Daily Reflector, September 27, 1983


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INSIDE TODAYMILITARY ROLE

In addition to economic assistance for Central America, the U.S. military role in the region is growing. It reflects concern over future. (Page 20)

INSIDE TODAY

UP TO WAH

President Reagan says hell let James Watt decide for himself whether he should quit. Does not believe words said in sense of bigotry or prejudice. (Page 8)SPORTS TODAY

NO-HIHER

St. Louis Bob Forsch tossed a no-hitter at the Montreal Expos yesterday as the Cardinals gained a 3-0 victory. Page 12.THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 213TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 27, 1983

28 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

'Extended School'

Strongly Supported

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

The word is clear and firm - keep the extended school program at Agnes Fullilove intact. This was the gist of the input by 30 spokespersons making statements before members of the Greenville Board of Education Monday night at Fullilove School.

The session was the first public expression forum on the issue of which alternative the school board will adopt for the future status of the program now serving a little more than too students at the two-story brick structure built in 1924. The building has been declared not up to acceptable standards, but city officials granted permission for the facility to be used

Not Running

Greenville Mayor Percy Cox, whose career in public office here includes six full terms as a city councilman and three tenures as mayor, said today that he will not seek re-election in November. *

I feel like Im leaving the city in the best condition its ever been in," said Cox.

"Im satisfied that we have two fine candidates running for mayor and I feel like after over 17 years of city politics its time for me to take a break and maybe later on try something else. the mayor said. Cox would not say what his future political plans might be.

Cox, saying the city has a "busy two years coming up, indicated that he plans "to take some time off and travel with his wife. Janice.

Cox was first appointed to the council in 1964 to fill an unexpired term, then was elected to six terms on the governing board before running successfully for mayor in 1975 and 1977. He was mayor pro-tem during his last four terms on the council. Cox did not seek seek re-election as mayor in 1979 but ran again in 1981, ousting first-term incumbent Don McGlohon.

Janice Buck, the mayor pro-tem, and Greenville businessman A.B Whitley have already filed for mayor in the Nov. 8 municipal elections.

H KI I.KdOR J

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

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

HOST HOMES ASKED

The Department of Pastoral Care of Pitt County Memorial Hospital has asked Hotline to appeal for participants in its Host Homes Program which seeks "to provide free or inexpensive accommodations for relatives of hospital inpatients.

We are asking people in the Greenville-Pitt County community to volunteer to open their homes so that patients families will not have the burden of large motel bills, hospital Chaplain Lewis Lint said. He explained that the host home participant is asked to provide the patients family member a place to sleep and get a bath. He or she is not expected to provide meals, transportation or use of kitchen or laundry facilities.

Hospital volunteers are coordinating the program. A volunteer will visit each host home and have the participant fill out a questionnaire. Potential guests also complete questionnaires, and the two will be matched for the most compatible arrangement.

There will be a Host Homes desk in the hospital lobby.

Persons interested in taking part may contact the hospital Volunteer Office, 757-4491 or 757-9700 or the Pastoral Care Department, 757-4790.

THERE ISAPWPHERE

Hotline answered the question, Is there a Parents Without Partners chapter here? Monday by saying we were unaware of one. There is one, indeed, PWP President Shirley Poole reported this morning. PWP Chapter 1058 meets monthly at the First Presbyterian Church, corner of 14th and Elm streets. It serves single parents regardless of whether they have cust^y of their childr'^n or not. Interested persons may call Ms. Poole, 752-3510, or membership chairman, Gerri Cooke, 753-5577.

this school year.

Spokespersons, each limited to four minutes, ranged from students at the school to court probation personnel and East Carolina University faculty, parents of present an former students, Fullilove faculty members and personnel of various public agencies.

Stanley Little of the Greenville Area Preservation Association urged preserving the building on the basis of its historic value. Dr. William Martin of the ECU School of Education cited the need to keep the program going and intact as long as you can. Any program is going to cost money, you have to be prepared for that. The cost of education is whatever people think it may be worth.

Walt Kitchen was one of the few to touch on attitudes about possibly transferring the program to one of the elementary schools. We are anxious that Third Street (Elementary) School remain as it is, he commented.

Ted Gartman, chairman of social work eduation at ECU, pointed out the value of the Fullilove program as one of the (Please turn to Page 10)

State Award

BETHEL RECEIVES ST.ATE .AWARD ... Jack Edwards and Ferrell Blount, (left to right) members of the Pitt County Board of Education, along with Jannie .Manning, principal of Bethel Elementary, and Dr. Eddie West, superintendent of Pitt

County schools, admire the (lovernor's that has been presented to the Bethel sc the award for its annual Heritage Day Staff Photo)

\ward of Kx'cellencH hool. Bethel received activities. (Beflector

Parker Convicted Of Murder

Seek Death Penalty In Killings

By ROY H ARDEE

A Pitt County jury deliberated for 77 minutes Monday before finding Dwight Parker, 23, guilty on two charges of first degree murder and two counts of robbery with a firearm.

A pre-sentence hearing was under way today, and the jury was expected to begin deliberations on the sentence - life imprisonment or the death penalty - this afternoon.

This morning. District At-. torney Tom Haigwood told the jury the state is seeking the death penalty for Parker, while defense attorneys said they would argue for a sentence of life in prison.

Judge David E. Reid Jr. excused the jurors late 'this morning. They were to return at 2 p.m. to hear attorneys argue the issues and questions of punishment before receiving instructions from Reid.

Parker was found guilty by the jury of nine women and three men in the murder and robbery of the Rev. Leslie L. Thorbs, 31, of Grifton and 41-year-old Anthony Ray Herring of Goldsboro. Their bodies were recovered from the rain-swollen Tar River near Falkland in mid-February. Large cin-derblocks were attached to one leg of each man.

Medical Examiner Stan Harris said each man had

been shot in the top of the head, with the bullet penetrating the brain. Harris said Herring, the father of two children, also had been stabbed.

Parker accepted the

verdict with the same quietness he has displayed throughout the four-week trial, displaying little emotion as he, from time to time, referred to notes. His father and m()ther - she joined the

audience for the first time to hear the verdict - sat behind Parker during .Monday's court session. His wife was absent for the second consecutive day.

Carolyn Pippins, 20, a

co-defendant facing trial on two murder charges and one armed robbery count, also was absent. According to testimony in Parker s trial, .Ms, Pippins received half of the .?35 taken from the

victim.' knew ot the planned. robher\-murder in advance and ht'lped dispose of the bodies No (late has been set for her trial District Attornev Ton. iPlease uirn to Page Id'

Boards Urged Be Ready To Compromise

School Merger Study Is Heard

Crimestoppers

If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt County, call Crimestoppers, 758-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.

By STL ART SW AGE Reflector Staff Writer

The Pitt County Board of Commissioners, along with the county and Greenville boards of education and school principals, listened attentatively Monday afternoon as a Research triangle Institute official said the best way to solve problems facing the two school districts would be to consolidate them.

John Pyecha, project director for the merger feasibility study done by the RTFs Center for Educational Research and Evaluation, told the officials that merging the two school systems would alleviate problems of declining enrollment in the city system, make it easier to maintain racial balance in the schools, provide for better utilization of facilities and improve planning and organization.

Charles Gaskins, chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, opened the meeting by saying the study was authorized in an effort to determine if "unification, consolidation, merger -whatever you call it - would be of benefit to the students, teachers, taxpayers of the county, and how current resources can best be used.

"Do give this thing your serious cc 'ration and be willing to compromise, Gaskins asked the members of the two school boards. Be unselfish and something can be resolved.

The study, authorized in November, cost $41,000.

While the study recom

mends consolidation as the best way to maintain and enhance quality education for all students in the county. Pyecha said the decision was up to county officials and citizens.

There is a declining enrollment in the city system, and an under

utilization of space, while enrollment in the county system is gaining and there is an over-utilization of space.

The Greenville system has about 4.800 students, while the county system has about 11,000 students. By consolidating, the resulting

system would be "a good size to be flexible, " so the io.ss of some students would not impact on the system, and facilities _)uld be better utilized, PTkha.said,

Pointing out that the city system is losing student.s while the county is gaming, (Please turn to Page lo)

Reagan Reminds United Nations Of Dreams Its Founders Held

By R. GREGORY NOKES .Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS (AP) - President Reagan made clear to U.N. members that he yearns for the good old days, when he says the world body stood as a force for peace and could be counted on to use its moral authority to fight international lawlessness.

But the U.N. that Reagan would like to see is unlikely toreemerge.

This body was to speak with the voice of moral authority, Reagan said in

Japanese Ambassador Will Be Greenville Guest

Ambassador Yoshio Okawara of Japan and his wife will visit Greenville Friday to speak at a luncheon arranged by Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co. While here, they will be taken on an aerial tour of the region.

Gov. Jim Hunt also will speak at the luncheon.

In a letter inviting eastern North Carolina leaders to the luncheon. Hunt cited the success North Carolina has had attracting Japanese industry and business to the state. While most of the early growth has been west of Ralei^, the eastern part of the state has an abun&nce of qualities and resources that will make it attractive to the Japanese, Hunt said.

The visit by Japanese dignitaries

was

arranged by CT&T President Wayne Peterson who is also a director of the North Carolina Japan Center at N.C. State University. Peterson also led the North Carolina delegation of the Southeast U.S.-Japan Association for Trade and Commerce to its last two annual conferences - in Japan in 1981 and Tennessee in 1982.

1 am anxious for the ambassador "to meet our people and to see eastern North Carolina. Im sure the community, county and state leaders at this luncheon recognize the value that Japanese .investment can have for the region. 1 believe the ambassador will be impressed with the friendliness of our people, with the diversity of the region and with the overall quality of life, Petersop,said.

an address to the 38th U.N. < General Assembly Monday. Then he asked, "What has happened to the dreams of the U.N.s founders? What has happened to the spirit which created the U N"?

Reagan's speech, which also focused on arms control issues, was warmly applauded by most of the delegations from the 158 members.

The very size of his audience - a U.N. assembly three times as large as it originally was - indicates what has happened since the heady days of its founding in 1945.

There were 51 original members. Of those. 34 were in Western Europe and Latin America and solidly pro-U.S. There were only 11 from Asia and Africa, rnost of them pro-West, and only six from the Soviet bloc.

When the United States wanted to send troops to South Korea to stop an invasion from North Korea in 1950, it received quick support from the U N. membership, Of the 60 U N. members, 53 backed the U.S.-led police action, 41 sent supplies and 16 sent troops.

Since then, the situation has changed so radically that the United Nations, wouldnt name the Soviet Union in iU condemnation of Soviet intervention in Afghanistan or Vietnam in its occupation of Cambodia. It used only the words foreign forces.

A senior administration official recently said Reagan was disappointed in "the tendency toward a doublestandard" on the part ot many U N members, complaining they overlooked misdeeds of the .Soviet Union and its allies but were quick to criticize Western behavior.

The official, who insisted on anonymity, voiced particular unhappiness that some U N. .Security Uounci! members had abstained from the vote condemning the Soviet Union for shooting down .a South Korean airliner, and the failure of the Security Council to con demn Libya for intervening in Chad,

Reagan was" more circumspect in his address, but his meaning was clear. "The emergence of blocs and the polarization of the U N, undermine all that this organization initially valued, he said.

In referring to the past good influence of the United Nations, Reagan cited as one positive development the end of the colonial era and "the birth of 100 newly sovereign nations

It is those new nations that. have caused what Reagan laments as the U.N.s problems.

They are among the worlds poorest, mostly in Africa and Asia, and many have highly illiterate popula-tionfe. Most have never been

convinced that emulating Western economic and polili cal models would lead to prosperity, and. except m a few cases, it hasn't.

Their votes often seem to reflect frustration over the continuing and growing gap betueen ricti and poor nations To qualify for the Western loans that they desperately need, they often have to adopt unpopular remedies at home. Tweaking Uncle Sam's nose is a way of I Please turn to Page 10)

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Trudy Lynn McGowan Marries David D. Hardy

Trudy Lynn McGowan and David Donald Hardy were married Friday evening at seven o'clock at the home of her aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Coley Vainright of Greenville.

The double ring ceremony was conducted by Capt. Paul Kirkpatrick of Washington. A program of wedding music was presented by Samuel Squires.

Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack M c G 0 w a n 0 f Washington, the bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. The bridegroom is the ^ son of Mr. and Mrs. David Hardy Jr. of Murfreesboro. His father was best man.

Magalene McGowan of Washington was the honor attendant. She is sister of the bride.

Adam Congleton of Washington, cousin of the bride, was ring bearer and the usher was Carl Angely of Murfreesboro.

The bride wore a white poly organza over taffeta gown styled with a fitted bodice, alencon lace appli

ques on the bodice and long sleeves. An illusion yoke was bordered with Venise lace and had a high stand-up neckline with jewel sequins tracing the neckline and bodice. The skirt had a nipped natural waist and was overlaid with appliqued lace extending into a cathedral train. She wore a chapel length veil of illusion edged in Chantilly lace attached to a Camelot etched with pearls. She carried a royal bouquet of daisies.

The maid of honor wore a candy organza over taffeta gown styled with an open squared neckline, narrow shoulder straps and off the shoulder bertha collar. The gown was encircled at the empire waistline with candy satin ribbon. The modified A-line skirt was enhanced by a flounce at the hemline that extended up the back to form a bustle. She carried a long-stemmed mum.

The mothers and grandmothers of' the couple were remembered with corsages.

Sallie Vainright was

mistress of ceremonies.

The wedding scene was decorated with a background of candelabra flanked by English ivy. The couple knelt on a decorated prie-dieu. The mantel was accented by an arrangement of daisies.

A reception was held after the ceremony and was given by the brides family. Lena Mae Cox, aunt of the bride, served cake and punch was poured by Elizabeth Smith, sister of the bridegroom. Loria Vainright presided at the register and rice bags were given out by Paula Congleton.

The refreshment table was covered with a white lace cloth and centered with an arrangement of yellow and white daisies.

The couple will live in Murfreesboro after a wedding trip to Nags Head.

The bride graduated from Washington High School and works at Big Star in Washington. The bridegroom graduated from Murfreesboro High School and is attending Chowan College.

In 'Tlie American ^ay

HAIR STYLED - Miss America 1984 Vanessa Williams has her hair worked on by New York hairdresser Vincent Roppatta at Bergdof Goodman. Miss Williams says some beauty contests exploit women but that the Miss America pageant is not among them. She called it a scholarship pageant." Miss America gives $2 million in scholarships alone." she says. 1 dont know what feminist organization does that."(AP Laserphoto)

Cooking Is Fun

BvCKdLYBROVVNSTONK Associated Press Food Editor TE.AT1MEFARE Chocolate Madeleines & Tea CHOCOLATE

M.ADELEIXES Requested by a reader.

2 cup sifted unbleached all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder i-pound stick lightly ' salted butter I refrigerator-firm I, cut in 16 pats '2 cup sugar '2 cup cocoa

1 teaspoon vanilla

2 large eggs

Use 2 madeleine pans, each with 12 shell-shape wells - each well 3 inches long and 2-tablespoon capacity. Grease wells generously with unsalted butter. On wax paper or in a small bowl stir together flour and baking powder. In a medium bowl beat together until blended the lightly salted butter, sugar, cocoa and vanilla; beat in eggs, one at a time, until blended after each addition. Add flour mixture and beat gently until blended. Spread a rounded tablespoon of the batter iff each well in the prepared pans, filling two-thirds full. Bake in a preheated 425-

Map Seller Also Tells Tidbits

HOLLYWOO&HAP) - He knows when Jimmy Stewart walks his dog and what Barbra Streisand has for breakfast, and he doesnt care if the stars gripe about gawkers. As a curbside salesman of maps to the stars homes, Vincent Cravero knows a bit of ogling is good for publicity.

We make the stars. They dont make us, says Cravero.

Its better that they see a few (!rs passing in front of their homes, he says. That way they know theyre still in business. Otherwise youre a dead duck.

Cravero has been a fixture on the Hollywood map-selling scene for almost 10 years, earning about half the $5 price for each Guide to Starland Estates and Mansions that he sells.

But the former disc jockey and band and theater manager does more than sell maps.

Sitting on a lawn chair clad in a T-shirt, jeans and tennis shoes, he provides curbside gossip for the Midwestern masses and foreign tourists who stop in their campers and rental cars.

Ringo Starr left his house and theres just regiilar rich people living there now, Cravero tells Cookie and Dean from Illinois. ...No. 14 is God - George Burns. ... Lucy (Ball) comes out sometimes. Forget Johnny Carsons house. Its not visible. ... Raquel Welch just sold her place. Wanna know what she got for it?

He also tells tourists when Stewart walks his dog, the time Miss Ball is likely to pass through her front door and the type of sports car Burt Reynolds drives.

Cravero says he is updated constantly on Hollywoods real estate transactions by his loyal emissaries, including deliverymen, swimming pool builders and gardeners.

He also says he personally trails celebrities when he spots them and even rummages through their garbage to learn their buying and eating habits.

People like to know what their stars eat and what they drink, he says. Streisand just bought a coffee maker. They want to know that. So I try to give them more than whats listed here on the map.

Craveros customers are a varied lot.

They even come up in Rolls-Royces and buy maps from me, he says. Ive had rich and poor. Ive even had sheiks.

Japanese tourists are big customers, asking most commonly about Paul Newman but also liking Charles Bronson and Kirk Douglas, Cravero says. The French are fond of Miss Ball and Jerry Lewis, while Midwesterners want to know about Miss Ball, Stewart and Peter Falk. Cravero says everyone loves Burns, except the Swedish, whom he contends dont seem to know much about any of the stars.

Cravero, a native of Philadephia who now lives in Burbank and has two daughters, came to Los Angeles in 1973 to be with his father and sister and gained his map-selling territory in Bel-Air by responding to an advertisement. He sells up to 60 maps daily during the busiest months, July and August.

degree oven until a cake tester inserted in the center come: out clean - about 5 minutes. With the tip of a paring knife, loosen edges; with a small spatula remove to a wire rack, shell-shape side up. Serve while still warm or cool completely. Makes 24 - with dark chocolate flavor.

Include Troy In Giving Shower

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by Universal Prats Syndicale

DEAR ABBY: We work in an office consisting of 11 women and one man. The lone man, Troy (not his real name), is in his early 20s.

The problem; One of the women in the office is getting married and we want to give her a bridal shower. Should we include Troy? (It might be a lingerie shower.)

Some of us feel that Troy should not be included and some feel he should. Those of us who feel he shouldnt be included are afraid he might show up lingerie in hand. Help!

THE OFFICE GANG

^ DEAR GANG: If the office gang is giving a coworker a bridal shower, and since Troy is a member of the gang, he should be included. Whether he participates or not is up to him. And to those of you who are afraid he might show op with lingerie in hand: Grow up!

DEAR ABBY: Last year I attended a class reunion and met a former classmate Ill call Ben. After the dinner Ben walked me to my hotel room and I invited him in to talk. We were very much attracted to each other in more ways than one, and before I realized what was happening, we were making love passionately. (Im divorced and he is married.)

I have never enjoyed better sex, and he said it was the same for him. He told me he will never leave his wife and children because he has too much to lose. (He is very successful in his own business.) When we said goodbye he told me he would call me so we could meet again to make love in one of the many cities he travels to for business. So far weve met three times. He sends me plane tickets and we spend a thrilling night together.

The problem; Ben is the only man I have really enjoyed sex with, I believe I am in love with him, but after not hearing from him for two months I have decided to write to him and break off our relationship, but I dont know what to say to him. Please give me some advice. How can I break it off without hurting him? I know he cares for me and I am miserable without him. What should I do? Answer soon so I can get on with my life.

NO FUTURE WITH BEN

DEAR NO FUTURE: A letter from you breaking it offi would be incriminating should it fall into the wrong hands, so wait until he calls, then tell him, I see no future with you, and I need to get on with my life, so if you really care about me, please dont call me again. And if he calls again, repeat the above message. It may be necessary to repeat it two or three times to emphasize your sincerity.

DEAR ABBY: I am a 30-year-old single female who seems to attract gay men. Wherever I am, if theres a gay man around he will strike up a conversation with me. I find gay men very attractive and a lot of fun to be around, and I would like more gay men friends, but Im afraid of being labeled a lesbian. What should I do?

GAY ATTRACTION

DEAR ATTRACTION: Where did you get the idea that the only females who socialize with gay men are lesbians? It's absurd. Attractive people attract attractive people straight and gay.

Problems? Everybody has them. What are yours? Write to Abby, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. For a personal reply, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.

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

BALANCE NEEDED

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - Are status-conscious parents overloading their children, starting as early as age three, with exercise classes, ballet, art, music -and top-of-the-line clothes and toys?

Structured activities can be beneficial, says Rita Un-derberg, a child psychologist and an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester Medical Center. Held in a safe place, under skilled supervision, such activities can foster independence. But she cautions against over-scheduling; Children need a balance between free play and supervised group activities.

Ideally, the child of todays status-conscious family needs first-rate goods, services and supervised care, balanced by enjoyable times with parents, she says.

Ktn Perhins, 00$

Family & General Dentistry

Call For Appointment

752-5126

Bridge Winners Announced

Tied for first place in the Wednesday morning game were: Mrs. Stuart Page and Mrs. Sidney Skinner with Mrs. Everett Pittman and Mrs. Fred Sorensen. TTieir game percentage was .602 percent. Others placing were Mrs. C.I. McCilellana and Emma B. Warren, third;

Bridal

Policy

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For p^ublication 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.

Chris Langley and Ed Yauck, fourth.

Nalh-South winners in the afternoon game played at Planters Bank were: Mre. Eli Bloom and Mrs. M.H. Bynum, first with .603 percent; Mrs. Lacy Harrell and Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts, second; Mrs. Barry Powers and Lee Hastings, third.

East-West: Pearl Schecheter and Edith Gintis, first with .600 percent; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew de-Sherbinin, second; Mrs. Robert Barnhill and Mrs. E.J. Poindexter, third.

North-South winners Saturday afternoon at Planters Bank included: Mrs. Harold Forbes and Mrs. M.H. Bynum, first with .643 percent; Mrs. I.J. Murphrey and Abe Jakob, second; Mrs. W.R. Harris and Mrs. J.M. Horton, third; Mrs. Robert Blenk and Mrs. Sallie Brown, fourth.

East-West: Mr. and Mrs. Andrew deSherbinin, first with .583 percent; Emma Warren and Mrs. William Parvin, second; Chris Langley and Ed Yauck, third; Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Webb, fourth.

Scientist Marie Curie died in 1934.

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Asheville Is A National

Center For Jewelry Repair

By MIKE BOYD The Asheville Times ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Isjour 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 box from Kentucky.

Fine stores across the nation send their customers jewelry here for repairs. Rings that need to be resized, lockets with broken hinges, )ins with catches that no onger 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. They can repair your jewelry or make a custom design from scratch.

Joe Cottrell Sr. says one of the big items today in the jewelry repair trade is gold necklaces. The lighter they are, the more easily they snap.

Paul and Lucia Greene and 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 small 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 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 sprav 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 hundr^ 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 busings 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, furnishing 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. Occasionally, a woman brings in an engagement ring to determine the extent of her fiances intentions.

Michael Greene says, in the case of engagement rings, they are almost always the real thing.

Usually, if you have that kind of a relationship, and the ring isnt real, he will tell her. Hell say, This is the best that I can do. Or something like that.

Costume jewelry makes up a surprisingly large part of the jewelry repair business. The owners know the jewelry isnt worth the price of the repair. But they do it anyway.

Michael Greene says: Milestones are marked in a persons life by jewelry. These things always have value.

Joe Cottrell Jr. agrees. Most of the time jewelry is a gift from some one else. If you received it for a special occasion, then you want to have it repaired. How much the jewelry itself is worth really doesnt enter into it.

Chicken And Rice Can Be Prepared Ahead And Frozen

By CECILY BROW.\STONE Associated Press Food Editor

DEAR CECILY: Some months ago a reader wrote you she had an electric appliance that seals food pouches for freezer storage and asked you whether you would copycat the Chicken, Vegetable and Vermicelli dish available in frozen pouches in supermarkets. It particularly appealed to her because it had less than 300 calories per serving, and she wanted to make it at home.

I tried your copycat recipe of that dish and found it practically identical with the bought one. Now 1 am wondering whether you would copycat the chicken and vegetable-rice combination also available in frozen pouches in supermarkets. If you do, I shaU consider it a great favor. -GRATEFUL.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Tuesday, Septernber 27. 1983

DEAR GRATEFUL: Heres a recipe for Make-ahead Chicken and Vegetable Rice - the frozen pouch dish you want to make at home,. I think our version is remarkably similar to the bought dish and each serving of the homemade version has only 340 calories. A friend of mine was good enough to work out this recipe; I hope you agree with me that she did a superb job. - C.C.

COPYCAT COOKING You can make Chicken and Vegetable Rice in a boilable pouch at home.

cooking pouches; add 4 cup of

FREEZE-AHEAD CHICKEN AND VEGETABLE RICE Sauce Mixture, recipe follows 2 tablespoons com oil 1 pound boneless skinless chicken (cut in 2- by 1-inch pieces)

1 cup sliced fresh mushrooms

Vegetable Rice, recipe follows

Prepare Sauce Mixture and reserve.

In a large skillet, over medium heat, heat oil. Add chicken, about one-half the pieces at a time; cook, stirring a few times, until lightly browned - about 2 minutes. With a slotted spoon, remove chicken and reserve.

To the skillet, add mushrooms. Stirring several times, cook briskly until wilted - a minute or two. Restir reserved Sauce Mixture and add. Stirring constantly over medium heat, cook until Uiis mushroom sauce is clear, thickened and boiling.

Place 'ys cup (rf the reserved chicken in each of 4 boilable

the mushroom sauce. Seal according to manufacturers directions. Freeze.

Prepare Vegetable Rice.

At serving time for each serving, place 1 chicken and 1 vegetable-rice boilable cooking pouch in a saucepan of boiling water; do not cover. Boil gently for 18 to 20 minutes. Remove from water. Shake pouches to mix. Cut open and serve.

Makes 4 servings.

SAUCE MIXTURE; In a small bowl stir together 2 tablespoons cornstarch, 2 teaspoon instant minced onion, '4 teaspoon instant

seasoning sauce. Makes about 2 cups,

VEGETABLE RICE: In a small bowl toss together 1'2 cups cooked converted-type rice, 1 cup cooked French-style snap beans, 4 cup cooked wild rice, 4 cup finely chopped onion, 4 teaspoon salt and a dash of turmeric. Put about '2 cup of the mixture in each of 4 boilable cooking pouches. Seal according to manufacturers directions. Freeze.

minced garlic, '4 teaspoon salt.

V4 teaspoon paprika,'/teaspoon dried tarragon leaves, 'g teaspoon pepper and I-I61 teaspoon turmeric. Gradually stir in, keeping smooth, 2 cups cool chicken bouillon or broth, 1 tablespoon dark com syrup, l tablespoon lemon juice ana teaspoon browning-and-

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En^ajiiement

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Mr. and Mrs. James Turnage of Greenville announce the engagement of their daughter. Peggy Turnage Jackson, to Larry Smith, son of .Mrs. .Nina Smith of Greenville and the late Jack Smith. The wedding will take place Oct. 15.

mm on;

Time Magazine Anniversary

IN ENGLAND - British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at her 10 Downing Street residence in London late last week is surrounded by the front page covers of Time Magazine on which she has appeared. The British celebration of the

You can always tell when the high school and college reunion season hits us.

The streets swell with joggers. There are waiting lines around the gym. And you cant find a piece of lettuce in the entire town.

Everyone wants to go back to their old school looking like theyre 12 years old. Everyone wants to be the one who fulfilled the class prophecy. Ite deja vu with hairpiece, dentures and stretch marks.

Some classmates never return to the school that unleashed them into society armed only with a talent for diagramming a sentence and three Spanish verbs. They have no curiosity as to how everyone turned out.

Others are staples at every graduation and wouldnt miss it for the world. Who are they?

INSURANCE SALESMEN. One class reunion is worth 500 callbacks. Show them a picture of your family and from somewhere they pull out an artists brush and take Daddy out of the picture, leaving you with no income and a $130,000 mortgage. They really know how to make a party fun.

THE CHEERLEADER WHOSE BUST MEASUREMENT EXCEEDED HER I.Q. BY 35. She has the only chest that can accommodate two name tags. If Sandra Day OConnor appeared in her black robe shed say, How many children do you have now and where are you living? You must have been color-draped

You look fantastic in black.

EVERYONE WHO IS PREGNANT. They show up in the early reunions and why shouldnt they? They have nothing to lose. Literally.

TALL PEOPLE WHO USED TO BE SHORT. At my reunion I met a boy who had grown six inches since high school graduation and turned out to be a hunk. I told his wife (an outsider) it wasnt fair. We put up with him when he was short. He could have at least told us of his plans to grow.

RICH PEOPLE WHO USED TO BE POOR. They drive new cars, give you their card and hide out in the restroom from the University Development Fundraisers. They never bring their own bottles, but summon drinks from the bar at $5 a pop.

SHY PEOPLE WHO NOW HAVE THEIR OWN SYNDICATED TALK SHOWS. Their motive in returning is always the same. Revenge upon all the teachers who never called on them when they knew the answ er and were too shy to raise their hands.

PEOPLE WHO KNOW ALL THE WORDS TO THE SCHOOL SONG. I have been to a lot of reunions in my time and they always show up. Both of them.

Scientists still arent sure whether all animals sleep. They think nearly all pause in their daily activity, but whether all of those breaks are true sleep remains a mystery.

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magazinges 60th anniversary includes an exhibition of Time cover art. a display of portraiture and photography featuring 240 British personalities who have appeared on its cover since 1923. (AP Wirephoto)

Garden Club Has Slide Presentation

The Grass Roots Garden Club held its meeting last week at the home of Mrs. C.R. Sheppherd. The program was given by the Rev. and Mrs. John Moore.

They showed slides of his missionary work in St. Vincent, West Indies. He has been in missionary work in the Southern Roanoke Baptist Association for 25 years. After his retirement in June 1982, Moore and his wife spent 10 months as volunteer missionaries in St. Vincent. She is a member of the club.

The October meeting will be held at the recreational center.

The basic ingredient used in the manuf^ture of dice is cotton, the source of the heavy plastic, cellulose nitrate.

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The Women of the Moose held its business meeting Thursday evening at the Moose Lodge. Mary Bed-dard, senior regent, conducted the meeting.

Various committee reports were given. It was announced that Hit and Run

Band will play for a dance nd a bi

Oct. 22 and a bake sale will be held at Carolina East Mall Oct. 29.

The next meeting will be

Oct. 13.

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CWI Attend Fall Conference

The North Carolina Credit Women-International held its 42nd annual conference at the Holiday Inn Four Seasons in Greensboro recently.

Attending from Greenville were Debbie Johnston, Jean McLawhorn, Jane Walker, Gail Stephenson, Pat West and Marian Hardee.

The installation of new state officers was held and several seminars took place.

Approximately 160 CWI members attended.

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4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.

Ediforial

Tuesday, September 27,1963

Paul O'Connor

The Gore Measure

Its a thought (not ours) deserving considerable contemplation.

Like it or not, there is now a market for human body organs; and it is likely to grow as surgical techniques improve so that expectations of success in the transplant process mount.

All over the land there are people in need of vital organs essential for healthy living or to life itself. And, accompanying that demand for items in critical shortage, there are people who, for reasons of their own are considering possibilities of^ selling a part of themselves (for many thousands of dollars?) to meet their own needs.

The thought is repugnant.

Still, the demand outweighs the available supply of vital

organs.

Most people, bemused by concerns of the present, neglect to sign donor cards (such as those distributed by North Carolina's driver-licensing offices), and it might be presumed many emergency room physicians might ignore them out of fear for malpractice suits and reluctance to involve themselves in a time-consuming and financially unrewarding procedure.

There is an alternative concept in the wings.

Rep. Albert Gore (Tenn.) has introduced a bill in Congress that would permit physicians to assume consent for utilization of cadaver organs for transplant unless a person carries a refusal card, or an objection is raised by a family member. This would transfer the burden of proof in organ donations to those who do not want to participate, rather than those who

are willing or reticent or for whom it is too late to express

their wishes.

The details of the proposal are more involved than our limited space permits; but we do earnestly call this proposed law to the attention of North Carolinas congressional delegation for closer scrutiny of its wisdom and timeliness. It just might be the answer to problems that are looming ever larger in modern society.Conif^uhication Price: $3 Million

Public Forum

ill the editor:

I am writing in response to the recent 'iispension ot Betty Trought. director of nursing services at Pitt County .Memorial Hospital, and her policies, I am a senior nursing student at ..ECU as well as an mployee at FCMH. .Any opinions presented here are my own.

I am disturbed by the action taken by 'he FC.MH Board ot Trustees against the director o! nursing services and her hiring policies regarding nursing staff. The move towards an all-H.X. staff is an etiort to upgrade the quality of nursing .'crvices and, in turn, to improve the delivery ot patient care. The main issue ol coneern is that of quality assurance, or rather the delivery of the highest quality ot health care possible to the consumer. Should not the consumer be assured of the highest quality of care while getting the most for his her tax dollar' Research has shown that an all-K..\. staff is more cost- effective than a staff consisting of aides and L.F .N.'s working under the supervision ot H.N's.

.Another point m support of an R..\ staff is that FCMR is a regional referral center as well as a teaching hospital. The patient level of acuity is generally higher than m other area hospitals, and this necessitates a well-trained efficient nursing staff. .As a student. I feel that R X.'s provide a better role model for rursmg students .Also. R.X.'s are more qualified to suplement the instruction of nursing students as well as medical students.

Lastly, the prospective plan of reimbursement by .Medicare effective October 1, 1983, provides incentive'for FCMfl to examine the cost-effectiveness of all areas of hospital service, including nursing services.

I feel that the mam concern ot all nurses is the delivery of high quality patient care, and R.X.'s are more qualified to do just that.

Christine .Martin President, East (aroolina Association of Xursing Students

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 Cotanche Street. Greenville. N.C 27834

Established 1882

Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHARO Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHiCHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers

Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville. N.C. (USPS14W00)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly S4.00 MAIL RATES (Priesa include tax where applicable)

Pitt And Adjoining Counties 84.00 Per Month

Elsewhere in North Carolina $4.35 Per Month Outside North Carolina SS.SO Per Month MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications ot special dispatches here are also reserved.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ' Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request.

Member Audit Bureau ol Circulation

To the editor:

Please be advised that;

1. 1 am not retiring as indicated by the headline over my picture on page 5 of the Friday, September 23rd Edition of the Reflector.

2.1 did not notify, nor was 1 contacted by, the ECU .News Bureau to "announce my resignation."

3. 1 have not indicated to the ECU News Bureau that I will devote my time to teaching as quoted in the aforecited September 23rd article but will remain on the ECU faculty and continue teaching, doing research and service.

4. 1 am not a native of Jacksonville. Alabama but of Camp Hill. Alabama a fact of which 1 am very proud.

5. Omitted from the list of professional experience was my six years as Director of the School of Home conomics at The University of Oklahoma, 119T4-1980).

6. Under my leadership, the School of Home Economics at ECU has been reaccredited, a fact that 1 believe warrants much more publicity than it received.

Unfortunately, my resignation has been submitted to the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and accepted by him. Eugenia ,M. Zallen

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

Strength ForToday

The word optimism comes from a Latin word meaning the best. It is the conviction that life and the things which make up life are essentially good. They may be imperfect in fact we are sure they are but they are essentially good.

Tliere is justification for^ optimism when we confront every situation in life. But also, there is justification for a certain amount of pessimism. Optimism and pessimism are like the positive and negative currents of electricity. We need them both. Too much optimism and we are giddy, superficial, and willing to believe anything which makes us feel better. Pervasive pessimism, on the other hand, leads to a dismal despondency and disillusionment.

Realism demands that we should be aware of all the elements of life which evoke pessimism, but cultivate all those elements which justify optimism. Optimism stands for light, progress, happiness, helpfulness all of which we need if we are to lead a satisfying life. ^    *

RALEIGH The consultants presentation was like something from a television commercial the ad where the modern day businessman walks into an office equipped with turn-of-the-century typewriters and staffed by secretaries in bonnets. The Legislature, the consultant said, is trying to legislate in the 1980s with the tools of centuries past.

Three consultants from the firm of Arthur Young Inc. of Washington, D.C., told the Legislative Services Commission this month that the General Assembly should completely revamp its information services. The price tag: $3 million.

The consultants were hired last spring to observe the Legislature in action and then to recommend improvements. They began their presentation with a back-handed compliment. If your staff was not so highly motivated, youd be in a real jam. They went on to describe a Legislature where inefficiency

istl^e operating rule.

Ina day when word processors have eliminated the re-typing of documents in most modern offices, the Legislature has people working like mad continuously re-typing clean and corrected copies of bills, calendars and historical documents. When a final copy of a publication is ready to go to a printer, the printer must type it up again into his machines. That costs the state $30,000 a year in typesetting fees.

Legislative staff economists who must project revenue and spending patterns for the budget committees dont have automatic access to the latest figures coming out of the state departments. When a report is issued, they take out their notebooks and record the results.

Legislative staffers also dont have any record of previous work done by their colleagues, the consultants say. Its all word of mouth. For example.

one staffer asked to investigate bingo laws. He doesnt have an index of all previously legislative research on bingo laws. If hes properly diligent, his first research tool is to ask around.

When the laws are changed, legislative lawyers must comb the statute books looking for other laws that might be affected. When a graph has to be drawn for a report committee, high-paid staffers must sit down with crayon and rulers and put their first-grade skills to work. When a legislator wants to know how a bill did in committee this morning, he must go looking for someone who was in that committee.

Information moves slowly through the official channels of the Legislature they didnt comment on the rumor mill and that slows down the assembly, the consultants reported. Theres a lot of wasted motion, a lot of time wasted sitting around. The quality of

SB1tCI8(OPHafelflt6>-nBJ>g(WlCBE01j||^^^

James Kilpatrick

Books On Royster, Buckley

SCRABBLE, Va. - Two autobiographies recently have come to hand. The first of them covers 50 years in the life of Vermont Royster; the second covers one week (plus a few flashbacks) in the life of William F. Buckley Jr. Let me recommend both books wholeheartedly.

Royster and Buckley would rank among the top 10 in anyones list of the most influential conservatives of the mid-century. Royster was for many years editor of The Wall Street Journal; Buckley is the longtime editor of National Review. In some ways they are as unalike as Mutt and Jeff. Royster is short, solid, laconic; he has the build of a major league catcher apd is about as voluble as an infield umpirp. Buckley is tall, limber, talkative; more than any person I have ever known, he is possessed of a true joie de vivre a zest for living every minute for its full 60 seconds.

There are other contrasts. Royster was born and reared in North Carolina and pever traveled much beyond Raleigh and Chapel Hill until he was out of college. Buckleys cosmopolitan upbringing saw him all over the world during his boyhood; he was fluent in French and Spanish before he ever got to prep school. Roysters father was a college professor of Latin and Greek; the family income was decidedly middle. Buckleys father was a multimillionaire oilman and entrepreneur; the family income per-, mitted the Buckley children to

benefit from a governess, two nurses, two music teachers, seven servants, two grooms.

Yet Royster and Buckley have come separately to their eminence with much in common. Both of them have sat at dinner in households of the mighty and have been impressed in just the right degree. Both of them have seen the worlds emperors, clothed and unclothed. Their great good fortune, earned the hard way, has been to sit in the No. 1 press box of contemporary history, watching the scene below, and to have access to the locker rooms after a game is over.

In My Own, My Countrys Time

(Algonquiii^ Books, Chapel Hill), Royster looks back at the great figures in American politics he Ww as a reporter and editor, but his autobiography is also an intensely personal account of his wartime years as a naval officer and of his early struggles to get established in New York. Since his retirement from the Journal, Royster has been teaching editorial writing at the University of North Carolina; his trenchant observations on the craft

ould be must reading in editorial . oms everywhere.

In Overdrive (Doubleday), Buckley returns to a form he used successfully in his earlier autobiographical work, Cruising Speed. He takes us day by day through a typical week in his life. The book has encountered some stinging reviews, but the criticism is notJohn Cunniff

directed at Buckleys writing or Buckleys ideas, but rather at Buckleys lifestyle. The reviewers are pea green with envy.

Some intimations also have floated along that Buckley doesnt really live at such a breakneck pace, that Overdrive is overblown, that the names he drops are names he never really held at all. Let me put the lie to these insinuations. I have known the gentleman for 25 years, have sailed a few times with him on the old Suzie Wong, have heard him at the harpsichord and in the lecture hall, and I can attest that this is exactly how Buckley lives. He drives in the fast lane, and given his stamina, he can run on empty for hours.

Royster and Buckley hold one characteristic above all in common: They are both first-class writers. Their styles are quite different, but their prose is rooted in the same academic disciplines. Roysters account of his years in a private academy is strikingly similar to Buckleys reminiscence of his years in Millwood. They built a foundation in Latin, and on that foundation they raised their reputations as writers, men of reason, critics of ideas.

Royster was 68 last April; Buckley will be 58 in November. As editors, columnists, authors, both of them merit a place in journalisms hall of fame. Roysters book is easy reading; Buckleys headlong diary may leave you breathless. Both works provide a warm glimpse of gentlemen youd like to get to know.

The Oddities Of Finance

NEW YORK (AP) - Anyone who has ever applied for a personal loan begins to understand some of the odd principles that seem to apply in the seemingly proper world of high and low finance.

The oddities begin at a very rudimentary level - with that upright person, for example, who scrupulously pays bills on time and in cash. He has no record, so he will be denied credit because, of course, he hasnt used credit.

Only slightly higher in respectability and acceptability is the person who applies for a $3,000 loan. His credit record will be examined in great detail, the loan will be granted warily, and repayments will be monitored closely.

The big borrower, however, is treated a bit differently, his request for seven or eight-figure sums suggesting a borrower of means rather than a person in need. And the bigger the debt, the more formidable the borrower becomes.

The ultimate in formidability and irony is when the big borrower finds himself unable to repay on time anj insists that the lender eive him more monev and

soften the terms of repayment if he ever wishes to get his inoney back.

Such phenomena will be evident this week as the International Monetary Fund holds its annual meeting in Washington with a proposal that $42 billion -one-fifth from the United States - be added to its resources.

The money is needed, say IMF officials, to lend to underdeveloped nations, among them nations that recently have been unable to re|y earlier loans to commercial banks in the United States and other industrialized nations.

A lot of the arguments are bound to raise the hackles of ordinary Americans who couldnt get a personal loan or even a home mortgage in the past few years, despite their ability to demonstrate a credit rating better than, say, Mexico.

And their sense of injustice might be raised even higher by the realization that some of the domestic shortage of lenda-ble funds resulted from banL bundling up consumer savings and shipping them abroad to foreign borrowers.

Now, they argue, the request of the IntemaHnnal Monetarv Fund is an at

tempt to bail out those banks, to save them from their own folly and greed, and once again it is the ordinary American who will pay - through inflation.

The argument has tremendous appeal, and probably as much merit, but reason and ogic arent the sole criteria, as even some bankers will admit. In the odd world of finance, they say, it now can be argued that it is in the ordinary Americans self-interest to come up with more money to be lent abroad.

Never mind that additional irony -that while the loans arent being repaid a lot of the money is nevertheless returning to the United States as investments in choice real estate. Remember, logic offers little guidance.

Better instead to remember that those loans mean jobs.

If the less developd economies are denied an additional injection of funds from theindustrial world they may be unable to buy the industrial worlds goods. If they cannot buy goods, those who produce goods cannot employ workers.    f

legislation may suffer from a lack of some information. The Legislature may be unable to assess the ramifications of some of its actions with the current information systems in place.

So a $3 million network of word processors and computers was recommended. It would link the assembly to the main state computer. It would establish some needed information re^ trieval services for the staff. It would eliminate much of the re-typing that currently occurs. -

But it wouldnt save much money not as compared to th investment, that is. Each year, the state would save about $150,000 with the new computer. Thats about a 20-year payback period for the initial investmeni' a lifetime the computer, network is not likely to enjoy.

So the commission adjourned without taking action. Now they face the question: Is a more efficient Legislature worth $3 million?

Rowland Evans and Robert NovakBitter Harvest

WASHINGTON Having sown the seeds of Republican- opposed legislation, President Reagan is reaping a bitter harvest: demands from liberal Democrats that he humble himself to keep their support for his International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout bill.

To retain needed House Democrats, the president must publicly disavow the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC). Even that would not relieve Reagan from the earlier Democratic requirement that he pay for the IMF financing with the coin of a costly domestic housing bill.

The presidents dilemma flows inevitably from pursuit of legislation opposed by Republican friends and supported by Democratic foes. The effect is cumulative, pushing Reagan ever further from his political base. To pass the IMF bailout ecorned by Reaganite Republicans, he is preseured to condemn Reaganite politics and embrace anti-Reaganite economics.

Unless he calls the Democratic bluff, Ronald Reagan will drift down the same path followed 30 years ago by Dwight D. Eisenhower. That course began with his Democratic-backed tax increase in 1982, but the current IMF financing erodes much more of Reagans right-populist base. Pouring $8.5 billion in American tax money into the IMF to bail out the international banks from improvident loans to feckless Third World countries certainly would have been opposed by the pre-presidential Reagan. Consequently, to his true believers, the presidents aggressive support of the financing package represents the triumph of Wall Street over Main Street in his administration.

On no other issue has Reagan beeti so dependent on Democrats. Its passage in the House Aug. 3 by a six-vote margin found 22 more Republicans opposing it than supporting it, with Reaganite ranks including Minority Whip Trent Lott and GOP Conference Chairman Jack Kemp closed against the president. A 28-vote Democratic bulge saved Reagan, but the financing is far from final congressional approval.

The Democratic due bill came Aug.

16 in a letter to Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan from the chairman of the House Banking Committee, Rep. Fernand St Germain of Rhode Island: I am seriously constrained from continuing with the legislative ' process on HR 2957 (IMF financing) until the housing authorization bill is completed. The threat did not impress the White House. Well stare him down, a senior presidential aide said of St Germain.

The White House was more impressed Sept. 15 when Don Regan was confronted during a hearing by Wisconsins Rep. David Obey, the hard-nosed Democratic liberal leader who vented accumulated antagonism. Obey was fuming about news releases sent out last month by the NRCC to some 20 congressional . districts berating their Democratic incumbents for voting against an administration-opposed amendment to the IMF financing bill. The defeated amendment, sponeored by Rep. Phil Gramm, the Democrat-turned-Republican from Texas, would have barred IMF aid to communist dictatorshipe.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises Inc.





The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C

Multinational Peace-Keeping Force In Lebanon Pays Price

Tuesday. September 27, 1983    5

SOVIET MINI'SUB A Soviet mini-submarine used earlier this month to search for debris from the Korean Airlines jetliner shot down Sept. 1 near Sakhalin Island, rests on the deck of a conventional tender vessel in Nevelsk, Sakhalin

Island. It was not known if the sub, which is painted red and white, found any of the wreckage. .Nevelsk port can be seen in the background. (AP Laserphoto)

Japan's Arms Makers Keep Low Profile On Production Planning

TOKYO (AP) - Some defense and industry officials want Japan to gear toward self-sufhciency in arms )roduction by developing and milding more of its own fighters, ships and missiles - a sensitive issue in a country that vividly remembers World War II,

Giant electronics firms including Hitachi and Toshiba have opened defense divisions; the nations No. 2 automaker, Nissan Motors, develops missile technology; Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the No. 1 arms builder, which gobbles up a quarter of the Japans defense contracts, wants to make more wea{wns.

This comes against the backdrop of continued U.S. pressure for Japan to boost its ability to defend itself and sea lanes stretching up to 1,000 miles from its shores, and for Japan to cooperate with America in a two-way transfer of military technologies.

Japanese industry and defense sources said they felt hemmed in by their governments ban on arms exports and its public in

sistence that defense spending be held to less than 1 percent of the gross national product.

Many Japanese feel strongly that there must never be a return to the miltiarism that drew them into the devastation of World War II, and Southeast Asian nations have made clear that renewed Japanese military strength would not be acceptable.

Japanese industries are well positioned for serious entry into electronics-based weapons production, and ahead of the pack in fields such as fiber optics and ceramics that have military applications, experts say.

One Japan Defense Agency official, who asked not to be named, said about 80 percent of the nations military planes and 60 percent 70 percent of its missiles are now produced under license with foreign firms.

Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, bending Japans postwar ban on all weapons exports, early this year announced that Japan would supply military technology to

Neighborhood Outlaws Feud

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Police have stepped up patrols and scheduled meetings to try to settle a rift between members of a motorcycle gang and residents of a neighborhood where two fatal shootings have occurred in the past week.

Eleven members of the Outlaws motorcycle gang pleaded innocent Monday to murder charges in the fatal shooting of a maiv Saturday near their new clubhouse in the Portland neighborhood.

Last Tuesday, an Outlaw member was shot and killed when someone opened fire from a car that spd past the clubhouse.

The main request of the residents is to get them (Outlaws) out, but they have the same constitutional rights as everyone else and I cant make them move as long as they conform to the law, Police Chief Richard Dotson said Monday.

He said he plans to meet with the gangs president and area residents this week to discuss the situation.

Meanwhile, police have increased the frequency of their patrols in the riverfront neighborhood and officers are "anticipating (more violence) as a possibility, Dotson said.

The 11 - most of whom were outsiders in town-for the funeral of the slain gang member - were arrested Saturday after Gary Wayne Baucom, 30, was shot to death while driving past the clubhouse, authorities said. Baucoms pickup ran over three of 36 motorcycles parked in front of the

clubhouse shortly after midnight, police said.

The pickup went out of control and crashed into a business at the corner of the street. Somebody then fired through the back of the truck and hit the driver, police said. Two passengers in the truck with Baucom fled the scene.

Baucom was a brother-in-law of one of the three men involved in a brawl with two Outlaws last Monday at a bar in the Portland neighborhood where the clubhouse is located, police said.

The night after the fight, Donald G. Kopp, 28, an Outlaw biker, was killed by bullets fired from a passing car.

Robert D. Douglas, a bystander who lives next door to the clubhouse, was wounded in that shooting. He was treated and released from an area hospital.

No arrests have been made in the Kopp shooting.

Police think both killings resulted from the barroom fight.

But Outlaws attorney David Kaplan said Monday it was area residents who had been the aggressors.

Two Outlaws are trying to have a quiet drink and three men start insulting them. Then one Outlaw (Kopp) just walks out of the clubhouse and gets shot. Then some car comes by and knocks over their motorcycles, Kaplan said. Who is the aggressor and who is the victim?

If we find that we can get no response from police, then we will seek legal advice, she said.

the United States, but there has yet to be any specific agreement on or actual transfer of arms technology.

Some examples of companies gearing up for future business:

-Hitachi set up a defense technologies promotion division in August 1980 that accounted for 0.5 percent or $53*million of total sales last year, said a division official who asked not to be named.

Half of Hitachis 27 factories and six research operations can be applicable for defense technologies, he said. Among its defense products are data processing systems for shipboard sonar and data link systems for jet fighters, he said.

Electronics will play a major role in defense technologies, he said. Were behind other companies and we want to catch up.

He named Mitsubishi Electric, Toshiba and NEC Corp. as companies far ahead in the field.

-At Toshiba, another giant electronics maker that has been a defense contractor for a decade, a defense division was created this April because the amount of sales was high enough to justify it, said a corporate spokesman. Most of the sales, which hit $228 million last year, involved equipment for missiles, he said.

At Nissan Motors, plans are under way to increase.i production of solid-fuel booster rocket technologies used in missile launching. A company spokesman called the defense-related spending in the companys aeronautical and space division a drop in the bucket - representing less than 0.5 percent of sales.

The spokesman said the companys defense contracts were still very sensitive, in part due to the nuclear phobia in Japan, which suffered two nuclear bombings, at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, at the end of the war. If somebody said Nissan was into defense, it could incite a public reaction.

Last year Nissan signed a technical agreement with the Maryland-based Martin Marietta Corp. - maker of the Patriot missile. The spokesman said the agreement helped in laying the groundwork for future business. The Japan Defense Agency may acquire Patriot missiles to succeed the Nike series.

Total defense procurements for 1982 were equivalent to $5.7 billion with 80.5 percent going to domestic firms, the Defense Agency official said.

The Defense Agency official claimed the arms industry accounted for only 0.36 percent of Japans industrial output, smaller than the bread industry, bigger than the traditional cake industry.

More than a dozen U.S. and Japanese government' and industry officials interviewed held similar views on the gradual expansion of Japans still small arms industry. All of them also insisted that they not be named, saying    ,

the issues were too sensitive, embarrassing and political.

The cap on exports -which makes the Defense Agencv the sole buyer of made-in-Japan weapons -tightly restricts the market. The spending ceiling means little government money is available for research and development.

Its very stupid. a Japan Defense Agency official said. Obviously if there were no restrictions we could have much better weapons."

Still, all the sources agreed the 1 percent export ceiling will be exceeded and exports of defense-related equipment will begin within a few years for two main reasons:U.S. pressure and the likelihood of agreements on transfers'' of military technology.

ByMONAZIADE Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The four-nation, 5,800-man force that was sent to Beirut last year to help keep the peace has suffered a dozen dead and 68 wounded in the latest round of the Lebanese civil war.

The 2,000 French troops suffered the highest death toll. Light French soldiers have been killed and 20 wounded since fighting between Shiite Moslem militiamen and the Lebanese army began Aug. 28.

Four of the 1,600 U.S. Marines were killed and 37 were wounded before a cease-fire agreement Monday halted the battles in Beirut and the central mountains that rise from the southern edge of the capital.

Eleven of the 2,100 Italian peacekeepers were wounded. The 97 British troops suffered no casualties although their headquarters is located at the foot of the slopes where the bulk of the fighting raged, and they came under sniper and mortar fire often.

The Lebanese police estimated the casualty toll at 806 killed and 1,725 wounded. The army would not make public its casualties, and neither would the various warring militia groups.

Many of the casualties among the peacekeepers occurred during the five-day street battle between the army and Amal. the Shiite Moslem militia. Aug. 28-Sept.

Marines killed and seven French. 14 Americans and three Italians wounded.

Battling for control of Moslem west Beirut, the militiamen were armed only with small mortars and rocket-propelled grenades. But Druse militiamen and their Syrian allies in the mountains poured down rockets and heavy artillery, and some of the barrages hit the peacekeepers.

On Sept. 4. the Israeli army withdrew from the central mountains southeast of Beirut, the Lebanese army moved in to bring the area under the control of President Amin Gemayels gov-

Shooting Claim By North Korea

The toll then included five French soldiers and two U.S.

TOKYO (AP) - North Koreas news agency claimed today that South Korean troops fired scores of machine gun bullets at North Korean soldiers Monday.

The (North) Korean Central News Agency, in a report monitored in Tokyo, said no one was injured in the incident. It also said two armed South Korean helicopters flew more than 5.000 feet into North Korean airspace in the western sector, of the demilitarized zone Monday.

The report said a protest was filed by the senior Nqrth Korean member of the Military Armistice Commission.

ernment, and the Druse militia went to war as Druse leader Walid Jumblatt had promised they would.

Three days later, shells falling on Beirut killed three mor French soldiers and two U.S. Marines and wounded four Frenchmen, two Americans and three Italians.

The U.S. aircraft carrier Eisenhower and the French carrier Foch sent F-14 Tomcat jets and Super Etendard fighter-bombers flying low over the capital and the mountains as warning to the gunners shooting at the peacekeepers.

When firing on the Marines continued, the U.S. frigate Bowen blasted militia positions in the hills.

The U.S. destroyers Arthur W. Radford and John Rodgers and the cruiser Virginia opened up several times with their 5-inch guns on artillery positions firing on the Marines, on the suburban residence of U.S.

Ambassador Robert Dillon and on the Lebanese troops defending the hilltop town of Souk el-Gharb. which overlooks the Marine encampment.

The American task force off the Beirut beaches was strengthened by the arrival of the battleship New Jersey, but its 12-inch guns did not open up.

When four more French legionnaires were wounded last Friday. Super Etendard jets from the Foch bombed militia batteries in the hills. It was the first air attack by any of the foreign peacekeepers.

TORTURE CHARGE

PEKING (APi A former Chinese national trade union official has been arrested on charges of torture and rebellion during China's 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, the China Daily reports.

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Old Farmer's Almanac Predicting Cold Winter

I'MSl AL LANDING A twin-engine F-28 passenger jet of the Airlines of Western Australia circles the Perth airport, (in Australia) with its passenger door open and its boarding stairway hanging down. The plane with 58 passengers aboard

circled the airport for two and a half hours to use up fuel before landing safely in a shower of sparks as the boarding stairs dragged along the runway. (AP Laserphoto)

Sister Of Jimmy Carter Dies Of Cancer; Funeral Set Wednesday

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (APi - Former President Jimmy Carter will attend the funeral of his sister, Ruth Carter Stapleton, who died of pancreatic cancer after refusing conventional treatment, a spokesman said,

Mrs. Stapleton. 54. died Monday morning at her Fayetteville home. Carter spokesman Dan Lee said the former president would go to the graveside funeral, which a spokeswoman for Rogers & Breece Funeral Home said was s:heduled for 2 p.m. Wednesday at Lafayette .Memorial Park.

Carter visited his evangelist sister during a May family reunion in Fayetteville and returned without publicity within the past two weeks.

Duke University Medical Center doctors diagnosed Mrs. Stapleton in April as having terminal cancer. Her son. Duke opthalmologist Scott Carpenter Stapleton, urged her to undergo orthodox treatment. But she refused. relying instead on exercise, diet and faith.

My whole life has been geared-to this kind of thing," Mrs. Stapleton said in May

T worked 20 years in healing, and I have seen so many miracles. ... If I'm going for broke, I want to have a single mind. 1 want to put all my faith in God."

The Rev. Billy Graham, in a statement issued from his .Montreat home, said Mrs. Stapleton "was often misunderstood, but she was a devoted and loyal follower and servant of the Lord Jesus Christ. She was filled with Zealand love."

Mrs. Stapleton's father, William Earl Carter, died of

pancreatic cancer in 1953. Her mother, Lillian Carter, is in total remission from breast and bone cancer.

In July, Mrs. Stapleton was treated by Dr. Lawrence Burton at the Immunology Research Center in the Bahamas A spokesman for -Carter said then that .Mrs. Stapleton received daily injections of blood serum and ate a macrobiotic vegetarian die', to try to strengthen her immune system

Mrs. Stapleton married in 1(148. graduated with a de

gree in English from Methodist College in Fayetteville in the 1960s and received a masters from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

In J976 she authored a book. "The Gift of Inner Healing." in which she described inner healing as a slow process of emotional reconstruction under guidance of the Holy Spirit. Her philosophy dealt with emotions and tried to instill an attitude of forgiveness for childhood wrongs.

In 1977 Mrs. Stapleton drew national attention when Larry Flynt, publisher of Hustler magazine, said she helped him convert to Christianity.

Survivors include her husband, Dr. Robert Stapleton; two daughters, Lynn Nimocks of Fayetteville and Patti Stapleton of Fayetteville; two sons, Scott Carpenter Stapleton of Durham and Michael Stapleton of Fayetteville; and a sister, Gloria Spann of Plains, Ga.

RITH CARTER STAPLETON -The sister of former President Jinimv Carter died Mondav in

Fayetteville. She was a familiar face in the presidential campaign. (AP Laserphoto)

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By DAVID FOSTER Associated Press Writer

DUBLIN, N.H. (AP) - TTie Old Fanners Almanac, the little yellow book that claims it predicted Hurricane Alicia -albeit a week early - is back with an updated edition with a new forecast: a white Christmas and a cold, wet winter.

The nations oldest continuous periodical, which hits the newsstands this week, uses the latest scientific technology to make the predictions, which are based on cycles of solar activity, positions of the planets and the moons phases, said editor Judson Hale.

Its tradition, Hale said of his 192-year-old publication. It always appears, it doesnt change, and people realize that their grandfathers and great grandfathers and mothers read this.

That yellow cover with the hole in the lefthand comer (to hang in the outhouse or pantry) is as good a sign of autumn as the changing of the leaves.

Yankee hiblishing Inc., of Dublin, spends about $100,000 a year making the forecasts, which are checked against a 192-year-old secret formula developed by founder Robert Thomas and stashed now in a black box in the almanacs offices, Hale said.

Although the old formula is less specific than the modern almanacs 16-region forecasts, It has never been in conflict with what weve come up with, Hale said.

The predictions are 80 percent accurate. Hale said, but he conceded recently that accuracy is a matter of opinion.

Take, for example, the forecast in the 1983 almanac for Texas on Aug. 18, the day Hurricane Alicia slammed into the state. The almanac predicted sunny and hot weather.

Hale said, however, the almanacs prediction for Aug. 9-13 called for a possible tropical storm for the area. We missed by five days, but Im going to claim that one because we were so close.

The almanac was right on target, however, in predicting floods for Californias Sacramento Valley in March.

' Under the entry for March 1-5 in California, the almanac said: rains, snow mountains, floods Sacramento River Valley.

Suit Seeks Defer Vote

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Five black voters in Rocky Mount, saying the citys latest annexation plans weaken minority voting strength, have filed a suit to try to block city elections set for Oct. 11.

The lawsuit, filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Raleigh, seeks a preliminary injunction to stop the election until the U.S( Justice Department can review 11 proposed annexations as required by federal law.

No order to stop the elections was iss Monday.

stop

ued

by late

Rocky Mount Mayor Fredrick E. Turnage said Monday the city had intended all along to await Justice Department approval before annexing the new areas.

The plaintiffs allege the

annexations fit a 20-year pattern in the city of annexing areas that are either predominantly white or later developed into predominately white population centers.

The U.S. Attorney General informed Rocky Mount in early September it could not reach a decision on whether the annexations discriminated against blacks because the information submitted by city officials was insufficient.

The Voting Rights Act of 1964 requires 40 North Carolina counties and their subunits to submit for federal approval any local actions that would affect voting patterns.

JAIL CHURCHMAN MEXICO CITY (AP) -Judicial authorities say the head of the Episcopal Church in Mexico has been jailed on fraud charges stemming from a dispute over ownership of a parsonage in Acapulco.

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But the big attractions of the $1.75 paperback, are the legendary - if not 100 percent accurate - weather forecasts, Hale said.

This winter, weather east of the Rockies initially will be cold and wet or snowy, with a good chance of a white (Jhristmas in the north, according to the almanac. It then will turn mild and dry until late winter when colder weather will prevail, it saj^. Precipitation will be lighter than normal, but heavy snows in November, January and March will give the countrys northern half an above-average snowfall, the almanac says.

In the South, the almanac calls for a wetter-than-usual winter, with cold waves extending deep into Dixie at least once a month.

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Doctors Join BCU Staff

Dr. Edward F. Hill and Dr. Nicholas Ogbum have joined the medical staff at East Carolina Universitys School of Medicine.

In The Area

The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N C    Tuesday.    September    27,1983    7

DR. EDWARD F. HILL    DR.    NICHOLAS    OGBURN

Hill is an assistant clinical professor of family medicine and Ogbum has been appointed an instructor in the department of surgery.

HiU, a graduate of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Mo., completed a residency in family medicine at the University of Oregon School of Medicine in Portland, Ore. From 1976 until his appointment at ECU, he was involved in private practice with the Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound in Olympia, Wash.

Hill graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and served in the Army for six years.

Ogburn, a native of Statesville, Ogbum earned his medical degree at Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem. He completed his first year of a five-year residency in surgery at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and the remaining four years at the ECU School of Medicine.

A general surgeon, Ogburn will teach and conduct research in vascular surgery, his special interest area.

Consultant Earns Citation

Jo Lentz Williams of Greenville has been presented a citation of merit by the North Carolina Public Health Association. The citation, established in 1954 to recognize outstanding accomplishments of individual members of association, was presented in Raleigh last week.

Mrs. Williams is the tuberculosis control nursing consultant for the 34 counties comprising the Eastern Region of the Department of Human Resources. She was cited as a leader in the planning and implementation of contracts with TB regional referral hospitals, inservice training for health professionals, design of systems to encourage more accurate reporting, program evaluation, and consultation tools.

Judge Overturns Parole Board Act

:    FAIRFIELD,    Calif.    (AP)

- Gregory Powell, wh(e 1963 murder of a policeman was dramatized in the book and movie The Onion Field, must be released in 10 days, a judge has mled, saying the case puts Californias system of justice on trial.

Solano County Superior Court Judge Ellis Randall on Monday overturned a state parole board decision, which he said relied on improper evidence of an unproven act of sexual misconduct and, apparently, public outcry, when it canceled Powells parole date last year.

"Powell had complied with the requirements placed upon him in prison but the state had broken its contract, Randall told reporters, adding that the states action amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.

Californias system of justice (is) on trial, he said in ordering Powells release from prison within 10 days.

Deputy Attorney (ieneral Dane Gillette said he would . ask a state appeals court in San Francisco to block Powells release and overturn the lower court ruling.

Powell, now 49, and Jimmy Lee Smith were convicted of killing Los Angeles police officer Ian Campbell in an onion field near Bakersfield in March 1963. Another police officer broke away from the killers and escaped after a prolonged chase.

The killing and trial were dramatized in Joseph Wambaughs book The Onion Field, which was made into a movie.

Both Smith and Powell : were initially sentenced to die, but their convictions were overturned and they were retried separately.

Powdl again got the death I penalty, while Smith re-^ ceived a life sentence;

; Powell was spared the gas

* chamber when the death penalty law California had at

PUBLISHER CLEARED ANKARA. Turkey (AP) -A military appeals court on Monday cleared a newspaper publisher of charges that he violated Turkeys censorship taws by printing an article calling on youths to fight reactionary forces.

the time was declared unconstitutional.

Smith was paroled in February 1982 but currently is in Los Angeles County Jail on an alleged drug-related parole violation.

In October 1977, the state Board of Prison Terms found Powell suitable for parole and affirmed its decision in two later hearings, scheduling his release on June 13, 1982.

But as the parole date neared, the board was flooded with petitions with 31,000 signatures from the public and with protests from political leaders.

A board panel issued a new decision in April 1982, saying there was evidence that Powell would be dangerous if released.

The board did not cite public outcry, which state courts have found impermissible as a reason for denying or canceling parole.

But Randall said that the dates    and    timing    of    the

complaints clearly support a strong inference that public outcry played a part in the boards decision.

He found the key evidence relied on by the board last year to be tainted.

The    board said    a    new

isychiatric evaluation had ound that Powell was likely to be a danger to others if released.

But    the    judge said    the

report    had    used a    second

hand allegation of sexual misconduct by Powell, based on an incident at San Quentin prison in 1978.

The board had previously ordered a report of the incident removed from Powells file because it had not been proven and no charges or disciplinary actions had been brought.

But Randall said Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Sheldon Brown, representing the prosecution at the April 1982 role hearing, had gotten a : ormer San Quentin guard to write a letter that was placed in Powells file and cited by psychiatrist Diane Sutton, who made the evaluation to thepan^.

Partly on the basis of the inadmissible evidence, Ms. Sutton told the board that Powell suffered from a lack of impulse control, the judge said, adding that the psychiatrist had never met Powell or talked with anyone who had met him.

Liberty Chorale To Perform

The Liberty Baptist College Chorale will give a concert Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Peoples Baptist Temple, 2001 W. Greenville Blvd. It will feature musical arfangements by the Chorale as well as a multimedia video/audio production coinciding with the music.

Building Fund Service Planned

Eldress Shirley Daniels will preach at Bells Chapel Holy Church toni^t at 7:30 p.m. The service will benefit the church building fund.

Radio Guests Named By City

City Manager Gail Meeks has announced that guests this week on the City Hall Notes radio program will be Howard Vainright of the recreation and parks department and Capt. Jerry McLawhorn of the fire-rescue department.

Vainright will discuss the official opening of River Park North, and McLawhorn will talk about Fire Prevention Week, Oct. 9-15. The program is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.

City Endorses Airport Grant

The City Council, in a special call meeting Monday, endorsed the acceptance by the Pitt-Greenville Airport of a $148,737 federal grant for improvements at the facility.

The grant from the Federal Aviation Administration, according to airport manager Jim Turcotte, amounts to 90 percent of the project costs. He said the state Department of Transportations Division of Aeronautics will provide 5 percent of the funding and the remaining 5 percent or $8,300 has been placed in reserve by the Pitt-Greenville Airport Authority.

The FAA has awarded the grant toward funding line of sight clearing at runway intersections, the installation of slope indicator lighting at the ends of runways, as well as a taxiway lighting system.

Turcotte said the grant requires the approval of the council and Pitt Board of Commissioners, as well as the Airport Authority. The county endorsed the federal participation last week.

Blood Drive Nets 145 Pints

The Pitt County blood committee almost met its goal at Mondays bloodmobile at the Moose Lodge as 145 pints were collected, said Red Cross spokeswoman Ruth Taylor. She said the collection total was only five pints short of the target figure and only four deferrals were recorded during the blood drive.

The next bloodmobile visit will be next Wednesday and Thursday at Mendentall Student Center at East Carolina University. Mrs. Taylor said the campus visit will be sponsored by the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps.

Flower Information Available

Information about fall planting of flower bulbs will be provided this week at the Tobaccoland U.S.A. Museum in Kenly. On Thursday and Friday complimentary bulbs will be given to visitors to the museum.

Attractions to be featured at the museum on Saturday include a tobacco tying and grading demonstration, an archery demonstration, horseshoe pitching and the showing of a collection of antique farm tools.

The museum is open Tursdays through Saturdays from 10 '-^.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Friends Of Libraries To Meet

The 1983 meeting of the Eastern North Carolina Workshop of the Friends of North Carolina Public Libraries will be held Saturday at Wayne County Pulbic Library, 1001 Ashe St., in Goldsboro.

The workshop opens at 9:30 a.m. and will conclude at 12:30 p.m. Speakers will address the basic issues of fund-raising and increasing memberships for local public libraries. State Rep. Charles D. Woodard will be the guest speaker.

Train Advocates To Meet

The Carolina Association of Passenger Train Advocates will hold a general membership meeting Saturday at noon in Columbia, S.C., according to club president W.C. Cobb of Greenville. For more information alwut the meeting or club, write Cobb at Route 6, Box 245, Greenville, N.C., 27834.

Drama Director Visits School

Classes at Third Street School and Sadie Saulter Elementary School were recently visited by drama director Steve Myott of Vermont. Myott demonstrated how drama can be used to motivate learning, and asked the children to act -out ideas and communicate through dramatic techniques.

certified East Carolina University Public Safety Officer John Burrus recently completed a two-week training course sponsored by the N.C. Department of Human Resources and is now certified to perform breathalyzer tests. The ECU Public Safety force now has four officers qualified to administer breathalyzer tests (ECU News Bureau Photo by Leslie Jodd).

Unity Church Being Formed

Unity Christ Church is being formed in Greenville, with worship services and classes to be held at the Greenville Seventh Day Adventist Church, 2611 E. 10th St., beginnine Sunday at 11 a.m.

On Thursday nights beginning Oct. 6, a prayer-healing class will be held from 7:30-8:30 p.m. The meetings will be conducted by Raymond and Shirley Katrobos, ordained unity ministers formerly with Unity of Delray Beach in Florida

For more information call 756-8784.

Animal Film To Be Shown

The Pitt County Humane Society has announced two showings of the film, The Animals Are Crying.

The first showing will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Parish Hall of St. Peters Catholic Church, courtesy of the Knights of Columbus; the second Oct. 3 at 7:30 p.m., also in the St. Peters Parish Hall, courtesy of Boy Scout Troop 826. The showings are open to the public.

Horse Clinic Scheduled

The Coastal Plains Horse Show Circuit and Shiloh Farms of Louisburg will sponsor a horse clinic and pig picking Saturday at Shiloh Farms. Route 5. Louisburg. For more information, call Janet R. Hamilton. 816 Nashville Road, Rocky Mount, N.C.

Clogging Class Will Begin

A new class for intermediate doggers will be held in the activity room at the Jaycee Park Administrative Building beginning Thursday. Class timis 7 to 8:30 p.m.

The fee is $11. Students should have taken a beginning class in clogging. To preregister, call 752-4137, extension 200.

Organizational Meet For Pack

Cub Scout Pack 330. sponsored by Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, will hold its organizational meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the church fellowship hall. All interested boys and parents mav attend.

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Reagan Says Decision To Step Down Is Up To Waft

By MARTIN CRITSINGER Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan says hell let James Watt decide for himself whether he should quit as interior secretary.

Reagan, asked in an interview with the New York Post if he thought Watt could still function as a member of the president s Cabinet, said: 1 think thats a decision that he himself will have to make - whether he feels he

has made it questionable as to whether he can be effective or not.

Disci^ssing Watts characterization of several appointees as "a black.... a woman, two Jews and a cripple, Reagan commented in the Monday interview:

"I think in all fairness we have to recognize that, yes, it was a very improper thing to say. But it certainly was not said in the sense of any

bitterness or bigotry or prejudice.

If I thought he was bigoted or prejudiced, he wouldnt be part of our administration.

While Watt has gained some breathing room on Capitol Hill in the badtle to keep his job, the criticism over his latest controversial remark and his environmental policies shows no sign of abating.

Watt came under renewed

fire today from two congressional critics of his coal leasing program. Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., and Rep> Edward Markey, D-Mass., told the Commission on Federal Coal Leasing that Watt was ignoring the current over-supply of coal and glutted market to press forward with coal sales that have cost taxpayers $100 million.

The public and Congress can only assume that the

Eastern Airlines Reports Its Workers Must Take Pay Cut

By The Associated Press

Only two days after Continental Airlines filed for bankruptcy reorganization and shed its unions. Eastern Airlines chairman Frank Borman said his company will be forced to close, or reorganize if workers dont accept 15 percent wage cuts.

In a videotaped message to Easterns 37,500 employees, Borman said Monday that the Miami-based carriers dim financial picture required drastic and immediate action.

He told them we have three choices." said Richard McGraw, Easterns senior vice president for corporate communications. "One is to shut the airline down, one is to file a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition and try to operate like Continental Airlines, and the only really viable option is to approve 15 percent wage cut. .

Meanwhile, in Houston. Continental resumed limited operations today with a schedule trimmed from 78 U.S. destinations to 25 and special one-way fares of $49 on all non-stop domestic flights through Friday. The airline has laid off 65 percent of its 12.(MKi workers and cut

in half the salaries of the re.,t.

The first flight left Houston International .Airport at 7:31 a.m. headed for Lafayette, La., and Baton Rouge, La., with only six passengers on the 90-seat DC-9. No telephone reservations had been accepted,

A flight to Houston and New Orleans left Denver at 7 a.m. MDT with 28 people aboard a DC-9, Continental workers said.

The filing was the second of a major U.S. carrier, with Texas-based Braniff International going to bankruptcy court last year.

Borman's latest statement to employees - he has repeatedly called for wage concessions - was greeted with doubt by the head of the flight attendants local.

"Whether this is the time he means it or not. 1 dont know," said Patricia Fink, president of Local 553 of the Transport Workers Union, which represents Easterns 5,800 flight attendants.

"Threats cannot and will not solve the problems we have. The only way is if management and the union work together to reach a solution," she said.

Diet Firm is Sued Over 'False Claims'

VE.N'TURA, Calif. (AP) -A mail-order diet company is facing a $250 million lawsuit o\;er alleged false advertising and "exorbitant and unconscionable" pricing, a Ventura County prosecutor says.

Deputy District Attorney Richard Brungard, saying there are an estimated 80 million overweight Americans. accused New York-based London Diet Research Ltd. of preying upon "a very emotionally vulnerable group of people."

Besides the $250 million, the Superior Court suit, filed Monday, seeks "potentially astronomical" civil penalties and an injunction to halt the companys alleged false advertising, Brungard said.

Under the state Business and Professions Code, civil penalties of up to $2,500 |:^r offense can be sought, with each solicited consumer considered a separate offense, the prosecutor said.

The suit contends that: -London Diet's advertising claimed a person using their plan and diet pills could lose up to four clothing sizes, or 30 pounds, in two weeks. Brungard said scientific evidence regarding the pills, phenylpropanolamine hydrochloride, indicates a person normally might lose from two to three pounds in a fortnight,

-London Diet's advertising misleads consumers into believing that its diet plan and pills are specially formulated to turn fat into water, which then passes from the body. In fact, Brungard said, this occurs automatically as the body metabolizes food -The "exorbitant and unconscionable prices they (London Diet) are charging in and of themselves constitute false advertising... to capitalize on the consumers basic assumption that you get what you pay for, Brungard said.

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Lawrence Roth, whose firm represents London Diet, said he had not received a copy of the suit but that he had discussed the action with Brungard.

He contended that the company "can substantiate" its claims about weight loss and that the advertising never claimed that only its pills could turn fat into water.

The flight attendants are currently negotiating with Eastern on a new contract and have set a strike deadline of midnight Oct. 12, at the end of a 30-day cooling-off period.

The companys 3,980 pilots have presented directors with a vote of no confidence in Borman and his management team, and Easterns 12,500 machinists, who settled their contract earlier this year after protracted talks, also have rejected pressure for wage cuts.

Charles Bryan, president of Easterns machinists union. said he rejects Bormans "doomsday remedy."

"Delta Air Lines lost almost $100 million more than Eastern the first half of this year, so Easterns not doing too bad operationally. They do have a tremendous debt. That is a problem, but we just do not accept his strategy or his remedy, Eastern suffered a $106 million loss in the first seven months of this year. Although traffic was up 5 percent in July and 3 percent in August, it has remained inadequate, analysts say.

Eastern sustained a net loss of $74.9 million in 1982 on operating revenues of $3.77 billion. It blamed the recession and fare discounting.

Company officials said he set a deaiiline of Oct. 12 ^ the date the cooling-off period in the flight attendants negotiations ends -for acceptance of the new pay cuts by all employees.

One city Continental no longer will serve is Detroit, leaving thousands of Michigan residents holding three-day, $99 Mothers Day Special" tickets, purchased in May. travel agents said.

"The special offered tickets for $99 to anywhere on Continental routes," said Annette Langdon, owner of Elkin Travel in Detroit. A lot of people bought tickets to Los Angeles or even to New

York City, via Houston. Travel agents said they would not give refunds until they are told whether Continental will reimburse them.

Continental Airlines President Frank Lorenzo said Monday in Houston that he is confident a reorganized airline will succeed.

We are very optimistic and very enthusiastic about our future, he said. Now that costs are firmly under control, we can comete and build a Continental Airlines that our founders and everyone associated with us can be proud of.

The airline had filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy law after posting losses of U71.9 million since January 1979.

Representatives of the carriers flight attendants and pilots have denounced the filing as a ploy to void union agreements, but said Monday that they had no plans to strike or picket Continental when it resumes operations.

Henry A, Duffy, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, said the unions will fight the airline in bankruptcy courts and added that he expected the publics doubts to hinder the airlines return.

I want to counter the idea that everything is going to go smoothly tomorrow or that anybody is going to be on those airplanes. Duffy said at news conference Monday.

Although Continental cut its fares this week to $49, and then to $75 from Saturday through Oct, 15, it was not accepting telephone reservations for flights this week.

All reservations made previously for this week were valid, the airline said, but no refunds will be issued during the startup period. Instead, a program will be announced shortly that will provide ticket holders with future travel credits, it said.

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department is more interested in protecting the interests of the coal industry than the interests of taxpayers, Bumpers said.

Markey said by abandoning previously accepted procedures for determining the appropriate wwlh of the governments reserves. Watt had adopted a course destined to fail.

Warren White, an aide to Wyoming Gov. Ed Herschler, said the states of Colorado, Montana, Utah and Wyoming - which contain the bulk of western coal - believe that the fundamentals of the current coal leasing program are sound, but that the commission has a major job ahead in restoring public confidence in the Mficult area of fair market value because of questions raised over Watts program.

For his part. Watt continued to remain out of the public eye, as he has since he made the comment last Wednesday that the coal commission contained a black,... a woman, two Jews and a cripple.

While the commission resumed hearings into charges that Watts leasing policies have cost taxpayers $100 million, the interior secretary worked to shore up badly eroded support.

At the White House, meanwhile, a group calling itself Council of Volunteer Americans presented petitions, postcards and mail-grams to Craig Fuller, a Reagan assistant, to show support for Watt.

Myron McKee, a spokesman, said the delivery represented the support of 120,000 people. He acknowledged, however, that the group began collecting the signatures last May.

Among those delivering the material was Bob Brostrom, who uses crutches. Brostrom praised Watts efforts to make national parks and monuments more accessible to handicapped people.

Watt received good news when Senate opponents agreed to put off a Wednesday debate on a resolution calling for Watts resignation for conduct totally unbefitting a senior Cabinet member.

Watts supporters had feared his fate would be sealed if the resolution was pushed to a vote and he suffered wide-scale defections in GOP ranks.

In a discussion with re-)orters. Senate Majority .ader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., said he would not support the Democrat-

sponsored resolution, although he added pmntedly, I think the time could come when I could support such a resolution.

Baker told Reagan on Friday that support for Watt was waning in the Senate, according to soirees.

However, Watts allies, led by Senate Majority Whip Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and Rep. Manual Lujan of New Mexico, the ranking Republican on the House Interior Committee, have launched a counteroffensive in an effort to save Watt.

It's beginning to look like he might stay, said one GOP official who insisted on anonymity.

We do not have a clear signal. But as of today, no decision has been made, the official said Monday.

Sources said Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., a close friend of the president, had been designated by the White House as a go-between with

the Republican congressional leadership. Watts (rffice and the White House.

Wtt spokesman Doug Baldwin said Watt was giving no thought to resigning and instead busied hiipseH Monday with a normal round of staff meetings on a variety of subjects.

The man who ultimately will decide Watts fate. President Reagan, tried to close off discussion by telling renters again Mondi^ I lave accepted his apol(^.

But Democratic National Chairman Charles Manatt called Reagans continued suKXMTt of Watt pathetic.

And Watt, who was called an idiot during the Emmy awards presentation by. comedian Joan Rivers, was attacked Monday by violinist Itzhak Perlman during a Capitol Hill press conference announcing a campaign to change peoples negative attitudes about the handicapped.

Perlman, who uses cnit-ches because of polio, said Watts reference was "a perfect example of people with insensitivity and the problems (tf attitudinal barriers.

Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan., who appeared with Perlman at the press conference, said before Watts commait last week he hadnt heard anyone use the word criw)le in 20 or 30 years.

Dole, who has a paralyzed right arm, said if he wert presi(tent. Watt would be gone. He added that Republicans cant stand about every two or three months Mr. Watt making some comment to offend another 20,30,40 million people.

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Navy Denies Japanese Radio Report Of Key'Find'

TOKYO (AP) - Japanese government officials reportedly said today that U.S. Navy search vessels have located the flight data and voice recorders from the downed South Korean airliner, but a Navy spokesman denied the reports.

Reports by the Japan Broadcasting Corp. and the Kyodo News Service, quoting unnamed government sources, followed a statement by the chief government spdcesman that set off a wave of speculation the Americans would soon recover the recorders.

But Lt. Gary Shrout, spokesman for the U.S. Navy in Japan, denied the reports. As of this afternoon we have not found the black box, he said. Im not waffling on that one.

The recorders - the socalled black box - have tapes of t^e last 30 minutes of the flight and might tell why the Korean aircraft veered off course into Soviet airspace.

This morning. Chief Cabinet Secretary Masaharu Gotoda, Japans top government spokesman, said the United States had invited Japanese officials to join U.S. search operations off western Sakhalin where the Korean Air Lines jumbo jet is thought to have gone down after being hit by a Soviet missile Sept. 1 with 269 people aboard.

Gotoda said the officials were to be preset when the Americans recovered the two recorders.

SandhtHsxSce Resorts Boom

By The Associated Press

One of the Sandhills largest resorts has been sold after sinking deep into debt, but observers say the economy of the region dominated by retirement communities is basically sound.

The Foxfire Inn and Country Club in Moore County brought $1.5 million in a foreclosure sale Monday. Samuel H. Poole, an Aberdeen attorney and trustee for the resort, said The Carolina Bank was the only bidder, offering $1 million for the west golf course complex and $500,000 for the east golf course site.

Th& sale will not be final for 10 days, leaving time for upset bids, Poole said. It included a swimming pool, tennis courts, bath houses and other property.

Foxfires foreclosure is not the first financial disaster of a Sandhills resort. In 1979, the Lake Surf and Whispering Pines golf, tennis and lake resorts were foreclosed, with an estimated $3.25 million in debts. Three years later, the plush Pinehurst Hotel and Country Club, with a reported $73 million debt, was sold to a consortium of banks.

But building Moore County permits' issued during the first seven months of 1983' were valued at $25.1 million, compared to $15.1 million in

permits issued through 1982, giving rise to optimism among resort owners.

Pinehurst has shown one of the sharpest upturns with new management and a consortium of banks in control, says Pinehurst President Marcus Fields.

Developers say Pinehursts roller-coaster financial picture isnt unusual among retirement developments in golf-crazy Moore County -home of 52,000 residents and 26 golf courses.

Pinehurst emerged as the states premier golf resort shortly after Boston philanthropist James Walker Tufts paid $1 an acre for 5,000 acres in 1896.

Ironically, Foxfire, too, has flourished in recent months, says David OStrowski, the resort manager. Business in July was twice what it was in July a year ago. And after changing management in the spring, the restaurant did four times more business than the same time last year.

But Foxfires occupancy rate has averaged 25 percent, while nearby Pinehurst averages 60 percent.

It takes about 40 percent (occupancy) to break even on a resort, said former owner Henry Mayer. Theyve never been aUe to achieve it and I cant tell you why.

Freudian Dream Theory Disputed

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -Sigmund Freuds theory linking dreams with disguised, forbidden sexual desires is intellectually heavy baggage and best left behind, says a Harvard University psychiatrist.

Dr. J. Allan Hobson said during a recent speech at Duke University Medical Center that dreams probably represent an imperfect attempt to create meaning out of nonsensical signals arising out of the brain during sleep.

Hobson said Freuds theory that had gone largely unchallenged for 90 years is giving way to the belief that two varieties of nerve cells in the brain stem act together as a dream-state generator. Their activity is as automatic as breathing, he said.

Throughout the night, they fool the cortex of the brain into thinking it 'is awake. Intead of processing signals

Union Accepts Interim Pact

BAL HARBOUR. Fla. (AP) - Atlantic and Gulf port employers and union longshoremen have agreed on an interim master contract and set a Jan. 15,1984, deadline for reaching new long-term agreements.

TTie contract agreed to by the International Longshoremens Association and seven major harbor - management -group ended the threat of a strike Friday, when the current pact expires, by 50,000 workers from Maine to Texas.

The pact means an increase of about $1 an hour in wages and higher employer contributions to pension and welfare funds.

from the external world, however, the cortex processes signals coming from within the body, Hobson said, including the visual system.

"Its amazing that these visual images are synthesized as well as they are, Hobson said. One might expect the images to be chaotic or kaleidoscopic. HolKon said he and research colleagues are getting an increasingly complete model of how brain activity and dreaming are linked. They have been able to turn on the rapid eye movements associated with dreams by injecting chemical agents into the brain stems of experimental animals.

If you push back the eyelids of your sleeping companion with a rubber eraser you can see the eyes flying around in highly disorganized movements during dream sleep, he said.

The two varieties of nerve cells that work together to generate the dream state are called aminergic neurons and cholingeric neurons. When a person is awake, aminergic neurons are active and inhibit the activity of cholingeric neurons.

Before dream sleep begins, however, aminergic neurons gradually turn off and cholingeric neurons become excited and fire off in intense bursts. The rapid eye movements occur soon aRer these bursts, and it is then that the brain cortex sho^ signs of intense activity.

Hodson said chemical agents that increase c^-ingeric activity or decrease aminergic activity turn on dream sleep in experimental animals. Aminergic neurons are linked to learning and memory. The fact that they are tunied off during dream sleep may explain why it is hard to remember dreams, Hobson said.

Later today, 10 officials, including two Japanese and one from the International Civil Aviation Organization, left Wakkanai, Japans northernmost city, aboard a U.S. Navy helicopter for an unidentified U.S. Search vessel.

Japan Broadcasting Corp. said the recorders had been located in international waters at a depth of 2,300 feet west of Moneron, a small island off Sal^lin. The recorders continued to give off an electronic pinging sound which can be picked up by sonar equipment on the U.S. vessels, it said.

It said the main wreckage of the Boeing 747 also appeared to be in the same spot, and that the Americans are preparing salvage operations but face the technical problem of overcoming the high water pressure at that depth.

U.S. military and embassy officials in Tokyo, Hawaii and Washington earlier denied that recovery of the recorders was imminent.

Master Gunnery Sgt. Ed Evans, head of the Media Liaison Office of the U.S. Forces in Japan, said the invitations to the Japanese were intended to establish a diplomatic procedure in the event the recorders are recovered.

There is nothing to indicate the flight recorder has been found, Evans said. We are dealing with a ping for a black box that is getting weaker.

U.S. military authorities have confirmed that a Navy salvage ship picked up and then lost underwater pinging signals from the flight recorder last week. Officials hope the recorders, if found, would help explain why the airliner wandered off course into Soviet airspace.

Earlier today, the Japanese patrol ship Tsugaru returned to Otaru after a voyage to the port of Nevelisk on Sakhalin Island, where Soviet military authorities turned over 76 items of clothing and aircraft wreckage that one U.S. official termed meager. The material did not include human remains.

By mid-afternoon, two officials from Japans Maritime Safety Agency - a communications officer and an inspector - had boarded U.S. search ships operating off Moneron.

MSA officials said the agency was notified Monday that an MSA representative should join the U.S. search effort today. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, however, said the invitation was first extended to the Japanese government last week.

Shrout said seven ships from the U.S. Navys 7th Fleet were continuing search operations today.

When the debris delivered by the Soviets was displayed to the public after the Tsugaru docked in Otaru, some relatives of the victims aboard the plane expressed doubts that the

Soviets had turned over all the material they had.

The items on display included seven pairs of pants and a suit coat soaked in kerosene, five batter^ oxygen bottles and other debris.

Minoru Tanba, chief of the Soviet section of Japans

Foreign Ministry and head of the Japanese delegation to Sakhalin, was asked at a news conference if he thought the Soviets had handed over everything collected in their search.

Thats what they say, and there is no way to verify if they are telling the truth or not, he said.

EXAMINE WRECKAGE - Lynn Pascoe. left, deputy director of the Office of Soyipt Affairs of the State Department, examines KAL flight 007 debris Monday after visiting .Nevelsk, USSR, to claim it from the Soviets. With him at Nevelsk was Dennis Wilham, center, senior representative for Asia of the

Federal Aviation Administration. Carl Nordlander. right, a Swede representing the International Civil Aviation Organization, made the voyage aboard the Tsugaru. a Japanese vessel, but did not disembark at Nevel'sk.' AP Laserphoto i

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Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was 25 cents to 50 cents lower. Kinston 14.50, Clinton. Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 44.25, Wilson 44.50. Salisbury 43.00, Rowland -.1.00, Spiveys Corner 44.50. Sows: ail weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 38.00, Fayetteville

37.00. Whiteville unreported. Wallace 38,00, Spiveys Corner unreported, Rowland

38.00. Durham 39.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH. .C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this week's trading was 44,73 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 24 to 3 pound birds. The final weighted average was 44.11 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady to week and the live supply is moderate for a moderate, instances good, demand. Weights desireable. Estimated slaughter, of broilers and fryers in North Carolina tuesday was 1.728.00, compared to 1,780.t)00 last Tuesday.

Hens

RALEIGH. N.C. lAP) -NCDAi - The North Carolina hen market was steady. Supplies moderate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds

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7 iH) p m h'amily Support (iniupat F.irnilv iructice Center 7iKi pm - I C.AN COPE at (iaskins Leslie Center room 124 7 .ill pm - Creenville Choral .Society rehearsal St Immanuel Baptist Church 7 ,iO p m - Toughlove parents support group at St Paul's Episcopal Church

7 :io p m \ ernon Howard Success Without Street study group at IION Warren St.

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PLO Factions See Extended School... Fighting Break Out

(Continuedfrom Page IF

Obituaries

at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 22 cents.    ~~

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices turned downward today as traders cashed in profits from the markets recent gains.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which rose

5.18 points Monday to a record closing high, fell back 8.13 to 1,252.64 in the first half hour today.

Losers took a 3-2 lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

The J)ow Jones industrial average rose more than 45 points from mid-September through Mondays close. But many analysts have expressed somV misgivings about the markets recent performance.

None of the broader indicators of stock price trends have been able to join the Dow to date in surpassing their peaks reached in early summer.

Brokers also cited fears that demand for the big-name blue chips might drop | off after money managers at investing institutions complete the task of readying their portfolios for third-quarter reports. The quarter ends on Friday.

Todays early prices included American Telephone & Telegraph, up at 65^8: Schlumberger, down 4 at 564. and General Motors, down -431744.

In Monday's trading advancing issues outpaced declines by about 3 to 2 on the NYSE,

Big Board volume totaled 86.40 million shares, against

93.18 million in the previous session.

The NYSE's composite index rose .32 to 98.39. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up. 15 at 236.67,

Kolliming are selected 11 am .stuck market quolatiuns

.Ashland prC    40'i

Burroughs    .74    >1.

Carolina Power 4 Light    23';

Collins 4 .Aikman    44'j

Conner    I'*

Uuke    23'j

Eaton    ,46',

Eckerds    26

Exxon      37',

Eieldcresi    33\

Halteras ,    CVj

Hillon    56",

Jefferson    35    j

I)ere    4o

Lowe's    25',

.McDonald's    65'1

McBraw    ;i8".

Piedmont    28>

Pizza Inn    l;C,

P4    55'.

TKW', the    74',

Cnitert Tel    23',

Dominion Kesources    21    ,

Wachovia    45

OVEKTHECOL'.NTEK .Aviation    l7'-.-17'.

Branch    27 27';

Lillie Mint    ,

Planters Bank    li)'4'20'4

POLTERtiEIST?

REGENSBLRG, West Germany lAPi - A 17-year-old dental assistant has gone on trial here, accused of helping arrange a hoax about a "poltergeist" that insulted patients.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Seven Palestinian guerrillas reportedly were killed today in a fresh outbreak of fighting between factions supporting and opposing Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yasser Arafat.

The fighting with bazookas and machine guns flared between midnight and 7 a.m. today around the Palestinian refugee camp of Baddawi on the outskirts of the northern Lebanese port city of Tripoli, 50 miles north of Beirut, reports said.

Reporters in Tripoli said the fighting was between rival members of the Libyan-backed Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Com-

Drug Ring

Dismpted

WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N.C. (AP) - Five men, including two North Carolinians, face drug trafficking charges after authorities seized $33 million, a State Bureau of Investigation official says.

Malcolm Campbell, 43, of Charlotte; Tylon William, 40, of Leland; Marvin Wallace Guyton. 46, of Medina, Fla.; and Roland Berry, 61. and John Gray, 39. both of London, Ky,, were held Monday in New Hanover County Jail, said SBI spokesman Cuyler Windham.

Two were arrested Sunday after police confiscated 40 pounds of cocaine and a single-engine airplane at Wrightsville Beach. The three others were arrested Monday in New Hanover County,

Monday night, there was a related seizure of 99 pounds of cocaine in a van in Palmetto, Fla.

Windham said bond has not been set for the five.

Parker Case...

(Continued from Paget)

Haigwood told the jury to "let your verdict speak the ever-lasting truth."

Defense attorney Milton Williamson, speaking for only 10 minutes, stressed that it was the defendant's right not to offer any evidence. He urged the jurors not to stress the absence of defense evidence and the defendant's silence, but to "consider the lack of premeditation" in the crime.

Evidence was presented during the trial indicating that Parker had not expected to find Thorbs home on the night of the murder.

Reid in charging the jury Monday, said it could find Parker guilty if no "reasonable doubt existed. Proof of motive for the slayings was not necessary for conviction, the judge said.

Reid recalled the jurors briefly to reiterate instructions not to consider a possible sentence in reaching a verdict in the trial. After the verdict was delivered by Mary B. Stocks, the jury foreman, Reid polled individual jurors at the request of the defense attorneys.

mand, one of the eight factions comprising the PLO.

The reports said the fighting erupted when followers of PFLP-GC leader Capt. Ahmed Jibril attacked the Baddawi headquarters of a group loyal to Arafat. The attackers reportedly were beaten back.

Jibrils group supported a Syrian-backed mutiny within Arafats mainstream Fatah guerrilla group in east Lebanons Bekaa Valley last May. The Syrian army evicted about 1,500 pro-Arafat guerrillas from the Bekaa and laid siege to 1,000 other Arafat loyalists in the Bekaa's northeastern district of Hemel over the weekend, Bekaa-based reporters said.

Arafat has been at odds with Syria since his outster from Beirut in the wake of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon last year. His critics within the PLO accused him of mishandling the fight against Israeli and appointing aides on the basis of loyalty rather than merit.

Merger...

(Continued from Pagel)

Pyecha said a reduction in students doesnt mean a reduction in fixed costs.

Peycha said there would be no appreciable increase in current expense costs for a merged system because both systems are "excellent" and have similar programs. "There isn't a big gap between the two systems," and both are linked together to a common pool of bucks."

Any large increase in costs, he suggested, would be in the area of capital outlay. However, he said "which ever way you go, you will have a lot of capital outlay."

Pyecha also said that any pupil reassignment would be relatively small if the city and county schools are consolidated, and would affect primarily schools in the southern portion of Greenville and schools in the Winterville attendance area.

While recommending merger, several other options were outlined in the study. One would maintain the status quo, while another would expand the city school district to include more students and reassign students in some county schools.

These other options would also affect primarily the students in the southern Greenville and Winterville areas. Pyecha said.

Pyecha said the study recommends that a 12-member board of education be formed

- eight members from the county and four from the city

- if consolidation occurs. The board would .})e cut to nine members when 1990 census firgures are available.

At the close of the meeting, county board chairman Mark Owens told Gaskins, "If you can supply the money, 1 think we can work out the plan."

Following the meeting. Gaskins said. "I hope the two school boards take the report under consideration and advisement and do the very best thing they can for the students, teachers and taxpayers, and come up with something.

"The Pitt County Board of Commissioners will certainly support any such action."

By The Associated Press The following are preliminary gross sales for flue-cured tobacco reported by the Federal-State Tobacco Market News Service for Monday;

Eastern Belt

Market    Daily    Daily    Daily

Site    Pounds    Value    Avg.

Ahoskie......................................237,498    421,387    177.43

Clinton .............................392,431    750,893    191.34

Dunn.........................................................................no    sale

Farmvl.......................................7M.064    1,492,611    195.35

Gldsboro.....................................831,762    1,614,657    194.09

Greenvl......................................816,922    1,592,956    194.99

Kinston.......................................850,838    1,643,386    193.18

Robrsnvl (!)...........................................................no    report

Rocky Mt....................................753,182    1,406,630    186.76

Smithfld (I)...... 226.996    436,358    192.23

Tarboro.....................................................................no    sale

Wallace......................................354.545    667,150    188.17

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

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

Willmstn...................................................................no    sale

Wilson (I)................. ,..1,665,323    3,198,259    192.05

Windsor.  .........................................................no    sale

Total(I)....................................6.893.323    13,224,287    191.84

(I) indicated incomplete figures. Average for the day of $191.84 was up $3.63 from the previous sale.

best anywhere. It provides not only education, but a social point of view for the students, how to handle their day-to-day lives. Gartman additonally noted the value of the extended day program as a place for ECU social work students to receive practical field training.

John Anema, a vocational rehabilitation counselor, emphasized that the program serves students with a different type of need.

Statements made by past and present students, mothers and guardians of students focused on the manner in which another chance to get an education had made tremendous differences in their lives. They cited the location in the area where they live as one of the primary advantages of keeping the program in an easily accessible place.

The purpose of public expressions at Monday nights meeting was to get opinions from the public on the nine alternatives open to the board for action. Only the briefest references were made to the alternatives themselves. The main point of concern voiced was for keeping the program intact, not to divide the program or restructure it.

The Greenville City Schools Business Affairs Advisory Committee has recommended that the present structure and lot be sold, that a property adjoining Fullilove be purchased, and that a smaller building be constructed to house the program. The committee members feeling is that elementary schools should remain as they are and that Agnes Fullilove program remain structured and administered as it is.

On the matter of options to be considered for athletic facilities to serve Rose High, a rough estimate of costs for options was furnished the board. These include those of adding-on or improving existing facilities at:

Aycock School - construct bleachers, provide lighting, construct a field house. $136,0(XI.

Greenville Middle School construct bleachers (1,000 minimum seating), provide lighting, construct a field house, prepare the field, install a score board, build a concession stand, and fence in, $157,500.

Elmhurst School - essentially the same as Greenville Middle School with parking on the Rose High campus.

Options presented for new. rather than expanded or improved facilities, are:

Middle School - a permanent stadium, 2,552 seats with toilets under the stadium, a press box, parking lot, parking lot lights, field house, field lighting, track, field preparation, and a baseball field with 500 seats. $534,700.

A new site, same as Middle School, plus the cost of property. A rough estimate for a 4,000-seat stadium runs to about $300,000.

Other options mentioned include the use of leased or borrowed facilities or the continued present program with minimal change.

The options, drawn up per an earlier request of the school board, were solely to provide board members with initial estimates and options to consider.

Board members approved a motion to have the administration form a committee to further study options, with the report to incorporate suggestions from coaches and comments from residents in neighborhoods where facility locations are suggested. This study is to be presented to the board in a time frame of a minimum of 60 days.

The board approved a motion to present the name of John Perry to Pitt Community College as a nominee for the colleges board of trustees. Perry is a chemical engineering manager at Procter & Gamble.

At a future meeting, board members will look into suggested policy changes and review on exemption from exams and graduation requirements.

Relative to the Research Triangle Institute merger study presented to the city and county boards on Monday, Superintendent Delma Blinson encouraged board members to agree to appear before civic or other interested groups to help explain the ramifications of the proposed merger plan.

Reagan Reminds...

(Continued from Pagel)

showing their own people they are not subservient to the West.

Guyana, which gained its independence in 1966, recently saw a multi-million dollar loan from the Inter-American Development Bank for rice production vetoed by the Reagan administration, which said Guyana wasnt doing enough for private enterprise.

Scarcely a month later, non-Communist Guyana was among the four Security Council members that abstained from the vote condemning the Soviets for the airliner tragedy.

In his address. Reagan also decried what he said is the "use of violence for political gain" in the past decade.

"The members of the United Nations must be aligned on the side of justice rather than injustice, peace rather than aggression, human dignity rather than subjuga-

JudgeReleases Part Of Funds

CHICAGO (AP) - The Education Department has received a judges approval to distribute a portion of the $48 million he froze in a dispute over government aid for Chicago schools integration.

U.S. District Judge Milton I. Shadur on Monday released $4.3 million to be used to finance educational programs across the nation. But he continued his freeze on the remaining $43.7 million, and set Oct. 15 for another hearing on the matter.

The federal nioney was impounded June 30 for possible use by the Chicago school board for desegregation efforts. Shadur ruled that the government had violated its part of a consent decree over integration plans for the nations third-largest school system.

tion," Reagan said. He also said, What harms the (U.N.) charter harms peace,"

But many of those 100 new nations remember their own violent, relatively recent struggles to shed colonial rule. Kenya ousted the British and became independent in 1%3, Algeria became a U.N. member in 1962 after a fierce rebellion against France, and Angola tcame a member in 1976 after a successful struggle against Portuguese rule.

Cannon Mr. William Thad Cannon, 73, of Route 1, Chocowinity, died Monday in Wake Medical Center in Raleigh. Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Wilkerson Funeral Home.

Heath

f. Jimmy Heath, 37, died (onday nitjorning. The funeral service will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at Greenwood Cemetery.

Mr. Heath was born and raised in Greenville and attended Greenville schools.

University Suit Bep

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - A woman is asking a federal judge to award her any of three University of North Carolina jobs she says she didnt get because of her sex.

Testimony began Monday in the trial of a sex discrimination lawsuit filed by Helen L. Urquhart, 63, who claims she had the skills and exj^ri-ence to qualify for three jobs but all went to men.

The university contends that the jobs were given to applicants more qualified than Ms. Urquhart.

The suit, filed in 1977, asks that Ms. Urquhart be awarded back pay and benefits for any of the three jobs the court decides she was illegally denied, that she be given the job when its available and that she receive back pay until then.

Ms. Urquhart testified in U.S. Middle District Court on Monday, describing her education and experience and the jobs for which she applied.

Ms. Urauhart holds a masters degree from the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Public Health and worked in the university medical schools family medicine program from 1970 to 1975.

She said she never had a formal job title, but that she assisted the program's chairman, Robert Smith.

Smiths term ended in June 1975 and was not renewed. He was replaced by Donald Dunphy, who later told Ms. Urquhart her job had been canceled as of Sept. 30,1975.

He was a painter by trade, but had been attending Pitt Community College as a full-time student.

He is survived by two sons, Jimmy Heath Jr. and Michael Heath, both of the home; his mother, Mrs. Rubell Heath of Greenville; four sisters, Mrs. Shirley Adams of Wilmington, Mrs. Linda Elks, Mrs. Barbara Tetterton and Mrs. Phyllis Hodges, all of Greenville; three brothers, Lester Thomas Heath Jr. and Herbert Heath, both of Greenville, and Mickey Heath of Charleston, S.C., and two half-brothers, Billy Steinbeck and Bobby Steinbeck, both of Greenville.

Family visitation will be from 7-9 p.m. tonight at Wilkerson Funeral Home, and at other times at the home of his mother, Mrs. Rubell Heath, 28-B Glendale Court.

Yeager

Dr. John Calvin Yeager, 35, an associate professor in the East Carolina University Department of Psychology, died Monday. Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Wilkerson Funeral Home.

Whitehurst

Mrs. Caddie Warren Whitehurst, 85, died Monday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Charles Branch and the Rev. Leon Harris. Burial will be in the Bethel Cemetery.

Mrs. Whitehurst, a native of Pitt County, had spent most of her life in the Whitehurst Station community and was a member of Hickory Grove Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving are six sons. Stephen B. Whitehurst of San Diego, Cecil G. Whitehurst of Robersonville, Joseph W. Whitehurst, Ralph Whitehurst and H. Dean Whitehurst, all of Bethel, and John H. Whitehurst of Rocky Mount; two daughters, Mrs. Ruth Manning of Bethel and Mrs. Clayton Everett of Charlotte; 23 grandchildren and 27 great-grandchildren.

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

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THE DAILY REFLECTORTUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 27, 1983

Cup Goes 'Down Under'

America's Cup Winner

Australia II, the 12-meter yacht challenger in the Americas Cup finale race Monday off Newport, R.I., runs under a full spinnaker during the race with the defender Liberty. The action took place

during the closing minutes of the seventh and deciding race, won by Australia. It marked the first time during the 25 race series that a foreign boat has been successful in wresting the cup from the Americans. (AP Laserphoto)

Cornhuskers Unanimous Pick As Football's No. One Team

ByllERSCHELNISSENSON AP Sports Writer

The Nebraska Cornhuskers, who have crushed four opponents this season by a combined score of 226-49, are a unanimous choice today as the nations No. 1 college football team.

Texas remained in second place and Arizona moved up to third, while Southern California and Notre Dame, two of the top names in college football, fell out of the Associated Press Top Twenty.

Nebraska whipped UCLA 42-10 after trailing 10-0 in the second period. The Cornhuskers received all 60 first-place votes and a perfect score of 1,200 points from a

Sports Calendar

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

Today's .Sports Voilryball

Southwest Edgecombe, Greene Central at Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.)

Farmville Central, North Pitt at Southern Nash (.4 p.m.)

Tennis

Roanoke at Washington

RoseatFike(3:30p.m.)

Ridgecroft at Greenville Juniors (3:30;m.)

Farmville Central at Greene Central

Soccer

Rose at Fike(4p.m.l

Old Dominion at East Carolina (3

p.m.)

Cross-Country

Rose at Fike boys and girls

Goli

East Carolina at N.C. State Invitational

Wednesday's Sports

Golf

East Carolina at N.C. State Invitational

Tennis

Greenville Jrs at Wayne Country (2:30 p.m.)

Campbell at East Carolina (3 pm.) ^

nationwide panel of sports writers and sportscasters.

Texas, a 26-6 winner over North Texas State, received 58 second-place votes and two third-place ballots for 1,138 points.

For the third week in a row, Arizona reached its highest point ever since the AP poll began in 1936. The Wildcats trimmed Fullerton State 31-10 and climbed from fourth to third with 1,001 points.

Iowa moved up from seventh to fourth with 998 points following a 20-14 victory over Ohio State, which dropped from third to eighth as a result. North Carolina, a 51-20 winner over William & Mary, remained in fifth place with 917 points and Alabama held onto sixth place with 880 points by defeating Vanderbilt 44-24.

West Virginia jumped from 12th to seventh with 750 points for a 27-17 triumph over Boston College, knocking the losers out of the Top Twenty. They had been 19th last week.

Rounding out the Top Ten are Ohio State with 709 points, Oklahoma with 695 and Auburn with 693. Oklahoma slipped from eighth to ninth despite a 28-18 victory over Tulsa, while Auburn rose from 11th to 10th by pounding Tennessee 37-14. Washington and Southern Cal were the 9-10 teams a week ago.

The Second Ten consists of Georgia, Florida, Southern Methodist, Michigan, Miami of Florida, LSU, Florida State, Washington, Maryland and Arizona State.

Last week, it was Auburn, West Virginia, Notre Dame, Georgia, Florida, Pitt, Michigan, SMU, Boston Col

lege and Florida State.

use fell out after a 26-20 loss to Kansas, Notre Dame disappeared by dropping its second game in a row 20-0 to Miami and Pitt was knocked out after a 13-7 loss to Maryland.

Meanwhile, Miami made the Top Twenty for the first time this season, LSU returned after a two-week absence by trouncing Washington 40-14, Maryland came back after a one-week lapse and Arizona State made it for the first time this year with a 44-14 rout of Wichita State.

Lady Bucs Top ACC

East Carolinas womens tennis team gained a 7-2 victory^over Atlantic Christian College yesterday, evening the Lady Pfrate record at 1-1 on the year.

Atlantic Christian won the number one and three singles," but were shut out after that, as ECU built up a 4-2 lead after the singles then swept the doubles.

The Pirates travel to Davidson on Saturday.

Summary;

Anborn (AC) d. Tolson, 6-1,6-3

Russell (EC) d. Summerlin, 6-1, 6-2.

Maxwell (AC) d. Beck, 5-7, 7-6, 7-5.

Manderfield (EC) d. Dickerson, 6-3,6-0.

Bolton (EC) d. Fussell, 6-3,64).

Wallace (EC) d. Williams, 6-2, 6-1.

Tolson-Russell (EC) d. Anborn-Summerlin, 6-1,6-2.

Manderfield-Bolton (EC) d. Dickerson-Maxwell, 6-2,7-6.

Beck-Wallace (EC) d. Fussell-; Riesler,fr,64).

AP Rankings

By T)ie .\ss(K'ialfd Press The Top Tvsentv learns in Ihe .Associated Press college fuolball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records and total points. Points based on 20-l-lX-l7-l(>-l5-II-i:i-12-Il-ll-9-8 -i-ti-5-4-3-2-1:

1. Nebraska 16O1 2Texas 3. Arizona 4 Iowa

.North Carolina

6 Alabama 7.West Virginia

8 Ohio State

9 Oklahoma 1 Auburn

11 Oorgia

12 Florida 13.S0. .Melhodist

14 Michigan

15 Miami. Fla

16 LSU

17 Florida .State

18 Washington l9.Maryland

2() Arizona State

4-0-0

2-0-0

4-0-0

:i-o-o

1-o-fl

3-0-0

4-00 2-10

2-1-0 2 10 20-1 3-0-1 3-iM) 2-10 3-1-0 2-10 2-10 2-10 2-1-0 20-1

1.200

1.1:18

1.001

998

917

880

750

709

695

69:i

619

566

385

384

310-

284

215

179

157

114

UPl Rankings

NEW YORK I UPl) - The United Press International Board of Coaches Top 20 1983 college football ratings, with first-place votes in parentheses 1 total points Based on 15 points for first place. 14 for second, etc. I

1 Nebraska 1401    i4-0i    600

2. Texas 12-01    '    550

3 Iowa (3-01    479

4. Alabama 13-01    459

5. North ( arolina 11-01    437

6. West Virginia (4-01    371

7. Oklahoma (2-11    242

8 Georgia (2-0-11    234

9. Florida (3-0-1)    228

10. Auburn (2-11    223

ll.OhioStaie(2-ii    202

12. Southern Mthdsti 3-01    149

13. Louisiana State (2-11    112

14 Michigan (2-1)    109

15. MiamnFla.i (311    97

16. Maryland 12-11    42

17 Arizona State (2-0-11    36

18. Kenlucky(4-0i    34

19. Washington (2-11    25

20. Pittsburgh (2-11    23

Note: By agreement with the American Football Coaches Association, teams on probation by the NCAA are ineligible for the Top 20 and national championship consideration by the UPl Board of Coaches The teams currently on proba tion are Clemson. Southern California. Arizona. Wichita State and Southern Mississippi.

NEWPORT, R.I.(AP)-Its over.

The 132-year winning streak, the longest in sports, is over The seven-race struggle, the first in history, is over. The secrecy of the winged keel is over. Australias 21-vear wait is over.

And a new Americas Cup era - the Australian era - has just begun.

This is the greatest day of my life. said Australia 11 skipper John Bertrand, the winner of the greatest Cup series He captured Mondays final race the way he captured the best-of-seven competition, by turnin| the tide that was flowing in favor of Liberty, the 25th U.S. defender of the Cup and the first loser.

Bertrand rallied from a 3-1 deficit to tie the series with two decisive wins after trailing at the starts, then surged from behind on the fifth leg to win the unprecedented seventh race by 41 seconds, the fourth smallest margin in Cup history.

The gun that signalled the end of the race was the cue for the start of far-flung celebrations. From this seacoast resort to a newly important place 12,500 miles away called Perth, Western Australia, horns blared, crowds cheered and tears of joy and sorrow were shed.

Liberty skipper Dennis Conner, a master seaman who met his match in Bertrand, fought back tears at a news conference where he made a statement but took no questions.

Today, Australia II was the better boat. We had no excuses, he said. I dont think there is any reason for Americans to feel they are anything other than No. 1,

Outside the Rhode Island Armory, where the news conference was held, a predominantly American crowd of about 2,000 roared for both skippers. The throng was jammed together so tightly that Bertrand rode into the armory on a police motorcycle and shook his fist in victory.

Winning sailings most prestigious prize "is the fulfillment of a dream come true, he said.

It was a nightmare for Conner, whose career as an Americas Cup skipper api^ared to be over. Conner, who won the Cup aboard Freedom in 1980, had said before this series that he was uncertain if he would return for another Cup battle.

And, while the New York Yacht Club wont nonor the legend that the head of the first losing skipper be placed in the showcase now displaying the Cup. that notoriety won't enhance his credentials.

Something else is over, now that the Australians have succeeded for the first time since launching their pursuit of the Cup in 1962. Its the mystery of the radical winged keel that made Austrlia II more maneuverable and carried her to victory.

As the new champion of the sailing world maneuvered through dozens of welcoming boats and settled into her berth, the chant went up from some of the thousands in the crowd: Lets see the keel. Lets see the keel.

The jubilant Aussies obliged.

Their conquest completed, they no longer felt the need to hide the once-secret breakthrough beneath her familiar green and blue plastic skirt. S^ctators felt the keel, clung to it and fell in the water from it.

Its appearance was no surprise. It had a blue bulbous front that extended toward the bow, rather than angling as traditional keels do toward the stern. The wings extended sideways from the bottom edge and were painted the same blue color that was difficult to see under the water.

Aussie syndicate chief Alan Bond, successful at last in his fourth Cup campaign, ordered the unveiling of the keel that ended his decade of frustration.

They say something good comes along once in your lifetime. Well something came to Australia today, said the outspoken millionaire, who planned to send a messenger to pick up the Cup at the New York Yacht Club. "Id like to thank the New York Yacht Club because they have not had an

Aussies Delight In Race Victory

The National League record for team home runs in one season is 221, shared by the 1947 New York Giants and the 1956 Cincinnati Reds. Neither team won the pennant.

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -She entered Newport Harbor in the twilights last gleaming amid the rockets red glare and bombs bursting in air.

Her name was neither Liberty nor Freedom, and this was not an American holiday. It was, quite to the contrary, the celebration of a lifetime for a feisty Australian who had written the final chapter in a 132-year epic.

Alan Bond, who had spent $16 million for the privilege of explaining how he lost the Americas Cup three times, was at long last telling the world how happy he was that his Australia II had finally won it.

Ive said plenty, but there really arent any words to describe it, the 47-year-old millionaire said. I think Ill just let my smile tell the story.

It wasn't necessary. American flags at half-mast on Freedom, which successfully defended the sailings most coveted prize three years ago, and Liberty, which had just lost it, were more descriptive.

"Look at this, said Bond, proudly displaying a telegram from Aussie Prime Minister Bob Hawke. You dont get one of these every day.

You have climbed the Mt. Everest of yachting, and you have made us a nation of insomniacs, the wire read.

The latter alluded to the fact that millions of Aussies stayed up most of the night to watch television and history in the making. Bonds latest creation, Australia M, had managed to do what no other boat had done since 1851 -beat the Americans on the high seas.

Lets face it, we came here on Mission Impossible, said Bond aide Warren Jones. And we did it.

Indeed they did, turning a

57-second deficit into a 41-second victory by sailing past Liberty in the final nine miles of their 24.3-mile excursion around Rhode Island Sound.

"For some reason, I knew we couldnt lose, Bond said. I just had a feeling this was it.

If it wasnt, that would have ended the Bond era in Americas Cup racing.

I wasnt coming back, he explained. You only lose so many times, and then you say thats it.

Bond had lost his share, but when the moment of truth arrived he stood proud as the only foreigner ever to take the Cup from the Americans.

I feel good about that, Bond explained. "But I really feel good because they were a good boat, and we were better.

I guess everybody has their day in the sun. This was ours, and Ill never forget it.

Mallard Is Winner

It was Ladies Day in The Daily Reflector Football Contest this week as women claimed both first and second place.

Louise Mallard of 45. 1. Box 163, Vanceboro, took first place in the weekly contest, correctly picking the winners in 26 of the 32 games listed.

Second place went to Margaret Pollard of Rt. 6, Box 326, Greenville. She picked the winners in 25 of the games.

Nine other entrants also had 25 correct, but were further off the point total guess. Pollards guess of 69 was just two off the actual total of 71 points.

The next contest in .the series appears in todays Reflector.    ,

easy job when it comes to dealing with a challenger as hard as us.

American boats have sailed on behalf of the .\YYC. .Now the Cup will be lodged in the Royal Perth Yacht Club until 1987 or 1988 when. Bond said, the .Aussies will stage their first defense in the Indian Ocean off Perth. And thev will enforce the rules.

It always has been an uphill fight for challengers. The NYYC has overseen the defenses The scenes of all those defenses have been American waters. It has been in Rhode Island Sound off Newport since 1930.

Foreigners had won just three of 35 races in the 12-meter era that began in 1958. No boat had won more than two races in a series, much less four. Bond's yachts had won onlv one of 13 races before Australia ll's victory. This vear his boat weathered an NYYC protest to the keel's legalitv. Challengers never have had it easy.

But now the Americans are challengers

They inherited that unwelcome title in a dramatic 14-day series - tying the 13-year-old record for longevity. There was a three-day lull between the last two races, two lay days and a postponement due to shifty winds. The final race began nearly an hour late after the first attempted start was abandoned when the breeze shifted.

The thrilling series turned history, and pre-series predictions, topsy-turvy.

Australia II was supposed to be at its best in light air. but won in all conditions.

Liberty was supposed to be superior to Ihe Aus.sie boat going downwind, but lost on that leg in five of seven races. It was that leg of the final race that swept Australia II to victory.

Conner, 41, was supposed to be the wiser, more resourceful sailor than Bertrand, 37. But Conner made a fatal mistake, then couldn't find a way to catch up .Monday. '

Liberty led by eight seconds at the start and by 29.45.23 and 57 seconds after each of the first tour legs. With less than nine miles left, Bertrand found a wind shift on the fifth leg

I Please Turn To Pa jie T21

Knights Ease By Wilmington

Tim Bland and Cary House both scored goals in the second shootout to give Greenville Christian a 6-4 victory over Wilmington Christian in a long, hard soccer match yesterday.

Greenville Christian scored twice in the first half to take a 2-0 lead. Chris Harris, assisted by Brian House, scored seven minutes'into the half, and Mike Bragg, assisted by Harris, made it 2-0 at the 25 minute mark.

Wilmington came back, however, to score at the 31 minutes into the half with Craig Spell getting the goal.

Spell then got the only goal of the second half to tie it at 2-2.

After two overtime periods produced no more scoring, the two teams went into a shootout. Paul Hollingsworth and Harris both scored for GCA and Tim Reagan and Darrell Whitfield each scored for Wilmington to raise it to 4-4 at the end of the first shootout.

In the second, however, the Knights got the two goals from Bland and Cary House to gam the win as Wilmington tailed to score.

"I think we can play better than we did today, Coach Dale Thatcher said, "We were

Clubs Meet Tonight

The Pitt Count) Chapter of the East Carolina University Pirate Club will meet at the Pirate Club building tonight at 7:30. The meeting will follow the Quarterback Club meeting scheduled for 5:30 p m

Art Baker, associate head football coach and offensive coordinator at ECU. and Tom Throckmorton, defensive coordinator, will address the Quarterback Club, while the Pirate Club will elect officers and directors for the coming year.

AH members of the Pirate Club residing in Pitt County are invited to attend.

missing some starters, and they played very physically We were forced to change out game style"

Thatcher cited Bland and David .Sohn tor their defensive play.

.\\iw :!-4. the Knights travel to Raleigh on Frida> to face Friendship Academy

Watson Has 700 Series

Gary Watson of Greenville turned in a rare pair of 7oo series this past weekend at Hillcrest Lanes.

Watson carded a 248. 183. 276 series lor a 7o7 on Thursday night, then came back with a 2,58,2(13,248 set lor a 7o9 on Sunday.

The first Too came in the Thursday .Mixed League, and the Sunday series came in the Shirts &: Skirts Both league are sanctioned and the series will be recognized by the American Bowling ('ongress. He will receive a plaque from the ABC and also trom .Major League Lanes, the home organization of Hillcrest Lanes Gary. 22. is the son of George Wafson, secretary of the Greenville Bowiing .Association, and a member of the national AB(' championship team,    

Hillcrest Lanes, which is now being managed by Everett llicks. is being remodeled and IS planning several upcoming events.

On Saturday and .Sunday, Krispi Kreeme will sponsor a no-tap. no-split singles tourmanet at 2 p.m. each day with a SKKi prize guarantee.

On October 21, a .Shoney's Lock In will be held from midnight to 6 a.m. For one price, bowlers will be able to bowl all they wish, and also will receive a free breakfast at Shonev's afterwards.

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mm

^2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Tuesday. September 27,1983Forsch Has No-Hitter Against Expos

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Any doubts Bob Forsch was harboring over the future of a pitching career in eclipse during most of 1983 have been placed on hold.

The 33-year-old St. Louis Cardinals right-hander was never more masterful than he was Monday night as he fired his second career no-hitter with a six-strikeout performance in a 3-0 triumph over the Montreal Expos.

This one was more gratifying, said Forsch in comparing the feat with his first no-hitter, a 5-0 conquest of Philadelphia in April 1978.

But the first one was a bigger thrill, said Forsch, half of the only brother tandem in major league history to throw no-hitters. The first one set up the one

Kiny got the next year.

In April 1979, Ken Forsch tossed a no-hitter for the Houst(m Astros against the Atlanta Braves.

Monday nights no-hitter, in which there were two baserunners, a hit batsman and a runner who reached on an error by second baseman Ken Oberkfell, was the first in the National League since Nolan Ryan of Houston fired the fifth of his career exactly two years earlier. It was the second no-hitter this season, accompanying one thrown July 4 by Dave Righetti of the New York Yankees.

Forsch rated his performance against Montreal superior to that which earned him his first no-hitter.

I felt like I had a better fastball

Umight. A^inst Philadelphia the ball was just sinking real good, he said. I thought I was a lot better in this game than I was in78.

Forsch, 9-12, had not gone longer than 5 2-3 innings in six starts since Aug. 3.

His most recent start had been a 10-1 loss six nights earlier to Montreal. And he admittd the embarrassment served asan incentive.

There was a little ill feeling when we lost in Montreal, he said.

They put us out of the running for a title. It helped to save a pretty bad season for me, he said. I dont think Id lost faith in my ability. Its just that things hadnt worked out.

Monday, Forsch encountered difficulty only in the second inning as he breezed to

Looking For A No-Hitter

St. Louis baseball Cardinal pitcher Bob Forsch watches the flight of the ball during the seventh

inning of the game in St. Louis against the Montreal Expos. Forsch completed the game with a no-hitter. (AP Laserphoto)

Phils, L.A. Both Win

B_\ The .Associated Press

For five years. Bob Forsch lived with the knowledge that some people thought he didn't deserve his first no-hit game.

On Monday night, he left no doubts as he pitched the second no-hit gem of his career and the first in the National League in exactly two years as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Montreal Expos 3-0.

"A lot of people said that it (the first no-hitter) was tainted, Forsch said. This one I don't think there was any question about '

Only a hit batsman and an error by second baseman Ken Oberkfell, both in the second inning, kept the no-hitter from being a perfect game. Forsch. 33, retired the last 22 Expos.

Meanwhile, division leaders Philadelphia and Los Angeles both won their games to pull closer to clinching spots in the playoffs. The Dodgers rallied to beat Cincinnati 12-9 in 10 innings and the Phillies beat Chicago 5-2, while Atlanta defeated San Francisco 6-2 and Houston tripped San Diego 5-3.

Forsch, the 20th player to pitch two no-hitters in this century, got his first on April 16,1978 against Philadelphia.

In that one,a drive that went under the glove of Ken Reitz was called an error in the eighth inning. On Monday night, Oberkfell let a grounder by Chris Speier go through his legs.

It had a fouled-up spin on it, said Oberkfell, who assisted on the final out in the ninth on a ground ball by Manny Trillo.

Forsch, 9-12, said his second no-hitter was a better pitching performance than his first.

I felt like I had a better fastball tonight, he said. Against Philadelphia, the ball was just sinking real good.

Forsch, who threw 96 pitches to beat the Expos, who had been mathematically eliminated earlier in the day. said he groups his memory of his first no-hitter with the one thrown by his brother, Ken, a year later, making them the only brother combination to throw no-hitters.

The first one set up the second one for Kenny, he said. There can be no greater feeling than when he got his the next season.

Mondays nights performance came two years after the last previous no-hitter in the NL. Nolan Ryan pitched record fifth no-hitter.

r

I

against Los Angeles, on Sept. 26,1981,

Forsch also alluded to the fact that he is having one of the worst seasons in his 10-year career with St. Louis, which failed to defend its 1982 world championship.

"I dont think Ive lost faith in my ability, he said. It's just that things havent worked out,

The only ball close to a Montreal hit came in the second inning when Tim Raines slugged a long drive to left-center that Cards center fielder Willie McGee caught after a long run.

In the same inning, Forsch hit Gary Carter on the left arm, drawing an umpires warning, and Oberkfell made his error, putting Carter on third. Angel Salazar then struck out, the first of six for Forsch. and the Expos were retired in order the last seven innings.

The Cardinals scored all of their runs in the fifth inning on run-scoring singles by Ozzie Smith and McGee and an RBI-double by Lonnie Smith.

Phillies 5, Cubs 2 Philadelphia won at Chicago for its 11th straight triumph, built its lead over second-place Pittsburgh to 44 games and lowered its magic number to two with five games left.

John Denny picked up his 18th victory, high in the league, with an eight-inning seven-hitter and the Phillies got all their runs on two-run homers by Ivan DeJesus and Joe Lefebvre and a solo shot from Len Matuszek.

Denny, who has lost only six times, walked none and struck out three before Ron Reed took over at the start of the ninth inning and gained his ninth save.

Dodgers 12, Reds 9 Los Angeles maintained its 34-game lead over Atlanta by rallying for three runs in the top of the ninth to tie the score and then winning the game with four runs in the 10th.

Pedro Guerrero slammed a two-run double in the 10th and contributed an RBI-single in the ninth.

Greg Brock and Dusty Baker collected their fourth hits of the game to start the lOth inning, and Guerrero drove in pinch-runners Derrel Thomas and Candy Maldonado for a 10-8 advantage. Cecil Espy then singled to score Guerrero and Steve Sax walked with the bases loaded for the final run. ,

Braves 6, Giants 2

Atlanta won its third straight, holding on to beat San Francisco after Jerry Royster capped a four-run first inning with a two-run double.

Phil Niekro, 11-9, won his fourth straight decision, striking out four and walking four in 6 2-3 innings before being replaced by Gene Garber, who earned his ninth save.

The Braves sent nine batters to the plate in the first inning, chasing Giants starter Mark Calvert, 1-4. In addition to Roysters double, Claudell Washington and Rafael Ramirez knocked in a runs with singles.

Astros 5, Padres 3

Houston also scored early to beat San Diego, as Denny Walling drove in two runs with adoubleandagroundout.

The Astros scored three runs in the first against loser Eric Show, 14-12. Dickie Thon

EC Golfers In Seventh

RALEIGH (AP) - North Carolina States Todd Phillips and AVake Forests Billy Andrade fired 2-under-par 70s Monday to share the first-round lead in the second annual Wolfpack Golf Tournament.

The Deacons took a 16-stroke lead in the chase for the team title after shooting a 1-under-par 287 on the par-72 Raleigh Country Club course. N.C. States White and Red teams are tied for second at 303. Guilford is fourth at 305 in the 11-team field.

Andrade, a sophomore, shot a blistering 33 on the back nine after making the turn at 37. Teammates Jerry Haas and Mark Thaxton each shot even-par72s.

Phillips, a junior, had a 34 on the front nine and a 36 on the back nine.

Virginia senior Chris Anderson also had a 72 as only five golfers shot par or better.

William & Mary and Virginia are tied for fifth at 307 followed by East Carolina and Duke at 312. Campbell is next at 314 with Old Dominion at 317 and North Carolina at Charlotte last at 323.

The 54-hole tournament continues Tuesday, with the finals scheduled for Wednes-

fy.

and Jose Cruz had run-scoring singles in the inning, and Walling drove in the third run with a ground ball. Walling added a run-scoring double in the third.

Mike Madden, 9-4, pitched six innings for the victory.

Sloan Hopes For Hea th

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -Duke football coach Steve Sloan hopes last weeks open date enabled his team to recover physically and mentally from its first three games - all losses.

But things wont get any easier for the Blue Devils, who this Saturday face a Miami of Florida team that blanked Notre Dame 20-0 last week for its third victory against one defeat.

Miami is an exceptional football team ... uncommonly physical with good speed, Sloan said during his weekly news conference Monday. He even compared Miami with the Miami' Dolphins of the National Footbal League.

Miami does a lot of offensive and defensive things like the Dolphins, he said. Coach (Howard) Schnellen-berger worked with (Dolphin) coach Don Shula for an number of years, and they both have developed very good football teams.

Sloan said he wasnt counting on a Miami letdown after its victory over Notre Dame.

When you have things go as well as they have defensively, it is tough to have a letdown, Sloan said. "We have moved the ball well offensively this year so this will give them some incentive to stop us. They have not allowed an opponent to score in 11 quarters, which in todays brand of football is an amazing feat.

The Blue Devils had a good week of practice, he said. We worked on fundamentals and tried to get some players healed up that had injuries.

Sloan said he is unsure about the status of receiver Mark Militello, who led Duke in receiving last season with 52 catches but suffered a fractured transverse vertebrae against South Carolina two weeks ago.

Duke quarterback Ben Bennett is third in the nation in total offense with 285.7 yards per game.

his frst victory as a starter since July 28.

Tim Raines lashed a long drive to left-center in the secmid with one out, but center fielder Willie McGee tracked it down. F(msch afterward knicked Gary Carttt* with a pitch and struck out Ai^el Salazar after Chris Speier reached first as Montreals last baserunner on Ob-erirfellsenw.

Hie Expos, who earlier in the day had been mathematically eliminated from contention in the NL East, refused to alibi their ineptness.

Were not any flatter than the Cardinals were. Tonight he was better than we were, said Montreal Manager Bill Virdon. That sums it up.

Despite his pitching brilliance, Forsch

had no margin fw otot against ri^t-hoider Steve Rogm, 17-12, until his teammates eru[^ fw all their runs in the fifth.

Rogers issued a leadoff walk to David Green, vriw stde second and scored on Ozzie Smiths singte. Lmmie Smith douhled'home Ozzie &nith, and McGee ca{^ the uprising with an RBI-single.

Im glad it happened early, said

McGee in respect to his running catch (rf Raines drive, the only strong defensive play needed to protect the no-hitter.

Forsch said he became aware of his no-hitter in the sevmth inning but later bad mis^vings. About the ninth inning, I started thinUng about all the other guys this year who had come close.

A crowd (rf 12,457, third-smallest of the season at Busch Stadium, rose to its feet after Fwsch retired Gene Roof to end the eighth inning.

Pindi-hitter Terry Crowley looked at a called third strike to start the ninth. Tory Francona lined to Green in right for the second out, and Manny Trillo grounded to Oberkfell, who had moved to third base, to fini^ the accom(dishment.

Forsch, sippna idly at a glass of champagne, said be would it)bably savOT the no-hitter m<H% lata*.

You have to be luclq' to pitch a no-hitter, and Ive been ludty twice, he said of his 96-(Htch performance. Im very grateful. You have to be lucky, and the g(M Lord has to be willing.

Heaton Finds Motivation For Three-Hitting Cleveland/ 7-0

By The Associated Press

In a nearly empty Yankee Stadium in a game which meant little, Neal Heaton found plenty of reasons to go all out.

Heaton, a native New Yorker, three-hit the Yankees Monday night in Clevelands 7-0 victory. He did it for himself, his family and friends.

This was a big thrill, going nine and its against the Yankees, said the 23-year-old rookie left-hander and onetime All-American at the University of Miami. All my family was out there - I had about 50 comps (complimen-tai7 tickets). And guys I

havent seen for 10 years were here.

The Yankees announced an attendance of 15,119 but only about 6,000 were visible.

They saw Heaton surrender a bunt single to Omar Moreno, Steve Balboms line single in the seventh and Bobby Meachams double in the eighth. He struck out six and walked three to earn his third shutout.

Heaton, who moved into the rotation July 20, gained his sixth victory in his last nine starts.

Elsewhere, it was Kansas City 6, Seattle 2; and Toronto 3, California 2 in 10 innings.

Im still a rookie and have

King Ready To Promote Coetzee

to prove myself every time out there, said Heaton. I dont care if were 50 games bdiind and its the last game of the season. Im doing my best.

All my life I had been a starter. I thought mentally I was better as a starter. I just wasnt used to the bullpen. I was used to rest, running between starts, and sitting in the dugout, all the things a starter does.

I hope I never see a bullpen again.

He has an awful lot of stuff, a good fastball, slow breaking pitch and a changeup, said Moreno.

Andre Thornton and Gorman Thomas each drove in two runs for Cleveland, which broke open the game with four runs in the sixth. Thornton belted a long bases-loaded double to key the rally.

Royals 6, Mariners 2 Darryl Motley slammed a two-run homer and Dan Quisenberry registered his 43rd save, extending his own major league record, with three innings of perfect relief.

I visualized the ball going over the fence earlier in the day, said Motley, whose folks were at the game. It was quite a thrill. Thats the first time my parents have seen me play in person since high school in 1978. When I rounded third, I saw my dad standing up cheering.

Blue Jays 3, Angels 2 Damaso (Garcia singled in the 10th and scored his third run of the game on Garth lorgs single. Doyle Alexander went nine innings to pick up his sixth consecutive victory.

By ED SCHUYLER JR.

AP Sports Writer

Gerrie Coetzee, the World Boxing Association heavyweight champion, is a South African gold mine, and therein lies the problem for promoter Don King and possibly some future opponents.

This is where I won the title, and I want to defend it here, Coetzee said after knocking out Michael Dokes in the 10th round and winning the title at Richfield, Ohio.

As long as hes the champion with me, hell fight here (the United States), said King, a black promoter, who has long criticized rival white promoter Bob Arum for promoting fights in South Africa.

King said h 3 has options for three Coetzee fights. Some say more. But Arum says none.

Arum said that WBA rules state a promoter cant have options on a new champion unless he has promoted previous fights of his. King didnt, said Arum.

I will stick with King, said Cedric Kushner, a South African who now promotes in the United States and is Coetzees advisor.

Pwill not fight this guy over there, said Larry Holmes, the World Boxing Council champion, whose name immediately was mentioned as an opponent when Coetzee became the first white heavyweight champion since Ingemar Johansson of Sweden won and lost the title in fight with Floyd Patterson in 1959-60.

Now, Coetzee calls South Africas race-separation policy of apartheid rubbish. He lives with his wife and family at Huntington Beach, Calif., and is on his way to becoming a legal U.S. resident. His third child, a girl, was born in the United States the day after his victory.

But that victory made the 28-year-old Coetzee a hero to white South Africa, and the

Duke-Miami Set For ABC

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Dukes college football game against Miami of Florida Saturday afternoon has been moved to 3:50 p.m. to allow ABC-TV to televise the contest regionally.

The game was originally scheduled to start at 1:30 p.m. in Wallace Wade Stadium.

The Blue Devils, 0-3, will be looking for their first victory under new head coach Steve Sloan.

Miami, 3-1, is coming off a 20-0 victory over Notre Dame, while the Blue Devils did not

really big money for him and anyone he fights is in South Africa, where Coetzee tried for the WBA title twice before succeeding in the United States.

There is a 110,000-seat stadium^in South Africa that would be filled for Coetzees first defense, his second, his third, etc., because a Coetzee defense of a share of one of sports most important individual prizes would be an international event in a country banned from participation in many areas of international sport.

Protests and demonstrations by civil rights groups -there was none for his bid against the favored Dokes -probably will be part of any Coetzee defense in the United States. Some say any South African athlete represents South Africa. It seems here that Gerrie Coetzee is just a professional fighter, who happens to be a South African, and that the hero worship heaped on him there need not reflect his political beliefs.

There will be no demonstrations over a Coetzee-fight in South Africa - at least before the fight.

Of course, there would be intense pressure on Coetzee, the kind of pressure he feels he escaped by challenging for the title in the United States.

But pressure is the name of the game in fighting, and a multi-million dollar purse can make bearing up under pressure worthwhile. After all, boxing is a business.

I aint no politician, Dokes said when asked about fighting a white South African.

But some fighters and at least one promoter are going to feel political pressure in the upcoming weeks and months al)out being involved in future Coetzee fights. Consciences will have to be searched.

Chances of Coetzee defending the title in South Africa are excellent. Boxing is a business, like dealing in gold and diamonds.

Cup Goes...

(Continued From Page 11)

and Conner failed to block his air. It was the beginning of the end.

Australia II picked up 1:18 on that downwind run to surge ahead by 21 seconds. All Bertrand had to do the rest of the way was block the wind coming toward Conners sails.

Youve climbed the Mount Everest of yachting, Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke said in a telegram to the winners.    /

Its just indescribable. Im drowned in champagne, said Hawke, who was among the celebrants at the Royal Perth Yacht Club.

At the NYYC, members seemed to take the setback reasonably well.

It wouldnt have been put in competition if it wasnt assured that one day it would be won by the opposition, said Alec Leonart, a club member for 25 years.

President Reagan sent a telegram to Conner. Its contents were not disclosed.

From the highest levels of government to the common man on Newports bustling Thames Street a sailing regatta with little mass appeal had become an object of intense interest and emotion.

This year, the Americas Cup was more than a few sailboat races. It was drama. It was suspense. It was history.

And, it was over.

Allison Extends 106-^Point Lead

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Bobby Allison carries a 106-point lead in the NASCAK standings into Sundays Holly Farms 400 race on a track where No. 2 Darrell Waltrip is considered difficult to beat.

With his second-place finish in last weeks Goodys 500, Allison was able to extend his lead to 3,908-3,802 over the two-time defending Winston Cup champion.

Waltrip was third in the Goodys 500, which was won

by Ricky Rudd, at Martinsville, Va.

Now the circuit goes to North Wilkesboro, N.C., Speedway.

The Goodys 500 and Holly Farms 400 are considered crucial in Allisons bid for the title. Last year, Waltrip out-scored Allison by 250 points in four Winston Cup races at Martinsville and North Wilkesboro.

Bill Elliott is third in the Winston Cup standings with 3,537 points.

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Wednesday, September 28,1983 11:00 A.M.





Giants Pound Packers

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C Tuesday. September 2/. 1983    13

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) New York Giants Coach Bill Parcells had a can of so^ in his hand, a stick of gum in his mouth and a notion in his head.

He had something to say about his team, and he said it more than once.

His words werent poetic nor nearly as overwhelming as the Giants 27-3 National Football League victory over the normally explosive Green Bay Packers Monday night. But he made his point.

Althoi^ our won-loss record doesnt show it, I think

were an imiM-oving football team, said Parcels, whose team evened its record at 2-2 while notching its largest margin of vicU7 in eight years at Giants Stadium.

Presumably, Parcells and Green Bay Coach Bart Stan-watched the same game. But

Down For The Count

A referee ends up on the turf as Rob Carpenter (26) of the New York Giants pushes through a number of Green Packers to score the first

TANKBFNAMAM

touchdown of Monday nights NFL game. The Packers Mike McCoy (29) and Mark Lee (22) try to stop Carpenter. (AP Laserphoto)

it didnt sound that way as Starr indicated his team made it easier for the Giants to look im{M-oved.

We embarrassed ourselves, Starr said. We did just about everything we could to cost ourselves a ball game. The Giants are good, but they are not supermen. We made them look like supermen.

I dont like to admit it, but I cant remember us playing any worse than this.

'ITie Giants chose to look at it another way.

This was just our night. There was no way they could beat us, said linebacker Lawrence Taylor. We got very stingy. They got close to our goal line and wed bend. But we didnt break.

Taylor referred to a few instances when the defense refused to break, including a fourth-down play by cor-nerback Mark Haynes in the second quarter. Haynes rode Green Bay tight end Gary Lewis to the turf inches short of the end zone after quarterback Lynn Dickey executed a seemingly perfect fake handoff up the middle and shoveled the ball to Lewis onanend-around.

That was my man, Haynes said. If 1 dont go with him its six points.

The Giants got three points a few minutes later when rookie Ali Haji-Sheikh kicked a team record 56-yard field goal with three seconds to play in the first half to give the Giants a 10-3 lead.

The Giants capitalized on Green Bay fumbles the first two times the Packers had the ball in the third quarter, scoring on Terry Jacksons 35-yard return with a recovered fumble and on Haji-Sheikhs 32-yard field goal.

The Giants closed out the scoring when Scott Brunner hit Earnest Gray with a 27-yard scoring pass.

IIV 11^1    i^.v/.  j ucouay. ocpiClI. f . jC

Tears And Cheers Sparkled At Close Of America's Cup

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Correspondent NEWPORT, R. 1. (AP) -The winning skipper, John Bertrand, wept unashamedly. His heart-broken American rival, Dennis Conner, kept a stiff upper lip while his beaten red-hulled sloop flew the Stars and Stripes at half mast.

It was an occasion for tears

and cheers - a dark day for American pride, an elixir for the national ego of a distant continent of some 15 million people who sometimes feel forgotten at the bottom of the world.

And it was a day on which this staid old seaport resort went deliriously mad over a band of leather-tough, free-

Women Athletes Seek Assurance

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SCOREBOARD

DOUBLES: Ripken, Baltimore, 45; Bo^, Boston, 44; Parrish, Detroit, 41; McRae, Kansas City, 41; Yount Milwaukee 41.

TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 9; Herndon Detroit, 9; Gibson, Detroit, 9; Yount, Milwaukee, 9; 4 are tied with 8.

HOME RUNS: Rice, Boston, 37: Armas, Boston, 36; Kittle. Chicago, 34; Murray, Baltimore, 32;Winfield, New York, 31

STOLEN BASES: Henderson. Oakland, 106; R. Law. Chicago, 74, J. Cruz, Chicago, 55; Wilson, Kansas City, 55;

.500    91    93

.750    99    84

.500    98    91

.250    46    64

.000    85    131

II    58 *    .372 37

Rec Softball    x-cHncheddivisionUtle

   Monday's Game*

Fall Leanue    Cleveland 7, New York 0

I D Dawson        Toronto 3, dalifornia 2,10 innings

Dawson.................................8    Kansas City 6, Seattle 2

Bailey s.................. 3    Only games scheduled

Tuesday's Games

Tommys M.H 000 000 0- 0 (MSor'iMTTn/*'*^

Mike's P.C..............201    602    011    Boston (Hurst 12-11) at New York

Leading hitters: T-Bobby (Keough4-7),(n)

Godley 3-5, Elks 3-5; M-J. Von    J',!'?.''"    

Cflnnnn 9 3 n RnvH 9 3    Milwaukee    (Caldwell 1111, (n)

Lannon2-3,D. Boyd2-3.    Texas    (Smithson 9-14) at Minnesota

(Williams 10-13), (n)

Vermont Amer 000 300 1-4 Toronto (Leal 13-11) at California

;S' -

Carmen 3-3; SSmith 3-3.    Kansas City (Gura ii-i7)    at Seattle

(Beattie 9-14), (n)

Grogs.....................102    053    0-11    Chicaoa'l^ffiS'*^^'"""

Morga^.................000    000    0 0    DetroS at Baltimore, (n)

Leading hitters: GCloyce    Boston at New York, (n)

Wilson 4-4, Bill Cleghom 3-3.    Cleveland at Milwaukee, (n)

TexasatMinnesoU, (n)

Toronto at California, (n)

Jims Tire...............331    422    116    Kansas City at Seattle, (n)

14th Street...............302    121    0- 9

Leading hitters: J-Edward LeaOUe Leadpr^

Cobum 5^, Jim Medlin 4-5, Charlie    ucauci    3

Cobum 4-5; 14thGreg Wilson 3-4,    By The Associated Press

Dennis Johnson 2-4 (HR), Dave    national    league

Smith2-4(HR).

Pittsburgh^ .325; Cruz, Houston, .323;

r-;    --- UiSmith, St. Louis, ,319; Hendrick, St

Baseball Standings

"liTol5!(LffiE*    IS'pWlawff

EAST m VISION    Chicago.    92.

EASTmVISION    RBI: Mu^y, AUanta, 117, bawson,

Philadelnhi.    7    70    fif**'    Pll<lelphia,

Pduffi"    Z    7*    ^    1.,    ^'?l'^Angeles,99,Kennedy,

SMS    7    l7,    Cruz.

^^0    70    w    7    Houston, IM; liver, Montreal, 182;

NewXk    63    M    :lo4    a*.    181;    Raines,    Montreal,

LosAnaele8'^^T'S^' S7i    ""a    58;

Hous^    81    74    .523    7'f    tsburgK 3^ Knight Houston 36    '

SanDiego    77    79    494    12    TRlPLS^utlM Atlanta n

Qnc^''*^ ra 84    17    Louis,

uncinnati    ,    84    .462    17    *; Redus, Cincinnati. 9;'Thon.riouston 9

Houston 5, San Diego 3    ^IIn BA5^ ^ines Mnntm.-

Los AnMles (Honeycutt 2-3) at Ph^i^{|]o(P upj 7^2'

Cincinna fRiisell 4-3)    pittoixffi 157 2 j w^t

(DLo7?),'(nr'

San Francisco (Calvert 1-3) at AtlanU 6m3M    **".    IM,

^5 ,-u,

PhiUdelh?ffiio*"**    S*"^'i    'Mrtten

(n)    ui"l^**d *5iWno, Houston,

Montreal at St. Louis, (n)

Atlanta at Houston, 2, (t-D)        

Only games scheduled    ,

       '    AMERICAN    LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE    BATTING (M at bata): BoggjL Botton.

EA8TDIVI8ION    3(M; Carew, California, 34lT^taker

W    L Pci. GB Detroit, .321; Moa%, Toronto, .318

x-Baltimort    96    SB    .619    -    Ripken. BalUinore, .31/

Detroit    89    <7    .571    71k    RUNS; Ripken, Baltimore, 118; Mur-

New York    87    68    .561    9    ray, Baltimore, 113; Moie^,    Toronto.

Toronto    88    71    .548    11    lU; Hendenon,Oakland, idb;    Cooner,

82    74    .528    144    Milwaukee, 97; Upihaw, TorontoTw;

75    81    .481    214    Yount. Milwaukee, C

88    88    .438    284    RBI: Rice, Boaton, 121; Cooper,    ____________

WE8TDIVIM0N    '"'rt    CLEVELAND    INDIAI?S-Called    up

8ia . S 5 :g S.    Sr-    -'f    lit

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 12-5, .70^2.33.

STRIKEOUrS: Morris, Detroit, 221; Bannister, Chicago, 184, Stieb, Toronto, 180; Righetti, New York, 169; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 154 SAVES: (juisenberry Kansas City, 43; Stanley, Boston, 32; R. Davis, Minnesota, 29; Caudill, Seattle, 25; Ladd, Milwaukee, 23.

NFL Roundup

By The Associated Press American Conference East

W L TPct. PF PA

3    1    0    .750    68    54

3    1    0    .750    74    57

2    2    0    . 500    84    87

2    2    0    . 500    98    99

2    2    0

Central

3    1    0

2    2    0

1    3    0

0    4    0

West

4    0    0    1.000    89    37

2    2    0    .500    48    55

2    2    0    .500    81    85

1    3    0    . 250    49    71

1    3    0    .250    101    119

NattonalConference

East

4    0    0    1.000    114    80

3    1    0    .750    107    73

2    2    0    .500    62    60

2    2    0    .500    59    64

1    3    0

Central

3    1    0

2    2    0

Buffalo Miami Baltimore New England N.Y.Jete

Cleveland

Pittsburgh

Cincinnali

Houston

L.A.Raiders Denver Seattle Kansas City SanDiego

Dallas Washington N.Y.GianU Philadelphia St. Louis

resignation of Jim Campbell, general manager, so that he can become chief executive officer.

NEW YORK YANKEES-Named David Hersch director of minor league operations

BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association DALLAS MAVERICKS-Signed Dale Ellis, forward.

DENVER NUGGETSAcquired Kenny Dennard, forward, from the Kansas City Kings in exchange for a 1985 third round draft choice.

KANSAS CITY KINGS-Announced that Don Buse, guard, has agreed to terms.

F(XTBAL1.

United States Football League BIRMINGHAM STALLIONS-Signed Thomas Boyd, linebacker, and Ken T^ler, wide receiver

, PITTSBURGH MAULERS-Signed John Rizzi, Jeff Tift, Brian Dalatri, Mark Udinski, Albert Lester, Rich Passerolti, Chris Cowles, Steve Ingalls, and Michael Stearns, offensive linemen.

HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BUCK HAWKS-Sent Steve Blyth and Don Dietrich, defensemen, and Dan Frawley, Tom McMurchy and Florent Robidoux. forwards, to Springfield of the American Hockey League.

NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Senl Mike Antonovich and Glenn Merkosky, centers, Gary McAdam, left wing, and Mike Moher and John Paddock, right wings, to Maine of the American Hockey League Returned Steve Janaszak and Rick LaFerriere, goaltenders, Doug McGrath, Mike Hordy, M.F Schurman and Carmine Cirella, defensemen, Joe Ward. Roy Sommer and Kevin Maxwell, centers Mike Lekun. Paul Fulcher, Pat Rabbitt and Ed Cooper, left wings, and Mitch Wilson and Brent Shaw^ right wings, to Maine. Assigned Tony Gilliard, left wing, to Muskegon of the International Hockey League NEW YORK RANGERS-Signed Mike Allison, center

NEW YORK (AP) - President Reagan has been called on to promote and protect womens sports opportunities, by Donna de Varona, who has fought to promote womens athletics and who made the most of her opportunties as a swimmer,

De Varona and three other new members of the Womens Sports Foundations Hall of Fame and tennis star Martina Navratilova, one of the fun-dations two Athletes of the Year in 1983, were among past and present female athletic stars who met Monday with Reagan, who was here to address the United Nations.

Missing from the meeting with the president and from a news conference at which various awards were announced, were runner Mary Decker, Amateur Sportswoman of the Year, and new Hall of Fame member Lt. Col. Micki King Hogue, a diver who is deputy director of athletics at the Air Force Academy.

King recently had a baby, while Decker is resting at home in Eugene, Ore,

It was the second straight year and third time in four years Decker was named Amateur Sportswoman of the Year. She holds two world, one indoor and four American records and is ranked first in the world in the 10,000-meters and first in the United States at 800-, 1,500-, 3,000- and 5,000-meters.

Navratilova, the reigning Wimbledon and U.S. open champion, was named Professional Sportswoman of the Year.

The five women named to the Hall of Fale were Dr. Tenley Albright, figure skating; Andrea Mead Lawrence, skiing, and Helen Stephens, track, in the Pioneer category (women who competed before 1960), and De Varona and Hogue in the Contemporary Category.

W'inner of the team award was the U.S. Womens Volleyball Team, which won a bronze medal at the world championship in Lima, Peru.

De Varona, the president of the organization, told Reagan, What we need from you Mr. President is we want your administration to hear what we are saying ... so that women can earn their place in this very competitive world,

I can understand your suggestions to me, Reagan said, who praised corporate support for the foundation and said it was just the type of initiative we are encouraging.

Sponsors of the various awards were American Expresss, Avon and J&B Scotch.

De Varona set 18 world swimming records between 1960 and 1965 and won two gold medals at the 1964 Olympics. Hogue won a gold medal in springboard diving at the 1972 Olympics and won 10 U.S. national championships.

Albright, a practicing surgeon in Boston and a former member of U.S. Olympic Committee, became the first American woman to win the

.250 75 115

Minnesota Green Bay CTiicago Detroil Tampa Bay

San Francisco Atlanta LA. Rams New Orleans

.750    83    102

-    -    .    .500    92    114

1    3    0    .250    84    86

1    3    0    . 250    68    81

.000    43    70

.750    131    86

.500    83    71

,500    94    87

0    4    0

West

3    1    0

2    2    0

2    2    0

2    2    0    500    109

Monday's Game New York Giants 27. Green Bay 3 Sunday, Oct. 2 Dallas at Minneso(a Tampa Bay at Green Bay Denver at Chicago

at Los Angeles Rams Houston at Pittsburgh San Francisco at New England Seattle at aeveland La Angeles Raiders at Washington Baltimore at Cincinnati Philadelphia at Atlanta St. Louis at KanusCity Miami at New Orleans San Diego at New York Giante

New York JrtTitSuftolMn)

Transactions

By HieAiswialed Press BASEBALL Amerkau League

IDIANS-I

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individual world championship in figure skating in 1^ and repeated as champion in 1955. She won an Olympic gold medal in 1956.

That thing that is so impressive about this honor is that it involves every sport, said Albright.

Lawrence, the supervisor of the fifth district. Mono County, Calif., is the only American skiier ever to win two gold medals in a single Olympics. She competed in the 1948,1952 and 1956 Games and won her golds in 1952.

The acceptance (of women in sports) is the phenomenon of society as it now, she said. Were pushing for equal time.

Stephens, who at age 65 won six gold medals in this years Senior Olympics, won a gold medal in the 100-meter dash at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin and anchored the gold medal-winning 400-meter relay team.

Also honored were USA Today with the Presidents Award for its consistently expansive coverage of womens sports; Dr. Cliistine Well, professor of Physical Education at the University of Arizona, for outstanding contribution to womens sports by an individual; the Womens International Bowling Congress, outstanding contribution by a non-profit organization, and Coca-Cola USA, outstanding contribtion by a corporation.

Northeastern

Williamston

Edenton

Washington

Bertie

Tarboro

Roanolie

Ahoskie

R. Rapids

Plymouth

Conf W L

3    0

3    0

1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 0    3

Overall

Last Weeks Results Williamston 40. Bertie 6 Edenton 21, Washington 19 Roanoke 14, Plymouth 7 Ahoskie 26, Roanoke Rapids 14 Tarboro - Open

This Weeks Schedule Williamston at Tarboro Washington at Ply mnouth Roanoke Rapids at Bertie Roanoke at Ahoskie Edenton at Perquimans

living Australians who absconded with one of this countrys most prized possessions - yachtings Americas Cup.

For a few wild, unharnessed hours, it seemed everybody donned the green and gold, sang Waltzing Matilda and became an Aussie,

Nobody met a stranger.

We finally got rid of that darned Cup, a National Guard corporal said under his breath as the radio blared the news that Australia II had crossed he finish line 41 sec()nds ahead of Liberty, thus ending a 132-year possession of the bottomless silver pitcher by the United States.

It didnt mark the end of an era. It marked the end of an age.

When a schooner named America beat a fleet of British vessels in a race around the Isle of Wight for a pot-bellied silver cup that cost $500, British pride was shattered.

At the time, Britain was undisputed queen of the oceans. Her people were lordly and condescending. They looked upon American citizens as Yankee hayseeds, uncouth descendants of religious outcasts.

The New York Yacht Club put up the Cup for world challenge. Over 113 years, beginning in 1870, yacht-racing powers, mostly British, sou^t to capture the trophy first with giant sloops and ketches, then multimillion-dollar J boats and finally the present day 12s. All failed. None won more than two races.

Meanwhile, America itself grew to be the richest anil most powerful nation in the world. The New York Yacht Club became haughty and arrogant - legalistic and hair-splitting in making its own rules.

Many times challengers returned home, saying they had been swindled. The New York Yacht Club paid them little mind.

The emergence of Australia as a legitimate contender and finally a winner is an ironic twist almost a reverse replay-of history.

. Australias heritage has been much like that of America, the continent originally a British penal colony, very pioneer-spirited and slow

Don McGlohon INSURANCE

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758 -1177

in development, stuck with a massive inferiority complex.

Then it began emerging with great fighters, remarkable athletes and in recent years the source of some of the worlds most popular pop and rock musical artists - a modern, progressive land Americans see muc'hv.of themselves in the Aussies - a brash, hardy and uninhibited breed without pretense - and the feeling was reflected in the great outpouring of celebrants after Australia IIs remarkable triumph.

They swarmed the docks to shoot off firecrackers, send flairs into the sky, join in the Aussies catchy ballads and then poured onto the streets and into the alleyways.

It was Times Square on New Years Eve, New Orleans at Mardi Gras time,

A Thames Street pubkeeper brought cases of champagne to the docks and kept popping corks endlessly as long as Aussie thirsts continued.

Theyre great people. he said. They came to my place every night. People loved them. I would say 60 per cent of all Americans wanted the Aussies to win.

For one thing, they resented the New York Yacht Club, which is like owning the bat and ball, playing the game in your own backyard and having your mother looking out the window.

Joey Gregory, a New York writer and actress, sported a T-shirt with the imprint, Americans for Australia II."

I loved the Aussies, she said. I found many Americans were rooting for them, I like their style. They are such good sports,

Correction Leon Hardee Jr. was the person who shot the eight-point buck pictured on page B-8 of the Sundays Daily Reflector instead of Linwood Coward as was reported in the caption.

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mm

J4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C. Tuesday. September 27,1983Last Weeks Winners 1st Place *25

Louise Mallard Rt. 1, Box 163 Vanceboro, N.C. 285862nd Place-*15

Margaret Pollard Rt. 6, Box 326 Greenville, N.C. 27834

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CONTEST RULES

1. Thirty-two football games are placed on these pages. Pick the winner of each game (not the score) and write the team name opposite the advertisers name on the entry blank. The entrant picking the most correct winners each week will be awarded $25.00. Second place $15.00.

2. Pick a number which you think will be the most number of points scored by both teams in any one of the weeks games listed and write your answer in the space provided on the entry blank. This will be used to break ties. In the event of a further tie the money will be equally divided between the winning entrants.

3. Only one entry per person per week. The contest is open to all except employees of The Daily Reflector and their immediate families.

4. Entries must be in The Daily Reflector office not later than 5:00 p.m. Friday or post marked not later than Friday p.m. Address entries to: FOOTBALL CONTEST, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. (Reasonable facsimiles also accepted.)

CLIP THIS OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK AND MAIL TO

FOOTBALL CONTEST, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834

(Reasonable Facsimiles Also Accepted) Please Print

MY NAME.

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Goodyear Tire Center Lowe's

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Pepsi Cola Bottling Co...............

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I THINK.

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Phelps Chevrolet............................................

The Trophy House...........................................

Airborne Overnight Express....................................

A Cleaner World..........................................

Hooker & Buchanan Insurance...................................

Mountain Dew..............................................

Daughtridge Oil & Gas Co.................................

The Swiss Colony............................................

Greenville Cable TV...........................................

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................. V.A. Merritt & Sons............................................

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..... Athletic World...............................................

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.WILL BE THE MOST POINTS SCORED BY BOTH TEAMS IN ANY ONE GAME.

il

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Jtltoiii

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C.

Tuesday. September 27. 1983 -j 5

MaiJ Your Entry To:

FOOTBALL

CONTEST

P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27834

Contest

Deadline

ENTRIES MUST BE IN THE DAILY REFLECTOR OFFICE NOT LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY OR POST MARKED NOT LATER THAN FRIDAY P.M.

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PITT COUNTY

WITH

18 YEARS OF SALES, SERVICE AND PARTS

Ohio at Toledo

COLLEGE

FOOTBALL

I ]\I D E X

EXPLANATION - Tk* Dunkil lytftm previdM a conrinuoui index to the reloliv* strength of oil teoms. It reflects ovtrogt seeriiig morgiii combinod with areroge opposition roting, weightsd in favor of recent performonce. Exomple: a 50.0 teom hot been 10 scoring points itrangtr, pr gome, than a 40.0 tsom against opposition of identicol strength. Originoted in 1929 by Dick DunkoL

GAMESOF WEEK E.NDI.N'G OLT 2,198:)

IIIGIIEK

K\T1.\G    RATING OlPOSINt.

TE.AM    DIKE.    TE.\M

M.AJOR (i.AMES

Friday. .Septembrr 20

Penn 64.U...................(181 (olumbia 46 1

Saturday, October I

AlabamaX97 7 i22i Memphis75 9

AngeloSt617............i6iWTex SlX.55 7

Appalach'n 68 6............(61E TennX 63.0

Arizona 101.3  .......(15i CaliforniaX 86 4

ArizonaStX 95 0...........1211 SUnford 73 9

Arkansas 85.2

Armv 64.5........

AubiirnX 100 6.

Bavler 77.9......

BoiseStX63 1 . BoslonCol93.3.,

(16IT C.U X69 5 13) HarvardX6l 7 111) Flonda.SI 89 8 .,<01 HoustonX 77 8 ,,.i2)CalP.SL0 61.3 <16iTempleX77 4

^wl'gGr'n71 8 (18) E MichiganX 54 0 <221 KenlSt 52 1

Cent .MichX 73.9

Cha'nooga 74.7.......

Cinc'natiX78.1 .

ColgateX 74 8........

ConnecftX 59.2......

DeI.StateX 55,2.....

DelawareX 74 6 .

E lllinolsX75 9.......

EasternKyX 75 9 Ela AM57 4

Fresno 74 9............

FullertonX73 1

Furman 79 3......

3aX99.1........

GrarblingX 69.3 HawailX 82 1

. <7iLaTechX 67 7 .    <281 Cornell 50 3

., (121 Bostonl62 6 .. <2) N H'shire 56 8 <81 B Cookman 47 7 '    <17) Ia?high,57 6

<8i Youngsrn67 7 (15) Aus.Peav60 9 <9) HowardX48 9

(7)CtahStX68.l

<7) Pacific65 9

(23)V,MIX56 2

(10) Miss,Sl89 5

. (33) PrairieV"36 1 (01 S.DiegoSt 81 8

OhioStateX 95 2 . ..

Oklahoma 96 0.......

Penn.State 85.7 Princeton 54 9

S.C.Slate 73.6........

,S.Illinois 80 5.........

S M.i: X91 4.........

.SeaslLa62.1.........

SwestMoX60 7

SanJoseXBOO........

So.Calif 88.8..........

So Miss 87.8...........

SouthernU 62 7......

Tenn SIX 67 5........

TennTechX49.4 TennesseeX 86.2. ..

TexasX 100 8.........

TexasTechX 85 4 .

ToledoX74.4..........

Towson 59 9..........

Tulsa 90 1...............

L'CLAX95.1......

I'tah 83 6...........

Vanderbilt 85 4

W' Carolina 67 4.....

W VirginiaX 100.0. W'ashingtonX 86 5

W'eberSt 65 0 .......

W'lchitaX .58:6 .

Wisconsin 85.8.......

Wmi.MarvX61.7. W'yoming.X 78 6.

.131) .Minnesota 63 9 .(17)KansasSlX78 8

(11) Rutgers 74 6

10) BrownX ,54.5,

(16) AlcornX 57.3

ill)Ark..SlX69 1

.,,<25iTex,Arl'n66 8 (7) W'esternKvX .55 0 ,..,(17iS'eastMo43.5

(4) Oregon75.8

.16) S.CarolinaX 82 4 ..(10) Mis'sippiX78 2 ,...<2) Miss valXOO 4

(18) Ala St 50.0

.. .(16iT-Martln33 1

(23) Citadel 63 3

134) Rice67.2

...14) TexasA&.M 81 7

(14) Ohiol.' (ill,6

i2) MaineX.57,7

iliOkla,StX89.2

..(5) Brig,Young 90 1

(18) Colo .St.X 65 9

i2)TulaneX8:)4

..(19) .MarshallX 48 3 ...(5) Pittsburgh94 7

(10) Navy 77 I)

11) MonlanaSl.t 53 7

(16) Drake 43.1

(19) NwesternX67 1

(18) Yale44,l

(10) Tex EIP 68.8

OTHER MlimE.STEKN Saturday, October 1

A g'stanaX 57,6, .'....igS) 111.W'esl'n 34,6

AshlandX 55,3............<    111 Ind.Cenl 44 8

,...(9) Grinnell 1.0 (22) Valpar'o.33 1 5) OtterbeinX 14 3 (6i N.ParkX20 0 (101.N.CenlralX 28.9

BeloitX 9-8 ButlerX55.2. .

Capital 39.4.....

Carroll,Wis 25,5 Carthage 39.0... CentralStX 49 6.

Coe 26,7..........

Conc.IilX 30,8. Cone.Neb 32,2. CornellX 26.5 UenisonX 46 2 .. I)ePauw 48 2. . ElmhurstX51.3 Evansville 37.5.. FranklinX 45 2..

Geneva 37.3.......

Harding 42 6 Heideib'gX 36 9 HopeX 49.2

(5) LiberWBapT 44.6

19) RiponX 18.0

. (13) .NEIltinois 18,3 .115) Conc.W'isX 17,5

'5)Colo.Col218

(111 Muskingum 34 8

(5) AlbionX 43 2

(22) Wheaton 29.6 ,.iliSl,JosephsX363 .,(16(Gtown,Kv29.3

(20) Oberlin.X 17.0

(9) EvangelX33.6

., .10)0 North'n 36.8 (9) Kenvon40 4

OTHER E ASTERN

HolyCross697........i8i    DartmoulhX 62.1

IdanoX65 4.............i5i E W'ash'n60 4

lndlana.Sl 80 2 i20i lllinoisStX 60.2

Iowa 96 8 .................(6)    IllinoisX 90.7

IowaStX75.8..........i20)    N Mex S155.7

J.C Smith416..........l5i,N.C A&TX36.4

JacksoruSt 73.5............(8)    .N'ichollsX    65.1

L S.U X 102.5.................(3)    Florida 99.9

LafayetteX 63 8..........iJ8) Bucknell 45 5

LamarX 69 1..........(14)    Tex Soulh'n 55.0

LongBeachX 78.9......132)    TexasA&I 47.3

Louisville 81 8...........12) Va TechX 80 0

MadisonX 64 4...........i21i Davidson 43.4

MarylandX 96 9...........(1!) Virginia 86 0

Mass UX 67 9.................14) Rhodel 63.5

Miami.Fla 92.7..............114) DukeX 78 3

Miami,OX 67 8........13i    W Michigan 64 4

Mich St 84 2................(ll)PurdueX73.4

MichiganX 94 5.............123) Indiana 71 7

.MidIinn67,2................14)    AkronX63.6

MissouriX 84 8..........13)    E.Carolina 81.8

Montana 65 3.........(4)    N ArizonaX 61.3

MurrayX57 6............125l    Morehead32.4

N.C.Stale78.1 10) W keForestX 78.1

N.Carolina 95 1.........(21)    Ga.TechX 74.1

N.IIIinols71 8.................(8)BallStX63.8

N.Iowa 48 4.............111 W IllinoisX 47.9

N,Tex.S1 84 4............(6)N.MexicoX 78.1

N'easternX 53.7.......(18) %irlngfield 36,0

N'westLaX 72 0.........(8) S.F.Austin 63.7

NebraskaX'118.2 (36) Syracuse 82.7

Nev LasV76.0...........(5) OregonStX71.3

Nev.RenoX 72.7.............i u MahoSt 71,3

NolreDame 83.8.........i6i ColoradoX 78.0

Buffalo 48.0.......

Cheynev28 3 ClarionX48 1    ,.

Del ValleyX 39 0 Dickinson 15 5, E.Stroudsbg 36.5 EdinboroX 35.7 . Frostburg23,9... GeltysbgX45.8.

HofstraX37 3......

Indiana,PaX 50.6

Ithaca 40 6..........

Lk.HavenX37.3..

Montclair 44.6.....

Paterson 20 7.

St LawrenceX 36 Sus'hanna 48.0 . SwThmore 46 7 .. Trenton 34 5

Trinity 33.7.........

L'nionX 48 u........

UpsalaX29.6.......

WThesterX 63.3. W Maryland 33.1. W'ldenerX 51.1 Williams 36 5......

.123) BuffaloStX23.1 ...10) MansfieldX28.l .. (2i.Shinpensbg46.3 ... (3) Moravian 35.9 (2) Leb VallevX 13 6 .120) KulztowhX 36.3

1141 Calif St 41 9

i2) MercvhurslX23.8 ...1211 J.tfopkins 25 0

110) Canisius27,8

i9iSlip.Rock42.0

(6) AlfredX 34.5

113) iN'ewtlaven 23,9

113) RamapoX32.0

(6) KeanX 14.8

.3..........(9)    Hobart 27.6

144) WilkesX4 4

(20) CrsinusX 27 0

... (7) GlassboroX 27.9

14) HamiltonX30.2

118) Albany 30.3

(28) F Dick son 15

(20) M'lersv'le 43 3

... i6i .Muhlenb'gX 27.3

161 Lycoming 45.6

15) RochesterX 31 2

IllinoisColX 10 3.............(5) Chicago5.8

Kearney 52.7....... i9)    Fl.HavsX 43,8

LaCrosseX47 7...........i9i SleveiisPt38,3

LakeForestX 19.0.............i5i Knox 13.6

Lakeland 19 3!.............i5)    EurekaX 14.2

Loras 27.7..............H4i    NW.WisX 13.5

Luther 36,6..:...........:i7) DubuqueX29.2

Mo.South'n 60.5.......(15) PitlsburgX 45.4

Mo.West'n41.7 ...,i20) Wavne-.N'ebX22.2 .Monm'th.Ill 19.5 i5i St AmbroseX 14.7

.Ml Union 46 1...........(34) MariettaX 119

OlivelNazX 28.0.......171 111 Bened'ne 20.6

OshkoshX51.0...

Platteville43.6 ,

RHulman 30.9.

S.Colo51 4........

.SW.KanX.32 9.

WabashX 38,6 .

WashburnX 35.7

..(3) EauClaire47 8 '21 WhitewaterX41.7 114) PrincipiX 16.5 ,('12i Ft.LewisX 39.5 , .17) Bethany 26.3

 li.MillikihljBO

(2) EmoonaSl :)3 3

OTHER SOUTHERN Saturday, October 1 Ala A&M 51 7    (14) MorehouseX 37.8

BishopX :)9.9...........'2)    S'eastOkla 37.9

U-.N'ewmanX 58 7 ......i27)    Catawba    31 8

Cent FlaX 45.8.......lOi Valdosta 45,6

DeltaSt 69 9......i9i N AlabamaX614

E.Cent ()kla59..7    , 112) HendersonX 47 4

ElonX 54 0    (8)    Len Rhvne45 9

F&M25.9.......ilSiG'lown.DCXll.O

Ft Valley 56 6..............129) Clark 27 4

Ga SouthnX .54,3..........111 G-Webb 53,7

Jax,AlaX73 9 KnoxvilleX 25 1 MarsHillX49 8 MilLsaosX 42 3 .Miss ColX 69.0 Montlcello 47 4 . S HoustonX 63 5 SSt.ArkX42 2 S'westTex 77.6 SalisburvX 35,9. , SulRossX 32 9 TuskegeeX 44,6 W GeorgiaX48 9 Wofford62 2

(22) Livingston 51.:

. (24) Fisk 10 111 .Newberry 48 9 .. (32) Baptist 9 9

(10) TroySt 59.5

i7) OuachitaX 40 5 l3i Tex Lulh'n60.6 .i6iPineBluff:i65 (30) How PavneX47 9

i4i Coriland 32.4

(5) .Austin28 1 (16) Albany 29.0 117) Livingstone 32.0 (15) Presl)v'nX47 2

Sunday, October 2

MorrisBr'n 35 9..........131 Savannah 33,0

X HOME TEAM

\f,\J()R

NATIOVAi

LE.VDERS

WO

Nebraska......

-118,2

SECTIONAL

L.S.U............

102,5

LEADERS

Arizona........

.101 3

Texas..........

.100.8

Auburn.........

.100.6

NATIONAL

W Virginia .,

.100,0

Nebraska.....

.118.2

Flornia.........

99.9

L.SU...........

.102 5

Georgia........

.,.99,1

Arizona........

101 3

Alabama

.97.7

Texas..........

.100 8

Maryland......

.96.9

Auburn........

.100.6

Iowa'............

.96.8

W Virginia. . Florida........

. 100.0

Oklahoma

96.0

999

Clemson........

.95,4

Georgia........

,99.1

OhioStale......

.95 2

Alabama......

. ,97 .7

UCLA.......

95 1

Maryland.....

...969

N Carolina

.95.1

EAST

Pittsburgh.

ArizonaSt

95,0

. . 94.7

Pittsburgh . .

...94.7

BoslonCol

93.3

Michigan......

.94,5

PennState .

...85,7

BostonCol

...93.3

Syracuse.....

82,7

Miami.Fla

...92.7

Temple.......

...77.4

S.M.U, ..

.91 4

Navv...........

...77,0

Illinois.........

. 90,7

Colgate

,74.8

Kentucky......

.90.4

Rutgers

.74.6

Tulsa ,

.90.1

Delaware

, .74.6

Brig. Young .

.90.1

HolyCross

69 7

FioridaSt

89,8

MIDWEST

MissSt.........

.89.5

Nebraska,

118.2

OklaSt

89.2

Iowa............

%.8

So Calif

88 8

Oklahoma

.96 0

So .Miss.....

.87,8

OhioStale .

95 2

Washington

86 5

Michigan

, 94 5

CaliforniA

.864

Illinois .......

. 90,7

Tennessee .

,86 2

Tulsa

90.1

Virginia ........

. 860

Okla Si

. ,89 2

Wisconsin.....

.85 8

Wisconsin

858

PennSlate

. 85 7

Kansas

85 4

Vanderbilt

85.4

SOUTH

TexasTech

,854

1. s u

Auburn

102 5

Kansas......

,85.4

1(K).6

Arkansas

85 2

W Virginia Florida

1181 (1

Missouri......

848

99S

N Tex St.......

, 84 .4

Georgia

99 1

Mich,St.......

84 2

Alabama

. 97.7

NotreDame

83.8

Maryland

. .96,5

Utah.........

83,6

Clemson.....

,,.,9.5,-l

Tulane.......

,83 4

N Carolina

.95 1

Syracuse.....

.82.7

Miami.Fla

, .92 7

S Carolina

82 4

SOUTHWEST

Hawaii.......

,82 1

Texas.......

.100,8

S.M U..........

.;.9I-4

MINOR

LEADERS

S'westTex.......77 6

Jax.Ala.........73.9

TexasTech Arkansas,, N Tex.St, . TexasA&M

85.4 2

Abilene.....

73.0

UCDavis

.70.8

DeltaSI

699

Miss.Col........

,69 0

Cent Okla

. 66.7

St Cloud......

:i:i

.N.DakotaSt .

.Neb Omaha .

.64,7

S F Austin

.63.7

S Houston......

.63.5

W Chester

,63.5

Wotford.......

.62 2

AngeloSt .. ,

61 7

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C    Tuesday.    September    27,    1983

MLSKAL PAIR - Singers Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers bell oui a song during rehearsal session in Los Angeles for their appearance on the NBC-TVs "Live ...And In

Words FallJoqn After Flap Over Emmy Show

By RICHARD DE ATLEY Associated Press VV riter

LS .ANGELES i.AP) -For once, it seemed, comedy star Joan Rivers had little to say after she sparked a furor with remarks during television's Emmy awards.

"Thank God the Emmys are over. I lost my voice," she said Monday while guest-hosting "The Tonight Show" for an absent Johnny Carson, "It's the first time in nine years I've been there and it's crazy. Everything is live...,"

Her Emmy-telecast remarks on Interior Secretary James Watt, homosexuals, herpes and hookers had lit up TV station switchboards around the nation Sunday.

Actress Shelley Winters tried to draw her out on the topic during Monday night's videotaping at NBC, but to no avail.

"I want to congratulate you. You did what everyone in the country wants to do. You told James Watt off," Miss Winters said. "Be proud of it."

-Miss Rivers responded, Oh. thank you so much, darling," but changed the subject repeatedly when guests brought up the Emmys.

Viewers had complained about a profane remark Miss Rivers let slip and about her wardrobe for the evening, including one with a neckline that plunged to her navel.

File Complaint Over 'Shoving'

HAILEY, Idaho lAP) -Singer-songwriter Carole King declines to talk with reporters about the incident, but an attorney for Miss King '.ys she and' her husband nave lodged a formal complaint of battery against a

,S Forest Service 'mployee ,

The complaint alleges that !)eon Wells ot the Sawtooth '\ationa! Recreation Area

.lived the 41-year-old singer

hile she was lixiking at the lorest service's files on her last Friday.

The files involve an ongoing dispute Mlss King has had over whether a road going by her Cust' r County ranch in central Idaho should be open to the public. Attorney Steven Millemann said Monday, Part of the property is on recreation area land,

U.S. Forest Service personnel who declined to be identified refused to comply with requests to speak to Wells, saying all calls on the King matter were being referred to the National Recreation Area superintendent.

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PUniOLLS

MAI LIN

TALKS ABOUT E.M.MYS Comedienne Joan ivers holds her hands to her head as she discusses the response of viewers Sunday night of the Emmy Awards presentation which she co-hosted with Eddie Murphy. Rivers related the trials and tribulations of being a host during Monday nights "The Tonight Show", which she co-hosted for Johnny Carson. (AP Laserphoto)

But some callers complimented Miss Rivers, whose outrageous brand of comedy usually is reserved for late-night television.

Nothing was held back for prime-time audiences on the East Coast and in the Midwest who saw the show live.. But the show was edited and tape-delayed in the West.

During Monday's "Tonight Show" she tried to explain,

"I was so nervous. 1 swore on camera," she said. "Then you go and you swear again. But when you re tense and nervous..."

She alluded once to a low-cut evening dress she wore on the Emmys by telling actor James('oco' "My daughter looked at me and said, 'Oh, MotherShe s 14,'

NBC affiliates in Los Angeles. New York and Chicago reported more than 4,50 complaint calls by .Monday evening. An NBC spokesman in New York expresses! regret if anyone was offended by the performance.

"When you have entertainers like Eddie Murphy and Joan Rivers on a live show like the Emmy Awards, they do act in a spontaneous manner and since it is live, you cannot edit the program," said the spokesman, who preferred that his name

not be published.

Bantering with .Murphy during the Emmy show, .Miss Rivers noted that Murphy is a black, male Catholic, while she is a white, Jewish woman.

'.'If you had a limp we could be the committee appointed by James Watt. Is he an idiot!"shesaid.

Watt has been denounced for his remark to a business group that an advisory committee formed to review his coal-leasing program contained "a black ... a woman, two Jews and a cripple "

A spokesman for Watt said Monday night he could not be reached for comment on .Miss Rivers' or Miss Winters' remarks.

A dress change spurred a one-word comment -"goddamn"

When Miss Rivers' asked Murphy how he stayed in shape, he playfully whispered in her ear. She shot back: "I wouldn't go near her. She gave a friend of mine herpes,"

Discussing her many dress changes. Miss Rivers cracked that she appreciated how exhausting it must be to be a prostitute.

Miss Rivers said when three men saw her nude, one got sick and the others turned "gay."

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Shrimp Salad ....................$2.99

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Madeline Kahn's Show Tonighf

Person" show slated to air tonight, Wednesday and Thursday evenings with a star-studded group of guests hosted by Sandy Gallin. (APLaserphoto)

By FRED ' ROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Update I Love Lucy wiUi Erma Bombecks view of the suburbs, throw in a weekly sexual misunderstanding, and you have Madeline Kahns first venture into television: Oh Madeline, the ABC comedy debuting tonight.

The modern woman, according to Ms. Bombeck, jogs on a treadmill of trendiness, but never gets anywhere. In the opening scene of "Oh Madeline, Madeline is bouncing on her indoor jogger while mimicking Shes a Maniac from Flashdance.

Madeline, fighting mid-life malaise, is also into aerobic dancing and health food, which puts her at odds with

TV Log

For complete TV programming infof-mation, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Oaily Reflector._

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

TUESDAY

7:00 Jokers WHO 7:30 TicTacDougl 8:00 Mississippi 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch WEDNESDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Press Your 11:00 Price Is

12:00 News 9 12:3(J, Young and 1:30As The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 A, Griffith 5:30 MASH 6:00 News 9 6:30 News 7:00 Joker's Wild 7:30 TicTacDougt 8:00 Movie 11:00 News 9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

WESDAY

7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8 00 A Team 9:00 R. Steel 10:00 Special 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12 30 Leflerman

1 30 Overnight

2 30 News

WEDNESDAY

5:30 Lie Detector

6 00 Almanac

7 00 Today 7:25 News

7 30 Today 8:25 News

8 30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All m the

10:00 Ditf Strokes 10:30 Sale of the

11:00 Wheel of 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Ot Our

2 00 Another WId

3 :00 Fantasy 4.00 Whitney the

4 30 Brady Bunch 5:00 Gomer Pyle

5 30 WKRP 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News

7 00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud

8 00 Real People 9:00 Facts ot Life 9:30 Family Ties 10:00 Special 11:00 News

11:30 Tonight 12 30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

TUESDAY

7 00 3 s Company

7 30 Alice

8,00 Just Our Luck

8 30 Happy Days

9 00 3's Company

9 30 Oh, Madeline!

10 00 Hart to Hart 11.00 Action News

11 30 Nightline

12 30 Thickeof WEDNESDAY

5 00 H Field

5 30 J Swaggart

6 00 AG Day

6 30 News

7 00 Good Morning 6 13 Action News

6 55 Action News

7 25 Action News

8 25 Action News

9 00 Phil Donahue

10:00 Connection 10 30 Laverne 11:00 Benson 11:30 Loving 12 00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Lite

3 00 Gen Hospital

4 00 Charmkins

4 30 BJ/LOBO

5 30 People's 6:00 Action News

6 30 ABC News

7 00 3'S Company

7 30 Alice

8 00 Fall Guy

9 00 Dynasty

10 00 Hotel

It 00 Action News

11 30 ABC News

12 30 Thicke of

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

TUESDAY

7 00 Report

7 30 Folkways

8 00 Nova

9 00 Lilelme

10 00 Ascents ol

11 00 Monty Python

11 30 Doctor in

12 00 Sign OH

WEDNESDAY

3 00 TBA

3 30 Adult B

4 00 Sesame St

5 00 Mr Rogers

5 30 Dr Who

6 00 Newshour

7 00 Report

7 30 Computer

8 00 Live From

10 30 A Visit

11 00 Monty Python

11 30 Doctor in

12 00 Sign Off

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Monday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 62. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 62 percent of your hot water needs,

.Ul businesses selling beer and wine in the city must obtain a City :eer and or wine license annually. f'or more information, call the Citv Tax Uffice at 752-4137.

her husband, Charlie (James Sloyan). He calls her bigh-nutrition concoction a piece of the backyard.

Despite moving in different directions, they profess their love for each other. Maybe so, but, after 10 years of marriage, this modem relationship isnt bulging with honesty.

Charlie writes romance novels. His friend, Robert (Louis Giambalvo), who has no visible means of suppit and hangs around during the day, says Charlies Nwks seem easy to write: Hes handsome, shes a virgin and something bums down. When the shows characters are commenting about the brave new world of diet fads and plastic wrap, Oh Madeline can be very funny. When the characters are zinging each other, Oh Madeline can be funny; Have a so-so day, Madeline tells Robert, the ex-husband of her best friend, Doris.

Hospital Visit No Emergency

NEW YORK (AP) - Con-trary to an earlier report, Bob Hopes visit to his eye doctor was routine, not an emergency.

The 80-year-old comedian visited Monday with Dr. Robert Ellsworth of New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. He always stops in to see his friend. Dr. Ellsworth, when hes in New York, said the doctors secretary, Elsie Donohue.

Kay LaGuardia, secretary for the hospitals public relations department, said Hope went there for a routine checkup.

A published report from London said Hope had gone to New York for emergency eye surgery. Paula Thompson, on the staff of Ken Kantor, Hopes publicist, said from Los Angeles that the report was not correct.

Hope has suffered from an eye problem for years, and to rest his eyes last December he canceled his traditional entertainment show for U.S. servicemen. It was the first time in 40 years that that show did not go on.

ENDS

THUR.

PARK

30NLY

SHOWS 7:10 & 9 PM

PtTT-PlAZA SHOPPING CINTIt

ENDS THUR! ESCAPE 2000 (R) SHOWS 3:00-7:10-9:00

ENDS THUR! DUSTIN HOFFMAN "TOOTSIE (PG) SHOWS 3:00-7:00-9:05

ENDS THUR! WAR GAMES (PG) SHOWS 3:00-7;00-9:05

SHRIMPerfection VWed&Fn. ^

All The Fried, Broiled Or Boiled Shrimp \tiu Can Eat, ^ Salad Bar. Stuffed Or Baked fWato, PLUS All The Chablis Vtxi Can Drinl JUST $8.95

RAMADA I

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>

But when the plot lines are exposed as weekly bedroom farce, Oh Madeline becomes Twos Company, and silliness is raised to an art form. Instead of lovable-but-dizzy Lucy burning the roast and hiding the damage under the sheets, lovable-but-dizzy Madeline is hiding under the sheets.

Tonight, Madeline, clad only in a towel, and Charlie, clad in a towel and raincoat, are at Roberts house, but neither knows the other is there, nor does Robert or his date for the afternoon. Next Tuesday, Doris accuses Madeline of making a play for Robert when Madeline hugs the wrong mummy at a costume party.

Ugh! If only lifes mix-ups were all this insignificant and meaningless.

Alas, thats the weakness of Oh Madeline. Its so-what comedy - forgetfully funny, with characters you wouldnt find in real life, or want to know anyway.

But if you like Ms. Kahns brand of comedy, youll like Oh Madeline. Its her show from start to finish. The shrill-voiced comedian from Paper Moon and Mel Brooks movies doesnt play a character as much as she plays her caricature.

She does schtick, takes pratfalls, contorts her face and enthusiastically delivers madcap lines that might fall flat with others. What a piece of flotsam he must be, she says in her inimitable way.

If the relationship in Oh Madeline is supposed to be the suburban prototype of married folks, Its Not Easy makes bogus claims to being the suburban model of unmarried and remarried folks. The ABC series premieres Thursday night.

The nuclear family has undergone fission here. Jack (Ken Howard) and Sharon (Carlene Watkins) are divorced. Sharon has married Neal (Bert Convy). But to raise the kids together, Jack and Sharon have established households across the street from each other. Its one happy, all-too-civilized family.

Oh, theres some bitterness. But, given the sophistication of the comedy.

it manages only to come out in juvenile name-calling. You love a sissy and I love a phony, Jack says to Sharon, referring to Neal and to Jacks girlfriend. It could be worse. I could be the one who loves a sissy.

Jack lives with his mother, played by Jayne Meadows, who is very trying here. When Jack and his girlfriend are smooching (actually they are calling each other kissie-face) Jacks mother predictably enters stage left.

The grounds for divorcing yourself from Its Not Easy are irreconcilable

diffe/'ences: A 1980s issue with 1950s humor. It is easy to watch the competing Cheers on NBC instead.

I DATED RES

!Miiltss2.005aiyN'gs1%

BUCCANEER MOVIES

756-3307 Greenville Square Shopping Center

LINDA

BLAIR

1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00

'CHAINED HEAT

(R)

1:10-3:10-5:10-7:10-9:10

STUCK ON rou'

(R)

1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20

<

'THE GATES OF HELL

(R)

Water Tree ^ Terrace

Located In

Wednesday Night Special

Prime Rib

Served with Salad Bar, Potato, And Wine





m

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Cf099t09tl By Eugene Sheffer

* ACROfiS I Yearn SCornpart 8 Office note

12 Brainstorm

13 Doctors org. M Wife of

CUchulain IS Scorch H Utopia, for one 18 Model of excellence 21 Rivera , painting tl Martini ingredient 22Letti)ce 23 Handled clumsily 28 Flaunts 36 The gums

31 Wicked

32 Feeling of wonder

33 Sunshade 38 Senior

member of a group 38 Actin' Harrison 39John-Passos

MMaceor 2C(mcert or^ano    halls

43Self-contra- SOose dictory    4 Car haven

assertion    5 Table bird

47 Lover    8 Arab

46 Donated    sultanate

S6 Emerald Isle 7 Comer pub

51 Wrath    8 Snake-haired

52 Ardor    Gorgon

53 Gaelic    9 Arab ruler

54 Guided    10 High table-

55 Farm    land

structure    11 Soviet city

DOWN    17 Cupid

ISpe^Iike 19Anagramfor a child    dig

Avg. solution time: 25 mimites.

mm

mm sin mm

BISS] sBsingasis siBsisiBE] sosnsig mm SBS iBQoonsiBs mm BBS mmm \sm

SBSIS IQISQBBBS SBD lESBD BBSSlBg DBSSina iBsiDniii mm mm BIS QgBB gssB Bss mm

9-27

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

22 Bounder

23 Young seal

24 Wing

25 -is hell (Sherman)

28 -Joey (1940s<nig)

27 Dennis or Doris

28 Rams mate

29 D.C. denizen

31 Spar

34 Secret

35 Appear

38 June bug

37 0r^esand Indians

39 Qiallenged

40 German admiral

41 Catherine (1512-48)

42 Spring flower

43 Unadulterated

44 Spanish painter

45 Elliptical

46 Strange; comb, form

48 Painters medium

FOCUS

WHERE MANY AMERiCJtNS Wi LtVE IN THE YEAR 2009

Population Shift

The population of the United States is moving south and west. According to new Census Bureau projections. California, Texas, and Florida will become the most populous states by the year 2000. New York and Pennsylvania will lose the greatest number of people, and Vermont will replace Alaska as our least populated state.

Do You Know Which states currently rank one, two and three in population?

MONDAYS ANSWER - Washington is the number one apple-growing state in the U.S.

I

KnowledjiPIndustries

PEANUTS

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Tuesday. September 27.1983 -J J

you're BACK! HOU) WERE 1KIN65ATTME "SLEEP PI50RPER5 CENTER"'?

I SUPPOSE YOU LEARNEP EVERYnilN6FROM"A"TO

Z.'HAHAHAHA

GET IT?'X TO'Z Z"5TANP5F0R5LEPIN6... 'A"TO"Z"... GET ITT

NO WONPER I SLEEP A LOT

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Kilby's Oicwmi

60REN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 TrItMjrw Company Syrrdicate, Inc:

SCORE THOSE LOW TRUMPS

I A POOL AND Mie mm are I eoON PARTEO.

BLONDIE

CRYPTOQUIP

9-27

IXOF JB MTWFMTHH OHTXFS ZU

BZFLX SFWFLI:    WTUSHJI.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - INCONTROLLABLE BIRDS BIGGEST ERROR: A CARDINAL SIN.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: H equals L.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter uaed stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrof can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

"        IfU King Features Syndicate. Inc

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES:A full Moon day when you have all sorts of opportunities to put in motion whatever plan or course of action appeals and you should be alive, alert and active now.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) A good day for handling business affairs and getting much accomplished, especially if you cooperate more with partners.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Get into those monetary plans you made and get excellent results with them. Spend the evening socializing.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Good day to get in touch with those who can help you to further your interests and get the right results now.

M(X)N CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Study every angle of any new venture you want to get into and be sure of whal you are doing.

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) Plan how to have better relationships with your friends and enjoy them more. You need to relax now.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) If you make a good impression on bigwigs, you can advance more quickly where your career is concerned.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A good day to delve into new interests that can give you added income in the future. Watch your temper.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Study your responsibilities and figure out the best way of handling them in the future.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Try to get more cooperation from your partners for those practical ideas you have qnd get good results.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Now you understand every phase of your duties and can handle them very efficiently.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb 19) Good day to get entertainment matters set up early with friends for the days ahead.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You have a plan for improving family life, so dont permit a member to spoil it. Dont entertain at home this evening.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will be one of those charming young persons whose mind and body are well co-ordinated and should have a good education. It would be well to slant it along lines of merchandising and selling.

Both vulnerable. East deals. NORTH 46

. 'J108752 0Q62 4AQ72 WEST EAST 4 10952    4AKJ83 "

<:?K943 ^QJ6 OVoid    0KJ9

4KJ1054 83 SOUTH 4Q74 ^ k

0 A1087543 496

The bidding:

East South West North 14    30    44    50

Dble Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Ten of 4.

Freak hands yield strange results. We can only admire Souths technique at his contract of five diamonds doubled.

Souths weak jump overcall might not measure up to exacting standards - the quality of his suit left something to be desired and his hand was too strong. Easts double of five diamonds is hard to fault. With so much of his values in the enemy suit, it is not surprising that he did not relish the prospect of having to play five spades.

East won the opening

spade lead with the king and shifted to the queen of hearts. Declarer won the ace and, since it was likely that East held all the missing trumps for his double, set about reducing his trump length. But first, there was the matter of avoiding a club loser.

The finesse of the club queen won, and declarer ruffed a heart. Next, he carefully crossed back to the table with the ace of clubs for another heart ruff. A spade ruff provided an entry to the board, and a club was led. Obviously, it would not have helped the defenders^ cause for East to ruff, so he discard ed a spade. Declarer ruffed, trumped his last spade in dummy and then reduced his trump length to that of Ea^ by ruffing another club. \

Now declarer and East were both down to nothing but three trumps each. Declarer simply exited with a low trump to the queen. East won the king, but he was forced to lead away from his J-9 of trumps into Souths A-10 tenace. So declarer lost only one spade and one trump to land his doubled game.

Help keep Greenville clean!. Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.

HERB, AAV PROBLEM IS THAT EVERYONE TAKES ADVANTAGE

GOOD IDEA...WHERE WOULD you LIKE Jk

BEETLE BAILEY

DONT MISS TIT

COMING SOON!

At a Theater Near You

TALK OF [THE TOWN PLAYING NIGHTLY

THE

HAPPy-HOUR^r

GREENLEAF    a

FRI.    |g

FREE HORS DOEUVRESM

DINNER MENU    >

4:00-10:00    S

(croM from Airport)

1104 N. Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C.

757-3107

The Greenleaf Presents

In Concert RDL Promotions

Rita Coolidge

Wednesday, Sept. 28, 1983

One Show

Doors Open 7:00 P.M.

Advance Tickets $8.00    Door $10.00

Tickets Available At The Greenleaf And Both Record Bars Of Greenville

COMING

WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 28

Rita Coolidge

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

C%l||iR|IIHmNiinH

Greenleaf

Showcase Of The Stars

1104 N. Memorial Drive (Acroaa From Airport) Greenville, N.C.

757-3107 For Information





The Daily Reftector, Greenville, N.C Tuesday. September 27.1983

PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTICE OF GENERAL

ELECTION TOBE HELD WITHIN THE TOWN OF FALKLAND, N.C ON NOVEMBER 8,1983 Pursuant to G.S. 163-33(8), Notice

is hereby given that there will be a ral election conducted within

gener.

the Town of Falkland, North Carolina, for the purpose of the election a Mayor and three (3) Coun oilmen. Said election will be con ducted on Novmeber 8, 1983, and the >>ting place will be open for voting in that oeneral election between the ttours of 6:30 a.m. and 7:30 pm ' Registration for this election will w closed October 19, 1983, at 5 00 p.m. All prospective voters who Have not heretofore registered are wvised to register on or before October 10, 1983, as failure to do so will render unregistered voters in

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of late of Carlton Avery late of

the esta PIH to notify

County, North Carolina, this is >tify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased

to present them to the undersigned

' ch 6,

Executrix on or before Marcl 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 2nd day of Septerhb^, 1983. Selma S. Avery

eligibile to vote in said election. - Fil

-iling period for candidates for the positions of Mayor and Coun dlmen shall begin at 12:00, Noon, September 16, 1983, and doe at 12:00, Noon, October 7, 1983.

' This is the 20th day of September, 9983

PITT COUNTY BOARDOF ELECTIONS

CLIFTONW EVERETT,

JR., CHAIRMAN September 20, 27; October 4, 1983

NOTICE OF GENERAL

ELECTION TOBE HELDWITHINTHE TOWNOF BETHEL, N C.

ON NOVMEBER 8, 1983 Pursuant to G.S 163 33(8), Notice is hereby given that there will be a general election conducted within the Town of Bethel, North Carolina, for the purpose of the election of a Mayor and five (5) Commissioners Said election will be conducted on November 8, 1983, and the voting place will be open (or voting in that general election between the hours ot 6:30a m. and 7 30 p.m Registration for this election will be Closed October 10, 1983, at 5:00 p.m All prospective voters who have not heretofore registered are advised to register on or before October 10, 1983, as failure to do so v9ill render unregistered voters inel igible to vote in said election.

Filing period for candidates (or die position of Mayor and Town Commissioner shall begin at 12:00, Noon, September 16, 1983, and close a) 12:00 Noon, onOctober 7, 1983 This is the 20th day of September, 1983

PITT COUNTY BOARDOF ELECTIONS

CLIFTON W. EVERETT,

JR., CHAIRMAN Sleptember 20, 27; October 4, 1983

very Rt. 1, Box 492 Greenville, North Carolina 27834

.vE xecutrix of the estate of Carlton Avery, deceased September 6,13, 20,27, 1983

022

PlynMMitti

I97S PLYMOUTH FURY. Automatic, power steering and brakes, crulM. Excellent condition. $1295. 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5.

023

Pontiac

051

HtipWanttd

BOOKKEEPER/SECRETARY part time. Mond^ through Friday, 1:00 to 5:30 Call 75-4I64 for appointment for interview.

BOOKKEEPER AND

1976 PONTIAC SUNBIRO. Good condition. $1900. 752 5679 after 6.

1981 PONTIAC PHOENIX. 4

luggage rack, loaded. $4200. 7: from 9-5,

,752 5556 after 6p.m.

9157

024

Foreign

OATSUN 280ZX - 2-1-2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition. $7700. Call 756 6336 days or 756-1549 nights.

ager for small firm.

office man Good book

0S1

HelpWantBd

SALES

INDUSTRIAL SALES

keeping, typ^ and telephone skills 1. File

essential. File maintenance skill also necessary. Experience preferred. Send resume and references fo PO Box 3018, Greenville, NC 27834. Contact for Interview will be made after 5 p.m

COUPLE

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 8889 after 5p.m.

MAZDA GLC. 1979. Deluxe. 61,000 miles, 4 speed, AM/FM radio. Very good condition. $2300 Call 756 9820 after 6 p.m.

MGB-GT, 1974. Black, 43,000 miles, AM FM, new upholstery, clean. Good condition. Phone 758-8662.

TOYOTA SERVICE. 4 cylinder tune special, $20. 4 cylinder valve adjustment, $14. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage, 756 3796.

1972 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle Good condition. $1250.    1    946-7881

after 4 p.m.

1976 MGB, red, good condition, rebuilt engine, Weber carbs, $3,000 firm. 756 4904.

1982 DATSUN 280 ZX Loaded with all options. T top, AM/FM stereo. Priced to sell. William Handley, BBSiT, 752 6889

1982 MAZDA, 4 door sedan, excellent condition, asking $5995. Call after 6 p.m., 752 5008.

NOTICE OF GENERAL

ELECTION TOBE HELD WITHIN THE TOWNOF FOUNTAIN, N.C ON NOVEMBER 8, 1983 Pursuant to G.S. 163 33(8), Notice is hereby given that there will be a general election conducted within tpe Town ot Fountain. North Carolina, for the purpose of the election of a Mayor and five (5) Com missioners. Said election will be conducted on November 8, 1983, and the voting place will be for voting in that general election between the hours0(6:30a.m. and 7:30 p m.

' Registration for this election will lie closed October io, 1983 at 5:00 pm All prospective voters who gave not heretofore registered are advised to register on or before October 10, 1983, as failure to do so will render unregistered votes inel igible to vote in said election Filing period for candidates for the positions of Mayor and Com missioners shall begin at 12:00, Noon, September 16, 1983, and close t 12.00, Noon, onOctober 7, 1983.

This is the 20th day of Septembei 1983

PITTCOUNTY BOARDOF ELECTIONS

CLIFTON W EVRETTE,

JR.,CHAIRMAN September 20, 2/, October 4, 1983

Oil2

PERSONALS

BASEBALL FEVER?

Friday, September 30th catch a double heacier between the Yankees and Orioles Charter bus service from Greenville to Baltimore, re turning that night $32.50 for tickets and bus. Call Stewart or Joe at 752 3200 tor further information and reservations.

1983 DATSUN 280ZX, 2 + 2, T roof, loaded, 4,200 miles. $14,850 Call 758 0041 after 4

1983 NISSAN Sentra Stationwagon. 5 speed, AM/FM, luggage rack, 9,000 miles $6,000 or best offer. 756 2488 until 7:30 p.m., ask tor Doug.

029 Auto Parts & Service

NEEDED; For HUD subsidized apartments located in N. C. Experience preferred In some office and maintenance work. Ad ditlonal training will be given as needed. Apartment furnished with small salant. One person may work outside job provided the property is properly maintained. Send resume to J. W. AAanagement Co., P.O. Box 1254, Dunn, N. C. 28334.

DISPATCHER WANTED for l^cal

Concrete Company will require nvilU

This position knowledge of

Greenville and surrounding areas Salary depended upon educational background and ability. Call fot appointment AAonday through Fri

day, 8 to 5, 756-0782.

irt time and it. Must have

DRIVERS NEEDED

full time, day and nli car, NC insurance, I $3.35 hour plus commission. Apply at Alano's Pizza, 1403 Dickinson Avenue, no phone calls please.

ENDICOTT SHOES in The Carolina East Mall is now accepting

applications for full time employ equired

ment. Sales experience Is requl Apply in person only. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR. Group home for autistic adults. Pitt County. MA (preferred)in Education Psych., social work, or related field (Must qualify as QMRP). Salary competetive. Write: Eileen Clearly, c/o Eastern Teacch Center, Apartment 30 B, Stratford Arms, Greenville, NC 27834.

Need part time work from now until

the hoidays? You'll.......

Classified.

hoTdays? You'll find a position in

EXPERIENCED AUTO MECHANIC

TOYOTA AUTHORIZED SERVICE

4 cylinder tune up $19.95. Oil and filter change $12.99 (most models). We're keeping your Toyota "Cheap To Keep" Toyota East, 109 Trade Street, 756 3228.

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,

anager, 756 1135.

Greenville Blvd.,

aaei

6n

reenville

032

Boats For Sale

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

CREDIT PROBLEMS? No Credit? Slow credit? No problem with furniture finance. We specialize in furniture, TV and stereo financing. Pick up the phone and call Mike at 757 0438 or Robert at 757 0451 for further details.

NOTICEOFGENERAL

ELECTION TOBE HELDWITHIN THE VILLAGE OF SIMPSON, N.C ON NOVEMBERS, 1983 Pursuant to G S 163.33(8), Notice IS hereby given that there will be a general election conducted within the Village of Simpson, North Caro lina There will be three (3) council positions open for municipal elec fion Said election will be conducted on November 8. 1983 and the voting place will be open for voting in that general election between the hours 0(6 30 a m and 7:30 p m Registration for this election will be closed Oitober 10, 1983, at 5:00 p.m All prospective voters who have not heretofore registered are advised to register on or before October 10, 1983, as failure to do so will render unregistered voters inel igible to vote in said election Filing period (or candidates for the Council Positions shall begin at 12 00, Noon, September 16, 1983, and close at 12 00, Noon, on October 7. 1983

This is the. 20th day of September, 1983

PITT COUNTY BOARDOF ELECTIONS CLIFTONW EVERETT,

JR , CHAIRMAN September 20, 27 October 4, 1983

NOW OPEN M & W's Country Crafts and Gifts. Located '2 mile from Pitt County Fairgrounds on Ram Horn Road Open 5 days a week from 9 to 5, Tuesday through Saturday, closed Monday. Crafts and gifts (or everyone Free gift wrapping. 758 4045

WE PAY CASH tor diamonds Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.

010

AUTOMOTIVE

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick We will pay fop dollar

BALBOA 20 SAILBOAT, 1976 Cabin with galley, porta potti, 3 berths, trailer, 6 horsepower Evninrude. Excellent condition. $5,000. 946-7080.

HEAVY DUTY aluminum Like new. 756 6784 after 6p.m.

boat.

14' FIBERGLASS tri hull with 18 horsepower electric start Evinrude. Rebuilt trailer with new tires, bearings and wheels. Boat, motor, and trailer, $800 firm. 756 9615.

16' GRADY WHITE. 85 horsepower Evinrude boat motor and trailer, $1500. 1 524 4247 after 5.

EXPERIENCED SHEET ROCK

finishers. 4 years or more experience Call 756 0053

FRAMING CARPENTERS

Minimum 4 5 years experience. Call 756 8700.

Every Industrial And Transportation Firm, institution And Contractor In This Area Uses Curtis Type Products

FURNITURE

(MOVING, MUST SICLI VfV rM tonabie. Oeak, wolt, couch and cfwir, wicker chair, drettar, and morall 756-6S46anytima

coUctt with country

print In fabric. 2 year oM, bought for S800 Will tall tOTUOO

ThISi gives you an Idea of profitable our line of maintenance

how

chemicals. Industrial fasteners, truck replacement parts and specialty industrial items will be for you We are a national manufacturer and Division of a major U.S. Corporation. SO years of service, with established protected accounts now available for the individual with sales experience. We offer

draw commensurate with experi-I, excellent

ence, (no income ceiling). _ _ product training, profit-sharing and group insurance programs.

If you're interested, call today:

Jim Branson

Wednesday, 12 noon - 6 p.m. Thursday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. (919) 758-3401

Excellent coodltlon. Call 758-4983 SOFA (Corduroy rust sofa), axtra

long 3 cushions. $)05.752-1264.

Good condition.

SOFA AND CHAIR for sale, S200. 1-524-485) anytime.

072

Livestock

ENTIRE STABLE for lease. 7 stalls and tack room. 20 acres pasture. Automatic water tank. Call 7S6-9315 or 756-5097.

FOR

SALE quarter horse. 15.3 old Bay

075 Mobile Homtt For Sait

BY OWNER, 1973 Charmar, 12x64. 3 badrooms, ivs baths, central heat, window unit air condftionlng, un furnished axcapt for gas range

. Pai "

refrigorafor. Partial^ramodatad. Asking $6500.756-2818 after 9 pm. MlLE HOME for safe. Located

In Washington. 2 bodrooms, appli-all7S6-I-"

ancM. Call 756-5588. MOVING, MUSY SLLI

______  1979

Brigader, 12x65, 2 bedrooms, total electric, partially furnished, small equity and assume payments ol $177

per month. 758-4491 or 355-6683 after Sp.r

p.m.

NO MONEY DOWN. VA financing.

Two day delivery Homes, 756-0333

Call Conner

hands, 8 year after6:30p.m

HORSEBACK

Bay. Call 757-0592

Sfables, 752-5237.

RIDING. Jarman

If unable fo call, write to: Fran OH 44(!r^ Curfis Blvd., Eastlake

CURTIS INDUSTRIES A CONGOLEUM COMPANY

An Equal Opportunity Employer A6/F

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed. Auto sales ex perience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC

756-4267 For Appointment

SALES REPRESENTATIVE AAa

tor national compcny has an open ng 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 Mckage. For a confidential in erview send resume fo Manz PO Box 1985, Greenville, NC 2 Equal Opportunity Employer

SALESMEN WANTED

T

FUNI PART TIME. Nation's #1 Toy Party Company now hiring demonstrators. Free $300 kit. No collecting, no delivery. No experience needed. Toys sell themselves. Call 756 6610or 753 2534

FURNITURE SALESPERSON

needed tor local firm. Mature individual encouraged to apply. Call Gloria, Heritage Personnel, 355-2020.

19' MFG CAPRICE, 1977 200 Johnson, tilt and trim, tandum galvanized trailer, CB, depth find er, top and side curtains, all in excellent condition. $6500 758-2300 days.

1974 WESTWIND BOAT, 165 horse

power Mercruise, new Cox trailer. El

Electric winch. 758 3839or 752 2065.

1975 TOMBOY BASS BOAT, 33

horsepower motor, depth finder, motor guide trolling motor, $1.000. Call 753 2228.

CARS $200! TRUCKS $100!

Available at local government sales Call (refundable) I (619) 569 0241, extension 1504 tor directo ry on how to purchase 24 hours. YOUil

SELL your CAR the National Autotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114

21' COBIA with cuddy cabin. 135 Evinrude with power tilt and long tandem galvanized trailer. 55 channel VHF, compass, depth find er, and porta potti. Other extras available Boat motor and trailer in great shape! Moving, must sell! 756 9615

HELP WANTED immediate Kitchen experience. Apply dal between 3 and 5 at 205 Ez Street, Blue Moon Cafe

.iL

ast 5th

HELP WANTED. Installer for storm windows and doors. Call 752-6116

MEN OR WOMEN We need 4 salesmen to work Ian corporate accounts on payroll duction in Greenville and Pitt County area. Leads will be furnished. Those interested call 752-4051 from 9 am to 2 pm, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday or Friday

SHARP INDIVIDUAL to train as

keyboard salesman Largest Jealer In NC. Hard worker with expansion

potential. Excellent income. Piano & Organ Distribufors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. 355-6002

SOCIAL WORKER. Howell's Child Care Center, Inc. is seeking highly motivated individual with eittier a BSW or BSP In social work

plus 2 years experience perferred in XF MR ..... -

facility. Excellent benefits and salary package. If 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

23' O'DAY, 1979, 6 Evinrude, main, genoa, 2 jibs, all extras. Fresh water use only. Immaculate $11,500 946 7412

I.E.S. MANUFACTURING NOW HOLDING INTERVIEWS $300PERWEEK SOLAR ENERGY CONSERVATION

STARTING a 9 month secretarial course, October 3. Greenville School of Commerce, 752 3177.

We believe high pay brings good workers. Join the fast growing dynamic solar energy conservation industry Outstanding potential for:

034

Campers For Sale

012

AMC

1974 GREMLIN. Power steering, air, FM, radiais $895. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5

013

Buick

1976 BUICK LeSABRE. Extra clean $1595 For more information call 753 5862 after 7.

014

Cadillac

1977 CADILLAC, silver, sedan De Ville Excellent condition, clean 756 0750 Monday Friday after 6 p m , weekends anytime

NOTICEOFGENERAL

ELECTION TOBE HELDWITHIN THE TOWNOF WINTER VILLE, N C ON NOVEMBERS, 1983 Pursuant to G S 163 33(8), Notice IS hereby given that there will be a general election conducted within the Town of Winterville. North Carolina, for the purpose of the election of two (2) Aldermen Said election will be conducted on November 8 1983, and the voting place will be open tor voting in that

198) CADILLAC SEVILLE. 35,(K)0 miles, extra clean Call 1 792 4783

JAYCO POP-UPS Seahawk and Cobra truck covers Camptown RVs, Ayden, NC. 746 3530.

TRUCK COVERS

Leer Fiberglass tops 250 units in stock Raleigh, N C 834 2774

All sizes, colors, and Sportsman O'Br

riants,

1978 COACHMAN LEPRECHAUN

motor home, 24, loaded with extras Top of line luxury mode. Price, $14,800 758 1593 days, 752 7246 nights.

036

Cycles For Sale

XL 250, On and ott road. 1000 miles. Like new, $1000 Call 758 3169.

1971 750 HONDA tor sale Very good condition $900 negotiable 756 9912 after 5pm

015

Chevrolet

I960 NOVA. 4 door, needs some work $350 Call 758 6986 anytime

1970 CAMARO. Runs good Good condition $750 758 0185 or 758 0547

1973 MONTE CARLO LANDAU.

Fully equipped New paint Good conditon 825 2831 or 758 1539 ask (or John.

1974 VEGA GT. $325 Call 757 3820

general election betv/een the hours i CHEVROLET MONZA, 2-i 2, 5 ot 30am and 7 30 prn    i    speed,    good    mechanical condition

Registr.ition for this election will I    ^58    2300    days

be closed October 10, 1983, at 5 00 I 1976 CHEVY MONZA, Tit condi pm All prospeclive voters who I tion, 3 speed with stereo cassette

1976 HONDA XR75, $150 negotiable 1978 Kawasaki KEI75, street and dirt bike, $500 negotiable. Call 355 6976

1. INSTALLERS

2. SALES REPS

3. MANAGEMENT

4. DEALERS

No experience necessary, neat appearance a must. Minimum age 21. For personal interview go to: Holiday Inn, US 13, Memorial Drive, Main Lobby, Greenville, NC, Tuesday, September 27, 10 a.m. or 7 p.m. sharp.

IMMEDIATE OPENING (or Off Set

Press Operator. Salary based on ability. Advance to management for the right person! Send resume to Matthews Whitford Co., PO Box 67, Washington, NC 27889 or call for appointment at 1 946 2410.

WANTED-ADMISSION Counselor/ Recruiter/SGA Advisor. Prefer individual with a masters degree in guidance and counseling or student development. Prior experience in recruiting, student government functions, guidance and counseling and student career development preferred. Travel and flexible time schedule involved. Salary based on College's salary formula. Position available Nov. 1. Applications ac cepted through Oct. 17. Contact Personnel Dept., Pitt Community College, P.O. Drawer 7007, Greenville, NC 27834. Phone 756 3130, Ext. 289. An AA/EO Employer.

WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open ing for an experienced Real Estate Broker. For more Information or an appointment, call Rod Tugwell at Century 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810.

WORD PROCESSOR. Only experi enced need apply. Must know dictaphone and have all around office skills. Send resume and salary requirements to EM Rollins, PO Box 8026, Greenville, NC 27834.

1ST CLASS AUTO Mechanic. 1st class pay for 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

1977 YAMAHA. Good condition $475 Call 758 6679

1981 HONDA Custom. Drive shaft, cruise control, sissy bar and rack. Excellent condition, $1500 756 1259

1981 HONDA PASO Excellent con dition Low mileage Call 757 1590 after 5p m

1981 HONDA 200. 2,900 miles Housed and well kept. Selling due to illness. $700 758 1718 after 5 p.m.

have not heretofore registered are advised to register on or before

included $2200 758 4799

October 10, 1983. as failure to do so I CAPRICE CLASSIC. Loaded

I render unregistered voters me! igible to vote in said election.

Filing period tor candidates tor the positions ot Aldermen shall begin at 12 00 Noon, September 16, 1983, and close and 12 00, Noon, on October 7, 1983 Ttiis is the ?Oth day of September, 1983

PITT COUNTY BOARDOF

ELECTIONS

CLIFTON W EVERETT,

JR .CHAIRMAN September 20, 27, October 4, 1983

NOTICEOFGENERAL

ELECTION TOBE HELDWITHINTHE CITYOF GREENVILLE, N C NOVEMBERS, 1983 Pursuant to G S 163 33(8), Notice IS hereby given that there will be a general election conducted within the City of Greenville, North Caro lina, for the purpose of the election of Mayor and six (6) members of the City Council Said election will be conducted on November 8, 1983, and the voting place will be open for voting in that, general election between the hours of 6 30 a m and 7 30 p m.

Registration for this election will be closed October 10, 1983, at 5:00 p m All prospective voters who have not heretofore, registered are advised to register on or before October 10, 1983, as failure to do so will render unregistered voters inel igible to vote in said election.

Filing period (or candidates tor the positions of Mayor and City Council shall begin at 12 00, Noon, September 16, 1983, and close at 12 00, Noon, onOctober 7, 1983 This is the 20th day ot September, 1983

PITTCOUNTY BOARDOF ELECTIONS CLIFTONW EVERETT,

JR .CHAIRMAN September 20, 77, October 4, 1983

clean Reduced from $4250 to $3250 Call Henry, 752 4332

1977 MALtBU WAGON. Power steering and brakes, air Excellent condition $2595. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5

1977 VEGA. ,4 speed Excenenf condition $695 756 2892 after 5

speed

Call

1979 CHEVETTE, 4 door.' 4 speed: Excellent condition 54,000 actual miles For information call 756 8095.

1981 CORVETTE, navy and sil^ excellent condition 10,000 miles loaded Call 946 8565

1981 MALIBU CLASSIC. 4 door, aiF, AM/FM radio, power steering and brakes.1 792 7428

016

Ford

FAIRMONT SQURE WAGOF

1979 Fully loaded, new tires Excellent condition Low mileage $4200 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights

I97l'FORD PINTO, good trans portation for $500 Call 756 3517 after 6pm

PUBLIC NOTICE OF ELECTION

BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of Elections ot the Town ot Grimesland that

(1) An election is to be held on November 8, 1983, the date established by law, for the pur+zo' of electing Aldermen for the Tov of Grimesland

(2) The poling place will be Grimesland Town Hall, and the polls will be open oh election day (rom6:30a.m until 7 30p.m

(3) The filing period wiH be between 12:00 noon, Friday, Sep (ember 16, 1983, and 12 00 noon, Friday October 7, 1983, excluding

Saturdays and Sundays The regs (ration books will be open at ttx

Grimesland Town Hall for registra

tIon each day, excluding Saturdays and Sundays, during the registra tion period from 9:00 a.m. until

12:00 noon and 1.00 p.m. until 5 00

p.m. From October 10, 1983 throur.h Ni

November 8, 1983 the registr.it on books shall be closed for purp .a of the election

Mrs. Ruth D. Maiefte Chairman, Board of Flo- (ions Sepf^ber 20. 27; OctotV' 4, 1983

7

1973 FORD GALAXY, 2 door sedan, air, new radial tires, good condi tion 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 con dition, $1200 752 9076 or 752 7670.

1975 MAVERICK. Power steering and brakes, air Excellent condi tion $1295 Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5

1976 MUSTANG II. 4 speed $600 or bestotter 355 2047anytime

1978 THUNDERBIRD. 1 owner, low mileage, lady, fully equipped. 753 5422 days, 753 5504 after 6

1979 FORD LTD. Loaded 0 miles since over haul. $3995, Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5

1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade tor late model Pickup truck 757 0451, ask tor Mr Carraway.

021

Oldsmobile

1970 OLDSMOBILE.

753 4302 or 756 6810

$500 Call

1978 CUTLASS. Loaded! Excellent condition $4995 Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5

1981 YAMAHA 650 MAXIM Good condition Call after 6 p.m , 752 2804

1983 ATC HONDA 185, 3 wheeler, extras Call 752 7120.

LAND SURVEY/Field Personnel needed in Washington area. Expe rience helpful. Send resume to PO Box 1804, Washington, NC 27889.

LICENSED HAIR DRESSER

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cuttjn^ and removal. Free

estimates.

Stancil, 752-6331.

wanted. Apply after 4 at George's Coiffeurs, Pitt Plaza.

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

039

Trucks For Sale

FORD SUPER

752 0840.

CAB, 1975 Call

1953 WILLIS

756 7703.

JEEP. Runs good.

1971 CHEVY PICKUP. Has cab, 2 saddle tanks, and radio Excellent condition. $2100. 1-946 4480 or 1 946 9944

1977 GMC CIS - Short bed Excellent condition. $2695. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5.

1979 JEEP RENEGRADE

Extra Clean, low mileage. 756 2790 after 5 PM.

CJ 7. Call

1980 CHEROKEE CHIEF Jeep Loaded. Excellent condition. 746-2489

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.

040

Child Care

WEEKLY CHILD CARE for

anytime. Located in Contentnea Trailer Park, Farmville Call 753 2404

WILL KEEP CHILDREN in my

home in Camelot area Call Nita 756 9814.

WOULD LIKE to babysit in my home tor l child, ages 2 to 4 758 0064.    ^

046

PETS

AKC DOBERMAN PUPS Priced fo sell 10 weeks Shots and wormed 3H6^ ^l^cks. Excellent form. 524

AKC PEKINGESE. Shots, pedi g^ree, 6 month males, $75. 1 795 4901, Robersonville

AKC REGISTERED German Shep" herds, good breed Call 758 3693.

AKC REGISTERED Miniature Poodle, female 756 8438.

2 MALE SIBERIAN Husky puppies 7 weeks old. 1 male for $100, other $75. 752 2916 or 756 6747

051

Help Wanted

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

ACCOUNTING MANAGER tor CBS

affiliate TV station in Greenville, NC. 4 year accounting degree and a minimum of 2 years accounting experience required. Prior broatf cast and or Columbine Computer experince considered a plus. Areas of responsibility will Include gener al ledger, accounts receivable and payable, payroll, financial state ment preparation, budgeting, credit and collections, special projects as well as sui '

19/$ OUSTER, 6 cylinder, good condition, new paint job, air, AM/FM stereo radio, $12(X) Call anytime after 4, 752 9486_

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.

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs Counter tops, plumbing and carpentry State License. 746 2657 or 752 4064.

074

Miscellaneous

ALEXANDERS, Effanbe, ottieri. Highway 96-1</> miles North Zebulon, located at Bobbitt's Bakery. Wednesday-Saturday 9-6. 1-269-8160 or 1 365-5335.

ALUMINUM extension ladder, heavy duty, 17' extends to 30', $100 Sofa hide a bed floral print, like new, $50. Charcoal grill, 39" high, $20. 25" color tv console RCA, solid walnut cabinet, $250 or best offer 746-4015.

NOAAONEYDOWN VA 100% Financing

New I9e4 Singlewida, 2 badrooms, 1 bath, cathedral celling. Carpated, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of

07S MeMIe Hohms Fer Sale

liei ir WIDE HOMES. Paymants as low as siM.tl. At Graanvllla't volume daalar. Thomas MeMIe

Home Salas, North Memorial Orive acroas from alrpori. Phene 7S1-60M.

74 Motile Heme Imiiranct

U5Sia-mKi(ikik Wnca

bast coverage (or less menay.

- fy, 752

Smith Insurance and Realty 2754.

077 Muskal Instruments

ANtitut

Beautiful

Bastoffar.l2se765. CLARINET, used

UPRIGHT Plano. Good condition.

condition. $19$. Call 7-iIK7.*^ ^ PIANO a ORGAN Distributors. All

major brands at discounted prices. 329 Arlington Boulevard. 355-6002.

less than $140 per month

CROSSLAND HOAAES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

SMH LISTING SERVICE will list

your mobile home, advertise It, sell It, a

BROWN KITCHEN HUT. Very cheap. $50. 752 2660 between 9 a.m and4p.m.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale. 4 nnodels Delivery setup. 919-763-9734.

BUYING-LOANS INSTANT CASH

TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold & silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewriters, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games & cartridges, power tools, musical instruments, microwave ovens video recorders, bicycles. We also loan $$ on anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, located 405 Evans St., downtown. 752 2464.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor 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

DEEP FREEZER 8 cubic feet, upright chest. Good condition. $100. 756 3666

DINING ROOM, Queen Anne Williamsburg, solid cherry, new $7,000, will sell for $3500 or best offer. 756 7297 or 756 3613

ELECTROLUX VACUUM cleaner, 1981 Olympia I - all attachments. Excellent condition. $350. 756 9034.

FOR SALE: Large wooden desk, twin bed and box spring, chest of drawers, wicker chair and table, lamps, guitar. 7"8 4860

FOR SALE: Ping Pong table, $20; 2 ; 1 small metal desk.

sofas, $15 each $10. Call 752 4823 after 6 p.m

FURNITURE STRIPPING and re

finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756 9123.

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture. Stripping, Repairing & Retlnishing. (Formerly of East Carolina Voca tional Center) next fo John Deere on Pacfolus Highway. 752 3509.

GIRL'S CLOTHES. Sizes 4,5,6. some 3's. Polly Flinders dressers, Levi's, Izods. 254    $2.50.    756-4752

after 5.

LARGE LOADS ot sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.

METAL DETECTORS. Authorized dealer tor White's Electronics. Free catal^-^-_^ Baker's Sports Equip

ment, PO Box 3106 or 756-8840.

MOVING. Must sell. 17.2 cubic foot almond frost tree refrigerator with icemaker, 2'/i years old, $325. 10x13 tent $75. Kenmore dryer tor parts, $40. 753 $526.

NEW AND USED walk in coolers, pizza ovens, chairs. Ice machines, deep tat fryers. We install! Greenville Restaurant Equipment. Call 758 7042.

CLEARANCE _____

Mowers. Goodyear Tire Cen____

West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

SALE on Snapper nfer,

QUEEN SIZE sleeper sofa, tan tweed, 2 years old Originally $500, will sell tor $250. 756-9136.

REPOSSESSIONS. Vacuums and shampooers. Call Dealer. 756 6711.

BRICK OR BLOCK WORK Add! tions or repairs. 11 years experi ence Call 825 6591 alter 7 p m.

DOMESTIC WORK WANTED. Call 756 2940

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583.

NEEDED; FULL TIME and part

time help fo sell Avon in Cannon Court, Cherry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas. Earn extra money tor Christmas. Please call 758 3159

PART TIME police officer. NC certified. Weekends, daytime work. Contact Chief ot Police, Town ot Fountain, 749 2881

PERSONS NEEDED tor 2nd and

3rd shifts. Apply in person only at Sav A Ton, 612 Wes) Greenville Boulevard

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST. Position now avalla

ble in Howell Child Care Center, Inc or an energetic Individual with a BSOT. Duties require assistance in the development ot occupational therapy service delivery, and to prepare, implement, monitor and document the provision ot 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

MOBILE HOME REPAIRS. Time to check your heating plant, mobile home tops tor leaks, plumbing, insulation, etc. Call Ange Mobiie Home Repair, 752 1503 or 752-6471

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo components, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and antiques...anything ot vallue.

COIN&RINGMAN

On The Corner

moving and bush HOG work

Lots and fields. 752 6S22 after 5.

PAINTING Interior and exterior Free estimates References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience

756 6873 after 6 p.m.

PAINTING

At reasonable prices, free estimates, no job too small. Call anytime, 756 4967 or 758 0966.

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering Gold and silver leaf lettering. Call Rudi Hamvai 746 6156.

typing thesis, reports Call after S:30p.m ,756 1408.

040

FOR SALE

10,000 BTU air conditioner and gas electric refrigerator tor camper 752 1503 or 752 6471.

041

Antiques

antique oak roll Top desk $950

Excellent condition 758 3276 or 756 4039

firm.

HAND CRAFTED from old walnut. Queen Anne turned poster bed and Martha Washington mahogany chair and 1 desk 752 6749.

RN, LPN positions available. Full

time and part time, 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts. 75 bed ICF Oak Manor, Inc.,

Snow Hill, 747 2868.

RN's AND LPN's. Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, RN, Director ot Nursing, 943 2111.

ROOFING MECHANIC wanted Experience is required. Must have tools Inquire at 752 6116.

ROOM AT THE TOP

DUE TO PROMOTIONS In the local area, 3 openings exist now for voung minded persons In the local branch ot a large organization. If selected you will be given two weeks of classroom training locally a) our expense. We provide complete company benefits, major med leal, dental plan, profit sharing, and optional pension plan second to none Guaranteed commissioned

income to start. All promotions are based on merit not seniority

To be accepted you need a pleasant personality, be ambitious, and eager to get ahead, have grade 12 or better, and be free to start work

immediately.

We are particularly Interested In those with leadership ability who are looking for a genuine career opportunity. Phone now to arrange an appointment for a personal Interview. Call between 11 AM and 6 PM AAonday through Friday.

757-0686

044 Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor sale. J. P. Stancil, 752-633).

FIREWOOD: Mfyed hard wood. $35 a load. Deliver anywhere in Greenville area. Call 757 1772 after 6p.m.

OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Ready to go. Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 aHer Sp.m.

SEARS woodburning heater, $100

negotiable Call 746 4)40 weekends only.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 758 5590 or 752 1359.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. S45

a truck load delivered. $40 If you pick up. 758 3797 or 752 5488. ,

045 Farm Equipment

FALL FISHING SUPPLIES

Buddy bearings tor most Cox and Long trailers $9 99 per pair. Chest waders $31.95, Hip waders $25.95. Lite vest with pockers $20.49. Winches, couplers and many frailar supplies in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999.

SACRIFICE, repossession sale on video game cartridges. Atari, Im-agic, Activision, Apollo, and others at 35% below cost, $14 to $15 each. Also Frigidare microwave ovens, $150 under dealer cost. Call 758 0110 from 6 to 6 daily.

SHAMPOO YOUR RL "I Rent shampooers and vacuun Rental Tool Comp

.ompany.

SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88.

SHARP COPIER machines, sell, lease and rent, large seln'-'ion of used copiers Call tsa-ai

TECHNICS STEREO, 65 wa amp, $350. Tuner, $150. CasseMe deck, $300. Speakers, $300. Turntable, $200.- -------

Speakers, $300. . Call 752 5207.

USED HEATERS, furnaces, furniture, and appliances at prices you can afford. W. L. Dunn 8, Sons Antique Barn & Swap Shop, PInetops, NC.

USED LUMBER. 16' 2x6's for sale. Call 752 1231 after 5p.m.

UTILITY TRAILER for sale, $105. Call 756 1444.

WASHER

Heavy duty. Very good condition. $125. 746-2072.

WEDDING GOWN.

f. 741

never wor^ 746^4606 fELdyw

Size n-)2,

achine, 757-0307.

14' FREEZER. 1 couch with matching chair. 21" color tv. 2 frost fraa refrigerators. 753 5158.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, IVd baths, under pinning. 12x65. 1973, good condition. $5500. Call Wllllamston 1 792 2859 or 1 792-6668.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Acfoss From WachovM Compulpi Center Memorial Dr    756-6221

044

FURNITURE

ANTIQUE VICtORIAN upholstared

Swordsman chair. Good condition. $200. 1 946 4480or I 946 9944.

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory AAat tress 8, Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626.

CRAFTIQUE 4 POSTER King size bed. Mattress and box springs. Excellent condition. $1,000. Call

75^973.

FOR LEASE

2500 sa FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

and finance the transaction all at LOW COST to you. Sea George King, SMH Listing Service, Hlway 11 Ayden, 746-2078.

We Love America Special NOAAONEYDOWN!

SINGLE WIDE $8,495

DOUBLE WIDE...$17,5

(Loaded)

Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Hot j

lorsas. AAonkays Sorry- No In-laws

OM

INSTRUCTION

PRIVATE PIANO LEONS to

begin In October for children and adulta. Call 758-2897.

Ml

Business Services

WANTED- Commercial building to

laasa as paint shop. Prefarably In Greenville area.

Minimum square feet. Call 758-0809.

M3

OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Completa farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other Interests. Call 758 0702.

ry- NO in-li OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4B33

TRAOEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard

12.75%

homes.

FINANCING on selected

Call Conner Homes, 756

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris B Co., Inc. Financial & AAarkatIng Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 757-0001, nights 753 4015.

NATIONAL FRANCHISE AVAILABLE

Weight Loss Industry

Financing - Training Exceptional Financial Return

12X60, 1977, Conner, 2 bedrooms, 1'/5 baths. Partially furnished. 756 2626.

12x65 1976 OAKWOOD mobile home. Set up on private lot. Price negotiable. 75^3179, serious inquiries only.

1964 MIDWAY, 10x45, 2 bedrooms, partially furnished, air, good location. 758-4857.

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 12x68 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, refrigerator, stove, air, and deck. Good condition. S6500. 758 0646.

1974 FANTASTIC, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath. Partly furnished, central air and underpinning. 746-3727.

1976 Conner Mobile Home.

Conner AAobile Homes, 7S6-0333.

Call

1978 GUARDIAN 12x60. 2 badrooms, bath, partially furnished, air condition, deck, under pinned. Located In Branches Estates. S1050 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.. AAonday, Wednesday, and FrTd and anytime weekends.

'Iday;

1979 CONNER AAoblle Home. 6S'x 12'. Take over payments of $199.16 per month. Call Conner AAobile Homes, 756-0333.

1979 TAYLOR. Owner must sell I 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.

1981 14x70 COMMODORE. 3

bedrooms, 1V$ beths, total electric. Already set and blocked in Evans AAobile Home Park. Call 758-6805.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Contact; FRANCHISE DIVISION Collect (216) 666-7952 8a.m. -5p.m.

IT

W N Y O U R 0 W N

Jean-Sportswaar, Infant-Preteen, Ladies Apparel, Combination, accessories or large size store. National brands: Jordache, Chic, Lae, Levi, Vanderbilt, Izod, Gunne Sax, Esprit, Brittania, Calvin Klein, Ocean Pacific, Evan Picona, Haberdashery, Healthtex, 300 others. $7,900 to $24,900, inventory, airfare, training, fixtures, grand opening.

etc. Mr. Loughlln (6)2) 888-1

MS

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP. Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney

sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call

day or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

WHY PAY A fortune for wedding pictures? Call 756-4048 day or night.

102 ^mmercial Property

4k ACRE LOT in Industrial Park with water and sewer. Priced to sell. Contact Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 756-3500 nights Don Southerland 756 5260.

COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE

for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month Tease required. Call Clark-Branch, Real tors, 756-6336 or Ray Holloman 753-5147.

FOR SALE by owner. 2 buildir

mgs

and land. Location: 1500 and 1502

North Greene. 752 2481 or 758-1437. Shown by appointment only.

foot

FOR SALE: 5,000 square commercial building in the downtown area. Currently leases for $1400 per month. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756-Rod Tugt

6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE BY OWNER 198 ACRE FARM

Suited for Peanuts and other row crops. 43,245 pounds of peanuts. Located in Williamston Township, 1/4 mile west of Williamston on State Road 1444. Owner financing available. For further information call:

Federal Land Bank Association Of Washington 946-4116

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 tinencial sales helpful. College or related training preferred. Salary, commission and benefits package. For confidential and immediate consideration, toward resume detailing work experience and salary history to:

Sales Representative P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO IXHMINCI NKItSAOY

We will teach you...

Do you have a positive mental attitude Do you desire to be successful Are you able to follow directions explicitly Do you desire to earn $2000 to $2500 per month HSe..

Te Own If Te TeerseN Te iva H A Try.

Apply in person only.

Absolutely no phone calls.

See E.J. Lacosto or Rickie Moore.

ASTJ

FORD

Anil

(Ivd (rfi CiMnpinv

Tenth Street 6 284 By Pes$ 758-0114 Grewwnie N C 27IM





102 Comtwrci*! Property

NEW RENOVATKM dMmtawn, offlct or rttail. Economical to haat and cool. A must sao If you naod spaca. Spalght Raalty, 756-3330, nights 73I-7741.

108 Houses For Sai

lOi

Farms For Sals

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 aHer 7.

All

78 ACRES. New offering, t cleared. 13,300 pounds of tooac< Good land. Call Carl j Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758-2230.

73 ACRE WATER FRONT farm

outside Beaufort

----  -    Oumplin

Creek with house and pier. S123,00(

1-726-3884.

m

Houses For Sale

BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R. H. McLawhorn 756-2750 or 975-2688.

BY OWNER

107 Azalea Drive, ll'/iAPR assumable loan. Living room, din ing room, den with fireplace, : 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.

CHERRY OAKS $10,000 cash assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, bedroom, 2',^ bath - Owner. 756-8073.

COUNTRY. Call us about the home you've been looking for. We have 2,3

or 4 bedrooms ranging in price from $35,900 to $77,900. Red Carpet Steve Evans & Associates 355-2727.

COUNTRY LIVING remodeled home with over 3,000 square feet plus out buildings plus V* acre garden. 15 minutes to Greenville $69,500. Mr. Byrd, 758 0198 before 9 a.m. and after 10 p.m.

DREAM HOMES you can afford! Build it your self with no down payment. 9.9% APR. 12 models to choose from. 848 3230 collect, A Pathway Home.

EXCELLENT ASSUMPTION with graduated payments starting at $435.26 on this lovely ranch on quiet cul de sac In Lake Glenwood. Owner is ready to sell. Call Darrell at Hignite Realtors, 756-1306; nights 355 2556.

//

Featured Houses

n

GRAYLEIGH; Nearing completion ou

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 ofteredat $142,500.

GRAYLEIGH: Williamsburg style featuring 3 bedrooms, V/2 baths.

formal living and dining rooms, den with fireplace, bookcases, deck and garage. Large wooded lot offered at $110,500.

CLUB PINES; Brick two story, great room with fireplace and bookcases, 3 bedrooms, 7'/2 baths, dining room, garage, great location. Priced $84,500.

WINDY RIDGE: New listing, brick Colonial, 4 bedrooms, l'/2 baths, tormal living room, dining room, den with tireplac 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 7911 756 3880 756 1617

FHA 235. You can't keep from falling for this cedar home. A character flow inside and out. Features 3 bedrooms, wood deck, great room, Kenmore 'dishwasher and stove. Color coordinated carpet and wallpaper. $47,900. Red Carpet -Steve Evans & Associates 355 2727. ^XED RATE Assumption at 12%

available

jlllamsburg

this well kept In Belvedere. A

scious floor plan plus financing It makes ownership easy! Cad Ball and Lane, 752-0025 or Richard

Lane, 752 8819. ?R"

SALE BY OWNER. Very attractive passive solar two bedroom house located in Strawberry Banks in Ayden. FMFA Assumption. 746-6346 after 5.

SALE BY OWNER. 3

bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Living room, kitchen and den combination, with tireplace and wood heater Insert. Single garage, corner lot with tenced in patio. Elmhurst school district. 756-9615.

Nkw CONSTRUCTION - Price re duced on this Traditional that

price REOUCEOI University area. 2 story home featuring over 1,800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 1VS baths, carport $57,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton Associates 756-6810, nights i Baldwin 756-7836.

REOUCEOI

PRICE REOUCEOI astwood $13,500 assumes 11</5% loan with

gajc^ments of $545 PITI. 3 bedroom.

ring roo eptece, ENTUR

brick ranch that features room, dining area, den with large deck. $61,000. Call

CEfltURY 2f\lpton & Associates 756-6810, nights Harold HewlH 756-

2570.

REDUCED $5,8001 Owners must selk Assume loan. Payment $446.77 PITI approximately. Quiet neighborhood - Winterville school district. 1 story Williamsburg home Approximately 1,562 square feet, fenced In backyard, carport, heating systems - electric baseboard heat, heat pump, attic fan. You must see to appreciatel Call Davis Realty 752-3000, nIghH Mary 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or 756-4144.

VETERANS! Points and closing costs paid by seller on this three bedroom ranch in the $40's. Call Darrell at HIgnlte Realtors, 756 1306; nights 355-2556.

WATERFRONT HOME on Pamlico

River, 3 miles from Washington. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, large deck and porch, bulkhead, boat ramp, pier, no foot waterfront. Call 946-8565

$4588 DOWN and assume payments on this new 2 bedroom home with cathedral ceiling, eat-ln kitchen, deck and wooded lot. 5 miles from Greenville. Call Leonard at Hignite Realtors, 756-1306.

Ill Investment Property

DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE - Just Reduced!. Each side features bedrooms, l'/4 baths, living and dining rooms, kitchen with appli anees, deck and storage. $59,

Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

VILLAGE EAST: 2 bedrooms, V/2 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 It $41,900.

dent rental, priced at t

features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, dining area, and over 1,500 square feet on large lot. $62,500. Lots of extras. Better hurry on this one! Caii CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.

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 f* gardening. Near starter home. $47,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, Agry 756-1997, Grace 746-6656 or

i 4144.

NEW LISTINGI 6 miles from Pitt Plaza off Highway 43. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, carport, good size lot, spacious kitchen. Owner is painting la and outside of home. Assume low rate FmHA loan plus equity. Only $41,500. Neat starter home. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, nights AAary 756-1997, Grace 746 6656 or 756 4144.

NOAAONEYDOWN

liiat's right! We will build on your lot. Plenty of mortgage money, no red tape. Call 758 3171 for Darrell.

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.

PtANTATION HOME. Your oppor

tunlty to own that southern planta tion style home. In the country near

nome. in tne country near with approximately 1.9 and and a two stall stable.

Simpson

acres ot land    _______

Behind those beautiful white col umns is a foyer, library with fireplace, four bedrooms and two bSths, split rail fence. Assumable VA loan. $76,500. Duffus Realty, Inc. 756 5395

: CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^ORM WINDOWS UOORS& AWNINGS

C L. Lupton. Co.

752 t)l U)

CPA

^parienced, energetic desires >posHlon as controller/financial inager whh local firm. Will con-^aider part time position for small

.oompany. Reply to;

CPA

P.O. Box 179 Qraenville, N.C. 27834

Open End Autn Leasing

Down Ptivnunl LowofMnn

Down Ptiynunl Lowof Mon inly prfyfiipni'. Any n'.ili* iv nioclfi Nfw in ll'.cd'Aiito Ron Ills il.nl, Wpoi>Iv Monlhl,

1 ,w R.itns

Mid-Eastern

Brokers

n^ ^ Pitt PI.)/.I

T

DRESDEN PLACE: 2 bedroom, IW bath condominiums. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances turnlshed. Ideal location for student rental market. Corner of 11th St. 8. 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 bedrooms 1/5 bath. They are located in an excellent location and in very good condition. Priced at $145,000.

W.G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000

Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden

9753179 756 7911 756-3880 756-1617

TWO QUADRAPLEXES in River Bluff area. Excellent return investment! $210,000. Only serious nqulries please. Hignite Realtors,

756-1306.

$35,000 - 3 bedroom house with upstairs apartment. Total rent $42C per month. Good Investment pro perty. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton &  - 681'

Associates, 756-6810.

$45,000 - Duplex. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, each side

Possible owner financing. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8, Associates, 756-6810.

113

Land For Sale

WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden^ with well and septic tank. Serious Inquiries only. 746-4669.

115

Lots For Sale

ACRE LOT for sale Ayden Grifton. Call 756-2682 aHer 5 p.m.

LAKE FRONT LOT for sale. Located in Brook Valley with lots of trees Windsor Drive. 756-7654 days, 752-6913 nights.

NO CROWDING your neighbors on these exceptionally large mobile home lots. Off River Road, Greenville. On Greenville city

water. Owner financing. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Winnie Evans, Listing

Broker, 756 5258

752 4224. Faye Bowen,

THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and guHer, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley-Marcu!

746 2166 tor full details.

Realty at

117 Resort Property For Sale

PAMLICO RIVER - 12x60 mobile home with large screened in porch, recreation room, electric and gas heat, air conditioning, boat shelter.

pier and boat ramp priviledges. 756-r -

i-0431.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

117 Resort Property For Sale

mSSTTSmSTT

trade. 4 apartment complex. 3 bedrooms, I Vi baths, central heat and ate. 415 Ocean Drive, Club Colony, AHantic Beach. Asking $225,000. Will trade for Greenville area.

757-0451.

te for propel^ In Call 752-23U or

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, nC Quiet, established neighborhood Call 758-0702 days, 753-0310 nights.

121 Apartments For Rent

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT. Also 2 and bedroom mobile homes. Security its required, no pets. Cal

758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAOET We have an

size to meet your storage need. Ca Arlington Self Storage, Open " day - Friday 9-5. Call 756-9933.

AAon

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.

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J .T. or Tommy Williams 756-7815

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, l'/i baths, washer-dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. $310 per month. 752-2040 or 756-8904.

Cherry Court

s 2 bedroom towi

Spacious 2 be<iroom townhouses with 1V4 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner-dryer    

hook-ups, laundr room, sauna, tennis court, house and POOL. 752-1557

ndry

duo

DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wooded lot at Frog Level bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and living room, no pets allowed. $265 per month. 756 4624.

GreeneWay

bedroom garden

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical

abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, disp

frigerator, dishwasher, disposal nd cable TV. Conveniently located 9 shopping center and schools Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

At our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Iris Cannon at 758-6050 or 746-2639, Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756-1498, WII Reid at 758-6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758-7029.

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

LOVE TREES?

iperience the unique In apartment ing with nature outside yi

door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces.

heat pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units).

dishwasher, washer-dryer hookups, cable TV,waM-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    15    Sunday

AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd. 756-5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN

Must be experienced in domestic as well as foreign cars and have own tools. Pay depending upon experience. Good fringe benefit package. Apply to: Steve Grant, Service Manager.

756-3228

109 Trade Street Greenville, N.C.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 on, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, teeturing Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

NEAR CAMPUS. Available October 1. Stove and refrigerator provided. Call756-2352aHet6p.m.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE. PRIME RETAIL or

oHice space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 souare feet. Only $3.60 per square foot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752-4348.

23,000 SQUARE Will subdivide. 756-9315.

FEET aveilable Call 756-5097

or

127

Houses For Rent

ALMOST NEW 3 bedroom, 2 story home. $600 per month. Call Jean neHeCox Agency, 756-1322.

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.

apar

ments. 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis

^^Mncluded. We also have Cable

Haide

MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES MANAGER Possible $20,000 plus first year ASSISTANT MANAGER $12,500 first year potential EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA

Due to expansion, Franchise Enlerprisat has opportunities available for qualified personnel interested in Restaurant Management. MAKE YOUR EXPERIENCE PAY by working with the pacesetter of the fast food industry.

. WE REQUIRE

Can Do" Attitud*

High School Diploma

Excallant Communication and People Skills

Able to relocate

WE PROVIDE

Opportunities for rapid advsncamant based on performance. We promote from wRhIn , Benefits4>rofit SharingfRotirement Dental insurance. Comprehensive Hospital and Life Insurance, 2 Waakt Vacation after first year

6 weeks of concentrated professional training, plus on going workshops and samlnars

For managars, a bonus potential of up to $7,000 par year If you are int^aatad in a managemant opportunity with Hardaat, ^e caii baorga Ooldbeck on Wadneaday, September 2ith, 1983 from 9:00 AM - 12:00 Noon end 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM at 919-7S6-2792.

EOeiNF

/mimse enstmisF M

'ory convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 756-7815.

ONE BEDROOM furnished or un furnished 2 blocks from university. Heat, air conditioner, and water furnished. No pets. Call 758-3781 or 756-0889.

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din Ing, bedroom complete. $79.00

month. Option to 756-3862.

>uy. U-REN

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE

TV

Office hours 10a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook-ups, cable TV, |ool, club

house, playground. Near

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Village. $350. CallLorelle at 756-6336.

WEDGEWOODARMS

bedroom, I'/i bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

HOUSES AND Apartments country. 8 mnlles south Greenville. 746-3284and 524 3180.

NEW 3 BEDROOM, ^'/l bath home $400 per month. Lynndale: bedrooms, 3 baths - $600 per month

MacGregor Downs: 5 betir^ms, I'/i baths - $700. Lease and security deposit required. Duffus Realty, tnc. 756 0811.

ONE 3 BEDROOM, \'/2 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 Grifton. Phone 1-524-4147, nights 1-524-4007.

2 BEDROOMS, corner lot, 1 mile outside city limits on Pactolus

Highway. No pets. $300. 758-6176 or 752-9928 at

!-9928after6p.m.

3\ BEDROOM MODULAR home with large garage on B'/i acre lot. $350 a month. 756-7755.

3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, den with fireplace, living room, all appliances. Big yard, spilt rail fence. Lake Ellsworth. $425 month. Call 804 836 0637.

IF THERE'S something you want to Hi, check the

rent, boy, trade or sei.. ___________

classified columns. Call 752-6166 to place your ad

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

/y/ MK.

127 Houses For Rent

142 Roommate Wanted

4 BEDROOM RANCH. Over 2000 Muare feet with workshop In Griffon. Available Immediately tor $42S per month. Call Realty World, Clark-Branch, 756-6336 or Tim

CmUk

roommate wanted to share >/v

rent and <6i utilities. Call Ralph, 758-1121, extension 217 before 5

olTllTn, 752-toM.

144 Wanted To Buy

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood

MOBILE HOME FOR RENT. Call 756-4687.

timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 756 8615.

12 X 60. 3 bedrooms, $150. Also 2 bedrooms, $135. No pets, no children. 758-0745.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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.

2 BEDROOMS, semi furnished, Taylor's Trailer Park. $155 per month. 746-2638 after 5 p.m.

2 OR 3 BEDROOMS near Greenville. Deposit. Call 746-6847 or 524-4349 from 6 to 9

135 Office Space For Rent

OFFICE SPACE for rent. 4 (fflce suite in Jeannette Cox Agency Inc Dujtoing. Call Jeannetle Cox 756

OFFICES FOR LEASE, Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

SINGLE OFFICE, 154 square feet, Joyner-Lanier building, 219

Cotanche Street. Parking available. Call Jim Lanier at 752-5505.

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park ing. Call 758 2300days

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED

to share '/3 expenses. Birchwood Sands Mobile Homes, 752 3040.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furnitura Refinishing and repairs. Superior caning for all type chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakes-any length, all types of pallets, selected framed reproductions.

EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758-4188    8AM-4:30PM

Greenville, N.C.

BEDROOM APARTMENT 201

North Woodlawn. Heat and hot water furnished. $215. 756-0545 or 758-0635.

BOYD

ASSOCIATES

INCORPORATED

P.O. BOX 1705, GREI ar/HLE. NORTM QMIOUNA 27M4

7584284

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

METAL BUILDINGS

144

Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY old Jerry Wallace tapes and records. 757-1451.

148

Wanted To Rent

ECU FACULTY MEMBER and

wife requires 3 or 4 bedroom house.

3'<-')618.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BEDROOM near campus. Hot water furnished. No pets. $215 per month. Phone Stuart Buchanan, 756 3923.

BEDROOM APARTMENT

carpeted, central air and heat. $275. 758-3311.

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex. Uni

versify area. No pets. ' $235 per month. 756-4277 or 752-8179

ROOM APARTMENT for rent. Located close to univeristy. Call after 4 p.m., 756 0528.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL

m

D '

\

5/

Safe

Model S-1

Special Price $12250

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S. Evans St.    752-2175

Now Accepting Applications For

MANAGEMENT

POSITIONS

Must have at least 1 years experience in ladles 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

SPECIAL INVITATION

GREENS FEES

Weekdays $5.00 - Students $4.00 Sat. & Sun. $7.00 - Students $6.00

BRING ATRIEND, RENT A CART AND RIDE DOUBLE DEDUCT $1.00 EACH FROM GREENS FEE.

Grifton, NC

524-5485

WANT TO BUY

TOBACCO POUNDS

Any Amount TOP MONEY

WORTHINGTON FARMS, INC.

Day 756-3827 Night 756-3732

SUBARU

Rcdi CarsUsed 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 cassette, 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.

1982 Chevrolet Maiibu Classic 4 door, White, Cruise, power windows, 31,000 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 Buick Regal Tan and Maroon, 2 door. Power equipment, 41,000 miles. 1981 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme - White, 2 door. Power equipment, 41,000 miles.

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.

1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais - Beige, power equipment, 43,000 miles.

1979 Buick Regal Limited - Silver and Gray, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM/FM stereo, 44,000 miles. 1979 Buick Electra 2 door. Blue, Loaded, 39,000 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.

1978 Mazda Pick-up Camper Shell, 5 Speed, Good Condition!

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Academic Position Vacancy Notice

Position Vacant: VIPP Project Director D^ree Sought: Ed.P., Ph. D. in special education or educational p

psychology. Experience in teaching undergraduate and graduate special education students.

Jasic Standards ot the Position: Primary responsibility

for management of the Project, in-service training of staff, development of community outreach, project evaluation, project development and dissemination. Additional responsibilities may include classroom teaching and supervision of education students in School of Education.

To Apply: Contact- A. Dewane Frutiger, Director    Developmental    Evaluation    Clinic

Irons Building

East Carolina University School of Medicine Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 757-6921

BOB BARBOUR, INC.

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Service Manager / Volvo. AMC-Jeep, BMW / Must have service management experience, technical skills and administrative skills. Must help develop program with eyes toward growth and customer service.

Parts Manager / Honda / Must have parts management experience, preferably with Honda cars. Need self-motivating person that can help stimulate growth.

Assistant Service Manager technical skills, preferably Management and warranty helpful.

I Honda / Needs with Honda cars, experience will be

Pre-Submit resume with salary requirements to:

Bob Barbour, Inc.

3300 S. Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834

BANKRUPTCY AUCTION SALE

Metalwood, Inc.

506 W. 13th St. Greenville, N.C.

September 30,1983 10:00 a.m. on premises

AWNING MATERIALS: OFFICE EQUIPMENT: EQUIPMENT & TOOLS

Awning Materials: (partial listing)

Metal for glass, screen and window frames, tubing for awnings, 30'x12 awning sheets, glass for doors and windows, nails, screws, bolts, storm doors and windows, glass and screen welt, caulking, sample cases, miscellaneous metals, screens, miscellaneous hardware items other miscellaneous items too numerous too list. Scrap metals.

Office Equipment: Secretary & executive desk, chairs, file cabinets, adding machines, electric typewriter, storage cabinets, credenzas, file trays, lamps, end tables, love seat, side chairs, miscellaneous office items, copy machine, folding chairs.

Equipment and Tools: Aluminum siding brakes. Craftsman radial saw, metal cutting saw, metal punch press, bench grinder, aluminum ladders, hand shearing machine, hammer drills, electric drills, metal trimmer, tool boxes tor trucks,, screen wire, tables, racks, miscellaneous tool items, rack tor truck, trailer.

Note: This was an operating business with normal inventory and supplies, it you need equipment or wish to add to your inventory dont miss this sale. Equipment appears in goorJ condition and ready for use.

Terms: Cash or good check date ot sale; All items sold AS IS.

Trustee: Richard Stearns, Attorney at Law. Kinston, N.C., Phone 523-2295.

Sale Conducted by: Boyette Auction Co.,- Lie. 472, Wilson, N.C., Phone 291-1508.

Lie. 472

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U.S. Military Role In Central America Is Growing

REBELS CAPTURE TOWN -This photo, taken off a Cable News .Network monitor in New Y'ork .Monday, shows soldiers standing over a victim of recent bombings in

Tenancingo, El Salvador. Residents said the town 21 miles northeast of San Salvador was captured by rebels after 12 hours of combat. (AP Laserphoto)

BydlARI.KSJ.HA.NLEV Associated Press Writer PA.NA.MA CITY, Panama |APi - Franklin D, Roosevelt, in bronze, peers out benevolently over the gleaming Pacific. Below, on , the statue's base, someone has spray-painted in Spanish: ankees out of Salvador and .Nicaragua!!! From another palm-draped hilltop, across Panama City, orders go out from the generals and colonels of the U.S. .Southern Command as they shape the expanding U.S. military presence in El Salvador, Honduras and elsewhere on a Central American isthmus alight with the fires of revolution.

The United States pursued FDR's hands-off "Good Neighbor ' policy in another era. in a tranquil Latin America. But today, says Ronald Reagan, "we cannot attord the luxury of turning awa\ Irom our neighbors' struggles."

,\nd the Southern Command, once a drowsy backwater on the Panama

Canal, is in charge, overseeing not just 9.000 U.S. troops stationed at a dozen posts strung along the canal, but a major program of aid. advisers, base-building and military exercises to combat what is described as a regional threat of Marxist takeover directed by Cuba, Nicaragua and Moscow.

U.S. defense officials are careful to label their pro-gram a mission of assistance, not intervention.

"There is a legacy of feeling in Latin America of over-intervention by the United States, U.S. Army Gen. Wallace Nutting, former Southern Command chief, noted in a recent interview.

In this century, the U.S. military took direct action a half-dozen times in Panama, Nicaragua and Honduras, usually to crush insurrections and protect American interests,

But this time, were not looking for a permanent U.S. military presence in Central America, said a top Pen

tagon policy-maker for Latin America, granting an interview on condition he not be identified.

..., What we must do is provide the wherewithal to let them defend themselves. If the Soviets and Cubans would pull back from their buildup of Nicaragua, then our aid program could decrease as well.

The legacy of intervention burns deep in the Central American memory, however, and for some the memory is stirred by the new U.S. campaign, a campaign for which the Southern Command is paymaster, drill instructor and strategist;

Collecting Old Student Loans

H> KKi( A,I()II\.ST()N Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. lAPi -More than 1.7U North ('arolinians who haven't repaid state-sponsored student loans are getting a taste of their own medicine, courtesy of the N.C Department of Revenue.

The department is collecting more than S25.000 from former students by intercepting their state income tax refunds and applying the money to their debts, said Stan Broadway, executive director of the .VC. Carolina Educational Assistance Authority

"Were collecting money we weren't able to collect any other way" under a law passed by the General Assembly in 1979, said Bill Stvons. cashier at N.C. State

Parents Demand

School Cleanup

WILLIAMSTOWN, Vt. i.APi - Chanting Clean water, clean air, no more toxic waste,' parents demanded that the state close or clean two schools where a mildly toxic chemical has been found

The parents have been keeping their children out of class and on Monday staged a protest march between the two schools.

Air and water samples taken last week revealed low levels of tetrachloroethylene, which irritates the eyes and skin, in soil and air at the elementary school, and in the air at the high school.

Health Commissioner Roberta Coffin has acknowledged the state "doesnt have all the answers, but her agency and the local school board decided to keep tltf schools open pending an inlestigation.

University in Raleigh.

"1 thought (the law) was going to mean a lot of paperwork and be ineffective." Styons added. But I was dead wrong. It's been very, very effective.

The federal government would begin a similar debt collection system by withholding federal income tax returns under two separate bills pending before the U.S. Senate, Broadway said.

The North Carolina law requires public colleges and universities, hospitals, courts and other state agencies to turn over to the revenue department for collection any debts of more than $50 three months or more past due.

The law enabled the revenue department to collect more than $1 million the first seven months of this year, said George Davis, assistant director of the individual income tax division.

About 4.5 percent of the people who borrowed about $60 million this fiscal year through the North Carolina Insured Student Loan program - the largest state-sponsored aid system - are expected to default on the loans, Broadway said.

But by intercepting income tax refunds and hiring collection agencies to recover the bad debts, sooner or later you collect on all but 4 or 5 percent of all defaulters, he said.

Broadway added the state probably always will lose some money on educational loan defaulters. If defaults were eliminated, it probably would mean the state was not

taking enough risks in loaning to needy students, he

said.

It is possible to play the game too safely, he said. "Although were never totally satisfied (with the recovery rate for defaulted loans), we want to keei the money available to thus , * dont have the resources ^

AID

U.S. military aid to five countries - El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Costa Rica and Panama - leaped from $39 million in 1980 to about $230 million this year, for small arms, trucks, aircraft, radios and other equipment. El Salvador, whose right-wing government is wrestling with a four-year-old leftist insurgency, is the biggest recipient.

TRAINING

About 200 U.S. military advisers and trainers are in Honduras and El Salvador. Besides the thousands of troops trained by these onsite instructors, an additional 1,764 Salvadoran officers are being readied this year at American bases in Panama and the United States.

RECONNAISSANCE U.S. Air Force RC-130 reconnaissance flights, based at Howard Air Force Base here, survey guerrilla-held areas of El Salvador and reported arms-smuggling routes from Nicaragua to the Salvadoran rebels, through Honduras. U.S.-based U-2s overfly Nicaragua itself. U.S. Navy "listening ships patrol the coastline.

RADAR About 50 U.S. Air Force personnel man a new moun-taintop radar station in southern Honduras, alert for any airdrops of munitions to the Salvadoran guerrillas, and controlling the increasing U.S. military air traffic.

AIRTRANSPORT U.S. Air Force transports based here shuttle arms supplies to San Salvador for the war. Other planes carry equipment to Honduras. Southern- Command officers reject charges they are supplying the CIA-directed operations of Nicaraguan counter-revolutionaries fighting to overthrow the leftist Sandinista government in Managua.

CONSTRUCTION U.S. military construction crews are building or expanding three airfields in Honduras to handle big U.S. planes.

EXERCISES By the end of the year, at least 18,000 U.S. military personnel will be in the region, including up to 5,000 in Honduran ground exercises and more than 3,000 aboard U.S. Navy vessels maneuering in the area.

In some quarters in Central America, the step-up in U.S. military activity has aroused voices of opposition. The revolutionaries, pre-ctablv the most strident, the Southern Com

mand of turning Honduras into an immense base to be used against Nicaragua and the Salvadoran guerrillas. But some of Central Americas established, pro-U.S, political figures also sound uneasy.

American muscle-flexing would radicalize the people, Panamanian President Ricardo de la Espriella said in an interview. I dont think its in the best interest of the U.S.

In Honduras, the debate has been muted, but growing.

The Hondurans accuse the Sandinistas of provoking border clashes and infiltrating subversives into Honduras. The Nicaraguans say

the Hondurans are aiding the anti-Sandinista counterrevolutionaries.

The U.S.-Honduran exercises are a needed warning to Nicaragua, which has been the basic problem in the convulsions of Central America, Honduran Foreign Minister Edgardo Efrain Diaz Arrivillaga, a leading opposition politician in Honduras, says the Nicaraguan threat to Honduran democracy is a fabrication.

The U.S. government is deciding for us who are enemies are, what our interests are, he said.

Panamas President De la Espriella, a leader in regional peace efforts, said he

fears the United States might be thrown into a military conflict in the region unwillingly.

The exercises are putting hundreds of U.S. troops into a volatile sector of Honduras, the steamy southwestern flatlands, said to be used by guerrillas or supporters transporting munitions into El Salvador.

American and Honduran soldiers will conduct exercise sweeps through the region. Any spark might ignite an explosion. Furthermore, U.S. troops will be less than 25 miles to the east of Salvadoran guerrillas being pressed from the west by Salvadoran government forces.

At their air-conditioned headquarters on Panama Citys Quarry Heights, the Southern Command planners, cool in pressed tropicals, insisted U.S. forces will not become involved in another Vietnam.

My estimate is the risk to the U.S. force in Honduras is minimal, said one officer whose opinion counted highly in the plans for the exercises.

To a man, these Southern Command officers - who gave interviews on condition they not be identified -rejected the idea of introducing U.S. combat forces into the l^lvadoran conflict.

It wouldnt solve the problem, said one Vietnam veteran. Its up to the

Salvadoran government to win the confidence of the people.

Even without troops in combat, however, the U.S. Southern Command looms ever larger as an instrument of U.S. policy.

When Nutting, then a' lieutenant general, left as commander in May, the Panama job was upgraded to a four-star p<Kt, and the White House dispatched the accomplished Gen. Paul Gorman, formerly a CIA officer and special assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to take over the job of conifronting what Reagan has called the first real communist agression on the American mainland.

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Title
Daily Reflector, September 27, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30586
Date
September 27, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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