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COOL
Sunny Sunday and Monday. High Sunday in upper 60s. Low Sunday night in mid 40s. High Monday in mid 70s.CONSTRUCTION
The buiiding industry in Greenviiie keeps roliing aiong. Jerry Raynor teiis the story in words and pictures on D-1.CUP DELAYED
The seventh and finai race of the 1983 Americas Cup competition was deiayed by shifting winds Saturday. (Page B-1)
Today's Reading
Abby.............
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Classified
D-3-7
Arts...............
......C-8,9,12
Crossword
A-15
Bridge,
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Editorial
A-4
Building
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Enterment
C-10-11
Business
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Opinion
., A-5
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 211
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE, N.C. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25, 1983
104 PAGES8 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTS
Parker Case Goes To Jury Monday
By ROY HARDEE The jury is expected to begin deliberations fy to determine the guilt or innocense of Dwight
Parker, 23, of Newark, N.J., on two counts of
murder and armed robbery in connection with the mid-February deaths of the Rev. Leslie Thorbs and Anthony Ray Herring, as the trial enters its fourth week Monday.
District Attorney Tom Haigwood announced Friday afternoon that the State was resting its case, followed shortly thereafter by the defense team of Milton Williamson and Bob Browning informing Judge David E. Reid Jr. that it would offer no evidence.
After the jury was dismissed Friday, Reid heard, then denied, a motion by the defense for dismissal of charges. He then discussed the instructions which are to be given to the jury when hey return to the courtroom at 10 a.m. Monday, to hear the final arguments for the state and the defense,
The jury will be told by Reid that it can find Parker guilty of first degree mijrder, second degree murder, or not guilty on each of the murder charges.
On the a-mi' robberv charges, the jury will be instruct jd that it can return a verd^t of guilty of robbery v. ith a fire arm, or not guilty.
Reids instriic^ions will say the verdicts must be unanai..ous, and will de with special instructions .on confessions, motive and the fact that the jury should not consider the end punishment in determining the degree of innoscense of Parker,
Two weeks were required to select a jury in the case, and testimony was heard all last week.
On the day of his arrest in the basement of a Newark home, Parker gave Pitt authorities two hand written statements: one a paragraph long, which said that he killed Thorbs and Herring with a gun and knife; the second an eight-page hand written confession in which he outlined the events leading to the murder and robbery and the dumping of the bodies into the Tar River.
Parkers statement, which was introduced into evidence, said he told Carolyn Pippins that he planned to kill Thorbs for his money and car, then set fire to his Grifton home, then got Ms, Pippins to drive him to Grifton.
The statement said when he found Herring, of Goldsboro, was at the Thorbs house, he got the two men to drive him back to a spot near Ms. Pippins house near the Pitt-Green\ ille Airport, where he shot both men in the head.
The statement then outlined how he and Ms. Pippins, who was not present at the scene when the two men were killed, tied cen-derblocks to the two bodies and dumped then into the Tar River.
Ms. Pippins, 20, of Route 4, Greenville, is a co-defendant in the case, charged with two counts of murder and one of armed robbery.
She has been in the courtroom during most of the trial, as had Parkers mother and wife.
(Please turn to A-2)
PLAIN CONTRAST - A windmill and an abandoned ranchhouse on the Plains of San Augustin are backdropped by a dish at the
Very Large Array radio telescope system between Magdalena and Datil, N.M. (AP Laserphotu)
Battleship Arrives Off Lebanon
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) The U.S. battleship New Jersey, its huge guns capable of hurling a one-ton shell 20 miles, arrived off the coast Sunday as Lebanese troops battled Moslem and Druse militiamen with artillery and machine guns.
The .arrival of the 887-foot vessel vastly increased the firepower of the U.S. naval force off Beirut. U.S. Navy officials said the New Jersey will be able to shell anti-government artillery positions that have hammered targets around the U.S. Marine peacekeeping force, based at the international airport, and other parts of the capital.
The battleship, which steamed from the Pacific to join a dozen other U.S. naval vessels already off the coast, carries nine 16-inch guns, 12 five-inch guns and an array of other weaponry. Some of the other ships already have shelled anti-government positions overlooking Beirut with five-inch guns.
The New Jersey served in World War II and the Korean and Vietnam wars, and is the first American battleship to operate in the eastern Mediterranean in nearly a quarter century. Under the command of Capt. Richard D. Milligan of Matawan N.J., it carries a crew of 72 officers and 1,480 enlisted luen.
On shore, the U.S. Marines abandoned two checkpoints Saturday to avoid getting involved in the fighting as Lebanons civil war spread from the central mountains to
Beiruts southern slums.
Marine spokesman Warrant Officer Charles Rowe said a Marine CH-46 helicopter came under ground fire while flying over the slum fighting and responded with .50 caliber machine gun bursts. He said the chopper was not hit.
Police said at least 19 people were killed and 48 wounded in shootouts between Lebanese troops and Shiite Moslems in the slums, in mountaih fighting with Syrian-backed Druse warriors and in a Druse shelling of Christian-populated east Beirut.
No Marines were reported hurt, but an Italian member of the multinational force patrolling Beirut was wounded in cross-fire, a spokesman for the Italian contingent said.
Cease-fire talks remained stalled and Syria warned the multinational force against further involvement in the 21-day-old conflict.
Saturdays fighting came one day after Druse militiamen in the mountains and Shiite militiamen, in southern Beirut wounded four Marines in an artillery barrage.
The Shiite Moslem militia has long controlled Beiruts southern slums. Though sympathizing with the Druse, the Shiites remained large y neutral in the civil war until Friday, when Amal gunners bombarded Lebanese army and Marine positions in support of Druse militias fighting the army in the mountains.
Residents of Shiite-held neighborhoods said the militia
joined the fight after Christian militiamen erected checkpoints in mixed Moslem-Christian areas nearby. Southern Beirut is believed to be a major route for anti-government Druse attempting to slip into the capital.
Government troops responded Saturday by pounding Shiite positions in the southern slums of Hay el-Sellum and Bourj el-Barajneh with hundreds of rounds from 155mm artillery and tarik cannon. Shiites retaliated with grenades, mortars and machine guns.
A truce with the Shiites was declared, but collapsed hours later when Shiites claimed Christian militiamen had murdered a group of Moslems in the Mreije neighborhood south of the capital. Reporters in the area could not confirm the claim.
A weeping 12-year-old boy, who identified himself only as Mohammad, told Associated Press correspondent Scheherezade Faramarzi that three men in street clothes had shot his mother and others.
I did not scream, I only cried, he said. 1 had seen my mother dead in front of me."
The multinational force is comprised of Marines, French paratroopers, British troops and Italian soldiers. It originally was sent at the Lebanese government's request a year ago to keep the peace and help the army reassert control after the Israeli invasion and subsequent evacuation of Palestinian guerrillas from the Lebanese capital.
Lebanon War Is Teaching Israel
limits Of Power
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) The new civil war in Lebanon is causing deep dismay in Israel, but it also seems to be teaching the Jewish state something about the limits of its power.
The explosion of Druse-Christian fighting is the latest in a series of setbacks Israel has suffered in Lebanon in the past year. If the fighting prevents the return of the Palestine Liberation Organization to Lebanon in force. Israel still will be able to say its invasion was worthwhile.
But if the nightmare scenario circulating here comes true and Yasser Arafat returns in triumph to Beirut, fhe Israelis may feel obliged to join the fight. The fact that they have not stepped in so far is indicative of the profound reluctance to do any more battle in Lebanon. '
The dream of a Lebanon at peace with Israel and free of the Syrian-PLO presence went sour months ago.
The Lebanese civil war has triggered an acrimonious debate in the Cabinet, caused rumbles of displeasure in Israels own large Druse and Christian minorities and mav even have hastened Prime Minister .Menachem Begin s political demise.
Begins devoted secretary. Yona Klimovitzky. says Begin feels brokenhearted and betrayed over the war.
She was quoted by the daily Vedioth Ahronoth as saying in an interview: He thought we would go into Lebanon and be out in the blink of an eye. Apparently he was disappointed at being betrayed by people he trusted.
Israel is a much quieter place nowadays than last summer, when Begin and his defense minister. Ariel Sharon, were promising a throng of supporters in a Tel Aviv square that the PLO would be destroyed and Lebanon would make peace with Israel.
That kind of fist-waving rhetoric has evaporated. With Begin resigned and Sharon pushed offstage, the crisis is in the, hands of Defense Minister Moshe Arens and Prime Minister-designate Yitzhak Shamir, low-key businesslike men who share one goal: to cut fsraels losses in Lebanon and end what has been the most divisive, unpopular war it has fought.
Sharon masterminded the war with the grand design of driving the PLO and the Syrians out of Lebanon and establishing a stable Christian government which would sign a peace with Israel. He spoke of Israel. Lebanon and Egvpt shortly becoming "a triangle of peace" in the Middle East. Begin, borrowing from the Bible he reveres, promised -the land will be at peace for 40 years."
The design went awry with the assassination of Lebanese President-elect Bashir Gemayel, which knocked the underpinnings out of the Israeli-Lebanese alliance. The subsequent Sabra and Chatilla camp massacres of Palestinians, which blackened Israel's image, forced Sharon's ouster as defense minister and brought home to the Israeli public what an ugly war it was involved in.
Gemayels successor, his brother Amin, had little inclination to sign a peace with Israel. He felt too thi^tened by Syria. Some Israeli officials call him weak and indecisive. We kept pressing him to make a move, and he wouldn't," claims a know ledgeable Israeli official.
Last month, when Israel was ready to withdraw its forces from the Chouf mountains in Lebanon, it says it begged Gemayel to get tough and send in his army to prevent a bloodbath of sectarian fighting.
He kept delaying, and ended up like a schoolboy who realizes on the last day of the summer holiday that he has to write a paper, so he resorts to praying that the school will blow up or the teacher will die, said the official.
Arens sought a more even-handed policy in Lebanon, and opened lines of communication to Gemayel's Druse foes. His critics say he thus bet on both horses and lost everything.Tradition Of Old Barbershops Still Lives Today
By Sue Hinson Reflector Staff Writer Where would you go if you wanted to meet up with friends, have a lively sports conversation or wanted to take a shower. Maybe a health spa or sports club, but 50 years ago you would have gone to the Proctor Hotel Barbershop.
Showers were relatively new conveniences then, and business men, truck drivers - almost everyone - considered the 25 cent fee well worth it. After your shower, you could get a haircut for 40 cents, a shave for 20 and your shoes polished til they gleamed for only 10 cents. The conversation, some of the best to be found anywhere, was free.
The Proctor Hotel and barbershop closed their doors many years ago, but just around the corner from where so many memories were made, three of the men who were part of that history are still in,business - barbers Lee Rowland, 76, and George Brown, 82, and shoeshine boy Arthur Cherry, 75. Their place is called The Proctor Barbershop.
Stiff-starched collars, white jackets and shower lines arent the order at the new Proctor, but Rowland, Brown and Cherry are unmistakably originals and still carry on the tradition of good work, j^ood conversation and friendship.
Theyll give you a warm cream shave with a straight edge-razor, a trim, and if you like, Arthur, the best and perhaps only shine boy left in Pitt County, Ill make your shoes prettier than when you bought them. All that will cost you $7.75. The conversation is free.
There are people who stop in here every day, and then theres the people we wave to, but anyone is welcome to just come in ana swap tales and talk, Rowland says as he settles into his barberchair - the one closest to the window. Yep, well talk about anything, but I enjoy sports, baseball really. Im probably the biggest Braves fan there is in this area ... even though theyre about to lose out, he laughs.
Brown, says he talks sports a lot more these days. "Business was the big topic at the hotel barbershop.
Arthur doesnt do a wnole lot of talkinc unless hes asked a question. He just sits there taking it all in - an ear on the
conversation, an ear on the soap opera and his eyes hidden behind a wreath of cigar smoke.
Now you would think being together so long would cause problems, but Rowland, Brown and Cherry say theyve never had a serious or any other kind of fight. Believe it or not, weve never had a cross word, never had a fight, Rowland says.
Yep, Arthur adds.
Were more like brothers I reckon. We always got along even though we didnt always agree, Brown says.
Rowland takes his pipe from between his teeth long enough to do his snorting kind of laugh and then settles back.
The barber business isnt quite as good as it used to be, but we still have plenty of customers, Brown says. The difference is that back in the days of the Proctor Hotel people didnt have anything to shave with at home because they couldnt keep their razors sharp. So the regulars would come in every morning before work to get a shave.
Now people have showers at their homes, but then most people only had tubs, some didnt even have those, and it was a treat to come down to the shop for a shower. Sure it cost a quarter, but it was well worth it, Rowland adds.
We used to keep the old shop open until 11 at night on Saturdays. It was not unusual to have all five barber chairs full, all the waiting seats full and two waiting in line for the shower right at closing time, Brown says.
During the week wed open at 8 oclock, Rowland says.
7:30, Arthur says.
Yeah, 7:30, Brown says, then wed close at about 7. That way people could get in after work for a haircut or shower.
Now they keep their shop open from 7:30 until 5, six days a week.
You know, the other day I waited on a fourth generation, Rowland says. Think of that, waiting on grown men with sons. The same men I waited on when they wefe small enough to need the bench.
(Please turn to A-2)
L
FULL HOUSE ... The conversation rarely ceases at The Proctor Barbershop. How can it when the proprietors are characters like Arthur Cherry, George Brown and Lee Rowland (working left to right)? But it takes more than three to get a
good jaw jammer going and these regulars (left to right) Lee Abbott, Phil Goodson and W.C. Cobb, have been at the barbershop enough to know exactly what to say. (Reflector Photo by Marv Schulken)
Obituaries Shooting Death
Cannile
KINSTON - Mrs. FYances Harvey Canvile died Friday night in Pitt County Memorial Hospital She was a resident of 605 Edwards Ave.. Kinston. A memorial service will be held at 11 a m. Monday in the First Presbyterian Church in Kinston by her pastor. Rev. Hue Christopher. A graveside ser\ ice will be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the Greenwood Cemetery.
Mrs. Carwile. a native of Greenville, had been a resident of Kinston for the past 43 years and was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Kinston. A graduate of East Carolina University. she was a former public school teacher.
She is survived by her husband, William Edward (Ned) Carwile; a daughter, Mrs. Mary C. Seibert of Savannah. Ga.; a brother, E.W. Harvey Jr. of Greenville; and a granddaughter.
The family suggests that memorial contributions be made to the First Presbyterian Church of Kinston. , the family will be at the home, 605 Edwards Ave.. Kinston. Arrangements by Wilkerson Funeral Home.
Dixon
The following survivors were left off Mrs. Leona Elks Dixon s death announcement which appeared in Friday's paper; two sisters, Mrs. Lillian Harrell of Chesapeake, Va., and Mrs. Clifton Toler of Washington; and two brothers, Hugh Elks of Plymouth and Russell ElksofGrimesland.
Ebron
Mrs. Helen Ebron. 49, died at Pitt County Memorial Hospital Thursday. She was the wife of Mrs. Stephen Paul Ebron of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Phillips Brothers Mortuary.
Garner Princess Sharrell Garner,
3. died at Pitt County Memorial Hospital early Thursday morning. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.
She was the daughter of Wayne Garner of Garysburg and Sharon Garner.
In addition to her natural parents, she was is survived by her foster-parents, Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Staton of Greenville; four foster-brothers, James, Henry, Herbert Jr. and Stephen
Staton, all of the home; a foster-sister, Jenelle Staton of the home; and her foster-grandparents.
Funeral arrangements are being handled by the Faison Funeral Home of Seaboard. The foster-family will receive friends at their home. 135 E. Catawba Road.
Knox
VANCEBORO - Mr. John Bryan Knox, 74. retired electrician, died Friday night at his Rt. 1, Ernul, home. A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Clayton Family Cemetery in Beaufort Coimty by his pastor. Rev. David Causley, and the Rev, Graham Lane, Free Will Baptist Minister of Cayton.
Mr. Knox, a native and life long resident of the Cayton community of Craven County, was a member of the New Haven FWB Church.
He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Christine C. Knox; four daughters. Ms. Johnnie K. Garris and Ms. Lillian Knox, both of the Cayton community. Ms. Shirely K. Gaskins of Topsail Island, and Ms. Joyce K. Ipock of Vanceboro; six sisters, Ms. Mary Wetherington and Ms. Minnie Morris, both of the Cayton community, Ms. Mildred Alligood of New Bern, Ms, Lucille Chauncey of Washington, Ms. Hazel Walker of Chesapeake. Va.. and Ms. Sina Bilodeau of Virginia; 13 grandchildren; and ten great-grandchildren.
The family will be at the home of Ms. Johnnie Garris, Rt. 1, Ernul.
Arrangements by the Wilkerson Funeral Home of Vanceboro.
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - The State Bureau of Investigation is probing the involvement of a Fayetteville policeman in the shooting death of a 27-year-old man in Fayetteville early Saturday, police said.
Julius Mitchell was dead on arrival at 4;38 a.m. at Cape Fear Valley Hospital, said hospital associate administrator Torrey Johnson. He said Mitchell had been shot in the base of the skull around 2;27 a.m.
Patrolman A. Panzilo of
the Fayetteville Police Department said a policeman was involved in the shooting. Panzilo refused to give further details, but said the SBI was investigating the shooting.
SBI district supervisor Frank D. Johnson did not return repeated phone calls to his office and his home.
Fayetteville Police Chief Danny Dixon did not return calls to his office and could not be reached at home for comment because Panzilo refused to give his unlisted number.
Parker Case...
(Continued from A-1)
It was information supplied by Ms. Pippins that first tipped officers to the murders, the location of the bodies and to Parkers location in Newark. She has been free under bond since she was charged, and no date has been set for her trial.
The state placed more than 55 exhibits into evidence during last week, most of it circumstantial.
Most of the states evidence Friday delt with expert testimony by State Bureau of Investigation agents from the SBIs crime lab in Raleigh, which linked clothes line used to tie cen-derblocks to the victims to clothes line in Ms. Pippins yard.
The testimony also linked blood stains found on the Tar River Bridge on N.C. 222 between Falkland and
Belvoir, in Thorbs car recovered in Newark, in Ms. Pippins sisters car, and from a dirt path near the Pippins home where Thorbs and Herring were shot, to bipod samples taken from the two bodies.
The last witness before the state ended its case Friday, was former Pitt Deputy Sheriff Jackie Moye, who was recalled to the stand by the defense.
Moye recalled a conversation with Parker about the defendants having not only to face a Pitt County Court and judge, but having to face a higher court on judgement day.
Under questioning by Williamson, Moye said that Parker hung his head and was teary eyed ... the first time he (Parker) showed any emotion.
MONDAV
12 Noon (ireenville .\oon Rota-r>- Club meets at Rotary Bldg.
12:3(1 pm - Kiwanis of Greenville-Cniversity Club meets at Holiday Inn .3 :iu pm - Greenville TOF.S Club mee'ts at Planters Bank 6 15 pm. - Professional Secretaries International meet at Western Sizzlin' on lth Street 6:30 p .m Rotary Club meets 6 ill p m - Host Linns Club meets a! Tom s Restaurant
6 3n p m -- (ip'imist Club meets at Three .Steers
7 (JO pm- Kastern Pines Volunteer Fire Department meets at fire department
7:30 p m - Pilot Club of Greenville meets at Ramada Inn' District governor is visiting 7:30 pm. - .Sweet Adelines, Eastern Chapter meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p m - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg.
8:00 p m. - Lodge .\o. 885 Loyal Order of the .Moose
TUESDAY
7:00 am- Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m. - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at .Masonic Temple 7:0() pm - Family Support
Group at Family Practice Center 7:00 p m -.1 CAN COPE at Gaskins-Leslie Center, room 124 7:30 pm. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p m - Toughlove parents support group at St. Paul's
Episcopal Church 7:30 pm. - Vernon Howard
Success Without Street study group at 110 N Warren .St 8:00 p m - Narcotics Anonymous meets at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. - Withia Council,
Degree of Pocahontas mefts at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg , Farmville hwy
WEDNESDAY 9:30 a.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. Kiwanis Club meets 6:30 p.m. - REAL Cri.sis Intervention meets 8:00 p.m. Pitt County AI Anon Group meets at AA Bldg on Farmville hwy.
8:00 p.m. - John Ivey Smith Council No. 6600, Knights of Columbus meet at St. Peters Church hall
8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.
Hero Sailors
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) - Two sailors, awakened in the middle of the night by their irksome smoke detector, searched their apartment building and saved an elderly neighbor from a fire Saturday, officials said.
The sailors said the smoke detector had become bothersome because it buzzed whenever they boiled water or burned toast. Sailor Daniel Waldenga, 22. of Genoa, Ohio, said the noise "can drive you crazy when cooking, "but it paid off."
Vernice Wynn, 77, a retired school teacher, was hospitalized in critical condition. The fire, of undetermined origin, was confined to her apartment,
Waldenga and his roommate, Nelson Barger, 23, both Navy photographers, were awakened by the familiar blare of their smoke detector about 3:20 a.m. When they couldnt find smoke in their own quarters, thev searched the halls.
Barbershop ...
(Continued from A-1)
Asked to tell about his years as a shineboy, Arthur plucks his cigar from his mouth, thinks a moment, then says... Ive worked 50 years on and off for them (Rowland and Brown)... and the business hasnt changed too much in that time. Its still good. Back then, I used to do 200,300, pair a week at 10 cents a pair... I still do a good deal, 125 to 100 a week... now I charge 75 cents.
Arthur says he began shining shoes when he was 14 because he wasnt in school and his mother told him that if he didnt go to school. He'd have to work.
"When I was 14,1 just didnt want to go to school, so I went out and got a job shining shoes and Ive had a job ever since. Brown sayS hes not really sure what made him want to become a barber. I guess it could be because I enjoy people so much.
Rowland is definitely sure. When I was a small boy, my father would take me down to Enfield once a month and Id go by the barbershop. I said then that if I ever got big enough. I'd be the barber. What it was that impressed me, I dont know... maybe it was the whitecoats.
.Asked if they would ever retire, all three just chuckled.
"Shoot we just had a new sign painted, Rowland says. "See there. The Proctor Barbershop.
Why not drop in for a visit, itll be worth your while.
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County Owned Allotment Sold
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners Friday auctioned off the countys 18,015 pound tobacco allotment for $104,742.75.
The allotment was offered in 18 lots of 2,000 pounds each, and one 2,015 pound lot. High bids ranged from $2.65 per pound to $2.90 per pound.
Successful bidders at the sale included: Dal Cox, one lot at $2.90 a pound and two lots at $2.80 per pound; Robert Earl James, one lot at $2.65 and one lot at $2.80; J.P. Stancil, one lot at $2.65 and one lot at $2.80; Tucker Farms, one lot at $2.65 and three lots at $2.75; Tull Worthington, one lot at $2.70; Jessie Lee Mills, two lots at 2.75; Curtis Mills, three lots at $2.75; J.S. Brown, one lot at $2.75; and Robert Halstead Jr., 2,015 pounds at $2.85.
Fridays sale resulted from government regulations which said the allotments had to be sold before the end of December, and brings to an end the countys leasing of the allotment, which has produced some $220,614.47 in revenue since the county acquired it more than a decade ago along with land for the new Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
The board of commissioners, over the years, has received criticism over its leasing of the allotment.
But, according to board chairman Charles Gaskins, "the county-owned allotment was the property of all of the people of Pitt County and we had to take care of it to the best advantage of the people. We couldnt throw it away and let it go.
'It was the peoples property and had to be used to the best advantage of all of the ^ople.
The allotment has saved the tax payers a lot of money, County Manager Reginald Gray said.
Actually, the leasing of the tobacco, coupled with the sale of 40 acres of the property to the state as the site of the East Carolina University School of Medicine and Fridays sale of the allotment, has turned a profit for the county of some $131,354.
The county paid $389,000 for the hospital property, then sold the 40 acres to the state for $195,000. Add the $220,612 income from the allotment leasing to the $195,000 received from the state and the $104,742 from the allotment sale, and the county has gained $131,354 more than the cost of the hospital site.
Council Meeting
The City Council will conduct a special call meeting Monday at 5:30 p.m. in the first floor conference room at city hall. The council will
consider documents to accept grants for airport improvements, followed by a regular workshop meeting.
Accused Spy Ordered Held
NEW \ORK (AP) A Bulgarian trade official described as a professional intelligence officer" was ordered held without bail Saturday for allegedly buying U.S. nuclear weapons secrets from an American decoy.
Penyu B, Kostadinov, 41, was arrested Fridav night as he left a Manhattan restaurant where he gave aii undisclosed amount of money to the decov and received a document according to a complaint filed' bv the FBI in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.
The document, Report on Inspection of Nevada Operations Office, concerns nuclear weapons securitv procedures, the complaint said.
If convicted of the espionage charge, Kostadinov could be sentenced to up to life in prison, or execution.
In court on Saturday, Assistant U.S. Attornev Ruth Glushien Wedgwood asked that no bail be set on the grounds that Kostadinov is "a professional intelligence officer for the Bulgarian government who has no reason whatsoever to stay in the country" to stand trial.
Stanley Singer, a Manhattan lawyer who represented Kostadinov at the request of the Bulgarian Embassy in Washington, argued against prosecutors request that the man be held, saying the defendant has been in New York since 1979land that he has a wife and two children,
The Bulgarian ambassador is willing to give his personal assurance to guarantee his (Kostadinovs) appearance" in court, Singer said.
Such a procedure would have to be worked out with the State Department, and U.S. Magistrate Nina Gershon said she could see no immediate reason to release the defendant on bail.
The complaint said Kostadinov paid money after having received documents marked "Secret" and National Security Information to the unidentified American, who was working with the bureau.
The transaction took place at the Top of the Park restaurant atop the Gulf & Western building, a Manhattan skyscraper, and was witnessed by FBI agents dining at nearby tables, the bureau said. Kostadinov was arrested as he left the building.
The American had been meeting with Kostadinov since May 1981, and the Bulgarian presented a list of other classified documents he hoped to acquire, the FBI complaint said.
In the Bulgarian capital of Sofia, the Foreign Ministrv lodged a sharp protest with the U.S. Embassy and called for Kostadinovs immediate release.
U.S. Ambassador Robert L. Barry was summoned to the Foreign Ministry and told the arrest of Kostadinov can be interpreted only as a crude and premeditated provocation against Bulgaria, and that the communist government insists on his immediate release
Barry was told that any allegations that (Kostadinov) has engaged in illegal activities and the present charges against him are groundless, according to the Bulgarian national news agency. Kostadinov is engaged only in normal busmess and technological activity, the agency said.
Kost^nov is an assistant commercial counselor for the Bulgarian Commercial Office, a trade and exchange agency His job involves trade missions and the placement of , Bulgarian exchange scientists and researchers in assignments with universitits and other institutions in the United States, the FBI said.
Nurses From ECU, PCC Do Well On State Exams
By ANGELA LINGERFELT Reflector Staff Writer Students graduating from nursing programs at East Carolina University and Pitt Community College faired well on state nursing exams given this year.
ECU School of Nursing Dean Emily Henning said 12 nurses from ECU took the exam in February and all of them passed. At PCC, according to nursing program director Judith Kuykendall, 93 percent of the PCC graduates - 26 out of 28 passed the February boards.
A comparable exam was taken by 73 ECU graduates in July. Eighty-eight percent - 64 out of the 73 passed that exam to become licensed registered nurses.
While East Carolinas 88 percent average was better than the 86.6 percent average posted by the graduates of nursing programs at the nine campuses of the University of North Carolina system' who took the July test, ECUs average stood mid-way down the list.
All graduates of UNC-Wilmington and Winston-Salem State University passed the July lioards, as did 90 percent of the graduates of UNC-Chapel Hill and Greensboro.
The passing rate for the other UNC system schools included- A&T State Univer
sity, 78.9 percent; N.C. Central University, 71 percent; UNC-Char!otte, 83 percent; and Western Carolina University, 72 percent.
Almost 90 percent of the graduates of all nursing programs in the state, who, took the July exam passed -1,400 out of 1580.
Although both local schools had high passing rates in February, nursing officials are hesitant to compare the passing rate in February with that in July.
One reason is the difference in programs at the two schools. Another is the fact that PCC students have not been able to take the July exam because they graduate after it is given.
At PCC graduates earn an associate degree, while at ECU students receive a baccalaureate degree,
An associate degree nurse completes two years of study, usually in a community college, and is prepared to care for patients with common health problems in structured settings such as hospitals or nursing homes, Dr. Henning said.
She explained that a baccalaureate degree nurse completes four years of study, usually in a college or university, with a more in-depth study in the sciences and nursing.
This nurse is prepared to
care for patients in a variety of settings including hospitals, nursing homes, public health departments, community health centers and mental health centers.
She said a baccalaureate degree nurse is also prepared for graduate study in nursing.
Ms. Kuykendall said, I dont want to compare the two groups of graduates because they are two entirely different levels of nurses. They take the same exams, but their educatiort is very different.
The PCC official said another reason not to compare the scores on the exam was because we do not want to look as if were competing with ECU, because were not.
According to Dr. Henning, those tests do not evaluate overall competencies of nurses. They are geared toward testing the basic knowledge of nurses from all nursing programs. If a nurse passes the test, it just means she is a safe practitioner.
Betty Trought, former vice president of nursing at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, also said the board exams are a minimum indicator of nursing ability. In reality, there are some excellent practitioners who are just not good test-takers.
Judge Gave Tax Refunds
CHICAGO (AP) - The judge who handles nearly all real estate tax refund cases in Cook County has been awarding hundreds of thousands of dollars to his friends clients for 11 years, according to a published report.
Circuit Judge Robert Dempsey also owns land with the friend, lawyer Peter Alexander, who routinely appeared in Dempseys court, the Chicago Sun-Times reported Sunday.
Dempsey, asked about the report, said he had done nothing wrong. Alexander refused comment.
Dempsey called Alexander a good friend and said, I consider them all my friends and try to treat them all the same. He said Alexander moaned about some gf his rulings and appealed others.
Alexander has not practiced law since February after being convicted of paying bribes in an unrelated
case to get real estate assessment reductions at the county Board of (Tax) Appeals. He was sentenced to 30 days work release and ordered to pay $51,000 in restitution.
The newspaper said the relationship could violate the American Bar Associations Code of Judicial Conduct, which says a judge should refrain from business dealings which involve him in frequent transactions with lawyers or persons likely to come before the court on which he serves.
Court records show Alexander filed hundreds of cases in Dempseys court and the judge approved tax refunds totaling hundreds of
thousands of dollars for his clients, the newspaper said.
The two have been friends for 17 years and together purchased six vacant lots on the citys north and, west sides for cheap prices at tax sales and sheriffs sales, it said.
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Sunday Opinion
flCj|||pj|l8l9TUeRIO<MONP|061^
\ V ^ AUnbelievably, N.C. Election A Year Away
The way candidates for governor are coming through one would think the election is within a
few weeks.
It is not that way. however. The primary election will not be held until May 8. 1984. It is then that the Democratic and Republican nominees will be chosen. The general election is over a year away, in November 1984.
Nevertheless, a flock of Democratic hopefuls are already in the race, seeking eastern support and. most importantly, the money that is needed to conduct a winning campaign.
Knowlegeable observers say the candidates are getting their licks in early because they must nail down the financial support, particularly before the big money is drained off by the projected monumental Jim Hunt-Jesse Helms battle for the U.S. Senate.
The activity is putting political leaders all over the state in a tight spot, since many of them are not yet ready to commit to a gubernatorial candidate but don't want to be left behind if a favorite comes up rapidly. |
It IS certain that any Democrat who wnts to support a candidate will not have any great difficulty in finding one to like. There are plenty to choose from.
The activity points to a wide open race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. There seems to be no sure winner in the race and it means that all of them will have to go to the public and attempt to get the support and votes they will need to win. It should be an exciting vear.Some Security In A Handful Of Flowers
The East Germans apparently take more kindly to people coming over their wall from the west than they do those going from the east. That Indian swami who flew his motorized kite over the Berlin Wall lost only his $7.200 kite and six hours of his time to interrogation.
In the past. East German guards have not hesitated to open up with gunfire when anything including humans attempted to span the wall.
Maybe they were awe-struck this time by the purple chrysanthemums carried by the swami. Perhaps the would-be peacemakers going into the Mideast should lake a bundle the next time.
Noel
YanceyFriestadtAlvin Taylor
Sunday Morning Notes
Recently .Mrs. Joseph Shallit (Louise Lee Outlaw) wrote to ask for information on her uncle, Paul Repton Outlaw, who was associate editor of The Daily Reflector from Jan. 8. 1903, to Nov. 27,1903.
She said her records showed he died in Kinston in March 1904 when he was only 27 years old.
She asked for a copy of his death notice as it will allow me to someday come to Kinston and visit his grave, jn addition to being able to pass on to my children what happened to their great-uncle.
A search of our microfilm files showed that Outlaw was indeed with the paper and left'because of poor health.
An article on March 22, 1904, said. Paul R. Outlaw, who was for more than a vear associated
with The Reflector and gave up his position last fall on account of his health failing and left in December for his old honie in Hertford went to the hospital at Tarboro last week, in the hope of being benefitted sufficiently to enable him to stand a trip to Colorado. Information came this afternoon that his condition is desperate and it is not thought that he can live many hours. This is sad news and will be learned with regret by his many friends in Greenville.
The next day the paper carried the news of his death.
He was a brilliant w'riter, and as associate editor his work on the paper spoke for itself. He made many friends in Greenville, the paper commented.
It noted that his body was taken to Elizabeth City for burial
and he was married to Miss Rodolph Freeman of Moyock. Mr. Outlaw was not a strong man physically, and while he dismissed the thought from his own mind his friends feared that the monster, consumption, had fastened itself upon him. In the fall his health failed and the decline was so rapid that he soon had to give up work and in December went back to his old home at Hertford. The progress of the disease could not be checked and he fell an early victim to it, though he made a brave fight for life.
Mrs. Shallit is a former newspaper wTiter in Philadelphia. Her father was with the New York Herald Tribune. He commented that his younger brother, Paul, would have been a great American writer if he had lived.
PaulO'Connor
No Mere Horserace
R.ALEIGH - Early this year, one of. .North Carolina's most respected journalists got out of newspapering and took a firsthand look at how political campaigns are run. Howard Covington, 38, former executive city editor of the Greensboro papers and a. Pulitzer prize winner while with the Charlotte Observer, signed on with Wade Barber Jr.'s campaign for attorney general.
That campaign came to an abrupt end this month when Barber decided he couldn't compete for campaign funds with former Superior Court Judge Lacy Thornburg. Barber hung up his campaign hat and Covington talked to his former colleagues about what it had been like on the inside.
''I'm not as cynical about (fundraising)," Covington said. "As a reporter, 1 made a mistake about it ... there isnt a smoke-filled room of 10 people saying we re going to buy this candidate. There really are a. lot of people out there ... who live and breathe politics and they don't want to get anything out of it, 1 was pleasantly surprised that when we talked to people about contributions and money, they were really concerned about making this office as good as it can be."
Covington said he's also discovered that political reporters talk to the wrong people. There are quiet folks, working in the small towns of this state, who raise a great deal of money for candidates and provide candidates with a great deal of t^eir support. It is these people the press must find if it is to understand a campaign, he said.
Covington said he hopes reporters will cover this years campaigns "as more than a horserace." He suggested two stories about the A.G.'s race: The growing strength of the office and growth of multi-county crimes which require an attorney general who can coordinate local police units.
Tell Arlene Pulley she shouldnt be paranoid about federal police powers.
Mrs. Pulley is the administrative assistant to Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green and she feels very strongly that the FBI has trumped up charges aganist her boss.
Then, a few weeks ago, her 24-year-old son, Van Pulley, was interrogated and strip-searched by federal drug agents at JFK Airport in New York.
Mrs. Pulley said her son, a graduate student at Princeton, was returning from an 11-nation summer business trip. Hes employed by the Asian Development Bank, she said, and had finished the summer by visiting his girlfriend in Turkey.
He fits the profile of a drug smuggler, she said, because hes young, a student and he has a habitual runny nose. But. he was also dressed in a business suit an'd he had all his credentials as an employee of the bank.
After 90 minutes of interrogation. Van Pulley was stripped and forced to submit to a humiliating exam. Nothing was found, she said.
"Nowhere was he treated like when he came home, she said angrily. Green, informed of the search, said, "And this is America?
The state Board of Education decided this month to allow teachers to buy home computers through the states purchasing contract. The state buys in bulk, so its hoped that teachers will be able to save themselves some money.
Dick Spangler, board chairman, says teachers better shop around, first. He looked at the prices the state pays for computers. Then he went to his local K-Mart.
You guessed it. K-Mart charged up to 40 percent less.
Hans Freistadt was a graduate student and part-time instructor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Freistadt was also a communist. He made no secret of his affiliation.
These facts became public knowledge in May of 1949 when it was announced that Freistadt, an Austrian native and naturalized American citizen, had been awarded an Atomic Energy Commission scholarship for studies in the field of relativity at UNC.
The award precipitated an uproar in Congress that result^ in Freistadt losing the AEC scholarship as well as his part-time job at UNC. It also sparked a re-examination by the committee of chancellors into the UNC policy on hiring communists as faculty members.
Freistadt, a University of Chicago graduate who served as sergeant in the Army in World War II, became a controversial figure when Senator Clyde R, Hoey, D-N.C., blasted the AEC for what he asserted was its failure to properly investigate students selected for nuclear studies. The AEC was also roasted that day in the House of Representatives whigre Rep. Cole, R-N.'Y., said Freistadt got the AEC award "in the face of the fact that the Atomic Energy Commission has a Federal Bureau of Investigation report" on him.
Later that day Freistadt told reporters in Chapel Hill who asked about the AEC scholarship that "nothing was said in the application for the scholarhip about political affiliation, A day or so later the young man wrote a letter to Hoey explaining his status as a communist and member of the Communist Party. He asked Hoey to have his letter inserted in the Congressional Record.
Asserting that he was both a communist and a loyal American citizen, Freistadt wrote:
Allegations that the Communist Party is under foreign control are false; they have not, and cannot be, proven in court. If I thought for a minute that these allegations are true,
I would resign from the Communist Party.
He said he hoped his letter would help clarify matters and bring the incident to a close, because I am anxious again to devote all my working hours to my work as a physicist, and some of my free time attempting to convince my friends and fellow students of the correctness of my political views. Freistadt had an opportunity to read his letter into the record personally when he was called two days later before the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee in Washington. He had written Hoey that he resented the insinuation that I am disloyal to this country, and therefore not entitled to the fellowship (scholarship).
Freistadt made no bones about being a communist, but assured the committee that he is not a foreign agent. He said if at some time he should be granted access to atomic secrets I would not disclose such data to unauthorized persons."
"The Constitution of the Commuinist Party provides for expulsion of any member engaging in espionage, he told the committee. It must be pointed out that Freistadt was speaking about a year before the FBI arrested Julius and Ethel Rosenburg and charged them with spying for the Russians and before Klaus Fuchs was arrested in England on the same charge.
While Freistadt was in Washington Senator OMahoney, D-Wy., chairman of a Senate appropriations subcommittee, said the AECs spending bill for fiscal 1950 would not contain any money for Freistadts scholarship or for any other person of similar beliefs.
OMahoney apparently was not impressed by Freistadts arguments to the joint committee that if his AEC fellowship were withdrawn the same sort of thing may happen later to a "militant New Dealer, a Progressive or even a Republican."
"Once scientists and science students are discriminated against because of their political views or lawful political activities, the whole concept of academic freedom as we have known it is endangered, Freistadt told the committee.
A few days later, UNC Controller W.D. Carmichael Jr., assured the university trustees that Freistadt had been fired and that the UNC administration would do its utmost to see that no more communists'were hired. After hearing the promise, the trustees agreed to leave the university administration the handling of such problems as Freistadt had presented.
We frankly dont want Communists on this campus any more than you do, said Carmichael. If we cant keep communists out, youd better get rid of us and get someone else who can keep them out.
The recommendation to leave the communist problem in the hands of the administrative officers and the faculties of the consolidated university" was made by a committee composed of Carmichael and the chancellors of the universitys three units, R.B. House of UNC at Chapel Hill, John W. Harrelson of N.C. State and Dr. W.C. Jackson of Womans College (now UNC-G).
"If the board of trustees will put its trust in us, we believe we can keep the faith the faith with you, faith with our founding fathers, and keep... the university faithful to the principles of American freedom, they said.
If we would keep our university free, we must keep it from anyone who would destroy it, the report continued. We must never forget that a free university can be destroyed as quickly by its friends as by its enemies. At the same time, we do not believe it is necessary for the university to commit suicide in order to prove to the world that it is not afraid of freedom.
The Communists are taking advantage of the unlimited freedom of our university. And if we are not realistic, prudent and cautious, we may discover too late that we have been unwitting collaborationists of the Communists...
The University of North Carolina, in all three of its institutions, stands united unequivocally opposed to Communism...
The Daily Reflector
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Overlooked Entitlement
WASHINGTON - In recent years we have heard a vast deal about the government's "entitiement programs." The talk has to do with food stamps, student loans, subsidized housing, hot school lunches. .Medicaid and the retirement of federal employees. The talk is generally to this effect - that the programs have grown uncontrollably and must be curtailed.
But it is a curious thing. We hear almost nothing at all about other entitlement programs that have grown more rapidly than all the rest. These are the programs intended to support income down on the farm. In the 1970s. farm subsidies cost the taxpayers $3 billion or $4 billion a year. These costs swelled to $6, billion in 1981. and doubled again to S12 billion in 1982.
The latest estimate is that these costs will exceed $21 billion for the fiscal year that ends on Sept. 30. Talk about programs out of control! And the most lamentable part of the situation, as Clifford M. Hardin recently has observed, is that, greatly as the programs may benefit farmers in the short haul, over the long run the programs are bound to be harmful.
Hardin serves' as President Nixon's first secretary of agriculture (1969-71). He is now a scholar in residence at the Center for the Study of American Business at Washington University in St. Louis. In a paper released by the center last month, Hardin directs his criticism especially at President Reagans Paymeiit-in-Kind (PIK) program, but he comments cogently on the whole idea of trying to solve the farmers acknowledged problems by undertaking to limit their production.
PIK was Reagans own idea. The plan has succeeded beyond the administrations dreams. I kept seeing the figures for how much it was costing us to accumulate all that surplus and then store it. the president told me last week. So I said, if
weve got to pay out all these payments for farmers, like for taking land out of production, soil erosion, so forth, I said: Why give them the cash? Why dont we give them the crop that they didnt have and let them sell that crop on the market?"
So the PIK program materialized. An estimated 1.4 million farmers are participating in it. They have taken 82 million acres out of production - 36 percent of all crop land. The government has given the participants $12 billion worth of surplus commodities they presumably would otherwise have produced. Meanwhile the government has saved $9 billion in price supports and storage costs. Froiii the Treasury's viewpoint, PIK makes remarkably good sense.
Hardins point is that our farm policies totally, including PIK, make no economic sense at all. Our on-again. off-again grain embargoes have resulted in the expansion of food production in Argentina, Canada and Australia. As the dollar has risen in value in relation to other currencies, our farm exports have become more expensive; over the past three years, the price of our corn to the average foreign customer has gone up by 80'percent. Who benefits from that?
The 1981 farm act mandates progressive increases in target prices in 1984 and 1985; wheat, for example, would go from $4.30 this year to $4.65 in 1985. At the very least, the president told me, we must have a freezing at the present levels of those price supports. The trouble is that the administrations efforts to freeze target prices have run into adamant opposition from such senators as Zorinsky of Nebraska and McClure of Idaho. They think they are looking after their constituents.
If Hardin is right - and he makes sense to me - all these target prices, support prices, deficiency payments and other devices are only superficially attractive.
TODAYS VERSION-'THE KING HAS NO CLOTHES!
mm
5avid
Mason
Undone
Rowland Evans and Robort Novak
The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C SurOay SeptemDer25 983 A-5
Devising A Ceasefire For Lebanon
LONDON (AP) John J. Louis Jr.. the furniture wax heir derided in the British press as the invisible man." leaves his post as U.S. ambassador to Great Britain in November, amid speculation that he had fallen from favor with both his own and the British governments.
Although Louis departure, effective Nov. 7. was described as a resignation" in a warm letter from President Reagan. British newspapers and diplomatic circles assumed that Louis, who had served for 2' 2 years, was fired.
A strong hint came last week from Louis who said. Not i surprisingly, my wife, my family and I are disappointed and saddened at the prospect of leaving Britain."
Louis, a 58-year-old heir to the Johnson'^ Wax fortune and a major financial backer of Reagans 1980 campaign, is being replaced by Charles H. Price, a Kansas City candy manufacturer who has been ambassador to Belgium since 1981.
Nigel Dempster, the London Daily Mail gossip columnist who broke the story of Louis departure, called the ambassador the invisible man." a nickname quickly picked up by the rest of the British media.
The London Daily Telegraph suggested Louis was being replaced following State Department pressure for the ap[K)intment of-a more forceful and articulate envoy before cruise missile deployment begins at the end of the year.
British officials and the press gave Louis low marks because he remained on vacation in Florida rather than return to London during the first days of the Falklands conflict between Britain and Argentina.
Dempster suggested British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was behind Louis recall.
Her enthusiasm for ever closer ties with the United States clearly needs a professional American ambassador, not just a social figure rewarded for political favors," the columnist wrote.
A spokesman for Mrs. Thatcher denied that she had anything to do with Louis departure and said she had very cordial relations with him.
Louis, a long-time contributor to the Republican Party, is the first to admit that he is not a foreign policy expert, and he spent much of his time entertaining British and American visitors at his elegant home in Regents Park.
He told Washingtonian magazine in 1982 that he was surprised when Reagan offered him the nomination. The London post traditionally goes to a political appointee, in part because of entertaining costs which are not covered by U.S. government funding.
I had thoughts of doing something in government service at some point in my life," he said in the interview. But to have thought of this particular post would have been hilarious."
Others shared that view.
Malcolm Toon, a retired U.S. Foreign Service officer and a former ambassador to the Soviet Union, told the Foreign Service Journal, We have a man in London who owes his place in life to the fact that his parents founded a furniture polish dynasty.
His only qualification lor the job is that he speaks English," Toon said.
At the time of Louis appointment, the Times of London called him, far and away the most obscure of the last five American ambassadors.
Louis has spent most of his career in big business, much of it for S.C. Johnson & Son Inc. as an advertising account .executive and later as its director of international marketing.
He was also chairman of Combined Communications Corp.
The fact that Louis confirmed his departure was unusual. Normally it is left to the ambassadors home capital, but the announcement from Washington was not made until five days later.
Louis was generally appreciated in Whitehall government circles and the London diplomatic community for being a cordial, intelligent quiet American" who represented his country well. But as one French diplomat said, He seems to lack substance as a diplomat.
Some of the criticism of Louis was directed less at him than at the American system of rewarding the president's political and financial backers with ambassadorial plums.
Said the Daily Telegraph in an editorial:
Mr. Louis can smooth his doubtless ruffled pride by reflecting that he is the most conspicuous victim to date of the flawed American approach to diplomatic duty. This treats ambassadorships as an honors system, or more crudely as plums to be handed around to presidents personal'and political cronies ... ,For the United States, whose diplomacy grows ever more complex, the system is no longer good enough."
Jasper
Becker
Criticism
Of Swiss Banks
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - Its an insular world of numbered bank accounts and staffs sworn to secrecy that attracts the personal fortunes of financial wizards and ordinary tax dodgers alike.
Switzerland has 572 major banks with assets, according to 1982 figures, of more than $278 billion. And secrecy plays an important part in their popularity.
Almost ho international financial scandal in the past years has not ended up, in part, at a Swiss numbered account, said Beat Koppler, secretary of the Swiss Trade Union Confederation.
As a result, Swiss commercial secrecy laws are now under attack and financial observers say that the rules are slowly being changed - despite fierce resistance from the countrys bank managers.
The case of oil trader Marc Rich and his partner Pincus Green, who are believed hiding in Switzerland, is only the latest incident to place Swiss banking laws in the spotlight. The two men were indicted Sept. 19 in New York, along with two of their companies, on charges of conspiring to evade $48 million in U.S. taxes on illegal oil profits.
Tax evasion is not an extraditable offense in Switzerland.
The Rich case has fueled an on-going debate over )roposed reforms to the 1934 )anking law which was passed originally in reaction
to demands from Nazi Germany that the accounts of German refugees be made public.
Switzerlands secretive banking laws are no longer unique, and the industry is facing increasing competition from Luxembourg, Austria, Panama, the Bahamas and the Cayman Islands.
But despite the competition and the international debt crisis, Swiss banks thrive, partly because of the tough and conservative control of the Swiss Banking Commission.
Dr. Hans-Peter Dietzi, legal adviser to the Swiss Bank Association, said the countrys neutrality, political stability, strong currency, sophisticated services and communications industries, central location, and reputation for top investment management expertise also help.
Above all depositors have complete confidence they will always be able to withdraw their money, he said. During the Great Depression Swiss banks paid out all the deposits requested even though the penalty was a 50 percent decline in bank assets between 1930 and 1936.
Ever since the 16th century, Switzerland has been attacked for giving refuge to foreign capital.
It is illegal for French citizens to maintain secret bank accounts, such as numbered Swiss accounts, abroad.
WASHINGTON - For all its bold talk about standing by its commitments, the Reagan administration is well on its way toward devising a ceasefire that would honorably extract the Marines from Lebanon by accepting partition of much of the country between Israel and Syria, with the Lebanese government controlling Beirut and its Christian environs.
Assuming acceptance from the high-riding Syrians for this plan, the U.S. may retain honor but hardly achieves glory. President Reagans down payment for it would abandon his pledge of a reunified, strengthened Lebanon free of Israeli and Syrian outsiders. Future installments would cast aside his 1982 Mideast peace plan and acknowledge a general loss of American influence in the region.
Nevertheless, considering the dangerous military position of the Marines, nothing at hand is better than this three-stage plan: first, a ceasefire; second.
consensus talks between sectarian factions in Lebanon to give Moslems a fairer share of political power; third, declaration by Reagan that since the mission of the Marines has been carried out they can now be withdrawn with honor.
That is a long way from Ronald Reagans dreams of presiding over a general Middle East settlement embodied in his peace plan a year ago. But Israels invasion of Lebanon, so spectacular militarily, has yielded a bitter harvest not only for the Israelis but also for their American allies. Instead of implementing a peace plan, U.S. policymakers are reduced to a makeshift formula for pulling American forces out of the line of fire in Beirut.
The formula taking shape within the administration envisages Lebanese President Amin Gemayels government retaining power in a Lebanon that would not precisely be defined but really would not constitute much more than a Beirut
city-state. Gemayels plucky army, only recently trained by the U.S., would be praised for having rescued the nation from the quickeand of civil war. Israels continuing occupation of Southern Lebanon behind $40 million worth of fortifications and Syrias continuing occupation or control of the Bekaa and Northern Lebanon would be tacitly accepted.
Wishy-washy and untidy as this plan appears, other proposed solutions for the Lebanese quagmire all seem worse. No U.S. official seriously considers a military confrontation between the U.S. and Syria. Such a shootout would weaken the U.S. throughout the Arab world and possibly all Islam despite deep hostility for Syria in some moderate Arab states.
Reinforcing the Marines and converting them from peacekeepers into an arm of the Lebanese government in its fight for survival is out of the question. Leaving them in the present twilight zone risks
escalation of casualties or even unwanted warfare with Syria, which could break out at any time, without control from Washington.
This plan to accept but not acknowledge the fact that Lebanon has indeed been partitioned depends heavily on Syrias ehrewd President Hafez Assad. Administration officials tell us that the toughest part of the job for Robert McFarlane. Reagans emissary, is to persuade Assad that, yes. the U.S. now appreciates Syrian interests in Lebanon. That is no easy task after Washingtons long neglect of Damascus. Nor does-McFarlane know whether Assad will accept a compromise from Washington or, feeling himself newly dominant in the Arab world, will demand more.
Some Reagan advisers still would like the U.S. to press Israel to soften its withdrawal agreement with impotent Lebanon, as Assad demands. That will not happen, as one key administration strategist told us. for a simple reason: The Israeli-
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They ARE Talking
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Soviets may simply brush off President Reagans impending embrace of the build-down arms control proposal with a shrug. Thats your problem, they said when the idea was broached earlier this year at the negotiating table in Geneva.
The Soviets dont like to be told how to drop down to lower nuclear weapons levels. They want to set a ceiling agreeable to the United States with considerable latitude in how to get there.
When U.S. negotiator Edward Rowny formally puts the proposal on the table sometime after the opening of the next round on Oct. 6, the Soviets may remain unmoved.
A^TPVTMAT9\Ve fHBRe'5 A COm^CWH FAOAL MU^CU^ANPOUR
INTERIOR s^remi
But Reagans imminent endorsement of the idea of destroying up to two strategic nuclear warheads for each new one that is deployed could have an important impact on Capitol Hill.
The cynical shooting down of the South Korean jetliner probably provided all the emotional help the president needed to get the expensive and awesome MX missile program through Congress. In the national uproar over the plane. Congress is in an anti-Soviet mood. Pleas for moderation in piling up nuclear weapons are lost in the din.
Members who otherwise are inclined to buck the tide, nagged by concerns about the arms race, may now go along with
ANP yeOPLE WITH Biq (jRlse AR HEALThlER IN^ipe.'
THE author of that fTupy
HA^ NEVER PEEN ID A SINGLES BAR*
the $16 billion program to develop and deploy 100 MX missiles with 10 nuclear warheads each.
Like their colleagues who switched to support the White House when Reagan modified his stand in the START (strategic arms reduction) talks last spring, they are candidates for conversion. Build-down could bring them over. It has long had the support of number of key moderates, including Sens. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.. and William Cohen, R-Maine, whose votes the administration has been seeking.
Build-down" has a sincere ring. But it fits so comfortably into the U.S. negotiating position that its acceptance does not push arms control to a new frontier.
To get down to the 5,000 warheads Reagan has prescribed for START the United States would have to destroy about 2,200 warheads even without build^iown. And the Soviets would have to decommission about 2,900.
Uesides, the START proposal and build-down leave plenty of room for new long-range bombers, submarines and missile programs like the MX.
And yet, considering the poisonous atmosphere, its a miracle of sorts that the administration is going ahead on arms control even while chilling relations with Moscow on most other fronts. We are certainly aware of the Korean airline incident, Rowny said the other day. You cant brush it away. We feel it is in our interest to continue arms control and we are going to go back to the negotiations and do it.
Moreover, Rowny and Paul Nitze, his counterpart in parallel talks with the Soviets on nuclear missiles in Europe, are being authorized by the White House to be flexible in the pursuit of weapons reductions.
Reagan, who campaigned against the arms control policies of his three presidential predecessors, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, is seeking deeper cuts than they did - and has made several concessions to try to win over the Soviets.
The outlook is uncertain. Rowny doesnt expect to get down to the bottom line in the START negotiations before the end of the year. And the two sides are probably even farther apart on Euromissiles.
But they are talking.
Lebanon agreement was also Secretary of State George Shultzs agreement and. unsatisfactory though it is to the .Arabs. Washington will not abandon it.
Although Lebanon in due course is expected to bow to Assads demand and abrogate its Israeli withdrawal agreement, the U.S. will stay silent. Washington s ceasefire offering to the Syrians is less sweeping: support for a greater distribution ol power to Moslems within Lebanon.
If Syria accepts this as
the prelude to a ceasefire, the etage will be set lor Reagan to order his quiet plan into effect: withdrawal of .Marines from their shooting-duck gallery. That would mean no withdrawal of foreign forces from Lebanon, no revival' of the 1982 peace plan and no glinip.sc of a political tireaktbrough. The goal of U S Alicieast policy has liecome an end to .American bloodshed in Beirut: That dramatically lowers ambitions tor the Reagan administration.
Copyright t9:i Field Enterprises, Inc
George
Gallup
Poll
PRINCETON. N.J. As the new school yea'- iko;;.' a nia-jority of Americans, for the first time, backsi v\>tHri for educating the nation's children ^
Under the voucher system the governi^.en' '.ui'iM jrn\ ide a certain amount of money tor the educatim; n: c.a h child, regardless-of whether the child attends a puhhc. [);.r<ichial or other private secondary school In the latest survey.'the voucher system is tavmvd bv a .51 percent majority of the adult public and oppi)scf!..b\ ;;; percent, with 11 percent undecided. As recently as two years ago. backers and opponents of the plan \Ure aboui equah in number, with 4:1 percent in favor to 41 fiercent opposed In surveys conducted in the early '70s' opponents ot the voucher system plan narrowly outnumbered proponents Thr .lalt-st survey thus marks the first time majority .-iipport !i',r 'hi' idea has emerged.
Not surprisingly, better than 2-tn-l support lor the plan is found among parents ot children atten(iin parochial' or independent, non-public schools. At the same time, a piuralitv 0! parents of children attending the public schools now tavors'the voucher system, by a 48 percent to 41 percent margin Following is the question asked and the trend:
In some nations, the government allots a certain amount oi money for each child for his education. The parents.can then send the child to any public, parochial, or private school they choose. This is called the 'voucher system.' Would you like to see such an idea adopted in .this country '."
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No
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Oppose
opinion
June 24-27.......
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1981 .
43 '
41
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1971.............
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44
18
1970 ..........
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.As shown in the table below, greater support tor the voucher system is found among parents ot children in parochial or private schools, blacks. Catholics, and y oung adults Conversely, proportionately less support is expressed by parents of public-school children, whites. Protestant-, and persons 5 and older.
Roughly equivalent proportions of men and women ta'. or the voucher system concept. Republicans. Democrav- mid Independents also back the plan by similar margins.
Following are the details in fable form .-\ oiiclier .Svsifiii
.NATIONAL Public school parents
.Non-public school parents '
No children in school
Men.....
Women
Whites
Blacks '
Protestants .....
Catholics
College education ,
High school Grade school 18-29 years
30-49 years...........
50 & older Republicans.
Democrats Independents The results reported today ar with 1.5.58 adults. 18 and oldei
period June 24-27 For results based on.sampk percent confidence that the error attnlHitaiT- tw -.m.'fin.ng .i.nd other random effects could be pt-rconiugc pm:;!,- n'lmr direction.
Today's poll results were sponsored by 1 hi Delta K.m.pa. '.he professional educational fraternity, icI 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
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41
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^ A COVERED SUN DI AL
The American evangelist Phillips Brooks told the story of an African tribe, who having received the gift of a sun dial, immediately built a roof over it to protect the sacred object from the elements. Without realizing it, of course, in their desire to preserve the sacredness of the sun dial, and in their unwillingness to use it, they had made it worthless.
Some people treat their religion the same way. Religion is to be respected, praised, but not used. It is something to be kept in the church, and not taken out into the world. Like the African tribesmen who built a roof over their sun dial, people who treat religion in this way destroy it,
A religion that cannot be taken out into the world and used amid its daily problems is a useless ornament. The religion that has to be kept under the roof of a church is as useful to men seeking direction in life as is a sun dial under a roof to men who want to know the time of day.
Japan Reducing Number
Of Ships In Search
; W.\KKANAI, Japan (AP) - Japan's nav>- said Saturday it is substantially reducing the number of ships hunting for the downed South Korean airliner and that the Soviets appear to be doing the same.
The U.S. searchers hunting for the plane's flight recorders were hindered by vast undersea mountains. American military officials said,
"IThe Soviets) may be reducing their search efforts because they are not finding much. " Maritime Safety Agency Rear A d m. Masayoshi Sato said. "I can't speak for the Soviet side, but the Japanese in recent days have found very little. "
Kato said only one piece of metal from the plane was found Saturday. Rve bodies were found earliw in the search, but there have been no bodies recovered in the past 10 days. In all, 269 people, incl ling 61 Americans. died when the Soviets shot the plane down.
Kato said 18 Japanese ships will be reduced Sunday to six looking for debris and four monitoring U.S: and Soviet activities off Moneron. a Soviet island off* Sakhalin where the Korean .Air Lines jet is believed to have crashed when a Soviet interceptor blasted it out of the sky Sept . 1, the Soviet fleet of 17 ships seen Saturday morning near .Moneron had shrunk to 11 by the afternoon, Kato said. The rescue ship Georgi Kozumin and the surveyer Gidronaut, two Soviet ships that carried out undersea operations with mini-submarines, had both left the immediate search area, Kato said.
In Tokyo, the news media liaison chief for U.S. forces in Japan, Master Gunnery Sgt. Ed Evans, said the .American search effort 'continues to be hampered by the undersea terrain and the sheer size of the search
area.
He said seven U S vessels were searching a
1,600-square-mile area off southwest Sakhalin and were confronted by 300- to 3.000-foot undersea mountains.
On Friday. Maritime Safety Agency vessels observed the U.S. Navy ocean tug Narragansett using a derrick to lower a remote-controlled ocean floor search vessel into the sea northwest of Moneron, but no U.S. undersea operations were spotted Saturday.
The Soviets and Americans are looking for the flight data and cockpit voice recorders
- the so-called "black box"
- which could provide information on the jumbo jet's last moments.
The shooting down of KAL Flight 007 was a main topic when Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger arrived in Japan Saturday for a one-day visit on his way to China.
U.S. officials said Weinberger, in a meeting with Defense Agency Director General Kazuo Tanikawa, called the missile attack on the unarmed commercial jetliner a "horrifying event" and said the "one positive thing" that arose from the disaster was that it showed the strength of U.S.-Japanese cooperation in a humanitarian effort,
Weinberger said that effort had managed to dispel Soviet "propaganda and lies" that the plane was on a U.S. spy mission, and thanked the Japanese for releasing tapes of Soviet air-to-ground transmissions as the Soviet fighters pursued and shot down the Korean aircraft.
Tanikawa said his government did not want to release the tapes - which revealed the extent of Japanese electronic intelligence capabilities in the area - but found it necessary to do so because of Soviet reluctance to disclose details about the incident.
Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe also told Weinberger that U.S.-Japanese cooperation was "verv meaningful."
adding that Soviet attempts to shift the blame to the United States and Japan are unpardonable, Foreign Ministry officials said.
In Hamburg, the West German tabloid Bild Am Sonntag claimed it had transcripts of secret tapes that showed the Soviets shot down the South Korean plane after the airliner signaled its willingness to follow orders by tipping its wings. It did not say how it got the transcripts.
The Soviets claim the airline pilot ignored all efforts to contact him and lead the plane to a landing in Soviet territory.
In Moscow, the Soviet press quoted the West German weekly Quick as saying former President Nixon canceled out of Flight 007 at the last minute. The Soviets said, "the American intelligence establishment could not send a former president to his death,"
In response. Nicholas Ruwe, Nixon's assistant, said that the former president was never booked on Korean Air Lines Flight 007 to Seoul." He said that .Nixon "never held a reservation to Seoul on anv other airline.
Former President Nixon has hundreds of foreign and domestic invitations under consideration at any given time. The Seoul conference was one of them and it had been declined,"
Habits Guide Cats' Eating
NEW YORK (UPl) - Cat food manufacturers foster the idea that felines are finicky eaters.
Its not the food theyre choosy about, studies show.x but such things as frequency of meals, familiar surroundings. sudden environmental changes and absence of a familiar companion.
Cornell University veterinary college researchers found a group of breeding cats refused a certain food because the bowls it was in had been washed in an unfamiliar disinfectant, according to the Pet Information Bureau.
A bureau announcement adds that studies of cats eating habits reveal a distinctive pattern, not finickiness.
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Pitt County
The Pitt County United Way is not an impersonal, national organization. Its Pitt County people working to help Pitt County People.
Goal 585,080.96
AMERICAN RED CROSS 752-4222
Trained 1,830 persons in First Aid. CPR and water safety; collected 4.101 units of blood and served 249 military families. Also provides disaster relief.
AMERICAN SOCIAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION 1-800-227-8922
Toll-Free VD Hotline for information and referral. Involved in research and strategies for control; prevention and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.
ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION. N.C. CHAPTER 1-800-572-0949
Toll-Free line provides information, education and referral. Works with ECU to provide training for health professionals; has swim therapy program at ECU: promotes community education; local support group has 25 members.
ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS IN PITT COUNTY 757-3084 Assures services for the 3.000 mentally retarded Individuals in Pitt County. 83 retarded adults attend the ARC social events. Provides information, referral and public education.
BOYS CLUB OF PITT COUNTY 355-2345
Serves 700 boys ages 6-18 providing guidance through health, social, educational, recreational, vocational and character development programs.
HOSPICE OF EAST CAROLINA 758-4622
For advanced cancer patients and their families provides direct volunteer services ranging from food preparation to respite care, emotional support and counseling. Provides coordination and referral, and is available fo the family for a one year bereavement period. Served 87 patients and families in its first year.
HOSPICE OF NORTH CAROLINA 1-800-662-8859
Serves as a service and support organization to local Hospice programs.
INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SERVICES (919) 964-7550
Works with local agencies to solve individual and family problems which cross national boundaries.
MEDICAL RESEARCH FUND OF NORTH CAROLINA UNITED WAY
East Carolina Medical School shares in block grants tor medical
research.
MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION IN PITT COUNTY , 752-7448
Works toward the prevention of mental illness and the improvement of attitudes, legislation, and services tor the mentally ill. Provides pubic education promoting mental health and provides services tbg.mprove the quality of life for the mentally ill who are hospitalized.
CHILDRENS HOME SOCIETY
752-5847 1-800-632-1400
124 cases from Pitt County were handled through its counseling and adoptive programs. Toll-Free line for problem pregnancy counsling.
DAY CAMP FOR HANDICAPPED CHILDREN
70 mentally and/or physically handicapped children ages 5-17 attend Camp Sunshine during the summer.
EPILEPSY ASSOCIATION OF NORTH CAROLINA (704) 377-3619
752-3769
Local chapter provides education and support for epileptics and families. 10 workshops held in Pitt County last year attended by 233 health professionals and school personnel. Training is available tor all schools in Pitt County.
NATIONAL COUNCIL ON AGING (212) 223-6250
Provides a grant to the Pitt County Council on Aging to fund eleven service positions tor older unemployed or underemployed. Concerned with policies, research and programs of the elderly NATIONAL CYSTIC FIBROSIS FOUNDATION (919) 291-7190
Concerned with prevention, control and treatment of lung damaging diseases.
NORTH CAROLINA UNITED WAY (704) 375-0222
Provides services, workshops and training for staff and volunteers. Coordinates funding of state-wide United Way agencies.
OPERATION SUNSHINE 758-5315
Served 226 girls through its after school and summer program. Emphasis is on girls who are neglected by existing programs.
FARMVILLE CHILD DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER 753-4742
Serves 25 children in developmental day care and educational placement ranging in age from 6 weeks to 16 years. These children generally function in the moderate to severe range ol mental retardation or developmental delay.
FLORENCE CRITTENTON SERVICES OF NORTH CAROLINA (704) 372-1850 Provides a residential facility for the unwed expectant motner. Nine persons were served through its counseling and expectant mother programs.
FLYNN CHRIS!IAN FELLOWSHIP HOME 752-2961
Served 83 men in 1982 through its program of recovery for alcoholics and shelter lor the homeless.
GIRL SCOUTS (919)734-6231
571 girls were served through educational, leadership, and character development programs. In addition 190 adult leaders were trained.
HOME DELIVERED MEALS FOR THE ELDERLY 752-1717
A new program this year for Pitt County United Way. The Pitt County Council on Aging will provide 17,500 more meals each year for many of the homebound elderly.
Pin COUNTY ASSOCIATION FOR THE BLIND
Provides supportive services and special needs for the blind. Also
supports a glaucoma clinic under the supervision of the Health
Department.
PITT COUNTY BOY SCOUTS 758-4478
Served 1,298 boys; 515 adults are involved in the program. Also provides a program for girls and boys in 10 handicapped classrooms.
Pin COUNTY 4-H COUNCIL 752-2934
1,412 youth ages 6-19 were involved in the educational learning-by-doing programs assisted by 197 volunteer leaders.
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION 758-HELP
There were 3,928 contacts through REAL which provides free, confidential supportive counseling and information and referral services for all problem areas. Offers 24-Hour telephone counseling; walk-in center and off-site Crisis Teams.
THE SALVATION ARMY 756-33M
3,071 persons were assisted through its programs which include providing food, clothing, fuel, shelter, counseling, disaster and emergency services.
UNITED HEALTH SERVICES (919) 688-7058
Committed to reducing the incidence of alcoholism and drug abuse.
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Public Concern Is Mounting
LONDON (AP) - Public concern is mounting in Britain, France and Italy over deepening involvement of the multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon, but not on the same scale as in the United States where the issue of how long the Marines will stay has been raised repeatedly in Congress.
France, with 2,000 soldiers in Lebanon, has had 17 killed and 52 wounded. The United States, with 1,200 Marines, has had four killed and 36 wounded. Italy has had one killed and 27 wounded among its 2,100 soldiers. Britain, with only 97 troops in the Beirut area, has not had any casualties.
Britain recently put ground-support aircraft on Cypus, 125 miles from Lebanon, to protect its troops, and Italy is negotiating to put jet fighters on Cyprus too. France sent jet fighters into combat for the first time Thursday, attacking Druse artillery batteries that wounded six French soldiers.
A British Foreign Office spokesman said Saturday that Britain, France and Italy have launched their own bid for a cease-fire in Lebanon, but said the effort was being made in concert with the United States and Saudi Arabia.
Our intent is to supplement, not to undercut, the efforts already under way, said the spokesman, who asked not to be identified.
The Times of London said the European effort followed a meeting of British, French and Italian officials in Rome Monday.
It is understood that the three European countries were becoming increasingly concerned by th United States action, which they believe falls outside the mission of the multinational
force, the newspaper said.
Britains Spectator magazine said in an editorial: Any larger scale intervention by the United States forces could lead to an appalling increase in the sea e of the conflict and have uncertain consequences. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, speaking to reporters Friday before her departure for Canada and the United States on Sunday, said Lebanon would be at the top of the agenda for her talks with President Reagan.
I think one would have to be very, very wary of deeper involvement, she said.Mrs. Thatcher described Britains participation as a symbolic gesture and said, We could not possibly increase our numbers in Lebanon.
The British involvement has been criticized by both the left and right as ill-advised. Right-wing gadfly Enoch Powell said the British presence in Lebanon was without moral or practical justification and was an example of Britains wish to dance and be seen to be dancing to the American tune.
On the left, Laborite member of Parliament Tam Dalyell urged a decision to take British troops out and said the multinational force gives Lebanese President Amin Gemayel a confidence that makes him far more intransigent than he would be.
In France, one important rightist figure called for tougher military response after last weeks shelling of French troops.
Jacques Chirac, mayor of Paris and leader of the neo-Gaullist Rally for the Republic Party, said the government should have attacked and destroyed Syrian batteries that fired on
French positions.
France, Chirac said, "does not warn twice. When she has warned once, she strikes.
But French Communist leader Georges Marchis, whose party has four posts in the 43-member Socialist-led Cabinet, urged negotiations for a political solution. If such negotiations were not successful, the withdrawal of French soldiers would be necessary, Marchis said.
Marchis said Lebanon was suffering a civil war, and France cannot take any side for fear of damaging its credibility in the Arab world.
Italian Communist leader Enrico Berlinguer also says that Italy should pull out its force unless a cease-fire can be put together.
Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Andreotti and Defense Minister Giovanni Spadolini, testifying before a parlia
mentary committee' last week, said the Italian contingent will continue its mission.
Some Italian political analysts believe pressure for a Dullout would mount if
Italian troops suffered more casualties. Families of Italian soldiers already have sent a petition to President Sandro Pertini asking a guarantee of safety for their loved ones in Lebanon.
An opinion poll conducted for II Mondo, a moderate weekly news magazine, showed 31.6 percent of the 2,000 people surveyed believe Italian troops should be withdrawn, and 26.6 percent said it was a mistake to send them in the first place. Supporting the Italian presence in Lebanon were 20.6 percent, and 10.5 percent said the troops should be reinforced, even if it meant active combat. The remainder had no opinion.
IRS Agent Slain
T pEEKTOWAGA, N.Y. (AP) - A former employee of the In ernal Revenue Service shot and killed a visiting IRS agent in his kitchen, officials said Saturday.
Cheektowaga police filed a second-degree murder charge against James F. Bradley, 63, who met officers at the door of ms suburban Buffalo home Friday afternoon and led them to the body of the slain tax man.
Michael J. Dillon, 61, an IRS agent from Batavia, was shot at least three times with an M-1 carbine, a short-barreled military rifle, authorities said. Tax documents were scattered around the kitchen.
Cheektowaga police refused to speculate on a motive for the slaying. Lt. Fred Netzel said Bradley owed back taxes to the IRS but said, It wasnt very extensive. He refused to disclose the amount.
Bradley also could be charged with murdering an on-duty federal agent, a federal crime punishable by death in certain circumstances, U.S. Attorney Salvatore Martoche said.
There was some employment with the IRS in the past, said Bradleys lawyer, Terrence Connors, but Bradley had not teen an agent. Connors said Bradley, who was retired also had worked as a high school teacher and held other jobs which he refused to specify.
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Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. until 9 p.m.Phone 756-B'E-L-K (756-2355)
A-8 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday. September 25.1983
FORECAST FOR SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 25,1M3
FORECAST FOR MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1983
W WYOUR DAILY _
Horoscope
from the Carroll Righter Institute J[
from the Carroll Righter Institute
SBI Ends Probe
GENERAL TENDENCIES: This is a great day right from the very start You will find it easy to express hidden talents and get along with all those who surround you. Explore any original outlets in mind.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Develop a good system today to help you attain personal desires. Spend time on amusements you enjoy this evening.
TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Concentrate on your material status to see what can be done to improve it. Entertain new ideas.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A lot of ideas are whirling around in your head, but try to decipher the good from the bad for further benefits.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Consult financial experts who can help you add to present abundance. Relax quietly this evening.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Your energies need to be channeled into constructive areas or you eould get into trouble with loved ones and friends.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Someone close to you will get you out of your financial bind. Plan how to repay this efficiently and expediently.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You need to have friends around you for support at this time. Use the evening planning your activities for the week ahead.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Listen to suggestions of those in authority so you can implement improvements on your property and home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Use that inspirational idea right away or it will be wasted. Friends can help you with this.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan 20) Business matters need to be concentrated on for more efficient means of action. This will aid in future success.
AOUARIUS (Jan 21 to Feb. 19) Someone will present a new project that may be just what you need at this time. However, study its aspects.
PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar 20) Everyone around you is being extremely helpful and supportive to you in helping you gam all your goals.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be one of those charming young persons who easily understands the intricacies of modern machines and methods. It is important to slant the education along innovative lines for future success.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!
s 1983 McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Until midafternoon you are too apt to get involved in an argument over a slight of a personal nature or where your pride is concerned, so watch out and don't let this happen.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Arguing over some practical matter is not wise and then you can come to a fine agreement with a partner and gain benefits.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Get right at the work that you have promised to do and handle it efficiently. If you need a favor, ask a fellow worker for it.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You have a habit of criticising unmercifully, so curtail that now. Later be with a charming person who is good for you.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Once your work IS done, it is best to be at home with your family and be safe, happy Driving could be hazardous.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Begin the week properly by not arguing with others, be they employers, partners or co-workers. Then you can achieve a good deal.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Stop worrying about some personal or business affair you can do nothing about, and concentrate on the practical.
LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) You have control over conditions today but take care you don't argue with one in business over price of some product.
SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Don't enter into any argument between a partner and a higher-up otherwise you could become the scapegoat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Avoid that argument between a friend and an outsider since it does not concern you. Get busy with your own affairs.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Your mate may be having an altercation with an outsider, but don't mix in and It IS soon over. Impress those in authority.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb 19) A close tie could argue with an associate, if you are not diplomatic with both. Make some new contacts who can be most helpful to you.
PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar. 20) A co-worker and a higher-up could be at odds, so steer clear of both, and keep focused on the work you have to do.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .. he or she will be one of those charming persons who is apt to fight over every little thing, especially money, even small sums. So early teach to be more cooperative with others in all ways and get better results during the lifetime.
"The Stars impel; they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!
- 1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - A State Bureau of Investigation probe of Mecklenburg County finances has ended and no charges will be brought, says District Attorney Peter Gilchrist.
The SBI has confirmed that Nathan Alberty, a former assistant county manager and finance officer, was a subject of the investigation.
But Gilchrist, who requested the SBI investigation into what he called p^ible improprieties or criminal acts, refused to disclose the investigations findings.
We are no longer looking into county finance matters, he said. The matter is closed. 1 will not reveal what or who was inquired into.
On June 15, the SBI confirmed it was investigating a Mecklenburg County employee. Later that day, Alberty, a county employee since 1972, requested and was granted a leave of absence by' county commissioners. The next day, he requested and was granted medical leave.
The SBI later confirmed that Alberty, who handled
more than $200 million a year in county funds, was a target of the investigation.
The probe began after the SBI received allegations of a plan to kick back to county officials part of a computer consultants fee while boosting a computer firms chances of selling the county a $1 million system. The Charlotte Observer reported.
Last November, a Raleigh man told Gilchrist that a Charlotte computer salesman who said he was working with Alberty had asked the Raleigh man to participate in a kickback arrangement, the paper reported Saturday.
The alleged plan did not unfold and no consultant was hired by the county. Alberty denied any wrongdoing in his letter of resignation.
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Phillip R. Dixon J. David Duffus, Jr. Randy D. Doub Michael C. Stamev
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UNC Law Student Finds Oldest N.C. Poem
U.NC Law Student Finds - A law student at the
Oldest Poem Written in .N.C, University of North Carolina
CH.APEL HILL, N.C. (APi at Chape! Hill has found a
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poem older than any other known to have been written in North Carolina or South Carolina.
Thomas E, Terrell Jr. found the poem, written in 1698, while searching through the Quaker collection at Guilford College in Greensboro. Terrell, who has published the poem in the current issue of the journal Early American Literature, said if is also the Souths oldest religious narrative in verse.
The 302-line poem was written by Henry White, a resident of what is now Perquimans County bordering Albemarle Sound who was converted to the Quaker faith in 1679 by traveling ministers.
Terrell, a High Point
DENTAL ASSISTANT
The Dental Assistant Board announced that Jeanne Marie Ingnito of Greenville has been certified as a professional dental assistant after passing an examination. She is now authorized to add CDA, for Certified Dental Assistant, after her name. Ms. Ingnito is a graduate of the University of North Carolina.
native, said the poem is about the fall of man and his salvation through Christ, but that it cant be compared with more famous poems of the period from New England.
But because it is the only surviving 17th century Southern poem from outside Virginia, it deserves careful examination, he said.
He said Whites poem is also important because it differs from the few other writings surviving from the 17th century South.
____
VW MINISTER - Dr. .Maurice E. Ankrom is the new pastor of Red Oak Christian Church. He is a graduate of Manhattan Christian College in Kansas and Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis where he received his D.Min. degree. Ankrom is the former pastor of East Lynn Christian Church in Indiana. He and his wife, Thelma, have two married daughters.
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Reg. 74.95. Speaker 700 phone has built in microphone and speaker so you can talk and still move around the room Easily switches to standard mode for private conversation.
Sale prices effective through Saturday.
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1600 phone features a touch sensitive keypad, with 12 touch pad memory locations plus 3 color coded emergency locations. Digital display gives time date, telephone number and elapsed time of call.
Shop 9:30 - 9:30 Phone 756-1190 Pitt Plaza
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Marcos' Unpopularity Is Delema For US
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C Sunday. September 25.1983
WASHINGTON (AP) -The violent anti-government demonstrations in the Philippines are posing a familiar problem for the United States: what to do about potential political instability in a country where there are vital American security interests.
The are some differences but also some striking parallels between the situation facing the government of President Ferdinand Marcos and that which confronted the Shah of Iran and Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somoza in the late IWOs.
In Nicaragua and Iran, the pro-Western authoritarian
governments in those countries were victims of popular u[wisings after enjoying long years of American support. Both were replaced by assertively anti-American regimes.
The experiences of Iran and Nicaragua have left many analysts wondering whether same fate will befall Marcos, whose 18-year grip on power appears to have weakened drastically since the assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino a month ago.
To some who see Nicaraguan and Iranian parallels, the United States made a mistake in nurturing those regimes for too long.
Wrong Woman
IMMOKALEE, Fla. (AP) - A retarded Florida woman whod never been away from home was deported to Mexico after she told authorities she was a Mexican citizen, officials said.
I dont like to think this kind of thing can happen, said Gary Hatmaker, deputy chief of the U.S. Border Patrols Miami office. But she passed herself off as a citizen of Mexico.
Sara Martinez, 21, told Southwest Regional Airport officials in Fort Myers that she was Mexican and wanted to return home to be with her child. Immigration and Nat-uralization Service spokeswoman Beverly McFarland said.
Night-shift employees took up a collection and bought her a bus ticket to Miami, where Border Patrol agents met her and transferred her to the Krome Avenue detention center.
Comedy Set For New Bern
NEW BERN - Neil Simons comedy "Prisoner of Second Avenue, will be presented by the New Bern Civic Theater for six productions Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and again on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 6,7,8.
Performances will be given at the Saax Bradbury Playhouse, 414 Pollock Street, with dinner to be served next door at the Athens Cafe, 412 Pollock Street. Tickets for the theater only is $5.00 per person, and for dinner and theater, $12.50 per person. Dinner tickets must be purchased at least 24 hours in advance. Reservations for dinner, the theater performance, or both can be made by calling 638-3633 or 633-0567.3 Hours for the events are: 6 p.m., cafe opening and apertifs, 6 p.m., dinner at 6:30 p.m., and show time, 8:15p.m.
Mark and Athene Bunn are directing the show, and Nancy Blades is in charge of the dinner. Both the theater and the cafe site are historical buildings in New Bern.
Vignettes By Kinston Group
KINSTON - Four vignettes from Robert Andersons You Know I Cant Hear You When the Waters Running are being offered on Friday and Saturday at the Holiday Inn in Kinston. The vignettes are' being produced by the Community Council for the Arts, and constitute a pilot pro^am.
Tickets for the dinner theater production can be purchased through Holiday Inn, with reservations also by telephone, 527-4155.
Fall Jurying On Saturday
RALEIGH - The fall jurying of the Carolina Designer Craftsmen will be held in Raleigh on Saturday at Christ Episcopal Church, 120 East Edenton Street.
The event is designed to consider original work only (no copies, reproductions, kit items) by craftsmen who may wish to become members of the group.
Details on fees and type of work to be juried can be obtained by telephoning the Carolina Designer Craftsmen office at 851-2901.
Miss Martinez signed a voluntary departure form and officials put her on a plane to Brownsville, Texas. From there, she rode a bus to Mexico, Ms. McFarland said.
But last Wednesday, Mexican police in Hildago told us they had a U.S. citizen who claimed to be a Mexican citizen and now wanted to return to the U.S., Ms. McFarland said.
Miss Martinez returned home Friday.
Hatmaker said officials had trouble understanding the woman, who speaks only Spanish, and there was no indication (to officials) she was retarded.
thus making anti-Americanism a popular rallying cry that the successor governments have seized on to the detriment of American interests.
To others, what happened in Iran and Nicaragua demonstrates that the United States should use extreme caution in addressing the problem of regimes that are friendly, strategic and authoritarian: their ouster may not be a gain either for protection of human rights or for American security interests.
The assassination of Aquino has generated a number of questions about the propriety of a visit by President Reagan to the Philippines, as scheduled, this November.
Would it be seen as an endorsement of Marcos? Would a cancellation precipitate Marcos ouster? Is there in the Philippines, as there was in Iran and Nicaragua, an anti-American component to the anti-government demonstrations?
Reagan tentatively has decided to go ahead with his visit so long as no solid evidence emerges in the interim period of government complicity in the assassination.
Administration officials, speaking privately, see the visit as an opportunity to reassert American friendship with the Philippines, not as an endorsement of the Marcos government.
In contrast to Iran, the officials note that the United States has long-standing ties with the Philippines, dating back to the turn of the century. Nowhere but in the Philippines would six million peope sign up in favor of their country becoming a state of the United States. The American military bases 'at Clark Field and Subic Bay promote American defense interests and also provide economic and security benefits to the Philippines.
As officials here see it, the Reagan visit, if it takes place, would stress that American interests in the Philippines transcend those of a single leader and his family.
Beyond that. Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights and Humanitarian
Affairs Elliott Abrams testified before Congress last week that cancellation of the )residents visit would real-y constitute an intervention in partisan politics in the Philippines against Marcos. But Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the longterm interests of the United States require that Reagan cancel his trip.
Having problems with dogs in your neighborhood? Call Animal Control at 752-3342.
Need a Lawyer Who CARES? Call Wanda Naylor 752-9954
The Grapes Are Ripe!
DIXIEGREEN VINEYARD
HWY. 903 . BETWEEN SNOW HILL & MAURY HOURS: DAILY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.-SUNDAY 1:30-6:00
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They'll warm up to the cool weather in these smart, sporty sweaters in assorted styles, fabrics and colors. Boy's and girl's sizes.
Peg. Sale-
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Pullover sizes 3-6x.............. ^.'soo 6^00
Cardigan sizes 3-6x.................... 8.50 6.37
Boys pullover sizes 2-7.............................................g qq 6.75
Girls acrylic pullover sizes 7-16......................................g'oo 6.7S
Boy's Fox sizes 6-20...............................................igoo 9.75
Boys wool/acrylic sizes 6-20............. .........................1 goo 975
Girl's acrylic pullover sizes 7-16............................... 20,00 15.00
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Sale 8.24. Cathv Hardwick twin sheet. Sale 10.99. Versatile thermal blanket. Sale ^8. Waterfowl bedpillow
Reg. 10.99. The flpral fantasy bedroom by Cathy Hardwick, exclusively at JCPenney. Polyester/cotton percale sheets, flat or fitted: Reg Sale Reg. Sale
Full..............13,99 10.49 Queen...........20.99 15.74
Matching comforters are plumped with polyester fill.
Twin.............$90 $65 Queen...........$135 $100
Full..............$115 $85 King.............$160 $120
Coordinating pillowcases, shams and bedskirts also on sale.
Sale 4.99. The JCPennev bath towel.
Reg. $7. Our super thick, super sized cotton/polyester towel.
Color cued for your bath in 15 gorgeous shades.
Reg Sale Reg. Sale
Hand towel .......5.00 4.49 Tub mat......... 9.00 7.99
Washcloth........2.50 2.19 Bath sheet 16.00 13.99
Sale 24.99. Warm automatic blanket.
Reg. $40; twin. Colorful acrylic/polyester automatic blanket has 11 energy-saving comfort settings.
Reg. Sale Reg Sale
Full, single control. . $50 39.99 Queen,
Full, dual control .. $60 47.99 dual control....... $70 55.99
Reg. $16; twin. Light, airy thermal-weave acrylic blanket gives just right warmth for year round comfort.
Reg. Sale Reg. Sale
Full............... $19 14.99 Queen............$23 17.99
Sale 24.99. Automatic blanket
Reg. $40. Twin. Colorful acrylic/polyester automatic blanket with 11 settings.
Reg. Sale Reg. Sale
Full, single...........$50 39.99 Queen, dual..........$70 55.99
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Sale 17.99. Vellux blanket.
Reg. $24. Twin. Our cloud-light, color-bright Vellux blanket is plush nylon pile bonded to polyurethane foam.
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Reg Sale
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Sale 79.99. All down comforter.
Will be $100 after Oct. 1st; twin. Light and fluffy, a down '
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Will be Sale Will be Sale
Full/queen ......$240 119.99 King ...........$280 139.99
Sale 39.99. Feather and down comforter.
Will be $80 after Oct. 1st; twin. Sumptuous warmth at a price you can afford Soft feathers and down, covered in cotton Full/queen, Will be $120 Sale 59.99
Save 50% on all-down bedpillows; on waterfowl feather pillows, too.
Sale prices effective through Saturday, October 1st.
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NCRSP To Have Luncheon
North Carolina Retired School Personnel will have a covered dish luncheon at St. James Methodist Church Wednesday at noon.
New members will be guests at the luncheon. New members who are unable to attend the meeting or those who wish to renew their memberships should contact President Vernon Ward at 756-1958 or Viola Vines at 752-5439.
PTA PLans First Meeting
The South Greenville PTA will have its first meeting of the yearTuesdayat7:30p.m. in the multipurpose room.
The open house meeting will allow parents to meet their childs teacher and visit the classroom. The fall fund raising project will be explained.
The cost of joining the organization includes: a family fee of $5; couples 4; and individual fee, $2.
To Address Membership Meeting
WASHINGTON. N.C. -Dr. Mark M. Brinson, director of graduate studies in biology at East Carolina University, will speak at the annual membership meeting of the Pamlico-Tar River Foundation at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Beaufort County Courthouse.
Brinson will speak on "Some Factors Influencing Water Quality of the Pamlico River"' Among research projects he has. participated in are several on water quality in the Pamlico River. He is also the author of several publications on the Pamlico estaurine system.
Thursday's meeting is open to the public. At that time interested persons may join the foundation, a non-profit organization concerned with environmental quality of the Pamlico, its tributaries and surrounding lands.
Members will also- vote on nominees to the board of directors, and are reminded to pay annual membership dues. One-year mmbership is $5.
D. IV./. Conference Planned
The D.W.I. coordinators for the Third Judicial District will hold a brief conference in the second floor courtroom of the Pitt County Courthouse Monday at 7 p.m.
The conference will be in reference to the new Driving While Impaired community service program as provided for under the Safe Roads Act of 1983. All directors or interested persons of non-profit and community service agencies are invited to attend.
The program will be discussed in relation to the agencies' benefits in working with the alternative community based services program.
For further information call 752-2979 on Monday prior to the meeting.
EANC Chapter Having Meeting
The Coastal Plains Chapter of the Epilepsy Association ot .North Carolina, based in Greenville, will hold its monthly meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the fellowship hall of Tabernacle Baptist Church. 616 Broad St., .New Bern.
A car pool will leave Pitt County Mental Health Center on Slantonsburg Road at 6:30 p.m. For more information call 752-3769 or the epilepsy hotline toll free at 800-642-0500.
DR. .M.ARK BRINSON
School Paper Selects Staff
The following staff members for D.H. Conley High Schools newspaper. "The Shield, were recently selected: Missy Whitford, editor; Emily Wilkerson and Renee Ambrose, assistant editors; Kathy Dunn, managing editor; Amy Edwards and Debbie Coward, page one editors; Deborah Little and Danny Anderson, page two editors; Lisa Ivery, page three editor; Mark Bailey and Jennifer Dixon, page four editors, and Stuart Oliphant, page five editor.
Kathy Dunn will edit sports, assisted by Sherry Hardy and sports writer Jeff Allen. Duane Mills will manage ads and circulation, while Jeff Allen and John Shaw will handle photography. Cheryl Adams is typist.
The advisor for the newspaper is Rose Marie Sherman.
Pitt Board Meeting Monday
The Pitt County Board of Social Services will meet Monday at noon at the Three Steers Restaurant on Memorial Drive.
Revival To Begin Tonight
Revival services will begin Sunday at* Shelmerdine Pentecostal Holiness Church and continue through Friday at . 7:30p.m. nightly.
The guest speaker will be the Rev. Mickey Baysden of Robersonville Pentecostal Holiness Church in Robinsonville.
Assistant Vice Chancellor
ECU News Bureau Dianna Beamon Morris, an alumna and employee of East Carolina University since 1978, was named assistant to ECUs vice chancellor for academic affairs. Her primary areas of reponsibility will be personnel and budget administration.
A Greene County native, she received a bachelors degree magna cum laude from ECU in 1972 and completed the master of arts degree program the following year. She is at present pursuing a second master's degree in public administration.
She has been a lecturer/research associate in the ECU Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the Office of Institutional Research, and for the past several years served as associate director of institutional research.
Her memberships include several professional and honorary organizations, including Phi Kappa Phi honor society and the .American Business Womens Association.
Named To Board
ECU .News Bureau Dr, Dennis Chestnut, assistant professor of psychology at East Carolina University, was appointed advisor to the national executive board of the Association of Humanistic Psychology.
.As advisor and as member of the AHP's Visionary Planning Committee. Chestnut continues a leadership role with the organization begun several years ago.
He has participated in its last 13 annual meetings and is scheduled to conduct a workshop on ethno-cultural mapping at the Conference on Professional Applications of Humanistic Psychology in New York next January.
Earlier this fall. Chestnut was elected treasurer of another national organization, the Association of Black Psychologists.
Chestnut is an ECU alumnus, with bachelors and master's degrees, and has a doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Utah.
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The City Control can designate certain areas of Greenville as controlled residential parking area. For more information, call 7,72-41:17. .Ask for Engineering.
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CAROLINA EAST MALL GREENVILLE, N.C.
A
SUPPORT THE CRIPPLED CHILDRENS HOSPITAL
EAT CHICKEN WITH THE SHRINERS
PITT COUNTY SHRINE CLUB
7
A
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Chicken
FRY
FRIDAY, SEPT. 30,1983
11 AM TIL 7 PM
Chicken, Slaw -Rolls & Potato Salad
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Tablas, Chairs & Soft Drinks Available
Chicken Will Be Served At These Locations
HARRIS SUPERMARKET Memorial Drive OLD KINGS DEPT. STORE 264 By Pass
RIVERGATE SHOPPING CENTER E. 10th St. Ext. ECU CAMPUS 9th & Cotanche Sts.
ELM STREET CITY PARK Elm St. HARRIS SUPERMARKET N. Greene St.
HARRIS SUPERMARKET Bethel, N.C. (11 AM TIL 3 PM ONLY)
Harris Supermarket
Hooker & Buchanan Inc.
D.D. Bright Electrical Contractor
Hallow Windows & Doors
This Advertisement Sponsored By... Bostic Sugg Furniture Co.
First State Bank
First Federal Savings & Loan Assn. Of Pitt County
Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. Of Greenville
Abrams Riverside Oyster Bar
New Greenville Warehouse
mm
Watt Struggles To Hold Onto Job
The Daily Reflector. Greenville NC Sunday September 25 1983 A-11
WASHINGTON (AP) - Interior Secretary James Watt, struggling to hold onto his job, received support Saturday ifrom a prominent conservative but came under renewed fire for what a Democratic senator charged was his outrageous
Viguerie, a top * direct-mail fundraiser for Republicans and one of the leaders of the New Right, sent a telegram to President Reagan urging him not to fire one of the most loyal members of your administration.
However, Sen. Paul Tsongas used the weekly Democratic radio address to charge that Reagans refusal : to fire Watt was symbolic of an administration that has shown so little concern for I women, for minorities and for the less fortunate among us.
' And Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-111., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations ' Committee, became the eighth GOP senator to call for Watt to offer his re-I signation. Percy said Watt has a responsibility to turn in the resignation and then let the president decide.
Viguerie is one of the few , conservatives to come to
Watts defense following his description Wednesday of a federal advisory panel as having a black... a woman, twoJews and a cripple. While calling the choice of words unfortunate, Viguerie said in an interview that Watt was simply expressing a fairly deep frustration that the majority of Americans have about quotas and affirmative action.
Vigeurie said if Watt was, fired it would cause conservatives to have a bad taste'in their mouths because the secretary has traveled the length and breadth of this country sup-wrting the conservative phi-osophy.
Tsongas, D-Mass., said in the radio address said Watts comment was only his latest effort to divide his fellow countrymen.
"How is it possible in modern-day America for this kind of bigotry to be running amok in the presidents Cabinet for such a long time"? Tsongas asked. The answer is very simple because the president allows it.
He called on Americans to let President Reagan know that James Watt offends the greatness, the moral sensitivity and the togetherness of
Hospitality House
WASHINGTON, N.C. -;; Music and dance will be the basic themes on Kay Curries .. Hospitality House which is airing from 1:30 to 2 p.m. Saturday. The show is cur-
* rently being broadcast on a temporary basis on Saturday instead of its regular early
^ Sunday afternoon hour. It is aired over WITN-TV, I Channel 7, Washington.
Bo Thorpe of Rocky Mount, band leader of "Generation
II, a band that has revived "the Big Band sound, is Kays
first guest. He will talk about ;the Beaux Arts Ball sched--uled in Washington on Oct. 14 being sponsored by the ^Beaufort County Arts
Council. Video clips of the band will be shown.
Three dancers of the Jeffrey 11 Dancers of New York City will be guests. Jennifer Habig of Fort Wayne, Indiana will show some dance warm up exercises. Two dancers, Tyler Walters from Hillsboro and Robert Gardner of Vinton, Va. will tell about their dance experiences with the company.
The final guest will be Sylvia McCreary, president of the Beaufort County Community Concerts, the group responsible for bringing the Jeffrey II dancers to Washington.
'Vi
Audition Dates Set For Boys Choir
Auditions for the Greenville Boys Choirs 1983-84 season will be held on Tuesday and Thursday, from 6:30 to 8:30 and on Saturday from 10 a.m. until noon. Auditions will be at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church. The first regular rehearsal for those chosen for the choir will be held Thursday, Oct. 6 from 6:45 to 8 p.m.
Membership will be limited to 30 singers.
The Greenville Boys Choir is for boys in the third grade and up whose voices have not yet changed.
Jerry F. Jolley, Music Minister of Jarvis, has been named the new director of the choir to succeed Carolyn Ipock, who is going full time into teaching. Jolley has 25 years of experience working with children singers.
Interested boys and/or their parents are to call Jolley at 752-3101 or756-1201 for more information.
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America.
Despite Vigueries defense, many of Watts other conservative supporters were showing little inclination to ride once more to his de-, fense,
While conservative groups were mobilizing telephone banks to generate letters and telephone calls to save Watts job, a White House aide, who asked not to be identified, said so far the letters and calls have been running against Watt.
Among those calling for Watt to resign have been the presidents daughter and political adviser, Maureen Reagan, and the Republican governor of California, George Deukmejian.
In Nevada, state GOP chairman Curtis Patrick joined the chorus of Republicans calling for Watts resignation. He said because of Watts most recent verbal gaffe he will not be invited by the state GOP to speak in Nevada again. Watt has been one of the partys leading
fundraisers, drawing the faithful not only in his native West but around the country.
Watt, for his part, was pictured by aides as a man hghting to hold onto his job, making phone calls to Senate supporters to assess the political damage from the remark about the advisory commission, set up to review his controversial coal leasing program.
In the speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, Watt described the commission he appointed by saying, I have a black, I have a woman, two Jews and a cripple. And they have talent.
While Watt first defended
MANSION TOURS RALEIGH - The Executive Mansion in Raleigh is again open for fall tours through Nov. 18. Guided tours will be held on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays at 10, 10:30, and 11 a.m. For reservations and further details, call 733-3456.
the comment as a joke, within hours he was apologizing for the unfortunate remarks and the next day he wrote a letter to Reagan asking forgiveness for morally offensive remarks.
For his part, the president was avoiding all questions from reporters about Watt on Saturday and an aide said no further action is being undertaken.
However, there was an indication that Watts fate may be decided before Wednesday, when the Senate
is scheduled to take up debate on a resolution offered by Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., to call for Watts resignation for conduct totally unbefitting a Cabinet member.
The remark about the advisory panel was the latest in a series of rhetorical blunders by Watt.
Free public library service for Greenville and Pitt County residents is provided by Sheppard Memorial Library. For more information, call 752-4177.
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E. Twin-size tester bed w/frame 168.00
F. 5-drawer lingerie chest.............188.00
G. Large hutch .....................148.00
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E. Bunk bed w/guard rail & ladder.................218.00
F. Vertical mirror.................. 68.00
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H. Small deck............... 98.00
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9
A
Alternatives For Fullilove School Program
By JERRY RAYNOR
Reflector Staff Writer
At the action meeting of the Greenville City Board of Education Monday night, the first item on the agenda will be a public hearing on the Status of the current pro-, gram at Agnes Fullilove Community School.
The meeting will be held at Agnes Fullilove and will begin at 7:30 p.m. It is designed to permit public input for board members to take into consideration in deciding on one of several alternatives for the program in the future.
The program in operation at .Agnes Fullilove is an outreach type for students of the secondary level in need of a special curriculum and studies.
Due to the building standards of the Agnes Fullilove facility, city inspection officials authorized operation at the present site under
(IVITAN MEETING
The Greenville Civitan Club held its annual awards land installation dinner at the Three Steers Restaurant Thursday. Highlights of the dinner included Gvitan and Citizen of the Year awards.
ECU professor Hugh Wease was the recipient of the coveted Civitan of the Year Award, while Glenn Cannon, recently retired Green\ille police chief, received the prestigious Citizen of the Year Award. Doug Caldwell was presented with the President's Plaque.
Jim McGee was sworn in as club president for 1983-84.
(HIRCHTRIP
First Timothy Free Will Baptist Church has chartered a bus to Brown's Chapel in New- Jersey Sept.
.311.
The bus will leave from^ Bell's Shell Station on Me-* inorial Drive at 7 p.m. and will return Sunday. Oct. 2 Anyone interested in taking this trip may call Eldress Millie Wiliams at 7.58-1208. or contact her-at 201 Stutz St.
YOUTH DAY SERVICE
Sycamore Hill Baptist Church will hold Youth Day .-iervices Sunday. Oct. 2 at U a m and 3 p.m. and has . planned several nights of ' fellowship to preceed these special services. .Activities are as follows.
.Monday, prayer, praise and testimony.'7:30 p.m.: Tuesday. Joy Night. 7:30 p.m.: Wednesday., spaghetti dinner and film. 6 p.m.: and Thursday, revival service with 13-year-oid Timothy Ward. 7::3o p.m.: Sunday.
Y Day service with guest spu. Amber Harris. 11 a.m.. and Youth Day afternoon service with a special guest choir accompanied by members of the church band. 3pm
l.ANGLEY REUNION
The descendents of P. T Langley will hold their annual reunion Sunday at the Simpson Community Building.
mK DO YOU TURN FOR FINANCIAL COUNSELING?
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present conditions for the 1982-83 school year only.
It is basically this situation that necessitates board action in coming to a decision for an alternative operation
of the program.
Eight alternatives have been listed for consideration. These will be discussed beginning at 7:30 Monday, with interested members of
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribuna Company Syndlcala. Inc
DIAMOND HEIST
IN AMSTERDAM
DEAR READERS: He have had many requests over the years for those hands that we consider to be our favorites. That makes quite a list. For the time being, therefore, we are devoting the Sunday column to a series of famous hands. At the end of the series, we will go back to our weekly question and answer column.
Ka.st W('>t vuln(T,ible. Ea.sl deals.
NORTH
J
AK 10842 A 10965
5
HEST EAST
AK 7653 lOS
6 ' J9
2 KJ743
J 10964 KS73
SOUTH
0942 0753 08
A 02 The biddintr:
East South West North Pass 1 2 3 4
Pass 4 Pass 4 NT Pass 5 Pass 6 Pass Pass Pass Openimr lead: Kinir of .
If you are bra/en enough and do it early enouirh. you can tiet away with bare laced robbery at the bridtje table. Thi.s hand is from the 19t)ii 'World Open Iair Olympiad in .\msierdam.
We knou many players vs ho would havt pas.sed the .''outh hand. Yla.itnis of France elected to o[ien .ind soon found hlm.^el propelled to a slam, for which no blame can be attached to his [lart ner.
West led the king of spades and shifted to a trump. The outlook was bleak, for it seemed that declarer woifld have to lose a diamond trick for down one. But watch what happened.
Declarer won the second trick in his hand and im mediately led a diamond to the ace and continued with a low diamond from the table. .Now it is obvious to us that East can rise with the king of diamonds and set the con tract, but consider his predicament.
It certainly looks as if it is .'south who has the singleton diamond, and West the doubleton queen. If that is the case. East will gobble up his partner's queen if he rises with the king, and declarer will be able to .set up a dia mond trick hv taking a ruf fing finesse for the jack. So East elected to play low on the diamond lead from dum. my. Declarer won the queen and scored his slam.
At another table. - North became declarer at six hearts after his partner had opened the bidding with one spade. West got into the auction, -howing both his suits, and East chose to lead the king of clubs to "lake a look at dum-mv." He saw!
the public invited to express their opinions. The alternatives are:
Leave at tire present site, which may involve as much as $250,000 in funds for improvements to meet the citys current building code.
Move the program in its entirety to Rose High or Aycock Junior High, and operate the program during the day.
Move the program to Rose High, and operate it during the afternoon/evening hours.
Divide the program, staff, students and resources along grade lines and move it to Rose or Aycock.
Move the program to a
school now housing a kindergarten through grade three program.
Rent a building for the program.
Reorganize the program for a grade structure of grades K-12.
Leave the program at the present site pending merger.
Another alternative previously considered was that of combining the program with Pitt Community Colleges Extended Day Program, This alternative, however, is no longer considered viable since PCC and Pitt County Schools have abandoned their program.
School Board Agenda |
The Greenville City Board of Education will meet Monday at Agnes Fullilove School at 7:30 p.m.
Following a public expression period in which anyone may discuss any topic, the board will review housing alternatives for the Agnes Fullilove Outreach program, and have an open session on personal matters.
Also on the agenda are reports from the superindent on Pitt Community College trustees and annual leave polic^
SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE on WhM^oi
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258'
The
Send any questions for this rolumn to: Charles Goren and Omar Sharif, care of this newspaper, ffach week a prize of a copy of the new "Gorens Bridge Complete." a $9.95 value, will be awarded for the question judged the best received.
(hades (ioren and Omar Sharif personally cannot undertake to answer all questions submitted.
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Adopt-A-Pet
'wr-
The Adopt*a-Pets of the Week are two half-grown kittens, ode black and white mae with a tuxedo and one female calico. These kittens are very affectionate and need a good home. 752-9438.
Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane the following;
Society are
Four kittens, two white with a black spot on its head and one black and one orange. Outside cats. 758-5467.
Two 8-week-old female part retriever puppies, wormed,
1. Ca
one black with white markings and one tan. Call 758-4004.
' Found; cockapoo in the vicinity of Fairlane Road. Call 752-9922 and describe.
5-month female mixed cocker spaniel, loves children. Woiiriind shots. Human Society. 756-9427.
Lost: male black cat with reflector collar. 756-9427.
Male black mixed lab, 2 years old, shots, needs a country home. 752-5778.
Found; 10th and Evans, male grey and black tabby cat with flea collar. Human Society. 756-1268.
Found; Quali Ridge area, black puppy. Human Society. 756-1268.
Female orange tabby cat, female calico cat, black female, all are spayed and have shots; male black and white larfge cat, neutered; female black and white, spayed and declawed. Human Society. 756-1268.
Three 6-week-old kittens. One is an orange tabby, one a gray tabby and one is black. Call Diane at 756-2404 after 6 p.m.
A 24 month puppy, part pomeranian, part terrier, brown and black, wormed. 752-2965.
A black cat, approximately 7-8 months-old, affectionate, house-trained. Call 758-7213.
Four 8-week-old litter-trained kittens. Three are black females with white paws, one is a white male with gray tail and ears. Call 756-5970, evenings and weekends.
A 2-month black male kitten and a five-month black female cat. 752-4776.
To place an animal for free adoption through this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage, 756-4867; Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; or Carol Tyer, 752-6166.
Plane Signaled
HAMBURG, West Germany (AP) A West German tabloid Saturday claimed it acquired transcripts of secret tepes showing that the Soviets shot down the South Korean jumbo jet after the airliner signaled its willingness to follow orders by tipping its wings.
The mass-circulation Bild am Sonntag quoted from what it claimed was the tape of radio traffic between ground control and the Soviet fighter pilot who downed the passenger jet carrying 269 people Sept. 1.
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Most State Development Plans Do Not Work
DURHAM. N.C. (AP) -Most state policies designed to encourage economic growth dont work very well, but one exception is North Carolinas Research Triangle Park, according to a new book published by Duke University.
Such policies usually just cost taxpayers money, said Lawrence Litvak, a community development expert from Oakland. Calif., and Belden Daniels, president of a Cambridge, Mass., consulting firm.
Litvak and Daniels said in their portion of Financing State and Local Economic Development that state taxes represent only a small part of the cost of business. That means state tax incentives and subsidies generally dont influence business location and expansion decisions, they said.
The 480-page book has just been published by Duke Press in cooperation with the Council of State Planning Agencies.
The authors acknowledge that judicious use of state revenue and regulator policies probably can affect
business location decisions if thev are carried out as part of an integrated, systematic, long-term state economic development policy.
But only with such a policy, using a full range of regulatory, spending and tax powers, should state planners begin to think about tapping capital markets to stimulate growth, they say.
Such policies are effective only when they take into account world market forces and the impact of federal policies on the states economy.
Within these constraints of markets and cost and availability ot trained people, land, energy, transportation and materials, any state government can determine those key industries for which the state has a real comparative economic advantage, the authors say.
North Carolina, which has attracted high-technology industries to the Research Triangle Park between Raleigh and Durham, is an examole of a state that over time changed its comparative economic position through concerted state pol
icy efforts, they say.
Litvak and Daniels say that influencing economic development shouldnt be the only goal of state policies.
For example, shifting expenditures from education for handicappd students to general vocational training programs may improve the quality of the states labor pool, yet still be very undesirable, they say.
Or, relaxing land-use regulations may reduce barriers to development in an area, but destroy the quality
of life for those already living there.
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WIIKN TIIK l,KiHT.S WENT OL T - A total power failure hit the Fast Carolina I niversity campus this past week when a feeder line became o\erloaded. Air-conditioning units stopped and electric typewriters fell silent but
much of the university's work went on as usual. Here, for example, a student in Joyner Library continued to study by the light afforded by windows. (ECC .News Burau Photo b\ Leslie Todd).
Disagree Over Crash
MAKIO.N. .\C .AP -Results of a National Transportation .Safety Board investigation indicate that runway conditions at Marion Airport may have contributed to the Aug. 22 crash of a small plane carrying gubernatorial candidate I) .M "Lauch" Faircloth.
But the manager of Marion Airport blamed the crash on pilot error.
Jack Drake. MSB air safety investigator in .Atlanta., said a draft of an investigation summary has been prepared to send to N T S B 0 t f i c i a 1s in Washington, who in coming months will determine probable cau.se of the crash.
Drake would not speculate on the cause of the accident, but said he did not in-vestigate possible mechanical malfunctions in the twin-engine Cessna 414 because the pilot. Leighton Klliott, reported that everything seemed to be operating properly,
Drake said Elliott reported walking through standing water on the grass runway before takeoff, and that the plane had run through water so deep on takeoff that it splashed on the windshield.
Airport .Manager Gene Padgett said no water was standing on the runway the night of the crash, but that a heavy tog hugged the ground Elliott 'realized that after the hullabal(X) was over." Padgett said "He ran into some ground fog, he turned left t(M soon and hit some trees < It had rained that afternoon, but he came in after the ram . .
Eiliott. who lives in Raleigh, could not be reached Friday for comment
The investigation also revealed that some of , the runway lights were burned out. and that grass had grown over others. Drake said
Padgett confirmed that some lights were burned out and obscured, but noted that the airfield is for daytime flying only. Pilots fly in and out after dark at their own risk and are aware of the opening hours, he said.
The airplane clipped a tree at the end of the runway on takeoff, burst into flames
FLOODING RIV ERS
NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Floodwaters from the Ganges and the Brahmaputra rivers have killed at least 142 people as they swept through hundreds of villages in India and Bangladesh, authorities say.
and crashed into the Catawba River about 10 p.m. .Aug. 22.
The four passengers -Faircloth. deputy press aide Brad Crone. Elliott and copilot .Manuel Sowers - made their way out of the wreckage and through
flame-covered, waist-deep water to shore, some 250 feet away. All were treated at Marion General Hospital for minor injuries and released, Faircloth suffered burns to his hand from pushing away water covered with flaming fuel.
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By GAIL MICHAELS No one ever prepared me for raising Zachary. Of course, when Meg was smaller, I heard lots of comments like, Just wait 'til you have a boy. But the answers to my question,
Why?" were always unsatisfactory.
Theyre more active, one mother told me. More active than what, I wanted to know. They couldnt be more active than girls. Megs nonstop activity could make
CtOSSWOtd By Eugene Sheffer
ACROSS 46 Store cargo
1 Pointed 50 Arthurian
6 Gym feature isle 12 Beast 52 Up and
ISSingerKing about 14 Yacht lot 54 In ones
15 Actor Peter
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Theyre so violent, said another mom. I didnt believe this. If boys were more violent than girls, it was the result of the boys will be boys childbearing mentality, and I firmly believed that this excuse was not an acceptable reason for condoning unacceptable behavior.
Its their mouths, yet another mother insisted, and I thought, Ha! Nothing could compete with my backtalk campion who has an intolerable list of irrational reasons for every action she ever executed or conceived.
But after having given ear for many moons to Zacharys aggressive approach to the English language, I have to
admit that I was mistaken. Although I still dont endorse stereotypes and Im sure that there are plenty of 3-year-old girls out there who were cut from the same cloth as Baretta, I really have been disturbed at Zacharys close conformity to the snakes n snails school of thought.
I refuse to accept responsibility for this, for he certainly never heard Ill spit on you from me. Yet, he says it, along with a host of other terrific comebacks.
His verbal aggressiveness first became apparent while he was still quite young, when he began to stick a rattle in the back of his diaper and to swagger around ominously. Ill soot you, he would threaten with alarming frequency.
Phillip and I were appalled. Strong opponents of guns, we refused to furnish him with his hearts desire. It didnt help. At friends homes, he would make a beeline for the weapons. At our home he made do with blocks, rulers and Magic Markers until his grandmother bought him his prized possession, a water gun.
Suddenly, he was volunteering to shoot all our adversaries, no matter how small their infractions. He yearned for the day when his bullets would be real. When I get to be a policeman, Im gonna go into the kitchen and shoot those ants, was a typical comment.
I really think thats a rather drastic solution, I
responded. You might ruin the kitchen.
I dont care.
Well, I do. Shooting is usually not a good idea, and most policemen know that.
You shut up.
I was shocked, but I did try to reason with him as any good modern mother would. Dont you talk to me like that young man. You make me very angry when you say ugly things, and then I dont want to be around you.
Ill push you down.
Although it was probably counterproductive, I repaid violence with violence. I spanked him.
Why are you being mean to me? He howled as I escorted him boldy to his
room. Im gonna get me some handcuffs!
And I may get me some soap and a gag.
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FORECAST FORSEPTEMBER26 THROWH OCTOBER 1
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Yesterdays Cryptoqulp: ARE POOR, BAD-TEMPERED HABERDASHERS MAD HATTERS?
Todays Cryptoquip clue: F equals G.
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 wor^, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
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DONT MISS the 1983 edition of Fair Da\ s and Fair Nights, Pitt County style, sponsored by the Pitt County American Legion. This year the fair runs from September 26 through October 1. And we have the biggest, most exciting fair ever.....with more rides, shows and
special attractions than ever before. Take a look at this line-up:
MONDAY IS LADIES NIGHT AND ONE PRICE NIGHT. Ladies are admitted free until 7 pm, PLUS anyone can pay one price ($6.00) and get free admission plus ride all
the rides at no additional cost.
TIESDAY IS FAMILY NIGHT. Bring the whole family for a super night of fun and games.
WEDNESDAY IS BIRGER KING DISCOUNT NIGHT. With a Burger King coupon (available at either Greenville Burger King) you can buy $9.00 worth of ride tickets for just $6.00. Save 33%! Also, Wednesday, Senior Citizens vviU be admitted free from 9:30 am until 11:30 am. THURSDAY IS COLLEGE NIGHT AND ONE PRICE NIGHT. Again, pay just $6.00 for admission and all the rides all night. ONE PRICE COVERS ALL!
Preschoolers are admitted free 9:30 am to 11:30am.
FRIDAI' AND S.ATURD.W WE PRESENT FANT\SY ON WHEELS. At 4 pm each day, come see the premiere daredevil show. Youll see HoU\"wood stunt men perform feats in cars that you-never imagined possible. Theyll jump fift>' feet thru the air, balance n two wheels, totallv destrov a junk auto, and youll see the incredible DIVE BOMBER CRASH. The show is free. Dont miss it!
Also, on Friday, the Handicapped vvill be admitted free from 9:30 am till 11:30 am.
prrrcoumTRn
SEPTEMBER 26 - OCTOBER I
BE SURE TO VISIT OUR VILLAGE OF YESTERYEAR FREE WITH REGULAR FAIR ADMISSION.
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Cavs Undefeated With Win Over Pack
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) - Virginia coach George Welsh isnt any more excited about Saturdays 26-14 victory over North Carolina State than he was over his teams first three victories.
Despite Kenny Stadlins record-tying four field goals, which led the Cavaliers to a 4-0 record and 2-0 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, Welsh said he thinks his team still has something to prove.
This win doesnt tell us anything that the first three did, Welsh said.
Stadlins kicks, which tied a record set by Russ Henderson against Wake Forest six years ago. included a 49-yarder with 2:58 left. That gave Virginia a 19-14 lead and forced N.C. State into a situation where a touchdown was crucial.
Wake 'D' Holds In 31-6 Victory
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Wake Forest Coach A1 Groh beamed Saturday over his teams defensive effort in the Deacons 31-6 college football victory over the Richmond Spiders.
The Deacons, 3-1, have not allowed a touchdown in the past 12 quarters in running off three consecutive wins after a loss to Appalachian State in which the defense allowed only one of three Appalachian touchdowns.
The other two Appalachian touchdowns were scored on interception returns.
Groh was especially pleased by the way his team comes up with key turnovers.
We have made this a personal challenge to our players. We tried to emphasize contact fumbles, and then the hustle and effort necessary to recover them, he said.
Our team responded nicely today. Im pleased with their poise. We have to have an intense effort to win and we had it today, Groh said.
The Deacons forced five turnovers, including three fumbles by the Spiders, which helped overcome Richmonds 365-304 edge in total offensive yardage.
The Deacons were able to win without a strong effort by Gary Schofield. Entering the game averaging 187 yards per game passing, Schofield was held to 63 by Richmonds defense.
The difference was a strong running effort by Michael Ramseur.
Michael is a big production player, Groh said.He has a certain magic and flair. Hes a fine young player.
Ramseur tied his own Wake Forest record with four rushing touchdowns and gained 132 yards in 21 carries.
The loss was Richmonds 14 straight, its fourth this year. Wake Forest opened the scoring on a 37-yard field goal by Harry Newsome with 6:23 left in the first quarter. In that drive Ramseur carried five times for 40 yards.
Wake Forest capUalized on a fumble recovery on Richmonds 39 yard line with Ramseur scoring on an 8-yard run with 9:32 left in the first half.
Ramseur scored on runs of 7,11 and 5 yards in the second half, winding up with 21 carries for 132 yards. It was the second time in his career that he rushed for four touchdowns in a game.
Richmond got all of its points on two field goals by Brendan Toibin. Jarvis Jennings carried 21 times for 164 yards to lead the Spiders offense.
Punt Block Lets Down Pitt
We were going for the field goal come hell or high water, Welsh said. The field here goes down a bit at the (south) end and I really think that helped us. Otherwise, it doesnt make it.
N.C. State coach Tom Reed took the blame for the loss, saying his team was ill-prepared.
Virginia wanted the game and they believed they could win it, Reed said. On the other side, we had no desire. We didnt really want it. To review the situation, its my responsibility to get them ready to play. I didnt.
The victory was Virginias first over N.C. State pee a 14-10 triumph in 1971, and only its second victory over the Wolfpack in the last 23 contests.
While the kicking game was the key to Virginias victory, it proved to be N.C.
States downfall. Punter Marty Martinussen was droped for a big loss attempting to punt and had another punt partially blocked. That deflection opened the way for Stadlins second field goal, a 27-yard boot with 11:16 left in the third period to give the Cavaliers a 13-7 advantage.
Joe McIntosh, bottled up much of the day by a strong Virginia defense, cappl a 73-yard drive with a 15-yard scoring run with 5:34 left in the period. Mike Cofers conversion led to a 14-13 Wolfpack lead. McIntosh finished with 66 yards in 18 carries.
Virginia went 52 yards late in the quarter to set up Stadlins 24-yard field goal with 16 seconds left, giving Virginia , a 16-14 advantage.
McIntosh and quarterback Tim
Esposito helped drive the Wolfpack to Virginias 8, but Espositos pass for Ricky Wall was picked off in the end zone by William Frazier.
The interception set up the drive for Stadlins record-tying fourth kick.
'The Wolfpack, 1-2 after its ACC opener, attempted a rally, but Lester Lyles intercepted an Esposito pass. That set up Howard Pettys 3-yard scoring run with 2:16 left to clinch the victory.
The Cavaliers took the opening kickoff and marched from their own 32 to the Wolfpack 3, where Stadlin booted a 19-yard field goal to give Virginia the early lead.
Virginia got a break early in the second quarter when Don Wilson fumbled Jeff Walkers punt and Bart Farinholt recovered at the Cavalier 40. Five plays later.
however, Wayne Schuchts pass for Nick Merrick was picked off by N.C. States Ken Loney and returned 15 yards to the Wolfpack 26.
N.C. State cashed in the mistake with a 74-yard, nine-play drive. Espositos 4-yard scoring pass to Ricky Isom and
Virginia.................................3 7 6 KV-36
.N. Carolina St.........................u 7 7 014
UVaFG Stadlin 19
NCSIsom 4 pass from Esposito iCofer kick)
UVaWord 1 run (Stadlinkick)
UVa-FG Stadlin 27 NCS-McIntosh 15 run (Cofer kick)
UVaFG Stadlin 32 UVaFG Stadlin 49 UVa-Petty 3 run (SUdlin kick 1 A44.800
LVa .\CS
First downs 23 16
Rushes-yards 56- 77 38- 83
Cofers conversion gave the Wolfpack a 7-3 lead with 10:27 left before halftime.
Martinussen was tackled for a 13-yard loss attempting to punt from his own 46 and Virginia took advantage, scoring on Barry Word's 1-yard dash around left end with 47 seconds left. Stadlin's kick gave Virginia its halftime lead.
Passing yards Return yards Passes.
Punts
Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Time of possession
INDIVIDI ALI.KADKKS
RUSHING-Virgmia, Pettv 21,-49. Word 12-30. .\ Carolina St, McIntosh 18-66 P.ASSING-Virginia, Schuchts 18-28-1-223 Carolina .St, Esposito 17-25-3-153 RECEIVING-Virginia, Smith 7-93, Merrick 5-67 Carolina St . Wall 6-94.
223 28 18-28-1 4-33 1-0 6-69 34:.36
153
29
17-25-3
4-37
4-1
4-30
25:24
Stankavage Knots Carolina Record
Terps
Slipping By
Wake Forest running back Michael Ramseur (20) slips by a Richmond defender during first half action of the
REFLECTOR
SUNDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 25.1983
game in Richmond Saturday. Wake Forest wont the game 31-6. (AP Laserphoto)
ByRICKSCOPPE Associated Press Writer
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - North Carolina quarterback Scott Stankavage tied a school record and set a personal best as the fifth-ranked Tar Heels took a 51-20 victory over William & Mary Saturday, but he didnt get to celebrate.
Stankavage threw four touchdown passes and set a personal high with 218 yards against the Indians, but was taken to the student infirmary with an injured foot.
"He hasnt been a surprise to me. North Carolina coach Dick Crum said. Hes played like I thought he would. I think a difference between this year and last is that our receivers are really catching the ball well.
Stankavage, who is expected to play next week against Georgia Tech, threw two touchdown passes of 8 yards and added scoring tosses of 13 and 11 yards to tie his own record and that of Chris Kupec. Stankavage threw for 210 yards last year in a loss to Clemson.
"I guess Carolina did what it was supposed to do, William & Mary coach Jimmye Laycock said. "But I have to say I thinik we did some things today we werent supposed to against them,"
Indian quarterback Stan Yagiello hit 24 of 40 passes for 199 yards and one touchdown as William & Mary, which has never beaten North Carolina in 12 games, fell to 1-2.
Tailback Ethan Horton rushed for 141 yards and one touchdown as the Tar keels, 4-0. gained a total of 515 yards. The Indians had 352 total yards.
North Carolina scored on all five first half possessions to take a 31-10 lead at intermission.
William & Mary cut the lead to 31-20 in the third period on a 36-yard field goal by-Brian Morris and a 24-yard run by reserve tailback Michael Clemons.
The Tar Heels came back on a 73-yard drive to regain control 38-20 as Stankavage hit tight end Dave Truitt with an 8-yard touchdown pass with 4:30
left in the third period.
Stankavage then hit wide receiver Mark Smith from 8 yards out with 14:01 left in the final period to make it 44-20. Brooks Barwick's point after was his 55th straight, breaking the school record set by Jeff Hayes.
Reserve fullback Ray Littlejohn's 3-yard run with 3:02 left made it 51-20. karwick missed the extra point, snapping his streak.
William & Mary took the opening kickoff before 49,400 and shredded the nation's top-ranked defense, driving 67 yards on 11 plays to take a 7-0 lead. Yagiello's 4-yard scoring pass to Jeff Sanders capped the drive with 9:55 left in the period.
William & Marv......................7 ;{ lu ((_2k
.\. ( arolina............................7 24 7 i:{51
W&M-Sanders 4 pass from Yagiello I Morns kick 1 UNC-Horten 1 run * Barwick kick 1 l'.\C-M. Smith 13 pass from .Stankavage 'Barwickkick)
UNC-Jones 3 run Barwick kick 1 UNt'-L Griffin 11 pass from Stankavage iBaruick kick.)
L'NC-FGGliarmis37 W&M-FG Morris 22 W;&M-FG Morris 36 W&MClemons 24 run (Morris kick 1 L'.\C-Truitt 8 pass from Stankavage I Barwick kick >
UXC-M Smith 8 pass from Stankavage I Barwick kick I L'.NC-Littlejohn 3 run > kick failed A-49.4O
First downs
W&M
21
IN(
28
5:1-293
Rushes-yards
29-135
Passing'yards
217
222
Return yard.s
9
37
Passes'
27-4,7-1
18-22-0
Punts
6-41
1-40
Fumbles-lost
M
1-1
Penalties-yards
10-74
11-79
Time of possession
30 44
29 16
IVDIVIDlM.l.KADKKS
RUSHINGWilliam & .Mary, Scanlon 9-54',
Littlejohn 8-57, Jones 4-41 P.ASSI.NG-William & Mary, Yagiello 24-40-1-199. N. Carolina. Stankavage 17-21-0-218,
RECEI\'1.\GWilliam & .Marv, Sanders 7-51. Sutton 6-81. Scanlon 6-3U .\ Carolina, M, Smith 5-71, L. Griffin ,5-71, Truitt 3-17
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - Doug Cox will be a letterman for Maryland this season.
The walk-on junior linebacker, who failed to letter in his first two seasons, scored after blocking a second quarter punt to put Maryland ahead, and the Terps held on to upset 16th-ranked Pittsburgh Saturday.
Hes just a good, ole tough kid, a fighter all the way, Maryland Coach Bobby Ross said of Cox, who was redshirted season. I couldnt be happier than to have a young man like that succeed.
He has become a really good special team player, Ross said. "But the funny thing is, he has bad hands.
Cox had no trouble picking up the blocked punt, however, as the ball bounced directly into his hands off the natural turf as hespeddownfield.
Pittsburgh was driving for a possible victory before an option play produced a costly fumble with 74 seconds left after an illegal use of hands penalty nullified a gain to the Maryland three.
I never thought they we stop us, said Pitt Coach Foge Fazio. We stopped ourselves with the penalty. We ran the belly so many times on that drive that we thought we would be able to run the option.
Maryland, 2-1, thwarted two scoring bids by the Panthers after Jess Atkinsons 24-yard field goal, his second, produced the only points of the second half on the first play of the fourth quarter.
Wind Shift Prompts Finale Delay
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - The showdown oetween Liberty and Australia II for the Americas Cup was postponed because of shifty winds Saturday and then erupted in controversy over changes in the U.S. yachts weight and sail configuration.
The Australians also complained that a mysterious frogman seen in the water at 2 a.m. Saturday near their dock might have been out to damage their boat.
The Americans called a lay day for Sunday to consider changes in Liberty, and the Aussies said they would sail Mondays decisive seventh race under protest because any modifications now are unfair.
Skipper Dennis Conner had 924 pounds of lead removed from Libertys hull Friday night. He planned to take the boat back to a Barrington, R.I., shipyard for more possible changes Sunday in hopes of extending the 132-year U.S.
monopoly on the Cup, the only international trophy never to change hands.
They cant run forever. Theyve got to face us some day, said Australia II syndicate chief Alan Bond, who has spent $16 million in four tries to win the Cup, What Im wondering is which boat are they going to send out after us. The blue one? The red one? The green one? Or maybe they can use a can of spray paint and we wont know the difference. Maybe the right color would be pink.
This could get ridiculous. We could have five different hulls, five different keels, five different masts and a thousand sails, and you would never know which boat you were running against.
Maybe theyre going to cut the mast off.
Bond said that once Liberty was changed Friday and recertified as meeting 12-meter racing specifications, she should not be changed
again on a lay day.
When you give a certificate today, that should be the same certificate you sail under because its the same race, he said.
Bill Ficker of the host New York Yacht Club's Americas Cup Committee said Liberty has three different certifications to use depending upon the weight, although she must be remeasured each time.
Conner refused to talk with reporters, but John Marshall, mainsheet trimmer for Liberty, said the Americans will w^ait for a weather report Sunday afternoon before deciding whether to make further changes.
The Australians took a lay day Friday after their record 3 minute, 25 second victory Thursday evened the series 3-3.
It was a great break for us for the Australians to start the lay day cycle, " Marshall said. It gives us a chance to make
changes."
But Marshall said Liberty's crew had been looking forward to racing Saturday and ending this most dramatic and challenging of Cup series,
We were very keen to race Australia in light winds with our boat set up for light wind conditions," he said. "We'll go through the same cycle again tomorrow and see what configuration it should be raced in."
Bond avoided any direct charges of attempted sabotage in the frogman incident.
"We saw a guy with frog gear coming up through the water," he said. "He obviously got wind of the security guards and disappeared."
Bond said he is not worried about damage to Australia ll's celebrated winged keel, which has been kept hidden all summer, but he added: "We are concerned with damage to the yacht and the gear up on it,"
Perry Remaining Quiet About Pitch That Made Him Famous
KANSAS CITY, Mo, (AP) - Gaylord Perry could not hide his melancholy at the end of a remarkable career.
You do something for 25 years, youre going to miss it a little bit, the sometimes controversial right-hander said after announcing his retirement Friday night.
Shortly before the Kansas City Royals played Minnesota, Perry surprised Manager Dick Howser by informing him of his decision. After 21 years in the major leagues, two Cy Young awards, 314 victories and more than 3,500 strikeouts, Gaylord Perry was hanging it up at age 45.
Perrys long career frequently was spiced with allegations that he threw a spitball. It was a controversy that Perry himself helped fuel, and he couldnt resist one more reference to illegal pitches,
Its going to be a little drier around the American League, he said with a prin.
He came in and said, 'Id like to speak to you. Skip, Howser said. Then he laid it out. He was iMisinesslike and a
1
little sad.
1 think this is the time, Perry said later.
Grins were coming hard to the North Carolina native, but not memories.
1 played with the guy I think was the greatest player ever, Willie Mays, he said. I played against (Sandy) Koufax. I pitched with one of the all-time great pitchers, Juan Marichal. I played with Dale Murphy in Atlanta. I played with Dave Winfield in New York. I played with George Brett and Dan Quisenberrj' in Kansas City.
Its all been great, but now its time to get back home to the peanut farm and make a living there.
Perry became the 15th pitcher in major-league history to record 300 victories when he hurled the Seattle Mariners to a 7-3 victory over the Yankees on May 6,1982. He was picked up by the Royals in July after Seattle released him.
He is the only pitcher to win the Cy Young Award in both leagues, leaving with a 314-265 lifetime record and an earned run average of 3.09 covering 5,352
innings.
He was typically coy, and somewhat defensive, when asked about the spitball.
I thought it would help me to have pwple think about it, he said. So I tried to use it to my advantage.
Did he throw illegal pitches?
Ive got to pick the time to release that, he added.
He says he is most proud of his durability.
Even with some of the milestones Ive been able to achieve, the thing tluit stands out in my mind is that I was always able to take my turn, he said. I can only remember twice when I missed a scheduled start.
Perry reached another milestone in August 'hep he became only the third pitcher' i; r-le ^hist07with3,500 strikeout. fin d with 3,534, third on the all-tiir uehind Steve Carlton and Nolan Ryan is 314 victories put himlOth nth. all-i me list.
Perry spent twq years in San Diego, spent parts of 1%0 with Texas and the Yankees, played for Atlanta in 1981 and Seattle in 1982.
Gaylord PerryAlabama Rolls Past Vanderbilt
N.ASHVILLE. Tenn. i.AP) - Alabama quarterback Walter Lewis rushed for a pair of touchdowns and gained 274 yards in total offense as the 6th-ranked Crimson Tide dfeated Vanderbilt 44-24 in a Southeastern Conference football game Saturday night.
Alabama, which found itself down 17-0 after the first quarter, upped its overall record to 3-0 and its SEC mark to 2-0.
Vanderbilt's Commodores fell to 1-2 by dropping their league opener.
Lewis rallied Alabama to a 17-17 halftime deadlock with scoring scampers of 1 and 11 yards.
Linebacker Venson Elder set up the Tides go-ahead score when he intercepted a pass off the arm of Vanderbilt quarterback Kurt Page at the Commodores 30-yard line.
Six plays later, Alabama halfback Lennie Patrick scored from 2 yards out and Van Tiffin added the conversion for the Tides first lead of the night, 24-17.
Alabama then took advantage of a short Vanderbilt punt to pad its lead to 27-17 on a 28-yani field goal by Tiffin with 7:59 remaining in the third quarter.
The Commodores tightened the game on a 9-yard scoring run by tailback Carl Woods but Alabama answered with a 6-yard scoring burst by halfback Joe Carter to gain a 34-24 edge.
Vanderbilt; quarterback Kermit Sykes ended a string of six consecutive scoring possessions* by Alabama when he intercepted a Lewis pass at the Vandy 6-yard line early in the final quarter.
B-2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday, September 25.1983
COLL^^
Scores
B> The Assoriatrd Press EAST
Albanv, V 28 Brockport St 0 Albright 7.1'psala 6 Allegheny 13. Thiel-13 Amherst 30, Bates 30, tie Army 13. Dartmouth 12 Bloomsburg St 10. Maasfield St 6 Boston I . Maine 14 Buffalo 21. KoehesterT Canisius 17. Buffalo St 10 Carnegie Mellon 46 Hiram Col 0 Clarion St W, Look Haven St to ColgatefiO Cornell7 Concord 23 W Va Weslyno Connecticut 38 Vaie 12 Cortland St 26. Pace 10 Delaware 40 Penn 7 Delaware'St DiM olColumtoafi Dickm.'on38 (ieorgetown.DC 17 EdinboroSt 44, Shippensburg St 16 Fairmont St .3<), Salem. W Va K Framingham SI 16 Brdguater.Mas.s 3 Grove (itv 21, Duouesne 10 Hamiltonl4, Boaoin6 Hofstra 14. Alfred II Holv Cross 42 New Hampshire 30 Indiana. Pa 33, California. Pa 21 Johns Hopkins 3.1. Lebanon Val 31 Kings Point 33, St l^w rence 14 Ufavette 34 Columbia 20 Uwell 1,1 KPl 12 l.vcoming 39. Wilkes 0 MassachuselLs21. Harvard7 Mass .Maritime27, Curry 9 Mercyhursl 24, St Francis. F-a ii Miller-villeSt 20. Kulitown St 6 Montclair SI 48. Kean 7 MorganSI 24. N Carolina AiL 12 Muhlenberg 3 Frnkin 4 Marshll o Nav\ .10, Limigh o Northeastern 14 C W Post lo Norwich 17. American Intl M Penn St 23. Temple 18 Plymouth St 27 w Connecticut 0 Princeton 46. Bucknell28 .Flhode Island :to Brow n 16 St John s. NV 27.. Marist 7 Shepherd 41 West l.itxTtv 7 S Carolina.St 28, Howard C 7 Stony Brook 20 Siena 13 Susquehanna 30, Delaware Val 14 SwaiThmore 27, Gettysburg 22 Syracuse 17, Kutgers 13 Towson SI 28. Slippery Buck 0 L'nion, N V 23. Hobart o Wash 4 Jeff 12, Bethany ,W Va 7 Wavnesburg 17. Oneva 6 Wesleyan 1., Colby 13 W New England 12. Maine Maritime 7 W Virginia'27 Boston College 17 W Maryland 24,1 rsinus 12 Widener 38 Juniata 7 Williams 29, Middlebury 14 SIH TH Alabama 44, Vanderbilt 24 Alabama A4.M 28, Albany Ga 7 AppalachianSl 27,Citadel 16 Auburn :i7, Tennessee 14 ^
Austin Peay 13, W Kentucky 3 Catholic 117, Hanipden Sydney 9 Clemson4l. Georgia Tech 4 E Kentucky 10, .Akron .3 Elizabeth ('ity St 15. Norfolk SI o Florida 35. Mississippi St 12 Furman31, Marshall?
Gardner Webb6 Mars Hill 3 (B^irgetown. Ky 20. Emory 4 Henry 0 Georgia 31. S Carolina 13 Guillord23 Favctleyille SI 7 Jackson St 33, Mississippi Val 19 Jacksonville St 18 W Georgia o James Madison 44 Litierly Baptist 35 J C .Smith 42. Bow ie SI 2.3 Kentucky 26, Tulane 14 Kentucky Weslyn 27. Baptist I 14 l^mar 18. Uiuisiana Tech 12 Louisville 31, Cincinnati 23 Maryland 13,1llLshurgh 7 .Maryville 24, Hrdgwaler.Va 7 MiddleTenn 36. MoreheadSt 17 Millsaps 43. Trimly, Tex 13 Mississippi 1.3. Arl(an.sas 10 .Morehou.se ,3.1, Fisk 6 Newberry 13. Davidson 7 N Carolina .31. William & Mary 2o Presbyterian 7. Lenoir I3hyne3 St Paul's 16, A irgmui SI 14 Salisbury St 29. FrostburgSi 14 .Sewanpe'31 Principia 19 Tennessee.St 23. Florida A4M 13 Troy St 28 (B-orgia .Southern 2:
Valdosta St 14 Savannah St 10
A'lrginia 26, N Carolina St 4
Virginia Tech 28 VMIo
Virginia I nion 40 Wmston-.salem 7
Wake Forest 31 Kichmond6
Wash M,ee2>. C.T.T- 7
'W Virginia Te<;h 24 Itundolph-.MdCon
12
W Carolina!?. E Tennessee Si 16 W offord 2.3 t atawba 15 MIDWEST Albion,i,3 Wabash 17 Alma 111 NE Illinois 3 Anderson .32 Wilrninglon 13 Auguslana 111 47, Wheaton 12 BemidjiSt 33 Moorhead St 28 Bethany Kan '23. Kansas Wesly n 7 Black Hills St 19, S Dakota Tech 7
Bowling Green 17. Miami, Ohio 14 Butler 14 Wittenberg'3 Carthage 17. Millikin 16 Case W eslern 37. John Carroll 7 Cent Arkansas 35, NW Missouri St 14 Cent Michigan 32, W Michigan 14 Cent St .Ohio 21 Grand Valiev St 14 Concordia. Ill 37 Illinois Col Concordia. Moor 14. St 01al9 Dakota St '26, Dakota Weslvn U Dayton 17, Baldwm Wallace 14 Dehison24, Heidelberg?
DePauw 28 Rose Hulmn?
Earlham 28, Manchester to
E Illinois 42, NE Missouri 0
Emporia St IB.ChadrnnSt 6
Findlay 2.3, iihio Northern 7
Gustav Adolphus I: Hamline?
Hanover 17 Deluinielii
Hope 21-1 ilerhr; 12
Huron? s Dakota sprgfld7.tie
lllinoi'2ii Michigan St 10
IlliniiisSt 16. Drake 17
Illinois Wevlyn 26 North Central 13 ,
Indiana Central .8), Ferns St 0
Iowa 20, iihioSt 14
Iowa St 21, Colorado .St 17
Kansas St 27. Wyoming 2.3
Kenvon 16. Woos'ler in
Knox 13, Beloit 6
Lawrence?. luikelando
Macalester21 c.,rie|m>
MayvilleSi 17 H.i.cjngso Michigan W '.V - on'in 2
Midlanfl,3.i. W.i.ii. N- '- n-Minn Duluth to 'W \I iinesota 17 Mmol .St 7 ,la:.'-''i.wi!*. ^
Missouri 17. Llal; 7!
Missouri Rolla 17 E\,insvilie6 Mo Western 42 F.vangel 7 Monmouth 111 28, Rijhu. 12 Mount I'nior 23 Otterbein? Muskingum 42 .Marietta 9 Nebraska 42 I'CLA 10 Nebraska-Omaha :8. Mornmgside o North Park 16. Benedictine.Ill 15 N Illinois ,18, Kent St 7 N .Michigan 28. .Michigan Tech 21 Northwestern to Indiana 8 NW Iowa 26. Doane 18 OhioL' 31, E Michigan 14 Olivet 34, Olivet Nazarene o St Cloud St 41 S Dakota?
St Thomas 41. St Johns. Minn 14 Saginaw Val St 40-, Franklin 21 Simpson 17, Cent Iowai,3 S Dakota St 28 N Dakota'27 Sterling35 Bethel. Kan 21 Taylor 31, Bluffton 10 Toledo 43, Ball St 7 Wayne. Mich Zi.Sl Joseph. Ind 0 Westmar23, Dana 19 Westmnstr Pa 13, Adrian to Wis -Oshkosh 28 Wis Plalteville 14 Wis -Whilewater28. Wis Slout l SOITHWF.ST E Central L 45. Arkansas Tech u Henderson St 21, Ark Pine Bluff 7 Oklahoma 28. Tulsa le Oklahoma St 34,Texas A4M 1.3 Southern L 23. Prairie View 9 Texas Lutheran 41. (iuachita 8 Texas Tech 26. Baylor 11
Da was Stop Gamecocks
Going For Paydirt
Georgias David McCluskey (43) goes around the right side and is all alone as he goes 41 yards for the
Bulldogs first TD against South Carolina at Sanford Field Saturday. (APLaserphoto)
Bruins 'Test' Nebraska As Osborne Wins 100th
LINCOLN. Neb. (APi -Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne. capturing his 100th victory as a collegiate coach with 42-10 defeat of UCLA, got the test he was looking for.
Osborne won his first game for .Nebraska 11 years ago against the Bruins and Saturday's victory also e.xtended for .Nebraska the nation's longest current winning streak to 14.
Osborne, who had said he wanted a test for his Huskers. got his wish when six first-half fumbles gave the Bruins a 10-0 lead.
We were our worst enemy for a while today." Osborne said. It looked like we weren't going to be able to overcome these mistakes for a while. If we had' come out (in the second half) and turned it over a couple of more times we could have lost the game."
But UCLA could not answer to all of Nebraska's 42 points, including 14 points in the second quarter to erase the deficit.
UCLA's Coach Terry
Rutgers Tops ECU Booters
RUTGERS. N.J. - The Pirates of East Carolina managed the first goal scored against Rutgers this season but dropped a 4-1 decision in Saturday soccer action.
Scott Gibbs scored for the Pirates in the second half with an assist by Billy Merwin,
"We did not play well at all in the first half." ECU coach Robbie Church said. We are not getting play from some key people, and it looks as if we've got to make some changes,"
The Pirates, now 1-4 on the season, play Monmouth today at 2 p.m. Rutgers improved its record to 4-0.
East (arolina...............................ii |i
RutRers.......................................3 14
Donahue was pleased with the 10-0 lead but there were problems he couldn't control.
We lost too many players in the first who couldnt play in the second half." he said. At one point, when it was 14-10. I honestly felt we could have stayed in the game."
Osborne said it was a lack of intensity that contributed to the slow first half.
We didn't have great intensity. he said. Our yards came harder today. We had to earn everything we got. When you win three games as easily as we have, you subconsciously can relax a little bit."
As for the test, he said, the defense and offense answered the call.
"1 think our first team guys needed a game where they really had to go hard for three or four quarters. Our defense played well and Im sure there are 90 percent of the teams in the country that would love to have our defense, Osborne said,
On his lOOth victory, he said: "I just hope I'm around
here for another 50 games. That seems like a lot now. UCLA, 0-2-1, struck in the first quarter after Nebraska quarterback Turner Gill had his second fumble of the day on the Bruin 34. Ten plays later fullback Frank Cephous dove from the 1-yard line and a partisan crowd of 76,510 was stunned.
The Bruins struck again after Husker Mark Schellen fumbled at the UCLA 40, and John Lees 37-yard field goal made it 10-0.
The Huskers managed to score on the next series with 7:27 left in the half on an 11-yard run by Schellen. Nebraska held again on UCLAs next drive and three plays later Roziers 5-yard run made it 14-0.
Later in the second quarter the Huskers drove to their own 1. but Rozier fumbled out of the end zone for a touchback.
After Lupe Sanchez fumbled a Nebraska punt at the Husker 18, Rozier, who carried 26 times for 159 yards, scored on a 2-yard run.
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) - John Lastinger, who lost the starting quarterback job earlier in the week, came off the bench in the sec(Hid half for injured starter Todd Williams and threw for one touchdown and ran for another to trigger 14th-ranked Georgia to a 31-13 college football victory over South Carolina Saturday.
"In the second half, we resembled a true Georgia football team. South Carolina kept the pressure on us all day, and they will really fight you, said Georgia Coach Vince Dooley. However, we came back in the second half under the direction of John Lastinger and we were able to comeback.
"I have never been prouder of one individual than I am of John. He was put in a tough situation, but he kept his spirit up, had a great week of practice and went in and did a great job of leading this Georgia football team, Dooley said.
Lastinger, a senior Who started in the Bulldogs first two games, lost his No. 1 spot to Williams after last Saturdays Clemson game.
I told you wed win some games with John, said Dooley. "We had several good individual efforts but the important thing was the way we responded as a team in the second half."
South Carolina Coach Joe Morrison said he was pleased with his teams play in the first half and proud of their effort throughout the game.
"I thought we had good effort in the second half, but we didnt get the job done containing their quarterback in the first half or the second half. Georgia is a good ballclub and they just wore us down in the second half," Morrison said.
Georgia broke a 10-10 halftime deadlock when Lastinger tossed a 2-yard touchdown pass to Clarence Kay early in the period before sparking the Bulldogs on an 18-play. 82-yard fourth quarter
Pirate Netters Win Tourney
WILMINGTON - The East Carolina University mens tennis team won the Wilmington Invitational Tournament held at UNC-Wilmington this weekend with 27 points.
Coastal Carolina placed second with 26 points, while Campbell University and UNC-W rounded out the finish.
The Pirates picked up a 9-0 win over UNC-W and a 7-2 win over Campbell, but lost to Coastal Carolina 5-7 to post a 2-1 record on the season.
ECU will, host Campbell in its 1983 home opener Tuesday at the Minges Coliseum courts.
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An Open Letter
For many years Greenville has considered itself an alert and progressive community providing programs and facilities that make it a good place to live. In particular it has enthusiastically supported good recreation and athletic programs. The city leaders, with the supiwrt of citizens, have supplied an outstanding recreation program with good parks, ball fields and tennis courts. Citizens and community leaders have given generously to support the athletic programs of East Carolina University. Funds have been donated to build a fine Boys Club.
Unfortunately, there are two glaring areas of neglect in this otherwise good picture of civic responsibility. Rose High School has no athletic field, and there is no auditorium in the entire Greenville city school system.
These two unmet needs have bothered me for many years, both while I was coach and athletic director at Rose High and since I have retired. A few days ago I was again forcibly reminded of the problem when Rose was obliged to play its first home footbaU game of the season on one of the county high schools athletic fields because it has no field of its own. One would have to search long and hard to find another school system anywhere without an athletic field or an auditorium.
This neglect of the needs of our own young people is partly the result of the citys belief that its high school could share East Carolina Universitys facilities. When Ficklen Stadium was built citizens of Greenville gave many thousands of dollars on the assumption that it would be used by Rose High as well as ECU.
From the beginning this arrangement has been unsatisfactory and with every passing year it becomes increasingly so. The needs of the University athletic pro^am are naturally always primary, and the high schools use of the stadium is, at best, grudmngly tolerated. The high school coaches and administrators are in the uncomfortable position of supplicant to the university athletic department for use of the university facility to make their schools programs possible.
Every year the high school coaches must
arrange Rose Highs football schedule to suit the convenience of the University. This year the arrangements for three of Roses five home games have had to be changed because Ficklen Stadium was unavailable at the times the games would normally have been played. Two games will be played oh Thursday nights instead of Friday and one game has already been played on the D. H. Conley field.
Apart from the inconvenience, these changes reduce the funds available for high school athletic programs. Gate receipts from games played on Thursday night are likely to be smaller than from those played on Friday. Games played out of the city are not as well attended as those played in Greenville. Any reduction in gate receipts for football games harms the entire Rose athletic program since it is funded from the revenue producing sports.
Although, because of my former work in athletics, I am most familiar with problems caused by the lack of an athletic field, I also know that having no auditorium is a severe handicap to the schools programs in other areas.
Each year, musical and dramatic programs must be staged in improvised or borrowed quarters. Graduation and academic recognition programs are hostage to the availability of borrowed facilities at East Carolina University. The outstanding musical drama that the hii school stages every year must be put on at great inconvenience to performers and spectators in the inadequate surroundings of the school gym.
It seems to me that it is time for the citizens of Greenville and their leaders to provide these facilities that our young people need. It is unrealistic to expect that East Carolina University will supply for GreenviUe the basic educational facilities that other communities supply for their own children. I have heard that city leaders are considering building a civic center in Greenville. However important such a project may be, it seems to me that properly set priorities would give first position to the construction of an athletic field and an auditorium for the city schools of Greenville.
Bo Farley
scoring drive. Keith Montgomery capped the drive with a l-yard touchdwon run as Georgia improved its record to 2-0-1.
Lastinger then closed (Hit the Bulldogs scoring when he scampered around left end on a 37-yard touchdown run with 6:28 remaining to play.
The Bulldogs first-half scoring came on a 41-yard touchdwon run by David McCluskey and a 32-yard field goal by Kevin Butler.
Mark Fleetwood had field goals of 38 and 26 for South Carolina, 2-2. Sophomore quarterback Allen Mitchell scored the Gamecocks only touchdown on a 5-yard run in the second period.
Williams, who was making his first start after winning the quarterback battle over Lastinger, who started last year, cast for 53 yards on five of eight attempts. He also ran for 65 yards on five tries before a pulled right thigh muscle, injured after he gained 24 yards on Georgias first offensive play of the second half, forced him out of the game.
Lastinger came on to complete the 60-yard scoring drive that put Georgia ahead to stay at 17-10. Lastinger connected with Kay on a 36-yard pass to the 4-yard line, then found Kay all alone in the end zone on the 2-yard TD pass.
South Carolina tied it at 10-10 only 2:03 before halftime as Mitchell hit a key 27-yard pass to Ira Hillary and Quinton Lewis broke loose for a 20-yard run to the 5 before Mitchell scored.
A touchdown was set up when Georgias McCluskey fumbled at the South Carolina 48, and it was recovered by Gary Ryan.
s. rarolina........................ 3 7 3 013
Georgia.............................7 3 7 14-31
SCFG Fleetwood 38 GAMcCluskey 41 run i Buller kick) GAFG Butler 32
SCMitchell 5 run iFleetwood kick) GA-Kay 2 pass from Lastinger (Butler kick)
SC FG Fleetwood 26 GA-Montgomery 1 run i Butler kick i GA-Lastinaer 37 run (Butler kick) A-82.I22
First downs Rushesyards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts
Fumbleslost Penalties yards Time of possession
.SC
16
40-139
151
0
8-21-1
3-44
3-0
3-15
28:05
Geo
25
56-344
161
4
15-22-0 1-36 3-2 6-48 31 55
INDIVIDIAL LEADERS RUSHING-S. Carolina, Dendy 1060, Lewis 5-27, Mitchell 16-25 Georgia, McCluskey 12-91, T Williams 565, Lastinger 3-5L
PASSING-S Carolina, Mitchell 8-21-1, 151. Georgia, T. Williams 5-8-0, 53. Ustinger 1^14-0.108 RECEIVING-S Carolina, Hillary 3-83,
Wade
Kay 5-59,
1-31, Blasingame 1-15 ( 9. Wisham44i Archie 5-36
Georgia,
South Carolina missed another scoring opportunity four minutes earlier when a 34 field goal attempt by Fleetwood was blocked by Georgias All-America rov-erback Terry Hoage. Hoage also blocked two field goal attempts against Clemson last week in a 16-16 tie.
Clemson...............41
Ga. Tech..............14
CLEMSON, S.C.(AP) -Tailback Kenny Flowers ran for 124 yards and one touchdown as an opportunistic Clemson capitalized on Georgia Tech turnovers and whipped the Yellow Jackets 41-14 in college football Saturday.
The game was the first Atlantic Coast Conference contest for both teams but it does not count in league standings because Clemson is on NCAA probation.
It was the third straight loss for Tech, the first time since 1900 the Jackets have been winless in the first three games. Clemson is now 2-1-1.
Clemson began the scoring early in the game when quarterback Mike Eppley went over from one yard out. The score came after cor-nerback Reggie Pleasant intercepted a Stu Rogers pass at the Georgia Tech 39.
A 17-point outburst in just over four minutes at the end of the first quarter and the beginning of the second put the Tigers firmly in control.
Tech scored on a 66-yard touchdown run by John Dewberry with 6:43 left in the half to make it 24-7 at the half.
But Clemson came back to put the game away with two touchdowns in the third period. One on a 2-yard run by Stacey Driver and the other on a 1-yard run by Flowers.
Clemsons Bob Paulling added to the scoring with a
Lady Bucs Drop Pair
RALEIGH - The East Carolina University Lady Pirates lost to Duke 15-2, 15-3, 15-5, then dropped another match to Western Carolina 15-9,15-2, 15-11 in the N.C. State Wolfpack Volleyball Invitational Tournament Saturday.
South Carolina won the tournament with a 15-13, 15-6, 15-10 sweep of Western Carolina.
26-yard field goal in the first period.
On Georgia'Techs first offensive play after the field goal, Jeff Suttle intercepted a pass thrown by Dewbmy. Two plays later, Eppley passed 11 yards to Terrance Rouhlac for a touchdown.
After Tech had run two offensive plays Ronny Cone fumbled and ClemsonS Roy Brown recovered at thel Tech 25.
Reserve quarterback Anthony Prete scored from four yarcb out with 11:23 to play in the second period for a 24-0 Clemson lead.
Dewberry, who replaced injured starting quarterback Rogers in the first period, won praise from his coach for dashing off a 66-yard touchdown in the opening half.
"John made a great adjustment on the touchdown run," said Bill Curry, Georgia Tech hpad coach. That was not a called play. It was an adjustment he made and he ran away from some folks.
It was a mistake-filled game, with Georgia Tech being penalized for 97 yards and Clemson for 109 yards.
GforgiaTech.......................0 07 0 07-14
Clfmson............................10 14 14 341
CU-Eppley 1 nm Paulling kick CU-Paulling26FG
CL-Rouhlac 11 pass from Eppley I Paulling kick I CU-Parette 4 run (Paulling kick I GT-Dewberry 66 run (Rice kick) CU-Driver 2 run (Paulling kick)
CU-FGIwebuike41
GTCarter 1 run (Rice kick)
A-73,000
GT
Clem
First downs
19
17
Rushesyards
48-206
49-216
Passing yards
139
Return yards
^ 27
24
Passes
12-22-2
12-26-2
Punts
7-31
5-40
Fumbleslost
5-3
5-1
Penalties-yards
10-97
14-109
Time of possession
28:18
31:42
INDIVIDI AL LEADERS
RUSHING-Georgia Tech, Lavette 14-19, Dewberry 10-101 Clemson.Flowers 18-124, Driver 13-71.
PASSING-Georgia Tech, Rogers 1-3-1-0, Dewberry 4-1^1-23, Gast 7-KHMB8. Clemson. Eppley 11-18-1-129, Parette 16-1-10
RECEIVING-Georgia Tech, Whisenhunt 5-70, Lee 1-15. Clemson, Rouhlac 5-48. R. Williams. 2-48.
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Ramirez' Single Caps Atlanta Rally
lAJTA AP) both sides. lln avn/^flir iirlinf lafM l#! A 4A __L. T _ 1__.1 _ _______Iniv* ....
ATLANTA (AP) - Rafael Ramirez lined a one-out single over short to drive in the winning run Saturday as the Atlanta Braves trimmed the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-2 to stay alive in the National League West race.
You are not going to see a better at-bat tnan Ramirez had right at the end, Braves Manager Joe Torre said. He came back from an 0-2 count and got the job done.
The victory moved the Braves to within 4'^ games of the Dodgers, whose magic number remained at five. Los Angeles has eight games remaining, Atlanta nine.
Last year we won 13 in a row at the start of the season, Torre said. Theres no reason we cant win 10 in a row now. Were scratching and clawing.
Dale Murphy started the winning rally when he drew a walk and then stole second to become only the sixth player in major-league history to attain at least 30 stolen bases and 30 home runs in a season. He has 35 homers.
Chris Chambliss was walked intentionally after Murphy's 30th steal and Ramirez then ripped his game-winning hit to left off Tom Niedenfuer, 8-3.
We still got a chance, Braves second baseman Glenn Hubbard said. Its more or less win every game.
The victory went to Pascual Perez, 14-8, who allowed six hits and ended a personal five-game losing streak. It was his ninth attempt at his 14th victory.
The Dodgers gained a 2-2 tie in the fifth when pitcher Joe Beckwith got his first major-league hit, a single to center. He scored from first on Steve Saxs double to center. Sax advanced to third on an Infield grounder and scored on Dusty Bakers single to center.
Hubbard belted a two-run homer for the Braves in the fourth following a leadoff walk to Brett Butler. It was Hubbards 11th homer of the year.
both sides.
"Anytime you hold this club (Expos) to one run in two games, youre talking about outstanding pitching. Candelaria, 15-8, yielded just three hits while striking out six and walking two before the chronic tendinitis that has bothered him all season tightened up his left elbow after five innings. He was replaced by reliever Cecilio Guante.
Candelarias catcher, Tony Pena, praised the pitchers gutsy performance. .
At the beginning of the game he told me he had a sore elbow, said Pena. I told him, I just hope you can go five innings. But he work^ real well, his breaking ball was the key to his game. Guante pitched the final four innings to record his eighth save.
Candelaria and Bryn Smith, 5-11 were locked in a ptichers duel for four innings. But with two out in the top of the fifth, successive doubes by Dale Berra and Candelaria produced the Pirates run.
Smith pitched seven innings, giving up five hits and striking out six.
three hits including his 39th homer, a two-run shot in the ninth-inning uprising, said total team concentration is the key to the Phillies outstanding j)lay lately.
Its amazing, the all-out concentration and effort on this team, said Schmidt. Man for man, from the guys on the field to the guys on the Joench, the concentration is at the peak.
The ninth inning showed it today. It was like textbook baseball up until my home run, which really didnt mean anything. If you programmecf a game into a machine, youd
do exactly what we did in the ninth inning.
The Phillies have won 21 of their last 27 games and Philadelphia Manager Paul Owens said: The only way to explain it is that the players finally realized that everybody has got to get together as a team.
Owens has been using a lot of players he said, That makes everybody feel like a part of the team. Everybody is a contributor and thats what brings things together.
With the Phils trailing 5-4, pinch hitter Von Hayes opened with a single off Bruce Sutter,
9-10, and pinch hitter Len Matuszek belted an RBI double to tie the game.
Then Cardinals second baseman Jeff Doyle made a wild throw after fielding Greg Gross routine grounder enabling pinch-runner ^Bob Dernier to score the go-ahead run. Pete Rose sewed Gross with a bunt single and Schmidt followed with his two-run shot to left.
Cincinnati..........3
San Diego..........2
CINCINNATI (AP) -Johnny Benchs pinch-hit
single scored Paul Householder in the bottom of the ninth inning Saturday to give the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-2 victory over the San Diego Padres.
Dan Driessen led off the, ninth with a walk of Sid Monge, 8-3. Householder reached on a fielders choice and Skeeter Barnes drew a walk.
One out later. Bench grounded a single off Floyd Chiffer to give Reds starter Bruce Berenyi, 9-14, the victory.
The Padres grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first on Rupert
Wym
JRay
Parke
PITTSBIRGH
ab r h bi
Wynne cf 4 0 0 0 2b 4 0 2 0 rf ^ 0 1 0 JThosn lb 4 0 10 Easier If 4 0 0 0 TPena c 2 0 0 0 Hebner 3b 3 0 0 0 Berra ss 3 110 Tandlria p 2 0 1 1 Guante p 10 0 0
Totals 31 I 6 1
MONTRE.AL
ab r h bl
Raines If 4 0 10 Trillo 2b 4 0 0 0 Dawson cf 4 0 I 0 GCarter e 3 0 10 Wallach 3b 4 0 0 0 Wohlfrd rf 2 0 0 0 Roof rf 2 0 0 0 Vail lb 10 10 Cromrti lb 2 0 1 0 Flynn ss 3 0 0 0 BSmith p 10 0 0 Oliver ph 10 0 0 Reardon p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 0 5 0
Pittsburgh 000 010 000- 1
Montreal 000 000 000 0
Game-Winning RBI Candelaria (1). DP-Pittsburah 1, Montreal 1 LOB-Pittsburgh 4 Montreal 7 2B-GCarter, Berra. Candelaria SB-Raines'8
LOS .ANGLS
ab r h bi SSax 2b 4 111 BKussel ss 3 0 0 0 DBaker If 4 0 4 1 Guerrer 3b 4 0 0 0 Landrx cf 4 0 0 0 .Marshal rf 4 0 0 0 Brock lb 4 0 0 0 Yeager c 10 0 0 Bream ph 10 0 0 nmple c 10 0 0 Welch p 10 0 0 Beckwth p 1 1 1 0 Lndsty ph 10 0 0
iiednfur p 0 0 0 0 Mall 33 2 t 2
ATL.WT.A
ab r h bl
Butler If 3 10 0
Hubbrd 2b 4 1 1 2 Wshgtn rf 4 0 0 0 Murphy cf 3 1 0 0 Chmols lb 3 0 0 0 RRmrz ss 3 0 2 1 Pocorob c 2 0 0 0 AHall pr 0 0 0 0
Benedict c 0 0 0 o Rovster 3b 2 0 0 0 PPerez p 2 0 0 0
TMali
2( 3 3 3
Lw Angeles 000 020 000- 2
Adnta 000 200 ooi- 3
One out when winning run scored Game-Winning RBI - RRamirez 110) E-Chambliss, RRamirez. DP-Atlanta 1 LOB-Los Angeles 6. Atlanta 5 2B-SSax HR-Hub&rd (11). SB-DBaker
(61. Landreaux (30)^ Murghyj 30)
Lot Angeles
Welch Beckwith N'iednfuer L.g-3 Atlanta PPerez W.14-8 T-2:57 A-43.9
R ER BB !40
31-3 1 2 2-3 1 2 1-3 1
'85)
IP II R ER BB SO . Pittsburgh
Candna W.15-8 5 3 0 0 2 6
Guante S.8 4 2 0 0 1 2
Montreal
BSmith L.3-11 7 5 1116
Reardon 2 10003
T-216 A- 43.359
Philadelphia.......9
St. Louis............6
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The Philadelphia Phillies are not quite ready to lay claim to the National League East, but they were brimming with confidence following a five-run ninth inning that lifted them to a 9-6 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday.
The triumph was the Phillies' ninth straight - their longest victory streak since 1969 - and enabled them to remain three games in fron' of Pittsburgh with just seven games left. Third-place Montreal is all but out of the race as the Expos fell six games back by losing to the Pirates 1-0.
Mike Schmidt, who had
Jones' two-run triple. Jones has driven in seven runs in his last two games.
Cincinnati tied it in the bottom of the inning against Ed Whitson, who scattered five hits over eight innings, Gary Redus walked, Ron Oester tripled and Barnes had an infield single.
SA.N DIEGO CINCINNATI
ab r b bi ab r h bi
Brown If 4 10 0 EMilner cf 4 0 0 Wiggins lb 4 0 0 0 Redus If 3 10 0 ,^Gwynn rf 4 0 10 Oester 2b 4 111 TKenndy c 3 1 0 0 Driessn lb 3 0 10 RJones cf 4 0 12 Hoshldr rf 3 1 0 0 Tmpltn ss 3 0 10 Barnes 3b 3 0 11 LSalazr 3b 4 0 0 0 Bilrdelo c 3 0 1 0
Bonilla 2b 4 0 10 Walker ph 10 0 0
Whitson p 3 0 2 0 Folev ss 3 0 0 0
Riehrds ph 1 0 0 0 Bench ph 1 o I 1
Monee p 0 0 0 0 Berenvi p 3 0 10
Chiffer p 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 2 6 2 Totals 31 3 6 3
San Diego 200 00 WK) 2
Cincinnati 2(K) 000 001 3
Two out when winning run scored Game-Winning RB Bench 7 E-Barnes LOB-San Diego 9 Cincinnati 6 3B-RJones, Oester SB-Brown '26). Templeton 15 EMilner '37).
IP
San Diego Whitson 8
.Monge L.8-3 1-3
Chiffer 1-3
Cincinnati Berenyi W,9-14 9
T-2:00 A-9.615
H R ER BB SO
5 2 2 2 5
0 112 0 1 0 0 0 0
6 2 2 4 7
24th home run. wild-pitching home another run and allowing an RBI double by Mike Diaz. Carlos Diaz relieved him, allowing a two-run double to Gary Woods before Doug Sisk cam on to retire Ron Cey on a ground ball and record his 10th save.
NEW YORK CHIC AGO
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Wilson cl 5 0 3 0 Sndbrg 2b 3 10 0
Brooks 3b 5 0 0 0 Bucknr lb 5 0 0 0
Heep rf 4 2 2 0 MHall cf 4 0 10
Fosfer If 5 2 4 0 Woods ph I o 1 2
Rajsich lb 5 1 1 2 Cev 3b 5 0 0 0
Giles 2b 5 2 4 4 Morelnd c 1 0 1 0
Ortiz c 4 0 11 JDavis c 2 111 Oquend ss 4 0 0 0 JCarter If 4 12 0
Seaver p 3 0-0 0 Grant rf 3 2 2 0
Torrez p 0 0 0 0 Bowa ss 1 0 u 0
CDiaz p 0 0 0 0 Boslev ph 1 o 0 0
Owen' ss 1110 Schulze p 0 0 0 0 Prolv p 0 0 0 0 Rohn ph 1 0,1 1 Noles p 0 0 0 0 Connly ph 10 0 0 Bordi p 0 0 0 0 Johnstn ph 1 0 0 0 Johnson p 0 0 0 0 MDiaz pn i o 1 0 Hrgshmr p 0 0 0 0 Totals 10 7 13 7 Totals 33 6 II 4
New York 014 000 101 7
Chicago 001 000 003 6
Game-Winning RBI - Ortiz' 1 DP-New York 1, Chicago 2 LOB New A'ork 9, Chicago 7 2B-Foster. Giles. Owen 3B-Wilson, MHall. JCarter, Woods HR-Giles 2). JDavis'24 SB-Giles 17
IP H R ER BB SO
New York..........7
Chicago............6
CHICAGO (AP) Brian Giles drove in a four runs with four hits, including a home run, to lead Tom Seaver and the New York Mets to a 7-6 victory ovre the Chicago Cubs Saturday.
Giles capped a four-run third inning with his second homer of the season, a two-run shot over the left field wall. It followed singles by Danny Heep, George Foster and Gary Rajsich, the last driving' in two runs.
Seaver ran his record to 9-14, striking out five and allowing one run and seven hits in eight innings.
Mike Torrez started the ninth, yielding Jody Davis'
New York
Seaver W,9-14 Torrez CDiaz Sisk S.IO Chicago Schulze LO-I Prolv Noles Bordi Johnson Hrgshmer
BP-Ortiz bv
1-3 3
. >-3 1
1-3 0
2 2-3 6
1-3 0 2 , 2 2 3 1 1-3 4
2-3 0 Prolv
1 .) 3
5 5 2
0 0
0 0 0
0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0
WP-Schulze,
Seaver Torrez f-2 59 'A-JO.lll
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Record Steal
Dale Murphy of the Atlanta Braves slides safely into second base as Los Angeles shortstop Bill Russell applies the tag late. Murphys 30th steal of the season made him the only the sixth person in
White Sox Fans Await Tickets
the majors to hit 30 homers and steal as many /
bases in the same season. Murphy later scored the winning run on a single by Rafael Ramirez. (AP ^ Laserphoto)
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CHICAGO (AP) - Three people were arrested Saturday when Chicago White Sox fans who waited two days and nights to purchase American
6 2 2 2 4
Pittsburgh 1
rgi
Montreal...........0
MONTREAL (AP) - John Candelarias curveball was effective but it was the breaking pitch he hit that made the difference for the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday.
Candelaria stroked a double down the right-field line to drive in the only run of the game as the Pirates beat the Montreal Expos 1-0 to remain within three games of National League East-leading Philadelphia Phillies.
The ball Candy hit was one of the best breaking balls youll see, said Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner. And there was great pitching on
PHIL.A
vb r h bl
Morgan 2b 5 0 0 0 Rose lb 4 2 2 1 .Schmdl 3b 5 2 3 2 Lezcano rf 2 1 1 1 W'Hrndz p 0 0 0 Lefebvr rf 2 0 2 0 Matlhws If 3 1 0 Reed p 0 U U ASnchz ph 1 I) u Holland p 0 .Maddox cf 4 O 1 1 Virgil c 3 0 0 0 VHayes ph 1 1 1 0 BDiaz c 0 0 0 0 DeJesus ss 2 0 0 i Matszk ph 1 0 1 1
Dernier If 0 10 0
Btrm p 2 0 11
GGross rf 2 10 0
Garcia ss 0 0 0 0
Totals 37 9 12 8
STLOILS
ab r h bl
LoSmilh If 5 2 3 0 VanSlyk If 0 0 0 0 O-Smlfh ss 4 12 1 McGee cf 5 0 0 1 Hndrck lb 5 1 1 1 Porter c 5 2 3 0 Oberkn 3b 4 0 2 I Green rf 4 0 11 4 0 10 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0
Doyle 2b LaPoint p Braun pn Citella p Brumr ph 10 0 0 SBaker p 0 0 0 0 Sutler p Rucker p
10 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tolalt 40 6 13 5
Philadelphia 400 000 005- 9
StLouis 021 000 III 6
Game-Wmnmg RBI - None E-DeJesus, Doyle. DP-StLouis 1. LOB-Philadelphia 5. StLouis 8. 2B-Schmidt. Porter. OSmith. Matuszek HR- Schmidt (39)
IP H R ER BB SO
Philadelphia
Bystrm WTIerndez Reed W.9-1 Holland SILouli LaPoint Citella SBaker Sutter L.9-I0 Rucker
League playoff tickets were shoved aside by newcomers who arrived at Comiskey Park after daybreak.
The three fans were taken into custody for disorderly conduct after the come-latelies rushed windows where 15,000 American League )layoff tickets went on sale. )ut otherwise the waiting fans behaved well, police said.
Ken Valdiserri, a spokesman for the A.L. West Champions, said security guards and police had the situation under control in a short time.
"People who had been waiting across the street -where they were told to wait -> were told at about 7 a.m. to get up and start getting in line because the windows would be open at 9 a.m., he said.
When they started to do so, some people who had just arrived got in ahead of them. Line passes were issued, but they apparently were not issued soon enough.
Valdiserri said that Howard Pizer, White Sox executive vice president, apologized to the fans throu^ the media for the unfortunate incident in which they were cut off in the lines.
However, Valdiserri said there were enough tickets to go around.
There were few, if any, disappointed fans, he said. The wait was not in vain. He added that plans for the sale of World Series tickets will be announced later.
Five-thousand tickets for each of the three possible home playoff games - Oct. 7-8-9 - were sold in 95 minutes. Half were reserved seats at $15; the others were for standing-room-only at $6. All were sold on a cash basis.
4 1-3 6 3 1
2 2-3 3 1 1
1 3 11
1-3 1 I 4
2-3 1
5 4
1 0
3 3 1 2
WP-Byslrom. T-2:48 A-27,441.
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Mr. Davla' promotion can ba diractly attributed to hit outatanding record of aarvica to tha Inauring public and to our cllanta, Mr. Pittman aald.
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Two-Hitter Gives Burns Confidence
ANAHEIM. Calif. (.AP) -Left-hander Britt Burns, whose season has been marred by injury and ineffectiveness, ran into the California Angels just in time.
Burns, who one-hit California two weeks ago in Chicago, came back with a two-hitter against the Angels Saturday to give the White Sox a 2-0 triumph.
"To beat anyone at this point in the season is great, said Burns. 10-10. "I had a real good day, 1 felt like I could put the ball pretty much anywhere 1 wanted,
"It has been a disappointing season for me personally, but I have a chance to contribute now and be a part of a very good team.
Burns was unhittable after the game's first two batters, Gary Pettis and Steve Lubratich. singled off him. Pettis' leadoff hit was a bunt single up the first-base line, an apparent reaction to Greg Luzinski's presence at first base.
^.Normally Chicago's designated hitter. Luzinski played the position for the first time since 1972. in preparation of a possible appearance in the World Series, which this season will be played without a designated hitter'
It was his first defensive appearance since 1980.
"I was a little nervous before the game but not once I got out there," said Luzinski, who did not have to make any difficult plays during his six innings in the field.
Bruns faced only two men over the minimum during his seventh complete game and fourth shutout.
Pettis was thrown out trying to steal second before Lubratich followed with a single to right. Burns permitted only two other base runners, Dick'Schofield. hit by a pitch in the third, and Lubratich, who walked in the
seventh.
The White Sox scored in the first when Rudy Law led off with a single, stole second for his 74st theft, took third on Scott Fletchers sacrifice and scored on Harold Baines sacrifice fly. The other run came in the ninth on Marc Hills RBI double.
Rookie Steve Brown, 1-3, was the loser.
(HIIXOO
ab r h bi RLaw cf 4 12 0 Flelehr ss 3 0 0 0 Barnes rf 3 0 0 1 Luzinsk lb 3 0 1 0 Squires lb 1 o 0 0 Walker dh 4 0 3 0 .Nvman pr o 1 0 0 Kittle If 3 0 0 0 VLaw 3b 2 0 0 0
Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 Kodrgz 3b 0 0 0 0
( A1.IK0RM.A
ab r b bi
Peltis cf 4 0 10
Lubrlch 2b 3 0 I 0 Beniquz rf 2 0 0 0 DeCncs 3b 3 0 0 O Dwnng dh 3 0 0 0 RJcksn lb 3 0 0 0 Boone c 3 0 0 0
MCBron If 3 0 0 0 Schofild ss 1 0 0 0 Carew ph 10 0 0
Parsns ph 10 0 0 Dvbzisk 3b 0 0 0 0
Nfilill c 3 0 1 1
JCruz 2b 4 0 0 0
Totals 32 2 7 2 Totals
26 0 2 0
Chicago UNI INNI IKII 2
California INH) INNI INNI- II
Game-Winning RBI Baines i2H.
DP Chicago 1 LOB-Chicago 7, California 2 2B-Walker, .M' ll 3B RLaw SB-RLaw i74i S r'letcher. Beniquez SF-Baines
IP H R KR BB S4)
(hicagii Burns W,io-io 9 ( alifornia
SBrown L.I-3 9 ......
MBP- Schofield bv Burns T-2 (Ni .A 23.388
2 0 0 1
2 2 2 6
Boston..............5
Detroit..............3
DETROIT (AP) - Tony Armas will never be mistaken for a long-distance runner, but his 360-foot dash worked out well for the Boston Red Sox Saturday afternoon.
That was a long run for me. laughed Armas, after his second home run of the game, an inside the park shot in the eighth inning clinched the Red Sox 5-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers, The Tiger loss guaranteed the Baltimore Orioles of no worse than a tie for the American League East title.
I never ran that far before, he continued. When I hit the ball, I thought it had a chance to go out. When I touched second base I saw the ball bounce off the fence and I really started running hard. Armas' two home runs
raised his season total to 36 and moved him into second place in the American League, one behind teammate Jim Rice. The pair has a chance to become the first teammates to finish 1-2 in the home run race since Willie Mays and Willie McCovey accomplished the feat with 52 and 39 homers in 1965.
I never think about that, Armas said. Rice is a good player. Hes been doing it for years. I dont go against him and I dont go against anybody.
With two out in the first. Rice singled and Armas followed with a drive deep into the upper-deck in left-center field off Detroit starter Dan Petry, 18-10.
Boston added three runs in the eighth. Jeff Newman led off with a double, took third on a single by Wade Bo^s and scored on Rices sacrifice fly, Armas followed with his inside-the-park homer.
Tudor, 13-11 surrendered four singles, walked three and struck out three to raise his career record against Detroit to 6-1. All the Tiger runs came in the ninth on a two-out error by Wade Boggs and Lemons two-run single.
Stanley relieved after the error, allowed Lemons single.
then got the final out to i his 32nd save.
BOSTON
(brh bi
Remy 2b 4 0 0 0 Boggs 3b 3 110 Rice If 3 12 1 Armas cf 4 2 2 4 YsUmk dh 4 0 0 0 Miller rf 4 0 2 0
Stapltn lb 4 0 0 0 IIHfi
GlHfmn ss 1 0 0 0 Jurak ss 2 0 0 0 .Newman c 4 I 2 0
Totals 33 5 9 5
DETROIT _ , r h bi
TrammI ss\ 0 2 0 Cabell lb 4kO 1 0 Herndon If 3M 0 0 LNPrsh dh 3 I 1 0 Wcknfss c 4 1 0 0 GWilson rf 3 0 0 0 Lemon cf 4 0 12 MRCstI 3b 2 0 0 0 Nhrdny ph 1 0 0 0 Krnchk 3b 0 0 0 0 Whitkr ph 10 0 0 Brokns 2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 5 2
posted a remarkable 25-3 record with 1.74 earned run average to win the Cy Young Award. The Yankees went on to win the World Series that season.
In a sense, though, that year burden.
Boston Detroit Game-Winning RBI E-GlHoffman, Bo^ Detroit 1 LOB-Boston Miller, .Newman HR SF- Rice
IP
Boston
Tudor W,13-11 Stanley S.32 Detroit Petrv L.ia-lO
1
-22.940
200 000 030- 5 000 000 003- 3
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. DP-Boston 1, 4, Detroit 5. 2B-Armas 2 (36i.
H R ER BB SO
8 2-3 1-3
3 0 4 0 0 0
reirv u,l-iu Uidlir T-2:18. A-22.9
5 5 10 0 0 11
New York..........9
Cleveland..........1
NEW YORK (AP) - Ron Guidry of the New York Yankees became a 20-game winner for the second time in his career Saturday, but he knows nothing will ever compare to 1978.
Im sure if I win 21 or 22 next year, theyll still remember the 1978 season, said Guidry after raising his record to 20-9 by five-hitting the Cleveland Indians 9-1 Saturday.
It was 1978 that Guidry
has become a bu I feel fortunate to have had one of those seasons, but I just try to put it aside, said Guidry. Im still pitching now. Ive got to look to the years ahead. I wasnt a great pitcher in 1978. I was an overpowering guy nobody knew.
Dave Winfield drove in four runs, two with a homer, to lead New Yorks offense.
CLEVELAND NEW YORK
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Rhmbrg If 3 0 1 0 Rndlph 2b 4 10 0
Oakland...........2
Toronto.............1
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -Toronto right-hander Jim Clancy was one strike away from a tidy complete game shutout and team-record fourth consecutive complete game by Blue Jay pitching.
Clancy wound up with the complete game but he was the losing pitcher as Oakland rallied for a run in the ninth to tie the game and won it on Rickey Hendersons one-out single in the 10th for a 2-1 victory over the Blue Jays Saturday.
The victory went to rookie
right-hander Mike Warren, 4-3, who outlasted Clancy and allowed only seven hits over 10 innings.
I was in the du^t, just about ready to go to the clubhouse, said Warren, and then we tied it. Then I go out and hit the guy (Torontos Tony Fernandez) to lead off the 10th. But I couldnt let it get me down, and as it turned out, it didnt.
Toronto failed to capitalize on its scoring opportunity in the top of the lOtn but thcTAs wasted little time in their half.
Harrah 3b 4 0 2 0 Milbrne 2b 0 0 0 0
Thorntn lb 3 0 0 0 Griffey lb 5 2 3 1
GThoms cf 4 0 0 0 Winfield If 4 1 3 4
Tablet dh 4 110 Nixon rf 10 10 ABnstr 2b 4 0 I I Nettles 3b 4 0 0 0
Bando c 3 0 0 0 Mechm ss 10 0 0
CCastill rf 3 0 0 0 Baylor dh 4 0 0 0
Fischlin ss 3 0 0 0 Wvnegar c 1 2 1 0
Cerone e 2 0 0 0
Matngly rf 3 1 1 1
Smalley ss 2 1 1 1
Moreno cf 4 12 1 Totals 31 I 3 I Totals 35 9 12 K Cleveland 000 000 0011
New York Oil 601 OOx9
Game-Winning RBI - Mattingly (2i.
EWvnegar, CCastillo DPCleveland 1. LOB-Cleveland 6, New York 8. 2B-Wynegar. Griffev 2, Winfield, Tablet HR-Winfield i3n SB-Harrah
TORONTO
ab r b bi
Collins If 4 0 0 0 .Mullnks 3b 5 0 I 0 Moseby cf 4 0 2 0 Upshaw lb 4 1 1 0 Orta dh 4 0 10 Whitt c 3 0 0 1 Barfield rf 3 0 1 0 Fernndz ss 3 0 1 0 Griffin 2b 2 0 0 0
Totals
32 1 7 1
OAKLAND
ab r h bi
RHndsn If 5 0 2 1 MDavis cf 4 0 0 0 Hancck rf 4 0 0 0 Lopes 2b 4 110 Mever lb 4 0 3 1 Burghs dh 4 0 0 0 Page pr 0 0 0 0 Alniuii ju s 0 1 u Kearney c 2 0 0 0 Gross ph 10 10 McNely pr 0 0 0 0 Cias c 1110 Phillips ss 3 0 1 0 Totals 36 2 10 2
CONTINUOUS
GUHERING
INSTALLED
ABannisteri6)
(151
Cleveland Sutcliffe L.16-11 Jeffcoat Eichlbergr Spillner New York
IP H R ER BB SO
3 1-3 2 2-3 1 1
Guidry W.20-9 T-2:38. A-3
S I 1 3
Toronto 000 001 000 0- I
Oakland 000 000 001 1-2
One out when winning run scored. Game-Winning RBI - RHenderson (6i EWarren, .Mulliniks DP-Toronto 1, Oakland 1. LOB-Toronto 7, Oakland 7. 2B-Lopes SB-RHenderson il05i. S-Griffin 2. Phillips. SF-Whitt.
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Clancv L.14-10 9 1-3 10 2 2 0 3
Oakland
Warren W.4-3 10 7 112 6
HBP-Fernandez by Warren T-2:28 A-11.732
4
Passing Game Leads Gaior, ^\ia ^ins
TADt't'II t C- , vn. n____ ______, . . .........
STARKVILLE. Miss, (AP - Coach Cljarley Pell credits passing star Wayne Peace and a tough offensive line with providing the momentum that powered his Florida Gators to a 35-12 Southeastern Conference football victory over .Mississippi State,
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Peace, completing 21 passes thourgh the Bulldogs vaunted defense Saturday, seemed to demoralize them and they never really recovered.
"We came out in the second half and took charge a little bit. said Pell. Our drive very late in the first half gave us some momentum going into the locker room, I thought Wayne Peace rally took charge and our offensive line continued to get stronger as the game went along.
Coach Emory Bellard of Mississippi State agreed that Peace, now moving into position to become the No.5 yardage gainer in SEC history. is "one of the finest passers in the country. He had a great game.
Peace, showing uncanny ability to hit on third down passes, threw for two touchdowns and set up a third as the 15th ranked Gators worked their lead to 14-12 and then 21-12 before tailback John L. Williams scored the last two touchdowns through Mississippi State's broken defense.
The Gator passing star, who had been battling Bulldog quarterback John Bond for "So. 6 spot in the SEC career offensive records, won the matchup easily.
Peace hit on 21 of 34 passes for 260 yards biit lost 11 yards running, putting his total at 5.557, He now trails Archie Manning of Mississippi bv onlyl9vards.
Bond, only one yaril behind at the start of the game, completed 8 to 23 passes for 118 yards and gained 32 vards on 14 rushes to move his total to 5,457. He also scored both Mississippi State touchdowns on 1-yard runs.
Bond gave the Bulldogs their only lead of the game when he moved them 81 yards in 11 plays in the second quarter and scored the first tally of the game. He picked
up 23 yards on four runs and hit George Wonsley on a 17-yard pass.
But Florida countered with an 88-yard drive, with Peace hitting wide receiver Dwayne Dixon on a 34-yard pass'for the payoff. Four Peace passes ate up 73 yards during the march.
Tailback Neal Anderson scored for the Gators on a 22-yard run in the third quarter after four passes ate up 49 yards, but the Bulldogs recovered a Peace fumble at the Florida 24 and Bond passed 12 yards to end Danny Knight to set up his second touchdown.
But it was all Florida from that point, Peace passed six yards to wide receiver Bee Lang to break the game open and Williams added scores on runs of 70 and 20 vards.
21:!3 11-12
Florida............................u
Miskissippi .St.....................(I
.\IsSt Bond 1 run kick fails Fla-Dixon 34 pass from Peace Ravmond kick
Ffa-.Anderson 22 run' Raymond kick i MsSi Bond 1 run i run failed i Fla Lane 5 pass from Peace Ravmond kick .
Fa- Williams 7u run Ravmond kick' Fla - Williams 2ii run Ravmond kick.
A-31.875
I9th-ranked Eagles.
West Virginia built a 17-0 lead in the first period and then withstood B C quarterback Doug Fluties aerial blitz, stopping the Eagles three times inside their five-yard line, for its fourth consecutive victory. The host Eagles were knocked from the unbeaten ranks after winning the first three games.
BC won the toss and lost its top runner, Troy Stradford with a' knee injury, on the opening kickoff. Stradford fumbled as he was hit hard, and Cam Zopp recovered for West Virginia at the 16.
Gray carried for 6 yards to the 10, and then took Hostetlers pass over the middle for a 10-yard scoring efffort.
Wolfley caught BC by surprise 3 minutes later as he took the snap with the Mountaineers in punt formation, cut to his right and sprinted down
the sideline for his touchdown.
BC then was stopped on six plays from the West Virginia 5, hampered by a holding penalty for a first down on the 2.
Given that big boost by its defense. West Virginia marched down field to set up a 41-yard field goal by Paul W()odside. However, it lost Gray, its leading rusher, with a leg injury en route.
BC got on the board with a 32-yard field goal by Brian
Waldron early in the second quarter. But West Virginia caught the Eagles by surprise again when flanker Gary Mullen capped an 80-yard drive by racing 15 yards on a reverse for a touchdown and a 24-3 lead.
The Eagles, led by Flutie, went 75 yards for a touchdown late in the half, Brian Krystoforski plunging for the' score.
Woodside booted a 22-yard field goal early in the third
period before West Virginia stopped BC inside the 5 two more times.
Krystoforski scored on a another short plunge for the final touchdown early in the fourth quarter.
Flutie completed 23 of 51 passed for 418 yards but had three interceptions..Hostetler completed 12 of 20 passes for 170 yards.
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West Virginia......................17 7 3 027
Boston Collrgr......................0 10 0 717
WV-Gray 10 pass from Hostetler Woodside kick'
WV-Wolflev 67 run' Woodside kick i WV-FGW(iodside41 BC-FG Waldron .32 WV.Mullen 15 run Woodside kick
First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards -Passes PunU
Fumbles lost Penalties vards Time of Possession
Fla MsSt
21 41 189
273
27
22-36-U 3-50 2-2 9- 82 :13 33
18
:)9- 82 118
BC-Krystoforski 2 run 1 Waldron kick 1 WV-FG Woodside 22
BC-krvstoforski 1 run 1 Waldron kick 1
A-32,0(iO
8-23-2 5-43 2-1 2- 12 26:27
INDIVIDIALLEADER.S
Rl SUING - Florida. Williams 4-104 Anderson 13 36 Mississippi St. Bonii 14-32 Edwards9-2. Wonsley 819
PASSING - Florida, Peace 2L34-0-260 Dorminey 1 l-n 15 Mississippi St, Boni) 8-23-2118
RECEIVING - Florida, Dixon 9-120, Lang 3-32: Rolle 2-36 Mississippi ,Sl Knight 4-53
First downs Rushes-vards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts
Fumbles-lost
PenalliesAards Time of Possession
WV BC
21 29
59-328 29-87
170 418
62 0
12-2(M) 23-51-3 5-36 1-51
2-1 1-1
13-92 7-50
33:02 26:58
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
RUSHING-West Virginia, Wolfley 14114,. Hostetler 12-52, Harvey 14-46 Boston College, Flutrie 9-46^ Bell 8-25.
W. Virginia.......27
Boston Col........17
NEWTON. Mass. (AP) -West Virginia struck for two touchdowns in the first 4>2 minutes on Jeff Hostetlers pass to Tom Gray and Ron Wolfley's 67-yard run on a fake kick as the 12th-ranked Mountaineers stopj^d Boston College Saturday in a 27-17 football victory over the
uaiuii VUIICj^c, r lULI 1C a-TO, oeii D-ZO.
PASSING-West Virginia. Hostleteler 12-20-d l70. Boston College, Flutie 23-51-
3418,
RECEIVTNG-West Virginia, Bennett 4-56 Boston College, Phelan 6-145 Gieselman 9-124
The Lady Pirates opened the 1983 tennis season with a 7-2 loss to UNC-Greensboro Saturday at the Minges Coliseum courts.
Top-seeded Catherine Tolson lost to Amy Brown of UNC-G 6-7, 6-3, 6-3, and the Pirates went on to drop four of the remaining five singles matches.
ECUs Janet Russell defeated Lisa Zimmerman 6-3, 6-1 in the second flight, then teammed with Tolson to defeat Brown and Zimmerman 6-1, 6-3 in the top doubles match.
UNC-Greensboro is a very good team, while we are very young, ECU coach Pat Sherman said. Our team was very tense in the singles matches but performed much es.
The Lady Pirates host Atlantic Christian College Monday.
Summary:
Amy Brown (G) d. Catherine Tolson, 6-7,6-3.6-3.
Janet Russel) (ECU) d. Lisa Zimmerman, 6-3,6-1.
Barbera Bailer (G) d. Mariam Beck, 6-0,6-2.
Maureen Kimpis (G) d. Anne Manderfield,6-0,6-l.
Shelley Albright (G) d. Cisi Bolton, 6-2,6-2.
Laura Barnett (G) d, Lynn Wallace, 6-1,6-1.
Tolson-Russell (ECU) d. Brown-Zimmerman, 6-1,6-3.
Bailer-Paice (G) d. Manderfield-Bollon, 3-6,6-3,6-1.
Kimpis-Hiddie Albright (G) d. Wallace-Beck, 6-3,7-5,
Exhibition: Karen Paice (G) d. Laura Zalodek, 6-0,6-0.
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Crushing Blow
Michael Dokes crumbles under a flurry o fpunches from challenger Gerrie Coetzee in the 10th round of
their fight Friday night. Coetzee knocked out Dokes to win the WBA heavyweight title. (AP Laserphoto)
Tigers Gash Vols, 37-14
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - As far as Auburn coach Pat Dye was concerned, his teams 37-14 victory over Tennessee Saturday was as good a recovery as he could have asked for after last weeks loss to Texas.
The game was Auburns biggest margin of victory over Tennessee since 1900 - when the SEC rivals started their series with a 23-0 win by the Tigers.
Im so happy for our players. They came into the game off a tough loss last week and they were battered and bruised, said Dye, whose team fell to the Longhorns 20-7.
We knew we had to get back to basics. We didnt turn the ball over too much and we got some breaks like the punt return, he said.
Trey Gainous caught Jimmy Colquitts 50-yard punt and ran it 81 yards for a touchdown with 13:17 left in the game. Tommie Agee ran in the conversion.
Trey Gainous is a good one, Dye said. We prolMbly should have played him more before now.
A sellout crowd of 95,185 at Neyland Stadium saw the Tigers better their record to 2-1. Tennessee fell to 1-2 for the season.
Our offense needs to be more disciplined, Tennessee
coach Johnny Majors said. The game was lost in the first half. We did not take advantage of our opportunities.
Bo Jackson scored for Auburn on a 1-yard run with 7:29 left in the second quarter. A1 Del Greco kicked the extra point, and followed up with a 19-yard field goal four seconds before halftime.
Del Greco kicked a 22-yard field goal three minutes and 43 seconds into the third quarter and quarterback Randy Campbell ran 2 yards for a touchown with 1:21 left in the , period. His conversion pass failed.
Auburn sealed its victory with a 25-yard touchdown run by Clayton Beauford with 5:14 left in the game. Del Greco kicked the point after and then booted in a 27-yard field goal with 3:01 remaining.
Tim McGee caught a 30-yard pass from Alan Cockrell for Tennesses first score with 2:23 remining in the first half. Cockrell threw 5 yards to Lenny Taylor for another touchdown with 10:49 left in the game.
Fuad Reveiz kicked both extra points, raising his career record to 51 without a miss.
Gainous touchdown marked the first time in nine years that Auburn had scored on a punt return.
Del Grecos first two field goals salvaged failed Auburn touchdown drives. The first came after the Tigers were stopped at the Tennessee 2-yard line and the second followed a touchdown that was voided by a holding penalty.
Auburn kept the ball on the ground, rushing 61 times for 273 yards, while gaining only 127 yards passing.
Campbell completed 10 of 16 passes for 118 yards, while Jackson led rushers with 91 yards on 15 carries.
With little help from his receivers, Cockrell completed 18 of 33 passes for 195 of Tennessees 224 yards in the air.
.\uburn..............................0 10 9 1837
Tennessee .............0 7 0 714
AB-Jackson 1 run (Del Greco kick) TENN-McGee 30 pass from Cockrell (Reveiz kick)
AL'B-FG Del Greco 19 AL'BFG Dei Greco 22 ALB- Campbell 2 run (pass fails) AUB-Gamous 81 run (Agee run) TENN-Taylor 5 pass from Cockrell (Reveiz kick)
ALB-Beauford 25 run (Del Greco kick)
AUB-FG Del Greco 27 A-95,185
First Downs Rushesyards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts
Fumbleslost
Penalties-yards
AL'B TE.V
21 18
61-273 31-78
127 224
92 8
11-194) 20-39-2
5-42
6-2 5-30
5-53
5-3
4-30
INDIVTDL'AL LEADERS RUSHING-Auburn, B. Jackson 15-91, R. Campbell 8-36, Beauford 1-25, Tennessee Coleman 12-60, Henderson 8-38.
PASSINGAuburn, R. Campbell 10-16-0-118 Tennessee, Cockrell 18-33-1-195.
RECEIVINGAuburn, West 3-37, Woods 3-36. Tennessee, McGee 3-70, Taylor 10-72,
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Coetzee Stuns Dokes
Trie Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C Sunday September 18 1983 B-5
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Gerrie Coetzee, the new World Boxing Association heavyweight champion, doesnt know who his next opponent will be, but he knows what fi^t he wants most - a unification match against Larry Holmes.
That is really the fight I want, because I believe I can beat Larry, the South African said Saturday after he had knocked out Michael Dynamite Dokes in the 10th round Friday night at the Coliseum in nearby Richfield, Ohio.
I just hope it comes quick because hes getting old and I dont want to beat an old man, Coetzee told a news conference at a hotel.
I have to do what the people want, Holmes told The Associated Press by telephone from his home at Easton, Pa. If the people want it. Id cancel the Frazier fight if they put the money up.
Holmes, the World Boxing Council champion, is scheduled to fight Marvis Frazier on Nov. 25. But he said the original contract for that fight stated that the bout could be held no later than Oct. 15, and that he has not yet signed the rewritten contract.
Coetzee is the first South African to become
heavyweight champion and he is the first white heavyweight champion since Ingemar Johansson of Sweden knocked out Floyd Patterson in the third round in 1959. Johansson lost the title in his first defense, on a fifth-round knockout by Patterson in 1960.
Coetzee said his first defense would be up to promoter Don King.
King, who was not at the press conference, said he had options for three fights with Coetzee and that he wanted the first to be against an unnamed opponent in December, followed by a rematch against Dokes. Asked about possible opponents, Coetzee mentioned John Tate and Mike Weaver, the two men who beat him in earlier WBA title bids.
As for a Coetzee-Holmes fight. King said that Holmes must first make a mandatory WBC defense against top-ranked Greg Page.
Larry will watering at the mouth for it, said King. Its another (Gerry) Cooney situation (a major money match).
But Holmes said if the money was right, he would think about fighting Coetzee before fighting Page. Im in the money-making business in my last d,.ys in boxing, and
Ive got a lot of deals, Holmes said. Im in the business to make money.
As for a unification fight with the 28-year-old Coetzee, Holmes, who will be 34 on Nov. 3, said, The WBA and the WBC will have to come up with some kind of agreement.
I will not fight this guy over there (South Africa).
This is where I won the title and I want to defend it here, said Coetzee, who recently moved from Brigantine, N.J., to Huntington Beach, Calif., and is due to become a U.S. resident. It was unusual the way even the American people rooted for me. But Im not forgetting South Africa.
About 1,200 South Africans were in attendance . when Coetzee scored his upset over Dokes.
Coetzee was to have X-rays taken on his oft-broken right hand Saturday at a hospital where his wife, Rena, was due to give birth to the couples third child. She went to the hospital earlier Saturday.
Coetzee was a confident fighter in his third WBA title bid and he said Saturday, The fruitfulness of training in America, with the kind of sparring partners I had, gave me confidence.
He knocked down Dokes in the fifth round, then in the 10th hurt him badly with two consecutive rights to the head. Dokes tried desperately to hold on, but went down on his stomach from a barrage of punches and was counted out eight seconds after the bell rang ending the round.
It was the 25-year-old Dokes first loss after 26 victories and two draws.
Coetzees record is 29-3-1 with 18 knockouts, Two of the losses were in title fights with Tate in 1979 and Weaver in 1980.
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Knights Snap Rose Streak
By WOODY PEELE Reector Sports Editor
Jarrad Moody, tabbed as one of the best running backs in the state, popped Rose High School's unbeaten bubble Friday night with a 98-yard interception return, as Northern Nash gained a 28-7 victory over the Rampants.
It was the opening game of the Big East Conference for both teams, and the Knights let Rose know why they have been tabbed as the team to , beat in the league.
Moody, in addition to his defensive effort, also scored on a 14-yard run to highlight a 21-point first period outburst by the Knights, who move to 3-1 on the season - a record Rose now shares.
Fullback Oris .Avent scored the first Knight TD on an 11-yard run and quarterback Sam Vines got the other from a yard away. Brad Rice kicked all four extra points.
Rose's defense snapped in the first period, as the Rampants were run over for 186 yards - all on the ground, as "the Knights built up their 21-0 lead.
"Northern .Nash beat us. They played better and deserved it," Rose coach Ronald Vincent said afterwards. 'They did nothing we didn't expect them to do. They just executed very, very good."
After Hose fell behind 21-0, however, the Rampants came roaring back in the second period, scoring on a three-yard run by Reggie Smith, and then were in the shadow of the goal post again when Moody pulled off his interception and put the game on ice.
\Ve were coming back well and I thought we still had a chance to win it," Vincent said. "We had the momentum swinging back in our direction. but that interception may have been the key play of the game."
Vincent heaped praise on Northern's effort. "They have some fine athletes and .Moody is as good a football player as there is around. Thev were
very well prepared for us,
too."
While the Rampants ended up with more offensive yardage than the Knights, the Northern defense shored up when it had to. stopping several Rose drives. "An early turnover (in the second halfi and poor field position after that hurt us in our attempt to comeback," Vincent said.
Northern scored quickly, driving 68 wards in only six plays after the opening kickoff. On third and four. Don Gaylor came ripping through the middle on an end around, rambling down to the Rose 22 for 40 yards before he was finally hauled down. Avent picked up 14 on the next play, and while .Moody was tossed back three yards on first down. Avent burst through the middle on the next play from the 11 and .Nash was on the board with just 2:45 gone, in the game.
Rose gave Nash the ball back in good field position, fumbling at the 45 after picking up a first down on a Battle Emory to Roswell Streeter pass.
It took Northern only three plays to score again after the turnover. On first down, the reverse to .Gaylor worked again for 28 yards, and Avent raced for 12 more to the 14 on the next play. .Moody then went over right tackle for the final yards and suddenly it was 14-0 with 6:45 still to go in the quarter.
Rose was unable to move the ball and booted it away to the Knights o their own 36. On second dn.vn. Moody raced 17 yards to the Rose '39. and three plays later, went wide to the left for 14 more to the Rose 10. Two more .Moody carries put the ball on the one, and Vines pushed over from there with 49 seconds to go: giving the Knights a 21-0 lead It was then that Rose finally got its defense together and the offense began to move the ball Rose launched a long, 15 play, 69-yard drive that culminated in what was to be
Fumbles Help Jags Even Record, 23-14
VANCEBORO - Farmville Central used two fumble recoveries to gam an early 14-0 lead and gajned a 23-14 victory over West Craven Friday night.
The victory evened the Jaguars record at 2-2 on the season as they prepare to open their Eastern Carolina Conference action next Friday night.
Farmville, taking advantage of Eagle mistakes early on, built up a 17-0 lead in the first quarter of the game. Tyrone Forbes put the Jaguars on the scoreboard with a 34-yard return of a West Craven fumble and Patrick Nilsson booted the extra point for a 7-0 lead.
Not long afterwards. Farmville recovered another West Craven fumble in Eagle territory. Jeff Vail then scored on a 23-yard run and Nilsson again kicked fora 14-0 lead.
Before the period was out. Farmville again knocked at the door, but settled for a field goal by Nilsson from 31 yards
"We adjusted our defense well m the second half." Coach Gilbert Carroll said. "We held them down pretty-well then."
Farmville opens ECC play next Friday, playing host t'i league favorite. .Southwest Edgecombe
Karnnillt-l
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T-21 4-.4 (I 4-:) 2-II) II ii-2:i II K-14
Fif'! l)(Mn.'
Ku^ht.'-Yardage l'a^slng Yard.''
Retarn Yard.>
Passing Punb-.Y\erage ' 2 , Fumblcs-Losl
H-7.) Penallies-Yards
Farmville!......................17
WesKraven.....................ii
yoring
FC - Fiirbes :i4 fumble return Nilsson kick
FC-Vail 22 run Nilsson kick'
FC-.Nilsson :J1 FG WC - Raspberry. :i run run failed FC - Vines 21 pass from Kvans kick failed
WC - Williams. 24 fumble return Taylor pass from Raspberry
Bogue Banks Srs. Tourney
away.
West Craven came back in the second period to cut the lead to 17-6 .Mickey Raspberry scored for the Eagles on a three yard run.
After a scoreless second period, Farmville finished up its scoring with a 21-yard pass from Bobby Evans to Andre Vines for a 23-6 lead. Amos Williams then returned a Farmville fumble 24 yards for West Craven, with Raspberry passing to Lennv lavior lor the PAT.
The First Annual Bogue Banks Country Club Seniors Classic will be held Oct. 21-23 with brackets for men and women in ages 40, 50 and 60 years.
Competition will include singles, doubles and mixed doubles. The entry fee for the tourney is $12 for singles and $16 per team for doubles.
Entry deadline is W'ednes-day. Oct. 12. For more information, contact Judi Vinson at 726-6055,
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the only Rampant score of the night,
On the first play. Smith ripped off 17 yards to the Rose 48. and the Rampants then picked up a three-play first down at the 42. On fourth and three from the 35, Emory hit Tyrone Smith for 11 yards and a first down at the 24. Six more plays moved it to the three, and Reggie Smith went through the middle to the end zone with 7:04 remaining in the half to cut it to 21-7. after Brian Bridges' kick.
Rose quickly held and got it back at the Rampant 43. Emory hit Tyrone Smith for 29 yards on first down and Cyrus Blackwell broke away for 19 yards on the next play, down to the Knight 8. On third down from the four, however. .Moody stepped in front of Streeter at the two and picked off Emory's pass, then galloped down the far sideline to go all the way - 98 yards -for the backbreaking touchdown. With 3:18 left, it was 28-7.
Neither team was to score
again.
Not that there wasn't the
opportunity. Rose drove back inside the Nash 40 before a sack killed the drive, the last of the half.
In the second half. Northern had a chance when Rose fumbled at its own 35. but a Knight fumbled turned it back at the five. Gerald Sumlers punt return at the end of the next series put the ball on the Rose 25. but the Rampants held, forcing a turnover on downs at the 34 after two tackles for losses.
Emory then guided and passed the Rampants back down the field to the 15 before another pass was picked off in the end zone by Moody and returned to the 28. Nash drove from there to the Rose 25 before fumbling it away again.
Rose gambled on fourth and five at its own 31 and turned i the ball over, but once again the defense held, and a 35-yard field goal attempt was short by the Knights.
With*less than four minutes left in the game. Rose took the ball back down the field to the 13 before four passes fell incomplete, ending the final
hope for another score.
Well find out now what kind of people we have," Vincent said. Does one loss knock us out of it? Gosh, I hope not.
The Rampants will try to get their show back on track next week, traveling to Rocky Mount to face the Gryphons.
N. Nash 14
30-259
142
940
3-31.7
2-2
3-38
First Downs Rushes-Yardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-.Average Fumbles-Lost Penallies-Yards 21
Northern Nash.....
Rose...................
Scoring:
N.N - .Avenl, 11 run Rice kick ^
NN - Moody, 14 run' Rice kick i .NN - Vines, 1 run > Rice kick i R - R Smith. 3 run Bridges kick i NN - Moody, 98 interception return I Rice kick I
, Individual Statistics
Rushing: NN - Moody 14-79, .Avent 12-78, Gaylor 5-75. Vines 3-'-3'. Marshmon 2-9, Taylor 4-21: R - R. Smith 14-48, Emory 7- -14i, Blackwell 8-34. Streeter 2-10. Martin l-'2 , Passing NN - Vines 9-4-54) 0; R -Emorv 27-12-172-0 3, R Smith 1-04H) 0, Martin 8-3-53-00 Receiving: NN - Avent l-i-8i. Beaslev 1-3. Gaylor M2. Sumler l-'-2i: R Streeter 1-25, T Smith 8-118. Michel 6-84. Blackwell 1.1-121.
Hitting The Hole
Greenville running back Reggie Smith (32) tucks away the football as he is about to be hit by Derrick Ricks (11) of .Northern Nash in Friday
nights Big East 4-A Conference matchup, at Ficklen Stadium. Rose lost its first game of the season, 28-7. (Reflector photo by Tommy Forrest)
Is It going t(X) far to suggest that, in to(jay s complex financial world, your banks attitude could possibly make a difference? We dont think so.
In fact, at BB&T, we think attitude is all-important. We dont mean a superficial cheerfulness, a smile worn like a suit and as easily removed.
Attitude, for us, goes much deeper than that. It takes in the ability, and even more important, the willingness to commit our talents to meet
your future goals as well as your cuirent needs.
It rests on the integrity of a company that still believes it is driven by the needs of its customers, rather than itsowm corporate objectives. A company that realizes that the quality of its senice is inseparable from the attitude of its people.
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mss
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25 1983 B-7
Panthers Hold Off Rams For First Win
By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer
BETHEL - Senior split end Daniel Keel bobbled a 19-yard pass from Quintin Yarrell in the end zone and finally hauled it in for the North Pitt Panthers first touchdown of the year, and they held on to defeat Greene Central 7-6 in the Eastern Carolina 3-A Conference opener Friday.
Yarrell connected on eight of 17 passes for 92 yards on the night, with Keel grabbing three for 43 vards. Rickv
Hines led the Panthers ground attack with 64 yards on five carries including a 44-yard break.
Anthony Thompson paced the Rams with 75 yards on 19 carries, while Steve Wells led the Greene Central receivers with 54 yards on two catches. Brian Hall added 30 yards on four receptions.
The Panthers had to hold on defense within their own 35-yard line three times in the final eight minutes of the game. Greene Central drove
to the North Pitt 18 after Elmer Dixon intercepted a Yarrell pass at the Rams 49. But when Dixon fumbled on second-and-two, Alvin Grimes recovered for the Panthers with 7:42 on the clock.
North Pitt came up two inches short after three downs, and Coach B.T. Chappell elected to try to move the down markers in the Panthers favor. Grimes headed outside on the delay but was met in the backfield by Anthony Thompson and Patrick Moye to turn the ball
Rolling Out
Greene Central quarterback Elmer Dixon (II) rolls out for a pass as Daniel Keel (85) of North Pitt
pursues. The Panthers scored their first touchdown of the season and held on for a 7-6 victory Friday. ' Reflector photo by Katie Zernhelt)
Roanoke Downs Plymouth
ROBERSONVILLE -Garrett Baker grabbed a 10-yard touchdown pass from Stacy Wallace in the fourth quarter to give Roanoke a 14-7 victory over Plymouth in Northeastern 3-A Conference football action Friday.
Donnie Glover rushed 18 times for 108 yards for Roanoke, while Darius Hudgins carried 27 times for 163 yards. Baker caught all eight completed passes from Wallace for 81 yards.
Roanoke got on the board Eric Collins,
first on a three-yard run by The Roanoke Redskins, now Eric Collins in the second 3-2 overall and 1-2 against
quarter. But Plymouth rallied conference opposition, travels
quickly for a six-yard run by to Ahoskie Friday.
PIvmoulh
II
28-89
H
34
7-3-2
3-37.
5-1
6-49
Koanuke
First Downs Rushes-Vardage 53-255
Passing Yards 81
Return Yards .16
Passing 14-8-0
Punts-.Average 1-35.0
Fumbles-Lost .5-2
Penalties-Yards i:i-iu(i
Plymouth .............0 7 (k-7
Roanoke .................fl 7 I) 7-H
Scoring:
R-Darius Hudgins 3 run. (Martinez kick I ;
P-Eric Collins 6 run. (Whitehurst kick I
R-Garrett Baker 10-yard pass from Stacv Wallace. (Martinezkick i
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over on the Panthers 24-yard lineatthe5:39mark.
After the Rams were penalized five yards for illegal irocedure, Dixon was sacked )y Tony Ward for another five-yard loss to the 34. Dixon threw three incomplete passes with Keel knocking down the first and Gentry Sneed the last to return the ball to North Pitt with 4:03 to be played.
Michael Taylor gained four yards to the 38 on the first play but fumbled on second down on a hit by Thompson, and Bernard Williams recovered for the Rams with 3:23 remaining.
Again the Rams had trouble moving the football. But after Thompson was dropped in the backfield for a five-yard loss on first down, Dixon connected with Brian Hall for 12 yards to the 31, Dixon was sacked for three more lost yards, and his pass on fourth-and-six was picked off at the 10-yard line by Keith Clark and returned 20 yards with 1:27 left in the game.
The Panthers needed just three plays to run out the clock for their first victory of the 1983 season.
Were a little better on defense than we get credit for," Chappell said. Its good to win; its good to finally score, for that matter. It takes a lot of pressure off the kids.
Weve lost six players since the last game we played.
and were down to 22. But I Teel like Ive got a group that really wants to play now.
We made the decision to switch Ronnie Perkins to fullback off the offensive line, and he picked up six yards with a good effort on the first play from scrimmage. But he hurt his leg on that play and missed the rest of the game; we may be down to 21.:
North Pitt opened the second half with a 69-yard drive for its first points of the year. Yarrell connected with Ricky Hines for 14 yards and a first down to the Panthers 44. but North Pitt had to execute three difficult third-down plays to sustain the momentum.
Yarrell sneaked through on a third-and-one for a first down, Keith Clark spun off left guard for seven yards on the second third-down conversion and Hines bolted 11 yards on third-and-eight to set up the Keel TD reception with 6:52 left in the third period. Tony Ross booted the extra point for a 7-0 lead.
But Greene Central struck back quickly, with Dixon connecting with Steve Wells for 47 yards to the Panthers 12-yard line. Thompson ran for four yards, then powered his way for the final eight on second down to trim the score to 7-6 with 4:33 left in the quarter. The Rams faked the extra-point kick, and a pass
was knocked down by Clark to save the final margin.
Weve definately had to go to the passing game this year," Chappell said. Our passing game is the only thing working for us. Im the kind of coach that likes run the ball up the middle, but we just dont have the. size. Were going to have to try some different things to move the ball."
Neither team gained a significant advantage in the first half, though Greene Central moved to the Panthers 36-yard line before having to punt with 8:55 left in the second quarter. The Rams had another opportunity, but
Sneed intercepted Dixon's .pass to kill that drive at the Panthers seven with 2:12 till intermission.
Gentry Sneeds just a junior, but hes already got 11 interceptions to his credit," Chappell said. My quarterback tonight is a senior, but he hasnt played since the eighth grade. Keith Clark and Linwood Harris are in the same situation.
It takes a while to get accustomed to varsity football. Im hoping we can continue to come around."
Greene Central, now 1-3-1 overall, travels to C.B. Aycock next Friday, while North Pitt, now 1-3, visits Southern Nash.
Greene (en North Pitt
7 First Downs 9
30-95 Rushes-Vardage :i5-liil
0
18-6-4 3-240 2-1 1-5
92 20 18-8-1 4-2:i 5 4-2 4-20
Passing Yards , Return Vards Passing Punts-.Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Vards
Greene (entral........... u 6 0
North Pitt...................u 0 7 (17
Scoring:
NP-Keel 19 pass from Yarrell. 1 Ross kick I
GCThompson 8 run, run failed I
INDIVIDl ALSTATISTK S
Rushing: GC-Thompson 19-7.5 Dixon 7-17, Williams 3-:t. .\P-Hines 5-64. Tavlor 10-22, Clark 11-9 Grimes 2-1. Perkins 1-6. Yarrell .5-1-2,
Passing: GC-Dixon 18-8-84-4 0 NT-Yarrell 17-8-92-1 1. Hines 1-0-0-00
Receiving: GC-Hall 4-30, Wells 2-54; .\P-Keel ;i-43. Hines 3-29. Sneed 1-11, Baker 1-9
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B-8 The Daily Retlector. Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25.1983
OUTDOORS
Wilh
Joe Albea
Williamston Dumps Bertie Seniotf 40-6
Championship Fishermen -Three Greenville anglers took top honors in last weekends Atlantic Beach Mackeral Tournament.
The winning crew consisted of Pete West, Lewis Taft and Edgar Taft, three of the most experienced King Mackeral fishermen on the east coast. Trolling 12 miles off shore on the final day of the tournament, Lewis hooked into the winning fish, a fine 39 .3,5 pound king. The winning fish was one of 13 caught on the final day that averaged 25 pounds apiece.
The crew fished'off Petes 21-!oot Wellcraft. a center console sportsfisherman.
This championship team has consistar.tiy placed within the top - '.e places of the Atlantic Beac, T .".".a.ment since its besir.n.r-; This year's tournamc.-.t attracted 347 boats tro.T. up and down the east coast Clifton Moss, a former resident of Winierville, took fourth place in the tournament Congratulations to all four!
Beaver Trappers Seeded -Expanding beaver populations are causing an increasing number of landowners to seek assistance in controlling beaver related problems.
If surplus beavers cannot be removed during the open trapping season, the issuance
Bullets Upset By Creswell
CRESWELL - Creswell High School stunned hjghly favored Jamesville, 12-6,* in > Tobacco Belt Conference game, handing the Bullets a loss in their first league game of the year.
Creswell used a Bullet fumble to give it the first score of the game in the first period. Maurice Phelps climaxed a short 18-yard drive with a one-yard plunge, putting Creswell up. 6-.
Jamesville came back to tie it up on a two-yard run by Matthew Moore in the second period, but couldn't score again,
Creswell, however, used the bomb later in the period with Stenie Rodgers connecting with Ezroe Webb on an 86-yard aerial that put Creswell back out, 12-6, and it stayed that way the rest of the way.
Moore led the Jamesville offensive effort with 55 yards on 18 carries, while Phelps finished with 47 yards on 23 lugs for Creswell.
Jamesville. now 2-2 overall, plays host to Bath next Friday,
.Ijniesville
First Downs Rubhes-Vardage Passing Yards Keiurn Yards Passing Punts-.^verage Fumbles-Lost
Creswell
28-3.'! 125 48 17-5-0 5-22 0 1-1
13-5-:i 4-25 U 1-1
2-31) Penalties-Yards 4-40
Jamesville.........................ii (, U 0 6
Creswell............................i (i ii iv-12
Scoring
C - Phelps. 1 run. pass failed'
.1-.Moore. 2 run, pass failed'
I - Webb, HO-vara pass from Rodgers, pass failed
Nixon Leads Ridgecroft
Kirk Nixon scored two goals to lead Ridgecroft Academy to a 4-2 victory over Greenville Christian Acadmey Friday.
Nixons first goal opened the scoring, on an assist by Ricky Gray. That was followed by a goal by Gray, and Nixon came back later to make it 3-0, the score that stood for the half. , Thomas Cherry got the other ' Ridgecroft goal on a penalty kick.
Mike Griner scored the first GCA goal 5:36 in the second half, and Paul Hollingsworth got the other at the 20:00 mark.
T thought we got shellshocked in the first half." Coach Dale Thatcher said. "They scored four goals early and that kind of destroyed morale
T felt like we controlled the ball, but we missed a penalty kick and some one-one-one shots we should have made, Thatcher added.
Thatcher cited the play of David Sohn and Tom Warburton in leading the team.
Now 2-4, the Knights host Wilmington Christian on Monday.
i
of depredatiwi permits will result in removal at times when the fur is not prime an cannot be marketed.
If you are interested in trapping beavers this season to assist landowners with depredation problems, write Beaver Trapping. Wildlife Resources Commission. 512 North Salisbury Street. Archdale Building, Raleigh. N.C, 27611. Your name will be given to landowners with beaver-related problems in the counties you list. Trapping arrangements and conditions can be arranged between the landowner and trapper to the benefit and satisfaction of both parties.
Please list your name, address, telephone number and counties in which you are interested in trapping.
Steel Shot Requirements -There have been some changes made in the steel shot requirements for the upcoming waterfowl season. This season, waterfowl hunters will be required to shoot steel in all gauges at the Mattamuskeet, Swan Quarter and Cedar Island national wildlife refuges in eastern North Carolina, On the Cape Hatterai National Seashore recreation areas only 12 gauge shells will be required to be steel,
The use of steel shot remains controversial, and studies of the effectiveness of steel shot continue to show conflicting results.
Wildhfe Sote - At midday, when th sun is overhead, a fish can see objects perhaps 15-20 feet away in clear, shallow water according to International Wildlife magazine. When the sun is not directly overhead, little light passes through to illuminate the underwater scene, and fish must rely on their excellant senses of smell, hearing and touch.
WILLIAMSTON - In one of the biggest shockers in a weekend of shockers. Williamston High School dumped Bertie Senior, by a lopsided 40-6 score, thanks to the play of the Tiger defense and specialty teams.
Neither team was able to move the ball much during the evening, but with the specialty team returning two kicks for scores and setting up a couple of others, the Tigers were on a roll that the Falcons just couldn't handle.
. After taking over at the Falcon 40 on a very short Bertie punt, the Tigers used the flea-flicker to get into the end zone the first time. James Ward passed from the 23 to Michael Peele at the 13, who then tossed back to Larry Brown, who took the ball into the end zone and a 6-0 Williamston lead.
Just minutes later, Kermit Brown pulled in an interception - the first of three by the Tigers - and returned it 50 yards for the second Tiger TD. Jesse Ward passed to Donnell Griffin for the PAT and after one quarter, Williamston led,
, 14-0.
Larry Brown again did the honors for the third score, this time from a specialty team standpoint, running the opening kickoff of the second half back 83 yards and the Tigers were on top, 204).
A bad snap on fourth down gave the Tigers the ball on the Bertie three just a few minutes later, and A1 Willingham pushed in from there with Ward running over the PAT, raising the score to 28-0,
Peele did the trick for the specialty teams once more, partially blocking a punt, and Rodney Conner picked the ball up just a few yarjis beyond the line of scrimmage and returned it 35 yards for the nest Williamston touchdown. That made it 34-0.
The Tigers came up with one more, this time on a 60-vard drive after Larrv
Brown had given them the ball with another interception. Willingham went in for his second score from eight yards out.
Bertie finally got on the scoreboard late in the game, scoring on a 23-yard Steve Hayes to Calvin Moore pass.
TTie win left Williamston unbeaten at 5-0, 3-0 in the Northeastern Conference. The Tigers get another tough test on Friday, traveling to Tarboro. Bertie falls to 3-1 overall.
First Downs Rushes-Yardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
Williamston
31-99 33 101 10-5R) 4-30.3 1-1 5-35 6- 6 0 26 6-W
0 0
Bertie 9
42-98 54 15
18-3-3 3-15.7 1-0 12-106
Bertie.............................0
Williamston....................U
Scoring:
W - L Brown. 23 pass from Ward I kick failed i W - K Brown. 50 interception return 'Griffin, pass from Ward I W - L Brown. 88 kickoff return 'kick failed'
W - Willingham. 3 run < Ward run i W - Conner, 35 punt return rnin failed'
W - Willingham, 8 run' kick failed i,
B - .Moore. 23 pass from Haves ' pass
failed',.. .
FINE CATCH - Clay Johnston of Greenville shows off a fine string of bluegill bream he caught on crickets while fishing at a pond near Grimesland.
Eight-Pointer
Linwood Coward Jr. (left) and Junior Hardee, both of Greenville, show off this eight-point buck bagged by Coward with a bow-and-arrow
while hunting on game lands in Beaufort County. The buck was the first for Coward this year. (Reflector Photo)
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C Sunday September 25 1983 8*9
Stewart Saves 4-2 Win For Baltimore
By The Associated Press
It wa^iii^iness as usual for the Baltimore Orioles... and no one was more businesslike than Sammy Stewart.
Coming on in relief of starter Scott McGregor with the bases loaded and nobody out in the eighth inning, Stewart got out of the jam with only two pitches Friday night to nail down a 4-2 win over Milwaukee that reduced the Orioles' magic number for winning the American League East to two games.
First Stewart got Paul Molitor to hit into a run-scoring double play to short. Then he made Robin Yount ground out.
"Both pitches were fastballs and 1 sunk them down, Stewart said. I was looking for Molitor to hit my first pitch and I didn't want to get in trouble early by making a fat first pitch.
With Yount, I didn't know if he'd be swinging at the first pitch, but I didn't want to get in a hole with a slider, so I shook off (catcher) Rick (Dempsey) and I have had success with the fastball, so I stuck with it.,
In other AL action, it was Detroit 7, Boston 0; Chicago 2, California 1: Texas 2, Seattle 1; Kansas City 3, Minnesota 2;
Harris Leads A~G
STANHOPE - Kelvin Harris ran for two touchdowns and 116 yards in sparking Ayden-Grifton to a 20-8 victory over Southern Nash Friday night.
The victory gave the Chargers a successful opening to their Eastern Carolina Conference schedule, and brought their overall record to 4-1.
Harris carried the ball 15 times for his yardage, as Ayden-Grifton rallied from an early 8-0 deficit to take the win.
Ayden-Grifton helped the Firebirds out on the touchdown, as Southern took over at the Charger 11 after a bad snap sailed over the punters head. Bob May then scored on a one-yard plunge and Greg Jones ran over the PAT for an 8-0 lead.
Worthington down to the Firebird 20. Harris then went over from two yards out and Peede took a pass from Coley for the conversion for a 14-8 lead.
Harris put the iceing on the cake with a 59-yard run, the first play after a punt early in the final quarter, giving the Chargers their 20-8 lead.
Twice, however, the Charger defense had to shore up and stop deep Firebird threats in the final stages of the game.
Worthington added 86 yards on 12 carries for the Chargers, while Quentin Barrett and David Lister led the defense.
Now 1-0 in the league, Ayden-Grifton goes outside one last time next Friday, hosting Coastal Conference member D.H. Conley.
Following a 30-yard kickoff ike
Avden-Grifton
return by Mike Dixon, Ayden-Grifton twice overcame 15 yard penalties to march to its first touchdown. That came on a fourth and eight play from the 12 as Doug Coley hit Shannon Peede for the score, cutting it to 8-6.
The Chargers took the lead in the third period, scoring in eight plays, one of them a 40-yard ramble by Malcolm
12
37-295
71
25
15-8-0
3-25.0
1-0
6-07
First Downs Rushes-Yardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
.Ayden-Grifton...........0 6
Southern Nash..........8 0
Scoring:
SN May, 1 run (Jones run)
AG - Peede, 12 pass from Coley (run failed).
AG - Harris, 2 run (run failed). AG - Harris, 59 run (Peede, pass from Coley).
S. .Nash 7
36-117
13
0
5-1-2 4-30.0 3-1 2-10 i 8-20 ) 0- 8
Hooker's TDs Lead Chocowinity, 30-14
COLUMBIA - Roy Hooker ran for a pair of touchdowns and two extra-points to lead Chocowinity to a 30-14 victory over Columbia in the teams opening game of the Tobacco Belt 1-A Conference Friday.
Hooker tallied 189 yards on 26 carries for the Indians, while Tod McMillan rushed 16 times for 70 yards. Quarterback Vic Daluis completed six passes for 134 yards, including three catches for 113 yards by James Norman.
Daluis connected with Melvin Tripp to put Chocowinity on the board in the first quarter, and Hooker ran for the point-after for an 8-0 advantage.
But Columbia roared back in the second period to trim the margin to 8-7 on a one-yard run by James Norman and a Bradley Brickhouse PAT kick,
Hooker followed with a five-yard scoring run, and Daluis connected with Smith to give the Indians a IW lead at intermission.
Columbia struck first in the third period, with Brickhouse hitting Jeff Spencer on a 30-yard scoring strike and then adding the boot for a 16-14 score.
But Hooker put the game out of reach on a seven-yard run, and Shawn Harding returned an interception 10-yards for the final margin.
Chocowinity, now 1-2-1 overall, hosts Creswell next Friday.
Chocowinilv
12
46-266 134
77
14-6-2
1-45.0
3-3
10-95
First Downs Ruslies-Yardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
Columbia
6
35-46
29
5
11-2-4
3-28.0
4-3
8^
Chocowinity.....................8 8 0 1430
Columbia......................... 7 7 014
Scoring:
Ch-Tripp 30' pass from Daluis,
(Hooker run)
Co-Norman 1 run, (Brickhouse kick) Ch-Hooker 5 run, (Smith pass from Daluis)
Co-Spencer 30 pass from Brickhouse, (Brickhouse kick)
Ch-Hooker 7 run, (Hooker run) Ch-Harding 10 interception return,
(run failed)
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New York 7, Cleveland 4 and Oakland 2, Toronto 0.
McGregor, 18-6, struck out four and didnt walk a batter before getting relief help from Stewart, who gained his seventh save.
The Orioles, who have won 13 of their last 16 games, got all the runs they needed in the second inning off loser Bob Gibson, 2-4, on RBI doubles by Rich Dauer and Rick Dempsey and a run-scoring single by A1 Bumbry.
Our pitchers have just been giving us some great games lately, said Baltimores Cal Ripken Jr., who collected four hits and started the rally-killing double play in the eighth. Molitor hit it hard and sharply right at me. 1 was screened out a little by the runner, but I kept my concentration.
Thats exactly what we ne^ed. A twin-killing always helps out a team and a pitcher and it really did the job tonight.
Tigers 7, Red Sox 0
In Detroit, Wayne Krenchicki and Larry Herndon doubled
to key a three-run fifth inning as the Tigers beat Boston behind the combined six-hit pitching of Juan Berenguer and DaveRozema.
Berenguer, 9-4, struck out three and allowed just one walk over eight innings, but was forced to leave in the ninth when a line drive by leadoff batter Wade Boggs hit him in the right shin. It was only the fifth base hit off Berenguer.
Boggs, the top hitter in the American League, collected three hits in four at-bats, giving him 201 for the season and making him the seventh player in Boston history to get 200 hits or more a season.
walked four, struck out four and was supported by a pair of outstanding defensive plays by left fielder Ron Kittle The Angels, whose run was provided by Mike Brown's solo homer in the fifth, were twice foiled bv Kittle. With a man on third and two outs in the third. Kittle made a diving catch of Rod Carews liner. In the seventh. Kittle fielded Garv Pettis' single and made a perfect throw home to nail Jerrv Narron attempting to score from second.
White Sox 2, Angels 1 In Anaheim, Rich Dotson scattered seven hits for his 20th win and Rudy Laws second-inning single drove in both runs as Chicago beat California.
Dotson, 20-7, joined teammate LaMarr Hoyt as the majors only 20-game winners with his eighth straight triumph. He
Rangers 2, .Mariners 1 In Arlington, Pete OBrien drove in one run and scored another to lead Texas past Seattle.
OBriens sixth-inning single off the glove of shortstop Spike Owen scored George Wright, who had walked and taken third -on a single by Buddy Bell.
Winner Dave Stewart, 5-1, scattered eight hits, walked none and struck out five, logging the first complete game of his career as the Rangers won their sixth straight game.
Past Birds, 20-8 ^
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B-l 0 The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C Sunday. September 25.1983
Forced Out
Let! Matuszek of Philadelphia is forced out at second by St. Louis Bill Lyons during the third inning Friday night at Busch Stadium. Mike
Bailey Inks Four-Year $1 Million Utah Pact
SALT LAKE CITY mAP) - Thurl Biley took in the spectacle with a ready smile as the Utah Jazz introduced their first-round .National Basketball Association draft choice to a welcoming committee of dignitaries, reporters and several hundred curious shoppers.
Bailey's grin broadened when Jazz Coach-General .Manager Frank Layden handed him a pen, shoved his contract in front of him and said, "Put your hand here and you'll be a rich young man in a couple of minutes."
Bailey signed the four-year, $1 million-plus contract moments laterto a spattering of applause from the crowd gathered in a downtown shopping mall and from Utah LI. Gov. David Monson. who sat at a podium with Bailey.
The clapping grew louder when Bailey told the throng. "I promise to do my all to bring the spirit of a championship to this team"
The Jazz clearly are hoping the 6-foot-ll Bailey can fulfill the vow - or at least bring a winning record to a franchise which has not known success since moving to Utah in 1979.
While Utah finished 30-52 in the .Midwest Division last season, Bailey averaged 16.7 points per game and 7.7 rebounds and helped guide North Carolina State to the NCAA championship.
"We've think we've taken what we feel is another step to a division championship and a world championship." Layden said.
Bailey, the seventh player chosen in the draft, will compete with veterans Ben Po-
quette and Jeff Wilkins for a starting forward slot opposite either Adrian Dantley or John Drew, with 7-4 Mark Eaton at center.
Layden said he intends to play Bailey frequently when Utah opens its exhibition season in early October and expects him to become a starter eventually.
Layden coveted Bailey - whom he terms a "quality person" - because of his shooting, rebounding and particularly his shot-blocking abilities,
"He was one of the finest shot-blockers in college basketball," Layden said. "He fills a big void that we had."
Bailey, who often played on the perimeter at North Carolina State, said he was prepared for the physical pounding his 215-pound frame may take from NBA behemoths near the basket.
"If I'm not I will be," said Bailey, who hails from Seat Pleasant. Md. "It's one of those trial and error things. There are situations where finesse can come into play.
Bailey's signing came two days before the opening of Utah's rookie-free agent camp at Westminster College and over a week before the club's veterans are to report.
The Jazz use a fastbreak offense, which P says he relishes.
1 /ve to run," he said, "As a matter of fact, in our fastbreak offense in college, I was supposed , to lead the break with one of our guards because of my speed. I usually ended up on the other end of the break.
Then he smiled, "I think it will work out fine."
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Carlton Joins Elite Group
Schmidt grounded to third baseman Jim Sexton who threw to Lyons, but the relay to first was not in time for the double play. (.AP Laserphoto)
Bv The Associated Press lysi
in 1972 and the lefthander has never let them forget it.
On a cold clear night in St. Louis Friday, Carlton became just the 16th major league hurler to win 300 games.
And he did it by going eight strong innings, striking out 12, as the Philadelphia Phillies downed St. Louis 6-2, a loss that mathematically eliminated the defending World Champions from the National League East pennant chase.
The victory was Philadelphias eighth straight and kept the Phillies three games ahead of second-place Pittsburgh, which beat Montreal 10-1.
The triumph also upped Carltons career record against St. Lpuis to 37-11, his best mark against any team.
"Tonight was something special, but I didnt want him to get to the point where he got in trouble in the ninth inning, said Philadelphia Manager Paul Owens, explaining why he brought reliever A1 Holland in to pitch the ninth.
Carlton, as is his policy, did not talk to reporters after the game. He has not given a newspaper interview since 1979 after claiming he was misquoted. Instead, Silent Steve continued to let his actions speak for him.
Carlton, now 15-15, beat the Cardinals - the team that dealt him away after he went 20-9 in 1971 - last Sunday for his 299th career victory.
On Friday night, he allowed seven hits to become the first pitcher to win 300 since Gaylord Perry did it with Seattle last year.
Ironically, the 45-year-old Perry announced his retirement from baseball earlier in the day, leaving the Kansas City Royals with 314 lifetime triumphs.
The 38-year-old Carlton, who has won an unprecedented four Cy Young Awards with the Phillies.
helped himself by driving in his first run of the season with a second-inning single off Joaquin Andujar,6-16.
After David Greens two-run homer tied it in the fourth, the Phillies chased Andujar with three runs in the Fifth, an inning that saw St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog ejected by home plate umpire Jim Quick for arguing balls and strikes.
It was then left for Holland to nail down the triumph in the ninth, which he did. The reliever said his heart skipped a beat when he was summoned to start the ninth.
He promised me this, Holland said. We talked about it even in spring training. I wanted to save his 300th game.
Now it gets down to it, and its not a save, said Holland.
Dodgers 11, Braves 2
Dusty Baker and Ken Landreaux each homered to highlight a 14-hit attack as Jerry Reuss and visiting Los Angeles continued to haunt Atlanta.
The victory stretched the Dodgers lead in the NL West to 5>'2 games over the Braves. Los Angeles, which reduced its magic number to five, has nine games left; Atlanta has 10 remaining.
The Dodgers have now beaten the Braves 11 out of 16 times this season.
Jerry Reuss, 12-11, allowed nine hits in running his career record against Atlanta to 17-8. Baker knocked in four runs and Landreaux drove in three.
Baker hit a sacrifice fly to make it 1-0 in the first inning. Mike Marshalls two-run triple capped a three-run third that knocked out Len Barker, 1-3.
Landreaux, who had earlier contributed an RBI groundout, belted his 17th homer in the fifth. The blast followed a single by Pedro Guerrero, who hit his 31st homer in the eighth. Bakers 15th homer was a three-run drive during a four-run sixth.
Pirates 10, Expos 1 In Montreal, Mike Easier belted a grand slam and Tony Pena followed with a solo home run as Pittsburgh raced to a 5-0 lead in the first inning.
Pena added a two-run homer, his 15th, in the ninth inning as the Pirates shelled five Montreal pitchers. Scott Sanderson, 6-7, surrendered Easlers homer, his 10th of the season and his second slam.
Jason Thompson singled twice, giving him 1,000 career hits, and drove in two runs.
Rick Rhoden, 12-13, pitched a three-hitter. He 'Struck out four and walked three In his seventh complete game of the season.
Giants 3, Astros 2 Fred Breining took a three-hit shutout into the ninth inning before allowing two runs on three hits.
Greg Minton'got the final three outs for his 20th save, preserving the victory for Breining, 11-12.
Don Gladdin, batting just .198, singled home two runs for visiting San Francisco in the second.
Padres 11, Reds 8 Ruppert Jones knocked in five runs with a three-run double, a solo homer and an RB groundout.
'Jones double snapped a 6-6 tie in the seventh inning and came off reliever Ben Hayes, 4-5.
Jones belted his 12th homer in the ninth. Tony Gwynn rapped a three-run homer, his first of the season, in the fifth off Reds starter Mario Soto.
Cubs 4, Mets 1 Jody Davis drilled two home runs and Keith Moreland added a solo shot to carry host Chicago.
Davis two-run homer came in the second. Moreland cracked his 16th, a career high, in the fourth and Davis added No. 23 in the seventh.
Dick Ruthven, 13-11, pitched a seven-l^ter in his fifth complete game of the season. Walt Terrell, 7-8, took the loss.
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SCOREBOARD
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunaay Septfember 25 1983 B-11
by Jeffl^lar &~BiirHjnds
Sports Calendar
Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Today's Sports siiccer
, East Carolina at Monmouth (2
p.m.)
Monday's Sports ' Soccer Wilmington at Greenville Christian 143 p.m.)
(^If
East Carolina at N.C. State Invitational
Softball
Fall League J D Dawson vs Bailey's Jimmys 66 vs Spirits Thomas Mobile Homes vs Mike's Party Center Morgan Printers vs. Grog's Sunnyside Eggs vs. Vermont-American 14th Street vs. Jim's Tires Tennis
Atlantic Christian at East Carolina women (3 p.m.)
Tuesdays Sports Volleyball Southwest Edgecombe, Greene Central at Ayden-Grifton (4 p m.)
Farmville Central, North Pitt at Southern Nash (4 p.m.)
Tennis Koanoke at Washington RoseatFikei3:30p.m.i Ridgecroft at Greenville Juniors i3:30;mi Farmville Central at Greene Central
Soccer
Roscat Fike (4p m l Old Dominion at East Carolina i3 p.m I
Cross-Country Rose at Fike boys and girls Golf
East Carolina at N C. State In-vjtational
Wednesday's Sports Golf
East Carolina at N.C, State Invitational
Tennis
Greenville Jr's at Wayne Country Day (2:30 p.m.)
Campbell at East Carolina (3
p.m.)
Thursday 's Sports Football
Farmville Central at Southwest Edga-ombeJV Ayden-Grifton at Conley JV 7
p.m.)
Ahoskieat Roanoke JV Rocky Mount at Rose JV (4 p.m.) E.B .Aycock at Rocky Mount (4 p.m I
Volleyball Southwest Edgecombe, Ayden-Grifton at .North Pitt (4 p.m.)
Farmville Central, Greene Central at Southern Nash (4p.m.)
Havelock, Conley at North Lenoir i4pm.i RoscatHoggard (4p.m )
Tennis Roanoke at Tarboro Washington at Roanoke Rapids Hunt at Rose(3:30p.m.)
Southern Nash at Greene Central C B .Aycock at Farmville Central Soccer Hunt at Rose (4 p.m.)
Cross-Country Hunt at Rose (boys and girls) Softball Fall League Mike's Party CeiUer v Sunnyside Eggs
Jims Tires vs Morgan Printers Vermont-American vs J.D. Dawson Grogs vs Bailey's Spirits vs Thomas Mobile Homes 14th Street vs State Credit Friday's Spurts Football Creswell at Chocowinity (8 p.m. i BathatJamesvilleiHp'm.)
North Pitt at Southern Nash <8 p.m 1
Greene Central at C.B Aycock i8 p.m I
Southwest Edgecombe at
Farmville Central (8 p.m.)
D.H Conley at Ayden-Grifton (8 p.m.)
Roanoke at Ahoskie (8 p.m.) Washington at Plymouth (8 p.m.) Williamston at Tarboro (8 p.m.) Rose at Rocky Mount (8p.m.) Soccer
Greenville Christian at Friendship (4p.m.)
Golf
East Carolina at James" Madison Invitational
Tennis
East Carolina at James Madison Quad Meet
Volleyball
East Carolina at USC Carolina Classic
Saturday 's Sports Football
East Carolina at Missouri (2:30 p.m.)
Soccer
East Carolina at Campbell (3:30 p.m.)
Golf
East Carolina at James Madison Invitational
Basketball
Steelwheels at Winston-Salem Volleyball East Carolina at USC Carolina Classic
', Tennis East Carolina at Davidson women (2 p.m.)
East Carolina at James Madison Quad Meet
Sunday 's .Sports Golf
East Carolina at James Madison Invitational
Tennis
East Carolina women at UNC Charlotte (12 noon (
San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati
.503 11 .484 14
at
Friday's Games vVw
.458 18
C3iicago4, New York 1 Pittsburgh 10, Montreal 1 San Diego 11. Cincinnati 8 Los Angeles 11. AtlanU 2 Philadelphia 6, St Louis 2 San Francisco 3, Houston 2 Saturday 's Games
Pittsburgh (Candelaria 14 8) at Montreal (B. Smith 5-10)
1^ Angeles (Welch 15-12) at AtlanU (Perez 13-81 Philadelphia (Bystrom 6-9 at St. Louis (LaPoint 1^9)
San Diego (Whitson 5-7) at Cincinnati iBerenyi 814)
New York (Seaver 8-14) at Chicago (Schulze (M))
San Francisco (Krukow 11-9) at Houston (M. Scott 9-5), (n)
Sunday's Games
Baltimore (D. .Martinez 7-12) Milwaukee (CocanowertM)). (n) MinnesoU (Viola 7-13) at Kansas City (Black 9d)(ni Seattle (Young 11-14) at Texas (Tanana 7-8), (n)
Sunday's Games Boston at Detroit aevelandatNewYork Baltimore at Milwaukee MinisoU at Kansas City Seattle at Texas Chicago at California Toronloat Oakland
Monday's Games Cleveland at New York, (n)
Toronto at California, (n)
Kansas City at Seattle, (n)
Only games scheduled
Pittsburgh at Montreal igeles at /
League Leaders
Los Angeles at AtlanU Philadelphia at SI Louis San Diego at Cincimati New York at Chicago San Francisco at Houston, (n) Monday's Games Philadelphia at Chicago Los Angeles at Cincinnati, (n) San Francisco at AtlanU. (n I Montreal atSt. Louis, (n)
Sah Diego at Houston, (n)
Only Games Scheduled
By The .Associated Press
.American leagle BATTING (390 at bats I: Boggs, Boston. .363; Carew, California, .345; WhiUker, Detroit, .M9; Moseby, Toronto. .318 RUNS: Ripken. Baltimore, 115;
E.Murray, Baltimore, 113; Moseby, Toronto, l02, R Henderson, Oakland, 10
GB
.571
559
545 ll'i 526 14'2 481 212 438 28
Rec Standings
Fall League
W
L
Jimmy's 66................
.7
0
Bailey's....................
.6
1
Grog's.......................
.4
2
Mike's Party Cent........
.4
3'
Thomas Moh. Homes..
.4
3
Slate Credit............
..4
3
Sunnyside Eggs.........
,3
3
Spirits.......................
.3
4
J.D. Dawson...............
2
4
Vermont-American
2
4
Jim's Tires...............
2
4
14th Street...............
1
5
Morgan Printers...........
6
Bowling
.Strikette League
W
L
Trophy Hou.se...............
8
4
Team 4.......................
8
4
Overtons Super Market ?
5
Brinklev Moore Motors,,?
5
Thorpe Music Co...........
7
5
Five's Enough..............
7
5
Papa Katz....................
6
6
Farmville Gals.............
6
()
Kash & Karrv...............
.5
7
Ehonettes.....................
5
7
Team 12......................
5
7
Our Gang.....................
1
11
High game: Susan Puyear 572:
high series : Bernice Haddock 242.
Tuesday Bowlettes
UCM's........................
9
3
Team 8..................
9
3
Plaza Gulf...................
7
5
AMERICAN LEAGUE E AST DIVISION
W L Pci
Baltimore 95 58 621
Detroit 88 66
New York , 85 67
Toronto 84 70
Milwaukee 81 73
Boston 74 80
Cleveland 67 86
WEST DIVISION x-Chicago 93 61
Texas 75 79
Kansas City 74 79
Oakland 70 84
California 67 87
Minnesota 66 88
Seattle 56 97
x-clinched division title
Friday's Games Detroit 7, Boston 0 New York 7. Cleveland 4 Baltimore!. Milwaukee 2 Kansas City 3. MinnesoU 2 Texas2. Seattle 1 Chicago 2. California 1 Oakland 2. Toronto 0
.Saturday's Games Cleveland (Sutcliffe 16-10) at New York (Guidry 19-9)
Boston (Tudor 12-11) at Detroit (Petry 18-91
Chicago (Burn^ 9-10) at California iS. Brown I-21 Toronto (Clancy l4-9i at Oakland (Heimueller 3-5)
Cooper, Milwaukee, 96; Yount, Milwaukee, %
RBI: Rice, Boston, 120; Cooper, Milwaukee, 117; L.N.Pamsh, Detroit, 108. Winfield, New York, 107 HITS: Boggs. Boston. 201; Ripken. Baltimore, 198; WhiUker. Detroit, 196;
Hendrick, St Louis, 314; .Murphy, Atlahta, 314; Lo Smith,St Louis. 310-RU.NS: Murphy. AtlanU, 129; Raines, Montreal. 126; Dawson, Montreal. 103; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 98; Evans. San Francisco, 91.
RBI: Murphy. .AtlanU. 117; Dawson, .Montreal, 111; Schmidt. Philadelphia, 105; Guerrero, Los Angeles. 95;
Buffalo Miami Baltimore' New England N Y Jets
East
W I T Pet. PF 2 1 0 .667 38
2 I 0 1 2 2
667 60
0 333 62
.333 70
T Kennedy. San Diego, 94 HITS: Dawson, Montreal
------11, iviumredi, 185; Cruz.
Houston, 180; flliver. .Montreal. 180: R Ramirez, Atlanta. 177; .Murphy.
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Houston
1 2 0 , 333 64
Central
Monday 's Game
Green Bav at New York Giants n
Transactions
2 1 0 .667 69
2 1 0 .667 75
Cooper. Milwaukee, 185 DDUbi
.604 -,487 18 484 I8'2 455 23 .435 26 429 27 366 36'-2
LES: Ripken. Baltimore. 45; __ , Boston. 44: L N.Parrish, Detroit, 41; McRae. Kansas City, 39; Yount. Milwaukee 39.
TRIPLES: Griffin. Toronto. 9; Herndon. Detroit, 9; KGibson, Detroit, 9; Yount. Milwaukee, 9.
HOME RUNS: Rice, Boston, 37; Armas, Boston, 34; Kittle, Chicago, 34; E Murray, Baltimore, 32; Luzinski.
Chicago, 30; Winfield, New York, 30 STOLEN BASES: R,Henderson,
Oakland 104; R Law, Chicago, 73; J.Cruz, Chicago. 55; W Wilson, Kansas
J.Cruz, Chicago. 55; W Wilson, Kansas City 54; Sample, Texas. 42.
PITCHING (15 decisions): Haas,
Milwaukee, 13-3. .813, 3.27; Flanagan, Baltimore, 12-3, .800. 3 12; McGregor, Baltimore, 18-6, 750, 3 06; Dotson, Chicago. 20-7, .741, 3.30; Gossage. New York, 12-^ 708 2.35.
STRIKEOUTS: Morris, Detroit, 221; F.Bannister, Chicago. 184; Stieh. Toronto, 176; Righetti, New York, 169; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 151.
SAVES: Quisenberry Kansas City, 42; SUnley, Boston, 31; K.Davis. Minnesota. 29. Caudill, ^ttle. 23: Ladd, Milwaukee. 22.
Atlanta. 174; Raines, Montreal, 174 DOUBLES: Oliver. Montreal. 38; Buckner. Chicago, 36; Dawson, .Montreal, 36: J Ray, Pittsburgh, 36; Knight, Houston, 36 TRIPLES: Butler, Atlanta, 13; Dawson Montreal. 9; Green. St Louis 9 Ik Redus, Cincinnati. 9; Thon. Houston, 9. HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia, 38; Murphy. Atlanta, 35; Dawson. Montreal, 32; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 31; Evans, San Francisco. 28 STOLEN BASES: Raines. Montreal. 84; Wiggins, San Diego, 60. SSax, Los Angeles, 51; Wilson, New York. 50: Lo.Smith, St Louis, 40 PITCHING (15 decisions!: Denny, Philadelphia, 17-6. 739, 2 44; McWilliams, Pittsburgh. 15-6. 714, 3 14; Tunnell, Pittsburp. 10-5. 667 . 3 84. Orosco, .New York. 13-7 , 650, 1 47; Candelaria, Pittsburgh. 14-8, 636. 3.32; Rvan. Houston. 14-8, 636,2 82 STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 268; Soto Cincinnati, 233; .McWilliams, Pittsburgh. 190; Ryan. Houston, 174; Valenzuela. Los Angeles, 174 SAVES: Le Smith, Chicago, 28; Holland, Philadelphia. 23; Minton, San Francisco. 20: Reardon, Montteal, 20; Sutter, St.Louis, 20.
LA.Haiders Denver Seattle Kansas City San Diego
0 3 0 000 23
0 3 0 000 72
West
Dallas Philadelphia Washington N Y Giants St Louis
Green Bav -Minnesota Chicago Detroit Tampa Bay
3 0 0 1.000 67
2 1 0 667 41
2 1 0 .667 64
1 2 0 .333 43
1 2 0 333 77
National Conference
East
3 0 0 1 000 93
2 I 0 667 48
2 1 0 667 80
1 2 0 333 35
0 3 0 ' 000 61
Central
2 1 0
2 1 0
1 2 0
Bn The Ass(H aled Press BASKETBAI.I.
National Basketball \ssoi iatiun
K.ANSAS (ITA Kl.NG.S Signed Dane Suttle, guard, toa two-vear contract SAN DIEGO CLlPPEKS- Signed Dwight Anderson. Billy Allen and I,arr\
.AbheMileT.E Burke o Avden-Gnfton 20, S Nash 8 Belhaven.33. Bath 8 Burl Cummings :i4. Bartletl Vaneev o ( I atiarrus 1.. .\\V Cabarrus (I
Char Latin 49. Heathwood Hall 6 ( har( atholic20. W .Stanh 12 ( har Independence 27. N Mecklenburg 24
I 'F.--.. / ll, .Ill /'i____I I. _ J . .. ^
Char Oly m^c 28. Char Harding 20
Anderson guards SEATTLE SlPEKSoMc.s Signed.
Scooter .McCrav, forward toa three Near contract
FOOTBALL National Football League SAN FRA.NCLSCO 4oEKS .Activaled Bob Horn, linebacker Waived I)ar\le Skaugstad. defensive lineman
I nited States Football League SAN ANTONIO GlNSLINGEBs
.667 89 667 63
333 65
1 2 0 333 51
0 3 0 000 26
Atlanta L A Rams New Orleans San Francisco
West
2 1 0 667 8)
Signed David Worsham (juarierliack .Mike Parks, running back. Rick \ alerio.
.safety. Gary Milligan, nose tackle and Ralph Caldwell, linebacker
NATIONAL LE.AGUE BATTING (390 at bats): Madlock. Pittsburgh. .325; Cruz. Houston. 32:1;
NFL Standings
By The Associated Press American Conference
2 1 0 667 70
2 1 I) 667 89
2 1 0 667 107
.Sunday's Games New Orleans at Dallas Detroit at Minnesota St. Louis at Philadelphia Houston at Buffalo Kansas City at .Miami Cincinnati at Tampa Bav .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
HOLKEV National Hockey League NHL-Suspnded Ric Nattrcss. ile fenseman. of the Montreal Canadiens lor
the 1983-84 regular sea.son HARTFORI) WHALERS Signed ( hri.s
Kotsopoulos. delen.senian. Stoughton, rig
itoughton. right w ing NEW AORK RANY.ER,' Maloney, defeaseman
and Blame
its Signer) Dave
N.C. Prep Scores
ciayion .iO. Lnuisburg ii ('liiitim26, Dunn 22 (reswell 12. Jamesvilleb Currituck 27. Camden 8 K Forsyth 28, W Fosvtho K Carteret 21. Trenton Jones 6 K Surry 22. Wilkes Central 14 E Bladtm ,56. Bladenbom o E Alamance 21. Graham 7 E Henderson 8. Ashe HotxTson 7 Edenton 21 Washington 19-Enlield Acad26 Ker.slon Forest \'a lAanklmton 42. Zebulori7-I T Foard 41. Bessemer Cil\ (I Fay Byrd 1.5, Westover 12 F.iy R'iedKoss.12 LumfxTtori i:i Forbush 1 .Mt Airy ()
Fufjuay Varina i.s.'S (,ran\ille24 Gast liuss 18. Hickory 6 t.ast .Aslibrook 12. ,S Caldwell o GtroPage Li, HP Andrews?
(ibo (irimslev 21. (txi Smith o HP c'entralii'tibo Dudley 1 HeiiderMin.ille28, Mitch'ell 12 Heiid A'aiic.c 28. WarrenCo 12 Hills Orange K., Burl Williams 14' .LicksonyiIle21 E WaMieii Kaim.i|ioli>49 sunVafiey 12 Kenan,ill E Duplm26 Kings .Mountain .2 E Kutherlordl2 l.ee('o 21. Fav Caix- Fea'ro .MaidenU, I'herrvMlleT
By The Associated Press Here are the results from L riday high school fiHilball in North ( anilina: Albemarle 14. Parkwood o Alexander Central 28, Watauga 8 Alleghany 18. E Wilkes 15 Apex 3U. Jordan?
.Ashe Rey nolds 14. Brevard 6
.AlcDowell (i, Mrg I'reedomo Murlreesliorii 10 \W llalilax 14
.Myers Park D. E .Mecklenburg2n N Wilkes 42. .\ycry 2o N Pitt 7. (>reene ('entra! 6 N Nash 28 Green Rose 7
N Durham 28. Ral Sati(fers(,ri i,
lun: ro/).ige IS )2
FOOD LION
Nine Lives.....................6
We'll Take It..................6
Sandbaggers................6
Team 7......................4
Team #1.................. 2
High game and series, Purvear. 192,527.
(i
6
6
8
10
Susan
Thanks
Baseball Standings
By The .Assin ialed Press
Nation Ai. i.eague
EAST DIVISION
W I, Pet. G Philadelphia 84 70 .545 -
PlILsburgh 81 73 .526 3
Montreal 79 75 513 5
SI Louis 75 79 487
Chicago 69 85
New A ork 62 92
VAE.STDIVLSION Los Angeles 88 65 ,575
Atlanta 82 70 .539
Houston 79 71 52(1 8
Big Star
451 15
403 22
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0-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25. 1983
Upsets Rule Grid Slate
ByRICKSCOPPE .Associated Press Writer
Denny Wood scored five touchdowns and Darren McDonald rushed for 116 yards as Sylva-Webster, rated third in the APs combined 2-A and 1-A class, romped to a surprising 70-20 victory over No. 2 Robbinsville in high school football.
Sylva-Webster. 5-0. led 21-14 at intermission. but scored 49 points in the second half to defeat the defending 1-A champions Friday night.
"We just sort of exploded in the second half," said Sylva-Webster coach Babe Howell.
Wood's five TDs came in the second half. He also had 6 extra points for a total of 36 points.
"There is no way that I would have believed we'd win like this." Howell said. 'We've been struggling offensively, though we've won all our games."
Meanwhile, Randleman. ranked No. 1 in the 2-A and 1-A poll, routed Central Davidson 62-12 behind running back Tony Goss, who gained 256 yards and scored five. Goss scored on runs of 2, 29, 30.52 and 5 yards.
Randleman. 4-0. amassed 662 yards
total offense, including 521 rushing.
In a key 3-A game, running back Carey Metiss 47-yard run with 2:56 left lifted No. 3 Asheville Reynolds past defending 3-A champion Brevard 14-6.
The victory was Reynolds first over Brevard, ranked seventh in 3-A. since 1955. Reynolds, 5-0, was 0-19-1 against Brevard during that span.
West Henderson, fifth in the 3-A.class, used two touchdowns by quarterback Keith Moore to subdue winless North Buncombe 14-7. Moore scored on runs of 1 and 15 yards as West Henderson improved its record to 5-0.
Sixth-ranked Clinton fought off Dunn 26-22 as Jamie McCallop scored the second of his two touchdowns in the final period to lift the Dark Horses to their fourth straight victory.
McCallop scored on a 5-yard run to give Clinton a 26-14 lead and Clinton, which did not attempt a pass, held on from there.
Dunn, 1-3, was led by quarterback Chris Smith, who threw for two scores and ran for another. Smith completed 10 of20passes for 131 yards.
No. 9 Southwest Edgecombe, still
smarting from its first loss of the year, ripped Chai;les B. Aycock 63-0 to raise its record to 4-1.
Running back Jesse Forbes scored four touchdowns and threw a 60-yard TD pass for another score to lead Southwest, which lost to Wilson Hunt 40-13 last week. Forbes also had 9 PATs.
Southwest held Aycock to minus 49 yards rushing and minus 11 yards total offense.
In the 4-A division. No. 1 Greensboro Page edged High Point Andrews 13-7 and No. 2 Fayetteville Douglas Byrd took advantage of five turnovers to down previously unbeaten Westover 35-12.
Northern Nash, 3-1, upended No. 5 Greenville Rose 28-7 and unbeaten Myers Park knocked off No. 10 East Mecklenburg 21-20.
Running back Otis Jordan had two touchdowns and neither team scored in the second half as Page ran its record to 4-0. Jordans second run - a 15-yarder with two minutes left in the half - gave Page a lead it never lost.
Westover, 3-1, had four drives - three in the second half - stopped inside the Byrd 30 bv turnovers.
SCOREBOARD
I (inlmuedtrum pngv H II
N n.niilMinil. VSt'sl Kiman'
\ lrt'di11 :)1 \IiKiresville !:i N .'l.ini> i:. Ml Plea.'.ani
\U Heaver('rwk i>
NU ilii'llnrd.T K tiuilford 13 SeuHanoveri'T (iiilclsboroti Neil lot! l nnover-ii Bunker Hill Ik N 'rlhaiuplon Hast 44. Koanoke Kiver fi rhiirs
\,irih.iM1 l>i .NorthMixireu I Kiorii Webh47. Harnett I'enlral 13 I.milivo.H. SwaiislviriMi I'.irklanil: N Forsyth il Iliieeres; k Fav .Smith u Il.'ttahJH Fnkaii Iolk I enlralH. .Madison k '
Kap>dale 14. S (iuiliordT,
Handleinan h3.C Davidson 13 Hed.spnniis 3. Tar Heel (I Hivhmond 3K. Fay Pine Forest H Kivhlands .i.i. F.imp [.ejeuneti Koanoke 14. Plymouth .
Ho\ Person 33. Athens Drive it s I.enoirT. N Dunlin ti .s Diirham 3.V. llillside 13 s HoU'son33. W Brunsv^lck 30 s Iredell 3H l.ineolnton 37 s Mecklenburg 38. t'har'Dannjjer 13 s\\ Mpslow 31,T)ixon3o s\\ Kdgeeoml)ei>3. Pike Ay cock il .sW I lUiltord 43, E Dav d.sn ii .salisl'urv 30. North Howanfi Svotlan(i.i3. W KolH'sons shelhv 4! South Point 31 Smithlield .Selma l.'i, Hal Millbrookk St Stephens 13. Bandys II Starmoun!7. .Madisoii .MaviKlanii sw.,nlien 111. Ml Henlapeii s .on 33. Cherokee 14
Sv Iva-Webster 7li. Kohbinsville 20 Tabor('ily33. St Faulsfi Thomasville 18, DavieH .
Tuseola 4(i. Erwin 37 I nion Pines 2U. Chatham Central u W-S Reynolds 3..S Stokes 13 W Henderson 14, N Buncombe7 W ,\lamanee37. S AlamaneeM W Wilkes 33, Elkin II VV tiuilford 41. Eden .Morehead n W Davidson 16, Denton 14 W Caldwell 30, W Iredell6 Wake Christian 46. Pender Acad il Wallace Rase Hill 20. Pender 8 WayneCountrv Day 6. Parrott Acado Whiteville 16. Eairmonl 1,3 Wil Beddingfield 16, Rocky Mount 14 Wil Fike31. Nortf'eastern'6 Wilm Hoggard 14 S Wavne7 Wil Hunt 18, Kinston 6 Williamston40. BertieO W Columbus24. Hallshorok
Prep Top 20
K\ The AsMH'iateri Press RAl.EKlH. \ ( . I \P' - Here are how The \ssiKialed Press' lop high school football teams, according to classification, fared this past week:
I A
I GboPage 14-tc beat HP Andrews 13-7
3 Fay Bvrd i4Al beatWestover 35-12
3 RX Person .lAU beat Athens Drive 23-6
4 N Durham .5A> beat Ral .Sanderson 28-6
.3 (Ireen Rose'3-1' lost .to N Nash 28-7
6 Wilson Fike i4-0i beat Northeastern 31-6
7 Asheville ' 311 beat E Burke 7-0
8 Jacksonville 13-11 beat E Wayne 23-0 8 Wilson Hunt '4AH beat Kinstoh 18-6
111 E Mecklenburg i3-li lost to Mvers Park 21 20
3-,A
1 S Durham .5-0'beat Hillside 25-12
2 Kannapolis i.5-0i beat Bun Valiev 49-12
3 Ashe Revnolds 4-0i beat Brevard
14-6
4 Thomasville '5-01 beat Davie 16-9
5 W Henderson '5-0' beat N Buncombe 147
6 Clinton 4-01 beat Dunn 26-22
7 Brevard 3-2i lost to Ashe Reynolds 14-6
8 E Randolph'4-0'did not play
9 SW Edgecombe '4-U beat Pike A.vfock 6341
id C Cabarrus '3-1' beat NW Cabarrus 174)
2-A-l-A
1 Randleman '441- beat C Davidson 63-12
3 Robbinsville '3-11 lost to Sylva-Webster 70-20
3 SvlvaWebster '541' beat Robbinsville 70-20
4 F T Foard 3-0-1' beat Bessemer Cilv 41-0
5 Fuquav Varina '44)i beat S Granville .35-34
6 W .Montgomerv ' 441' did not play
7 Maiden ' 3-0-11 beat Cherryvifle 14-7
8 Franklintnn ' 441. heal Zetiuinn 42-7
9 Wallace-Rose Hill '44)i beat Pender Co 30-8
10 Albemarle' 54H beat Parkwood 1441
Goody's 500 Lineup
MARTI.NSVHXE, Va. lAP) - The starting lineup for Sunday's (ioodys 500 (irand National stock car race at Martinsville Speedway with driver, make of car and quanfying speed in mph: Qualified Thursdav 1. Darrell Waltrip. Chevrolet, 89.342
2 Ricky Rudd, Chevrolet, 89.274
3 Joe Ruttman, Pontiac, 89 211.
4 Tim Richmond, Pontiac, 89 056
5 Dale Earnhardt. Ford. 88 881
6 Bobby Allison, Buick.88 751
7 Geoff Bodine, Pontiac. 88 531.
8 Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 88 457
9 Buddy Baker. Ford, 88 284
10 Richard Pettv, Pontiac, 88 046
Qualihed Friday
11 Neil Bonnett, Chevrolet. 89 354
12 Butch Lindlev, Buick,89 178
13 Sterling Marlin. Pontiac, 88 652
14 .Vlike Alexander. Chevrolet, 88.589
15 Harn' Gant, Buick, 88 482
16 Bill Elliott, Ford. 88 243.
17. Dick Brooks, Ford, 88 124
18 Trevor Boys, Chevrolet, 87 785
19 Dave .Marcis. Chevrolet, 87 614
20 Morgan Shepherd, Buick, 87 392
21 Kyle Petty, Pontiac, 86 910
22 Jimmy Means, Chevrolet, 86 489
23 JoeMillikan, Ford, 86 049
24, Buddy Arrington Dodge, 85 858
25 Ronnie Thomas. Pontiac, 85.625.
26 MarkSlahl, Ford, 84.786
27 Mike Potter Pontiac 84 022
28 J D McDuffie. Pontiac 83 042
29 D.K Llrich. Buick, 82 611
30 Laurent Rioux, Chevrolet, no time
M
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Business Notes
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Gary R. Williams has joined Branch Banking & Trust
Companys managment development program and is cur-
. 0 - pivgiaiii aiiu la tui-
rently traming m the Greenville office, according to Jerry Powell, vice president and city executive here.
Williams earned both his undergraduate and graduate degr^ at East Carolina University. He was a member of the North Carolina Student Legislature, served on the ECU Student Government Association board, was a member of the North^ Carolina College Democrats and the Student Union board of directors.
Williams is a member of the North Carolina Farm Bureau and is active in the ECU Alumni Association and the Pirates Club.
COMPLETES COURSE Robert L. Norville, a local employee of Carolina Telephone, recently completed a three day course conducted by the company at its Rocky Mount training center.
Norville is a PBX installer-repairer in the installation and repair department of the company in Greenville.
CT&T conducts schools to train new employees and to advance the knowledge of other employees.
REVENUESREPORTED Western Steer-Mom n Pops Inc. of Claremont reported second quarter revenues of $7,892,000, up 26 percent from the $6,265,000 reported in the second quarter of 1982.
For the six months ended Aug. 12, 1983, the company reported revenues of $15,715,000, up 22.8 percent over
NEW PARTNER R.F. Warwick, managing partner of Lowrimore, Warwick & Co., CPAs, announced that Stephen H. Lock, CPA, has been admitted to the partnership of the firm.
Locke will continue to practice in the firms Washington and Greenvlle offices as a tax partner, Warwick said. A graduate of Elon College with a bachelors degree in accounting, he joined the firm as a tax supervisor in 1979 He resides in Washington with his wife, Ruth.
reported revenues of $15,715,000, up 22.8 percent over 0/0 x*
$12,794,093 reported in the first six months of last year. Net K0S6 S KfillOVfltlOII earrangs for the period were $455,913. ^ IV w MIIWII
The company declared an increase in its dividend to four cents per share, payable Sept. 26 to shareholders of record Sept. 1.
ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGER
Carlton Taylor, general manager for Coastal Leasing Corp., announced the appointment of Stearle Pittman as administrative manager in customer services for the Greenville firm.
Taylor said that Pittman, a Wilson native, has experience in the financial field. He is the father of two children and is active in the First F.W.B. Church.
Taylor said Coastal has established a sales office in Columbia, S.C., which is served by the home office here.
CITED FOR SERVICE
Edward Cobb, Ket equipment installer-repairer in the installation and repair department at Carolina Telephone in Greenville, was recently recognized for fifteen years of service.
Mr. Cobb is a native of Edgecombe County and lives in Pinetops with his wife, Debra, and their two daughters.
William WhitjB, installer repairman in the installation and repair departnient in the Bethel office, was also cited for 15 years of service.
He is a native of Edgecombe County and lives in Tarboro with his wife, Twana, and their two sons.
Interior renovations, including new carpet, repainting, and a redesigning of department layouts, are underway at Roses at Pitt Plaza, according to Bill Jones, manager.
Jones said the store will remain open during the renovations. which are scheduled for completion by Nov. 9.
The spokesman said Roses is changing the decor of the facility to reflect a new earth tone color scheme. New free-standing walls are being instiled to improve the display of merchandise, he said.
Jones said several de^ partments are being expanded, including sporting goods, stationery, hardware, automotive, arts and crafts, lingerie, cosmetics, clothing, home furnishings, and furniture. In sporting goods, the season will dictate merchandise emphasis, he said, with hunting supplies
expanded in the fall and fishing items geared toward the spring. The expanded sporting goods section will also carry ' tents, camping accessories and appliances.
The manager said aisles will no longer be utilized for display tables and customers will be able to shop and browse in new eight-foot corridors.
New carpet is being installed in all wearable departments, said Jones, who noted that approximately one third of the stores 47,750 square feet will be carpeted under the new format.
The stores cafeteria area is also being refurbished, including recovering of booths, installation of ceiling fans, the addition of exposed rafters, and repainting.
Jones said checkout areas at both the front and rear of the store, as well as the service desks at the main ntrance, are being redone.
ATTENDS SEMINAR Steve Evans of Red Carpet, Steve Evans and Associates Inc. sucessfully completed the 40-hour Red Carpet Management Institute held recently in Columbia, S.C.
The course offered brokers a look at running a real estate office, and provided insights into recruiting, training and management of personnel.
Evans has been in the real estate business six years and joined Red-Carpet in August.
Report 'Misleading'
MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) - A government report alleging procedural violations at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant is misleading and discounts a "commitment to safe and early cleanup" of the facility, the plant owners say.
"The investigators took a very narrow approach in their
CONFERENCE SPEAKER Robert F. Warwick, CPA and managing partner of Lowrimore, Warwick and Co., spoke at the Kreston International Tax Conference in Aviemore, Scotland, on investing in the United States.
Kreston International is an association of tax and accounting firms from over 35 nations.
Lowrimore, Warwick and Co. has an office in Greenville.
interpretation of the regulatory requirements," said Robert old.
NEW STAFF MEMBER Shirley Tacker has recently joined Duffus Realty Inc. as a real estate broker, specializing in residential properties.
Mrs. Tacker, formerly Shirley Everette Morgan of Farmville, received her bachelors and masters degrees from East Carolina University. She also taught in the Pitt County schools.
She and her husband. Dr. Robert S. Tacker, like in Lakewood Pines.
EXPANDEDQUARTERS North State Mortgage Corp., the real estate division of North State Saving and Loan Corp., moved Friday to the MingesBuildine.
The firm said adminstration and its major loan department will be located in Suite 204. Residential origination and mortgage loan servicing will be located in Suite 405. Office hours will remain the same - 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Arnold, president of GPU Nuclear Corp., referring to the report issued earlier this month by the NRCs Office-of Investigations.
Arnold said Friday that the company hired an independent investigator who concluded that the report made sweeping conclusions that werent supported by its investigation.
The report was "misleading to the public and lacks any perspective as to what the adequacy of controls for the TMI-2 cleanup is all about, Arnold said.
The NRC report, issued Sept. 13, found that GPU and the Bechtel North American Power Corp. had violated NRC procedures in the cleanup. Bechtel is under contract to manage the cleanup, and the NRC report said GPU did not monitor the contractor closely enough.
NRC spokesman Frank Ingram said officials had seen neither Arnolds statement nor the companys new report and would have no immediate comment.
Arnold said the NRC report did not take into account that procedures were changed as TMI operations were reorganized following the Unit 2 accident, the worst ever at a U.S. commercial nuclear plant. A portion of the radioactive core was destroyed in March 1979 when it lost its cooling shield of water.
Arnold said the NRC report overlooked very deliberate and effective improvements GPU made in its reorganization. As a result, he said, the report unfairly mischaracterizes the company commitment to safe and early cleanup."
Some of the NRCs findings represent differences in judgment between investigators and the company, Arnold said.
Radw
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Greenville .......... 756-3950
A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION
> DIVISION OF
1
T
PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS
The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C Sunday September 25 1983 B-13Inflation Steady In Aug.
By The Associated Press The Reagan administration says a 0.4 percent rise in retail prices for August - the same as the month before - means inflation remains under control, while a housing industry official is predicting a drop in mortgage interest rates.
The Labor Department, which released the August figures on Friday, said prices have risen only 2.6 percent over the past 12 months.
Food prices rose 0.2 percent last month, gasoline prices surged l.l percent and new-car prices rose 0.8 percent. Medical care prices rose 0.5 percent, housing costs rose 0.2 percent and natural gas prices fell 0.5 percent.
The slackening of inflation this year has been attributed to the effects of the 1^1-82 recession and lower oil prices. Now, even with the economy rebounding, analysts expect inflation to be moderate through 1984, although the dry, hot summer is expected to drive up food costs more than previously forecast.
The outlook for inflation remains quite good in a period of continued economic growth, said Allen Sinai, chief economist for the New York investment banking hrm of Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb Inc.
But he described the August report only as "OK and said increases of that size "are really still a little high.
It shows inflation has begun to accelerate somewhat, but not to dangerously high rates, he said.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the increase indicates "that inflation remains under control and that the overall rate for the past year is "a very encouraging sign for interest rates.
Another encouraging sign was the Federal Reserve Boards report Friday that its basic measure of the nations money supply fell $3.1 billion in the week ended Sept. 14. Economists
said that meant a greater chance that interest rates would decline.
In Philadelphia, Mark Riedy, executive vice president of the Mortgage Bankers Association of America, predicted that mortgage interest rates would fall 1'l> percentage points over the next 15 months, to about 12 percent.
As a result, housing starts should increase from the 1.5 to 1.6 million unit range in 1983 to between 1.6 and 1.8 million starts next year, Riedy said. "If these optimistic results come to pass, they will probably represent the highest rate of new housing production we can anticipate for several vears to come.
In other economic developments Friday:
-The major U.S. auto companies said sales of new cars rose 5.9 percent in the Sept, 11-20 period. Ford Motor Co. reported a 27.5 percent increase, and Chrvsler Corp. was up 35.5 percent, but General Motors Corp. was down 8.8 percent. American Motors Corp. reported a 43.7 percent gain and Volkswagen of America Inc. was up 13.7 percent.
-Oil industry sources said Britain has proposed a small increase in its North Sea oil prices. The increases, which will not be implemented until Britain's customers formally accept them, include a 15-cent-per-barrel rise for the Forties grade, to $29.90, and increases of as much as 50 cents a barrel, to as high as $30.40 a barrel, for other grades. Only one grade. Brent, will not be changed. The price changes are to be effective Oct. 1.
-The price of Apple Computer Inc. common stock plummeted $8.25 to close at $24.25 a share as more than 12.6 million shares changed hands in the over-the-counter market. The selloff followed a company projection Thursday that profits in the fourth quarter of its fiscal year were expected to be "sharply lower" than a year ago.
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GREENVILLE: 324 S Evans St./758-2l45 514 E Greenville B'vd 756.-6525 AYDEN: 107 W. 3rd St /746-3043 FARMVILLE: 128 N Ma.n St /753-4139 ORIRON: 118 Queen St /524-4128
I
B-14 Tne Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25,1983
Week's Stock Markets
\KW \(iKk At' ~ \e York Slock Exi'tunge iradinj :or the week selected issues
Sales
IK hds HiKh l.uu l.asi Chf;
ACK 1-kiNi 117vu52 47
AMK Mi 78->ti 17 , 16
AMK Cp 46 .l-Jli .1. , .*S
ASA u !74t! 6,1 61
AhiLjh 1 ;s6667 u.Vr. 47
Aerilv s is 14.! .Ai 18
Aetnl.1 J 64 7 H741 K 17
1:4 4878 48. 47
1 i 18711 18 *' i6;;4.18
411 H27N .11
.il'.sr 16 1 ip.sr 63 )- 1' 3(1 .*3 18 , >
Airt'r.t Aisk.Air A.can \l6ln;
AlldSir
Allisih
Alcoa
Ama\
Amllcs
Ailppu J ill 8 .688 3.3
Aildl p 3 411 H 1,1177 U.38 .
.....1 80 8 ,1787 ,31
.313 18\
1 .81 18846 46
30 ,361.1 381.
110 14 8348 1,1 . 38c 3 1
ABrand 1 no 8 6lu3 u.38 i
AHdc.'l 1 60 11 706.1 38 . Ami an 3 80 7861 4,3 j
A( \an 1 7.3 30 8088 ,36'. .AEllu 3 36 10 861.1 18 \K\p s I 38 U 183,14 40 I ' no 1.1 .388 33
3 40 1.1 1888 48 '.
I 16 104.30 44 6.166 8'.
: In h 1483 u44 160 18 3668 .13'1 40.1 M 3,-,6.18 67\
: 1.0 In 3n48 ulo8 ,
-1
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.31
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44
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^Market Analysis-
Dow Jones 30 Industrials
Sept 19 23+29.81
High 1257.52 Low 1233.94 Closed 1255.51'
1260-
1245-
1230-'
lill
M T W T F
1300
1250
14!-
16
!4h In : ,3.,:3 31
III
66'i *3
W KAI
t.'T',
.-. 34 :3 48
4 :i81 3,r
6 : 147 U47 ; ' :333 14'
: 1, ;3ii 3.1
47'
33'. 1
46', *3' .14 1*3
1200
1150
1100
1050
1000
A S
AP
Market In Brief
N Y S E Issues
Thnfty i Tigerfn
Consolidaled Trading Friday. Sept 23
17>2
6j
eth
84
58',
17,+
61,- 4
72 +24 85'4+2'i 60', + 1*m
2115, 2S',+l'i
Volume Shares 112,357,540
Issues Traded 1,996
9'I 2S>, 27 37 31', 26', 8', 32
9'j-l',
28'j+2
27*4+ * 40 +2
3214+
27'4+ 8H- '4 32',+
30S,- H 174+ S
6'j- '
Unchen 402
29
22
NYSE Index
98.07 -0.13 S&P Comp
169.51 -0.25
Dow Jones Ind
AP 1,255.59 -1.93
4.4
h386 38 .
- li-K -
M.ARKET .WALYSIS - The Dow industrials closed Friday at 1255.59, previous week. (.AP I.aserphoto)
Jones index of 30 up 29.88 from the
'4^33 111 33. 311 :3S4; 33
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I Houind 2 32 15 14295 22 21
. ! Hou.NG 1 82 10 4526 47 'j 44
!HuRhTl 84 86 5036 22' . 21
I _ 1-1 _
IP Ind 2.16 16 ,551 45'. 43
If Ini 115b 17 3644 29'i 28
' Idaho! 3 08 7 688 ,12. 32'
:IdealB 30i 907 22 \ 21
llilimr 2 48 8 1:1886 23'j 22'
; ImplCp 1382 10.
l.NCO 20 9595 IS',
:inexco 14 14 3001 13'4
' IngerK 3 60 4606 ,34
InldSll ,30 :1808 33.
InlrM 130 6 6994 30'.
Inirlk 2 60 40 243 43.
, IBM 3 80 16 51359 126|.
InlKlav 1 04 18 X4366 u33
InlHarv 4806 8.
InlMin 2 60 13 6(H)1 46
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54
1,31
18
3418 16' :4nu4 46 Jns 7n
' InlNrth 2 .12 12 4851 :18'
I.! InwaPS 2.36 8 264 24 . i ' - .I-.I ' -
; , JohnJn 1 HI 17 24861 45' 4 43
I :.Jonfng s 34 11 788 24. 24 . I Joslen 1 i:i ,322 u28'. 28 , iJoeMlg 1+1.12 1853 28 '. 26 - K-K -. K mart 1 ii8 14 lIM.iop.W . 16 IKaisr.AI 60 4.573 21. 20
. Kaneb 1 04 7 1814 18 .. KanGE 2 24 7 115o 2ii . i KanPI.l 2 56 . 8 747 27 . I Kale In Io 2021 u24 Kau'fBr. 4o 881 18
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Kellogg 1 60 111 4218u.il'
, Kenai 4o2 3
, 24 4 -*!' 'I8'i
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"sp 4
81
4 6781 :l 1877
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KerrMc 1 1 8 6272
KimbCl 4 20 11 I.I.ln
KnghlK I 12 17 1,3.17 38 .
Kopers 80 li8i 18
Kroger 1 88 1 0 6717 18
- I-I -I LTV 2.3 2.1,3,33 u 18 ,
il.earPl 20 14 7ii8 28'.
; LearSg I 60 11 '12 42 f
LeaKnl s 16 18 112 21' i
i LeeEn s 64 17 78 25 .
! Lehmn 1 88i' 724 17 .
Rorer 1 04 15 1569 27, 26',
Roeean 08 10 10135 13"4 13
RC Cos 1 04 13 330 26 4 24-,
RoylD 2 82e 5 x7850 47", 45'4
R.vderS 1 08b 15 3001 58'4 56'4
s
SCM 2 14 482 35'4 34',
.Safeee s 1 +1 9 7014 28'4 26
SlRegis 1 12 48 3032 30->4 29',
SFelnd 1 16 15410 u35. 32, .SchrPIo 1 68 12 5875 42'. 40 Schimb 1 04 14 18822 57. 55'; ScollP 1 16 2363 27'; 26'4
SearleG .52 22 9354 55'; 53'.
Sears 1 52 12 21270 38. 37', ShellO 1 80 9 4753 46 45'4
ShellT 2e 8 . 19 37"4 37'z
Shreeins 60 12 3742 27 23'-i
.Signal 90 82 8025 37'4 SB",
SimpPt 13 587 lO'z 9, Singer lOe 5887 26', 24
Skeline 48 28 5254 21'; 18';
SnikB 2 60 12 13177 68", 64"4 Sonat 1 55 7 4155 039", 35"4 SoneCp I6e 46 18852 15", 14", SOrKG 2 7 7221 18'4 18",
'SCalEd :i 80 7 22585 39'. 38'.. |South('ol80 8 17095 16"4 16' .SouPc s 1 50 4 5302 U41. 39. Spcrre 1 92 16 lOLi.l 46 44''.
.Squarl) 1 84 16 1414 35 33".
Squibb 1 34 17 6664 52'. 48'.
SIDilCl 2 40 8 1:1900 37 35'4
SlOInd 2 80 8 12602.52 50'-
StdOOh 2.60 8 14267 57'4 54 StaufCh 1 44 27 6272 29'; .27'.
SlerlDg 1 12 12 7880 26 25'4
StevnJ 1 20 21 16059 22"4 '20>4
SunCo 2 30 10 2290 44"4 43';
Svbron I 08 970 27'. 25' '
Svntex 1 40 13 11176 55. 52'. Svsco 32 18 1681 37'4 35'.
- 171717 18',
Tigerfn 2663 7 Time! 1 28 3678 73i,
TimeM 2 18 1615 u88
Timkn 1 80 390 61',
Tokhni 54 16 353 24 T0CO 7216 10';
TWCp 190 10951 29'4 Transm 1.56 9 6630 28",
Transen 1 92 9 3109 41 Travier 1 80 8 11636 32",
TriCon 2 53e x581 27',
Trico 16 27 379 9
TUCSEP 2.20 7 1203 32'4
- I'-l -UAL 6 5521 32"4 29^4
UMC .60 32 720 18 17',
UNCRes 444 6, 6';
USFG 3.84 10 x5695 57', 54"< 56^+l'2 UnCarb 3.40 23 8104 70"4 68'j 68"4-UnElec 1,64 6 7997 14, 14'j 14"4 + UnPac 1.80 19 11322 60'4 58",
Uniroyl 30 8090 ul7'; 16';
UnBmd 367 19'4 IB',
USGyps 2. 17 1019 49';
USImf 76 14 1023 15'; 15
USSteel -1 21637 30',
UnTech 2.60 II 6070 70,
UniTel 1.84 9 6163 22,
Unocal I 8 18579 32'4 Upjohn 2.28 13 2109 56';
USLIFE 88 7 3002 U28 25'
UtaPL 2 28 9 5616 23', 22'
- V-V -Varan s 26 32 3391 61'; 57'
- Ww
Wachov 1 56 11 2520 U45', 43'
Wackht 44b 16 297 27 24", 25Si-li
WIMrtS .14 36 10157 41", 38, 39';+", WalUm 1.20 9 4250 37", 36 WrnCm l 8710 23'; 21>4 WamrL I 40 13 15264 29, 27",
WshWt 2 7 1640 20', 19';
WellsF 1,92 6 2622 u39"4 38 WnAirL 4795 5", 4',
Wffnion 1 40 10 4831 35", 32';
WestgE 1 80 10 7423 S,
Weyerh 1 30 68 13039 36"4 34,
W-hirlpl 1 80 11 5329 49 Whitlak 1 60 15 2647 33 William 1,20 40 5510 27 WmDx 2.58 12 245 56',
lOe 38 3257 21,
1 80 13 7763 37 60 46 153 18,
-X-V-^
Xerox 3 11 14567 44", 43', 43"4+ ", ZaleOp 1 26 31 299 u33"4 32', 33"4 + l'4 ZenithR 125 6363 32'; 31 31',-';
Cop.vright by The Associated Press 1983
60 + ", 17 + S, 18',-1'4
"4- ", 15Si+ ^ 29,+ , 70'4 + 1's 22",+ ", 30", 31';+ '; 53'; 56';+2'; 25', 25",-e S, 22', 23',+ ,Mutual Funds
NEW YO^ l^i - .Wkly >dvm1u^
the high low and
Companies giving ,
prices for the week with die net cha from the previous
previous week s last price, uotations, supplied by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., reflect net asset values, at which securities could have been sold.
58",+
44", + !"*
Winnb
Wolwt
Wvnns
36",
22'4- "4 29", + 1"4 19,+ ', 38';- , 4",- ", 33,+ ', ', + 1", 35",+ ", "4- ', 31', 32", + !', 26", 27 + "4 55 55",- ",
19"4 20'4 34, 36,+!", 17", 18"4-, "4
Weekly Stock Dollar Leaders
NEW YORK i.Af") -The following is a list of the most active stocks baseif on the dollar volume The total is based on the mefdian price of the stock traded multiplied bv the shares traded
Name TotJIOOO) Saleslhds) Last
FedExpress GenlEiKt s
Gulf Oil Texas Inst RCA Chrysler
5640,061 51359 126", $571,633 85638 67'4 $267,756 36679 74, $226,904 21206 108 $216.808 34278 64, $181.897 47555 38'4 $175.784 X12635 144', $163,6 23890 69', $159,868 9667 163', $149,267 17957 85"4 $146,324 28621 52', $136,129 31475 44'; $132.866 11177 114 $132,416 43238 33'4 $130,181 43943 30"4
TECO
TRW
TacBt s
Tallev
Tandv
Tndvcft
Tekirnx
Teldyn
Telex
- T-T -
2 04 9 5314 24; : 2,60 15 1946 74'; ' 694 12.
13 934 12'. : 16 25262 44.
14 1102 16 1
1 31 1400 84 :
15 9667 170'. If
Weekly Amex Dollar Leaders
Higt
1 Lo
Last Ckg
32.39+ .a
1 AcomFd n
32&
3204
1 ADV Fund n
2179
21.49
21,72+ .53
I AfutureFd n
17.44
1732
17 37 + 29
AIM Funds
ConvYld
13.86
13,76
13.86+ .18
Greenway
1359
13.44
13.56+ .26
HiYield
10.47
10.
10.47+ 08
Sumit
592
5.84
5,90+ .12
AlianTch
23 92
23 39
23 78+ .74
AlphaFnd
26.89
26 65
26 81+ .60
AmBirthTr
16.95
16.79
16.90+ .32
AmExpGth n i
1 15.38
15,20
15 33+ .26
Amer Capital: CorpBd
6.97
6.92
6,97+ 07
Comstock Fd
1451
14.39
14.51+ 23
Enterorise ExchFd n
16.38
16.26
16 32+ .25
04
47.56
47.96 + 94
FundOfAm
15.13
14.91
1513+ .38
Growth n
30 93
30.66
30.79+ .56
Harbor Fd
16 10
15.97
16.10+ 35
HiYldlnv
10 12
1004
10.12+ 11
MuniBond
17.37
1729
17 37+ 11
Pace Fnd
20 43
20.28
20 43+ .42
ProvidentFd
589
581
5 89+ 13
VentureFd
32,65
32.37
3262+ 58
American Funds
AmBalan
11.14
1104
11 14+ .17
AmcapFd
892
8.82
8 88+ .17
AmMutI
1538
15 20
15.38+ 27
BondFd
12.57
12.
12.57+ .18
Fundmlnvs
12.06
11 86
12.06+ 29
GrowthFd
14.55
14.31
14 54+ .45
IncomeFd
1080
1070
10.80+ 15
InvCoA
11.32
11.16
11 32+ .26
NewPerspFd
9.11
8 91
9,07+ ,22
TaxExpt
9.60
951
9.60+ .11
WshMutlnv
10,07
9.95
10,07+ 17
Amer Growth
8.97
8.88
8.97+ 19
AmHeritge n
398
3.97
3.97+ 03
Am Invest n
11 16
11.01
1109+ .27
Am Invine n
11.43
11.37
11 43+ 09
Am medAsc n
29 08
28 69
29 07 + 59
Am NatGrth
612
604
6.12+ 13
Am Natlnco
19.63
19,38
19.60+ 28
Amway Mutl
691
683
6 91+ 09
Analytic n
140 62 139.22 140.40 + 2 00
Armstng n
9,77
961
9,75+ .24
Axe Houghton: Fund B
10.19
10.12
10 19+ 12
IncomFd
460
455
4 60+ ,07
StockFd
15.17
1497
15 14+ .43
BLC GthFd
18.38
18.12
18.38+ 41
BLC Inco
15.70
15 59
15,68+ .24
Babsonlncm n
1 49
1 49
1 49+ 01
Babsonlnvt n
14.52
14.31
14+ 29
BeaconGth n
15.16
14.89
15.14+ 44
BeaeonHill n
16.36
1633
16.56+ .38
Berger Group: 1(X) Fund n
21 14
20,95
21.07+ 37
101 Fund n
15,13
14.92
15 13+ 31
Boston Co:
CapApr n Gvtin n
28.03
27.61
28 03 + 75
10.63
10.60
1063+ 04
SpGth n
19,67
1934
19 67 + 45
BostFoundtn
12.80
1268
12 30+ .22
Bull & Bear Gp:
CapGth n
1663
16:50
16.57+ .22
EquitI n Golconda n
11,35
11.24
11,35+ 19
14.09
1373
13.94- 01
Calvert Group:
equity n
19.28
19.19
19.22+ .27
Inco n
1497
14.80
14 97+ .23
Sicial n
1764
17 56
17 56+ 20
Calvin Bullock:
AggresGth
BunockFd
12.18
12.09
12,15+ .09
1947
19,22
19,43+ 40
CanadianFd
9 59
9.41
9 59+ ,28
DividendShr
3,51
3.46
3 51+ 08
HilncoShr
11.73
11 69
11,72+ ,04
Monthlylncm Natn WdeSec
1103
1098
11 03+ 11
10.55
1045
10.55+ .18
TaxFree
968
962
968+ 07
Cap TNT n
10.19
10 16
10 19+ 05
Cardinal
12.53
1243
12 53 + 32
CentGth
13 95
13 77
13 88+ 21
Chancellor Group:
NwDecd
1501
14 46
14 86 * 39
CentryShr n
13 75
13,57
13 74 + 25
CharterFund n
23 18
22.90
2318+ 54
ChpsdeDollr n
16.41
16.24
16.38+ 41
ChestnutSt n
49 34
44
4916 + 1 19
CIGNA Funds:
Growth
15 93
15 71
15.93 + 38 1
HiYld
990
9.83
9.90+ 10
Income
690
682
6,90+ ,11
MuniBd
7 15
7 03
715+ 14
Colonial Funds:
VSSpecl Eberstadt Group; Chemical Ed EngyRes Surveyor EngyUtil n Evergreen n Evrgrtl n FarmBuroGt n Federated Funds: Am Leaders ExchFd n G.NMA n Hi IncmSe Inco n Short n TaxFree USGvtSec Fidelity Group: Assetlnv n CorpBond n Congress n Confrafnd n DestinyFd n Equtlncm n ExchFd n Fredm n .Magellan MuniBond n Fidelity n GovtSec n HilncoFd n HiahYield n Ltd Muni n Mercury Puritan n
24.99 24.66 24.94 + 77
13.03 12.91 13.03+ 19
15.49 15.37 15.41+ 19
12.31 12.13 12.21+ 24
12.32 12.26 12 28+ 12 18.54 18.26 18.+ 21 70 21.53 21.70 + 30 .34 00 .34+ .67 15 64 15 43 15.64 + 28 14.24 1409 14.17+ 19
HighYield InQFund MunicpBnd Option Summit Technology Tot Return USGvt
Keystone Mass: investBc
10.34 10.29 10.34 + 09 14.66 14.41 14.66+ 24 8.03 795 8.03+ .10 12.81 12.75 12.78+ 12 22 27.90 28.12+ .52 15.62 15.41 15.55 + 41 16.06 15.87 16.04+ .37 8.80 8.74 8.80+ .11
11.33 11,24 11.33+ 15
35.03 34.78 35.01+ 50
10.47 10.34 10.47+ .18
1210 12.03 12.10+ .13
10.21 10.12 10.21+ .18
10.12 10.11 10.12+ .01
9.10 9.15+ .07
8.24 8.31+ .15
InvestBdBl n MedgBdB2n OiscBdB4 n IncomeKl n GrowthK2 n HiGrComSl n GrowthSa n
9.15
1.31
Infematl n TaxFree n MassFd
24.94
6.75
54.81
13.10
13,35
24.65 24.94+ .57 6.68 6.75+ .08
53.99 54.73+ .92 12.91 13.10+ .30 13 14 13.24+ .28
LeggMastm n LenmnCa
inCapn
16.00 15.77 16.00 + 30 1955 19.35 19.55+ .26 8.43 8.35 8.43+ .10
9.17 9.09 9.17+ ,12
9.35 9.15 9.33+ .29
22.57 22.21 22.52+ .49 11.18 10.95 1113+ .37 8.07 8.20+ .20 5.21 5 31+ .15
7.70 7.82+ ,12 13.99 14.17+ .29 18 80 18.92 + 28
8.29
5.31
7,82
14.20
18.96
Leverage
Lexington
20.71 20,51 20,71+ 32
Grp:
11.1
11.83 11 99+ .25
Corp Leadrs GolSfu
27.27 27.03 27,20+ ,36 44.71 44.06 44.59+1.00 12.70 12,53 12.65+ .26 38.64 38.17 38 59+ .82 6.87 6.76 687+ 11
20 49 20.19 20.49+ . 9.32 9,27 9 32+ .07
8.95 8.87 8 95+ .10
ll 38 11.19 11.38 + 20 8 13 8.06 8.13+
13.68 13 53 13.67+ 12.11 12.01 12.11-r 16 10.34 10:39+ 13 16.62 16.85+ .38 19 96 20.10+ .44 14.76 15 06- 17 26.14 26 22 + 60 14.09 14.22+ .22 9.73 9 77+ .05
38.86 38.37 38.81 +
19.61 19.39 1961 +
13.
4.41
7.69
11.08
20.86
1863
13.16 13.+ .42 4.26 4.35 7.65 7.69+ .06 11.02 11.08+ .14 20.57 20.86+ . 18.51 18.61+ 18
26.70 26.11 26.+ .84 19.09 18.64 19.09+ .58
10.41 16.88 20 16 1544 26 61 1422 9,77
10 24 10.10 10.21 +
10.90 10.78 10.90+
10.33 10.24 10.27+
3.04 3.02 3.04+
9.32
139
.19 15 15 03
9.36+ 11
1444
8.55
7.03
9.06
14.33
8.47
8.97
14.44+
8.55+
6.99
9.06+
.49
6.98 10.53 14 4.62 911 9 18
14 13 14 38+ .27
681
5.31
SpcI Mathers n Merrill Lynch: Basic Value Capital Equi Bond Hi Incom Hi ^Ity InlTerm LtdMat MunHiYld Muni Insr Pacific Phoenix SciTech
10,25 10.14 10,25+ .13
13.28 13.10 13.28+ ,29
14.73 14.59 14.65+ .24
9.62 9. 9.62+ .22
13.14 12,92 13.11+ .37
15.57 15.41 15.49+ .28
15.59 15.29 15.54+ .45
12.82 12.68 12.82+ .22
9.30 9.17 9 30+ .15
7.88 7.83 7 88+ .08
8.30 8.17 8.28+ .21
25 11 24.62 25.04+ .66
1066 1491 1089 34 10
10.42
1483
Sp Val icTa
3.83 3.80
24 58 24.31 12.01 11.83
10,01
695
566
203
7.11 12.11
6.11 643
Mid Amer MidAmHiGr MSB Fund n x Mutual Benefit MdwIGvt n Mutual of Omaha America n Groi^th Income Tax Free Prudent SIP Putnam Funds: Convert CalTax Capital
13.96 1381 13 94+ .21
20.85 20,71 20.85+ .30
11.26 11,19 11.26+ 13
8.23 8.20 8.23+ .04
10,33 1028 10.33+ .10
10.40 10.37 10.40+ 05
9.80 9.79 9.80 + 01
9,01 913+ .12
6.95 7.04+ .10
13.86 14.12+ 20 12.13 12.17+ .09 9,75 9.88+ .25
13.49 13.68+ ,29 7.62 7.77+ .23
6.20 6,36+ .24
21.57 21.80+'.42 13 96 14.06 + 23 10 04 10.07+ .04
9.13 7.04 14.12 12,17 9.91 13 73 7,77 6,36 2180
14.07
10.07
985
6.34
8.53
10.03
14.33
9.61
6.29
8.32
9.84
9 68- .12 6.33+ 11 8,39- .09 9 92- 03
Invest ^1 n Trust S
Sh
Venture Shr SmthBarEqt n x SmthBarl G x SoGen
Swstnlnvinc n Sovereign Inv State Bond Grp: Commn Stk Diversifd Progress SlatFarmGlh n SutFarmBal n StStreet Inv
7,83 7.72 7.W+ 19
7.62 7.50 7.60+ 08
11.10 11.00 11.10+ 19
11.12 10 99 11 11+ .27
16.38 16.23 16.36+ 23
10.10 10.02 10.05+ .04
16.41 16.34 16.38+ 18
4.64 4.60 4 64 + 05
18 94 18.62 18.89+ 41
6.19 6.09 6 17+ 16
6.43 6.38 6 43+ 10
10,05 9.95 9.95+ 12
11.79 11.66 11 79+ ,25
14.74 14.58 14.74 + 26
14.17 14.31+ .29
15 48 15.30 15.80 15.69
10.61 10.69-^ .20
9 64 9.72-^ 16
14.39 14.41+ .45
15 79 15.79+ 35
10,23 10.34+ .14
15 - 01
15 80 + 25
i.'-
4. If. 3.-.
33 ,
34 .*1 )
Lcviiz.s 5*311351.1 .19
, .1.5 .
.19 ', *4
4,:+4.i .lu .
38 .
lu . * 1 ,
, LoF I 31)37 1141 41
; 4() 4
414*
'' T
: ')*
' \ i'!!"! 18'
. :I6'.
.37 ', * ',
M.ill\ 3 K.l n 65.53 83 '
I 80'.
83 , * 1'.
. . '81*. .
,18 '
1 Lmon 1 Hub 13 7177 88
. 83 .
88', *3'4
,*,K
'1.43 14 ,
.1.1,
:I4 . -1
i Lckhd s 11117)1,58 43
i ,18'.
41'; *3,
I'.F.
j j:
' T'.'il' 31) ,
3i)' -
31)'
1 Loews 1 30 7 337 184'
.' i:>6
16;l .*7';
; "i
:.' iW. 37 ,
38
37', 1 ,
i Ln.^lar 1 * ,'>08 39
4 -38 ;
39',* 'j
4l!
') ;i;3 u,i.> -
13-
14',-1 ;
, LlLLo 3 03 8 13918 18'
. 15',
18',* ',
>1 .
J ..8
:: 3.1839 ,').i .
47,
53' 1 * 5
LLand n lb 11 8493 38
, 37',
38 ,* ',
I'T: I'.w
,) !V*I7'.!9'^
.17
:I7,-
'UPac Hob 80 4,111 39
. 37 ,
39 , *3
: 38
. :7.i8,') i:i>
33'.
3:i * '.
LuekvS 1 18 10 .5038 34
I 33,
3.1,- ',
; 4'.
). ||)!)I 34 .
33',
24'.*1'.
- \l-\t
_
:'l:ii!
1 ji'
18 4839 48'.
46'.
47',-! '4
MGMGr 44 38 3390 14
, U',
14*.*1'.
. II,.'
: "3
8 3.'i8: -.i'j'i
ll'.
:l2'i* 4
Macmil 8(1 19 1388 :I4
, :I3 .
Li',*
irt Fi
; i4
7-.:8 :|.j'.
31',
3.1 1',
i Macs s 81)15 9(^7 -)4
, ,53'.
:>4 .*3',
15 5516 29". Tennco 2 72- 8 14697 4P4 Tesoro 40 7 1199 16'
Texaco 3 8 13021 37".
TexEst 4 10 12 2117 59".
Texltisl 2- 11177 124
Texim 113 3875 7'4 TxOGas ,32b 18 7296 51".
TxPac 35 25 64 30
iTexltil 2.20 7 18837 25'4
; Textron 1 80 16 5023 u36.
NEW YORK lAP) -The following is a list of the most active stocks baseifon the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied bv the shares traded
Toli$IO(Wl Saleslhds) Last $63.785 X19492 34
$17,869 4718 39' $17,7 4080 44"4 $14,730 7702 19'; $11,005 13757 8'
$10,355 1192 84'4 $10,313 4436 22". $9,537 3468 28 $9,153 2753 34"4 $8,723 3088 28>4
:28'1.3 49 .
\7i;2)'. Jfi".
.>.44 43 i 43i'j2:r,
! Vt U4H
*3',
48
26' 43'i*4', 23 '* '
MdsFd MagiCl , (jManvl MAPCii
47
1163 12
31
9
47 1*1'
.12'. 12 1
38'I
4,3
34 1 * 33.
.32'.-f
35 *1 80 1 3;i'.'*f 33' 1 * I 39'.* ' 4.3
41-1
39
;4 4,;h;j3-. j4
.iiuiOi
!)ir,f
Dr!
3e 6:13 17
73 1.3 31117 4i
118:17 1.1 1 13 .1,313 36
MarMid 1 4o ' 3 1473 3,3
I Marnui i6 2l xl)>86 76
I MarlM 193 1 1 1813 63
Masco 44 2ii 4952 .15
Mase'F 2117 3
MasDS 2 9 5188 3il
I Ma'vig 3 20 11 1211 47
Mctirl nl 80 |9 7.178 3.3 ; McDnld 112H488
' .MclJnl) 1 42 9 1.324
' McGEd 2 4 2977
' .McGrll si OH 21 4703 81 McKes. 2 40 12 1.379 44 ,
.Mead 1 4:107 .16
I Melvil s 1 09 1,1 9819 ,18*. Merck 2 8U IH 9948 95- , MerL\ s Hi) 7 47,355 39. MesaP n 10 3185 15. MidSl I 1 70 7 8710 16 ' MMM .1 30 1.3 10708 8:1. : MinPL 2 4(1 7 1.15 25 . Mobil 2 9 19152 32.
, MohkDt 17 2711.1 13. 1 .Monsan 4 2o 1410H:I8 ull6 I MntUr 2 44 7 ,i:i:i 28. i MonPw 3 68 : 4+l,3u28'.'
' Morgan :i 7o 7 x7H7i 72' i 1 Morion 1 6o 1.3+):I4 u76* i
Weekly Stock$ In Spotlight
NEW YORK AP ' - Yearly high-low. weekly sales, high, low, closing price and net chan .....
ge of the 20 most active stocks trading for more than $1
127 73'4 IBM
36'; 17'4 MerLv s 35'. 8 Chrvslr
.13'; 19'4 RCA 26'. 18". DiamS 77'. 46'4 GMot :S6, 22". Avon 8'. 2' PanAm 64. 25'; FordM 26'4 17'. BnkAm 45'. 27'. GultOil :18'. 20'; Kmart 39'. 27', Exxon 46', 25", Citicrp 30'1 13, PnmCs 57"4 37', GenEls 44"4 32, Pfizer s 41 17", PhibS s
38"4 14', NwslEn
Sales High Low Last (hg. 63,800 67, $5", 67'4-r ',
8,563,f
5,135,900 126", 122", 126",-* 3' 4.755,500 39, 36"4 38'4* 1",
CorpCsh
Fund
Grw th Shrs High Yield Income Option Tax Mangd COLUMBFix n ColumbGrth n Comwlth A4B Comwlth CiD Composite Group B4Sn Fund n Tax n ConcordFd n ConstellGth n Cont.Mutlnv n Copley n CountryCapGr Dean Wilier DevlGth n DivGth HiYld IndValu MlRsc TaxEx Delaware Group Decaturinc DelawareFd DelchesterBd TaxFree Pa Delta Trend DepstCap n DepslTr n DireclCap n DodgCoxBal n DodgCoxStk n DrexlBurnh n
47 69 47 77-* 13 86 13 95-1-
1045 7 45 7 38 7 45 +
6 88 6 81 6 88-1-
9 46 9 38 9.44 +
24 82 24 66 24 82-*
12 15 12 08 12 15-1-
26 46 26 OJ 26 41 +
1 42 1 40 1.42 +
1 98 2.00 +
24.74 24,30 24 72 + 60 10.98 10,89 10,98+ .09 36.26 35,75 36.22+ .77 10.52 10.48 10,52 + 05
13.70 13.62 13,70+ .14 37 29 36 91 37 14 + 63 26.01 25,58 26.01+ 69
: 19.73 19.37 19.37+ .07 6,44 6.35 6 44+ 12
16.71 16.24 16,59+ .60 41 03 40,10 40.10 + 33
251 89 248.94 249.66 + 3 35 9.97 989 997+ 12
25.75 25.05 25+ .72
Capital Iifec Inti Equ
a
Health High Yield Income Invest NY TaxEx Option Tax Exempt Vista Voyage juasar n lainbow n RochTax SFT E(it Safeco Secur:
15,45 15,37 15.45+ .18
13 87 13.74 13.87+ .15
22 99 22.72 22.96 + 43
14.07 13.71 13.95+ .43
18.84 18.55 18.84+ .37
15.16 15.01 15,14+ .25
12 99 12.80 12.99+ .30
19.50 19.04 19.50+ ,73
17.52 17.34 17.52 + 21
6 76 6.70 6.76+ 10
12 20 11 96 12 10 + 35 14.59 14 40 14.59 + 23 12.93 12.83 12,87+ .17
21.92 21.44 21 92+ .65 20 51 20.19 20.43 + 49 18 47 18 27 18 36+ ,36 63 61 63.37 63 37+ .67 4 14 4.08 4,14+ ,07
14.56 14 43 14+ 13
13.89 1117 11.23
ExchFd n
87.04
85.78
86,92+1 93
Growth n
57.14
56.47
57.06+1 11
Invest
78.23
77,59
78.07+1 37
Steadman Funds Amerind n
3,89
3.81
3.88+
10
Associated n
1.00
.99
1.00+
02
Invest n
1.74
1.73
1.74+
.02
Oceanogra n
7.54
7,49
7.54+
07
Stein Roe Fds:
Balance n
23.96
23.60
23.94 +
54
Bond n
881
8.74
8.81 +
10
CapOppor n
30.34
30.04
30.04+
38
Discovr
9.64
9.53
9.61
Stock n
24 47
24.04
24 25+
72
SteinSpFd n
1779
17,
17.73+
50
TaxExempt n
7.84
7.77
7.84+
13
Univrse n
20.94
20.70
20.83+
49
StrategCap
8.42
8.34
8.37 +
08
Strateglnv
10.36
9.65
10.09-
06
StrattnGth n
18.84
18.59
18.59+
.12
Stmgin n
17.02
16.87
17 02+
17
StmgTot n SunCrwth
16.19
16.03
16.19+
19
13.17
12.85
13.11 +
38
TaxMngUtl 1511 Templeton Group:
15.01
15.10+
21
Foregn
10.95
10.69
10.95+
.29
Global I
38.25
37.79
38.25+
73
Global II
10,03
10.01
10.03+
02
Growth
9.87
9.76
9.87 +
22
World
13.08
12.89
13.08+
32
Transam Cap
11.60
11.51
11.60+
22
TransamNew n
8.29
8.24
8.29+
09
Travelrs Eqts
13.00
12.97
13.00+
.23
TudorFd n
22.95
22.58
22.81 +
45
20th Century:
Growth n
16.73
16.44
16.60+
49
Select n
28.64
26.27
26.62+
77
Ultra
9.60
9.50
9.53+
24
USGv n
97 89
97 37
97 69+
47
USAA Group-
Grwth n
16.28
1598
16.24+
Income n
10.88
10.78
10.88+
14
Snbit n
18.69
18.45
18.62+
35
TxEHYn
11.86
11.68
11.86+
19
TxEITn
11.18
11.11
11.18+
07
TxEShn
10.37
10.28
10.29+ .03
Unified Mgmnt.
Accum n
8.11
8.06
8.10+
.06
Gwth n
17.50
17.32
17.50+ ,33
Inco n
13.47
13.43
13,43 +
02
Mutl n
12.49
12.31
12.49+
23
United Funds
Accumultiv
10
10.29
10,45+
28
Bond
5,59
5.51
5 59+
10
IntlGth
1830
18.02
18.30 +
,29
Cont Income
13.88
13.73
13.82+
17
FiducSh
30 94
30 37
30.81 +
85
High Income x
13.84
13,73
13.84-
01
Income
13.28
13.06
13.28+
.37
Municpl
6.37
6.29
6.37+
.10
NwCcpt
5.25
5.17
5.24 +
10
SciEngy
1166
ll.
11.65 +
.36
Vanguard
20,99
20.74
20,84+
39
Utd Services:
GBT Fd n
12.58
1244
12,58+
23
Prospct
USvGold
.99
.96
97-
,01
8.70
814
8 44-
,11
Value Line Fd:
Bond n
12.12
1198
12,12+
13
Fund n
14.15
1401
1401 +
.24
Income n
7.29
7.24
7.27 +
.10
Levrge Gth n Spec! Sit n
21,75
21,55
21.63+
38
17,53
17.38
17.41 +
.21
Vance Exchange:
10.66 10.79 + 21
20,58 20 78 + 47
13.39 13.65 + 33
11.53 11.73 + 21
1099 1089 10,99+ 13 12 56 12 36 12 55 + 32
14 30 14 43 + 36 16,24 16.30+ .26 9.78 9.86+ ,07 25,29 25,41+ .44
15.50 15.21 15.50+ .44
200
10.83
12,13
658
1073 11 81 648
6.67 6 61
3.68 3.65 10,12 10,07
15.39 15.21 15 39+ .35
66.14 65.84 65.98+ .89
15.33 15.01 15 31+ 45
11.83 11.74 11.83+ .13
20.83 20.43 20.83+ .36
64.61 63.21 64 61 + 11 42.92 42 05 42 82+1 25 70 86 69 40 70 86 + 2 08 109 05 106 67 109 05 + 3 17 90.29 88.21 90 29 + 2 96 59 31 57 99 59 09+1 63 64 62 62,87 64 62 +2 22
1 74 7,88+ 15
24 96 24 56 24 81+ 61
4.83
873
4,79
8.66
10 01 12 64 14 44
998 1248 14 30
20.16 19.86 3.94 3
13 26 13.14 8 51 8 45
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16.28 16.44+ .35 15.07 15 23+ ,27 15 15 15.39+ 42 8.23+ 14
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7.93 7.98 + 05
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25.22 25 19 25.22 + 01 24,90 24.68 24,79- 06 39 08 38.61 39.08 + 76 9 17 9.08 9 17+ .13
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8 01 7.97 8 01+ 06
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9.29 9.18 9.29+ 14
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n-No load fund, fPrevious day's quote
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Copyright by The Associated
14.00 14.15+ .28 14.21 14.35+ .25 9.02 .9,17+ 23 7 83 7.97+ ,26 11.81 11.89+ .13
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6.29 6,28 6 26+ .01 17,59 17.27 17,58+ .44 18.49 17.97 18.38+ .66 35.37 35 14 35.33+ .38 25.84 25.63 25.71+ .45
If New & Used Any Type No Down Payment lower Monthly Payments D.iily & Weekly Reni.ils Also
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Package Price 3595
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Grain Prices Were Lower
Counterfeits Cost Millions
By KEITH E. LEIGHTY AP Business Writer Grain and soybean futures prices were lower at the close of trading Friday on the Chicago Board of Trade.
The outlook for warm and dry weather over the next week to 10 days, raising pro-spects for harvesting drought-ravaged fields without further tosses, kept corn and soybean prices down, said Richard Loewy, a grain analyst in New York with Prudential-Bache Securities,
Inc. Loewy noted that because of the reduced size of the crop this year, We could have 60 to 70 percent of the harvest completed in the next 10 days.
Pressure also came from technical factors such as trends on price charts, as prices had started declining on Thursday, Loewy added.
The wheat market was under pressure because of indications that the Chinese will be unable to purchase as much wheat as they originally intended. Loewy said. And, he said, the wheat crop in Australia is growing and looks healthy.
Wheat settled 64 cents to 84 cents lower with the contract for delivery in December at $3.734 a bushel; corn was 34 cents to 74 cents lower with December at $3.544 a
bushel; oats were 4 cents to 6 S.OOO bu minimum: dolUrs pr bushel
cents lower with Deremher at 3.94^4 +.30^4 607
teiiis lower wun uecemoer at Dec 3 97 3 71 3 73^4 - 09 45,521
$1.91 a bushel; and soybeans 3.90'4 - osu 10,895
iDopn 101 001 r May 418'j 3,93^4 3.964- 08'4 4,011
were 124 cents to 224 cents Jui 4os'z 385^4 3.87 - io'4 6,415
lower with November at $9,09 ^ ^ ^
Fn to Thurs. sales 78,927 Total open interest 68.020
CORN
5.000 bu minimum: dollars per bushel
Sep 3.62'4 3.35'4 3.37 - 07'z 2.576
Dec 3 69'4 3 52'z 3.54>4 +.02 116,081
Mar 377 3 59'z 3.61'4 + 00'4 56,210
May 3 80'4 3 62'2 3.64 - 01'4 19,248
Jul 3.78"4 3 61'4 3.6II4 -.024 24,830
Sep 3.52 3 41 3.51'4 +.13 2,174
Dec 3 28 3.16 3.18 -.02' 11,279
Fri. to Thurs sales 263,415.
Total open interest 232.398
OATS
5.000 bu minimum: dollars per bushel
Live cattle settled .18 cent lower to .55 cent higher with the contract for delivery in October at 61.15 cents a pound; feeder cattle were .20 cent low-er to 1.10 cent higher with Octo-ber at 60.45 cents a pound; live hogs were 1.07 cents lower to .15 cent higher with October at 40.60 cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies were .20 cent to .63 cent lower with February at 59.20 cents a pound.
Precious metals prices were higher in moderate to active trading on the Commodity Exchange in New York.
Prices appeared to be supported by the rally in financial instruments, which indicates falling interest rates, and by the weakness of the U.S. dollar against major foreign currencies, said Len Alpert, a metals analyst in New York with ContiCommodity Services, Inc.
Gold settled $4.10 to $4.20 higher with the contract for delivery in October at $417.10 a troy ounce; silver settled 24.9 cents to 25.5 cents higher with October at $12.12 a troy ounce.
CHICAGO (API - The range of commodity futures this past week on the Chicago Board of Trade was :
Wk. Wk. Open High Low Close Chg. Interest
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Counterfeit products, especially clothing, cost North Carolina firms millions of dollars a year, according to an attorney whose firm specializes in protecting patents.
The primary area of counterfeiting in North Carolina is in the apparel field and primarily with the biggest and most well-known brands, said John L. Sullivan of Charlotte.
James Bikoff, president of the National Anti-Counterfeiting Coalition, said complaints of merchandise fakery have increased nationwide - and the deceit sometimes can cost more
thaamoney.
Two California men died in 1978 when the counterfeit rotor gear on their helicopter failed. Counterfeit automotive brake linings and phony heart pacemaker parts have surfaced, Bikoff said.
Pharmaceutical companies have been plagued with reports of counterfeit cough syrup and nasal inhalers. Sometimes the fake products are sold in authentic containers culled from stores that sell them second-hand.
Sullivan said dangerous counterfeits havent yet been found in North Carolina. But faked shirts and pants have
disint^rated in the washing , machine or lost their color.
I dont think consumers need to become paranoid every time they buy a product, he said. But iey definitely should be concerned with the quality of the item, and the big giveaway in probably 90 percent of the cases is price.
Bob Blumenthal, president of Blumenthals Mens and Boys Wear Store in Greensboro, said hes often visited by wholesalers whose pitch isnt legitimate.
Their price is absolutely so cheap you know its fake. And the goods are usually inferior, said Blumenthal.
Part of the blame for counterfeits lies with the manufacturers, Blumenthal said. Designers often refuse to sell their high-fashion wares to low-overhead stores. But if they would sell to any stores wanting the goods it would reduce the market for phonies, he said.
The best way for consumers to avoid counterfeit items is to buy from reputable stores, which build sales on return business and have good refund policies, experts say. Ridiculously low prices should be questioned.
A common giveaway is fuzzy or out-of-register hang tags that may have been poorly photocopied from an
original.
Also, manufacturers say, buyers should be wary of flea market garments and the guy on the corner selling Gucci bags from the trunk of his car.
Sometimes, only the manufacturer can tell whether an item is legitimate. Some clothing firms now shoot a beam of light through each garment, registering a kind of fingerprint that goes into a computer memory. Only the computer can separate a quality counterfeit from the real thing.
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4
a bushel.
Cattle prices were higher and live hogs and frozen pork bellies were lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
Live and feeder cattle for delivery in the next couple months were the strongest of the livestock contracts.
John Ginzel, a livestock analyst in Chicago with Drex-el Burnham Lambert Inc., said indications of good demand for carcass beef on wholesale cash markets, where the price advanced Friday, supported the futures markets. He noted also that the slaughter fell to 713,000 head during the week from 752,000 head the previous week and the cattle averaged a pound lighter.
Feeder cattle were supported by the decline in corn prices, which will ease the pressure on feed lot operators to cut the cost of acquiring animals.
Trends on price charts also prompted buying by traders who follow technical factors, Ginzel added. _
Live hogs were under pre- ^ ssure as the slaughter continued to increase this week and analysts anticipated that it would continue to expand to burdensome levels, Ginzel said.
Sep
Nov
Jan
Mar
May
Jul
Aug
Nov
Jan
Mar
May
Jul
Aug
Dec
An AP Member Exchange Feature By MIKE BOYD The Asheville Times ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Is your necklace catchless? Broach broken? Pearl unstrung? Send it to Asheville, a major center of the jewelry repair industry.
Jewelry flows into Asheville from across the United States. Packages come from Washington state, thick brown envelopes from Arkansas, a small fmx from Kentucky.
Fine stores across the nation send their customers jewelry here for repairs. Rings that need to be resized, lockets with broken hinges, pins with catches that no longer work. Anything and everything from a stickpin to a 3-foot candlestick.
There is something going on all the time, says Joseph Cottrell of Cottrell & Greene. Its year round. Were busy all the time.
Cottrell, his wife, Mae, son Joe Cottrell Jr. and their staff of four are tucked away in the Miles Building.
Within a stones throw of the Cottrells are a half-dozen other jewelry makers and jewelry repair operations. Names like Sherwood Forest Ltd., W. Galyean, Wick and Greene, Peterson Jewelry.
Outside this area lies Karat Patch, D C. Creasman and Millers. And others.
1 ii jfiwelry
e;967 or make a custom design from scratch.
Joe Cottrell Sr. says one of the big items today in the 36 50 33 60 34 87 +1 71 jcwelry repair trade is gold ^7*^ 3l:l^ fo'?33^ necklaces. The lighter they
ii s
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, ^ Paul and Lucia Greene and
714 son Michael operate Wick and Greene. Michael, the third generation jeweler in the family, says the original shop begun by Ernnest Wick 50 years ago at the rear of the present location was so sma 1 you had to step out into the hall to change your mind.
We have one man. Brad Harris, who repairs between 80 and 90 neck chains a
Ashville Is Jewelry Repair Center
week, says Michael Greene. Thats a very popular item. I guess the store probably does over 100 chains a week, but Brad does most of them.
Today, Wick and Greene has 11 employees, including seven jewelers. The complex has rooms full of metal-bending equipment, lacquer spray booths and room to handle even large religious altar pieces.
And ring sizing is something Michael Greene says is always in demand.
'Tucked away in the Miles Building is Judy Pallai, who learned the art of restringing pearls from one of the oldest and largest of the Japanese pearl companies. Today she carefully matches, strings, knots, and weaves hundreds of pearls into new necklaces.
^ Pallai works under contract to the Cottrells in an industry that is more like an extended family than fierce competition.
Mae Cottrell says: A business like ours is based on
trust. Your customers trust you when they leave their valuables.
John Sherwood of Sherwood Forest Ltd. is also in the Miles Building. He is prepared if somebody waits too long about having a ring stretched.
If the ring wont come off, Sherwood has a small ring cutter that will cut through a tight ring without nicking the owner. The tool looks a little like a pair of small pliers with a cutting wheel on one of the jaws.
Sherwood and his wife, Patricia, specialize in jewelry salvage, fur nishing parts to the repair industry.
Not everyone is outgrowing his or her rings. Mae Cottrell says sometimes people want rings made smaller.
Its a happy time for them. They, are losing weight. Theyve lost a lot of weight. Sometimes, we will size a ring twice as they continue to lose.
Prongs holding gemstones become loose and worn. And
the best way to protect yourself, Mike Greene says, is to have your jewelry checked twice a year.
Just like your car. We will check your rings and clean them at no charge. Even if they didnt buy it here. We dont want people to start losing the stones out of their rings and become unhappy with them.
The business of repairing jewelry has its lighter side. Many repairers say they spend part of their time telling customers if their jewelry is real.
Mae Cottrell says: People find a ring. Or their grandmother leaves them a piece of jewelry. And they want to know if its worth anything.
Home Cleaners Inc.
1501 Dickinson Ave.
Owned And Operated By
MARVIN SUTTON
Shirts
LAUNDERED
Every Day
WE DO ALTERATIONS AND REPAIRS
Our Own Suede & Leather Cleaning (4 Day Service)
COUPON
-GOOD-Monday thru Thursday
20%
WEEK OF SEPT. 25, 1983
OFF ALL DRY CLEANING
(EXCEPT SUEDE. LEATHER & SPECIALS) Coupon Must Be With Clothing When Brought In ! Hi COUPON tm
216 1.78
2.02'4 1.1 2 13 2.00'; 2.20 2 06 2.24'4 2 12
2.16 1.91 2 02' 2 08' 2.13
+ .01 + .01'4
+ .0(H4 + flO'z
Fri (0 Thurs sales 9,883 Total open interest 9,517
SttYBE.WS S.OOO bu minimum: dollars per bushel
10
7.470
1.288
424
325
American Stock Exchange
10,431
2,:
9 55 8 78 9 10'-. > 44'z 2,001
9 57 8 79 9 09 + 36 72,181
971 8 95 9 23 + 34'-. 26,185
9 83 9.07':.. 9 35 +,33'2 18,077
9 85 9.14 9 37'z +.31 6,620
9.82 9 13 9 28's + 24
9 48 8.80 8 97'z + 25'j
8.48 8 00 8 48 + 56'z
7 72'4 7 28 7 34'i + ll'z
Fn to Thurs sales 326,330 Total open interest 146 His
SOVBE.A.N Oil.
(O.OOO lbs: dollars per 100 lbs.
Sep Oct Dec Jan Mar May Jul Aug
Dec
i per
37 05 29 25 29 25 -3 75 1,121
35.25 32 00 33 16 +1 81
33.15 30.70 31 75 +1.95
30.40 28 15 30 40 + 2.40
29 25 26.80 27 70 +1.20
28 75 26.25 26.77 + 72
Fri to Thurs sales 96,757 Total open interest 76,814
SOVBEA.N MEAL too tons: dollars per ton
Sep 245.00 ^.50 228 80 -I 20 1,530
Oct 248 00 230,30 235.50 + 6,20 11,204
252.50 234 50 239.50 + 6.30 29,825
254.00 236.50 240.70 + 5 40 10,122
256 50 239.50 244 00 + 6 50 6,327
257 50 241 50 244.00 + 4 10 2,790
259 00 242 50 244 50 + 3.70 2,590
250 00 233.00 235 00 +5.00 1,460
239 50 225.00 239 50 +11 50 1,295
221 00 202.00 209.50 -.40 841
220.00 202.00 207,20 -4,50 303
Fn. to Thurs sales 65,187
Total open interest 68,287
9'I
4',+ ' 12'4+ ' 11':.+ ' 2'4- ' 6-'s- ' 6'- " 30 - ' 22+ ' 18'4- 32 +1' 3'
2(1 - " 7'z+ '
DOW Jones Averages
NEW YORK (API The following gives the range of Dow Jones averages Tor the week ended Sep 23.
S'TOCK AVERAGES Open High Low Close Chg.
Ind 1233 91 1257 52 1233.94 1255 59 + 29.88 Trans 582 84 590 04 582.84 584.33 + 11 60 Utils 131 45 133.62 131.45 133.43+ 1.54 65 Stks 493 17 501.22 493.17 499.38 + 10 50 BOND AVERAGES 20 Bonds 71.16 71.47 71.11 71.47 + 0.32 Ulils 69 42 69.92 69 42 69.92 + 0.54
Indus 72 90 73.02 72,71 73.02 +0.10
COM.MODITY FUTURES INDEX
149,56 151.11 149.34 150 90+1 79
What The Stock Market Did
Advances Declines Unchanged Total issues New yrly hghs New yearly Iws
Two
This Prev Year Years
604 965 792 1,551
182 232 238 ISO
2,206 2,194 2,125 2,107
215 154 335 10
26 20 17 690
Weekly Stocks Ups And Downs
NEW YORK lAP) - The following list shows the New York Stock Exchange stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down the most in the past week based on percent of change.
No securities trading below J2 or fOOO shares are includ^. Net and percentage changes are the difference between last week s closing and this week's closing.
ToUl for week Week ago Year ago JIan 1 to date 1982 to date AMERICAN BONDS Total for week Week ago Year ago
UPS
Name Last Chg Pet.
1 ACF Ind 51^,' + 9h Up 23.7
2 DMG Inc 4' + "4 Up 22.2
3 PrimeCm s 18"4 + Up 22 0
4 Teradyne s 36'4 + 5 Up 19.3
5 Brunswk 43"4 + 6'j Up 17.4
6 RCA 33'4 + 44 Up 16.2
7 Echlininc 23"4 + 3>4 Up 15.9
8 CowlesBrd 22 +3 Up 15.8
9 FtBnkrFla 27'z + 314 Up 15.8
10 Nat Stand 14^8 + l Up 14.7
11 Napcoind 14 + P4 Up 14.3
12 vjMestaMch 7'# + h Up 14 0
13 Purolator 60'4 + 7>4 Up 13 7
'S ^ '?S ,? 1 StorgeTKh 20'S, + 2:^, Up 13.2
17 Boise Cased 41 + 4^4 Up 12.8
18 Data Gen) 78'4 + Bh Up 12.8
19 FePa l,20pf 47'z + 5'4 Up
20 Omnicre s
21 FoetrWhlr
37.710.000 ^ XTRAInc
30.270.000 23 Kysorind 25,040000 24 PanAm wt
1.808.410.000 a Esmark s
1.583.910.000 26 PHH Grp
$5.110,000
$4,370,000
$7,560,000
47'z + 5'4 Up 12.4
41'j + 4'i Up 12.2
16'4 + 14 Up 12.1
SI'S. + 31 Up 11,9
21s. + 2'4 Up 11.8
4^4 + >7 Up 11.8
35'>4 + 3\
75S. + 7U Up 11,7 Up 11.7
Name 1 EAL wtO
DOWNS
Last Chg 3'8 - lU
t>ct. Off 28.6
We May Save You $200 A Year On Your Auto Liability Insurance If You Have A DUI Or Equivalent In Insurance Points.
Cali Day Or Night:
Eani Stokes InsuniKe Agency
^ 405 New Circle Drive Ayden, N.C. 746-3301
2 EastnAirL
3 EstnAir pfC
4 Cook Unit
5 LamsnSesn
6 MaryKay s
7 PatnckPtr
8 Avon Prod
9 Skyline Cp
10 VaEP 7,2^1 56
11 EastnAir pf
12 WnAir Lin
13 CessnaAir
14 NutriSys
15 FlowGenl
16 HowellPtr
17 CLC Am
18 Mattel Inc
19 ToscoCp
20 GEOlntl
21 EstnAir pfB
22 Anacomp
23 Pengoind
24 Vendo Co
25 ShellerGlob
5'S, - l'-2 Off 218
I7'4-4 Off 18.8 5'4 - 1 Off 16.0
4 - "4 Off 15.8
21'4 -38 Off 15.4
4'z - "4 Off 14.3
23'z - 3 Off 14,2
19'4 -3 Off 13.5
Off 13.1 14S - 2'8 Off 12 7
4"h - 'S. Off 12.5
- 3^18 Off 11.5
Off 11,1 Off 11.0 Off 10,8 Off 10.7 Off 10.6 Off 10.6 lOS - 1'4 Off 10.5
;- 13 - 1'8
- 3
- Ph
\
9'j - 1'
- 2 - 1'
Off 10,3 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 9.9 Off 9.6
NEW YORK (API - American .SKxik Exchange trading for the week selected issues:
Sales
PE hds High Low Last Chg. Actons 1137 231 8 7 \ 7,- '4
AdRusls.10 17 354 27 25'. 26'.+ 1'
Adobe 20 16 739 24' . 22'1 2:1'1-
.AegisCp 15 906 4'1 4 4'
.AfiTPbs <64 19 192 42''< 39'. 42'i e.')'-.
Altec 192 1, I'l I'I
Amdhl S 20 54 7702 19. 18\ 19' .)-'
A.MotIn 25 13 610 32'4 30-4 32's+ .
ASciE 315 IOh 9-'<
Ampal n 12 3 499 4'. 4':
Armlrn 11 232 12'1 12
Asmrgs 2015 11'.. 10'4
AtlsCM 1808 2'2 2'4
Atlas wl 76 7 6-\
Banstrgeoe 115 6'. 6'
BergBs 32 21 1556 31 30
BowAal 15 746 23 22'
BradNt 166 1823 19 16'
Brascngieo 528 u32' SO-
ChmpH 53 2506 6 5
CirclK 74 13 1493 21" 20
ConsOG 107 229 7"4 7"
Cookint 20 8"4 8^
CoreLb 16 158 220 17'' 17 17"+ '4
Cross s 1.20 20 702 u35", 32' 33'z + l'2
CruteR 10 4589 5 5'4 5'4- '4
Damson 19 406 10 10" 10'. '4 DatPds 16 36 3468 29 26 28 +P
DomeP 11145 4 9-16 4'a 4"-l-16
DorGas 16 17 1208 16 14"4 15'4+ 'a
Dynlctn 25e 11 979 H'4 13" 13+ ", FdRes V 27 920 1 3-16 13-16 13-16- " Felmnt .10 17 611 25'- 24 24'-
FlukeJ .841 28 306 u34'- 33"4 34" +
FrontHd ,20b 2163 13"4 12" 13 +
GRI 18 236 12" 11'- IP4-
GntYlg 428 21'z 20" 21'4+ "
GoldW 538 13" 12' 13"+ '
GIdFId 1523 2' 1 1- '
GtLkCh .64 26 719 71' 68'- 68"-!' GIfCdg ,44 3205 16" 15 16'4+ "
Hoilya 24 8 270 11'4 10" 10"-
HouO'rr 2 08e 3922 11 11 11',- ",
Huslyg .15 1522 9'- 9'4 9"
Imp0llgl 40 2273 u33" 32' 33 +
Insl^ 3895 3" 2 3"+ '
InlgEn 894 13-16 13-16
InlBkm 06e 1903 6'4 5 6
KeyPh 20 53 2548 33 31'- 31'-1'
Kirby 1595 7"4 7" 7"- '
MCOHd 3 306 15'4 H'4 14"+ ', MCO Rs 17 807 4' 4 4'- ',
MSRng 276 5"d5' 5'2
Marndq 681 '2 7-16 7-16
Marmpf2.35 405 21' 21 21 - ',
Mrshls 22 1887 25" 24'z 25 + '1 Mediae 1 04 12 676 58"4 56, 58"4 + l"4 MichSg 1,20 7 130 27', 26 26',- '4
MtchlE .24 16 2023 28'2 26 28'2 + l'-NKiney 4 513 5'4 4"4 5'+ ",
NtPatnt 54 1823 26"4 24", 26 +U2 NProc ,55el7 363 u26, 24'z 24'.--l
Nolex 30 65 3'# 3 3 -
NARqyl .20 13 30 18" 18" 18"
NoCdOg 116 16'2 15 16' +
Numac g 381 u22'4 20'z 21"4 + 1'4
OOkiep Z4850 16'4 dl5'4 16'4 +
OzarkA .20 213 4597 12"4 dlO 10"-! PallCps .36 23 954 38" 35' 35"-PECp .271 9 579 2, 2' 2,
Pet^w 1.491.9 2266 13 11'- ll-l
Pillway 1.65 12 274 62', 59 61"4+2'4 PrenHa 1.76 15 903 56 54'z 55'4+ '
Ransbg .72 29 x2476 18-" 16"4 18''4- "
Resrt A 16 4080 4 5 42 44"4 + 2"
SecCap 9 297 H'4 10'4 11'
Solitron 591 9", 8" 9"+ ",
Sunairs .2218 118 13" 11
TIE s
chAm
TchSym
Telsp'h n
Txscan
Trailer
TranEn
Tub.Mx
TubMx s
35"
40 4718 40
113 170 7', 6'4
25 638 21, 20':.
5233 9id7'-
23 598 21': 20
620 1 1"
193 4", 4
4 730 2 1,
4 138 6". O',
InFiKKf 20 9 284 8, 8'j
I'nivHs 630 8' 7'.
Vernit 12 16 337 15'- 14'
VVangBs 12 29 x19492 34 32".
VVrnC wt 994 7': 6'-
Wthfrd 637 10". 10'
Wstbra 20 260 14', 13"
WslnSL 12e 356 39'. 34
Wichita 443 5'.. 4
WwdeE 441 680 8, 8,
CopvTight by The Associated Press 1983.
39'+3, 6'.- '. 21': + l'i 8 - , 21 + l"i- ' 4'
1- ' 6'.
8",
8'.+ 14+ ", 34 + 6- ", 10'2 13,
38'1+4', 5't-
8',-
LOWRIMORE, WARWICK & CO.
Certified Public Accountants
Announces The Opening Of Our Office At
Suite 401, Minces Building
P.O. Box 7109
Greenville, North Carolina 27835-7io9 (919) 752-0884
William M. Zachman. Partner Stephen H. Locke. Partner
David C. Miller, Supervisor
Sundnc
1174 7'2 7
11-1" 7'-
NORIN state Mortgage Corporation
the Real Estate Division of
North State Savings and Loan Corporation announces its move to expanded facilities in the Minges Building.
Administration and Major Loan Departments
i| *
are located in Suite 204
Residential Origination and Loan Servicing are located in Suite 405.
Telephone 752-3209
Local News
Co-Editors Of Guide
ECU News Bureau Two East Carolina University faculty members are co-editors of the first comprehensive guide to instructional programs in planning, a publication of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning.
The 100-page book was compiled and edited by Wes Hankins and Mulatu Wubneh of the ECU Department of Geography and Planning and Robert Reiman of Applachian State University.
Entitled "Guide to Undergraduate Education in Urban and Regional Planning." the publication includes data gathered from 28 institutions offering planning degrees, along with information on the non-degree curricula offered at 36 other institutions.
Major categories of information include general institutional and program information, degree and student data, admission requirements and planning curricula, financial information, and data concerning faculty.
Copies of the guide are available for $7.25 each from Reiman at Appalachian State University. Department of Cmmunity Planning and Geography, Boone. N.C.
Mrs. Bradley Honored
Mrs. Lillian Dupree Bradley of Farmville was honored at a reception held recently at the Bachelor Benedict Club hosted by "A Committee of Friends of Lillian Bradley.
Mrs. Bradley was employed in the Pitt County Schools for 2 years as a supervisor of instruction and one year as a coodinator of programs for gifted children. She previously taught in Pender County where she also served on the central office staff.
Mrs. Bradley and her mother. Mrs. Mattie Dupree, were presented with white chrysanthemum corsages. A program of recollections were presented by friends and relatives. Music was provided by Myriam Harris.
Seminar Was Held
A seminar entitled "Marketing and Distribution for Child Care was hosted by Pitt Community College recently and featured child care specialists from throughout eastern North Carolina.
The group leaders for a panel discussion on "Recruitment for Child Care Cousese were Sue Creech of PCC. Jena Katkaveck of Nash Technical College and Ann Vogel of Wayne Community College.
Panel members who gave an introduction to "Directing a Child Care Program" were Sue Creech. Jan Keller from the office of Day care Service. North Carolina Department of Human Resources and Janet Nickerson of the office of Child Care Licensing. N.C. Department of Administration.
An introduction to three child care nutrition courses entitled "Basic Nutrition and Nutrition Education," "Food Production and Service" and "Infant feeding" was presented by group leaders Jan Cobb, Southeast Regional Education Center, Janet Farrar. Northeast Regional Education Center and Cherie W oodard. center Regional Education Center.
Also appearing were Peggy Ball, N.C. Department of Community College; Ola Porter, PCC and Rachel Fesmire, director of Day Care Services, N.C. Department of Human Resources.
Revival Services Set
The annual fall revival services begin at Timothy Christian Church in Gardnerville, Route 2. Ayden, Sunday at 7:30 p.m. and will continue through Friday.
Th evangelist will be the Rev. Stanley Gibson, the pastor.
A nursery will be provided each night and special singing is planned. Thursday has been set aside as Youth Night.
Warts-Cancer
, NEW YORK (.APi-Three years ago, it was herpes that alarmed the nation. That scare gave way to fear of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, or AIDS, and herpes was seemingly forgotten
All the while, the public remained.largely unaware of a sexually transmitted virus that was spreading to more people than hernes and AIDS combined ana is increasingly
ZIPPER SOCIETY
The Zipper Society will have its initial meeting Tuesday, Sept. 27 at 8p.m. at the Brook Valiev Countrv Club.
Membership is open to anyone who has undergone coronary artery ibypass surgery The purpose of the group will be to provide fellowship and support the Pitt County Heart Association.
being pointed to as a contributing cause of cervical and genital cancer.
In 1981. almost a million people went to their doctors for treatment for the virus. In contrast, only 295.000 people sought treatment for herpes that year. And AIDS was seen in only a scattering.
The virus, known as human papilloma virus or HPV, is the cause of a disease that at first seems to be little more than a nuisance - genital warts. But two new studies that were reported last week strongly suggested that at least some genital warts might be precursors of cancerous tumors.
Herpes, too. has been linked with an increased risk of cervical cancer, says Dr. Ward Cates, director of the division of venereal disease control at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
ONE HOUR KORETIZING
FREE STORAGE
?()% ffMPRiciOn^
L\3 /O DRY CLEANING L\3 /O
ONE HOUR KORETIZING I ^ I
This coupon good lor 20% OFF the cleaning price I ONLY of men's, women's and childrens wearing | I apparel. |
I COUPON GOOD SEPT. 26-OCT. 1,1983 |
Coupon Must Accompany Clothes To Be Honored.
FLUFF & FOLD SERVICE
I Present at 2105 Charles St., Greenville
EXTRA SPECIAL SAVINGS
4 SHIRIS FOR *2^^
On Hangers SHIRT COUPON GOOD MONDAY . SATURDAY
LEATHER & SUEDE CLEANING
One Day Service On Alterations
^ Now more than ever L
right for you! f
ftfMun
Open 7 A.W to 7 PM. Monday thru Saturday CHARLES ST., NEXT TO PITT PLAZA BEHIND SWEET CAROLINE'S 756-0545 Drive-in Door & Window Service
YORKSHIRE FINE PORCELAIN CHINA
4-PC. PLACE SETTING
WITH 40 BONUS CERTIFICATES
OUR BONUS CERTIFICATE PLRM IS ERSY AS 1,2,3..
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REDEEMED FOR FREE CHINA 3. COLLECT YOUR 4-PIECE SETTING WHEN YOU SAVE THRU WED., JAN. 18, 1984. 40 CERTIFICATES.
PRICES GOOD SUN.. SEPT. 25TM THRU WED., SEPT. 28TH NONE TO DEALERS WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES COPYRIGHT 1983. WINN DIXIE STORES. INC.
2-Liter No Return Btls.
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12 OZ. CANS REG.
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CARLO ROSSI WINE .....,1.99
wni lb V I w vwi II lb ^ p brand U.S. CHOICE BNLS.
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TOP ROUND STEAK OR
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22-OZ. BTL SUNLIGHT DISH
DETERGENT .... .99
7-V4 OZ. BOX KRAFT
MAC & CHEESE 4 ronM
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LUNCHEON MEAT , .89
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SOUPS ..... 4 roR^I
HARVEST FRESH BARTLETT
PEARS ...... L..49
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GREENS ..... l.^.49
HARVEST FRESH BELL PEPPERS OR
CUCUMBERS 5 r.n.99
3-LB. BOWL MRS. FILBERTS
SOFT SPREAD 1.69
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FISH STICKS . 1.99
5-OZ. BAG MORTON (ALL VARIETIES)
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CHEESE ..... 2.09
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MRS. WILLIAM THOMAS CORBETT...S the former Rhonda Jo Eastwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Thomas Eastwood Sr. of Route 11, Greenville, whose marriage to Mr. Corbett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Dudley Corbett of Route 11, Greenville, took place Saturday.
MRS. JAMES MARVIN HEATH JR....is the former Judith Arlene Elks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Elks of Greenville, whose marriage to Mr. Heath, son of Mr. -and Mrs. James M. Heath Sr. of Greenville, took place Saturday.
WANDA DENISE COLE...is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Donald E. Cole of Route 2, Greenville, who announce her engagement to Richard Bruce Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Williams of Greenville. The wedding will take place in April.Autumn Weddings And Engagements
MRS. LLOYD MICHAEL McNEIL...is the former Dawn Marie Stugart, daughter of Mrs. Marvine Stugart of Allenwood, Pa. and the late Merle Stugart, whose marriage to Mr. McNeil, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emry McNeil of Biloxi, Miss., took place Saturday .Wedding Write-Ups Are Printed On Pages C-2 to C-7
TERRY ELAINE POLLARD...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman R. Pollard of Greenville, who announce her engagement to William Bruce Shingleton, son of Dr. and Mrs. William Shingleton of Durham. A Nov. 20 wedding is being planned.
MRS. ROBERT LAWRENCE GASTON II...is the former Karen Leigh Hope, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Hope Jr. of Chadboum, whose marriage to Mr. Gaston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joeseph P. Gaston of Greenville, took place Saturday.
SARAH ANN SANFORD...is the daughter of Col. (USA Ret.) and Mrs. Samuel S. Sanford of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Durston Reeder Darden, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Darden Jr. of Greenville. The wedding is planned for Nov. 19.
TAMMY JEAN STOCKS...is the daughter of James R. Stocks and Mrs. Jean M. Riggs of Winterville, who announce her engagement to Brian Floyd Edwards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Edwards of Grifton. The wedding is planned forjec.3. ,
m
C*2 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C Sunday, September 25,1983
Engagements Announced
U' -
DEBORAH SUE EDWARDS...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Lewis Edwards of Grimesland, who announce her engagement to Weldon Earl McLawhorn Jr., son of Mrs. Jean Cay ton McLawhorn and Weldon E. McLawhorn of Greenville. A Nov. 5 wedding is planned.
Clinging Parents May Choke Sons Marriage
By Abigail Van Buren
* 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: I am engaged to a man Ill call "George. The problem is his parents. They moved into his house two years ago when they ran into financial trouble, so their bighearted son invited them to live with him temporarily. Both parents are ablebodied and have good jobs, but they live beyond their means and always have. 'They dont save a dime and owe their creditors thousands of dollars. Both drive expensive new cars and they practically live at the track every weekend. (They are horse crazy.) They owe George $15,000 that I know of, and Im sure he will never see a dime of it.
George and I were supposed to get married last summer and live in his house, but I refused to move into his house while his parents were there, so there was no wedding.
George says he cant kick his parents out. I say they will stay until he does. This is putting a terrible strain on our relationship. How can I cope with the problem of Georges parents?
AT ROPES END
TERRY CASE THOMAS...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Thomas of Greenville, who announce her engagement to George Richard Campbell, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Campbell of Route 7, Chapel Hill. The wedding is planned for Nov. 19.
DEAR END: Your problem isnt Georges parents its George. Hes suffering from role-reversal: Hes the parent who cant say no to his spoiled children. He may be a wonderful son, but unless he is able to (as the Good Book says) leave his father and his mother and cleave unto his wife, hes a poor candidate for marriage.
Tell him to call you when his parents are out of his house, and if youre still around, you would love to see him.
DEAR ABBY. My boyfriend (Ill call him Lou) has an 18th birthday coming up, which is why Im writing. Lous brother told me that their father is giving Lou a trip to Reno with a call girl thrown in as a birthday gift.
Lou doesnt know I am aware of this, and so far he hasnt mentioned anything to me about it.
Well, Lou and I share a sexual relationship, and I feel that if he accepts this gift (the call girl, 1 mean), he would be betraying me. Abby, please tell me what you think of a father who would give his son such a gift, and what do you think I should do about it, if anything.
MIXED UP IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR MIXED UP: Years ago some fathers gave their sons such gifts (the call girl, 1 mean) to introduce them to the ways of the world. Since its not necessary in your case, tell Lou that you are aware of the gift offer, then leave the talking to him.
CONFIDENTIAL TO UPSET IN FORT DODGE, IOWA: People who make a practice of eavesdropping rarely hear anything good about themselves.
For Abbys updated, revised and expanded booklet, How to Be Popular for people of all ages send $2, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Births
Fleming Born to .Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Thomas Fleming. .New Bern, a son, Christopher Andrew, on Sept. 19. 1983, in Pitt .Memorial Hospital.
Fields
Born to Mr. and Mrs. William David Fields, Chocowinity, a daughter, Lauren Marie, on Sept. 19, 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Tugwell
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lee Tugwell Jr., Route 1. Greenville, a daughter. Kassie Lee, on Sept. 19, 1983. in Pitt .Memorial Hospital.
Harris '
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Frank Harris. Gaston, a son, Caleb Frank, on Sept. 19. 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
%
GreenvUlet finest bakery for 63 years."
815 Dickinson Ave.
A Variety Of Breads Baked Fresh Daily
French, Cheese. Raisin. German Rye, Whole Wheat & Butter Top.
752-5251
Open 10:00 A.M. Until 9:00 P.M.
Pitt Plaza
WEVE GOT THE SHOES KIDS GET INTO.
This soft leather T-strap gives fit and comfort. In rust and navy. $24.00 to $26.00.
Soft tie shoe for flexibility and support. In brown and navy. $26.00 to $28.00.
StrideRite
AMERICAS FIRST PAIR OF SHOES"
Dawn Ml Stugart And L.M. McNeil Exchange Vows
Crasuiners purchase more cigarettes in the summer than at other times, according to R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, which has tracked
seasonal buying for more than a decade. Nationally, cigarette sales in July (the high) are 15 percent -eater than in January (the low).
Dawn Marie Stugart and Lloyd Michael McNeil were united in marriage Satur^y afternoon at two oclock in Green Springs Park. The Rev. Don P. Lee performed the double ring ceremony and music was presented by Randy Buck.
Parents of the couple are Mrs. Marvine Stugart of Allenwood, Pa. and the late Merle Stugart and Mr. and Mrs. Emry McNeil of Biloxi, Miss.
The bride was given in marriage by Douglas Stugart. Her matron of honor was Judy Whalen of Montgomery, Pa. and her maid of honor was Julie Bowers of Atlantic Beach. Bridesmaids included Kelly Woolbert of New Orleans, La., sister of the bridegroom, Elizabeth Stugart of Allenwood, Pa., sister-in-law of the bride, Susan Culvey and Dawn Stabley of Lock Haven, Pa. and Janet Stocks of Ayden.
Brad Shank of Greenville was best man and ushers included Emry McNeil, father of the bridegroom, Jim McNeil of Laurel, Miss., cousin of the bridegroom, Michael Woolbert of New Orleans, La., brother-in-law of the bridegroom, Douglas Stugart of Allenwood, Pa., brother of the bride, Alan Gaskins of Grimesland and Bill DaVanzoof Greenville.
The bride was attired in an ivory gown of schiffli embroidered organza featuring a high neckline and long fitted sleeves. The fitted bodice was accented with a ruffle of crystal pleating. An empire waistline held a tiered crystal pleated skirt with a scalloped schiffli lace overlay that flowed into a chapel train. She wore a matching open crown picture hat of tucked organza and schiffli lace with a veil of imported silk illusion. The bride carried a crescent bouquet of dusty rose and candlelight silk roses, pink stephanotis and dusty rose forget nots with ivy and springerii accented with ivory and raspberry silk ribbon streamers.
The honor attendants were
each dressed in a raspberry voile gown styled with a high banded neckline, short puff
sleeves. The bodice featured a yoke of English net trimmed with schiffli embroidery. The gown was styled tea length with a hemline flounce. Each carried a bouquet of silk dusty rose and candlelight roses, dusty rose and ivory forget me nots, pink stephanotis and springerii accented with raspberry streamers.
The bridesmaids were dressed identically and carried the same type bouquets.
A reception followed the ceremony at the Cherry Oaks Clubhouse. Jill Strother and Sheryl Crouse served cake and punch was poured by Kathleen Moore. Betty Jo Casper attended the guest book.
After a wedding trip to St. Augustine, Daytona and Orlando, Fla., the couple will live in Greenville,
The bride is a registered nurse at Pitt Memorial Hospital. The bridegroom is a phlebotomist at Pitt Memorial Hospital. She graduated from Williamsport Hospital School of Nursing.
A rehearsal pig picking was given by the parents of the bridegroom Friday evening at the Grimesland Seine Beach.
A bridal shower was given for the bride Friday morning by Lee Lipscomb, grandmother of the bride, and Connie Lipscomb, aunt of the bridegroom.
Free public library service for Greenville and Pitt County residents is provided by Sheppard Memorial Library. For more information, call 752-4177.
Eastern
Electrolysis
133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE 6 PHONE 7SM034, GREENVILLE. NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST
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Downtown Pitt Plaza
Couple Marries Saturday Morning In Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Sandra Jean Clark and Ronald Dean Stoner were married here Saturday morning at lOclock in the Church of the Assumption by Monsignor Kohls.
Matt Rimmer of Jacksonville, Fla. was organist.
The bride is the daughter of Ms. Betty Jean Clark and Melvin Earl Clark Sr. of Jacksonville, Fla. Parents of the bridegroom are Ms. Joy S. Stoner of Jacksonville, Fla. and Lonnie Stoner of Tennessee.
The bride was given in marriage and escorted by her father. Michelle Denney of Jacksonville, Fla. was maid of honor. Attendants were Rachel Welsh and Suzanne Stoner, sister of the bridegroom, both of Jacksonville, Fla.
Donald Stoner of Jacksonville, Fla. was best man for his brother. Ushers were Melvin E. Clark Jr. of Orlando, Fla., brother of the bride, and Mathew Welsh of Jacksonville, Fla. Groomsmen included Dean Mills and Justin Ellis of Jacksonville, Fla.
The bride wore a formal gown of white with a lace yoke and long lace sleeves. The waistline belt was made of daisies and the yoke was trimmed with daisies. She wore a bridal veil of illusion and carried a bouquet of white daisies, pink carnations and red roses.
The attendants wore long dresses of misty mauve fashioned with lace yokes and long lace sleeves. Each carried white daisies and pink carnations.
The brides grandmother, Mrs. Bernice H. Clark of Greenville, and the grandmother of the bridegroom, Mrs. Margaret P.
MRS. RONALD DEAN STONER
Salkins, were honored with corsages of bridal flowers.
Robbie Sheryl Windham, cousin of the bride of Greenville, presided at the guest register. Rice bags were distributed by Jennifer Leigh Nelson of Greenville, cousin of the bride, and Eric Clark of Orlando, Fla., nephew of the bride.
The couple will live in Jacksonville, Fla. after a wedding trip to Daytona, Fla
FIVE GENERATIONS...Seated above is Mrs. Bessie Alford Jones, of 1812 Sulgrave Road. Greenville with her daughter, Selma J. Rawls; Mrs. Rawls daughter, Joyce Cecil; Mrs. Cecil's daughter Denise Cason; and Mrs. Casons daughter Christin. Mrs. Jones celebrated her 91st birthday on September 23, 1983. She has nine children, 22 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren and 3 great, great grandchildren
Paid Announcement
The bride and bridegroom graduated from Englewood Senior High School in Jacksonville and attended Jacksonville Junior College. She works with Mustang Motor Homes and he works for R.B. Gay Construction Co.
A reception followed the ceremony and was given by the parents of the bride.
A rehearsal dinner was given by thq mother of the bridegroom at her home.
, FIGHTING FLEAS GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Killing the fleas that bite isnt enough to solve flea infestation.
The fleas that feed on blood are adult fleas, and pesticides that kill them may not kill pre-adults. Pre-adults feed on organic matter such as carpet fibers, but mature quickly into blood-sucking adults if not eliminated.
Entomologists at Spectrum Home and Garden Products say effective flea control is a two-step process. Pre-adult fleas must be treated with an insecticide that prevents them from forming the hard adult shells they need to survive. Adult fleas must be treated separately, with a multi-purpose insecticide fogger.
In addition, they recommend flea collars and shampoos for household pets.
To clean out a steam iron, fill it with a solution of one part vinegar to two parts water, let it steam, then rinse with clean water.
Wedding Vows Solemnized In Saturday Evening Ceremony
Judith Arlene Elks and James Marvin Heath Jr. were united in marriage Saturday evening at seven oclock in the Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church. The Rev. Cedric D. Pierce Jr. performed the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Elks and the bridegroom is the son of Mr, and Mrs. James M. Heath Sr., aU of Greenville.
A program of wedding music was performed by organist Peggy Hardee. Vicki Dixon sang You Needed Me, The Wedding Song and The Wedding Prayer.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. She wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de soie designed with a high neckline encircled with schiffli lace. The gown featured a fitted bodice overlaid in silk Venise and schiffli lace accented with pearls. The bishop sleeves were fashioned of English net and finished in cuffs of matching lace with button closures. The modified A-line skirt was enhanced with a flounce of schiffli lace edged in silk Venise that extended around and up to the waistline of the chapel train. She wore a fingertip veil of illusion edged in silk Venise lace held in place by a Camelot cap overlaid in matching lace. Motifs of matching lace were scattered over the illusion. She carried a bouquet of white daisies and lilies with spider plants.
Charlene Elks, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and wore a formal gown of cloudy blue matte taffeta designed with an open scoop necldine outlined in a ruffle of pouf taffeta. The elbow length sleeves featured a gathered ruffle edging. A
waistband of matching taffeta enhanced the waistline of the gathered skirt. She carried a bouquet of white daisies, blue miniature carnations and ivy tied with blue and white ribbon.
Bridesmaids included Sondra Padgett, cousin of the bride, Felicia Heath, sister of the bridegroom, and Debbie Anderson of Greenville. Their dresses in bluestone matte taffeta were styled identical to that of the honor attendant. Their flowers were also identical.
The mother of the brid wore a formal pink chiffon and lustreglo gown fashioned with a chiffon cape. The mother of the bridegroom chose a formal gown of cranberry knit designed with chiffon sleeves. They wore corsages of white roses and ivy. 'fte grandmothers of the bride were remembered with corsages of white tube roses.
The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers were Vance Taylor, cousin of the bridegroom, and William Anderson of Greenville and Timmy Evans, cousin of the bride of Washington.
Jean Evans directed the wedding and Becky Brock
presided at the guest register. Wedding programs were distributed by Robin Briley while Cindy Elks and Sheila Dixon gave out rice bags.
A reception was given by the Mrents of the bride, friends and relatives in the Cherry Fellowship Hall. Guests were greeted by Mr. andMrs. J.C. Boyd.
The bridegrooms parents and relatives entertained the wedding party Friday night at a rehearsal dinner in the fellowship hall.
The bride and bridegroom graduated from J.H. Rose High School. She works at Pitt Orthopedic Services, Inc. and he works at Phelps Chevrolet, Inc.
After a wedding trip to the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, the couple will live in Greenville.
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Ruffled Wreath Workshop Mon., Sept. 26 1:30-3:30
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Weekdays 10-5; Sat. 10-4 805 S. Evans St.
Across From The Museum Of Art 758-4317
45
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Uniperm perm including haircut, shampoo and styling, Reg. 37.50...Now 25.50. Precision haircut including shampoo and styling, Reg. 16.00...Now 12.80. Highlight frosting including shampoo and styling, Reg. 25.00...Now 20.00. To make your personal appointment call now!
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C Sunday. September 25.1983 C-3
3omething exciting is happening his week
at Be
k ye
Aramis Promotion...
Come to our Mens Gift Area and let our Aramis Counter Manager, Teresa Hopkins, show you the line. While there, register for a free 2 oz. bottle of Aramis Cologne to be given away daily at 5:00 P M All registrations will be sent to Charlotte, North Carolina, where a drawing will take place with the winner receiving a 1984 Corvette. The winner will be announced on November 4, 1983. No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win.
October Run Date Change...
It has become necessary to change the date of the October Run to Saturday, October 22. This is a Ten 4 Kilometer run to be held early that morning beginning at 9:00 A.M. Prizes and medals will be awarded for various age groups. Registration blanks will be available soon in our Sporting Goods Shop.
Color Me Beautiful...
Mrs. Sissy Weil of Goldsboro, the only certified Color Me Beautiful consultant in our area, will be back in our store on November 21 and 22. She will be conducting several sessions of more than six ladies each. Registration is $50 on a first come first serve basis. Since these sessions will fill up early and this is the last time Mrs. Weil will be in our store this year, call 756-2355 and make your reservation right away.
Monday, November 21 2:00- 4:00 P.M.
6:00- 8:00 P.M.
Tuesday, November 22 10:00-12:00 P.M.
2:00- 4:00 P.M.
6:00- 8:00 P.M.
Corvette On Display...
Come to the Mens Gift Area to see the new 1984 red Corvette. Its the dream car of tomorrow and is shown through the courtesy of Wynnes Inc. of Bethel, N.C. Mr. Robert Hardy, a modified race car driver will be in our store from 7:00 P.M. until 9:00 P.M. on Friday, October 30, to talk about sports racing. Come by to see Mr. Hardy and register for the free prizes to be awarded by Aramis Cosmetics for men. No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win.
Flowers, Flowers, Flowers...
Come see the beautiful fresh flower arrangements and corsages as well as individual flowers for you to arrange in our Garden Shop. We have a big selection In bud vases. If we dont have just what you want, place your order and we can get it made for you. We deliver to the hospital and local funeral homes. Use your Belk-Tyler Charge Card.
Ultra Suede Piece Goods...
For the lady who sews, weve just received a shipment of ultra suede piece goods in beautiful fall colors-brick, vanilla, brown, navy, purple, forest and teal. It is 45 wide at $57.00 a yard. This is the same quality piece goods used in the best ready made ready to wear. Come see this in our Piece Goods Department today. ^
its Coming...
Beau Ideal Week in our Home Furnishings Department begins October 2 and runs through October 8 During this event, you will find special savings on bedroom ensembles in several patterns. This will be a great opportunity for you to give your home an exciting new look for the holidays ahead. Watch for the ads in this newspaper.
Sportswear for Petite Ladies...
In our continuing efforts to bring a broad assortment of merchandise to our customers, we have added Personal Petites by Personal Sportswear. This is the same fine quality clothing that Personal Sportswear has offered our customers for years except the design is for the small lady 5 feet and under in sizes 4 to 14. We have blazers, skirts, blouses, and slacks in falls most beautiful fabrics and colors.
Wedding Gowns, MOBs,
Bridesmaid Dresses...
They are arriving daily-our offering of wedding gowns, Mothers-of-the-bride dresses, and bridesmaid dresses in our Regency Roomand more will be forthcoming. Come talk with Virginia Emory and let her help you plan that special day in your life. We have it all-the Bridal registry, invitations, flowers (both real and silk), clothing for everyone in the wedding party including the men. Remember, if your groom rents six or more for his attendants, his tuxedo is complimentary.
Planning A Party???...
Let us help you plan your next party with cheeses, crackers, wines, and cheese dips. We can help you plan quantities and have wine glasses for rent. We will even do small wine parties for you at your home Just bring us your party needs.
Candlelight Wedding Performed
FARMVILLE - In a candlelight ceremony Saturday night in the First Christian Church here, Kimberly Bryan Pippin of Farmville and Paul John Nelson of North Reading, Mass. exchanged marriage vows.
The double ring ceremony was conducted by the Rev. Ronnie Davis, pastor of the First Baptist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Bryan Richard Pippin and the late Mr. Pippin. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adrian Nelson of North Reading. Mass.
A program of organ music was presented by Charles Davis of Richmond, Va. with Milton Dwight Barnette Jr. as vocalist.
The bride, given in marriage by her mother and escorted by her uncle. Walter Lee Pippin, wore a formal gown of white silkened organza over peau de soie fashioned with a Queen Anne neckline, empire waist and long bishop sleeves adorned with seed pearls, iridescent and schiffli Venise lace. Her
Priscilla of Boston chapel length mantilla of imported silk illusion was attached to a Camelot cap edged with Venise lace and rosette appliques. The bride carried a bouquet of mixed pastel silk flowers.
Teresa Gayle Pippin, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids included Martha Bennett of Elizabeth City, Heidi Lomax of Charlotte, Kim Smith of Raleigh, Nancy Linville of Wilson, Sonya Sutton of Virginia Beach, Va. and Lisa Satterthwaite of Farmville. The bridal attendants wore formal gowns of azure linen trimmed in white with shirt matching jackets. Each carried a bouquet of pastel silk flowes.
Honorary attendants were Gail Wooten, cousin of the bride, Mrs. Ronnie Wooten and Connie May, all of Kinston, Lynette Craft, cousin of the bride of Greenville. Kathi Messer, cousin of the bride of Farmville, Lillie Andrews Young of Charlotte, Kathi Fitzsimmons of Springfield.
Capture That Adorable Face Forever On
Tuesdays
at Deans Photography
Childrens Day prices on sittings and portraits Tuesdays Only Call 752-3980 to schedule your childs appointment
Deans Photography
203 Evans Street
Countrj/ Collectibles
Come See Us For Early Christmas Shopping Or For Special Items To Accent Your Home.
We Pride Ourselves On Making Your Dollar Go /t Long Way.
Order Your Handmade Gifts Early!
Call Mary Ann Odom At 756-0494 Summer Hours;
Wed.-Sat., 10-5:30 PM
IVi'Vt' f roni
Suii'h'i.i' (uiriii'ii Cfiili-r
NEW YORK BROADWAY EXCURSION
October 31 - Nov. 3 $300.00
Includes: Charter motorcoach with champagne brunch served en route. First class hotel lodging. Reserved seats for CATS and MY ONE AND ONLY. Escort to accompany group.
Also includes, morning tour of The Cloisters as well as guided tour of Americas Exhibition of Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Join us for fun and culture to the Big Apple
For details call:
Greenville Museum of Art
802 S. Evans St.
Greenville, N.C.
Phone 758-1946
Va. and Cindy Sigmon of Newton. Each wore a formal gown and carried longstemmed mums.
Steven Nelson, brother of the bridegroom, was best man and groomsmen included Ronnie Wooten, cousin of the bride, Arthur Andrews of Kinston, Rick Longchamps of Milford, Mass., Steven Pecevich of Wakefield, Mass., Scott Feely of Needham, Mass. and Peter Reckendorf of Gaithersburg. Md.
Children assisting in the wedding included Kerri Glyn Braswell of Farmville, flower girl, and Trey Cummins, cousin of the bride from Kinston, as ring bearer. Clarence Hardy Moye II of Farmville and William Scott Creech of Pink Hill were acolytes and Leigh Messer was rice maid.
The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of jade mint georgette crepe that
featured a high neckline and doleman sleeves. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal gown (A blue qiana featured a bloustm bodice. Each wore a white orchid. Mrs. John T. Craft Sr. of Walstonburg, maternal grandmother of the bride, wore fcMinal gown of teal blue qiana with a matching coat.
After a trip to unannounced points the couple will live in Kinston.
The bride is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a B.S. degree in dental hygiene and works at Caswell Center in Kinston. She was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. The bridegroom is a graduate of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst with a B.S. degree and works at Caswell Center as a supervisor in the dietary' department.
Births
Bell
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dennis Bell. 403 Eleanor St.. a daughter, Stephanie Lauren, on Sept. 10, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Bunnell
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Owen Stephen Bunnell, Oakmont Square Apartments J-8, a daughter. Haley Elizabeth, on Sept. 11. 1*983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital,
Nelson
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Danny Kay Nelson. 426-F W. Fifth St., a son. Adrian Dantrez, on Sept. 11,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Parham Born to Mr. and Mrs. George Houghtaling Parham Jr.. Farmville, a daughter, Corinne Stewart, on Sept. 11, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Brown
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas Brown III, 24 Scott St., a son, Mark Hunter. on Sept. 11, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
.Marlowe
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Fred Marlowe, Williamston, a daughter, Jessica Nicole, on Sept. 12, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Keel
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Wilson Keel Jr., Ayden. a son, Christopher Burton, on Sept. 12, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Allen
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Mayo Allen, Route 2, Greenville, a daughter, Britney Leigh, on Sept. 13, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Speller
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Speller, Windsor, a daughter, Marquitta Jaramila, on Sept. 13,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.^ Anniversary Celebration Special
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hMpires September 30. 1903
Professtonal SidH
1 indd Lvnn Tripp HS.MA Td (C ourtselingl
( droline C Wurlhinyton H S (Foods & Nutrition)
Oglesby Born to Mr. and Mrs. Levi Calvin Oglesby Jr., Oak City, a son, Levi Calvin III, on Sept. 13,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Kittrell
Born to Mr. and Mrs.
James David Kittrell, Roanoke Rapids, a son, James David Jr., on Sept. 13, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Barrett
Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Travis Barrett, Ayden, a daughter, Dortral, on Sept. 13. 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Spain
Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Ray Spain, Win-
terville, a son, Jason Bryant, on Sept. 14, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Williams Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Johnnie Buck Williams III, Rocky Mount, a son, Michael Allen, on Sept. 14, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Kidd
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Garth Kidd Jr., Rocky Mount, a daughter, Leslie Diane, on Sept. 14, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Flowers Born to Mr. and Mrs. Phillip K. Flowers, Route 1, Greenville, a son, Jordan Bayard, on Sept. 14, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Goddard
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joe James Goddard, 1915-B McClellan St., a daughter, Carol Ann, on Sept. 18,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Lane
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Russell Lane, Williamston, a daughter, Kelley Michelle, on Sept. 18, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Mills
Born to Mr. and Mrs. James Thurman Mills, 411
Wedding
Invitation
Blr. and Mrs. Michael D. Clayton request the honor of your presence at the marriage of her daughter, Karen Denise Meekins, to Jeffrey Lee Warren, on Oct. 8 at 3:30
m. in the First Church of ist in Washington.
Tos^WeigEnJitT
Jack LaLanne
Meadow Fresh Diet Drink tastes like a delicious shake. Three flavore to choose from.
Phone 752-1201 or 756-8720
On The Yoimg
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'A Registered jeweler is a true professiona
The .American Gem Society title of Registered Jeweler, is based on gcmological education,
e.xaminations and ethical selling practices. Our credentials are reviewed annually before the
title is renewed. \Mien selecting fine jewelrs, our .AGS title is your assurance of the
reliability and capahilit\ of this firm.
LAUTARES JEWELERS
DIAMOND specialists Registered JewelersCertified Gemologists 414 Evans Street
We do not sell discount or promotional jewelry.
ByCLAY DEANHARDT
Rose High School has two teachers, Christine Gantt and Virginia Read, who have received a $2,500 fellowship grant from GTE for in-service work.
The grants are to be used to attend courses and semi-nars, related to math and science, that could not otherwise be attended because of lack of funds.
This is the first year high schools have been included in this college oriented program and Rose High is proud to be one of the 11 secondary schools statewide to be included in this pilot program.
Mrs. Gantt, a math teacher, plans to use her grant to attend a computer
Abel St., a daughter, Jennifer Lynn, on Sept.'18,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Gruber Born to Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Norbert Gruber Jr., 208 Woodhaven Road, a son, Christopher Raymond, on Sept. 18, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Sumrell Born to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Franklin Sumrell, Winterville, a son, Jason Everette, on Sept. 19,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Williams Born to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Frank Williams, Snow Hill, a daughter, Sheniqua Denise, on Sept. 19, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
seminar, attend state and national math conferences and take two math courses at East Carolina University. Mrs. Read plans to take two science courses at ECU, attend state and national science teachers conferences and a national physics conference.
Rose High also receives a $5,000 grant from GTE -half is to be used in the math department and the other half in the science department.
Virginia Jones, a 12th grade English teacher, has been named to represent Rose in the N.C. Teacher of the Year competition. Elected by her fellow teachers at school, she will compete with other city school teachers for the local title. The winner will then advance to the regionals and finally to the state competition.
. The FBLA is sponsoring a booth at this years county fair. All Aboard! Training of Opportunities Headed for the Top is the title of their booth which contains models of the establishments that employ the more experienced FBLA members. Other vocational courses are sponsoring booths at the fair and patrons are encouraged' to stop by and see what their high students can accomplish.
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Downtown 752-7076 Carolina East Mall 756-6286
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HOUSE CALLS!
Were not doctors, but we do specialize in buying estate merchandise. Sometimes its because someone is moving. Sometimes Its for an unhappy reason! But every week I now go out to make house calls on lovely folks and buy everything from the smallest piece of china to the largest piece of antique furniture. Sometimes we buy a few pieces. Sometimes we buy everything In the house. Its all done professionally and very privately-and If we can help you, call me for a personal estate house call.
The Estate Shop Coin & Ring Man 400 Evans St. 752-3866
Thank You Bronson Matney, Jr.
A
Double Ring Ceremony Performed On Saturday
Sandra Darlene Hendrix became the bride of Jeffrey Warren Williams Saturday at 7 p.m. in the First Pentecostal Holiness Church of Greenville. The Rev. Frank Gentry performed the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Hendrix Jr. of Greenville. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Williams of Greenville and George W. Creech of Snow Hill.
A program of nuptial music was presented by Mrs. Daneel leRoux, organist of Greenville. Debbie Gladson of Greenville and Jerry Waters, uncle of the bride of Washington, sang You Needed Me, Can Two Walk Together and The Wedding Prayer.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of white sheer organza over taffeta designed and created by her mother. The gown featured a high neckline, sheer round yoke and full bishop sleeves. The fitted skirt extended into a cathedral length train encircled with double rows of ruffles. Her fingertip veil of illusion was attached to a Camelot cap. The gown and veil were accented with cord edge ruffles. The bride carried a formal silk cascade of lavender orchids, white butterfly roses and stephanotis accented with white satin and lace.
Wanda Newton of Greenville, S.C. was matron of honor and wore a formal gown of purple crepe de chine with elbow length tucked sleeves. A lavender sash accented the flowing skirt which featured rows of tucks around the bottom. She carried a hurricane lamp which featured a lighted single candle and highlighted around the base with a silk arrangement of lavender orchids, white babys breath, carnations and roses with lavender and purple ribbon streamers.
Denise Umphlett of Greenville was maid of honor, Donna Davis of Royston, Ga. was bridesmaid and Tracy Williams, sister of the bridegroom, was junior bridesmaid. Each wore a gown identical to that of the matron of honor in lavender with a purple sash. Their hurricane lamps were also identical. The junior attendant wore a lavender gown with a purple sash featuring a tucked front yoke with a Peter Pan collar. Sh carried a lace parasol accented with lavender flowers and purple and lavender streamers.
The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers were Stacy and Tracy Mills, David Williams, brother of the bridegroom, and Toby Hendrix, brother of the bride, all of Greenville.
The brides mother wore a formal gown of rose crepe featuring a fitted waistline and neckline ruffles. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal gown of light blue knit and chiffon with an empire waistline. They were remembered with a white silk orchid.
Grandmothers of the bride, Mrs. Maggie Waters of Washington and Mrs. Lillian
MRS. JEFFREY WARREN WILLIAMS
Hendrix of Greenville, and the bridegrooms grandmothers, Mrs. Virginia Watson of Virginia and Mrs. Carrie Shirley of Ayden, were given white silk orchid corsages.
Penny Skinner of Ayden presided at the guest register and Wanda Wiseman of Greenville served as director.
The bride is a graduate of Rose High school. She graduated from Emmanuel College in Franklin Springs, Ga. and Pitt Community College. She works at East Carolina University.
The bridegroom graduated from Rose High Scool and works with the ECU School of Medicine.
The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip.
After the ceremony the parents of the bride entertained the wedding party, family and guests at a reception in the church fellowship hall.
Cake was served by Betty Pollard and Dana Powell poured punch. Virginia Alcock, Margaret Nelson, Betty Gentry and Lorraine Hines, all of Greenville, and Joann Williams of Washington assisted in serving.
After the rehearsal Friday night, the parents of the bridegroom entertained the wedding party in the fellowship hall of the church. The couple honored members of the wedding party with gifts.
By CECILY BROW.NSTO.XE .Associated Press food Editor SUPPER FOR TWO Hoisin Pork & Rice Bean Sprout Salad Custard Tarts & Tea HOISIN PORK Flavorsome hoisin "sauce is available in specialty food shops.
1 pound boneless rib pork chops (3)
Marinade, see recipe 3 tablespoons oil 8-ounce can sliced bamboo shoots, drained 5 medium scallions, thinly sliced
s2tablespoonshoisinsauce mixed with 1 tablespoon soy sauce
Trim fat from around chops; cut in half lengthwise; slice thin crosswise; mix with Marinade. In a wok over high heat, heat 2 tablespoons of the oil; add pork mixture and stir-fry until meat loses its pink color; remove. Quickly heat the remaining 1 tablespoon oil in the wok and stir-fry the bamboo shoot slices until hot. Return pork to wok with scallions and hoisin mixture and stir-fry until hot. Serve over rice. Makes 2 large servings.
Marinade: Stir together until smooth 2 teaspoons each cornstarch. soy sauce and dry sherry.
Birth
ZUCCHINI OMELET Repeated by request.
4 cup olive oil
At Wits . End
By Enna Bombeck
I was in an exercise class the other day when the instructor said, Remember how we used to do sit-ups lying flat on our backs? You old-timers will remember that. Well, they have since discovered sit-ups are bad for your lower backs. Now we bend our knees. And you dont have to come all the way up anymore. Its been discovered that just getting ygur shoulders off the floor is just as beneficial.
That really ticked me off!
How long am I going to go on being penalized for being born too soon? New exercise techniques are only a part of it.
In 10 short years my soap powder has gone from PERFECT FOR A L L Y 0 U R WASHABLES to IMPROVED! to NEW ADVANCED FORMULA and is now touted as A SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGH for detergents.
How can you keep improving on something that was perfect to begin with? And how about suntans? Twenty years ago they
cups thinly sliced unpared zucchini 6 large eggs 1 teaspoon salt Pepper to taste l-3rd cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese In a 10-inch skillet gently cook zucchini in the hot oil until tender - about 5 minutes. Beat eggs with salt and pepper until foamy; stir in Parmesan. Pour egg mixture over zucchini. As mixture sets, lift edges with a wide spatula and tilt pan so soft portion runs down to bottom of skillet. While top is still slightly soft, cut in we^es and turn to brown lightly. Serve at once. Makes 4 servings.
were the sign of health, wealth and a good bod and if you didnt have one by April 30, you stayed in the house.
Nowadays, sun is out. We know more about it now, they say, and its veiw bad for you. It makes you wonder how many other things we are living with today that in 10 years will be passe.
If I seem suspicious it is because I have been made to feel like a fool for learning how to baste clothes and then discovering 15 years later that basting is a waste of time.
How many other things are scientists and technology experts keeping from me? If lettuce and carrots are really fattening, I want to hear about it now. Even if you arent real sure yet.
If there are plans afoot to cap a childs mouth and use it for energy, ! urge whoever is working on this to share it with parents today. It could save lives. Lots of them.
No one wants to go on flossing their teeth for the next 20 years only to turn on the radio one morning and hear an orthodontist tell them it causes baldness.
So someone tell me. Is my coffee as rich and full-bodied as its going to get? Is my peanut butter as creamy as I deserve? My aspirin as effective as is humanly possible, or do they still have plans for it? And what about my gasoline? Has the last additive been added?
Until I get some answers. Im just going to sit around in a bathrobe in a state of inertia eating junk food and watching TV. Both are safe. I wouldnt believe anything anyone told me about junk food and as for TV ... it never changes.
Peele
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott Peele, 2403 Jefferson Drive, a daughter, Lauren Ashley, on Sept. 23, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25.1983 C-5
Exciting new Fashions-at rresistible Savings!
Brodys own modified wool blazer with the new
untailored styling In the fashion up-swing of the menswear look
Tweeds set the pace.
The blazer with a new vitality!
Navy, brown, and grey tweeds.
Reg. $70.00
FALL 1983 LADY
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C-6 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. September 25,1983
Karen Hope Weds Robert Gaston II
CHADBOURN - Karen Leigh Hope and Robert Lawrence Gaston II were united in marriage Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in the Chadbourn Presbyterian Church. Performing the double ring ceremony was the Rev. Ben Gurley.
Given in marriage by her parents, the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Hope Jr. of Chadbourn. Mr. and Mrs. Joeseph P. Gaston of Greenville are parents of the bridegroom.
Emily S. Hope of Garner was maid of honor and the bridesmaid was Elizabeth Anne Hope of Chadbourn, both sisters of the bride.
The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included C. Vann Stubbs of Greensboro and William Gaston of Greenville, brother of the bridegroom.
Mrs. Kitty Walton was organist and Devira Thomas was soloist for the ceremony.
The bride wore a formal gown of candlelight satin and re-embroidered alencon lace and seed pearls. The fitted lace bodice featured a high lace neckline. The back of the bodice had a sheer yoke, low cut to the waistline. Covered satin buttons accented the back to the natural waistline. The bouffant gathered skirt had a border nf alencon lace at the
hemline and extended into a full cathedral train. Her three-tiered mantilla was of candlelight silk illusion. The cathedral length illusion was sprinkled with seed pearls and attacl^ to a garland of silk flowers, satin and seed pearls. The bride carried a bouquet of white roses, stephanotis and babys breath. It was centered with silk white roses with mauve tips.
Engagements
Announced
GINA DORTHEA KEECH...S the daughter of; Mrs. Alfred Uriah Leggett of Washington, who' announces her engagement to Lowell, Dean, Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Henry Wfl^n of Greenville. The wedding is planned for Oct. 23.
DEDICATION TODAY
SALISBURY - At 3 p.m. today, a dedication ceremony, open to the public, will be held at the sculpture garden site on Water Street in Salisbury. Keynote speaker will be Mary B. Regan, executive director of
Each of the attendants was dressed in a mauve dress of double georgette chiffon over crepe. The tucked front bodice was trimmed with ivory cluny lace. She carried white and mauve carnations in a bouquet with satin candlelight streamers.
A reception was held in the church fellowship hall.
The couple will be living in Raleigh after a wedding trip to Jamaica.
The bride is a graduate of N.C. State University and is a sales representative for CBI. The bridegroom is an assistant vice president for N.C. National Bank. He graduated from East Carolina University.
The bride and bridegroom were honored at a rehearsal dinner Friday evening at Copper Hearth Restaurant in Whiteville. It was given by the parents of the bridegroom.
the North Carolina Arts Council. The Waterworks Gallery and Visual Arts Center, facilities of the Rowan Art Guild, is housed in Salisburys first waterworks building, built in 1913.
Just Arrived Great Selection of Brass and Ceramic Lamps
MARSHA ANN VINES...is the daughter of Mrs. Barbara Vines of New York, who announces her engagement to Johnnie Curtis Taylor, son of the Rev. and Mrs. J.B. Taylor of Greenville. The bride-elect is the daughter of the late William Vines. The wedding will take place Nov. 26.
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6ath To School Means 6ach To Clean Carpets
Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
Like many cooks. I particularly enjoy baking a pound cake that has a smooth top. No large hump and wide
crack in its middle. But recipes that produce such a sweet paragon are hard to find.
That's why 1 am particularly
Folk Art
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Reproductions A Taste Of The Past
Even though Jackies Ole House pays county and N.C. taxes. N.C. Hwy. Dept, says I can't advertise on this coun- ty road, so my signs had to come down! But, Im still at the same location.
1 i Milei VVe^i Of 753 1944
1 V M -Off 204 On Hwi, 13 At I any ^ Cross Rds F armville
happy to pass along an old recipe of mine, newly reworked, that is baked in a swirl-shape pan and has a flat top with only the tiniest of cracks.
This is not. however, the usual plain pound cake, Brown sugar gives it delightful maple flavor that walnuts round out.
MAPLE WALNUT POUNDCAKE 2 cups sifted unbleached all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 4 teaspoon baking soda 4 teaspoon salt Two > 4-pound sticks butter (1 cupj, soft or cut into 16 pats
1*4 cups firmly packed light brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 large eggs 1 cup walnuts, chopped medium fine
On wax paper stir together flour, baking powder, soda and salt. In the large bowl of an electric mixer cream butter, sugar and vanilla. At medium sp^ beat in eggs one at a time, beating 1 minute after each addition. At low speed, gradually beat in flour mixture until barelv
MAPLE WALNUT POUND CAKE - Its baked in a swirl-shape tube pan and is delicious to serve with other sweets at teatime or as an evening refresher. The above drawing is from an out-of-print cookbook.
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blended. With a wooden spoon, fold in walnuts.
Turn into a well-greased, lightly floured 2-quart swirl-shape tube pan. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven until a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean - about 50 minutes. With a small metal spatula, loosen sides; turn out on a wire rack; cool completely.
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EVENING REFRESHER Ice Cream & Praline Coffee PRALINE TOPPING It takes a little time to caramelize the sugar for this topping but it's worthwhile.
2 cup 12 ounce packet) slivered blanched almonds 2 cup sugar 1 tablespoon water Spread the almonds over the bottom of a shallow pan 113 by 9 by 1 inch is fine). Bake in a preheated 400-degree oven, stirring a few times, until lightly browned - about 3 minutes. Turn out almonds onto wax paper. Cool the pan and grease the bottom generously with butter. In an 8-inch skillet over medium heat, constantly stir together the sugar and water until the mixture becomes lumpy and then melts smoothly and is golden brown. Off heat, at once stir in the almonds. Pour onto the prepared buttered pan. Cool completely. Turn into a roomy plastic bag and crush (a meat mallet is good to use) until there is a mixture of small pieces and crumbs. Store in an airtight container. Makes 1 scant cup. Serve as a topping for ice cream or other desserts.
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Rhonda Jo Eastwood Weds
William Thomas Corbett
Parkers Chapel FYee Will Baptist Church was the scene (rf the wedding ceremony Saturday at 3 p.m. of Rhonda Jo Eastwood and William Thomas Corbett. The ceremony was conducted by the I^. Larry Stevens.
Gail Crisp of Stoices was organist and the Rev. Donnie MUes sang Let It Be Me, If and The Wedding Prayec.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Cooking
Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
BRUNCH FARE Tomato Juice Cocktails Sausage Fondu & Apple Rings Palmiers & Coffee SAUSAGE FONDU Flavorsome way to vary a popular combination.
12 slices bread pound sharp cheddar cheese, coarsely grated 1 pound bulk sausage 4 arge eggs teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon prepared mustard Ih cups milk Arrange 6 slices of the bread in a single layer in the bottom of a buttered 2-ouart baking dish (111^ by Ih by 1^4 inches). In a 10-inch skillet, crumbling with a fork, cook sausage until it loses its pink color; remove with a slotted spoon and sprinkle over bread. Tra with cheese, then with a layer of remaining bread. In a medium bowl, beat eggs, salt and mustard until blended; add milk and beat to blend; pour over bread. Let stand at room temperature for 1 hour. Bake in a preheated 375-d^ee oven until browned - 30 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes before serving. Makes 6 servings.
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.
Wedding 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.
Floyd Thomas Eastwood Sr. of Route 11, Greenville, the bride was given in marriage by her parents. Kim Car-raway of Falkland was honor attendant. Bridesmaids included Kathy Eastwood, sister-in-law of the bride, Deborah Coltrain, Wendy Flynn and Nancy Corbett, sister-in-law of the bridegroom, all of Greenville, Junior bridesmaids included Leslie House of Greenville and Tracy Andrews of Tarboro, cousin of the bride. April Eastwood of Bethel, niece of the bride, was flower girl.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Dudley Corbett of Route 11, Greenville.
The ring bearer was Patrick Black of Spartanburg, S.C., cousin of the bride, while ushers included Stacey, and Tommy Eastwood, brothers of the bride, Carlton Corbett, brother of the bridegroom, and Timmy Coltrain, brother-in-law of the bridegroom, all of Greenville. The father of the bridegroom was best man.
Honorary bridesmaids included Teresa Whitehurst, . Lisa Sawyer and Rhonda Jackson, all of Greenville.
The bride wore a floor length gown with a chaj^l train of organza and silk Venise lace and chantilly lace over taffeta. The fitted bodice featured a Queen Anne neckline and organza bishop sleeves. Silk Venise lace motifs etched with seed pearls outlined the neckline, adorned the illusion yoke back and appliqued the sleeves. Garlands of silk Venise lace edged with a Chantilly lace ruffle appliqued the skirt in a redingote effect. Tiers of chantilly lace ruffles accented the hemline of the train. Her waltz length layered mantilla of bridal illusion, bordered with silk Venise lace and accented with Venise lace motifs, flowed from a Juliet caplet of satin and lace etched with seed pearls. She carried a sweetheart bouquet of
burgundy and white silk roses with a white satin bow and streamers.
The maid of honor wore a floor length gown of burgundy satin styled with a fitted bodice, sweetheart neckline and pouf Juliet sleeves. The gathered skirt was sashed in satin. She carried a white lace fan covered with burgundy, pink and white silk roses with white satin bow and streamers.
The bridemaids gowns were identical. The junior bridesmaids wore pink satin floor length gowns similar to that of the bridesmaids and carried miniature white lace fans. The flower girls gown was identical to that of the junior attendants and she carried a white lace basket with burgundy streamers filled with mixed flower petals.
The brides mother wore a formal gown of emerald green styled with a V-neckline and cap. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal gown of pink lustreglo and chiffon with a high neckline. Both wore white orchid corsages.
The honorary bridesmaids wore formal dresses and carried a siqgle burgundy silk rose.
After the ceremony the parents of the bride entertained at a reception in the church fellowship hall.
The couple will live near Greenville after a wedding trip to Sea Island, Ga.
The bride is employed at Harris Super Market and is a graduate of North Pitt High School. The bridegroom is engaged in farming and is a graduate of North Pitt High School and N.C. State University.
An after-rehearsal dinner was given by the bridegrooms parents at Parkers Barbecue in Greenville. The bride and her attendants were honored at a luncheon held at the home of Mrs. Lester House. The couple was also honored with showers at their respective churches.
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C Sunday. September 25.1983 C-7
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Rare Cinquefoil Flower Being Protected In National Forest
By DAVID FOSTER Associated Press Writer MOUNT WASHINGTON, N.H. (AP) - The worlds last remaining patch of Robbins cinquefoil holds its own against the brutal climate on the Northeasts highest mountain, but the rare alpine plant is poorly equipped to survive the attention of people who might unwittingly love it to death.
Now the federal government is spending thousands of dollars a year to keep the cinquefoils admirers away.
INDIAN SUMMER WATER PLEASURE -Russ Kaplan, of Hampton, Va., takes advantage of the autumn weather which brings stronger winds and in turn larger waves for
surfers. Kapan is^ shown catching waves at Buckroe Beach, Va during a recent windy afternoon. (AP Laserphoto)
In June, when the tiny plant blossomed on an acre of rocky alpine barrens below the mountains summit, a U.S. Forest Service guard patrolled the area, telling hikers to stay out. Year-round, signs threatening $500 fines warn trespassers away from the walled-in acre. Pressure plates hidden under a nearby trail keep track of the annual
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Activities Scheduled By Marine Resources Center
Bed 'n Beth Boutique
ATLANTIC BEACH -Science and arts activities are scheduled this week at the N. C. Marine Resources Center/Bogue Banks, The center is located six miles west of Atlantic Beah in the Theodore Roosevelt Natural area. All activities are open to the public without charge. For events requiring reservations. interested persons are to call 274-4003.
The calendar for the week
(Contact center for more information).
Wednesday, 10 a.m. -Library storytime; and 7:30 p.m. - "The Living Sea, Channel 10. Vision Cable.
Saturday, 1:15 p.m. -Library storytime; and 3 p.m. - Frans van Baars watercolor demonstration.
Sunday (October 2), 3 p.m. - A slide presentation, The American Alligator; and 4 p.m. fish feeding.
is:
procession of more than 7,000 hikers.
Robbins cinquefoil, added in I960 to the federal governments endangered species list, is one of the worlds rarest plants. Only 4,000 individual plants are known to exist, and they aU grow here, on a mountain with some of the worst weather in the world.
Temperatures on Mount Washingtons 6,288-foot summit can dip below minus 40, and 100-mph winds regularly scour the exp^ rocks above treeline. The cinquefoil, growing within an inch of the ground, escapes killing winds by hiding under small pockets of insulating snow and ice.
In spring and fall, repeated freezing and thawing shatters the rocks and heaves plants by their roots out of the scant soil. But the cinquefoil survives where little else can, a long taproot anchoring it in crevices.
Robbins cinquefoil - scientific name: Potentilla robbinsiana - can grow for 30 or more years, each summer sprouting its five-|)etaled white blossoms and a few more tiny evergreen leaves.
For all its hardiness in a punishing environment, the plant is vulnerable to the heavy hand - and foot - of man. The cinquefoil is so small (usually about an inch in diameter) that even a trained botanist may not see it before stepping on it. Just walking near the plant can harm it. A footstep can dislodge soil particles, which then are blown away by the wind, leaving no soil for
Bridal Registry Service
Register and Receive A Free Gift.
Telephone 355-2583 Carolina East Mall
Monday. 1 p.m. - Mixed media art class, instructor, John Alpar. Co-sponsored with Carteret Technical College. Pre-registration required,
Tuesday, 1 p.m. -"Horticulture for Coastal Carolina," instructor, John Alpar. Co-sponsored with Carteret Technical College. Pre-registration required. -Tuesday through Saturday -(no time listed) - Frans van Baars Watercolor Workshop. Pre-registration required.
Book News
FROM SHEPPARD MEMORIAL LIBRARY
By WILLIE NELMS Bill Haley died on February 9,1981. To the generation that grew up in the 1950s, his songs were a major influence. A new book, "Bill Haley: The Daddy of Rock and Roll, by John Swenson describes the sad life of this very human individual.
Swenson draws on interviews with dozens of people who personally knew Haley to piece together this story. The book
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reveals many things about the singer that may be unknown to his fans. Blind in his left eye since infancy, Haley was always a shy and reclusive individual. Promotional pictures of his often appear staged and artificial as he tried to disguise his
blindness.
In his early days, Haley wanted to be a country and western singer. A better than average yodeler, he was gathering a country following when his early rock hits first materialized'' causing an abrupt change in his career plans. Songs like "Skinny Minny, See You Later Alligator," and the famous "Rock Around the Clock" helped make his name a household word in the 1950s.
Unfortunately, Haley was never able to replicate the formula for success that he discovered with his early records. Although he remained popular in Europe and Mexico in the 1960s and 1970s, his fame at home evaporated like the earnings from his early hits. The victim of unwise business practices and a growing alcohol problem, Haley was '-entually forced to flee to Mexico to excape his creditors. Haley's final days were spent in a sad effort to recover the lost glory that was his in the 50s. The various attempts at comebacks, along with his limited success on the rock and roll revival shows, are chronicled by Swenson. The author lets the people who knew Haley best speak wherever possible, and he draws from a rare interview with Haley to provide flesh to the story.
The picture that emerges is of a basically simple man with a real empathy for young people. Haley was a victim of his early success. He never had the sex appeal or the singing ability of Elvis Presley. His stage actions were never as spontaneous as Little Richard or Chuck Berry. Yet with his band^,j:iW Comets, Haley provided a dynamic show with musi^ which epitomized the phrase "Good time rock and roll.
Swenson provides an honest account of Haleys rise and his sorrowful ending. His book will appeal to anyone who ever jitterbugged to "Shake Rattle and Roll or any other hits by Bill Haley and The Comets.
/J...........................
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Oct. 5-8 & 10 Americas most famous & spectacular rock opera.
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Dec. 1-3, 5 & 6 Remarkable comedy hit about coming-of-age in the turbulent 1960s.
Feb. 24 & 25, 27-29 Performing modern, ballet & jazz. Exciting...solid achievement!
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Eight years on Broadway! A starkly realistic & funny play about life in the Georgia jackwoods.
ATLANTIC BEACH -Artist Frans van Baars of New Bern will conduct a watercolor workshop at the N. C. Marine Resources Center in Pine Knoll Shores from Tuesday through Saturday. The workshop will be from 16 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Friday, with a free public demonstration at 3 p.m. on Saturday.
Fee for the workshop is $90, payable to the N. C. Marine Education Resources Foundation. For more details, call the center at 247-4003.
THALIAN HALL SHOW
- April 18-21 IA satiric comedy about the greatest American myth of all: Hollywood.
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WILMINGTON - A new exhibit, "Still Playing -Thalian Hall, is opening at 2 p.m. today in the New Hanover County Museum. Actors and actresses in dress
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General Manager East Carolina Playhouse East Carolina University Greenville, NC 27834
COME BY Messick Theatre Arts Center Corner of Fifth & Eastern Monday-Friday, 10 am*4 pm
from past performances wi aingle with visitors and re-
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late Thalian Hall history. The exhibit uses photographs, programs, advertisements, costumes, and theater artifacts to tell the story of the historic theater. Admission is free.
germinating cinquefoil seeds.
That plant has adapted to this environment, said Roger Collins, the Forest^ Service worker in charge of protecting the plant. But... we dont need people tramping on it needlessly.
Martha McClellan of Newton, Mass., has hiked in the White Mountains since 1939. Every June she walks up the mountain to see her favorite alpine flowers.
Now she s disappointed the cinquefoil is off-limits.
other patches of cinquefoil blossomed in the White Mountains, Forest Service officials say.
This year, the service
spent $7,000 to enclose the remainirijg cinquefoil colony with a low rock wall and relocate a traU that went through the colony.
i guess pu have to do something. many people
come here now, she said. It used to be we would just walk anywhere we wanted, pointing out the flowers. Now you have to be more careful.
Collins said some people resent being told they cannot walk on what is supp(ed to be public land.
There are 752,000 acres of White Mountain National Forest, and thats the only acre closed to entry, he said Were not trying to close the forest to people, but thats the only known area it grows, and were bound to take some pains to protect it. Forest Service researcher Raymond Graber said he understands why people want to see the rare plant, but added, Anyone who walks out there, even the researcher, is causing some damage to the plant colony.
The flower-lovers are at least half the problem, he said. They appreciate the plant, want to photograph it, and they end up disturbing the area.
At one time, at least three
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FLORIDA, EPCOT, DISNEY WORLD Oct. 18-23, Nov. 22-27, Dec.
27-Jan. 1
NASHVILLE. TN Oct. 6-9, Oct. 27-30 OZARKS (Graceland, Eureka Springs, Passion Play, Mountain Music Jamtwree, Churchill Downs) Oct. 1-9 N.C. & TN MOUNTAINS Oct. 13-16 PA DUTCH Nov. 3-6 NEW YORK Nov. 17-20
NEW YORK CULTURAL TOUR (Winterthur Museum and
Gardens, St. Patricks and St. Johns Cathedral, Opera, Metropolitan Museum, Kennedy Center, Radio City Music Hall Christmas Spectacular) Dec. 7-11
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Write or Call lor more information on these end other tours available. Our 1983 catalog is available; Ask for yours today!!
Writers Will Meet Tuesday
The second meeting of members of the Greenville WriterS' Club for the month of September will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hannon, 201 Courtney Place, Lake Ellsworth.
Anyone interested in any form of creative writing is invited to attend.
Those wishing to share rides can meet at 7:30 p.m. at Krispy Kreme Doughnut Shop on East Tenth Street.
POPCORN THEATER Popcorn Theater, a film and book program for fifth, sixth, and seventh graders, will have its first session at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the Childrens Room at Sheppard Memorial Library. Due to limited space, those attending must have a ticket. For free tickets visit the library or call 752-4177.
m
Three Shows On View At ECU's Gray Gallery
The Daily Reflector, Greenyille. N C. Sunflay. September 25.1963 C*9
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer Coils of clay projecting from chicken wire, somber-eyed people depicted in lithographs, and a variety of graduate student work are the three cat^ories of offerings now on view at t^ Gray Gallery, Jenkins Fine Arts Center, School of Art, East Carolina University.
The triple shows in the exhibition are attractively arranged, with good use made of austere gray dividers brightened in some areas with large pots of greenery.
Rinda Metzs five works in Tapestries make for an interesting use of clay and metal. Three of the pieces -
one in peach and persimmon colors, another in blues and grays with touches of brown, and a third in shades of orange-brown, are densely clustered works. In these, literally hundreds of pencilsized clay coils have been worked through the grids of common chicken wire. The effect given is that of shaggy rugs which are stiff rather than soft. Its evident considerable time and work went into fashioning these heavy pieces, which are displayed hanging vertically from wres. The handsome simplicity of these sculptures make them ideal for display in a large gallery space, or in any spacious area such as lobbies or reception halls.
t
A LITHOGRAPH ... by Bette Bates. "B4, One-Two, is one of seven works by the artist who is working on the M.F.A. degree from ECU. She now lives in California.
Coming Events At Mariners Museum
BEAUFORT - Several events are scheduled for the coming week at Hampton Mariners Museum, 120 Turner Street, Beaufort. All are free unless otherwise noted. For events requiring reservations, call 728-7317.
Today - 1:30 p.m. - Rowing race during the Wooden Boat show. For sing e and two-crew boats.
Thursday Exhibit opens on mushrooms of Field and Forest, showing through November.
Friday - Fossil Hunt field trip to Texasgulf phosphate mine at Aurora. 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Meet at Aurora Fossil Museum, 8:30a.m. Fee $5 prepaid. Reservations required.
Saturday Island Creek Nature Trail field trip, Croatan National Forest, near New Bern. Meet at musuem at 10 a.m. or at trail entrance at 11 a.m., return at 2 p.m. Reservations required.
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'Ruckus Rodeo' Opens Oct. 1 At NCM
Two other sculptures by Ms. Metz reveal that the wire basis for these sculpture without massive introduction of clay coils can in themselves be expressive pieces. One is a collage of .various wire types ranging from fine mesh screen to larger meshed wire spray painted in various colw?.
Ms. Metz, now a faculty member at Ohio Weslyan University, previously taught ceramics at Chowan College in Murfreesboro where she also was director of the colleges art gallery.
Bette Bates, an M.F.A. candidate at ECUs School of Art, now living in California, shows seven lithographs. All except one depict somber, haunting faces who seem to have retreated from the world into hiding places of lonely boxes or within protective panels. These lithographs are imbuded with mystical and historical con-notations further strengthened by her choice oi titles - i.e., Changing of the Bard. One work, B-4, One-Two, more pared of details than the other pieces, done in grayish purp e and misty blacks, is especially haunting, with loosely.defined figures that suggest a 1 blend of sad-eyed dolls and a nebulous shape that calls to mind a centaur.
A large number of ECU students working at the graduate level - 26 of them - are showing works that run the gamut from small sculptures by Linda Darty and Betsy Markowski to large canvasses by Hugh Heaton and George McKims over-sized Siren.
A wide range of media is represented in this portion of the trio of exhibitions -mixed media, ceramics, sculpture in wood, metal, stone, graphics, paintings, and a couple of photographs.
ome of the student art work is for sale by the aitists. Anyone interested can secure the telephone number of individual artists from the School of Art and , approach the artist directly.
Gallery hours at Gray Gallery are from 10 to 5 weekdays, and from 1 to 4 on Sundays. The gallery will also be open on Oct. 29, ECUs homecoming day.
JERRYRAYNOR
By SHARON BROOM N.C. Museum of Art RALEIGH - Ruckus Rodeo, a walk-through sculptural exhibition by contemporary artist Red Grooms, will have its first
showing east of the Mississippi River when it comes to the North Carolina Museum of Art Oct. 1-Dec. 31.
Commissioned by the Fort Worth Art Museum for its
Bicentennial exhibition in 1976, Ruckus Rodeo cap tures the pandemonium of a Texas rodeo in larger-than-life figures. Populating Grooms environment are broncobusters, Brahma bull
riders, ttr v.re.-i'c'?. stretcher becrn,-, and a Rodeo Queen
The exhibition also includes Ruckus Films. six comical films by the artist which which will be shown Oct. 1-Dec. 30, and Red Grooms: Prints of the Seventies, to be on view .Nov. 1-Dec. 31, ^
The figures in "Ruckus Rodeo are constructed from wire supports covered with Celastic - a paper-like material dipped in acetone, then shaped before it hardens -and painted with acrylics. They are surrounded by a painted canvas backdrop of grandstands filled with spectators. The exhibition area measures 50 feet wide and 25 feet deep, with figures reaching 12> 2 feet high.
Ruckus Rodeo is perhaps the best example of the zany energy and humor that characterize Grooms work. Born in Nashville, Tenn. in 1937, and now living in New York City, Grooms has achieved a unique place in todays art world. Like the Pop artists of the early 1960s, he fills his work with objects from everyday life, using commonplace images to prove and satirize the fads and fancies of America in the
20th ccr:*-. Wiule "Ruckus Kodt .. ; the extite-
iiicot 01 a . . Tt*x.is rodeo, it also reminds us of our fascination with fame, however fleeting, and our penchant for violence.
The films by Grooms being shown demonstrates how his sptciul bra-*-! A humor is traibiui?; lu other art forms iht iilms will be shown at 2.30 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, at 3 p.m. on Saturdays, and at 1:15 p.m. on Sundays. (The Saturday,
Oct, 1 showing will be at 1:15 p.m. and there will be no showing on Sunqay. Oct. 16).
The prints by Grooms to be shown beginning Nov. 1 comprise 38 works from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Knestrick of Nashville. Lithographs, silkscreens and etchings, the prints portray figures from Gertrude Stein to Chuck Berry, and satirize life in contemporary America with such works as "Bicentennial Bandwugun, The print show was organized in Nashville by The Fine Arts Center. Cheekwood,
MusCuiii hours at the N, C. Museuin of Art are from 10 to 5 Tuesdu.vs through Saturdays, rtiid from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sundays. Admission is free.
THE RODEO QUEEN . . . from Ruckus Rodeo, of 1976. The big work. 50 by 25 feet by artist Red Rooms will go on view at the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh on Oct. 1, along with six of Grooms films. A collection of
his prints will be shown beginning Nov. l. Both shows will be on view until the end of December. (Photo courtesy N. C. Museum of Art).
A Review
Insightful Look Into El Salvador's History
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painstakingly documented book is a warning to those who would make hasty judgements about conflict that is over a century old.
Baloyra claims that many of the attitudes held by Americans about El Salvador are, in reality, fantasies. He writes, One of the American fantasies about El Salvador is not peculiar to that country. The fantasy is very much the result of an assumption that is shared equally by liberals and conservatives, although applied to the pursuit of diametrically opposed goals in some instances: that is, the assumption that, given its status as a superpower and the resources at its command, the United States can dictate the outcome ot a crisis like that in El Salvador. Baloyras book provides a convincing argument that this is not the case.
The primary virtue of El Salvador in Transition is that Baloyra sets the present conflict in El Salvador within a social, historical and political framework. While not discounting the possibility of Soviet, Cuban and San-danista aid to the rebels in El Salvador, Baloyra sees the present struggle as just the latest in a long series of wars and coups over political power in a country where an oligarchy of 14 powerful families controls the land, the economy and the government. Since 1841, for example, there have been 52 successful coups in El Salvador, but none has threatened the power of the ruling elite or increased the participation of workers or peasants in the government.
It is only against the detailed background of inequality and repression that such events as the assassination of the popular Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero and ihv killing of four American Maryknoll nuns become something other than isolated acts of terrorism. Rather than isolated incidents, Baloyra sees these acts of violance as parts of a campaign of terror designed to discourage any charge in the power structure of El Salvador.
A Week-End With Bruce Frye Fri.{Sept.30)&Sat.(Oct.l) Guitar & Vocals 9:00 PM UntiI...Cover Fri,: Peel Your Own Shrimp
El Salvador in Transition. By Eniique Baloyra. Chapel Hill. The University of North Carolina Press. 1982. 236 pages, paperback. $8.95
In the age of the electronic media, debate over public issues often takes the form of an exchange of slogans. A 60-second spot on the evening news leaves little room for in-depth coverage or analysis, and often newspaper editorials and wire service stories provide only slightly less superficial coverage. The Jeffersonian ideal of an enlightened citizenry rests on the assumption that we have access to full and accurate information. If the conflict in El Salvador is as crucial to this country as many claim, we need all the information we can get before we decide on what action America should take. One source of information comes from the University of North Carolina Press.
University presses have traditionally published books of interest to small groups of scholars and students, but El Salvador in Transition should be required reading to anyone concerned with the social and political upheavals in Central America. Enrique Baloyra is a professor of political science at Chapel and author of an extensive report on El Salvador completed in 1980 for the U.S. Department of State. His provocative and
Rather than a democracy under siege, Baloyras El Salvador appears to be a reactionary dictatorship in the throes of an internal revolution. Some readeis will not agree with this asscb. ment, but even thobc ho disagree must look at the evidence Baloyra carefully compiles. El Salvador in Transition is neither easy nor pleasnt reading, but it can help to move the debate of the American role in Central America away from emotional name-calling and towards an examination ot what has happened, is happening, and should happen.
JIM HOLTE
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THE
GREEN LEAF
PRESENTS IN CONCERT -RDL PROMOTIONS-
Rita I Coolidge 1
Wednesday, Sept 28, 1983 One Sliou Doors Opcz. I IU ' M. *
Advance Tickets $8.00 Door $10.00
Tickets Available At The Greenleaf And Both Record Bars Of Greenville
The Greenleaf
Showcase Of The Stars
1104 N Memorial Drive (Across From AirpOTt) Greenville, N.C ' 757-3107 For Information
Sfouf-Coletnan Recital Philip Evancho New PCC Visiting Artist
friiest rArit^lict r^ArHnn fv AHmccAn ic on/4 4Ka on o/4ittn/i* iL.^ c^nrr
Guest recitalist Gordon Stout, mahmbist, and pianist Donna Coleman will be in recital at 8:15 p.m. Monday in the A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall, East Carolina Universi
ty. Admission is free and the public is invited to attend.
This recital is sponsored by McFayden Music Co. of Fayetteville and Pearson Music Co. of Durham, and is
an adjunct recital of the ECU School of Music Festival for 1983-84.
Stout, currently assistant professor of percussion at the School of Music, Ithaca College, New York, is a com-poser as well as percussionist who specializes on the marimba. He has premiered a number of his own original compositions as well as works by other contemporary composers. A number of his compositions have been published and can be heard on recordings.
In this recital. Stout will perform three of his compositions Etudes for Marimba, selections from Books I, II, and II; Diptych No. 1; and "Three Dances for Marimba, (the Astral Dance, Two Mexican Dances).
Ms. Coleman, a member of the ECU School of Music keyboard faculty, will play three movements from Mozart's Concert in D Major: and Kreislers "Praeludium and Allegro."
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflectw Staff Writer I hope to help bring opera closer to the people in the area during my time here, said Philip Evancho, bass baritone with the National Opera Company in Raleigh who has been selected as the new Visiting Artist at Pitt Community College.
Ive performed earlier in Greenville with the National
Opera company of Raleigh, so Im familiar with the fine
Top Ten
MONDAY RECITAL . .. Marimbist Gordon Stout will be a guest recitalist with ECU faculty member pianist Donna Coleman in a recital at 8:15 p.m. Monday. The recital, free and open to the public, will be held in the A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall on campus.
1. Puttin on the Ritz, Taco
2. Every Breath You Take." The Police
3. "The Safety Dance. Men Without Hats*
4. Sweet Dreams." Eurythmics
5. .Maniac," Michael Sembello
6. "Tell Her About It, Billy Joel
7. "Total Eclipse of the Heart, Bonnie Tyler
8. "She Works Hard for the Money." Donna summer
9. "Don't Cry, Asia
10. "Sexv,StravCats
work being done by Clyde Hiss at the university with the ECU Opera Company. What I hope to achieve is to be another means for local people to learn a little more about opera. Getting to know this art form is to love it, Evancho commented.
The dark haired singer, a native of Barberton, Ohio, received his Bachelor of Music Degree from Baldwin-Wallace Con-semtory of Music in Berea, Ohio and worked toward a Master of Music degree in vocal [rformance at the University of Akron before continuing studies at the Boston Conservatory of Music. For five years he taught vocal and choral music in public schools in Ohio before returning full time to performance.
"It was in Boston that I really first made progress in performing," Evancho pointed out. There, I had opportunities to perform with top rated companies such as the Boston Lyric Opera, the Boston Concert Opera, and the Opera Company of Boston. He also sang at the Providence Opera Company in Rhode Island.
I enjoy performing in opera, not just for the music.
but for the entire magic that opera offers. Its an art thats visual, aural, and in many instances, it even involves fragrance, as in opera scenes where incense is burned.
His Boston performances helped him expand his re-)ortory. I played Lord )avenaut in ie American premiere of Marshners "hie Vampyre, and had the role of Seneca in one of the oldest of operas, Monteverdis Coronation of Poppea. Other roles Evancho have performed include ones in operas by Lortzing, Mozart and Donizetti.
It was with the National opera Company in Raleigh that Evancho sang the role of Don Pasquale in Donizettis opera of the same name which was not long ago performed in Greenville.
Evancho feels one a major factor hat has hampered opera is the widely held opinion its entertainment for the very rich. In a sense thats true in the U.S., but is becoming less so with the chances people have to see opera performed on television and to attend regional performances. Actually, most operas were written for the common man to convey his predicament in his daily struggles against the aristocrats. Or else it was a means of telling a love story, or musically expressing adventure, and quite often, simply an enjoyable comic entertainment.
Older people who were not been exposed at an early age to opera, or who may have heard only some real heavy stuff at first, like Wagners work, have understandably not cared much
for opera, Evancho commented. Put children who have a chance to hear a variety of opera, including the more lyrical and comic ones, usually fall in love with it.
During his years assignment as Visiting Artist at Pitt Community College, Evancho says I plan to be busy filling every commitment that comes along. Thats what Im here for, to
perform in schools, in churches, and for any ^oup that might want me to sing. And Im not limiting appearance to opera alone. I like to sing sacred music, show tunes, popular music, and art songs. I nope the public will keep me busy.
Evanchos wife, the former Stephanie Boryk, majored in Russian studies at Trinity College, Hartford, Con
necticut. She has taught Russian Folk Dancing and served as the National Folk Dance Director for the Federation of Russian Orthodox Clubs. The couple has a young daughter, Anya, just a little over a year old.
Already, Evancho has made a few local appearances and will be heard in the near future on Carolina Today, at St. Timothys Episcopal Church, with the local barbershop quartet, and at the First Quistian Church in Farmville. He will also sing at a conference in Raleigh next week, at the Recreation Center here in late October, and at an educators conference in Pinehurst in November.
Evanchos services, under the auspices of the Continuing Education Division at Pitt Community College, can be arranged solely as an entertaiment appearance, or combined with discussions and lectures in conjunction with singing.
Interested groups can arrange for a performance by Evancho by calling the college at 756-3130, extension There is no cost involved in his singing, lecture, or discussion engagements.
NEW VISITING ARTIST.., Bass baritone Philip Evancho is the new Visiting Artist at Pitt Community College. Arrangements for performances by Evancho, for singing, lectures, discussions or a combination program, can be made by calling the college at 756-3130, extension 225. There is no cost for the performances.
BLTE Opening Wednesday
The 1983-84 season of the Best Lunch Theater Ever will get underway promptly at noon Wednesday with workshop (reading) production of a one-act play at the Greenville Museum of Art, 8U2 South Evans Street. The play is longer than the usual presentation, and will run for about a full hour.
The public is invited to attend, and there is no admission for the monthly lunch time theater normally held at the the museum on the third Wednesday of each month.
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Patrons are encouraged to bring along a bag lunch. Beverages will be served by the museum staff without charge.
The work being featured in this season's inaugural offering is "Trading in Futures" by Robert Qlyman of Wayland, Mass. Dr. Clyman, a psycho-therapist practicing in Sudbury, Mass. will be present for the workshop production being directed by Catherine Rhea-Darby*. Barbara Gilmore and John Maple will read the parts of the two characters in the ' play
Sheila Turnage. literary manager of the Playwright
Fund of North Carolina, Inc. of Greenville, says the play is a laser-focused intensely personal examination of the power relationship between a husband and wife. It relies on emotional rather than visual transition."
Sweet Adelines' First Show October 23
Top Country
PUPIQLLS
STAMIM6
MAI LIN CHAMPAGNE JEAN SILVER
IN COLOR
Doors Open 5:45
1. ".Night Games," Charley Pride
2. "Why Do I Have To Choose," Willie .Nelson
3. "I'm Only In It for the Love." John Conlee
4. Baby, What About You." Crystal Gayle
5. "Don't You Know How Much I Love You," Ronnie Milsap
6. "Flight 309 to Tennessee." Shelly West
7. ".New Looks From an Old Lover," B.J, Thomas
8. "Paradise Tonight," McClain and Gilley
9. "What Am 1 Gonna Do," Merle Haggard
10. ".Nobody But You," Don Williams
Ted Ellis, professor of contemporary drama in the East Carolina University English Department, will moderate the discussion period scheduled to follow the workshop production of each play. Guest moderator will be Dr. James LeRoy Smith, Chair of Faculty at ECU and chairman of* the philosophy department.
Dr. dayman has had workshop productions of his plays presented at the Source Theater in Washington, D. C at the Drama Rama .New Play Festival in San Francisco, and at two Boston theaters, the Playwrights' Platform and the Nucleo-Eclettico Repertory Theater. This will be the first workshop production of one of his works in North Carolina.
The Eastern Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines, an incorporated organization of Lady Barbershop Singers, will present Sing A Rainbow, their first very own show at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 23 at Ayden-Grifton High School.
Tickets for their inaugural concert will be priced at $3 and will be available at the door prior to the performance hour. ^
Carolyn Ipock, director of Sweet Adelines, will also direct a guest group, The Expose Quartet of the Golden Triad Chapter of Winston-Salem. Additionally, the
Funds to support the PlaywTights Fund of North Carolina, Inc., producers of the Best Lunch Theater Ever, are provided by the North Carolina Humanities Committee and the North Carolina Arts Council through the auspices of the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council.
Organizational Meeting Slated
The Roxy Music Arts and Crafts Center, Inc. plans a meeting of individuals and groups interested in organizing the Roxys 10th Annual Halloween Masquerade Ball. The meeting will be at the Community Building, corner of Fourth and Greene Streets, at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. For additional information call 752-5713.
program will feature a double quartet from within the 22-member group. The lady barbershop singers perform in four range of voices -tenor, lead, baritone, and bass.
Members of the chapter have spent time all during . the summer planning their first big public show. Helen Turner has been program director, and Jo Ann Lewis has designed costumes carrying out the theme of a rainbow. Musical selections have been made by Mary Vars, and Brenda Ross has been in charge of securing a performance place and arranging for lighting and staging.
A Saturday workshop was held in August under the direction of Susan Danin and Mary Vars to rehearse the choreography for the show. Makeup artist is Jan Kittrell. Billie Jean Trevathan is in charge of hospitality, and Brenda Ross is house manager. Clara Weathers is publicity chairman.
Doug Mitchell is stage manager and technical director, and script chairman is Ruth Shaw.
Janet Rodgers is chairman of the show, and Mary Vars is co-chairman.
Hazel Stapleton, of the department of psychology at East Carolina University and also a veteran actress in ECU Playhouse productions, will be mistress of ceremonies for the show.
Advance tickets for the show can be purchased by contacting ticket chairman Susan Danin at 7567-9907.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25. 1983 C-11
Farmville Council Presenting Musical
REHEAR^L SCENE ... Three of the large David Scott as Applegate. Performances will cast of Damn Yankees" which will open be given at the auditorium in Farmville TOursday in Farmville are shown in action. Central School, with tickets priced at |4. r rom left to right are: Guy Wayne Harris as (Photograph by Bruce Steinbach)
Joe Hardy, Barbara Sauls as Gloria, and
FARMVILLE - For its first production of the 1983-84 season, the Farmville Community Arts Council is presenting the well-known musical, "Danm Yankees. Three 8 p.m. evening performances will be given, on Thursday and Saturday evenings this week and Monday evening, October 2, with a Sunday matineee to be presented at 2 p.m. All performances will be in the auditorium of Farmville Central High School.
Tickets are priced at $4 and will be available at the door prior to the hour of performance.
Director for Damn Yankees is Dan Roebuck. Co-producers are Beth Fulford and Hilda Joyner. Rosemary Holmes Turnage is the musical director, and DotDee Moye is the choreographer, assisted by Valerie Fountain.
Cast members, drawn from the community and from students at Farmville Central include Guy Wayne Harris in the role of Joe Hardy, Mike Barnette as Joe
Boyd, and Sara Beth Fulford as Lola. Also, Doris Wilkinson Briley as Sister. Cordelia Lewis Deans as Meg, and David Allen Scott in the role of Applegate.
Festival Events At ECU Announced
First Winner Of N.C. Award
FIRST WINNER . . . Dancer Mel Tomlinson, a native of Raleigh now dancing with the New York City Ballet where he is a soloist, has been announced as the first winner of an annual North Carolina Award which each year will be presented to an outstanding visual or performing artist. The |10,(K)0 award is sponsored by the four North Carolina newspapers that are owned by The New York Times Company. Gov. Hunt will present the award to Tomlinson in Wilmington on Oct. 27. (Photo by James Armstrong).
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WILMINGTON, N.C. -Mel Tomlinson, a dancer with the New York City Ballet, has been named the winner of the first annual North Carolina Prize, an award to be presented each year to a North Carolinian for outstanding work in the visual or performing arts.
Announcement of Tomlinson as the first winner of the award has been made by' Marjorie Longley, director of public affairs of the New York Times Company. The $10,000 award was established earlier this year by the four North Carolina newspapers, owned by The Times Company.
Tomlinson, who is 29 and a native of Raleigh, will be presented with the award by Governor James B. Hunt at a dinner in Wilmington on October 27 at the Figure Eight Yacht Club.
Tomlinson was selected for the award on the basis of his exellence of performance, his contribution to the development and appreciation of his art form, and the evaluation of his work by his peers in the field of dance. Agenes de Mille, the noted choreo-grapher, has called Tomlinson "as fine a young dancer as Ive worked with. Individuals are eligible for the North Carolina Prize if they were bom in North Carolina, regardless of their present residence, of if they are presently in the state and have at least seven years residence there. Winners are chosen by an anonymous jury appointed by a board of advisors and are judged on their entire body of work, not on special presentations or applications.
Tomlinson joined the New York City Ballet in 1981 and became a soloist with the company in 1982. From 1973 to 1974 he was principal dancer with Agnes de Milles Heritage Dance Theater. In 1974 he joined the Dance Theater of Harlem, where his roles included the pas de deux from George Bailan-chines Agnon. He was a principal dancer with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater from 1977 to 1978 and also in 1978 appeared as a guest artist with the Jeffrey Ballet for de Milles "Conversations on the Dance. Productions in which Tomlinson has appeared with the New York City Ballet include Agnon, 'The Four Temperaments, Goldberg
The
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Orpheus, and Who
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He has appeared on teleivison with the company in LEnfant et les Sortilges, Agnon, and Persophone. ,
Tomlinson attend the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem, studied in Italy in 1973, and received a B.F.A. degree in 1974.
The four New York Times Company newspaper Jhat have established the award are the Time-News in Hendersonville, the Dispatch in Lexington, The Lenoir News Topic, and the Wilmington Star-News. In addition to the publishers of the four newspapers, there are several other persons prominent in civic and arts activities in North Carolina, who constitute the board of trustees administering the prize.
Robert ^Hause, project director for the annual series of Festival concerts and masterclasses, has announced details on the first of these events which will be -held beginning Sunday, Oct. ,2.
Festival 83-84 promises to be a highlight in this continuing series, Hause commented. The School of Music has received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Solo Recitalists Program, to assist in bringing to the campus two nationally recognized young artists, David Jolley, French horn player, and Stephanie Chase, violinist. The first of the two artists to be featured in the festival will be David Jolley, who will present a recital on Sunday, Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. at the A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall on the East Carolina University campus on East Tenth Street.
On Monday, Oct. 3, Jolley will present two master classes, one from 10 a.m. until noon, the other from 2 to 4 p.m.
The recital and the classes are both open to the public without charge.
In his Sunday recital, Jolley will be accompanied by pianist Jonathan Feldman.
Compositions he will perform include a Bach/Busoni choral prelude, Come, Savior of the World; Beethovens Sonata for Horn ara Piano, Opus 17; an adagio and allegro by Schumann; a work each by four Russian composers,
Carolina Today
^ea festivals, one in Scotland Neck, another in Perquimans County, are two of the topics on tap for viewers of Carolina Today during the coming week. The early morning, 6 to 8 a.m. show, is aired over WNCT-TV, Channel 9, with co-hosts Slim Short and Shauna Barnaby.
The calendar is:
Monday 6:40 a.m., Dr. Lionel Kindrick on improving your self image; 7:15 a.m., Randy Coal talks about saddle bred horses; 7:25 a.m.; John Cousart with details on the world tobacco auctioneering championship; 7:40 a.m., a spokesman tells about Farmville Art Councils Damn Yankees.
Tuesday - 6:40 a.m., Dr. Don Brown talks about geriatrics on healthbreak; 7:15 a.m., a spokesman with details on the Friends of the School of Music; 7:25 a.m., information on the Fall Festival of the Scotland Neck Business Bureau; 7:40 a.m., bass baritone Philip Evancho, Visiting Artist at Pitt Community College, is the guest.
Wednesday - 6:40 a.m.. Cliff Everette, Jr., chairman of the Board of Elections, talks about voter registration; 7:15 a.m., the subject is the Lets Talk program of the Pitt County Action Coalition for Teens; 7:25 a.m., a guest gives details on the upcoming Pitt Shrine Club chicken fry; 7:40 a.m., a fall fashion show for men and women.
'Thursday - 6:40 a.m.. Tips for your pet is the topic of a Pitt County Human Society representative; 7:15 a.m., football coach David Jones comments on the upcoming Pirates game; 7:25 a.m., a staff member provides comments on the forthcoming production of East Carolina Playhouses production of Jesus Christ Superstar; 1-Ay \m., the
, Festival of Skills in Perquimans County is the topic.
Friday - 6:40 a.m., The subject is the N. C. Society of American Association of Respiratory Therapys recognition week; 7:15 a.m., Durwood Harris comments on computers and business; 7:25 a.m., Barbara High on regional businesswomens meeting; 7:40 a.m., plant doctor Eddie Harrington is the guest.
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Jolley has performed extensively in the U.S., Europe and the Near East. He is winner of a Concert Artists Guilds Recital Award and the Heldenleben International Horn Competition in Cleveland. In 1982 he was the first hornist to ever be chosen for the Affiliate Artists Residency Program and under that auspices performed over 100 recitals nationally.
A native of California, Jolley received undergraduate and graduate degrees from The Juilliard School in New York. He has made a solo recording titled Romantic Music for the Horn.
Pianist Feldman is an active recitalist throughout the U.S., in Canada, Europe, Africa, the USSR, and the Far East. He has performed as soloist with the Boston Pops, the St. Louis Little Symphony and other orchestras. Feldman has also recorded for Columbia Masterworks, RCA Red Seal, Titantic, and Philo Records.
Among others with name roles in the musical are Billy Carraway as Van Buren, Barbara Mewborn Sauls as Gloria, Donna Rasberry as Doris, and Bob McGaughey as Welch.
The large cast includes others in speaking or singing roles, as well as a chorus, a dance ensemble, baseball players and 14 children.
Bevill Searcey and Taylor Baker are in charge of lighting, Sound technicians
are James Allen, Carl Lineburger, and R. D. Johnson.
Musicians in the group directed by Ms. Turnage are Anita M. Gaboon, Hiram C. Gallop. April C. Wainwright, Sherry S. Waiters, Jerry W. Walters, Doug H. Cushing. Bill Dunn, and at the piano, .Miriam Bailey.
This Farmville Arts Council production is partially funded by a Grassroots grant from the North Carolina Arts Council.
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Newfoundland's English Unlike Any Other Form Of English
By CH.ARLES CAMPBELL
Associated Press Writer
ST. JOHNS. Newfoundland (API - The language spoken on Newfoundland island is called English and is easily understood by outlanders but it could never be mistaken for the Queens English, or even American.
Visitors from the United States and mainland Canada - called CFA's for Comes From Away - may be perplexed by such samples of local speech as: "My face was frore. my collars was frore and everything was ballicattered.
But never fear, an explanation is now at hand.
The above citation is from the Dfitionarv of .New
foundland English, and is one of 23 references to written or oral sources used for the definition of ballicatter. The noun means the fringe of ice formed in winter by spray and waves on the shoreline, and the verb means to cover with a layer of ice.
Frore. as you may now have guessed, means frozen.
The whole language is just like a currant cake -its dense with metaphor and simile. says George M. Story, one of three English professors who spent more than 25 years working on" the dictionary before it was published last year.
Theres a great sense of verbal play in Newfoundland, I think, Story said in an interview in his office at the Memorial Uni
versity of Newfoundland, storytelling is ubiquitous, puns, double meanings, plays with words.
Much ^)f what makes Newfoundland English special comes from the islands dependence on fishing, nearly as strong today as it was 400 years ago when the island was claim^ by Sir Humphrey Gilbert as the first overseas colony of the British Empire.
Furthermore, more than 95 percent of todays Newfoundlanders are descended from people who came either from southwestern Ireland or the southwest counties of England Devonshire, Dorset and Hampshire.
You get an unusual kind of intensification of the
F EMI\ K DA.\( L.S Two unidentified young members of the V\accamaw .Siouan Tribe Dancers are shown as they performed two of their tribal dances at tfie Indian .Summer Festival held .Sep. l.i at Hertford in Per
quimans County. The day long festival featured Indian craftsmen, traditional Indian food, an author, and representatives from several North Carolina tribes. (Photo Courtesv Jill Gillam of Windsor)
Wilson To Host Dance Theater
WILSON - The North Carolina Dance Theater will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Fike High School Auditorium in Wilson.
The performance by the 16-member troupe will open with .Allegro Brillante. George Balanchine s classic with music by Tchaikovsky A second selection will be Clowns and Others," choreographed by North Carolina Dance Theaters associate director Salvatore Aiello set to music by Prokofiev.
Tickets for the performance are being sold by the Wilson .Arts Council and will also be available at the (ioor. For more information and for reservations call the council at 291-4329.
Appalachian Festival At NCSU
RALEIGH - Three entertainments are on the calendar for the coming week at North Carolina State University Center Stage as part of an Appalachian Festival. All are at 8 p.m These are:
Thursday - Mike Cross in concert
Friday - David Holt and Doc Watson in concert.
Saturday - The Roadside Theater presents its newest musical, South of the Mountain.
Tickets for the concerts will be on sale at the door and can be reserved by calling 737-3900.
Remember
TOP TUNES 40 YE.ARS AGO Your Hit Parade September 25,1943
(The number in parentheses following each song indicates the number of weeks the song has been in the top
ten listing I.
1. All Or Nothing At All (11)
2. Paper Doll (3 )
3. People Will Say Were In Love(12)
4. You'll .Never Know (21)
5. Sunday. Monday Or .Always (7)
6. in The Blue Of Evening (18)
7. I Heard You Cried Last Night (6)
8. Put Your Arms Around Me. Honey (7)
9. HowSweetYouAred)
Photo Contest Deadline Oct. 1
CHARLOTTE - The deadline for North and South Carolina photographers to submit entries to the Culbertson, Gilley. Hubbard Photography (i^ontest is October 1,
Entries are to be sent to: GVA Productions, 107 Latta .Arcade. Charlotte, N C,, 28202. Five inside photos will be purchased at $125 each with $500 to be paid for the work selected as a cover photo For details on the type of photos wanted, interested persons can call (704)375-3775.
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culture, Story said. This is reinforced by three centuries of successive immigration, until it virtually stopped in the mid-l9th century. Very few people have come into Newfoundland since then,' except branch managers. The island of Newfoundland in the North Atlantic off Labrador and Quebec is part of the province of Newfoundland. Labrador is the other part of the province.
Newfoundland was an independent country until it went broke in 1933 and was adopted - though certainly not absorbed - by Canada in 1949. Since then, it has provided some of Canadas most articulate and colorful public speakers.
The colloquial style is not just something used by unlettered people. Its something almost the whole society shares in, Story said.
The society gets to share in such juicy words as "mollyfodge - a lichen used to make a dy^ lewerdly - awkward/or clumsy, scraveT - to crawl hurriedly; livyer -a permanent settler; and tallywhacking -thrashing of a mischievous child.
The dictionary also lists 34 entries over four pages for cod, even though the principal meaning of the word fish in Newfoundland is nothing more nor less than
codfish - so that a waitress Salmonm-fish? ' vocabulary list only hints at guage as spoken by New
might ask a customer, Story acknowledges that a of the glwies of Ian- foundlanders._
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C . Sunaay Septempfer 25. laoj
U i
Arthur is superintendent, and Deans is assistant superintendent for the facility heing developed by Davidson-Jones General Contractor, Raieigh. "
>Construction In Greenville
AKeeps Rolling Along
DISCUSSING SPECIFICATIONS .. . Ransome Carter, right, of Carter Construction Company, LaGrange, and subcontractor for framing and exterior trim of The Pirates
Landing college efficiences on Reade Circle, discusses with carptenter Nick Nixon of Washington specifications for studs being used in the building's framework.
The sound of hammers and the buzz of saws, the sight of fresh wood and the glint of new metal have been heard and seen throughout Greenville during the peak construction summer months of 1983.
This year, in contrast to the slow rate of construction in the past few years, new construction has been very much in evidence. Carpenters, supervisors, contractors, home owners, and businessmen investing in new apartments and businesses all agree it has been a rewarding summer - they add they hope it is a trend that will not soon slacken.
Ginger Barber, Building Permit Officer for the City of Greenville, said it has been a good year so far, and we are still getting requests for permits, with 14 permits issued in September through the 20th of the month."
Construction trends are discernible in scanning the monthly permit reports. Private residences account for a smaller percentage of permits than existed a few years ago. while permits for duplexes and particularly for townhouses are on the increase.
Permits issued during May, June. July and August, peak construction months, totaled 137 with a value of $22.814,748. Permits in this period included five instances of over $1 million each - Ormond Wholesale Warehouse and the Sheraton Hotel in May; a multi-family complex on Beasley Drive and condominiums on Mulberry Lane, $2,017,990 and $2,000,000 respectively, both in July; and a care center on Mattox Road in August.
Comparative figures in 1982 and 1983 construction for the two-month period of July and August reveal a dramatic difference this year from last - in 1982,27 permits amounted to $2,193,814. This year, for the two-month period, the figures are 55 permits with a dollar value of $11,501,814.
Permits and values given in the table below represent construction that has been completed as well as that still underway. The Industrial category represents all types of construction other than dwellings, and includes offices, warehouses, churches and other structures.
MOULDING IS FITTED . . . Moulding to a door frame at the Bill Clark Construction Company's new building is put into place by Calvin Wade, left, and Leland Taylor, both of
Greene County. Taylor is a sub-coniractor for the spacious building being constructed on Arlington Ave.
Permits
May
June
July
August
Residencies
19
14
10
12
Duplexes
13
4
. 9
4 .
Townhouses
7
10
4
7
Industrial
8
7
3
6
Totals
47
35
26
29
Dollar Value
Residencies
$1,171,475
$ 843,000
$ 584.691
$ 746,371
Duplexes
644,500
203,300
442,000
215,435
Townhouses
1,743,000
1,478,925
4.802,830
3,322,900
Industrial
4.293,680
935,630
526.330
860,735
Totals
7,852,655
3,460,855
6,355,851
5,145,387
Text And Photos By Jerry Raynor
NEW CHURCH ON THE RISE . . . Bobby Lloyd, top left, Thomas Nevelle, top right, and Rev. David Moulton work on the roof of the new Faith Assembly of God Church on Hooker Road. Rev. Moulton savs the church is a
private undertaking, with construction carried out as funds become available. He hopes the contemporary building will be completed by the end of this year.
LAYING UNDERGROUND UTILITY LINES... Pete Moore, background, and his father, Robert Moore, both of FarmvUle, are shown at work on utility pipes being laid at the construction site of the Sheraton Hotel now being built.
ON TOP OF THE SITUATION ... ECU student and carpenter Tommy Tayior of Greenville maintains a good balance as he nails upri^ts in the framework of apartments for ECU students under construction on Reade Circle.
I I
TAKING A CAMERA BREAK ... Four construction members working oi^ Bob Barbour's new building agreed to take a brief break to have their photos made. The building, which will house auto sales rooms and other facilities, is basically metal
and glass with some brick. It's located at the intersection of N. C, 11-13 and U.S. 264 by pass. The four are, left to right, Curtis McCormick of Larmar, Inc. Heating and Air Conditioning, Tim Grant, Claude Dupree, and Kelley Ford..1
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Garden
Clinic
Q. How can I improve the drainage in a bed where 1 want to plant jonquils and other bulbs'? (R.L., Randleman)
A. Good drainage is essential for spring flowering bulbs. If you have a clay soil that doesn't drain well, there are three things you can do if you want to grow bulbs. First, you can mix an organic amendment such as peatmoss, compost or aged bark to the plant bed until the amendment makes up 50 percent of the beds volume. This will improve drainage. Another way to overcome poor drainage is to plant the bulbs in raised flower beds. A third alternative is to plant the bulbs on a slope where there is better drainage.
I Kim Powell extension landscape horticm.urist)
Q. What are some plants that will grow in an area of my home that doesn't receive much light' iV.C,, Lumberton)
A. Try aluminum plant, pepperomia, Chinese evergreen or philodendron. Most ferns and palms will also grow in low amounts of light. (VP Bonaminio. extension horticultural specialist)
Q. This summer there has been an insect pollinating my phlox that looks like a small hummingbird. What is it? Will it sting'? (O.W., Asheboro)
A. The insect is probably one of the sphinx moths, some of which are almost as large as our hummingbirds. Sphinx moths are strong, rapid fliers, and they are capable of hovering or flying backwards much like hummingbirds do. Most of the larger sphinx moths feed in the evening. They do not
sting. (J.R. Baker, extension entomology specialist)
Q. How soon can I begin planting spring bulbs? (C.C., Gastonia)
A. Most bulbs that flower in the spring and early
summer should be planted in the fall to satisfy the cold requirement of the bulbs and to give the bulbs time to develop a root system. It is best to wait until soil temperatures are below 60 degrees before planting. In North Carolina, this is usually October to November. (Kim Powell, extension landscape horticulturist)
RENOVATED PARIS (AP) - The Louvre Museum has reopened its Roman sculpture rooms after a major renovation project, unveiling exhibits that had not been seen by the public since 1971.
Q. Last year some of my pecans were covered by olive and black blotches. The entire husk of some nuts turned black and some nuts remained attached to the tree. What could cause Ibis'? (L.G.. Lucia)
A. Scab is the most common and damaging pecan disease. It is caused by a fungus that affects rapidly growing leaves, shoots and nuts. Syptoms on all plant parts are similar. Velvety, olive-brown to black spots occur on the husks. Several spots may dcxelop to form black blotches or may blacken the entire husk. Severely affected nuts may drop prematurely or may die and remain attached to the shoot. Symptoms on the leaves first appear as tiny olive-brown lesions on the veins on he undersides of the leaves Later, symptoms appear on the upper surface as small olive-brwon to to black spots. For homeowners the most practical control (rf scab is to plant a resistant variety such as Stuart, Cape Fear, Desirable, Elliott or Gloria Grand. However, a resistant variety does not assure a complete absence of the disease because no variety is totally resistant. Removing and destroying all leaves and husks from around the tree may reduce the amount of scab the following year.
Supplied by the N.C. Agricultural Extension Agency
By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures
It is said that a portable eleptric drill is the first power tool you should purchase for your home workshop. If there is good reason for that statement -and there is - it is equally true that the choice of a portable jigsaw or saber saw should not be far behind.
Many of us have at one time or another used a regular table jigsaw, even if only in a school shop. It is simple to use, reasonably safe and can make all kinds of curved cuts. But it has the limitations common to all stationary power too|s. The work must be brouglit to the machine. With a portable jigsaw, the machine can be brought to the work, the identical asset of the portable electric drill.
Whether it is called a jigsaw or a saber saw or a bayonet saw or any of sever- -al other names given to it by different manufacturers, the tool has a cutting action in which the blade moves up. down and through the wood or other materials with ease and smoothness if the proper type of blade is being used. That's the key to good results - the proper type of blade. When you buy a portable jigsaw, it usually comes with one, two or three blades. Before you use the jigsaw, read the directions to determine the right uses for the blades that were furnished with the tool. You can then decide which other blades you will need at once or at a iater time. Generally, the more teeth to the inch, the harder the ' materials that can be cut without much effort. Thus, a blade with 28 teeth per inch can be used for metal, whereas one with six
teeth per inch would be for wood or plastic.
Also, the speed at which the machine operates plays a part in the kind of materials that can be handled. Some jigsaws have but a single speed, some have two, some have three and some are what is called variable. Saws that run at high speed are better for the softer materials, such as wood. Those that operate slowly are better for tough products. A variable-speed saw is usually more expensive, but it is better if you plan to work with a variety of materials, since its speed can be adjusted to suit whatever you are working on. Incidentally, if your saw comes with only a single blade, it is most likely to be an all-purpose blade, which is the kind that can be used for both crosscutting and ripsawing. And, of course, the larger the saw, the more useful it is for cutting heavier materials.
If a jigsaw is misused, it is when somebody decides to use it on a jo6 which is manifestly for a portable, more powerful circular saw. Even when the jigsaw can make the desired cut, the strain on the motor will shorten its useful life. Anyone who has done any woodworking at all knows when a task calls for a jigsaw or a circular saw. But if you dont, the booklet that comes with the tool will tell you the kind of work it can handle without excessive effort.
When portable jigsaws first hit the do-it-yourself market some 30 or so years ago, they had metal housings. as did nearly all portable power tools. These days, many jigsaws and other portable machines have
Clean Well Before Winter's Storage
NEW YORK lUPI) -Barbecue grills and bicycles need a thorough cleaning before being put away for winter, says a Cornell University Extension associate in consumer education.
After the last barbecue of the season, scrub the grills grids and grates with a stiff wire brush dipped in a detergent solution, says Hada de Slosser.
Prototypes
loiagined
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)-The light" trend in food and beverages may be an exercise in self-delusion, says a University of Missouri-Columbia faculty member.
Donald L, Shawver says light pancake syrup may have fewer calories than regular, but pancakes still are pancakes. And, he adds, national advertisements for light tacos say in small print they are no lower in calories than regular tacos,
Shawver, who is marketing department chairman for the College of Business and Public Administration, says American marketers who emphasize natural, light products may be giving consumers what they want instead of manipulating them into thinking their new product is really what they need.
Consumers will try it, but unless they really like it, it wont go, he says, adding that it takes a good product to generate repeat purchases.
Shawver also speculates that the prototype consumer imagined by U.S. marketers may be a woman who treats herself to extravagances, is status-conscious, and concerned about her health -not enough to quit smoking or drinking but enough to reduce her caloric intake. She also knows guests are weight conscious even at social events, he says.
Rinse and dry the parts completely. Apply a thin coat of oil to protect the grids from rusting. Clean the interior and exterior of a grill.
If your grill has a gas tank, disconnect it and cover the opening with foil to prevent debris from getting in.
If touch-up or complete repainting is needed, sand lightly all over to remove flaking paint and rust.
Remove standing dust with a tack cloth or rewash the surface. When dry, apply a rust inhibiting primer and follow with two coats of high heat-resistant paint for metal.
If the grill is to remain outdoors, protect it with a heavy duty plastic cover.
A bicycle should be washed with detergent to remove any dirt and grime, Mrs. De Slosser says. Rinse and dry, then wipe all metal parts with a cloth saturated in machine oil to prevent rust and dirt accumulation.
To allevaite wear on tires, suspend the bike from the seat and handlebar stem with a rope or bicycle hook. When ready to use the bicycle again, sponge it with sudsy water to remove the oil. Rinse and dry. Check and reinflate tires to the recommended pressure.
plastic or other housings to guard against the possibility of a shock should a short occur while vou are working.
Its a good idea to get a tool which is double-insudated or otherwise shock-resistant even if it costs a little more. Double-insulated or not, the tool should be handled with care. Be especially careful to remove the plug from the wall outlet if you are going to work on the tool in any way, either to maintain it or to find out why ft is not operating properly. A portable jigsaw requires only a minimum amount of maintenance to enable it to last many years.
(Do-it-yourselfers will find much valuable data in Andy Langs handbook, Practical Home Repairs, which can be obtained by sending $1.50 to this newspaper at Box 5, Teaneck.NJ 07666.)
By BARBARA MAYER AP Newsfeatures
An authentic ct^y of an old fabric is known as a document. Those seeking to create a historicaUy accurate interior rely on such documentary fabrics to recreate a feeling of the past with todays home furnishings.
Once hard to come by -especially for American interiors reproductions are now more widely available. One authority recently estimated that documentary fabrics are available for every year in American history between 1700 and 1850. A growing number of fabrics are also based on the later Victorian, Art Nouveau and Art Deco periods.
To make use of these fabrics, consumers must educate themselves about the period they are trying to recreate. This research can be carried out at libraries, historical restorations and museums as well as in books devoted to the past.
Start with the general period of your house. If it is an old house, chances are you can find out when it was constructed. If the house is
Here's tlie Answer
By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures
Q. - We have been looking at houses because we intend to move within a few months. We have just about decided on one particular house, but we are a bit worried by the fact that the baseboard in two of the rooms seems to have separated a bit from the floor. Is this serious? We assume the baseboard can be easily replaced.
A. - Yes, it is a fairly simple matter to remove them and either reposition them or install new ones. As for the cause, the separation can occur when the baseboards have shrunk over the years, especially if the house is very old, or when the floor has settled. The trouble is not serious in most cases. An extra word of advice is that, when you have decided on a house you want to buy but there are some questions that first must be answered, a possible solution is to hire one of the house inspection companies. It will pay to spend a couple of hundred dollars - sometimes less - to check on whether the house is in reasonable shape.
Q. - Some time ago you mentioned that putting baby powder into the cracks of a squeaky floor, as one of the readers had done, was only a temporary measure and that the floor would squeak again within a few months, perhaps sooner. Does the same thing apply to a powdered lubricant, which I saw advertised the other day?
A. - A powdered lubricant will probably stop the squeaks for a while, but it is difficult to see how the remedy can last indefinitely. Walking on the floor will dislodge the powdered lubricant the same way it dislodges baby or talcum powder, although it may possibly last a bit longer.
Q. - The latch on one of our doors does not fit exactly into the strike plate. I read in your column that, in such case, the strike plate must be repositioned, but just how can I tell which way to move it?
A. - Rub the plate with
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 And 8Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.
chalk or crayon and then close the door. The latch will take off just enough of the chalk or crayon to show you whether the plate is too far forward or backward. You will then know how it must be repositioned.
Q. -1 inherited a beautiful dining room table that is very old. The veneer on the top has come undone in several places. Can I repair it myself or should I hire a professional?
A. - Ordinarily, you can unloosen some of the old glue under the veneer, blow out the debris and apply new glue. Even at best, this must be done very carefully so as not to cause further damage. However, in this case, you may have a valuable antique. If the task appears the least bit difficult, have it done professionally to avoid splitting the veneer or causing other damage that could lower the value of the table.
Updated Guide To Job Rights
PUEBLO, Colo. (UPI) -An updated version of A Working Womans Guide to Her Job Rights is designed for job-seekers as well as those already working.
The U.S. Department of Labor booklet tells how federal laws protect working women. It includes, among other things, a list of agencies to contact if you think your rights have been violated in looking for work or on the job. Single copies are $4.50 each from: Consumer Information Center, Dept. 130L, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
new, but was built to reproduce the past, a book on American building techniques through the ages should help to identify the type of house and the approx-imate era to which it belongs.
The next question is what were the commonly available fabrics and fabric treatments of that period, says Jane Nylander, textile curator at Old Sturbridge Village restoration in Massachusetts.
Use whatever you know of the house and its real or imagined occupants as a basis to search for similar interiors in books, museums and fabric collections, says Ms. Nylander, who has written a useful book on the subject, Fabrics for Historic Buildings, published by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 1980.
Actually, todays machine-made fabrics do not exactly duplicate the color and texture of handmade fabrics of one or two centuries ago. Todays chemical dyes produce different effects from the old vegetable dyes and fabrics that were printed by hand engraving, copper plate or wood block techniques, while those printed today use silk screen, steel roller printing and photo-engraving methods.
Despite these changes, reproductions are closer to the past than they used to be. For one thing, scholarship is more advanced, We have learned that earlier reproductions were too dull, relying on documents that had faded over the years, explained Milton Sonde, textile curator at the Cooper Hewitt Museum of Design in New York.
Recently, it was learned there was a marked preference for bold and dramatic designs and bright, almost glaring, colors such as yellow, orange, scarlet and bright blue. In the 18th and 19th centuries, these colors were used together at times in effects that today might be thought garish.
Gaining accurate information about decorating ideas of the past has become easier as more museums and restorations have opened to the public. Books on historic architecture and interiors are also u. re plentiful. Furthermore, a new spirit of authenticity is making itself felt.
Thirty years ago, it was enough to save the artifacts. Today, the emphasis is on uncovering, down to the smallest detail, how homes were furnished, according to Susan Swan, textile curator at Winterthur Museum in Wilmington, Del.
Restorations such as Winterthur with its 1% rooms dating from 1700 to 1850,
Colonial Williamsburg, in Williamsburg, Va., and Old Sturbridge Village offer guidance. Smaller local restorations are also excellent sources for information, not only in their rooms but also in publications.
Viewing restorations and pictures of them provides a sense of how period rooms ought to look, which will be helpful when it is time to go shopping for fabrics.
When selecting fabrics, opt for those in keeping with the spirit of the house as well as its period. In all eras, both sophisticated and primitive settings and furnishings coexisted, but not usually in the same household.
Ask me how somebody furnished an 18th- or 19th-century home, and I couldnt give you an answer unless you also told me what their economic status was and where they bought their furnishings, said Sonde. Just as today, a variety of choices was possible, depending on ones taste and resources.
Most documentary fabrics come in several colors, but only one is likely to be true to the period. This color is known as the documentary colorway or, fiff example, documentary blue. The other shades are chosen by the manufacturer with an eye to what is selling and generally have little relevance to the past, so opt for the documentary color for authenticity.
Although many fabric manufacturers offer at least a few historic reproductions, some companies specialize in them. A knowledgeable retailer or decorator should be able to steer you toward the fabric sample books that meet your needs.
ADD SPACE AND VALUE TO YOUR HOME..-
I SUN SYSTEM
I PRFFAWCATCO
SOLARSUNROOM
FOR FREE BROCHURE AND MORE INFORMATION
Contact HaroM Creech & Associates P.O. Box 1S63, Greenville. N.C. Z783S Telephone (919) 7S2-43M
Dealer Inquiries Invited
SUN SYSTEM
Prefabricated SOLAR SUNROOM
Greenvilles Waterbed Experts"
bedroom
concept/
WATERBEDS AND THINGS
323 Arlington Blvd. Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919) 355-2337
NEW HOURS Monday thru Friday 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. 1st and 3rd Saturday 10 A.M. 10 5 P.M.
New Management Sale!
Our Entire Stock Is Marked Down
Savings Up To 70%
Early American Styled
Sofa And Chair
Sofa, Chair and Love Seat
$49095
Queen Size Innerspring
Mattress &
Box Spring
Extra Firm
,..239
All Wood 5 Piece
Dinette Set, Table & 4 Chairs
$169
Double Size Innerspring
Mattress And Box Spring
$12995
Upholstered Swivel Rockers
5995
Per Set
Solid Brass Bed
Queen Size $1200.00 Value
59995
Wing Back Chairs
Many Colors From Which To Choose
169
Plus Many Other Hems At A Great Savings
Store Hours: 9:30-6:00 Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. & Sat. open Friday 9:30 To 8
Reese Furniture Co.
509 West 14th St. Phone 725-2405
I
THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified Advertising Rates 752-6166
3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More
Dsys 40* per line per day
Classified Display
2.90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available
DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines
Monday Friday 4 p.m.
Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.
Wednesday. .Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.
Friday Thursday 3 p.m.
Sunday Friday noon
Classified Display Deadlines
Monday Friday noon
Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.
Wednesday ..Monday4p.m. Thursday .... Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday. Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.
001 PUBLIC NOTICES
IN THE GENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCK, DECEASED
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCK, late of PItt County, North
Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of EDWfN BURTIS AYCOCK to pres
ent them to the undersigned Executrix, or her attorneys, on or before March 27, 1984, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate
payment.
This 20 day of Seotember, 1983. JEAN HODGES AYCOCK
128 Longmeadow Road Greenville, NC 27834 Executrix of the Estate of Edwin Burtis Aycock,
GAYLOR*OSINGLETON, McNALLY & STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law P O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 September 25, October 2, 9,16,1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Madle Lee Langley late of Pitt County, North Carolina,
this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said
deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before
March 19, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.
This 14th day of September, 1983. Ronald B. Langley Rt. 11, Box 158 Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutor of the estate of AAadle Lee Langley, deceased. September 18, 25; October 2, 9,1983
READVERTISEMENT FOR BIOS
Sealed bids will be received by Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees In the Ho^ital Auditorium until 2:00 p.m., tues day, September 27, 1983 and Imme
diately thereafter publicly opened and read tor the addltic
lions and modlflcatlons-Phase I expansion at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The prime contractors for readvertisement are electrical, mechanical and plumbing. Bids shall consist of the following: Base bid and All New Construction. Alternate No. I, Renovations to Surgery, Alternate No. 2, Renovations to Radiology.
Plans and specifications will be available In the office of the Vice
President, Facilities Management, HospI
Greenville, North Carolina. Tele
Pitt County Memorial Hospital,
phone No. 919-757 4587, The Office of Henningson, Durham & Richardson, 103 Oronoco St., Alexandria, Va. 22314. Telephone No.
703 683 3400 and F W. Dodge Com pany, 3716 National Drive, Raleigh, North Carolina 27612. Telephone No.
919 781 1620 and F.W. Dodge Com pany, 7 Wood-Lawn Green, Suite 107, Charlotte, North Carolina 28210. Telephone No. 704 525-6924. A
S200.0 deposit Is required for each nts requ(
Each bid submitted must cover
setof printi
uested.
all portions of the work. All con
tractors are required to have pro per licenses. Bid bonds of 5% will be required. Bid deposits may be In
the form of cash, cashiers check or bid bond. Performance and Labor Bond of 100% of the cost of the work will be required.
The Hospital reserves.the right to reject any or all bids and to waive Informalities.
Jack Richardson,
President
Pitt County Memorial Hospital September 18,21,25,1983
002
PERSONALS
BASEBALLFVER?
Friday, September 30th catch a double heaMT between the Yankees
and Orioles. Charter bus service from Greenville to Baltimore, returning that night. $32.50 for tickets bnd bus. Call Stewart or Joe at 7S3-3300 for further Information and reservations.
NIW AtbiT cardi Nobody ril usedi Alto Visa/Mastercard. Call 0S-M7-4000 Ext. C 8752.
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
CREDIT PROBLEMSr 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 (^ft
to be given away weekly, purchase necessary.
GRAND OPENINGII September
19, 1983. M & W's Country Cratts and Gifts, '/i mile from Pitt County Fairgrounds on Ram Horn Roaa. All kinds of craft Items for home, special gifts tor friends - free gift wrapping. Hours; 9to5. 758-4045.
LIVE INSTANTWEATHER 24 Hours PHONE 975-2013
WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.
Oil Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79-82 model car, call 756-1877, Grant Bulck. We will pay top dollar.
CARS$200!TRUCKS$l0O!
Available at local government sales. Call (refundable) 1(619) 569-0241, extension 1504 for directory on how to purchase. 24 hours.
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer In PItf County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114.
013
Buick
19M BUICK ELECTRA. Collector's gem. 109,000 miles, 1 owner - given loving care. $2200. 758 6582.
1973 ELCTRA. Original owner. Low mileage. Must sell immediate
ly! Price negotiable. 757 0110.
1980 BUICK REGAL, bl< e, air, stereo, cruise, tilt wheel, new tires.
High mileage but in excellent con-
tlo -------- -
dition. $4950. 756-8997 after 6.
014
Cadillac
1977 CADILLAC, silver, sedan De-Vllle. Excellent condition, clean. 756-0750 Monday-Friday after 6 p.m.; weekends anytime.
015
Chevrolet
CASH FOR your car. Barwick Auto Sales.756-7765.
1968 NOVA. 4 door, needs some work. $350. Call 758-6986anytime.
1970 MONTE CARLO. Good running condition with Keystone rims. $72y
Call 355 2803.
1971 MALIBU. 4 door, hard top. V 8, automatic, air, AM/FM cassette, 60,000 origiani miles. Good condition. $1500. 756-3826 after 6 p.m.
1973 MONTE CARLO LANDAU.
Fully equipped. New paint. Good conditon. 825-2831 or 758-1539 ask for John.
1974 NOVA. 4 door, needs work. $500 negotiable. Call 752 8619 after 3.
1975 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC 9
passenger wagon. Full power. Priced to ---------- '
to sell! 756 8444 days.
1975 MALIBU. Good running condition. Light blue. $600. Call 756-4933.
1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2 + 2, 5
speed, good mechanical condition. $1500.758 2300 days.
1976 CHEVY MONZA, great condl tion, 3 speed with stereo cassette included. $2200. 758 4799.
1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Loaded, clean. Reduced from $4250 to $3250. Call Henry, 752 4332.
1977 MALIBU STATION wagon, one owner, good running condition. $1300 753 2381.
1981 CORVETTE, navy and silver, excellent condition. 10,000 miles, loaded. Call 946 8565.
017
Dodge
1976 DODGE COLT, air, 5
AM/FM radio, very good conmtlon, afti
$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 transportation for $500. Call 756-3517 after 6 p.m.
1973 FORD GALAXY, 2 door sedan, air, new radial tires, good condition. 756-6985.
1974 FORD CATALINA. Motor Chevy 350, 4 bolt main engine, $250. Car Is $500. 757-3385, ask for Mike.
1974 MUSTANG II, very good condition, $1200. 752-9076or 752-7670.
1976 FORD PINTO deluxe, 44,750 miles, excellent condition. $1,850 negotiable, 355 2772.
1978 THUNDERBIRD. 1 owner, low mileage, lady, fully equipped. 753-5422 days, 753 5504 after 6.
1979 FORD MUSTANG. 4 speed, 4 cylinder, power steering, new AM/FM tape deck, new set of MIchelln radials. $3675 negotiable. 756 5959.
1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757-0451, ask for Mr. Carraway.
021
Oldsmobile
1978 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition. 758-0778 days; nights 756 8604.
1979 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass cruise wagon, yellow, AM/FM, air, excellent condition. 756-0945.
022
Plymouth
1973 PLYMOUTH VALIENT, 6
cylinder, air, radio. Call after 5 p m., 746-4836.
023
Pontiac
1976 PONTIAC SUNBIRD. Good condition. $1900. 752 5679 after 6.
1981 PONTIAC PHOENIX. 4 speed, le rack, loaded. $4200. 758 9157
from-9-5, 752-5556 after 6 p.m.
024
Foreign
OATSUN 2I0ZX - 2 + 2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe
trim package. Excellent condition. Call 756-6336 days or 756-1549
$7700.
nights.
HONDA PRELUDE, 1979. Here's one that has been pampered! Log of 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 8889atterSp.m.
MGB-GT, 1974. Black, 43,000 miles, AM-FM, new upholstery, clean. Good condition. Phone 758-8M2.
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.
SAAB, 1973. New engine, tires and Interior. Must sell. 412 West Fourth Street, 756 4645.
TOYOTA SERVICE. 4 cylinder tune special, $20. 4 cylinder valve ad
justment, $14. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage,
756-3796.
I9M VOLVO SEDAN, new exhaust, new brakes, good radials, good gas mileage, $600. 758-4019.
1971 FIAT 124 Sedan, $500. Call 756-2301.
1973 MO MIDGET. Good condition. Best offer. 810 College View. 752-2296.
1973 TOYOTA COROLLA Wagon. 4 !-0562.
speed, 75,000 miles. $850. 752-1
1973 220D MERCEDES, 61,000 miles, dark blue, $6500. Call 756-3241 after 5 p.m.
1971 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
statlonwagon, llftback with automatic transmission, air, tilt
wheel, stereo, wire wheel covers, buckets seats, blue, excellent condition. $4500.795-3690 after 6 p.m.
1981 SUBARU OL, 4 door sta
tionwagon, air, cruise. Fully
1.Tr .........-
loaded. T owner. $4950.355-2445.
1982 DAtlUN 318 ZX. Loaded with all options. T-top, AM/FM stereo. Priced to sell. William Handley, BBSiT, 752 6889.
024
Foreign
1982 MAZDA, 4 door sedan, excellent condition, asking $5995. CallaHer 6 p.m., 752-5008.
1983 VOLKSWAOiN Rabbit Diesel, 27,000 miles, 4 speed, air, AAA/FM cassette, supt gas mileage. 756-2684. r-
1983 DATSUN 288ZX, 2+2, T roof, loaded, 4,200 miles. $4850. Call 758-0041 after 4.
1983 HONDA PRELUDE. Must sell. Almost new. Still under warranty. Very nice car. Loaded. Must see. Price negotiable. Call 756-8532.
1983 NISSAN Sentra Statlonwagon.
5 speed, AM/FM, luggage rack, 9,000 miles. $6,000 or best offer
756-2488 until 7:30 p.m., ask for Doug.
029 Auto Parts & Service
DODGE POSITIVE traction 355 gear rear end, $150. Pinto 1600 engine, $75. New Bosh starter, 1600 Capri, $75.758-7404
TOYOTA AUTHORIZED SERVICE
4 cylinder tune u^ V-W- O".
filter change $12.99 (most models).
We're keeping your Toyota "Cheai To Keep". Toyota East, 109 Trad Street, 756-3228.
032 Boats For Sale
HEAVY DUTY aluminum boat. Like new. 756-6784 after 6 p.m.
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 $3295.
old. New 3 horsepower motor 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.
18' DAY SAILOR. 3'/i motor, trail er, new paint, 2 sails. $2900. Call 792 7984.
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.
1974 WESTWIND BOAT, 165 horsepower Mercrulse, new Cox trailer. Electric winch. 758 3839or 752-2065.
1975 TOMBOY BASS BOAT, 33
horsepower motor, depth finder, motor guide trolling motor, $1,000. Call 753 2228.
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 fops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N.C. 834-2774.
036 Cycles For Sale
SUZUKI GS 7S0E, 1982 Model. Excellent condition. Very low mileage. Phone 758-0853.
XL 250, On and off road. 1000 miles. Like new, $1000. Call 758-3169.
1972 HONDA 350. Needs good home and owner with time to ride. 13K miles. Garaged. $250. 752-4440.
1976 HONDA XR7S, $150 negotiable. 1978 Kawasaki KE175, street and dirt bike, $500 negotiable. Call 355 6976.
1976 YAMAHA XT-500. Lo/ mile age. Good condition. $450. 758-6243.
1977 YAMAHA. Good condition. $475. Call 758-6679.
1981 CB 750 HONDA. $1350. 355 6613 after6:30p.m.
1981 HONDA Custom. Drive shaft, cruise control, sissy bar and rack. Excellent condition, $1500. 756 1259.
1981 HONDA PASO. Excellent con ditlon. Low mileage. Call 757 (590 after 5 p.m.
1981 YAMAHA 400 Special II. 1,800 miles. 752-7373 days, 752-1076 nights.
1982 HONDA Nighthawk 750. Call after 2 p.m., ask for Tony, 756-4096.
1983 ATC HONDA 185, 3 wheeler, extras. Call 752-7120.
039 Trucks For Sale
FORD SUPER CAB, 1975. Call 752-0840.
1953 WILLIS JEEP. Runs good. 756-7703.
1971 CHEVY PICKUP. Has cab, 2 saddle tanks, and radio. Excellent condition. $2100. 1-946-4480 or 1-946-9944.
1971 FORD PICKUP. Good condition. 756-7283.
1973 DATSUN PICKUP. Good con ditlon. $1300.757-1173 after 7 p.m.
1976 CHEVY PICKUP. Straight 6, needs some body work. $1500 firm. Call 758-1020 (lay Saturday and Sunday.
1976 DODGE VAN, fully customized with air, running gear perfect. Call 746-4660 or 746-2422.
1978 GMC pickup. Automatic V-8, 5518aftei
clean. 756-5518 after 6 p.m.
1979 JEEP WAGONEER. Excellent condition. 42,000 miles, many extras, excellent tires. $6700. Call 752 4719.
1980 CHEROKEE CHIEF Jeep. Loaded. Excellent condition. 746-2489.
1981 CJ5 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 fan interior. Loaded completely less sun roof. 5800 miles, brand new. 752-7950.
040
Child Care
CHRISTIAN CARING and loving person to care for Infant In my home or your home (near Carolina East, Lake Ellsworth). Letter about
self, experience, salary desired to TLC, P Box 1967, Greenville, NC.
WEEKLY CHILD CARE for
anytime. Located In Contentnea Trailer Park, Parmville. 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. .........Drive. 756-
Located off Memorial 3340.
044
PETS
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups Champion Pedigree. Wormed, shots. 1-792-7495, Wilmington.
lb puppies. Wormed, all shots. $100. 753-3692 or 753 3958.
AKC REGISTERED German Shepherds, good breed. Call 758-3693.
FEMALE DOBERMAN. 3 months old. 2 Pitt Bull Dog puppies. 746-2370.
LAB PUPS, Field and Bench
Champion produced, AKC registered, 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 SELLI Registered Cocker Spaniel, 4 months old, $65. Call after
6,752-3969.
REGISTERED COLLIE PUPPIES.
9 weeks old. Beautiful markings.
red).
(Sable, white, and trl-colori Ideal for breeders or children's pet. $100 - $125 with AKC Registered papers. Call 756-1788.
SCOTTISH TERRIOR, AKC Regis tered. 1 year old. Playful, loves children. 756-9687.
2 MALE SIBERIAN Husky puppies. 7 weeks old. 1 male for $1()0, other $75.752-2916 or 756-6747.
051
HelpWantBd
IMMEDIATE OPENlNGIor Ott Set Press Operator. Salary based on
ability. AdvaiKe to managernent for the right person I Send resume to Matthews-Whltford Co., PO Box 67,
Vhltforc _____. _
Washington, NC 27M9 or call for appointment at 1-946-2410.
051 H<lpWntd
ACOUNTINO MANAGER for 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 experlnce considered a plus. Areas ' -esponslbility will include ledger, accounts receivab payable, payroll, financial state-
experience required. Prior r Col
ered a plus.
gener
accounts receivable and
of responsibility will include
al I
ment preparation, budgeting, and collections, special prol
credit ects as
well as su^vl^ of accounting
personnel send resume
a phone calls. Please with salary history to AAanger, WNCTTV,
the General AAanger,
Box 898, Greenvflle, NC 27834.
EOE/M F.
ACCOUNTING CLERK. Immediate opening for part time position. (20 hours per week). Knowledge of bookkeeping a must, computer ex
perlence helpful. Call 752-2111, extension 251, for appointment.
BACKSTAGE Hair Studio now ac
allcations for employ-Tient.
menf. Call 752-9578 for appointment
BOOKKEEPER - Local firm needs experienced person in payroll, accounts payable and receivable, financial statements. Call Heritage Personnel for confidential interview, 355-2020.
CAMP COUNSELORS
6 Innmediate Openings in Eastern North Carolina. Challenging career opportunities In child care. LIve-ln positions at year-round wilderness
camps working with problemed routh, taking extended canoe.
youth, taking extended canoe, backpack, and raft trips. Camping experience and two years college
preferred for entry Into rewarding of tie
profession that offers continual in-
service training, direct staff support, and supervisory feedback. CompetlHve salary/benefit package. Call Joe Buccllli at Holiay Inn in Greenville, NC at 919-758-3401
on Thursday, Sept. 29th only,_9 a.m. snd re:
to 4 p.m. or send resume to. Eckerd Foundation, P.O. Box 31122, Charlotte, NC 28231. Equal Opportunity Employer.
COUPLE NEEDED: For HUD
subsidized apartments located in N. C. Experience preferred In some office and maintenance work. Ad
ditional training will be given as needed. Apartment furnished with
small salary. One person may work outside job provided the property Is
prmrly maintained. Send resume to J. W. AAanagement Co., P.O. Box 1254, Dunn, N.C.28334.
DIRECTOR OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
Excellent career opportunity in 450-bed acute care hospital for
licensed Phpical Therapist with
minimum five years experience (preferably In hospital). Experience in management required. Attractive salary and benefits. Submit resume by October 1, 1983 to: Curtis
Copenhaver, Associate Director, ibarr
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 >in........-
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.
if
$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. AnEqual 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.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR. Group home for autistic adults. Pitt County. MA (preferred)ln Education Psych., social work, or related field (Must qualify as QMRP). Salary competetlve. Write: Eileen Clearly, c/o Eastern Teacch Center, Apartment 30 B, Stratford Arms, Greenville, NC 27834.
EXPERIENCEDAUTO
MECHANIC
Due to increased service business, we are In need of an ambitious Automotive AAechanic. Must have tools and experience. Excellent commission schedule and benefit package. See Steve Briley, Service Manager, 756-1135.
Joe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc. Greenville Blvd., Greenville
EXPERIENCED SHEET ROCK
finishers. 4 years or more experi ence. 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.
FOOD MANAGER TRAINEE.
Outstanding opportunity for ag gressive Individuals. Should be able to relocate. Expected earnings after training, $25K-$48K. Call Ted, 758-0S41,Snelling&Snelllng.
FOTO EXPRESS Is now aca .
applications for experienced retai sales clerk with photo finishing
knowledge. Must be over 25 and lie. H<
flexible. Hours 9:30 to 2:00, Monday through Friday, alternating Saturdays 10 until 2. Apply in person only at Foto Express, 217 East lOth Street, Greenville.
FRAMING CARPENTERS
Minimum 4-5 years experience. Call 756-8700.
FUNI PART TIME. Nation's #1 Toy
Party Company now hiring d monstrators. 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.
GENERAL ACCOUNTANT. Should be able to handle accounts receivables/payables, Inventory, payroll, profit and loss, balance and deposit sheets. $11K-$13K. Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelllng&Snelling.
GENERAL OFFICE PERSON.
Person should be able to handle dally accounting procedures, depos its, and light typing. Excellent pay. Call Gertie, 7M-0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel.
GROUP HOME MANAGER for 5 retarded adults to live-ln Monday-Frlday. Requirements high school educ
Igh 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 Reived no later than September
HELP WANTED Immediately. Kitchen experience. Apply dally between 3 and 5 at 205 East 5th
Street, Blue Moon Cafe.
HOUSEKEEPER/CHILD CARE,
2:30-5:30, AAondays and Thursdays. Transportation/references required. $3.35/hour. 756-8294.
I.E.S. MANUFACTURING NOW HOLDING INTERVIEWS $300PERWEEK SOLAR ENERGY CONSERVATION
We believe high pay brings good workers. Join the fast growing dynamic solar energy conservation Industry. Outstanding potential for:
1. INSTALLERS
2. SALES REPS
3. AAANAGEMENT
4. DEALERS
No experience necessary, neat appearance a must. Minimum age 21. For personal Interview go to: Holiday Inn, US 13, AAemorlal Drive,
Main Lobby, Greenville, NC, Tuesday, September 27,10 a.m. or 7
p.m. sharp.
051
Help Wanted
ImMEOUtI need tor refrigera
---- * DOE,
tIon mechanic.. Salary Excellent benefits. Call Judy for interview 355-2020, Hertiage Personnel.
JOBS! JOBS!
Ttw Personnel Service Division of Thomas A Thomas Vocational
Services currently Is recruiting candidates for the following pos+
tions:
Administrator, Finance Bookkeeper, Industrial Clerk, Data Entry Foreman, Woodworking AAanager, Finance Manager, Retail (Trainee) Operator, Computer Sales, Office Equipment Sales, Printing Sales, Retail Secretary, Accounting Secretary, Finance Secretary, Industrial Secretary, Legal Secretary, Mortgage Supervisor, Machinist (IND.) Supervisor,QA (Electronics) Technician, Electronics Technician, Extruder Technician, Transportation Call us for an appointment at 757 3398.
LICENSED HAIR DRESSER
wanted. Apply after 4 at George's Coiffeurs, Pitt Plaza.
LOCAL BUSINESS FIRM needsi sales representative for Greenville and surrounding counties. Business degree or proven sales ability desired. Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355-2020.
MAID WITH experience in housecleaning. References desired. Call 752-1117.
manager trainee.
Outstanding opportunities offered in the fantastic world of retail clothing and shoe management. Don't miss out on these opportunities. Call Ted, 758-0541, Snelling & Snelling.
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 & Wood, Inc, 1205 Dickinson Avenue.
MECHANIC WANTED - Preferably with Ford experience. Front End experience helpful. Must have own tools. Excellent benefits. Call 756-8432.
MECHANIC WITH high school diploma and minimum of 3 years' experience in the repair and maintenance of gasoline and diesel engines. Also experience with hydraulic systems and general knowledge of garage operations
Salary negotiable. Applications
.... p... . -
available at Pitt 8, Greene Electric Membership Corporation, West Wilson Street, Farmville, NC. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
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, Cherry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas. Earn extra money for Christmas. Please call 758 3159
OVERSEAS, Cruise Jobs. $20,000 $60,000/year possible. Call 805-687 6000 Ext. J 8752.
OVERWORKEDAND
UNDERPAID?
I need management people who
------Ci
want $50,000+ per year. Call Mr Colson, 756 9902
PART TIME SALES CLERK
needed. Minimum wage. A^ly In
. ... .. .
person. 117 East 5th Street. From 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. or from 4p.m. to 5.
PERSONS NEEDED tor 2nd and
3rd shifts. Apply in person only at Sav-A-Ton, 612 West Greenville Boulevard.
PROGRAMMER/ANALYST Na
tional Spinning Company, a leading manuf.
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 of 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 application 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 offer a challenging and creative environment in which you can develop your career and pro fessional goals, a progressive sala
ry and benefit package, an opportunity 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-
iTtI - .....
portunitles for now and the future. Call Red Carpet, Steve Evans & Associates, Inc. 355-2727.
RECEPTIONIST. Experience needed. Person should be able to arrange appointments, and handle pegboard system. Excellent benefits
lenefits with retirement. Call Gertie, 758-0541, Snelling & Snelling.
REGISTERED OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST. Position now available in Howell Child Care Center, Inc. for an energetic individual with a BSOT. Duties require assistance in the development of occupational therapy service delivery, and to
prepare, implement, monitor and document the provision of OT
treatment. Howell's is located In beautiful River Bend Plantation, New Bern, N.C.. Excellent benefits and palary package. If interested call or send resume to: Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center, Inc., P.O. Box 607, La Grange, N.C. 28511 or call 778 3067.
RN, LPN positions available. Full time and part time, 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts. 75 bed ICF. Oak Manor, Inc., Snow Hill, 747-2868.
RN's AND LPN's. Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald. RN, Director of Nursing, 943-2111.
SALESS.
SALES MANAGER TRAINEE PAY...PROGRESS... PROMINENCE...
& PRESTIGE
Openings exist now tor an impressive sales opportunity In local branch of a large international firm.
Experience not required...desire is. To qualify, you should: be bonda
ble, own a good car, be aggressive !fe
and good references.
Excellent Company benefits Include complete training - expenses paid. Comprehensive Insurance program, unusual Profit Sharing Program.
Accepted applicants will have the opportunity to earn up to $20,(X)0 or more their first year and move ahead Into MGMT. on merit - not seniority. Only those who sincerely want to get ahead need apply.
For personal Interview In your area, call:
Chuck Carroll MondavJOAAAtoPAA orTues(iay,9AMtol2Noon
Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Our of Town, Call Collect
SALESCAREER
Expanding local office tor leading
growth company calling on com-,lne!
merclal businesses seeks male or female representatives with sales experience to establish new accounts and service present accounts
In assigned territory. No overnight - ilea
travel. Candidate must have sales experience, human relation skills, and a strong desire to succeed. We offer generous commissions, bonus, and Incentives, careful training and local advancement. If you are people oriented, energetic, intelligent, self-motivated and mature minded, this Is an outstanding opportunity for you. Send resume to Randy Simms, Division Sales Man
ager, PO Box 1459, Columbus, GA 31999
The Daily Retlector.Ureenville. N.C Sunday. September 25 1983 Q.3
051
Help Wanted
ROriNG MECHANIC wanted
Experience Is required. Must have
oTs. I ............
tools. Inquire at 752-6116
ROUTE SALES. Excellent opportu-
nlty for Individual that enjoys'fun in .....rtle E
the sun. Relocate to Myrtle Beach, SC. Experience desired. Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling 8. Snelling.
SALES OPPORTUNITY
Salesperson needed. Auto sales ex perlence preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GAAC
756 4267
For Appointment
SALES PER'SON. Farming back
ground needed. Should be outgoing office.
and capable of handling an Company car. Excellent benefits and salary. Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling 8, Snelling
SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma
ior national company has an open Ing for a Sales Associate in the Greenville area. Prior sales experi ence not as important as ability and willingness to learn. Salary negotiable. Excellent benefit package. For a confidential in terview send resume to Manager, PO Box 1985, Greenville, NC 27835 Equal Opportunity Employer.
{ALES REPRESENTATIVE
needed for Eastern NC. Travel required. Knowledge of fire apparatus and equipment a must. Send resume to Triad Fire Inc., PO Drawer M, Attention: Gerald Sapp, Kernersville, NC 27284.
SECRETARY. This one-girl office needs Individual than can type, tele-
reconcile invoices, handle the _ _ phone, and filing. Outstanding benefits. Call Gertie, 758-0541, Snelling & Snelling
SHARP INDIVIDUAL to train as
keyk^rd salesman. Largest dealer
Hard worker with expansion
potential. Excellent income. Piano 8. Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. 355-6002.
SOCIAL WORKER. Howell's Child Care Center, Inc. is seeking a
highly motivated individual with either a
BSW or BSP in social work
plus 2^ears_experience perferred in
-MR facility. Excellent benefits and salary package. It
interested please contact Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel
Director, Howell's Child Care Center, Inc., P.O. Box 607, La Grange, N.C. 28511 or call 778-3067
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 loltOI
Holt Oldsmobile, 101 Hooker Road.
WANTED: BOOKKEEPER. At
least 3 years experience. Must have working knowledge in following areas: 1) manual system, 2) posting invoices, 3) payroll, 4) accounts payable, 5) accounts receiviable, 6) financial statements. Call for an appointment, 758-0517.
WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open ing for an experienced Real Estate Broker. For more information or an appointment, call Rod Tugwell at Century 21 Tipton 8< Associates, 756 6810.
1ST CLASS AUTO Mechanic. 1st class pay for 1st class work. 8 to 5,
Class pay tor 1st class work. 8 to 5, five days a week. Please apply at Chuck Autry Paint, Body & Repair
Shop, 1806 Dickinson Avenue. 752-3632.
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.
Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J .P. Stancil, 752 6331.
BRICK OR BLOCK WORK Add! tions or repairs. 11 years experi ence. Call 825-6591 after 7 p.m.
CONSTRUCTION New and add! tions. Call Dillon Watson at 756-8232 after 6 p.m.
DOMESTIC WORK WANTED. Call 756-2940.
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583.
LAWN & YARD
SERVICE. From the gutters to the curb. Home and Business. Call 746-4728 or 757 3803,9 am 9 pm.
MOBILE HOME REPAIRS. Time
to check your heating plant, mobile jks,
ige
Home Repair, 752 1503 or 752 6471
home tops for Jeaks, plumbing, ge Mobile
insulation, etc. Call Ang
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 after 6 p.m.
PICKUP FOR HIRE. Will haul anything. Yard work done. Call 757 3847.
REPAIRS FRIGIDAIRE
Appliances and all other brand name appliances and televisions. Call 746-2138. Fleming's Repair Service.
TYPING - thesis, reports. Call after 5:30p.m., 756-1408.
WOULD LIKE TO do house clean Ing. Call 746-2747 between 9 and 5.
060
FOR SALE
10,000 BTU air conditioner and gas electric refrigerator for camper. 752 1503 or 752-6471.
061
Antiques
ANTIQUE OAK ROLL Top desk. Excellent condition. $950 firm. 758 3276 or 756 4039.
HAND CRAFTED from old walnut. Queen Anne turned poster bed and Martha Washington mahogany chair and 1 desk. 752 6749.
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA-ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale. J. P. Stancil, 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.
SEARS woodburning heater, $100 negotiable. Call 746-4140 weekends only.
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.
065 Farm Equipment
COTTON PICKER SUPPLIES
Parts for John Deere-Dotfers $4.99; Poly urethane Dotters for 9910 $9.49; Spindles $2.49 each per 100 or ds $1.19.
more; molstener pac Internal Iona I-Doff ers $4.99;
Spindles $2.49 each per 100 or more, molstener pads $1.09. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC 752-3999.
ELECTRONIC BUG KILLERS80 watt up to 1 '/2 acre coverage $76.95; 25 watt up to 4ii acre coverage $48 95. One year warranty. We
carry replacement bulbs. AgrI Supply, .....
Greenville, NC 752 3999.
FALL FISHING SUPPLIES
Buddy bearings for most Cox and
Long trailers $9.99 per pair. Chest waders $31.95; Hip waders $25.95. Lite vest with pockers $20.49. Win
ches, couplers and many trailer supplies In stock. AgrI Supply,
Greenville, NC 752-3999.
SOYBEAN FARMERS qet your combine ready with a new cutter bar from AgrI Supply. 13' Allis Chalmers $89.49, 9' John Deere $84.49; 15' Massey Ferguson
$139.95, 13' International $132.95, 9' New Holland $68.49. Replacement sickle sections, rivets and rivet
vise In stpck.^^rl Supply,
Greenville, NC 752:
I SET OF COMBINE dual wheels, 23.1 X 26. Tires like new. Call 752-9585.
066
FURNITURE
ANTIQUE VICTORIAN upholstered Swordsman chair. Good condition. $200.1-946-4480 or 1 946 9944.
BEDDING &WATERBEOS
LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory Mat tress & Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626.
CRAFTIQUE 4 POSTER King size bed. Mattress and box springs. Excellent condition. $1,000. (tall 7535973.
066
FURNITURE
CRAFTIQUE TWIN BED5
Including mattress and springs, night table and dresser. All in excellent condition, $1500. 2 marble
top tables, $250 each. Call 753 2400 afte
er 5 p.m. weekdays, weekends anytime.
OFF WHITE COUCH with country print in fabric. 2 years old, bought for $800 Will sell tor $400 Excellent condition. Call 758 4983
SOFA AND CHAIR for sale, $200 1 524-4851 anytime.
067 Garage-Yard Sale
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
YARD SALE. Saturday, October 1 Corner of Dickinson Avenue and Clark Street - Old Taxi Stand
072
Livestock
074
Miscellaneous
GRANDPA FISHER woodstove 2 years old $500 355 6613 after 6 30 pm
GREEN HIDEABED. Good condi tion. $75 Call after 6, 752 3969
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p m., Jim Hudson.
LIKE NEW, World Book En cyclopedias with all year books, $300. Call Mary days 752 3000; nights 756 1997
LOG SPLITTERS, lawn and garden equipment Sales and Rentals. Call 756 0090 anytime
LOST OR GAINED WEIGHT???
Are you in need of an inexpensive wardrobe until you reach your goal? Transition Wardrobes has beautiful previously owned large size women's clothing at reasonable prices. Clothing accepted on con signment, purchased and sold in sizes 14 and up. Call 355 2508
ENTIRE STABLE for lease 7 stalls and tack room. 20 acres pasture Automatic water tank Call 756 9315 or 756 5097.
MARY KAY cosmetics Phone 756 3659 to reach your consultant for a facial or reorders
FOR SALE quarter horse, 15 3 hands, 8 year old Bay Call 757 0592 after6 30p.m.
"MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE "
toys figures and vehicles Cali 758 1739 evenings 6 fo 9 p m
HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237
LEATHER REPAIR
North Hills Saddlery, 746 2134
WELL MANNERED bay quarter horse mare. Call 756 5937.
074 Miscellaneous
AIR CONDITIONERS,
refrigerators, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced (or quick sale. Rebuilt, like new Call B. J. Mills, 746 2446 at Black Jack
AIR CONDITIONER. Like new 11,000 BTU. Paid $500, sell for $200 Call 758 3470.
ALEXANDERS, Effanbees, others Highway 96 1'j miles North Zebulon, located at Bobbitt's Bakery. Wednesday Saturday 9 6 1269 8140 or 1365 5335
AM/FM STEREO with 8 track.
METAL DETECTORS, Authorized dealer tor White's Electronics Free catalog Baker's Sports Equip ment, PO Box 3106 or 756 8840
NEED A SMALL PIECE of
lumber? We have short lengths of pine and oak 1x4, 1x6, 2x4.
Plywood, etc Bring your pickup or
statlonwagon Save money on our low prices Contact Alvati Salisbury
or Ross Boyer at Eastern Carolina Vocational Center, Staton Boulevard Industrial Park, Greenville, NC Phone 758 4188
NEW AND USED walk m coolers, pizza ovens, chairs, ice machines, deep fa't fryers We instalil, Greenville Restaurant Equipment Call 758 7042
NEW 5000 BTU Air Conditioners Pick up in box $220 Tyson Elertnc & Appliance, Winterville 756 2929
CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers. Goodyear Tire Center West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue
turntable and speakers in good ' 1I7------
NO FROST Refrigerator E xceUent $100. Call 758 3470
condition. $30. Call 752 7485.
ATLANTA GAS HEATER, 30,000 BTU. 6' or 8' drink box, select from 4. Call 752 0840. .
BROWN KITCHEN HUT. Very cheap, $50 752 2660 between 9 a m and4p.m
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale 4 models. Delivery setup 919 763 9734
PORTABLE PICNIC TabTes arqe and small), dog houses, mailbox post (4x4 treated wood' garbage ' can racks, mobile home steps Al: products on display at center Eastern Carolina Vocational Center, Staton Boulevard Indus trial Park, Greenville NC Phone 758 4188
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.
CASH NOW
FOR
BUYING-LOANS INSTANT CASH
Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls depression glass, carnival glass, china, crysta. I and an
TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold 8. silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewrit ers, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games & cartridges, power 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
tiques anything of vallue
COIN & RING MAN
On The Corner
I SACRIFICE, repossession sale on I video game cartridges. Atari. I~
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CASH
From the oldest, most reliable buyer of gold, silver and any items of value.
COIN&RINGMAN
On The Corner
agic, Activision, Apollo, and others at 35% below cost, $14 to $15 each Also Frigidare microwave ovens, $150 under dealer cost. Call,,758 0110 from 8 to 6 daily
SEARS KENMORE Microwave oven. Retail for $500, will sell tor $350, Large dorm size refrigerator, 4.2 cubic feet, $150 Kerosene heat er, 9,100 BTU, $150. Call 752 6216 after 5 30p m
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
DEEP FREEZER 8 cubic feet, upright chest Good condition $100. 756 3666.
SHARP COPIER machines, sell, lease and rent large selection of usedcopiers Call 756 6167
DINING ROOM, Queen Anne Williamsburg, solid cherry, new $7,000, will sell tor $3500 or best otter . 756 7297 or 756 3613
FOR SALE: Harvest gold 17.8 cubic toot Hotpoint frost tree refrigerator with icemaker, 5 years olcf, $385. 752 1488.
STEEL BUILDINGS Manufacturer of First Quality All Steel Buildings otters clearspan full color 5 year warranty $2 99 per I square toot Example 50x100x14, I $14,950 FOB Plant Jewell Building I Systems. Inc., PO Box 397, Dallas, NC 28034 or Toll Free 1 800 821 7700, ' extension 321,
FOR SALE: Craft woodstove fireplace insert, large size, used 2 seasons, original cost over $800, will sell tor $395 complete. 758 5705
TECHNICS STEREO, 65 watt amp, $350. Tuner, $150. Cassette deck.
$300 Speakers, $300 $200 Call 752 5207
FOR YOUR WIRING Needs old, new; residential or commercial Call for estimate. Tyson Electric & Appliance, Winterville. 756 2929.
THREE STORY doll house,
I wallpapered. $100. Furnishings I available 752 2270
FURNITURE STRIPPING and re
finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden
TRS 80 MODEL I, Level II '6K computer and software $325 Call 758 3162
Center. 756-9123.
UTILITY TRAILER for sale $'05 Call 756 1444
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture
Stripping, Repairing & Refinishing (Formerly of East Carolina Voca
tional Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway 752 3509
GOOD USED REFRIGERATOR,
$50, Call 758 7304 or 746 2045
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WASHER - Heavy duty Very good condition, $125. 746 2072
1 NELCOsewing machine. 757 0307
2 NORFOLK ISLAND Pines, 8' tall Perfect shape. $50 each. 746 3314
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
STAFF NURSE
Staff Nurse needed to work relief duty for Student Health Services. Work schedules will vary. Must be registered and a graduate from an accredited school of nursing with experience in clinics, emergency care and or community health.
Submit detailed resume to:
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
East Carolina
University
GREENVILLE,
NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352
,An I . A",'.:' nAv'. i'
ECU
WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
We will teach you...
Do you have a positive jnental attitude Do you desire to be successful Are you able to follow directions explicitly Do you desire to earn $2000 to $2500 per month If So....
Tou Own It To Yourself To Give It A Try.
Apply in person only.
Absolutely no phone calls,
See E.J. Lacoste or Rickie Moore.
ASTXNG
[ford I
s
Ov d ( ai ( (HitpiKiy
Tenth Street A 264 By-Pass 7580 1 14 Greenvt.ie N C 2764
A
miThe Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25.1983
074
Miscellaneous
JO" APACHE insert woodstove with biower. Exceilent condition. Used seasons. Asking SOO or best oHer 7S6 6939 after 5 p m.
$0" BIG SCREEN GE TV, remote controi, Quartz tuning, cabinet modei. Cali Glenn at 756 9842.
742 REMINGTON 30 06 rifle with 3 9 Weaver scope and sling. $325 or best offer. Call 758 4523.
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms. 1*^ baths, under pinning. 12x65. 1973, good condition. $5500. Call Williamston 1 792 2859 or 1 792 6668.
BY OWNER, 1973 Charmer, 12x64, 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, central heat, window unit air conditioning, unfurnished excMt tor gas range and refrigerator. Partially remodeled. Asking $6500. 756 2818 after 9 pm.
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, retriger tor, dishwasher, dryer, central air.
To be moved 756 5646 after S SO and on weekends
DOUBLEWIDE, 24x60, large family room with woodstove, central air, microwave, underpinning and lots of extras Exellent condition $19,900. Call 752 7860 after 5 30
093
OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS .INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
EXCITING AND tremendous op portunity Well-established conve nience store grill located in downtown area of booming city within several hundred yards of several thousand college girls (and boys) Presently doing more than $100.000 annually with easy poten tial of at least twice that much, owner selling at tremendous sacrifice due to health.
RESTAURANT-GRILL for sale
Well located in busy section of progressive town Owner will sell lot, building and business. Selling due to other business interests.
102 Commercial Property
BUSINESS FOR SALE. Over 3,750
square feet metal building with 5 n fi
office. Excellent location for your business! Close to downtown on
large lot, 158 x 175, plus 3 extra lots. Financing available. $85.000
For
details call Davis Realty 752-3000, 1997 or 756
Mary Ward nights 756 2904, Grace at 746-6656 or 756-4144
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
EXERCISE AND FIGURE Salon Well established business with re peat clientele, good opportunity tor good income or additional second income Well located in beautiful facility in prosperous town.
MOBILE HOME PARK tor sale 15 acres with 27 spaces already devel oped and rented, room tor 28 additional spaces. City water and streets already in $2500 per month income potential, cash or terms.
MOBILE HOME for sale Located in Washington. 2 bedrooms, appli anees Call 756 5588
MOVING, MUST SELL! 1979 Brigader, 12x65, 2 bedrooms, total electric, partially furnished, small equity and assume payments ot $177 per month. 758 4491 or 355 6683 after 5pm
NO MONEY DOWN. VA financing Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes, 756 0333
FULL SERVICE BEAUTY shop operation for sale well located In downtown area ot progressive town All equipment needed to enable operator to provide complete hair care, facials, body wraps, mani cures, pedicures, ear piercing, elec trolysis, sun tanning, and many other services Well established clientele.
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191
SMH LISTING SERVICE will list your mobile home, advertise it, sell it, and finance the transaction all at a LOW COST to you See George King, SMH Listing Service, Hiway II Ayden, 746 2078
SPECIAL FOR YOUNG couples or college students. For only $700 down, $160 month you can now own a 1984 Horton Come by and see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, (We have lots availa ble) . 756 9841
MORE THAN 50 other business and real estate opportunities priced from $10,000 up, sonu with owner financing For additional informa tion in confidence, contact Harold Creech, Business 8. Real Estate Broker with
THE MARKETPLACE JNC.
752-3666
FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE
business tor sale. Complete farm supply Established 21 years Owner deceased, family has, other interests Call 758 0702
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT
tor sale or lease by owner. Downtown Greenville 75 seat restaurant. 30 seat cocktail lounge, tully equipped, all ABC permits, some owner financing Call Gary Quintard 758 5156after 5.
HALLMARK CARD & GIFT SHOP.
Parkhill Shopping Center, Tarboro. Good owner financing Exclusively through NEWGROWTH, LTD, Raleigh, 1 872 8600
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.
BUSINESS&INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
INVESTMENTS, DEVELOPMENT
Opportunity located in rapidly growing resort area Oceantront to sound with highway access.
WELL ESTABLISHED CLOTHING
store for sale Modern store re cently renovated after more than 80 years in business, specializing in name brand merchandise for men. Located m progressive city with
DOUBLE WIDE...$17,995 sX^greToVh^^L^it^esf
We Love America Special ; NO MONEY DOWN! SINGLE WIDE $8,495i
RESTAURANT BUILDING Commercial building and seven rental units available for sale and located on Mumford Road. Gross rents of $1400 per month. Priced at $134,000. Steady Income potential.
THIS COMMERCIAL BUILDING in
Grimesland may be just what you need to start that business you've
been thinking about. Good location and priced to sell at $27,000. Call today for your personal appoint ment.
LOT ON 264 By pass across from Heilig-Meyers Furniture. Corner lot with 120 feet road frontage. $75,000.
COMMERCIAL LOT off ot Memo rial Drive 1 acre. Across from Parkers Barbeque. $25,000.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Teresa Hewitt
Gene Quinn.....
Richard Allen
Tim Smith......
Marie Davis Ray Holloman John Jackson.
ON CALL.
756-1188 .756 6037 756 4553 .752 9811 .756 5402 .753-5147 756 4360
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE
for rent available In Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square teet with 5400 carpeted tor office space 12 month lease re quired Call Clark Branch, Real tors, 756 6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147.
FOR SALE: Commercial property " Vhlte's
on Memorial Drive beside Wl Tire Service with 110' road tron tage. Excellent location, near mall with 8 room house in good condition and garage apartment $75,000. Call 756 0729
NEW RENOVATION - downtown, office or retail. Economical to heat and cool A must see it you need space Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 7741.
106
Farms For Sale
47 ACRES - 26 Cleared, 1983 allot ments, 4,018 pounds tobacco, 3,838 peanuts. On Paved Road 1517, approximately 1 mile off NC 903, Stokes area. Call 758 2734 after 7.
(Loaded)
ests
Anything ot Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING
705 West Greenville Boulevard
RETAIL CLOTHING STORE for
sale Modern store, recently renovated, specializing in name brand merchandise for men, women and children, located m progressive area with several growing in dustries Gross annual sales of more than $100.000 with potential of much more
12 X 70, 1977 2 bedroom, 2 full baths, storm windows, insulated un derpinning. appliances $9500. Call after 6, 758 6904
THRIVING COUNTRY WESTERN
business located in progressive city with very little competition in the area
12.75% FINANCING homes Call Conner 0333.
on selected Homes, 756
1964 MIDWAY, 10x45, 2 bedrooms, partially furnished, air, good loca tion 758 4857,
MORE THAN 50 other business and real estate opportunities priced from $10,000 up, some with owner financing For additional informa tion in confidence, contact Harold Creech, Business 8, Real Estate Broker with
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
109
Houses For Sale
ASSUME FHA llVz% LOAN. Payment $349 07 PITI. Well kept immaculate Brick Veneer Rancn. Located near hospital Approximately 1,260 square teet. Corner wooded lot, trees, deck, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, extra insulation added. You must see this attractive hdme. Only $52,900 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Grace 746 6656 or 756 4144.
1971 MARSHFIELD 12x65 deluxe, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath Good condition Set up in Shady Knoll Estates Must sell $7500 For details call 752 6735, 758 4426, or collect 586 5049
1971 12x60 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer-dryer, refrigerator, stove, air, and deck Good condition $6500. 758 0646
THE MARKETPLACE, INC.
7523666
LAUNDROMAT FOR SALE.
location Reasonable rent 756 6890 after 5 p m
Good
Call
1972 12x52 HATTERAS. Excellent condition Fully furnished Reduced for quick sale! Call 752 7233
1974 FANTASTIC, 2 bedrooms, 1 ] bath Partly furnished, central air and underpinning 746 3727
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co , Inc Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, NC 757 0001, nights
753 4015
1976 CONNER. 65x12, 2 bedrooms, central air, new carpet in living room, partially furnished, some
095
PROFESSIONAL
payments I cHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman
1976 Conner Mobile Home Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333
1978 GUARDIAN 12x60 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, partially furnished, air condition, deck, under pinned Located in Branches Estates $1400 down and assume $109 72 Call 756 8145 days 9 a m to i p m , nights from 8 p,m to 10 p.m , Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and anytime weekends.
North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville
WHY PAY A fortune tor wedding pictures? Call 756 4048 day or night
1979 CONNER Mobile Home 65'x 12 Take over payments of $199 16 per month Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333
1979 TAYLOR. Owner must sell! 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, new carpet, new furniture, central heat and air This home is nice. Was asking $14,500 Will sacrifice now for $11,500 Call 752 2366or 757 0451.
1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148 91 At Greenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068
1984 HORTON doublewide 24x60. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with den $20,900 Come by and see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, 756 9841
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754
077 Musical Instruments
ANTIQUE UPRIGHT Piano Beautiful wood Good condition Best otter 1 825 0765
CLARINET FOR SALE. Almost new! 752 3499 after 5 30p.m
CLARINET, used 1 year condition.$I95 Call 758 1927.
New
LIKE NEW but '% price! Snare drum, case, stand, and 2 sets ot sticks $175 752 5528
PA CABINET. 2 V32 cabinets Cerwinvega Each contains 12" speakers, 2 tweeders, l horn $625. I 795 4332
PIANO a ORGAN Distributors All major brands at discounted prices 329 Arlington Boulevard 355 6002
INSTRUCTION
PRIVATE PIANO LESSONS to
begin in October tor children and adults Call 758 2897
SINGING LESSONS. Professional
singer seeks voice students Works
ith
with all levels ot experience Call 758 7285
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Fluffy and solid white cat, 1 blue eye and 1 green eye, about 2 years old, in vicinity ot Jarvis Street Reward ottered. 752 5856 after 5,
093
OPPORTUNITY
MINIATURE GOLF COURSES.
Indoors, Outdoors, Excellent fi nancing Immediate Installation Minimum $4,900 Mini-Golt, 202 Bridge Street, Jessup, PA 18434, (717 ) 489 8623.
NATIONAL FRANCHISE AVAILABLE
Weight Loss Industry
Financing Training Exceptional Rnanclal Re
Return
Contact: FRANCHISE DIVISION Collect (216) 666 7952 8a.m. -Sp.m
OPEN A BEAUTIFUL JEANS,
^ortswear or Children's Shop, Free Brochure. Top Brands! Low Prlcas! $13,975 to $16,975 to comi pletely set you up. Call 1-404-469-|IM
102 Commercial Property
4 ACRE LOT m Industrial Park with water and sewer Priced to sell Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500 nights Don Southerland 756 5260!
ASSUME 9'i% excellent loan assumption plus equity. Low mon thiy payments of $428.60 per month Possible owner financing on some equity Like new. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den with fireplace. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, nights call Mary 756 1997, 756 2904, Grace 746 6656 or 756 4)44.
ATTENTION INVESTORS! Brick Veneer Duplex. Each side rents at $200. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, utility, family room, heat pump. $48.500. Call Oavis Realty 752 3000, nights Mary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144.
COLLEGE COURT, 2 bedrooms, ) den, large corner lot, 2 porches, carport, large kitchen, 13(X) square teet, $47,500. By owner 752 1628.
com^fortable country
Subdivision otters peace and quiet without being too far from town. This charming home otters living room with dining area, work kitch en, large laundry room, 3 bedrooms, split baths, sliding glass doors to patio, garage antf at tractive landscaping beautifully wooded setting $55,000. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655, or Jane Butts, 756 285)
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FURNITURE STRIPPING
Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formerly of Dip And Strip All items returned within 7 days
TAR ROAD ANTIQUES
Call For Free Estimate 756-9123 Days, 756-1007 Nights
SPECIAL
Safe
Model S-1
Special Price SI 2250
Reg. Price $177 00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 s. Evans St.
752-2175
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. 00x1967 Greenville, NC 27834
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION Plant And Facilities Instrument Technician Salary Range $12,002-$19,594
Position available tor 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-$17,722
Position available for responsible person to perform skilled work in the operation ot the Water Treatment Plant on a rotating ablft basis. Entry level status and itarting salary will be commensurate with education, training, experience, and/or level of state certification as a Water Treatment Plant Operator.
Apply at the Personnel Office, Qreenvllle Utilities Commission, 200 W. Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 2783S.
"An Equal Opportunity Employer"mm
100 Houses For Sale
COOK'S OELIOHT Is this large.
airy kitchen with oUdles of cabinets
Id
counter space! All formal
areas, double garage, covered patio. Aldridge & Southerland, '56 3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142
COUNTRY. Call us about the home you've been looking for. We have 2,3
or 4 bedrooms ranging In price from
^ . ,900 Red Carpet
Steve Evans & Associates 3S5-2737.
$35,900 to $77,(
COUNTRY HOAAE 15 minutes west; three bedroom brick ranch with spacious kitchen, two baths, detached garage, fenced backyard with swimming pool. Reduced to sell only $65,000 Estate Realty Company, 752-5058; Billy Wilson, 7SS4476, Jarvis or Dorlis Mills, 752 3647.
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours! Assume loan. Payments less than $400 per month. 3 bedrooms, central
heat, woodstove, deck, large lot.
'52 3000,
$34,500. Call Davis Realty 7(
AAary 756 1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
COZY CONTEMPORARY in
excellent condition! Indirect lighting, thermopane window. Aldridge & Southerland, 75^3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142 /
OVERTOIL POWERS
33
$64,900 ERA'S'^TOP CHOICE is this lovely home in Elmhurst. Terrific location on large corner lot. This home is well kept inside and out. 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace, large kitchen-dining combination, dining room or downstairs bedroom. Must see to
appreciate. All working components uaranteed through ERA for one
full year.
$65,000 WE'VE DECORATED the exterior. Use your good tastb to top off the interior. Wonderful floor plan. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal areas, den, double garage, fenced backyard.
$79,900 YOU CAN'T TOP THIS! a'/2% VA assumable loan. 4 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, large family room with fireplace, unbelievable playroom for all ages. 28 X 40 outside building. Located on private lane. Ideal torcmildren.
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank financing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge S< Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756-5716.
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.
K HouRMForSRle
RiLVOIR. Ownar financing makas
this wall-kapt homa raally atforda bla! Call for datails. Aldrldga &
Southarland, 756-3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142.
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESA WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
S40's
WELL kept and cute as a button. 2 bedroom, l/5 bath townhouse in Windy Ridge. Includes dra(>es downstairs, glass fire screen and refrigerator. Priced at 845,200 and convenient to the pool.
COUNTRY LIVING. 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch now available with over 1600 square feet and an acre of land. If you're looking for a good buy, this is it. Call for an appointment. Located west of Greanvlfle. $47,900.
BARGAIN HUNTING? Try this FmHA loan assumption In Ayden ottering over 1100 square teat with
garage, privacy fence and other extras. Owner will consider offer.
Low$40's. Call today.
HERE'S A LOG home with over 1114 square feet of living space that's (ust right for the tirsf In
vestment. Singles and couples love the value of the Homestead II log
home which features 3 bedrooms, ivy baths and a full front porch on over of an acre. Priced to sell in themid$40's.
NEW OFFERING. FHA 235
assumption. Payments approxi mately $250 per month if you
qualify. Less than $4,000 equity required. Just two years old. 3 bedrooms, I'/y baths in Ayden. Better hurry. Offered at $41,500.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
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
To Buy Or Sell A Business In Confidence
contact Harold Creech
The Marketplace,
he.
2723 E. 10th St. 752-3666
GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN
Must be experienced in domestic as well as foreign cars and have own tools. Pay depending upon experience. Good fringe benefit package. Apply to: Steve Grant, Service Manager.
TOYOTA
EAST
756-3228
109 Trade Street Greenville, N.C.
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
SPECIAL INVITATION
Mm Trails Country Club
Beautiful 18 Hole Course
scenic beauty at its best!
GREENS FEES
Weekdays $5.00 - Students S4.00 Sat. & Sun. S7.00 - Students $6.00
BRING A Friend, rent a cart and ride double DEDUCT $1.00 EACH FROM GREENS FEE. . ^
Grilton, NC
524-5485
MASS MARKETING
THE WAVE OF THE FUTURE
Join a company that FORBES (November 9,1981) named as an Up-And-Comer company in their annual review!
We are growing at a tremendous rate and we need a few outstanding people who want a career situation with a potentially high five-figure income.
We want to share an opportunity that rarely comes along. Get in on the Ground Floor of a growing insurance industry trend.
No night work
Simplified issue disability income Blue collar and white collar market Commissions advanced weeMy 15% renewals Vesting
Wide open management opportunities Unlimited market Unique product
Call:
QREGQ QDDARD
919-758-3401
Mon., Sept. 26,9e-4p
or lend resume to:
Qreg Qodard 2331 Allyeon Drive Wllion, NC 27893
109 Houms For Sale
BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square teet, 3 bedrooms. 2- baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R. H. McL 756-2750 or 975-2608.
Lawhorn,
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
S40's
FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot in Oakgrove. Offered at $41,500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end street Income should te under S21,000. Call today
9W% VA LOAN assumption available in Griffon with total
payments of less than $350.00. This home has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath.
family room with fireplace. Home is heated and cooled by heat pump. Call today. Offered at $40,000.
WEATHINGTON HEIGHTS. 3 bedroom ranch with fenced back yard and assumable loan If you qualify. Flexible terms to suit your financial needs. Call total tor your personal showing. Offered in mid $40's with nearly 1250 square feet.
PACTOLUS HIGHWAY. 3 bedroom, I'/j bath home on large country lot Current conventional appraisal $42,900. Owner will sell for $40,500
On the Pactolus Highway about 10
lie.
miles from Greenvilli
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Teresa Hewitt ON CALL . 756 118
Gene Quinn. Richard Allen
Tim Smith......
Marie Davis. .. Ray Holloman. John Jackson.
.756 6037 .756 4553 .752 9811 756 5402 .753 5147 756 4360
Toll Free. 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CPA
Experienced, energetic desires position as controller/financial manager with local firm. Will consider part time position lor small company. Reply to:
CPA
P.O. Box 179 Greenville, N.C. 27834
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 Carolina. No phone calls, please. Apply in person Monday through Friday at:
Stuarts
Carolina East Mall
109
Houses For Sale
"Featured Houses"
ORAYLEIGH: Nearing completion. Choose your own colors, carpet.
light fixtures. Chair rail and crown moulding. 4 bedrooms (1 down), 3 baths, large deck. Custom built cabinets, 2 car garage, corner lot, presently oftereoat $142,500.
ORAYLEIGH: Williamsburg style featuring 3 bedrooms, 2'^ baths.
formal living and dining rooms, den
with firi^ace, bookcases, dwk wd
tlO.sOO
arge wooded lot offered at
CLUB PINES: Brick two story, great room with fireplace and bookcases. 3 bedrooms, 7'/i baths, dining room, garage, great location. Priced $84,500.
WINDY RIDGE: New listing, brick Colonial, 4 bedrooms, 2'.' baths, formal living room, dining room, den with fireplac e. Covered patio with privacy fence. Owner transfered, needs to sell. A good buy at $66,900
W.G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000
Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden
975 3179 756 791) 756 3880 756 16)7
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
109 Houses For Sale
BYOWNER
107 Azalea Drive, )1'/sAPR assumable loan. Living room, dining room, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, central air, natural gas heat, fenced backyard, patTo. Will consider another house as trade. 756-8281. if no answer 752 4844.
CAMELOT You'll love the cathedral ceiling 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 market rate. Call Sue Dunn, 355 25S8 or Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500
CHERRY DAKS $10.000 cash, assume 1st and ?nd mortgages, 3 bedroom, 2'/j bath Owner. 756-8073.
EXCELLENT ASSUMPTION with
graduated payments starting at
(o '
$435.26 on this (ovely ranch on quiet cul de-sac in Lake Glenwood. Owner is ready to sell. Call Darrell at Hignite Realtors, 756 1306; nights 355 2556
FARMVILLE. Call now about this 3 bedroom, 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. 355 2588
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
BUYER
McGraw-Edison Co., a manufacturer of a wide variety of electrical products has an opening in our Greenville, N.C. plant which produces pocket - plate nickel cadium storage batteries.
We are presently seeking a Buyer familiar with purchasing a wide variety of parts in an industrial company. The successful candidate will have 3-5 years experience in purchasing material in an economic fashion according to market reauirements.
We offer an excellent compensation and benefits package. Interested applicants should submit resume including salary requirements in confidence to: Personnel Manager.
McGRAW-EDISON
Power Systems Division McGraw-Edison Company
P.O. Bo> 28. Bloomfield. NJ 07^03 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
Snowden
Business Brokers
752-3575
Op Enii Auto Leasing
No Down Pavmenl - Lower Mon-
No Down Payment - Lower Monthly payments - Any make or model. New or Used/Auto Rentals daily. Weekly. Monthly -Low Rates
d-Eastern
Brokers
#14 Pitt Plaza 756-4254
FOR SALE BY OWNER 198 ACRE FARM
Suited for Peanuts and other row crops. 43,245 pounds of peanuts. Located in Williamston Township, Va mile west of Williamston on State Road 1444. Owner financing available. For further information call:
Federal Land Bank Association Of Washington 946-4116
INDUSTRIAUUIANUFACTURING
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 not apply. Salary commensurate with experience.
Send resume and salary history to:
ENGINEER
P.O.BOX 1967
GREENVILLE, NC 27835
YEAR-END
CLEARANCE!
...SAVE...
Dodge Power Ram 150
The 84s Are Already Arriving. Now Is The Time To Save Big On All 83s In Stock
Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth'Dodge Peugeot
3401 S. Memorial Dr.
Greenville, N.C Phone 756-0186
1
109 Houses For Sale
109 Houses For Sale
can't keep from fading (or this cedar home. A charactar flow inside and out Features 3 bedrooms, wood deck, great roonj, Kenmore dishwasher and stove. Color coordinated carpet and wallpaper $47,900. Red Carp^ Steve Evans & Associates 355-2727.
HEY GUYS - Lots ot cabinets In tha garage and storage room for the handy man's delight or hobbyist Large sunken den oft the formal living room offers lots of space tor entertaining. This 3 bedroom brick wme has 1 large baths and is priced at $62.500 Laah je^nmntiAn
FIXED RATE Assumption at 12% available on this well keot Williamsburg in Belvedere A spacious floor plan plus financing that makes ownership easy! Call
l^*7"51miT'
,/, wuari oaQumpiion
* Evans Company, or nights call Faye Bowen, Listing Broker, 756-5258, or Winnie Evans, 752 4224.
HOUSE (Built 1912). Restoration started. 7 large rooms, 6 fireplaces, porches, storage building, excellent acre site. 35 minutes from Greenville. $11,500. Snow Hill, 1
FOR SALE BY OWNER. Very attractive passive solar two bedroom house located in Straw berry Banks In Ayden. FMFA Assumption. 746 6346 after 5.
IN THAT HARO to find price range! The $50's is this three bedroom, two bath ranch with fireplace and woodstove in the den, large formal living room, eat-in kitchan, butler's pantry and double looted outside the city near WlncTv Ridge, (tall Leonard at Hignite Realtors, 756-1306.
GET AWAY FROM IT ALL!! Enjoy privacy and nature as you use your own creative ability to bring out the charm in this country home setting on I'-j acres with fruit and pecan trees. Garden galore! Over 1,8(X) squre feet, 4 bedrooms, family room oitrAa^ rmti r\m. !
yarogt?. Call QaviS Realty 752-3000, Mary 756-1997 Grace 746 6656or 756 4144.
LOTS OF SPACE, low in price. Great tor large family 4 bedrooms; 2 bdths gredt stofdge Aidrldgc &
GO SOLAR In this delightful 3 ^room, 2 bath home with solar heat (heat pump back up), old brick tireplace In den, large tchen winner 1981 Parade ot Homes! Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142.
Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142
LYNNDALE STATELY BEAUTY
features 4 bedrooms, 2 full and 2 half baths, office, play room, dual heat pumps. Super buy In Greenville's finest area Aldridge &
GRIMESLANO. This brick ranch in the country is on approximately 1 acra of land and has 3 badrooms ]
Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142.
bath, kitchen/den combination, additional 16x24 workshop, $47,500 Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 or Aldridqe 8i Southerland, 756 3500.
MAGNIFICENT 3,000 Square foot, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, all formal areas, brick traditional in Cherry Oaks. Very special home. Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142.
HARDEE ACRES. Pay equity and assume FHA loan below market rate on this 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch which features great room with fireplace, eat in kitchen and large screened in country porch Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or
DREAM HOMES you can afford! Build it your self with no down payment. 9.9% APR. 12 models to choose from. 848 3220 collect, A Pathway Home.
Sue Dunn, 355 2588.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
109
Houses For Sale
JOIN AN ELITE EXECUTIVE SALES TEAM
We are exerting every effort to develop the SUPERIOR SALES FORCE in our industry. To achieve this objective, we readily invest heavily in time, thorough training and substantial commissions for those who meet our rigorous qualifications.
Little or no competition Outstanding products A career opportunity No travel No nights No weekends
POTENTIAL INCOME. $15,000-$25,000 $3,000-$5,000 RENEWAL BEGINNING SECOND YEAR CONFERENCE IN Acapulco
If you are experienced in selling or dealing with businesses, possess a strong desire to make good money, are agressive but not high pressure, have the desire and ability for a sales or sales management career and good character,
CALL:
FRED RAAB
919-758-3401
Mon., Sept. 26, 9a-4p
or send resume to:
Regional Director 20 Enterprice St. Suite 3 Raleigh, NC 27607
MAVIS BUTTS REALTY
758-0655
CHARM AND INDIVIDUALITY Is
accentuated in this truly contemporary home. Unique floor plan offers private master suite, 2 additional bedrooms with convenient bath, great room with fireplace and celling fan, eat In kitchen, large utility area, storage shed in fenced back yard and artistically landscaped centipede lawn. SS8,S00.
VYHY NOT S-P-R-E-A-D OU T? This spacious family ranch home offers large living and dining room, den with fireplace and built-Tns, eat In kitchen for mom, laundry/play room for mom and the kids, 3 bedrooms, 1'/? baths, deck and large yard. $S9,900.
CONTEMPORARY WITH A tiair is featured in this beautiful home. Unique floor plan sets the pace with huge great room with vaulted ceiling, dining area, large work kitchen with laundry area, huge master bedroom with private batn, 2 additional bedrooms with common bath, sliding glass doors to deck and double garage. M7,900.
COLLEGE COURT - Popular neighborhood is within walking distance of all schools and shopping districts. Features 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, living and dining rooms, den with built-ins, playroom with. bay window and storage cabinets, lisrge eat-in kitchen with lots of cabinet space, fenced in back yard. $71,500.
TRADITIONAL BEAUTY is
featured in this charming like-new home in beautiful Cherry Oaks. Offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with woodstove and french doors to deck, eat in kitchen, dining room, laundry room, double garage, basement, storage shed and extra deep lot. $81,000.
Jane Butts, Broker (on call>.758-285) Elaine Troiano, REALTOR..756-6348
Shirley Morrison, Broker 758 5463
Mavis Butts, REALTOR, GRI,
CRS....................................752-7073
MODULAR HOME IN COUNTRY.
Over 1,400 square feet. Sapcious kitchen and breakfast area. Tastefully decorated! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, front porch, good size lot. Low $40's. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756 1997, Grace 746 6656 or 756-4144.
MOUNTAIN LODGE is how this rustic contemporary appears. Old brick, logs, cedar snake roof combine to make this an exciting home. Many extras,^ 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, great room. Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9)42
NEAT AND WELL-KEPT older home. About 18 miles trom Greenville. 3 bedroom starter home. Wooded lot Remodeled kitchen, large front porch, quiet neighborhood. Only $23,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, Mary 756-1997, Grace 746 6656 or 756 4144.
109
Housts For Sale
NEW LISTING. $48,900. Spacious 3 bedroom, 1W bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient location. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8i Southerland, 756-3500; nights 756-5716.
NEW
with
LISTING: Contemporary gorgeous cathedral calling and fireplace in greatroom. Split
bedrooms, two baths, and priced In HIgn
Realtors, 756-1306; nights 355-2&
the $50's. Call Darrell at HIgnlte
NEW LISTINGI 5 miles from the
hospital. Assume FmHA loan, plus equity. 3 bedrooms, almost new deck, sliding glass doors, carport, spacious gracious kitchen, built-in
bookshelves In den, large backyard for gardening. Near starter home. $42,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, AAary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.
NEW LISTINGI 6 miles from Pitt Plaza off Highway 43. 3 bedrooms, 1'^ baths, carport, good size lot, spacious kitchen. Owner Is painting in and outside of home. Assume low rate FmHA loan plus equity. Onl $41,500. Neat starter home. Ca Davis Realty 752-3000, nights Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or756-4144.
NO MONEY DOWN
That's rig lot.
red tape.
It's right! We will build on yoi Plenty of mortgage money, i tape. Call 758-3171 for Darrell.
OLD FARM HOME In the country Needs love and tender care! Less than 10 miles from Greenville, bedrooins, large kitchen, famMy
ippralse
$30,000. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, nights Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756 4144
room with tireplace, central About </2 acre. Home a
ONLY $45,000 will move you into this adorable 3 bedroom brick home on beautltui lot. Large detached garage and workshop. Living room with fireplace, pine panelled den FHA loan. Aldridge 8i Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142.
ORCCHARD HILLS. Exceptional 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, with great room/dinIng room, super nice kitchen. Huge storage/laundr room. Fenced dog pen. Aldridge i Southerland, 7S6-35dO, Jean Hopper,
NEW LISTING. Shaded lot, 3 bedroom, 1'/j bath brick ranch. Large family room, also features approximately 600 square feet de tached garage and workshop, excellent location. Call now .to see this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500; nights 756 5716.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORTING
MILITARY GOODS Over 1000 OilleienHtems New and Used -
ARMV-NAVY STORE
1501 S. Evans
RESPIRATORY THERAPIST
Progressive 118 bed general hospital on North Carolina coast seeks a registered or registry-eligible Respiratory Therapist for *uil time day/evening rotation position. Competitive salary and benefits. For more information contact.
1
ri
OVERTON & POWERS
355-6500
$46,500 SHAMROCK TERRACE. A much desired neighborhood and school district. You'Tl like this home and It's extra features. 3 bedrooms, 1'/? baths, large open kltchen-dlnlng-llving combination. Garage plus carport and privately fenced backyard. Corner lot.
$48,000 A LOT OF HOUSE for the money is what you'll say when you see this nice home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central heat and air, carport, corner lot.
$49,500 - NEW LISTING Enjoy country living In this super nice home. Beautltui contemporary style. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, central heat and air. It's a rare find you'll want to see.
$49,500 SHAMROCK TERRACE. Invite your friends to live near you. Located only a few doors down from above. Very nice brick home featuring 4 bedrooms, new carpet in some areas over hardwood floors, garage plus extra carport (negoflable). Fenced backyard. ERA one full'year home equipment warranty.
$62,500 LET US SHOW you this beautiful new listing. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all tormaf areas, quiet neighborhood near the hospital.
OWNER MUST SELLI Quality can be detected In this custom built home on wooded corner lot. Wln-tervllle School District. Brick Veneer with double car garage. 3 bedrooms, 2 full bahts. $60's. No reasonable offer refused. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, Mary 756-1997, nights Grace 746 6656 or 756-4144.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
2723 East Tenth street 752-4348
BEAUTIFUL COZY HOUSE has
large and attractive den with fireplace, formal living room, dining room, kitchen/breakfast bar combination, 3 bedrooms, 2 tull baths. Both the den and the master bedroom has onto a large
bedroom have sliding doors opening onto a large, fenced backyard with patio. Central heat and air condl-flonlng, well insulated and fully carpeted. 2 car carport has large utility room. Conveniently located In Westhaven Subdivision at 112 Ravenwood. Available Sept. 1.
IDEAL FOR FAMILY with son or daughter at East Carolina University or Pitt Community College. Large, attractive brick house with 4 bedrooms and 3 baths, (1 bedroom and 1 bath are located away from others with private entrance to
allow coming and going without disturbing others), central heat and air conditioning, large attractive
yard. All this for just $68,900 conveniently located in Westhaven Subdivision.
LARGE OLDER HOME in
Robersonvllle. Well built older home In good condition and ready to live in, but you can further fix It up yourself. Central heat. Large and attractive yard with plenty of room for garden. Additional lots are available beside property. Located In good section of Robersonvllle.
$7,000 POUND TOBACCO allotment and more than 420 acres for sale located In Pitt County near Gritton. More than 2 miles of fronfage on heavily traveled paved highway.
BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT in
country for sale. More than ]'/* acres il50'X470'X100'X412') located only minutes from Greenville on paved highway SR 1753 between Black Jack and Chlcod. Already approved for septic tank, has community water (Eastern Pines). Priced to move fast at just $6,600.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE
2500 SQ. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
JOHNSENS ANTIQUES & LAMP SHOP
SELECTION OF SMALL ANTIQUES
LAMP8-QLASS SHADES t CHIMNEYS
HANDMADE FABRIC SHADES
OLD LAMPS REPAIRED AND REWIRED
NEW LOCATION
758-4839
315E. 11THST. QREENVII
lBtt
109
Houses For Sale
OWNERS REDUCED to bottom. Said tale this lovely home in WInterville. Nestled in the Pines. 3 bedrooms, tamily room with wood stove, central heat and air, reduced to $53,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, nights AAary 756-1997, Grace 746 6656 or 756-4144.
OWNERS transferred and had to leave this spacious over 1,500 square toot home. Large great room, eat-in kitchen, large master bedrooms, beautiful wooded lot.
country setting, loan assumption. Low $60's. Call Oavis Realty ~ ~ 3000, nights AAary 756-1997, Grace
752
Oavis Realty
........ .ry
746-6656 or 756 4144.
PAYMENTS ARE BASED on your Income on this three bedroom ranch. Excellent Farmer's Home assumption! Call Darrell at Hignite Realtors, 756-1306; nights 355-2556.
POOLSIDE Is where you can be when you own this 3 bedroom ranch! Gorgeous pool and deck guarantee a great summer! Aldridge 8. Soutnerland, 756-3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142.
PRICE REDUCEDII Owner says sell! You will appreciate this three bedroom home if like the following features: cleanliness, large corner lot, one-car garage, deck, patio,
tius storage building. Only $47,900! state Realty Company, 752 5058; Billy Wilson, 758-4476; Jarvis or Dorlls Mills, 752 3647.
QUIET COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
surrounds this lovely 3 bedroom home with 2 full baths. Large sunken den, well landscaped yard with trees makes this brick home with cedar siding accents picture perfect! Call The Evans Company 752-2814, Faye Bowen nights 756-5258 Listing Broker, or Winnie Evans 752-4224.
The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C Sunday, September 25.1983 Q.g
109 Houses For Sale ^TRA7F0R^TjR?A'^ffer^^dvan"
tage of being close in, but very private and quiet lot Excellent 3 bedroom , 2 bath home with carport and huge screened porch Owner moving, must sell quickly! Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142.
VETERANSI Points and closing costs paid by seller on this three bedroom ranch in the $40's. Call Darrell at Hignite Realtors, 756 1306, nights 355 2556.
RED BANKS ROAD This lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch features all formal areas. Kitchen has skylight and butcher block work island for her convenience along with great room with fireplace. Priced to sell. Call Sue Dunn, 355-2588 or Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500
REDUCED $5,0001 Owners must sell. Assume 9'/4% loan. Payment $446.77 PITI approximately. Quiet neighborhood WInterville school district. 1 story Williamsburg home. Approximately 1,562 square feet, fenced In backyard, carport, 2 heating systems - electric baseboard heat, heat pump, attic fan. You must see to appreciate! Call Oavis Realty 752 3000, nights AAary 756 1997, (race 746 6656 or 756 4144.
RIGHT ON Greenville Boulevard. Perfect for professional couple! Great condition, 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, deck. Aldridge 8i Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142.
RIVER HILLS. New 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch on very large corner lot. Greatroom with fireplace, kitchen features greenhouse window. Better than E300, thermopane windows, steel doors. $60's. Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142.
'ely - -
7'/2 bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kitcnen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat pump. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8i Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756-5716.
SPLIT LEVEL located in Ellwood Pines near The Candlewick. 3 bedrooms, 2'/ baths, formal living room and dining area. Huge den has fireplace and comes with a fantastic bar for your entertaining pleasure. This area is located downstairs and offers lots of privacy! $54,500. Call The Evans Company 752-2814. Faye Bowen nights 756-5258 Listing Broker, or WTnnie Evans 752 4224.
waterfront HOME on Pamlico
River, 3 miles from Washington. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, large deck and porch, bulkhead, boat ramp, pier, 110 fool waterfront. Call 946 8565.
WESTWOOD. Owner needs to move this lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch with all formal areas, and Is ready to negotiate! Don't miss a chance (or a super buy! Excellent condition. Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142
WINDY RIOGE. Excellent living (or kids and adults. 3 bedrooms, 2'/2 baths. Tennis Court, Sauna, Club House. Average monthly utilities, $65. 756-5385.
212 ARLINGTON CIRCLE, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, excellent investment or couple beginners home. Reduced to $29,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.
t</^% ASSUMABLE, 3 bedrooms, 1'/i baths, large lot. Call 756-3968; 756-3134, or 752-4661.
8% FHA ASSUMPTION. Freshly painted, like new, brick 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch with double garage. Living room has bay window, kitch en by Arlanne Clark. Beautiful! $50's. Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142.
9Vii% FHA, super 4 bedroom, 2 bath home in the $50'sl. Can't beat this one! Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR
SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
OVERTON & POWERS
355-6500
$19,900 NEW LISTING. Just
starting out? Ownership can be yours. All you need is to move in. Newly painted Inside and out. Located outside of Greenville.
$29,900 TERRIFIC LOCATION
near hospital. Property very valu able in this area. 2 bedrooms, pretty country kitchen. Nice garden spot.
$30,900 CONDOMINIUM LIVING Is the way to go. This price is the best! You won't beat it! Special details available in office.
$35,9(X) Owning a brick home in nice subdivision such as this one is an opportunity that you don't find often. Fireplace, large kitchen with appliances including refrigerator, washer and dryer.
$35,900 IT'S RARE, but we've got it! Nice 3 bedroom brick home just outside city limits. Many nice 'features include central heat and lir and <;arport. At this price it will 11 quickly. Call ERA today.
i.iOO Sellers have lowered their price on this large home located in Ayden. Has 4 bedrooms so hard to find at this price plus carport, workshop and much more Owners are leaving woodstove which heats home the economical way.
$42,500 Commercial Property. Two downtown shops available at this price. Can be sold separately or together. Excellent business oppor (unity. Call tor details
$43,9(X) Perfect in every way describes this offer! Beautlioi inside and out Wooded lot, quiet cul de-sac. Ready for occupancy
$44,500 - THE COACH SAYS Sell! His loss is your gain. You'll love the versatility ot this attractive tri level condominium. Located in Universi ty area Call today for your personal showing.
Ill Investment Property
TWO QUADRAPLEXES in Kiver Bluff area. Excellent return on investment! $210,000. Only serious inquiries please Hignite Realtors, 756 1306.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
111 I nvestment Property
DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE - Just Reduced! Each side features 2 bedrooms, I'/i baths, living and dining rooms, kitchen with appli anees, deck and storage. $59,500 Call AAavis Butts Realty, 758 0655
111 Investment Property
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
VILLAGE EAST: 2 bedrooms, l>j bath townhouses. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances furnished. Central heat and air, GE
heatpump, patio, outside storage Conveniently located on Cedar Court. Excellent property for stu
dent rental, priced at $41,900.
DRESDEN PLACE: 2 bedroom, 1'^ bath condominiums. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances furnished. Ideal location for student rental market. Corner of 11th 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 I'j bath. They are located in an excellent location and in very good condition Priced at $145,000
W.G. Blounts. Assoc. 756-3000
NEW CONSTRUCTION - 2 Story D,uplex townhouse Each side features 2 bedrooms, I'-j baths, great room, dining area, kitchen with appliances, private deck and outside storage Rents $325 each side $69,500 More details call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Elaine Troiano, 756 6345
113
Land For Sale
WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank Serious inquiries only. 746 4669
115
Lots For Sale
Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden
975 3179 756 7911 756 3880 756 1617
ACRE LOT for sale Ayden Griffon Call 756 2682 after 5 p m.
LOTS ~IN ESTABLISHED
neighborhood starting at $8800 Call 756-8904 after 7 p m
i MAC GREGOR DOWN. 3 5 acre lot I Wooded Aldridge 8, Southerland, I 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756-9142.
I NO CROWDING your neighbors on these exceptionally large mobile , home lots Oft River Road,
I Greenville On Greenville city I water Owner financing The Evans i Co , 752-2814 Winnie Evans, Listing Broker, 752 4224 Faye Bowen, 756 5258
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
PAMLICO RIVER LOT. High on Clift at Blounts Bay Great view, sandy beach 30 minutes from Greenville For sale by owner, $24,000. 946 8071 or 946 8551 nights
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
m VOLKSWAGEN m
1983 CLEtMIICE SUE
UP TO m DISCOUNTS
All 1983 models must be sold this month
Limited Supply Remaining
loe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.
Greenville Blvd. 756-1135
Serving Greenville To The Coast For 19 Years
Your Old Car Is Your Down Payment!
Turn your old car into a brand new car.. .at Toyota East!
It doesnt matter what its condition. As long as you can drive it in, your old car is your down payment on any new Toyota car or truck, or on any used car.. .with approved credit. We have an outstanding selection of new Toyotas in stock, but dont wait.. .this is a limited time offer.
TOYOTA
EAST
Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer
Drive your old car in to Toyota East today, and drive a new car home!
109 Trade Street ^ Greenville, NC 756-3228
i
D-6 . Th'e Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 25,1983
115
Lots For Sale
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
LOTS
BUILD YOUR HOME on this ^ acre wooded lot. Quiet area adia cent to Grifton Country Club Priced to sell at $8,000.
LAND FOR SALE 67 acres. Pro perty just outside of Winterville can be purchased as one tract or may be sold in increments of 5 acre sections (wooded). $134,000 $16,500 per 5 acres.
$300 DOWN on >2 acre lot 12 miles east of Greenville on the Pactolus Highway. Cash price $5,300. Owner financino available at 12% rate for 8 years. Monthly payment of $176.53 Call John Jackson, 756 4360.
BROOK VALLEY Beautiful wooded lot located on a cul de sac. Great site for building that dream home Call for details. Offered at $24,000
WOODED LOT already cleared for house on corner lot in Candlewick Estates. $8,200 00
WOODED '2 ACRE lot on Highway 42, 1 mile west of Conetoe Quiet surroundings $5000 00 Owner financing available
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS 756 6336
Teresa Hewitt ON CALL.. 756 1188 i
Gene Quinn 756 6037!
Richard Allen..............756 4553
T.m 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
115 Lots For Sale
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
LOTS
LOOKING FOR LAND to build a home or business on? Over *'/i acres available right off Highway 11 between Ayden and Grifton. Owner financing available.
WOODED LOT in Lake Ellsworth. Back section. Priced to sell at $10,(XK).
COUNTRY LOTS near Lake Glenwood east of Greenville. Approximately '3 acre. $7500 each.
HEAVILY WOODED LOT In Camelot. Nearly 1/2 acre. $13,200.
SPACIOUS LOT in Cherry Oaks. Offered at $11,000
SIX ACRE BUILDING SITE in Knoll Acres subdivision, adjacent to Baywood. Restrictive covenants, city water. Owner will finance at 12% with 25% down payment. $33,000.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
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 Holioman.....................753 5147
John Jackson......................756-4360
Toli Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
LAKE FRONT LOT for sale Located in Brook Valley with lots of trees Windsor Drive. 756-7654 days, 752 6913 nights LOT IN BAYWOOD, large corner $17,500 Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500, Jean Hopper, 756 9142
115
Lots For Sale
PRICE REDUCEDI SR IS3S, I miles East, 3.3 wooded acres. $12,000.752-1915.
THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x IK) corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details.
2</S ACRES, Warrenwood Subdivision, $10,500. Call 756 3987.
117 Resort Property For Sale
BEAUTIFUL WATER FRONT
property In Beaufort County, NC. I'^i acre, long frontage on South Creek with fresh wafer pond. 3 bedroom modern house, 4 years old with deck, pier, garage and privacy. $70,000. Some financing af 8 percenf. 758-0428 or 758 0703.
FISH, SWIM, SKI on 345 acre lake Nearby Is your 75x200 wooded lot with private fish pond. $5500. 756-8722.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2:00to5:00
TWO LOCATIONS PAMLICO BEACH - Turn leff at ball field, go approximafely I'/? miles and look for sign. 4 bedroom, 3'2 bath waterfront cottage.
SMITH SHORES - Turn right off NC 92 on old Hub's Wreck Road, turn right first road and follow signs. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath home on canal leading to Pungo River.
Come see us at these two locations and ask about our other listings.
WOODSTOCK REALTY 943-3352, Belhaven
Sallie Robinson...................946-4711
Rudolph Blake....................943 3877
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Greemrille's Finest UsedCars!
(Located At Honda Store)
1983 Honda Accord
I :>.,or, 'pfL',1.1 IImik*
1982 Honda Accord LX
Bl'ji ,3'pt'tvi tr,iniinib5ion A.M FM .-lertio radio
1981 Mazda RX-7
d Jcmr auldiruitic transmi-,sion
1980 Honda Prelude
.XuiDiniiiic irap.smission, low mileagu
1980 Datsun B-210
.d'ciiir uiiu uuiwr iU-,1 liku iit',\ liulonvalit. air
.Fliu-i
1980 Chevrolet Citation
, .a 4 ^pl'l'd irainb'ion liiv ownti cat
1980 Volkswagen Sport Truck
Ki'd. 4 sptw'd traii'inbijn, Real nicu
1980 Ford Granada
i door ht'Hji .rui.iiTiatic. 4.4.n()l) miltw. onti.wnur
1980 Honda Accord LX ,
Bi iwih u'lour 'iiiurior .Auiomaik .,iir condi . "Ii/i'i rb^ulli dyilal cliX'k. hakii rf.eant
.1 'wiwroi:
1979 Honda Prelude 1979 Honda Accord *
Hliif )-pi'i'.i,it i oiijit'o!:
1979 Ford Granada
Ku! . Bluf -ki'i liku btaiiii iw u,
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
d io,.r browi'-iop low miluapi' onfownui
1980 Datsun 210
I i orionniio i:ran^^ll,';on
Bob Barbour
3023QS
3,'^(J0 s. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500
1979 Honda Accord
4 door 5 speed, low mileage, one owner.
1979 MGB Convertible
I ike new. 47.S00 miles, green with black convertible top. AM-FM stereo,
(Located At Volvo Store)
1982 Datsun Pickup
MVP package, low mileage, nice truck
1982 GMC S-15 Pickup
Gvpsv .All thdextras including air condition
1982 AMC Jeep Wagoneer
Every option available, low mileage
1981 Volvo DL4 A
Automatic, air condition, power steering and brakes Extremelv clean
1981 Honda Accord LX
l.uxurv model ,Air condition Luxury with economy.
1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7
Renegade One owner In excellent shape
1981 Olds ToronadoXCS
22 1)00 miles all the options, like brand new
1981 Buick Century
4 door Power steering and brakes, air condition, 'tereo radio ,\ice one owner car <
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
Power steering and brakes, air condition, clean automobile
1977 Chevrolet Scottsdale Pickup
One owner, power steering
1977 AMC Jeep Wagoneer
Air condition power steering and brakes, in great condilion. ready for,the hunting season
1976 Volvo Wagon
Overdrive transmission, air condition, stereo tape
BobBarbour
VOLVOAVK Jeep Rcnaull
117 W Tenth St. 'Greenville '758-7200
READY CARS - USED CARS
1982 Mazda RX-7 GLS - 5 Speed, air conditioning, power brakes, power windows, power steering, stereo cassette, leather interior, sunroof, 22,000 miles.
1982 Buick Regal - automatic. Brown, 2 door, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, cruise, stereo Mssette, 34,000 miles.
1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass - Brown, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, 27,000 miles,
1982 Buick Regal Green metallic, 4 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, stereo cassette, 38,600 miles,
1981 Oldsmobile Regency Blue Metallic, 2 door, Loaded! 38,000 miles,
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo White with Blue landau roof, automatic, air conditioning, tilt wheel, power steering, power brakes, wire wheels, 37,000 miles. 1981 Toyota Corolla - Brown, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, 21,500 miles, AM/FM radio.
1980 Dodge Omni - Creme color, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, AM/FM, 39,000 miles.
1980 Mercury Grand Marquis Black, 50,000 miles, Loaded!
1980 Plymouth Volare - Green, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering. power brakes, 50,000 miles.
1979 Buick Regal Regal Limited - Silver and Gray, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control AM/FM stereo, 44,000
miles.
1976 Oldsmobile 98 Creme color, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, power windows, power seats, AM/FM stereo; 82,500 miles.
1975 Volkswagen Bus - 7 passengers, Very Clean! 80,000 miles.
TRUCKS
1981 Chevrolet Silverado - air conditioning, automatic, power windows, power steering, tilt wheel, Black and Silver.
1978 Mazda Pick-up - Camper Shell, 5 Speed, Good Condition!
Subaru Of Greenville
605 W. Greenville Blvd.
Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885
Greenville
137 Resort Property For Rent
PAMLICO RIVER 13x60 mobllt home with large screened In porch, recreation room, electric and ga* heat, air conditioning, boat shelter,
?ler and boat ramp privlledges. 56-0431.
RESORT PROPERTY tor salt or trade. 4 apartment complex. 3 bedrooms, l'/i baths, central heat and air. 415 Ocean Drive, Club Colony, Atlantic Beach. Asking $225,000. Will trade for property In Greenville area. Call 753-3366 or 757-0451.
RIVER COTTAGE on woodtd 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.
120
RENTALS
FOR RENT: Furnished apartment Four girl or men students or couple. Also semi private room, kitchen privileges, near college available. $60 a month each. 758-2201.
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5.
NEED STORAGE? We have an^
ngt : ' ' ,
day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933
size to meet your storage need. Arllngfon Self Storage, Open Mon-
121 Apartments For Rent
ATTRACTIVE and energy efficient 1 bedroom apartments. $225 per month. Hooker Road, 'A mile from 264 By pass. Contact Tommy Williams, 756-7815.
AVAILABLE OCTOBER 1. $265 month. 2 bedrooms, roomy, carpeted, washer/dryer hookups, heat pump, all appliances (includ Ing dishwasher), free basic cable TV. 758 8537 or 752 0180 Langston Park Apartments.
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN-CO, 756 3862
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartmunts For Ront
AZALEA GARDENS
Greanvilla's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756-7815
BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1W baths, washar-dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. $310 per month. 752-2040 or 756-8904.
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'/4 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer-dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club houseand POOL. 752 1557
DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wooded lot at Frog Level. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and living room, no pets allowed. $265 per month 756 4624.
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, moclern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121
Apartmtits For Runt
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart-ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable TV. laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adlacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869
GRIFTON AREA. 2 and 3 bedroom
apartments. Central air, carpet and drapes. Call 524-4239 or 534-4 EHO.
1-4821.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located just off 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815
NCar hospital. New duplexes currently under construction. Available September 1. $300 per month. No pets. Call 752 3152 8 to 5, ask for John or Bryant.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Greenville Electric Co.
for all your electric needs
COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
Calvin Glissofl 752-5197 Johnny Stallings 758-1483
AUCTION
Wednesday, September 2810:00 AM Mt. Olive, N.C.
400 S. Center Street
store Out Of Business - Sale regardless of Price!
Entire contents of approximately 20,000 square feet of Supermarket - Grocery Store - Meat Market Equipment. Ordered sold for cash
Various office equipment Money safe, approximately 200 running feet of modern display units for meats, beverages, dairy, deli, vegetables and frozen foods. Sold in various size units some 12 ft. long upright and open top, etc...
7 Shoplift mirrors, 2 modern automatic checkouts, Dixie Craft 2 modern NCR registers, 220 -1521 Food Stamp model. Modern gondolas, 200 foot (50 Four foot sections) key making machine, Slushy Machine and 15 gallons of syrup. Platform scales, various shop and stock carts, Market equipment. 6 x 8 walk-in freezer cooler.
Meat block - Hobart 3000, weight scale and price machine modern. Hobart Cube Steak machine, Toledo Valuematic 2, scale, price and marking system. 2 Sets of produce or market scales. Meat Grinder.
3 Roll, meat wrapping machine. Chicken cutting machine, various other items.
TERMS: Strictly Immediate Cash Payment Everything sold As is. Where Is
Clark Auction & Liquidation Co., Inc.
Phone 734-2497 GRAHAM CLARK. Auctioneer Goldsboro. N.C ESTATES FARMS FACTORIES STORES MARINE TIMBER WE SELL EVERYTHING"
Your Old Car Is Your Down Payment On A Used Car!
This month, buy onf of these great used cars from Toyota East, and use the car you have now as the down payment, with approved credit...regardless of it's condition . . .as long as you can drive it in. This offer good thru October 4, 1983.
Stock No. Description
4199-A 1970 Oldsmobile Cutlass Yellow 4537-A 1977 Chevrolet Truck Brown 4565-A 1983 Subaru Wagon Beige 4595-A - 1981 Dodge Truck - White 4628-A 1982 Toyota Truck White
4727-A 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass Silver
4728-A - 1981 Honda Civic - Silver 4737-A 1982 Toyota Truck Beige 4739-B - 1980 Mazda 626 - Gold
4751-A 1979 Chevrolet Camaro Blue 4795-A 1976 Mercury Cougar Silver
4856-A - 1979 Ford Mustang - Blue
4857-A - 1980 Buick Regal - Black
4867-B - 1972 Mercedes-Benz SEL 450 - Blue 4894-A 1978 Lincoln Continental Green 4903-A - 1981 Ford Escort - Black 4905-A 1978 Toyota Corona Brown 4924-A 1980 Chevrolet Monza Brown P-8260 - 1982 Toyota Corolla - Yellow P-8261 1982 Toyota Corolla Red P-8274 1982 Toyota Corolla White P-8276 1982 Toyota Corolla White P-8284 1982 Toyota Corolla Red P-8295 --1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Brown P-83161982 Oldsmobile Cutlass Burgundy P-8325 1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Burgundy P-8331 1982 Chevrolet Chevette Dark blue P-8348 1982 Toyota Corolla Silver P-8352 1979 Chevrolet Corvette White P-8354 - 1979 Toyota 1401 - Yellow P-8355 1982 Toyota Clica White P-8358 1982 Toyota Clica Gray P-8359 1983 Toyota Corolla Champagne P-8360 1979 Toyota Corolla Blue P-8361 1982 Chevrolet Chevette Blue P-8362 1982 Datsun Stanza Silver R-7127 - 1981 Toyota 4X4 Truck - Blue R-7128 - 1982 Toyota 4 X 4 Truck - Blue R-7130-A 1981 Toyota Corolla Red R-7137 - 1982 Toyota Truck - Blue R-7140 1981 Toyota Corolla Brown R-7141 1983 Toyota Clica Blue R-7145 - 1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7 - Copper R-7146 1982 Toyota Celica White R-7147 1982 Toyota Corolla Red
TOVOTA
EAST
109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228
121 Apartments For Rent
LOVE TREES?
Expcri^nct tht unlqu* in apartmtnf living with natur* outiida your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, firaplacts, heat pumps (haating costs 50 par-cant lass than comparable units), dishwasher, wesher-dryer hookups, cable TV.wall-to-wall carpet, tharmopane windows, extra Insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lana Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartmants For Rent
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!
At our affordable alternative to ranting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rant. Call Iris Cannon at 75S-6050 or 746-2639, Ovran Norvail at 758-6050 or 756-1498, Wil Rtid at 758-6050 or 756-0446 or Jana Warren at 758-6050 or 758-7029.
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY'
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
SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS
1983 Oldsmobile Firenza
4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air 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 white interior, one owner, loaded.
1981 Olds Omega Brougham
White with blue velour interior, automatic, air condition stereo with cassette, 28,000 miles.
1981 Datsun 280-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 vinyl interior, automatic, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, low mileage.
1980 Pontiac Phoenix
4 door. Gold with tan vinyl interior, automatic, air condition AM-FM radio, 42,000 miles, nice car.
1980 Chevrolet Mallbu 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, AM/FM radio, low mileage.
1980 Buick
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, white vinyl 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 vinyl 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 interipr, loaded, 7^57 miles.
1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham
4 door. White with light gray velour interior. Loaded. 3,121 miles.
1983 OldsOutlass Brougham
Red with gray velour interior. Loaded, 6,122 miles.
1983 Olds Omega
4 door, Maroon with maroon velour interior. Loaded, 3,785 miles.
HOLT OLDS-DATSUH
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
OMCMIAUIY SERVICE num
MMIAl MOIOIt eORPORAnON
121 Apartnwnti For Rent
OAKMONT SQUARE - APARTMENTS
Apartm*nf For Rtnt
Two tMdroom townhMs* apart-I. Dlih-
mantt. 1212 Radbankt Road, u.wi waahar, retrlgarator, ranga, dit
Cable
STRATFORD ARMS ^ APARTMENTS
^ (55&Lr
-ETV
Vfry convanlant to Pitt Plaza "d, Unlvarilty. Alto toma furnlthed apartmentt available.
Office hoort 10 a.m. to J p.m. Monday through Friday
756-4151
Call ut 24 hourt a day at
756-4800
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
MOBILE
HOMES
ATTENTION
VETERANS
VA FINANCING
Now Available On The New Home 01 Your Choice--
No down payment
No advance payments
24 Hour delivery available
(with approved credit)
Over 25 new homes to select from
Interest rates are at an all time low
Visit CONNER HOMES Today!
WHY BUY FROM CONNER?
25 years in Ihe Mobile Home Business 20 Years m Mobile Home M.inulaclurinq Con-ner Financed Conner Service Conner Insurance Free Delivery and Set Up
Greenville, N.C.
(Open Weeknights Until 10 P.M.; (Week-Ends Until 8 P.M.)
616 W Greenville Blvd Greenville, N C
' call 756-0333 13.75% FHA
SEPTEMBER SAVINGS
KEn05UN
PORTABLE HEATERS
NEW LOW PRICES NOW IN EFFECT!
19S2 Sugo<t*<t Modtl: LlitPric*; Now:
Sunstroom;.......$289.95.........$249.95
Director .........$274.95.........$239.95
RqdlantIO:.......$22995.........$159.95
Radiant 36........$232.95.........$179.95
Radiants:........$183.95.........$139.95
Omni 105*........$264.95.........$189.95
Omni 85*.........$239.95.........$169.95
Omni 15*..........$152.95.........$119.95
Moonlighter ..... $169.95....... $149.95
Kero-Sun* Portable Heaters are available in 9 safeN tested and U.L. listed models ttxat are rated from 7,600 to 19,500 BTUs an hour All models feature 99.9% fuel-efflclency, odorless and smokeless operation, battery-powered Ignition, automatic safety shutotf, and they do not require a chimney.
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUYTHEKERO-SUN PORTABLE HEATER YOU WANT...AND SAVE!
Prices good limited time only, while quantities lost.
729 Dickinson Ave. 752-4417 West End Center 756-9371
121 Apartments For Rent
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer hook ups, cable TV, ^1, club house, playground. Near ECU.
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, V/i baths, nearly new, convenient location, professionals preferred, no pets, S330 per month. 7M-7314; after 6p.m. 756-4980.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S'^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton. Co.
75; 61 16
PLASTIC SLIP COVERS
Cuslont lined In home. Huy cloar plastic. Protacts lurnltura from smoka, dust, stains, waarlng.
J. AUSBY Sofa and Chair Covered (4 Ptiiows or less) $95.00 Ausby Plastic Covers 536-4793 Weldon
121 Apartments For Rent
TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Village. S350. CallLorelle at 756-6336.
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom, IVv bath townhousas. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.
756-0987
2 BEDROOM APARTMNT -carpeted, central air and heat. S275. 758-3311.
2 BEDROOM, 1 path duplex. University area. No pets. $235 per ' 752-817'-
month. 756-4277 or 752-8179.
122 Business Rentals
for lease, prime retail or
office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only S3.60 per square foot. For more informatim, 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
3 BEDROOM HOUSE. Living room, den, 1V5 baths, dining area. Located on Vi of an acre. 5 minutes from Greenville. $400 per month. Family preferred. Call 758-4693 after 6 p.m.
3 BEDROOMS, fenced In back yard. $340 per month plus deposit. 756-4808.
3 BEDROOM MODULAR home with large garage on 8'/i acre lot. $350 a month. 756-7755.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
10 X SO DESK
*179
CHniuiimcEEiiuinina.
Corner of Pitt & Green St.
127
Houses For Rent
AYDEN. 3/4 large bedrooms, 2 baths. Rent with option to buy. $355. 756-8160.
CHARMING LARGE 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,' study, 4 oak fireplaces, fenced yard, washer/dryer. Ayden, $360. 756-8160.
FARMVILLE HOME, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, fully carpeted.
oversized laundry room, stove, heat pump, 2 years old. No pets. Large woodisd lot. $375 monthly/$300 deposit. Available October 2.753-5526
HOUSES AND Apartments in country. 8 mnlles south of Greenville. 746 3284 and 524-3180.
NEW 3 BEDROOM, 1/i bath home -$400 per month. Lynndale: 4 bedrooms, 3 baths - $600 per month. MacGregor Downs: 5 bedrooms, 2'/i baths - $700. Lease and security deposit required. Ouffus Realty, Inc. 756 0811.
ONE 3 BEDROOM, V/3 bath house in Fairfield. Call 752-3993evenings.
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 1-5244147, nights 1 524 4007.
2 BEDROOMS, corner lot, 1 mile outside city limits on Pactolus Highway. No pets. $300. 758-6176 or 752-9928 after 6 p.m.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE near Greenville, electric heat, air, couple preferred. No pets. 756-0264 after 5.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 25.1963 D-7
127 Houses For Rent
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
4 BEDRDDM RANCH Over 2000 square feet with workshop In Griffon. Available Immediately for $425 per month. Call Realty World, Clark-Branch, 756-6336 or Tim Smith, 752-9S11.
3 BEDRQQMS, semi furnished, Taylor's Trailer Park. $155 per month. 746-2638 after 5 p.m.
2 MQBILE homes for rent. Furnished or unfurnished. 752-5635.
129 Lots For Rent
2 DR 3 BEDRQQMS near Greenville. Deposit. Call 746 6847 or 524-4349 from 6 to 9.
BEAUTIFUL PRIVATE lot tor single or doublewide trailer. Septic tank and shallow well on site. Can be hooked up to city water. Call 753-4631 after 6 p.m.
13S Office Space For Rent
QFFICE SPACE for rent. 4 office suite in Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc. building. Call Jeannette Cox, 756 1322.
VILLAGE TRAILER Park. Ayden. Paved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection. First month free or we pay moving expenses. 746 2425 or 752-7148.
QFFICES FDR LEASE. Contact J T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
SINGLE QFFICE, 154 square feet, Joyner-Lanier building, 219 Cotanche Street. Parking available. Call Jim Lanier at 752 5505.
5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park ing. Call 75a-2300days
MQBILE HQME FDR RENT. Call 756-4687.
12 X 40. 3 bedrooms, $150, Also 2 bedrooms, $135. No pets, no children. 758-0745.
furnished except for air conditioner, washer/dryer, dishwasher and refrigerator. 758-6042 from 7 to9 p.m.
12X65 2 bath, central air, screened back porch on corner lot in town. 756 7743.
2 BEDROOMS, l</i baths, no pets, no children. 756-6005.
2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath furnished. Very clean. $175. 758 7741.
2 BEDROOM trailer. $150 a month. Good location in Ayden. Call 746 3126 days, ask for Horace Tripp.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
BOYD
ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
P.O. BOX 1705, GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROUNA 27834 GENERM. CONTRACTORS 758-4284
RENOVATIONS
PRE-OWNED LUXURY CARS
1
1982 Lincoln Mark VI
4 door, 20,000 miles, local one owner.
1982 Lincoln Mark VI
4 door, French Vanilla inside and out, plush leather interior, local trade.
1980 Lincoln Mark VI
2 door, 30,000 miles, local one owner trade.
1980 Lincoln Mark VI
4 door. Black, power moon roof, one owner.
1980 Lincoln Town Car
White with Dark blue interior, 34,000 miles.
ALL THESE LUXURY CARS ARE EXCELLENT BUYS! 12,000 miles or 12 Month Warranty
LINCOLN
EAST
GMC
CAROLINA
TRUCKS
LINCOLNMERCURY-GMC West End Circle Greenville, N.C.
756-4267
WetlThoughtOf
Used Cars
THINK
But Haver Mxtsed UsedCars
1983 Cadillac Seville - 4 door. Silver sand with leather trim. Equipped with most factory options, only 4,000 miles, local trade.
1982 Ponilac Grand Prix siate gray with blue cloth Interior, blue padded landau top. Extras Include tilt wheel, air condition, stereo radio, 60-40 split seat, wire wheel covers, 24,000 miles.
1982 Cadillac Sedan Da Vllle Dark blue metallic with tan cloth trim, fully equipped including wire wheels, local trade, 25,000 miles.
1982 Cadillac Eldorado White with white leather trim. Fully equipped Including power sunroof,
36,000 miles, local trade.
1982 Honda Accord 2 door. Medium blue metallic with cloth trim, 5 speed, AM/FM stereo with cassette, 25,000 miles, local trade.
1981 Volvo QL 4 door sedan. Green with fan cloth trim, A speed, air condition, AM/FM radio,
32,000 miles, local trade.
1980 Olds Delia Royala Dark burgundy metallic burgundy vinyl top and trim, options Include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, 60-40 split seats, wire wheel covers.
1980 Mazda RX-7 silver metallic with burgundy trim, 5 speed transmission, air condition, stereo, local trade.
1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme Dark green metallic with green landau vinyl top and trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM/FM stereo.
metallic with green landau vinyl top and trim. Power
46,000 miles, local trade.
1980 AMC Eagle Wagon Tan with tan vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, air, til wheel, luggage rack, 4 wheel drive, stereo radio, 40,000 miles, local trade.
1979 Pontiac Grand PrIx Carmel beige with tan vinyl trim, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise, AM/FM stereo, wire wheel covers, bucket seats, local trade.
1981 Mtrcury Lynx Wagon Medium blue with blue vinyl trim, automatic, air, AM/FM radio.
luggage rack, local car.
1981 Pontiac T-1000 4 door, silver metallic with burgundy vinyl trim, 4 speed, air condition, AM/FM atareo, 26,000 miles, local one owner trade. 1981 Olds Cutlass Suprema silver metallic with blue cloth trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, AM/FM radio, rally wheels,
27,000 miles.Dickinson Avo.
Brown-Wood, Inc.
andymiwiilbiiy
III
752-7111ISUZU
1979 Toyota Corolla White with tan vinyl trim, automatic transmission, air condition, nice car, local trade.
1979 Pontiac Bonneville 2 door, silver metallic with blue velour trim. Extras include tilt wheel, cruise, AM/FM tape, wire wheels, 48,000 milgs.
1978 Cadillac Sedan De Villa Dark green metallic with leather trim. Equipped with most factory options including wire wheel covers.
1978 Buick LeSabre Landau Medium green metallic with white landau top and cloth trim. Extras include tilt wheel, AM/FM, air condition and sport wheels, sharp car, local trade.
1977 Cadillac Sadan Da Villa Burgundy with full vinyl roof and cloth trim. Equipped with most factory options Including wire wheels. Clean car. 1977 Ford Thundarbird Gray with red vinyl top and gray vinyl trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM/FM radio, wire wheel covers, local trade.
1973 Pontiac Grand Prix Black with black vinyl top and white interior. Options include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM/FM stereo with tape, 77,000 miles, local trade.
I
138
Rooms For Rent
ROOM FOR RENT fo temaie Christian student or older person. Call 752 7422.
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge. Pool, tennis courts and sauna Call 756-9491
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share '/j expenses. Birchwood Sands Mobile Homes. 752 3040.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. $75 plus V3 utilities. Call 757 3918 after 4 p.m
SINGLE MOTHER, non smoker, wishes to share 2 bedroom townhouse with same Call 752 6216 atfer5:30p m
144
Wanted To Buy
BEASLEY LUMBER Products will pay up to $150 per M for good grade standing Pine Timber Also top
137 Resort Property For Rent
BEECH MOUNTAIN condo tor rent by the day, wek or month Tennis, golf and swimming. Call 946 3248 days, 946 0694 nights.
138
Rooms For Rent
FURNISHED ROOM with air and refrigerator, across from college. Utilities. Male student. 758-2585.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
prices paid tor good grade Pine logs nill.
delivered to Scotland Neck mi Call Gene Baker 826 4121 826 4203
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 U51
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AUCTION
C
FARM LAND
3 TRACTS
Saturday, Oct. 15,1983 11:00 A.M.
Location: Take Hwy 903 north from Robersonvilie, N.C., go approximately 3 miles to Gold Point. Turn right on Rural Paved Road 1309. Go approximately 1 mile to sale sight.
Tract 1: 60 Acres (Approx), 43 acres cleared, 17 acres woods, 3.57 acres tobacco, 8172 pounds. Peanuts 19,700 pounds. Small house and outbuildings.
Tract 2: 89 Acres (Approx), 51 acres cleared, 38 acres woods, 2.92 acres tobacco, 6673 pounds. Peanuts 17,511 pounds. 2 houses and outbuildings.
Tract 3: 86 Acres (Approx), 49 acres cleared, 37 acres woods, 2.92 acres tobacco, 6674 pounds. Peanuts 17,511 pounds.
Terms: 5% day of sale. Balance in 30 days upon delivery of deed. Owner has the right to accept or reject and and all bids.
Farms Sold Subject To Timber Deed
Sale Conducted by
COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND pEALTY CO. P. 0. Box 1 235 Washington, North Carolina Phone: 9I6 600/ State License No. 765
DOUG CURKINS Crecnville, N. C. 75S-1B75
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
RALPH RESPESS
V",S
The Real Estate Corner
BELVEDERE!
Impressive throughout - Large family room with fireplace, kitchen with dining area, formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 sparkling tile baths. All this on a quiet, tree lined street.
$66,900
ball & lane
752-0025
H
Richard Lane, Listing Broker, 752-8819302 Queen Annes Road
Stately two story home features all formal areas, master bedroom suite on first floor, 3 bedrooms up, plus office and playroom. Excellent floor plan, lovely decor. Price reduced tb $119,900. Call Jean Hopper for your personal appointment. 756-3500 or 756-9142.Aldridge r^ Southerland Realtors756-3500
D-8 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday, September 25.1983
Lexington Square
Townhomes
Near The Greenville Athletic Club
Model Open Daily 1-5 P.M. Phase II, Unit 31
2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered
J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.
FOR RENT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL PARK TOWNHOMES
Brand ne* luxury aoartments located less than 1 rniie behind surgical center
Occupancy Mid-Octotier
2 Large Bedrooms f; baths Thermopane WindOA'S E 300 Energy Etfi cieht Heat Pumps, Patios Aith Private Fence. Washer Dryer HooK ups Kitchen ADphances. Custom Built Cabinets Beautiful Individual Wiinamsbu-g Exte'iors S340-Month
CALL 752-6415 Mon Thru Fn. 9-5
355 2286
On|%i
756-6666
OR
756-5868
Bass Realty
HORSE lovers - this new listing offers approx, 5,6 acres of land. Includes 23 horse stalls. PunK house, tack rooms, riding rings, rental house, pasture land, and 4 rail fences Owner will finance for 10 years. Good investment - call for more details. S72.000.
M OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4
'Beautiful & cozy house has a large and attractive den with fireplace, formal tivmg room, dming room, kitchen/breakfast bar combination. 3 bedrooms .& 2 full baths: central heat and air conditioning: 2-car carport & large utility room: large fenced back yard:, located m yVesthaven at 112 Ravenwood
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
2723 E. 10th Street 752-4348
FOR SALE
IN FOUNTAIN
3rd HOUSE FROM BAPTIST CHURCH ON MAIN ST
2 BEDROOMS, LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM, KITCHEN. BATH AND SCREENED BACK PORCH. UTILITY ROOM WITH HALF BATH. HEATED BY HOT WATER OR HEAT AND AIR BY HEAT PUMP, CONNECTING CAR-I -^ORT WITH 2 STORAGE ROOMS.
I CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
^ 749-3831
Special Feature
Owner Says Sell!!
This house has been totally renovated with new electric service, central heat and air, new modern kitchen with Jenn-Aire, double ovens, custom cabinet, modern baths, Baldwin Brass, working fireplaces, etc.The owner has been transfered out of the country. Must self. No reasonable offer will be refused. Call for further details and make your offer.
Call
w.g. blount
<
& associates
756-3000
BY OWNER
BAYWOOD
TENNIS BUFFS 2500 Sq Ft. contemporary on wooded lot over an acre Nea-- Tennis Club 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, double garage
LOADED WITH EXTRAS! Sun room.
great room with central two way freplace. lots of decking. Must see S120.000's.
CALL 756-2340
JEANNETTE cox AGENCY
REALTOR 75 1322
1516 Greenville BIvh
IF YOU ARE VOV NG TO GREENVillE
Call rS6 UJJor wr 'e P 0 Box 667. Greenville NC lor your tree copy ot Homes For Living a monthly publication packed with pictures details and pr.ces ot homes and available locally
IF YOU ARE MOVING TO A NEW CITY
Get your tree copy of Homes For Living ', in the city you are opmg to Know the real estate market before you get there Your copy is ih our office We can help you buy, sell or trade a home any place m the nation
OntuQi
21
TIPTON & ASSOCIATES
105 W. Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C. 27834
756-6810
$20,000 Lot with mobile home
S25.000 Nice 2 bedroom bungalow, 8% FHA assumption
$35,000 3 bedroom home with upstairs apartment; good investment property
S39.900 Stokes-Farmers Home Assumption. Two bedroom brick ranch with carport.
$41,500 Farmville-3 bedroom. Ih baths, brick ranch on large wooded lot. FmHA assumption.
$43.000 Country Squire. 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, corner lot. Assumable FmHA loan.
$44.900 Country. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, huge lot with fruit trees. 11 h FHA assumption.
$45,000 Duplex. Stan-tonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath each side. Possible owner financing.
$49,000 Stokes area. Brick ranch with double garage on 2 acres.
$60,000 University area. Two story home featuring over 1800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, baths, carport.
$62,500 Horseshoe Acres. Builder says sell this newly constructed traditional 3 bedroom, 2 baths home on large lot that features large den with fireplace, dining area, chair-railing, crown-molding and lots of extras.
$63,000 Eastwood. 11V2 loan assumption on this 3 bedroom, 2 baths, brick ranch that features large lot, dining area, den, fireplace, large deck off den.
$87,000 Farmville. Excellent 4 bedrooms, 3 baths home on large, heavily wooded lot that features all formal areas. Lovely screened-in porch.
$1 25,000 Commercial building in downtown area. Over 5,000 square feet.
NEW CONSTRUCTION: Call today about our new construction in Club Pines, Belvedere, Brentwood and Lyndale. We also custom build quality homes. Call one of our brokers today.
Nights Call Al Baldwin On Call-756-7836 Harold Hewitt-756-2570 Rod Tugwell-753-4302
THE REAL ESTATE
/
CORNER
TktOriiiul
Linlolsltii.
For Information Contact:
Hay Field Lo; Ikiiies
(919) 746-4616
Lobk What We Have To Offer!
LISTINGS
SHAM
183 Rosew baths, Livin Carport. List
lACE
F3 bedrooms, IV2 isWfbCTdsfove insert. Deck. Tr Faye Bowen.
WINTERVILLE
Farmers Home loan assumption. 2 bedrooms, large living room. Dining area has sliding glass door. Heatpump, carport. Low 40s. Faye Bowen listing broker.
CAMELOT
New house under construction. Be your own decorator if you buy now. Choose your own color schemes, carpet, vinyl, wallpaper.
WHISPERING PINES. SIMPSON
Absolutely beautiful lot with lots of trees 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths. 1254 square feet. Sunken den with French doors. Dining room, $46,500. Listing broker Faye Bowen.
ELWOOD PINES
Nice area near Candlewick, Split-level home has 3 bedrooms. 2/2 baths. Formal living and dining rooms. Huge rec room with fireplace & wet bar. $54,500. Faye Bowen listing broker.
LAKE ELLSWORTH
Beaiutiful brick home with 3 bedrooms, 2 large baths. Big garage perfect for handyman or hobby lover-has lots of storage cabinets and work space. Formal living room, foyer, large den with fireplace. Kitchen has breakfast room. $62,500. Faye Bowen listing broker.
SINGLETREE SUBDIVISION
FHA 235 loan assumption. 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths. Big deck looks out over a yard full of fruit trees, flowers. Decorated in earth tones using finest quality wall coverings, carpet, etc. Faye Bowen, listing broker.
LOTS
NEW HOMES
The
Evans
Company
CHERRY OAKS
A real showplace with lots of extras. 3 bedrooms, all with walk-in closets. Master bedroom has private bath with dressing area. Large great room with fireplace. Foyer, dining room. Kitchen has breakfast area with sliding glass door and separate utility room. $71,500.
CHERRY OAKS
Just started construction, buy now and choose your own paint, carpet, wall-coverings, etc. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Dining room, activity room, foyer.
ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION
Winterville area, community water. Must buila minimum 1300 square foot home. $7500,
MILLBROOK SUBDIVISION
Wooded lot is 120'x170', Located in Simpson area. Eastern Pines water system. $8000,
NORTH RIVER ESTATES
Several nice lots to sell or will build home for you according to your plans.
CAMELOT
Nice wooded lots in established subdivision $12,000.
LOTS TO BUILD
Will build your home on this large wooded lot on Hooker Rd.
SINGLETREE
1180 square,, feet of well-planned living area. 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths. Located on cul-de-sac on large lot. Will pay 4 pts. plus closing costs.
Will build to suit you in Cherry Oaks, Camelot, Tucker Estates. Lot of plans to choose from. Some nicely wooded lots.
752-2814
701W. Fourteenth St. Greenville
Faye Bowen 756-5258
Winnie Evans 752-4224
4-''
ms
house \
SUNDAY 2:00-6:00
When you first enter TVeetops, you think you are entering a gracious countiy estate.
Innovative design, prime location, ecstatically exciting carefiiee living and affordable quality construction are only a few of the accolades which have been used to describe this new concept in gracious living.
, Homes nestled in this beautiful environment are enhanced by natural landscaping creating a park-like atmosphere.
Tfieetops is designed for people who value good design and fine
Quiet cul-de-sacs add to the liveability, privacy and security.
The floor plans include both a one level and a two level design and can best be described as a villa or townhouse. There are two bedroom plans with two baths and three bedroom plans with two and a half baths. Prices start at $.56,900.
Visit TVeetops today and learn how you can afford to be part of thiis exciting community.
Your Hostess: Iris Cannon
workmanship at affordable prices.
DIRECTIONS
Go South On Evans Street One Mile Past T.V. Station, Turn Left At First Cross Roads, Go One Block And Turn Right Into Treetops.
Built By: Chapin & Associates 3106 S. Memorial Dr. 756-1234_
.Marketed By: Moore & Sauter Associates 110 S. Evans St.
_____758-6050 __________
I
FOR SALE
The Bilbro Building 1013 Dickinson Ave.
This masonry building has over 35,000 square feet on the main floor. There is an additional 3500 square feet in a basement as well as more storage area on a mezzanine floor. The railroad siding is available for loading and unloading inside the building. There are adequate steel storage racks which convey with the property. A parking lot adjoins the building and also conveys.
Aldridge ^ Southerland Realtors
756-3500
Dick Evans, REALTOR, 758-1119
w.g. blount & associates
REALTORS - DEVELOPERS 756-3000
C.vprc88 Creek Towpkoirjes
MODELS OPEN EACH
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2 - 6
12^/4% Fixed Rate Financing Available
Bob Barker.....975-3179
Bill Blount.....756-7911
Betty Beacham . 756-3880 Stanley Peaden. 756-1617
OPEN HOUSE TODAY!
2-4 P.M.
136 CANDLEWICK LANE Pineridge Subdivision FIRST HOME BUYERS this could be the home for you. Perfect starter brick ranch home'offers 3 bedrooms, 1 Vi baths ('/2 bath is plumbed for tub/shower unit), living room, large country kitchen with dining area, laundry room, carport with storage and extra deep lot. Conveniently located near hospital and doctor's park.
Only $45,500
Your Hostess: Jane Butts 758-0655 - Office 756-2851 - Home
BLACKSMITH LANE Horseshoe Acres Subdivision READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY this charming brick home has just been completed and is ready for you to move into! Features great room with fireplace, country kitchen with laundry area and sliding glass doors to 20x20 patio, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport with storage and large lot.
$61.900
Your Hostess: Elaine Troiano 758-0655 - Office 756-6436 - HomecMaoi,!Buts<cRay 758-0655
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C Sunday. September 25. 1983 Q-9
The Real Estate Corner
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1-5 P.M.
Robinhood Road, Candlewick Estates
CEDARDAIE LOG HOMES
SOLID CEDAR BEAUTY
AFFORDABLE RUSTIC ELEGANCE
WHY CEDARDALE?
NORTHERN WHITE CEDAR - NO ROT - NO TERMITES FINEST TONGUE S GROOVE LOOS NO AIR INFILTRATION POST BEAM CONSTRUCTION - STRONGEST KNOWN TO M MODERN MANUFACTURMO FACHJTV - 30 DAY OaiVERY ENERGY EFFICIENT HK3HCST 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.
Heritage Village
YOU'VE NEVER MET ANYPLACE LIKE THIS BEFORE
*38,500
The place is Heritage Village and it's your own home witr spacious rooms including a great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace and a fully equipped kitchen. Great up to now. But there's more... a superb location off 14th Street near Red Banks Roadj and a price of only $38,500that can't be topped. Come see and believe!
ball & lane
Duffus
Realty
rviEMBER
756-5395
RELa
WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION
Inc.
201 Commerce Street
rn
REALTOR-
'''I"^
REDUCED
Very pretty ranch home Beautifully landscaped lot Substantial reduction in price! Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, yreal room with fireplace, exposed beam ceiling, dining area, wood deck Possible assumption in Tucker Estates and now only $76,900
ON CALL THIS WEEKEND
Sue Henson Realtor
During Non-Office Hours Please Call 756-3375
REDUCED
This home has been reduced and could not be replaced at this low price Additionally, the qualified buyei can assume the FHA loan and with a small down payment, the seller will finance pan of the equity Edwards Acres Three bedrooms, 1' 2 baths, living room, dining area, family room with woodstove.' Now only $52.900
Thi' ihrvt'
FIX'ITUP
'-/n. jnci ^on % jp iiix! right io
I' I'.ThirWf'lh thi* handktndn (i5 is cund:fiun
[ ivng r
PARIS AVENUE
!Mlh
11,u! I'.oi; Mcpkj.t I ; -tlKi
FARMER S HOME ASSUMPTION
d p-wibn f anviiTsHimh ,-)dr d'sumpi.'^n un (jif Thri'y rv;riH,.'n> !. Mih huniy :n u.-ik! .A.rc- finiingart'd
ht-jf Mn'iiwi
COUNTRY
H.-id Liurg i'. th. u-jt.itv r
!'rg.irM vdrp-ir* Ilfn g Mr. AK-Jxhw .ijtsnjf
PAMLICO BEACH
ht'll. Pi'ocr; If,If.; I .y.lf . a .t..,!!!i .,n-
tv btJf . 'dih -..y.'iy fiA.n, !.(. r.t pitt .tg.c . inHi
EASTERN SIREET
COUNTRY
.A two CvJriiiinr twnbdthhumf i iht . ,r 175.5 Fuwr a th pdrqjt't fidof grt'dl- r.-rf .
firepdce i-viiingfan cer'tralair Vf ;-o4ixi
FOX RUN
P'Mibkf lUdn dssjmptl'yf: 01! this ptvny 'A'> 'I hnm^ Thrt't'mirooms '.5dlh> grvdt r, ..m y nrtfp.dtt a .dO Jtrk gatagt Ir
Luartf!, rot todr frdiT, !:f, t!. A
PLEASANT RIDGE
.hi/tii' n- hdiit :i; Pit'dsci!-! K J ;v A.;
Thrvv ix'ilroomy !: paths .lyrgr-'n 2 fug.si hfaipaiTip Lm: .; ,(Ms ar.d p>-r n pu a
HOW ABOUT ONLY 10> 2% APR
Thdt ' thv low .rtt-rot laty ui. j n, w rt.mv t^ai. car hdvt' hu;lt';' f-Juard*. .Aco a t* tr bedf'Hjn!s 1'. bdths Aipg pmiq'.u
garage Jwk .>,'>4 Mki
PRETTY RANCH
three .
rod'm Jirrg arva dmi!'. ''rvdk'o-.! ,vtd
gar.ige Fii.i-ng (mm, ,ir.: ;!j;h .
EASTWOOD RANCH
A fiij. ^"iniv II' ,j'greai '-cot.dt'. T^'ree VJr.
irje ,ivi> Id..
RED OAK
: n;ma,j.dit 'r
r-gurigt -i ,i.tgc '
CLUB PINES
A red.. preVc A ...amsrijfg a.it !*,r. J: hdths F .tt .Id ....r
Mrr , '-or, A '-rep N'c, . J
CLUB PINES
(.tArer t.jv tel' a.'- d'
KILBY ISLAND COHAGE
CAMELOT
eir, 'arir'uj'i
dm; f...-:^Ai .egdIJv AVdwI.
BROOK VALLEY GOLF COURSE
:ne i.-f- ^ ,t VV-^Ced . .f-et lut .jr -.r
CHERRY OAKS
V3-,iW
No pj'rk.ii
UNIVERSITY AREA
LVNNALE
REDBANKSROAD
rhr.c"
;:rg
TWIN OAKS
pteifc .tier.;
REDUCED HIWAY 43 SOUTH
COUNTRY SQUIRE
New hunts jiHj'f APR *Hdnv rg Thtei
f.repKie dir.i
Mfiii ms 1- . hdlhs !. .ng t'.. ii f t
tsan p-j'! fspdii!
EDWARDS STREET
he dll:.! ^ Vi.L.i r itj > K -ji'
REDUCED IN BELFEDERE
This ver), iiice^rarc^ ^.me has Ve: te i. :
! pr:,. vi '
heal p-M'P' .arp"i
LYNDALE
rnd.i fa. anj spac. A *:r
\ i-.
If, hrep.die p,ayhodse
dinmgdrdctiutpdf,. B.i, to "u .1
'vfsimvr! 47 imh
CHESTNUT STREET
f'.t rveslinKi.t d Jupies ,r h. ..'
!>r.:rc)<jms trree Pdihs ,1, r.g rm.m a taniiiy roiim w;th lirepwict
POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION
On this pretf'. h >me in Hardee Acres L.\mg ruoin Jinmg area three hedrot^ms 12 baths central air gaidoe S4h5iX'
GREENBRIAR
Npdc'*a> ranch with three 'tvdruoms U: baths king room him.'c. roi.m with hrepiace carport fenc.ng Possible rei t Ait^ pt..i, to hue >4b 9X1 PARIS AVENUE
A: udei bdl reiTitKtert'J two stoi'c h.>me intee Pedtujfns twI. baths !o,ei .iViog room 1;repidce j rx,m paf'i. new piuinbmg mrirg NeA kiic'ier'. vdbir els and .finer rcniudeling Fenced vard
A nq m-im 'air, \ i..m
;ck Ni.dii i >xi
POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION
GRIFTON
jir,! g r'-ofri ai. w;ih nafdwioc i'Atrs am* A" hrep.dcv btedkds! arvd 'o,ar,-
^ddjt r'p.d'.r.'.'m A,i.k up'i.a i-: ", .;,r
1 Tjg 'jdmd SI
A possible .'-an <
flip-1.
fddc "t A.
And ifi din.ng 1
f'.'ng Mom \.t' p.irp ard SV;hH:
NEAR HOSPITAL codntTc Foyer grvdl i three 'bedffrums iw., naths oreaki
DELIGHTFUL CONTEMPORARY
pirti.'
.;.-T3qe ?.
area storage buiki I'o SS.-s
CAN^----------
COGHILL
Keajtitiii yat; three bedr'>*tnis.- V bath ranch Living r<jLim w:i^- ltep.dce dining room, carport Greatiocdlion M5fX)
VACATION COHAGE l.iMik ng of i sjttiniei piav A.'^fe you lai. reiax-'
This Pdni.li>. Bede' "Hag 'hree Virovms
>uni Inir.g ara ar.j sjnp(,jv,h ^opie ,
Deduced AND ASSUMPTION
lt.,> n -iiie has bveti uJj'.td ano luuld ,>i be .p.dceil at this iow pr.it- .Add.I. rally t^c s,-rt!.!ed ,ai, jssuiTw Uc- FflA .-jai: dtu with d I 'Ai payriier.l Jn ifilei wiii tiPdrtce part ot me egu'iy tdwaiJs-Aiies Three bedtooms 1*2 baths liviiig loum dimng area family room with tdslove Now only $52 91X)
loan ASSUMPTION
Possihie loan assumption on this pretty ranch in pretty ranch m Shamrock Terrace Three bedrooms I'. baths Ifving room family room with fireplace iarge patio corner lot $5 T5(Hf
REDUCED IN COGHILL Four bedio'itns and reduced m price T.ike advanuge of fhis ,.'Dp*>rtunilv Livv; r,.,'.tT with hiepidifc d:*.*cjJica tw . M!h> A. : N a
$5,1 ;XX)
nou BEAT THIS PRICE?
Oh the. golf course m Acden It has.ever,thing Foyer BVing room dining roijm famiiy roum 'a i^' firepiace. three Dedruoms two baths duubie garage Patio and wood deck w.ih great .lew of the guit course Believe i! or not thepr'ce'Oiv., $5^ otio EAST WRIGHT ROAD A ranch home w.ih three ntdr.K ms and iw .''^d{'s living roorr, fami'v rco.:. dmng aita 'CieereJ porch carport '<1)
NEAR MEDICAL SCHOOL
_ln HoiH-shw A_ctes Oriiy a tew scat? w (h itirc, . bedrooms anc'f twojaths r.',.er grtai :.Mn a ft fireplace din.ngruom v.ttp .ri
TENNIS ANYONE?
A home with everything including a lei'.n.s ,"uri Ir Waisionburg aooui twenty minutes trorr. Greenville Five bedrooms, 2': baths iivmg rui;m w:m t.iepAe spacious dintng room pamrv. iam:,. toon, nr muC; music rL.>m sunporch double garage .ngi
So.liifkl
WE5THAVEN
Ranch rceme o! .. .uneiio: - u.
oams toyei. vn;a :.t.i; . 'u' ...
Aithl.rpia..e ,.i';K,rt ' > c , * ,
HARDEE ACRES
This pretty spitt leve. .11 the 'uldei aua c2 riatdti Acres has three bedrooms ai.d two baihs Citeai^ room wilh fireplace, dinmg area.^wooJsiuct: patio and 'Storage building Possible loan assumption $63.90(1
UKE ELLSWORTH
Not too far from the pool, clubhouse and lenn s courts' Three bedrooms, two baths foyer living roorn, dming room, family room with firepiace pati*-
EASTWOOD RANCH
A ranch home and a great location Thrte ^ iroi.ms ivcvf baths 1vir.g r'jom family rm A't" t.t.-p,.; , dm.'ig dita AA. deck, douOK.' carpet! ja,-.. kK.'OfX)
7 baihs great BIG REDUCTION
Ver. pretty Mv.h S nv Btaumu ^ a'-iM-apt; <1 Sunsiarta. re-Jutt .,1. ;r pric' ['fee v.!r'"tfr,' two bath' ; .yer .gtrat r-mm a f tep.i.i exposed beam ce.jig -Imrg area w. a: f'-v.n.e
os5c.mpt.on f Facke-f f state*' n ; .j . 'ky
BROOK GREEN
Fxcepi.una. F ve bedroomj ai.d three bam? iivmg room dm-ng room s.y.ar.-T : . iuwer eve'family r--.)Om three':reb.a.:s >ca .aurury room- wurksN.p :arpu' ,Mar, extras i!03tKH.i
CHERRY OAKS
BUILDING LOTS
OnRarrH-ii Koad IhJ'-i a^.at Iht b', pd" L .n arc appr xtu.,
,er grta:: ri. a - '.rep a * ' ..-si-ISkl. P -rif.)*
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CONTEMPORARY
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CLUB PINES
A \JJt1.. fa-.r* ! i:,. ij:'j.:va ! (,i.si
RED OAK LOT
Spaiiu5 ii'l Ait** n.Cc irt-es Bu.io ,
PINEWOOD FOREST
C'hu.cc- WHc2ed .! r pT.ew ) >rc*;
HIWAY 33 LAS]
lUCKEKESlAfES
p..tar. r,:[A.M,g-o:.Ucr.Iiai.c f ,,er ! .rnid: J'> u,g fooni niedklU'l area Ibree Otclr'uijirs ar.U !-a' bath? IViod.Vck garage
^ t. V.'i .ro
AYDENGKIHON L0I
biiAce. AcUcI af J C.'.T I t-l' Aha!..,
WOODED CHERRY OAhS
LOVELY RANCH
Arid .,n a beauiituiiy tandscape- .oi .n Came.ol Three bedrOijms Iw, baths f.Aer great room a.Ih firepidce d.n.ngroom w'^d ieik Jarac-e $M9iXi
WESTHAVEN 111
A ftai:y spac.ou* A^ocJtU >i -it vui ica 115X4(Xileet $N 5t'
CAMELOT A f.re lot in this nice supo v >."i. B^.,; .0 .home 'fere or purchase * >r your 'utur. ' .e $4 Si.Xi
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
A bl'X I'XMl meta bu..dmg fsie.ient -.a 2t*4 Bv Pd'S Farm. ,It C -.ere u>
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
WE SELL GREENVILLE
Sue Henson, REALTOR..................... 756-3375
Evelyn Darden, Broker........................................758-9878
Thelma Whitehurst, REALTOR, GRI, CRS 355-2996
Kay Davis, Broker...............................................756-6966
Catherine Creech, REALTOR ................756-6537
Sue Casteilow, Broker And Insurance.................756-3082
Charlene Nielsen, REALTOR, Rentals.................752-6961
Anne Duffus, REALTOR, GRI..............................756-2666
Jack DuHus. REALTOR, GRI, CRS......................756-5395
Shirley Tacker, Broker........................................756-6835
SUPER BUYS!!! FOR SUPER BUYERS!!!
NEW LISTING! Gifcat hori.t in me ccunl,,. m irie kVinterville area. Well desiyiifcd floor plan fealures greai room with fireplace and wood stove insert Ki:chen and big dining area, three bedrooms, two luii oaths, extra large utility area end storage room pcme.idcu^ play room 01 family area has just D-.t.. to ir.e ,tar..Nice big wooded tour acre lot with room to expand. Call for a showing. Priceo ngnt at io7 5Cu
$65,500-SELLER PAYS ALL POINTS AN ClOSiNG COSTS, Uni
que floor plan with walk around tue plate, great room dining area three bedrooma two full Datns FHA-VA FINANCING A'.'AILABlE
S56.000-BACK ON THE MARKET-Gicat vm u^an Assumption Great room with fireplace, di.iing ruom. kitchen, three bedrooms, two full bains Loan Bai of approx, $45,100. 10V2/o Fixed rate. payrT.ents of $484,54 PITI. Located at 101 Lancaster Drive. Cambridge Subdivision.
$62,000-HORSESHOE ACHES-Near li.o no.puai area. Immaculate Home with great roon, ana dmmg area with fireplace, nice kitchen, three goud aceo bedrooms, two full baths, big lot with storage area and garden area. Located at 119 Blacksmith Lane
S64,500-BRAND NEW LISTING-Collegt- Court area Good floor plan in this fine home at 1113 Rui^aUalf Road. Living room and dining area, fa.r.i', -oon, kiicnen-eating area, three bedroon.s to.: tii o.jio ,,:eencd in back porch. Big carpui' aiua .vit- . big corner lot
$64,900-WINTERVILLE AREA. CuStoii. bv..; home uri large corner lot. Approx. 1800 square teet ui area. Foyer, formal living and dining rooms taruily room with fireplace, big kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, -two full baths, large garage with storage area. Fenced in back ,arq 1U4 i-ijyianu Road Great buy for the mone-,'
$69,500-CAMELOT-FOUR BEDROOMS AT A GREAT PRICE!
Located at 402 Lancelot Drive on a large wooded lot with lots of privacy. Plan offers family room with fireplace, dining area, convenient kitchen, two bedrooms, down, two up, big garage, nice deck, $69,500.
$69,500-LOVELY HOME IN GREAT AREA Cc.i.enieritly located at 102 Grahaiii bireei iti CuiUge Co^'' ,,,imaculate plan features Io,cr. forma. i:. n_ anc c .img rooms, very nice kitchen with preiij u:e^taui nook, family room with fireplace three beuruuirii two full baths. Nice lot. Lots ot extras
$72,500-OWNER WANTS TO FINANCE! Nearly 1900 square feet of area on a wooded corner lot m a great location at 802 Forest Hills Circle. Lots ot features in this one owner home like hardwood ticois i.vo fireplaces. & porches highlight the floor plan with toyer, formal living and dining rooms, den or study Kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths
$116,000-OLD WILLIAMSBURG COMES ALIVE! Lovely two story with over 2500 square feet of area. Floor plan features big foyer, formal living and dining rooms, family room with fireplace, big kitchen with eating area, four bedrooms. 2'/2 baths, big deck, double garage. Large wooded lot
$125,000-BRAND NEW LISTING-Lo.atcJ nta. the Med School and Hospital on NC #43 aDCut 2 niiles from the hospital. 3100 square feet of nouse and 3-2 acres of land plus additional acreage available Large barn good for many uses. Four or five beorooms great kitchen, many, many extra's too numerous to mention
$165,000-ON THE GOLF COURSE! Beautiful two Story with everything, 3600 square feet ut neatea area plus a big basement Big fu,er, living aiio dinkug loums. family room with fireplace, large kitchen, four bedrooms, three full baths, extra big utility area, double garage, lovely wooded lot. Must see to appreciate!
$185,000-TREMENDOUS HOME IN THE COUNTRY, Large IV2 story with over 4000 square feet of area. Everything's big including formal living and dining rooms, kitchen, five bedrooms, big play or rec area. Also a 2000 square foot garage or multi purpose building Located on 5 acres of land just minutes from GreenvilleThe D.G. Nichols Agency
Katherine Vinson 752-5778752-4012
m
David Nichols 355-6414
i
/
D-10 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. September 25.1983THE REALESTATE CORNER
Discount Prices, High Quality Guaraq|ped
EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION CO.
758-7354 Greenville, N.C.
General Contractor*CarpentryConcfete*Rootin9
Protect the full value of your home for now and in the future, call:
Van Johnson 2428 S. Charles St. Office 756-0163 Home 756-8609
NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE
Nalionwid* IS on your side
.ae Vuiua' msi-iaiice Companv Na; c-A Je Vu'ua. P'fe insurance Compan Nanor-A ae ^ 'e ir-surance Compar-, o"ce Coiumpus Ohio
Let
Home Federal show you the way home.
HOME FEDERALS AFFORDABLE ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE - MAY BE YOUR KEY!
Home Federal has been helping customers with real estate financing for over 77 years.
Call or come see us for more information on our newest key to home ownership.
HOM FDRAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOOAT10H
OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
HOMf OTFICE
543 Evans Sfrwr, Gmnvill, N C 758 3421 aUNCH OFFICES
216 Arlington Boulevsrd, Groenvtlie. N C 756-2772 206 E VVtiar Street. Plymouth, N C 793-9031.
205 W ReilroeO Street, Bethel. N C 8268781 U.S. 64 Bypass, Williamston, N.C. 792-81 8
FSliC
UNDER
CONSTRUCTION
Re-Discover Lake Ellsworth
With this beautiful Williamsburg style home. Great room, formal dining room., dynamic eat-in kitchen with greenhouse window, three bedrooms, two full baths and lots of storage space. Large lot, energy efficient (Built to exceed E-300 standards) and quality built. Swimming pool, tennis courts, and lake for fishing. All located within walking Distance.
Located At 3209 Morton Lane
*69,900
BOWSER
The Name Of Quality Call Now For Details
756-7647
loBeUg-iSlarnu IRealtQ
Your Way to Better Living 746-2166
Open Today From 1 to 5 PM
BEAUTIFUL brick home in prestigious neighborhood. Owner says sell or rent with option to buy. Features 4 bedrooms. 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace, garage with lots of cabinets and much more. Call and let us show you this home at the Ayden Country Club. $67,500.
AUTUMNS HUES! Lovely brick ranch in Ayden featuring 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, large den with wood burning stove. You'll love the back yard with plenty of trees which is Ideal for cookouts. Good location $43,500.
SIT BACK AND ENJOY this well maintained brick ranch located in an excellent neighborhood. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, family room with wood stove, covered patio, workshop and many other extras. $65,500:
LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME? Ready TO RETIRE? Then take a look at this home in the country. 2 bedrooms, bath, living room, family room with wood stove, central heat large kitchen. Only $29,900.
OWNER FINANCING available on this older home in Ayden, Central heat, 3 or 4 bedrooms, formal areas, huge den, big kitchen with pantry. Located on a corner lot with plenty of fruit trees, $43,500.
A GOOD PRICE on this 3 bedroom,- 2 bath, 1600 square foot home in Ayden. Your family will enjoy the spaciousness of the rooms. Conveniently located m a good neighborhood. $47,500.
WEVE jQOT A GOOD THING GOING for you here in this 2 bedroom home in Griffon. Situated on a hill in beautiful Forrest Acres if features a Texas size ceramic tile kitchen with cooking island and built-ins, two fireplaces, screened patio with bar-be-que grilK 2 verandas and large basement $56,500.
DUPLEX in Ayden. Good location. Each side has living room, 2 bedrooms, kitchen and bath,
COMMERCIAL BUILDING downtown Ayden. 2 story with 12.800 square feet. Needs work but the price is right. Call for details. $25,000.
LOT IN AYDEN with trees zoned residential City water, sewage, fire and police protection. $4,000.
LAND FOR SALE about 4 miles east of Ayden. 5 acres wooded $10,000. Same area approximately 11 acres cleared.
ON CALL - LOUISE H. MOSELEY GRI NON OFFICE HOURS 746-3472
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
82.500-
15 .000Duplex, University area. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side,
90u106 Emma's Place. Duplex, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side. $400 per month Income.
50.000House, duplex and commercial lot. Rent potential of S6.600 yearly.
55.000Grimesland. Service station with 5 acres of land. T9.
55.000DUPLEX, $6,000 per year income. Close to ECU. good condition, excellent return. C12.
59 500-Riverbluff Duplex. 1550 square feet total 2 bedrooms each side, assumable financing, balance of $37,000.00. Age 2'! years.
65.000Commercial building. Dickinson Avenue. 8640 square feel healed, large paved parking lot
150.00Nine Unit Apartments on corner of Pans Avenue and Halifax St. near Dicksinson Ave. Excellent rental history.
220.000Eight unit apartment building, walking distance from E C U. Excellent construction low maintenance
275.000Commercial Building, Over 35.000 sq ft with railroad siding on Dickinson Ave Parking available
79.900-
79,900-
79.000-
185.000-
139.000
129.900
119.900-
98.000-
92,500
89.900
89.900
89.500
87.500
Homes ol this caliber are not available in the Greenville area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Route 9. the home has 3800 square teet, sits on 3 acres ot land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential for 5. formal areas, huge family room with fireplace, recreation room, many extras LynndaleCedar farmhouse 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer stained hardwood floors. 2 fireplaces, solar hot. water heat, kitchen with Jenn-Aire. many extras.
Magnificent 3000 square foot traditional home in Cherry Oaks Lovely decor, immaculate condition Features all formal areas vvith master suite downstairs. 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs, plus mother-in-law suite wifh bedroom, kitchen/sitting room and bath.
This stately home features all formal areas, 4 bedrooms, 2 lull baths and 2 half baths, office and playroom! Dual heat pumps and a beautiful lot complete the picture Definitely for the discriminating family.
Farmville. Located in one of the finest areas, this home is a delight. Beautiful entrance foyer, formal areas, pecan paneled family room, two fireplaces. 9 tool ceilings, and much more.
Brook Valley. Attractive 2 story in this wonderful area 4 bedrooms. 22 baths, formal entry foyer, living room and dining room.
Brook Valley. Dramatic contemporary ranch' 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace, deck, playroom and beautiful lenced back yard.
Peace and quiet. Beautiful home on over an acre sized lot. 2100 square teet of heated area. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large family room with fireplace, formal areas, double garage. Low interest financing available.
Over 5.000 square teet within walking distance ot the downtown area. Excellent house lor Iraternity.
Pamlico River. Beautiful permanent home only 25 miles from Greenville! On the water with pier, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace Deck circles home with screened porch, lull basement-garage
77.400-
76.900
76.500
74.500
69.900
69.900 69,500
69.000
67.500
67.500
66,900
Shenandoah Village Townhouses
$41,900
Financing Available With Low Initial Investment
Affordable Monthly Payments
1st Phase Sales Are Brisk. A Few Units Are Still Availble
66.900
66.900
66.900
65.900
Rustic contemporary situated on t acre wooded lot. Large great room with vaulted ceiling and fireplace, with loll overlooking room. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, huge deck, garage and storage room. Just lovely!
Drexelbrook. Beautiful brick ranch in this desirable area. Corner lot. with fenced back yard. Interior features formal areas, large den with fireplace. 3 bedrooms plus office, decorated in Williamsburg decor.
Overlook Drive Space! Over 3,000 square feet of heated area lor less than $80,000! 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace, office for dad. workshop, wooded lot in this wonderful location. Better hurry on this one!
Country living with convenience. Abundant acreage with beautiful Williamsburg, located only 5 miles from Greenville. This 4 bedroom home could be the one! Call for details.
ContemporaryWooded, private setting. 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths, high ceilings. 2 fireplaces, spacious deck under shady trees. II you are a contemporary lover, you've got to see this one!.
Tucker Estates. Williamsburg! 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, well decorated, better hurry on this one!
606 Eleanor Street. Unique contemporary in Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms. 2'- baths, large great room with lireplace and garage
Tucker Estates. Beautiful Wllliamsburg!3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, formal areas, huge kitchen with separate eating area, family room with fireplace. El 8.
Gritton Country Club. Well built custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial. Formal areas, large den.
Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, sunken great room with old brlcyi^plac^slide loyej^uper lloor plan!
Tucker EsIa^^yieWMm, French Provencial.
Formal entr|^BtaiL livliJroofI arm dining room. Kitchen with eating AieAiSwnLib Le/ace.
-Camelot. Solar heal supports highlights this tine home. Formal living room, kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths. Call us lor more details.
-Large 3 bedroom ranch located on over 13 acres ol land, only 10 miles from Greenville For country lovers, this could be the one, possible Federal Land Bank financing. Stratford. Charming, convenient, private-can you ask lor more' 3 large bedrooms. 2 baths, living room with bay window, huge screened porch, much more!
-Falrlane. Charming 2 story Cape Cod in great location. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, large kitchen, master bedroom downstairs. Really nice!
-River Hills. Under construction. Contemporary ranch on wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, great room with lireplace. deck.
-Red Banks Road Beautiful 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch. Kitchen with eating area and extra cabinet space, family room with fireplace, formal areas. Like new interior, fenced private backyard.
-Westwood. Spacious 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch in mint condition. Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.
Westhaven. Just like new brick ranch in this wonderful area 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, super great room with fireplace, completely new kitchen with island and Jenn-Aire range, wooded lot. Better hurry!
Red Oak. Great room with vaulted ceiling is the highlight of this charming contemporary. Large corner lot, extra insulation, indirect lighting are just a lew extras. This is a must see!
Ragland Acres. Beautiful lloor plan includes formal areas, study. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, carport. Lovely decor, large rooms. Assumable 9ft VAIoan.
Red Oak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, traffic free circle. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace.
Camelot. Very attractive split level in this popular area. Family room with lireplace. formal areas. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths. Possible rent with option, also.
65.900-
65,500-
63,000-
63,000-
62,500-
59,900-
59.900-
59,500-
59,500-
59,000-
58.500-
57,900
57,900-
55.900-
55.900-55,500-
55.000-
55.000-
54.900-
54.900-
53.500-
52.900-
52.500-
52.500-
49.900-
49,500-
ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND DICK EVANS............... .758-1119
756<3500
48,900
47.900-
47.500
46.500-
Aldridge r* Southerland
Realtors
45.900-
45,000-
44,500-
42.900-
42.500-
42.500-
Lake Ellsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suite, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with fireplace, immaculate interior.
Four bedrooms in this affordable price range. Located in Lake Ellsworth, with pool membership available. Interior features formal areas, family room with fireplace and roomy kitchen with separate eating area. A real bargain. Country Living. Yet only a couple miles from Greenville city limits, or the industrial park. This Southern Colonial has the charm ot another time. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace, modern kitchen.
Westwood. Excellent all brick ranch on well landscaped lot. All formal areas. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, garage, covered patio. Owner will sell FHA, VA or conventional. Forest Acres. 3 bedrooms. 2V: baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace and wood insert. Beautiful wooded lot! Contemporary close to schools and shopping. Decks and glass galore! Huge great room, step saving kitchen! two large bedrooms, 2 lull baths, loft area and full basement. -Gritton Country Club. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, formal areas, kitchen with eating area, playroom, and super lot. Singletree. Almost new brick ranch, 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, family room with fireplace, fenced back yard with detached double garage. Assumable 9'/;% financing.
Move right into this freshly painted 3 bedroom home in Red Oak! 8% FHA loan gives you the best payments in town. Orchard Hills. Darling 3 bedroom home on a private cul-de-sac. 3 bedrooms, including master with sliding doors to deck. Great room with fireplace, kitchen with many extras, mud room. Great price!
Cambridge. Really special 2 story in this conveitient location. 3 bedrooms, 2'z baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, deck for these delightful evenings!
"'dee Acres. 9V:/o assumption! 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, t room with fireplace, screened back porck, carport and storage.
Red Oak. 4 bedroom ranch like this one is hard to find. Formal entry foyer and living room, family room, garage with automatic door opener. Now the best part, 9/:% assumable loan with low equity. Better hurry!.
Ayden. Choice brick ranch on large fenced, corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. A lot for the money!
Hardee Acres. FHA 245 10 ! Yes. you can afford it. Cute as a button. 3 bedrooms. Iff baths, beautiful deck and pool. Don't miss it!:
Gritton Country Club area. Maintenance tree 3 bedroom ranch. Formal areas, large back porch and double garage. Beautifully landscaped.
-Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, den with fireplace, formal living room, fenced back yard, double detached garage.
-Elm Street. Super location, great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. 3 bedrooms, fenced yard. Cape Cod styling.
-Orchard Hills. New cedar siding ranch with energy saving wood furnace as back up unit. Custom kitchen from Kitchen & Bath Designs, double sinks in both baths.
-Ragland Acres. Large 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet cul-de-sac. Well landscaped lawn, double carport. Interior features 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, kitchen with eating area, den with fireplace. 086.
-Charming all brick ranch in Pleasant Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen with many built-ins. Almost new!
-Hardee Acres. Lovely 3 bedroom ranch in this line area. Great room, kitchen with many extras, breakfast area. Beautifully decorated.
-Gritton. Good assumable loan! Brick ranch features formal areas, large family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and large screened porch.
-Singletree. 3 bedroom brick ranch, immaculate interior. 3 bedrooms, 2 full' baths, central air. family room with fireplace, fenced yard. Low equity on assumption.
-Edwards Acres. 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet circle. Almost new, with family room, and roomy kitchen with separate breakfast area. Assumable financing available with affordable monthly payments.
Ayden. This three bedrooms, 2 bath ranch features a large country kitchen for entertaining your family and triends. Call about the 8 VA loan assumption available on this well kept home.
Eastwood area. 3 bedrooms, great room, kitchen with eating area, excellent condition, central air.
-Bethel. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Large storage building in rear on nice lot.
Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, bath, tamily room, kitchen with eating area. Only minutes from Greenville.
-Sylvan Drive. Lovely 3 bedroom cottage nestled on beautifully wooded corner lot. Huge dogwoods, magnolias, pines are gorgeous! Hardwood floors, built in china cabinet are just a few of the extras.
Blltmore. Duplex less than block from campus. 2 bedrooms each side, recently remodeled. Rent $500.00 a month.
-Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home. Living room with lireplace, pine paneled den, garage and workshop. J33.
-Rock SpringsCute 2 or 3 bedroom ranch on quiet traffic free circle. Family room with fireplace, wooded shady lot. Better hurry!
Wildwood Villas. 2 bedroom. IV2 bath townhouse close to the university. Full basement can be finished to give almost 1500 square feet ot living area. Excellent condition with central air and lanced patio.
Colonial Heights. Cuta 3 bedroom brick ranch. 1 bath, kitchen with eating area, shady, fenced back yard. Cl.
4 bedroom, 2 bath cottage style house in Meadowbrook area. Family room with lireplace, kitchen with eating area, detached storage building and workshop.
39.500University Area. 2 bedroom bungalow only a block from campus! Recently remodeled with new carpet and wallpaper. Modern kitchen with new cabinets and counter tops. Really spaciall
39.000E.C.U. Area. 3 bedrooms, den with fireplace, formal dining room. Could be starter home, or investment property.
35.000Reduced! Seller anxious. Make an otter on this exceptionally nice 2 or 3 bedroom home. Large kitchen with many cabinets, carport, nice lot. Just outside city limits.
33.400Farmville. Cute 3 bedroom, one bath bungalow. Sunrbom with fireplace, formal living and dining rooms, attached garage. Excellent loan assumption.
27.900MacGregor Downs. Over 3 acre wooded building site in this tine area.
27.500Ayden. 3 bedroom. 1 bath older home on large lot in good location. Room lor expansion by finishing two upstairs bedrooms.
25.000Country Living. 3 bedroom ranch in the Pactolus area. Attractive owner financing to qualified buyer. Family room, kitchen with eating area, trees!
pREsh ON lhE
MARKET !
ONLY 3 BLOCKS from university. Excellent investment on this duplex with rental income of $405 per month. Priced to sell.
GREAT ASSUMPTION! FHA loan below market rate. Youll love the cathedral ceiling and beams, not to mention the romantic stone fireplace in the great room. Features formal dining room, 3 bedrooms with spacious walk-in closets in each. Low $70s.
RIVERHILLS. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch] on an extra deep wooded lot is in immaculate condition. With living room, dining room and separate family room with lireplace. Its a great find for $62,9Q0.
STARTER HOME! Very nice 3 bedroom, Vh bath ranch. Includes refrigerator and fireplace woodstove insert. Fully carpeted, large back yard, just outside city limits Hardee Acres. A great opportunity. Mid $40s.
Peggy Morriton.............................. ..756-0942
Dick Event...............................................758-1119
Jean Hopper.............................................756-9142
Sue Dunn.................................................355-2588
{
i.
June Wyrlck.............................................756-5716
Myra Day..................................................524-5004
Ray SjMara...............................................758-4362
Allta Carroll............... 756-8278
Je Aldridge............................................
MikeAldrk&...........................................
Don Southerland......................................
Roaa Rhudy.............................. 752 5149
The Real Estate Corner
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C. Sunday. September 25 1983 Q.i "i
FmHA LOAN ASSUMPTION. In Winterville. By owner 3 bedrwms, 1% toths, living room, kitchen with dining area, car-port. Large lot. Recently redecorated in Williamsburg style. Immediate Occupancy. Low $40s. Call 756-3968 evenings and weekends, 756-3134 or 752-4661 weekdaysESTATE CLOSEOUT
Country home 7 miles from Greenville on Stantonsburg Road on approximately 1 acre of land. 4 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, kitchen and living room. Separate entrance for room or business. Building with concrete floor located behind house.
Call 752-4478REDUCED BY OWNER
Recently remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Elementary School and recreational parks in Colonial Heights. Beautiful carpet and hardwood floors, large living room, sunny kitchen with plenty of cabinets, dining room, cozy den with fireplace. Laundry room with storage area, picturesque enclosed back yard with 7 foot naturally weathered fence to give* privacy to your 16x36' inground pool, pool cover, chemicals and seasoned wood for this winter's fires included. $59,500! ___758-1355 After 9:30 P.M. Sunday Anytime
Reduced $4,000Owner Must Sell!
Country Living In Town... Beautiful Brick Ranch In Stratford
Three Large Bedrooms Two Full Tile Baths Formal Living Room With Bay Window
Kitchen With Dining Area 13x21 Screened Bark Porch Shaded Fenced Backyard Carport & Spacious Storage Room
Attic Storage With Disappearing Staircase
Central Heat & Air New Carpet New Roof
Freshly Painted Exterior Privacy & A Quiet Neighborhood
Call 752-650.3 Aflt>r Noon ^65,900THECENTURYZlSrerEM SELLS MCXIEIKMES THAN ANY OTHERREALESDVTE SALES (MJANIZATm.Call One Of Our Neighborhood Professionals Today!
Ann Bass
Eddie Pate
Janet Bowser
John Moye, Jr.
Gaye Waldrop Charles S. Forbes, Jr.
Pat Hartkopf
Tony Mallard
Mary Chapin
756-9881
752-6560
756-8580
756^)604
756-6242
756-7157
355-6426
355-2295
NEW OFFERING Outstanding home with over 4000 square feet of traditional elegance in immaculate condition Many quality features enhance this gracious 4 bedroom home situated on 2 16 acre wooded lot. Shown by appointment only. #594.
143,500 SUPERIOR EXECUTIVE HOWE - This home Is only for those with Champagne taste! Exquisite three story traditional in prestigious Bedford. Formal areas, 4 bedrooms, huge family room with adjoining solarium, finished room over garage and unfinished third story are just a few of the features, #552
139.900 - BUY YOUR BEST HOME now! This 4 bedroom showplace in Lyn-ndale has to be seen to be appreciated! All formal arqas-. den with fireplace & walk-in wet bar for entertaining, large kitchen with dining area, and many extras #407
110.000 - MAKE AN OFFER! Custom built 4 bedroom home in Club Pines IS just waiting for an owner Features all formal areas, den with fireplace, wrap around porch, circular drive, and so much more. Why not take a look at it #528
109.900 - PRESTIGIOUS GRAYLEIGH! This 2400 toot 4 bedroom has been reduced just in time for summer fun See the formal areas for entertaining and the spacious kitchen for that special lady in your life Double garage and Savannah style porches All for $109,900 #530.
97.000 FOR THE SELECT FEMALE. Out of the pages Of your better decorating magazines comes this two story home in Club Pines. Spacious greatroom with french doors leading to a deck. Designer kitchen featuring custom cabinets and desk for planning Located on a shaded wooded lot Call for more details #256
93.900 - TEE OFF in the backyard of this beautiful 4 bedroom home in Brook Valley Great room with fireplace, large bedroom downstairs, screened porch in back. This Williamsburg beauty is priced for quick sale! #533
91,500- LOCATED IN A QUIET subdivision, this 3000 square foot house is just waiting for the right buyer Features 4/5 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, recreation room, garage, and a large wooded corner lot Call and let us show it to you. #586
89.900 - SUPERBLY LOCATED on one of the most desirable lots in Club Pines, Offers spacious living areas, modern kitchen with a'l conveniences Very tastefully decorated a special home for special people. #500
89.900 QUALITY CONSTRUCTION is everywhere in this attractive 2 story in Tucker Estates. Randolph Builders will be putting the finishing touches on this traditional design soon, so call now if you want to pick out carpet & colors. #592
89.900 - TREAT YOURSELF! Impressed youTt be when you enter the foyer of this four bedroom home in Club Pines. Skylights, casablanca fan and greenhouse are |ust a few of the extras Master bedroom has its own detk for those romantic summer nights. Owners transferred so this can be your NOW. #481,
88.900 - BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths in Brook Valley. Has all formal areas, family room with fireplace, fully equipped kitchen with breakfast nook Put this on your list of must see -at this price you can't afford to miss it! #588
85.900 OWNER SAYS SELL! Don't miss your chance on this beautiful home in Cherry Oaks. Located only a stones throw from pool and tennis courts with acre corner lot It's just waiting for you and your family to move in and make it home. #360
- Williamsburg design nvllle's best builders, ice. formal dining room. lOose appliance colors.
85.900 - PREHY-PERFB
home now under cons You'll love the floor plajj and three bedrooms, wall papers, etc, #549
85,000 - TEN ACRES OF LAND, and over 2000 feet of house, make for a good buy Located south of Greenville, m the country, this new house is just waiting for you #160.
84.900 4 BEDROOM, 2 bath contemporary 2300 square feet of sheer space. Cathedral living room: dining room with skylights, master bedroom with private deck, and gourmet kitchen, and comfy den are just a few of the extras. Call now. #556.
81.500 REDUCED! Can you believe 2277 square feet in Club Pines, formal areas. 3 bedrooms, kitchen with lots of buiit-ins, extra room for that "special person, beautifully landscaped yard - Seller will finance part of the equity! #524
79.500 - WHEELCHAIR READY! That's right - this 2300 square foot home in Cherry Caks was built to accomodate a wheelchair. Extra wide halls & doorways. Large open living, dining & kitchen areas. Screen porch and a carport #212.
79.500 RUSTIC CEDAR FARM HOUSE - This,listing in Tucker Estates offers superior construction. Pewter light fixtures and period wall paper give the home a Williamsburg flair Floor plan is a reproduction of the owner's Grandma's home and lends a touch of nostalgia. Owners transferred and regret having to sell Call now for your private showing. #441
79.900 LETS BE PRACTICAL! Every day you wait to buy a home it is going to cost you more money. Invest now and reap the rewards. This home may be perfect for that decision and is located in Club Pines close to shopping, churches, schools, and yet nestled in the trees on a quiet picturesque street. Lots of space for the growing family is offered by the four bedrooms floor plan with eat in kitchen, formal dining room, and warm sunny family room with fireplace. 8477.1
78.500 - ONE OF A KIND! This listing just abounds in quality throughout. Beautiful parquet floors, exquisite custom built woodwork. Large master bedrooms, 2'/2 tile baths, formal dining, intercom, central vacuum, and fenced yard. Plus an expandable walk-in attic. Loan is assumable. #563
77.900 OWNERS SAYS SELL!! Moving from Greenville and wants to buy another in Virginia. You will love the interior of this spacious 3 bedroom home - and that's not all - the location is ideal with swimming pool less than a block away. Make them an otter Now! #505.
77.500 - HOME FOR A HAPPY FAMILY. This magnificent Cape Cod style home has too many extras to list. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage, screened porch, and a well landscaped yrd are just some of Its qualities. Call and let us show you this one. #600
76.900 COUNTRY INFORMALITY in this 3 bedroom split level. Spacious family room with fireplace, and large rec room, all modern kitchen to accomodate the most entertaining oriented family. Exterior features maintenance tree sidmq and brick. #582.
76.900 - PRACTICALLY NEW! Cniy a year Old with energy saving heat-pump. formal areas plus den. Located in a great neighborhood tor waltzing, riding bikes, swimming, playing tennis. Call tor showing. #423.
74,800 COLONIAL ELEGANCE - This two story home has everything you could want Four or five bedrooms, all formal areas, family room with fireplace and much more. Best of all it is located outside the city limits for plantation feeling! #520.
72,000 HORSE LOVERS - This new listing offers 5.6 acres of land (more or less) with 23 stalls, riding rings, pasture, bunk house, and much more Great trails and roads for riding , good investment. #596.
71.900 - THIS 1628 square toot home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal area with chair rail, and great room with fireplace, crown molding, airy kitchen, plus a finished 2 car garage. Call today for more details for this Lake Ellsworth home. #581.
71.900 - THIS 2714 square toot home otters 3 bedrooms upstairs with 2 baths and formal areas and en with fireplace. Dowstairs can be used as a private area for that older kid that likes privacy and music, or a guest area with its own private bath. Take a look at this one. #574.
69.900 - BELVEDERE - This two Story home, nestled among the trees is the answer to your home buying needs. It features a foyer, formal areas, plus a cozy den Owners regret having to leave this 3 bedroom charmer. #555.
69.900 - BEAUTIFUL Williamsburg style home under construction, with over 1600 square feet Features a great room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen with nook, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and lots of storage. Many extras like a greenhouse window and large deck See it today. #579.
69.500 COME HOME TO SOMETHING SPECIAL! This one of a kind 1 story ranch has room galore. Send the kids upstairs to the playroom while you relax in the large greatroom with fireplace downstairs Lots of attic storage behind the "Secret bookcase entrance. Realy unique. #507
63.000 - COUNTRY COMFORTS abound in this new ottering just minutes from town in a quiet subdivision. It is nestled on a corner lot and features a sunny eat in kitchen with bay window, formal areas, cozy den #541^ spacious walk-in panly. Owner says sell, so help us out today
66.900 - BELVEDERE - This 3 bedroom doll house is fresh on the market and must be seen today. The spacious yard is great to putter in before you go inside to relax on these pleasant summer evenings. You need to call right now. #597
65.900 UNIVERSITY AREA - This 3 bedroom brick ranch offers formal living room with fireplace, den & screened in porch. The well landscaped yard gives the home a real look of class. 8598.
65.900 - USE YOUR IMAGINATION and turn this quality built 4 bedroom in the University Area into a pblace. This 2337 square foot beauty features two sunrooms and a hot tub in the large bac^ yard. Call the office for more details. 8558.
65.000 LOCATION COUNTS This charming brick ranch is located in Belvedere and features many extras such as; large corner lot, deck, heat pump, living room, dining room, family room, and much more. Call to-dav! 8605.
63.900 - REDUCED! Owner say's sell. 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 fourth bedroom, can be yours. Call and make an appointment to see it. 8593.
62.900 - REDUCED!!! This 3 bedroom brick ranch with formal areas, den with wood stove and enclosed garage, has a wooded lot and is beautifully landscaped. Cham link fence, and a detached workshop or garage Owners most anxious to sell, so take a look and make an otter today, 8576.
62.900 RECIPE FOR HAPPINESS - Take one nice 3 bedroom home, add a den with fireplace and formal areas and you have the makings tor years of sweetness tor a family. Spacious yard with a split rail fence. 8499.
62,700 CONVENIENT TO THE HOSPITAL. This home has 1600 square feet, chair rail, wainscolting, beamed ceiling in greatroom. 3 bedrooms.
2 baths, and low utilities with its heatpump. Excellent condition. #447,
65.500 - CAN BE HAD for a reduced price. I'm a 3 bedroom ranch with low assumable loan. I offer all formal areas, den with wood stove, eat in kitchen, closed in detached garage is not included in square footage, could be a workshop. Chain link fence in back yard. & separage fenced double dog run. #576
61.500 3 BEDROOM. 1 bath Split Foyer in Rosewood All modern appliances in kitchen, plus a living room, foyer, and family room. Has a. heatpump for low utility bills, plus an attic fan and outside storage shed, 8546_.
59.900 - IF YOU WANT QUALITY then we have what you are looking for an exceptional 3 bedroom home in beautiful Forest Acres You can sit on the screened in porch and view your acre plus private wooded properly. #311. Just reduced
59.900 - TEXAS sizes lot surrounds this nice new listing in Winterville School district OHers 3 bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace and cathedral ceiling, dining room, and a step saving kitchen. Quiet neighborhood and nice neighbors add to its other qualities Take a look #591.
59.900 SUPER NEW LISTING - Beautiful 2V2 story 3-4 bedroom with 1 '-2 baths. This well maintained home has a completely equipped kitchen, screened porch, and detached garage. Third floor is heated & cooled, could be used as a bedroom, playroom or office. Check it .out! #608
59.900 - EASTWOOD A convenient location This 1571 square foot 3 bedroom brick ranch, with formal areas, den with fireplace, spacious eat-in kitchen, main bath with lots of "elbow room", carport and a very spacious attic. Call for your appointment today, #575.
59.900 - DAYS FRESH! Charming brick rancher, three bedrooms. 2 baths, beautiful groomed. Den with fireplace, half attic is floored and has plenty of storage. Located in beautiful Lake Ellsworth. Make a point to see this one today' #504
59.900 - CONTENTNEA CREEK - Don't miss your chance tc see this lovely home. If away from the hustle and bustle of city life is where you want to be, this IS the home to. , j #511
59.900 - UNIVERSITY AREA - Handyman already put new roof, aluminum siding, wiring and plumbing Rents for $525 per month 5/6 bedrooms, 3'/2 baths, 2400 square feet in all. Great investment property #571.
57.900 - COMFORT IS WHAT COUNTS in this cozy 3 bedroom 2 bath ranch in Williamston Home has all the things you want including great room with fireplace, large 3/4 acre lot. convenience to schools, shopping, hospital, and across from country club AND you can assume the loan! #606,
57.500 INTEREST IN IN-TOWN? Here is a very fine in-town home in excellent location Oil a heavily wooded lot. If you want privacy, but the convenience of being close to schools, shopping, etc then this is the house for you, 1 story contemporary with large loft upstairs Call for more details. #506
57.000 - SMACK DAB in the middle of one of Greenville s best areas. Belvedere, this 3 bedroom home has all your family will need. Formal living room and a den with a fireplace, kitchen with a breakfast nook. Double garage #513
56.900 - EASTWOOD - Located on a wooded lot this 3 bedroom brick ranch offers formal living room, den with fireplace, and lots of charm Let us show you this new listing. #584
56.000 - ASSUME this VA loan at 11 '.'2'o with payments of $481.94 mo and savings on closing costs. 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs. with livirtg room with fireplace, den with woodstove. and an energy saving heat pump. Only 6 years old, call for your personal showing #599
55.900 SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! ON THIS FIXED rate assumption you can save cost closing costs and initial investment. Owner is willing to help you with reasonable terms Spacious greatroom with dining room. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, conveniently located near the hospital. 8535
55.500 - WINTERVILLE - Looking for the perfect home? Well this could be it. On three acres of land. Three bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace Even has a space for that summer garden Betty hurry. #503
55.000 - FRUIT COMPOTE - From your mature bearing trees, just one of the many delights to savor when you buy this custom built brick home Located off Hwy. 11 just minutes from Greenville city limits A rural setting that you will be proud to call your own A new listing, so call today #604
54.900 ENJOY THIS FLOWER filled yard with room fora city garden. Spacious family room, three bedrooms, den with a fireplace, and all located In College Court. #470
54.900 - SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE CONDO. Has many extras much as 2 large bedrooms with private baths. Crafted fireplace insert keeps you snug in the downstairs greatroom Louvered shutters at every window Really special #436
53.900 - HURRY! This three bedroom brick home in quick selling College Court won't last long. Nice 1400 square foot home features living room, dining room, bright kitchen with nook, and ceramic bath Lovely screened porch, woodstove, and a shady fenced yard #607
53.900 - ENJOY SUMMER in the freshly cain'ed home located m Betnel, Features three bedrooms, two baths lormal areas, amily room with fireplace and a garage, #467,
53.900 - OWNERS SAYS SELL So they are sacrificing this 3 bedroom, 2 bath double garage home on a large counf y lo't fo- great pnce Call now for your appointment to see it #294
53.900 WHISPERING PINES CONTEMPORARY - For the small family 2 bedroms. 1 bath, plus a greatroom, ommg room, and kitcnen with appliances. Woodstove in the fireplace to keep you warm next winter Come out and take a look! #554
52.900 - INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Assume tnis low interest FHA loan and convert to rental property Offers garage, tirepiace. heatpump. and 3 bedrooms Located in good area tor rental #547
51.900 - KICK THE HABIT The rental habit! Get into a home o* your own This almost new home with assumable loan features 3 bedrooms 1 baths, and an attached garage Why not check it out #609
49.900 - OWNERS HAVE OUTGROWN this two bearoorxi two bath home m College Court. Excellenfcondition' Extra insulation timshed hardwood floors, knotty pine den. and lots more #440
49.500 THREE BEDROOMS - 1 bath, spacious den and priced below $50.000, Your family can move right in and enjoy it now #472
48,500- CHARMING & DELIGHTFUL! Expect to be envied by vou' tnends when you buy this like new brick ranch m Ayden Hardwood floors have just been reflnished New paint .job inside and out' Plus it has an assumable FHA loan #516.
47.000 - MORE SQUARE FEET - tor your money is one of the features of this 4 bedroom ranch with central air New paint and carpet on msioe all situated on 2 lots. #595
45.900 STARTING OUT. Then let us snow you Our new listing in quiet desirable neighborhood. This 3 bearoom ranch features 1' ? baths, and a large kitchen, dining area, carport, and is on a lovely wooded lot Take a pebk. #590
44.900 - FRESH AS A SPRING BREEZE! You won t believe your ears when we say that a Farmers Home Loan assumption is available on tnis beauty. Take a drive today and see for yourself how lovely this country home really is. Located on Stanton Drive #471
44.900 - SELL THE CAR, you'll be able to walk every place trom this lovely bungalow in the University area Living room is large featuring tnepiace with bookshelves on each side Large kitchen, sun porch ano 2 oc 3 bedrooms."New gas furnace and well maintained nome #444
44.500 LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME? Then look no mo'e This tnree bedroom home is perfect for the small family Cali today or more details. #510,
43.900 ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES! Here's you chance to own that 4 bedroom home you've been wanting tor under $50.000 This brick ranch otters you very roomy kitchen 1 bath, plus carport Large corner lot located only a few blocks from scnool #545
41.900 - LOVE A FRUIT ORCHARD' Then this is tne nome for ,cu 3 bedrooms, formal areas, greatroom with fireplace, and plenty of fruit trees, plus a grape arbor This is the home for fruit lovers "465
41.900 PRIVACY INCLUDED when you check out this immaculate double wide featuring a deck, woodstove. wet bar ana 2 'uli batns It s nestled on a 1 acre wooded lot and is just 5 minutes from.town 60i 41,000- ALMOST NEW FmHA ngme minutes.from town Two bedrooms, one bath, heat pump with central an ano beautiful decor #589
Js.auu-Ntw LibllNG.in Farmviile Area Features 3 bedroomiS, 1'. oaths fireplace, fenced back yard Ail this on a loyeiy wooded lot m a quie: neighborhood. #603
39,900 - VALUE PACKED! Come see how far a dollar can sun stretch in this 3 bedroom ranch. A huge 4 car garage 26x30 A comfortable home at a very affordable price. #502
39.500 - SUNNY LANE - This home will bnng sunsnme into your family Three bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, and much more 495
38.500 COLLEGE COURT Handy man special - needs some pamt here and there. Three bedrooms, wooded lot Owner will finance FHA #394
37,900-THIS HOME needs an owner now' Call for an the details and we'll work out the financing for you There's a home 'or everyone and this one may be for you #509
35.000 - GREAT STARTER HOME. I' you are looking fo^ your first home, or a retirement home, this one is'for you 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, combination family room dining & kitchen, with nice pantry Ceiimg fan for these warm days Call and let us show you this comfy nom:e n Ayden. #560
32.500 IDEAL STARTER or lnvestm,ent Home' Snug 3 bedroomi bungalow with low VA assumable loan. It s neat as a pn insioe and outside IS a pretty wooded lot ana fencec n back va'd with detached garage and workshop Take a look at it 454
30,800 QUAINT AND COZY and only $30,800 is his two bedroom condo Conveniently located to shopping and ca'^pus 544
28.00 RENTING YOUR MONEY AWAY" If ,Cu w^n: ,our own place, have we got the place for you! And it comes with a '2x12 workshop to give you a place to spread things out #564
27.000 - ASSUME THIS LOAN with payments 0* $287 Fill and save closing costs! This older home offers 2400 square feet with four bedrooms Immediate possession. Take a look #577
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
' ' 'I z y
CHEER UP This 3 bedroom 1/2 bath home, only 1 year old, has financing available that will brighten your day! This cheery home on a large sunny lot is located on a dead end street, just a lew minutes from town. Why not let us show you this new listing before it Is too late! $51,900. Listed by Gaye Waldrop. 8609.OnluQ;
SUPER LOCATION SUPER MORTGAGE on this new listing An immaculate 3 bedroom bath brick ranch with beautiful plush carpet, and hardwood floors, living room, dining area, large bright eat-in kitchen, heat pump, screened side porch, and much much more. PLUS FHA low rate assumable loan. Listed at $67,900. Listing ageny Gaye Waldrop. 8611.
a
756-6666Or756-5868
UNGELIEVABLY BEAUTIFUL Cape Cod in the University area. This charming and gracious home features 3 bedrooms, 1V2 baths, forma! areas, lovely hardwood floors, screened porch, large deck, and a basement. You won't find anything nicer than this well maintained and beautifully decorated home. Be sure to see it soon! Listed by Ann Bass. 8613.
MORE HOME FOR THE MONEY - is the only way to describe this immaculate older home with 2440 square feet. Heat pump, screened in porch and many other extras all for just $59,900. Listed by Tony Mallard 8608.
2424 S. CharlesBass RealtyBROKER ON CALL: Gaye Waldrop 756-6242
D-12 meuauyneriei. .
KIDS AT FLW In late September, it's still warm enough outdoors for boys to indulge in summer-type fun. Edward Durham of Fa\et-
teville balances on tires at a private school in Fayetteville. (AP Laserphoto by (Yamer Gallimore)
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Vietnam Comes Back To Life On PBS
On Tuesday, Oct. 4 and Wednesday, Oct. 5 Vietnam; A Television History, public televisions series that chronicles three decades of struggle in Vietnam - from 1945-1975 -premieres with a special two-part broadcast. The remaining 11 episodes will air on 'Hies-days (check local listings for exact dates and times).
Part one, Roots of a War, examines the genesis of American involvement in Vietnam. Part two, The First Vietnam War (1946-1954), is a detailed account of the Vietnamese revolutionaries eight-year struggle to wrest independence from the French.
Vietnam: A Television History, a six-year project from conception to completion, carefully analyzes the costs and cons^uences of the American war in Vietnam for both countries involved. The series provides a detailed visual and oral account of the war that changed a generation and con tinues to color American thinking on many military and foreign policy issues.
Series producers returned to Vietnam in 1981 and 82 to record over 100 interviews with citizens, soldiers and key decision-makers including General Vo Nguyen Giap and current Premier Pham Van Dong. The research team gathered hundreds of interviews, researched 70 film archives worldwide and traveled the len^h of Vietnam to create this historical documentary.
American veterans of the war also figure prominently in the series, along with those architects of policy whose mandate they carried out.
Commenting on the series, executive producer Richard Ellison says, We need to know what happened there and why, to figure out whether we, as a nation, have absorbed the lessons of Vietnam. All you have to do is watch the evening news or read tomorrows newspaper; discussion of every tension point on the globe, from El Salvador to the Persian Gulf, is laced with Vietnam metaphors. Vietnam is used to support every political position from total isolation to miliU^ intervention. Eve^ politician and pundit has his or her own set of lessons, with no consensus in sight Vo Nguyen Giap (I.) stands with Ho C||i Minh in 1945
Ken Howard (I.), Carlene Watkins and Bert Convy star as a trio with an interesting past and questionable future on the new ABCs Thursday night sitcom Its Not Easy..............
TV-2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, Septem^r 25, 1983
Sunday Daytime
5:00 Q) Kenny Foronan S OS (D Night Tracks S;SOQ) Eagles Nest 6:000 John Wesley White (D Please Dont Eat The Daisies O Jim Loudermilk 0 To Be Announced 0 Week In Review 0 James Robison (SHOW) Movie The Irishman
(1978)
(HBO) Neil Young In Concert 6:S0O The Deaf Hear O Spiritual Awakening (B Private Secretary OCkMpelSing O Charles Young Revival O JimBakker 0ABetterWay 0 Focus
0 Gospel Singing Jubilee (SPN) Movie Flight To Nowhere'(1946)
(ESPN) Auto Racing 7:00 O Newsight O Breath Of Life O 0 The World Tomorrow d) Jerry Falwell O Charles Young Revival O700aub O Praise Time 0 Meatballs & Spaghetti 0Humanside 0 Jim Bakker
(HBO) Movie The Europeans"
(1979)
(NICK)Pinwheel (USA) Cartoons 7:30 O Jewish Voice Broadcast O Leonard Repass O Church Of Our Fathers O Jimmy Swaggart O Kenneth f 0 Gilligans PL 0 His Love 0 It Is Written 8:00 O Zola Levitt O Sunshine For Today O Robert Schuller (B Frederick K. Price
ODayOf Uscov7 0Kidsworld
0 Amazing Grace ffible Class 0CartooQS 0 Kenneth Cqieland (SPN) International Byline (SHOW) Beqji At Work (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) 8:300 Fellowship Of Eidte-ment
O Paul Brown OOOOralRoberts O Christian Viewpf^t 0 For Your Information 0 Jim Whittington (SPN) World Report (SHOW) The Thunderbirds (ESPN) NFL Game Of Die Week(R)
(HBO) Movie "How To Beat The High Cost Of Living (1979)
9:00 O Kenneth Copeland O Day Of Discovery OTheValtons (BI Love Lucy O Heaven Bound Q Jimmy Swaggart O0 Sunday Morning 0 Robert Schuller 0 Frederick K. Price (SPN) Bible Answers (ESPN) CoUege Football 9:05 0 Leave It To Beaver 9:30 O The World Tomorrow (B Three Stooges Comedy Hour O Willie B.Uwis (SPN) Hyde Park 9:350 Andy Griffith 10:00 O Lloyd Ogilvie O David Paul
O Tarheel Football Highlights O Good News O D. James Kennedy 0 Jerry Falwell 0 James Robison (SPN) Kenneth Copeland (SHOW) Movie "Star Wars (1977)
10:050 Best Of Good News 10:30 O Larry Jones
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O O Jerry Falwell O Day Of Discovery Movie "The Big Store (1941) O Jim Whittington QEmestAngley 0 Movie Clambake (1967)
0 Marilyn Hickey
10:35 0 Movie "Captain Newman, M.D.(1963)
11:00 O Jimmy Swaggart O First Presbyterian Church QEmestAngiey 0 First BapbM Church 0 Bob And Marty niton (SPN) Oral Roberts (HBO) Fraggle Rock (NICK) KidsWrites (USA) Wrestling 11:300 Robert SchuUer O The World Tomorrow O Carolina Coaches Show 0 This Week With David Brink-
(^N)Jinuny Swaggart (HBO) Fraggle Ro(i (NIC^ The Tomorrow People 12:00 O D. James Kennedy O Tom Reed
(B Movie Crime And Passion (1976) Omar Sharif, Karen Black. (1 hr, 30 min.)
QUNC Coaches Show O North Carolina State Coaches Show O Ed Emory (SHOW) Paper Chase (KPN)Sp(tsCenter (HBO) Movie Treasure Of The Four Crowns (1982)
(NICK) You Cant Do That On Television
(USA) Movie Tower Of The Drunken Dragons (No Date) 12JOORdRmory O Duke Football Highlights OONFL83 O0 NFL Today 0 College Football Highlights (SPN) Real EsUte Actkn Line (EJSPN) NFL Game Of The Week(R)
(NICK) Reggie Jacksons World Of Sports
1:000 Beyond The Horizon: U,S. / Japan Magazine O 'TarM Football Highlights O Southern Sportsman OOO0NFLFootbaU 0SaraJevoM 0 Church Triumpliant 0FiringLine (SPN) Money, Money, Money (SHOW) Movie They Shall Have Music (1939)
(ESPN) Horseshow Jumping 1:05 0 Tennis Highlights 1:300 Tom Reed OPro&Con
Movie The Great Gatsby (1974)
(SPN) Name Of The Game Is Golf
(NICK) AgainstThe Odds 2:000 Movie War Of The Wildcats (1943)
O This Week With David Brink-
O0Baseball 0RezHumbard 0 Six Great Ideas (SPN) Real Estate Action Line (030) Neil Young In Concert (NICK) The Adventures Of Bladr Beauty
(USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
2:O50BasebaU 2:300 Phil Arms
ABCs Hart to Hart journeyed to London to film the premiere of the series fifth season, to air Tuesday, Sept. 27. Jonathan and Jennifer (Robert Wagner and Stefanie Powers) find Two Harts Are Better Than One in the story of how the Harts met and fell in love.
(Stations reserve the right to make last-minute changes.)
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(SPN) Christian Childrens Fund (NICK)Livewire (USA) Greatest Sports Legends 3:00 O Movie 0 In Touch
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(SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books
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(USA)OvaUon 3:30 (SPN) Travellers World (SHOW) Movie MacArthur (1977)
(ESPN) Play Your Best Tennis (NICK) Special Delivery 4:00 O Wagon Train Movie The Greatest" (1977)
01 Love Lucy O The Muppets O0NFLFootbaU 0 Rev. Stan Rosenthal
0 Undersea World Of Jacques Cousteau
(SPN) World Report (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (R)
(NICK) Special Delivery 4:30 O Gomer Pyle Q O Meet The Press 0 Kung Fu 0 Contact
(SPN) One In The Spirit 5:000 Movie Song Of Arizona" (1946)
OStar Search O The Waltons O All In The Family O Tar Heel Portrait 0 D. James Kennedy 0 Great Little Railways (SPN) Hello Jerusalem (HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (USA) You: Magazine For Women
5:050 This Week In Baseball
5:30 OWUd Kingdom 0 Special Assig^unent (HBO) Movie How To Beat The High Cost Of Living (1979) (NICX) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Co-Ed
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Movie: "El Condor"
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Hungry Child
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Movie: "Star Wars"
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Movie: "Diner"
USA Movie: "Against Rascal With Kung Fu"
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6KN)0 Traveller's World O0ONews
S) Movie El Condor (1970)
O Christian Childrens Fund
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Q) Jerry Falwol North Carolina People (SPN) Japan 120 (SHOW) Movie Dragonslayer (1981)
(NICK) Standby... Lights! Camera! Action!
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
6:30 e To Light A Candle OOABCNewsn OONBCNews^
0 Lorne Greenes New Wilderness
0 Tony Browns Journal 6:350 Nice People 7:000 Flying House O 0 Ripleys Believe It Or Not
e Solid Gold O O First (Camera 0060 Minutes 0 Good News
0 Thm Was Always Sun Shining Someplace: Life In The Negro Leagues (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Livewire
(USA) Movie Against Rascal With Kung Fu (No Date)
7:050 Wrestling 7:30 O Swiss Family Robinson 0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
(HBO) FraggleRock 8:000 KeepingTime O O 0 HardcasUe & McCormick Hardcastle joins forces with a powerful mobster (John Marley) whose son has been kidnapped by rival hoodlums, d) HealthBeat
O O Emmy Awards The 35th annual ceremony, honoring excellence in prime-time television during the 1982-83 season, is hosted by Joan Rivers and Eddie Murphy (live from the Pasadena, Calif. Civic Auditorium). (3 hrs.)
O0 Alice
0 Eve jing At Pops Nell Carter a id New Yorks renowned Abyssinian Baptist Church Choir join John Williams and the Boston Pops Orchestra for an evening of gospel and jazz. (R)(l hr.)
(SPN) Scandinavian Weekly A
tour of the Scandinavian countries with an eye to culture, scenery and night life is taken.
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Th Dally Refloctor, Qr*nvlll, N.C. Sunday, September 25,1983 TV-3
(USA) Rot Spots Orleans
(from The Tallyho in Wilmington, Del). (1 hr.)
9:300 0 Goodnight, Beantown Jennys ex-husband (Jim McKrell) threatens to instigate a court battle for custody of their daughter Susan. (R)
10:000 Ben Haden (SNews
O 0 Trapper John, MD.
ffi Robert Schuller 0 Hie Good Neighbon (SHOW) Paper Chase Commitments Hart has an affair with another woman and Bell desperately pleads for his help in dealing with Professor Kingsfield. (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie Diner (1982) Steve Guttenberg, Mickey Rourke. A Baltimore diner is the hangout for a quintet of young men seen during the time when the pressures of adulthood are threatening to disperse them. R (1 hr., 50 min.)
(USA) Tennis Transamerica Open Mens finals (live from San Francisco, CA). (4 hrs.)
10:30 O John Ankerberg
(SHOW) Movie Star Wars 0977) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford. A motley collection of rebels and robots band together to attack the huge space fort of an oppressive galactic empire. PG (2 hrs.)
(ESPN) CoUejge Football Clemson vs. Georgia Tech (3 hrs.) (HBO) Movie Amityville II: The Possession (1982) Burt Young, James Olson. A family experiences supernaturally influenced problems after moving into a Long Island house. R (1 hr, 45 min.)
(NICK) The Third Eye The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Cassie meets the mysterious Deverill again and almost believes he is a spirit from the past but is he good or evil? (Part 3)
8:050 BasketbaU "PUSH For Excellence Pro Classic Live coverage of this pro basketball game pitting the NBA all-stars against the NBA rookie all-stars is presented. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
8:30 O For The Love Of A Hungry Child g) Millers Court O 0 One Day At A Time
0 Oral Roberts (NICK) The Third Eye "The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Mrs. Palmer is convinced that Cassie has inherited her psychic powers and is anxious to meet the mysterious Mr. Deverill. (Part 4)
9:00 eio Touch O O 0 Movie Thunderball (1965) Sean Connery, Claudine Auger. Secret agent James Bond tries to thwart a major extortion plot, involving stolen nuclear warheads, by the sinister organization SPECTRE. (R) n (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(D Star Search O 0 The Jeffersons
0 JimBakker
0 Masterpiece Theatre The Flame Trees Of Thika: The Drums Of War The Thika community finds its way of life threatened by the outbreak of World War I. (Part 7) (R; n (1 hr.) ^
(SPN) Telefrance U.S.A. Cordon Blue Cooking / Cine-Club: Jules And Jim (3 hrs.)
(NICK) Mary Stuart Famed English mezzo-soprano Dame Janet Baker makes her final operatic appearance in the title role as Mary Stuart in Donizettis opera based on a fictional dramatic encounter between Mary Stuart, doomed Queen of Scotland, and her rival, Queen Elizabeth.'(2hri..25miiS)' * * *
0 Dave Allen At Large 10:350 Sports Page
11:00 O The King Is Coining (I) Movie Sometimes A Great Notion (1971) Henry Fonda, Paul Newman. An Oregon logging family devise a way to deliver a large order on schedule when strikers sabotage their equipment. (2 hrs.) OO0News O CBS News 0 Gene Scott 0 Twilight Zone (SHOW) Movie "The Road Warrior (1981) Mel Gibson, Bruce Spence. In an Australia of the future where civilization is reduced to a collection of rural communes, a former highway cop makes a 2000-mile run for sanctury in a promised land. 'R'(l hr, 35 min.)
(ESPN) SportsCenter
11:05 0 Jerry Falwell 11:150 Good News
O Jack Van Impe 11:200 CBS News 11:25 (NICK) Great Paintings Featured: Raphaels Madonna In The Meadow.
11:300 Contact ,
O O 0 News
O Movie "The Prisoner Of Zen-da (1979) Peter Sellers. Elke Sommer.
O Entertainment This Week
Featured: Sissy Spacek talks about motherhood; Valerie Ber-tinelli changes her image in a new movie; a report on the success of serial dramas. (1 hr.)
0 Two Ronnies 11:45000 ABC News O Jim Whittington O Duke University Coaches Show
11:55 (HBO) On LocaUon Catch A Rising Stars 10th Anniversary Richard Belzer, Pat Benatar, David Brenner, Billy Crystal, Gabe Kaplan and Robin Williams are among the stars saluting the New York showcase club which gave them their start. (1 hr., 30 min.)
12:00 O Larry Jones O Austin uty Limits Encore O Movie The Amorous Adventures Of Moll Flanders (1965) Kim Novak, Richard Johnson. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
0 Movie If Its A Man, Hang Up (1975) Carol Lynley, Paul Angelis. (1 hr., 30 min.)
0 Jim Bakker (SPN)LifeOfRUey (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments NFL Symfunny
12:05 0 Christian Childrens Fund 12:15 O Charles Young Revival O Movie Apartment For Peggy (1948) William Holden, Jeanne Crain. (1 hr., 45 min.) 12:300 John Osteen O Rat Patrol O For Our Times
(SPN) Holland On SateUite (ESPN) College Football
Nebraska vs. UCLA (3 hrs.)
12:45 O Jim Loudennilk (SHOW) Movie MacArthur (1977) Gregory Peck, Dan OHerlihy. (2 hrs., 15 min.)
1:000 Zola Levitt (D David Susskind 0 In Touch
1:050 Movie The Helen Morgan Story (1957) Ann Blyth, Paul Newman. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
1:30 O Jewish Voice Broadcast (SPN) Looking East (HBO) Movie Fast Times At Ridgemont High (1982) Sean Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh. (1 hr., 30 min.)
2:000 700 Onb O CBS News Nigbtwatoh 0 Jim Bakker
(USA) Don Drysdales Baseball
(R)
2:30 (SPN) Movie Grand Illusion (1937) Jean Gabin, Erich Von Stroheim. (2 hrs., 20 min.) (USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
3:00OEyesat 0 Kenneth Copeland (SHOW) Movie Falling In Love Again (1980) Elliott Gould, Susannah York. (1 hr., 30 min.) (USA) Boxing (R)
3:05 (IfflO) Neil Young In Concert Young performs a selection of his hits, including "Hurricane," Cinnamon Girl," "After The Gold Rush" and "Out Of The Blue," in a concert taped at Deutschlandhalle in West Germany. (1 hr.)
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday. Septeirrber 25.1983
Monday Friday Daytime
4;S5 (HBO) Neil Young In Concert
5:00Eyesat(Fn)
ONew(Toe-Fri)
O Jimmy Swaggart(Fri)
O JimBakker Health Field
PTL Club (French) (Tue)
Pattern For Living (Wed) Gods News Behind The News (Thu, Fri)
(SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (USA) Movie (Mon) Odette
(1951)(Tue) Untamed" (1929XWed) One Good Turn (1956)
S;10(D World At Large (Wed)
5:20 (D Winners (Toe) Nice People (Fri)
5:30 O Another Life O 0 Jimmy Swaggart O News (Mon)
O Lie Detector (Moo-Thu)
0 Its Your Business (Moo) Christian Children s Fund (Wed) 0 PTL Club (Italian) (Tue) In Touch (Wed, Fri) Westbrook Hospital (Thu)
(SHOW) Movie (Mon) They Shall Have Music (1939)
(SPN) Sportswoman (R) (Tue) SportsForum (R) (Wed) Horse Racing Weekly (R)(Thu)
5:45 (SHOW) Lola Falana: The First Lady Of Las Vegas (Wed) (HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert (Wed)
5:50 0 World At Large (Tue, Fri) 6:000 Romper Room O O ABC News This Morning Panorama
O Carolina b The Morning O Almanac O Carolina Today 0 CBS Early Morning News 0AgDay 0News
0 The Blackwood Brothers (Mon) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Tue) The Kroeze Brothers (Wed) Spiritual Awakening (Thu) Sound Of The Spirit (Fri)
(SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Singing Princess (Tue) (SHOW) Movie (Thu) Mystery At Castle House (1982)
(ESPN) Business Times
(HBO) The Marvelous Land Of
01 (Mon, Fri) Treasure Island (Tue)
6:05 (HBO) The Year Of The Gentle Tiger (Thu)
6:30 O Jimmy Swaggart 0 CBS Early Morning News 0 ABC News This MorningAre Your Feet Giving You Problems?
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0 Ben Haden (Moo) Oral Roberts (Tue) The LaHayes (Wed) Stan Rosenthal (Thu) Bible Pathways (Fri)
(HBO) The Electric Grandmother (Wed)
(USA) Sports Probe (Thu) Sports Probe (R) (Fri)
6:450 Country Morning .
7:000 Movie (Mon) Northwest Stampede (1948KTue) Devils Harbor (1954)(Wed) "Joe Palooka (1934KThu) Dressed To Kill (1941KFri) Apache Warrior (1957)
O O 0 Good Morning America
Bugs Bunny And Friends OO Today 0 CBS Morning News 0 Funtime 0 JimBakker
(SHOW) Movie (Wed) The Irishman (1978)
(SHOV^ Sunshines On The Way (Fri)
(ESPN) Business Times (R)
(HBO) Movie (Thu) Treasure Of The Four Crowns (1982) (NICX)Livewire (USA)AUveAndWeU!
7:30 Great Space Coaster (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Cannery Row (1982XThu) Paternity
(1981)
(SHOW) Anna To The Infinite Pow(Tue)
(^) Video Jukebox (Tue) Fraggle Rock (Wed)
7:35 01 Dream Of Jeannie 8:00 Popeye And Friends O CBS Morning News 0 Christian Forum (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Faerie Tale Theatre (Fri)
(ESPN)SportsCenter (HBO) Cavett Behind The Scenes With Kenny Rogers (Mon)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) Between Friends (1983KWed) How To Beat The High Cost Of Living (1979KFri) The Europeans (1979)
(NICK) Todays Special 8:050 Bewitched 8:15 (ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) (Tue) SportsForum (R) (Wed) Soccer In America (R) (Thu) SportsWeek(R)(Fri)
8:300 Movie (Mon) Heartaches (1947)(Tue) "The Madonnas Secret (1946XWed) "A Farewell To Arms (1932XThu) Model For Murder (1959)(Fri) "Toughest Man Alive (1955)
Tom And Jerry 0 Paul Yonggi Cho (Mon) Jim Bakker (Tue) The Camerons (Wed) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Thu) Contact (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) Timerider
(1982)
(NICK) Dustys Treebouse 8:35 01 Love Lucy 8:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter (Tue-Fri)
9:000 The Waltons O O Hour Magazine I Love Lu^
O Richard Simmons 00 Donahue
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0 Jimmy Swaggart (SHOW) Aerobidse (Wed, Fri) (ESPN) Rodeo (R) (Moo) Auto Racing (Tue) PKA Full Contact Karate (R) (Wed) Hydroplane Racing (Thu) Australian Rules Football (R) (Fri)
(HBO) Neil Young In Concert
m
(NICK)Pinwheel (USA)(CAL)CaUiope ,
9:05 0 Movie (Mon) Sybil (Part 1) (1977XTue) Sybil (Part 2) (1977KWed) Union Station
(1950)(Thu) Hilda Crane (1956)(Fri) The Model And The Marriage Broker (1952)
9:30 Leave It To Beaver O All In The Family 0 Contact (Mon) Shiloh Christian Retreat (Tue) Frederick K. Price (Wed) Light And Lively (Thu) Heritage U.S.A. Update (Fri)
(SHOW) Aerobidse (Mon)
(SHOW) Movie (Wed) The Boy Friend (1971XFri) The Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse (1962)
(HBO) Cavett Behind The Scenes With Kenny RogOT (Fri)
10:000 700 anb ODonahne O Frog Hollow AndyGriffth OODiffrent Strokes (R)
O 0 The New $25,000 Pyramid
0 Love Connection 0 Harvester Hour (Mon) Sing Out America (Tue) Power Of Pentecost (Thu) Something Beautiful (Fri)
(SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Movie (Mon) The Actress (1953XTue) Battleground (1949XThu)Strike Me Pink (1936)
(ESPN) Horse Racing Weekly (R)(Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) Silence Of The North (1981XWed) Little Miss Marker (1980XThu) Ticket To Heaven (1981XFri) On Golden Pond (1981)
(HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert (Tue)
(USA) Sonya 10:30 OEklge Of Night Bewitched OO Sale Of The Century O 0 Press Your Luck 0 Lveme & Shirley & Ctmipa-
(jods News Behind The News (Wed)
(ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Tue) Play Your Best Tennis (Wed) Sportswoman (R) (Thu) SportsForum (Fri)
11:0000(D Benson (R)
Medical Center O O Wheel Of Fortune O0 The Price Is Right 0 JimBakker
(ESPN) Womens Billiards (Mon) College Football (Tue) Sportswoman (R) (Wed) Auto Racing (Thu) To Be Announced (Fri)
(HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (Tue)
(USA) Womans Day USA
11:050 The Catlins 11:300 Another Life OO0 Loving O Jim Bums O Dream House (ESPN) Horseshow Jumping (Wed)
(HBO) Douglas MacArthur: The Defiant (kneral (Mon)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) "Waltz Across Texas (1982)
I (USA) Coronation Street 11:350 Hazel
12:000 Movie (Mon) Jubilee Trail (1953XTue) Laughing Lady (1947XWed) The Perils Of Pauline (1947XThu) The Scarlet Pimpernel (1935XFri) Swing High, Swing Low (1937) OOOOO0News Panoranoa 0 Family Feud
(fflOW) Movie (Mon) Sounder (1972)(Tue) MacArthur (1977XWed) Chariots Of Fire (1981XThu) True Confessions (1981)
(ESPN) To Be Announced (Mon)
Motocross (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) Reds (1981KWed) S.O.S. Titanic (1979)
(HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (Thu) Kenny Rogers In Concert (Fri)
(USA) Movie (Mon) Odette
(1951)(Tue) Untamed (1929XWed) "One Good Turn (1956XThu) Fighting Youth (1935XFri) Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round (1934)
12:05 0Pary Mason (SHOW) Movie (Fri) The Man Who Would Be King (1975) 12:3000 0RyansHope O O Search For Tomorrow O 0 The Young And The Restless
0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A. (ESPN) Australian Rules Foot-baU(Tlni)
(HBO) Movie (Thu) Silence Of The North (1981)
1:000 OOAU My ChUdren (S Movie (Mon) The Model And The Marriage Broker (1952XTue) Big Jim McLain
(1952)(Wed) Jane Eyre (1971XThu) The Incredible Sarah (1976XFri) Along The Great Divide (1951)
O O Days Of Our Lives (SPN) Eierdses (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri) Microwaves Are For Cooking (Wed)
(E^N) College Football (Mon)
PKA Full Contact Karate (R) (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Fri) Between Friends (1983)
1:050 Movie (Mon) We Were Strangers (1949XTue) Hook, Line And Sinker (1969XWed) The Rare Breed (1966XThu) The Borgia Stick (1967)(Fri) Lonely Are The Brave (1962) 1:30 O 0 As The World Turns 0Derins Coffee Shop (SPN) Good Life (Moo) American Baby (Tue) Personal Computer (Wed) Companion Dog Training (Thu) Telephone Auction (Fri)
(ESPN) Synchronized Swimming (Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) The Europeans (1979)
2:000 My Little Margie (Mon) Sewing Etc. (Tue) Make It Easy, Make It Microwave (Wed) Keeping Time (Thu) American Baby (Fri)
O O 0 One Life To Live OO Another World 0 How Can I Live? (Mon) Good News (Tue) Westbrook Hospital (Wed) Jerry Falwell (Thu) Jimmy Swaggart (Fri)
(SPN) Crafts N Things (Tue) Sewing With Nancy (Wed) American Baby (Thu)
(SHOW) Aerobicise (Mon, Wed) (SHOW) Movie (Thu) Falling In Love Again (1980)
(ESPN) To Be Announced (Tue) Horse Racing Weekly (R) (Thu) (HBO) Movie (Thu) Treasure Of The Four Crowns (1982)Michele Will Tell
By Michele Marks
DKAR MICHELE: I am a very good fan of actor Richard Gere. I have seen every one of his movies. I would love to know more about this wonderful actor, including his birthday. TRACY HALL, CARY. N.C.
TO TR/XCY IN CARY: Thirty-four-year-old Richard Gere was born in Philadelphia. Pennsylvania, on August 29. The son of an insurance broker, he grew up in North Syracuse, New York, with three sisters and a brother. Gere attended the I'niversitv of Mas.sachusetts for two years befoie he opted to pursue hi's acting career full time. It wasnt until Looking for Mr Goodbar' that Richard finally came to national attention, and when Travolta nixed "American Gigolo " his star was on the rise A bachelor, Richard has been romantically linked with Brazilian painter Sylvia Martins. How does he keep that Breathless ' body in shape He is a student of tai chi chu'an, works out with vveights and is not an advocate of red meat. Richard Gere is one of Hollywood's hottest actors. As soon as Breathless was in the can, he was off to Mexico to begin sh(K)ting on his next film, The Honorary Consul.
DEAR MKHELE: Could you please give me some infomu-lion on Maxwell Caulfield, who played Michael Carrington in (irease II. Is it true that hes married to Katherine Helmond, who played Jessica Tate on Soap'. FRANCES NEWTON, RALEIGH, N.C.
TO FRANCES IN RALEIGH: No. he is not! Maxwell is married to a lady eighteen years his senior - actress Juliet Mills Caulfield i.s currently working on a movie for CBS-TV with Michael (.earned.
DEAR MICHELE: Would you please give me some information on Linda Evans, and an address where I can write to her? STA( EY (OLSON, CLAREMONT, N.C.
TO STACEY IN CLAREMONT: She's come a long way from her series debut as Barbara Stanwycks daughter. Audra, on The Big Valley. The darling of television viewers, Linda has recently wrapped Gambler IT' with Kenny Rogers, airing later this season on CBS. has written a self-help beauty book and is now in her third season as the beautiful, but troubled wife Krystle Carrington on "Dyansty." A native of Hartford, Connecticut, born November 18. 1942. Linda was a mere baby isix months) when her parents relocated in Hollywood. She attended Hollywood High School with two other noted actresses. Tuesday Weld and Stephanie Powers. As a student she studied drama and landed several commercials prior to graduation. It didn't take long before MGM placed her under (iintracl and she landed a role opposite Richard Chamberlain in her first leature film. Twilight of Honor. " Twice married and divorced, to John Derek and real estate tycoon Stan Herman, Linda currently resides in Los Angeles. An excellent cook, she may h.llow up her beauty book with one of her favorite recipes. Fans may write Linda in c o ABC-TV, 2040 Avenue of the Stars, L)s .Angeles, ( a . 90007.
(FOR ANSWERS TO YOIR QUESTIONS ABOUT TV SHOWS ANDPERSONALi riES. WRITE TO MICHELE. t o This newspaper, J2'2 East Broadway, Hopewell, Va. 23860.)
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(I) WKRP In Gncinnati S) Circle Square S) MacNeil / Ldirer Newshonr (SPN) Telephone Auction (SHOW) Movie "Cannery Row (1982)
(HBO) Movie "Silence Of The North (1981)
(USA) Cartoons
6:05 ffi Little House On The Prairie
6:300 Love That Bob O ABCNewsn (STaxi ^ OONBCNews OffiCBSNews Good News America (NICK) What Will They Think Of Next?
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Father John Bertolucci North Carolina People (SPN) Scuba World (ESPN) Inside Baseball (HBO) Fraggle Rock (NICK) The Adventures Black Beauty (USA) Sports Look 7:35 Baseball 6:0001 Spy O O Thats Incredible! (1 hr.)
d) P.M. Magazine Victoria Principal's new beauty book and why she started working out; a talk with Patricia Neal.
O O Boone (Premiere) A young Southern man (Thomas Byrd) unwittingly creates family problems while striving for a career in country music during the 1950s. (1 hr.)
O AfterMASH (Premiere) Col. Potter (Harry Morgan), Cpl. Klinger (Jamie Farr) and Father Mulcahy (William Christopher) return from the Korean Wartocivilianlife. (1 hr.)
Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
Where Dreams Debut The North Carolina School of the Arts, where the arts are nurtured by training and developing the artists of tomorrow, is profiled; Isaac Stem, Jean Stapleton and Gregory Peck are featured. (1 hr.)
(SPN) Photographers Eye (SHOW) Movie "Reds (1981) Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton. American journalist John Reeds involvement in the Rus-
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. mander (Dennis Weaver) inves- lovers. (1 hr., 45 min tigates a mid-air collision
Sian Revolution of 1917 is depicted. PG (2 hrs., 40 min.) (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments 1963 NFL Championship - Giants vs. Bears / 1965 Packers Highlights (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie First Monday In October (1981) Walter Matthau, Jill Clayburgh. A liberal Supreme Court Justice clashes with the newest member of the nations highest court, an ultra-conservative woman jurist. R(lhr., 40 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People War Of The Empires 'The Tomorrow People take off into space when alien ships threaten to destroy the earth. (Part 1) (USA) Movie Untamed (1929) Joan Crawford, Robert Montgomery. A man dies during his quest to find oil in Africa. (2 hrs.)
6:30(1) Carol Burnett And Friends
(SPN) Post Time (NICK) The Third Eye The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer The Palmer family is forced to sell their house, and Deverill tells Cassie of hidden treasure which he says belongs to him. (Part 5)
9:000 700 Club Featured: Ethiopia's persecution of Jews; new make-up techniques for severe burn victims. (1 hr., 30 nnin.)
O NFL Football Green Bay Packers at New York Giants n (3 hrs.) d) Merv Griffin Guests: Linda Evans, Charles Nelson Reilly, Tess Harper, Dr. R. Gordon Douglas, Jon Hendricks, Bob Gurland. (1 hr.)
oo Movie Sessions (Premiere) Veronica Hamel, Jeffrey DeMunn. A sophisticated, high-priced prostitute starts doubting her profession as it begins to wreak havoc on her personal life, n (2 hrs.)
o Ol Emerald Point N.A.S. (Premiere) While dealing with his three grown daughters, a widowed Naval air base com-
a
between one of his pilots (Rich-I ard Dean Anderson) and a Cuban flyer. (2 hrs.)
Jim Bakker
Great Performances Princess Grace Remembered Mstislav Rostropovich conducts the National Symphony Orchestra performing Samuel Barbers Adajgio for Strings, Op. 11 and Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, Op. 64 and First Lady Nancy Reagan recites Camille Saint-Saens The Carnival of the Animals in a special tribute to Princess Grace of Monaco. (1 hr., 30 min.)
(SPN) Telefrance U,S.A. Fiction: Emile Zola And The Dreyfus Affair (Part 8) / In .Performance: Alexander Nevsky / Tele-Stories: Horses Of The Sun (Part 11) / The Last Adventure Of The Lapps (4 hrs.)
(ESPN) Auto Racing SCCA Supervees (from Lexington, Ohio). (1 hr., 30 min.)
(NHX) Great Paintings Featured; Egon Schieles Woman With Two Children. (1 hr.)
10:00 d) News Lester SumraU Teaching (HBO) Movie Timerider (1982) Fred Ward, Belinda Bauer. A motorcyclist unwittingly travels through a time warp and winds up among 19th-century Western outlaws. PG(lhr.,35min.) (NICK) Performers Siowcase; Beethoven - Piano Concerto No. 5 Italian virtuoso Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli joins forces with conductor Carlo Maria Giulini and the Vienna Symphony Orchestra to present the last and grandest of the works Beethoven wrote as solo vehicles for himself.
(USA) Ashford & Simpson Taped in London, England. (1 hr.)
10:300 Star Time Jerry Savelle Shock Of The New (ESPN) Inside Baseball
10:35 News
10:55 (NICK) Handmade In America Featured: quilt maker and historian Sandi Fox.
11:00 d) Soap O O O O News Introduction To Life (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) CoUege FootbaU Maryland vs. Pittsburgh (2 hrs., 30 min.)
11:15 (ESPN) Saturday Night At TheFights(R)
11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Topic: actors on acting. Guests: actress Blythe Danner; actor Sam Waterston; director Austin Pendleton.
11:300 Another Life (SITcke Of The Night Scheduled guests Cliff Richard, Peter Ustinov. (1 hr., 30 min.)
O O Tonight Guest host: Joan Rivers. Guests: James Coco, Linda Gray. (1 hr.)
O Hart To Hart Jonathan is unable to prove himself innocent of a murder charge after a memory loss suffered in an accident. (R)(l hr., 10 min.)
Entertainment Tonight Coverage of the 35th Annual Emmy Awards.
The Blackwood Brothers Doctor In The House (SHOW) Movie 1 Love You (Eu Te Amo) (1981) Sonia Braga, Paulo Cesar Pereio. Two people begin an explosive affair in an attempt to forget their former
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11:35 The Catlins 11:40 (HBO) When Women Kill
Actress Lee Grant directed and narrates this documentary, which profiles six women serving prison sentences for murder convictions. (1 hr.)
12:000 Bums And Allen 00News Charlies Angels Jim Bakker 12:05 Portrait Of America A profile of Florida is presented. (1 hr.)
12:300 Jack Benny O O ABC News Nightline O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: Don Rickies, author Amy Wallace (Significa). (1 hr.)
12:400 Columbo A highly intelligent man (Theodore Bikel) kills his spendthrift wife, then comes under Colombos scrutiny. (R) (1 hr., 20 min.)
(HBO) Movie The Sea Wolves (1980) Gregory Peck, Roger Moore. (2 hrs.)
1:0001 Married Joan OOONews (S Mission: Impossible Thicke Of The Night Scheduled guests: Cliff Richard, Peter Ustinov. (1 hr., 30 min.) OFaithline (SPN) TraveHePs World 1:05 Movie Rocky Mountain"
(1950) Errol Flynn, Patrice Wymore.(lhr., 45 min.)
1:10 (SHOW) Movie A Stranger Is Watching" (1982) Rip Torn. Kate Mulgrew. (1 hr., 30 min.) 1:300 My UtUe Margie O O NBC News Overnight (SPN) Movie Lorna Doone
(1951) Barbara Hale, Richard Greene. (2 hrs.)
(USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
1:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:00 O Bachelor Father OS) News
Film (Completed
Another High Holler. " a new motion picture tor televi.sion. starring Valerie Bertinelli. Michael Brandon and h'redenc l.etine. has completed production tor later broadcast on CBS Kd l.auter and Dinah .Manotl al.so star in the iilm, in which .Miss Bertinelli portrays a 21-year-old woman who is lured by the thrill of high-stakes gambling and risks destroying her marriage and future when she begins gambling obsessivel} with money from her trust fund U'hne plays .Miss Bertinellj's husband, a medical intern w'ho alienates his young wife and is blind to her weakness because of his ifd hour week at the hospital. Brandon portrays a seductive. cyTiical casino ollicial who is all loo willing to ;iccomniodate an attractive, vulnerable young gambler
Sunday, September 25, 1983 TV-5
O CBS News Nightwatch Jim Bakker (ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) (USA) PBA Gymnastics
USAIGC Womens Championship Finals (R) (2 hrs.)
2:300 Life Of RUey O All In The Family ONews
(ESPN) College Football Miami vs. Notre Dame (R) (3 hrs.)
2:40 (HBO) Movie Reds" (1981) Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, (2 hrs., 40 min.)
2:45 (SHOW) Movie The Ultimate Warrior (1977) Yul Brynner, Max von Sydow. (1 hr., 32 min.) 2:50 Movie Term Of Trial (1963) Laurence Olivier, Simone Signoret. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
3:000 700 Club Featured: Ethiopias persecution of Jews; new make-up techniques for severe burn victims. (1 hr., 30 min.)
ONews
Robert Schuller 3:30 ONews
(SPN) Mavie Cheers For Miss Bishop (1941) Martha Scott, William Gargan. (1 hr., 30 min.) 4:00 ONews Today With Lester Sumrail (USA) Wrestling (R)
4:20 (SHOW) Movie Strike Me Pink (1936) Eddie Cantor, Ethel Merman. (ITir., 40 min.) 4:300 Ross Bagley O All In The Family
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Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
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6:00 O Tic Tac Dougb 000000)0News d) WKRP In Cincinnati Q) Pirate Adventures 0 MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour (SPN) Microwaves Are For Cooking (USA) Cartoons 6:05 0 Little House On The Prairie
6:30 O Love That Bob O0 ABCNewsn (DTaii ^ OONBCNews O 0 CBS News 3) Good News America (SPN) Companion Dog Training (ESPN) SportsForum (NICK) What Will They Think Of Next?
7.00 O Bums And Allen O WKRP In Cincinnati O ABC News n S Threes wmpany OO0 The Jeffersons O Joker's Wild 3) Jewish Voice Broadcast 0 Business Report (SPN) Name Of The Game Is Golf
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(HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Sports Look 7:3SBasebaU 8:0001 ^y O O Just Our Lock Shabu makes Keith into a member of a music group called The Sha-belles for an appearance on the TV series "Soul Train. d) P.M. Magazine A preview of the season's new TV programs; two men who overpowered a would-be hijacker.
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Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
Nova "Life Patent Pending The promises and perils of genetic engineering and its impact on industry, medicine and universities are examined.
)(
(SPr^ This k New Zealand A
look at Northland, where New Zealand's first European pioneers settled. New Zealand's biggest sheep station; sailing in Auckland's Hauraki Gulf in a three-day yacht raced hr.) (SHOW) Movie MacArthur"
(1977) Gregory Peck, Dan O'Herlihy The famous, feared and flamboyant military leader
of World War II experiences brilliant combat victories before a final, fiery confrontation with President Harry Truman. (2 hrs,, 30 min.)
(IfflO) Movie Blood Relatives (1977) Donald Sutherland, Aude Landry. A police detective trying to find a young girls murderer runs up against conflicting testimony. R (1 hr., 40 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
"War Of The Empires The Tomorrow People take action to prevent the world from becoming involved in an inter-galactic war. (Part 2)
(USA) Movie One Good Turn (1956) Joan Rice, Norman Wisdom. A promise to buy a model car for an orphan winds up in a backstage chase, a walking race, and a mad drive. (2 hrs.)
8:30 O O Happy Days (Season Premiere) d) Carol Burnett And Friends (NICK) Against The Odds "Adams And Mao Samuel Adams helped bring the 13 Colonies independence from British rule, and Mao Tse Tung faced the challenge of bringing a country of half a billion people from feudalism to the 20th Century.
9:000 700 Gub O O Threes Company (Season Premiere) d) Merv Griffin O O Remington Steele
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O 0 Movie One Cooks, The Other Doesnt (Premiere) Suzanne Pleshette, Joseph Bologna. A suddenly unemployed woman decides to move in with her ex-husband, a realtor with money problems of his own, and his young bride. (2 hrs.)
Lifeline Dr. Daniel Smith Dr. Smith, Chief Resident Physician in Obstetrics at Womens Hospital in Los Angeles, Calif., is profiled. (1 hr.)
(SPN) Telefrance U,SA. Cine-Gub: Le Bonheur / Entracte: Being Ridiculous And Bip Hunts Butterflies With Marcel Mar-ceau / Fiction: Emile Zola And The Dreyfus Affair (Part 8) / In Performance; Alexander Nevsky (4 hrs.)
(NICK) Joaeph Papp Presents; Swan Lake, Minnesota This dramatic video variation on the theme of the classical ballet Swan Lake, centers around the story of a rural farmer who falls in love with the vision of a ballerina who dances in and out of his mundane life. (1 hr,, 10 min.)
9:300 O Oh, Madeline
(Premiere) A woman (Madeline Kahn) undertakes drastic measures to add new spice to her 11-year-old marriage to her conservative husband (James Sloy-an).
10:00 O O Hart To Hart (Season Premiere)
(5 News
Q O Live And In Person Sandy Gallin hosts the first of three celebrity-packed entertainment specials, to be broadcast live and featuring the second-act opening of Dreamgirls at the Shubert Theatre in Los Angeles. (1 hr.)
(ESPN) Women's Billiards
World Invitational 7-Ball Championship - Match 2 (R) (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie The Road Warrior (1981) Mel Gibson, Bruce Spence. In an Australia of the future where civilization is reduced to a collection of rural communes, a former highway cop makes a 2000-mile run for sanctuary in a promised land. R(l hr . 35 min.)
(USA) Don Drysdales Baseball
TV Chatter
By Polly Vonetes
The 1982-83 Emmy Awards ' will be celebrating its 35th anniversary when the show airs Sunday on NBC. Special events planned for the telecast include the presentation of a new award, to be given for the first time, to the year's Outstanding Children s Show. It will be awarded by the cast of Kukla, Fran and Ollie " - TVs popular children's show of the 50s.
PERRY COMO will be honored with a special tribute to his 50 years in show business. Co-hosts JOAN RIVERS and EDDIE MllRFHY have promised that many surprise guests from television's early days will make appearances during the telecast of this special evening don't miss it!
So many of the new series and returning ones are premiering this week you may have to toss a coin to decide which ones vou will watch.
KklO (NICK) Arts VisiU With Robert Wilsoo Robert Wilson introduces his "abstract theatrical creation Stations, (Part 1) 10:20 (NICK) Statkms An impressionistic journey through the inner world of a young boy is shown. (1 hr., 10 min.)
10:300 Star Time John Osteen
(SHOW) Movie Das Boot (1981) Juergen Prochnow, Arthur Gruenemeyer. In 1941, a young German U-boat crew face the challenges and horrors of war when they leave port on their first submarine tour. R (2 hrs., 25 min.)
(USA) Sports Look (R)
10:35 News
ll:00OOOOONews
(SSoap
TheLaHayes
Monty Pythons Flying
Circus
(ESPN)SportsCenter (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
11:15 (ESPN) College Football
Miami vs. Notre Dame (R) (3 hrs.)
11:300 Another Life O O ABC News Nightline S) Thicke Of The Night Scheduled guests: Ricky Schroder, Robert Guillaume, Fred Willard, Jim Cary. (1 hr., 30 min.)
O O Tonight Guest host: Joan
Rivers. Guest; actor Leonard Frey (Mr. Smith). (1 hr.)
O MagDmn, PI Entertainment Tonight (NICK) Arts Visits With Robert Wilson Robert Wilson discusses the production techniques and the meaning of various scenes in Stations. (Part 2)
11:35 The Catlins 11:40 (HBO) Movie Between Friends (1983) Elizabeth Taylor, Carol Burnett. Two middle-aged divorcees with entirely different backgrounds and attitudes become fast friends after literally running into each other in an automobile accident. (1 hr., 45 min.)
12:00 O Bums And Allen Charlies Angels (USA) Radio 1990 (R)
12:05 Movie Violent Road (1958) Brian Keith, Efrem Zim-balistJr.(l hr., 55 min )
12:30 Jack Benny O Tic Tac Dough News
O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: Ed
McMahon, photographer Annie Liebovitz. (1 hr.)
Thicke Of The Night Scheduled guests: Ricky Schroder, Robert Guillaume, Fred Willard, Jim Cary. (1 hr., 30 min.) (USA) Sports Probe (R)
12:400 McCloud
Wednesday Evening
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Movie: "How To Beat The High Cost Of Living"
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Movie: "I. The Jury"
Third Eye VII International Tchaikovsky Competition
6:00BTcTmI eeOOO(00New>
(DWKRPInandmuiti Q) Mr. MosUdie And Company SMacNdl/LehrerNewshoar (SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books
(ESPN) Play Your Best Tennis (HBO) Movie te Miss Marker (1980)
(USA) Cartoons 6:05 ffi Little House On The Prairie
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d) 0 Three's Company Q O O The Jeffersons O Jokers WUd 0 The Kroeze Brothers 0 Business Report (SPN) Medicine Man (ESPN)SportsCenter (NICK) You Cant Do That On Television (USA) Radio 1990 7:050 Carol Burnett And Friends 7:300DobieGillis O Threes Company O P M Magazine 3)OM*A*S*H O Family Feud O He Tac Dough 00Alice 0 Rex Humbard 0 Computer Programme (SPN) Money Talks (ESPN) The World Sportsman (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Sports Look 7:350 Good News
O 0 0 ^ PaU Guy d) P.M Magazine O O Real People O 0 Dempe^ Treat Williams portrays boxing legend Jack Dempsey in a dramatization of his personal and professional triumphs and crises; Sally Kellerman. Victoria Tennant
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0 Live^Froml^ Met Lucia di Lammermoor Joan Sutherland, Alfredo Kraus, Pablo Elvira and Paul Plishka are featured in Donizetti's opera conducted by Richard Bonynge. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(SPN) American Baby Featured: early learning; ask the experts about postpartum blues; music appreciation.
(SHOW) Paper Chase Commitments Hart has an affair with another woman and Bell desperately pleads for his help in dealing with Professor Kingsfield. (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie How To Beat The High Cost Of Living (1979) Susan Saint James, Jessica Lange. No longer able to keep up with inflation, three Oregon housewives turn to larceny to balance their budgets. PG (1 hr., 45 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
War Of The Empires Andrew works out a daring plan to free his imprisoned friend. (Part 3) (USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
8:050 Movie The Ambushers (1967) Dean Martin, Senta Berger. Matt Helm is sent to Mexico to find an experimental flying saucer and retrieve it from the enemy. (2 hrs., 10 min.) 8:30(1) Movie Sidekicks (1974) Lou Gossett, Larry Hagman. A con team makes money when the white man sells his black c^rade in the pre-Civil War \^t.(l hr., 30 min.)
(SPN) Real Estate AcUon Line (ESPN) Billiards (R)
(NICK) The Third Eye The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Mrs. Palmer feels that Deverill must be exorcised and suggests Uking the necessary steps, but her plans are strangely thwarted. (Part 6)
(USA) Baseball (Teams to be announced; subject to blackout). (2 hrs.. 30 min.)
9:00 O 700 Gub Featured: author Jim Simmons describes the way to a maximum marriage; miraculous healing of a chronic polio victim. (1 hr., 30 min.)
O 0 0 Dynasty (Season Premiere) A mystery person tries to save Krystle and Alexis from the burning cabin, while Fallon and Jeff each decide to stop Adams grab for power, g (1 hr.)
o O The Facts Of Life Blair recommends Mrs. Garrett as
caterer for her college sororitys party, then has a change of heart, n 0JiniBakker
(SPN) Telefrance U.SA Tele-Stories: Horses Of The Sun (Part 11) / The Last Adventure Of The Lapps / Cine-Club: Le Bonheur / Entracte: Being Ridiculous And Bip Hunts Butterflies With Marcel Marceau (4 hrs.)
(SHOW) Movie Chariots Of Fire (1981) Ben Cross, Ian Charieson. Social pressure and personal turmoil beset two contrastingly different British athletes on their way to glory in the 1924 Paris Olympics. PG (2 hrs., 5 min.)
(NICK) VII International Tchaikovsky Competition Struggling, young musicians from 40 countries vie for top honors and instantaneous recognition in one of the worlds most prestigious musical competitions in Moscow. (1 hr., 45 min.)
9:300 O FamUy Ties (Season Premiere)
(ESPN) PKA FuU ConUct Karate (R)
10:000 O 0 Hotel A would-be suitor (Richard Hatch) torments assistant manager Christine (Connie Sellecca), and hotel executive Victoria Cabot (Anne Baxter) is reunited with a former lover (Stewart Granger). (1 hr.)
dlNews
O O live And In Person Sandy Gallin hosts the second of three celebrity-packed entertainment specials, to be broadcast live, highlighting performers from various areas of show business. (1 hr.)
0 Lester Sumrall Teaching (HBO) Movie I, The Jury (1982) Armande Assante, Barbara Carrera. Private eye Mike Hammer tangles with a coterie of villains as he attempts to avenge a war buddy's murder. R(l hr, 50 min.)
10:150 News
10:30 estar Time 0 John Ankerbo^
0 A Visit With Reginald Stewart Internationally renowned conductor / pianist Reginald Stewart is profiled; interviews with Stewart and with bis contemporaries, and historical footage are included.
10:45 (NICK) A Night At AsUs American soprano Ashley Putnam hosts a visit to landmark New York Italian restaurant Astis, where employees and patrons join together to sing operatic favorites.
11:000000000 News (SSoap
0 Bib e Pathways 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(SHOW) Movie The Sin (1979) Anne Heywood, Donald
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 25,1983 TV-7 Fleasence. A reprrased Kansas (gpN) Movie A Farewell To
schoolteacher develops a traumatic relationship with a sadistic janitor. R(1 hr, 20 min.) (E*N)SportsCenter (USA) Baseball (Joined In Progress; teams to be announced; subject to blackout). (2 hrs.) 11:050 All In The FamUy 11:15 (ESPN) LA. 83 Highlights of water polo, swimming, diving and spchronized swimming. (1 hr., 30 min.) ll-JS(NICK) Nightcap Topic: opera. Guests: coloratura soprano Roberta Peters; Grace Bumbry, the first black to sing at the ' Bayreuth Festival in Europe; soprano Wilhemenia Fernandez, star of the French film Diva. 11:300 Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nightline d) Thicke Of Hie Night Scheduled guests: Lee Horsley. (1 hr., 30 min.)
O O Tonight Guest host; Joan Rivers. Guests: Larry Hagman, Betty White, comedian Gary Shandiing. (1 hr.)
O Police Story The relationship between two officers (Claude Akins, Paul Burke) who have been partners for 10 years begins to unravel. (R) (1 hr., 10 min.)
0 Entertainment Tonight An interview with Lesley-Anne Down on the set of her new mini-series. (1 hr.)
0 Sound Of The Spirit 0 Doctor In The House 11:350 The Catlins 12:00 0 Bums And AUen 0 JimBakker
(HBO) Movie Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer. (1 hr., 55 min.) '
12:05 0 Movie The Bofors Gun (1968) Nicol Williamson, Ian Holm. (2 hrs., 5 min.)
12:20 (SHOW) Movie Young Doctors In alAve (1982) Michael McKean, Sean Young. (1 hr., 35 min.)
12:300 Jack Benny O He Tac Dough ONews
O O Late Night With David Letterman Guest: singer Ronnie
Spector. (1 hr.) 0Ch
I Charlies Angels 0 Thicke Of The Night Scheduled guests: Lee Horsley. (1 hr., 30 min.)
12:400 Movie The Captive (1976) Kurt Russell, Tim Mathe-son. (1 hr., 20 min.)
12:45 (ESPN) Hydroplane Racing The Columbia Cup (from Tri Cities, Wash.). (R)(l hr.)
1:00 OI Married Joan O More Real People d) Mission: Imponible ONews 0GeneSoAt (SPN) Personal Computer (USA) Pick The Pros 1:300 My Little Margie ONews
O O NBC News Overnight
Arms (1932) Gary Cooper, Helen Hayes. (2 hrs., 15 min.)
(USA) Baseball (Teams to be announced; subject to blackout). (R)(2hrs., 30 min.)
1:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:000 Bachelor Father OCSNews
O CBS News Nightwatch 0JimBakker
(SHOW) Movie Halloween II (1981) Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasence. (1 hr., 30 min.) (ESPN) Horse Racing Weekly
(R)
2:05 (HBO) On Locatk Catch A Rising Stars 10th Anniversary Richard Belzer, Pat Benatar, David Brenner, Billy Crystal, Gabe Kaplan and Robin Williams are among the stars saluting the New York showcase club which gave them their start. (1 hr., 30 min.)
2:100 Movie "Dangerous Crossing (1953) Jeanne Crain, Michael Rennie. (1 hr., 40 min.) 2:300 Life Of RUey O All In Hie FamUy ONews
(ESPN) PKA FnU Contact Kante(R)
3:00 O 700 Gub Featured: author Jim Simmons describes the way to a maximum marriage; miraculous healing of a chronic polio victim. (1 hr., 30 min.) ONews
0 Lowell Lundstrom 3:30 ONews 0 Rex Humbard 3:35 (HBO) Movie S.O.S. TiUnic (1979) David Janssen, Cloris Leachiijan. (2 hrs.. 30 min.)
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(SHOW) Movie Paternity" (1981)
(ESPN)SportsWeek (HBO) Movie Timerider" (1982) (USA) Cartoons 6:05 CD Little House On The Prairie
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(HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (NICK) The Adventures Of BUck Beauty (USA)BasebaU 7:350 Good News 8:000 ISpy O O 0 Trauma Center Cutter performs emergency surgery on stunt-accident victim Howie Munson (Doug Barr). (The cast of The Fall Guy" guests.) n (1 hr.) ^
d) P.M. Magazine A profile of James Dean on the 28th anniversary of his death; an interview with Smokey Robinson.
O O Gimme A ^eak (Season Premiere) Julie (Lauri Hendler) tries to meet the members of her favorite rock band when the group comes to Glenlawn.
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0 Sneak Previews Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at wbats new at the movies.
(SPN) Travellers World (SHOW) Movie Prince Of The City (1981) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach. A New York cop is caught between federal pressure and loyalty to bis fellow officers during an investigation of widespread police corruption. R (2 hrs., 45 min.)
(HBO) Movie Amityville II. The Possession (1982) Burt Young, James Olson. A family experiences supernaturally influenced problems after moving into a Long Island house. R (1 hr., 45 min.)
(NICK) The T'viorrow Peq>le
War Of Th Empires The Tomorrow People have only their imaginations as weapons against a powerful space fleet. (Part 4)
8:050 Ducks Unlimited
Greenwing The award-winning story of a young mans fascination with water fowl is presented.
1:30(1) Carol Burnett And Friends
oq Mamas Family (Season FYemiere)
0 Red Barber Remembers
Veteran baseball announcer Red Barber describes how his career developed.
(SPN) Sharper Image (NICK) Against The Odds Keller And Edison Thomas Edison brought the world into the age of the electric light and recorded sound, and Helen Keller was born deaf and blind, but was brought out of her darkness by her teacher Anne Sullivan to go on to be an inspiration to mankind.
8:350 Baseball Atlanta Braves at Houston Astros (3 hrs.)
9:000 700 Club Featured. Phyllis George discusses her media career and the I Love America diet. (1 hr., 30 min.) OO0 9 To 5 (Season Premiere)
CD Merv Griffin Guests; Maud Adams, Jose Feliciano, Randy Bright, three young stars from Calendar Art.(l hr.)
O O We Got It Made Mickey s late hours, flashy wardrobe and sudden wealth cause Jay and David to become suspicious.
O 0 Simon & Simon (Season Premiere)
0 Jim Bakker 0 Great Little Railways (SPN) Telefrance U.S.A. Fiction: Emile Zola And The Dreyfus Affair (Part 8) / In Performance: Alexander Nevsky (4 hrs.)
(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Live from Las Vegas, Nev. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(NICK) Perfwmen Showcase: Great Orchestras Of The World - The Cleveland Orchestra The
Cleveland Orchestra, founded in 1918, and one of the Big Five in American symphonic activity, plays music by Gershwin, Mozart, Dvorak, Prokofiev and Berlioz, under the direction of conductor Lorin Maazel. (1 hr.,
10 min.)
9:300 e 0 Its Not Easy
(Premiere) A man (Ken Howard) and his ex-wife (Carlene Watkins), who is now married to her second husband (Bert Con-vy), live on the same street to share custody of their children.
O O Cheers (Season Premiere) 10:000 0020/20(1 hr.)
News
O O Live And In Person Sandy Gallin hosts the last of three celebrity-packed entertainment specials, to be broadcast live and featuring the finale of A Chorus Line at New York City's Shubert Theatre. (1 hr.) o o Knots Landing (Season Premiere) Gary defies Abby and
refuses to fire defense attorney Mitch Casey (Barry Primus) as he attempts to clear himself of Cijis murder. (1 hrj 0 Lesta* Sumrall 0 Jazz Id Ammca Mulligan Harold Danko, Frank Luther and Billy Hart join Gerry Mulligan in a club appearance at Erics in New York City. (1 hr.)
(HBO) Inside The NFL (USA) Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at San Diego Padres (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
10:10 (NICK) Beethoven This profile of the German composer is presented by pianist and music historian Israela Margalit, with dramatic recreations, biographical quotes and rarely seen drawings, against a backdrop of Beethovens music performed by Margalit. (1 hr., 5 min.) 10:300 Star Time 0 Eagles Nest 11:0000 OOO00 News Soap
0 Today In Bible Prophecy 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(SHOW) Movie Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer. In a world of the future, a special police officer is assigned to track down and destroy four renegade androids. R (1 hr., 55 min.)
(HBO) Movie Blood Relatives (1977) Donald Sutherland, Aude Landry. A police detective trying to find a young girls murderer runs up against conflicting testimony. R (1 hr., 40 min.)
11:15 (NICK) Arts Visits With Israela Margalit The distinguished concert pianist, a featured performer with the London and Berlin Symphony Orchestras, the Cleveland Orchestra and many others, is interviewed.
11:300 Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nightlioe d) Thicfce Of The Night O O Tonight Guest host: Joan Rivers. Guests: David Brenner, Joan Collins, Erma Bombeck. (1 hr.)
O Trapper John, M.D. Gonzo and his patient (Dick Gautier), an author of self-help books, become the targets of death threats. (R)(l hr., 10 min.)
0 Entertainment Tonight Frankie Avalon talks about his nightclub act and upcoming movie.
0 Contact
0 Doctor In The House (E9*N) SportsCenter 11:350 News (NICK) Nightcap Topic, new forms in the Broadway musical. Guests: top contemporary composers Marvin Hamlisch and Stephen Schwartz.
11:45 (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments 1963 NFL Championship - Giants vs. Bears / 1965 Packers Highlights (R) (1 hr.) 11:550 The CatUm 12:00 OBnnj And Allen 0 Charlies Angels 12:250 Movie Toward The Unknown" (1956) William Holden, Lloyd Nolan. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
12:300 Jack Benny ONews
O O Late Night With David Letterman Guest: comedienne-actress Sandra Bernhard. (1 hr.) 0 Thicfce Of The Night (USA) Pkk The Pros (R)
12:400 Movie Women At West Point (1979) Linda Purl, Andrew Stevens. (1 hr., 20 min.) (HBO) Movie Mad Max (1980) Mel Gibson, Joanne Samuel. (1 hr., 29 min.)
12:45 (ESPN) Billiards (R)
1:00 OI Married Joan O More Real People Mission; Impossible 0News
0 Jewish Voice Broadcast (SPN) Sharper Image (SHOW) Loving Friends And Perfect Couples
(USA) Don Drysdales Baseball
(R)
1:300 My UtUe Margie ONews
O O NBC News Overnight 0 Good News
(SPN) Movie "Inner Sanctum (1948) Mary Beth Hughes, Lee Patrick. (1 hr., 30 min.)
(SHOW) Movie True Confessions (981) Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall. (1 hr., 50 min.) (USA) Baseball Detroit Tigers at Baltimore Orioles (R) (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
1:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:000 Bachelor Fatbo-0News
OCHS News Nightwatdi 0 Jim Bakker (ESPN)SportsWeek(R)
2:15 (HBO) Movie The Road Warrior (1981) Mel Gibson, Bruce Spence. (1 hr, 35 min.) 2:300 Life Of RUey O All In The Family ONews
(ESPN) Auto Racing Formula I Italian Grand Prix" (from Monza, Italy). (R)(lhr.,30 min.)
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6:300 Love That Bob O ABCNesrsn Taxi ^
OONBCNews 0(D CBS News Q) Good News America (HBO) Cavett Behind The Scenes With Kenny Rogers (NICK) What Will They Think Of Next?
7:000 Bums And Allen O WKRP In Gndnnati O ABCNesrsn Threes C^pany OOOTheJeffersons O Jokers Wild S) Larry Allen SBusinessT (SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books
(ESPN) SportsCento-(HBO) Inside The NFl (NICK) You Cant Do That On Television (USA) Radio 1990 7:05 Carol Burnett And Frimds
7:300DobieGillis O Threes Company O P.M. Magazine OM*A*S*H O Family Feud O Tic Tac Dough 0Alice The Camerons Stateline: Legislative Report (SPN) Investors Action Line (ESPN) Inside FootbaU (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Hockey Special 7:35 Good News 8:000 Superbook OO Benson P M. Magane
O O Mr. Smith Mr. Smith takes to the gambling tables of Las Vegas to raise enough money to buy the freedom of his brother Bo-Bo.
O The Dukes Of Hazzard S) Camp Meeting, U-S.A.
S Washington Week In Review (SPN) Movieweek (SHOW) Movie The Man Who Would Be King (1975) Sean Connery, Michael Caine. Based on the story by Rudyard Kipling. Two British soldiers set out to claim the riches and power of a remote, legendary kingdom. PG (2 hrs., 9 min.)
(ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week
(HBO) Movie Venom (1982) Nicol Williamson, Klaus Kinski. Kidnappers hold a young American boy hostage in his parent's London home, alternately contending with the police outside and a deadly mamba snake in the buildings ventilation system. R(l hr, 33 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People The Slaves Of Jedikiah A new Tomorrow Person is emerging. (Part 1)
8:05 Movie "Silent Running (1972) Bruce Dern, Cliff Potts. A botanist in charge of sustaining plant life on another planet yearns for human companionship. (1 hr., 55 min.)
8:30 O Swiss Family Robinson o O Webster The short-in-height but determined Webster decides he wants to join a community football team.
Carol Burnett And Friends OO Manimal WaU8treetWeek (SPN) Country Kids (ESPN) SportsWeek (R)
(NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain Infant twins Rachel and Theo Matheson are saved from death by a kindly but mystical stranger, and find out eight years later that they have been chosen for some momentous task against the forces of evil. (Part 1)
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9:000 700 Club Featured: 22nd Anniversary Show. (1 hr., 30 min.)
OO Lottery!
Merv Griffin Guests: Nell Carter, Dean Jones, Michelle Lee, Leroy Neiman, Norman Cousins, a visit to LOrangerie Restaurant. (1 hr.)
O Dallas (Season Premiere) O Jim Bakker O Victory At Sea (SPN) Telefrance U5JL Cine-Club: Le Bonheur / Entracte: Being Ridiculous And Bip Hunts Butterflies With Marcel Mar-ceau / Fiction: Emile Zola And The Dreyfus Affair (Part 8) (4 hrs.)
(ESPN) Best Of Top Rank Boxing (R)
(NICK)"The Greeks: The Minds
Of Men A detailed look at the life and teachings of the great philosopher Socrates and his pupil Plato, and the two founding fathers of history, Herodotus and Thucydides, drawing from the lifetime studies of Sir Kenneth Dover. (Part 4)(1 hr.) 9:30 World War I (HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert The Grammy-Award winning country-western star performs such favorites as The Gambler, Lucille and Lady, as well as a duet of We Have Tonight with guest star Sheena Easton, from the Greensboro (NC) Coliseum. (1 hr.)
10:000- O Matt Houston News
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scheming Capt. Wiecek plans a surprise maneuver that he hopes will prove Grace (Rachel Ticotin) incompetent. (1 hr.)
O O Falcon Crest (Season Premiere)
0 Baseball Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres (3 hrs., 5 min.) Lester Sumrall Teaching Europe: The Mighty Continent
PCK) First Edition Guest: Joe McGinniss, author of Fatal Vision,
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(USA) &orts Probe 10:50 (NIdQ Women In Jas The Instrumentalists Featured is a look at the coctrasting styles of five women performing jazz. ll:00OOeOONewi Soap
K-Dimension Magaxiae ffi Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie Young Doctors In Love (1982) Michael McKean, Sean Young.
(USA) Night Flight The Wizard of Waukesha (4 hrs.)
11:15 (ESPN) Top Rank Boxmg
From Las Vegas, Nev. (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
11:25 (NICK) Ni^tcap Topic: science fiction. Guests: Isaac Asimov, Harlan Ellison and Gene Wolf.
11:200 Another Life 00ABCNewiNightIine Thicke Of The Night O O Tonight Guest host Joan Rivers. Guests: Eileen Brennan, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Lorenzo Lamas. (1 hr.)
O Movie The PUot (1980) Cliff Robertson, Diane Baker.
Entertainment Toni^t Behind the scenes of late-night news shows. ffiLifeguHle Doctor In The Home 12:00 O Bums And ADen This Week In Coontry Mnsk ffiJim Bakker 12:30 O Jack Benny OTic Tac Dough ONewa
O O Friday Night Videos
Musical mini-features highlight tunes by top rock stars. (1 hr., 30 min.)
OHeeHaw Thicke Of The Night (SHOW) U2 In Concert The Irish rock band performs Sunday, Bloody Sunday, New Years Day and other hits from the Red Rock outdoor amphitheatre in Colorado. (1 hr.)
12:35 (HBO) Movie 1, The Jury (1982) Armande Assante, Barbara Carrera. (1 hr., 50 min.) 1:0001 Married Joan O More Real People Movie Dracula Has Risen From The Grave (1969) Christopher Lee, Rupert Davies. (1 hr., 30 min.)
Zola Levitt
RwWoctor. Gfwvitte, M.C. Sunday, SefxtMnber 25.1M3 TV-9
(SHOW) Movie "Cannery Row (1982) Nick Nolte, Debra Winger. In a 1940s California coastal town, a marine biologist becomes romantically involved with a girl from the local bordello. PG(2 hrs.)
(ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments NFL Symfunny (R) (HBO) Not Necessarily The News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric takeoff.
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(CootimwdFroaiPwged)
(NKX)TodiysS|wcial (USA) Are Ym Anybody?
2:15 (SHOW) AenbkiK(Fri) 2Jie At Home With Beverly Nye (Moa) Family Chef (Tne) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Oeaoiiig Up Your Act (Thu) Together Shirley And Pat Booae(Fri) hiM(Pri)
Oa^itel
The Lem (Mob) Oral Roth erts (Tne) Pattern For Living (Wed)
(SPN) Mediterranean Ectees (Mon) Japan 120 (Tne, Tliu) Scandinavian Weekly (Wed) Holland On Satellite (Fri)
(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Strike Me Pink" (1936)(Wed) Goin South (1978KFri) Cannery Row (1982)
(SHOW) Lola Phlana: The First lady Of Lm Vegas (The)
(ESPN) RncqmtbaD (Wed) Hot seshow Jumping (Thu) Rodeo (R)(Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Wed) The Prize Fighter (1979) (NKX)DuttysTkeehoBK (USA) You: Magazine For Wom-ea (Moa, Tne, Fri) Womans Day USA (Wed, Thu)
SMBTMOib
He-Man Masten Of The Uni-
O0Faatasy OSGuiding Light SPTLSeaainar e To Be Anaovced (Moa. Wed, Fri) Staff Devetopment (Tne, Thu)
(ESPN) bride BaaebaO (R) (The) LA.'83 (Wed)
(HBO) Stopwatch: M Minates Of Investigative Tkkiiig (The) (HBO) Morie (Fri) The Europeans (1979)
(NICK) What Win They Think Of Next?
(USA)Soaya 345QFhntime 3:31 The Flintstooes S General EdKatioaal Devri-opmot (Mon, The, The) Adult Rosie Education (Wed, Fri) (SPN) HeDo JeraHkm (Wed) This Is New Zealand (Fri) ^
(SHOW) Am To The Infinite Power (The)
(ESPN)CoDegeFootban(TBe) (HBO) Cavett Behiiid The Sccna With Keuay Rocen(Moa) Video Jokeboz (The)
(NKX) Yob Cant Do That Ob Teteviriaa (Mon, Wed, Fri) Kids Writes (Tne, Tho) SJSBTheFlialitoaei 1-NB Another Life eWhafsHappcaing!!
O Woody Woodpecker And Friends
Tom And Jerry O little Book On The Prairie e Witney The Hobo OTheWalteai OEMhtbEao^ e Cartooas (Mon, The, Thu, Fri) The Charmkins (Wed)
Toifaqf Wite Lester SumraO (Main Kenneth Copeland (Tue) Time Of Deliverance (Wed) Calvary Temple Hour (Thu) Ford PhiIpot(Fri)
S Sesame Street (R) n (ESPN) OoDege Footti3fi (Moo) (HBO) The Marvelaas Land Of Ox (Mob) Treasure Island (Tue) The Year Of The Gentle Tiger
m)
(NKX) The Adventures Of BbckBeaaty (USA)AliveAadWdl!
1-15 The Mwnten IJiaBallseyc eCHUh Patrol OGood Times Piiri Panther e The Brady Bunch eBJ/Lobo
Q SgD Of The Times (Wed) How Can I Live? (Fri)
(SPT4) Pail Ryan (SHOW) Siiii Princess (Moo) (SHOW) Movie (Wed) Mystery At Castle House (1982)
(SHOW) The Thuaderfairds (Tha) Faerie Talc Theatre (Fri)
(ESPN) Sportswoman (Wed)^ Auto Racing (Thu) Top Rank Boxing (Fri)
(HBO) Fra^ Rock (Wed) The Electric Grandmother (Fri) (NICK) The Thmorraw People 4J5S The Brady Bunch 540 Cham Reactioa
(Continoed On Page 12)
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Saturday Daytime
S.-MOA01ineF5ulj 081110 Not (SBOW)BajlAtWort S.0Nicht1^wls S:1S(HB0) Not Neeoniily The Nan SJIONan
0 Today b Bible Prophecy (SBOW) Morie Soender (1972) Ml 0 The Bbckwood Brothen 00Newi
(SBapBvy/Forty Pig
O Little Hove Ob The Prairie''
0ChptamKafaroo
0Teiebory
0ZobLeritt
(ESPN) Rodeo (R)
(HBO) Mofie Treasure Of The Four Oowns (1982)
Ml S JbBDy HoBttoB OBtdoon ~r OCartooBi
(SPopeyeAndPHeaib , OLittleRMcali 0KidnNrid e Great Space Coaster 0 Pirate AdveBtBres (SPN) boeie "The Big Cat (1948)
7400SBpertwok O Post 5 Reports (D Vegetable Soup O0Cartoooi O A Better Way O Captaio Kangaroo 0Jiffl Batter
S General Edncatioaal Devd-opment
(NICK)Piinrbeel (USA) Sports Look 7:0S 0 Between The Lines 7;1S O Rocky And Prienfa 7;M O Flying House OOTheJetsons Newsbag O Treeboose Club O Benji, Zax And The Alien Prince
ffi General Educational Development
(USA) Sports Probe 7;S5 0 Romper Room 8:000 Contact
O O 0 Scooby Doo / Menudo
The Jetsons
O O The Flintstone Funnies
O 0 The Biskitts
0 Mr. Mustache And Conapany
0 Making It Count
(SPN) Poet Time
(SHOW) Movie The Actress"
(1953)
(ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R)
(HBO) Movie "The Toy " (1982)
(USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
8:05 0 Starcade
8:300 O 0 The Monchhichis / Little Rascals / Richie Rich Tom And Jerry OO The Shirt Tales O 0 Saturday Supercade 0 Contact 0 Making It Count (SPN) Junmy Houston Outdoors (ESPN) SportsCenter
(USA)C^
I-J5 0 Hovie Smoky (1966) 1:45 (ESPN) Instnctiooal Series tMOTheLewui iBoedibieHBlk
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0 Understanding Hnman Behavior
(SPN)OaftsNHingi (ESPN) To Be Announced (USA) You; Magaiine For Wom-
1:310 Weekend Gardener e O 0 Pac-Man / Rubik Cabe/Menndo O O Dungeons And Dragons Olnade Track
0 Understanding Hnman Behavior
(SPN) Sewing With Nancy (SHOW) Movie Ball Of Fire (1942)
(USA) Alive And WeU!
10:100 Itovie Santa Fe Trail (1940)
Sil Ifillioo Dollar Man OOTheDnkes 0 Jinomy Swaggart 0 Business Of Management (SPN) Country Kids (ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week(R)
(HBO) Inside lie NFL (USA) Movie The Baby And The Battleship (1956) 10:30000 Hie Uttles O O Alvin And The Chip-mnis
O 0 Charlie Brown And Snoo-
0 Business Of Management (SPN) Good Life (ESPN) Inside Football (R) 10:350 Movie "The Missiles Of October(1974)
11:000 O 0 Puppy / Scooby Doo / Schoolbouse Rock Movie Shane (1953) OOMr.T
O Benji, Zax And The Alien Prince
OSoul Train 0 JimBakker 0MooeyPusle
(HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (NICK) Kids Writes 11:30 O O Amazing Spider-Man / Incredible Hulk O Bugs Bunny / Road Runner 0Mooey Puzzle (SPN)TheAPtay (SHOW) Movie "The Toy (1982) (ESPN) Play Your Best Tennis (HBO) Movie Waltz Across Texas(1982)
(NICK) nie Tomorrow People 12:00 O The Westemen O Lorne Greenes New Wilderness
O 0 ABC Weekend Spedab O0 NCAA Today 0 Jack Van Impe 0 Computer Programme
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(USA) Movie The Tnitb About Women (1958)
12:310 Wild BiDHickok O O 0 American Bandstand OCartoou OThimdarr O 0 NCAA Football 0 Sign Of He Times 0Dmlingb Discipline (ESPN) The World Sportsman (NICK) Standby ..jj^ Camera! Actk.'
1:000 Movie Down Dakota Way (1949)
O O Wild Kingdom 0 Father John Bertotncd 0 Snpersoccer
(SPN) Name Of Hie Game b Golf 1:30 O Wrestling
0 Movie Spanish Affair (1958)
Movie A Gunfight (1971)
01 Love Lucy
O Hospitality House 0 Movie ITie Day The Earth Stood Still (1951)
0HeriUgeU5 A Update (SPN) Photographers Eye (SHOW) The Hasty Heart (ESPN) Play Your Best Tenms (HBO) Douglas MacArthnr The Defiant General (NICK) Against The Odds 2:00 OO Baseball 0 Joy Junction 0DoctorWbo (SPN) Personal Computer (ESPN) Saturday Ni^t At The Fights (R)
(HBO) Movie "Treasure Of The Four Crowns" (1982)
(NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty
(USA) Movie "Vendetta (1950) 2:050 Movie Stagecoach (1966)
2:20 0 Doctor Who 2:300 Call Of Hie West O Happy Days Again (SPN) Companion Dog Training (NICK) Livewire 2:40 0 Doctor Who 3:000 Movie Law Of The Rangers" (1937)
O Southern Sportsman OSportsBeat
Movie Killer Force (1975)
0 Athletes In Action (SPN) Financial Inquiry 3:10 0 Doctor Who 3:30 000 NCAA Football 0Zob Levitt 0 American Adventure (NIOC) Special Delivery 4:000 Wyatt Earp O O Tennis 0 PTL Gub (Spanish)
0 Victim Garden (SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (SHOW) Movie Gray Lady Down (1978)
(HBO) Movie' Green Ice (1981) (USA) Pick The Pros (R)
4:30 O Wagon Train 0 High Chaparral 0 Folk Ways
(NICK) You Cant Do That On Television
(USA) Scholastic Sports Academy (R)
5:00 (I) SoulTrain O Six Million Dollar Man O Wrestling 0 Paul Yonggi Cho 0WoodwrigbtsSbop (ESPN) Auto Racing (NICK) Against The Odds
The Chipmunks; ready for a comeback
By Elaina Thompson
The biggest comeback in show business history? It maybe those feisty little Chipmunks.
Absent for 13 years, the 1980 album from the squeaky-voiced trio hit gold status two months later, then on to platinum. Their first television special last Christmas scored higher ratings than other animated favorites Charlie Brown, Pac-Man and the Smurfs. Now theres a feature movie in production and the new NBC Saturday morning series Alvin and the Chipmunks.
How did this e.Kploding success start? Songwriter Ross Bagdasarian Sr. hit on the idea of singing chipmunks after hearing a speeded-up recording. Later he developed a plotline that fitted the animation with himself as the model-and-voice of the Chipmunks human protector. David Seville.
But by 1967 he had phased them out of his business interests. He died in 1972, while Ross Jr. was still in college aiming to be the businessman and a lawyer as his father wanted him to be. Although he received his law degree in 1976, Ross Jr. found he was mesmerized with the thought of giving his father's Chipmunks a future.
Ross Bagdasarian
The idea of the Chipmunks began on a dark night in 1958 when Ross Sr. braked his car in time to avoid hitting a critter crossing the road. He was startled by the defiance
(USA) USA Presents: Time-Out Theater 5:30 0 Lowell Londstrom 0Hiis Old House (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty 5:35 0 Motorweek Hlnstrated
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of this chipmunk, and it reminded him of the tough executives in the music business, like his chum, Alvin Bennett. (The other chipmunks, Theodore and Simon, were named after other bigwigs in the field.)
No. the real A1 didnt mind the chipmunk being named for him, Bagdasarian says, "Not after the Chipmunks sold 30 million records for his
But all the original contacts and boosters were gone when Ross Jr. and Janice Karman - partners for seven years, husband and wife for three -began working on the recent Chipmunk resurgence. ^
The breakthrough came by a fluke when a disc jockey did a punk rock speed-up (of an old song) and said it was a new Chipmunk release, Bagdasarian says. It started a demand.
Ross Jr. and Janice already had formats in mind. Her background is film production and she does the story-boards, flies them to Korea for animation and with Ross cowrites the scripts and music. She also does the voice of Theodore. Ross does Alvin, Simon and David.
Jim Metzler and Shelley Hack portray a couple of doctors in a small Texas hospital on Cutter to Houston. The new CBS drama premieres Saturday, Oct. 1.
(Sutions reserve (he right to make last-minute changes)
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Sports This Week
Saturday Evening
SUNDAYS SPORTS SE3TEMBER2S,1N3
I lOOOO Tarheel Football HighUshti
12:000 Tom Reed O North Carolloa State CoacheiSbow ODicfcCmm
12 SO O Duke Football Highlights ONFL83 O NFL Today
1
_ NFL Foothali Coverage of Cincinnati at Tampa Bay, Houston at Buffalo, Kansas City at Miami or New England at Pittsburgh (3 hrs.)
O NFL Football New Orleans Saints at Dallas Cowboys (3 hrs.)
2:000 Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Atlanta Braves or another key NL game. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
4:00 (D NFL Football llfas^ington Redskins at Seattle Seahawks (3 hrs.)
MONDAYS SPORTS SEPTEMBER 26,1083
0:000 NFL Football Green Bay Packers at New York Giants n (3 hrs.) ^
SATURDAYS SPORTS OCTOBER 1,1083 12:000 NCAA Today 12:300 NCAA Foot^ (3 hrs., 30 min.)
2:000 Baseball
3:000 SportaBeat (Starting time subject to change.)
3:300 NCAA FootbaU (SUrting time subject to change.) (3 hrs., 30 min.)
4:000 Tennis U.S. Womens Indoor Championships Early-round coverage (live from the Hartford, Conn. Civic Center). (2 hrs.)
6:000 Wrestling 11:30 O ACC FootbaU Highlights 11:460 Wrestling
Olympic Problems Anticipated And Solved
Roger Goodman, a director for .\RC Sport.s, sat in front of the world s largest video game, scanning Its 70 television monitors. Rui this was no ordinary video game there were no free plays till liquidating the solar system. The I ireuitry in this control room would handle the biggest video Games of all time - the 1984 Olympic games.
l or one week last month, ABC S|)orls simulated 'A Day at the Olympics, using footage from the Lake Ilacid Winter Olympus. >iand in talent to act as Jim \li Kav and color commentators and a production crew to roll in the -.pecial graphics and try out the Name equipment they would he iiMiig III next year's Olympics, .Network engineers began de-'igiiing the control center more than two years ago and. since \piil, Li tedinicians have been putting the pieces together at \li( N own Olympic Village " in a w,II chou.se in New York City's Wisi Side The engineers' job is to determine the pitfalls in this
(Hmlom-designed center long before the Winter Olympics begin in February in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
If we can identify the problems now and make the proper adjustments, it will make life a lot easier in Yugoslavia." said Goodman, an Emmy winner for his work on ABC's coverage of the 1976 Olympics in Innsbruck.
It took over two years to construct ABC's control center, but it will take just three weeks to take it apart. The man in charge of this logistics nightmare is Ben Greenberg. The control center will be used in Yugoslavia, and again in Los Angeles for AEKs Summer Olympics coverage.
We call this a control room.
but it's actually the entire Sarajevo broadcast center." said Goodman "We have two control rooms, ten editing cubicles, an audio layer area, a studio and an entire graphics area with the most sophisticated state-of-the-art equipment in order to create our special Olympic look."
When the Olympic flame is extinguished in Los Angeles on .Monday, Aug 13, 1984. the video game players can look back at the 900 people and 2,500 miles of video tape needed to bring off the biggest video game of all time. But for now, the video game players are all in line with (Goodman, quarters in hand, just Itching for the Games to begin.
Giants Back To Tackle The Pack
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Door-To-Door Service Phone Locally
758-0696
Nearly a year ago, when the Packers last playtKi the Giants. Green Bay rallied in the fourth (iuarter to win The Packers,were on a tear that would eventually land them in the playoffs, and the Giants were in the middle of a
coach. Bill Parcells, who joined New York the day that Ray Perkins accepted the coaching job at Alabama Also, Joe Danelo, the Giants' kicker for the past seven years, has been replaced by rookie Ah Haji-Sheikh,
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e
ANas Smith And Jones
Movie: "Sands Ot Iwo Jima"
Sing Out America
e
HeeHaw
T.J. Hooker
Love Boat"
o
riwws
Saturday
T.J. Hooker
Love Boat
(fi
3s Company
M*A*S*H
Star Search
MervGritfin
News
Page Five
o
Dance Fever
Am . Top Ten
Oiff. Strokes
The Rousters
Candid Camara
o
HeeHaw
Did. Strokes
The Rousters
Candid Camera
o
Solid Gold
Cutter To Houston
Movie: "The Cannonball Run"
(D
HeeHaw
Cutter To Houston
Movie: "The Cannonball Run"
0
Wrestling
T.J, Hooker
Love Boat
0
Wrestling
NCAA Football: Arizona vs. California
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God's News
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J. Van Impe
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irest
Jacques Cousteau
A Horseman Riding By
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SPN
Japan 120
Telefrance U.S.A.
SHOW
Movie: "The Toy"
Movie: "The World According To Garp"
ESPN
NFL Game
SportsCenter
Saturday Night At The Fights
HBO
Movie
Movie: "The Toy"
Movie: "Blade Runner"
NICK
Special Delivery
Third Eye
Laurence Olivier Presents: The Collection
The Country
USA
Sports Probe | Sports Look
Ovation
Alfred Hitchcock Presents
inauspicious 0-3 start that would a ninth-round draft pick from the keep them out of post-season I'mversity of .Michigan, The play. quarterback slot, which each pre-
'fhe Giants will have a chance season flip-flops between Phil to even the score when they play Simms and Scott Brunner, has the Packers again on "BG's been firmed up with the ball NFL Monday Night Football," ending up in Brunner's hands for Sept, 26 (9 p.m.-conclusioni. the second straight year. Simms Since their last meeting, the mis.sed all of last season with a Giants have signed a new head knw injury.
Although New York's strong-point is their defense - anchored by linebacker Lawrence Taylor - Brunner must inspire the offense if the Giants are going to be in the running for a playoff berth. Both the offense and defense have been sporatic this season, with Brunner turning in mediocre performances.
Admittedly, the fault doesn't lie entirely with the Delaware graduate's arm. Brunner was chosen by Parcells because, among other things, "he doesn't commit turnovers." but in the season opener he threw three interceptions, fumbled twice and was sacked five times. With almost non-existent pass protection. Brunner was hurried into throwing the ball everywhere except to his receivers.
6:000 The Monroes (SKuiigFn OOO0News
0 The Blackwood Brothers 0 Sneak Previews (SPN) Holland On Satellite (SHOW) Duran Duran (HBO) Movie The Prize Fighter (1979)
(NICK) Reggie Jacksons World Of Sports (USA) Co-Ed 6:100 Wrestling 6:3000 NBC News O CBS News 0 Reflections 0 Breath Of Life 0 Bill Bumids Quest (USA) You: Magazine For Women
7:00 O Alias Smith And Jones OOCDHeeHaw ONews
Threes Company O Dance Fever OSoUdGold O Wrestling
0 Gods News Behind The News
(SPN) Japan 120 (SHOW) Movie "The Toy (1982) (ESPN) NFL Game Of Tlje Week(R)
(NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Sports Probe 7:30 O Carolina Saturday MA*S*H O Americas Top Ten 0 Rock Church (ESPN)SportsCenter (USA) Sports Look 7:66 0 Red Man Football Action Report
8:000 Movie Sands Of Iwo Jima (1949) John Wayne, John Agar. The tough training that a U.S. Marine sergeant gives his rebellious recruits results in the capture of Iwo Jima. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 TJ. Hooka* (Season Premiere) Hooker re-enters the narcotics underworld to start a new probe of his detective partners murder four years earlier.
8(1 hr.)
Star Search O O DifPrent Strokes (Season Premiere) Arnold meets Mr. T when the A-Team staff films scenes in the Drummonds
nent building, (n I Cutter To Houston (Prmiere) Three young doctors (Shelley Hack, Jim Metzler, Alec Baldwin) trained at the Texas Medical Center are sent to the small town of Cutter, where they establish a community hospital. (1 hr.)
0 Undersea World Of Jacques Cousteau
(HBO) Movie The Toy (1982) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason. A multimillionaire purchases an unemployed black man as a
plaything for his spoiled young son. PG(1 hr.,40min.)
(USA) Ovation Benoni And Rosa (Part 6) / Journey Into Thailand: The Other Thailand / Umbrella (2 hrs.)
8:060 NCAA Football Arizona vs. California (3 hrs., 15 min.)
8:30 O O The Rousters (Premiere) While working as general peacekeeper for a traveling carnival, Wyatt Earp III (Chad Everett) tries to keep the members of his boisterous family in line.(l hr., 30 min.)
0 Jack Van Impe (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (Live) (2 hrs., 30 min.) (NICK) The Third Eye The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer The Palmer family is forced to sell their house, and Deverill tells Cassie of hidden treasure which he says belongs to him. (Part 5)
9:00 O O 0 Love Boat (Season Premiere) The crew and passengers of the Pacific Princess travel to the Peoples Republic of China; guests include John Forsythe, Ursula Andress, Linda Evans, Lee Majors, Susan Anton and Lee Horsley, n (2 hrs.)
Merv Griffin Guests: Nell Carter, Dean Jones, Michelle Lee, l^roy Neiman, Norman Cousins, a visit to LOrangerie Restaurant. (1 hr.)
O 0 Movie The Cannonball Run (1981) Burt Reynolds, Roger Moore. A no-holds-barred auto race attracts various competitors vying to win by driving from coast to coast in the shortest time. (2 hrs.)
0 JimBakker
0 A Horseman Riding By
(SPN)TelefranceU5.A.
(SHOW) Movie The World According To Garp (1982) Robin Williams, Mary Beth Hurt. The son of an unmarried prep school nurse enjoys a life full of adventures, coincidences and bizarre characters. R (2 hrs., 15 min.)
(NICK) Laurence Olivier Presents: The Collection A tale
about four people enmeshed in jealousy, suspicion and revenge. (1 hr., 15 min.)
10:00 O Sing Out America News
O O Candid Cameras 36th Birthday Party Allen Funt and Loni Anderson celebrate the popular programs milestone with classic clips showing people caught in the act of being themselves. (R)(l hr.)
0 Kenneth Copeland (Continued On Page 12)
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TV-12 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Sunday, September 25,1983Saturday Evening Continued
(Continued From Page 11) S) A Horseman Riding By (HBO) Movie "Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger Haur>r In a world of the future, a special police officer is
assigned to track down and destroy four renegade androids R'(l hr., 55 min.)
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
10:15 (NICK) A Month In The Country A production based on the author's disappointing romance with a friends wife. (1 hr., 45 min.)
10:30(1) Page Five
11:00 O Rock Church Proclaims OOOOO<D0News (D Odd Couple In Touch S Twilight Zone (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) Night Flight The Big Chill " Interviews, excerpts, and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of "The Big Chill " (4 hrs.)
11:1500 0ABCNews
11:200 Baseball Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres (1 hr., 45 min.)
11:30 O John Ankerberg OSoUdGold
O ACC Football Highlights S) Movie "The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing (1973) Burt Reynolds, Sarah Miles An outlaw falls in love with the sole survivor of a train his gang robbed and must outwit his cohorts to ensure her escape (2 hrs.)
O O Saturday Night Live Host Stevie Wonder (R) (1 hr.,
30 min.)
O Dance Fever O0Movie 0 LoweU Lnndstrom 0 Two Ronnies (SHOW) Best Of Bizarre (ESPN) CFL Football OtUwa Rough Riders at Saskatchewan Roughriders (3 hrs.)
11:450 Wrestling 12:00 O Beyond The Horizon: U.S. / Japan Magazine OStar Search 0 Jim Bakker (SPN) Looking East (SHOW) Movie "I Love You (Eu Te Amo) (1981) Sonia Braga, Paulo Cesar Pereio. (1 hr., 45 min.)
12:05 (HBO) Movie "Amityville II: The Possession (1982) Burt Young, James Olson. (1 hr., 45 min.)
12:300 Soul Train 12:45 O Movie Sorry, Wrong Number (1948) Barbara Stanwyck, Burt Lancaster. (2 hrs.)
1:00 O The American Trail O Music Magazine O Christopher Goseup OSonl Train 0 PTL Gub (Spanish)
(SPN) Joe Burton Jazz 1:05 0 Night Tracks 1:300 700 Gub d) Movie Murder On The Thirteenth Floor (1974) James Stewart, Strother Martin, (1 hr., 30 min.).
O Americas Top Ten OONews
1:40(SHOW) Movie Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford,
Rutger Hauer. (1 hr., 55 min.) 1:500 Movie
1:55 (HBO) HBO Ctmiing Attractions
2:00 O All In The Family 0 Jim Bakker
(SPN) Movie Breakfast In Hollywood (1946) Bonita Granville, Billie Burke. (2 hrs.)
2:05 0 Night Tracks 2:300 News (ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie Green Ice (1981) Ryan ONeal, Anne Archer. (1 hr, 55 min.)
2:450 News 3:000 Heritage Singers d) Movie "Grand Prix (1966) James Gamer, Eva Marie Saint. (3 hrs.)
0 Rez Humbard (ESPN) To Be Announced (USA) Night Flight The Big Chill Interviews, excerpts, and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of The Big Chill. (R) 3:050 Night Tracks 3:30 O Hi, Doug O All In The Family 0Phil Anns 3:35 (SHOW) Movie Gray Lady Down (1978) Charlton Heston, David Carradine. (1 hr., 51 min.) 4:00 B Westbrook Hospital OONews 0 D. James Kennedy (SPN) Movie Santa Fe Trail (1940) Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland.
4:05 0 Night Tracks 4:25 (HBO) Movie Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, (1 hr., 55 min.)
4:30 B Ross Bagley
Monday-Friday Daytime Cont.
(Continued From Page 9) O Sanford And Son d) Love Boat O People's Court B Gomer Pyle B Andy Griffith 0 Threes Company 0 100 Huntley Street 0 Mister Rogers (R)
(SPN) Life Of RUey (Mon) Telephone Auction (Tue, Thu) Insight (Wed) Looking East (Fri)
(ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Wed)
(HBO) The Electric Grandmother (Wed) Neil Young In Concert (Thu)
(NICK) The Third Eye (Mon, Wed, Fri) Against The Odds (Tue, Thu)
5:05 0 Starcade 5:30 B Lets Make A Deal B Sanford And Son B Andy Griffith QNews
B WKRP In Cincinnati B M*A*S*H
0 0 Peoples Court 0DoctorWho
(SPN) Money, Money, Money (Mon) Investors Action Line (Wed)
(SHOW) The Hasty Heart (Tue)
Benji At Work (Fri)
(ESPN) Soccer In America (Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) Between Friends" (1983)
(HBO) Fraggle Rock (Fri) (NICK) LJvewire 5:35 0 Beverly Hillhillies
Popular Subjpcl
The set of "Another World ' is tilled with "baby talk" these days Stars Laura .Malone ' Hlainet and Terry Uavis (Staceyi are both expecting. For Laura it will be her first, due in February. Perry s second child is due in .March I m always a.sking Terry where she bought her crib and all the other babv stutf.' savs Laura,
Novel On CBS
Ian Charleson. Harry Hamlin and Clif DeYoung will join Dyan Cannon in key roles in the nine-hour mini-series ".Master of the Game, based on the current Sidney Sheldon best-seller, planned for broadcast this season on CBS.
Andrew Stevens and Sela Ward are part of the new CBS drama Emerald Point N.A.S. The series, created by Esther and Richard Shapiro of Dynasty fame, premieres with a two-hour episode on Monday, Sept. 26.
(SUUont reserve (be right to make laat minute changes)
.Miss Cannon plays the central roll' of Kate Blackwell, head of a corporate empire and matriarch of the troubled Blackwell family. The story spans a century from the founding of the family fortune in the diamond fields of South Africa to the present when the company's business covers the world.
The film will be shot on location in New York. Maine. London. Paris. Antibes and Kenva
MENS WEAR
andChapsby RALPH LAUREN
Chaps by Ralph Lauren has captured the classic-minded customer who responds to a great contemporary designer. Perhaps the most acclaimed American designer today, Ralph Lauren roots his work in the traditional, to which he brings subtle touches of flair that are his alone.
The Navy Blazer by Chaps is a complete expression of this timeless tradition. Chaps tailors this garment in a year-round fabric blend of poly-wool particularly adaptable to Eastern North Carolina wear. Youll find this fine coat at all of our
stores. $155.MENS WEAR
Downtown Greenville Carolina East Mall Tarrytown Mall - Rocky Mount
Sale starts Monday,Sept. 26;ends Saturday, Octobar 1, unlost omrwita spociffied. Mott items ot reduced prices
^4 .
n c;r
BIG
BUYS
Children's ski jackets
Hurry in now for fabulous buys for you. your family, your home and car I
SAVE
7, 9
Misses' 2-pc. BQctivewear sets
H> V-
_|
1 /3 OFF
ALL big girls' sweaters
Rfl.$8.99tO$21.
If '/,! Most owy style stw
J i couW want from classic I S cardigans to far-out
fashion pullovers. Sizes 7-14 and S.M.L. Thru Monday.
no OFF
ALL car seats
for infonts, toddlers
A.|9B.flSBobbyMac<
A carsest .....4IJI
B.ISS.9S One Step car mm.v. ...41n
C.S.ttTot-Rlderciir .1IJI
0.. Safe N* Sound carseat..,..........4l.SI
Little boys and girls jackets, special purchase, while quantities last
SAVE *li
Bigger girls jackets Reg. $29.99
Bigger boys jackets special purchase, while quantities last
Theyll be ready for any weather in our new ski jackets. Each has these quality features: zipper fronts and pockets, elasticized wrists and waists and theyre ail machine washable. Little and bigger boys and girls sizes. Hurry in and save!
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
I
Short avWlabte at similar j savings.
r
There are almost as many fabrics, styles and colors to choose as ways to be active-or just comfortable! Great savings, too. Reg. $26 to $36.
1/3 OFF
Men's fleeced wear
25% OFF , SAVE ^5
Men's cotton flannel shirtst Men's casual shoes
2 for $12
Beg. $8.99 each
Aborbsent fladced sweatshirt or pants of Kodei polyester and cotton. S,M,L,XL.
2 for $10 each
14
Rag.M.99 * iwi ^ m v Roj.n. I ^ pair
Choice of plaids and one or two pocket styles. Slip-on or oxford has sueded split-leather up-
Sizes S,M,L,XL. pers, moo-toe styling, more. Mens sizes.
SAVE n
Sleep 'n play suit
049
Rsg.H40 w
Polyester terry suit snaps down front and onefeg. NB-3B.
2 to *3 OFF
Girls' activewear
899 099
to 7 eoch Acrylic fleeced pante and tops. Bigger girls sizes. Reg. $10.90 to $12.80.
1/3 OFF
Boys' activewear
529 729
to / eoch ' Acrylic fleeced sweatshirt and pants, reg. $7.90 to $10.00. Big boys' sizes.
SAVE 25%
Men's underwear
Reg.|S.90 4^5., .of 3
Choose T-shirts or briefs. $8.90 Boxer shorts, package of 3.4.99
SAVE 1
Fashion underwear
099
Rg.$3.99 JL
Choose from kMKlse or Wklnl briefs and Perms-Prest* trim cut boxers.
SAVE 2
Men's sport socks ^99 C99
^ tow pkg. of 6 Bag of crews, reg. S6.90. Bag of over-the calf socks, reg. 17.99.
bcsehidiilidfdrplGfcHipordslivsry.
N la At Hi
reducippi^^pigill^
^ BilfabwliloiickiiranM
HURRY IN TO SEARS NOW AND STRETCH YOUR DOLLARS...
Carpet, Bodding, Other Home Fashion*, Paint and morel
YOU SAVE 20o-33
ALL blonktsrogulor, thrmolt ond outomotlcs nowon solo I
Doybfeoktwinl Q99
leg.$29.99 * I #
Easy-care. Designed to keep you warm and cozy all night. Choose from a wide variety of styles and sizes. Save now at Sears!
$36.99 full size blanket. 21.99
Sovo on soloctod plush ond sculpturod corpofs
YOU SAVE '6 to '7!
099 1L99
O tolOaq.yd.
Reg. I12J9 to 122.99
Choose plush or sculptured nylon pile carpets in today's fashion colors. Hurry for good selection.
Not mM In Concord, OanvHIo, QoMcboro, OrMnvWo, Rock HW
CusMon and InttallMlon oxtfa
Sort Interior ond Extorlor 1-coot points
WeettMfbeeter #%0 0
ai..satinfMsh | 2^
Reg. 919.99
Easy Using QsL. satin flat or csWng, Rag. $11.99
91005
Weetherbsatar axterior latax available In 46 colors. It's durable and washable. Thru Oct.1.
Easy UvbigO interior comes in 23 beautiful colors. Thru Oct. 1.
STRETCH YOUR DOLLARS
NOW SAVE M00-M60!
2 SIZES, ONE PRICE!
SAVE 1/2 PRICE!
For one coat results, all Sears paints must be applied as directed
Brawny Bunk or Crews Quarters
199** Sa.299*
Bunk
Reg. $299.99
Twin size bunk is made of solid pine. Includes 2 mat-tressboards. Converts to 2 twin beds.
Crews quarters are handsomely crafted with lots of storage space. Includes 2 mattress boards.
Furniture not available in Concord, Danville, Goldsboro, Greenville, High Point, Rock Hill, Rocky Mount
THRU MONDAY ONLY I
Our creamy thick paint gives you washable, spot-resistant coverage that dries fast and cleans up with soap and water. In 9 popular coiorfast colors. Reg. $13.99. Thru Sept. 26.
$15.99 Semi-gloss 1-coat paint . ................gal. 7.99
SAVE 25% On All Sizes
1-in. Aluminum Blinds
14i
Highlight blinds add that beautiful touch to any decor. Choice of colors. Reg. $19.99. Sale ends Saturday.
Blinds Mlg. by Lsvolor Lorentzen, Inc.
SAVE MOO!
Manhandier Reciiner
NOW ONLY
199
The man In your life will love the comfort of this 2-way, easy-to-clean vinyl upholstered reciiner. Relax and save big! Reg. $299.99.
66498
Thru Oct. 1
SAVE MOO on %-HP Garage Door Opener...VALUE!
With the same power as Sears Best garage door opener! 3,300 digital codes. 4V^-min. light delay. Reg. $259.88.
159
Installation
extra
In larger stores only
62064
SAVE MO on Touch-on Lamps
29
99
SAVE Big on Wintuk Yorn
Thru
SAVE 40% on Both Towels
Monday
Simply touch metal to turn on, 4 level touch control. Reg. $39.99. Sale ends Saturday.
Washable acrylic 4-ply skeins in 31^-oz. solids and 3-oz. ombres. Reg. $1.39. Sale ends Sat.
239
Reg. $3.99. Solid colors. $2.49 Hand Towel ...1.99 $1.49 Washcloth......99
Assortment of washcloths
299
Convenient package of 12 colorful washcloths. Limited quantities!
SAVE MOO on Sopc. Dinette
Hurry, Thru Mondoy only!
1/2 PRICE Seors TIrpolene*
249 2".
Westbury, Includes 36x60-in. table. 4 chairs. Reg. $349.99.
quart
Evaporates quickly. Reg. $4.99. Thru Monday only at Sears!
Thru Monday Only!
1/2 PRICE Lotox Coulk
199
I 10*A-ox.
Fast-drying latex caulk. Reg. $3.99. Don't miss ill
ThraMondoyl SAVE MOOl 1-HP Air Compressor
29999
5.0 SCFM at 40 PSI/100 PSI max. 12-gal. tank. Reg. $399.99.
Quilted Spreads 20-30% OFF
Delicate rose or colorful patch print bedspreads. Eaaycare. Available In all sizes, twin to king.
Reg. $29.99 Full size ....21.19
TWIN SIZE ONLY Reg. $26.99
18L
SPECIAL PURCHASE pillows
Choosa Standard, queen or king! Your Choice
Don't pass up this fantastic bargain during our Stretch Your Dollars Sale! Provides medium support. Limited quantities.
499
^ eeeh
21512
1/2 OFF Seors Best Faucets
Sears Best dual control kitchen and bath faucets have water-saving aerator. Heavy die-caat body. Removable acrylic inserts. Reg. $54.99 each.
Your Choice
29
99
each
42M
2 OFF Compactor Bogs
stock up nowl Strong, puncture reeietant baga come In a package of 12 for your convenience. Buy several packs and save big. Reg. 17.99.
NOW ONLY
5
SAVE MO
KenmoreP...
Amrico't btf telling replacement woter heater
Polyurethane' foam Insulation is 175% to 266% more effective than fiber glass Insulation
Need hot water fast? Call Sears for emergency installation within 24 hours (except Sundays and holidaya) by our Authorized Installers. Or pick up your water heater and install It yourself. Installation extra.
7033
Kenmore* built-in dishwasher
Water Heat control helps assure proper wash temperature. Pots/pans cycle. Reg. $499.99. Thru Oct. 25.
299STRETCH YOUR DOLLARS
Our best, longest vvearing belted tire
'tss
whHowgl
tar
Ctan.Cat.
pitMM.
Sato
adi
A78-13
P155/60B13
50.99
29.99
B78-13
P165/80B13
65.99.
32.99
078-14
P1SS/75B14
74.99
37.49
E78-14
P195/75B14
79.99
39.99
F78-14
84.99
42.49
G78-14
P205/75B14
89.99
44.99
H78-14
P21S/75B14
91.99
45.99
G78-15
P205/75B15
93.99
46.99
H78-15
P215/75B1S
96.99
48.49
L78-15
P22S/75B15
99.99
49.99
18 OFF
Guardsman steel belted radlals
P165/80R13 whitewall and old tire plus $1.64 F.E.T. each.
99
A great low price for a steel belted radial tire. Low rolling resistance helps save gas. Radial design adds responsive handling.
Sears 48 auto battery for strong starts
Was $57.991983 Fall General Catalog
39.!
exchange
Heres a great chance for you to get a powerful-starting battery at a savings of many dollars. Provides 410 amps cold cranking power, 90 minutes reserve capacity. In Groups 24, 24F and 74. For most American-made cars and many imports. Also available in Groups 56 and 72. Installation included. While quantities last.
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
SAVE *95
Weight set and bench
Weight set has 14-interlocking discs. Bench has 1000-Ib. cap. ^ J O ft
(user plus weights). Reg. Sep. ^ \ A * ^
prices total 1309.98. Mm t *9
SAVE MO
20-in. wheel cycle
Has quick-release adjustments for different users. Adjustable tension. Reg. $139.99.
99
SAVE *20
Jog-n-Tramp
34-in. tramp helps stimulate circulatory system.
Reg. $69.99.
44% OFF Radiator chemicals
Reg. $1.19 66^
Choose Rust Preventive, Leak-Stop or Fast Flus, 11-oz. each. Sale ends Tuesday.
-ch
M OFF 5-qt. All-weather oil
^ W 5K)t. container of 10W-30 motor oil.
~ " Reg. $5.40.
440
SAVE *30 Free Spirit
lO-speed or 3>speed touring
0999 10999
# # 2^.rMer,Reg.tl29. | W # tStn.l ^ " 2atn.rKer,Res.tl34. ^ ----
Reg. $130.1
louriM bike, $130.98
SAVE *1
Sears sweat separates
Choose from crew neck sweat shirt or sweat pants with drawstring. Reg. $8.99.
SAVE *1
99
each
Brand name tennis balls
Can of 3 Penn or Wilson balls.
Heavy-duty felt cover. Reg. $2.99 each.
Available In Barbouraville. Ctiarlealon WV. Chartealon SC (Nortbwooda), Columbia, Durtiam, Fayettavillo, Greensboro, Ralelgli. Roanoke. Wilmington, WInaton-Salem.
1
can
THRU MONDAY
SAVE *100to *150
Gas chain saws with cases
A. 16-in. 2.3 CIO gas chain saw has solid-state ignition and automatic oiler. Reg. $299.99 ............199.99
B. 18-in. 3.7 CIO saw has Power Sharp. Reg. $449.99..................................... 299.99
1/2 PRICE
OieHord alko-line botteries
$1.nAAorAAA* 99* $2.e**C"Of"D"....1.14 $2.e9wolt..........1.M
BIG BUY
Frosted light bulbs
4lor97
60.75,100 watt
1/2 PRICE
27-range
mult-tester
Reg.$35.90 17^
Tests appliances, motors and more.
SAVE ^5
Craftsmon
bowsaw
Reg. $10.90 Craftsman quality
599
SAVEon WD-40 or
propono cyllndor
$1.79 WD-40 spray lubricant, 9-oz. can.. 1.31 $2.e 14.1-oz. refill propane cylinder.......1.11
SAVE 5
Whilo woodon toilotsoot
788
Reg. $12.00 /
Has baked enamel finish.
SAVE 6
32-gollon trash contoinor
099
Reg. $15.90 7
Green ribbed container.
SAVE *5
40-lb. box of Soors dotorgont
Reg. $20.90 15^^
Heavy-duty detergent.
STRETCH YOUR DOLLARS
with KENMORE Appliances
19.2 cu. ft. Kenmore Refrigerator-Freezer
599
SpMiol Edition Volu*
Special Purchase. Frostless...no defrosting ever. 13.53 cu. ft. fresh food section, 5.70 cu. ft. freezer. Porcelain-on-steel liner. In white.
Sale ends Saturday, unless otherwise stated
Sears Spe
ton^^ues
SPECIAL PURCHASE
A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value. While quantities last.
Big-Screen Color TV with Convenient Remote Control
65801
Microwave Oven with Electronic Touch Controls
399
99
Special
Edition
Value
Kenmore large-capacity washer with all the great features of our $529.99 model
Special Purchase! This TV has all the features of our $M9.99 model for $150 less. Reliable electronic tuner. Sensor Scan channel selection. One-button color. Super Chromix picture tube for bright, natural color. 19-in. diagonal measure picture.
Special Purchase. 2-speed, 8-cycle model with automatic water temp control. Dual-Actioh agitator.
Extro'copocity Fabric Mostar Dryor. Special Purchase. Electric dryer with top-mounted lint screen.
Special Edition Value
379
Special Edition Value
279
299
99
SpMlal
Edition
Value
Special Purchase. Temperature probe helps food cook to preset temperatures. Electronic touch controls, digital display, automatic hold/warm. Variable power for a range of cooking needs. Large capacity oven.
MOO OFF
Gat Grill Package
199
Reg. $280.99. Large 460 sq. m. cooking/warming surface. Match-free ignition, dual controls. Porcelain enameled grid.
Unassembled
Kenmore *
"Steam-type"
Carpet
M15 OFF
Vacuum, tote tray and tools
99
Reg. Sep. price 1214.98. Twin-ftn suction, double row bester-bar brush. 8-pile settings; active edge^teaning. 2-apeed motor.
EdMon Value
Special Purcbaae. S^aya hot solution deep into carpets. Loosens and extracts deep down dirt for profetaionel-type cleaning I
Each of these advertised items is readi ravallable for sale as advertised.
NC:
SC:
VA:
SHOPjr^ , Concord, Dui
Sears VCR s are designed tor personal in-twme viewing, not tor usm that might vio-lald^opyright laws
MOOOFFIVMoo CottoHa Rocordor
399t!.,
Rag. $4l9.9a. Sday/i-pro-giaiR/aar. Elactronic lunar. BeUhScan ptdwe aaofch.
Uir9*copaify Konmora wothar
279
It's Haavy-duty. 3 wath/rlnae tamparaturas. In
Largo-copocity Eloctric Dryar
a 229
This Kanmora has 2-cydaaandtop-mount ^Hnt scrawl.
8tS1
W wwIWpfwW
Cosiotfa Rocofdof
Spaciai Pufdiaaa. Has easaatta play/reaerd. mimmmmrn.
20 OFFI Tillich
rrva aiwi iww fioiKl
139**
Rag. miA suaigM dgtag aSMiaa auilHR
Komnora
CinlititrVacMinw
PicM Purchaaaf Qood tralgiit auction. At-twiwiaiiialiiuiiiiiaa.
*50 OFF
4.0cu.ft.
Compact
Froozart
Rg. n.N neh. TMnwah foam ittaula-hon haipa saua apaoa andanargy. Adiuatabia cold oontroi, fcay-alet toek and powar aiofiai flghL Almond.
*200 OFF
ttJlcu.li.
ilR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE
Burlington, Charlotte, Concord, Durham, Fayette ville, Gastonie, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Greenville, Hickory, High Point, Jeckaonville, Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Salem Columbia, Florence, Myrtle Beech, Rock Hill, Charleeton
Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke KY: Ashland WV: BaitxMirsvllle, Beckiey, Bluefield. Charleston
Larga Nmm such os appNonoaa are hwen-torlad hi our dMrtbuNon contar and wHI be dwdulad tor doNwary or pidHip, daNvary itaxira.
THEDAILYREELECrOR
ewitc
iDONNY OSMOND
Are you raising your sons the way you were brought up? R.O., Waco, Tex.
My father and mother dished oilt equal doses of discipline, love and laughter. I am applying this same principle to my two sons. My parents were the greatest teachers and they still are.CONNIE CHUNG
co-anchnr ol \BC \eus Early Today
Are women more emotional than men in reporting hard news? T.R., Cmiton, Ohio
1 don t think so. It depends on the man or woman s personality I happen to be very sentimental, quick to cry if something affects me. Once, when I was in L.A., we did a story on a mother's reunion with daughters she had not seen in years. Back at the studio my partner [who was a man] and I both had tears in our eyes, so, yes, men do cr>'. However, 1 suppose we [reporters] become a bit cynical. If we became too emotional and wept all the time, we could not function.
IFROM THE ''ASK'' EDITORS
LOS ANGELES Two-time Oscar-winner Glenda Jackson is having trouble finding roles with a touch of class. In fact, Jackson is so disgusted about the scripts she's been sent lately that she is rumored
to be pondering a political career. One role she likes, however, is that of Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov's wife, Elena Bonner, which she'll play opposite Jaaon Robards in H.B.O.'s upcoming Sakharoi After that she may defect from show business. Says Glenda, Tm committed to just that one movie, after which I'll be making a
Glenda Jackson getting touchy about scripts
final decision as to whether or not it will have been my verv' last.".. .When it comes to making deals, novelist-screen-writer Sidney Sheldon, author of The Other Side of Midnight and Bloodlines, clearly doesn't play around.
Sheldon's latest bestseller,
Master of the Game, will be a future ninehour CBS miniseries. and his new three-novel contract with Warner Books and William Morrow and Company Inc. guarantees him "in excess of S20 million," on top of which he retains foreign and theatrical rights-. . Jane Withers, who from 1964 to 1976 was known best as TV's Josephine the Plumber," will be plunging back into her famous commercials again (she gave them up to care for her ailing mother, now deceased), and it's not hard to see why Withers cleaned up as Josephine, earning more money for her detergent ads than she ever did as a child star in the 1930's when she was Shirley Temple's only serious rival, appearing in some 48 films.
Back then. Withers also started a doll collection (now numbering 8,000), which shell soon be exhibiting around the country for the benefit of needy children.... If his new movie musical is a hit. Tab Hunter will know the sweet smell of success. Hunter is coproducing (with Allan Glaser) and co-starring with Polyester pal Divine in Lust in the Dust, which Hunter describes as "a western for the 80 s the 1880's." L'n-I like Polyester, however, Lust in the Dust will not offer any Odorama effects for viewers to sniff at. ' Robert Windeler
NEW YORK - Ex-iBeatle and former mop head Ringo Starr beat the heat this summer with a new, close-cropped coif. "I can't stand long hair in hot weather." says Starr. "I should have done this years ago."
Gossips were proved wrong when they assumed that former soap opera queen Eileen Fulton who recently bought herself a Mexican
wedding dress, was about to
renounce her single status and get hitched to As the Wbrld Turns cast member and former beau Robert Burton
For the moment, Eileen appears to be wedded to her career she bought the dress for signing autographs.... Walter Briggs, who makes his movie debut this week in in All the Right Mot es as a star high school quarterback, must have found the role pretty easy to play: Last year he was the star quarterback for Hackensack High School in New Jersey.. . Recently, when Joan Rivers and hubby Edgar stopped by Stage Deli, a waiter sidled over to them and whispered,
"Can we talk? Try the Monte Carlo.
Its Liz Taylors favorite sandwich.
For this tip. he was rewarded with an extra-big gratuity.
Anita Summer
W^ASHINGTON -Whats going on behind closed doors in town these days? Heres a brief rundown: One of the most in-demand
which boasts dramatic floral displays and eclectic interiors, has entertained Jordans Queen Noor and J<riui Travolta. The most discreet presidential suite is at the small Jefferson Hotel. No one there will say who has enjoyed the marble foyers, the Austrian cry'stal chandelier or the 19th<entury oil paintings. Spokesman Ken Matheson says, "We insure anonymity for our clientele.".. The biggest scoop on Capitol Hill lately does not involve the economy or defense. A slew of Congressmen and Congressional staff members 7.500 in all recently gorged
themselves at an ice-cream-
Former mop head Starr cleans up his act.
hotel
rooms is the presidential suite at the Vista International. It s decorated by Givenchy, boasts a brass four-poster bed in the master bedroom and has a ja-cuzzi to hold five people. Recent visitors include President Gemayel of Lebanon and Elizabeth Taylor The most expensive suites at $1,200 a crack are at the Sheraton W'ashington and Madison hotels. Bob Hope. George Bums and Mena-chem Begin have resided in the Sheratons 9-room extravaganza, featuring a panoramic view of the city. The Madison, with its Persian carpets and Oriental porcelains, is known as the unofficial residence for visiting heads of state. The Four Seasons Hotel in Georgetown,
Strom Thurmond Capitol Hitt's super scoop.
eating contest held at the Senate by the International Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers. The Capitol Hill police said it was the largest turnout for any event, including one with booze." reports the associations president, Glenn Witte. The unofficial winner of the ice cream Super Bowl was 80-year-old Strom Thurmond (R-S.C ), who apparently ate his younger colleagues under the table. According to the official Congressional poll on ice cream, announced at the event, chocolate is the Congressional favorite and 28 percent of Congressional members have worked as soda jerks or ice cream dippers. Remarked one Congressman. Dishing it out is part of our training."
Kathleen Maxa and Jane Ottenberg
Cover photo by Tony Costa; Hair by Sandy Salvatore; .Makeup by Davida Simon.
S 1983 FAMILY WEEKLY All rights reserved
Beayfam
Enter the Maxi Cosmetics Sweepstakes and win a trip to the
Summer Olfmpies.
r*.
Here's your chance to go to the '84 Summer Games in style.
Just fill out this official entry form and take it to any store that sells Maxi cosmetics. See official rules for complete instructnns.Five lucky winners will go to the Olympics.
Each gets a one week trip for 2 to Los Angeles, including round trip transportation, accommodations, tickets to selected Summer Games and a wardrobe of Maxi cosmetics, plus Le Jardin and Epris fragrances.Everyone else gets something too.
Everyone gets 30^ off on their next purchase of Maxi cosmetics. All sweepstakes entries must be received by November 30,1983. So get into the running. And, with a little luck, you 'II end up at the '84 Olympics.
Mmax'FACTOR
means more:
i>'
Not a sponsof Of merrber ot USOC
OFFICIAL RULES-NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
1. You are aulomaiically entered in ine MAXI COSMETICS sweepstakes by tilling out and redeeming tne Mam store coupon featured m tnis advertisement by November 30. 1983
2. It you do not wish to redeem the coupon but you want to enter the sweepstakes you can complete an entry torm available at store displays or print your name and address and the words "MAXI MEANS MORE" on a 3' X 5 * piece ot paper Mail your entry
to MAXI COSMETICS SWEEPSTAKES. PO Bo> 3342. Syosset NY 11775 Enter as often as you wish but each entry must be mailed separately and received by November 30 1983 3 Winners will be selected in a random drawing from among all mail-in entries and coupons re-caivad and processed by the coupon claanng-housa prior to the end of the sweepstakes. Judging will be conducted by National Judging Institute. Inc.. an independent judging organization whose decisions are final on all matters relating to this sweepstakes. Judging will take piece by April 30. 19B4 All prizes wiH be awarded and winners notified by mail. Only one prize to an individual or household Prizes are nontransferable. not ox-changeable for cash, and no substitutions are allowed Taxes, if any. are the responsibility of the ndividual winners. Winners may be asked to execute an affidavit of eligibility and release In the event the prize is won by a minor, it will bo awarded in the name of the parent or legal guardian
4. Sweepstakes open to residents of the U S except employees and iheir families ot Ma Factor & Co Inc its subsidiaries its atiiiiates advertising agencies and Don jagoda Associates, inc This otter is void wherever prohibited and subiect to an Federal State and local laws
5. For a list of mator winners, send a stamped, self addressed envelope to MAXI COSMETICS WIN NERS LIST. Box 3M1. Syosset. NY 11775Save 30o on any Maxi Cosmetic.Maiitomatically enter tlie Maxi Cosmetics Sweeestakes.
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The stars are coming out on television this year. As the three major networks unveil their lineups for the 1983-84 prime-time season, several longtime movie greats will be appearing on the small screen this fall.
ABC is way out in front in slarshine, having nabbed the First Lady of .American cinema, Bette Davis, for the role of the very proper proprietress in its new series Hotel. Additionally, .Madeline Kahn, our cover girl and that sexy comedienne from the Mel Brooks movies, makes her TV-series debut in the delightful new sitcom Oh. Madeline (Tuesday, 9:30 P.M., E.S.T.). CBS executives, meanwhile, are pleased to present the lofty Charlton Heston in his first TV work in 30 years the touted miniseries Chiefs. Cybill Shepherd will also be starring in her first TV series and seeking to bolster her flagging show business career by playing a randy rancher's daughter in NBC's The Yelloii Rose.
Several existing shows will also get a boost from movie-star power, the most notable example being Falcon Crest, which has managed to press Oscar-
This may in fact be the worst new season in a period where every new season is called the worst
winner Cliff Robertson into regular service. Even an ape is getting into the act: Clyde, star of those Clint Eastwood flicks, will be up to his old monkeyshines in Mr. Smith (Friday, 8), NBCs rather amusing comedy about an orangutan with a genius I.Q who works for the Government.
Movie stars showing up in specials and miniseries like Chiefs is nothing new, and that trend will continue this year with Albert Finney in John PaulII, Martin Sheen in Kennedy and Ann-Margret and Treat Williams in a remake of A Streetcar Named Desire.
But silver-screen stars in a regular series that's a switch. There is a reason for all of this, and its not a very-happy one. Simply put, there arent enough movies and hence enough good film roles to go around these days. In the studios heyday of the 30s and 40s, Hollywood turned out perhaps 400 A movies a year. Now, only about 80 to 90 movies are made each year, and most of them seem to star Richard Gere and Meryl Streep. Television, on the other hand, is omnivorous and needs all the projects it can get to fill the vast air space of prime time. And if the networks can add a touch of glamour and glitz by landing a movie star, all the better.
BK-SCREEN
STARSTURN
TO TVOur Fourth Annual New Season PreviewBy Mark Goodman
4 FaMII.V WK*1.Y SEPTEJUBER 25 1983
But tragically, the new shows continue to retill tired soil. This may, in fact, be the worst new season yet in a historical period where every new season is usually characterized as the worst new season yet. There are standard crack teams everywhere; detective teams, medical teams, etc. etc.; there are glamorous ghosts to provide escape fantasies of wealth and sex; there are vigilantes, from a John Wayne-styie judge to teen-agers armed with computers to a criminologist who transforms himself into crime-stopping creatures; and inevitably what the world needs now another set of warring Texas clans.
Herewith, for what its worth, a rundown of the 1983-84 season. Most of these turkeys could well be cooked by Thanksgiving.
NBC: The once-proud peacock, its feathers ruffled badly in the ratings for more than a decade, is struggling mightily to regain a perch high on the television tree. Its loftiest entry may well be The Rousters (Saturday, 9), which brings back Chad {Medical Center) Everett, a persuasive actor who
The viewing public seems to have an inexhaustible thirst for the arid Tjexas plains.
has here the curious role of a roustabout saddled for life with the name of Wyatt Earp III. The comedy-adventure about a traveling carnival set on the beaches of California centers around Everett, his 14-year-old son and his half-dotty mother who tries to keep the family legend alive. Peculiar as the notion may sound. The Rousters is one of the few new shows with even a trace of wit and inventiveness. (Consequently, it probably wont last.
The Yellow Rose (Saturday, lU) may endure, not because it has some fine performers particularly Susan {Fk'e Easy Pieces) Anspach but because the viewing public seems to have an inexhaustible thirst for the arid Texas plains. Perhaps its because Texas seems, to much of the nation, a foreign world of money, guns, oil and power. It would probably surprise people weaned on movies and television to learn that most of Texas sits down to the dinner table every night and eats with knives and forks, just like everyone else. Still, this real-life Texas is not the one portrayed in Dallas, nor in The Yellow Rose, which is essentially Dallas in dusty boots. Cybill Shepherd, Sam
Hotel's James Brolin. Bette Davis and Connie Sellecca: Room for improvement.
Elliott and David (Starsky and Hutch) Soul stalk around talking hard and looking lewd.
For Love and Honor (Friday, 10) takes the rousing success of An Olficer and a Gentleman and transposes it to an airborne division at Fort Bragg. N.C, Replacing Lou Gossett Jr. as the case-hardened drill sergeant is an equally powerful actor. Yaphet Kotto. .A few other capable performers, notably Cliff Potts and Shelley Smith, are on hand to give some credence to this sudsv tale of life and love on an .Army base, and executive producer David {Police Stor\) (jerber exhibits his usual gritty sense of place. Still, every time the trcx)ps break into their airborne chants, thev sound like the .Mormon Tabernacle Choir in battle fatigues.
One show that shouldnt la.st is tfie new comedy series H (ot It Made (Thursday, 9). It details the misadventures of two young .\ew York bachelors who hire, to the di.stress of their lady friends, a dazzling live-in maid (Ten Copley). The comeK Copley is a young actress who has clearly studied Farrah Fawcett s ever\ move. The theme is set when one of the gentlemen tells hl^ ladylove that. Her looks had nothing to do with it. 1 hired her because she works miracles." Lady friend sharply replies: "If theres any laying on of hands, you're dog meat." if ail of this sounds titillatingiy familiar, examine the credits and you'll find, under the title executive producer, the name Fred Silverman,
Ghosts are making an appearance on the tube again. In Jennifer Slept Here (Friday, 8:30), the lovely .Ann Jillian plays a dead HolKTxood .star who continues to inhabit her old Beverly Hills mansion, somehow purchased by a middle<la.ss family from New York with a 15-year-old son, the only mortal the ghost befriends. Jillian. an enormously talented lady, can toss around brash-blonde quips as well as anyone since Jean Harlow, and she's been in search of the right vehicle for some time. She won't find it with a kid who doesn't even have a learner s permit yet.
Boone (Monday, 8) is the creation of Earl Hamner, the writer who first documented his mountain youth in the movie Spencers Mountain, then flogged it nigh unto death in J\'s The Waltons. Forgive our suspicions, but just months after the original John B^yv Walton, Richard Thomas, played Hank Williams Jr. in a made-for-t\ movie, here comes Boone (Tom Byrd), a backwoods bov who wants to become
Stars u'ill be rising and ratings falling this season on T\: (Chckuise from bottomi Charlton Heston and the cast o/ Chiefs, the spinted Ann Jillian plays a ghost m Jennifer Slept Here, T\ veterans Jamie Fan ilefti. Harry Morgan and William Chnstopher return home in AfterMASH, Clints Chde (i[)is a hiih(iii( nil in Mr Smith (iiS honks on the iompiili'i < xi:(' n iih W'hi/ Kids
d countr\- and western singer. Lest there be any doubt, young Boone shows up at his first audition and sings Slip .Around. " This series .should fold long before Byrd desecrates ".lambala-va' and "Y'our Cheatin Heart."
.Manimal (Friday, 9) is an enterprise of (literally) supernatural asininity, wherein a character wonders aloud, "Should 1 have myself committed, or is It possible that .someone is using animals as a formidable crime-fighting
Calling the Wi nners
There is, of course, no wa\ to ac-curatelv pick which of the new fall shows will win the battle of tfie Nielsen ratings, but there are a few guidelines Each vear major advertising agencies, including Dancer Fitzgerald Sample Inc.. offer their clients an analysis of new shows so they'll know where to put their money, though they're not alw.ivs on the mark DFS called Falcon Crest as a sure winner, but foresaw top-rated Simon and Simon getting knocked out of the ring their predictions are definitely worth noting Here are s<jme of the DFS calls for the 1983-84 prime-time seascjn:
Top Contenders: Hotel. Oh. Madeline: AfterMASH: Mr Smith: .Mammal
Even Money: The Yelloii Rose. Whi: Kids. Medstar. lie Got It .Made. .Jennifer Slept Here
Easy Knockouts: Ciitiei to Honsinn. hm Lot e and Honoi Lottcn
weapon.'" The answer: yes on both counts. The show stars an excellent British actor. Simon MacCorkindale as a profes.sor of criminology who turns into panthers, hawks, cats and what have you.vto take up where the baffled police leave off.
NBC will also be throwing us Bay Li-t\ Blues (Tuesday. 10), the story of a minor-league baseball team brought to you by Stephen Bochco. the .same guv who gave us Hill Sireet Blues. No pili;t was available for viewing as we went to pre.ss,
CBS: The network that rides the highe.st changes the lea.st. CBS. which has won the prime-time ratings war the past four years, has only five new shows this season. Two of these were not yet ready for screening. Emerald Poinl .\ A S (Monday, lU), with Dennis Weaver playing shades of Winds of War a naval-base commander who must balance work and family; and .AfterMASH. set after the Korean War with Harry Morgan. Jamie Farr and William Christopher recreating their roles .stateside.
Highlighting the CBS trio we saw is the adventure series Scarecrou and Mrs King (Monday. 8). starring Kate Jackson and Bruce (Bnng 'Em Back
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TV PREVIEW
Alive) Boxleitner. Scarecrow is Boxleit-ners Government-agent code name, while Mrs. King, played by the winsome .Miss Jackson, is a ^divorced mother who falls innocently, a la Alfred Hitchcock, into a spy chase before joining in semiprofessional partnership with Scarecrow. The show is obviously CBS's answer to the popularity of ABC's Hart to Hart and NBC's Remington Steele. And while disbelief must be suspended for the sake of real-life divorced mothers who yearn for a little excitement in their lives, Boxleitner and Jackson, returning in her first series since Charlie's Angels, at least make a winning pair.
Speaking of Charlie's Angels, one would think that show had ended the acting career of model Shelley Hack. Unfortunately, no. Now she is back as a dedicated young doctor who is part of a small-town medical team in Cutler to Houston (Saturday, 8). A publicity blurb announces that. "Their moral values and medical skills are tested as they treat local patients despite small-town suspicions," The presumption seems to be that small-town America is ac
customed to leeches and the bleeding bowl.
Whiz Kids (\\ednesday, 8) may score off the popularity of WarCames: both are basically computerized versions of Nancy Drew and the Hardy boys. These four whiz kids track down criminals with the aid of a computer named Ralf and a skeptical reporter who scoffs at their discovery of a real-estate swindle by telling them, "You guys have been watching too much television' (3ood point.
Admittedly; its better that Bette Davis and lesser lights are uxirking in TV than not working.
Cybill Shepherd hopes her career will bloom with The Yellow Rose.
ABC: The network s fall from the top of the ratings recently is reflected in its revamped schedule, which includes eight new series.
It's .\'ot Easy (Thursday. 9:.J0) is the best of the lot, bringing a lightly satiric touch to the veiy real plight of multiple divorce in the suburbs. Sometimes it's not ea,sy to follow who is doing what with wfiom here, but the cause is abetted by a dandy cast. It includes Ken Howard, the rangy, likable coach from The White Shadow: fetching come dienne Carlene (Best of the West) Watkins; Bert (Tattletales) Convy and Christine Belford, who does a nifty job as the classic hussy in the barnyard. When Carlene, Ken's ex, now married to Bert, discovers that Ken and Christine are an item, she confronts Ken with, "I thought we hated her." Ken smiles slightly. "I lied," he says. If viewers can get it all sorted out. It's Not Easy may be the sleeper of the season.
By ail means check out Hotel (Wednesday, 10), which is really Love Boat terra firma. Adapted from Arthur
6 Family Weekly September s i9h.i
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Emmanuel Leu is (r. u Hh brother Chris) has h(x>keda (kiry Coleman-sMe role in Webster.
TV PREVIEW
Haileys novel about the fabulous old St. Gregor\ of New Orleans, Hotel, set now in (California, stars Bette Davis doing Queen Elizabeth as the hosteler and James (Marcus Welby M O ) Brolin as the prince consort who keeps the place running.
The workings of even the grandest hotel are not exactly the stuff of high drama, and thus ihere are fatuous moments aplenty, as when Brolin tells an assistant who is falling for a nightclub singer, Youre losing your objectivity. That's death in the hotel game. " And anyone who has ever walked into a first<lass hotel without a credit card will hoot with hollow laughter when Brolin picks up the tab for the indigent singer.
So to heat up interest, Hotel takes us behind closed doors, where, in the debut show, Shirley Jones is having an affair with Pernell Roberts, and to really generate the steam, the ubiquitous Morgan Fairchild is on hand as an unhappy hooker with a heart of hardest silver.
The rest of ABC's offerings include (hmmmmrn, where have we heard this before?) a crack medical team! Medstar (Thursday, 8) tells of a team of paramedics who. among other things, rescue a pregnant woman from a wrecked auto teetering on the edge of a precipice and push cops around to get the job done. The hard-nosed honcho of this unit is Dr. Michael Cutter" Royce (not to be confused with Culler to Houston), who goes about reflecting angrily, "There's no reason for me to care this much." His assistants include a wise-guy squirt patterned after (jopher of Love Boat and played by, indeed, Alfie Wise, and an incredible hulk of a paramedic who. indeed, turns out to be none other than Lou Fer-rigno. Viewers with queasy stomachs are warned to expect fountains of spurting arteries. Otherwise its hard to buy a tough-but-caring surgeon with a hair
style that looks like a Jerrv' Vale party wig.
then comes Wete/er (Friday. 8 30). a sitcom starring real-life married couple Alex Karras and Susan Clark. Karras, a former all-pro tackle with the Detroit Lions, plays a former all-pro tackle who marries a socialite, a scenario reminiscent of Beauty and the Beast. He has forgotten a pledge to his old pal, a black running back, that he would take care of his family in case of an accident. Said accident occurs, and in walks just what you've all been waiting for the next Gary Coleman (Emmanuel Lewis). But while young Emmanuel is far less grating than Coleman. Karras and Clark both seem ill at ease in their roles.
Hardcastle and McCormick (Sunday. 8). are yet another unlikely team of sleuths. Hardcastle is a just-retired judge (Brian Keith) who once sent race-car driver Skid McCormick (Daniel Hugh-Kelly) up the river on a technicality. Now the judge wont lift his parole until Skid helps him track down ever\ crook that ever slipped through his fingers. Keith is an admirable screen staple, but there's an uneasy lynch-mob mentality about this one
Lottery^ (Friday, 9) picks up where The Millionaire left off light-years ago. Ben (Alias Smith and Jones) Murphy plays the administrator of Intersweep Lottery and goes about dispensing multi-million-dollar checks to troubled ticket-holders, while Marshall Colt as an R.S. agent tags along to see that the Government gets its cut. You'll lose if vou choose this little number.
Admittedly, in the end its better that Bette Davis and sundry lesser lights are working in television than not working at all. The sad part of it. though, is that prime-time television has not replaced movies at all. Rather, after years of brute calculation, it has succeeded in replacing the comic book. IW
Mark Goodman is a fomier leleiision u nlei for Time and New Times magazines
8 Family Weekly September 25 isss ,
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Stop the train," Mrs. Trencher cried. My prize diamond has been stolen!
As the train rolled through the Swiss Alps in splendor, passengers discussed the crinte over dinner. Nearly everyone was a suspect.
M. Poulet private investigator, however, suggested six prime suspects. James (2), the porter, returned Mrs. Trencher^ jewel box to her cabin. Henri (1), the chef, was upset over Mrs. Trencher^ comments about his soup and twice returned to the dining car to talk with her. Paul (3), the waiter, had every opportunity as he served dinner. Winston (5), the butter, dislikes wealthy Americans. Charles (6), the concierge, unhappy at his work after 30 years, has the motive but little opportunity Gibson (4). the valet, who'd love to be rich, shouldn't be ruled out.
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3 AJERfMIE MEANS OF B4T1W--N0 PURCHASE NECESSAPV b enter mtnut isdeemmg me Store coupon or Onem Express poster, inie your compieie name and addmss on a 3' x5" paolpaperalongymita3" >5" pace ol papii on rtncb you have bantomien ttit name at any pattiopabng product sbdwi n this advvtBemem Mail to The Grad Onem Express Sweepstakes, PO Box 44. New tofk. NY 0046. Enter as ollen as as you Mte but aacD entry must be malsd sepaidely and iscenad by Match 31.19B4. Nm reaponeilik kx losi or misdiracled man
4 Each Grand PtiR coneas ol a tOHlay dehne tram mp lor two (douPa occupancy) Includes axtaalmmywf local maw atport k) London; M nrgitt a London, baneportabon to Wnct via me Wnice Sinipkin Otam Expiiss; two nrgtib in Wnict: lianspona-ton b Ibns wa Ha Vknct Srmpkm Oram Expnse. two nghis a has: aKtaie tram fWa ID your local nwot airpon. Dekta hdWe. two iraMi a dw. sqhrssemg. Hwaiit bdals. strvroe taxes and trerslBfaareiaonduded
5 Wratts will be iMeded on or abom Septemtar 30.1964 a random diawags conductto by MaidstMUne. inc. an adipen-demiudgagotgawaiion. whose deouons are hnal
6 Odds ol wanag depend on me number ol enbas iicenad AP pnnswiHbeawaided.Wlnntrswilbenmitadbynwl luesan Ha SON asponsrOikty ol the priK waners One pnie k) a lamiiy No subsbbibon or transNr ol pmes psmfled. Wniais may Pe raquM k) skm *r> MMm m ekgmrhly and isteaet which inuM He returned wiHia 14 days after beagnoUad a wanr Wkvars gram permaeian to uie Harr name andxx phmogiaph or Mantis for pubkoly or adwrtwag purposes a conactxa wim Hhs or any oHai pramobon wHhout iMihpr compensation %ips nuBt Pe compatHt by June 30. BBS and am subact to awiiatkMy. H a mam was Ha mp It wM be awarded to hBHat parem or agar guardan
7 SwtepsiakesopentoaliasidemsormeUS Bytars or okter. except emptoyiei and Hair farniai of Lmi Bromis Company. Its subudaras and Marden-Kane. Inc m Hait agents. Swtep-stakes void wherever prohibitod or mstnctod by law An Fsdmal Stale and local laws and mguiaiions apply
8 Fm a bst ol Ha mayx pnie wmnets iGiand. 1st 2nd) stnd a Stomped. seo-adiHesMd envelope to Oram Expnu Wmnen P 0 Box 904. Long Island City. NY ttlOt Winiars lat anMaHa aliet September 30 BB4
250
STORE COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 31.1984 ! 250
Ti Deilti Leer *-1 reimcjrse you lo' ne *ace a'ue o' '-
COuDO C'uS Tt 'ijnflli"g j'ov OeO you ai"d rrnsuTf nave tcmp.ied * m 'he le-ms ni me cirei Casn <a'ue '00 o tc Leve- Brome's CoTjany Bo '385 C inrc- nwa 52734 L.nii une ccucor- PC Puicnase Good on y pn sukllCKT OISNMSHMC ligUID A-v ome- jse cpr-st rules 'raud
SAVE
254
when you buy NEW
SUNU6HT.
LIQUID
Radaam this coupon at your favorite store by March 31.1984 and be automatically entered Into The Great Orient
Sweepstakes Entry Form
Oly.
Zip.
250
150
mil 31317b
Express Mystery Sweepstakes.
STORE COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 31.1984
150
SAVE
15<
when you buy
Mrs.
Butterworths
II DllKr Lewer w reimburse you ro' the ace a'ue 0' '-
coupon p-us 7C nanSunQ p-QyiJed yO. and me donsjne' have complied with me rerms o' me o*le Cash va-ue 'OC o' 14 .ever Brolhes Cpmpany Bon '305 C: n|on lowa 52734 l mi' pne coupon pe' puChase Good only on MBS BlilTtkWOIlIH S SY8UP Any omer use constiiuies ''auc
Sweepstakes Entry Form
. State.
Re<leem this coupon st your favorite store by March 31.1984 and be automatically
entered into The Great Orient
150 Mystery Sweepstakes.
lllis 3fi0fl7E
150
STORE COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 31,1984
150
SAVE 15<
' when you buy 2 bars of
DOVE.
Redeem this coupon at your favorite store by March 31.1984 and be automatically
entered into The Great Orient
lg0 Express Mystery Sweepstakes.
To DiiKr Lever *- reimburse you 'c me 'ace <a ue o' coupon plus 74 nanc.itig p-jyiped yOu and 'he consume nave compi.eO nin me lermrs o' 'he otte' Cash va-ue' 'OC o' 14 Leve'Brolhe's Company Bo '305 Cmlon i5*a 52734 c-ui one couoor pe' pucnase Good on y on OOYt IA8 Any ome' uSe cpnsMules I'aud
Sweeostakes Entry Form
City.
Zip.
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250
STORE COUPON EXRRES MARCH 31.1984
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254
when you buy
wisr
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Is Dlinr levei * 'eimbu'se you ipr the 'ace a ue o' coupon plus 74 hanfliing p'ovOed you and ihe consume' have compiiefl wm me ie""s o' me oher Cash vaiue' '00 3' 'C uever B'Olhe's Conpany Bo '305 Cnnlori lowa 52734 l 'h i one coupon pe' pu'cnase Good only on NlSk HEWT DUTY lAUkOlY OETEHEIT Any olhe' use constitutes I'aud
Sweeostakes Entry Form
. Stale.
Redeem this coupon at your favorite store by March 31.1984 and be automatically
entered into The Great Orient
250 Express Mystery Sweepstakes.
mil 3E2E5fi
20c
STORE COUPON EXPIRES MARCH 31.1984
20c
SAVE
20<
when you buy
RNAL1DUCH.
Fabric Softener
Redeem this coupon at your favorite store by March 31.1984 and be automatically
1 entered into The Great Orient
200 ' Express Mystery Sikreepstakes.
Ii Dull) Levf 11' 'fimburse you 'or 'he 'ace a ue o'
Cduoon plus 71 hand, ng prpyded yOu and the cons jine' have corttpiied nth me ternrrs pt me oite' Cash va ue t tOCrc Lever B'Olhe's Company Box i305 C'mloh lowa 52734 ..mi one coupon oe' Purchase Good oniy on FMAl TOUCH fIHIC SOfTEkElt Any 3lhe' uSe consl'lules 'raud
Sweeostakes Entry Form
11111 3DlSlfi
9 mg "tar". 0.7 mg. ntcotme av. pcf cigarette. FTC Repon MAR. '83.
ANAB
YOUR
G EGO ALTER HAPPINESS?
By John E. Gibson
TRUE OR FALSE?
1. For many people, having money is a means to happiness.
2. People with high self-esteem tend to be unhappy.
3. What you eat and how others treat you may determine your momentary well-being.
4. Many peoples greatest enjoyment is spending money on other people-
5. Older people who are still working tend to be happier than those who are retired.
6. There are some life goals that can be
hazardous to your happiness.
ANSWERS
1. True. Many people think it is important to have enough money in order to be happy, according to an institute for Social Research study. "Enough money" is defined as being able to make the car, house and other payments and still have money to save, spend or splurge once in a while without suffering a financial hangover. The survey also indicated that children are a major source of happiness for many people.
2. False. A National Institutes of Health psychological study found that happy people are optimistic, well-adjusted, socially active and esteem themselves highly.
3. True. A Veterans Administration Medical Research Service study indicated that little things have a big influence on our sense of well-being, particularly on the happiness we feel at any given moment. For instance, social slights hurt our feelings, toothaches make us miserable, compliments Yaise our spirits, and eating a good meal leaves us satisfied.
4. False. In an Ohio State University psychological study, male and female subjects indicated that they would most enjoy receiving $1,000 or more unexpectedly. Other sources of happiness for them, in order of importance: receiving an excellent job offer; being on vacation; doing something nice for the family: having someone they admire and respect ask for their advice, making a really important discovery that would help people.
5. False. University of Michigan behavioral scientists compared older people* who still work with retired older people and concluded that there is little
difference in the amount of happiness and satisfaction each experiences. In fact, the activities of retired older adults differ little from those who are still working, with the exceptions that retired women are more likely to participate in social activities, retired men more likely to engage in active-leisure activities (golf, fishing, etc.) and that both sexes spend more time on passive-leisure activities, such as watching TV and, when retired, doing housework.
6. True A Universitv' of California study noted that a major reason for unhappiness in many individuals is that their expectations are unrealistically high. Unrealistic goals are unattainable and cant help but minimize a sense of wellbeing and self-esteem. We can't all be the best at everything the best-looking, best-dressed, smartest, highest achiever in our particular social or work settings. It is impossible for everybody to be No. 1. Unrealistic expectations make us feel like failures and are pitfalls to be avoided. IW
5 DCIRA POUNDS gOFCOME*NGniT
*25 POUNDS FOR THE PRICE OF 20*
Treat your dog to the new, exciting taste of Come N Get It. Real beef, cheese, liver and chicken flavors baked deep into every crunchy nugget. Right now, you can get 25% extra Come N Get It FREE in specially-marked bags at participating stores. Plus, when you clip the coupon below, you save 500 on any size bag of Come 'N Get It 4-flavor variety dog food.
Here^ an extra 500 to help you come'n get it!
sTpni ccxx>o e*piES I
SAVE50C
50<
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ON ANY SIZE PACKAGE OF COME N GET IT' DRY OOG FOOD OH COME N GET IT PUPPY FORMULA
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Needlework Spotlight
823
Thrfe classic blouses (or skirts or
pants Craft 832 In Si 10 to 18. ?! tat alte. Sue 12 34
bust bovi tied 2''- v^rds of 45
inch fabric raqlan 1 yards tailored 2 yards
Sirtiple crochet (iranny Sctuare" make a briyht se'l Craft 700 has directions for S M and L (1((2<I| lOilusive
Sew simple, comfort able apron with giant rose pocket Craft 214 has pattern (Sizes 38-40 42 inclusive) transfer, full directions
0
1
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700
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A regal peacrKk in cross stitch or needlepoint is destined to become an he'rltKim Craft 422 has trans (er color chart for lb x 21" design
832
935
.Hsi'
1ft 905
Sloped V.rap stole with hands t>Kki't' has coKhet directions Craft 823
499
afet"
A Lacy Sacque fi it Baby m kmt is a welcome gift Craft 905 has knit directions
This elegant lace cloth 5b inches in diameter is crocheted in motifs about 12 inches across the center Craft 935 has full crcKhet directions
Colorful, bouncy. 11 inch yarn dolls made from knitting worsted Craft 5M has full directions
697
Charming PiUow are easil. appligued or pieced from bright fabrics Craft 697 has pattern pieces (or Klower (iirl I)resden Plate and F3c iwer Basket
SwIrUng Leaves in cross stitch make a bright quilt Craft 499 has transfer directions
644
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Lflll 1111)11 111111111)1; Mni1111)7
A."/) iMiUiV'A 1
A dainty Crochet Dress tor tne
tiny tot. using 4 ply worsted yam Craft 644 has directions for Sizes 468 inclusive
A pert and saucy 18" kitten pillow 239-B has transfer full directions
llf^
898-B
'217
Rose and Pansy p< >th< ilders add colorful protection in the kite hen Craft 217 has trans fer for both directions
239-8
'''
A flower trimmed capelet crocheted I 4 ply knitting worsted in your favorite shades Craft 785 has directions (one size fits 816)
530
Cross stitch Lilacs bIcMim all Vc'ar on a prettv, quilt Craft 898-B has transfer for 12 motifs color chart, directions.
Send $2.50 phis 50C for potift and
ittem; (four patterns for $10.00); and $3.50 for each
1 to:
Family Weekly Magaalne P.O. Box 438. Dept. A-241 Mkhown Station, New York. N.Y. 10018
Include name, address, zip code and cratt number (New 'r'ofk State residents add sales tax I
0'134-The Needlenom Priawr. Directions lor over .10 Items tocrcK'hcl or knit plus
a knit and crochet section (or reference $3.50 a copy.
Patterns shown are available from this addrcaa only.
HE PROS AND CONS OF UNISEX INSURANCE
By John Hitchcock and Linda Elliott
for auto insurance, but they pay more for annuities and health and di.sability insurance.
Unisex proponents argue that this is a violation of women's civil rights. The law says you can't treat an individual as a member of a class.
even if the generalizations about that class are true," says .Judy Schub. director of public policy for the National Federation of Busine.ss and Profes-.sional Women's Clubs Inc.
The main argument of insurers defending sex-based policies is that with the
jathalie Norris was Tt) years old and I newly divorced I w hen she t(X)k a job with Arizona's Economic Security Department. The job not only provided her with a weekly paycheck, it promised a pension of S32(J a month on retirement for as long as she lived.
But Norris noticed that her employers pension plan promi-se,d men a slightiv larger chc*ck about S33 more a month, in fact.
She filed a suit gain.st the Arizona Committee for Tax Deferred .Annuity, and this summer, eight years later, the Supreme Court narrowK sided with Norris, ruling that it is illegal for employer pension (>lans to [)ay smaller monthlv bcmefits to women than to men. Although the decision isn't retroactive the now-retired Norris won't get that extra S3 J a month it brings the countiA a step closer to the age of unisex insurance. And there are bvo bills pending in Congress that would eliminate sex discrimination for all kinds of insurance, including life, automobile, annuity and health and di.sability insurance.
At the heart of the uni.sex insurance debate lie the insurance industiy's actuarial tables, those statistical averages u.sed to predict the likelih(K)d of a policyholder filing a claim or ciraw ing a benefit. Insurers fit their clients into risk categories on the basis of certain characteristics: Age and K'cupafion are among the favorites, but gender is perhaps the mo,st popular.
Statistically, there's no substitute for gender." .savs Mavis Walters, a member of the .American Academy of .Actuaries, Women as a group live longer than men. tend to drive more .siifelv and end up in hospitals more often be-cau.se of pregnancy. As a result, women often pay less
hihii Hili hon li N (I ri'ixifUf sfMunl-i:inii in hiisiniss ami hnumv. anti Linila Ellioii i\ a laii slmlcnt ai ilw I niursiiK Ilf Mil Innan
Today and for over 105 years..
Quaker Oats
One of natuies most perfect foods for all the right reasons!
No Sugar Added Low Sodium
No Preservatives No Cholesterol
Whole grain Fiber
Great laste About 5< a Serving
FREE
Quaker Oats Heritage Cookie Tin Offer
WITH TWO HERITAGE TIN PURCHASE SEALS M 75( FOR POSTAGE AND HANDLING OR 3 WITH ONE HERITAGE TIN PURCHASE SEAL.
See specially marked packages. Good while supplies last.
Cut along red dotted line for 30< coupon 5564
c 14S3 The Quaker Oats Company
STORECOUPON NO EXPIRATION DATE
KTMUI; As OJ' igent nay acctfai s couao'' ra :s wiws ociy *16^ 'eCWTeo an lie spec'tiM 3tfljc;i5) Qjd'e' * i -e-ntiuise yot O' It'S 'ace vSje -I S cojcon piuS 7C '0' IjnCiing Aiy ieei use "lay const Me -aua A,ie-juate prpc' 0* pufdase nus? :e sutmmefl j3on -ecues! CjStomei pays a.ny lax This coupon s .o c i lanstei'ed, assigied. rep'oouced. tiwed, kei'sed 'estnciec. o' pir/iiMed by law CWr ;bCd pniy n D S A. and military comnissai es and eicnanges. Cash .ai.e OO'i Omy retawrs and Quake- autnonac ciearng fixises send to Thy Quake' Oa's Company 115 Comnerce Dr ve Oak Brook. IL 60521 T(MS Of mU: Redeemable :niy cr 'fte bu'-cnase oi specd'ed b'Odud'Si Any jiner use may youi ai' coupcis suD-imiHed Id' edempiior and surn coubcnsmaybeconirscaled Um.tort
I
10
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556^
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30
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Two packages any size Quick or Old Fashioned Quaker Oats
i m coubcnsmavbeconnscaiec Lim.tort .
I 2 wss I tcubon pe' I'ansacnon e '983 QOC I
Cut along blue dotted line for 10'coupon
One package any size Quick or Old Fashioned Quaker Oats
pas,sage of the bvo bill.s pending in Congres.s, eveiAone may pav more money. Daniel Ca.se. an actuar>- for the American Council of Life Insurance. says that making pension payouts for women equal to men's would cost pension-plan .s|)on,sors and insurance companies about 51 billion to S2 billion a vear.
Unisex pricing in auttimo-bile insurance, where voung women tvpicallv eiijov a sizable discount, would result in adjustments approaching $700 million a year, according to the American Academv of Actuaries. 'VearK premiums for a 2;T-vear-old woman, for
Insurers say unisex insurance may cost everyone more money
in.stance. could ri.se as miii h as S3.37 in Sacramento. Calif.
.And unisex insiiraiue might change the conditions under which pensions .ire offered. Before the Arizona state agenc\' ai)i>ealed its lower-court loss to Norris, it removed the lifetime annuitv o[)tion she'd chosen from the state's list of retirement benefits
Women are exfxvted to hrnefit from unisex [)ricing, however, in major medical and di.sabiliw income cov-I'Mge where thev now pay on the average about .3(1 percent more than men. Summing u[) the s[)ectrum of likely ch.inges overall, the .Academv of .Actuaries' Walters preiiicts that "economically, women will lose."
Unisex proponents ha\e a hard time accepting such predictions. For one thing, tfiev suspect the insurance indii.v tfv's cost estimates are exaggerated. Proponents [foint to legislation banning sex dis-criminiition in housing, em-plovment and lending, where the changes haven't brought about the costs their oppo nents envisioned
Ultimatelv. thev argue, economic co.st isn't what is important. Explains Si. huh: "This is a civil-rights is.sue Anvtime someone has trouble st'eing that. 1 tell them to substitute race' for sex' That makes it cle.ir' FW
Famiu Weekly September .5 ms 13
BRIGHT
Fresh Clean Ta^ Low 1
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
Fresh Clean Taste Low Tar
OW TO BEAT THE BROWN-BAG BLUES
If your daily rations of peanut butter and jelly or tuna on r\'e are making you feel boxed in. why not .sack them and try our delicious new lunchtime combinations instead.
CNEESE TRIO SANDWICH
2 alice* mixed-graln bread Muatard: O^on, coarw seed or bot
2 tablespoons cream cheese or rkolta 1 slice Emmenlaier or Jarlsberg cheese I sike Cheddar or Havaiti cheese
Few sprigs curly endive or red-leaf lettuce
1. Spread mixed-grain bread slioe.s with the selected mustard and then spread with cream cheese. On one slice of spread bread, place a piece of Emmen-taler or Jarlsberg cheese, another of Cheddar or Havarti, Top with endive or red-leaf lettuce. Top with second bread slice, ('ut in half, wrap securely, and chill if time permits.
2. Serye with fresh vegetable crudites and an apple. Hot or iced tea makes a good accompaniment. Makes I sen'ing
ROMAN REPAST
2 cups mixed lettuce greens
3 slices mozznrelia or smoked mozzarella cheese
4 cherry tomatoes, crisscross star cut
4 slices pepperoni
3 hot pickled peppers
4 pickled mushrooms 4 short carrot sticks 2 radishes
2 olives Red-wine vinegar OUveoii
Freshly ground black pepper
1. In a serv'ing-size plastic con-tner with tight-fitting lid, place a bed of lettuce leaves. Arrange mozzarella or smoked mozzarella cheese, cherry tomatoes, p^per-oni, pickled peppers, pickled mushrooms, carrol slicks, radishes and olives on lettuce.
2. Sprinkle all with a little red-wine vinegar, olive oil and a few twists of fresh pepper. Cover con-taiTWPJiihtly and chill.
'i. Pac^ith some bread sticks or sliced/Italian bread, a bunch of grapes, macaroon and beverage of choice Makes I serving
By Marilyn Hansen
HAtfSKSiOHBSwarmy
Tomymm
nmwm ON SUGAR.
nyNUTNswrnwcAimuFNumsmn.^
We know what youie thinking. How can Whafs more, Halfisies cereal has all the
acerealwithhalfthesu^ofmost gcx^nessofcrunchycom,crispy
sugar-coated cereals 5/itf have rice, plus 9 essential vitamins
the neat, sweet taste kids love?
Simple.
Hbu see, Hales cereal isnt only sweetened with sugar... f also sweetened wim NutraSweet**A natural tasting sweetener that puts back ^ sweetness of me sugar we took out
and minerals. Meaning Halfsies cereal not on^ tastes good to your child... it S good for your child.
Why not try Quaker Halfsies cereal out with your child? Mfe think youV both be convinced. Itls one sweet way to cut downonsugac
25W
i QumR
for the face value of this coupon plus 7( I when accepted from your retail customers *| in accordance with our redemption policy _ (copy available on request) and on the pur- I chase of products(s) specified. Only retailers and Quaker authorized clearing houses send to: The Quaker Oats Company, 815 Commerce | Drive, Oak Brook, IL 60521. LIMIT ONE _ COUPON PER TRRNSACnON. Void if trans I
ferred, assigned, copied, taxed, licensed, or
where prohibited. Good only in U.S.A.,
A.P.O.s, F.P.O.s Cash value OOIC. C1983Q0C Ij
NERRING-APPLE-BEAN SALAD
I cup cooked dark red kidney beans, rinsed and drained Vi cup pickled herring tidbits in wine sauce, undrained
1 Golden Delicious apple, cored and diced
2 tablespoons diced red onion 2 tablespoons chopped celery '/2 tablespoon vegetable oQ
Dash salt, or to taste Freshly ground black pepper
Lettuce leaves
Whole-rye crisp bread slices
1. Combine Ix'ans. herring and liquid, apple, onion, celeiy: mix well. .Add vegetable oil, salt and pepper: mix well, then chill.
2. To bring to lunch, pack into widemoutfied thermos container and seal Pack lettuce leaves .separately to eat with salad. Serve with slices of crundi> wholerxe crisp bread. Makes I semng
TURKEY TARRAOON
2 slices mixed-grain bread Mayonnaise A teaspoon fresh or dry tarragon leaves '/4 lb. thinly sliced smoked turkey
Freshly ground black pepper 2 thin slices cranberry Jelly Romaine lettuce leaves
1. Spread slices of mi.xed-grain bread with mayonnaise and sprinkle with tarragon. Place turkey on top of one slice; grind a little pepper on top. Cover with slices of cranberr> )oll> romainc lettuce leases and srvond slice of bread. Cut sandwich in half: wrap well.
2. Good go-alongs are fresh pineapple wcxJges with a sprinkle of chopped crystallized ginger, a raisin-spice cookie and a container of milk or a Ixrttle of mineral water. Makes I sernng
LAYERED VEGCTABLE SANDWICH
2 slices mixed-grain bread 2 taMespoons mayonnaise Vi cup thinly sliced zucchini Vi cup thinly sliced broccoli Vi cup thinly sliced tomato Vi cup thinly sliced bell pepper, red or green 2 thick slices blue cheese 1 hard-cooked egg, sliced Freshly ground black pepper
1. Spread slices of mixed-grain bread with mayonnaise. Layer zucchini, broccoli, tomato and bell pepper on one slice of spread bread. Top with blue cheese and e^. Season with pepper and cover with second slice of bread Cut sandwich in half, wrap securely and chill.
2. Pack some plain yogurt, a little brftw n sugar or lionev' and a claster of grapes. Serve with a container of grapefruit juice.
Makis sen ing
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i\NTED: HCW-TOS FOR ADS THAT SELL
By Linda Vilbrosa
Whether youre searching for a housekeeper, look' ing for a lost pet or trying to sell anything from a horse to a house, the newspaper classifieds can be an excellent way to do your advertising. According to the Newspaper Advertising Bureau (N.A.B.), about 58 million Americans
68 percent of all newspaper readers
scan the classifieds each day. And placing an ad is quick, easy and inexpensive.
At the Fort Myers News-Press in Florida, for instance, you can place an ad by phone or in person as late as 5 P.M. the day before you want it to appear. (Most newspapers have a 24- to 48-hour deadline.) A salesperson will make suggestions, including how many days it should run, depending on the type of item or service youre advertising. Most ads cost from $5 to $15 for three lines running for three to seven days. (Price depends on circulation, market competition and the number of days the ad appears.) You can pay for the ad right ayyay or be billed Py mail after it appears.
To m^e your classified ad more effective, Eric Anderson, vice president of classified advertising at the N.A.B., recommends the ad be at least three lines long and as detailed as possible. For example, when placing an ad to sell a car, you should always list the manufacturer, model, year and price. Buyers might want to know if the car has special features [such as an air-coriditioner or a tap^eck], he explains, so if youre trying to sell a $3,000 car, its worth spending a dollar or two more on extra space for more description.
Price is a particularly important detail to include. "When you leave it out, people suspect you did so because its very high, says Dick MacDonald, president of The MacDonald Classified Services Inc. in Lafayette, Ind. Ads should also include your phone number and the hours you can be reached.
Linda Viliarosa is a freelance writer who sold a car through the classified ads.
1 6 Fa.MILV WkKKLV StPTt.MBKR J.i . lys l
(Your name and address arent needed.) You' might also want to set limited hours for people to call. Dean Welsh, classified advertising manager at The Regisler in Santa Ana, Calif., tells of a man trying to sell a trailer through the classifieds who received 50 calls before 7 A.M. the day after his ad ran.
What are some of the most common mistakes people make with their ads? Too many abbreviations, says Rita Heit-ler, classified ad manager of Camden, N J.s Courier-Post. People abbreviate to get in more words, but this can make the ad confusing, she explains. Exp *or example, could stand for experienced, expensive or even expert. Heitler advises using only the most well-known shortcuts, like St for street or for and.
Also avoid employing vague phrases like in ideal condition, a perfect
**Don*t make dcdms that sound si^ it the ad isn*t totalfy believable, the reader will just ignore it**
neighborhood and other descriptions that could only be considered a matter of opinion. Instead of perfect neigh borhood, you should say, close to schools and shopping centers, says MacDonald.
The author of the ad featured abov did just about everything wrong. Tlie abbreviations he used are almosrim-possible to decipher, he doesnt'quote prices and he forgot to mention his louse number. Even worse, he made a false claim: After all, who ever heard of an heirloom thats never been used? If i^our ad doesnt sound absolutely be-ievable, the reader will just ignore it, says Dick MacDonald.
Knowing how long to run your ad requires some strategy, too, depending on what and where youll be advertising. Most ads should run for at least three days, advises the N.A.B.; some items, though, like real estate, require much more time. And if youre advertising in a newspaper with a lai^ circulation, the N.A.B. suggests a seven-day run, for maximum market penetration.
If you pay ahead for an ad to appear for a certain number of days and the item is sold before then, most newspapers wont hesitate to remove the ad and give you a partial refund, according to Anderson. RV
WORK
955
Quick and Colorful
IUNIV FMCITVOU
mv im IS TRUE
HEART IS VOURS
lltaiWAVS II TRUE
III NEVU Till V9U ME BEAUTiFUl 401
Nf-
Charming crossstitch flowers trim guest towels Craft 401 has transfer color chart for h motifs Circle of roses in cross stitch for round or square pillow tops Craft 2% has transfer for 2 motifs, color chart
2%
Lacy star is fascinating to crochet Craft 928 has crochet directions for 18 inch center
Knit a ripple afghan on a circular needle from left-over 4 ply yams. Craft 955 has full knit directions
Kitchen sampler in bright cross stitch Craft 322 has transfer, color chart for 9" x 16" panel
Easysew cobbler with appli qued owl pocket Craft 481 has pattern for one size (1418). full directions
481
A /
Our KiTchen is a ' warim and pleasant spot Where friends father, to chat and | Jaufh a lot/
o
322
The Gingham Dog and Calico Cat in simple applique stand watch on Babys coverlet Craft 453 has pattern pieces, full directions for 36" X 44" quilt
/
453
5831
Soft yarn dolls with easy crochet clothes Craft 5831 has directions for 10" dolls
Crocheted slippers for tiny toes Craft 597 has crochet directions for 2 bootees
u
/ /
597
))h
238
282
Quaint and charming doll hides the toaster Craft 282 has pattern pieces, full directions
Amusing country style barnyard potholders Craft 238 has transfer, full directions
ft
Pattern* shown are available from this address only.
21
r 1
Q-134
Q-134. Slumbertime Coverlets, a
prize collection of 24 quilts for cribs and children's beds $3.50 a copy. Q-132, To Give or Keep, has full directions for 40 items in Crochet. Knit. Sewing and Embroidery, plus transfers $3.50 a copy.
Send $2.50 plus 50C for postage and handling for each pattern, (four patterns for $10.00): and $3.50 for each book to:
Family Weekly Magazine P.O. Box 438, Dept. A-230 Mkkown Statkm, N.Y., N.Y. 10018
Shown abaw are three o the replicas in one of the many ways you might display them in your home or office.
Come let your imagination take wing, let your spirit soar, as you embark on one of the most thrilling and memorable collecting adventures of all time! For here, thundering out of the past and into your own private sculpture gallery are the Great Aircraft of History!
This is a collection which dazzles the eye, captures the imagination, and instills an incomparable pride of ownership. For here in authentic, hand-crafted pewter are precise scale replicas of the planes which comprise an honor roll" of aviation. Indeed, these 12 airplanes will forever stand among the most significant in history!
Flying Machines That Have Shaped the Course of Modem Times
These airplanes are more than the greatest mechanical marvels of their age. They shaped the course of modem history, revolutionized world travel, and pioneered mankind s journey into space.
From Kitty Hawk to Outer Space
Of course, mankind has yearned to fly since the davim of history, but it took two ingenious young Americans-the Wright Brothers-to give wings to mans eternal dream of flight. The. Wright s rickety, yet soundly-designed Flyer actually flew for only 120 feet and 12 seconds. But it marked one of the most important milestones in the history of the human race.
Here, too, is the Sopwith Camel, the most successful British fighter of the First World War. It could maneuver with extraordinary speed making it a lethal foe. Indeed, it is a Sopwith Camel that is credited with downing the infamous German ace, Manfred von Richtofen, the Red Baron.
Here also is the Lockheed Lightning. This is the plane our pilots vowed would "pay 'em back" for Pearl Harbor. And it did - destroying more enemy aircraft in the Pacific than any other fighter!
And never to be forgotten is that modem supersonic marvel, the Concorde. This graceful giant is so
Announcing...GREAT AIRCRAFT OF HISTORYA collection of authentic hand-crafted pewter scale replicas of twelve legendaiy aircraft.
Replicas shown much smaller than actual sizes
range up to a full 8 in wingspan or length.
aerodynamically efficient that it doesnt even require high-lift devices such as wing flaps or sbts, which are standard equipment on other planes.
The DC-3...the famed Cypper...the 707...the Hellcat...the F-15...all these great aircraft are included in this historic collection! In all, it is a sweeping panorama of the history of flight, right up to and including the Space Shuttle, which is probing the last frontier - outer space.
Authentic Scale Replicas Hand-Crafted in Fine Pewter
There is probably no other medium which so perfectly suits these planes as does pewter. It is prized among collectors for its classic elegance and dignity. Like the planes honored in this collection, its value is destined to stand the test of time.
Each plane will be authentic in scale and range up to a full 8" in wingspan or length. Each will be authentically reproduced down to tl?e smallest detail. Moreover, each plane will be lovingly hand-finished and hand-polished by master craftsmen.
Accompanying the collection will be a fascinating historical booklet explaining each plane's development and the reasons for its permanent pl^e in aeronautic history. Reading this information will add immeasurably to your enjoyment, for you will be able to cite fascinating, little-known facts about each plane to the many admirers of your collection.
An Exceptional Value Available only from the Danbury Mint
The original issue price of each of these Great Aircraft of Hbtoiy is a remarkable value at only $45, which includes shipping and handling. Judging by the price of pewter pieces generally avail>le, comparable sculptures would sell for much more. Yet thanks to this direct-by-mail offer, we save on "middle-man" costs and can pass the savings along to you.
But perhaps even more inrportant there are no comparable" pewter sculptur^ for this collection is truly one of a kind. Each replica has been commissioned exclusively for the series by the Danbury Mint They will be available only by advance reservation. None will be sold separately and none will be available in stores, not even the finest galleries.
Convenient Monthly installments Satisfaction Guaranteed
To reserve your collection, you need send no money now. The twelve replicas will be issued at the rate of one every two months. You will be billed for each replica in two convenient monthly installments of $22.50 each, or you may charge each monthly installment to your VISA or MasterCard.
If you should receive any replica you are not completely satisfied with, you may return it upon receipt for replacement or refund. And, you may cancel your subscription at any ume.
Please Act Promptly
For production planning purposes, we ask that your attached reservation application be returned no later than November 30,1983.
As you look at these photographs. 1 think you can visualize the dignity and grace, the decorative and conversational value these replicas will bring to your home or office. They combine everything that makes a collection coveteda treasured metal... magnificent artistic skill...extraordinary hand-craftsmanship in every detail... plus a theme that captures the imagina-tioh and uplifts the spirit by honoring one of mankinds greatest achievements - tfie miracle of flight
This is as rare a combination of attractions as you are likely to find in one collection. Indeed, this is a unique collecting opportunity the likes of which may not pass your way again! To avoid disappointment, please return the reservation apprlication toclay.
RESERVATION APPLICATIONGREAT AIRCRAFT OF HISTORY
The Danbury Mint 47 Richards Avenue P.O. Box 5260 Norwalk. Conn. 06856
Please return by November 30,1983. Limit one set per subscriber.
Please accept my reservation application to the Great Aircraft of History. I understand that this is a collection of authenbc hand-crafted pewter scale replicas of twelve legendary aircraft I need send no money now. The collection will be issued at the rate of one replica every two months. I will pay for each replica as billed in two convenient monthly installments of $22.50 each. Any replica 1 am not completely satisfied with may be returned upon receipt for replacement or refund, and this subscription may cancelled by either party at any time.
Name.
PLEASE PtriNT CLEARLY
Address.
City.
State.
.Zip.
Check here if you want each monthly installment charged to your: MasterCard VISA
Credit Card No.
Signature
Expiration Date
Allow 8 to 12 weeks after payment for initial shipment
COPING WITH ALZHEIMERS
DBy Ellyn Spragins
uring the past few decades, medicine and technology have conspired to push back the mortality rate, increasing the odds of a longer life. Whats more, due to medical advances, youll probably enjoy the extra time in good health.
However, for about 1.5 million people 65 years a id over, the occasional forgetfulness and fuzzy thinking characteristic of growing older and often considered harmless can mean something serious; a slow destruction of the mind and body, known as Alzheimers disease. This incurable ailment whose cause remains unknown eventually renders its victims helpless.
Its opening stages arent all that frightful," says Jerome Stone, founder of the Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders Association (A.D.R.D.A.) and the spouse of an Alzheimers sufferer. One begins to misplace things, can't balance the checkbook, forgets things. You feel it is a transient thing, but then comes a personality change
Though Alzheimers manifests some of the same signs as senility, its a far more devastating illness. For example, Alzheimers can span 20 years and can begin as early as a persons late 40s or
Ellyn Spragins is a freelancer based in ,\eu Yorh Cily
early 50s. During much of that time, it snarls the victims thoughts and emotions, leaving the body healthy. In my wifes case. continues Stone, .where she was once very sweet and thoughtful, now there are tantrums, bits of envy. The victim nearly always becomes hostile as he misperceives events or is angered by his degeneration. Restlessness and sleep disturbances develop, and often hallucinations torture the sufferer.
Later in the illness, the disease assaults the body and mental functions cease altogether. At the time she was diagnosed as having Alzheimers 13 years ago. Evelyn Stone played the violin and piano and spoke three languages. She is now tut fed," says her husband. She has to be turned in bed In addition, she has no control of her bladder and bowels.
There is no cure for Alzheimers, nor is there any drug available to curb the symptoms. Furthermore, this degenerative ailment leaves its victims vulnerable to other illnesses, some fatal.
But the victims arent the only casualties. Because in time Alzheimers robs patients of the ability to do even simple tasks, spouses and families face years of around-the-clock physical demands and emotional abuse from afflicted partners. "When you have an Alzheimers patient, you have to watch for the second patient," warns Rachel Billington, administrative director at A.D.R.D.A., whose 68 chapters in the U.S. offer information on the disease and hold family-support meetings. "Many family members become so restricted and so burdened that they are prone to heart problems."
Although caring for Alzheimers patients in their initial stages is rigorous for family members, its usually not impossible. But money becomes a problem. For Hilda Pridgeon of Minneapolis. whose husband was found to have Alzheimers at the age of 50, there was little support. I couldnt stay home to care for my husband because we, couldnt live on the little bit of Social' Security and pension that he got not
with a child still in school and a home to maintain, she explains. I wasnt going to make it on a secretarys salary, so while he was still able to be left alone, I went to night classes, got up at 4 in the morning to study and got my degree in two and a half years. Its been that kind of rat race just to survive
There comes a time when one person or family cannot go it alone. Good custodial care, in a nursing home, is often the best choice. The drawback however: Neither private insurance nor Medicare absorb this cost. Only after a patients family bankrupts itself does Medicaid step in.
This grim picture may finally be changing, as more research is devoted to the ailment. Although Alzheimers was first observed in 1906, for years doctors considered it a rare disorder, unconnected to senility. Then, in the 60 s, the connection between the two was made, and slowly funds have trickled in to support research.
Most of the funding has come through the National Institutes of Health. Five years ago research funds totalled about $2 million to $3 million: In 1983 at least $20 million of public-health funds will be spent for Alzheimers research. The Chica^based A.D.R.D.A. has begun to chip in as well. Last year it granted $100,000 for research and this year it is shooting for $250,000.
As encouraging as this financial support is, there is still relatively little known about how and why the disease occurs. Alzheimers disease is identified only by eliminating other conditions, such as alcoholism, depression and drug intoxication. All can produce the memoty lapses and cognitive mishaps associated with Alzheimers. Even the latest diagnostic tools only aid minimally in spotting the disease, and its not until doctors look at the brain tissue, usually during autopsy, that they can confirm that the patient suffered from Alzheimers.
The disease marks the brains outer layer in two abnormal ways. First, small nerve fibers called neurofibrillary tangles develop, which under a microscope resemble twisted strands of yarn. And neuritic plaques, pieces of disintegrating nerve cells, show up, looking like a cottony spot on the brain. Such tangles and plaques occasionally mar normally aged brains, but Alzheimers victims have many more.
So far plaques and tangles havent helped explain what causes Alzheimers. But several theories have been sparked. One is that a virus may play a role. Some doctors feel heredity may also be a factor. A positive step is that researchers recently uncovered information on Alzheimers effect on the body, which may lead to drugs that could treat the illness, if not cure it.
In 1976 researcher Peter Davies presented his observation that Alzheimer-diseased brains have a chemical defi
ciency. So doctors and pharmacists are trying to increase levels of one particular chemical called acetylcholine in several ways. Some experiments have supplemented patients diets with choline and lecithin, the raw materials of acetylcholine without significant results. Other scientists believe that the enzyme that processes choline and lecithin, called choline acetyltrans-ferase, should be increased because it too is in short supply in victims.
Increasing the enzyme level looks like a promising lead. But approaching the problem from a different angle by extending the life of the acetylcholine already in the body has thus far yielded more encouraging results. During experimental studies, the drug physostigmine has been shown to improve patients memories and ability to recall words. However, the drug has a long way to go before it meets F.D.A. requirements: For one thing, it causes cardiac irregularity and gastrointestinal disturbances, and its effects only last four hours.
Physostigmine is a very tricky drug," says Dr. Robert Terry of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York. If you give a little too little, there is no effect. And if you give a little too much, there is severe toxicity.
Despite all this interest in raising the level of acetylcholine, the first drug to really help Alzheimers victims may not affect that chemical at all. The drug
A hopeful note: More money than ever before is being channeled into Alzheimer's research.
pramiracetan, which has been used in recent tests, seems to offer the most hope. We showed measurable improvements in a number of factors psychological, behavioral, overall pattern as measured by the doctors and families, says Dr. Robert Hodges, vice president of scientific and medical affairs, Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Company in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Though the pramiracetan test was not controlled checked to be sure that patients were responding to the drug, not the attention Hodges, who worked on the tests, is encouraged by the treatments effect.
In the meantime, other researchers are working on treatments. "The answer to this disease does not lie with someone in the back room hovering over the microscope, says Dr. Thomas Burks, head of the department of pharmacology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine. "It is a building of knowl^e from a number of different disciplines which is then pieced together." rW
2 ) FA-MILY WttXLV SEPTEMBER 25 19ai
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B^traight
l^ALK ABOUT rCOUPLES AND CONVERSATION
By Stephani Cook
Mortimer Adler
Failure lo com-municQie can be lethal to a loi e relationship. In many cases it's not that we don't know what to say hut that we don'/ know how to sa\ It. And some of us also fail to listen well when It's "the other person's turn to talk Mortimer Adler, whose new hook. How to Speak/How to Listen (.Macmillan). is a son of companion to his tmennial bestseller How to Read a Book (Simon and Schuster), spoke to F.amilv VV'f.kki.n about how to have a productn e coin ersatioii on the most intimate leiel
Q: Mr. Adler, how do we most often fail in having a 'heart-toheart talk "',
A: Bv not being clear enough about hou we feel and even less clear about how the other person feels,
Q: Then it is just a matter of saying what's on your mind'i
A: That's onl\ one part of communicating. Everv'one brings to a conversation his own vocabularc and his own sense of what words mean, and until you and the person you're talking with agree on the definitions of the words you both use. no communication takes place. This is also true of using examples to make your point, because they can be treacherous in their inexactness. When you use an example, you should always ask, "Do you see the point of my example^"
Q: This all sounds ver>' rational.
A: You must learn lo conduct even the mo.st emotional conversation in the coolest manner; you don't clear up emotional problems by becoming more emotional about them.
Q: So you shouldn't have, discussions when you're angry or continue them when you lose your temper'.
A: I think losing one's temper is one of the worst things that can happen. You say things you don't really mean, and there is a nastiness that can hurt the other person.
Q:So how do you go about insuring that the most productive interchange will occur^
.Siei>h(ini ('i)iik IS ((>-<iiiiti(ir nt Hcalth\ Sfx .\ii(i Kia'pmij It That Ua\ iSnuon and .Sihusieri
A: When I w-ant to have a serious conversation with someone I love, 1 don't do it w'hen my emotions are hot. I clariK' what my emotions are and what questions to ask before I set a time for a
heart-to-heart talk.
Q: You have said that marriages break up when conversations fail rather than when sex fails. That wonderful ob.ser-vation cuts \'erv close to the bone for
most of us.
A: V\'hen people can't settle differences by talk, they settle them by force or by fraud. This is true for the world as well as for marriage. RV
Family Weekly September l>5 i983
Bald? Thinning? Worried? Read
BAUMESS CONQUHiHI
Medical Breakthrough Successful In More Than 95% Of All Cases!
by MIchMl J. Roh, noted Rttoarchtr A Hair Thtrapltl
n
Dear Friend Showi rtiulU ol hiir lupplmtttlon program
It was with great pleasure that I answered an invitation to bring you news of a remarkable breakthrough lor baldneaa:
A triumph ol what I believe can be called nothing less than surgical skill and daring Imagination, combined in a program that has been (aated on over 1000 fortunate men who needed our help ...and could afford the enormous cost of attending our private clinic. In fact, since I was involved in its development from the very beginning, I am pleased to announce that now...
IF YOU ARE BALD IF YOU ARE CONCERNED ABOUT
EXCESSIVE PREMATURE HAIR LOSS
OUR HAIR 8UPPLANTATI0N PROGRAM OFFERS YOU A WAY TO ACTUALLY REVERSE THE SHAME ANO SUFFERING OF IAL0NE88 FOREVERI
Even If you are completely bald... even if you haven't had a strand of hair on your scalp in 20 years... with our HAIR 8UPPLANTATI0N PROGRAM you can look strong, virile, and desirable again... with hair that commands respect, the kind of nair women love to run their fingers through.
15 YEARS OF HAIR RESEARCH ANO OVER JIO MILLION SPENT IN SEARCH OF AN ANSWER TO BALDNESS
My HAIR SUPPLANTATION research began more than 15 years ago In England where I workeowlth some of the most respected nair therapists and practitioners in all of Europe To be fair, some people don't consider baldness a major problem, but you wouldn't know It from talking to most men who are bald, going bald, or worried about losing their hair. To these men loss of hair means untimely aging, endless embarassment.
problems with confidence, and ultimately, depression.. . which is why no less than SIO MfLLION has been invested worldwide by many independent companies and researchers in fhe BATTLE AGAINST BALDNESS. On both sides of the Atlantic, doctors, chemists, and biologists joined the work...
THEN CAME THE BREAKTHROUGH OVER 95. SUCCESS IN SUBJECTS WITH MALE PATTERN BALDNESS
Thanks to the tireless efforts of dedicated researchers and the selfless courage of early test subjectsthe mystery of HAIR SUPPLANTATIOIf was unraveled At long last we had found the power to stop the tragedy of baldness in its tracks and help almost any man to a bright new beginning-from 25-year-olds with sligntly receding hairlines to middle-aged men with jusl a norseshoe of hdir left on their scalps. With years of development and testing... our research was proven out. And among men who have visited our clinic in New York City-even those with so-called irreversible" male pattern baldnesswe have achieved a consistent success rate of over 95%.
THE HAIR SUPPLANTATION D^SCOVEP'
A PATENTED MEDICAL COMPOUND
"Simplicity itself", the biological mechanisms involved are too complex to be adequately explained in this limited space. I have therefore aufhorized a detailed, step-by-step, photo-illustrated reportJitled BALDNESS CDNQUERED. on the HAIR 8UPPLANTATIN PRDGRAM and the research effort for AN ANSWER TD THE PRDBLEM DF BALDNESS, now available to those who wish to seethe PDSmVE PRDDF in the privacy and comfort of their homes... withouttheexpenseoftravelingtoNewYork for a private consultation
F0LLICIN-NH3 PREPARATION FOR HAIR
F0LLICINNH3PesafatiorF:' Hai' IS a sea p nvigo-atoi spec ally to"'i..iaed !c p-py ce scierti'icSjpcor'to'ConMjec Por^ia Hair g-p.ytc Hai-pounsPnepr aidhar maicenarce Apphec preci v tonesca p.yne-eii s neesec!-nos:-F0LLICINNH3s jpcPOP spec fic PI cto-cjtrer:g'o..c .soinsp.. cki, loproro'eessenpalpplPQical activiv e-iePOLLI'CIN-NHS'eg "'eneipsinso'eihat nafoiicesare prope-lv serviced Dy ne -picroscppic capiianesrHa! carry t*-e chernicai pjlpino plocss necessa'v'o-BEAUTIFUL HAIR, F0LLICIN NH3:Quiies"PClv its coivMaiyOLPeectonscrea Peattifjl HEALTHY HEAD OF HAIR!
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PREPARATION FOR HAIR
With positive results in over 1000 cases, our key HAIR SUPPLANTATION discovery is a medical compound, developed and patented by a major unaffiliated drug company The miracle is that its use in the HAIR SUP-PLANTATION process was entirely unforeseen until our testing began . It works by clinically preparing thescalp
(without chemical irritants or dangerous hormones) to provide an environment where HAIR SUPPLANTATION can occur... safely and naturally. Though as one client puts it. the HAIR SUPPLANTATION PROGRAM is
NOW available TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC Through a special arrangement with a national maker of Hair Therapy products, we are now making the 8E(ET8 OF HAIR SUPPLANtATION available to the general public. This marks the very first time we have agreed to reveal the program successfully tested on over 1000 bald and balding men at our exclusive clinic. Because we firmly believe that knowledge of THE ULTIMATE ANSWER T(I BALDNESS should not be limited to the privileged few
WHO HAS USED HAIR SUPP.ANTAT|GNT'
Men of all ages, but mostly affluent ones since the program was designed to be administered by highly paid doctors and hair therapists... with treatments costing S2.000. S3.000. S4.000 and more But what all these men had in common was that they had tried
everything TO GROW NEW HAIR... every pill and lotion on the market Many were completely bald Others found that day by cay strand by strand they were, losing their hair.., and nothing seemed to help The FDA says there is no known cure for baldness Vet today almost every single one of these men enioys A FULL HEAD OF HAIR. They include FAMOUS MOVIE STARS POLITICIANS DOCTORS LAWYERS YOUNG MEN OLD MEN MEN FROM EVERY WALK OF LIFE
We ca ' name names in print (though you will receive signed and'notarized proof of a list of famous satisfied customers with your order), but we can fell you that you would recognize their names instantiy. know their faces from newspapers and TV, and be astounded at how great the_y look,.. thanks to the
miracle of HAIR ........ , And these are men
who came to us full of despair desperate tor A BALDNESS SDLUTIDN..
" STA'NTs'RErEA'RCH lTEflNATNALDEPT~SFh324*
IB W. 27 STREET. NEW YORK, N Y. 10001
Please send me my FREE copy of BALDNESS CONQUERED. And RISH me the supply of roLLIQN-NH3 checked below
I MONTH SUPPLY OF F0LLICIN-NH3:
S45 plus S2 shpg & hndig (Total S47)
SAVE SI4-2 MONTH SUPPLY OF F0LLICIN-NH3:
S80 plus S3 shpg & hndlg. (Total S83)
SAVE S27-3 MONTH SUPPLY OF F0LUCIH-NH3;
S110 plus S4 shpg & hndlg (Total S114)
SAVE SI22-RECOMMENOED 6 MONTH SUPPLY OF F0LLICIN-NH3: S160 (We pay shpg & hndlg I
Total Enclosed S__iny. r iti iiitt t|
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Use F0LLICIN-NH3 for a full 6 months You must be completely delighted or simply return empty bottles for a
Brompt full refund. . no questions asked limilictureri Note; While initial results are often seen in X days or less for maximum effects our researchers recommend the daily use of FOLLICIN NH3 for a full 6 months
SYNOMETRICS...an Olympic Champions Discovery!
Turn Bdlji Fol into Q Rodf-Hofd Leon SLoniodi
in 7 short minutes 3 3JV A 'ne '7'i'ace ot SVNOMETRiCS ' "as: c 'eA j scove'v *o' speed shaping aAay ugly em-:a"ass "q a d3 'a: 'o -evea' a Srano neA 'ocn-harq lean
introducing ike BERGER-Olympic Chimpion and truly one ol the world s great athletes
Olyn'B'C Geld ~ed3i a nner
I m over 50. yet in just 7 days SPEED SHAPER burned' ofl the fat and flab I ve lived with for thirty years. "
I I''0ujnr -ri|( .'d( a-o ''dO as w fh me tor l.le Sr.t^MetRlCa Cu' ej I U ^ r 7 J,),s Hi HARRIS ' New YolV N V
\f
IKE BERGER explains SVNOMETRICS
vg- '*'>id)r -OA 'le isoto" : g so-^e*-
' w f *'- 3 e 0* DcGy CS M 0"S O' 3t*DC C
use c-'e L' ^'e oe' ">e ' Oa y t-ie'C StrS C-e
Gay ^c. co''a y Os;cve'eG ''a! I uStG BCTm f^e^ CGS lofltihtr in one imglt titrcise. au o y c.i y SGecOefl uc !^e 'esu's 'e'^e-aous y a'd ' 'eda.fd da y e*e'c se ^ou' do^ lo O'* y ' S'-:'* -u'es
THE SCIENCE OF SVNOMETRICS
I'"' e.i-ed ""0 s; e! ' ; 'casd" 'o' !" s i""ar-"j ies.i l s ca ed SvNERGiSV-mea' "g i^a: we- >ou ce""D "v AO ""e'-oos I'e resu ' >s grea'e- ''ai i"e Do"- oi i"em jepa>a'e > I no* ca t-d my ne* d scovery SVNOMETHlCS and de-ueioped a jpec ai eiercse un.i i can the SPEED SMAPEP A-d |nai j luti wnji ,i u , speed
meinod '0 g ve ycu 'esc's - m "c'es \GT -pj-s \CA bu d you-se a 'a"'as' : opv "g codv * -n ine 'Cred 0 e SYNCVETRiCS--.' -,en' 0-i-a: *0s on tne ec ! ng -e* s: ot i - co o' iSOTCNiC ISOVETRIC
O'
IRON CUO MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
In ;uS' a 'e* dds you must acija y teg n jr.^ 'neasc-abe rea: resu is or your money back promptly and wilhout any question No d et needed >1 da y ca u'lC iniae does not add lo oreseni body *eighi
rWORLD PRODUCTS, D#pt.SS-*2"" " T I 1202 Brighton Rd , Clifton. NJ 07012 i
I' It the SrNOMETRlC Un.t can really start shap ng *
me up .n lUSl days, and I mean ALL over stom I acn, aisl. chest, arms and legs . I *>ii keep ,t
and use it otherwise, I will want a lull refund I
Rush STNOMETRIC lo me I
I
I '''''t - - - _ I
I ADDRSS . I
city SIATt IP
I I enclose S9 9S plus 91 00 postage handling I
LNv & Nj res aac appucai e sac 'a*
Save SI 00' Order 2 and send Sll 90 I
NEEDLEWORK
Playmates
Calico Cat IS edsuo sew, d delight to cuddle Craft 255 has pattern, directions ti.ir 14 inch toy
Koko the Koala Bear is fun to
make and give Craft 552 has pat tern pieces, directions
rile New Album han an appeal mg -.eiectK.m ot needlework de Mgnn from which to choose pat terns a Free Pattern Section with directions, and Bonus Coupon. $3.00 a copy.
Send $2.50 plus 50C for postage and handling for each pattern, (four patterns for $10.00); and $3.00 for each Album to;
Family Weekly Magazine PO. Box 438, Dept. A-224 Midtown Station. New York, N Y. 10018
Iru iudv- niimv! dddrvss cip . ihIv ,ind crjlt numhvr lN.<u York Sidle residents ddd sdles Idx |
Jack & Jiu dolls will de light kids of all ages Craft 439 has face transfers, pat tern pieces, full directions.
GETTING PERSONAL WITH
MADELINE KAHN
THE SILVER SCREEN'S FUNNY LADY IS SERIOUS ABOUT TV
Sh('\ been ni( niela mi's queen of the sexpot sendup for close to a decade, hut non . madcap Madeline Kahn is netting a nen act together and takinn it to T\' Yon nia\ knon her best as the campx lemme fatale of the Me! Brooks moi les: in 'lining Frankensteiti she collapses hlissfnih into the arms ot the monster and .she narnered an ,Academ\ .An aid nomination for her mle as lnst\ saloon sinner Lili ion Shtiipp in Blazinii ,Sad-ilk's \ladellne s made it on Rroadn a\. too. n itli a I trama Desk .An ard fijr her role III "Boom Boom Room and a Toin nomination tor the musical "<)n the Tnentietli Centnn ' Some ma\ sa\ she 's stoopini> to conquer the hooh tube this season ithoiinh Madeline doesn't see It that mm as the star of Oh. MiiijOiiU'. a sew farce about the nron in<i pains ot an I Ixear mamai>e .\on (ipproai hmn ane 4!. .Madeline's neier made a irlp h, the altar herself ah Ihonnh she s dime close a fen times In an intenien nith Fwiii.y WrKki.'^'s Ellen Kunes. Madeline discusses nh\ she 's iiiminn to T\ and hoii the life of a tiinin huh is a prett\ serious business
Kunes; .Most of your work has bwn in film and on the stage. What made you decide to do a TV series?
Kahn I m dtfiniteK the Inadini character in it, aiul in films. 1 haven't been. It's not that I mst desirf to t)e the center, hut it dot'sn t challenge me enoutth to continue to do small su[)-portiilit "hen I m capable of di> ini( somethinu more,
Q: Critics have said that you're possibly the funniest woman in films today.
Kahn: Thev alway s .sav that about me. Q: Do you enjoy doing comic roles the most?
Kahn' I think I do basically prefer comedy. It's a real challent^e for me. With mv particular talents, I think I'm pecu-liarily suited to it. I can do serious roles, and I d like to do a really t^ood serious rf)le some day But I don't think it would be devoid of humor this serious role of which we speak.
Q: Are you funny offstage, too? Kahn: It reallv has to do wifti mv mood. If I'm rela.\ed and in a good moo(], I can he ver>' funnv'. If I'm working hard or fhere's a lot on my mind. I'm the furthest thing from it .
Q: Even the smallest roles youve done are memorable. In which film do you feel you made the most of a small part?
Kahn: In Younn Frankenstein There
24 Family Weekly NtKreviBtR .'5.
was this little role [Dr Frankenstein fiancee. FJizaheth], and it was small I mean, there were a couple of jokes, f)ut it really wasn't that funnv. But then. Mel Brooks said, Took, I don't know. There are a couple of funnv things here. Maybe you could make .something out of this We took each moment, eacti little scene and made it into something of high (|ualitv It stands out. People think of it when they think of inv work Q: Youre a singer, actress and comedienne. Has being so talented made it easier to get good roles?
Kahn: It may have worked against me Iteiause if what vou have to offer is unusual and doesn't fit into anv cate-,gor\, thev [the |)roduc(*rs| sav. 'What .ire we su{)()osed to do with this." .Some/tne eventually uses vou, and then evervone else sav s. 'Oh wow, I see. Well, now we'd like to u.se vou ' Q: Youve never married. W'ould you like to?
Kahn: I think it would be verv nice to have a partner in whatever form that would take. Whether it would he marriage or not. I don't know. That would l)e an ideal state but it s not one which 1 necessarilv expect to have. Still, it would he nice.
Q: Are you a feminist?
Kahn: I wouldn't label mv.self as unv-thing, and I don't believe in doctrines of anv kind. 1 lead an independent life. There's no one felling me whaf to do. That speaks for it.self.
Q: Do you like having a face and name people recognize?
Kahn: If's somefhing that, whether I like if or not. I have to accept. If goes along with the territory. If isn't something that I thought of in the beginning, but of course, those moments when someone does recognize me and savs a nice thing well, that's verv plea.sanf.
I can't .sav I mind that. FW
PlAl
IT
SAFE.
ENTER THE AT&TSWEEPSTAKES
TIA1
IT
mi
1 Qrand PrfaM Wmnmr of U.S. Treasury Receipts worth $100,000 at maturity in five years.
r
9 nrst Me Whmers of U S
Treasury Receipts worth $10,000 at maturity in five years.
6 Second Prise Winners of
U.S. Treasury Receipts worth $5,000 at maturity in five years.
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U.S. Treasury Receipt worth $1,000 at maturity in five years.FICKUPIVNJR ENTRT LANK AT RymoRinNG AT&T mmE centers AND AT&T PHONE BOOTHS.
**Play K Safe'* and you could win a financially secure future. Just stop by any participating AT&T Phone Center or AT&T Phone Booth for your entry blank and official rules. And enter the **Play It Safe** sweepstakes.
No puretwM nwMury. Vm inuti b IS ytvt ol ag* or older VbMl iir the of and wtMrever ptoiuMed by law
Raaidotrtt of me suit of dhio ONLY may raoeiv* ari Official EiMry Form and rulet by aubmdtina a aeU-addreaaad. alamped envelope lo Requeet for Enby. PO Box 4309R. BUIr. NE 68009 Limit one requett per envelope. RequeeU mutl be received by Oct^ 10.1963 SweepcUkee enda October 3i. 1963
**Play tt Safe** With OurSecurity-
Minded** Products. Products that dial emergency numbers at the touch of a button, or that take messages and screen calls without the caller knowing. W have cordless phones that stay by your side around the yard or house, and the new Emergency Call System that reacts with your smoke detector and calls for help when you're not home. Remember, when you buy AT&T products, you're buying the peace of mind that comes with 108 years of telephone know-how and the highest standards of quality.
Play n Safe** and Save 99 Wmi Our Savings CertHleate. Just buy any AT&T telephone, TeleHelper* adjunct, Telesystem, Emergency Call System or Do-It-Yourself wiring product worth $30* or more between September 25 and October 16,1983. Then, send in this Play H Safe** $5 Savings Certificate, along with your sales receipt and product name from the package, and we'll send you $5 back. Savings requests must be received by October 31,1983. Offer limited to one certificate per name, address or household.
'Excluding sales lax Registered Trademark of ATST
All products may not be available at all stores
PlAl
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mi
ssmms
To rocoive your 66 00 savings. :haM any AT6T ttlaphona.
purcnaaa any atit ttlaphona. TafaHalpar* adjunct. Talatyttam. . Emargancy Call Syaiam or Oo-H-
8l laaat >30.00 laxdudiiM salas lax); 8wn..ssnd in your Siwings Cartriicala along with your aalas racaipt and product nama from mapachagoto
Plav irSaVs BBjBO BaHtnga M.BmABBBB
NAME.
icompMe
MI tOHOWHIQ.
(Print claarly)
CEHnnCATE
Products must be purchaiad batwean Saptambar 25 and Odobar 16.1963 All >5.00 aavlnga reouaals mutt ba lacaivml by October 31.1983. OHar llmilad to one oertificate per nama. addiata or household. Your savings raquaat may not ba as-signod or transwnad. A savirtgstvquast can only be made on an official "Mag M Safa >5.00 Savings CartHicata. which may not ba copied or raproducad in any manner.
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HE MADE THE GRADE
Dr. LeRoy Hay. a high school teacher from .Manchester, Conn.. is clearly in a class by himself. Hes recently beeri selected .National Teacher of the Year by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
So we caught up with Dr. Hay and quizzed him a little. The son of a factory worker who never completed high school. Hay grew up believing education was the key to a bright future. Now 38. he's been teaching for 17 years, and in that time, he's learned that teachers need to be flexible You must adjust your teaching to the particular class and then again to each kid w ithin that class," he says. Hay is careful to single out students by asking questions of them and by commenting about something of interest to them.
He is concerned, too. that his students learn to deal with the changes he feels are coming. In addition to English and theater, he teaches a class called futuristics. which he hopes will help students prepare for what lies ahead.
Right now. Hay admits that being Teacher of the Year can be kind of tough on a guy who loves his work.
The award will take him out of teaching for one year to give speeches and conduct workshops for parents and educators around the country.NO YOKE
$eems like youve got to crack a few eggs these days to clean up a lake. At least, thats what theyre doing in an effort to save central Sweden's Lake Holmsjb from the menace of acid rain.
WTien area residents learned they were not going to receive any Government funds to spread calcium on their lake (used to neutralize the sulphuric acid in water), they tried to save it at their own expense. A resident genius realized that the neighborhood bakery, just a few miles from the lake, throws away tons of calcium-rich eggshells every month.
A drive past Lake Holmsjo today reveals a waterway loaded with broken eggshells. True, the unorthodox method may detract from the lake's scenic beauty a bit, but experts at Swedens University of Agricultural Sciences in Uppsala say the method is working.WE INTERRUPT THIS PROGRAM. . .
It seems TV viewers are wandering all over the wasteland these davs.
i5liSOM)WAY MW N,
A survey by a TV-research company found that Americans decide to watch more than half of all programs on the spur of the moment, and that nearly 40 percent of us always or often change channels during commercials. Furthermore. we are restless, distracted and impulsive" in our viewing habits. (Do you recall who was aboard Love Boat last week?)
The company, Television Audience Assessment Inc. (T.A.A ), has developed a new rating system, based on viewers satisfaction and involvement with programs. The most surprising thing it found in the .survey of 3,(MH) viewers over a two-week period is that p<Vpular shows, like The Dukes of Hazzard and Fantusv Island, received low marks for program appeal and impact." Shows with the greatest appeal included Hill Street Blues. Little House on the Prairie (since canceled) and 60 Minutes
Says T.A.A. president Elizabeth Roberts, Shows like Dukes, despite their large audiences, are porous. They serve as a background when people dont want to be stimulated. They turn it on so they can tune outhiiiiil>' Wcckl>WANHD: SPACE CADETS
If you want a job that will expand your horizons, heres your chance to really fly. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is looking for a few new astronauts.
Before you plan your first moon walk, though, look at the job's basic requirements. Pilot-astronaut candidates must have logged at least 1 ,00() hours piloting high-performance aircraft: hold a math, science or engineering degree; pass a rigorous physical exam and measure between 5 feet 4 inches and 6 feet 4 inches in height. A scientist-astronaut ne^ not have'flight experience, and the physical is less stringent than for pilot candidates (required height is between 5 feet and 6 feet 4 inches), but he or she must have three years of professional experience in a math, engineering or science specialty.
Needless to say. a willingness to travel is a must.
If you think youve got the right stuff, write for an application package (to be completed by Dec. 1 of this year) to; Astronaut Candidate Pro
gram. Mail Code AHX-FW, National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center. Houston, Tex. 77058.Pl^ FOR MORE
When youre putting together that hardhitting, all-business resume, dont forget to mention that you pursue the sporting life, too. According to Robert Half International, a New York consulting firm, executives who mention on their resumes that thev regularly participate in sports earn more money than those who dont.
How much more is a jock worth!* In the firms survey of 180 execs all of whom earn between $30,000 and $55.000 a year the sporting types pull down about $3,100 a year more than nonjocks.
The only reason we could come up with to explain this," says the firms vice president. Marc Silbert, is that physically active pmple often appear more confident, competitive, energetic and self-reliant qualities employers frequently pay a premium for."
Tennis, anyone?BIRTHDAYS
(All Libra) Sunday Barbara Walters 52; Mark Hamill 31. Monday Olivia Newton-John 35; Jack LaLanne 69. Tuesday William Conrad 63: Sam Ervin 87; Shaun Cassidy 24. Wednesday Brigitte Bardot 49: Marcello Mastroianni 59. Thursday (jene Autry 76; Madeline Kahn 41; Jerry Lee Lewis 48: Greer Garson 75; Bryant Gumbel 35. Friday Truman Capote 59; Lester Maddox 68: Angie Dickinson 52; Deborah Kerr 62; Johnny Mathis 48. Saturday Jimmv Carter 59: Walter Matthau 63; Julie Andrews 48; Edward Vil-lella 47: George Peppard 55.
'Mt NtWSfAl MAGA^M
PfMldwil and PuWlahar
Patrick M Linskey
Vtca PfMldani and Ad OIraclor
Geraia Wroe
VIca Praatdanl and Qanl. Mgr.
Jonathan Thomcsori
Chatman Emartlua, Mo-o- f
26 Fvvill.v WKKkn .>El>TKVBt:K IMh)
Makeup Mgr y. a^ Typographer Oec'a ose S-e -, Detroit Mgr.'aA-e-rpv ---*Caiif'-t's Assoc Eastern Mgr. c-a-o a Ca-o Southern Mgr, Ke-o-j
Pa- c a Ky e Creative Dir oce- 3a-.- Sis Pro Mgr Do.-y Sc-oee c Melc-'handis^ng C Do-a Swc E^nt's M^r''!'" a oa'" " '
ta^:n^sr"^v^yas;npjti.;n^r"^rT^,5rc^iu^rsvcf:r^^^ prn;n'^rrro^on
Ifs beige. Ifs slider. Ifs special.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
8 mg. "!ar".i).7mg. nicotine 3v. per cigarette by FTC method.
VITAMN PnCESTHlS LOW!
We probably could not offer you quality vitamins at these advantageous low prices if we sold in stores. But with mail-order, theyre yours. So act now. Save as youve never saved before!
MENS OR LADIES LCD QUARTZ WATCH
These watches give you the very same accurate information that you get from others selling for $30 or more. Each one has an easy-to-read, easy to set display that instantly shows you:/rhe Hour The MinutesThe SecondsThe MonthThe Datebesides a light-emitting diode. Each one
has a rugged, comfortable tapered, metal band. (Batteries included) Just check the box in the order form. Return it with your order and add $1.00 to cover handling of your watch, and well send along one of these fine Quartz LCD Watches as a free gift.
Offer ends Oct. 10. 1983
; VITAMIN
EndoM Coupons Below With Order ________ CJ
"mail ORDER "o UP ON
MONTHS suPPLYi
400 Unit Capsules
Expires 10 10'83
E
^ LiM Oflt i
100 for 1.69 500 for 7.89 1000 for 15.29
500 MG
VITAMIN
WITH ROSE HIPS
1930 Exptres 10 10 B3
MAIL ORDER COUPON
c
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HI-ENERQY PROTEIN BARS
Tasty CaiQO coMd snack Mh VSamtnsSMnsres
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GLUCOMANNAN
CAPSULES SOO na
: 5** 10
Enclose Coupons Below With Order.
MAIL ORDER COUPON ] Ml fTd'co7pn^
1.000 Mg. ;GarlicOilcap.iM; VITAMIN
READERS DIGEST eaiis ne F-PLAN
diet the "Diet of the Decade We 11
have Fiber-Filler' Powder and c50
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COMPARE THCU PRICES WITH THOSE VOU ARE MOW RAVNtOI Runs LiCrTHIW OWAWUteS-1 ip tor 3 75; 3 tot tor 10 00 IXMO COO UVES OS.-eai (Of 1.88:16 os. lot 3 70
H|.^TENCY
STRESS FORMULA
B Complex and Vitamm C 100 TABS 1** 291 tor 4.75
i(B|e J Kelp, VM. BS, Lecithin DIM ^ and Ckfar VInMur
100
For
and Cklir Vinegar
79* ^ 3.50 r 6.49
1100 For
C
with Rose Hips
<98
Of Af^ Silt to i N
amdy
500 for 9.49 1000 for 17.98
11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11
I
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121
500 for 3.28 ~ 1000 for 6.39
N930 Expires 10 1083
Limil One of Any Sire to a far
800 MO. ASCOWatC ACS) vn. C.-100 tor 00; 500 tor 4 38 BWtWtWS VIAST FUKIS-1 to tor 1 95; 3 lbs lor 550
DSSSICATB) UVES TASLSTS-IOO kx B9: 500 let 419_
500 MO. SSI ROIXBt TABLm-100 tor 2.19: 500 lor 9 50 Max ERA'* CARSUUS50 tot 4.49; 100 tor B.75
MAIL OnOER COUPON
Our TOP-B B-Complex 50
Ever^capwte contains 50 mg
f"mail oroecoJpon I
LECITHIN II
I 19 Grain Capsules ' -
||49
Z 100 Capsules
Limrt One ot Any Size to a tamiiy
Z 300 for 3.98 Z 600 for 6.85
N930 Expires 10 10 83 !?
I I I I I I I I
--------------------^ I
16, Niaanamide. Panto ! Acid Choline. Inositol, 50mcg ! B12 Biotin, 50mg Paba.lOOmcg Fokc Acid__
Limit One ol Anw Sire a f>
E00liaBmMTAaLETS-100lor65:50OIOf2 9e_
KELR TASLITS-IOO tor 49; 1000 lot 2.49_
50B Mg L-tYSS-100 tor 1 98: 300 lot 5.5Q_
500 MO. L-TWYRTORWAWS-30 lor 3.99; 80 lot 7.50_
too MCq SBLPSUM-100 tot 2 98:250 lot 5.75_
eveWSIQ RWBIIWag os. CAROULES-SO lor 4.08:100 for 8.50 25,000 WST SSTA-CAWOTSNi-lOO tot 2.95; 250 kx 6 75
\/|*rA|Lj|||^ C FINEST quality-lOCTo PURE alpha VI IMIVIInl C TOCOPHEHYL GELATIN CAPSULES
100 FOR
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1000 FOR
100 UNIT CAPSULES
98
4.85
9.49
MO UNIT CAPSULES
1.89
8.99
17.59
4BBUNIT
CAPSULES
2.89
14.49
28.49
1000 UNIT CAPSULES
7.89
37.98
69.85
SOMaCNEUTCO
100 lot 1.70: 500 tor 7.25
RAPAYA DIZVME-2S0 for 1.65; 600 kx 2.00
1500 MO. vrr. c wrrn nose iors too tor 2.90; 500 lot 14.00
ACTtVATED CHAWOOAL CARSUtgS-30 lot 1.40:100 kx 3.90 YIOSTASLILAXATIYS ROWDSW-Platn or Otanoe-IA at. can 2.00
BREWERS^ YEAST TABLETS 250 qcc
TaWeis
1000 for 2.95
1
nTAMMBL For Nail Caro
Same roimuia as oiniis cnaigt tS 95 lot 50 Oa Supw MOW
asr, 395
C-500^
500 mg va C Plus Rose Hips 100 mg BioHavonpiOs 50 mg Rutin 25 mg HespciiOm
rZs 2*^
SOO lor 10.90.
B6;s
100 lor 1
SOOIerSJO
iof3
MO T, lOOkx 1
18AVEPT070%0II0IIRIBIIJ8
to a amily | rnmnarMhlm m Utllie I inn Aw I c/ui 1 _________
50 for
_ 100 for 3.49 Z 250 for 7.98
N930 Expires 1810 83
MAIL ORDER COUPON
Our Name
Comperableio
VALUE
too lor
SOOIor
There Min
TharaoranM*
509
1 49
725
OaUy w Iron
Ona-A-Oay* wWi Iron
4 17
89*
375
Ger Iron
OaflM'
539
99*
475
Super ves i Urns
nGnimNHi
795
229
929
Qtewebfe Veamms
Chocks
484
1 49
625
BwithC
Atooa'wWtC
499
185
750
Oyster Cel
Oseal*
459
149
5.95
A-Z Tabs
Caidninr*
649
1301
brsee
NutreOec
Hyadac'
579
130 kx 3 89
Stress 600
SIraaa TMM* 999
828
60kx289
fl C wrth Zinc
ZC
648
60 for 2.89 1
ARGININESOO MO 100 FOR O.SO
ORNITHINE800 MG 100 FOR 0.50
^N930 Expires 10 10 83 , ^
MAIL ORDER COUPON '
m? zinc
394
I each meal
Quart $2.98 Gailon $9.95
'.iiiANirf: I,;, jDOfD isr^rf, si -o.om:!- N N930
I I I
iGAR SIAPCu I iii'Misvnns I Expires 10.10 83 |
i anaiiw
iSsSr-
9.95 Z
ALFALFA Tanieis too Tatiids 49^ 500 for 1.95
100 For
500 for 1.89 1000 for 3.49
Limn One ol Am ire to a family
Expires 10 10 83 |
CALCIUM
LOW LEAD
CALCIUM IS essentialBut some calciums have been found high m lead This balanced calcium is laboratory-tested to have a low SAFE-iead level
199 lof 1.25 599 tar 4.98
259 Iw 2.58 1889 tor 7.59
DOLOMITE Calcium Ricti LaUotaiory Tiittd
too
TiUMs
49*
500 for 1.85
MEW-acttlalilim*jiiivilentol 50 for 2.00 TABLETS ont toMpootUul ol Aloa-Vara gel 150 for 5.00
Supar Polancy SOO MCG VITAMIN B12
too
TaUais
149
500 for 6 J5
POTASSIUM
TABLETS
100
TabMs
1
500 for 5.00
NuflTert
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^t NUTRITION HEADQUARTERS
^ / T04 Wost Jackson SL n930 1 Cartiondalo, m. 62901
U$t fftms you with tmn:
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MASTER CARD and VISA accepted on orders over S10 00 Give card number and expiration date We reserve the nght to limit quantities
FREE QUARTZ ICO WATCH
Just check the watch ot your choice add another $1.00 for handling your iree watch and mail your order before Oct 10. 1983 _ Men s Ladies
HERBAL DIURETIC 100 TatUefs 175 aoAfwrAana
ADDRESS.
1 I I
I
I I I I
I
.STATE.
.ZIP
& 1983 NUTRITION HOQS
A FlUTHR OF LIFE-SIZE CARDINALS spark decor with nature s flash of fiery red' Alight on tree, wreath, centerpiece! Real feathers downy bodies! Set of 3. 4" Ig CardlMlt (0-45203)
"FEEL SANTAS lEARD" BOOK is a delightful "touch 4 see' story for tots. Has pictures they can really touch 4 feel-fluffy reindeer i(ur, soft beard, rough brick, etc.
TNCb Book (66528)......
address labels IN RAINBOW COLORS add cheer to mail, end writing return address! Just wet 4 stick, 3 lines ttolo oomo, loll oOiroti. zip.
SIB LoBoll (0-20842)
Olipooior (35865)
CHARGE
vrtiiR
rwi IWWI GIFTS
CATALOG OF VALUES SINCE 1947
S5t%
Famili Weekly September . iw:i
f SEE-THRU QUARTER OR OIME RANK
shows how
savings stack up! Quarter
Bank holds up to S25 A Dime Bank S10. with marked dollar levels in golden numbers Lock A 2 keys incl. Plastic
(89003
75 MARBLES IN A POUCH! A
kids dream collection of colorful glass cat s eyes including lumbo shooter' All in sturdy drawstring bagready to trade, play or stash away' 75 Marbles (72504) StiAj
YOUR OWN PRINTING SET! You gel 3 complete alphabets. numbers, symbols
plus stamps ink pad, tweeters' Personalize checks books: print signs, etc Print Sol 113136) Sf^H
SEE THE CAROS WITHOUT GLASSES! Standard-site Cards have Qiant markings E-Z See Oetk ^ Standard (32284)
Pinochle (MieY)
Bridge (72728) $t^
TRACE-A-PET ART KIT
12 perky poly animals are caught m playtui poses fun for little artists to trace'Safety plastic scissors incl Troce-A-Pel Kit (55525) jHA
KIOOIES NAME PLAQUES tell the world a room IS all theirs' Ceramic, selt-adheres 2>.v x Ijt" Stale Ul name.
FAILEO UNICORN-craltod in genuine pewter! Elusive steed IS captured in a dramatic rearing stance Finely detailed. T/>~ hi Pewter Unicorn . (95059)
MIX on MATCH SALE! ANY 6 OR MORE ITEMS IN THIS CATALOG ONLY
881
n lo S item* priced at martiedi
WEATHER-WISE OWL gives a hoot about the weather* He s blue when skies are fair violet when a change is due pink means it s fowl outside Bisque ceramic. 3'/4hi Woalber Owl (41863)
Name Plaque
Girls (P-03061) $i^
Boy's (P-03079) ST9
EYEGLASS REPAIR KIT lets you tighten or replace hinge screws in seconds'Has mini-screwdriver magnifying glass 4 screws Saves trips to optician4 money'
Specs Kit (69591) S^AA
MAGIC BATH CRAYONS clean kids as they color! Let em draw on tub Sink, skin' Suds right otf Mild soap safe color Box el 12. j Soap-Color (0-80119)
TIC-TAC-TOE GOES MAGNETIC
to follow kids wherever they go' Magnetic pieces stay put Brightly colored 3'SQ J Tic-Tac-Toe (99481)
FOREST FRIEND NOTEB-no , Jf envelope needed! Just (old. seal. . sUmp A mail!
;,R 4 asst woodsy
scenes fold r, ^ A; on outside.
IB sheets A I .. golden seals.
6x8.
ceramic
FRAME gives a precious photo elegant treatment' Chaim-'ngly Victorian m white ceramic. adorned with roses Easel incl 2vv x 3v4 '
Posy Frame (68908) SilBQ
GENUINE PEWTER BIRO-IN-NEST IS a lucky find for the collector' Nests are said to bring good luck Ours also brings a wee fledgling nerched prettily' vs" Bird-ln-Nost (91157) $^9A
E
ENCHANTING UNICORN 01 PEGASUS BELL in snowy por
celain! Mythoiogy s favonti steeds rear atop sweetly chim mg bells About 4' hi
'Pegasus Bell (95139) Unicom I
I Bell (95125) SN
(o3aoB)S5{
MREBISTIIIE BONE CHINA TTEN-IN-A-BASKET White kitty enjoys that special cat delight something cozy to bide in! Nestled in her wicker-look basket she strikes a typical feline pose; standing up to see whos watching, crouching tor 11... rk... 4M . f'W Iwiw China: about T
I lene Cbina KiMea-ie-a-laitat; Crei^j^(M6g *jHB (6^
PERSONALIZED POCKET-SIZE NOTE PAD-100 sheets to list pressing things to do' Navy leatherette cover 3 * Slate name
Note PaK (P-73684) S^9
-------
nwav rv ir-ruuo*f; J
2ReiUPal|0-73833)j
CANCELLED CHECKS COULD SAVE YOU MONEY! So keep them safe & handy' Sturdy expandable file has 12 compartments to keep checks m monthly order 4 x 8"
Check File (98533)
DIAL IN THE DARK! Giant Ez See Dial has luminous numerals over 3 times the size ot regular phone numbers Adhesive back Black plastic Set el 2.
Ez-Oialt (0-69849)
SECURITY DOOR LOCK TRAVELS WITH YOU! Installs vrithout toolsjust press into door iamb Feel safe' Door cao'l be opened trorn outside! Metal KoyIoss Lok (99390)
TAKE FUZZ OFF SWEATERS! A
tew strokes with D-Fuzz-lt whisks balling, matting pilling from sweaters blankets, coats in seconds' Sturdy mastic
0-Fou-lt (22749) SN^
#
End Rw-Nmm Heek Nen eiekol NelieleiH
I
I
END RUN-DOWN HEELS!
Noiseless shoe taps keep heels new tor months' Non-skid poly Pack of 3 pair.
Shoe Taps Pack
Men (0-56697)
Women (0-56705)
NVMIO-PMS ARE *1Nlirai S' FOR 11, ACMNB FBTI Never feel a hard floor underfoot again! Amazing insoles have ualed-in cushions of water to soften every step! Slip in shoes; "pillows" help ease pressure of standing, walking.
Hydn-Peds:palr sH|
'Vm's WMma's
Ul.(MK93591) Sm. (MM94037) ,
ed. (I-1I) (S4003) Med. (74) (94T02)
Lg-111*) (94029) Lg. (i-ll) (94110)
CLEVER COTTONTAIL BUNNY
IS a cotton ball dispenser' Just (ill with cotton (not mcl) & she'll sit prettily on dresser m bathroom or nurseryalways handy' Plastic 4vv ig Cottontail (61200)
mmiyi^i
MIX OR MATCH SALE' ANV 6 OR MORE ITEMS IN THIS CATALOG ONLY
881
(I to 5 ittmt prictU at marktd)
MAKE-UP BRUSH KIT SLIPS IN PURSE . handy
for touch-ups. travel' 4 sil natural bristle brushes & 1 sponge-tip
CATCH HAIR TRIM CLIPPINGS! No messy clean-ups. Itchy hair down back' Snap-on vinyl cover-up has flexible rim Great for perms, tinting etc' Wipes clean adiusiaoie Trim Tray (23267) $t^
INVISIBLE
GUARDS
MAKE
RINGS
^ 7/ SNUGLVI
MAKE RINGS FIT PERFECTLY! No more slipping, fear of loss! Invisible guards slip under any size ringmassive or petitetor a perfect fit' Set of 5 widths, vinyl Geerds (0-98046)
all with tortoise-tone handles 2V4' X 3Vx; vinyl
pouch. X BroaiKH>
LIFETIME SOCIAL SECURITY PLATE! Wafer-thin aluminum copycan never tear or burn 3'4 x t'4 Specify name A number.
Social Security Plate (P-84426) sNg.
FOLO-AWAY SCISSORS ANYWHERE! Tuck m purs pocket, suitcase Aiwa handy when you need tnei Sharp little scissors fold
rp little SCI lust 2'-?"' In vinyl case Fold-Aways (69518) S7
HAIR TRIMMER lets you be your own barber' Just glide overhead for neat easy trim' Great for kids' Poly Blades separate
Trimmer (99499) $^49
6 Blades (0-75242) $t^
TIGHT BRAS FIT PERFECTI
with comfortable elastic e; tenders Just hook onto bra voilaa perfect lit' White
2-Hook 10-99168) 3 tor $ti
3-Hook (0-99176) 3 lor Sfa
4-Hook (0-99184) 2 for $ti
16 STEEL TEETH CLUTCH ICE LIKE CLAWS! Give safe, sure footing on those slick surfaces Just slip over shoes, boots Elastic band adjusts to any size shoes Ice Grips (51425) SHU
HOT FOOT" PADS keep feet
warm in cold weather' Give glowing warmth on body contact' Trim 4 slip in shoes Cushion feet too' Hot Foot (92304) $t^
COMIC YULE TISSUE no
has loliy day messag tor bathroo visitors Chuckle-provoking toons pnn in cheery n All in good taste 104 greetings
Sr roll Tele (21782)
STICKPIN i, ftelt WMMHlIt Mlire't nte!
HONEYCOMB TISSUE STICK-ONS! Snowmen, angels. Santas & more open into 3-di-mensionai gitt decorations Just peel & stick' 2> hi Set 0II6; 16 tags incl TIssue-Ons (0-55863) STtSa.
50 OLD-FASHIONED NOEL GIFT TAGS feature 3 nostalgic Yule scenes' Merry-colored old-time tags are heavy printed stock 2 2' tie strings mci SetolSO.
Gilt Tags 10-528781
ICICLES BY THE DOZEN SPARKLE LIKE CRYSTAL-
turn your tree mto a wmter wonderland' Iwist design reflects every light Plastic 5"r Set of 12 Icicles (0-43307) SHi.
3 SCENTED CHRISTMAS CANDLES in cheery red, greens while are topped with sculptured, handpamted Yule design' Plump votives perfect tor centerpiece, etc 3 Candles (0-42572)
25 CHRISTMAS POST CARDS
have cheery seasonal motifs
lovely greetings & elfin Charm
to win the hearts of all' 3 merry designs 25 cards on heavy printed stock 4'V'x5V Yule Cards 10-63115) $t^
HOLIDAY MAILBDX COVER
extends a Merry Christmas greeting to all' ties securely on standard rural mailbox Use year after year Colorful plastic Tie cord incl Mailbox Cover (63198)^
FESTIVE POINSETTIA NAPKIN RINGS beautifully enhance your holiday table' Vivid Yule blossoms are finely crafted of airy Smamay fiber in the Philippines Set of 4.
Yule flings (0-573491
150 PRESS-ON HOLIDAY SHAPES bring lack the old-fashioned fun of kids making Christmas come alive! Spntely decorations press on to adorn mirrors, windows, tile, any glossy surface Peel off without leaving marks or messready to use again next year' Self-sticking plastic All precut. iust punch out Santa, stars, reindeer, snow-T flakeseven letters for wishing 'Merry Christmas & Happy New Year' Set of 150. Christmas Press-Dns (60970) STiKj
QUiUIIT CIMPEL-ON-A-HIU n A BELL) A wee porcelain marvel with its minute detailing from the hilltop steps to the tiny steeple bell. White gl porcelain blue accents 3VY
LDVELY PDRCELAIN UNI-CDRN BELL-Jusi 2 - hi mythical horse s sensitive head IS captured m snowy porcelain, its horn a gleaming goldtone
Unicorn Bell (550201
GQ
CHEERY KNOB HANGER
welcomes guests with Yule spirit' Vivid felt with sequin accents & bell 10
Door Knob Hanger Snowman (59774) $t^
Candles (59782)
Each velvet-soft petal IS hind-formed from shaven wood fiber Sweetly scented Rosa Sliekpip (90266) mg.
INSPIRING LAPEL PIN
expresses reverent message'God Loves You' in goldtone or "Trust God' in silvertone
God Loves Pin (99564)^
Trust God Pin (99572) StlBA
ELEGANT MONOGRAMMED CORNER BOOKMARK keeps your place' Crafted m brassembossed with floral design & custom engraved State 3 initials.
Corner Mark (P-52167) SMB MEMO CALENDAR PAL lets you see 6 weeks afT glance! Has room for daily notes & appointments' lOvr x16vr Hang hook.
Calendar Pal 1
(50815)..........SNbI
BUCKING BRONCO OR WILD MUSTANG-striking m n d tures artistically detanec
fenuine pewter' i *
] Pewter Horse . Bronco (72801)
Mustang (72819)
COUPON SAVER CASE keeps em organized easy to handle while shopping Sturdy envelopes for 12 grocery groupings bound into purse-size booklet Bw x CwpM Saver (81828) Stit^
MAGNETIC HOOTERS KEEP MEMOS HANOYI Friendly owls hold notes & lists on Iridge. cabinet, etc Whimsical with eyes that roll' Plastic, I/i" Set ol 5.
0wlMagnet*(0-617M)$TiS_
INSTANT MIX CADDY floret up lo 24 packets of soup sauce, dressing mixes Holds em upright, easy-to-tind' White, plastic-coated wire. 7" X 3V4", stands: hangs ^
MU Caddy (86702) SYlit
COFFEEPOT LOOK-ALIKE
prettily holds instant coffee on table Screw-tite lid keeps It tresh Nice for sugar, too Crystal-clear plastic handy
Boon incl 4v<" hi Colteepot (87189) $^4^
EAD ANY NEEDLE IN-
NTLY with Automatic boer' Just put thread in ve push button & you're 1 to sew' Built-in cutter I thread at any length ueider(00307)
ENJOY HANDS-FREE READING . . Clever Book Stand adjusts for reading angle & thickness of material Handy
for reading while eating, following recipes, etc Plas; Bosk Stand (88336) S
HANDY MARKING PEN ENDS FREEZER GUESSWORK! Labels frozen foods with the contents 4 date Special ink writes on.foil, freezer wrap, bags 4 boxes: won't rub otil Freez-Mark (20685) ltss[
KEEP SEWING MACHINE DUST FREE! Plastic cover keeps dirt out of mechanism 4 oft your work Fils standard machine
Sow-Cover (83980)
BOBBIN BOX KEEPS 21 COLORS READY TO SEW! No more misplaced bobbins' No rethreadmg for the color you need' Plastic, 4/i"x3'/4". .
Bobbin Box (60848) $Tr5.
It CU9II li MEffKtLI A wMiniiibowof Mt boas tarried in aao-Nira stem. JiMt top out tiM aao yoo wtti^ to. ^
HEAT-REFLECTING DRIP
PANS speed cooking: save Reflect heatlChrome-
power' plated steel elements
lit notched pan
6- Drip Pan (73858) $th49
r Drip Pan (73866)
SLICE ONIONS PERFECTLY. SAFELY! Handy holder has 18 stainless steel prongs to grip slippery onions: guide knife tor perfect, thin slicesi Wide handle keeps lingers safe'
Onion-Hold (99093) $174^
tCMLL
ciiKures ttM| HappHtwe i Is Love' I Ulingof i cototry ^ swettwarts
HANDY CORN-ON-THE-COB SPEARS handle pipm hot ears Make the eating neat the serving gracious Stainless steel Set ol 8.
Cob Spears .
(0-59899) StiGS
PI
HANG 12 SHIRTS IN r OF CLOSET SPACE-without
crushing, wrinkling' Just hook caddy over closet rod & hang clothing Taper-design avoids wrinkling Steel 6" wide ShM CMy (69708) Stt(
NEVER HANO-LAUNOER HOSE OR LINGERIE AGAIN!
Do them safely In washer & dryer with nylon lersey Washer Case! Protects from snags, twists' Holds to12pr WasN-Cau (81067) St^
ONE-TOUCH GLIDERS move heaviest appliances with ease, end struggling to rearrange furniture' Rubber tops, nickel-coated bottoms 2" diam Sal of 4.
Glitfiri (0-49320) S^^
DISPUY VOUR TREASURED PLATES on handsome hardwood hinged easels Elegant ebony enamel finish shows them off beautifully'
rEattI 53645) Sl^
rEasal 53652 SN|mnii
TIGHTEN WOBBLY CHAIR LEGS; rungs, any loose wood lointswithout glue, clamps, mess'' Pen ' miects amaiing swelling agent that makes em fit & stay tight' ^
Tlla-Jalat (73874) SH|
EXTRA "HANGING SPACE ON BACK OF ANY DOOR! No Rails, scrawt, drilling! Steel Hook Bar slips over door has 3 double hooks Can t interfere with closing 12" ig Hoak Bar (69823) ST^
NEVER WASH WINDOWS!
just whisk Wonder Cloth over any glass surface Special chemicals resist water stains, smudges Great lor mirrors, windshields, too' 1(T x ir Glass Clolh (90456) Sf(
MIX OR MATCH SALEI ANV 6 OR MORE ITEMS IN THIS CATAUMi ONLY881
(lloSltamt pricMl M marktd)
SEE-THRU ZIPPER CASE PROTECTS KNITS. WOOLENS
for storage or travel' Great for sweaters, lingerie, blouses Zips shut tor mothproofing Heavy plastic Big iO" x 13 Zip-Casa (93609)
REAL CEDAR PROTECTION!
Cedar Logs slip over hangers Contain more laaalna cadar scant than the natural wood' Pack al IB.
Cadar Logs (0-27672) .
OUTDOOR THERMOMETER
press-mounts to your window outsideyou read temperature in comfort from inside Easv-reading^i Plastic: 1V<"
Oatdoor-Tkarm (87031) .
HAMZINE PILEM PRESERVE RRCI IttlKS for tutara rotoranca. Boofc-Uka btndars of haavy Nberboard kaap old mag-azftias naat on your library SMif. Eieb boWs 12 or mora issuas. Fill in indox on front 4 iocata tht ona you want instantly! Ordar Sm lor Raadtrs DWast sizo; Mad. NatKHHri Goognariiic; Lg, timo; X-Lg.
Maiazlba Fllbr ...........
Ill (22822): Had(22BS5L L|(;
Extra Larga Filar (22897).
CMLOROPNYLL CANDLE KILLS SMOKING ODORS
tha tactful way! As canda bums, chlorophyll cloars tha air of tobacco, cooking, paint, pat A othar un-plaasant smalls! 4* hi.
SaM-Saadla
(47613)... fhSI
COLORFUL MINI STACK BIN
organizes clips, stampsall those little things' Modular design lets you stack 2. 4. more! Poly: 3'/^" x 2/i x 2' Mini Stack Bln S^4S Brown (99317) Almond (99382)
NEVER OVER-WATER OR UNOER-WATBI PLANTS! Water Rite tells you when to water' Insert in soilturns white when water's needed, green when okay Pack al 4.
Watar-Rlta (0-72298) SNg
GLASS TAPE BINDS LIKE STEEL STRAPS! Self-adhesive polyester reinforced with fiberglassresists up to 200 lbs stress' W wide 40r Sugar Tapa (41244) sHB
if h LIBRt BULBguaranteed 4 10 yearsor
costs ? ' f*P'4cehient
fnr . IfeQuent changing! ideal for hard-to-get-at fixtures Burns ao-
KT**'!! Poh^s-outlalfs
W to 13 ordinary bulbs'
IB-Yaar Bulb; Enb sVaa
sstei
WIPE EPS FOG AND MIST AWAYI Avoid accidents due to poor windshield vision' Chemically treated sponge helps keep windows, mirrors fog tree (or weeks'
Fog-Away (64816) StiH
DRAIN SPRINKLER UNROLLS WHEN IT RAINS to carry water away from house' No more gutted lawns, flooding from water rushing thru downspout Poly 9ttlg Drala-Away (96792) SH)
DOG A CAT I D. TAGS!
Stainless steef tag assures pet's sale return when he strays' Sieclly pel's name, address A phone nnmber.
Dog Tag (P-99465) IMS
Cat Tag (P-99473) StitS.
PET MAT CAN'T SLIDE! DISH STAYS STILL! Personalized mat has cling-fast foam center to stop slidingprotect floor Vinyl; 21/5" x 14'/i. Slale pel's name.
Pel Mai (P-02253) ST:*S
SPENCCR OFTS, K-49 SPCNCCR BUILOMQ
ATLANTIC OTY, NJL 0M11
Name_
(piease pnnt)
Rt
Raii
City-
How You CH CUtrie Your OrerI
II charging, fill in all intormatlon balow SlO minimum on Charga Charga to my: MASTERCARD VISA :: AMERICAN EXPRESS MY CREDIT CARD NUMBER
_
INTtRMHX NO in C ONU)_
my ckRO EXPIRES_
Si|niluie.
STOCK NO.
NAME or ITEM
Calar. Sita ar Panaaalizaliao
NICE
EACH
YOUR SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY CHEERFULLY REFUNDED'
ran MUX TM own
INsKlems o> mf smei nust M Sutf S Tu ,5*0 B S L* 3S CO 3 --. VIII3V. XL IX IL Ml NC NO NE OX SC WX VT 4, MO 4 >. U ri IN XV MX MD ME MS SO rx Wi WV 5', .11 5 0 5 S
INVS-.V CX MN NJ PX Rl is TN 6'.% NY 7S I Cl WX :-.S NVC
POSTAGE CHART Orders up to $3 00 9bt
Avoid delay by fiom S3 01 to $5 00 tl 35 From J5 01 to $7 00 $175
From $7 01 to $9 00 $2 05
From $9 01 to $11 00 $2 25
From $11 01 to $13 00 $2 45
From $13 01 to $15 00 $2 65
Ffom$15 01to$17 00 $2 85 From $17 01 to $19 00 $3 05
including postage and handling charges These small charas are only part of total costs We pay the rest
MIN ORDER $2
Over $19 00 Add only $3 25
(No itanpi ai C.O.D. alaaM)
TOTAl
SMa Salat Tai (Saa Chart)
PatUft (Saa Chart)
INSURANCE (Laat 01 Oaaugae Orean Will a Raglacae)
Eaclaiae
.45
SKOAL euus FOR $100.000 PRUE ORAWWC (NO PURCHASE REOUWEO TO IE ElKIIU) A $100 000 Pn/e w ii be awarded m a random drawing from entries received m appro 26 promotions sponsored by Spencer Gifts throughout 1983, under the supervision of D L Biair Cotp whose decisions are final An entry, eligible m any one of mese promotions, received by Dec 15. 1983. is automatically eligible m the $100.000 Pt./e drawing The $100,000 Pri3e Winner will be oHicially notified by mail The odds ol winning depend upon the number ol entries received Void where prohibited by law All Federal. Slate and local laws and regulations apply q
spencec.
CATALOG OF VALUES SINCE 1947
NEW 88 SALE
ANY ITEM IN THIS CATALOG ONLY 88(
WHEN YOU MIX OR MATCH 6 OR MORE!
(1 to 5 ITEMS PRICED AS MARKED)
WKIWOfiOW
Th* SwMpMakM Entry on th covor couM Ho you $100,000,001 Fill It In A rotum It todayl
MIRACLE REYCHAIN LIGHT! No battorift
10 replaci aver! Incredible light is run by a micro-electronic cell that regenerates its power Alnayi llobtikeeps keys handy' Kay LIgbl (41178)
7-PIECE BOWL COVER SET keeps food freshthe pretty & practical way' Colorful patterns dress up bowls, elasticized bottoms
fit snugly Vinyf Sot o 7;4'-if diam loialTi
Bowl Topi (0-15990)
strss
SCHOOL MEMORIES BOOK is pirsaaallzaP
with Child s name' 12 keepsake envelopes irade; places for itale 1tl nama.
for 1st grade thru 12th photos signatures, etc . Scbool-Days (P-98558)
sfi
GIFT WRAPPING IS A "SNAP" WITH BA6-
ITS! Odd shapes toys, goodies are wrapped at a pull of drawstring'Lined SelollB Yule (B'/'-IOi/) or ass t (^5'/4"-8'^") designs
Yala Bags (0-04424) cwa
Asi't Bags (0-90845) sTttf
2-YEAR PURSE SECRETARY tucks in purse or pockethas 2-year planning calendar phone-address section, area code map ^tes & data pages' Vinyl cover: ass t colors Plaaaar(92213)
REAL FERN NEEDS ONLY AIR to live a long hfe Beautiful Neptune Fern from English Channel growths Never needs water-^esn t need soil' Lives on air without care Lisa Far (17459) si^
HALF THE TIME with simple-to-use Rug Gun' Just load, press, release' Knots up to 600 pre-cut yarns in 1 hour'
Rag Gaa (i-----
[44099)
I" doorman has
5 'I St Nick
Winks a Merry Christmas' and waves a jhVl visitors & passers-by
The friendliest Doorman" in town he II stand at your door year after year Colorful wquered paperboard.
Santa Doormaa (51292)
YOUR
KElrSrjkvoiuT the DAILY REFLECTOR
cionxios
GREENVILLE, N.C.
PEANUTS
SIM) \Y. SI PILMBLR 25. 19^2
by Charles Schulz
anp you certainly shoulpn't worry
ABOUT THE PA5T..U)HAT'S PONE 15 PONE...
ANDV CAPP
by
BEETLE BAILEY
by Mort Walker
CAN YOU TRUft ,MM Ml T4 '^wkkly can
lYCSr TMirt art af IMI Ui
Ml irawMit JMM MUWWa MR ani MeNMi Mili Nw an yin MM NmmI tiMcM aiwwars wNM mm MW.
^ ^*' *'**'1* * M AjJfW wtfUi
s iOlfllulf J00<| -p { Ntkldlll momo) s| l :t9iU9J9^ftO
^uni^rWhirip
by Hal Kaufman
r$ HAVE ITI Each of the following statements is attributed to ah American 'I cannot tell a lie." 2. "I am as strong as a bull meOM." 3. "I do not chose to run." 4. "lama Ford nOt a Lincoln." Can you name the Presidents? p>aQ
* 36pi)003 t ttsAMoot) ajopOtMi t uoiSuimmm 6joo t
a Poetic License! Take %(1 of SMliey, 3/5 of Blake, 2/7 of SRenser, 2/9 M Kedts and 2/1 of Mwe and find the name of another fhrtiOus EhEllUI pOaf.
|4j 4 * 4 (H ^ aw 4 imajetikt|tMS|iAMaMi
llghf Ball. Challenge: Arrange eight figure eights in a column to add up to 1000. Cirt you comply?
4|4|f M4MPPV
0 Riddle Me this! Hou^ did thO pridners fare with their stage show? They had a coll c Viking had a penchant for bookt? Erie the I
odt crowd, ha Read
What
HATNX-ERCISE Tin
MA1
fiWlTSI
Our professor friend above is pointing to a challenging problem in multiplication.
Students are asked to determine from the few numbers given and their positions in the computation the identity of the numbers represented by X's.
As a starter, note that the first digit In the multiplicand multiplied by 7 results in a number ending In 8. Also note that thO entire mulflpilcahd multiplied by S is SSm or more.
Take It from therO.
i( N!(4!4lAa iM
MlteeRil HMeihliig Isamitt Mi WMI can M lit' To MM OMI.
HP Oeei*
FOOT LOOSEI Apply these colors neetty to the scene above: I^Rtd. ILt. blue. 3Yellow. 4-Lt. brown. SFlash, aLt, grson. 7-OM. brown. l-Ok. bhie. S-DM. purple. lO-DM. green.
SPELLBINDER _
SCORE to Ibints for using all the letters lA ffia ytmtA h*u>u, tn ittrt
twA complete words:
fMVti tOR
THEN acere 2 points each fdr all .......
MWite at fhur ^ .
Mamd ewhong the letters.
try Allcore at toast HlainM.
|W uoji tMvAMHmiu
i
Our Stor^^: the saxon chieftan
PREPARES TO ENP HI5 LIFE, ANP IF HE SUCCEEPS,HIS MEN B/ANCIENT CUSTOM WILL PO LIKEWISE. BUT ARM HAS OTHER PLANS FOR THE SAXONS. WITH A WELL-AIMEP THROW HE KHOCKS THE CHIEFTAIN OF " BALANCE... ANP IN MOMENTS IS UPON THE MAN. STAP At^ONGYOUR FELUM SAXOYYS ARP USTEN," HE COMMANPS.
ARN THRUSTS THE CHIEFTAIN'S SWORP INTO THE RIVERBANK. '^SAXONS!" HE CRIES, "J GlYE YOU A CHOICE. EtTHER 5RUFF OUT YOUR UVES...
" .. ANP GARBLE OR L/RYRG /ALRAUA. OR STEP FAST TRfS SWORP ARP BECO/HE FREE BRfTORS. HO WE IYER, AS RECOMPENSE FOR YOUR FOUL PEEPS, YOU R/LC PAY A POUBLC TAX TO THE R/R6 FOR L/FE ARP 6/VE ONE PAY OF SERV/CE EACH WEEH 70 THE FAMYES YOU HAVE //VJUREP. "
mm THE PEOPLE OF ORR THERE IS MUCH ANSR/ ORUMBLINS. BUT THE SAXONS, IN ONES ANP TWOS CLIMB FROM THE SOFT RIVER BOTTOM ANP SHEP THEIR WEAPONS ATARN'S FEET. THEY ARE WARY, REMEMBERING WHAT THEY HAVE SEEN OFARN'S GREAT POWER AS A MAGICIAN.
IN THE FEW MOMENTS LEFT ARN BIPS THE SAXONS SWEAR AN OATH TO LIVE PEACEABLY ANP BE LOYAL TO THE KING. "YOU WILL NO LONGER NEEP YOUR 0OATS/ Am SAYS FINALLY. RAISING HIS ARMS HE CRIES.* "C RIVER, TAKE THEM AWAY. IT IS TIMEP JUST RIGHT. SUPPENLY THE WATERS CRASH INTO VIEW ANP SWEEP THE VESSELS TO SEA.
1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.
NEXT WEEK; SUrtiu^ Over
S-2S
PONYTAIL
by Lee Holley
6PENTTW0, HOURS ON rr./Wow / you wRig studying/ XWHPO- WAS THE HARPE6T edSECT FOR VO?
AWELtUTWAS ABOUT MOSSBetween what clothes iwas going to WEAR TO SCHOa AND WHATy WAS 60ING TO BUY ME LUNCH !
>OU OUGHT TO START \ WITH something EASiEI^
THERE'S ALREApy TOO MUCH FIGHTING IN THE WORLP.' I'LL BET >OU TWO COULt^ RESOLVE VOUR PIFFEKENCES IF VOU C0UK7 ^6 lACH OTHER'i fOlNTOPVISWr r~-a*A.
NQ REGGIE. I^Vl never HA/E THAT
HAVE NOTHING TO PO ANVWAy.'
PROBLEM, ARCHIE!
...... , WHEN I RON'THAVE
I CAN'T GET / A PATE, I SPENP THE A PATE.' >( I VENING LOOKING IN
BARNEY
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THI5 SAY 1$ ReAi. Blah/
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by
MORT WAIXER
and
DIR BROWNE
^ TH/5 pay )
0T THE lA/liWTloN X C/4V VO^
eBsr 15 THe sounp of stiow
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REDEYE
(5AIIPP OALLOPby Gordon Bess
EASY ON^S THAT STU^
SUKP!
lUlRPJ
DON'T DRINK TDD ML1CH~.1T ISN'T
0OOP FOR you
VQjm
SUIRP!
We'll never catch the
CAVALRY AND ENSASE IN A euORlOUS BATTLE TO THE DEATH IF Y?U DRINK TOJAAUCH!
V-
, THREE (/clock/INDI PE/IR THE KIN& HP&seEN cnPrURED
by Brant parkar and Johnny harfll
HOW/WNT PIVl&IONS to TOO HOLPIN , RESERVES
MTKNI6HISUVE ^ THE CODE'-OEATN EEPORE
DISHC7N0R
OT three WVI6IONE!
feWlElf'...
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... AhiPMV OUP 5Wof2P... TMIP 15 PiS&RACSFUL.. I'M 60IN5 TO MAVE TO PO 50MEl>4lM5 AaoTTW... r
A CITY ?5^lA1IWP^16eeisr5^^^ ^IP^^PEM301EPKIU^AKIP PRIV02&. SOME 1MI0? UiCClP C0UKm2l65 A5 laaocc^ 10 $QJ17 li^lR AlMlFme ID 60CM A FTACC
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14AT INJ TOTAL CMA03C OFaVMPIC $ccRitY wiii6e Piiery uarrv'cauaoam
v^?ap/1(iJP3
aO-SVERYWHERE CAPE
451 Smart, cozy cape with a neat collar and buttons down front. Crochet in easy shell stitches of synthetic worsted Sizes 10-20 included . . . $2.50
OOUBLE BREASTEO EFFECT
9172 Two-piece dress. Multi-Size pattern gives 3 sizes on one tissue. Half Sizes (IOV2,
12 Vi. 14 i); (1612,18 Vj,20'^2);<22V2 24' 2.26/2). Order regular size. 9172 Printed Pattern . .. $2.50
$2.50 each
Add bOc lof eacn paiiem tor postage and handling
Pattern No
451
9172
9031
434
7497
Site
^FASHIONS TO SEW CATALOG PATTFRN^
Fa'I.Winter has over ICO s-yies. choose one pattern tree. $1 bO 1984 NEEOLECRAFT CATALOG Filled with 150 designs, plus 3 free patterns mside. $1 50
Craft Books.. $2.00 each
121 - PILLOW SHOW-OFFS - Full color pages of 27 cratty pillows to embroider, paint, sew, crochet.
124-EASY GIFTS 'n' ORNAMENTS-
Jiffy gifts to make, cratty holiday ornaments, includes diagrams
126-THRIFTr CRAFTY FIOWERS-
Features aU crafts, for the home and lashion items. Directions
127-AFGHANS ANO DOILIES-Add
charm to your home with 20 doil.es, alghans. bedspreads, tablecloths
For catalogs and books please add 50 each tor postage handling
AAIOUNT enclosed $ _
Send to: LETS SEW. READER MAIL c/o This Newspaper
Box 133, Old Chelsea Sta. New York. N.Y. 10113
434 Cables radiate from the ribbed neckline and wrists of this cardigan. Knit it of knitting worsted-weight yarn. Sizes 32-38 included ... $2.50
CROSS-STITCH BIROS
7497 Embroider cross-stitch birds on 12 blocks; join. Transfer of twelve 7Vi x 7'/2" motifs; quilting design; directions; yardages incl $2.50
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BfcSune To ust Younzik
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gOTI'V, PE2fii6K iiv'ORxaK n 9om <wcf
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/%&. -FLASH GORDON
by Don Barry