associated Press Writer ^:WASHlNGTON (AP) -J^e Speaker Thomas P. JCJNeill is putting a choke hold on President Reagans plan to increase support for the International Monetary Fund in retaliation for a Republican campaign letter accusing 20 House Democrats of supporting communism.

- ;Unless the president apologizes for the letter from the Ikpublican Campaign Committee, ONeill will not appoint conferees to work out dpferences in the House and Senate versions or schedule a for final approval of the Rep. Barbara Boxer, itt-Calif., told reporters Thursday.

Mrs. Boxer, president of jfie House Democrats fieshmen caucus, asked ^Neill to take the step, 'which effectively freezes ac-lipnonthebill.

; *The move to delay the bill iiiithorizing an $8.5 billion slot-in-the-arm for the in-Wnational lending agency cpes as top financial oficiis from around the world Sither in Washington for the IMFs annual meeting. . - ;A key issue at the bankers !fid economists sessions will ;bi the Reagan administra-tibns failure to get its IMF legislation through Congress.

;Also, the Fund reportedly s been forced for the first l^e in its 38-year history to ;cBt back on some existing ddan commitments and delay ^apy new talks on helping or countries because its jMn sources are overcom-!riitted.

jiThe IMFs 146 members ^reed last year to bolster tpe banks lending pools by '-adding $32 billion. The Unitied States decision on its ;^are is key, since it is one of ^e largest contributors.

The administration has ^cked the IMF increase as means of helping stave off ^iternational financial chaos, ^biecause the international lending agency has become a major impetus in helping ^manage the mammoth debt ^accumulated by developing ^nations like Brazil and Mex-ico.

* Although the administra-^tion got the Senate and House ;to pass the IMF legislation, it ;ran up against fierce opposi-tion from those who regard it 'as a bail-out of international i banks that have made im-: prudent loans to the heavily indebted Third World nations.

' But the letter, sent earlier .this summer, angered ; numerous House members : on both sides of the aisle.

Mrs. Boxer said her group Jof 60 Democrats was out-^ raged by the red-baiting

tactics of the Republican

bcopee Caught 6 Hours Later

DOBSON, N.C, (AP) - An ,18-year-old inmate was . -cau^t some six hours after locking up two jailers and escaping from the Surry ' County jail early Thursday : morning, authorities said.

James Keith Ledford was ; 1 captured about 10:45 a.m. at 'a house where he had ; stopped to make a telephone ' call, Surry County Sheriff BiU Hall said.

He had called somebody : and they gave us a tip, Hall *: said late Thursday afternoon in a telephone interview.

Hall said Ledford escaped about 4:30 a.m. by crawling through a vent and then >: taking the guns of two jailers ; and locking them in a cell.

I; Ledford has been charged ; with two counts of second-! degree kidnapping and one count each of escape and r,' possession of a dangerous weapon by an inmate. Hall rj said.

[4 Ledford was orginally be-ing held on armed robbery I and breaking and entering, liJMllpd, ,

Congressional Committee.

They met with ONeill and issued a letter warning that an attack on their patriotism had been made, resurrecting the policies of the shameful era of McCarthyism.

The Republican letter, sent to 20 Democrats home districts, accused them of supporting communism because during consideration of the measure, they voted against an amendment that would bar IMF loans to communist-ruled nations.

It accused them of showing total disrespect for freedom, and quoted from Rep. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, as saying, What gives them the right to vote to support

communism? Gramm sponsored the amendment, which was carried on a 242-185 vote.

Several administrations have backed IMF loans in the past to nations such as Hungary, Romania, and Yugoslavia as a means of retrieving them from the Soviet orbit..

The Reagan administration opposed the Gramm amendment, and even top Republican leaders as Rep. Bob Michel of Illinois had joined the Democrats in voting against it. But only Democrats were the focus of the letter.

Mrs. Boxer said the Democrats are demanding a writ

ten apology from Reagan, a full disclosure of the names and organizations that received the letter and that a retraction be sent to all who originally received the letter, at Uie cost of the Republican Committee.

Other more senior House members that were targeted by the letter have made similar demands, but received no response. Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., threatened last week to kill the IMF bill because of the letter, while Reps. Howard Wolpe, D-Mich, and Jerry Patterson, D-Calif., wrote Reagan twice, telling him a public apology is long overdue.

LUMBERJILL TO SEEK TITLE - Shirley Smith of Albany, Ore., became the first woman to qualify for the Homelite Tournament of Kings world chain saw championship when she won the power saw contest earlier

this month in Duluth, Minn. The 46-year-old mother of four will be trying to win $10,500 in prize money at the Tournament of Kings VI on October 5, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Laserphoto)

The problem, by most accounts, is the same as it has been* for months: An unwillingness by congressmen to take bold budget-cutting stands while the president and Democratic congressional leaders are stalemated in disagreement over tax increases.

On Thursday, President Reagans chief economist had said Congress had only a few weeks to move decisively toward cutting the deficits in order to avoid a sour future including more years of red ink and a permanent loss of money needed to keep the economy healthy.

Martin Feldstein, chairman of the presidents Council of Economic Advisers, said in a speech in Indianapolis that failure to cut the deficit from this years expected $200 billion would cause economic weakness that could make later CLiting even more difficult and costly.

. We may have reached an impasse in the budget process, he said. But the deficit problem is so critical that I sincerely hope that that is false and that Congress will recognize the need for immediate action.

If the stalemate persists, the budget deficit will only get worse. And as the national debt accumulates, the government will inevitably have to raise future taxes even more just to pay the interest on the extra debt, he said.

Feldstein said Reagan has shown he is willing to accept tax increases along with spending cuts.

The president believes that the next step is up to Congress and that they must be prepared to accept spending cuts as well as tax increases, he said.

However, the Reagan tax increases he referred to were those in a contingency program that was part of the presidents budget recommendations sent to Capitol Hill last winter. Those increases would not begin taking effect until two years from now - and then only if big spending cuts had also been voted.

That proposal is given virtually no chance of passage -especially in light of the fact that Feldstein is the only administration official who has even been mentioning it for months.

Meanwhile, the Budget Resolution calls for $73 billion in tax increases over the next three years, including $12 billion in

N.C. Woman Is Sef For Quinfs

fiscal 1984.

Reagan indicated again on Thursday that he opposes that idea, saying simply, Rather than moan and weep about my stubborn refusal to raise taxes, I urge all of those of good will to work with me.

In the meantime, while that disagreement simmers, legislators themselves have shown little enthusiasm for translating the tax-increasing generalities of their own Budget Resolution into specifics either.

The House Appropriations Committee has seemed to be making better headway than some had expected in holding spending plans down for the fiscal year that begins in one . ieek. But no one is predicting those efforts will significantly reduce deficits that are projected at $180 billion or more for fiscal 1984.

Congressional budget leaders have also expressed concern about the stalemate, and the Congressional Budget Office has said that if no substantial action is taken the deficits could continue in the $200 billion range for years to come - the same prediction Feldstein has made.

It is widely agreed that if Congress fails to take substantial budget action by the end of the current term, there will be little deficit-trimming before 1985 since legislators are reluctant to cut programs or raise taxes in an election year.

But Feldstein said such delay could make things worse. "If nothing is done legislatively before 1985, the economy is likely to be too weak in 1985 to accept the impact of a significant immediate tax increase," he said.

CP&L DIVIDENDS

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Carolina Power and Light Co. officials say quarterly dividends on the com-panystock jumped five percent, from 60 to 63 cents.

Complete Radiator Service

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

TABERNACLE, N.C. (AP) - A Tabernacle man whose wife is expecting the states first quintuplets on record says doctors will decide Saturday whether to admit his wife to a High Point hospital.

Tim Small said Thursday he and his wife Kathy already have five cribs waiting for the babies. Mrs. Small was due to deliver the infants Sept. 14.

We're just waiting now, said Small, 28. Were just trying to take every day as it comes and be calm.

Mrs. Small will undergo a regular weekly check-up Saturday at High Point Memorial Hospital, Small said. Doctors will decide then whether to admit her and induce labor.

Until last week, Mrs. Small^ 32, believed she was going to have triplets. But her weight had soared from 100 pounds to 212, and doctors administered an ultra-sound test. The test showed Mrs. Small was carrying quintuplets - believed to be three boys and two girls.

Doctors say they expect the infants to weigh 4 to 5 pounds apiece.

Mrs. Small, who took no fertility drugs, has three sons from a previous marriage. She underwent surgery several years ago and had been told she couldnt have any more children.

The quintuplets will be the first born in North Carolina since the state began keeping records 35 years ago.

NOTICE

Pursuant to the General Statutes of North Carolina, Section 143-129 sealed bids will be received by the Pitt County Board of Commissioners until 11:00 a.m., E.D.S.T. on Monday, October 3, 1983 in the Commissioners Auditorium on the second floor of the Pitt County Office Building, 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 for the furnishing of labor, materials, and equipment necessary to properly fine grade, compact, and place two inches of asphalt pavement on the driveways at the Port Terminal and Shelmerdine Transfer Station Sites in accordance with specifications as set forth for the projects.

Complete plans, specifications will be open for inspections in the office of C.A. Holliday, P.E., County Engineer, and may be obtained upon request, Monday thru Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. by those qualified and proposing to submit a bid.

No proposal will be considered unless it is accompanied by a bid bond, cash deposit, or certified check on some bank or trust company insured by Federal Depository Insurance Corporation in an amount not less than five (5%) percent of the proposal. Bid bonds for the unsuccessful bidders will be returned as soon as bids re awarded or rejected.

The Pitt County Board of Commissioners reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, and waive any informalities in bid.

PITT COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS H.R. Gray, County Manager

ART & CRAFT SHOW AND SALE

SEPTEMBER 22-23-24

Over 20 Artisans Will Display Hundreds Of Handmade Creations At The Place To Be....

264 By-Pass on Hwy. II, Greenville





10 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

Friday. September 23,1983

^ By V.

JOHN LEHT

WHAT CAUSED JUDAM TO BECOME 6REAT?

THE TRIBE OF JUDAH HAD NO STAMP OF SREATNESS ON IT UNTIL DAVID BECAME KINS. KINS SAUL HAD BEEN A BENJAMINITE AND WITH HIS DEATH AT THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINE ARMV DAVID TOOK OVER THE HELM OF LEADERSHIP AND ALSO THE THRONE OF ISRAEL. THE TRIBE OF JUDAH WAS ONLV TOO SLAD TO accept I3AVID AS ITS NEW KINS, REMOVING THEM FROM THE SUBSERVIENCE OF THE TRIBE OF BENJAMIN. BUT ALL OF THE TRIBES WERE HAPPV TO PLEDSE THEIR ALLEGIANCE TO THIS HERO WHO HAD, AMONG OTHER THINGS, DOWNED THE CHAMPION PHILISTINE GOLIATH! AND WHAT A PICTURE HE MADE, WITH HIS HANDSOME PEATURES, AND RUDDV COMPLEXION, AND

athletic phvsioue/ and how

THE PEOPLE CHEERED WHEN HE STARTED HIS REISN. A 5T0RVB00K HERO IF EVER THERE WAS ONE!

SAVE TH6 FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOKSponsors Of This Page Along With Ministers Of All Faiths, Urge You To Attend Your House Of Worship This Week. To Believe In God And To Trust In His Guidance For Your Life.

r-

' J'/

.J. t . 1 I

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,1^':

COZART S AUTO SUPPLY, INC.

81A DiCKinson Ave 752-3194 BanKs Cozart 8, Employees

GREENVILLE MARINE & SPORTS CENTER

Greenville Blvd NE 758-5938 Joe Vernelson Owner

Comphrnents O' THOMAS W. RIVERS

PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC.

Eiect'onics Suppliers 756-2291 107 Trade St , Greenville N C

GRANT BUICK. INC.

756 1877 Greenville Blvd Rill Grant s Employees

ANNE'S TEMPORARIES, INC.

758-6610 120 Reade St Greenville

JIMMY'S PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE

All Types Minor Repair Work

WrjjcKef-SefVfce--------

Corner i4fh & 264 Bypass J F Baker, ow'ner.752-2996

OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

211 S Jarvis 752-5025 All Employees

SMITHS HEARING AID SERVICE

Authorized Beltone Hearing Aid Dealer 1716 W 5th St Ext 758-4334

Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY

752-0876 1506 N Greene St Greenville, N C

EARLS CONVENIENCE MART

Route 1 756-6278 Earl Faulkner S Employees

TURNAGE REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE AGENCY

See John Finch For All Your Insurance Needs Corner 3rd & Cotanche 752-3459 or 752-2715

WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE

We Put It On The Plate'

500 W Greenville Blvd 756-0040 2903 E 10th St 758-2712

FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC.

Jim Whittington Oakmont Professional Plaza Greenville N C 756-0000

TOM SRESTAURANT

The Very Best In Home Cooking 756 1012 Maxwell Si West End Area

AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE

1007 Chestnut St 758-7000

Compliments Of KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CO.

114 E 10th St 752-5205

Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.

518 E Greenville Blvd 766-4id5

ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS

756-3500 226 Commerce St. Greenville

HARGETTS DRUG STORE

2500 S Charles Ext. 756-3344

PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE

2105 Dickinson Ave, 756-2444 Ricky Jackson & Employees

EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS

758-3568 1514 N Greene St.

A Complete Restaurant S Office Coffee Service'

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC

2201 Dickinson Ave 756-4267

PLAZA GULF SERVICE

756-7616 701 E Greenville Blvd.

Ryder Truck Rentals 756-8045 Wrecker Service Day 756-7616 Night 756-6479

HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO.

Residential & Commercial Building 400 N 10th St 752-1553

Compliments Of FRED WEBB, INC.

BILL ASKEW MOTORS

Buy-Sell-Trade S Memorial Dr 756-9102

BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS

218 Arlington Blvd 10th St. Greenville 756-6001    752-4156

PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO.

758-2113 Greenville

JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC.

The Finest In Manufactured Homes" 316 W Greenville Blvd. 756-4687 Johnny L, Jackson & Employees

WHITTINGTON, INC.

Charles St Greenville. N.C Ray Whittington 756-8537

A CLEANER WORLD GARMENT CARE CENTER

622 Greenville Blvd 756-5544 Pickup Station West End Circle 756-8995

TAPSCOTT DESIGNS

222 E. 5th St. 757-3558 Kate Phillips. Interior Designer Associate member ASID

DAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO..

2102 Dickinson Ave 756-1345 Bobby Tripp & Employees

CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE

1405 Dickinson Ave. 752-3776 Jerry Creech, Owner

Compliments Of PITT MOTOR PARTS, INC.

758-4171 911 S Washington St.

GREENVILLE HEATING &

AIR CONDITIONING CO., INC.

308 Spruce 758-4939 Cecil Clark & Employees

COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN

2905 E 5th Take Out Only 752-5184 600 S.W Greenville Blvd.

Eat In Or Take Out 756-6434

PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER

752-6125 Corner of 5th & Greene Greenville. N C.

JA-LYN SPORT SHOP

Hwy 33, Chicod Creek Bridge 752-2676, Grimesland James & Lynda Faulkner

INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.

W M Scales. Jr General Agent Waighty Scales. Rep.

Clarke Stokes. Rep. 756-3738

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Road 756-3115

ROBERT C. DUNN CO.

301 Ridgeway 758-5278

HOLIDAY SHELL

-Steam Cleaning Service All Types Auto & Truck Repair 24 Hour Wrecker Service 724 S. Memorial Dr. 752-0334

PARKERS BARBECUE RESTAURANT

756-2388 S Memorial Dr.

Doug Parker & Employees

Compliments Of PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle 756-2150

EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

2739 E. 10th St. P 0. Box 3785

752-4323 Greenville

LAUTARES JEWELERS

414 Evans 752-3831

HENDRIX-BARNHILL CO.

Memorial Dr 752-4122 All Employees

HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC

"Where Shopping Is A Pleasur 41 Memorial Dr. 756-0110 #2 2612 E. 10th St. Ext. 757-1880 #4 Bethel #5 N. Greene 752-4110 #6 Ayden #7 Tarboro

COUNTRY SQUIRE MOBILE HOMES, W'

703 W, Greenville Blvd. 756-98/.

WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY

756-0317 123 S. Railroad. Winterville

LOVEJOY AGENCY

Daybreak Records 756-4774 118 Oakmont Dr Larry Whittington

" CofhpTrmehts Of HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE

#1 911 Dickinson Ave #2 Memorial Dr & 6th #3 Stantonsburg Rd at Doctors Park

INAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS

N Memorial Dr, Ext 752-5656 Management & Staff

BUCKS GULF STATION

& Employees E 10th St. Ext. 752-3228 Road & Wrecker Service - /58-1033 Jarlran Truck & Trailer Rentals-758-4885

ART DELLANO HOMES, INC.

"A Place You Can Count On " 264 Bypass Greenville 756-9841

FARRIOR & SONS, INC.

General Contractors

753-2005 Hwy 264 Bypass Farmville

EASTERN INSULATION, INC.

Owens Corning Fiberglass Phone Day or Night 752-1154

i

FAITH CAN CLAIM ALL OF GODS PROMISES





Come To CHURCH

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Friday, September 23.1963    |'|

CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY .    baptist CHURCH

Subdivision The Rev James Wright ,8: p.m. Fri - 11S Senior Choir Club

TBmeetalthehoineofSis.LUlieWhite

lOe.m. Sun. Sunday School ,hi I.'?. ~ ^orshiD. sermon by me^astor, music rendmd by Gospel

wiy

T; w p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur. The Pastor Male ChortB and Senior Ushers, will be in St Marys MB church in thier association

- ST. JOHN MISSIONARY

-    BAPTIST CHURCH P.O. Box 134, Falkland TMRev.AntonT, Wesley, Pastor

7:38 p.m. Sat. Render service ai Burning Bush Holiness Church in P^oril Anniversary Wa rn. Sun. - Sunday .School 11 a.m. - Morning Worship

Bibtesfcdy ~

10:00 a m Thur-Sun. - The OEMB AswMtion will convene at St. Mary M B

I.    Of"    CHRIST

SR1727 (Lake Glenwood Road)

Mr. Melvin Rawls lO.m. Sun - Bible School 11 a.m. - Worship Service Semre ~    Worship and Youth

vS.il'ictS'*^ ~    *

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH DiSr*'"    Plaza

Frank Bentry Di^RoSi ~ Sunday School, Supt

11 a'.m. Worship Service

6 p.m. Choir Practice

Prayer and -aise Service TOOp.m. Mon. - Mens Fellowship TOOp.m - Prayer Warriors 8:06 p.m. - Board Meeting 7:30p.m Wed. - BibleStudy/Lifeliners.

7. p.m Thurs. Nursing Home Chocowinity

wl^ Pri - Sunday School Lesson

7 p.m. - University Nursing Home

PINEY GROVE FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy. 264 West

AllanSterbin, Pastor, Phone: 756-7430 10 a.m. Sun.Sunday School iWorship

 *     riiuay, ocpicinucr j. I^QJ

Area Church News SinOut Of

Style Today

FAITH PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH

Rt 9, Box 500 City (14th St Ext Cherry Oaks Subd. I    '

Rev. Paul N. Brafford 9;45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday school SUff Deyotions

10:00 a.m. - Sunday School (Johnny Jackson. Supt.)

11:00 a.m. - Morning Praise and Worship Service (Rev. L.B. Collins) S.Mp.m. - Sunday School SUff Meeting 6:30 p.m. Church Choir Practice 7:30 p.m. Evening Hour of ExhorU-tiofl (Rev. L.B. Collins)

C30 p.m Wed - Family Night Program (Lfddie Anderson Dir.)

ST. TIMOTHYS EPISCOPAL CHI RCH 107 Louis Street

The Reverend John Randolph Price 8:00a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist Rite I 9:30a.m. Sun. -Christian Education 10:30a.m Sun. - Holy Eucharist Rite II 7:30p.m. WedChoir Practice 7:30 p m Acolyte Practice

HOLY TEMPLE A.K.C.O.G.

Rte 6, Greenville, N.C. Saintsville EllderI.J. Robinson SjOOp.m.Tue. Midweek Service 8:00 p.m Fri. Bible Studies (Missionary L Debrew Teacher)

7:30pm 2nd Sun. - Worship Service 7:30b.m 4th Sun. - Communion Service 16:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School (Supt Deacon L. WhiUker)

11:30 a.m. 1st Sun. Missionary & Youth Day 11:30 a m 2nd Sun. - Deacon Day (Elderl J Robinson Speaker 11:30 a m Sun. - Quarterly Meeting (Elder I.J. Robinson

CHURCH OF GOD Comer Spruce and Skinner Streets, Greenville, N.C.

Rev. Paul Lanier Jr.

9:45a.m Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a. m Sun. - Worship Service 7:00p.m. Sun. - Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m. Tue. - Worship Service University Nursing Home

11 a.m. - Moraiiu Worship 7:00 p.m. Sun. Evening Worship 8:00 p.m. Sun. Choir mctice 7:30p.m. Wed - BibleStudy 7:30 p.m. Tliur. Visitation

PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE 2001W. Greenville Blvd The Rev. J M. Bragg, Pastor 7:30 a.m. Sen. Laymens Prayer Breakfast (Three Steers Rest.)

10a.m. - Sunday School (Campaign title Water the Grain)

II am MorningWorship 5:30p.m. Choir Practice 6:30pm. - Evening Worship 7:( p.m. Wed. - Sunday School Teachers Meeting 7:30p.m Wed.-Hour of Power 8:45pm -ChoirPractice 7:00 p.m. Thur. Church Visitation

Program Together Again WBZQ 7:15pm. Monday through Fritfey

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1400 S. Elm St.

Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Pastors Brett Watson, Director of Music E. Robert Irwin, Organist 9:00 a.m. Sun. Koinonia Class 9:00a.m.-Worship 9:45 a. m.-Church School II a m. - Worship 6:30p.m. Overeaters Anonymous 9:00a.m Mon. - WOCCouncil 7:30 p.m. - Church Council 9a m Tues -Park-A-Tot 9:30 a.m. - League of Women Voters 12:00p m. - News Deadline 2 p.m Wed - Address Angels 4 p.m. Rainbow Choir 4:45pm - Choristers 7:30 p.m. Gallery Choir 9a.m Thurs- Park A Tot 5:00 p.m. - Bulletin Deadline 7:30 p m - Overeaters Anonymous 10a.m. Fri. Pandoras Box lOa.m Sat. Pandoras Box

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

1206 Mumford Road James C. Brown

10 a. m. Sun Sunday School

11 a m Morning Worship 6:30p.m. - Young PeMie s Service 7 p.m. - Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting

SELVIA CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 1701 S. Green St.

The Rev Clifton Gardner, Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sun Sunday School 11 a.m. Worship Service 4pm Carnation Ushers will meet 7:30p.m. Mon. Trustee Board meeting 7:30 p. m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:00p.m. Fri. Seniorchoir rehearsal 3:00j).m. Sat. - C.G. Spintual Singers Choir Rebearsal 7:30 p.m. Oct. 3, Gospel Chorus rehearsal

7:30p.m. Wed. - Family Training Hour r. - Worship Service irsing Home - (Jnfton Rest Home

7:30 p.m

ville Villa Nursi

 Thur

Greenvi ______

6:30 p.m. Fn Service Dial-A-Prayer 752-1632

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Statonsburg and Allen Road Reverend Arlee Griffin, Jr 9:15 a.m. Sun. - Church School (K-12th Grades)

9:30a.mWorship Service 6:30 p.m. Thur. - Youthstones meet for Bible Study 4 Fellowship 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Aoult Bible Study and Prayer Meeting

SAINT JAMES CHURCH (UNITED METHODIST)

200 East Sixth at Forest Hill Circle Greenville, North Carolina 27834 (919) 752-6154 M Dewey^Tyson, Minister Ralph A. Brown, Associate Minister Ste^n W. Vaughn, Diaconal Minister 9:40a m Sun-Church

5:30p.m - Jr andSr HighUMYF    a.,    ..a    d    i

,.m M, F"- w,**,

7:30 p.m Mon. - Bible Study (Steve    n

J1.5?;    Shiigart,    1749    'o^S2    oS^sIl.    - CbthesI.ne

9:00 p m. - Bus returns from Duke

OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH

1800 S. Elm St.

R. Graham Nahouse

9:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Communion

10 00 a m. - Sunday School 11:00a.m. - Worship Service

6:00 p.m More with less Supper/Lutheran Student Assoc.

7:30p.m.Tue. - BuildingCommittee ^ 7:30 p.m. Wed-Choir Rehearsal

THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baptist)

1510 Greenville Blvd.

E.T Vinson

9:45 a m Sun. - Sunday School 11a m. Morning Worship 6:30 p.m. - Jr and Sr. High Youth Meeting

7:30 pm. Tue. - Evening Current Mission/Group with Arlene Mallison, 21 Scott St

5:45 p m Wed - Family Night Supper 6:30 p m. - Devotion, Mission Friends, Cherub and Carol Choirs 7:00pm Wed -GAs.RAs,

8 p.m.-Chancel Choir

JARVIS UNITED MEMORIAL METHODIST CHlRfH 510S. WashingtonSt

Jim Bailey, Susan Pale, Martin Armstrong Aiirian Brown, Ministers Jerry Jolley, Music Minister Mark Gansor, Organist 8:45 a m Sun Morning Worship 9:15 a.m. - Church Library Open 9:40 a,m. - Church School/Nursery

11 a m. Morning Worship

12:15 p.m. - Communion ithapel)

4:20 p.m - Jarvis Singers listen to Godspell

5:00pm.-Jarvis Singers 6 00p m -UMYFSupper 6:30 p.m. Sun. - UMYr Prcwrams 6:45 p m. - Childrens Handbells 7:30 p.m. - Young Adult Bible Study Parlor

3:00 p.m Mon. Lydia Wooten SS Class 113 S. Harding 7:00p.m.-EEIII CR 6:45p.m Tue. - Adult Handbells 7:25 pm. Albert Long 7:30 p.m. - Ada Cherry SS Class 1100 E. 10th St 9:30a m Wed - EE III 10:00-12:00 Wed.-Clothesline 10:30a m. Wed - Prayer Group (CRI 4:30 p m. - Childrens Choirs (ages 4-6th grades)

7:30p.m.-Chancel Choir 10a.m. Thurs. - Adult Bible Study 7:00 p.m. - Nominating Committee 7:30 p.m - Cub Scout Organization Meeting FH 7:30 p.m. - Dr Rileys George 4 Pol

Renewal Services At Immanuel

Immanuel Baptist Church will hold a series of renewal services Sunday through Wednesday entitled Faith Alive. The series will emphasize the need for renewal of Christian faith in all aspecte of life. Rev. Bill Treadwell, pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Georgetown, Kentuct^, will deliver the series. He is co-author of the book Conflict Ministry in the Church.

The services will start at 11 a.m. Sunday. Weekday services W1 begin at 7 p.m. nightly through Wednesday.

Homecoming Services Planned

Homecoming will be held at the Bethel Pentecostal Holiness Church Sunday, The Rev. WUey Vick, a former pastor, will speak at the 11 a.m. worship service. Sunday School will start at 10 a.m.

Church To Have Fall Festival

The second annual fall festival will be held Oct. 1 at Sweet Gum Grove Free Will Baptist Church. An auction will start at 3 p.m., followed by a barbecue chicken dinner at five oclock. Dinner tickets are available from members or by calling 758-5533 or 752-0102.

Church Organ To Be Dedicated

A new digital computerized organ will be dedicated at the Ayden Christian Church in Ayden Sunday.

The dedication will be held after the morning worship service and will be followed by a carry-in dinner in the fellowship hall.

The organ was given earlier this year by Mrs. Johnie Beland and daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Turner, in memory of their husband and father, John Beland.

Observing 25th Anniversary

The 25th anniversary of the Mt. Calvary Free Will Baptist Church in Hookerton will be observed Oct. 2.

Planned activities include morning worship at 9:45 a.m. followed by worship at 10:45. Pastor Jim Summerson will preach with singing by the Southeastern Quartet. The Rev. David Paramore, former pastor and founder, will speak at 2 p.m. Another former pastor, Willie Justice, will preach at 7 p.m.

The church also operates Mt. Calvary Christian Academy with an enrollment of over 171 and a day care facility.

Bake Sale By Ladies Auxiliary

A bake sale will be held by the Carson Memorial Pentecostal Holiness Church Ladies Auxiliary Saturday at Harris Super Market on Greene Street, starting at 9 a.m.

Revival Scheduled To Begin

Revival services will be start Sunday at Carson Memorial Pentecostal Holiness Church and will continue through Friday. The Rev. Thomas Conway, pastor, will speak. Services will include special singing and will start at 7:30 p.m. The Sunday service will stai t at 7 p.m.

Yard Sale To Benefit Fund

The Ladies Bible Class of the Greenville Church of God will have a yard sale Saturday beginning at 7:30 a.m. in front of the church fellowship hall at 1805 Spruc St. Proceeds will go to the church building fund.

Women's Day Activities Set

Mount Calvary F.W.B. Church, comer of Hudson and Ward Streets, will oteerve its annual womens day Sunday at 11 a.m.

Eldress Martha Tyson, pastor of First Timothy FWB Church will be the guest speaker. Music will be provided by women from Mount Calvary and First Timothy FWB Churches.

FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST ( HI RCH

2600 S. Charles St Harry Grubbs. Pastor 9:45 a m Sun - Sunday School 11 a m - Morning Worship 7:00 p. m. - Evening Worsnip 7:30p.m Wed.-BibleStudy 8:15 p m. - Choir Rehearsal

EV ANGELISTIC TABERNACLE CHURCH

102 Laughinghouse Dr.

S.J Williams. Pastor .Mike Pollard. Minister of Music

10 a m Sun. Sunday School, Sup. Linwood Lawson

11 a m Worship Service, Junior Church, Debra Whaley

7 p m. Sun - Celebration of Praise 7:30 p.m Wed. Praying and Sharing

K* Elfc"* ~

7 p.m Sat. - Intercessory Prayer

Beaumont Circle 8:00p.m. - UMWExecutive Board 1:00 p.m Tue - UMW Group #i WorkalM^ in the Fellowship Hall 4:30 p.m Tue - Merry Music Makers, Cliapel Choir 12:00 pm. Wed - Retired Teachers Luncheon 7:15 p.m Wed. - St. James Ringers 7:30p m. - Boy ScoutTroop 340 8:00 p.m. Chancel Choir 6:30p.m. Thur. - Evangelism Explosion Acolytes Neosha Hough, Lisa Wallac

SYCAMORE HILL B.APTISH CHURCH 226 West Eighth Street Rev. H.W Parker, Jr., Pastor 9:30a.m, Sun. - Sunday Church School 11:00 a m Our Worship E.xperience with Holy Communion 7:30 p.m Mon. - Youth Activities Week Prayer, Praise and Testimony with ECU stucKnts

7:30 pm Tue. - Joy Night with

ji nm^i, LiiMi WCI114II.C    7*30    p    fn

iriViL. "    Community Choirs

6 - Spaghetti Dinner and Chuck Seeley, Ted Watson    pilm, Fellowshijp Hall

7:30 p.m Mid Week Prayer Service

P^HA^STBAPTIST^CHURCH    wiUiMiSiSerTimoth'^Wart^'*'

K'KSto Day School    ^    ^

DavidlLeBlanc 756-3624

10:00a.m. Sun. - Sunday School all ages 11:00a.m. Sun - Worship Service 6:00pm Evening Service 7:30 p.m. - Youm Social at Pastors Home

7:30 p m Tue - New Young Belivers Bible Study 7:30 p m. Wed. - Prayer Service 7:00 p m Thur. - Soul Winning

GOOD HOPE FWB CHURCH 404 N. Mill Street Winterville.NC 28590 Bishop W H Mitchell, Pastor 9:45 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship, W H Mitchell (JosepI Chorus rendering music 7:00p m. Wed - Prayer Meeting

m. - Church Conference Thurs-

Deacon John Sharpy Superintenuuiu i 11:30 a m 4th Sun. Pastoral Day I Quarterly Meeting, Dinner Served)

8:00 p.m. 4th Sun. Holy Communion I Bishop R.A. Griswould)

PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610Farmville Blvd.

The Rev. Randy Royal 9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School, Supt Mrs. Mary Jones II a.m. Morning Worship 2:00 p.m. Worship with St. Peter Church of Christm Seven Springs, NC 8:00 p.m. Wed. Bible Study and Prayer Meeting

GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By-Pass and Emerson Road

igelist

Evaaielism    7:30    p m. - Church Conference Thurs

9:30 a.m. Sat. Soul Winning day night before 1st Sunday Evangelism    7:30    p.m.    -    (tunrtcrly Conference Fri

day night before 1st Sunday

CC'irc'lkJ'ru rwAwr a mrciwi<Mov    inz-vf    '    "

SE VENTH-DAY ADVENnST CHURCH 2611E. lOth Street Greenville Robert H. Kerr

9:30a.m. Sat.-Sabbath School 11:00a.m. Sat.-Worship 6:40 p.m. SaL-Vespers 6:30 p.m. 1310. - Pathrmder Chib

THE CHRIST TEMPLE BAPTIST mURCH R.F D RobersonviUe, N.C Rev Hoyt Hammond, Pastor Sister Minnie D Council, Ch. Clerk 7:30jmm. Wd. - Prayer aiid feUowship    **

*1Se"linirLKlucted by guest

! puior ww airect in siuoy, ine

and the Ching Of the tiospel n,ims'te7clircrchiri^ ai;dc": Dav 1-00 nm Over WRZ 15.50 KC gTCgation from The First Zion Grove BnKm    ^    Church,    Plymouth. N.C.

SsfiirHsv fnMnt^ni ufill li-QO 3.ID. SlUl. Monunfi WoTShOD meet at he%ch booth af the GreenviUe    with Holy Communion

County Fair Grounds to take Blood Pre-ssures, from 3:00p.m. toOp.m

ARTHUR CHRISTIAN CHURCH BellArthur Ben James, Minister Phone 753-2043

0:45 a.m. Sun. - Bible School. Supt Mike Mill!

. IIa.m.-MorningWorship 8p.m. - Evening worship 7:30p.m. Tues. - Visitation 7:30 p.m. Wed - Bible Study and Prayer

6a.m. Fri. - Prayer Breakfast (Tims)

-Choir Practice

1:00 p.m. Dinner Served 2:00 p.m. - Spiritual Concert Singers from the Young Adults (^ir and Community Singers of Washington (bounty. Roll of Church Families

HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 111 Greenville Blvd.

The Rev. R^Messick, Phone: 756-2275 Susie Pair, Choir director

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets 11 a.m. Sun. Sunday School, Sunday Service    ^    ^

-------.....azing Grace TV

Bible Study Channel 12 10 a.m. - Bible Study, Classes For All Ages

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worhip God Will Deliver Us

6:00 p.m. Sun. Ev,ening Worship Turning Your Duties Into Desires (Jeremiah the Prophet)

7:00 p.m. Wed. Bible Study Class for all ages

For Information and or Transportation Please caU 752-5991 or 752-6376. Home Bible Studies also available

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P Houston, Jr., Rector

The Rev. J. Dana Pecheles, Asst. Rector 7:30a.m. Sun. Holy Eucharist 9:00 a.m. Morning Prayer 9:00 a.m. - Childrens (hoir Rehearsal, Choir Room 10:00 a.m. Christian Education 'Open House

11:00 am. MOming Prayer 7:30 D.m. Al-anon, Friendly Hall I2:0()p m Mon - Churchwomens Fall Covered Di.........

UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.

Rick Townsend Phone: 756-6545

10 a m. Sun. - Sunday School

11 am - Morning Worship, Junior Church

6:00 p.m. Sun. Choir Rehearsal 7:00 p m. - Evening Worship and Youth Meeting 6:45p.m Wed,-BibleStudy

BROWNS CHAPEL APOSTOLIC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST

Route 4 Greenville, North Carolina Bishop R.A. Giswould, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sept 26 -Oct 2 - Annual convocation (Hertford North Carolina 8:00 p.m Thur. - Bible Studies (Sister Ida Staton, Teacher)

8:00p.m Fri. Prayer Meeting 10:3() a.m. 2nd Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon John Shanie, Superintendant)

11:30 p.m 2nd Sun. - Missionary and Youth Day (Mother Lynch in Charge)

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN CHURCH MinUtrvi Miss^^^Mai^sl^i^rdf'"^ PaKT*""    8"rp'mr'?^-VS'Aide

Phn^ 7574imi    meeting (Deacon J Sheppard, President)

P "! 3rd Mon - Pastor Aide

10.30a,m,Sun.-Sunday&hool    10:30    a m 4th Sun. - Sunday School    (

HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN    Dacon John Sharpe, Superintendant)

CHURCH

Hwy. 43 South

Minister Rev. C. Wesley Jenmngs S.S. Supt. Elsie Evans Music Director Vivian Mills Organist Leida McGowan Youth Leaders Debbie and Steve Asl-inger

Weekend Retrat at Green Acres

10 a. m. Sun. -r- Sunday School 11:00a.m Sun. Worship Service 7:00 p.m. Wed.-Bible Study 8 p m. Wed. - Choir Practice

OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red ^nks Road E. Gordon Conklin, Pastor Greg Risers Minister of Education Treva Fuller, Minister of .Music 9:45 a.m. Sun - Library Open until 10 a.m.. Sunday School 10:45 a.m Library Open until 11 a.m.

11 a.m. Morning Worship, Childrens Church

5:00p.m,-BYF

6:00 p.m. - Chapel Choir Rehearsal,

GA's

9:15a m. Wed- Staff Devotional 8:00 p m Wed - Mid-Week Meditation and Fellwoship Hour 8 p.m. Thurs. Chancel (hoir Rehearsal

COREYS CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH Route 1, Winterville J.B Taylor, Pastor 7:00p.m. Fri. - Prayer Service 9:30a.m,Sun.-Sunday School 4:00 p m - J.B. Taylor Traveling Choir Anraversary Registration begins at 3:00 pm.

7:30pm Wed.-BibleStudy

Pastor s Aid Club Featured

The Pastors Aid Club will be on parade Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Sweet Hope F.W.B. Churcdi. The Rev. F.C. MitcheU will speak. Specia guests will be Zion Temple F.W.B. Church of Pantego and Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church of Ayden.

Will Speak At Brown Chapel

Eldress Mary Shepard of Brown Chapel Holiness Church will speak at Burneys Chapel F.W.B. Church Saturday at 7:30 p.m. She will be assisted by the young adult choir.

To Reherse For Annual Service

Rehearsals for the annual Christmas Eve service to be held at the Ayden Christian Church will start Oct. 4 at 7:30 p.m. at the church. Practices will be held each Tuesday evening at 7:30 until the service is held Dec. 24 at 10 p.m.

Fellowship Will Have Meeting

The Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship will meet Sunday at 10:30 at the new meeting house on Oak Street. Gene Sutton will read a sermon entitled A New Religious Synteis by William Hammond, starting at 11 oclock.

Sunday school is supervised by Mimi Reed. The meeting and Sunday school will be followed by a covered-dish dinner at noon. For informtion call 756-7158 or 752-0787.

Weekend Services Are Noted

Warren Chapel F.W.B. Church announced the schedule of services for this weekend.

Friday, the pastor. Elder A. L. Miller, the senior choir and senior ushers will conduct a service at Arthurs Chapel FWB Church at 7:30 p.m.

Sunday at 11 a.m., the Gospel Chorus and Ever Ready Ushers will have services at Shady Grove F.W.B. Church in Snow Hill.

Sunday at 7 p.m.. Elder E. L. Hardy and choir will conduct services at Warren Chapel.

Observing Quarterly Services

. Homecoming and quarterly services will be observed at St. Peter Missionary Baptist Church Sunday. The pastor. Rev. Hugh Walston, will deliver the 11 a.m. service. The senior * choir and ushers will be in charge. Dinner will be served on the ground following the service.

Services At Simpson Chapel

Sunday services will be held at Simpson Chapel F.W.B. Church, Simpson at 7:30 p.m. Eldress Sudie Vines will preach, with music to be provided by the Wynn Chapel Gospel Chorus. Eldress Annie Dixon is sponsoring the service.

Youth To Speak A t Church

Nine-year-old Patricia Phillips of St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church will be the guest speaker at the Church of God in Christ Jesus Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

The church is located at 1515 S. Pitt St.

Observing Women's Day

Waterside F.W.B. Church will observe Womens Day services Sunday at 11 a.m. Eldress Margaret Komegay from Thomson F.W.B. Church will deliver the sermon. Music will . be provided by the combined choirs of St. Delight Missionary Baptist Church of Walstonburg.

Church Having Youth Day

Youth Day services will be held at Haddock Chapel FWB Church Sunday at 11 a.m. Rev. Billy Anderson and the Young Adult Choir will be in charge of the service.

Youth Day Set For Sunday

Youth day will be held at Haddock Chapel F.W.B. Church Sunday at 11 a.m. The Rev. Billy. R. Anderson and the young adult choir will be in charge.

Called Meeting Scheduled

Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church announced that a young adult called meeting will be held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. The church bazaar will be held Oct. 29.

Will Celebrate Anniversary

St. James Free Will Baptist Church of Farmville will celebrate the anniversary of its deacons and trustees Sunday

at 3 p.m.

The Rev. James Lindsay and congregation of Ellis FWB Church of Wilson will be in charge of the service.

The Rev. C.R. Parker is the pastor at St. James.

Services Will End Sunday

English Chapel will close out its pastor anniversary services Sunday at 8 p.m. with the Rev. Melvin Phillips and Mt. Oliva Pentecostal Holiness Church of Belhaven.

Will Observe Men's Day

Sunday will be observed as Mens Day at Unity Free Will Baptist Church, 2020 W. Greenville Blvd.

Laymen of the church will be in charge of services that day. Eddie Walker will have the morning message at 11 a.m. and Bill Highsmith will speak at the evening service at 7 p.m.

Music will be presented by the mens choir and the mens quartet and testimonies will be shared.

Food Stamp Report Will Be Required

7    III J / c-    Covered Dish Luncheiw 4 Meeng Parish

7.45 p.m. Wed. - Wednesday Evening Hall

Meeting

2-4 p.m. Wed - Reading Room. 400 S Meade St

7:30p.m. Fri.

- MORNING GLORY APOSTOUC FAITH HOUNESS CHURCH lOIkW.FiftliSt.

il, nursery

lOt.in. Sob. BHWSCDOOI    vnviwn

ll:INp.m.-Wanhipand Preaching    264 ^-P^ West

7:30pm.Sun.-W(liipandPreaaimg Dr MaunceAnkrom Pastor 7-30pm Tues-WonupService    9:45a.m    Sun-Bible School classes for

7;30D.m.Ttai.-WonfiipService    aUages _    ......

'~-'SKsdi

Dr, Rosemary Fischer, L.

10 a.m. Church scl provided

11 a.m. Childrens sermon-nursery provided

8:00 p.m. Wed. - Choir Practice

RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

7:15 p m. - Jr Choir Rehearsal Choir Room

7:30 p.m. Mon. Vestry Meeting, GREENVILLE BIBLE CHURCH    Tue    -    Holv Fiirharisi

.    oSSS"'""'    ^

7:O0a.m, Wed.-H

i ' Mens Breakfast and

mens Drt

Bible Study (Three Steers Rest,)

10:00 a m

5:30 p.m. Wed. Growth Group 10:3(ia.m Thur. - Womens Bible Study 3-jo pm

d. Holy Eucharist - Holy

7:30 p.m. Thun.-W^. 7:80 p.m. Sat. - Holy

ST. PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2708 East Fourth : Her. Michael G. Clay !gie757-32S6

; :]p.m.Sat.-MaH 8i8|jiji.SuiL-MaM l886.m.-llMi

all ages

and lla.m. ServiceofWorship

5:00 p.m.-Youth Choir Renearsal 6:00p.m. - Youth Groups Meet 7:00 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal 7:00 p.m - Nominating committee meets

7:00 a.m. Mon. Mens Prayer Breakfast Tom s Restaurant 7 ;30p.m. Mon. - CWF General Meetii

viaivii 0 ajit/ic I.JVUUT

88 P O) Thur - Worship in Song Home (Mulvaneys300QueenAnneRoad)    p.m

ARLINGTONSTREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1006 W. Arlington Blvd.

The Rev Harold Greene 9:45a.m. ^.-Sunday School 11 a.m. Mormng Worship II :00a.m. Mission Friends 7:80 p.m. - Worship Service 7:^p ra. Mon. Personnel Committee

7;M pm. Fri. - Adult Bible Study Home 01 LoUreu s

Eucharist and

Holy Eucharist, Nursing

- Adult Choir Rehearsal, hapel

7:00 p m. 'Thur - Extension for Ministry, Friendly Hall 8:00 p.m. Sat. AA Open Group Discussion, Friendly Hall

Let Sheppa^ Memorial Library help you with your information needs. Call 752-4177 for more information.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Some 20,000 North Carolina families will soon be required by federal law to complete monthly reports to receive food stamps, state officials say.

The law is expected to affect about 10 percent of the states food stamp families.

The reports will be evaluated by the local county departments of social services to determine whether the families are elgible to continue receiving public assistance, said Larry Goolsby, chief of food stamp operations for the North Carolina Department of Human Resources Division of Social Services.

The new monthly reporting procedure, which goes into effect Oct. 1, was established by Congress in an effort to reduce errors and fraud in the nationss food stamp program.

The monthly rer will apply only to fooa stamp families of six or more members, except in cases where all adult individuals are blind, disabled, or of the age of sixty, Goolsby said.

All other families receiving food stamps will continue the current practice of reporting changes in their income or household . circiumstances as they occur, he said.

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area yesterday, computed by the East Carolina University Department of Wiysics, was 75. This means tlt a sdar water heater could have irovided 75 percent of your K)t water ne^.

ByGEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer

In classical Christian thought, the woes of the world and of the people in it stem from a single, pervasive and underlying condition - an ailment called sin.

The word isnt fashionable these days, despite the steady tromp of wrongdoings stamped in the headlines, and its often been muffled, even in the churches. But its getting sharpened attention.

That deep-rooted blight, with all its ramifications, mystery and counter-forces to it, is the focus for extensive deliberations, starting at the Vatican Sept. 29, of representatives of the worlds Roman Catholic bishops.

The fundamental cause of all divisions in mens sodls and their societies is sin, or the evil that man does freely before God, says a 49-page study document for the sixth general Synod of Bishops.

It has met every three years since being established in 1965 at the close of the Second Vatican Counmcil to advise the pope.

The onset of sin, as portrayed in the Book of Genesis, was when the first man, Adam, sought to seize full control, be God himself, decide his own rules.

That egocentric, domineering impulse - to regard self as the utmost - is seen at the core of every tyranny, every heedless oppression, cruelty, conflict, crime and greed, eveiy selfish pjustice and deprivation, both in social systems and personal strife.

While various explanations - psychological, sociological, economic and political - are given for the hostilities, disorders and unjust structures, the root cause is sinfulness, says Cardinal Joseph Bemardin of Chicago, a U.S. delegate to thesynOd.

Ultimately it is sin and its consequences which separate us from God and disorient us as individuals and as society, he adds in a column for the weekly Chicago Catholic. If we are honest with ourselves, we know this to be true.

And we therefore know our need for repentance and forgiveness. We crave to be made whole again. We want to be reconciled with od and one another. The good news of the gospel is that God offers us reconciliation in Christ Jesus.

Encouraging and helping people to respond to it, he adds, is the churchs mission.

But an obstacle to it cited by Bemardin and by numerous' other churcH scholars, as well as by some psychiatrists, is that many people have lost any sense of sin.

As noted psychiatrist Karl Minninger puts it in his book Whatever Happened to Sin? the term has virtually disappeared, but he says it remains a fact of the human condition and must be recognized to cope with it.

He says reaffirmation of the concept of sin and of personal involvement and responsibility in it is the only hopeful view, since it implies the possiblity of repenting and correcting wrongdoing.

Pope John Paul II, talking earlier about the synod, said reconciliation of humanity with God necessitates reviving a greater sense of God and his commandments and standards for life.

This means, he added, reviving a sense of sin among our people.

If its not acknowledged by individuals or the societies they form, church thinkers point out theres no inclination to repent, accept Gods, pardon, be reconciled to him and seek a better way.

Roman Catholicism teaches that personal confession, now called the Rite of Reconciliation, is necessary for people who have committed grve sin, but the practice has fallen off drastically.

This is another problem being tackled by the synod, which is expected to last through most of October and involve about 200 bishops from around the world, most of them elected by their national conferences.

Other U.S. delegates are Archbishop John R. Roach of St. Paul-Minneapolis, president of the U.S. bishops conference; Archbishop Patrick F. Flores of San Antonio and Auxiliary Bishop Austin B. Vaughan of New York.

It may be popular to pooh-pooh sin, Bemardin writes, but deep down we know better - we know we are weak and sinful.

If we deny this, we create iroblems for ourselves and gin to suffer from nameless anxieties and guilty feelings which we cannot remove because we refuse to acknowledge their source in sin.

You are cordially welcomed to

THE RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

(Disciples of Christ)

264 Bypass West

DR. MAURICE E. ANKROM, MINISTER

9:45 a.m. Bible School Classes for all ages 11:00 a.m. Service of Worship

Nursery School Monday through Friday 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. "We only do well that which is done with joy!

inuiE you | to {JtJO%llill (joitli

;;

U____

SUNDAY SCHOOL

9 45A M

T Vinson, Minister

WORSHIP    1LAM

, c/Einoii(i[

^Bafitist Ciuxcli    51 Greenville Blvd SE

GREENVILLES FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH    |

'A Southern Baptist Church    e

HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH

Independent - Soul Winning

Meeting At Carolina Country Day School LOVING CARING - FORGIVING

For the preaching of the cross IS the power of God

1 Cor 1 18

Ministering To The Whole Family 756-3624

Sunday School    10:00 AM

WoTihip Service    11:00 AM

Sunday Evening    6:00 PM

Wed. Prayer Service    7:30 PM

David J. LcBlanc. Paaior    (Nursery    Provided)





12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C

Friday, September 23,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Zealous Juror Now Defendant

Hogs

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly steady to 25 cents lower. Kinston 44,30. Clinton. Elizabethtown. Fayetteville. Dunn, Pink Hill Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 44.25. Wilson 44.50. Salisbury 43.00. Rowland

43.00, Spivey's Corner 44.50, Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 40 00, Favetteville

37.00, Whiteville '39.00, Wallace 38.00, Spiveys Corner 39.00, Rowland 38.0, Durham 39 00.

Poultry RALEIGH, .C. (APi NCDA' - The North Carolina f o.b dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 44.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack LSDA Grade A sized 2^2 to 3 pound birds. 45 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary weighted average of 44.80 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is mostly steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate demand. Weights mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and 'fryers in North Carolina Friday was ' 1.633,00(1. compared to 1.640.000 last Friday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. lAP

I.NCDA I - The North Carolina hen market was steady with a steady undertone Supplies moderate. Demand m()derate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursda\ and Friday slaughter was 22-22'1-, mostly 22 cents.

.NEW YORK .API-Stock prices declined slightly in active trading today, pulling back from an early advance as traders moved to cash in on the market's recent gains.

The Dow .Jones a\erage of 30 indusfnals, up 14.23 Thursday to a record high, slipped back 3,35 to 1.2.54.17 by noontime today Losers held a 7-6 lead over gamers among New York Sto.ck Exchange-listed issues

Apple Computer tumbled 8C to 23W bid in the over-the-counter market. The company said its earnings tor the quarter ending Sept.

3i' uouW be down sharply from the comparable period a year ago The NYSE s composite index dropped 27 to 97,93. At the American Stock Exchdiige. the market value index down 98 at 236,49.

\'olume on the Big Board totaled 47 56 million shares at noontime, against 4(.).86 million at the same point Thursday. .

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FRID.AY

7:30 p m. - Red Men meet

.SATl RD.AY 1:30 p m - Diqjlicate bridge game at Planters Bank 8:00 p m AA open discussion group meets at St Paul's Episcopal Church

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410    410

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115    115

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33"4    33"4

580    58",

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290    29'4

560    560

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Collins & Aikman

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Ex.xon.

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Halteras.

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Jefferson

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Donations

Prooioted

WASHINGTON (AP) -Human organs needed for transplant operations shouldnt be bought and sold. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop says. So to back up his point, he is forming a national organization which will try to increase voluntary organ donations.

The new group, called the American Council on Transplantation, will be made up of health care organizations, hospitals, voluntary groups and others interested in organ donation. The group will hold its first meeting early next year.

In June, a committee appointed by Koop passed a resolution expressing concern about recent suggestions that organs be sold to patients wanting transplants.

Koop said in an interview Thursday that any spot shortages of organs would be solved by the voluntary system, adding that a system of selling organs would lead to nothing but trouble.

T dont approve of it," Koop said. If you go to an organ purchasing system, a number of negative things would happen.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - A holdout juror who made his own investigation of a robbery because^he couldnt sleep at night wondering about unasked questions was accused of contempt of court for taking his duties too seriously.

Morton Wolfe, a 52-year-old dog track worker, was ordered Thursday to make a public apology and return his $60 jurors pay.

Broward County Circuit Judge Arthur Franza said he had considered charging Wolfe the $5,000 court costs for Petersons trial, which ended Aug. 18 with a hung jury because Wolfe held out.

Others on the six-member jury said Wolfe argued hard for an innocent verdict, supporting his claims with detailed descriptions of the crime scene.    *

Wolfe said his curiosity had taken over when he wound up by coincidence in the convenience store where Harry Peterson allegedly robbed a clerk at gunpoint.

Franza said he had told the jurors not to visit the crime scene or take notes, the same thing hes been telling . enough jurors in 13 years on the bench to probably fill Broward County. No one ever broke the rules before Wolfe. Franza said.

But Wolfe said he couldnt sleep at night worrying why the lawyers wouldnt ask certain questions.

Wolfe said he stopped at the store Aug. 17 on his way to work and, once tlm, realized it was the store he was hearing about in court.

He found it curious, he said, that there were no orange sodas in the refrigerator because Peterson was alleged to have bought an orange soda before pdling a pistol and robbing the clerk.

Wolfe scribbled notes at home on a yellow legal pad and brought them into the jury room, then demanded police documents that could not be admitted as evidence, said Assistant State Attorney Herbert Cohen.

When I came into court and saw that fellow sitting there with the po^ibility of going to jail for life, I was overcome with a feeling of responsibility, Wolfe said.

Franza asked why he hadnt left the store immediately.

1 had to buy my drink and pay for my gas, Wdlfe said.

Peterson is scheduled to go on trial again Oct. 17.

He did the wrong thing, said fellow juror Janet Elias of Hallandale, and we were all surprised at his foolishness.

Pay High Price For Drug Abuse

By JEFFREY .MILLS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The cost to America of drug abuse is about $100 billion per year, an official of the Department of Health and Human Services says.

Dr. Edward N. Brandt Jr., assistant secretary of health and human services, said Thursday that $10 billion to $16 billion of this total is because of the impact of drug abusers on the health care system, the law enforcement and judicial systems, the employment market, and general welfare and social service systems.

"Another $70 billion to $80 billion in annual costs result from the association between drugs and crime, Brandt told a House Judiciary subcommittee.

He said there are a hi it 500.000 heroin addicL in me United States. These individuals, when actively addicted, are each responsible for approximately 350 crimes per year,he said.

However, when an addict is in treatment the number of crimes that person commits is reduced by about 84 percent, Brandt said.

He said that drug use in society can change rapidly. Over the last two decades, for example, there has been approximately a thirtyfold increase in the use of marijuana by American young people," Brandt said.

He said recent surveys indicate that the departments efforts are beginning to get results. The 1982 National Household Survey data show some moderation in drug use charted by earlier surveys in the 70s, he said.

The biggest drops this year

The following are gross sales for flue-cured tobacco

reported by the Federal-State Tobacco Market News Service

for Thursday:

Eastern Belt

Market

Daily

Daily Daily

Site

Pounds

i Value Avg.

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

...............347,785

613,490 176.40

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

...............308,827

580,735 188.05

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

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

................676,711

1,305,506 192.92

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

................768,942

1,453,461 189.02

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

...............739,038

1,440,291 194.89

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

................725,819

1,386,402 191.01

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

...............313,903

592,977 188.90

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

................662,599

1,204,846 181.84

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

................785,790

1,473,892 187.57

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

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

...............301,272

570,420 189.34

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

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

...............373,962

675,160 180.54

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

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

2,770,184 188.52

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

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

14,067,364 188.21

Season Totals...............

........207,350,290

377,077,953 181.86

Average for the day of $188.21 was down $3.74 from the

previous sale.

came in marijuana, cocaine, amphetamines and sedatives, he said. Possible exceptions to this overall picture of declining use occurred for three of the less frequently used classes of drugs - heroin, opiates other than heroin and inhalants, none of which showed any appreciable change in 1982, Brandt said.

Even though these declines have been recorded, he noted that drug use by young Americans is thought to be the highest of any industrialized country in the world.

He said that increasing public awareness of drug abuse and its health consequences is an important goal of the Reagan administration. In efforts to combat youthful drug abuse, Brandt said it will provide technical assistance to private sector and family-based prevention activities, such as those of local parents groups.

Anonymous Tip Brings Arrest

MIAMI (AP) - A tip from an anonymous witness led to a 21-year-old mans arrest on charges of strong-arm robbery and aggravated battery in a mob attack on a stranded motorist and her rescuer, police say.

Bond was set Thursday at $20,000 for Patrick McGriff, who was arrested a day earlier near a lounge where Angela Vivier, 19, and John Ayer, 34, were attacked Saturday night, said Metro-Dade Detective Richard Kolodgy.

Ayer, who received a call from President Reagan praising him, suffered a broken jaw in the melee when he stopped to rescue Miss Vivier from a mob that surrounded her stalled car.

INAUGURAL RUN PARIS (AP) The start of the inaugural trip of the worlds fastest railroad route (on which a train can reach 168 mph) was delayed 40 minutes Thursday by a bomb scare, but the train arrived eight minutes early on the return run.

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Obituary Column

COMEDIAN DIES -Brother Dave Gardner, popular Southern comedian, died in Myrtle Beach, S.C. Thursday after suffering a heart attack on a movie set. (AP Laserphoto)

Coonliiiates dFougbt Aid

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Dr. A. Frank Bordeaux Jr., chief economist for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture, was appointed Thursday as the states drought relief coordinator.

Bordeaux will serve as a liaison between state government and farmers who have suffered crop and livestock losses from the summer drought and will also work to coordinate drought assistance activities.

Agriculture losses in the state during the current drought have exceeded $430 million, according to estimates by the state Department of Agriculture.

Gov. Jim Hunt and state Commissioner of Agriculture Jim Graham, who announced Bordeauxs appointment, made a formal request to U.S. Secretary of Agriculture John Block on Sept. 1 that all 100 North Carolina counties be declared a disaster area.

Anticipating that our request for a disaster declaration will be approved, Frank Bordeaux will be available to our farmers as a source of information and will assist them in any way he can in smoothing the process of seeking assistance, Hunt and Graham said in a joint statement.

Torpedo....

(Continued from Pagel)

immediately northwest of the west ferry and within the corridor traditionally used by ferries operating at the site, Watts said.

The Blossoms Ferry site has been so badly disturbed by looting that recovery of the torpedo was the only way to assure that it is going to be preserved and documented, Watts commented.

Watts, now leading a four-member team of second-year graduate students participating in their research semester, will be working on the Blossoms Ferry project until Oct. 12. Operating with a $1,500 grant from the Maritime Pre-servatin Grants Program pf the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the ECU group will continue its survey of the fragile but well-preserved ferries at the site.

MASONIC NOTICE

Mt. Herman Lodge No. 35 will hold a communication Monday at 7:30 p.m. with work in the First Degree. Candidates are asked to report to the lodge at 7; 45 p.m.

Briley

Mr. J.B. Briley, 60, died Thursday at his Rt. 1, Win-terville home. The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkers(Mi Funeral Chapel by his pastor, Rev. Ed Taylor. Burial will follow in the Winterville Cemetery.

Mr. Briley, a Pitt County native, spent all his life in winierville and was a retired farmer. He was a member of the Winterville F.W.B. Church.

He is survived by a brother, Robert J. Briley of the home; and a sister, Mrs. M^e Corey of Greenville.

The family will receive friends at Ihe funeral home from 7-9 pdii. Friday

Britt

FARMVILLE - Mr. Robert Britt died today in Lenoir Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Joyners Mortuary.

Dixon

Mrs. Leona Elks Dixon, 76, died Friday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was a resident of Grimesland. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Wilson Rogers and the Rev. Gene Chitwood. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mrs. Dixon was a native and lifelong resident of Grimesland and was a member of the Grimesland United Methodist Church. She was a retired employee of the East Carolina Un-iversty Student Supply Store.

Surviving are three sons, James Brooks Dixon of Chesapeake, Va., Quentin Dixon of Newport News, Va., Bobby Gene Dixon of Winston-Salem; three daughters, Mrs. Milton (Margie) Cox of Washington, Mrs. Ennis (Audrey) James of Bath and Mrs. Jasper (Maxine) Gladson of Simpson; 17 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Saturday and at other times will be at her home in Grimesland.

Godley Mr. Johnnie Edward Godley, 77, of Majette Trailer Park, Grimesland, died at Pitt County Memorial Hospital Wednesday. The funeral service was held at 3:30 p.m. today in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. G.S. Holliday. Burial was in Greenwood Cemetery.

Mr. Godley was a Pitt County native and spent most of his life in the Greenville area. He was employed by Nabisco for 26 years and retired in 1968. He was a member of Mead-owbrook Pentecostal Holiness Church.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Kathleen Cox Godley; two sons, Charles E. Godley , of Apex and Johnnie W. Godley of Decatur, Ala.; five daughters, Mrs. Steve Snyder of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., Mrs. Norlan Harrison of Knightdale, Mrs. Claude Lowery of Pembroke, Mrs. John W. Clark of Greenville, and Mrs. Thurman Gray of Elizabeth City; three brothers, Alton Lee Godley of

Terminally ill Given Choice

WASHINGTON (AP) -Terminally ill patients at Veterans Administration hospitals have won the right to choose death rather than resuscitation if their heart or lungs fail

Under the policy, the patient, a disinterested third party and all members of the medical team involved in the case must concur in the decision before doctors can write explicit orders to bar resuscitation of a dying patient, the VA says.

The agency said it is sending the new guidelines, adopted three weeks ago, to all 172 VA hospitals.

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Lincoln, 111., J.D. Godley of South Carolina, and Paul Knox of Washington; two sisters, Mrs. Annie Davis of Winterville and Mrs. Hilda Ainsley of Portsmouth, Va.; 20 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Griffith

EDENTON - The Rev. S. N. Griffith of Edenton died in Washington, D. C. on Sept. 20. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday in Edenton.

Kirk

DURHAM - Wamie Lee Kirk, age three, of C-2 Channing Court, died Thursday at Duke Medical Center from injuries received in an automobile accident.

Graveside services will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. at Rogers Family Cemetery in Durham.

Surviving are his mother, Judy Thompson Kirk, formerly of Greenville; three sisters, Dietra Kirk, Nina Kirk and Mia Kirk, all of the home; his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thompson of Durham.

The famiy will receive friends at Scarborough and Hargett Funeral Chapel today from 7-8 p.m.

Lang

FARMVILLE - Funeral services for Mr. Johnnie Lang of Farmville, who died in Grays Rest Home in Winterville Tuesday, will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. from St, John F.W.B. Church in Farmville with Elder Joe Dixon officiating. Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park.

Mr. Lang was a retired farmer and a member of the St. John F.W.B, Church, where he played piano for the senior choir. He also played piano for Moyes Chapel F.W.B. Church, St. Paul F.W.B. Church, Waterside F.W.B. Church and Little Creek F.W.B. Church. He was a member of the American Legion Post of Farmville and was a veteran of World War I.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Bessie Lang of Greenville; one daughter, Mrs. Dortha Tyson of Norfolk, Va.; six sons, A.J. Lang and James Lang of Farmville, Robert Lang, David Lang and Willie Ray Lang, all of Greenville, Alexander Lang of Norfolk, Va.; six sisters, Mrs. Carina Sleight and Mrs. Ada Gray Dixon, both of Snow Hill, Mrs. Annie Suggs of Kinston, Mrs. Mable Speight of Washington, Mrs. Willie Mae Staton of High Point and Mrs. Carrie Hines of Baltimore; two brothers,

D C. Joyner of Farmville and the Rev. Lester Moye of Greenville; 32 grandchildren and 32 great-grandchildren.

The body will be at Joyners Mortuary after 5 p.m. Saturday. Family visitation will be from 7-8 p.m. Saturday and at other times the family will be at the home of James Lang, Route 1, Farmville. The family will meet at 1 p.m. Sunday for the funeral.

Moor.e,

SIMPSON - Funeral services for Mr. Charlie C. Moore, 73, will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Phillippi Missionary Baptist Church by the Rev. J. C. Purvis. Burial will be in Phillippi Cemetery.

Mr. Moore lived most of his life in Pitt County. He attended Pitt County schools and Harris Barber College in Raleigh. He was a licensed barber in Greenville and Boston before his retirement, and was a member of Phillippi Church.

He is survived by two sons, Charlie C. Moore, Jr. and Curtis Earl Moore, both of Boston; two daughters, Louise and Jean Moore, both of Boston; five sisters, Mrs. Viola Boyd of Simpson, Mrs. Annie Moore of Kinston, Mrs. Ethel Keyes of New Bern, Mrs. PauTine Anderson of

Greenville, and Mrs. Lillie Wilson of Grimesland; two brothers, James Moore of Baltimore and Clarence Moore of the home; and nine grandchildren;.

The family will receive friends from 7-8 p.m. Saturday at Flanagans Funeral Home and at other times at the family home in Simpson.

Moore

Mrs. Lillie Adams Moore died Wednesday evening at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be held Sunday at 3 p.m. at Sycamore Chapel with her pastor, the Rev. Hue Walston, officiating. Burial will follow in the Jones Family Cemetery.

Mrs. Moore spent her entire life in Pitt County and was a member of Sycamore Chapel.

She is survived by a foster-daughter, Mrs. Gonzella Cobb of the home; a stepson, John David Moore of Norris Town, Pa.; a brother, Raymond Adams of Washington, D.C.; two grandsons and two greatgrandchildren.

The family will receive friends at Phillips Brothers Morturary in Greenville Saturday from 7;3()-8:30 p.m. At other times, the family will be at 1306 Clark St.

Pettaway TARBORO - Funeral services for Mr. Roosevelt Pettaway will be held Sunday at 3 p.m. at Macedonia Baptist Church in Princeville with the Rev. John Williams officiating. Burial will follow in the Princeville Community Cemetery.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Annie Lee Pettaway of the home; five daughters, Mrs. Rosa Moore and Mrs. Gladys Williams, both of Tarboro, Mrs. Emma Lee Godwin of Greenville, and Mrs. Joyce Cullingham and Woody Jean Pettaway, both of Washington, D.C.; three sons, James A. Pettaway, Roosevelt Pettaway and Milton Pettaway, all of Tarboro; two sisters, Mrs. Sarah Branch of Portsmouth, Va., and Mrs. Elmer Lloyd of New York, N.Y.; three brothers, John Henry Pettaway of Detroit, Mich., William Pettaway of Rocky Mount and James Arthur Pettaway of New York, N.Y.; 20 grandchildren an(l three great-grandchildren.

The body will be on view at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro after 6 p.m. Saturday. Family visitation will follow the viewing from 7:30-8:30 p.m.

Savage SPEED - Funeral services for Mr. Frank Edward Savage will be held Sunday at 3 p.m. at'White Chapel Baptist Church in Spefed with the Rev. Robert Ricks officiating. Burial will follow in the Princeville Community Cemetery.

He is survived by seven daughters, Mrs. Hattie Ellison and Mrs. Irene Pinkney, both of Tarboro, Mrs. Mary Bell Purvis of Hobgood, Jean Savage of Kinston, Ada Savage of Greenville, Mrs. Mary Roberts of Phildelphia, Pa., and Mrs. M.H. Sherrod of Plainfield, N.J.; a son, Edward Savage of Bethel; three brothers, James H. Savage of Scotland Neck, Leroy Savage of Baltimore, Md., and Charlie Savage of Rocky Mount; 25 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren.

The body will be taken from Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary to White Chapel Church Saturday at 6 p.m. for viewing. Family visitation will follow the viewing from 7-9 p.m.

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Sports THE DAILY REFLECTORClassifiedFRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 23, 1983

Stage Set For Historic Race

NEWPORT, R.I, (AP) -The stage is set for the most significant yacht race in history.

Australia II, the spunky, speedy challenger, an(iber-ty, the steady, unspectacular defender, clash in the final battle for the Americas , Cup, sailings most prestigious prize.

It happens Saturday on Rhode Island Sound. A vast armada of spectator craft is expected for the ultimate race in a sport hardly noted for its mass appeal. This time, its different.

Australia II made it so. She whipped Liberty by a record 3 minutes, 25 seconds Thursday and tied their best-of-seven series, 3-3. One more victory and the never-say-die Aussies will put an end to sports longest winning streak.

Its going to be very exciting to be involved in the race of the century, Liberty skipper Dennis Conner, in danger of becoming the first American helmsman to lose the grand prize the United States has held since 1851, said Thursday. We have a very courageous crew and, somehow, I think well pull it out Saturday.

Im confident that well win, said helmsman John Bertrand after pulling Australia II back from a 3-1 deficit with consecutive

must-win victories. But its going to be a tough race and its a great finale to a summer.

Bill Ficker, who skippered Intrepid to the 1970 Americas Cup over Gretel II, another Australian hopeful, saw it as something much more.

Were all going to see the most significant yacht race in history, he said.

'There was an anxious calm today before Saturdays showdown. Australia II called a lay day to make sure the crew and craft are at their peak for the final thrust at the only international sports trophy never to change hands.

Alan Bond, the Australian syndicate head nearing fulfillment after three Cup campaigns in which his boats won just one race^ said he wanted the day off to allow us to check our boat from stem tO'Stem ... and to give our crew relaxation. Theyve had two very testing days.

Conner said shortly after Thursdays race that he hadnt talked with his crew to determine todays activities.

But Im sure well find something to do, he said.

One thing he may try is lightening his boat, he said. Australia II, 3^8 tons lighter than Liberty and using an innovative winged keel, is more maneuverable than the U.S. yacht.

Conner has been reluctant to engage Australia II in tacking duels because Bertrands boat is much better at those zig-zag maneuvers into the wind.

That hurt Liberty Wednesday, when she lost the fifth race by 1:47, and Thursday, when she absorbed the worst beating ever by an undamaged Americas Cup defender.

Conner won his fifth consecutive start Thursday, crossing the line seven seconds ahead of Bertrand. But midway up the first leg, Australia II caught up when she picked up a wind shift to the left as Conner failed to cover Bertrands tacking. Australia II breezed to a massive advantage of 2:29 at the first rounding and led comfortably for the remainder of the 24.3-mile race.

We tried to cover. When they tacked we tacked on them until they were ahead. Then they covered us, Conner said. Australia II is a bit peculiar from the standpoint of normal 12 meters inasmuch as she can tack very quickly.

We made mistakes, but I think that relative to the potential of our yacht, weve gotten a fair bit out of it in this series and were pleased.

But the tide that was flowing for Conner when he took a 3-1 lead with a 43-second victory Tuesday has now reversed.

Conley Sweeps Two Wins In Loop Debut

HOLLYWOOD - D.H. Conleys volleyball team swept a dual match from Havelock and White Oak yesterday as the Valkyries opened Coastal Conference pay.

Conley downed Havelock, 15-0, 15-5, in the opening match. Michelle Waters served up eight straight points during the match. Lisa Mills had five second hits and two kills, while Karen Barrett had four second hits and three kills. Trellaney Boyd paced the Valkyries in assists.

The Valkyries then downed White Oak, 15-5,15-10. Waters served up nine straight points.

Sports Calendar

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

Todays Sports

Football

Chocowinity at Columbia (8 p.m.)

Jamesville at Creswell (8 p.m.)

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.)

Bertie at 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

Saturday's Sports Soccer

East Carolina at Rutgers (2 p.m.)

Basketball

Steelwheels at Greenville, S.C. Tennis

East Carolina at UNC Wilmington Tournament

UNC Greensboro at East Carolina women (2p.m.)

Volleyball

East Carolina at N.C. State Invitational

Sundays Sports Soccer

East Carolina at Monmouth (2 p.m.)

while Mills added six points. Barrett had five effective hits and two kills, while Darby Fulford and Rhonda Jackson each had one effective hit.

The victories boosted the Conley record to 10-0 overall and 2-0 in league play. The Valkyries return to action next Thursday at North Lenoir in a dual match with Havelock.

SWE-NP-SN

PINETOPS - Southwest Edgecombe downed North Pitt 15-2, 15-3, but the Panthers bounced back before bowing to Southern Nash in

Cobb Sparks AycocK Win

Anthony Cobb ran for four touchdowns and tallied 242 yards as E.B. Aycock crushed Nash Central 40-6 Thursday in the opening junior high football game of the season.

Cobb had scoring runs of 67, six and 60 yards from scrimmage and returned a kickoff 80 yards for the Jaguars. He also added two point-after runs to account for 28 points in the contest.

Tom Moye scored on a three-yard run for Aycock, and later connected with Stacy Best on a 30-yard pass for the other TD.

Other offensive standouts for the Jaguars included Lee Miller, Steve Peele, Walt Pollock and Rodney Harris.

Melvin Jenkins, Devin Gatlin, Anthony Chavis, Chris Throckmorton, Terry Warren, Robbie McDonald and Jeffrey Green excelled on defense for Aycock.

The Jaguars travel to Rocky Mount next'Thursday.

'The momentum, Bertrand said, is very important. Weve developed a lot of confidence in the way were sailing Australia II and I believe that we will be improving.

I also believe weve learned how to sail against Liberty and, as a result. Im confident about continuing the success that weve had the last two days.

If that happens, his next stop will be the Manhattan mansion of the New York Yacht Club, where the, silver pitcher at stake Saturday is displayed.

Robert W. McCullough, chairman of the NYYCs Americas Cup Committee,

said if Austra

ia II wins, a

presentation will be made Monday or 'Tuesday at the club.

He said the Aussies would have to sign a document promising to abide by the deed under which the NYYC has held the Cup before it can be transferred.

McCullough said whether the Aussies could change the Cups name is a good legal question ... I guess they could change it but I dont know why theyd want to.

Australia II Executive Director Warren Jones has said that if his boat wins, the competition would continue to be named the Americas Cup after America, the schooner that won the first race in 1851.

Australia II already has won as many races as the eight other challengers combined in the 12-meter era that began in 1958.

No other Cup series ever has gone to a decisive seventh race. The only other time the series came down to a final race was in 1920 when it was a best-of-five competition. That year, the defending boat Resolute came back from an 0-2 deficit to win the last three races against Shamrock IV of Northern Ireland.

Bond thinks this years series will end with another three-race winning streak.

the second volleyball match 15-12,14-16,19-17 Thursday.

Pam Gorham led Southwest with 10 service points in the first match. Corliss Hall served 15 successful points for Southern Nash.

Dewan Willis had 13 service winners for North Pitt, while Wanda Hines and Sherry Bradley added nine each. Bradley had six of North Pitts winning hits with assists from Willis.

The Panthers trailed 13-4 in the final game against Southern Nash but rallied before the Firebirds took control.

North Pitt, now 0-2 in the conference and 2-5 overall, travels to Southern Nash 'Tuesday to play the Firebirds and Farmville Central.

GC-FC-AG

SNOW HILL - Greene Central swept through a tri-match in volleyball yesterday, downing visiting Ayden-Grifton and Farmville Central.

The Lady Rams downed Farmville Central, two games to one, then beat Ayden-Grifton in two straight games. Farmville Central won its match with Ayden-Grifton, two games to one.

Scores and other details were not made available.

Ayden-Grifton is now 0-4 on the year and plays host to Greene Central and Southwest Edgecombe on Tuesday. Greene Central is now 8-0. Farmville Central, 4-6, travels to Southern Nash on 'Tuesday with North Pitt filling out the field for that tri-match.

Maneuvers

Australia II, foreground, runs in front of Liberty during pre-start maneuvers Thursday at the sixth Americas Cup race off Newport, R.I. Australia won the event, tying the best-of-seven series at three wins each the first time a foreign boat has forced the Americans this far. The climactic race is set for Saturday. (AP Laserphoto)

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Phils Strengthen Grip With Sweep Of Expos

By The Associated Press

With the Montreal Expos poised to strike, the stalked Philadelphia Phillies quickly changed into the stalkers.

Veterans Joe Morgan and Mike Schmidt led a first-game power display, and then rookie Charles Hudson fired a four-hitter in the nightcap as the Phillies swept the Expos in a double-header Thursday night.

The 9-7 and 7-1 victories in Montreal put the National League East-leading Phillies four games ahead of the Expos, who dropped into third place. Pittsburgh beat Chicago 8-2 to move into second, three games behind the Phillies.

All three contenders have nine games remaining.

Two victories, thats just sweet! exclaimed Phillies Manager Paul Owens during the postgame celebration in the Philadelphia lockerroom, which was closed for a short time after the second game ended.

It was bedlam. he said. The players were rushing around shaking each other's hands and rubbing heads. I felt it was best to keep everyone out for a while until they had cooled down."

Philadelphia has now won seven straight games and travels to St. Louis to begin a three-game series tonight.

The Expos, who play host to Pittsburgh for a three-game set this weekend, realize they dealt their pennant chances a

Rampants Kick Vikes

Rose High Schools soccer team continued to roll along yesterday, downing Kinston, 3-2, in a game not nearly as close as the score indicated.

The Rampants took the lead 18 minutes into the first half when Pedro Gener scored from the left wing. Rose then added a second goal with four minutes left in the half, when Derek Leupen scored off an assist by David Ely.

Rose extended the lead to 3-0 25 minutes into the second half as Jim Benedict scored with Ely again assisting.

Kinston then came on with a flurry in the final four minutes of the game, scoring the first time on a Gordon Hill shot, and getting the second with 1:10 left on a penalty kick by Rick Rogers.

Rose outshot Kinston 33-9 in the contest, and Coach Will Wiberg cited the play of Greg Savage and Clark Stallings.

Now 4-1 overall and 4-0 in league play, the Rampants travel to Wilson Fike on Tuesday.

severe blow by losing their last two games of the season against Philadelphia.

It's very tough to win when youre four back with nine to play," said Expos Manager Bill Virdon. You've got to get a lot of help and you can't afford to lose any."

In other NL games. Cincinnati stopped Atlanta 6-4 and St. Louis beat New York 3-2.

The Phillies won the opener as Morgan - who has 13 hits in his last 18 at-bats - doubled three times. Schmidt belted his 38th home run of the season, while Ivan DeJesus and Ozzie Virgil also homered.

But the big blows were a bases-loaded triple by Joe Lefebvre in the fourth inning, which gave Philadelphia a 5-1 lead, and Len Matuszek's two-run single in the seventh that made it 7-4.

John Denny, 17-6, got relief help from .A1 Holland, who earned his 23rd save. Charlie Lea, 15-10, took the loss for Montreal, which got home runs from Tim Raines and Chris Speier.

In the nightcap, Hudson. 8-7, outpitched Steve Rogers. 17-11.

Singles by Greg Gross. Bo Diaz and DeJesus made it 1-0 in the fifth inning and the Phillies added four runs in the seventh on RBI singles by Matuszek, Schmidt and Gary Matthews and a throwing error by center fielder Andre Dawson,

We played hard, we battled hard and probably we tried too hard," said Montreal's Gary Carter, who went O-for-8 in the double-header and hit the ball out of the infield only once,

Look, I'm human; I'm not a machine. I just had a bad night."

Pirates 8. Cubs 2

Johnny Ray tripled, doubled and added two singles to help Pittsburgh end its lO-game losing streak in Chicago. Eight of those losses came this season.

Rookie Lee Tunnell, 10-5, pitched a six-hitter to beat Rick Reuschel, 1-1.

Larry Bowas RBI single , gave the Cubs 1-0 lead jn the second before the Pirates struck for four runs in the fifth.

With one out. ,Marvell Wynne doubled and scored on Ray's triple. Walks to Dave Parker and Jason Thompson loaded the bases and another run scored on Mike Easler's forceout.

Tony Pena and Richie Hebner then delivered run-scoring singles.

Ron Cey hit an inside-the-park home run in the ninth inning to account for the Cubs' other run. Cey's 23rd homer came when Parker crashed into the right field wall while chasing the wind-blown fly hall.

Reds 6, Braves 4

Slumping Atlanta missed another chance to gain ground in the NL West as Dan Driessen's two-run homer, his 12th, put visiting Cincinnati ahead 5-4 in the sixth. The Reds stayed in front and reliever Tom Hume pitched the ninth for his ninth save.

Second-place Atlanta, which has won only two of its last nine games, now trails the Los Angeles Dodgers by 44 games, The Braves, who have 11 games remaining, and Los Angeles, with 10 left, begin a three-game series tonight in Atlanta.

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^4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Woody

Pecie

Once again, there are a group of men hanging their heads in shame this week. When it comes to football knowledge, long standing traditions, ERA notwithstandng, say men are supposed to know the answers and women are supposed to ask, Whats going on? I dont understand.

Well, Vickie Spivey, our woman on the panel has struck a blow for equality. Shes currently leading the pack, with a 22-12 record. After an 8-3-1 week last time out, however, the guests and this writer h^ve pulled up into a tie with Joe Jenkins for second place, 21-13. Our guest from last week, ECU marketing director Dave Hart, has used his 8-3-1 record to take over first place among the guests. The best guest, of course, comes back at the end of the year to join in the bowl selections.

Tom Baines, after a dismal 5-6-1 week, has dropped into a tie for fifth with Jimmy Dupree, both at 19-15.

Tom promises to do better this week, but Vickie is sure shes going to remain at the top of the heap.

Our guest this week, by the way, is Farmvilles A1 Hamm, a golfing buddy of Joe and Tom whos been asking for some time to join us in some picks. The fact that he also dates the daughter of one member of the panel, who shall remain nameless, has nothing to do with it. A1 is a pharmacy student at UNC.

At any rate, a look at the high school picks first. Our record last week of 4-2-1, brought our record for the year to 20-5-2.

North Pitts Panthers, still looking for their

Friday, September 23.1983

first touchdown of the year, play host to Greene Central after an open date. The Panthers hope the time away from the schedule gave them some time to regroup and get things going. We have hopes, and predict a score for the Panthers, but the Rams will win it, 20-7.

Farmville Central, after winning its first game last week, travels to West Craven this week, out to even the record at 2-2. West Craven is also coming off its first win, but the Jaguars should have no trouble in this one. We look for a 27-0 Farmville win.

Ayden-Grifton travels to Southern Nash. The Firebirds won their opener, but have lost the last two. Southern was expected to be stronger this year, but that remains to be seen. The Chargers meanwhile, a 2-1, after losing their opener, and have come on strong. This is another chance for them, as we see a 21-6 win for Ayden-Grifton.

In other area games, itll be Chocowinity over Columbia, Jamesville over Creswell, Roanoke over Plymouth, Washington over Edenton, and Bertie over Williamston.

With the Pirates off, theres only one area game that the panel looks at, the Rose-Northern Nash high school contest.

The Rampants are 3-0 and ranked fifth among 4-A schools by the AP. Northern lost its opener to 3-A Warren County, but has since beaten Vance and Southern Nash. The Knights appear to be a big play team, and they have a good defense. The Rampants are still trying to find a running game to go with their passing attack. The panel likes the Rampant chances, however, giving the Rampants a 6-0 edge.

Our other concensus picks: Pittsburgh over Maryland; N.C. State over Virginia; Miami, Fla., over Notre Dame; Auburn over Tennessee; Ohio State over Iowa; Clemson over Georgia Tech; North Carolina over William & Mary; Wake Forest over Richmond; Michigan State over Illinois; Texas A&M over Oklahoma State; and Florida over Mississippi State.

The full poll:

Peele

Rose over N. Nash Pitt over Maryland State over Virginia N. Dame over Miami Auburn over Tennessee Ohio St . over Iowa Clemson over Ga.Tech UNC over W&M Wake over Richmond Michigan St. over 111. Texas A&M over Okla. St. Florida over Miss. St.

Dupree

Rose

Pitt

N.C. State Miami, Fla. Auburn Ohio State Clemson N. Carolina Wake Forest MighiganSt. Texas A&M Florida

Hamm

Rose

Pitt

N.C. State N. Dame Auburn Ohio State Clemson / N. Carolina Wake Forest Illinois Texas A&M Florida

Spivey

Rose'

Pitt

N.C. State Miami, Fla. Auburn Ohio State Clemson N. Carolina Wake Forest Michigan St. Okla. State Florida

Baines

Rose

Pitt

N.C. State Miami, Fla. Tennessee Ohio State Clemson N. Carolina Wake Forest Michigan St. Texas A&M Florida

Jenkins

Rose Maryland Virginia Miami, Fla. Tennessee Ohio State Clemson N. Carolina Wake Forest Mich. State Texas A&M Miss. St.

Rampette Netters Roll Over Kinston; Aycock Tops Rams

Rose High Schools girls tennis team won their fifth straight match yesterday, rolling up a 7-2 win over Kinston.

The Rampettes had little trouble in the win, losing only in the number one singles and doubles.

The victory raises the

Rampette record to 5-1. Rose travels to Wilson Fike on Tuesday.

Summary:

Andy Dawson (K) d. Kelly Wall, 6-2,64.

Vickie Parrott (R) d. Susan Mattocks, 64.6-3.

Catherine Land (R) d. Sara Anderson, 6-3,6-1

Susan Evans (R) d. Patricia Tunstall,6-l,6-3.

Ann Davis (R) d. Robin Powell, 641,6-1.

Marjorie Jones (R) d. Mary McMahon, 6-1,6-3.

Dawson-Mattocks (K) d. Hayes Warren-Caroline Powell, 8-6 Jessica Perry-Lisa Parrott (Rid. Anderson-Tunstall, 8-6.

Kara Deyton-Mary Clark (Ri d. Powell-McMahon, 9-8 (7-51.

East Carolina Statistics

Rushing    Att    Gn    Ls    Net    Ave    TD

Ingram........................................39    273    22    251    6 4    3

Byner........................................37    188    1    187    5 1    2

Baker........................................27    114    1    113    4.2    1

Walden........................................19    92    4    88    4.6    1

JWilliams...............................  6    44    9    35    9.2    0

Speed........................................10    29    1    28    2.8    0

Brach.................................  4    14    0    14    3.5    0

Hill.......................................... 1    1    0    1    1.0    0

Totals..........................................143    755    38    717    5.0    7

0pp...............................................148    627    131    496    4.3    5

Passing    Att    Cmp    Int    Yds    Pet    TD

Ingram........................ 37    21    3    292    56.8    3

JWilliams...................................... 5    1    0    20    20.0    1

Speed........................................ 1    0    0    0    00.0    0

Totals............................................43    22    3    312    50.0    4

Opp.............................................108    66    1    770    61.1    4

Total Offense    Plays    Rush    Pass    Tot

Ingram....................................................76    251    292    543

JWilliams...................................................11    35    20    55

Speed.......................................................11    28    0    28

(Others same as rushing)

Totals.......................................................186    717    312    1029

Opp..........................................................256    496    770    1266

Receiving    No    Yds    Ave    TD

Vann............................................................ 5    103    20.6    .

Nichols............................................................ 4    43    10.0    0

Walden....................  3    47    15.7    0

S. Adams........................................................ 3    33    11.0    0

Pope...................    3    22    7.3    1

HWilliams....................................................... I    24    24.0    0

AAdams........................................................ 1    20    20.0    1

Black............................................................ 1    13    13.0    0

Baker.........................................  1    10    10.0    0

ToUls............................................................22    312    14.2    4

Opp........................................<....................66    770    11.7    4

Field Goals    11-20    21-30    31-40    41-1-    Total    BIk

Heath............................ (M)    2-2    1-2    1-2    4-6    1

Opp............................... 04)    1-1    3-3    04)    4-4    0

Punting    No    Yds    Ave BIk

Bolch............................................................. 8    323    40.4    0

Opp.................................................................11    389    35.4    0

Punt Returns    No    Yds    Ave    TD

HWiUiams...................................................... 7    79    11.3    1

Opp............................................................. 5    16    3.2    0

Kickoff Returns    No    Yds    Ave    TD

HWiUiams...........................!........................... 8    321    40.1    2

Byner............................................................ 3    57    19.0    0

Walden............................................................2    31    15.5    0

Vann............................................................ 1    5    5.0    0

Totals........................................... 14    414    29.6    2

Opp...:.........................................................15    329    21.9    0

Interceptions    No    Yds    Ave    TD

Walker............................................................ 1    0    0.0    0

Opp................................................................ 3    0    0.0    0

Scoring    TD    Kick    Run    Pass    FG    TP

Heath.............................. 0    12-13    00    04)    4-6    24

Ingram............................3    OO    1-1    0-1    00    20

Vann.............................. 3    OO    00    00    00    18

HWilliams........................ 3    00    00    00    00    18

Byner.............................. 2    00    00    OO    00    12

Baker..............................l    OO    00    OO    00    6

Pope...............   1    00    OO    OO    OO    6

AAdams .............. l    00    00    00    00    6

Walden............................ 1    00    OO    OO        00    6

Team    2

Totals............................15    12-13    1-1    6-1    4-6    118

Opp...............................16    6-7    64    2-3    06    88

First Downs    Rash    Pass    Pen Total

ECU............................................................ 40    13    5    58

Opp....................*rf;...................................... 34    37    6    77

Fumbles No Lost    Penalties    No    Yds

ECU    6    5    ECU    18    179

OPP    10    5    OPP    27    211

C.B. Aycock 8

Greene Central....1

PIKEVILLE - Carla Edwards won the only match for Greene Central as the Lady Ram tennis team bowed to Charles B. Aycock, 8-1, yesterday.

The match was the first Eastern Carolina Conference match ofthe year for the Rams and left them with a 1-4 overall mark and an 0-1 league record.

Greene Central plays host to Farmville Central on Tuesday in the next match.

Summary:

Carla Edwards (GO d. Carrie Pritchett, 64,2-6,6-3.

Debbie Pittman (A) d. Tangela Craft, 6-3,64).

Whitley-Musgrave (A) d. Herring-Gay, 84).

Pridgen-Pittman (A) d. Jenkins-Roth, 8-2.

Jackson-Pritchett (A) d. Edwards-Craft,8-1.

Edenton............8

Roanoke ......1

Whitney Musgrave (A) d. Kathy Herring, 6-0,64).

Dawn Whitley (A) d. Jennifer Gay, 64). 6-1.

Liddy Jackson (A) d. Carol Jenkins, 64), 6-0,

Janet Pridgen (Ai d. Kim Roth. 6-4,5-7,6-3.

ROBERSONVILLE -Edenton swept through the singles matches without a loss, then took two of the three doubles for an 8-1 victory over Roanoke in girls tennis Thursday.

Roanoke, now 0-5 on the season, travels to Washington Tuesday.

Summary:

Patricia Ashley (E) d. Ginya Smith, 6-1,6-1.

Elizabeth Hornthal (E) d. Marty Knox, 6-0,6-1

Nicole Roberson (E) d. Tara Knox 6-0.6-0.

Karen Keeter (E) d. Debbie Atkinson, 64), 6-0.

Carol Voight (E) d. Chanty .Norris, 6-1,64).

Cindy Dunn (E) d. Angie Whitfield, 6-1,6-3.

Smith-M Knox (R) d. Catherine Byrum-Liza Vaughn, 8-5.

Lynn Cale-Patti Boss (E) d. T. Knox-Atkinson,8-l.

Carol Baker-Keli Johnson (E) d, Whitfield-Jackie Wynn, 8-5.

Six Schools Eye New Football Conference

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - Six Division I-AA colleges in the East will continue discussions this fall toward the possible formation of a new football conference to be named the Colonial League.

It is hoped that the formation of a new competitive Division I-AA football league will be approved by the relevant institutional governing boards and announced in the late fall, said a Thursday announcement released by William & Mary.

The new conference, which the announcement said would be associated with the Ivy League, would include Bucknell, Colgate, Holy Cross, Lafayette, Lehigh and William &Mary.

Formation of such a league would include inter-league agreements with the Ivy League on football scheduling, the announcement said.

Excluded from discussions on the new league, which included the presidents of the six schools involved, were James Madison and Richmond, which had been linked at one time with William & Mary in proposals

for a new conference. All play in the ECAC Southern Division in basketball.

The purpose of the new league would be to bring Jogether a group of institutions of higher learning which enjoy comparable academic standards of admission and achievement, as well as historically long commitments to intercollegiate athletics, the announcement said.

It added that discussions so far have been conducted at the policy level primarily by the presidents of the colleges within the proposed new league and the Ivy League.

new league by colleges which share our phiic

and our view of the rol athletics in higher education.

1

Rose JVs Top N. Nash

RED OAK - Rose High

Schools junior varsity scored on the lining kickoff of the

second half and gained a 21-18 win over Northern Nash last night in the first Big East Conferoice game o( the year for the Rampant Cubs.

Dwight Smith raced 75 prds with the second half kickoff to run the Rampants into a 21-12 lead, and they hung on the rest of the way to pull out the victory.

Rose took the initial lead in the second quarter on a five-yard pass from Ervin Best to Tyrone Jones. Kendall Phillips then kicked the first of three extra points. Northern cut it back to 7-6 before Rose scored again. That came on a one-yard run by Best after he had set up the score with a 40 yard pass to Smith.

Northern scored again before the half ended for a 14-12 deficit at halftime. Rose then pushed back out with Smiths run, and Northern closed it to 21-18 before the period ended.

Todd Morris, Brian Walsh, William Ward, Wayland Moore and L.C. Atkins were cited for defensive play, while Mike Wooten, Darryl Perkins and Mark Ebrom led the offense.

scored single touchdowns, with two-point conversions, in each of the next two periods to move out into a 28-12 lead. Farmville came back late in the game to score on a 22-yard run by Fred Dixon to close it to the final 28-18 margin.

May led the FarmvUle offense with 91 yards rushing.

Now 1-1, Farmville travels to Southwest Edgecombe next Thursday.

Rose, now 3-1, plays host to iTTiursday.

Rocky Mount on 'Thursday.

West Craven.............6    6    8    8-28

FarmviUeC..............6    6 0 6-18

Rose.......................0    14    7    6-21

Northern Nash.........0    12 6 018

West Craven 28

Farmville C 18

Ayden-Grifton... 18 Southern Nash....O

LITTLEFIELD - Alex Chapman scored a pair of

touchdowns to lead the Ayden-Grifton jayvees to an^ 18-0 romp over Southern Nash i in Thursday footbal action.

Shawn Farmer got the Chargers on the board with 8:57 remaining in the fir^ quarter on a 43-yard pass from Timmy Best. Chapman' scored on a six-yard run, then added a three-yard blast with 2:05 remaining in the game. lapman ran for 79 yards' on the day, while Best rushed for 63.    :

Wheeler Davis led th* Chargers defense with six' solo tackles and 11 assists. Ayden-Grifton, now 3-0 on* the season, travels to D.* Conley next Thursday.

Beacham Wins Amateur Putt

Marshall Beacham fired a four-under par 68 to win the Thursday Night Amateur Tourney at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.

Paul Harrington finished second with a three-under 69 for the two rounds of play.

FARMVILLE - West Craven High Schools junior varsity broke open a 12-12 deadlock in the Second half and rolled to a 28-18 win over Farmville Central last night.

The Jaguars scored first, gaining a 6-0 lead in a 52-yard scoring run by Wesley Harris. But West Craven came back with single touchdowns in the first and second periods to take a 12-6 lead.

Farmville tied it up late in the half on a four-yard run by Don May for a 12-12 tie at halftime.

The Baby Eagles then

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Brown President Howard Swearer, chairman of the Ivy League, said presidents of that group welcome the prospective formation of the

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SCOREBOARD

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

Friday. September 23. 1983    -|5

tankbpnamara

^Guy'&Ao. Twtusffi U6 coupKi'T 00V Aac M4IT. . ^ijjKik&UJSCAK) UWlwSPKlGceZOM

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

Fall League

14th Street................010    000    0-1

Orogs......................021    060    x-9

^-eading hitters: G - Bill CSe^m 3-4, J.B. Shacklefore 2-3, reck Langley 2-3 (HR); FS - Greg VClson2-3.    

^irits i 000 012 1-4

Slate Credit ... OOI oil 2-5

Leading hitters: SC - Clevie Ayerette 3-3, Campbell 2-3, Jesse Baker 2-3; S - Allen Hair 3-3, Wade G#x 3-4, A1 Salisbury 2-3.

Nbrgan Printers a 00 2

J.-D. Dawson ..........031 9417

Xeading hitters: JD - Gary Cox 3J, Dick Webb 2-3, Bill Twine 2-3; ^ff-Jim Hardy 2-3.

Baileys....................in 120 1-7

V(innont-American...300 000 03 Leading hitters: VA Eddie ChuVch 2-3, Joe Brown 2-3, Jesse Jdmes 2-3; B Steve Wallace 34 (HI^),J.C. Daniels 2-3.

Sia|iyside Eggs 300, 010 1- 5

Thomas Homes 502 422 x15

Leading hitters: TH - Charlie Re^ 34, Burton Robinson 3-3 (3 HRl; SE Moon Miller 34, Joe GaiUis 2-3, Mike Board 2-3.

Jimmys 66..............000    204    612

Mites Party Cent.. .401 400 1-10 Leading hitters: MP Mike Mills 34, Levy Brock 2-3, Fuzzy Wiislow 2-3; J - Linwood Brown 34, JeffWagstaff2-3.

:' Bowling

Burroughs-Wellcome Mixed W

Meat Balls...................11

Mix Ups........................9

Jedis............................9

7-Ups !..............9

Rated X........................8

TheJs..........................7

Ba'r H............................6

Anonymous...................6

HJng Ten......................4

The J.B.s..

x-Chicago

Texas    74    79

Kansas City    73    79

Oakland    69    84

California    67    86

MinnesoU    66    87

Seattle    56    96

x-clinched division title

Thursday's Gaines Detroit 5, Baltimore 4,10 innings Cleveland 9, Milwaukee 5 Minnesota 2, Kansas City 1 Texas 5, Seattle 2 Chicago 3, California 2 Only game^scheduled av'i " rsle'

Friday's Games Boston (Eckersley

8-12) at Detroit

(Berenguer84),(n) Cleveland

(Behenna 0-2) at New York iRawleyl4-12),(n)

Baltimore (McGregor 17-6) at Milwaukee (Gibson 2-3), (n)

Minnesota (Pettibone 1-2) at Kansas City(WillsO-l),(n)

Seattle (Nelson 0-1) at Texas (Stewart 4-l)i(n)    

Chicago (Dotson 19:7) rft California (Witt7-f2),(n)

Toronto (Leal 13-10) at Oakland (Conroy 6-9), (n)

Saturday's Games Cleveland at New York Boston at Detroit Chicago at California Toronto at Oakland Baltimore at Milwaukee, (n)

Minnesota at Kansas City,(n)

Seattle at Texas, (n)

Sunday's Games Boston at Detroit Cleveland at New York Baltimore at Milwaukee Minnesota at Kansas City Seattle at Texas Chicago at California Toronto at Oakland

.Monday's Games Cleveland at New York, (n)

Torontoat California, (n)

Kansas City at Seattle, (n)

Only games scheduled

.......3

Philadelphia Pittsburgh Montreal St. Louis Chicago New York

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION W L

83    70

80    73

79    74

75    78

68    85

62    91

WEST DIVISION

Pci.

.542 -.523 3 .516    4

.490    8

.444 15 .405 21

High game, Jinnis Harris 214, Joyce Streeter 204; high series, Jinnis Streeter 557, Grace Ward 56{.

> Hillcrest Ladies League

Thorpe Music................12

D4 Bees..

Peppis...

Twm #1..

HAS, Inc.

Team #3..........................6

HJV. White......................6

Riverside Oyster Bar 5

Team #14........................5

Daily Reflector...............5

Arbys.

Pals.....

Merry Five....................2

IPCCC..........................2

high game: Doris Wysokowski 221 (scratch), Peggy Dragnet 259 (hdcp.). High series. Patricia Cannon 604 (scratch), Joyce Cates 671 (hdcp).

: Baseball Standings

12

0

9

3

9

3

8

4

8

4

6

6

6

6

5

7

..5

7

5

7

4

8

3

9

2

10

2

10

By Thf Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST DIVISION

W L

Pet.

GB

Baltimore

94 58

618

Dqtroit

87 66

569

7'j

New York

84 67

.556

94

Toronto

84 69

549

104

Milwaukee

81 72

.529

134

Bton

74 79

.484

204

Cleveland .

67 85

441

27

Tobacco Belt Conference

Conf

. Overall

W

L

W L T

Bith

0

0

2 1 0

Jsmesvitle

0

0

2 1 0

Mbttmauskeet

0

0

1 1 1

Coocowinity

0

0

0 2 1

Oeswell

0

0

0 2 0

Bglhaven

0

0

0 3 0

Clumbia

0

0

0 3 0

Aurora

0

0

0 3 0

Last Weeks Results amesville 32, Northwest Halifax 0 Chocowinity 8, Mattamuskeet 8 (tie iMa-conferencegame)

Horth Edgecombe 8, Bathe Mantele, Belhavene ^mden 14, Columbia 0 Creswell-Open Aurora-Open

This Weeks Schedule ^IhavenatBath damesvilleatCreswell Mattamuskeet at Aurora piocowinity at Columbia

Los Angeles    87    65    .572    -

Atlanta    82    69    543 V2

Houston    79    72    .523

San Diego    76    76    .500    11

San Francisco    73    79    480    14

Cincinnati    70    82    . 461    17

Thursday's Games Pittsburgh 8, Chicago 2 Philadelphia 9-7, Montreal 7-1 Cincinnati 6, Atlanta 4 St. Louis 3, New York 2 Only games scheduled

Friday's Games New York (Terrell 7-7) at Chicago (Ruthven 12-11)

Pittsburgh (Rhoden 1M3) at Montreal (Sanderson 6-6), (n)

San Diego (Hawkins 4-6) at Cincinnati (Soto 16-13), (n)

Los Angeles (Reuss ll-ll) at Atlanta (Barker 1-2), (nl Philadelphia (Carlton 14-15) at St. Louis (Andujar 6-15) jn) an Francisco (Breining 10-12) at Houston (Niekro 14-13), in)

Saturday's Games Pittsburgh at Momreal Los Angeles at Atlanta Philadelphia at St. Louis San Diego at Cincinnati New York at Chicago San Francisco at Houston, 1 n)

Sunday's Games Pittsburgh at Montreal Los Angles at Atlanta Philadelphia at St. Louis San Diego at Cincinnati New York at Chicago SanFranciscoat Houston, (n)

Monday's Games Philadelphia at Chicago Los Angeles at Cincinnati. (n)

San Franciscoat Atlanta, (n)

Montreal at St. Louis, (n)

San Diego at Houston. (n)

Only Games Scheduled

League Leaders

By The Associated Press

American LEAGUE

BATTING (390 at bats): Boggs, Boston, .360; Carew, California. .345; Whitaker, Detroit, .321; Moseby, Toronto, 320; Simmons. Milwaukee, .315.

RUNS: Ripken, Baltimore, 115; E.Murray, Baltimore, 113; Moseby, Toronto, 102; R.Henderson, Oakland, 99; Cooper, Milwaukee, 96,

RBI: Rice, Boston, 120; Cooper, Milwaukee, 117; Winfield, New York, 107;

E.Murray, Baltimore, 106; L.N.Parrish, Detroit, 106.

HITS: Boggs, Boston, 198; Whitaker, Detroit, 196; Ripken, Baltimore, 194; Cooper, Milwaukee. 185; Rice, Boston, 180; Simmons, Milwaukee, 180.

DOUBLES: Ripken, Baltimore, 45; Boggs Boston, 44; L.N.Parrish, Detroit, 41; McRae, Kansas City, 39; Hrbek, Minnesota,^38; Yount, Milwaukee, 38.

TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 9; K.Gibson, Detroit, 9: Yount, Milwaukee, 9, Franco, Cleveland 8; Gantner, Milwaukee, 8; Herndon, Detroit, 8, Winfield, New York, 8 H()ME RUNS: Rice, Boston, 37; Armas, Boston, 34; Kittle, Chicago, 34; E Murray, Baltimore, 32: Luzinski, Chicago, 30; Winfield, New York, 30.

ST(5LEN BASES: R.Henderson, Oakland, 103; R.Law, Chicago, 73; J.Cruz, Chicago. 54; W.Wilson, Kansas Ciri, 53; Sample, Texas, 42.

PITCHINfi (15 decisions): Haas, Milwaukee, 13-3, .813, 3.27; Flanagan, Baltimore, 12-3, .800, 3.12; McGregor, Baltimore, 17-6, .739, 3.07; Dotson, Chicago, 19-7, ,731, 3.39; Gossage, New York/12-5. 7(^ 2.35.

STRIKEOUTS: Morris, Detroit, 221;

F.Bannister, Chicago, 184; Stieb, Toronto, 176; Righetti, New York, 169; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 151.

^VES: (^isenbetiw, Kansas City, 41; Stanley, 'Boston. 31: R.Davis. Minnesota,

SATURDAY AFTERNOON FUN DOUBLE HEADER!

N.C. STATE vs. VIRGINIA

Football Broadcast On WNCT-FM108 Saturday, Sept. 24th at 12 Noon

Then...Stay Tuned For

f

A

Original

BEACH PARTY

Directly After The Football Game!

GB

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (390 at bats): Cruz, Houston, .325; Madlock, Pittsburgh, .325; Hendrick, St.Louis, .315; Lo.Smith, St.Louis, .313; Murphy, Atlanta, .313.

RUNS: Murphy, AtlanU, 128; Raines, Montreal, 125; Dawson, Montreal, 103; Schmidt, Philadelphia. 96; Evans, San Francisco 91.

RBI: Murphy, Atlanta, 116; Dawson, Montreal, 111; Shmidt, Philadelphia, 104; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 94; T.Kennedy, San Diego, 92.

HITS: Dawson, Montreal, 185. Cruz, Houston, 180; Oliver, Montreal, 179; R.Ramirez, Atlanta, 175; Raines. Montreal, 174.

DOUBLES: Oliver, Montreal, 38; Buckner, Chicago, 36; Dawson, Montreal, 36; J.Ray, Pittsbureh. 36; G.Carter, Montreal, 35, Knight. Houston, 35.

TRIPLES: Butler, Atlanta, 13; Dawson Montreal, 9, Green, St.Louis, 9; Redus Cincinnati, 9; Thon, Houston, 9.

HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia. 38; Murphy, Atlanta, 35; Dawson, Montreal, 32, Guerrero, Los Angeles, 30; Evans, San Francisco, 28.

STOLEN BASES: Raines, Montreal, 83; Wiggins, San Diego, 59; Wilson, New York, 50, S.Sax, Los Angeles, 49; Lo.Smith St.Louis, 40.

PITCHING (15 decisions): Denny, Philadelphia, 17-6, .739,2.44; McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 15-6, ,714, 3.14; Tunnell, Pittsburgh, 10-5, ,667, 3.84; Orosco, New York, 13-7, .650, 1.47; Candelaria, Pittsburgh, 14-8, .636, 3.32; Ryan, Houston, 14-8, .636,2.82.

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

SAVES: Le.Smith. Chicago, 28; Holland, Philadelphia, 23; Reardon, Montreal, 20; Sutter, St.Louis, 20; Bedrosian, Atlanta, 19; DiPino, Houston, 19; Minton, San Francisco. 19.

NFL Standings

By The Associated Press American Conference East

W L T Pet. PF PA

Bill Rogers John Cook Chi Chi Rodriguez TomPurtzer Fred Couples Lindy Miller J.C. Snead Gan Koch WiieWood Craig Stadler George Archer Bruce Fleisher BobMui^y HalSuttim Curt Byrum Ronnie Black Bobby Cole Dav

Fuzzy Zoefl Ed Sneed Loren Roberts Darrell Kestner Blaine McCallister Brad Bryant Wayne Player David Offin MikeM^ough Jim Roy Sammy Rachels Hale Irwin Ed Fiori Jon Chaffee Chip Beck Ben Crenshaw Hubert Green

a-John Slaughter Bobby Wawnf T.C. Chen

Buffalo Miami    2

Baltimore    1

New England 1

New Enga N.Y.JeU

Cleveland

Pittsburgh

Cincinnali

Houston

L.A.Raiders Denver Seattle Kansas City San Diego

,667    38    41

.667    60    51

0    .333    62    68

0    .333    70    76

0    .333    64    69

1 1

2 2 2

Central

2    1    0    .667    69    60

2    1    0    ,667    75    63

0    3    0    .000    23    47

0    3    0    , 000    72    101

West 0 1

0    1.000    67    30

0    .667    41    33

1    0    . 667    64    58

0    . 333    43    57

0    .333    77    89

Dallas Philadelphia Washington NY. Giants St. Louis

3 2

2 .

1 2 12,,. National Conference East

3 2 2 1 0

Green Bay Minnesota Chicago Detroit Tampa Bay

0    0    1.000    93    60

1    0    .667    48    50

1    0    .667    80    56

2    0    .333    35    57

3    0    .000    61    104

Central

2    1    0    .667    89    87

.667    63    85

.333    65    64

.    .333    51    61

0    3    0    .000    26    47

West

.667    63    47

I    0    .667    70    60

I    0    .667    89    78

2 1 0 1 2 0 1 2 0

Atlanta    2    1

L.A. Rams    2

New Orleans    2    ,    

San Francisco    2    I    0    .667    107

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 Cleveland at San Diego Washington at Seattle Atlanta at San Francisco Los Angeles Raiders at Denver Los Angeles Rams at New York Jets Monday Sept. 26 Green Bay at New Yorx Giants, (n)

Golf Scores

ABILENE, Texas (AP) scores Thursday in the Coors Classic on the 7, 36-36-72 Fairway Oaks denotes amateur):

Andy Bean Rex Caldwell Wally Armstrong Keith Fergus Lee Trevino Lon Nielsen Mike Donald Pat McGowan Mick Soli

First-round 1350,000 LaJet 166 yard, par Golf Club (a-

33-34-67

35-33-68

36-34-70

34-36-70 34-36-70

34-36-70

36-34-70

35-35-70

37-33-70

Tommy Valentine Rafael Alarcon MarkPfeil Jack Renner Terry Diehl Steve Hart Ron Commans I^nLott (ieorge Cadle Bill Murchison Charles Coody Tom Weiskopf Gavin Levenson Dave Barr Jim Thorpe Tony Cerda RodNuckotls Gaiy McCord Buddy Gardner Donnie Hammond Mark OMeara Jeff Sanders Tim Simpson David Graham Jim Simons Jeff Mitchell Lon Hinkle Tony Sills Joe Inman Allen Miler Forrest Fezler Howard Twitty Bill Sander Peter Oosterhuis DaveEichelberger Tom Kite John Adams JimBooros Dan Pohl Greg Powers Bruce Devlin Curtis Strange Mark Hayes Scott Simpson 5 Gil Morgan Mike Gove Jim Dent Gary Hallberg D.A.Weibring RonStreck Thomas Gray Clarence Rose Tom Lehman Rives McBee JohnMcComish Mark Brooks Steve Melnyk Joey Rassett Jerry Pate DanForsman a-Scott Verplank Ivan Smith Payne Stewart Boo Boyd Ken Green Jodie Mudd Mike Peck Brad Faxon Mark Coward Phil Hancock Frank Conner Tom Jenkins Victor Regalado Bob Byman Orville Moody Jay Haas Ray Stewart Mike Zinni Bob Eastwood < Woody Blackburn Larry Rinker Dan Halldorson ItogerMaltbie JimNelford Larry Mize Wayne Levi Jimmy Powell John Fought Mike Sullivan VanceiHeafner JeffSluman Lennie Clements Bill Britton David Edwards

34-37-71 36-35-71

32-39-71

35-36-71

36-35-71 36-35-71

35-37-72

36-36-72 39-33-72

36-36-72

37-36-73 36-37-73 36-37-73

35-38-73

36-37-73

38-35-73

38-35-73 36-37-73 36-37-73

36-37-73

34-39-73

33-40-73

39-34-73

35-38-73 38-36-74

37-37-74

37-37-74

38-36-74

35-39-74

38-36-74

36-38-74

39-35-74

37-37-74 37-37-74

35-39-74

39-35-74

36-38-74

37-37-74

38-36-74

33-41-74 38-36-74 38-36-74

34-40-74

35-39-74

36-38-74

37-37-74

38-37-75

40-35-75

38-37-75 37-38-75

36-39-75

37-38-75

39-36-75

36-39-75

37-38-75

38-37-75 38-37-75 36-39-75

36-39-75

37-38-75 . 37-38-75

38-37-75 38-37-75 38-37-75

37-38-75

40-35-75 35m-76

38-38-76

39-37-76

40-36-76

39-37-76

37-39-76

38-38-76

40-36-76 38-38-76

41-35-76

37-39-76

38-38-76 38-38-76

37-39-76

38-38-76

38-38-76

39-37-76 36^0-76 36m-77

38-39-77

39-38-77

40-37-77

38-39-77

39-38-77 38-39-77

38-39-77

37-40-77

40-37-77

39-38-77 35^2-77

39-38-77

38-40-78

40-38-78 38-40-78 38-40-78 36^2-78

38-40-78 38^0-78

41-37-78 41-37-78 41-37-78

39-39-78 37-41-78 39-39-78 43-35-78 39-30-78

39-39-78

40-38-78 38^0-78 3043-79 3841-79 3940-79 3940-79

41-38-79 41-38-79 3841-79

3841-79 40-39-79

3940-79

3842-80 40-40-80 4040-80 3743-80 3842-80

3941-80 3842-80

2^^ for nnen

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

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A great shoe at our special anniversary price! Reg. $28.00,

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99

John Mahaffey Dwight Nevil MacOGrady LarsMeyerson DougTeweU BUlKraUert Tom Jones Mark McNulty DanStrimple DaveJenmngs Danny Edwards Leonard Thompson

4140-81

3843-81

3942-81 42-39-81

3943-82 4043-83

3944-83 4142-83 4342-85 4245-87

49 WD 42-WD

of car andqualU; 1. Darrell W;

inmph: rolet, 89 342.

2. Ricky Rudd. Chevrolet, 89 274

3. Joe Ruttman, Pontiac, 80.211

4. Tim Richmond, ZPontiac, 89.066

5 Dale Earnhardt Ford, 88 881

6 Bobby Allison, Buick, 88.751 7. Geofi Bodine, Pontiac, 88 531

8 Terry Laboote, Chevrolet, 88 457

9. Budy Baker, Ford, 88.284.

10. Richard Petty, Pontiac. 88 046.

N.C. Scoreboard

By The Associated Press Men's College Soccer Pembroke St 3, Barber-Scotia 0 Pfieffer 1, N. Carolina-Asheville 0 Women's Voilevball N Carolina def E Carolina 15-9, 15-7. 15-9

N.C Weslevan def .Methodist 15-5,15-6, 15-12

Meredith def N.C Weslevan 915 199, 1914

Carolina St. def W Carolina 1914. 1913.198

N Carolina Wilmington def Wingale 195,195,199 High Point def Shaw 15-1,15-7 High Point def Elon 1918.15-5.199

piooship, being played at the 6,4 par 72 ^ail Hollow Country Club; Miller Barber    :

Doug Sanders Allalding CTiristyCrConner (JeneLittler Jim Ferree Paul Harney RodFunsetn Guy Wolstenholme Gardner Dickinson MikeFetchick Howie Johnson Charlie Sifford Arnold Palmer Buck Adams

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - First-round scores Thursday in Die $IS2,M0 World Seniors Invitational golf cham- S,e9yard,

34-34-68

3935-70

37-33-70

3935-71

3935-71 37-35-72

3936-72 3934-72 3936-72

3934-72

3935-73 37-36-73 3938-73

3938-74

3935-74

3939-74 3938-74

3936-74 3938-74 3938-74

3936-74

3938-74 37-38-75

3937-75

3939-75 3939-75 4936-76

3938-76

3938-76

37-39-76 3640-76

3939-77

38-39-77 3941-77

3740-77 3939-77

3741-78 3741-78 3840-78 3741-78 3939-78 41-37-78 3840-78 41-38-79 4041-81 4145-86

Jack Sleek Gordon Jones Dan Sikes Fred Haas Bob Stone Denis Hutchinson Billy Casper BobKeUer Lionel Hebert Bill Collins Eric Brown Roberto DeVicenzo Pat Rea a-HampAuld Kel Nagle Jerry Barber Dow Finsterwald Bob (}oalby A1 Mengert BobToski Doug^Ford BobErickson Tommy Bolt Joe Cheves Pete Hessbmer Fred Hawkins Bill Johnston Harvie Ward Bert Weaver ArtSilvestrone

Goody's 500 Qualifiers

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - The qualifiers Thursday for Sunday's Goody's 500 Grand National slock car race at Martinsville Speedway with driver, make

BRYANT REMEMBERS

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Kelvin Bryant, the star running back of the Philadelphia Stars, has not forgotten his college days at the University of North Carolina.

He presented the university with a $10,000 endowment toward academic scholarships in the recreation-administration curriculum.

House of Stuart best in the field!

The great Scotch at the thrifty price.

D U l%[ K E L.

I Ihl D E X

NATIONAL FOOT LEAGUE

Current ranking:

1. Washington. 125.4

2. Dallas 125.2

3. L A. Raiders . .124.1

4. Miami 121.2

5. San FranciKo. 119.1

6. NY. Jets 118.6

7.Pittsburgh.... 118.3

8. Philadelphia . .116.8

9. San Diego . 116.5

10. Atlanta 115.9

11. Green Bay.. . .115.7 12 Seattle 114.9

13. Buffalo 113.9

14. Cincinnati.. .113.6

15. N Y, Giants 113.5

16. Kansas City. 113.3

17. L.A. Rams 113.1

18. Cleveland 112.7

19. New Orleans. .111.9

20. Chicago 111.8

TIE New England 111.8

22. Denver 111.7

23. Detroit 111.4

24. Minnesota ,111.2

25. Tampa Bay. 110.7

26. Houston 107.6

27. St. Louis 107.1

28. Baltimore . . 105.9

This weeks schedule with three points added

to home team:

HIGHER RATER

DIFF

LOWER RATER

Sun.. Sept. 25

Dallas' 128.2

(16)

New Orleans 111.9

Philadelphia' 119.8

(13)

St. Louis 107.1

Miami' 124.2

(11)

Kansas City 113.3

Pinsburgh' 121.3

(10)

New England 111.8

BuHalo' 116.9

(9)

Houston 107.6

LA. Raiders 124.1

19)

Denver' 114 7

N.Y, Jets' 121,6

(9)

L.A. Rams 113.1

Washington 125.4

18)

Seattle' 117.9

San Diego' 119.5

(7)

Cleveland 112.7

San FranciKo' 122.1

(6)

Atlanta 115.9

Chicago 111.8

(3)

Baltimore' 108,9

Minnesota' 114.2

(3)

Delioil 111.4

Tampa Bay' 113.7

(0)

Cincinnati 113.6

Mon., Sept. 26

N.Y. Giants' 116.5

ID

Green Bay 115.7

'home team

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/More TV Premieres Slated Tonight

The Bronx, wrii^ so much honest sentiment from her scenes that hardened soldiers, as well as viewers

desiring something better than Falcon Crest ojj^ Friday nights, are sui^ to be moved.

ByFREDROTHENBERG ,\P Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The best adult comedy of the new season is also the best kiddie show of the new season. Its NBC's Mr. Smith, about a talking orangutan with a 256 I.Q., who becomes a consultant to the U.S. government.

The series debuts tonight with a one-hour episode, and Mr. Smith will wear even better in its regular 30-minute form. Children will get a kick out of the primate doing his thing, and parents will enjoy his sense of humor and satirical swipes at Washington.

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Mr. Smith is played by C.J., the best performer in Clint Eastwoods Every Which Way You Can. Leonard Frey plays Mr. Smiths personal secretary. Nifty special effects give the illusion of Mr. Smith talking. The voice comes courtesy of Ed. Weinberger, coexecutive producer.

Weinberger and Stan Daniels also were behind Taxi" and The Mary Tyler Moore Show. Mr. Smith won't let down fans of those shows.

Through a scientific accident, ,Mr. Smith becomes a superhuman intellect in ape's clothing. I can read Hebrew, but I can't throw a frisbee. Go figure. he says.

It's amusing to see Mr. Smith converse, shake hands and walk around in formal attire, but that would get old quickly - if the lines didn't work.

Bare feet with formal attire isn't done in Washington, even during the Carter administration, Mr, Smith is told after balking at wearing shoes.

One of his bosses says patriotic duty calls Mr. Smith to the capital because; You have the best brains in Washington ... A dubious distinction, perhaps.

The best brains in TV-land are not wasted here. This is one gimmicky show about a creature that is, at last, creative.

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Weekly TV series can enlarge a theatrical films focus, allpwing familiar characters To grow from episode to episode, while raising issues that werent covered by the original movie. M-A-S-H did that, and so might NBCs new series, For Love and Honor.

An Officer and a Gentleman only touched the surface of the emotional and psychological frailties of young men training for careers in the military. For

Love and Honor, which debuts tonight with a two-hour pilot, lo(As as thou^ it can go further.

For Love and Honor has the realistic texture of what life is like for men and, yes, women, training to be paratroopers in peacetime. These are, basicaly, kids, getting on-the-job maturity. Some are leaving the cocora for the first time, others are running away from themselves.

The program will explore their friendships, problems

and cmnparative abilities to cope wiUi the preliminary stages of military life.

Cliff Potts, who was Billie Newmans baseball-playing lover on Lou Grant, is the soothing division leader. Hes the mother hen, who tells war stories to comfort his trainees, acts as a buffer against the bigoted, sadistic captain (G^ Grubbs) and even has time for a secret dalliance with the divisions medic (Shelley Smith).

What should I bring? she asks of their rendezvous.

REUNION CONCERT - The Evenly BrothersPhil (left) and Don (right) the duo with a string of number one hits in the fifties and sixties, on stage at the Royal Albert

Natalie Fined, On Probation

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer Natalie Cole was put on two years probation and fined $300 after pleading guilty to a reckless driving charge, the district attorneys office said.

The Grammy Award-winning daughter of the late singer Nat King Cole had been charged with driving under the influence of drugs. But prosecutors allowed her to plead guilty to a lesser charge, and a Beverly Hills judge imposed the sentence Sept. 13, District Attorneys spokesman A1 Albrgate said Thursday.

BobHopePlays Only 9 Holes

LONDON (AP) - Come-dian Bob Hope, known for his love of hitting a golf, ball as well as tickling a funny bone, called it quits after completing only half the 18-hole course at the British golf tournament named after him.

Bob is feeling very tired, explained tournament organizer John Spurling after the 80-year-old Hope dropped out Thursday after playing nine holes in par.

The tournament raises thousands of dollars for charity.

Hall in London last evening during their reunion concert. It was the first time the brothers had performed since their break-up ten years ago. (AP Laserphoto)

SHIMMER AND SHINE A model walks down the runway in Gloria Swansons strapless dress of amber satin draped at the waist with a large bow. The 1950s creation was one of over 300 articles of clothing owned by Gloria Swanson and auctioned Thursday at the William Doyle Galleries in New York. (AP Laserphoto)

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In NBCs on-air promotions, this relationship is given brazen play, but iats misleading. For Love and Honor is more than another follow-the-bouncing-bed soap.

Although sex certainly is on the minds of the young, robust trainees (and the older officers, too), their passions fit the stories and situations. Theyre not mere contrivances thrown in whenever the action slows.

Sexual tension among co-ed trainees living in close quarters, under heavy stress, is a reality. So is the conflict between the old guard and the new wave on the issue of women in the military.

The issue is raised in the character of Grace Pavlik, the only fem-^e recruit in the barracks. Rachel Ticotin, who was Paul Newmans girlfriend in Fort Apache,

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Passenger Injured In Accident

Cars driven by George Edward Davis of 401 Club Pines Braxton of Mannings Trailer Park Qolli^ about 12:58 p.m. Thursday at the intersection of 14th and Chestnut Streets.

' Police, who said a passenger in the Davis car was injured, ffitimated damage at $2,200 to the Davis car and $1,800 to the Braxton auto.

Collision Leaves One Hurt

A car driven by Jenifer Ruth Yates ofTOlF Cherry Court, and a truck operated by Larry Anthony Brooks of Route 1, Grimesland, collided about 10:42 a.m. Wednesday at the ihtersection of lOth Street and College Hill Drive, causing an estimated $1,000 damage to' the car and $500 damage to the truck.

Investigators reported that Ms. Yates was injured in the collision.

Horse And Pony Show Set

The 24th annual Greenville Horse and Pony Show will be held Saturday at the Pitt County fairgrounds beginning at 9 a.m. The show is co-sponsored by the Greenville Saddle Club and the Greenville Jaycees. Proceeds will go towards providing lights for the fairgrounds area and projects for the BoysClub and cystic fibrosis.

The show, a member of the Coastal Plain Horse Show Circuit, will feature 44 classes. Hunter and western classes will compete in the morning and American Saddlebreds, Morgans, Arabians, Tennessee Walking Horses and roadster-type ponies are scheduled in the afternoon.

In addition to silver and six ribbons per class, awards will be presented.

Admission is free and concessions are available.

Girl Charged In Larceny

A 16-year-old Statesville girl, Kathy Anne Cox, was arrested by Greenville police Thursday on larceny charges after she allegedly took a $30 pair of jeans from J.C. Pennv Co. at Pitt Plaza.

Capt. John Briley said Miss Cox, who ran away from home several months ago, is scheduled for trial Sept. 29.

Arrest Follows Wine Theft

Gregory Paige of 1609 S. Greene St., was arrested by Greenville police Wednesday on larceny charges in connection with an incident at the Kash and Karry at 405 E. 14th St. on Sept. 9.

Capt. John Briley said Paige allegedly took a bottle of wine from the store.

Law Changes Focus Of Workshop

Pitt Community College will offer, in cooperation with the Highway Department, a workshop Monday at 7:30 p.m. in room 221 Whichard Building to discuss changes made under the Safe Roads Act of 1983.

The workshop will be taught by Sgt. Glen Swanson of the state Highway Patrol and will cover changes in the laws concerning offenses while under the influence of alcohol or drugs. It will also cover changes in penalties, types of hearings, levels of punishment and penalties for youthful offenders.

The workshop is open to the public and free of charge. For further information call 756-3130, extension 225.

Weekend Reunion Of VOA Staffers

In The Area

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

More than 100 retired Voice of American Foreign Service staff members began arriving in Greenville today for a weekend reunion. The retirees are coming from as far away as Washington state, California, Texas, Florida, Virginia, Indiana and other states. One is flying in from the African country of Liberia.

Four retirees currently living in Greenville, along with their wives, are coordinating and hosting the reunion -Mr. and Mrs. James W. Alley, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin T. Jepson, Mr. and Mrs. Cleon McKnight, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tate.

Essentially, the reunion is a fellowship gathering de-VQted to renewing old acquaintances and enjoying a weekend in the autumn sunshine of eastern North Carolina.

A welcome party is being held tonight from 7-10 at the Greenville Womans Club, On Saturday, a session of bridge playing at Ramada Inn will begin at 10 a.m. and continue until 3 p.m., with a group dinner at Ramada from 8-10 p.m. Those who play golf will have an opportunity to play at Greenville Country Club beginning at 9:45 a.m.

On Sunday, the retirees have been invited to an outdoor barbecue to be held

at the Bayview-on-the-Pamlico summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Alley.

One of the couples in Greenville for the reunion is Mr. and Mrs. Betty Casey of Kerrville, Texas. When they were residents of Greenville,.

COLLISION INJURES TWO - Two Grifton men were injured Thursday night when their small truck collided with a Seaboard Coastline train near Grifton. According to Trooper Ray Early, a truck driven by Ronnie Graham, of Route 3, Grifton, was headed east on rural paved 1802 when the collision occurred with the southbound train. The engine of the two-car

Police Levy Assault Charge

Francis Brown, 35 of 610 Roosevelt Ave., has been arrested by Greenville police on charges of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, in connection with a June 18 incident here.

Brown, according to Capt. John Briley, allegedly shot Cleveland Sherman of Greenville in the stomach. The incident occured on Pitt Street near the Bonners Lane intersection.

Blood Drive Exceeds Quota

A Bloodmobile visit Thursday at Tyler Dorm at East Carolina University resulted in the collection of 175 pints of blood with 14 deferrals, according to Ruth Taylor of the Pitt Red Cross.

Mrs. Taylor said the collection total exceeded the quota of 150 set for the dorm visit.

A general blood drive is scheduled for Monday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the Moose Lodge here, Mrs. Taylor said.

Poets Involved In Reading

GREENSBORO - Two Greenville poets, Claire Pittman and Jim Rivers, are among five Tar Heel poets who will give a reading at 8 oclock tonight in the library at Guilford College in Greensboro.

Others to read tonight are poets Margaret Boothe Baddour of Goldsboro, Charles Fort, and Paul Jones.

The reading is the opening event of the 1983-84 season of readings and seminars sponsored by the Poetry Center Southeast, Inc. of Guilford College.

Community Club To Meet

The Hillsdale Community Club wilt meet Saturday at 4 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Mary Phillips, 210 Paris Ave., according to Rosa Weaver, club president.

Pitt Schools Air Viewpoint'

The North Carolina Governors School will be the topic of this weeks Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with David Wiggins, Carla Snow and Evette Allyne about their experiences during the summer at Governors School. The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sunday, 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05 p.m.WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.

train struck the rear of the truck, knocking it into a utility pole, causing a brief power outage. A passenger in the truck was listed as Ronald Corey, also of Grifton. Both men were transported to Pitt County Memorial Hospital for treatment. The truck, according to Early, was a total loss. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

New Project Getting Started

Project Child Find, a program to locate children with special needs, is being started by the Pitt County and Greenville City schools systems in cooperation with other local service agencies.

Gov. Jim Hunt has proclaimed September as Child Find Month and each first Monday in the months afterwards for the remainder of the 1983-84 school year as Child Find Day. The project attempts to locate special needs children, inform parents or guardians of available services and to provide information for planning future programs.

Agencies involved include Pitt County Health Department, Department of Social Services, Pitt County Mental Health Center, Area Services for the Blind, and the Developmental Evaluation Clinic.

For further information, contact Ann Harrison, director of programs for exceptional children at Greenville City Schools, or Jean Averette, coordinator of programs for exceptional children at Pitt County Schools.

Harvest Day Activities Set

The Winterville Baptist Churchs Harvest Da\ crafts and baked goods sale will be held Oct, 1, at the Winterville Fire Station, rather than Saturday, as reported in Thursdays edition of The Daily Reflector.

The crafts and baked goods sale will begin at 10 a.m., and a hot dog lunch will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Chicken pastry dinners will be sold from 4:30 p.m. to 6 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.

Sponsored Graduation Program

Burroughs-Wellcome Company sponsored a graduation program for the 21 graduates of the Pre-Release and Aftercare Center in Greenville on Wednesday. Bachelor Benedict Club provided facilities and acted as hosts.

S. E. Hemby, a veteran community volunteer of the PRAC program, made the graduation speech.

The PRAC, located on 108 Dexter Street, serves a 26-county area in eastern North Carolina providing pre-release and parole supervisen for prison inmates.

Students Are Raising Funds

Third Street School students are selling spices to raise funds for the purchase of a film projector and playground equipment. Both individual bottles and sets of four are available.

Students will be selling the spices through Sept 26.

Gospel Concert At School

A gospel concert featuring the Fantastic Vfilliams Brothers of Smithdale, Miss., will be held at H.B. Sugg School in Farmville Oct. 2 at 3 p.m. For more information contact Minnie Edwards at 757-0040.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C

Friday. September 23,1983

I \KTKK 1.1BR.\K\ - Former President Jinini\ ( arter explains the facilities of the (arter Presidential Library and the Carter Center of Kmory University at a press conference Thursday at F^mory U. as (left to

right) .Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, Georgia Gov. Joe F. Harris, and Emory University President James T. Laney look on. Carter termed the center his gift to the nation. (AP Laserphoto)

Four Are Found Guilty In Election Fraud Case

BRYSON CITY. N.C. LAP) - (.'lay County Shenft Howard Barnard and three others were scheduled for sentencing next Tuesday after a federal jury convicted them of election fraud.

The jur\- deliberated about four hours Thursday night before returning guilty verdicts against Barnarci. -Magistrate Gene S.

Harvey " Auberry. local liusinessman Glenn .Martin and county election registrar Frankie Campbell.

The charges stem from an FBI investigation into election corruption in western North Carolina, focused on Clay County.

All defendants were convicted on 30 counts of vote buying and aiding and abetting vote buying in the November 1982 election. Each also was found guilty of one count of conspiracy.

-Additionally, Barnard was convicted of obstruction of justice, while Mrs Campbell was found innocent of voting more than once. One further count ot vote buying and aiding and abetting vote buying against each defendant was dismissed because a witness was unavailable.

U S, District Court Judge Woodrow W. Jones released 'all four defendants on $2,500 bond until sentencing.

Five witnesses had testified that the defendants

offered $50 to $150 to anyone agreeing^vote a straight I)^B8^raic ticket.

The government witnesses said they were told to ask for Mrs Campbell when they went to vote. Some said she 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 a service station outside Hayesville, where they were paid.

During defense testimony Thursday, however. Barnard said he had never seen or participated in vote buying but had heard rumors" that it occurred. Auberry said he had never discussed or seen vote buying.

Both said the money given to government witnesses was to help people having a hard time and wasn't connected to voting.

Attorneys for Mrs. Campbell. 72. and Martin, 76. said their clients wouldnt testify because of their age and physical condition.

Barnard testified he had known Edgar Eugene Jones. 34. the government's prime witness, for four years. Jones, a Hayesville service station owner, has pleaded guilty to conspiracy and 20 counts of vote buying in connection with the FBI probe.

Jones testified Tuesday that he had received money from Barnard to buy votes and was promised a job as a deputy if Barnard was elected sheriff.

Barnard said he had never "given (Jones) a penny" and said he didnt hire Jones because he had a bad reputation,

Barnard said Jones attempted to bribe him by offering him $100 a month if Id let him sell drugs nnd tradeat his station."

AAanChargedIn Girl's Murder

RUTHERFORDTON, N.C. (AP) - A 21-year-old Rutherford County man has been charged with murder in the stabbing death of a 12-year-old girl earlier this month:

Authorities say Bobby Shepherd is charged with murder, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill and first-degree burglary.

Shepherd allegedly stabbed Cindy Sue Wilson to death at her the home of her aunt, Janice Dyer, 23, on Sept. 4.

Shepherd is in Rutherford County Jail. No bond has been set.

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Few Letters Sent Congressmen

ByURRYMARGASAK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressmen say most of their mail on Lebanon is opposed to U.S. Marine presence there, but they add quickly that they arent getting many letters on the subject.

Rep. Bill Alexander, D-Ark., the chief deputy whip for House Democrats, said hes not surprised at the scarcity of letters. He hasnt received any, even though the subject has become a burning issue in Congress.

The American people are waiting for the president to tell them why the Marines are there. He has not articulated a policy, so the American people cant agree or disagree with that policy, he said.

Americans wrote their congressmen about the Korean airliner shot down by the Soviets because the situation was a clear statement" by the Soviet government, Alexander added. He received 126 letters on the presidents Central America policies.

Rep. Clarence D. Long, D-Md., who has received 120 pieces of mail, said he expects the correspondence to increase if you start wasting a large number of Marines who are sitting ducks. Then youre going to get people really upset.

Long has proposed a cutoff of funds for the Marines as of

Dec. 1 - unless the president has by then invoked the 90-day timetable in the War Powers Act, for their continued presence without congressional action.

The congressman said 87 percent of his own constituents and 80 percent of those who wrote from outside his district want an immediate withdrawal.

Most people dont ulations aimed at wiping out prejudice against the handicapped.

We want attitudes to change,/ said council Chairman J.S. Dusenbury, commissioner of the South Carolina Vocational Rehabilitation Department.

Dusenbury said the thrust of the policy, which has been turned over to the president, is to make disabled people independent livers.

Unemployment among the disabled is more than 50 percent, Dusenbury said. Everyone has a right to a job if he wants it. Every disabled person has the right not to be a liability to this country, he said.

Vice-Chairman Justin Dart Jr., a disabled Texas businessman, said We hope the policy will focus the consciousness of the nation on disabled people and on the fact that there are solutions.

Dart, who was stricken with polio in 1948 and is confined to a, wheelchair, traveled to all 50 states and

Scientist Seeking Transplant Answer

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -When reacting to transplanted organs, the bodys immune system tends to do its job too well, says a Duke University Medical Center sckntist.

Dr. Randy Bollinger, assistant professor of surgery and immunology, is among several scientists trying to make the body less resistant to donated organs and thus make transplants more successful.

Drugs can , surpress the immune response of transplant patients, but by lowering the bodys defenses, the chances of infection are increased, Bollinger said.

Cyclosporine7~^hich recently gained tentative approval from the Food and Drug Administratin, is expected to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection somewhat.

"Cyslosporine is more specific than the drugs previously available, and we welcome it as a significant improvement, he said. But whats really needed is a way to manupulate only that part of the immune system that affects the transplanted organ, leaving the bodys resistance to bacteria and other infectious agents intact.

The Duke study will focus on kidney and high-risk corneal transplants, Bollinger said. The project involves 18 scientists from the surgery, immunology, medi-cine, pathology and ophthalmology departments at the hospital.

Scientists hope that certain antibodies can be cloned that will allow the grafted organ time to establish itself without otherwise disrupting the immune system, Bollinger said.

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met with 2,000 handicapped leople to get their comments or the policy.

The policy says the nations 35 million disabled, who suffer from handicaps ranging from blindness to total paralysis, have a right to free public education, jobs and the ability to navigate without physical barriers in their communities.

The report also calls for a nationwide health education campaign to prevent handicaps and elimination of government benefits that make it more profitable for the disabled not to work.

It also points out that the disabled have a responsibility to solve their own problems and meet their potential.

Disabled people are human. They have certain basic rights, said Dusen-bury. The federal government has a positive place and responsibility in this process.

The council compiled the policy as part of its mandated responsibility to direct national policy on the handicapped.

Dusenbury said before the report was drawn up, disabled people everywhere felt programs were really disjointed Every group with a special disability was pushing for themselves. There was a lot of crossfire among the disabled."

Dusenbury said the report will eventually be turned over to Congress. He said he hopes Reagan and future

presidents will adopt the policy.

The policy also calls for: -Tax incentives, loan guarantees and other subsidies to entice private industry and business to hire and educate the handicapped,

-More volunteers to work with the disabled;

-Making help available to disabled people living in rural areas.

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Life In China Is Changed By Consumer Revolution

The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.

Friday. September 23.1983

By VICTORIA GR.AHAM Associated Press Writer PEKING (AP) -Madame, can you truly afford not to buy a White Orchid washing machine?. Just a small down payment...

Get six blank tapes free when-you buy one Peony cassette recorder..."

Three-year warranty on Snowflake refrigerators. If we can't fix it, well replace it. Be the first in your unit. Hurry, theyre going fast..."

Such come-ons have become the rallying cries of Chinas consumer revolution, and they bear the Communist Party's emphatic approval.

After years of egalitarian poverty under Chairman Mao Tse-tung, the new consumer revolution is dramatically raising the standard of living and profoundly changing values.

China has struck off on its own capitalist road paved with consumer goods that once were considered luxuries for party officials or movie stars: avocado-colored refrigerators, washing machines, private telephones, motorcycles, color TV sets, tape recorders, stereo systems, cameras, air conditioners, gold trinkets and fancy clothes.

And there may be no turning back.

Madame Li Shuying, a prosperous suburban pig farmer, couldn't afford not to buy a $143 White Orchid washing machine with a spin drier.

The wife of 4 busy Peking veterinarian and mother of two active children, she raised 52 pigs last year and earned S2,7(X), After a hard day on the pig farm, the 37-year-old peasant woman stiil must feed her family, do the cleaning and washing, check th 'counts and try to relaxinirootoftheTV.

'T just love my washing machine, its so convenient," she said, "Now I have more time for my family and my work. Many rural families like us want washing machines since they spend so much time on production Last year her family bought a television set and an electric fan - this year the washing machine.

"Next year were going to buy a refrigerator," sh said..

this rampant, unabashed consumerism would have been denounced as bourgeois decadence a few years ago. And still today critics say that expectations of material well-being are rising dangerously high and fast - beyond Chinas ability to meet them.

China, they fear, is departing from the socialist road and spiritual values and opening a Pandoras box of insatiable materialism, growing gaps between the haves and have-nots, inequalities. envy, greed and frustration.

During the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, people who had refrigerators often covered them with a cloth or board. Shops delivered them at night to avoid spiteful neighbors who would turn the buyers in.

We had the money to buy a refrigerator long ago, but we didnt want to be different from other people, said Gao Xijin, 63, vice president of the Peking Mechanical Institute. We did not want to appear special

But Gao and thousands now line up happily to be among Pekings 30,000 proud owners of refrigerators.

Under the policies set down by Chinas current leader, Deng Xioaping. people are encouraged to work hard, earn more and live well. Since 1979 China has shifted its economy from heavy industry to light industry. Defense plants that once turned out tanks are switching to sewing machines, electric fans, radios and bicycles.

Last year China produced 2.5 million washing machines and 3 million cassette recorders - double the 1981 output. It turned out 99,900 refrigerators - an 80 percent increase, 5.2 million TV sets

- a 90 percent increase, and 24.2 million bicycles, up 38 percent. This years production will be higher and China announced it will produce 700,000 color televisions in 1985.

Still it cant keep up with the demand of 1.1 billion people. Neon signs, shop windows, TV commercials, billboards and the neighbors latest acquisition all fuel the desire for more.

There is a proliferation of competing brands, consumer awareness, and comparison shopping. Discriminating shop^rs are so conscious of status brands that counterfeit bicycles and trademarks are cropping up in some places.

For the first time consumers can choose. Shall it be the Pheonix brand - the Cadillac of Chinese bicycles

- for 260 yuan $130? Or the Flying Pigeon for $95? The double Wild Goose washer from Chengdu for $117 or the Hundred Flowers brand from Hefei for $108? The White Cloud refrigerator for $101 or the Long River for $118?

The revolution is based on rising purchasing power. The average worker earned about $400 in 1982, but an average worker at the Peking Refrigerator Factory earns about $500.

Private entrepreneurs and restaurant owners, once banned as capitalist exploiters, now can make thousands of dollars a year. Although the average peasant income was $135 last year, many earn more and face criticism from the less well-off.

Some peasant families earned the equivalent of more than $20,000 through various undertakings in one year. The 160 families in Xingshisi Brigade in Heilongjiang all live in new houses, earned $500 per person and all own color televisions.

Credit buying and the installment plan, once banned as usur;, now mean the good things of life are not beyond the reach of an average family and modern young marrieds.

College students pool their money to buy washing

machines so they can have more time to play and study.

He Sumei and her husband are Peking factory workers, together earning only $50 a month. But they recently spent almost three times that much on a top-line washer.

Sure its expensive for us, but furnishing your room with one like this gives you a sense of modernity and fashion, and we like that, Madame He said.

In bygone days, brides used to be content with the three things that go around and the one that ticks -sewing machine, bicycle, fan and wristwatch. Dr they

wanted the modest 24 legs - the total number of legs on furniture considered essential. *

Now they aspire to no fewer than the 52 legs."

Nie Chung Bie, a 25-year-old army doctor planning to marry next year, frantically is trying to scrape together enough money to satisfy his sweethearts demands.

Not only does she expect the things that everyone else has, like a washing machine, refrigerator and sewing machine," he said, now she is asking for a stereophonic recorder with four speakers and a motorbike.

Speaking of Your Health...

Lester L Coleman, M.H.

Hopeful News in Medicine

valuable drug. Doctors will probably soon be trying the drug and carefully evaulating its potential.

An interesting contribution has recently been made to patients with asthma. Dr. Prem Kumar, of the I^ouisiana State University Medical Center in New Orleans, made an interesting observation.

In a study he found that a good number of persons with asthma or nasal allergies are sensitive to molds that grow in their own automobile air conditioning systems. Many of these patients experienced a worsening of symptoms when exposed to these molds, Dr. Kumar said.

He noted that nine out of 10 asthmatics and four out of five patients with allergies of the nose had worse symptoms when riding in a car with the air conditioning in operation. He found, too, that there was a distinct diminution of the respiratory function of these patients.    ^

Dr. Kumar and his associates did an excellent study of these patients and molds that were cultured from the outflow ducts of the air conditioners.

It is a fascinating observation and should be considered by asthmatics and sufferers of severe allergies.

* * *

A new drug, baclofen, is sometimes used to treat patients with multiple sclerosis. It is an antispastic drug that has been found to reduce severe muscular low back pain.

Dr. Francis Dates recently reported an interesting study at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Clinical Pharmacology. A large series of patients with acute low back syndrome with muscle spasms    and . functional

disability    of less than two

weeks were treated with this drug.

Patients with moderate pain improved only slightly. Dramatic improvement occurred    in patients with

more severe pain. In addition to the drug, heat therapy and bed rest were also prescribed.

The side effects were minimal.    The preliminary

studies certainly suggest that it may turn out to be a

Controlling the diet, especially the salt intake, can be a most effective treatment in a majority of cases of patients with high blood pressure. This    important

statement was made by Dr. Joseph M. Pitone, of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.

Dr. Pitone said, About 85 percent of patients with high blood pressure    are salt-

sensitive. There    may be too

much salt and calcium in the cells of these    individuals

leading to the water logging of blood vessel cells resulting in swelling and constriction.

If this regime alone is not effective in controlling the hypertension lor high blood pressure), then many of the new and important drugs that are now available can be introduced to supplement the control of this serious disease of mankind.

Deregulation Plans Outlined

WASHINGTON (AP) -Transportation Secretary Elizabeth H. Dole has sent draft legislation to the White House outlining proposals to fully deregulate the interstate trucking industry.

Mrs. Dole told the Senate Commerce Committee that the proposal was being discussed and debated in the Office of Management and Budget. But she indicated that the Reagan administration may hold off sending the proposal to Capitol Hill until more support has developed within the trucking industry for partial deregulation steps already implemented.

Mrs. Dole acknowledged the trucking industry had the worst year in 1982 that theyve had since the 30s.

V

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NARROW STREETS? David Davis, 3, of Roanoke (Va.), found himself a narrow maze of streets - or it would seem that way. as he explored old Roanoke city street signs that were for sale at a recent neighborhood park festival. Money from the sale of the signs, which had been recently replaced with more

modern ones, was to go to a mini-grant program of the Roanoke Neighborhood Parinership, Davis dad, Joe, was nearby with his camera recording his explorations. (AP Laserphoto)

f

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s. >

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   20    Daily    Reflector,    Greenville.    N    C.      Friday.    September    23.1983

PEANUTS

vtS,5lR,ITMlNKI KNOU) It'MV YOU PUT All THESE UilRES ON MY HEAP,..

AFTER! fall Asleep

YOU CAN TELL IF I'M

narcoleptic if my

"RAPIPEVE MOVEMENT" BEOINS RI6HT AuiAY...

T

INCIPENTALLYHOU) IS MY FRIENC; 5Nf)0PV, P0IN6 IN THE nest room?

//'//// ' II (

here's THE UlORLPUlAR I FLVIN6 ACE BEIN6 TORTREP BY THE ENEMY...

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WHY ARE YOU ^ STARING AT Y0UR5ELP ^jN THE MIRROR

I WAS JUST WISHING THERE WERE TWO OP ME N-

THEN I COULD SEND HIM TO W0RI< AND I COULD GO BAC< TO BED

BEETLE BAILEY

-YOU SEE BEETLE, TELL ^IM I WANT 5EE MIM

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LET ME YWOLPYOU

IF I SEE

YOU NOT

H/M AGAIN,

SEE TO IT

GET THIS STRAIGHT-

TUiOSeA0OT ALL THIS ^ 0UT6IPE?/

FRANK & ERNEST

OFFICE SUPPLIES

I Bought a New TYPfwPirep. ALi. You I HAvP TO X> TO A ; GPEAT wPiTEfi I TO    I

flGUPE OUT wHicVt KEY^ TO hit. V, I

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FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CH^ F AR

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CANT REAIW (WAKE THE GRADE.'

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SOME HAUE BEEN IN SCHOOL SO LONG,

THEV'RE GETUNG MEDICAID.'

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FOCUS

( ONSTITin iONAL (Y)NFLKT

Approved in 197.5. the War Powers Act rniuirts the Pn>sident to eonsult with ('ongress hel'ore sending troops abroad. In theeaseol hostilities, he must Itriiif,' them honif' within 90 days unless Congress declares war or permits him to let the troops fi^ht. The Act ^'rew out of a power stru^rgle rooted in the ('(institution. 'I'hat document fiives ('ontiress the ri^dit to declare war, whileestalilishinKthe President as (ommander-in-('hief.

DO YOU KNOW - What President vetoed the War Powers Act?

THURSDAYS ANSWER The vernal equinox occurs each year about March 20.

'*-.1 ^ i    Kit,,wliML'r    ln(lu..-lni    s    111,    lilh.t

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1983

'W WYOUR DAILY    _

Horoscope

from the Carroll RIghtar Inatituta JL

GENERAL TENDENCIES; You will have lots of interest in making some new conditions that interest you come true and you would be wise to carefully consider them and not ,et your enthusiasm run away with you.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You have many ideas but cant decide which to get in motion as yet, so keep studying them and tomorrow you know better.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Good day to sit in the quiet of your study or office and decide on new outlets that fascinate you. Take time to meditate.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Being too busy with other affairs, you have been neglecting personal matters of late, so get at them now. Use care in motion,

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Get into career affairs early and achieve a good deal, plus being more efficient at them. Socialize with friends.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) You have some new and progressive course you want to put in motion, so go ahead with it, even if you have to change some partners.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Good day to make business plans that will extend far into the future and talk the matter over first with an expert,

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Try to gain more good will from associates and you will get better results in the future. Co-workers re helpful.

SCORPIO (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Get into discussions about other sports and amusements than the usual with friends for the near future.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jaq, 20) Change your attitude somewhat and bring more harmony into your home and be happier there in the future.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Good day for shopping, running errands, making out reports and looking into the newspaper for good opportunities, ideas.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Get busy doing whatever can bring you a greater abundance in the days ahead, and don't spend much money.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .... he or she will be one of those charming young persons who will fit right into the current swim of things, so. as parents be alert to what IS going on also, and then you can assist your progeny more in realizing his, or her potential.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

c 1983 McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Uncle Sam Has Corrected Abhy

WASHINGTON (AP) -Columnist Abigail Van Buren, heeding advice from Uncle Sam, is correcting erroneous information she published that prompted a flood of letters and calls to Congress and the Social Security Administration.

The whole thing started when the syndicated Dear Abby column alerted newspaper readers to what was called an inequity" in Social Security retirement benefits for people born from 1917 to 1921.

Social Security officials said Wednesday they had sent their own letter to Abby, asking her to correct her column on the so-called "notch" that ran Sept. 5.

In that column^ someone who signed herself Notch Your Baby complained that people born from 1917 to 1921 would get lower Social Security benefits than those born before and after those years.

Abby urged readers of her column, which is run by 900 newspapers, to write to their congressmen protesting this inequity.

In fact, due to a foul-up in a Social Security benefit formula that Congress wrote in 1972, those born in 1916 do get over-generous benefits from Social Security, A retiree who turned 65 in 1981 can get as much as $110 a ^month more than a co-f worker who paid the same

Crossword By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS

46 Grow older

2Press

1 Topper

41 Give in

STVsGar-

4 Praise

45 Headliner

roway

8 Hacienda

48 Mixed drink

4 Central

house

50 Othello

Americans

12 Period

villain

5 Have-in

13-Boleyn

51 Pot starter

the hole

14 Bards river

52 Envision

6 Prefix for

15 Fit together 53 Midday

com or

snugly

54 Trial

verse

17 Budget

55 Dutch

7 Deceived

concern

commune

8 Proof

18 Weak-

DOWN

readers

blooded

1 One of Zeuss

mark

19 Exploit

loves

9 - Maria

21 Chemical suffix

22 Fine point

26 Surveys

29 Britons brew

30 Actress Lupino

31 Gone

32 Tablet

33 Blissful place

34 Guitarist Paul

35 Cunning one

36 Beseech

37 Require

39 Enemy

Avg. solution time: 27 min.

9-23

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

10 Offspring

11 Hill dweller >

16 Etiquette

expert Post

20 The briny

23 Assistant

24 Brainstorm

25 Hit ground

26 Colorless

27 Actor Reginald

28 Final

29 Assessment

32 Skunk

33 Vote In

35 Sweet, pear-shaped fruit

36 Pants feature

38 Slugger Hank

39 Bits of truth

42 Simplicity

43 Went out, as a fire

44 (}en. Robt. -

45 Transgress

46 Chinese truth

47 Past

49 A Chorus Line song

53

27

46

28

38

47

40

35

32

48

54

29

19

22

20

36

39

49

33

30

42

52

55

10 11

43

44

CRYPTOQUIP    9-23

SOX WNNO, CSB-VXKWXOXB ZSCXO-BSUZXOU KSB ZSVVXOU?

Yesterdays Cryptoquip HUGE DEER HUNTER NEEDS HINDSIGHT.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: B equals D.

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 Kinfl Featurei Syndicate. Inc

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

19B3 Tribune Ck)mpany Syndicata, Inc

LOSE A TRICK IN TIME

Neither vulnerable. East deals.

NORTH'

4 105 ^ J643 0 54

A 10754

dr^w the outstanding trumps. The rest of his hand is high.

EAST

32

V KQ7 0 KJ1087

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North

Pass

taxes but was born in 1917.

But that old benefit formula was driving the system into bankruptcy and Congress voted in 1977 to correct its error and phase out the formula.

It left the formula intact for those born in 1916 - who would first be eligible at age 62 for early retirement benefits in 1978 - and it provided a less generous, transitional benefit for those born between 1917 to 1921.

That group will get less than the 1916 babies, but their retirement benefits will still be somewhat more generous than for those born in 1922 or later.

Jim Brown, a spokesman for Social Security, said Social Security offices and * congressional offices were inundated with thousands of calls about the notch since Abbys advice appeared.

The notch has been widely reported previously and an attempt by some lawmakers to raise the retirement benefits for those in the transitional group failed last year. Social Security says it would cost billions of dollars to give everyone the same level of benefits as those born in 1916 are getting.

Alan McDermott, managing editor of the Universal Press Syndicate, which distributes Dear Abby, said the new column was sent out for use Sept. 26.    ^

WEST

986 ^ A1098 0 2

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SOUTH

AKQJ74

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Void The bidding:

East South West 1 0 < 4 Pass Pass

Opening lead: Two of 0.

There are times when you cannot avoid losing a trick in a certain suit. But you might still be able to control your fate by losing that trick when it suits you, rather than the opponents.

There is no "right" wav to treat South's hand after East opens the bidding with one diamond. South's decision to barge into four spades was as good as any.

West's lead of the two of diamonds was a marked singleton. Declarer was faced with five losers in the red suits. One of those would go on the ace of clubs. The other would have to be ruffed.

The thoughtless declarer would pay no heed to the opening lead. He would win the queen of diamonds and attempt to cash the ace. West would ruff and shift to a trump, and declarer would have to concede down one.

The correct technique is not difficult to spot. Declarer should win the first trick as cheaply as possible and, in-stead of trying to cash the ace, concede a diamond trick immediately. The defenders have no counter.

The best they can do is win the diamond, cash two heart tricks and shift to a trump. Declarer wins in hand and gets to dummy by ruffing a diamond with ,the ten of trumps. Now he discards his remaining diamond loser on the ace of clubs and returns to his hand with a club ruff to

PUBLIC

NOTICES

FILE NO. 83 SP 273 INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORETHECLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE: Amanda Jean Oiler, A Minor Child

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: MACK BUTLER or JOHN DOE, the biological father of a female child born on or about August 28. 1981, in Wilmington, New Hanover County, North Carolina, TAKE NOTICE, that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed on the 29th day of June, 1983, in the above entitled special proceed ing The nature of the relief being sought is the adoption of the minor child above referenced.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than the 2nd day of November, 1983, which

ly ot

said date is forty (40) days after the fir.......

date of this first publication of notice herein, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service, against you will apply to fne Court ight.

This 20fh day ot September, 1983.

for the relief sough

lay ot Seal PERRY.PERRYi. PERRY

Attorneys for Petitioner By

Dan E. Perry, Attorney P.O. Box 607 Kinston, NC 28501 Tel.: (919) 523-5)07 September 23, 30; October 7, 14, 1983

IN THE GENERAL COURT

OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF BRUCE F. HADLEY, DECEASED

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Executor of the estate of BRUCE F. HADLEY,

late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of BRUCE F. HADLEY to present them to the undersigned Executor, or his at torneys, on or before March 19, 1984. or this notice will be plead In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 12th day of September, 1983 HERBERT W. HADLEY P.O. Box 2645 Greenville, NC 27834 Executor of the Estate of Bruce F Hadley, Deceased GAYLORD, SINGLETON, McNALLY 8, STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834

^^tember 16, 23, 30; October 7,

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of the estate ot Guy V. Peaden lata of

Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is

to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said dacaased

to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before March 2,

1984 or this notice or sale will be pleaded In bar of thair recovtry. All persons Indebted to said estate

please make Immediate payment It, 1983.

This 29th day of AuSu.r Flossie W. Peaden Route 5, Box 250 Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Guy V. Peaden, decaai Septamber 2,9,1(1, 23, H

icaaaed

t-





PUBLIC NOTICES

FILENO UJM

FILM NO:

INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE JUVENILE COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE: ROBERT BENJAMIN VICK, AMINOR CHILD

SERVICEOF PROCESS

BY PUBLICATION TAKE NOTICE that a Petition seeking to terminate your parentai rights for Robert Benfamin Vick, a minor chiid, has been fiied in the above entitied action. The nature ot the reiiet being sought is as foiiows: Termination ot your parental ri^ts.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than October 13, 1983, and upon your tailure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

You are hereby notified that as the parent of the above named minor child, you are entitled to appointed counsel it you are in digent provided you request counsel at or before the time of the hearing on termination of your parental rights. You are further notified that you are entitled to attend any hearing affecting your parental

rights.

This

exhibit them to Charles L, A^Lawhorn, Jr., Resident Process PU*''* to N.C.G.S. o" or before March 12, 1W4, at Post Office Box 8188, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, or be barred from their recovery tutors of the ^edent are asked

to make immediate payment to the named Process Agent.

DAVID JOSEPH CARISEO

-----  CARISEO

Executor ot the Estate of * Cariseo OF COUNSEL:

Charles L.McLawhorn, Jr.

Post Office Box 8188 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 September 9, 16, 23,30, 1983

is the 25 day of August, 1983 WILLIAMSON, HERRIN STOKES&HEFFELFINGER BY

ANNHEFFELFINGER

BARNHILL

210 S. WASHINGTON STREET P.O BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 September 2, 9, 16, 23, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Ad ministrator or Administratrix of the estate ot Minnie Lee Stokes Cox late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate ot said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator or Ad ministratrix on or before March 9, 198i or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate

please make immediate payment.  .......  <ber,    1983.

This 6th day of Septem Van Buren Cox Route 3, Box 274 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Mildred Cox Porter 1503 Greenville Blvd Greenville, N.C 27834 September 9, 16, 23, 30, 1983

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

AND DEBTORS OF

EVA REBECCA DAVENPORT JACKSON

All persons, firms and corpora tions having claims against Eva Rebecca Davenport Jackson, de ceaMd, are notified to exhibit them to George Claudius Jackson, as Executor of the decedent's estate on or before March 12, 1984, at Route 6, Box 87, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, or be barred from their recovery Debtors of the decedent are asked to make immediate payment to the above named Exec utor

GEORGE CLAUDIUS JACKSON

Executor of the Estate of Eva Rebecca Davenport Jackson OF COUNSEL Charles L.McLawhorn,Jr Post Office Box 8188 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 September 9, 16, 23, 30, 1983

015

Chevrolet

1*73 MALIBU 2 door hard top Drives good. Runs quiet. (450. 752-6852.

1*73 MONTE CARLO LANOAU.

Fully equipped. New paint. Good condlton, 825 283) or 758 1539 ask lor John.

1*74 NOVA. 4 door, needs work. $500 negotiable. Call 752 8619atter 3.

1*75 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC 9

passenger wagon. Full power. Priced to sel I! 756 8444 days.

Shopping for a new car? The most complete listings in town are found in the Classified ads every day.

1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2 + 2, 5

speed, good mechanical condition. $1500 758 2300 days.

1*74 CHEVY MONZA, great condi tion, 3 speed with stereo cassette included. $2200. 758 4799.

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Having qualified as Ad ministratrix of the Estate of JAMES DANIELS, late of Pitf County, North Carolina, the un dersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is Post Office Box 197, Winterville, North Carolina, 28590, on or before the 23rd day of March, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in'bar of fheir recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment lo the undersigned.

This the 20th day of September, 1983.

LizzieC. Henderson Post Office Box 197 Winterville, N.C. 28590 Michael A. Colombo JAMES, HITE CAVENDISH 8, BLOUNT

Attorneys at Law

Attorney ____

PostOftice Drawer 15 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 September 23, 30; October 7, 14, 1983

NOTICE

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of Willie V. Hardee, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the

undersigned or its attorneys,

  .. ....

Williamson, Herrin, Stokes -felfinger, on or before March 23, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned This the 19th day ot September, 1983.

Mabel Lee Hardee Administratrix of the Estate of Willie V. Hardee, Deceased RFD2, Box 583 Ayden, NC 28513 Milton C. Williamson Williamson, Herrin, Stokes 8, Hefteltinger Attorneys ai Law P O Box 552 Greenville, NC 27834 September 23, 30, October 7, 14, 1983

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

AND DEBTORS OF

JOSEPH E. BROWN All persons, firms and corpora tions having claims against Joseph E Brown, deceased, are notified to exhibit them to Jane B. Brown, as Executrix of the decedent's estate on or before March 25, 1984, at Route 2, Box 525 M 1, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, or be barred from their recovery. Debtors of the decedent are asked to make im mediate payment to the above named Executrix.

JANE B BROWN Executrix of the Estate of Joseph E. Brown OF COUNSEL:

Charles L McLawhorn, Jr.

Post Office Box 8188 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 September 23, 30, October 7, 14, 1983

NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION

OF

SUPERIOR INVESTORS, INCORPORATED NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Articles ot Dissolution of SUPERIOR INVESTORS, INCOR PORATED, a North Carolina cor poration, were tiled in the Office of the Secretary of State of North Carolina on the 22nd day of August, 1983, and that all creditors of and claimants against the corporation are required to oresenf their re spective claims an'd demands im mediately in writing to the cor poration so that it can proceed to cpilect its assets, convey and dis pose of its properties, pay, satisfy and discharge its liabilities and obligations and do all other acts required to liquidate its business and affairs This the 30th day of August, 1983. SUPERIOR INVESTORS, INCORPORATED 701 Dickinson Avenue Greenville, North Carolina 27834

SPEIGHT, WATSON AND BREWER P 0 Drawer 99 Grgenville, NC 27835 0099 Telephone: 919 758 1141 September 2, 9, 16, 23,1983

NOTICE OF SERVICE

OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE

SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEJ=ORE THE CLERK FILE NO.

IN RE: THE ADOPTION OF LILLIAN ROBERTA HARTSELL TO WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER STEVENSON

TAKE NOTICE that a petition for the adoption of Lillian Roberta Hartsell has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows:

1. The adoption of said minor child, Lillian Roberta Hartsell.

2. For an adoption to be entered allowing the adoption proceeding to proceed without your consent, pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes48 6(a)(1).

YOU ARE REQUIRED to make defense to such pleading not later than 40 days after the 16th day of September, 1983, exclusive of said date, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that a hearing on this matter will be held on the 1st day of November, 1983, at 10:00 a.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, in the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County.

This the 16th day of September, 1983.

Nancy E. Short

PUBLIC NOTICE

STATEOF NORTH CAROLINA ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT COMMISSION NOTICE OF APPROVAL OF A PRETREATMENT PROGRAM On the basis ot staff review tor compliance with pretreatment rules and regulations 40 CFR 403 Federal and 15 NCAC 2H 0900 State notice is hereby given for the approval of local pretreatment programs by the Division ot Environmental Man agement to the following City Town

Greeenville Utilities Commission, (Approved July 25, 1983)

Contentnea Metropolitan Sewage District, (Approved September 9, 1983)

The pretreatment program pro vides lor the administration and enforcement of pretreatment standards Questions concerning this approval should be directed to Salahdin Abdul Haqq at 919 733 5083

Forrest R. Westall For Robert F Helms, Director Division of Environmentai Management Date9 16 83

Newspaper: Greenville Daily Re (lector

September 23, 1983

Nancy fc .bhort CHARLES L. McLAWHORN, JR., P.A.

PostOftice Box8188 Greenville, North Carolina 27834

(919) 752 2435 September 18, 23, 30, 1983

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS

BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE

SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK FIbENO.

IN RE: THE ADOPTION OF ROSE MARIE HARTSELL TO: WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER STEVENSON TAKE NOTICE that a petition for the adoption of Rose Marie Hartsell has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought Is as fol lows:

, 1. The adoption of said minor child. Rose Marie Hartsell.

. 2. For an order to be entered allowing the adoption proceeding to prpceed without your consent, pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes 48'6(a)(l).

YOU ARE REQUIRED to make defense to such pleading not later than 40 days after the 16th day of September, 1983, exclusive of said date, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the

relief sought.    __

YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that a hearing on this matter will be held on the 1st day of November, 1983, at 10:00 a.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard. In the office of the Clerk

of Superior Court of Pitt County This t

the 16th day of September, 1983.

Nancy C. Short . CHAftLES L.MCLAWHORN,

. JR.,P.A.

* Post Office Box 8)88 ' Greenville, North Carolina,

'    27834

   (*1*) 752 2435

September 18, 33, 30,1*83

NTiiT6H6IT6<T

AND DEBTORS OF

JOSEPH A. CARISEO All pr*ons, firms and corpora tions haeing clalRis against Joseph A. Carls |>, deceased, are notified to

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

CREDIT PROBLEMS? No Credit? Slow credit? No problem with furniture finance. We specialize in furniture, TV and stereo financing. Pick up the phone and call Mike at 757 0438 or Robert at 757 0451 for further details.

FREEI Stop in and register at Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary.

GRAND OPENING! I September 19, 1983. M & W's Country Crafts and Gifts. Vj mile from Pitt County Fairgrounds on Ram Horn Road. All kinds of craft Items for home, special gifts for friends free gift wrapping. Hours: 9to5. 758-4045.

LIVEINSTANTWEATHER 24 Hours PHONE 975-2013

010

AUTOMOTIVE

Oil

Autos For SBle

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer In Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.

013

Buick

1*73 ELECTRA. Orig Inal owner. Low mileage. Must sell immediately! Price negotiable. 757-0110.

1*80 toUICK REGAL, blue, alri stereo, cruise, tilt wheel, new tires. High mlleAge but In excellent condition. $4950 756 8997 after 4.

1*82 REGAL. 21,000 miles. Diesel. $10,700. Call 746 4143.

014

Cadillac

1*74 CADILLAC, good condition. Gas heater, five brick. Call 752 0773 anytime.

015

Chevrolat

1*68 NOVA. 4 door, needs some work. $350. Call 758 6986anytime.

1*71 MALIBU. 4 door, hard top, V-8, automatic, air, AM/FM cassette, 60,000 orlglani miles. Good condl tIon. $1500. 754 3826 after 4 p.m.

1*77 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Loaded, clean. Reduced from $4250 to $3250. Call Henry, 752 4332,

1981 CORVETTE, navy and silver, excellent condition. 10,000 miles, loaded Call 946 8565.

017

Dodge

1974 DODGE COLT, air, 5 speed, AM/FM radio, very good condition, $1,300. Call 756 5866 after 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.

1971 FORD PINTO, good trans portation for $500. Call 756 3517 after 6 p.m.

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

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

1973 PLYMOUTH VALIENT, 6

cylinder, air, radio. Call after 5 p.m., 746 4836.

1975 OUSTER, 4 cylinder, good condition, new paint job, air, AM/FM stereo radio, $1200. Call anytime after 4, 752 9486

023

Pontiac

1981 PONTIAC PHOENIX. 4 speed, luggage rack, loaded. $4200. 758 9157 from 9 5, 752 5556 after 6 p.m.

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.

HONDA PRELUDE, 1979 Here's one that has been pampered! Log ot every mile and penny spent. 54,000 miles, regular gas, electric sunroof, AM/FM cassette with 1401 Bose sound system, 5 speed. $5,000. 752 8889 atter 5 p.m.

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 ad justment, $14 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage, 756 3796.

1968 VOLVO SEDAN, new exhaust, new brakes, good radlals, good gas mileage, $600. 758 4019

1971 FIAT 124 Sedan, $500. Call 756 2301.

1973 MG MIDGET Good condition Best offer 810 College View. 752 2296.

1973 220D MERCEDES, 61,000 miles, dark blue, $6500. Call 756 3241 after 5 p.m.

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 stat ion wagon, liftback with automatic transmission, air, tilt wheel, stereo, wire wheel covers, buckets seats, blue, excellent con dition. $4500. 795 3690after 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, BB8.T, 752 6889.

1982 MAZDA, 4 door sedan, excellent condition, asking $5995. Call after6p.m., 752-5008.

1982 VOLKSWAGEN Rabbit Diesel, 27,000 miles, 4 speed, air, AM/FM cassette, super gas mileage. 756 2684.

1983 DATSUN 280ZX, 2 + 2, T roof, loaded, 4,200 miles. $4850. Call 758 0041 after 4.

1983 NISSAN Sentra Statlonwagon. 5 speed, AM/FM, luggage rack, 9,000 miles. $6,000 or best offer. 756 2488 until 7:30 pm., ask tor 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 To Keep". Toyota East, 109 Trade Street, 756 3228. ,

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.

TANZER 16 DAY Sailer. 2 years old. New 3 horsepower motor. $3295. 753 5758

14' FIBERGLASS tri-hull with 18 horsepower electric start Evlnrude. Rebuilt trailer with new tires, bearings and wheels. Boat, motor, and trailer, $800 firm. 756-9615.

16' ALUMINUM Runabout. Good condition, $200. Call 758 0587.

16' GRADY WHITE. 85 horsepower Evlnrude boat motor and trailer. $1500.1-524 4247 after 5.

19' MFG CAPRICE, 1977 200 Johnson, tilt and trim, tandum galvanized trailer, CB, depth finder, top and side curtains, all in excellent condition. $6500. 758-2300 days.

1*74 COBIA 18 open bow, 115 Evlnrude with trailer and accessories. Immaculate. 1-946-8475.

1*74 WESTWIND BOAT, 165 horse power Mercrulse, new Cox trailer. Electric winch. 758 3839 or 752 2065.

1982 21' DIXIE, Inboard/outboard 470 Mercrulser, less than 40 hours. Extras. $13,000. 355-2166after 4 p.m.

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.

036

Cycles For Sale

XL 250, On and off road. 1000 miles. Like neyv, $1000. Call 758 3169.

1*72 HONDA 350. Needs good home and owner with time to ride. 13K miles. Garaged. $250.752-4440.

1*76 HONDA XR75, $150 negotiable. 1978 Kawasaki KE175, street and dirt bike, $500 negotiable. Call 355 6976.

1*74 YAMAHA XT-500. Low mile age. Good condition. $450. 758 6243.

1*Z7 YAMAHA. Good condition. $475. Call 758 6679.

1*81 CB 750 HONDA. $1350. 355-6613 after 6:30p.m.

1*81 'HONDA Custom. Drive shaft, . cruise -ontrol, sissy bar and rack. 'Excellent condition, $1500. 754 1259.

036

Cycles For Sale

039

Trucks For Sale

1*53 WILLIS JEEP. Runs good 756 7703.

1*71 CHEVY PICKUP. Has cab, 2 saddle tanks, and radio. Excellent condition $2100. 1 946 4480 or 1 946 9944.

1*73 DATSUN PICKUP. Good con dition. $1300. 757 1173 after 7 p.m.

1*76 CHEVY PICKUP. Straight 6, needs some body work. $1500 firm Call 758-1020 day Saturday and Sunday.

1*76 DODGE VAN, fully customized with air, running gear perfect. Call 746 4660 or 746 2422.

1*76 K10 BLAZER 4 wheel drive, all accessories, like new. Asking $4900. Call anytime 825 1728.

1*78 GMC pickup. Automatic V 8. clean. 756 55l8after6p.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

1981 CJS JEEP. 6 cylinder. Good condition. 746 2062.

1983 DODGE VAN. Air. automatic, power steering and brakes. AM/FM. 2 customized captain's chairs and 2 barrel chairs. Excellent condition. $9300. 757 0416.

1983 JEEP WAGONEER Ltd . dark blue, dark tan interior. Loaded completely less sun roof. 5800 miles, brand new. 752 7950

1983 2500 VANOURA Conversion Van Brown on brown. Low miles, loaded. $18.500. Financing available for qualified buyer. 756 5621.

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, PO 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 Contentnea Trailer Park, Farmville. Call 753 2404.

WILL KEEP CHILDREN in my

home in Camelot area. Call Nita, 756 9814.

WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home. Educational activities, hot lunches, large play area Located off Memorial Drive. 756 3340.

046

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups Champion Pedigree Wormed, shots. 1-792-7495, Wilmington.

AKC REGISTERED Lab puppies. Wormed, all shots. $100. 753 3692 or 753 3958

AKC REGISTERED German Shep herds, good breed. Call 758 3693.

FEMALE DOBERMAN. 3 months old. 746 2370.

FREE PUPPIES to good home! Part Chow and part Lab. 6 weeks old. 757 1755 anytime.

LAB PUPS, Field and Bench Champion produced, AKC regis tered, top bloodline for hunting and show. Excellent pedigree with 30 Field Champions in 5 generations, including National Derby Winner and Dual Champion. Call 793 3336.

MUST SELL! Registered Cocker Spaniel, 4 months old, $65. Call atter 6, 752 3969

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.

2 MALE SIBERIAN Husky puppies. 7 weeks old. 1 male for $100, other $75. 752 2916 or 756 6747.

051

Help Wanted

ACCOUNTING MANAGER tor CBS

affiliate TV station in Greenville, NC. 4 year accounting degree and a minimum of 2 years accounting experience required. Prior broacT cast and or Columbine Computer experince considered a plus. Areas of 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 ot accounting personnel. No phone calls. Please send resume with salary history Jo the General Manger, WNCT TV, Box 898, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE/M F.

BACKSTAGE Hair Studio now ac cepting applications tor employment. Call 752-9578 for apoointment.

BRODY'S DOWNTOWN has an

opening for salesperson for better sportswear and ready-to-wear. Experience preferred. Congenial co-workers. No night work. Apply Brodys Downtown, Mrs. Bailey.

COUPLE NEEDED: For HUD

subsidized apartments located In N. C. Experience preferred in some office and maintenance work. Additional training will be given as needed. Apartment furnished with small salary. One person may work outside job provided the property is

properly maintained. Send resume to / W.

Management Co., P.O. Box 1254, Dunn, N.C. 28334.

DIRECTOROF PHYSICAL THERAPY

Excellent career opportunity in 450-bed acute care hospital tor licensed Physical Therapist with minimum five years experience (preferably In hospital). Experience in management required. At tractive salary and benefits. Submit resume by October 1, 1983 to: Curtis Copenhaver, Associate Director, Cabarrus Memorial Hospital, 920 Church Street North, Concord, N.C. 28025. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

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 for appointment Monday through Friday, 8 to 5, 756 0782.

DRIVERS NEEDED part time and full time, day and night. Must have car, NC Insurance, 18 years of age. $3.35 hour plus commission. Apply at Alano's Pizza, 1403 Dickinson Avenue, no phone calls please.

ENDICOTT SHOES at the Carolina East Mall Is now accepting applications for part time employment. Apply in person only. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

ESTABLISHED ARCHITECTURE,

engineering, and surveying firm has following positions open for qualified personnel: Survey Party Chief, Technician/Draftsman, and Construction Inspector. Send resume 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 Volkswaaen, Inc. Greenville Blvd., Greenville

EXPERIENCED FABRICATORS

needed. 3 years minimum experience In miscellaneous and structural fabrication required. Call for appointment Monday through Friday 8 to 5, 756-2376.

EXPERIENCED SHEET ROCK

finishers. 4 years or more experience. Call 756-0053.

EXPERIENCED HAIRDRESSER

needed. Very nice shop, has all extras. Call 746 2768 days, 746-6361 nights.

FLORAL DESIGNER. Experience preferred. Apply In person at Julleene's Florist, 1703 West 6th Street, Greenville. No phone calls please.

The Dally Reflector. Greenville N C

1981 HONDA PASO Excellent con dition. Low mileage. Call 757 1590 after 5 p.m.

1H1 YAMAHA 400 Soecial II 1,800 miles. 752-7373 days, 752 1076 nights.

1982 HONDA Nighthawk 750 Call atter 2 p.m., ask for Tony, 756-4096.

1*82 750 NIGHT Hawk, low mileage, excellent condition. $2300. Call 756 5386 after 5:30.

FORD SUPER CAB, 1975. Call 752 0640

051

Help Wanted

FUNI PART TIME. Nation's *1 Toy Party Company now hiring demonstrators Free $300 kit No collecting, no delivery. No experience needed. Toys sell themselves. Call 756 6610or 753 2534

FURNITURE SALESPERSON

needed for local firm. Mature individual encouraged to apply. Call Gloria, Heritage Personnel, 355-2020.

GROUP HOME MANAGER for 5

retarded adults to live-in Monday Friday. Requirements: high school education and 2 years college or 2 years experience in mental retardation setting. Send resume and 4 references to Our Homes, Inc., Box 1066, Kinston, NC 28501 or call 523 1886. Resumes received no later than September 29

HELP WANTED immediately. Kitchen experience. Apply daily

   '^KK'7 (JOMT

between 3 and 5 at 205 East 5th Street, Blue Moon Cafe.

immediate opening for Off Set

Press Operator. Salary based on sbility. Advance to management for the right person! Send resume to Matthews Whitford 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 1 day a week for 2 month old. References required. 752-1535.

MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have tools. Excellent company benefits. Apply to Robert Starling or Bill Brown, Brown 8, 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 for installation of 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, (Jherry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas. Earn extra money tor Christmas. Please call 758 3159.

Friday. September 23 1983 21

M5 Farm Equipment

AUTO SUPPLIES; Automotive batteries 27-6MF 95 amp $52 49 24 3MF 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 752 3999

1 SET OF .COMBINE dual wheels, 23.1 X 26. Tires like new Call 752 9585

OM FURNITURE

ANTIQUE ViCTORIAN upholstered Swordsman chair Good condition $200. 1 946 4480 or 1 946 9944

087    Garage-Yard Sale

07i Atobile Homes For SalB

3 FAMILY Yard Sale Saturday, September 24 Something tor everyone! Beginning at 8 a m 202 Meade Street

! BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, 1 'z baths, ! under pinning 12x65    1973,    good

I condition $5500 Call Williamston I 1 792 2859 or 1 792 6668

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 atter 6:30 p m

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, dishwasner, dryer, central air To be moved 756 5646 after 5:30 and on weekends

HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237

MOBILE HOME for sale Located m Washington 2 bedrooms, appll ' anees Call 756 5588

WELL MANNERED bay quarter horse mare Call 756 5937

MUST SELL! 1971 Ritzcratt 12x65, I 2 bedrooms, good condition Needs I carpet and curtains $3950 cash 752 3619

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION al guaran

teed lowest prices Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149 Factory Mat Iress 8. Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626

CRAFTIQUE 4 POSTER King size bed Mattress and box springs. Excellent condition $1,000 Call 753 5973

074

Miscellaneous

' NO MONEY DOWN. VA tfnancing Two day delivery Call Conner i Homes, 756 0333

ADMIRAL PORTABLE color TV,

?ood condition, $145 GE upright reezer, good condition, $135 Kelvinator clothes dryer, good condition, $125 746 6929 after 4

NO MONEY DOWN

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

AIR CONDITIONERS,

refrigerators, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reducetf for quick sale Rebuilf, like new Call B J Mills, 746 2446 af Blackjack

ATLANTA GAS HEATER, 30,000 BTU 6' or 8' drink box, selecf from 4. Call 752 0840.

VA 100% Financing

I New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, i appliances, total electric Minimum I down payment with payments of I less fhan $140 per monfh

, CROSSLAND HOMES

I 630 Wesf Greenville Boulevard '    756    0191

FRENCH DIRECTOR SOFA and

two chairs Excellent condition Price reasonable. 756 1075

OFF WHITE COUCH with country print in fabric. 2 years old, bought for $800 Will sell (or $400 Excellenf condifion Call 758 4983

BASSETT crib and mattress with matching chest of- drawers, $125 Call 752 5580

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Invenfory clearance sale 4 models Delivery setup 919 763 9734

I SMH LISTING SERVICE will list I your mobile home, advertise it, sell I it, and finance the transaction all at i a LOW COST to you Sm George King, SMH Listing Service, Hiway I 11 Ayden, 746 2078

SOFA AND CHAIR for sale, $'200 T524 4851 anytime.

067 Garage-Yard Sale

ALPHA OMICRON PI Yard Sale Saturday, September 24    805

Johnston Street Numerous items, good bargains Ham will be raffled, do no have to be present to win 8 until 3

PART TIME truck driver needed tor long distance hauling of boats. Must have 3 5 years experience and good driving record. Apply in person at Grady White Boats be tween 9a m 4 p.m.

PERSONS NEEDED for 2nd and

3rd shifts. Apply in person only af Sav A Ton, 612 West Greenville Boulevard

PROGRAMMER/ANALYST Na

tional Spinning Company, a leading textile manufacturer located in Washington, NC has an immediate opening for a programmer/analyst on a data processing staff. You will work in a large, state ot the art, on-line IBM environment through our computer subsidiary and with IBM mini computers at all plant locations. We require that you have 2 years experience as an applica tion programmer in a large IBM environment and experience in any one of the following disciplines: COBOL, CICS, OS/JCL, EDX, Communications, UNIX. A degree is preferred but not necessary. We otter a challenging and creative environment in which you can develop your career and pro fessional goals, a progressive sala ry and benefit package, an opportu nity to work with an aggressive managment team Send resume to: National Spinning Company, Inc., PO Box 191, Washington, NC 27889. Attention: VP Industrial Relations Director.

REAL ESTATE Did you want to know more about real estate? Sales, management, and career op portunities (or now and the future Call Red Carpet, Steve Evans 8, Associates, Inc. 355-2727.

ANOTHER BIG yard sale, Satur day in Bell Arthur, beside the water tank, inside trailer Over SOO items

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

BIG YARD SALE. Saturday, Sep tember 24, 9 until 1. Parking lot ot The Army Navy Store, 1501 South Evans Street,

CAROLINA COUNTRY Day School gigantic yard sale, September 24, 8 until 11:30 at school gym near Sunnyside Egg on Highway 1708.

BUNDY ALTO SAX $350 Spinet piano, $650 Both excellent condi tion Walnut cabinet Magnavox stereo. AM FM, good condition $250 756 8677 after 4 p m

BUYING-LOANS INSTANT CASH

SPE(;iAL 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 availa ble) 756 9841

TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold 8. silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment,"typewrit ers, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games 8, 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, topsoil and stone Also driveway work

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

We Love America Special NO MONEY DOWN! .

SINGLE WIDE S8,495

DOUBLE WIDE...$17,995

(Loaded)

CASH

CHURCH BAZAAR and Auction Saturday, September 24. Bazaar at 2 pm. Auction at 7 p m Crafts, baked goods, games, bingo, hot dogs. Chicken and pastry dinner, and more! Arthur Christian Church, Bell Arthur, NC.

From the oldest, most reliable buyer of gold, silver and any items of value

COIN&RINGMAN

On The Corner

Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In laws    .

OVER 30    '

FINANCE PLAN5 AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

DO A GOOD THING! Attend annual Rehabilitation Counseling Schol arship Fund yard sale. Rain or shine. September 24, October 1 (all day); September 25, October 2 (3:00 to 6:00). Great variety many contributors (toys, clothes, bottles, electronic stuff, guitars, junque and plunder, record players, TV s, plenty of etc ) Former King's Garden Shop, across bypass from Krogers

ESTATE SALE, Saturday 207 North Lee Street, Ayden From 1 to 4p.m

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

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, desire 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 ot 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-AAERCURY-GAAC

756-4267

For Appointment

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

GARAGE AND yard sale, Satur day. Route 3, Box 112 C. Highway 33, Hardee Acres on main highway

GARAGE SALE. Stereo, $50; air conditioner, record player, house hold items, toys, clothing, baby items including carriage, walker,

fiate, umbrella stroller, swing, GM ove seat and portable bed. 111 Avon Lane, Saturday, September 24, 8 1.

DEEP FREEZER 8 cubic feet, upright chest Good condition $100 756 3666

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard

12.75% FINANCING on selected I homes Call Conner Homes, 756-' 0333

DINING ROOM, Qpeen Anne Williamsburg, solid cherry, new $7,000 will sell tor $3500 or best offer 756 7297 or 756 3613

1964 MIDWAY, 10x45, 2 bedrooms, partially furnished, air, good location. 758 4857

FOR SALE : Harvest gold 17 8 cubic foot Hotpoint frost free refrigerator with icemaker. 5 years old, $385 752 1488

1971 MARSHFIELD 12x65 deluxe, 2 I bedrooms, 1 bath. Good condition i Set up in Shady Knoll Estates Must i sell $7500 For details call 752-6735, i 758 4426, or collect 586 5049

FOR SALE:    Craft    woodstove

fireplace insert, large size, used 2 seasons, original cost over $800, will sell for $395 complete 758 5705

1971 12x60 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer dryer, refrigerator, stove, air, and deck Good condition $6500 758 0646

FOR YOUR WIRING Negds old, new, residential or commercial Call for estimate Tyson Electric 8. Appliance., Winterville 756 2929,

1972 12x52 HATTERAS. Excellent condition Fully furnished Reduced for quick sale! Call 752 7233.

FURNITURE STRIPPING and re

finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center 756 9123

1974 FANTASTIC, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath Partly furnished, central air and underpinning 746 3727,

1976 Conner Mobile Home Call

GOOD USED REFRIGERATOR,

$50 Call 758 7304 or 746 2045

Conner Mobile Homes, 756-0333.

GRANDPA FISHER woodstove 2 years old $500 355 6613 atter 6:30 p.m

GREEN HIDEABED. Good condi tion $75 Call after 6, 752 3969

HAND CRAFTED CHESTS,

bookcases, coat racks, and nov elties. Carolina East Mall, Sep tember 22, 23 and 24

! 1978 GUARDIAN 12x60 2 bedrooms, j 1 bath, partially furnished, air I condition, deck, under pinned.

I Located in Branches Estates $1400 I down and assume $109.72. Call I 756 8145 days 9am to 1 pm. ' nights from 8 p m to 10 p m , I Monday, Wednesday, and Friday,

I and anytime weekends

LAKE ELLSWORTH Community Yard Sale Saturday, 9 to 12, at the entrance to Lake Ellsworth (across from Kittrell's Nursery.) Lots ot families, loads of bargains!

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available 756 4742 after 6 p.m , Jim Hudson

! 1979 CONNER Mobile Home, 65'x , 12'. Take over payments of $199.16 i per month. Call Conner Mobile i Homes, 756 0333.

LIKE NEW, World Book En cyclopedias with all year books, $300 Call Mary days 752 3000. nights 756-1997

I 1979 TAYLOR. Owner must sell! 2 I bedrooms, 2 full baths, new carpet, new furniture, central heat and air.

: This home is nice. Was asking $14,500 Will sacrifice now for $11,500 Call 752 2366or 757 0451.

MULTI FAMILY yard sale, Satur day 24(h, 8 until. Furniture, clothes, antiques, toys, 4 wheel c|rive jeep and miscellaneous items Next to Jimmy Farmer's Funeral Home in Ayden.

SATURDAY, 9 to 12. No early birds. 115 Village Drive. (Ragland Acres), Winterville.

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 clothinp at reasonable prices. Clothing accepted on con signment, purchased, and sold in sizes 14 and up Call 355 2508

1981    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

VARIETY OF ITEMS in a 4 family Yard Sale Saturday, College Court at 1009 East Wright Road 7 a m to

12.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

needed for Eastern NC. Travel required Knowledge of fire appara tus and equipment a must. Send resume to Triad Fire Inc., PO Drawer M, Attention: Gerald Sapp, Kernersville, NC 27284.

SHARP INDIVIDUAL to train as keyboard salesman. Largest dealer in NC. Hard worker with expansion potential. Excellent income. Piano 8i Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Bouievard, Greenville. 355 6002.

YARD SALE. 804 East 2nd Street, Ayden. September 24.8 to 1.

YARD SALE SATURDAY, 8 to 2 6

miles from Pitt Plaza oft Highway 43, County Road 1733 Couches, stoves, bikes, clothes. 756 0941.

yard sale, Saturday. 9 1. Baby equipment, children's clothes, lamps, furniture, household articles, antique woodstove Old County Home Road, near Bell's Fork

MALE BELLY DANCING Services For any occasion!! Phone 752 1876

"MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE"

toys figures and vehicles Call 758 1739 evenings 6 to 9pm

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

MATCHED COMPONENT Stereo Technics. $1400 firm Call from Noon to 3 p m. 752 5207.

076 Mobile Home Insurance

METAL DETECTORS. Authorized dealer for White's Electronics. Free catalog Baker's Sports Equip ment, PO Box 3106 or 756 8840.

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752

2754

SOCCER INSTRUCTORS needed Must know the game. Call Alice or Barry at 752 6106,

TRUCKING - Tractor Trailer drivers and owner operators needed. (919) 475 2119, Interstate Personnel Services, Ipc

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.

WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open Ing tor an experienced Real Estate Broker. For more information or an appointment, call Rod Tugwell at Century 21 Tipton 8, Associates, 756 6810.

1ST CLASS AUTO Mechanic 1st class pay (or 1st class work. 8 to 5, five days a week. Please apply at Chuck Autry Paint, Body 8. Repair Shop, 1806 Dickinson Avenue. 752-3632.

YARD SALE. Saturday 7 until 12. Household items, clothing, some antiques, used tires, and many other items. VOA Road off Stan tonsburg Road.

NEW AND USED walk in coolers, pizza ovens, chairs, ice machines, deep tat fryers We install! Greenville Restaurant Equipment Call 758 7042

077 Musical Instruments

ANTIQUE UPRIGHT Piano Beautiful wood Good condition Best otter 1 825 0765

NEW! 5000 BTU Air Conditioners Pick up in box. $220 Tyson Electric 8i Appliance, Winterville 756 2929

CLARINET FOR SALE. Almost new! 752 3499 after 5 30 p m

YARD SALE. Saturday, October 1. Corner of Dickinson Avenue and Clark Street Old Taxi Stand

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

PA CABINET. 2 V32 cabinets Cerwinvega Each contains 12" speakers, 2 tweeders, 1 horn. $625, 1 795 4332

YARD SALE SATURDAY, 8:00, 305 Jarvis Street. Lots of African vio lets, 2 oak chairs, sofa bed, bar, baby swing, odds and ends plus children's clothes,0 to 5 years, cheap Maple single bed (head, footboard and rail).

REFRIGERATOR. 30 years Perfect condition. $65 756 8855

old.

PIANO & ORGAN Distributors All major brands at discounted prices. 329 Arlington Boulevard 355 6002

CASH NOW

078

Sporting Goods

YARD SALE, 305 Lindell Road, Saturday, 8 to 12. Furniture, clothes, etc.

yard sale, Saturday, September 24 at 523 Jeannette Street, Winterville,. Weatherington Heights Lots of items to sell, all sorts. 7:30 i until.    I

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J.P. Stancll, 752-6331.

BRICK OR BLOCK WORK. Addi tions or repairs. 11 years experi ence. Call 825 6591 after 7 p.m.

CONSTRUCTION New and addi tions. Call Dillon Watson at 756-8232 after 6 p.m.

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583.

LADY AVAILABLE for '/z day weekly house cleaning. Good references. Call Judy, 752-2326.

MOVING AND BUSH-HOG work. Lots and fields. 752-6522 after 5.

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

TYPING thesis, reports. Call atter 5:30p.m., 756 1408.

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 9and5.

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

ANTIQUE OAK ROLL Top desk Excellent condition. $950 firm. 758 3276 or 756 4039

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale.J.P. stancll, 752 6331. COMPLETE LINE of woodstoves.

chimney pipe and accessories at Tar Road Antiques, Winterville. 756 9123, nights 756 1007.

OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Ready to go. Call 752 6420 or 752-8847 after 5p.m.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752-1359 or 758 5590

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 758 5590 or 752 1359.

YARD SALE. Saturday, September 24. 7 until. 3 family sale. Something for everyone! Go approximately 'z mile North of Welcome Middle School on No. 11, turn right at Earl Bray 66, then 1st black top left. Stop at Islander 1.

!    FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com : ponents, cameras, guitars, old ; clocks, lamps, portable tape ; players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, jchina, crystal and an tiques...anything ot vallue.

COIN&RINGMAN

On The Corner

CALL US WITH your classified ad today You can find a cash buyer for lawn or garden equipment fast! Call 752 6166

1 PAIR of Cypress Gardens water skis, good condition $50 825 2831 or 758 1539, ask tor John

060

INSTRUCTION

YARD SALE, Saturday, 100 South Elm, 8 a.m. Hollow silver and odds and ends.

YARD SALE, 212 Eleanor St.. Cherry Oaks, Saturday, Sept. 24, 8 am until 12:30pm.

YARD SALE. A little bit ot everything -toys, babies' clothes, children's clothes, furniture.; Saturday, next door to Parkers' Chapel, 7 until 11 A.M.

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 OHO from8to6daily.

NOW ACCEPTING PRIVATE

piano students. 756 8461 atter 5 p m.

SINGING. LESSONS. Professional singer seeks voice students Works with all levels of experience Call 758 7285

Sears KENMORE Microwave oven. Retail tor $500, will sell for $350. Large dorm size refrigerator, 4.2 cubic feet, $150 Kerosene heat er, 9,100 BTU, $150. Call 752 6216 after5:30p.m.

082 LOST AND FOUND

YARD SALE. Saturday, 8 a.m.. 202 S Library Street. Household items, tools, electric Grandfather clock.

YARD SALE, Saturday, September 24, 9-12. Calculators, clothes, toys, Christmas tree, wheel chair and miscellaneous items. 820 Mumford Road, S & W Septic Tanks.

YARD SALE. 3 families. Bethel Highway, 3 miles before North Pitt. Starting at 8 a.m.

YARD SALE. 3103 Tucker Drive, Tucker Estates. 7:30 a.m. Bike, tapestry with pillows, carpet, desk. Star Wars bed spread, clothing, lawn chairs, and much miscella neous.

YARD SALE. Saturday, 8 a m. to 12 noon. Cancelled if rain 2607 Jef ferson Drive.

YARD SALE AT 208 Burrington Road Saturday (Singletree Subdivision) 8 to 12.

YARD SALE. Moving. Professional womens clothes-sizes 10-12, mens clofhes-size S-M, Drapes, furniture, paperback books, etc. Saturday, September 24, 8 to 12. Take Evans Street Extension to intersection before Sunshine Gardens, turn left, third house oh right.

YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 a.m. RIverview Estates Trailer P8rk behind Hastings Ford on 10th Street, Lot 44.

105C NORTH SUMMIT. Saturday, 8 a.m. Women's knits and crochets, nice children's things.

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.

3 FAMILIES - at 608 Griffin Street, near South Greenville School.. 8 until 12.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool (Company

SHARP, SONY 8, GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue Prices start at $69.88.

SHARP COPIER machines, sell, lease and rent, large selection of used copiers. Call 756 6167

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.

THREE STORY doll house, wallpapered, $100. Furnishings available 752 2270.

BULL DOG PUPPY, tan with white markings Missing since Friday in the St John's Community between Ayden and Griffon Reward offered. Call 524 5705 anytime

LOST: Prescription sunglasses in cream colored case Call 757 3517

093

OPPORTUNITY

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 tor sale Complete farm supply Established 21 years Owner deceased, family has other interests Call 758 0702.

TRS 80 MODEL I, Level II 16K computer and software $325 Cali 758 3162

HALLMARK CARO 8 GIFT SHOP

Parkhill Shopping Center, Tarboro Good owner financing. Exclusively through NEWGROWTH. LTD, Raleigh, 1 872 8600

UTILITY TRAILER for sale, $105 Call 756 1444.

VARIETY OF miscellaneous. Re habilitation scholarship yard sale. Saturday September 24, Saturday October 1, rain or shine Former King's parking lot.

WASHER - Heavy duty. Very good condition. $125. 746 2072.

1 NELCOsewing machine, 757 0307

30" APACHE insert woodstove with blower. Excellent condition. Used) 1'/z seasons. Asking $600 or bes)^ offer 756 6939 after 5 p.m.

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 otter Call 758 4523.

8,000 BTU AIR conditioner, new GE, $200 20 cubic foot GE (reezer, $75. Mini bike, $125. Go cart, $75. 2 wheel chairs(will make one good one altogether) $25 for both. Call 758 4576

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 & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N.C. 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

095

PROFESSIONAL

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

102 Commtrcial Properly

commercial office space

tor rent available In Industrial Park on Staton Court, Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month lease re quired. Call Clark Branch, Real tors, 756 6336 or Ray HoW^an 753 5147.

foMpn

I





22 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Friday, September 23.1983

102 Commercial Property

NEW RENOVATION - downtown, offic* or retail. Economical to heat and cool. A must see if you need space. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 7741.

106 Farms For Sale

FOR SALE; Tobacco pounds 3,299. Beaufort County William M White, 3416 Windsor Drive, New Bern, 633 3721

70 ACRES. New offering. All cleared. 12,300 pounds of tobacco. Good land. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230.

73 ACRE WATER-FRONT farm outside Beaufort on Dumpling Creek with house and pier $123,000. 1 726 3884

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109 Houses For Sale

COLONIAL HEIGHTS Recently remodeled 3 bedroom ranch.

carpet, hardwood floor, large living den with

room, dining room, and fireplace. Sunny kitchen with plenty of cabinets, laudry room storage. Picturesque enclosed back yard with 7' naturally weathered fence to give privacy to your 16x32' inground pool. Pool cover, chemicals, and seasoned wood included. Reduced to $59,500!! 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 565,000. Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, Billy Wilson, 758 4476; Jarvis Or Dorlis Mills, 752 3647

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

on

Now Hiring At Our Greenville, North Carolina Store Positions Available in the Following Departments:

Experienced Grocery Stockers Experienced Dairy Clerks Experienced Receiving Clerks

This is your opportunity to be a part of one of the largest retail food chains in the United States.

Applications will be accepted Monday Friday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM.

AT

KROGER SAV-ON

600 Greenville Blvd.

EOEM/F

Greenville, N.C. 27834

SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT

QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Oldsmobile Firenza

4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, condition. AM/FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon

Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition. AM/FM stereo,

1981 Honda Civic Wagon

Light green with tan vinyl interior. 5 speed transmission, air condition. AM FM radio, low mileage, like new

1981 Ford Thunderbird

Red with while interior, one owner, loaded.

1981 Olds Omega Brougham

White with blue velour interior, automatic, air condition stereo with cassette. 28.000 miles,

1981 Datsun280-ZX

2 plus 2. Loaded White with red vinyl interior, one owner,

1981 Datsun 210 Wagon

Light brown with light brown vinyl interior, 5 speed. AM/FM radio.

1981 Olds Cutlass Brougham

4 door. Dark blue, beige vinyl roof, beige velour interior diesel, loaded, one owner

1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme

Beige with brown vmyl interior, automatic, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, low mileage,

1980 Pontiac Phoenix

4 door Gold with tan vmyl interior, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio. 42.000 miles, nice car.

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door Automatic, air. brown with buckskin velour interior.

1980 Olds Toronado

Gray with gray leather interior, nice car. low mileage

1980 Datsun Truck

Blue with blue interior, 5 speed, air. AMFM radio, low mileage

1980 Buick Regal

2 door, light blue with landau roof, blue vinyl interior, bucket seats, automatic, air. AM/FM radio

1980 Buick Skylark

4 door Dove gray with blue interior., automatic, air. AM/FM radio, looks new,

1979 Mercury Cougar XR-7

Burgundy with burgundy interior and white landau roof. Loaded. 30.000 actual miles, like new.

1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale

4 door, dark blue with light blue velour interior

1979 Ford Thunderbird

Blue with white landau roof, while vmyl interior, T-tops, loaded, nice car

1978 Datsun Truck

Short bed. Red with black interior, AM'FM radio, sliding glass window, sport wheels, very nice

1978 Olds Delta 88

4 door Diesel Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.

1978 Buick Century Wagon

Blue with blue vmyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM/FM radio, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks.

1978 Olds 98 Regency

2 door, light blue with blue landau roof, light blue velour interior, loaded, like new. 27,000 actual miles.

GM EXECUTIVE CARS SAVINGS UP TO $2000.00

1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

Burgundy with gray cloth'tnterior, loaded. 7B57 miles.

1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham

4 door. White with light gray velour interior. Loaded. 3,121 miles

1983 Olds<^utlass Brougham

Red with gray velour interior; LoaJed, 6.122 miles.

1983 Olds Omega

4 door Maroon with maroon velour interior. Loaded, 3,785 miles

HOLT OLOS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

OM QUALITY SERVICE MRTS

OMMtAL INOTOtt CORPORATION

I

109

Houses For Sale

BARGAIN IN WHOLEII House for $2,000 or best offer. Partially burned - Must be moved. 752-6852 or 752 5242.

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

formal living room and dining room, huge family room wifh fireplace. Heat pump. Located on

over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adjoining acres) Possibly Federal Land Bank financ ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 5716,

BELVEDERE By owner. Immac ulate 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family

room with fireplace, cedar siding

carporf. Huge wooded lot tremendous deck off back. Greaf neighborhood. 206 E. Woodstock Drive. 756-4618 nights (Home), 758 0055 (Business)

BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden qn quiet country road. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

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

756 2750 or 975-2688.

BYOWNER

107 Azalea Drive, ll'WAPR assumable loan. Living room, din ing room, <ten with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, central air, natural gas heat, fenced backyard, pafio. Will consider another house as trade 756 8281, if no answer 752 4844.

CAMELOT You'll love the cathedral celling and beams, not to mention the stone fireplace in the great room Home also features formal dining room, 3 bedrooms with spacious walk in closets. Great assumption below maarket rate Call Sue Dunn. 355 2588 or Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3S(X)

Want to sell livestock? Run a

Classified ad tor quick response.

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.

Ihly payments Any make or model. New or Used/Auto Rentals daily. Weekly, Monthly -Low Rates

109

Houses For Sale

EASTERN STRET. 3 bedrooms.

dining room - den, fireplace. Mint

-ilTlr *---

condition. A must see with a VA loan assumption. Speight Reelty 756-3220, nights 758-7741.

CENTURY21 BASS REALTY

756-6666 or 756-5868

Broker On Call: Gaye Waldrop 756-6242

DAD WILL LOVE his workshop and boSrt

Mom will love this lovely 3 bedroom

ranch, featuring large living area C'

with fireplace. Convenient location In Willlamsfon, lovely lot is 3/4 acre. This is a fixed rate assumable

mortgage, that saves closing costs!

fnis new

Call and let us show you listing. $57,9(X). i606

renting! your money away?

It you waht your own place, we've got the place for you. And it comes

with a 12 X 12 workshop to give you a place to spread things ouf. Listed

at just $28,000, you better take a look at thls.1564.

REDUCEDI OWNER WANTS an

otter! Lovely home in Camelot originally $65,800, now the price has been slashed to $63,900. Immaculate inside and out, this three bedroom with study which would easily convert to a 4th bedroom can be yours. Make an appointment to see it! 1593.

PRIVACY INCLUDED when you check out this Immaculate double wide featuring a deck, woodstove, wet bar, and 2 full baths. It's

nestled on a 1 acre wooded lot and Is I totf)!n $41,900.

just 5 minutes from #601

CHERRY OAKS $10,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3 bedroom, 2W bath Owner. 756-8073.

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40's&$50's

COUNTRY PLACE, Select your plan now and take advantage of wooded lots, secluded privacy, custom features and 10.15% NCHFA funds Quality not often found In an 1100 square toot home. Priced in the mid $40's and extra energy etti dent

Mid-Eastern

#14 Pitt Plaza 756-4254

SWIMMING

POOLS

Swimming Pool Construction and Supplies

GREENVILLE POOL & SUPPLY, INC.

2725 E. 10th St. Colonial Heights Shopping Center 758-6131

IMAGINE! A house in the city with so much room priced under $50,000. You'll love the fenced and tree shaded backyard and the family room with big brick fireplace. Extra room with beauty shop could be a place to work at home or extra bedroom Come out and see it today!

GET A GCOD BUY in Windy Ridge with this three bedroom townhouse with loads of extras. Jenn-Aire grill, washer and dryer, built In bookcase, house tan, extra wallpaper plus front and rear parking available. Ottered at $53,000

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Teresa Hewitt...ON CALL..    756-1188

Gene Oulnn.........................756-6037

Richard Allen.....................756 4553

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

John Jackson......................756 4360

Toll Free: 1 800-525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S'^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

752 6116

SPECIAL INVITATION

l^lndian Trails Countiy Club'

Beautiful 18 Hole Course Scenic beauty at its best!

GREENS FEES

Weekdays $5.00 Students $4.00 Sat. & Sun. $7.00 - Students $6.00

BRING A Friend, rent a cart and ride double

DEDUCT $1.00 EACH FROM GREENS FEE.

Griffon, NC

524-5485

it'

The American Legend Ski Boats - Fishing Boats Cruisers

McCotters Marina, Inc.

P.O. Box 967, Washington, N.C.

946-3156

North Carolinas Oldest Chris Craft Dealer Call Us Now For Quotes On Fall & Spring Delivery 64 Models To Choose From

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO EXPERIENCE 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 ie....

Tow Own It To Teortolf To Oivo It A Try.

Apply in person only.

Absolutely no phone calls.

See E.J. Lacoste or Rickie Moore.

A5TIIM

FORD

AlllfIM.lS I (1st <1 ( .11 ( (ttlip.MIV

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass

758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

109

Houses For Salt

CENTURY21 BASS REALTY 756-6666 or 756-5868

Broker On Call; Gaye Waldrop 756-6343

FRESH ON THE m^rkatl Located on one of the most desirable itreets

in College Court, this three bedroom home otters woodstove In living room, unny kitchen with nook, screened In porch, and so much more. All spruced up and ready to sell! Listed at $53,900.4607.

USE YOUR IMAGINATION and

turn this quality built 4 bedroom home In the University area into a palace. This 3337 square toot beauty features two sunrooms, and a hot tub In the large back yard. Call the office tor more details. $65,900.4558.

109

Houses For SbIb

ENTERTAINING will be a joy In

contam-

this 3 bedroom, 3 bath

girary home with loft and wat bar.

back, tiraplaca, and garage. CENTURY 31 B. Forbes Agency 756-3131 or 756-7436.

EXCELLENT ASSUMPflON with graduated payments starting at $435.36 on this lovely ranch on quiet cul-de-sac In Lake Glenwood

Owner is ready to sail. Call Darrell at^H^lta Realtors, 756-1306; nights

FARMVILLE. Call now about this 3 bedrodm, 1 bath home which features sun room with fireplace, large eat In kitchen, detached garage or workshop. Excellent loan assumption below market rate. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or Sue Dunn, 3SS-3S88.

HARDEE ACRES. Pay equity and assume FHA loan below market rate on this 3 bedroom, 3 bath ranch

ME FOR A happy family. This > Cape Cod style nome has many as to list, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths.

HOME FOR A hai

nice extras

garage, screened porch, and a well landscaped yard are just some of its qualities. Call and let us show you thisonel $78,500. 4600

FOR THE SA4ALL family this Whispering Pines contemporary Is

just waiting tor you. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, wit

th, with greatroom with fireplace, dining room, and kitchen

with appliances. Come on out and

1 app

take a look. $53,900. 4554

Featured Houses"

GRAYLEIGH: Nearing completion.

3lO

Choose your own colors, carpet, light fixtures. Chair rail and crown

moulding. 4 bedrooms (1 down), 3 la

baths, large deck. Custom built

cabinets, 3 car garage, corner lot.

presently ofteredat $142,500.

GRAYLEIGH: Williamsburg style featuring 3 bedrooms, 2'/ baths,

llv

formal living and dining rooms, den with fireplace, bookcases, deck and

epi

garage. Large wooded lot offered at

$110,500.

CLUB PINES: Brick two story, great room with fireplace and bookcases, 3 bedrooms, baths, dining room, garage, great location. Priced $84,500

WINDY RIDGE; New listing, brick Colonial, 4 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, formal living room, dining room, den with fireplac e. Covered patio with privacy fence. Owner transtered, needs to sell. A good buy at $66,900

W.G. Blounts. Assoc. 756-3000

Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden

975 3179 756 7911 756 3880 756 1617

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

which features great room with fireplace, eat in kitchen and large

screened In country porch, all Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or Sue Dunn, 355-2588.

HOUSE (Built 1912). Restoration started. 7 large rooms, 6 fireplaces, porches, storage building, excellent '/S acre site. 35 minutes from Greenville. $11,500. Snow Hill, 1 747 5233.

IN THAT HARD to find price fh

range! The $50's is this three bedroom, two bath ranch wifh fireplace and woodstove in the den, large formal living room, eat-ln kitchen, butler's pantry and double

garage located outside the city near windy Ridge, all Leonard at Hignlte Realtors, 756 1306.

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$50'S

OWNERS ARE ANXIOUS to return to their homeplace and have chosen to sell their new 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch which is only 15 minutes south of Greenville. Over of an acre, circular driveway, additional detached garage used as a workshop. Priced to sell at $55,000.

THE PINES, AYDEN New home available with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths and over 1450 square feet of

living space. This home has a large 11) ......

family room with fireplace, sepa rate utility room and an energy efficient heat pump. Call today. Ottered in the $50's.

JUST IN TIME for school! You can be settled In this roomy 3 bedroom home In WInterville school district by tall. Great low Interest loan assumption at    Modern    built

In kitchen and attractive great room with brick fireplace. Mid $50's. Call today tor showing.

$50's & $60's

ing ft

loan assumption In Quail Ridge, this is it. 1422 square feet with 12/lk%

variable loan with payments of $555 per month total. Patio, well land-

pool ,

tennis courts. Ottered at $58,500. Sound good? It is. Call today, It won't last long.

RED OAK. 4 bedrooms ottered in upper 60's. Over 2000 square feet with fenced In back yard and plenty of room in all large rooms. Recently painted and ready tor occupancy.

SELLERS ARE READY to move. You can move in immediately. No touch up required. Convenient to the University, schools and shopping. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Priced to sell in the low $60's. Call for details.

PLAN YOUR BARBEQUE on the patio in this unique and livable plan nearly 1500 square feet. Builder pays points tor 12'/?% fixed financing. Complete this tall in excellent location "Camelot", exceeds E-300 standards. Call now and select your decor. Ottered at $63,800.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Teresa Hewitt...ON CALL...756-1188

Gene Quinn.........................756-6037

Richard Allen.....................756 5443

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Ray Holloman t 753-5147

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

John Jackson......................756 4360

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY

758-0655

UNIVERSITY AREA Sparkling brick rancher otters convenience of location as well as economical price! Features include 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room, eat-in kitchen with some appliances, fenced back yard, carport with storage and beautiful shaded corner lot. $44,900.

CHOICE LOCATION ON CORNER LOT is ottered in this well-kept home. Excellent floor plan otters living room with fireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 5 baths, carport with storage and fenced in back yard. $47,000.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Teresa Hewitt...ON CALL.. 756-1188

Gene Quinn.........................756-6037

Richard Allen.....................756-4553

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Tim Smith..........................752-9811

John Jackson.....................;756-4360

Toll Free: 1 800-525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FURNITURE STRIPPING

Painl and varnish removed from wood and melal Equipment lormer-ly ol Dip And Strip All items return

ed within 7 days

T.^R ROAD ANTIQUES

Call For Free Estimate 756-9123 Days, 756-1007 Nights

Now Accepting Applications For

MANAGEMENT

POSITIONS

Must have at least 1 years experience in ladies retail management. Must be willing to transfer within Eastern North Carotina. No phone ceils, please. Apply in person Monday through Friday at:

Stuarts

Carolina East Mall

NEWCONSTRUC TION Conveniently located near

all major highways, this lovely new

u----  .    .    7    .

.....itvi^    MWV

home otters choice of colors and floor covers to buyer. Contem

porary ranch styling Is reflected in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home that

includes great room with fireplace.

dining room with sliding glass doors to deck, work kitchen. Seller will

pay all closing expenses and points $54,200.

A OREAM COME TRUE Is what 'ou'll find in this immaculate ranch

lome in popular neighborhood. ..... 1, kftc

Features living room, kitchen with dining area. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, lovingly landscaped and new 6' privacy fencing. FHA 235 loan assumption available to qualified buyers with payments as low as $250.00. $54,900.

NEW LISTING NEW CON STRUCTION Popular neighborhood located just minutes from hospital and Dcyrtors' Park. Have It your way! Features 3 bedrooms, great room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen with

breakfast bar, single garage, deck, Chippendale railings and much, much more! Sound too good to be

true? Contact one of our quailtled-brokers today and let us put you in ahorne! $56,900

Jane BuMs, Broker (on call).756 2851 Elaine Troiano, RE ALTOR.756 6346

Shirley Morrison, Broker 758 5463

Mavis Butts, REALTOR, GRI,

CRS....................................752-7073

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr.    756-6221

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

FOR SALE BY OWNER

198 ACRE FARM

Suited for Peanuts and other row crops. 43,245 pounds of peanuts. Located in Willlamston Township, y# mile west of Williamston on State Road 1444. Owner financing avaiiable. For further information ceil:

Federal Land Bank Association Of Washington 946-4116

109 Houses For SalB

LOW INCOME and OMd a housa? S this 4 badroom, IV? bath homa, tanced yard, larga kitchan. Potsibla FmHA loan assumption. CENTURY 21 B. Forba* Agancy 756-2121 or 752-4707.

MAKE AN OFFER on this wall kapt 3 badroom homa In Hardaa Acras. FIraplaca, fancad yard, covtrad and scraanad patio. Posslbla 9'/>% FHA loan assumption. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agancy 756-2121 or 758-0180

MORE FOR YOUR MONEY. 4

bedrooms, 2 baths, game room, fireplace, and carport. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agancy 756-2121 or 758-9549.

NEAT AS A PIN. 3 badroom, 2 bath home in wall established

neighborhood. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agancy 756-2121 or 756-7426.

NEW LISTING. Shaded lot, 3 badroom, 1'/? bath brick ranch.

Large family room, also features

(Y -        

approximately 6(W square feet de

tached garage and workshop,

.. . . . ..

excellent location. Call now to see

this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge

- --

8i Southerland, 756-3500; nigh 756-5716.

NEW LISTING. $48,900. Spacious 3 bedroom, 1'/? bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient location. Call June Wyrick,

Aldridge 8i Southerland, 756-3500; Is 754

nights 756 5716.

NEW LISTING: Contemporary with gorgeous cathedral ceiling and fireplace in greatroom. split

bedrooms, two baths, and priced in the $50's. Call Darrell at Hignlte Realtors, 756 1306, nights 355-2556.

NO MONEY DOWN

That's right! We will build on your lot. Plenty of mortgage money, no red tape ..Call 758-3lfl tor Darrell.

PAYMENTS ARE BASED on your income on this three bedroom ranch. Excellent Farmer's Home assumption! Call Darrell at Hignlte Realtors, 756 1306, nights 355 2556.

/PRICE REDUCEOII 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;

n Wilson, 758-4476, Jarvis or Is Mills, 752-3647.

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESA WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$60's 8. $70's

BETHEL COUNTRY HOME with 2100 sq. ft. located on 3'/? acre wooded lot 4 miles West of Bethel on Highway 64. Home has formal living room, large family room with dining room and kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, carport plus

109

Houses For Sale

REO Banks road. This lovely-3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch featuras Ml

formal araat. Kitchan hat ikyll^f land for

and butcher block work Island har convanienca alotw with graf room with fireplaca. Priced to sail.. Call Sue Dunn, 355-2588 or Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500

RIVEkHILLS. Lovely 3 bedroom, 2'/? bath, split level, features living

...____  spli.--------------

room, family room with fireplace large kitchen with beautiful

greenhouse window, also hept'

pump. Call June 'yv/ick;. Aldrid^

& Southerland, 756-3500; nig 756-5716

SOMETHING FOR HIM some-, thing tor her is the best way Jo describe this 3 bedroom bridk home. For him a large garage with lots and lots of built In cabinets and work space. For her, a floor platv that offers foyer leading into formal-living room and drops down into-a large den with fireplace and sliding glass doors Kitchen and breakfast room offer easy meal planning andT family atmosphere.Call The Evans.

Company, 752-2814 or nights call Faye Bowen, Listing Broker, 756

5258, or Winnie Evans, 752 4224.

SPLIT LEVEL located Jn Ellwood* Pines near The Candlewick. 3' bedrooms, 2'/? baths, formal living'^

room and dining area. Huge den has vlth a tan-entertaining pleasure. This area Is located

fireplace and comes wl tastic bar for your entertainin

downstairs and otters lots of $54,500. Call The Evans-

privacyl  _____

Company 752-2814, Faye Bowen, nights 756 5258 Listing Broker, or

Wir "        

nnie Evans 752-4224.

VETERANSI Points and closij^g costs paid by seller on this three bedroom ranch In the $40's. Call' Darrell at Hignlte Realtors, 756-1306; nights 355-2556.

WAITING FOR A BARGAIN? 3

bedrooms, living room, family

room, and carport. Wooded lot. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency

756 2121 or 758 9549.

WATERFRONT HOME on Pamlico River, 3 miles from Washington. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room/ large deck and porch, bulkhed.

boat ramp, pier, 110 toot - (Tal

waterfront. Call 946-8565.

WINDY RIDGE. Excellent living tor kids and adults. 3 bedrooms, 2'/? baths. Tennis Court, Sauna, Club House. Average monthly utllitisr $65. 756 5385.    >

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$20's8.$30's

a large outside storage building that can be easily converted to suit

owner. Must see to appreciate home's many fine extras. 15 miles north of Greenville. Ottered in 70's.

REDUCED LOVELY RANCH on Hillside Drive In Elmhurst. Features formal rooms, kitchen with dinette area, oversized den with fireplace and bullt-ins, 3 bedrooms, 1'/? baths, carpet over hardwood, deck, lovely shaded lot on dead end street. Priced In the mid $60's.

PLAN YOUR BARBECUE on the patio In this unique and livable plan nearly 1S(X) square feet. Builder pays jjoints tor 12'/?% fixed financing. Complete this tall In excellent location ' Camelot", exceeds E 300 standards. Call now and select your own decor. Offered at $63,800.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS 756-6336

Teresa Hewitt ON CALL. .756 1188

Gene Quinn.........................756-6037

Richard Allen.....................756 4553

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Tim Smith..........................752-9811

John Jackson .............756-4360

Toll Free: 1 800-525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

QUIET COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE

surrounds this lovely 3 bedroom home with 2 full baths. Large

sunken den, well landscaped yard brick home

with trees makes this with cedar siding accents picture perfect! Call The Evans Company 752-2814, Faye Bowen nights 756-5258 Listing Broker, or Winnie Evans 752 4224.

PICK UP A little extra money by setling used items In the classified

INVESTMENT POTENTIAL. This home has 4 5 bedrooms and two full baths and could easily be converted to a duplex. It you're in need of a good tax shelter, let us show you this one. VA loan assumption. Low Twenties, Breakeven cashflow.

AURORA. Live or vacation in this bedroom mobile home which features a 12' x 30' family room, a screened-in front and back porches, less than a block from the water. Priced to sell at $27,000.

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM. Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bedroom, 1| bath townhouse tor the, same monthly payment as rent This unit was recently re-carpeted Call today. Low$30's.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Teresa Hewitt...ON CALL, .756 1188

Gene Quinn.........................756-6037

Richard Allen.....................756    4553

Tim Smith..........................752    9811

Marie Davis........................756    5402

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

John Jackson.................. ..756-4360

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity '

212 ARLINGTON CIRCLE, 3

bedrooms, 1 bath, excellent In-,

vestment or couple beginners home. Reduced to $29,500. Bill Williams

Real Estate, 752 2615.

8'/i% ASSUMABLE, 3 bedrooms, 1'/? baths, large lot. Call 756 396, 756 3134, or 752 4661.

Ill Investment Property

DUPLEX TOWNSHOUSE - Each side otters great room with dining area, kitchen with all appliances, laundry area, 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, private deck and outside storage. Just reduced! $59,500.00. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758-0655.

section of this newspaper. Call 752 6166

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$70's8.$80's

OWNER FINANCING. Locatbd on Stantonsburg Road. 2170 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2'? baths, brick ranch. Excellent condition. $75,900.

COUNTRY HOME with 2100 square feet located on 3'/? acre wooded lot 4 nines West of Bethel on Highway 64.

Home has formal living room with dining room and kitchen, 3

bedrooms, 2 full baths, carport plus

a large outside storage building that can be easily converted to suit

owner. Must see to appreciate home's many fine extras. 15 miles north of Greenville. Ottered In the mid $70's.

CLUB PINES, Loan assumption available on this lovely home in Club Pi, ,s. Extra large den with woodburning stove. All formal areas, garage, bullt-ins. Intercom system and much, much more. $82,500.

VILLAGE EAST: 2 bedrooms, Il bath townhouses. Washer/drydf location, all kitchen appliances furnished. Central heat and air, GE

heatpump, patio, outside storage Conveniently located on Cedar Court. Excellent property tor $tu

dent rental, priced at $41,900.

DRESDEN PLACE; 2 bedroom, 11? bath condominiums. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen, appliances furnished. Ideal location tor student rental market. Corner of nth St & Charles St . Priced at $43,600.

GRIFTON: 7 brick houses are being sold to settle an estate. These, houses have from 900    1400    square    ,

feet, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath 3 bedrooms 1'? bath. They are located in an excellent location and .

In very good condition. Priced at 1,000

$145.1

W. G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000

DREXELBRIXIK. Reduced. Im maculate best describes this 3 bedroom home with all large rooms and spacious back yard not to mention the rear screened porch. Over 2000 square feet In one of Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and root. Call today. Ottered at $86,900

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden

975 3179 756-7911 756 3880 756-1617

THREE MOBILE HOMES and one

house in country with community CENTURY 21 B Forbes

water ____

Agency. 756 2121 or 758 0180

TWO QUAORAPLEXES in RIvr Blutt area. Excellent return on Investment! $210,000. Only serious Inquiries please. Hignlte Realtors, 756 1306.

113

Land For Sale

REALTORS

756-6336

Teresa Hewitt . ON CALL.. 756-1188

Gene Quinn.........................756-6037

Richard Allen.....................756-4553

Tim Smith..........................752-9811

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

John Jackson......................756-4360

Toll Free: 1-800 525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE

2500 sa FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR

OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank. Serious inquiries only. 746 4669.

115

Lots For Sale

CANDLEWICK ESTATES- Lot has'

100' of frontage and depth of 217':' ~            lly

Popular family neighborhood otters pool and tennis court tor yearly tee. $9,000.00. For more detalls'calf Mavis Butts Realty , 7S8 06SS.

LAKE ELLSWORTH. Residential lot ready for building. $14,500. Call Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500 or Sue Dunn 355-2588.

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

month (owner financing). Seller lobll

will pay to move your mobile home $5900. 758-7741 nights. Owner Broker.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENSiDOORS

C.L. I uplon Co.

GENERAL AUTOMCTIVE TECHNICIAN

Must be experienced In domestic as well as foreign cars and have own tools. Pay depending upon ex^ perience. Good fringe benefit package. Apply to: Steve Grant, Service Manager.

TOVQTA

EAST

756-3228

109 Trade Street Greenville, N.C.





115

Lots For Salt

tftM* xcwtlonany |rgt mobll* heoB* lot- Off Rivar R^Sd, city

wa^tr. Ownar flnanclM. Th# Evani Co.. 7M-m4. WInnia Evana/LUtTw

]21 Apartmtnfi For Rent

PAMLICO KiVfeR Lt Hloh n Grtat vlaSI! sandy booch. 30 minutas from Gratnvilla. For tala by ownar S24^. 940t071 or 9<6 551 nights '

PRfCE REOUCEOI

mili;- EsiriTS/S

$17,000.752191$

* ^RRS - Ownar financ 7^-774?    "'Ohts

TMt pinks In Ayoan. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location Pav^ streets, curb and gutter ^estl^ous neighborhood $10,500 Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 744-JIM for full details.

117 Resort Property For Sale

Fisk SWIM, SKI on 345 acre lake

8772

private tish pond. $5500. 756

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Haopy Place To Live ABLE TV

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

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

STUDIO APARTMENT near

3554I7U    cieposit    Call

TAR RIV ESTATE

1. 2, and 3 bedrooms, was)/er-dryer hook ups, cable TV, ,pbol, house, playground, Neai^CU

P*LICO RIVfcR ,2x60 mobile hotne with large screened in porch, muWi purpose room, electric and 1 9'i heat, air conditioning, boat shejter, pier and boat ramp privjiedges. 756 0431

Our Reputation Says It All 'A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

RESORT PROPERTY tor sale or trade. 4 apartment complex 3 bedrooms, 1W baths, central heat and air. 415 Ocean Drive, Club Colony, Atlantic Beach. Asklno $225,000. Will trade tor property in Grwvllle area Call 752 2366 or

RfV_ER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC Quiet, established neighborhood Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights

TIME SHARING Dis

neyworld/Epcot area Private owner. Must sell. (919 ) 756 5990 (305) 281 1285.

12

RENTALS

FOR RENT: Furnished apartment Four girl or men students or couple Also semi private room, kitchen prtvljeges, near college available $60 a month each. 758 2201

752-4225

127

Houses For Rent

4 BEDROOM RANCH. Over 2000 square feet with workshop in

tri uaiiy nutieoior. tueenvine. i'4.C.

l-rioay, September 23 1983    23

Grifton. Available Immediately tor $425 per month. Call Realty 'Hor\, Clark Branch, 756 6336 or Tim

Smith, 752 9811.

129

Lots For Rent

BEAUTIFUL PRIVATE lot tor

single or doublewide trailer. Septic tank and shallow welt on site. Can be hooked up to city water. Call 753 4631 after 6p.m.

133 Mobile 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, baths, no pets, no children. 756-6005.

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

The Real Es/

New 1 Bedroom Apartments 225.00 A Month/225.00 Deposit Contact Tommy Williams 756-7815 Or 758-8733

2 MOBILE homes for rent. Furnished or unfurnished. 752-5635.

135 Office Space For Rent

hSS    9,for an apartment? You'll

   whde range of available units

list^ In the Classified columns of today spaper

TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, 1W paths, nearly new, convenient location, professionals preferred, no pets, $330 per month. 756 7314, after 4pm 756 4980.

TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Village. $350. Call Lorelleat 756 6336

7 bedroom APARTMENT

efb beat. $275.

750-3311.

OFFICE SPACE tor rent. 4 office suite in Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc. building. Call Jeannette Cox, 756-1322.

OFFICES FOR LEASE. Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams, 756-7815. SINGLE OFFICE, 154 square feet, Joyner-Lanler 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

2 BEDROOM, I bath duplex. University area No pets. $235 per month. 756 4277 or 752 8179.

122 Business Rentals

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4512 between 8 and 5.

NERO STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington jSelf Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933

121 Apartments For Rent

ATTRACTIVE and energy efficient 1 b^room apartments. $225 per month. Hooker Road, i/x mile from 264 By pass Contact Tommy Williams, 756-7815.

AVAILABLE OCTOBER I. $265 month. 2 bedrooms, roomy, carpeted, washer/dryer hookups, heat pump. 758 8537 or 752 0180.

AYOEN.

...-----1    bedroom    duplex,    stove,

refrtgerator, carpet, screened porch, $140 per month. 746 4474.

AZALEAGARDENS

for LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 souare feet. Only $3.60 per square root. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348

PRIME BUSINESS location for lease. East 5th Street. 752 3411.

23,000 SQUARE FEET available. Will subdivide. Call 756-5097 or 756 9315.

127

Houses For Rent

JkYDEN. 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.

FARMVILLE HOME, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, fully carpeted, oversized laundry room, stove, heat pump, 2 years old. No pets. Large wooded lot. $375 monfhly/$300 de posit. Available October 2. 753 5526.

Greenville's newest and most ! uniquely furnished one bedroom i 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 rettigerators.

HOUSES AND Apartments in country. 8 mniles south of Greenville. 746 328J'and 524 3180

ROOM FOR RENT to female Christian student or older person. Call 752 7422

142 Rbommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge. Pool, tennis courts and sauna. Call 756 9491.

FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED

to share 'i expenses. Birchwood Sands Mobile Homes, 752 3040.

ROOMMATE NEEDED. $75 plus >/7 utilities. Call 757 3918 after 4 p.m.

SINGLE MOTHER, non smoker, wishes to share 2 bedroom townhouse with same. Call 752-6216 after 5:30p.m.

144_ Wanted    To    Buy

FARM TRACTOR. Call Seaton Howell, days 752 4470 or 757 0222 nights.

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 756 8615.

WANT TO BUY old Jerry Wallace tapes and records. 757-1451

148

Wanted To Rent

STUDIOUS STUDENT, 25, needs room in quiet house year round, ok'    ......

prefers cooking. Peter, 756 5642

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.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE near Greenville, electric heat, air, couple preferred No pets 756 0264 after 5

Contact J .T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, I'/j baths, washer dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. S3W per month. 752 2040 or 756 89Q4.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'/4 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

cornpactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club

houseand POOL. 752 1557

DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wobded lot at Frog Level 2 bedl-ooms, 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

?iarden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air condi tionlnjg, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

CJifice 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

GreeneWay

Lai-ge 2 bedroom garden apart merrts, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, conomical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Living room, den. I'j baths, dining area Located on 1,3 of an acre. 5 minutes from Greenville $400 per month. Family preferred Call 758 4693 after 6pm

3 BEDROOMS, fenced in back yard. $340 per month plus deposit. 756 4808

3 BEDROOM MODULAR home with large garage on B'j acre lot. $350 a month. 756 7755.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GRIFTON AREA. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Central air,'carpet and

Help tight Inflation by buying and selling through the Classified ads.

Call 752 6166.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

No Credit Check

FINANCIAL SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Leading financial institution in eastern N.C. is seeking a sales representative for its investment, retirement and insurance programs. Need a competitive, self-motivated individual with ability to motivate others. Sales capabilities is a must. Previous experience in banking, insurance or related financial sales helpful. College or related training preferred. Salary, commission and benefits package. For confidential and immediate consideration, toward resume detailing work experience and salary history to:

Sales Representative P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834

EH

Call 524 4239 or 524 4821

; KINGS ROW APART/V\ENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re

frigerator, dishwasher, disposal nd    "

and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

At .our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Iris Cannon at 758 6050 or 746 2639, Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1 498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029,

AAOORE&SAUTER

: :110 South Evans 758-6050

; LOVE TREES?

ExpetJence the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE -APART/VIENTS

Quali^ construction, firtplaces, s SO per

mps (heating costs

than comparable units), $her, washer dryer hook

fable TV,wall to-wall carpet.

u^,

tNenwopane windows, extra Insula-in. 'r

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION Plant And Facilities Instrument Technician

Salary Range $12,

,594

Position available for person who has a working knowledge of AC/DC motors and control systems (including variable speed drive), process control and monitoring instrumentation (both analogue and digital), and telemetering systems (both FSK and microprocessor directed digital). A working knowledge of the NEC is required. Previous experience is essential.

Water Plant Operator Salary Range $10,899-SI 7,722

Position available for responsible person to perform skilled work in the operation of the Water Treatment Plant on a rotating shift basis. Entry level status and starting salary will be commensurate with education, training, experience, and or level of state certification as a Water Treatment Plant Operate

Apply at the Personnel Office, Greenville Utili ies Commission, 200 W. Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27835.

An Equal Opportunity Employer"

pfllce Open 9-5 Weekdays

V'Siu^rday    1-5    Sunday

J^fry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NEW% BEDROOM duplex, hange, refIrgerator, dishwasher.

^cr oiviz    ,

wpshar/dryer hobk ups. Convenient Iqeation. Professionals preferred

Nb pets. Dfevld.

S320. 756 2121, ask for

OAK/V\ONT SQUARE APART/yiENTS

apart-I. Dlsh-

badroom townhouse nts. 1212 Redbanks Road shar, refrigerator, range, dIs I Included. We also have Cable Very convenient to Pitt Plaza ,^d University. Also some tiBnished epartments available.

!    756-4151

INDUSTRIAUMANUFACTURING

ENGINEER

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 hot apply. Salary commensurate with experience.

Send resume and salary history to:

ENGINEER

P.O. BOX 1967

GREENVILLE, NC 27835

tl-

Lexington Square

Townhomes

Near The Greenville Athletic Club

Model Open Daily 1-5 P.M.

Phase II, Unit 31

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Offered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.

355-2286

(D

n

0

3

ID

-1

HOMES FOR SALE

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

CONTACT

D.D. Gairett Agency

752-4476    752-7756    752-1764

FOR LEASE

OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY

Su^Henson

REALTOR

During NON-Officc Hours Please Call

756-3875

DUFFUS REALTY, INC.

756-5395

R C WATERS

The former Bank of North Carolina building at Cotanche and Fourth Streets Over 1500 square feet of modern space

DARDEN REALTY 758-1983

NIGHTS-WEEKENDS 758-2230

NEW LISTING

* *

COUNTRY HOME! WINTERVILLE AREA! A great buy in the area everyone is looking tor. Locateij on four lovely acres of land this well planned ranch offers 2200 square feet of living area. Plan features great room with fireplace and wood-stove insert, kitchen and dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, big utility area, large storage closet, big rec or play room good for many uses. Nice wooded setting. Priced to sell at $87,500.

THE D NICHOLS AGENCV

752-4012

Listing Agent Katherine Vinson-752-5778

For Information Contact:

Hay Field Log Homes

(919) 746-4616

CONSTRUCTION CO.

756-5805

CYPRESS CREEK TOWNHOUSES

Models Open Sati/rday And Sunday 2-6 P.M. w. g. blount & associates

QUALITY CONSTRUCTED CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

E 300 ENERGY EFFICIENT. COME BY AND SEE OUR PLANS OR LET US HELP YOU DESIGN A HOME TO MEET YOUR INDIVIDUAL NEED.

LOTS AVAILABLE WINDERMERE ESTATES WESTHAVEN V SUBDIVISION

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY

OPEN HOUSE

SATURDAYS SUNDAY 1-5 P.M.

Robinhood Road, Candlewick Estates

CEDARDALE LOG HOMES

SOLID CEDAR BEAUTY

AFFORDABLE RUSTIC ELEGANCE WHY CEDARDALE?

' NORTHEIM WHTTE CEDAR NO NOT . NO TEHMTES ' FINEST TONpUE t QROOVE LOOS - NO AIR MFILTNATION ' POST 6 BEAM CONSTRUCTION - STRONGEST KNOWN TO MAN ' MOOERN MANUFACTURMQ FACILITY 30 OAV DELIVERY ' ENERGY EFFICIENT HKWEST R.FACTOR OF ALL WOOD

JUST COMPLETED

Cedardale Log Dealer Larry House - 753-3922 Rt. 1, Box 221 A. Farmville, N.C.

Cedardale Log Agency CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency - 756-2121 2717 S. Memorial Drive, Greenville, N.C.

m Ike ?m ?(eMune

Ot

PAMLICO

WLANTATim

Beaufort County, North Carolina

A planned waterfront community ...in the old tradition...

Live a way of life that has almost vanished.

Just wtien you thought that every waterfront development was another stack em up, pack-'em-in project, Weyerhaeuser Real Estate Cnmpany cnmes up with something down right old fashioned...Pamlico Plantation.

This ultra-private community offers a limited number of wooded homesites that average more than an acre each...with acres and acres of green space.

Room to relax and breathe.,.privacy...round the clock controlled access and security...and all of the plush leisure living amenities that one would expe'cTin a first class waterfront communitv.

Located in the heart of the incredible beauty of coastal North Carolina.

Pamlico Plantation is on Broad Creek (across from the Washingtrfh, NT Vacht and Country Club) just off the Pamlico River, which flows to the Intracoastal Waterway, Pamlico Sound and the Atlantic Ocean.

Pamlico Plantation Yacht & Racquet Club.

Your membership in the very exclusive (property owners onlyi Pamlico Planta tion Yacht & Racquet Club includes your own personal slip in the 200 boat marina, a clubhouse with huge porch ^nd sun deck area, large swimming pool and lighted tennis courts.

Relax in the wooded quiet of the rugged natural setting.

Or GO FOR IT on the open water!

Pamlico Plantation is just opening. Choice homesites are available right now

im in ?m Pimm o{ Pamlm PImIoUh.

AC 919 946-9121

Box 790

Washington, NC 27889





Rain Helps Wash Away Potentially Risky Residue

SALISBl'RY, N.C. (AP) - A rainstorm helped the environment around National Starch and Chemical Co, 'dodge a bullet," washing away potentially dangerous residue from a series of explosions, a state official says.

Cleanup began Thursday at the Salisbury plant, part of which was reduced to twisted rubble the previous day in the explosions and fire that injured 26 people and forced temporary evacuation of 75 families. Authorities said the blast occurred as employees mixed chemicals.

The four explosions late Wednesday morning ignited flames that shot 200 feet in the air and blew off part of the buildings roof Firefighters brought the blaze under control by early afternoon.

State officials said some chemicals were spilled, but there was no serious environmental damage because most of the

debris was washed into a nearby lake and harmlessly dispersed.

"W'e dodged the bullet on it," said Jim Sheppard, spokesman for the state Division of Environmental Management. It could have been real bad. There are a lot of chemicals at that plant

Tw'o dams were set up to prevent chemicals from escaping, Sheppard said. However, a heavy storm Wednesday afternoon washed most of the spilled chemicals into a nearby creek and on into High Rock Lake.

Sheppard said investigators found traces of ethyl acetate and methyl isolutyl ketone, both solvents.

0 The company agreed to take responsibility for the cleanup, he added.

Plant spokesman Henry Barry said there were no remaining chemicals and that the U.S. Environmental

Protection Agency had given the plant a clean bill of health

tnd~d8^rG6 bums at Rowan Memwial Hospital. Kesler, 29, of Gold Hill, wa

se''oi

I dont think there is anything left to take to a hazardous waste dump," Barry added.

Ronnie Kesler, injured in the explosion, said in a telephone interview that the blast may have started in one of the companys reactors or mixing kettles.

Im not exactly sure what they were doing, he said. I was working on the other end of the room and I heard a kind of whistle, a kind of hissing-like. I looked around and saw flames coming out and I ran out of the building.

Kesler said about six employees were inside that section, including three of the four injured workers.

Samuel Howard, 42, of Salisbury, and Michael Hill, 27, of China Grove, were listed in satisfactory condition with.

, was treated for cuts.

Also injured was Kenneth Kluttz, 33, of Salisbury, who was treated for burns and released.    :

Barry said the workers were mixing an intermediaCe chemical used by the company to make other products when the vat began hissing and workers started running. The explosion followed.

The hissing meant there was something going on that shouldnt have been going on, said Barry. This product wacs made here under the same condition for over 10 years, and we never had any trouble.

Barry estimated it would cost $2 million to $3 million to replace the plant. He said the facility is still operational and the company is continuing to supply its customers.Sovief Finishes Pipeline; Need Only Compressors

B> ANDBKW KOSKNTHAL Vssociated Press Writer M('.S(0\V APi - The Soviet I'nion has finished the controversial Siberian natural gas pipeline at a cost of nearlv ?18 biilion, but has not

yet completed the pumping stations needed to operate the line independently, officials said today.

Oil and Gas Minister Boris Shcherbina insisted 17 compressor stations would be

finished by the end of the year and that even without them, the Soviets can deliver 9 billion cubic meters of gas a year - 4 billion more than initial obligations to Western Europe.

Oil Money Threatened

\

By Helms' Amendment

H\ The AvM)Ciaiil IlTss I S. Sen ,IesM' Hi>lnis is trying once again . to win Senate approval of an anti abortion measure, this time attaching it to a bill that would give coastal slates a share o federal oil drilling revenues.

Heim.'-: K N.t. and .Sen Kogi1 .lepsen, H-'lowa. have piinsored an amendment to the Senate companion of a House bill sponsored by Rep Walter Jones. D-.\ T .Jones' bill passed the House last week..Jo 1-9:1 The hill would give coastal states some of the $:J00 milhon collected annually Irom tederal leasing of of-isfioro oil drilling rights .North i'aroiina would get an estimated 57 H million for Coastal programs Helms amendment would prohibit ieder.ij funding and ledera! m.-urance coverage 01 abortion.' unless the mi'ii'ors iile is in danger, bar, lie' I niiod Stales from promotoig alioriian abroad, and pre'.'-r; any institution roco.M.ng federal iunds from denying, medical treatment to a newl.ioni with birth delects 7 spokesmen tor Jones and other ml! .'upporters say the amendm'nt could kill the ml! \r aide acknowledged till' rieo;;' dlose to tack the ameiidiriei.i to thi.'particular i.'iii ' ecau-e one of its chief 'Upnorier'' b Sen Robert Pa.'Kaood K-uregon. who iielpe..! Seattle Helms last atiempt to get anti-abortion legislal'.oM through the .'senate.

Anythmg strongly supported by an anti-prayer, pro-abortion senator is going to be a likely large for such an amendment." said Helms aide Torn Aehcratt Packwood last vear led a

NRC Insisting On Testimony

WAsHlNGTdN APi -The Nuclear Regulatory Coin.mission has refused to back down on subpoenas ordering 47 lormer and current I'nree .Mile Island worKors to- testify about alleged falsification of reactor leaK rates I'he I omrnission has determinen that the public health and safety require it to completo Its investigation into tho.se allegations without further delay." the panel said in a memorandum and order.

The allegations were first

made in Mar 1979 bv Harold

Har'man. a control room operator a' ine T.M! s Unit 2. reactor, aij-.ul tests conducted dufi-ng the months before the serious .March 1979 accident that crippled the reactor Hartman said the tests were routinely doctored and repeated because of abnormal leaks of the coolant hat keeps the radioactive core from melting. but the problem was never reflected in reports to the NRC.

d

month-long Senate filibuster apinst a Helms bill to prohibit federal funding and lederal insurance coverage o! abortions. The Senate twentually voted 47-46 to table the bill

Deb Sterling, an aide to Sen. Ernest Hollings. D-S.C.. said supporters of the coastal drilling bill would try to persuade Helms and Jepsen to withdraw the amendment. Otherwise we'll spend weeks debating abortion, not the bill," said Ms. Sterling.

Helms has not decided on the merits of the bill, although he is leaning against it, said aide David Craft. The Reagan administration opposes it becau.se it would increase the federal deficit.

About $13 million was bid earlier this year on potential drilling sites off the North

Carolina coast, and the figure nationwide runs into the billions. The bonuses collected by the federal government last year totaled $8.3 billion.

Jones argues that the federal government shares with states the revenue from similar projects on interior federal lands and should do so with the offshore sites.

Craft said Helms is concerned most about the staggering deficit, and he's said this just doesn't make sense, particularly since California. Louisiana and Alaska would get most of the money"

, Gov. Jim Hunt this week "wrote Helms and Sen. John East. R-\,C., asking them to support the bill. A spokesman for East said he has not decided his stance.

T0:

\m

( LOSE INSHORE The I'SS Tarawa, part of the United States fleet in Lebanese waters, is pictured at approximately TOO meters offshore Thursday. In foreground (left) is seen the famous landmark of the Beirut ferris wheel, reminding the city's people of happier times. Firing from the American ships against anti-government gun positions in Lebanons central mountains erupts from time to time when the militia shells threaten .Marine lives. (AP Laserphoto)

SELL YOUR OLD car in classified and you'll have extra money for a new one Call 752-6166.

Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?

First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector

752-3952

Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And8Til9 A.M. On Sundays.

m

\

L

Shcherbina said the Soviet Union can use compressor stations built for two parallel pipelines to pump gas through the 2,759 miles of pipe laid between the LYengoi gas fields in northwestern Siberia and the Uzhgorod terminal on the Soviet-Czechoslovak border.

We are ready to fulfill our contract obligations starting from today." Shcherbina told Soviet and foreign journalists.

He said gas is being pumped through the Siberian pipeline to storage chambers and other internal systems using compressor stations on the lines that serve Moscow and thecityofPetrovsk.

Shcherbina said the start of service to Western Europe next January would not mean "any reductions at all on other lines.

Shcherbina also provided the first official price tag for the project - the equivalent of $18 billion for equipment, design and installation.

The pipeline, keystone of

an ambitious development scheme involving five other major lines across the center of the Soviet Union, was the target of U.S. embargos after the declaration of martial law in Poland.

President Reagan tried to stop delivery of American-made turbines and turbine parts for compressor stations, but European firms and governments refused to cooperate and the sanctions were lifted late last year.

Shcherbina said the laying of the pipe through swamps and mountains and under rivers and lakes was completed six months early and pronounced the embargo a failure. But it apparently succeeded in hindering construction of compressor stations.

The minister did not say any compressor stations were completed along the line.

He said one was nearly operational - the central station at Pomary that was built by an Italian firm using

25-megawatt general electric turbines. He said two other stations had been erected and were to be operated with Soviet-built 16-megawatt turbines.

But when pressed for specifics on how far the project had come along, Shcherbina would say only that 17 stations were scheduled for completion by the end of the year. He did not say whether any were to use the 25-megawatt turbines the Soviet Union rushed into production to counter the U.S. embargo.

Forty compressor stations ar^ planned for the pipeline, and Western experts believe the Soviets need 20 of them to meet their obligation to deliver 5 billion cubic meters of gas per year to West Germany, France, Switzerland and perhaps Italy next January.

Western estimates say the pipeline at peak delivery, about 20 billion cubic meters, could bring the Soviets between $2.5 billion and $3.3

billion of badly needed hard currency per year.

But the gas market has been soft in the face of declining world prices and West Germany the Sovi

ets single biggest customer at a peak of 10.5 billion cubic meters per year - has-a built-in option to reduce purchases by 20 percent, a year.

Back Jetties

By The Associated Press

A U.S. House committee has approved construction of two mile-long stone jetties off the states Outer Banks, despite opposition from the Reagan administration and environmentalists.

The jetties are needed to keep sand from filling Oregon Inlet, said Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., the measures chief sponsor. Oregon Inlet connects Pamlico Sound with the Atlantic Ocean and is the only access to the sea for local fishermen.

But the U.S. Department of Interior and environmental groups say the project will cause severe erosion at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore north of the inlet and the Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge to the south.

Jones said that the environmental concerns were totally unfounded, adding that building jetties is going to do much less damage than not building the jetties.

Interior Secretary James Watt has refused to grant construction permits for the jetties, which would be anchored on 150 acres of federal land.

EAU IS

FOR PLANTING

Landscape Evergreen Special

Sale ends Monday

Each

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i


Title
Daily Reflector, September 23, 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.) - 30582
Date
September 23, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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