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SUNNY
Mostly sunny Sunday with highs in the upper 70s and lows in the mid 50s. Highs Monday wil be in the mid 80s.NEW LAW
Arrests for drunken driving dropped during the early hours -Of-Worth Carolinas stiff wew-i-traffic law. Page A-16.PIRATES WIN
East Carolinas Pirafes scored a late touchdown and defeatedH^ issourrTnS-drSatuF day afternoon. Page B-1
Today's Reading
Abby.........
C-7
Classified
...... D-3-9
Arts...........
............C-8-11
___Ciossword,...............
Bridge
...............D44
Editorial
..... A-4
Building
.................D-2
Enterment
C-12-14
Business,
B-15-17
Opinion
............A-5
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 217
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION GREENVILLE, N.C. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 2, 1983
160 PAGES 13 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTS
East Carolina...........13
Missouri...............7.. 6
Maryland...............23
Virginia ..............3
Miami, Fla..............56
Duke....................17
North Carolina.........38
Georgia Tech...........21
N.C. State..............38
Wake Forest............15
West Virginia..........24
Pittsburgh..............21
Auburn ........27
Florida State...........24
Nebraska...............63
Syracuse ..........7
Illinois i 33
Iowa......................0
AFL-CIO Says ^Yes' To Mndale
ByD.^VlDESPO Associated Press Writer Former Vice President Walter F. Mndale strengthened his claim as front-runner for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination Saturday, winning an unprecedented preprimary endorsement from the AFL-CIO leadership and getting a resounding vote of support from Maine Democrats.
Mndale gained the support of the AFL-CIOs lead
ership handily, duplicating a victory he won Friday when he was endorsed by the' National Education Association. Together, the two labor groups claim more than 16 million members and can provide thousands of volunteers in all 50 states as well as sophisticated political support for the candidate of their choice.
The former vice president received 939 votes for 51 percent of the total cast in the non-binding Maine
straw poll." Finishing second was Sen. Alan Cranston 'of California with 531 votes for 29 percent of the total. South Carolina Sen. Ernest F. Hollings came in third with 198 votes for 11 percent.
"As Maine goes, so goes the nation. Thank you, thahk you, thank you," Mndale told cheering' supporters in Maine shortly after the vote was announced.
The Maine straw poll, taken at a meeting of party activists in Augusta. ,had no
direct bearing on selection of delegates to next year's Democratic national con-vefttion. But it became a hotly'contested and heavily publicized event as Mndale sought to defend his position and the men chasing him tried to weaken it.
The AfLi^JO endorsement marked the first tim^ the 14.5-miIlion-member labor federation has decided to support a Democratic candidate before the beginning of the primary season, a
break with tradition that labor president Lane Kirkland wanted to influence the 1984 election before the choice was narrowed to one Republican and one Democrat. A formal vote to ratify .Mondale's endorsement is expected Monday b\ l.OuO delegates to the, .VfL-CIO convention.
The vote of the general board, meeting in Hollywood, Fla., represented a setback particularly for Sen. John Glenn of Ohio, generally ac
knowledged to be running second to Mndale, as well as the other contenders for the nomination.
Glenn has said he will continue to campaign for votes among labor's rank and file, and his aides have suggested strongly that the support Mndale got from labor's chiefs far outstrips his support from the membership.
.Mndale is expected to address the AFL-CIO convention on .Mondav.
Pitt Considers Move To Vote 'Tabulators'
By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer
For most people, the election experience involves stepping into a red. white and blue striped canvas booth, making marks on many colored ballots with a stubby yellow-orange pencil with no eraser, and stuffing their choices into a wooden, padlocked box.
Not many people get the chance to observe or participate in the election process once the precincts close at 7:30 p.m. and the ballot counting begins. Votes have been counted by hand in Pitt County,for years, but as coveted as this
traditional method may be, Pitt election officals feel it is time to look into alternatives.
'T've been in this election business 12 years, and every year it's a long, long process that begins at 6:30 in the morning and doesn't end until sometimes 12. 1 in the morning." .\vden Board of Elections Chairman Steve .Nobles said
Our troubles begin when we sfart counting the ballots. .As a matter of fact we've been having trouble getting ballot counters because thev often have to.stay after midnight even though they do get paid, he said.
After looking at several types of election apparatus, Pitt Board of Elections Chairman Cliff Everett Jr. said he feels vote tabulators will be the way to go should the county Board of Commissioners approves modifying the system,'
"There are various types of equipment on the market and have been for several years ... but after going to several state meetings andseeing various demonstrations, my opinion and the opinion of others is that the tabulating system offered by Airmac Technology 'is the I Please turn to A-31
Throngs March To Back Freeze
By The Associated Press
Hundreds. of Americans in 200 cities took part in 10-kilometer walks Saturday and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars to campaign for a nuclear weapons freeze.
Marchers in Maine called their effort "Legs Against Arms." and one of the dozen contingents in Illinois paraded past Reagan's boyhood home in the town of Dixon.
^More than l.Oflib people turned out in downtown Cleveland, but in most places, the turnout was much smaller.
Rich Zeichik, the natiohaf coordinator for Freeze Walk of the national Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign in Santa Rosa, Calif., said Saturday evening that walkers had raised an unofficial $610,889 in pledges and cash from 169 of the days 200 waHcs. He said the cash amounted to about $250,000.
There were 14,941 walkers and 118,764 sponsors. Zeichik said. Another 37 walks were scheduled for the coming weeks, he said.
In Augusta, Maine, about 100 arms-control advocates marched from the statehouse to the site of the Democratic presidential straw poll, which was won by former Vice President Walter F. Mndale,
Japan's Envoy
Savs New Push
day
Will
Help East
L7S.-JAPANESE TIES - Gov. Jim Hunt, Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Company President Wayne Peterson, and Japans ambassador to the United States, Yoshio Okawara, stressed the strong ties between the United States and Japan.
and the importance of Japanese investment in North Carolina during a Greeinille luncheon arranged by CT&T. Okawara said the Japanese consider North (arolina one of the best sites for investment in the United States. (Reflector Staff Photo)
By.STU.ARTSAV.AGE Reflector Staff Writer
Japan's ambassador to the United States. Yoshio Okawara, says eastern North Carolina should benefit from efforts to disperse new Japanese investment throughout the state.
Okawara's comments praising .North Carolina's efforts to attract Japanese investments were made at a luncheon Friday attended by Gov. Jim Hunt and more than 200 eastern North Carolina leaders in Greenville. The luncheon and the ambassador's visit were arranged by Wayne Peterson, president of Carolina Telephone and Tefegraph Co., who is a director of the North Carolina Japan Center at N.C. State University.
Peterson 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 in Tennessee in 1982.
Okawara was introduced by Hunt, who said "we are here today to celebrate a friendship that has grown through years of mutual respect and cooperation."
Pointing out that Japan is the largest overseas customer for North Carolina tcbacco. Hunt said the Japan Tobacco and Salt Corporation's office in Raleigh was the first Japanese business in the entire southern part of the United States.
"There are now live major Japanese shipping lines calling on our ports in eastern North (arolina, " the governor said, "and since 1977. Japanese companies have invested more than $175 million in new and expanding manufacturing facilities in this state. And those dollars meant hundreds of
i Please turn to A-121Merger Debate Resumes Over School Consolidation
1 Related editorial on A-4) ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer The issue of school system merger, eternally a red-hot subject In Pitt County and Greenville, began to sizzle again last week when the Research Triangle Institute ended a nine-month feasibility study by recommending consolidation of the two school systems in Pitt County.
Between the four options the study offered as ways of improving the quality of education in Pitt County schools (PCS) and Greenvilles city schools (GCS), RTI picked merger, it said, because, merger would be superior to the other three (options) in terms of its impact on the identified issues and concerns and in terms of its potential for long-range planning for public edcua-tion.
RTI project director John Pyecha said the study, an intense composite of data on the two school systems, showed that both systems ,^are basically very sound ones. Mutually and individ-
lually, how'ever, he noted, PCS and GCS face obstacles, present and future, that could hurt the quality of' edcuation in Pitt County.
The study identified the five major problems of the two systems as:.
' Declining enrollment (primarily GCS).
Racial balance (primarily GCS).
Condition oF existing educational facilities (primarily PCS).
Under and over-crowding of facilities (both GCS and PCS).
Inconsistent school-grade
level organization (primarily PCS).
A comparison of enrollment statistics of GCS and PCS for the past five years (1977-78-present) shows that both systems lost students but that GCSs enrollment decline was more dramatic, according to the study.
According to RTFs data, in 1977-78 GCS had 5,264 students enrolled. By 1982-83, the number dropped to 4,884. a decrease of 380 pupils or 7 percent of the student population, RTI proje*ited that by 1986-87, GCS enrollment will, 'dip to 4,752, a loss of another 132 students.
RTFs statistics on PCS indicated an enrollment of 11,453 students in 1977-78 and a current _ enrollment of 11,268. a loss of 185 pupils or .06 percent of the total number of students. Projections tor 1986-87 indicate PCS's student population will increase to 11,709,
Loss of students means loss of revenue for a school system s'ince state and local fund-allocation lormulas are based on average daily attendance. These cutbacks are hard tor a school system to absorb, RTI said, since operating expenses do not decrease in direct proportion
\
Consolidation WouMTIave Its Problems
ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer
The Research Triangle Institute Merger Feasibility Study observed that consolidation of Pitt County and Greenville schools would offer the optimum solution" to each of the two school systems problems.
Along with the positive points of a consolidated school system, which the study listed as alleviating declining enrollment in the schools, improving racial balance, simplifying planning for adaquate educational facilities, easing under- and overcrowding in present school facilities and creating sound grade level organization, there will be negative 'aspects.
These the study identified as governance, system loyalties and resolving differences.
If RTFs suggestions concerning merger are
followed, one school board rather than two would be responsible for setting policy and overseeing the operation of all schools in Pitt County.
RTI concluded that this move would, to some extent, increase the distance" between the voters and their elected representatives, thus reducing'local control."'
The study also stated that a consolidated board enjoys both the advantages of a county-wide perspective and the burden of solving county-wide problems.
If merger becomes a reality in Pitt County, the study suggested that a board of edcuation for the consolidated system be initially composed of 12 members selected from the present boards - all eight of the county board members and four city board members
selected from a single electorial district composed of Greenville precincts 1-10.
The new board would elect the officers and the superintendent. In 1990 the board would be restructured and reduced to nine members based on the new census data, said RTI,
The second anticipated problem, system loyalties, occurs according to the study when personnel employed in both districts are reassigned to a single school unit and must relinquish loyalties to either system.
Giving up past loyalties is easier said than done," noted the study, based on experience in other merged districts. RTI suggested that time would, however, ease if not dissolve past alliances.
The study identified the third problem with merger as resolving differences or the leveling off" of conditions and services in the
district. Discrepancies in salaries, curriculum offerings, instructional practices, fringe benefits, working conditions, etc.. that were tolerated in two districts become unacceptable in a consolidated district, noted RTF
Decisions must be made by the new board and administration to 'level up' or 'level down,"' reads the study. According to RTI project director John Pyecha, most systems tend to level up", not down,
Pyecha said few significant differences (in the city and the county systems) were identified, leading investigators to conclude that consolidation should not result in either a significant increase or decrease in edcuation funding over the short term,''
The study concluded that in the long run. merger would save the county money.
to the percentage of students lost.
GCS also has a disproportionate number of "high cost, " or exceptional children to educate, the study noted. Over 27 percent of (iCS's students fall into this category, which includes the /landicapped and gifted and talented.
Schools in North Carolina spend an average of 1.5 times as much per year to educate exceptional students as they "do an,lingular students, cited the study. An average of $1,744 is spent on each regular pupil, compared to $2,655 on exceptional children.
In contrast, only 18.4 percent of PCS's pupil's fall into this "high cost "category.
The study indicated an average racial breakdown of 50 percent white. 50 percent non-white in PCS. compared to a 44-percent white, 56-percent non,-white breakdown in GCS. The study also said a 65-percent non-white. 35-percent white 1982-83 kindergarten pupil population in the city in-
I Please turn to A-14)
is
In The Area
School To Be Discussed
Admissions representatives from the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics will be in Greenville Wednesday to talk with area community leaders, educators'parefifs and" prospective students about the school and its admission process.
The program, which will begin at 7 p.m. at Pitt Community College, will include a 20-minute presentation by an admission representative, a 10-minute information slide show, and a time for questions and answers. i
Located in Durham, NCSSM is a public residential high school for academically gifted juniors and seniors with special abilities and potentials in the fields of science and mathematics.
Social Workers To Meet
The Eastern North Carolina Regional .Association of Black Social Workers' monthly meeting will be held Friday. Interested persons may call 355-2065 or 7,58-5847 for more information.
Officers elected at the last monthly meeting are Shelly Henderson, president; Jo-Linda Sanders, vice president; Thelma Ellis, secretary; Thorl Williams, assistant secretary; Mildred Council, treasurer; Ora F. Flynn, historian, and Gwendolyn Harkley. parliamentarian.
Awards Banquet Scheduled
The Pitt County Committee for the Employment of the . Handicapped will hold its annual awards banquet Tuesday at 7 p m at the Western Sizzlin' restaurant on luth Street.
During [he meeting, area individuals and firms will be recognized tor their services rendered to the handicapped citizens of the community. The Rev. Willis Wilson will be the guest speaker
Anyone wishing to attend should call 758-4188. Ext, 20!. for information and reservations
ECU Blood Drive Scheduled
The annual Red Cross blood drive sponsored by East Carolina University'' Air Society will be held Wednesday and Thursday in .Mendenhall Student Center between noon and 6 p m
This drive's goal i> win pints, according to Capt, B.J. \'ereen, a staff officer of the ECU Air Force R< )TC
ECU Schedules Two Programs
Effective Telephone Techniques' and 'Communication Skills for Secretaries atid Administrative .AsMStant.', " two one-da\ programs for employees whose jobs inuilve public contact, will be offered in Raleigh and Greenville during November by the East Carolina I'niversitc Division of Contminng Education.
, The communication skills program is scheduled in Raleigh on Nov ! and in Greenville on Nov. 9. The telephone techniques pniaram will be held in Raleiah on Nov 2 and in Greenvillt'onXio, 10 ...
Furtin-r mfiirmation and registration forms are available run: t oinmunKation SkiiU Telepiimie Techniques, "
l.dvi.'inn n;.;',,;;;i;;umg IvJucalion. FCf, G.fcenville. \('278,i4.
pnincV'C-qq,;'
Malaysia Leads Foreign Roster
Th;r';. ' :'.r 'iremn iiutiuii' art- ropre.'or.ted among East I'arolina I niwrMt;- -mdeni t)od\ itiis tail Malaysia, with L student,' ;it ECU. ha> the hiahest number 0! toreign students, Other nations represented b\ at least five ^tuaen!^ are the 'Cr.;0ii Kmadoir,, N'lr'vwi';.. .Iordan, Kuwait Iran jm;T..;v,.;n According to a li>:mu rele^i.'c; : j '!i'' i-.U! Ueai-irar'' iiftiu' a lota: oi ifo I'ur'eni s;udc;;:> ei,;im'a jifnmmf-nt addro'-m ior-".Lr. n.i:i)i>
Coffee Hour Scheduled
.1 (.oee iour ait. rfue,' oouk.' wa i < hold rcm ,1 45 am o noon ,n he iilirarj a .larvi.' .'vlenioriai Initeu Methoqi.'t Church Dr Carol''leitch, oi the Ea."t' Carolina Universit_\ departmeni ol ubraiw >eience ami prufes.'orot children','literature, will be premnt
AHHHH!
Dr. Kenneth Perkins peeks inside the mouth of a Chicod School student at Chicod School during dental screenings that will be held for elemetary students in Pitt County and Greenville schools through November. The screenings are being conducted b\ the Pitt County Health Departemnt and local dentists. Children with obviously impairing dental defects will be referred for treatment. (Barry Gaskins Photo)
Pork Tape Worm Reported
Two cases of trichan'osis - pork tape worm - have recently been reported in Pitt County, according to Dr, Robert Ehinger. the county health director.
The pork tape worm, a parasite most often present in the larva stage in pork and pork products, becomes active when eaten by humans. The larva develop into round worms in the human intestine and produce additional larva which then evade the lymphatic system and bloodstream,
".Most of us were brought up to observe the old saying. 'No pink in the pork.' and we allow plenty of time for thorough cooking of all pork products," Ehinger said.
"However, problems do arise on occasion, when pork is barbecued on the grill, for example. If too few coals are used, or the coals die out or cool down before the cooking process is complete, the result may be underdone meat and subsequent infection with the pork tape worm." he said.
Ehinger stressed that freezing does not kill the tiachanosis larva; only thorough cooking will do the job.
Pitt To Join DUI Project
Pitt County is one of 35 counties in North Carolina selected to participate in a project involving young people in the prevention of driving drunk.
The state Department of Administration said the project will help organize a variety of community groups and activities, including Students Against Driving Drunk, Drive-A-Teen and others, to educate young people about the dangers of driving drunk.
The counties were selected for having the states highest number of young people up to 25 years old arrested on the charge of driving under the influence of alcohol in 1982.
Pitt County had a total of 630 DUI arrests in 1982 for people under the age of 25. This total compares to Wake County's total of 3,306, which was the highest number of arrests'm North Carolina in 1982.
Missionary Day Scheduled
,Mis>ionary Day will be held at Emanuel Temple Pentecostal Holiness Church of the Lord Jesus Christ No 1 today at 11 a m. The church asks all missionaries to wear u hite. The church is located at Hassell Crossroads.
School Report To Be Discussed
The Greenville City Council and the Greenville City School Board will conduct a joint workshop meeting at 5:30 p.m. .Monday in the Board Room of the Greenville Utilities Commisson. A proposed merger of the Greenville and Pitt Countv school svstems will be discussed.
PHKsLN r T APES... Greenville Boy Scout Jeff Moore and his assistant .Mout leader Walter L. Shepherd present cassettes of music, stones and jokes to Pitt Count\ Memorial Hospital recreation therapist Nancy Nobles. Moore, to fulfill his service project requirement for his Eagle badge, recorded 2(i cassettes
to be used by the children in pediatrics at the hospital. He is a member of Troop 30 of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist (hurch and is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Moore of Greenville.
Quilters Guild Elects Officers
Sylvia Wheless has been elected president of The Quilters Guild of Greenville. She succeeds outgoing president Pat Reep. Other new officers are Bertie Hengeveld, vice president; Beth Howard, secretary, and Mozelle Exum, treasurer.
^lans are being made for a quilt show and seminar to be ^eld in November in conjunction with the Tobacco Festival. Grace Karnes, committee chairman of the quilt seminar, isks that anyone wishing to attend call her at 756-6874 for more details.
A quilt, designed by Lynn Strausbauch, was completed by the guild and will be on display at the Scotch Bonnet and Calico Square. Chances will be sold until the end of November, when a drawing for the quilt will take place.
Student Places In Contest
Donna Beatty, a student at D.H. Conley High School, won second place in a paper bridge construction contest at North Carolina State University's recent open house.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Beatty, 100 Terry St., Greenville. She received a trophy and a certificate and a $25 check.
Miss Beattys entry weighed in at 12.21 pounds and carried 1,184 pounds of force with a weight-load ratio of 96.97.
ESC Announces New Program
Jim Hannan, manager of the Greenville Employment Security Commission office, has announced that a new non-chargi-ng provision has been added to the Employment Security Law by the North Carolina General Assembly.
Under this provision, if an employer hires an individual referred through the local Job Service office for a probationary period of 60 days or less,'and the employee is discharged for inability to perform the work he/she was hired for, then the employer may now request non-charging of the unemployment insurance account.
The employer must initiate the non-charging request by contacting the local Job Service office within 15 days of the individuals discharge, and the local office will assist in the completion of the necessary paperwork. Employers may contact'Hannan at 756-2686 for more information,
Meditation Seminar Planned
A meditation .seminar titled Taming the Mind will be conducted at Mendenhall Student Center on the ECU campus beginning Wednesday at 7 p.m.
The class will he held each Wednesday for seven weeks. The cost is $15 per participant. For more information, call Linda Barkand at Mendenhall Student Center, 757-6611.
Special Week Scheduled
Monday through Saturday has been designated as the 39th annual observance of National Employ the Handicapped Week, Public officials, leaders in business and industry, and private citizens are taking part in various ways to mark the
occasion.
The Greenville office of Vocational Rehabilitation and the Employment Security Commission are coordinating this year s observance. Local offices of either agency may be contacted for further details.
Group Wins National Award
The National ASPO/Lamze organization has presented its "greatest chapter progress award to its Greenville affiliate. The award was accepted last week at a national meeting by local members Janice Daughtery, Margy Maira, Tommie Pratt and Laura Kesler.
ASPO/Lamaze is a national organizaon concerned with the well-being of the family througl^ preparation for childbirth and education and support for the family. For more information regarding the local chapter call Margy Maira, 7.56-4524, or Tommie Pratt, 756-3047.
Dawkins Win Td Be Dedicated
The Eastern Carolina Vocational Center will hold dedication ceremonies for its $5.2 million Howard Dawkins Wing -a dormitory and recreation facility - on Friday at 3 p.m.
This wing will make the center one of the largest cornprehensive rehabilitation facilities in the country. Guests and speakers scheduled to be on hand are Gov, Jim Hunt Jr U.S. Rep Walter B. Jones, state Sen. Vernon White, state Reps. John Gillam and Walter Jones Jr., and Claude Meyer director of the North Carolina Division of Vocational Rehabilitation Services.
Guest Minister Speaks Today
The Rev. James Tyson of Ebenezer Baptist Church. Rocky Mount, will be the guest speaker for 11 a.m. services at Reids Chapel Missionary Baptist Church in Fountain Sunday. The Gospel Chorus and the Junior Choir will provide music
Next Saturday at 6 p.m. a Gospel Sing will be held at Reid?' Chapel. Groups appearing will be the Haddock Family of Black Jack, the Gospel Starlites of Farmville, and a gospel group from Tarboro.
City School Board To Meet
The Greenville Board of Education will have an information meeting Monday at Eastern Elementary School to a hear a special report by Carloyn Ferebee on a resource volunteer directory.
Also at the meeting, special recognition will be given to retirees and Superintendent Delma Blinson will report on a comprehensive plan timeline and the maximum class size.
Dentist Receives Recognition
Dr. Herbert Wesley Gooding of Ayden has received the Academy of General Dentistry Fellowship Award in acknowledgement of the completion of over 500 hours of continuing dental education.
Gooding, a 1945 graduate of the Medical College of Virginia, has maintained a general practice in Ayden for the past 37 years. He is a member of the Eastern Prosthetic Study Club, East Central Dental Society and the Ayden Rotary Club.
DialAPrayer752-1362
Harvest Revival
Reaching The Lost At Anv Cost Through PentecostPhillippi Missionary Baptist Church
Simpson, N.C.
Rev. J.C. Purvis, Pastor
J
H Brown Jr October 3-7 7:30 Each Nitc
Evangelist
Dr. Brown is a graduate of A&T (Jniversity and Greensboro Bible Cottege. He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree and a Graduate of Theology Degree. He received an Honorary Doctor of Divinity Degree from South Eastern University, Greenville. S.C.
Come hear good singing and preaching each nite.REVIVALDR. HAROLD DEITCH
Evangelist
Song Evangelist JOE RAY
OCTOBER 2-5
"7:30 p.m. nightly
SUNDAY EVENING SERVICES AT 7:00 P.M.
Mt. Pleasant Christian Church
V2 mi. off Belvoir Hwy. Greenville, NC John Simpson, Host Minister NURSERY PROVIDED
Dr. Harold Oeilch
Do you have a medical condition that has made it difficult or impossible for you to buy the Life Insurance you need? Immediate protection is available now through M.I.I.S. You choose that amount desired from $500 to $4000. YOU CANNOT BE TURNED DOWN!
Mail today for FREE MEMORIAL GUIDE and additional information to:
M.I.I.S.
(Medigap Insurance Information Service)
Post Office Box 4062 Greenville, NC 27834
Name.
-Age.
Address. Phone #_
For insurance you can depend on from a company you can trust, contact M.I.I.S. today!
The Great Greenville Sleep SaleSAVE ON ALL WATERBEDS IN STOCK
-The Frontier-
Rpq S299
Sheet Sets
The Caprice-
Reg. $399
'269
Mattress Pad
Water Conditioner
Th San Carlos-
Reg. $519
*349
Drawers Optional
-The .Laurelwood
Reg. $599
The Heri^ge-
Reg. $599
Factory Mattress & Water bed Outlet
Drawers Optional
Padded Rails.......... $24.95
Open Mon.-Thurs. 10-7 Frl. & Sat. 10-6
730 Greenville Blvd. (Next To Pitt Plaia)
355-2626
Delivery
Low Monthly Payments Layaway
Waveless Mattress..........$49.95
Drawer Pedestal. ......$79.95
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
^ I ^ ----f) I f I ureenviiie. N C Sunday. October ? 19:^ ^-3
Obituary Column Bank Leader Freddy Martin Dies Of Stroke
t VFWPflRT RfAru Pniif . . 1 , . . . . . '
Briley
WILSON Mrs. Geraldine Nelson Brilev. 63. died at her home. 1815 Windsor St. Funeral services will be conducted Mondav at 11 a.m. in Wilkerson Funeral Chapel. Greenville, by the Rev. Paul Allen. Burial will follow in National Cemeterv m Raleigh at 2:30 p.m.
Mrs. Briley was born and reared in the Stokes community. She had been a resident of Wilson for the past 18 years. She was a member of Westview Christian Church.
Surviving are her husband. W. Calvin Briley; three brothers. James .Nelson of Ayden. Ed .Nelson of Huntington. Tenn.. and Rav Nelson of Stokes, and a sister. Mrs. Helen .Morton of Rocky Mount.
The family will receive frinds at the funeral home Sunday from 7-9 p.m. and at other times will at the home in Wilson.
Ebiiui
Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Ebron. who died Thursdav in Washington. D.C.. will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m at Saint Mary's .Missionarv Baptist (hurch by the Rev. F.R Peterson. Burial will follow in ('lark Cemeterv : Surviving are' iour sons. Mames Lee Ebron Sr.. Norris Ebron.Sr..('harles Ebron Sr. and Billie Thomas Ebron Sr.. all of Greenville: three .daughters. Mrs .Marv Eborn Harp of Greenville. .Mrs.
Rosa Mae Ebron Freeman of Maryland Park. Md.. and Mrs. Alice Louise Ebron Jones of Washington. D.C.; one sister. Mrs. Naomi Mooring of Bridgeport. Conn.; 51 grandchildren. 72 great-grandchildren and It great-great-grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Sunday from 8-9 p.m. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary and at other times will be at the home of Mrs. .Mary Ebron Harp, 204 Greenfield Blvd.
Di.von
AUSTIN. Te.xas .Mitchell Dixon. 15. formerlv of Greenville.. .N.C.. died'Friday. He was the grandson of Mrs. Ethel Lee Dixon of Greenville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Mitchell's Funeral Home in WinterVi11 e. N.C.
widow of the late Charlie Parker.
Survivors include three daughters, Ms. Bessie Parker and Mrs. Carlos Joyner, both of the home, and Mrs. Minnie Perkins of Danbury, Conn.: two sons, Don Parker of Kenbridge, Va., and Charlie Parker Jr. of Danbury, Conn.; one foster son, Verlen .Nobles of Connecticutt; one adopted sister. Mrs, Mamie Barnes of Falkland; five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Family visitation will be held Monday from 7-8 p.m. at Flanagan's Funeral Chapel and at other times the family will be at the home. 1400 Ward St.
Martin, who led his band on tenor sax, was dubbed "Mr, Silvertone" by Johnny Hodges, Duke Ellington''s alto saxophonist.
One of his biggest instrumental hits was the 1941 Teeordifig 0{-i^Tonigbl^We-
.NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Big band leader Freddy Martin, whose "sweet society music" once set the pace at tlye nation's most popular ballrooms, died after suffering a stroke, a family .friend said Saturda^;^
_JkwasJ76,--
Dinah Shore. Merv Griffin,
Buddy Clark, Russ .Morgan and Helen Ward were among the vocalists who recorded with Martin's band.
Martin had been playing dates until he suffered" his first stroke on June 8. He died Friday night at Hoag Memorial Hospital from complications after a second seizure on Sept. 29, said Bryce Patterson.
Tabulators...
Love, derived from Tchaikovsky's Concerto for Piano in B Flat.
Martin's bands recorded hundreds of songs for the Columbia, RCA Victor, Brunswick and Decca labels, ^e sometimes used pseudonyms.
"That was common in that time, because of the type of contracts artists signed," said Jim Seeley, who hosts a radio show on'KPFK in Los
Angeles featuring swing, big band and jazz music recorded before 1950.
.Martin's band played at the most popular spots of the era; the Waldorf-Astoria and Roosevelt hotels in New AiorlcutheJEdgew.aierJBeaclL
Hotel and Palmer House in Chicago and the Coconut Grove in Los Angeles.
It was at the Grove that' he got the inspiration for 'Tonight We Love," said his son, Fred.
"We were living at the Ambassador Hotel and he was getting ready for his show when he heard the Tchaikovsky song on the radio. He was listening to Toscanini and the NBC
Orchestra." .Martin said .Saturday.
"He said, 'You know, there's some good notes in there. '
Martin said his father discussed the song with his piamsL_Ja.ckJina^and ar-
ranger Ray Austin. Their version was broadcast and the response led .'Wartin to record the song for RCA.
In 1942, Miss Shore recorded ' I Can't Give You Anything But'Love " wtfh the band. Grittin had a hit with the 1948 song ' I've Got A Lovely Bunch Of Coconuts
Music historian Brian Rust called the Martin orchestra "a sweet society banrf Very few ol his'recordintt-
are Of interest to jazz ' purists I. but there are .some exceptions"
"He was somewhere' m league with .Artie Shaw ' .Seeley said Martin was born Dec 9, 1906. in Cincinnati and roKPfj
I Continued from A-II
Obituary
Stroud
Mrs. Maggie Felton Stroud, 89, died Friday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. in Memorial Baptist Church by the Rev. E.T. Vinson, her pastor, and the Rev. T^ercy Upchurch. her former pastor. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery,
Mrs. Stroud, a native of Beaufort, was the daughter of the late Richard and Victoria Burselle Felton. She was married to Lawrence A. .Stroud on April 22, 1911, and moved to Greeenville in 1913. Mr. Stroud died in 1960, She was a member of Memorial Baptist Church for 70 years and had taught Sunday School and a Bible study group for manv years.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. .Margaret S, Brown of Greenville and .Mrs. Edna S, Spell of Emerald Isle; a sister, Mrs. Alethia Gordon of Morehead City; five grandchildren. Mrs. Carolyn Robertson of Martinsville. Va.. Bryan Spell of Vienna. Va.. Lawrence Spell of Cape Carteret, Kenneth Brown Jr. of Greenville and Miss. Vicki Brown of Greenville, and seven great-grandchildren.
' The family will receive friends Sunday from 7-9 p.m. and at other times will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Brown, 1201 East 10th St.
Paid Announcement
Jackson Mr, Wilbert Jackson of the Hanrahan community on Route 1, Grifton. died Friday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, He was the husband of Airs. Kal|ierine Harper Jackson of the home. Funeral arangements are incomplete at Norcott P'uneral Home in .Ayden.
Edwards
Mr, Ovie 'Boots) Edwards of the Calico community. Route 2. Ayden. died Saturday. he was the husband of .Mrs. Irene Smith Edwards. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott Funeral Home in Ayden,
farker
.Mrs. Olivia Nobles Parker. 83. died at her home Thursday Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 4 p.m. at 'Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church by Bishop Stephen Jones. Burial will follow in Brown Hill Cemetrey.
Mrs. Parker was a member of .Mount Calvary Church and a charter member ol Loving Union Tent No. 464. She was the
White
SIMPSON - Mr. Willie James White, 59. of Hardee Street died Saturday morning in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Flanagan's Funeral Chapel by the Rev. David Hammond. Burial will be in. White Oak Cemetery.
Mr. White was a'native of Pitt County and spent most of his life in the Ham's Crossroad, community of Pitt County. He was a menrbifr of Simpson Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.
Survivng are his wife. .Mrs. Lena Hansley White of the home: two daughters, .Mrs. Mildred White of Forestville, .Md., and Mrs. Trumiller White of Brooklyn, N Y.: six sons. Willie Andrew White. Roger White, Lonnie White, Gregory 'White and Elbert White, all of Greenville, and Lewis White of Grimesland; his mother, .Mrs. Pearlie White of Simpson; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel Stanlev of .Washington. D.C.. and .Airs. .Mary .Mike ol Brooklyn; one brother, Carlton W'hite of Brooklyn, and 12 grandchildren.
Family visitation will be held .Monday from 8-9 p.m. at Flanagan's Funeral Chapel in Greenville.
best, "Everettsaid.
The Airmac vote tabulator is a blue box that stands about three feet high into which stiff paper ballots are inserted. The machine scans the handmarked ballots and keeps track of votes on a counter inside the double-locked box. One key is kept at the board of elections office and the other is kept by the precinct supervisor to ensure that no tampering occurs.
"The beauty about this type of system is that if a machine should break; or if something goes wrong, the cards which are basically the saine as the old ballots except thicker, can be counted f ' hand"
Everett said.
"The lever-type voting machines can cause much the same problems as computer cards ... if something goes wrong, you're out of luck. When the lever voting machines are used paper ballots still have to be bought and marked," he said.
Pitt County currently has 24 precincts and approximately "35,000 registered voters. According to Everett, that would mean Pitt County would have to purchase 26 to 27 machines to provide for all. the voters. The Airmac tabulators cost approximately $4.000 new, but Everett said the company will also sell
demonstrators for about S3.4oo.
Before the machines can be purchased however, the Pitt Countv Board of Commissioners must review the retjuest and research the budget to see where money would come from to pav for the tabulators.
Commission Chairman Charles Gaskins said the board has alreadv sent a letter to state Elections Director Alex Brock asking for an opinion on the machine. As soon as the-replv comes the commissioners will meet with the Bfiard of Elections to discu.ss the possibility of purchasing some kind of new voting system for Pitt County. Gaskins said. '
as an orphan in Columbus He learned to plav tenor sax and drums m high school and was a sideman lor several bands before a.s.semblmg hi-own in 1932
He IS survived by his wile. Lillian, his son and two granddaughters, '
A funeral was scheduled for Tuesday
, AI.UMM MEFTINt.
The Pitt County chapter of the North Carolina A&T University Alumni .Association will meet Wednesdav at tiie home ol Richard B, 'Johnson m Bethel. The meeting will 'tart at 7:30 pin
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N&O Executive Ivan Mims Dies
ICALEIGH. N.C. i APi - Ivan C. .Mims, production director of The News and Observer Publishing Co. since 1973. died at his home .Saturday. He was'6d.
.Mims had undergone oper-hearl surgery two months ago to repair a heart valve. He had returned to work and was there through Friday.
He began his career in the publishing business when he was 16. working as a Linotype machine operator at the Greenville Daily Reflector Mims went from there to two other newspapers, but relumed to Greenville in 1942. He spent three years there before moving to Raleigh and The News and Observer.
Mims' brother. Howard .Mims of Grenville, is the former mechanical superintendent of The Daily Reflector.
"We will miss him very much," said Frank A Daniels, board chairman of the company that publishes the News and Observer and The Raleigh Times. "He was a remarkable fellow. He went to work as a printer and worked his way up."
Among his accomplishments, .Mims invented a method of automatically setting type in double-column width that was purchased by a manufacturer of printing equipment.
He also developed a conveyor system that carried metal lines of type from the typesetting machines to the newspaper's composing room, where pages were prepared. The process was adopted by such papers as The Washington Post and the South Bend (Ind. I Tribune.
He is also survived by his wife, Rachel, another brother and a sister.
Funeral services are scheduled for 2 p.m. Monday at the Holly Springs United Methodist Church.
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Trill p ill Touphlov'*' parents support proup at St Paul's Fpiscopal Church T.rlii p.m Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study proup atlltiN Warren St,
7,:i() pm (ireeiiville Chural Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church K:(i(i p m - Cherr\ Oaks Home and (larden Club meets at club house I
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mous iiieetmp at Piney (irove Free Will Bap!ot Church ii (Ml pill -'Pitt Co Alcoholics Anonymous at AA BIdp . Farmvilie hwy
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There will be a regular communication of Greenville lodge No. 284 AF&.AM Monday at 7:30 p.m. Supper will be at 6:45. The communication is open to all Master Masons.
Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 7.52-4137 for more information.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C.
Sunday. October 2.1983
Sunday
Opinion
City-Cunty School Merger Must Be Done Without Delay
Th^ thorough Research Triangle Institute study on the feasibility of consolidation of Pitt and Greenville school systems has been completed with the primary recommendation being that the systems should be merged.
The study was presented last week by John Pyecha, director of the RTI study. It outlines five major needs of the two systems:
Maintaining a high level of educational effectiveness in both systems, considering reduced funding due to declining enrollment in the Greenville system.
The need for maintaining reasonable racial balance considering changing pupil population patterns.
The need to provide adequate facilities.
The need for optimum utilization of existing facilities.
The need for consistent organizational pattern based on sound education principles.
The report warned that the needs are "symptoms of an economic crisis that, if not resolved, will limit the school systems ability to meet their goal of maintaining and enhancing high-quality education for all students.
While merger was recommended, the report listed other options:
Maintain the status quo.
Maintain the two districts but change the district lines.
Change funding procedures through a supplemental tax-weighted formula system to increase the amount of revenue going to the city schools.
The report makes it clear that we have problems, particularly in the Greenville system where enrollment is declining. Doing nothing is unthinkable if we have the welfare of all our children in mind. Changing the district lines is possible but it would mean constant changing of attendance areas as the city limits are moved into the county school district. Changing the formula for distributing revenue to favor the city school district has little merit since the county commissioners now distribute revenues based on a per capita student basis.
The weight of evidence, as we read the report, is in favor of merger of the two systems. Because of the small size of the two school systems effective utilization of existing facilities is precluded, the report says.
Of course merger would not be painless and the report points out possibilities for reorganization of a new school board. Consolidation of administrative staff would need to be carried out and long time loyalties to school systems ^ould have to be dealt with.
The report presented by the Research Triangle Institute is fair and comprehensive. Based on the facts the Institute has reached a recommendation which would be difficult to refute. It appears the report has been well received by the two boards of education and the county commissioners.
We see no alternative, in the interest of sound public education for all our young people, than to carry out the recommendation and .institute the merger. It should be done with adequate preparation, but without undue delay. The boards involved should act favorably on the recommendation.
Maxwell Glen and Cdy Shearer
Skills
The Daily Reflector
INCORPORATED
209 Cotanche Street. Greenville, N.C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD. Chairman of.the Board JOHN S. WHICIjARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville. N.C.
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A Splitting Of The Ways ...For How Long?
7H
Alvin
Taylor
Sunday Morning Notes
We saw Betty Lane Evans Bissett of Spring Hope in Carolina East Mall one day last week. As many local people know, she was Miss Greenville and then Miss North Carolina of 1958.
Then, as a poised 18-year-old, . she went on to the fierce Miss America competition at Atlantic city and was named fourth runner-up.
The winner that year was Mary Ann Mobley, then a young lady from Mississippi, who went on to fame in the entertainment world. Another runner-up who gained fame was Anita Bryant.
Betty Lane, who was in Greenville visiting her father, proved to be a popular Miss North Carolina and traveled extensively throughout the state during her reign. The local pageant at that time was sponsored by the Greenville Jaycees and she was a source of pride to the local members and. indeed, the entire community.
For a number of years after winning and placing so well at
Atlantic City Betty Lane was called upon to judge various pageants around the state. She said she does a little of it these days,.but prefers to devote her time to her family. (She has two children, age 14 and 17.)
She noted that her son had a soccer match that night in Rocky Mount and she had to return to Spring Hope in a few hours to prepare a meal and then travel to Rocky Mount for the match. That means more to her at this stage than other activities.
We were standing in a book store at the time and she picked up a book on physical fitness. "I'll have to buy this and get back in shape," she quipped.
You don't need it Betty Lane. You could still be Miss North Carolina or Miss America.
Your columnist returned last w'eek from a trip to London, which needless to say, is exciting.
The first thing any traveler to
England has to do is familiarize himself with the money. Its simpler than it once was since the pound is divided into 100 pence, similar to the dollar being worth 100 pennies.
Bills are easily identified since they are different sizes and colors.
The coins, however, are enough to throw an American. There are half-pence, one-pence, five-pence, 10-pence and 50-pence pieces. That doesnt sound difficult, but the British dont believe in too much light and it is not easy to see the markings on unfamiliar coins.
There is also another complication. Shillings are still floating around and they are worth five pence.
I found the easiest way to pay with coins was to hold out a handful to vendors and allow them to take what they wanted. (Its also well to remember that a pound is worth roughly $1.50 in American money.)
Paul
O'Connor
-RALEIGH - With the new drunken driving law going into effect this weekend, .North Carolina is in the position of the tinkerer who's trying out his latest invention. He thinks he's found and solved all the potential problems, but. until he actually plugs his contraption into the wall outlet, he doesn't know whether it will work or blow a fuse.
"The Safe Roads Ad" is such an ambitious, multifaceted attack on drunken driving that it threatens to blow fuSes all through state and local government. At any of a half-dozen points, the act could, overload the system and create massive problems for
' WASHINGTON - Armed with an architecture degree from the University of Pennsylvania. Christina Harlander found work two years ago at asmall Philadelphia consulting firm,
' For Harlander. a four-year investment in a liberal arts education seemed to have paid off.
Last year, howev^er, the 24-year-old Riverton, N.J.. resident discovered that she lacked the training to make it as a modern businesswoman. Having passed up Penn's assortment of computer sciences and related courses - "I was too busy taking other things,* she explained - Harlander had neither the experience to advance as a manager norjhe academic qualifications for a top-flight business school.
Harlander fits the description of what some people call a "computer illiterate." If computer-competents are those who've either been formally schooled in programming or have ' learned it at work, computer illiterates are those who've fallen through the gaps and. without special training, could be left behind They constitute a lost generation of Americans whose inadequate quantitative skills may be one of the most unfortunate legacies of the nation's educational crisis.
According to Katherine Poliak, vice dean of Penn's College of General Studies, the typical computer illiterate probably graduated from college between 1975 and 1982, earned respectable marks as a humanitiosn]^or, but now realizes that he or - she ffi woefully*undereducated when it coil^ tp-computors.
"It was almost without consideration that students during the late 1970s went through four undergraduate years without taking math and computer courses and emerged without those skills." Poliak told our reporter Michael Ouffy. Anybody who went to college in those years thought. T'm not going to do stuff like that in mv-life,"
Indeed, even as late as 1980. computer science was regarded by many collegians as all but exclusive to IB.M-bound engineers or future NASA technicians. Until recently, computer courses were generally the domain of math departments. - a tendeocy which only fanned students' irrational fears of infinity, integrals and matrices.
Meanwhile, some students found "interfacing" with a big mainframe computer a little queer; Even if they could foresee the array of personal computer applications available today, few believed then that their life's work would involve a terminal.
A few years later, of course, that assumption seems primitive. Data processing has infiltrated businesses of all 'kinds, and computers have grown more user-friendly. Computer illiterates face a scary, premature obsolescence as the demand for technically-trained college graduates grows in an otherwise sluggish job market.
To help this strangely disadvantaged class 'roughly 2U million Americans', Poliak conceived a program last spring for "retooling" liberal arts graduates in quantitative skills. In September. students, including Christina Harlander. registered for introductory courses in calculus, statistics, economics, accounting and the "decision sciences" 'computers i. Some of Poliak's "Post-Baccalaureate Pre-Business" students are eyeing an MBA: others just want to make themselves more valuable to their current employers.
Consider student Paul Rader, a 198:5 graduate of Notre Dame. An English literature major with a weakness for Shakespeare. Rader was able to bypass Notre Dame's science requirements and, he says, received only gentleman's grades in economics. Rader. 2:5. now works at his brother's shoe store and kicks himself for ignoring the computer mania that swept South Bend in late 1981. "It was getting crazy'" he recalls. "Everyone realized that the computer was going to affect their lives and wanted to get some experience 'with' it,"
Perhaps not surprisingly, Poliak contends that her program will self-destruct by 199:5. As high school and undergraduate computer courses overflow with students 'and, no doubt, graduates in other cities return to school to pursue computer skills', computer illiteracy will diminish. By Graduation Day 1993, oomputers w ill have become as rudimentary to liberal arts as James Joyce. As Poliak puts it' "Kids coming 'to college) now know better."
It's too early to gauge the extent to which the "lost generation" will see the need for retraining. But if the current job market provides any indication of future demand, this group's members may have to recognize that need soon or remember college as literally the best years of their lives.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises. Inc,
In?
DWI Law Is A Tinkerer's Delight
the people charged with enforcing it.
Gov. Jim Hunt, editor of this anthology of ideas from various boards and commissions. says the law will work because it will reduce the. number of people who dhve drunk. Thus, the number of people who must be dealt with will be manageable. Others have differed. But, we'll know soon now.
The first fuse could blow shortly after the first drunks been arrested. The magistrate is given authority to automatically revoke his license for 10 days - a power some lawyers think is unconstitutional. Expect a lawsuit very soon challenging this section of the law
and maybe throwing automatic revocation into a state of limbo.
The second fuse is the court calendar. There'll be no plea-bargaining under the new law so defendants won't have any incentive to plead guilty. That means more trials. In the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety, one source estimates there may be as many as 15,000 extra trials in North Carolina next year. Also, the law calls -for a rather extensive presentencing hearing that will also take court time. All of this could overload court dockets.
The third fuse is called jail overcrowding. The new law has mandatory jail sentences. For example: If
you've been convicted of drunken driving at any time in the past seven years and you get nabbed, get your toothbrush ready. You're going to jail for a minimum of seven days. During the debate on the bill, sheriffs and county commissioners asked: "Where are we going to put all thse folks?
Fuse No. 4 is the Division of Victim and Justice Services which was just formed this summer to direct the community service punishment programs which the Safe Roads Act mandates. The division got a late start in training its people for this job and now faces what could be 40,000 people a year who need a civilian brand of Kitchen Patrol. Can they
handle that many people' Can they find meaningful punishment for them' Can they find agencies which will put the drunken drivers to work'?
The fifth fuse is the North Carolina high school senior. With the drinking age for beer and wine raised to 19, he can't legally drink. Will he go to the soda shop, instead, as Hunt would have us believet Or, will he get some beer surreptitiously, drink it in his car, and actually make the drunken driving problem worse, as others suggest?
Then there's the main fuse. Will the law work'? Will it cut the number oif drunken drivers - or, simply punish drunken drivers more
severely'? Last year, when public concern with drunken driving ignited, highway deaths dropped by 13 percent. This year theyve dropped another 3 percent. State officials sense that the public is drinking less. tThe ABC reports that its selling less alcohol.) Drunken driving arrests are down 9 percent in 1983. And they see evidence that more people are finding alternative ways of traveling after theyve been drinking.
It is on this last point that the tinkerer's contraption will ultimately be judged. You can replace a few fuses, expensive as they may be. You can't replace the victims of drunken drivers.
James J. Kilpatrick
Court Again Faces Religious Issue
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Supreme Court begins its new term on .Monday, and 24 hours later the court will be back in a brier patch. Set for argument Tuesday morning is the case of Lynch vs. Donnelly. Once again the justices will be wrestling with a question that last term left observers sorely puzzled: What in the name of God is the court doing to the Constitution*?
The pending case comes from Pawtucket. R.I., where the municipal government lor the past 40 years has lent its auspices to a Christmas display in a downtown park. To judge from the record, the display is impressive. It covers 40,000 square feet of exhibits and includes a remarkable array of elves, gnomes, reindeer. Wall Disney figures, a live Santa Claus, a wishing well, ahd a loudspeaker from which issue the traditional Christmas carols.
The display also includes - and this is the nub of the issue -a creche complete, with Mary. Joseph, the Christ child, the Magi, attendant angels and assorted animals. The creche takes up 140 square feet.
In December 1981. four members of the American Civil Liberties Union were shocked and frightened by this offensive scene. They feared the city of Pawtucket was seeking to impose an establishment of religion upon them in violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution. They sued for an injunction to halt the horrid practice, and last November the 1st U.S. Circuit, by a divided vote, agreed that the city-sponsored display was unconstitutional.
The case has attracted quite a stack of supporting and opposing briefs. The Justice Department and the conservative Legal Foundation of America are siding with Pawtucket; they denv that in the context of the city's totpl Christmas dispav the creche promotes the Christian religion. B'nai Brith. the American Jewish Congress and the National Council of the Churches of Christ take the opposite position, Thev contend that Pawtucket's practice violates all three parts of the Supreme Court's test in such matters. .
Until this past term of court, most observers profblv would have agreed with the city's challengers. These are the three parts of the test: A governmental practice, if it would survive constitutional challenge, must have a secular legislative purpose; it must not foster an excessive governmental entanglement with religion: and it must not have as its principal effect either to advance or to inhibit religion.
It would take an ingenious constitutional lawyer to argue that a city-sponsored creche has a secular legislative purpose. There was some evidence, moreover, that the Pawtucket ' creche had indeed aroused some of the dissension one equates with "entanglement."
But the Supreme'Court may not be quite so wedded to the three-part test as it used to be. On June 29 the court approved Minnesotas tuition tax credit act, and on July 3 the court approved Nebraska's em|iloyment of a chaplain for its legislature. In the Minnesota case it was shown that 95 percent
of the children benefiting from private school tuition credits were attending sectarian schools. In the Nebraska case, the court found that 2(K) years of tradition counted for more than the three-part^ test. Legislative chaplains present "no real threat to the Establishment Clause. The practice of opening legislative sessions with prayer "has become part of the fabric of our society . "
Which brings us to Pawtucket and to next Tuesday's oral argument. The question is whether the people, through their , local government, can participate in any Christmas observance that touches upon the religious meaning of Christmas. In a similar case in Denver, a U.S. District Court found no constitutional violation. Is the three-part test still the rule*? Or have such factors as custom and tradition begun to plav a new role' , ^
Back in 1971. when the court laid down its three-part test. Chief Justice Burger described the Establishment Clause as opaque, and conceded that "we can only dimlv perceive the lines of demarcation in this extraordinarily sensitive area of constitutional law " Justice Rehnquist, speaking for the court in the Minnesota tuition case last June, agreed that it,is easy-enough to quote the clause_but not at all easy'to applv it.
Well. God save the United States and this'honorabie court! That is how the term begins, with a tax-paid plea for divine guidance. In this area the nine justices, bless them, need all the help they can get.
WPP"
Public Forum
To The Editor:
nursing
You are correct on aneast one count sir, there does exist a fallout" over^ertain issues currently faced by the health care industry .wit your misstatements regarding registered nurses and official personnel decision.^ only exacerbate such "fallout' and ill will throughout the comraunitjv In fnv opinion this constitutes irresponsible joumlsn. KavJanosko.RN
To the editor ;
A crisis has occured! A crisis I perceive not only for the nursing staff of Pitt County Memorial Hospital, but also for the residents of Pitt County and the many other counties served by PCMH as a regional referral center. The vice president of a major division - nursing - has been suspended without cause. Therefore, I have many fears as a professional nurse, a citizen and a taxpayer of Pitt County, Through more than six years of affiliation with PCMH in various capacities. I have seen the level of patient care grow to great heights through decentralization and participative nursing management. I feai* that Mrs. Troughts suspension will only lead to nursing management that is both centralized and nonparticipative. I also fear that nursing at PCMH may be directed by a non-nursing person. If this transpires, nurses will not lead nursing, and the professional goals of excellence in patient care will suffer.
1 feel we need the continued leadership of Mrs. Trough! and professional nurses like her to continue to grow toward further excellence in patient care for ourselves as nurses and our loved ones.
Sharon Isenhour Sarvey. K.\, BSN Greenville
To the editor:
As a member ot the nursing profession I feel a need to correct the several inaccuracies which were included in the editorial titled "Hospital Fallout" in Wednesday's Daily Reflector.
A registered nurse (RN) is an individual who, after completing an approved course of study, has made a passing grade on the state Board of Nursing comprehensive licensure examination. The setting for this education may be a hospital-based school of nursing, where a diploma is awarded after two or three years of study. The R.\ preparation may be accomplished in two years at a community or junior college, where the graduate receives an associate degree in nursing (ADN). The third method of preparation of an R\ is in a four-year college or university where a bachelor of science in nursing (BSN i is granted. All three are registered nurses.
Pitt County Community College provides an associate degree education to its potential RNs. Completion of the course of studv at East Carolina Universitv gives the would-be RN a BSN.
Many registered nurses have advanced degrees in their field - master's degrees and doctorates in nursing. These individuals are still RNs.
LPNs are licensed practical nurses. They must pass a licensing exam after completion of a one-year course of study in a hospital, technical-vocational school or community college. PCC prepares nurses for the LPN exam. They also use an innovative curriculum design which allows interested women and men who meet certain criteria to go directly into the second year of the ADN program.
With so many educational preparations available.'^t is not surprising that confusion abounds. 1 am glad to have had this opprtunity to clarify this subject to those for whom the profession exists: the consumer of nursing services.
Susan K. Jones, RN. BSN
Pinelown
To the editor:
If you didn't see it. I urge you to read the excellent letter from Bo Farley on Sept. 25, 1983, located on the second page of the sports section.
Why didnt we have a high school athletic field?,
The so-called stadium agreement with East Carolina has not been satisfactory. Rose High must bow to ECU, regardless of how it affects the high school schedule and finances. ECU does not want the high school using its field any time.
Why don't we have an auditorium in a Greenville schooU Have you ever attended a program, other than a basketball game, at the Rose High School gym Very uncomfortable bleacher seats - acoustics are poor.
The City Council has not and will not budget money for an athletic field and auditorium,
Where are our priorities'? There is talk of building a civic center in Greenville which probably will be another drain on our tax dollars.
Our civic and business leaders have always rallied to raise money for the ECU stadium and Pirate's Club, but nothing for our high school. The high school needs do not have the same incentive or appeal as the university.
We can have the athletic field and auditorium if all parents of Greenville students decide we must act now.
What do you plan to do?
William A. Wright 190 Gifford Place Greenville
Letters submitted to Public Forum should be no longer than 300 words. The editor reserves the right to edit longer letters.
Barry
Schweid
The Daily Reflector. Greenville NC Octoaer2 I98j A-5
Reagan Indicates A Shift Toward The Middle
Speaking for myself only.H^sh to comment on tbe editorial of Wednesday. Septmber 28, entitled "Hospital Fallout. The issue of what constitutes appropriate utilization and allocation of nursing personnel has become a highly emotional one in the Greenville area. Many complex factors are involved in this controversy, and inumerable inaccurate rumors have been disseminated, resulting in injured feelings for some individuals.
In your opening paragraph you refer to Pitt County Memorial Hospitals decision to curtail usage of associate degree nurses and fill their ranks with registered nurses. Sir, associate degree nurses .ARE registered nurses once thev pass board examinations.
Second, a spokesman lor your office was this morning unable to provide me with .any details on such a decision. He could not do so because no decision to this effect has been reached. This fact was confirmed by a conversation I held with Mr. Charles Fennessy. PC.MH Vice President for Human Resources.
Third, in your editorial you noted that manv area women have invested (locally) in education to becom'e LPNs. You overlooked the fact that numerous men. also, have entered
WASHINGTON (AP) - Forget the rhetoric, Ronald Wilson Reagan is swerving toward the middle.
He is trying to get an agreement with the Soviet Union to limit nuclear weapons. And he is going to China next April.
Thats not the kind of foreign policy one might have expkted from candidate Reagan. He blasted SALT 11
agreement as "fatally flawed" and he was, tar and away, Taiwans best friend among the candidates But stumping for president and working in the Oval Office are two very different things. Even the shooting down of the South Korean jetliner hasnt caused Reagan to scrap the 1979 strategic arms limitation agreement and break up the
VWt, UT IF (He PUUi OUT, UKMiM ILL ffiT DtSilftRPite INTO CWaS!"
Michael
Myers
Street-Fight Diplomacy
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Reagans decision to visit the Philippines in November will be based on. .the outcome of violent political struggles being waged in the streets of Manila.
The demonstrations against the regime of President Ferdinand Marcos have cost more than 10 lives. The crackdown by his security forces shows no sign of easing, and Reagans security dominates all other considerations in allowing the one-day visit.
Reagans possible reluctance to leave town if Congress is still in session notwithstanding, chaos in the streets of Manila or a poor security environment will be the basis of the judgment on going ahead with the visit or canceling it.
Its understood the visit could not go forward if the Marcos regime is definitely implicated in the assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino.or if it blocks an objective investigation of his murder.
The administration wants to avoid any action that would further weaken Marcos if a verdict is still out on his regimes possible role in Aquinos death. And a premature, poorly reasoned cancellation, without a definitive answer on Marcos complicity, could still amount to a judgment of culpability.
Another consideration is the vital U.S. security interests in the Philippines. Clark Air Base and the Subic Bay naval facility. These bases are strategic American assets along the sea and air lanes of Asia. No longer does the United States have such assets in Vietnam - they are ports to the Soviet navy now.
A Reagan visit to the Philippines can be judged by
Marcos's opposition as American^support to the embattled leader. If an anti-American regime ultimately comes to power in the Philippines, Clark Air Base and Subic Bay mav go with Marcos,
The United States has .seen this before. President Carter's administration supported the dictatorial shah so long that support doomed any chance of possible accommodation with the radisgl.^lslamic revolution that seized control of Iran.
Years of support for the Somoza regime in Nicaragua, despite Carters condemnation of his human rights record, helped poison relations between Washington and Managua and opened the way for a Cuban and Soviet presence on the mainland,
Washington has expressed its confidence that the Marcos government will properly investigate the death of Aquino, shot to death by a reputed criminal on his arrival at Manila Aug. 21.after three years of exile in the United States
But thats not the decisive factor in Reagan's visit.
Ff the Marcos government could not protect a popular opposition leader who placed himself in its security, some people ask how can it gurantee the safety of the pres'ident of the United States.
Thousands of Filipinos have raged through the streets of Manila, clashing with club-swinging security forces in opposition to the long, harsh rule of Ferdinand'Marcos and doubts of his innocence in Aquino's death. Marcos has warned of even harsher retaliation to control the street orotests.
An excess on both sides could close the question against a Reagan visit. "
Noel
Yancey
The Squawks Were Few
Congressman Robert L. Doughton of North Carolina's 9th District headed the powerful House Ways and .Means Committee longer than anyone in history. .As such, he had much to say about writing the nation Stax laws.
Although the veteran committee chairman had at his beck and call some of the nation's keenest economists, he never prolessed to be an expert in the science of taxation. He often said his basic philosophy in taxing was to "get the most feathers ... with the fewest squawks from the goose."
He headed the committee from 1933 through 1952, except for one two-year period when the Republicans controlled Congress, so that the "feathers" totaled scores of billions of dollars.
During his tenure. Congress made huge appropriations in the hope of getting the coupfry out of the Great Depression, Then it provided the staggering sums needed to wage World War II. After the war there were more vast expenditures for' European reconstruction and the Korean War.
Affectionately called Muley" -because "I don't like to change a decision once made " - or "Farmer Bob," Doughton approached the problems of government with an alert mind and a homespun philosophy.
"You can shear a sheep every year without hurting him but you can skinhim but once." he often asserted. One such
decision came when he resisted a proposal by Treasury .Secretary Henry A^orgenthau tor a SIO billion tax boost.
However, he recognized that taxes were necessary and did not hesitate to support those he felt were essential. He operated on the theory that tax levies should not soak the rich or grind the poor, and once he decided on a tax bill, the chances were it hit the rich and poor alike.
"Taxes on income," he said, "are about the only ones which take into consideration the taxpayers' ability to pay."
During the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the e.ssentially conservative Doughton served both as a wheel horse and a balance wheel. He helped push much of the New Deal legislation to passage and the first Social Security law bore his name.
While serving under seven presidents and nine speakers of the House, Doughton introduced more tax bills than any other person in U.S. history. Getting back closer to home, he helped establish the Blue Ridge Parkway, A G.ObO-acre park on the parkway, half way between .Asheville and Roanoke. Va.. was named Doughton Park in his honor. It is only a few miles from his home at Laurel Springs.
Both Doughton and President Roosevelt disliked a sales tax. In fact. Doughton led the fight against a sales tax
measure in 1932. When the Ways and Means Committee gave the bill a favorable repori. Doughton came out with a minority report that bore only his signature. But he rallied enough support on the House floor to kill it. However. Roosevelt later changed his mind when he sorely needed a new revenue source. He called it a "recovery tax " and gave it his ble.ssing
"I'm against it," Doughton said, "because a sales tax places the burden ot government on those least able to bear it It taxes the bread and britches ot the poor man whose income goes almost entirely lor tood and clothing and shelter."
He asked the president to give him a lew days to find other revenue sources and came up with a new set of business .taxes that more than raised the needed amount.
Doughton was 88 years old and in his 42nd year in Congress when he decided early in 19,52 not to seek re-election again. He liad entered the House .March 4. 1911, by defeating Republican incumbent Charles H. Cowles by 759 votes He was re-elected 20 times, often without opposition,
Doughton's decision to step down was dictated by concern tor his health voiced b^ his doctors who urged him to slowdown. President Truman, in commenting on the decision, praised Doughton tor "long ad distinguished service."
David
Tomlin
Nobody Hands The President A Rain Check
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Many political observers are curious about why Sen. Strom Thurmond brought President Reagan to town in mid-September for a campaign fund-raiser when Thurmond hasn't said for sure hes running, doesnt have an opponent and doesnt need the money anyway,.
.As it turns out. the timing was for the president's convenience, not the senators. And nobody hands the president of the United States a rain check.
"The president agreed to do six events in 1983 for senators befpre he would get into his own re-election campaign, and he personally mentioned Strom Thurmond as someone he wanted to do something for, says White House political adviser Lee Atwater,
"This was back in April or May," Atwater goes on. "So 1 called Strom, and of course the senator was very pleased and so we just worked out the details,
There was no real key strategy decision as to why. we chose September, hut 1 knew summer is not a particularly good time with people on vacation, so we thought it would be
good as soon as possible after summer was over," Atwater adds,
Thurmonds neighbor and fellow conservative. Jesse Helms of North Carolina, also got a presidential boost, "in Was,hington at his request
The other four favored Republicans were David Duren-berger of Minnesota. John Warner of Virginia. Roger Jebsen of Iowa and John Tower of Texas, who laterdecided not to run again after all.
All of which is not to say Reagan might not come back on his own behalf next year, assuming he does the expected and runs again.
"I would think that would be based on the presidents political situation," Atwater says.
"If it looks like South Carolina is totally in the bag. he probably wouldnt come. If its competitive, he probably would. A smart campaign does not make scheduling decisions a year in front of the campaign," he says.
Back to Thurmond, his all-but-certain re-election bid is now
sitting fat. but although the conventional wisdom is that a Democrat opponent w'ould be taking on a kamikaze mission, the party refuses to concede.
".No matter how you look at it, this is still a Demwralic state," says party Executive Director Bob Coble. - If Rollings is on the ticket and Reagan popularity is way down, there's no telling what may happen."
Even if things' don't shape up that way. Coble is confident somebody will step forward to take on the venerable incumbent, even if it takes a little behind-the-scenes cajolery from party leaders.
"Absolutely, That's right." he says. But he adds that whoever the lucky person happcms to be. heor she had better go in with eyes open.
"Any race against him would be very ditlicult," Coble says, "1 think anwne who would run knows Thurmond would have as much money as he would need, and it he needed more he could raise more "
Geneva negotiations.
"The door to an agreement is open," he informed Moscow this week in a speech to the United Nations General
.Assembly, "It ts time for the Soviet Union to walk through it."
In April, hell be raising his glass in a toast to his hosts in Peking, pledging U.S. friendship for the world's largest communist country. Setting the stage for the visit. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said his own talks with Chinese officials will mature into, and very quickly, the actual transfers of weapons systems if that's what the Chinese want."
Added Weinberger:'We are fully prepred o do that''
It might be said that Reagan is playing the China card -cementing ties with China in order to make the Soviets nervous. But it's probably having that effect on Taiwan and on his old right-wing friends who expected Reagan to slow down - or even reverse - the process Richard Nixon began with his 1972 journey.
In office, Reagafi has concluded the Chinese government cannot bl wished away. And He has recognized that the United States has to live in the same world with the-Soviet Union, and work with it to reduce the threat ot nuclear war'
Reagan has vigorously condemned Moscow tor shooting down the Korean airplane. But the punishment he meted out was mild, and he has signaled as furiously as he can that he doesn't want the arms talks to suffer.
The U.S. position in the European missile negotiations has been modified, probably not enough to break the deadlock but in a way that may elicit matching concessions If the two sides get into the habit of swapping concessions they may w ind up with an agreement at ter all
The same holds true for the parallel talks on intercontinental ballistic missiles and long-range bombers that resume next week. Negotiator Edward Rowny will be returning to Geneva with more flexible instructions
Liberal critics are inclined to be skeptical Arms control experts like Paul Warnke, the chiel negotiator in the Carter administration, think Reagan is still .seeking a one-sided agreement.
And Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A Gromyko called Reagan's stand on Euromissiles "lopsided" while Yuri Andropov, the Soviet leader, accused the president.of "unwillingness to conduct series talks on anv kind of arms control,"
But there is no denying that Reagan is keeping the talks going, and easing the U S position in the process.
Pushing for arms control and making a highly publicized visit to Peking m the midst of the 1984 primary campaign may be part of acting presidential
Reagan wouldn't be the first man in the White House to conclude the best way to run is to exhibit a masterv over foreig.n affairs.
But if and when he declares for the White House again it will be as a candidate much closer to the middle of the road than the last time.
George
Gallop
Poll
PRINCETON, N.J. - President Reagan and his leading Democratic rivals, Walter Mndale and John Glenn, generate only mild enthusiasm among the electorate at present, but a close look af the image each man dramatic ditterences To measure enthusiasm lor the candidates, a lo-pomt scale called the Stapel Scalomeler is u^ed Reagan. Mndale and (jlenn are tound to create about equal enthuMasm among the electorate, with '29 percent giving the president a highly lavorable" rating i the top two positions on the scale to 25 percent lor .Mndale and 24 percent tor Glenn On the negative side, however, Reagan receives a highly unfavorable" rating i the bottom two scale positions of 18 percent compared to only 6 percent tor Mondalf* and 3 percent for Glenn.
All persons in the survey were handed a copy ot the scale and a.sked this question:
"Y'ou will notice that the to boxes on this scale go trom the highest position of plus-5 tor 'sMmeone you have a very favorable opinion ot - all the way down to the lowest position ot mmus-i) tor someone you ha\e a \ ery unfavorable opinion ot. How far up or down the scale would y ou rate each ot the following'?"
Personal .\ppeal 01 (aiididate'
llighlv favorable Plus'5:4'
Moderatelv favorable Plus3,2,'u
.Moderately unlavorable Minus 1,2.31 Highly unfavorable i.Minus4. 5'
No opinion TOTAL Here are the ""higiilv atfiliation:
Reagan Mndale Glenn
29n
25-i,
24%
49
Hi
18
5
11)11
tavorable'
ratings b\
3 9
lou
political
lligtfy Favorable Hating''
NATIONAL Republicans Democrats . Independents
Reagan
29%
84
11
Mndale
)V'.
42
(ilenn
24%
13
35
2U
Personality Profile>
In terms ot positive personality trait>. President Reagan outscores his rivals as ""a man who says what he believes." "has a oolorful. interesting personality ." 'you know where he stands on issues." ""a religious per.son. and has a well-delined program for moving the country ahead" a builton advantage, of course; since Reagan is chief executive .
Reagan fares less well than the two leading Democratic contenders as being sympathetic to the poor." 'siding with the average citizen," and " takes moderate positions "
Of the two Demoorats. Glenn lares much better on many ot . the items but holds his widest leads over Mndale on ""likable," ""has a colorful, interesting pc'rsonality, "'would show good judgment in a crisis." "puts country 's interest first."
Mndale beats Glenn on "sympathetic to the poor." anld closely matches Glenn on "having imaginative solutions t'o problems." ""you knovvWJiere he stands." ""has a well-detined program tor progress'-'and "stdes with the average citizen.V
In the latest Gallup suQey. Glenn held a slim lead over Reagan, receiving the support ot 48 perceat.j)i-icgLsiered voters to 40 percent tor Reagan In the same survey, Mndale received 43 percent ot the vote to 44 percent tor Reagan.
Mndale and Glenn are currently the leading contenders tor ' the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination, with Mndale tbe choice ot 41 ptmcent ot Democrats to Glenn s 25 percent. Next in the rankings are Sen Alan Cranston with 7 percent, followed by Sen. Gary Hart with 4 percent and tormer Florida Gov. Reubin Askew and Sen. Ernest Hollings. each selected by 2 percent of Democrats.
Although Mndale leads among Democrats, he runs neck-and-neck with Glenn among Independent voters .Mndale wins. 32 percent. Glenn 31 percent, Cranston 4 percent. Hart 4 percent. Askew 2 percent and Hollings 2 percent
The personality measurements are based on in-person interviews with l.,534 adults. 18 and older, conducted m more than 300 scientifically selected localities across the nation during the period August 12-13.
For results based on samples ot this size, one can say with 95 percent confidence that the error attributable to sampling and other random etjects could be 3 percentage points m either direction. ;
Id 1983, Los Angeles Jimes Svndicate
H 1 "
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^ The Adopt a Pets of the Week are six 8-week-old mostly German shepherd puppies. 758-4419.
Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following:
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SALE ENDS SAT.. OCT. 8
CAROLINA EAST MALL GREENVILLE. N.C.
By FRANCEINE PERRY ECU Xews-Bureai^
tSix4-week-old kithens - mrosTdf them lipt gray with blue eyes. 355-6344.
An.8-week-old orange kitten. 758-7375. '
Two half-grown kittens - a black and white male and a calico female 752-94:18 A full-blooded female golden retriever named Gracie. About 2 years old, housebroken, well-trained, prefers fenced-in yard. 756-5288.756-4728 or 756-4253.
Found on Fairlane Road - poodle. Call and describe. 752-9922.
7-year-old blue Persian cat. 752-5249. or at work 756-8020. 1-year-old black long-haired; spayed female cat. 825-5781. Female 2-year-old Wack, gray and white small cat. comes with "starter kit" 752-2489.
1-year-old blonde cockapoo. will bite. Found: part Si^ese cat at Union Carbide, a black and white cat trapped ilnied Banks Road area. All may be seen at Greenville Animal Shelter,
Nine 6-month and under cats, ail colors. 24-50L Five 7-week part cocker spaniels, two black, three beige. 756-7521.
Lost between Bethel and Stokes - possibly heading toward Staton Mill Road - a female black cat. 825-0186.
Lost off Oakview Drive - an orange tabby male cat and a male beige cat. 756-6803.
Lost off Hooker Road - a 12-week-old Doberman puppy. 756-6643
^Male mixed shepherd named Sox. Has shots. Needs country home. Humane Society. Ayden. 746-2468.
Four 8-\veek-old kittens one female gray tabby, two female black, and one male gray tabby. 758-3227.'
Three cats - a spayed female calico, has shots; a spayed female black with shots: and a neutered male black and white. Humane Society. 756-1268,
Two 12-week-old black part-Lab puppies - one male, one female Wormed, with shots. Also, five 7-week-old part-Lab puppies had shots, wormed. Humane Society. 756-1268.
Lost two miles outside Greenville on Highway 33 - a male black and tan doberman pinscher 3-to 4-years-od. Is wearing a tan collar and answers to the name "Cobalt." 757-1936.
A 3-year-old spayed female Irish setter, housebroken. all shots, good with children and obedient Needs country home or large fenced yard. 756-U379.
Lost in Tucker Estates area - a female tortoise-shell Persian cat with yellow-brown eyes, wearing a white flea collar 7,56-9317.
To place an animal tor free adoption through this column,'* published tree of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage. 756-4867: Bobbie Parsons. 756-1268: Janet Uhlman, 756-3251: Barbara Haddock, 7,52-9922: Cathy Ketron. 746-2468 <.Aydeni; or Carol Tver. 7.52-6166
Lack of previous language experience, rather than fear or disinterest, may cause many beginning readers to tail, expecially those from low-income families, says an East Carolina University education faculty member.
"Children from poor homes often begin school with no concept of the relationship between spoken and written language and have problems associating symbols on a printed page with real words," said Dr. Beverly Bradford Swanson, assistant professor of elementary education.
Such children have rarely, if ever, had stories read to them, and most never see their elders enjoying books. But even middle-class children sometimes lack the necessary-linguistic experience, she said.
"Since the advent of television, there has been an increasing lack of literature in the home for leisure time, and fewer and fewer children see t.heir parents or brothers and sisters reading." Dr. Swijanson explained.
"Few children are being read to regularly, so the purpose for the marks' on the page and their relationship to one another is not clear."
Families seem not to value the development of good reading skills as mush as the development of oral language, she said; the parents who painstakingly help their toddlers learn to talk should continue this interest through the preschool years, making sure the youngsters' "understand the value of. written language,'
During her teaching and research career in ^Georgia, Florida and .North Carolina, Dr. Swanson has studied reading classes and tested hundreds of first-graders. She has observed that children are often "misinformed or confused" about reading and the terms used in reading instruction.
"Some children fail to recognize the difference between writing and drawing. between letters and numl^rs. she said.
"Beginners perceptions of speech segments do not usually coincide with the units of word. sound and sentence used by the teacher. Children who are contused about these terms may need extra attention before they can learn to read with success.
Dr Swanson, a first-grade .teacher for five
years, believes the ultimate benefits_
help for confused" children will result in easier teaching later on.
There is an apparent need in first-grade classrooms to give beginning readers .some assistance in acquiring the basic concepts about written language," she said.
"Children entering first grade who have not received reading-related activies in their homes must be given the opportunity to overcome their language deficits in a language-enriched classroom."
Dr. Swanson has found first graders to be "generally enthusiastic" about learning to read during the earliest stages of instruction. As the months pass, however, they "begin to experience frustration toward the task of learning toread."
We need to help these children maintain their positive views of reading. Students are eager to learn the initial stages, reading does not become a negative act until they experience repeated failure,"
To provide the kind of HflgiltrcHy enriching environment she recommends, teachers can relate the skill of reading to the outside world, particularly to areas children are interested in. said Dr. Swanson.
"Children should see printed words in a variety of reading materials, not just skill sheets and basal readers. Teachers can show children words in magazines, comic books and newspaper," she suggested. "Cereal boxes and travel brochures can be used as reading materials that communicate as well as motivate.
These items can be used to teach both beginning reading skills and enjoyment of reading. For instance, children working in pairs can looks tor words that start like bed from a cereal box instead of a mimeographed worksheet."
She also advises teachers to read to children daily, and have them read to each other, "This helps establish understanding of the true purpose for reading - communication of the written word.
"Writing activities can also reveal the importance of deriving meaning from print. These might range from writing notes to parents or pen pals to composing class announcements or short paragraphs about a subject of personal interest."
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V^e believe we are F.a-tern North Gar/dmaS largest coin buyer We are 'c'OLUME buyers and 1 think we pay higher prices
Silver Dollars Gheck uur price' *
Silver Goins iT-he larger the tiuaniitv. the more we pav) Gold Goins We need' Paying premium prices Rare Goins. Tvpe Goins N- Goin Goliectioiis
iWe are com specialists, Gheck with us')
We use the most current market price guide lines and, market demands fi-r pricing /
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1. QUALITY STEREO COMPONENTS
Bose, Sony. Pioneer, McIntosh. Marantz, Teac. Panasonic-and others'''^^'-'-^
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The Most Unique Shop In Eastern North Carolina 400 S. Evans Street 752*3866
AJI 1^ m I _ IhePailj^ector. Gfeenv.lle. N C Sunday October 2 9&3 A
Medicare Implements New Payment System
M-'II^INGTON (AP) In a rural price schedule, said niimhprnf hnsnifak siatpH tn wn hncnitiic rtanoroiiv
INGTON (AP) - In an ^fort to contain the exploding^ cost of medical care, the federal government put into effect Saturday a new system s.etting in advance what Medicare will pay a hospital to treat various ailments.
With the change, patients may find an emphasis on shorter hospital stays and . fewer amenities during their visit, a spokesman for the hospital industry said.
; In the past! a physician .might have been more receptive to a patient saying, can't I stay another dav to rest up?" Bruce McPherson, executive director of the American Hospital Associations office of policy analysis in Chicago, said Friday in a telephone interview.
; Medical personnel will be under pressure not to order 'any more tests or procedures than are needed, he said. The bottom line will be, is it ,_^eally necessary?" ilcPhersonsaid.. , Because the new system puts a premium on' cost-cutting, hospitals are probably going to have to pick and choose more carefully what amenities, or luxuries, are offered to patient%" McPherson sdd, citing hospital aesthetics and menus as examples.
Under the prospective payment sys.em ordered by Congress at the administrations request, hospitals will know exactP what Medicare, the federal health insurance program for the elderly and disabled, vHl pay for treat-ing a pitient with a particular ailment. Price tags will )e set for treating 467 differmt ailments.
Nine re'ions have been set up, with line different price schedule: based on prevailing wag( rates.' Within each region, tiere is an urban and
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a rural price schedule, said Dr. Rqtert Rubin, a_ssistant secreta'ry for planning and evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services.
If a hospital is able to keep the cost of treating a patient below the scheduled feey it keeps the differencelf/the cost exceeds the/Qledule. the hospital absopbs the difference.
The system went into effect at about 1.700 hospitai on Saturday, the beginning of the federal fiscal year he said. That is approximately 25 percent of the total
number of hospitals slated to gn-nndeF the^w-plam-he said. Others will begin when their fiscal year starts, v The plan will mean no change in an individual patient's financial situation, Rubin said, because it doesn't allow the hospital to charge a beneficiary any more than he or she would have been charged under the old system. Under that system, a hospital's reimbursement was based on what if claimed as reasonable costs,"
McPherson said his members, who include some
6.J00 hospitals, generally 'favor ttie' new" system over the old, but have some concerns about how if will look after the phase-in has been completed.
The old system, he said, was a no-win situation. If a hospital was able to contain costs, there was no financial reward. There were upper limits on what costs could be incurred and they vxere fairly arbitrary. A hospital could contain costs and still find itself over the limit. Now the hospital knows up front what it's going to be getting and
can budget with that in
mind."......
During the first year of the new system, payments will be based 75 percent on an individual hospital's historical costs, and 25 percent on regional averages. Over three years, this ratio will be reversed.
An official of the Congressional Budget Office summed up fears by some that the system could result in less access to qualitv care by Medicare beneficiaries, One reason for this is that if hospitals faced lower payments they might re
spond by admitting' fewer M^iicare patients -
AMERICAS FAMILY DRUG STORE
particularly those most costly to treat." said .Nancv Gordon, assistant director for human resources at the CBO. in testimony before Congress when it was considering the change.
Moreover, some hospitals with a large proportion of Medicare patients might experience serious financial problems and be forced to^ postpone modernization or to close, "shesaid.
Rubin said the new system places a premium on cost-effective. high-quality care"
and has safeguards ]o j)rq^ tect against Medicare pa
tients being slighted.
- HeiiMJlospitals can lit expected io increase t.he things thev do best
^ jflilrty ^otx)
(CUSTOM FRAMING AND MATTING)
LOOP ROAD (FRONT OF C & A) FARMVILLE, NORTW CAROLINA 27828
l/Ve Appreciate Your Business
OWNERS:
SHIRLEY & MITCHELL STEPPE JANICE VANDIFORD
Phone:
753-5780
753-3297
YOU CAN SAVE UP TO 50% ON YOUR PRESCRIPTION WITH ECKERD GENERICS
Last year alone our customers saved over $8 million with Eckerd Generics.
Ask your Eckerd Pharmacist if your prescription can be filled with one of the 300 Generics now available.
AN EXAMPLE OF ECKERD GENERIC SAVINGS
By substituting Ruten for Motrin and Insudo for Actifed, one Eckerd customer saved over S115 00 on two prescriptions last year alone'
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PHOTO CHRISTMAS CARDS
Add a personal touch to your ' Christmas cards & save
Coupon Good Thru Wed Oct 5lh (9/29NC),
'o,,
Sale Prices Good Thru Wed. Oct. 5th WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. Item availability may vary at select stores.
V/S4
\
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center ^ Rivergate Shopping Center
iMltl i
coim
\H09
iNtiOl
eOUR BIGGEST AND BEST SALE OF THE YEAR
Hunt Club Sweaters
SsIg 19.99
Req. S26.
V IS casual and positively Hunt Club . These - sweaters are,perfect for layering with all your -.0,. C.^'Oose the crew or v-neck style for juniors' S.
Off
Hunt Club jeans
Sr.e '6 99. Reg. S22 It's the great American look. And nobody Hun* Club . Choose the long lean jean in cotton ooly corduroy for sizes 5 to
Join the Garland crew
In the race for style and fashion, this crew team wins the title. Garland's- casual sweaters feature ribbed neck, cuffs and bottom, and are made of DuPont Orion acrylic for easy care. Misses sizes S, M, L, XL
Reg. Sale
Solid crew. ........ $18 12.99
Striped crew............. $24 16.99
25 % off
All womens outerwear. Now thats a warm reception.
Ward off those bitter chills and save on winter coats. Choose a double breasted herringbone for pure class. Or stay toasty warm in a down-filled coat or quilted stadium jacket. Fabrics include wool/nylon and polyester/cotton. So turn up the het and save!
10 off
earn mates.
0 ana
cu' u ','cn G'oGi,este'O'Misses'
Sale 19.99
'rjcot govvn
robe
eeocoat
Reg. Sale
517 11.99 S20 13.99
518 12.00 532 21.99
Get in step with savings.
25% off
\ A little bit dressy. Or a little bit playful. We've got all^the styles you want for afternoon or evening. Work or play. Women's sizes.
I AS! JCPenney
L.aut-hose''
Reg. S22. Pillowy Whisper Steps open-toe pumps of polyurethane.
Reg. S24. Patent-look pumps of black urethane. Open for interest at the toe.
Reg. S26. Slip on this moc-toe style and slip into comfort. Of buttery soft leather.
SgIg 5>99
Infants jog suits.
Reg. S7. Here's the perfect outfit for infants on the go. Our soft and fleecy jog suits. Choose V-necks in solid colors or raglan sleeve tops in assorted screen prints. Both come with coordinating elastic waist pants. Sizes 1,1V2, 2.
Sale 5.99
Cozy, warm oversleeper.
Reg. 7.59. Sweet dreams for the little ones when theyre off to bed in this fleece oversleeper. It is just the right thing to keep infants cozy and warm all night long. Of easy-care polyester in pretty solids and prints. Sizes V2-4.
Sale 5.99
Girls striped sweater
Reg. S12. AutumTi is a festival of color and girls can join the frolic in one of these bright, bouncy striped sweaters with stylish boat neckline. In
acrylic/nylon.-Big girls'
Sale 9.99
Girls Supercords
Reg. S14. No matter what the season, it's always time for Supercords'. Girls love these extra tough poly/cotton corduroy jeans. Five-pocket styling in a wide range of colors. Big girls' sizes 7P-14.
Shop 9:30 9:30 Phone 756-1190 Pitt Plaza
I
OUR BIGGEST AND BEST SALE OF THE YEAR
i
Woodmere suit
Sale 99.99
Reg. $175. The essential 3-piece suit wears the Woodmere label, for classic tailoring at fantastic savings. In a year round polyester/wooi biend. Choose from solids and patterns, men's sizes.
Sale 65.99
Suited Separates
Reg. $96. Our Comfort Suited Separates. The look is all business in a well-tailored jacket, slack and vest. And well-suited for comfort in airy stretch polyester to make every move a breeze. Machine washable too.
Reg. Sale
Jacket.............................$70 50.00
Slack $26 15.99
Vest $21 14.00
Sale 11.99
Dress shirt
Reg. S16. A great price on a great classic: the long-sleeve button-down oxford shirt. Polyester/cotton in a choice of colors. Men's sizes.
25 % off
All Big Mens special order suits.
Big sizes, x tall and portly.
20 % Off
All boys outerwear
It's autumn: time for boys to have all the fun that comes with season. Like colorful romps through the'park or playful jumps into piles of leaves. And as the weather gets colder, dress .them up in 20% off our coats
25% off
Mens flannel
Sale 4.44
Boys flannel shirt
Reg. 5.99. Long sleeve polyester/cotton flannel shirts are just what boys warm up to when the temperature goes down. In colorful plaids that match the season's brilliance. 8-20 Little boys' sizes 4-7, Reg. 4.44 Sale 3.44.
All boys sweaters
shirt
Reg. $15. Classic Directions does the flannel shirt in plaids that go bold or basic. Of midweight cotton. Spread or button-down collar styles, mens sizes.
Sale 8.99
Supercords^
Reg. $12. Boys like our Supercord' jeans for the heavy duty fun they can have in them. And moms like Supercords cause these rugged polyester/cotton corduroy pants don't wear out when the kids play rough.
Western styling. 8-16, regular and slim.
Theyll warm up to the cool weather in these smart, sporty sweaters. Pullovers, V-necks and more in assorted styles, fabrics and colors.
Sale 16.99
Action Master
jean
Reg. $25. Get in on the action in our Action Master* jeans. Western style, or casual brushed denim, a steady stretch of comfort in stay-neat polyester/cotton. Mens waist sizes.
Mens
casuals
Sale 29.99
Reg. $36 to $40. Make tracks for savings on a terrific team of casual leathers. Try a jazzy oxford or neat demi-boot. A rugged moc-toe or a,tassel slip-ori. All in softest leather for step-by-step comfort. Men's sizes.
VISA'
u
Shop 9:30-9:30-Phon 756-1190-Pitt Plaza
Jackson Says He's Winner,
Run'Or Not,_________
CHICAGO AP - 4Ie's a hit on the hustings. His name brings chants, his words applause. The Rev. Jesse Jackson is not a presidential candidate - yet - but the Baptist minister says he already is a winner *
We ve raised the remote and the ridiculous almost to reality." he said Other blacks, notablv Shirle\ Chisholm, the former U.S. Representative, and comedian' Dick Gregory, have run tor the nations highest office But theirs were sideshow candidacies, never seriousl\ considered.
Jackson, some black leaders say. couldn't win in 1984. but he could be a factor in the crowded Democratic primary -winning convention delegates, motivatinig blacks to vote and inspiring minorities to run - and get elected - to state and national office That. Jackson says. IS a vidoryjn Itself.
"There's a new climate of national enthusiasm, of getting involved in the political process.' he said. "We pave opened up the Democratic primary process psychologically " iin Saturday. Jackson took an indefinite leave of absence trom uperation PUSH, the civil rights organization he's headed since 1971. to ponder the iong-heralded decision lie'll announce this month ^ ^
But not all black leaders agreo^oHi'Jk'kson's upbeat assessraeat ot his six-m'onth odyssey in American politics.
Some .'ay his candidacy could be divisive, pulling black voters away trom other Democratic candidates and helping the man they want to unseat - Ronald Reagan "I doubt It a single politician is not aware ot the issues attecting black people in this country." said Benjamin Hooks, head ot the National Association lor the Advancement ot Uoiored People, who opposes the concept of a black presidential candidate, "I cannot believe Democratic presidential contenders Fritz Ernest Hollmgs or Fritz Waiter Mndale don't know theissues" tithers say e\en though Jack.'on's unannounced campaign ha.' captured the national spotlight. America is not ready to embrace a black presidential candidate ^
And although lew are willing to ^tate it publicly, some black leader^ teel if there is a black candidate, it shouldn't be .lackson
"I ve heard some people >a\ it a black is going to make thb step. It ought to be >omeone. who has government experience. " said the Rev Joseph Lower\. president ot the Southern Uhristian Leadership Conterence,
' Jesse s raising the issue, and the media interest has probably sottened attitudes."*said Lower>, who heads a coalition ot black leaders developing an agenda to present to Democratic contenders
Bus, Cars Collide
Two injuries aiid approximate!) S2.27iO damage re^ulted tmm a collision Frida) involving three vehicles and a (iKFAT bus, according to Greenville Police records The collision occured at the intersection ot West Fifth Street and West I4th Acenue when a vehicle driven by Elizabeth Loui.se Hobbins ot Pineview Trailer Court collided with a GREAT bu.' driven b) Samm) Ray MilD ot Route 7, Greenville, causing vehicles driven b) Alma Elaine Gilmore ot Fleming Hall. East Carolina I'nnersit). and Walter Lee TVilson ot 4ofi West Third St. to collide Xone 0! the eight passenger> in the GREAT liu> were .'med and Hobbin> was charaed with a sale movement
tw.r
K.-imated damaae to the Hoi)bins \ehicle was S.ioo, uhile lamaue to the GREAT bus was .sg.Ti Damage to the Gilmore .(iiicie .^.as placed at Sl.Joo and damace to the Wilson vehicle wass.foo
A LOVELY TIME TO VISIT - Autumn, or fall if you prefer that designation, is a lovely time to visit the mountains of western .North Carolina. The brilliant autumn color of hardwood tree leaves makes a dazzling show against the permanent green of pines and firs. October is a prime ti'me for seeing the spectacular annual display of golds, reds and dark greens on the mouirtainsides. (.V C. Travel and Tourism Division Photo bv Clav Noien)
SALE
ALL PEWTER
0 Off
A-1 IMPORTS
THE INTERNATIONAL EMPORIUM GREENVILLE SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER /
U.S.-Backed Forces Meet Iti Quatemala
GUATEMALA CITY AP - Armed torces officials trom four U .x,-backed Central American governments met Saturday in private high-level conterence on security in the region, government and diplomatic sources said.
Also at theatternoon meeting was U.S. Gen Paul Gorman, chief fit the U.S. Southern Command in Panama, the sources said.
Gorman and representatives trom the armed torces ot Honduras. El .Salvador and Panama tlew separately into the military section ot the Guatemala City airport, according to airport sources They were taken in helicopters to'"Finca Santo Toma>." a farm 81 miles to the south which is used as a w e e. k e n d resort b) .Guatemalan leaders,, where they and Guatamalan militar) otticial.' met tor several hours Reporter> were
barred trom both the farm and. the military section ot the airport A diplomatic source said the officials will discuss.re--vival ot the Central American Detense Council. CONDECA The council, headquartered in Guatemala since Its creation in 19ti8, has been inactive since the 1989 "soccer war ' between Honduras and El .Salvador. It was created at the urging of the I'nited States as a precaution against threat> ol subversion from Cuba Nicaragua, originally a member of the group, was not invited to the gathering, sources said.
The' militar)-dominated governments oi El .Salvador. Guatemala and Honduras are, at odds with the leftist Sai.dinisia government ot .Nicaragua, closely linked to Cul>a They and the United States accuse the Sandinistas encourage leftist rebel guer-
Suit yourself for Fall in richly textured poly-rayon jacket and skirt separates by Irish Eyes. Sizes 3-15 in grape, gray, camel and burgundy. Detachable-bow blouse by Cross Tlireads in sizes S, M, L. Jacket, reg. $24, now $17.90. Skirt, reg. $18.00, now $13.90. Blouse, reg. $25, now $18.90.
Carolina East Mall Greenville Open Mon.-Sat., 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Phone; 756-8242
rilla movements in the re-gion.
The Guatemalan government maintained a cloak of secrecy around the meet-1 n g and a m 11 i t a r )' spokesman refused to confirm or deny it was taking place
Gen Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, chief of the Honduran armed forces, went to the meeting, government and diplomatic sources in Honduras said
The sources in Honduras also said Gorman was attending the meeting and would travel Sunday to Honduras.
Carlyle & Co.,
)ur Rolex Repair Specialists
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Fine Jewelers since 1922 Carolina East Mall 75o-8734
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I 500$??0
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iii49= ii.49'
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EXPIRES 8 8.'
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COD LIVER OIL
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500-J749
EXPIRES 10 8 83
Stxt SI 00
500S2
LECITHIN
sp
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500 S579
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Brewer sieasl!
SQ69 i EXPIRES 10/8/83 EXPIRES 10/8/83 i EXPIRES 10/8/83 EXPIRES 10/8/83 O COUPONIMBiiaiCOUPON COUPONIIBBJBBICOUPON
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SI 80
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REG
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CAROLINA EAST MALL GREENVILLE, N.C. .
Bike Along Scheduled
Need to blow those cobwebs out of your head* Want to make the most of the beautiful autumn weather"?
Pull your bike out of the garage, dust it off. oil it up and pedal down to the Willis Building at 2 p.m^ next Sunday for Bike Along '83.
Bike Along, a"^ ci^unifv bike tour being held in conjunction with Gov. Jim Hunt's series of state-initiated outdoor activities, will consist of a five-mile ride from the Willis Building on Reade Circle to Riverpark North and back. The event, sponsored by the Greenville Citizens Bike Wavs Committee Greenville Parks and Recreation Department and Greenville Community Schools, will also include activities at River Park .North, event chairman Shirley .Morrison said Once we gei to Riverpark North, bikers will be have several options, they can go on a
tour of the facility, take a free paddleboat ride, register their bikes for free or pick up a free T-shirt with the Bike Along logo emblazoned across the front," she said.
Following refreshments, bikers wilh straddle-up and head back to town.
The whole trip will be about five miles, but those who want to go farther can go back on another loop that will add an additional five miles to the tour, she said.
This is really a family thing, but everyone is invited to participate, Mrs. Morrison said.' We even sent letters to all Greenville school children detailing the event.
Mrs. Morrison did say, however, that children 12 years and younger must be accompanied by an adult. If children do show up without adult escorts, they will not be allowed to participate.
Soviet Space Rocket Burns On Launch Pad
ByHOWARDHKNFDKT
AssiH'iati'd Press U tiler WASHINGTON lAPi A Soviet rocket burst into flames on a remote launch pad in Asia last week, forcing the ejection of three cosmonauts who parachuted to safety, I S intelligence officials said .Saturday,
The sources, uho asked to remain anonymous, said the cosmonauts may have been injured in the accident last Tuesday.
The accident is as serious a setback as the manned Soviet space program is known to have suffered, the sources said.
TJj,e cosmonauts were
The Loser Is...
\ 0 T T I N (. H A .M . England (API - A man who shot a burglar in the thigh must pay his victim $768 in damages, a judge says.
Judge Edwin Jowitt said William (ireenwood, .74. took ^xtreme measures that were' not justified, and firing the gun was "foolhardy",
I feel sick and hurt, and can ill afford to pay," said Greenwood Thursday after being successfully sued by Anthony Sharpe, 21.
Sharpe pleaded guilty to burglary at an earlier hearing and received a suspended three-month prison sentence and a fine of ,70 pounds ($7.i.
saved when their Soyuz spaceship was jerked away from the booster by an escape rocket mounted atop the capsule, the sources said.
They said the flash fire occurred as the liquid-fuel rocket was about to blast off and send the cosmonauts, one of whom may have been a woman, to relieve the crew aboard the orbiting Salyut 7 space station.
The sources said there is a possibility the cosmonauts could have been hurtfin the accident because of the abrupt ejection. Their mission was designated T-10, as it would have been the 10th mission of the Soyuz-T program.
"The escape rocket really pulled the capsule away with a slam bang. The cosmonauts are subjected to 15 Gs for two to three seconds, said one source, referring to a gravitational force 15 times that normally felt on earth.
"That's like driving a car intoatree."he said.
The sources declined to say where.they got their information, but it is known that the United States has an intelligence network that includes spy satellites and radar listening posts along the Soviet border.
Earlier reports were that the T-10 rocket had exploded on the launch pad, but the sources said they were fairly certain the accident was caused by a fire. They did not rule out the possibility of a blast, however.
The Soyuz rocket is fueled by some 270 tons of highly flammable kerosene and liquid oxygen. The space shuttle, the only U.S. spacecraft now in operation, is boosted into orbit by a pair of solid-fuel rockets and three main engines fueled by liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.
Prior to 1981, the United States ped the same liquid fuel in' its rockets .as the Soviets now use in the Soyuz craft.
The Soviets have not made any public announcements about the incident. Myron Nagurney, senior duty officer for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said Ff-iday night he had no information about such an accident.
The intelligence sources said the fire occurred about 1:38 a.m. Tuesday, at the launch site, or 11:38 p.m. Monday, Moscow time. That would have been 4:38 p.m. EDT Monday.
The cosmonauts now aboard Salyut 7 were scheduled to come home this week or next. It is not known how much longer they will now be forced to remain in orbit.
The only other known Soviet launching abort took place in April of 1975, when two cosmonauts aboard Soyuz 18A made an emergency landing in the Alpine Mountains after the third stage of their rocket failed. That rocket was launched fron the same pad as the one that burned last Tuesday.
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^.|2 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. October 2.1983
Japanese Ambassador Says East Will Benefit
I Continued irom A-l I
jobs for Xorth Carolinians.
'In the last three months alone, such internationally known Japanese firms as Sumitomo, Mitsubishi and Honda have announced plans, for building ne\y major manulacturing and res^eaTch taciliTisTfNorth Carolina." Hunt continued.
Japan and North Carolina "have mtich more in. common than economic tics." Hunt said, "Cur friendship is strengthened and enriched by the values and beliefs we share. Both friends strive to be' achievers, and our work ethic IS strong. Both friends value, their past, but they are determined to lead m the future "
According to Hunt, "Eastern North Carolina is our greatest agricultural area iand' our most burgeoning industrial area. .Most important. it is the area where the desire and committment tor economic development is the greatest We would welcome w ith open arms Japanese industry ."
Ckauara. ambassador to the I'nited States since 1980. said "this prixiuctive region is by no means unknown territory to us Japanese .Much of oiir tobacco originates in North Carolina - about 18,i million dollars worth last year. ; which he said was "an important contribution to a trading partnership that has made Japan the best overseas customer tor North Carolina exports."
Now , iikawara said, "a signiticant new dimension is being added to this relationship - the flow of Japanese investment into the area.v w here it is creating new industries and jobs tor North Carolina w orkei>,"
Much ot the credit for the new industries. Okawara said, belongs to the founders and leaders ot the Southeast I S -.iapaii .Association, a group of businessmen and political and academic leaders representing the se\en southeastern states '
"For the past eight years, this group has been working hand-in hand with its Japanese counterpart, the Japan-l'.S Nfulheast .Association, to strengthen and expand the ties ot -trade, investment and economic cooperation between Japan and the Southeastern Cnited States, "
The amba.vsador^noted that the association's efforts have . attracted "a substantial share ot the S14 billion stake Japanese investors now have m .America " to the .southeastern states, including more than SLAfi million in investments accounting tor more than 1.8lK)' jobs in North Carolina
' No other nation has made so large a commitment to the luture growth ot the North Carolina economy, " Okawara >aid
Favorable tax laws, the NC Japan Center which helps meet the educational needs ot the state's Japanese communit). and more advanced vocational training programs "which are essential tor assuring an adequate "uppl)
(It skilled labor, "'were cited by okawara as reasons why the ,lapane.se are particularl\ interested in North Carolina Pointing to the N C Japan Center again, oka'wara said in addition to serving the state's Japanese communit). the center "is pertormmg other valuable task.'' a> well I am tolii that approximately to undergraduates are now enrolled in .lapanese studies, and that the center is providing one-\ear tellowships'in Japan.where young Carolinians are stiuKing , new technologies in fields such as textiles and ceramics
engineering "1 should
add," okawara said, "that East t'arolma
University, here in Greenvill. is an increasingly active participant in the Japan Center's program, and that a Japan Center fellow from this institution is currently studying in Kyoto."
According to Okawara. the eastern region of th state "is also benefiting from another inhovafive approach pioneered by Governor Hunt,"
'"This is a deliberate strategy of encouraging the dispersal of new Japanese investment throughout the state, to avoid excessive concentrations of any one industry - or of Japanese-managed industries - in any one place.
"Such strategy." Okawara said, "is sensitive to the long-term interests of both Japanese management and the various communities and sections of the state. It prevents the kind of saturation that could create undue burdens for any one locality, and thus give rise to community fractions. It also ensures tliat all parts of the state have a fair share in a growing economic pie." Okawara pointed out.
"What can Japanese industry bring to the state that couldn't come, just as well or better, from some other source'." Okawara'asked,
"The answer to this question lies, I believe. In the unique interdependence that has grown up over the past few decades between the Japanese and American economies. It is an interdependence based, not on proximity .. ." nor o . "similarities of economic structure. Rather, we are each other's largest and most valuable overseas trading partners, and each other's most dynamic competitors, because we share the same entrepreneurial drive and innovative spirit. The cooperation, competition and interaction of our two economies account tor more than one lliird of total world output, and makes us pacesetters in the post-industrial technological revolution that is now transforming the global economy."
.According to Okawara, "earlier in our partnership the flow ot technology and managerial science was primarily in the direction ot Japan, and Japanese industry and consumers were the beneticianes ot American inventiveness Today, that flow IS becoming more two-way. as .Japanese technology _jnd managerial methods are helping revitali/e America's ~automotive. steel, machine-tool and computer-aided industries"
"The Japane.se manulacturing and servic'c industries, that are now operating m the United States, or are contemplating doing so, are among the most progressive and innovative of Japanese companie> They have to be to compete Successfully in the world s large>t. richest and most diversified market "
The continuing flow ot .Japanese investment into North Carolina "is insurance lor this stale ot a vital role in the most dynamic partnership in th? world, the .Japane.se-American partnership." (tkawara emphasized.
"The aims ot the North Carolina Japan Center express.this idea verv well. These aims are to: broaden academic relations with Japan, .since Japan is with the U S, on the toreironi o! knowledge and science; help business with Japan. Mnce .Japan is increasingly important to the economy ot North Carolina, and increase understanding m North Carolina and Japan ot each other, since that is a necessary foundation tor long-term ties
"1 know ot no one." Okawara said, "who has said it more succinctly That is why North Carolina is a pacesetter tor the
region in attracting new Japanese investment. It is also why others are now following your lead."
.As a diplomat. Okawara said. "I have no voice or eVen opinion about whether or where a Japanese company should invest its capital.
"When asked about regional hospitality to Japanese investment, however. I am perfectly free to cite those examples 1 find most sensible and interesting. To that extent. I might be accused of being neutral in your favor."
A native of Gunma, Okawara graduated from Tokyo University and entered the diplomatic service.
From 1954 to 1958* he served as second secretary in the Japanese embassy in the United Kingdom and as first secretary in the embassy in the Philippines, then became director of the economic and social affairs division of the United .Nations Bureau. Ministry of Foreign .Affairs.
In 1962 Okawara was a fellow of the Center for International Affairs at Harvard University then first secretary in the embassy in Washington. Following other assignments, such as Japanese envoy to the U.S. and ambassador to Australia, Nauru and Fiji. Okawara became .Ambassador to the U.S. in April 198U.
Peterson, who presided at the luncheon, said CT&T -sponsored the luncheon and helicopter tour of eastern North Carolina because "we have a SI billion investment in eastern North Carolina ... economic growth protects our investment." and "we want to be a good corporateNiitizen and that means involvement."
, In announcing the ambassador's visit. Peterson said "1 would like to see eastern Carolina reap some of the Japanese investment in industry and business that so far has gone to the Piedmont and western North Carolina. I think it is evident that we and the Japanese have talents H^at can be of mutual benefit."
Army Reactivated
ATLANTA t.APi--'The 2nd Army was reactivated at Fort Gillem on Saturday, marking a major reorganization of the Army's reserve forces.
The reactivation of the 2nd Army is part of a major reorganization aimed at streamlining the command structure of the Army 's reserve components ' The 2nd Army will command all Army Reserve and National Guard units in Alabama. Florida. Georgia, .Mississippi. North Carolina. Puerto Rico. South Carolina.'^ Tennessee and the Virgin Islands. A total pf 1U3,UI)0 National Guard soldiers and 49.(KKi reservists will come under the 2nd Armv's control.
'Wasting Time' Over 6 Frogs
D.4LLA.S I.API ^ Cily of-ficials were just wasting time in trying to evict six l-foot-tall, mechanical frogs from the roof of the two-story Tango nightclub, says a councilman who successfully
argued for letting the frogs stay..
Tango attorney Robert. Fischer, who sued the city claiming the frogs are art and thus exempt from the ordinance.
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B. Special purchase $199.
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Pentagon Uses Buying Spree
Tp^Save'^unds
_ The Daily Reflector. Greenvilie N C Sunday Octot>L- 2 9b.; 3
ByTl.MAUEKN Associated Press Writer W'ASHINGTON l AP) The Defense Department, like all gov'ernment agencies, hates to have monev left over at the end of the fiscal year. So when the Pentagon faced the end of the government s fiscal year Fridav. it wpnt on a one-day, $4.2billion shopping spree.
Veteran Pentagon observers said it was the largest single-day defense expenditure since the Vietnam War ended a decade ago.
To avoid having to return any part of its fiscal 1983 appropriation to the Treasury Department, the Pentagon awarded 234 contracts and wiped out what would have been a surplus. Just the bare-bones descriptions of those last-minute contracts covered 29 pages.
By contrast, the Pentagon normally announces two dozen to four dozen contracts every working day. For example, the previous Friday. 40 contracts were let with a total worth of $777.3 million.
The Defense Department is in the midst of a five-year, $1.7 trillion build-up. a record peacetime defense spending figure designed to cure what President Reagan and top administration officials say are years of neglect of .Americas military machine. In fiscal 1983, Pentagon was authorized to spend a total of $178 billion.
Friday's contract awards to dozens of contractors covered a vast array of equipment, weapons and construction work.
For example, the .Newport News Shipbuilding Co. won a pair of contracts worth $28.8 million for work on three nuclear-powered submarines and General Electric was awarded a $3.4 million pact to build 3,709 turbine blades for the Navy's new F-18 fighter-attack jet.
The J.W. Mitchell Co of Irvine. Calif., received a $3.45 million contract to build new railroad tracks across the .Marines' giant Camp Pendleton base near San Diego.
.Although the contracts were announced Friday, they were the product of months of work by more than 7.(100 Pentagon contracting employes.
The majority of the awards were "sole source" contracts, in which the Pentagon negotiates a price with a single company and buys from that firm alone.
Sole source contracts have been the target of Pentagon spending critics who say more competition could drive down prices. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger agrees in part with that philosophy and has ordered the Pentagon to seek competitive bidding where it can.
But many of the Pentagon's contracts are bought from a single firm, particularly once a company wins a contract to produce a particular weapon.
For example, only Lockheed makes the C-130 Hercules, a cargo plane popular with militaries around the globe because of its large carrying capacity and ability to take off and land on relatively short and poorly developed airstrips. The Air Force awarded Lockheed a $22 24 million pact for a pair of C-130S. .
The largest single contract Friday went to Honeywell, a $4,50 million agreement for 3,205 torpedoes and related work.
Pratt & Whitney and General Electric each received a 202.7 million contract for the Joint Fighter Engine Program, an Air Force program to try to come up with a single engine for use indifferent fighters.
.Although the Pentagon has plenty of money to spend, apparently not every contractor is eager for a share of it,
F'or example, when the Air Force decided to go ahead with plans to renovate 130 base housing units at Kirtland Air Force Base in New .Mexico, ^t solicited bids from 70 contractors. Only four were received and the winner was Texas Pointer Craft Inc , of Lampasas. Texas, with a bid of $3.3 million.
While the Pentagon was spending S4.2 billion, it also rewarded a Navv employee who savecl the service about $10,(KK).
Irene Usowski. a purchasing agent at the .Naval Supply Center in Norfolk. Va., was given a $1,000 reward because she challenged the prices ranging from $554 to $792 each a sole source contractor had quoted for fiberglass plates, ^he found they could be bought for far less, and the Navy ended up paying $20 each.
Allen Entries Win Awards
Ted , Allen copped the overall individual champion compeli.tion at the Pitt County .Market Hog Show and Sale held at the Pitt Countv Fair.
Other w inners in the junior and senior divisions of the
show were: senior in-vididual. Glen Stewart: junior individual, Allen: overall penof three. Tim Allen Jr.: senior pen of three; Tim Allen Sr.; junior pen of three. Tim Allen Jr., and junior showmanship, Jason Stewart.
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A-14 The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C Sunday, Octaber 2.1983
tContinuedtroin ,\-l dicates "GIS will txvome increasingly/ non-white over the next tive-lo years"
The study reported that 32 percent ot Pl'S's kingergarten students tor 1983-82 were non-white and 48 percent white, suggesTmgTire' current 3U-3ii average is stable
RTl found:that the condition ot existing edcualional facilities varied widel\ in the county afid cit\
'rtie composite picture is one ot a countv s\,stem uith
Debate Resumes Over School Merger ,
about an equal mix of very new and very old facilities and a city systemjvith most facilities suitable for intermediate 110-15 years I use." stated the study,' Twenty-seven percent of the facilties in the PCS were -raTKHTy^ RTf use -30 plus years', Twent> lour percent need to be phasr'd out in three years and !7 fx'rcent in tne years. The remaining ,!l percent KTl listed 'as suitable tor medium or long range use ' in plus or 13 plus years I,
Seventeen percent of the ^XjCS facilities were rated for long-term use i30 plus years). Eight percent need replacing in three years and 23 percent in 10 years. The remaining 30 percent may be used 13-plus years, said the
, Rtl reported that the PCS lacilfly funding needs total S19 million. The largest item expenditure is $4,7 million for replacement of obsolete tacilities,
GCS's facilities funding needs total $8,7 million, ac
cording to RTI. Replacement of temporary facilities heads the expenditure list at $3.1 million.
Too many students in some schools and not enough in others - that was another -.Jlfinclusion of the RTI study, which refers to OHder-use and overcrowding as "underand over-utilization" of facilities."
Seven of the 10 schools in GCS are under utilized, said the study, which listed them as Elmhurst, Third Street,
Wahl-Coates. E.B. Aycock. Greenville Middle. Agnes Fullilove and J.H. Rose. No schools in the city were' termed over-utilized Several in the PCS are considered under-utilized, including Bethel. Stokes. Falkland. G R. Whitfield. H.Bv Sugg. Wellcome MiddTe and -lyden-Grifton. More significant, however, reported the study, are the schools over-utilized in the PCS - AG. Cox. .\vden Elementary. Belvoir. Sam Bundv. W.H. Robinson, D.H
Conley and .North Pitt.
The study expressed concern over the "inconsistent school-grade level organizational patterns in the two' systems, particularly in the PCS."
PCS schools are organized as follows; oneK-3: one K-4; .four K-5; one K. 4-5; four K-8; one 1-3;, one 4-8; one 5-8; two 6-8 and four 9-12.
GCS schools are organized as follows; four K-3; two 4-6: one 7: one 8-9; one lu-12 and one 7-12.
The major consideralion in organizing grade levels K-8. stated the study, seems to be building capacity and location rather than "sound education principles." .
mmiiiiiiiiip
AirMikMmajK^
Malt BtHy Oanrin) Strwkts 752-|$76
Changes Proposed In School Lines
H\ MARV.Sdll I.KKN Reflector .Staff Writer
The Research Triangle Institute, in endorsing the merger of ,Pitt Count) and Greenville schools lisK'd two .sets ol recommendations lor restructuring attendance areas.
The guidelines, noted the stud\. are aimed at easing the problems ot overcrowding and under-utilization in the two systems and achie\mg a reasonable racial balance.
The study . states that a development ot a student assignment plan was. "well beyond the scope ot this study" and that the "two sets ot recommendations do not constitute a complete and comprehensive plan of restructuring school attendance lines and upgrading school facilities."
The suggestions do. howtwer. according to the stud\. . "represent an initial set-ot immediate steps that can alleviate the major issues and concerns idenl itled in the study "
One set ot recommendations mandate that all attendance areas remain the same except tor the tollow ing changes:
Build a new grade 4-K school m the Wmtm'ville .Sunshine Nurser) area
Assign A G (,'ox students 4-K to the new tacility at Winterville
Gonvert A (i I'ox to K-:f which KTl ,sa\s would require a major renovation tollow mg completion ot a hew middle school The stud\ .viid this renovation would eliminate trailers at Gox and Kobmson-schools Reassign the 9-12 students living in tlx area Ixtween \ G, 43 and .\ G II north ot secondaiw road 1708 Gannon's Grossroads Road Jo Rose grades I0-.12 and Ajcix'k grade 9 with a grandtather clause tor all children living in the current residence This includes the Tar Road area Those south ot 1708 would attend Gi.mley Approximately 3o students would be attected. " . .
(.'lose Agnes Fullilove Schoo
sug^e:
test ion main
Greenville parents have already expressed opposition to. and move the present alternative school program to il) J.H. Rose (grades 10-12) and Aycock (grades 8-9) or i2) Third Street School or Sadie Saulter. L'nder the second option, the elementary students presently assigned to Third Street or Sadie Saulter would be reassigned to Elmhurst. Eastern, Third Street or Sadie Saulter (which ever is not closed) and a new K-3 facility at Winterville. ^
Close eithe'r the Sadie Saulter School or the Third Street School and reassign the 300 or 400 pupils 1 depending on which school is closed) as follows; 20 percent to Sadie Saulter or Third Street; 2o percent to Elmhurst and 60 percent to A.G. Gox '.converted to K7ji* or Robinson, Greenville students attending Cox or Robinson K-3 schools would go to South Greenville for grades 4-6, Greenville .Middle for grade 7. Aycock Tor.grades 8-9 and Rose for grades 10-12. Pitt County students would go from Cox or Robinson to the county school in the Winterville attendance area,
The other set of recommendations suggests shifting students to other schools in the same geographic areas and incorporates the following changes:
Transler lourth-grade pupils from Ayden Elimentarv to Ayden Middle,
Close H,B Sugg .School and build an addition to Bundy School on adjacent land,
Reassign pupils in the Holland-Belvoir Crossroads area from Belvoir to Falkland, This area is bounded on the west bv the Pitt t'ounty line; to the south by the Tar River; on the east b\ N ( 222 irom the Tar Ri\er to Belvoir Crossraods and state road 14oo Irom Belvoir Crossroads to I'.S, 64 and on the north by I S 64 All K-3 students along both sides of SR 1400 and N G 222 in this area would be assigned from Belvoir K-5 to Falkland K-3. In 1982-83 60 K-3 students were in this area. Reassign pupils m the Ballards Crossroads from
Conley to Ayden-Grifton. including the following areas: d) U.S. 13/264 west of SR 1124: (2) all of SR 1124; (3) SR 1114 north of SR 1117; (4) SR 1138 squth of SR 1217 and (5) SR 1125 west of SR 1124. A total of 20 high school students were in this area in 1982-33.
Reassign pupils in the Clayroot area from Conlev to Ayden-Grifton. This area is bounded on the east and south bv the Pitt Coiinty line; on the north by N.C. 102 and on the west by SR 1923. A total of 25 students were in this area in 1982-8,3.
Build sufficient classrooms to Conley to eliminate trailers
Build a 16-classroom addition to North Pitt to eliminate trailers.
Build a new K-3 Stokes Pactolus school to replace existing schools.
Renovate and upgrade facilities at G.R. Whitfield.
Close Agnes Fullilove School and move students to either Third Street or Sadie Saulter.
Reassign 70-100 students from South Greenville to Wahl-Coates
Transfer 369 ninth-grade students to Rose and add grades 6-7 to Aycock.
Convert all other schools to K-5 schools.
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A choir festival will be held at Simpson Chapel Free Will Baptist Church in Simpson Sunday. The festival will begin at 5 p.m.
A Hazardous Materials Team has been organized within the Fire-Rescue Department in order that oflicers may be better prepared to respond to chemical fires and disasters For information, call 752-4137.
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jCourt Faces Cases On Race, Justice
The Datly Reflector. Greenvine N.C Sunaay Oc!ot;er 2 1 %3 /^.i 5
;Bv RICHARD CARELLI Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP.) - A flsitive race-relations dis-;pute and consideration of a ^fundamental change in the ^nation's criminal justc system highlight the Supreme Courts crowded rdocket as its 1983-84 term ;begins Monday.
I Among the most closely watched and potentially divisive questions to be an-pswered by the nine justices in ;the next nine months are these:
j - When hard times hit, smay employers be barred tfrom laying off black V workers when the result is Zlost jobs for whites with *more seniority?
Federal courts scrapped a ^last-hired, first-fired se-niority system to protect an '^affirmative action program in the Memphis, Tenn., fire department. White firemen who lost their jobs -call the result "reverse dis-.crimination "
t - Should a court-created rule barring all illegally ob-tained evidence from criminal trials be modified to ^ allow such evidence when : police make a "good faith -I mistake
The still-controversial "exclusionarv rule, first
fashioned by the Supreme Court in 194. is meant to keep police conduct in check ,by tossing out evidence obtained in violation of a persons constitutional fights, Thenfliir oTten is blamed, by the Reagan administration among others, for freeing criminals on technicalities.
Two-thirds of the 150 cases the justices will fully study and decide by July have already been identified. The court committed itself last term to resolving those cases.
The remaining 50 or 60 cases to receive full review will be chosen from some 5,000 disputes the court wilt act on this term more than 900 on opening day.
Among the cases that arrived over the courts summer recess is one from Morton Grove, 111., asking whether theres a constitutional right to keep a handgun in your home. Lower courts said no.
Another asks whether parents of children born after an unsuccessful sterilization operation may , file "wrongful birth' lawsuits against doctors or hospitals to recover child-rearing costs.
The justices may say as
rChub'Seawell ^ Dies At Age 78
PINEHURST, N.C. i.APi Herbert F "Chub Seawell, a former Republican gubernatorial candidate and attorney '! whose letters to editors were seen regularly in North Carolina .; newspapers for a generation, is dead at age 78.
Seawell died Friday at Moore Memorial Hospital at 'Pinehurst after being stricken at home with a brain " hemorrhage Thursday night.
Although best known for the last 20 years for his letters on politics, liquor and the Bible. Seawell once was one of the states most powerful Republicans. He rah for governor in 1952. losing to William L'mstead but garnering more votes than any other GOP candidate for thatoffice at that time.
Seawell later quit the Republjcan Party and became an independent when the Republican administration of President Dwight Eisenhower declined to appoint him U.S. attorney for the Middle District of North Carolina.
In 1976, he ran again for governor, this time under the banner of the American Party, a short-lived party organized primarily to boost the presidential ambitions of Alabama Gov. George Wallace.
Seawell was a lifelong resident of Carthage and was graduated from Wake Forest University.
fie was a founder of the Gospel Chapel Mission in Carthage as a young man and often filled in at the pulpit in later years.
Seawell is survived by his wife, Harriett McGraw Seawell; daughter, .Mrs. Paul Freed of Morristown. N.J.; stepdaughter, Mrs. Jamie Loy of Robbins; stepson. J. Lloyd McGray Jr. of Southern Pines; sister. Miss .Meade Seawell of Carthage; five grandchildren; eight stepgrandchildren; four great grandchildren and one stepgreatgrandchild.
The funeral was scheduled for 4 p.m. Sunday in the Gospel Chapel. Burial will be in Cross Hill Cemetery at Carthage.
early as Monday whether they will review those controversies.
Here are some of the other cases the Supreme Court is _ expectedJo^^^^^
- May private citizens go to court and prod the federal government into denying or rescinding tax breaks to racially discriminatory schools? The court last .May upheld an Internal Revenue Service policy of denying tax-exempt status to discriminatory private schools such as Bob Jones University in Greenville. S C., and the Goldsboro Christian Schools in North Carolina. Now, it must decide in a case from Memphis. Tenn.. just who can sue to speed up IRS enforcement.
- Are millions of Americans illegally taping television shows and televised movies on their video recorders' And if so. must video recorder manufacturers pay continuing royalties - or even be made to stop selling the machines -because of such armchair piracy? A federal appeals court in California answered "yes to both questions.
- May the federal government. under a 1972 law banning sex discrimination in education, cut off all aid to a college because it practices sex discrimination in one particular program only' The question, an important one on the scope of the law known as Title IX. may be answered in the case of a pri\'ate college in Pennsylvania where the only links to federal funds are the grants given its students.
- Are law firm partnerships, unlike corporations. exempt from federal laws forbidding sex discrimination? A federal appeals court ruled in a case involving the Atlanta law firm of former Attorney General Griffin Bell that a law firm partnership is a voluntary association exempt from those laws.
- May youngsters charged with delinquency be confined before trial to prevent them from committing other crimes? The court's study of such a New \ork case could lead to its first ruling on the constitutionality of "preventive detention" holding without bail defendants who have not yet stood trial after finding them to be a danger to the community.
- Does the Miranda rule protecting criminal suspects when questioned by police also apply when probation officers do the asking The
THE MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION IN PITT COUNTY
Presents
SPOTLIGHTS
A SERIES OF THURSDAY LUNCH-TIME TALKS AND DISCUSSIONS
12:00 NOON
JAVrPF PARK
ADMIWSTRATIVE BUILDING 2000 CEDAR LANE GREENVILLE, N.C.
THEME! FEtLINC GOOD
1. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6. 1983- : FEELING GOOD ABOUT YOURSELF AND OTHERS AROUND
WILLIAMS. PSYCHOLOGIST. CAROLINA PSYCHIATRIC & PSYCOLOGICAL ASSOCIATES
2. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1983- "FEELING GOOD-WHATS NORMAL DR JERRY G GREGORY
MEDICINE. EAST CAROLINA SCHOOL
Or MEDICINE
3. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1983- "RESOURCES FOR FEELING GOOD"
fACILITATOR-DR. STEVE CREECH
RELAXATION THERAPY-MINNIE SAVAGE. CLINICAL
''LCOHOL REHABILITATION CENTER NUTRITION-NELL EASON. R.D., ADMINISTRATIVE
PYFuricc memorial HOSPITAL.
EXERCISE-BILL MCDONALD. COUNSELOR IN
HOLISTIC APPROACH TO HEALTH CARE
4. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1983- "MORE RESOURCES FOR FEELING GOOD
PANEL FACILITATOR-CAROLYN MEANS PANEL:
MANIPULATION AND BOD^^SlQUEto^
MEDITATION
VOCAL MUSIC RENDITION-PHILIP EVANCHO VISITING ARTIST, PITT COMMUNITY COLLEGE BASS BARITONE VOCALIST
BRING YOUR LUNCH IF YOU WISH
(BEVERAGE WILL BE SERVED)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL THE MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION IN Pin COUNTY .
752-7448
NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERIES OF PROGRAMS
Minnesota Supreme Court said yes.
- May Americas communities include nativity scenes as part of their of-
Jicjal Chmtmai holid^ decorations? Lower courts ruled in a Pawtucket. R.I.. case that governmental sponsorship of such scenes violated the constitutionally required separation of church and state.
- The court will consider reinstating at least part of a $10 million award won. and then lost, by Karen Silkwoods family'against the Kerr-McGee Corp. It is
studying whether, as a lower court ruled, the award based on Oklahoma law impermissibly conflicts with federal regulation of the
nuclear industry.______
.Miss Silkwom]. a 28-year-old laboratory analyst and a union activist at Kerr-.McGees Cimarron plutonium plant near Crescent. Okla., died in an automobile accident .\ov. 13. 1974, She had been radioactively contaminated days before.'
- May courts exclude the public and press from jury selection in all capital murder trials? Some
California courts have interpreted a 1980 California Supreme Court ruling to require such exclusion.
- May public television stations receiving federal aid be barred from airing editorials? A federal judge in Los Angeles struck down a
federal law that imposed such a ban.
- .May slates bar charities from spending more than one-fourth of their income on fund raising? A federal court struck down such a Maryland law as an unconstitutional interference with free-speech rights.
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THE QUIZ
Answers On A-18
I THE WEEKLY QUIZ IS PART OF THIS NEWSPAPER'S SCHOOL PROGRAM
worldscope
(10 points lor each question answered correctly)
1 President ferdinand Marcos ot iCHOOSI ONE: the Philippines. South Koreai threatened-'cir astir rneasuresl.to end rer ent pro-tests aitainst his stnc t rule and the assassination ot his'main fiolitiral oppontmt.
2 Ihe (doss National Produr t iru reased h\ penent riuiin^the (last threr months, Uhir h ot the tollin\ini; has atiompanied thr* le-toreroi
a-double diuit intlaiion b-inr reased stor k prues t-a riecline in the national debt
I ( MOOSE ONE ontinental. Amenrani air-a h(t>nfk halterl riomestit tlitjhis v%him it ar iiankiuptr
4 . nt Reaitan ami rom^iessional leaders
aiiu-r'it on vi uimpromise that rould allou I 's Marini's to remain in' Le ha non for 18 monrhs IR( [ OR f Al,''l Ihr' comrromise
permits the Miirines to iletend themsekes it .lOai, kfd
5 Sfi o rji V a'Deterise r. talked v\ ith (.'hinese le.aifis .tOniil a [)Oss|()le detense agreement and it'i.'ii-. rnteiesi in' puri hasint; 'Xnieiuan
newspicture
(10 points it you answer this question correctly)
In a*ipeer h to the I N P'es.rient ReaRan declared "a nuclear war r annot he won and must never be touuht. and he revised U.S. [)ro()osals tor limilini; medium-ran^e nuclear weapons. The iCriOOsi ONI ; s I S.S.K.I has the largest number of
riiiim-ranite nur ieai vsea(H)ns in Ftirope and Asia.
peopiewatch/sportfight
1.1 leal let hnoldyv
newsname
(2 points tor each question answered correctly)
(10 points if you can identify this person in the news)
As a.mr'silier ot the Presi
dent ' C atnnet, I am re-sponsiF'le tor our t oun-trr's I.inti and natural r esou r i es. Remarks I m a d e r e t e n i h has t' ,vausetl trouble tor Fioth the Presirient and nuselt Uhii ah' I -aiui .vhai
C atiin.ei post have I helti''
lA
matchwords
(4 poinis for each correct match)
1-1 ui lal
d-nronev, t ash
1 At tor ludri^iliist h ret entiv won an Emmv tor his role in the tantelled NH( dimetk series (CHOOSE ONE: Efill Street blues, lav 11
2 1 d Hart Is IS p, ,i 'C.iv 'nir toimer astronaut )ohn Glenn in the film versiiin nt I he Riuhi siutt", Fraseti on the book by about the eailv lia.s nt 't'f spat e (irogram.
a-Nnim.tii Mallei F)-IomV\olte c-John Irving
3 Steve ( ailtnn nt itie A HOOsF (3NE:Philadelphia Phillies, St. louis ( animals reieiitlv Freame only the 16th pitcher in ma|trr leaitue fiistniv.lo win 100 games in a career,
4 (,avlniil Periv nt tim Kansas ( ilv Kovals announced he will retire alter tills seasnii IRIF OR F ALSE: Perry IS the oldest active player in iFve in,i|or leagues.
5 Aiisti.ilia 11 e,,i(!e ti.smrv w hen it beat Liberty to win the best of seven > ( u(i It was the fust, time in-the rates 132-year historv that ilie t v t'aii taileti to win the Cup. .
2-i.redif'le
b-pr()lei imn. t are
3-1 .in-nm
4-u.sindv
3-1 '
r-u'ite'nl' dei nive d-i'nierqent v dittii O.ltv e-Fielievaliie ''kek
roundtable
Family discussion (no score)
Kei ent I mniv winners int lutleti some shows which had already been i ,im elleii Uliat i.ii tors do vou think should determine w lietiiei ,1 lelevisinii- stiiivv remains on the air or not?
YOUR SCORE 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE' 81 to 90 points - Ecellenl 71 to 80 points Good 61 to 70 points Fair
Knowledge Industries. Inc 103-83
Clerks To Enforce Child Payments
RALEIGH, .\ C, -.Starting .Monday, .North Carolina's clerks of court will be responsible for beginning court action against people who tali behind in court-ordered child-support payments
"When you get somebody or. a person's trail and keep hounding him , if he's able to payi he'll pay. ' said Franklin Freeman, director o! North Carolina's Administrative Office of the Courts
The first notices of delinquency will hit the mail on Monday, he said.
In the past, we've been the collectors," said Barbara Mobley, assistant clerk of court in Wake County "Now we re going to be the enforcers ' Clerks of Superior Court also serve as clerks of District Court in each county
The Legislature adopted the new law in July with the aim of convincing reluctant parents to pay their child support A statewide survey of child-support cases was done in August, and since early September, clerks across the state have been combing about 100,000 payment records and calculating overdue payments Many counties had to hire extra workers to help with the accounting, with the Administrative Office of the Courts picking up the tab,
T heard from a clerk in a western county that they had been working diligently since Sept, 1 and were only, through the G's," Freeman said. "But 1 think most of them will be ready " Freeman's office will have, to provide $1 million this' year and $1.1 million next year to implement the new law. But the law provides for money to be paid back into his budget from the Department of Human Resources, whose welfare payments to single parents will be reduced when the child-support money is collected, he said.
Aft^r about a month, district courtrooms will bgin seeing the first non-payers summoned to court under the new law to face possible
contempt oi vuurt proceedings, Depending on the specific case, conviction carries a penalty of up to 30 days in jail, possibly longer if the non-payer continues to refuse to pay.
"It's going to make believers out of people who think they can get away-with not paying their child support." Mrs Mobley said.
In the past, court action against those who fell behind in their payments had to be initiated by the person who was supposed to be getting the money. That could be a .strain for people already struggling to pay bills and wary of attorneys fpes./aid Raleigh lawyer Mark E Sullivan.
Please Help Us Help Them
Send A Tax-Deductible Donation . To The
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Rt. 5. Box 503 Greenville. N.C. 27834Drunken Driving Arrests Drop
By The Associated Press North Carolinas new Safe Roads Act apparently has put the fear of the law into would-be drunken drivers, law enforcement officials said Saturday.
Several hours after the law took effect at 12:01 a.m.,spolice reported a decrease in the number of drunken driving
arrests. But they said the process of giving suspects chemical breath tests and booking them was taking longer, creating a
bottleneck at magistratesoffices.
In Asheville, police Sgt. J.R. Emory said there was only one arrest for drunken driving early Saturday, compared with up to a dozen on most weekend nights.
It could just have been a quiet night, he said. ^Tonight well probably catch up and break even all around. Butin the long run, it (the new law) should reduce arrests somewhat.
Emory noted that drunken driving arrests have been decreasing across the state for months. Sionce the bill was introduced in February, there have been about 3,000 fewer drunken driving arrests cmpared to the same eight-month period in 1982.
With it being a militaiy pay weekend, wed ordinarily have a lot of arrests, said G.C. Lockamy, highway patrol dispatcher in Fayetteville, home of Fort Bragg and Pope Air Force Base. But its been pretty quiet. I hope it will stay that way.
Wake County Magistrate Mark Hill said there were no more arrests than usual - in fact, not as many. But it used to take about 45 minutes to process a suspect and now its taking
Leaf Prices Slip
By United Press International
Prices of flue-cured tobacco sold on markets in the Carolinas and Virginia slipped slightly last week as farmers offered more low and poor quality leaf for sale, the Federal-State Market News Service said.
On the Eastern Belt, average prices dropped to $180.79 per hundred pounds, down $2.62 from the previous week. Gross sales for the week totaled 31,675,849 pouncls. Season sales stood at 239,026,139 pounds for an average of $182.77 per hundred.
The Flue-Cured Tobacco Stabilization Corp. got 1,508,589 pounds, or 4.8 percent of the weeks gross sales. L^n receipts for the season stood at 37,949,407, or 15.9 percent of gross sales. At this time last year, 28.6 percent of sales had beefi placed under loan.
On the Old and Middle Belt, average prices dropped to $179.04 per hundred pounds, a decline of $2.01 from the previous week. The weeks gross sales totaled 24,599,192 pound^ bringing season sales to 154,264,141 pounds for an average price of $172.30 per hundred.
Stabilization received 16.2 percent of gross weekly sales for a season total of 16 percent. During the same period last year, 20.4 percent of sales had been placed under loan.
Prices increased for more than half the grades sold on the South Carolina and Border North Carolina belt last week, but the average price declined to $191.44 per hundred, down $1.31 from a week ago. Gross sales totalled 22,080,276 pounds. Thus far this season, 174,029,560 pounds of tobacco have sold for an average of $181.05.
Stabilization receipts were 1.8 percent of gross sales, lowering the season take to 11.1 percent. During the same period last year, 24.4 percent of sales had gone under loan.
up to two hours. We hope that things will speed up a bit as we get used to it. ,
Tte law, pas^by the 1983 General Assembly, raises the minimum i^e for drinking beer and wine from 18 to 19, but the minimum age for drinking liquor remais at 21). It also replaces several drunken dnving offenses with a single charge of driving while impaired.
People charged with drunken driving lose their license automatically for 10 days, although they can appeal to a magistrate. Those convicted lose their license for a year.
Plea bargaining has been eliminated, requiring more jury trials. Sentencing takes place after a separate hearing during which the judge must consider the circumstances of ie case. Flagrant violators face jail terms of up to two years.
The law is expected to have profound long-range effects on the law enforcement and court systems, but its most visible first impact was on taverns, bars, restaurants and other establishments that sell alcoholic beverages.
Harpos Gas House, a bar near N.C. State University in Raleighj^ecked all patrons identifications at midnight and ousted l^ear-olds.
In the umversity towns of Greenville and Chapel Hill, some bars and nightclubs barred 18-year-oids ail day Fnday.
I dont want to be responsible for anything that happens after midnight. said Thomas M. Kirkpatrick, owners of the Henderson Street Bar in Chapel Hill. I think the best thing to .do is to not let them in.
^In Oiarlotte, Debra Gasperson. an 18-year-o!d waitress at Rigbys, spent her last hours on the job late Friday night The new law requires thtse who serve liquor to be at least 19 years old.
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October t&oc
A-17
ACROSS 1 Coalition 5 Vermin 9 Craze
12 Foolhardy
13 Lined up
44 Require. 48Wfelike- (1956 slogan)
49 Shore mound
50 Nothing
51 Transgress
14- Wall climber 52 Once, once 15-wantfor 53Verve
Christmas...
16 Fury
17 Uproar
18 High time WSawbuck .
20 Inlet
21 Greek letter 23 Cigar
dropping 25 Beehive , Stater 28 Berated
32 Lustrous fabric
33 Acid type
34 Wild cat
36 Hinder
37 Deceit
38 Vast expanse
39 Molten stuff 42 Nothing
54 Aardvarks tidbit
55 Catches
56 Italian family
DOWN
1 Cereal
2 French composer
3 European city
4 Fur source
5 Comic Steve
6Diea-
7 Toasters drink
8 Sheep she
Avg. solution time: 26 min.
SISQIS!
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
9 Rovers friend
10 Tel-
11 Physics unit
20 Trained
animal
22 Asian city
24 Disrespect
25 GI entertainment org.
26 Tic---toe
27 Consumed
29 - -hard (stubborn one)
30 Finale
31 She passes the buck
35 Teachers standing
36 Keys
39 Mona-
40 Related
41 Air duct
43 Part of MIT
45 Slippery ones
46PartofQED
47 Finished
49 Lair
a _ ' r----
School Teachers Return To Basics
MARIPTTA ____ ______________
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Todays Cryptoquip clue: H equals L.
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School Menus
V
Menus for Greenville elementary schools this week as announced are:
Monday - hoagie sandwich, pickle strips, tomato slices cucumber strips, birthday cake and milk.
Tuesday - baked ham, seasoned cabbage, buttered green peas, fresh apple, roll and milk.
Wednesday - fried chicken, mashed potatoes, chilled peaches, biscuit and milk.
Thursday - beef pie with biscuit topping, corn on the cob lettuce wedge with dressing, vanilla pudding and milk.
Friday - chili con carne with beans, coleslaw with carrots, fresh apple, cornbread and milk.
Menus for Pitt County schools this week as announced are:
Monday - pizza, tossed salad, dressing, applesauce and milk.
Tuesday - sloppy joe, french fries and catsup, fruit cup hamburger bun and milk,
Wednesday - fried chicken, mashed potatoes with gravy, garden peas, hot rolls and milk.
Thursday - beef stew with vegetables, tossed salad with dressing, corn-on cob, hushpuppies and milk,
Friday - barbecue, tater tots with catsup, coleslaw, hamburger bun and milk.
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MARIETTA, Ga. (UPI) -Cobb County teachers of economics and business are giving high marks to a summer teacher work-learn program that has them pitching right in with area businesses from the loading dock to the board room.
The plan was developed by the Cobb County Chamber of Commerce in cooperation with the Cobb County-Marietta school system. It is modeled on a similar program devised by Joseph T. Ryerson & Son Inc. of Chat-taooga, Tenn., a subsidiary of Inland Steel.
Chamber officials said the work-learn program for teachers is designed to counteract some of the anti-business sentiment that they see as a leftover from the social upheaval of the 1960s and 1970s.
The program places teachers in a professional
business-environment' to work like slimmer interns. The teachers are paid $1,500 for their six weeks of work, and they are treated like any other new employe.,
J.D^ Dennis, community development manager of the chamber, said the program has been a success and he is promoting the idea among other chambers nationwide.
Its been a good program all the way around, said Dennis. One of the pitfalls we wanted to avoid was the possibility that it might become some kind of make-work idea that would produce only superficial results.
This summer the chamber was able to place 10 of the 19 teachers who applied for adm.ission to the program at eight companies. The teachers were all instructors of economics, private* enterprise, personal finance
and related courses seeking first-hand experience in the disciplines and techniques they pass on to their students when school is in session. We^iad ^0 turn down anyone who was just looking for a sumlner job, said Dennis.
Dennis said the program was an unintended corollary of another idea,
We pushed for many years to have mandatory teaching of personal finance, free enterprise and so forth, he said. When that became a reality, we found that the schools did not have the necessary resources to develop the curriculum and that the teachers.did not have the personal experience, especially in managerial areas,
We originally made business people available to the teachers for discussion, then we decided to emulate the
City To Get $580,640
In State Street Aid
program out of Chattanooga where we could put the teacher in the business coiffmunity for six weeks. It is a sort of compacted training program, as if for a new manager, to give a view of the whole company before assignment to a'specific area.
Dennis said the businesses that have supported the program are: Hewlett-Packard: Ridgeview Institute, a private non-profit psychiatric hospital in Smyrna; Lockheed-Georgia; Tip-Top Poultry: Healthdyne. and Post Properties. Several banks in the area have also opened their doors to the program, Dennis said.
He said the program had three teachers in 1980. six in 1981. two last year and 10 this year. Next year he hopes to place 18 to 20 teachers, including those from other subject areas such as gov-ernmentand social studies.
We asked the businesses if a problem arises in their day-to-day operations that
they not exclude the teachers." Dennis said. "It's important they deal with real-life situations, get the[r bands-dirt v^nd help^develop
real programs. If it means showing up. on the loading dock at 3 a.m.. then that is what they should do. -
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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) The state Department of Transportation has sent checks totaling more than $43 million to 463 cities and towns for local street construction and maintenance.
The $43,246,535 comprises the 1983 allocation of state street aid under the Legislatures Powell Bill, said William R. Roberson, secretary of transportation.
Greenvilles share will be $580,640. -
Sharing these resources is another example of our partnership with the communities we serve in our joint effort to meet transportation needs locally as well as statewide, he said in a statement released Friday.
Last year under the Powell Bill provisions, communities in North Carolina received $43,102,211, he said. The total funding this vear and last year is made up of l\ cent of the 124-cent-per gallon state gas tax.
Before 1982, Powell Bill funds were based on the amount produced by l cent of the states gas tax revenue. The -8-cent increase was a
portion of the 3-cent gas tax increase approved under Gov. Jim Hunts Good Roads program passed by the 1981 General Assembly.
The Powell Bill funds are distributed according to a formula devised by the Legislature that is based 75 percent on population and 25 percent on local street mileage that is not state-maintained.
From this years Powell Bill funds, the largest single check went to Charlotte. That citys allocation of $5,239.350 was based on a population figure of 328.358 and a local street
mileage figure of about 1.288.
The smallest check - $1.644 - went to the town of Falkland in Pitt County, which has a population of 188 and. 18 mile of local streets.
Larger North Carolina cities receiving checks include Greensboro, $2,535.609; Raleigh, $2,440.792; Winston-Salem, $2,230 735-Durham, $1,574.500; High Point, $1.090.791' and Asheville, $993,013,
Other cities receiving funds included Fayetteville, $964.571; Wilmington. $699.405 and Burlington. $630.961,
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Wilkes Drug, Political Probe Is Federal Case
_ _ NORTH WILKESBQRQ, .C. (AP) - A federal investigation into drug trafficking and political corruption in Wilkes County is now a Presidential Task Force case, U.S. Attorney Charles Brewer says.
Brewer said the designation makes more agents and money available for the investigation. He said seven state and federal agents are now working full time on the case and that more agents are available as needed.
"The Justice Department considers this a very significant case, and a lot of resources have been_^made available to carry out the investigation," he said.
Brewer, who said the case was raised to Presidential Task Force status in early August, declined comment on whether indictments were expected soon.
A federal grand jury in
Cat Torture To Be Banned
G.ASTO.MA, N.C. (APi -A state senator says he may propose a state law to make torturing an animal to death a felony punishable by up to two years in prison.
State Sen. Ollie Harris. D-Cleveland, said he has been closely following news reports about a kitten in Gastonia that died after being doused with a flammable liquid and set afire. ^
Dr. Roger Tessner, a veterinarian who spent more than 50 hours trying to save the 4-month-old.gray tabby kitten, said he believes whoever tortured the cat also swung it by the tail to fan the flames.
Under a current state law, it is a misdemeanor to be cruel to animals People found guilty can be sentenced to a maximum punishment of a $500 fine and six months in jail.
Harris said his proposed law would make cases of extreme cruelty a felony and increase the maximum penalty to two years in jail.
The current misdemeanor would still apply where extreme cruelty .wasn't involved, he said.
Meanwhile. Gaston County' police said they have started an investigation of the incident.
Detective Sgt. Mark Stewart, one of two officers investigating the kitten's death, said police have interviewed several people at, the mobrle home park where the kitten was burned.
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Asheville has. .been Investigating the Wilco" case for more than nine months. The case grew out of a federal drug investigatin in Parkersburg, W.Va., in 1982.
That investigation turned up evidence that Wilkes County was a principal source of drugs into West Virginia. Two Wilkes County men were indicted by a feder'al grant jury in Parkersburg.
One of them, Cletus F, "Dobe Powell of North Wilkesboro, was alleged to be the leader of the drug ring. He has been missing since March 1982,
The Asheville grand jury has subpoenaed several former Wilkes County sheriff's deputies, present and former Northwestern Bank officials from the North Wilkesboro branch and several Surry County prisoners involved in a mobile methaqualone lab that operated in Wijkes and .Alleghany counties.
A Hays cattle farmer and a Ronda nightclub owner also have been targets of the investigation.
Brewer said the investigation so far has turned up
significant infemation -and that its focus is still on drug trafficking and possible election fraud in connection with the drug traffic.
Three Internal Revenue Service agents, one FBI agent and one U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent have been assigned full time to the probe.
Max 0. Cogburn, an assistant U.S. attorney in Asheville, has been named to head the task force for the U.S. Western District of North Carolina. Cogburn must spend 75 percent of his time on the Wilkes County case.
IWo State Bureau of Investigation agents have also been assigned to the case. Charles J, Overton III of the SBIs drug division said the two agents have been working on the case full time for the last two months.
President Reagan established regional task forces for drug investigations in November. The regional center for this area is Atlanta. Brewer said the Wilkes case is the only case in North Carolinas Western District that has been assigned to the task force.
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.4:Ingram's Pass Nails Missouri,
By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer
COLUMBIA, MO. - The sign on top of The Original Bobby Bufords Lounge and Restaurant" optimistically predicted Missouri 84, East Carolina 13" when the Pirates pulled into Columbia Friday afternoon.
Later, with a little nocturnal alteration by a pair of Pirate Club members, the signs message was Missouri 4, East Carolina 13."
While the Pirates. slept, the score ballooned to 104-13 as the Battle of the Board raged on.
Chalk up one prediction for the Pirate Club, as ECU roared to a 13-6 victory Saturday over the highly-touted Missouri Tigers of the Big Eight Conference.
In the Pirates first three games of the season, the offense carried the load by producing 118 points. But against the Tigers, the ECU defense was the "star of the game.
Quarterback Kevin Ingram connected with Ricky Nichols for a 27-yard touchdown with just 7:15 remaining in the game to break a 6-6 tie. Jeff Heaths extra point kick set the final margin.
Ingram connected on 10 of 17 passes for 1.35 yards, while Nichols led the receivers with three catches for 51 yards. Earnest Byner led the Pirate ground attack with 95 yards on 16 carries, and Jimmy Walden rushed 13 times for 63 yards.
Tiger quarterback Marlon Adler hit on nine of his 19 attempts for 137 yards, while Missouri managed just 86. yards rushing against the stingy Pirate defense.
I want to attribute this whole football game to the defensive staff and players, ECU coach Ed Emory said. They held when they had to on third down several times. 1 said before the game I thought a touchdown would win for either team, and I was right.
Weve got a heck of a football team. Weve got a quarterback who can throw the football against anyone in the country. I wouldnt trade my 11 on offense for (Missouri Coach Warren Powers) 11 anytime; I wouldn't trade my lion defense for his."
Sp^dster Henry Williams returned the opening kickoff 32 yards to the ECU 46-yard line to give the Pirates optimism for an early score, but the Missouri defense held on three downs. A 30-yard punt by Jeff Bolch gave the Tigers the ball on their own 23.
But after Jeff Pegues dumped Santio Barosa for rio gain on second down at the 27, Adler scrambled out the pocket and found Andy Hill on a 56-yard pass to the Pirate 17-yardline. Three plays later, the Tigers settled for a 28-yard field goal by Brad Burditt with 9:31 left in the first quarter,
Ingram completed a 14-yard pass to Nichols to the ECU 37, but Byner fumbled on the next play and Jerome Caver recovered for the Tigers.
The excited ECU defense was penalized five yards on first down for offsides, and the Tigers managed a first down to move the ball to the 24 on a seven-yard run by Eric Drain.
Kenny Phillips dropped Barbosa for a yard loss on first down; and Clint Harris
stopped tailback Ron Floyd for no gain on the next play. Then Hal Stephens broke through to sack Adler for an 11-yard loss to the 32.
Burditt booted a 48-yard field goal to boost the Tigers advantage to .6-0 with 3:08 left in the opening period.
The ECU offense then mounted its best drive of the half starting on the Pirates
20 after a touchback on the kickoff.
Ingram connected with Williams for 12 yards, and two plays later kept the ball for a 14-yard gain around the left end on the option. Later, on second-and-two at
(Please turn to B-2)
East Carolina ,
15 First Downs
54-196 Rushes-Yardage
135 Passing Yards
63 Return Yards
17-10-0 Passing
8-38.5 Punts-Average
3-1 Fumbles-Lost
9-53 Penalties-Yards
East Carolina.............................3 3 0 ,13
.Missouri.......................... 6 0 0 0 6
Scoring:
M Burditt 28 FG.
. M-Burditt 48 FG.
EC-Meath 26 FG.
EC-Heath 39 FG.
EC Nichols, 27 pass from Ingram (Heath kick).
Individual Statistics
Rushing: ECU - Byner 16-95, W'alden 13-62,
Baker 7-16. Branch 2-16. Ingram 15-7. Walker 1-0; UM Drain 17-66, Barhosa 10-.34, Riley
4-15, Esson 1-4, Seitz 1-3, Shorthose l-(-l), Adler 7-(-35). Floyd 2-0.
Passing: ECU - Ingram 17-10-135-1 0; UM -Adler 19-9-137-01. ^
Receiving: ECU Nichols 3-51. Vann 3-i:5,
H. Williams 2-25, S. Adams 1-39, Walden 1-7;
UM - Shorthose 3-25, Hill 2-70, Davis 1-19, Thomas 1-17, Krahl 1-10, Esson l-(-4)
Stretching
University of Missouris Santio Barbosa (22) goes flat out as he tries for yardage against East Carolina Saturday afternoon. Barbosa is about to
fall on teammate Ernie Brain CIJ) after being gripped up by ECUs Kenny Phillips (20) during first quarter action. (,\P Laserphoto)Stankavage Rallies Tar Heels By Tech
ATLANTA (AP) - Coach Dick Crum of fifth-ranked North Carolina said Scott Stankavage turned in his best performance of the season Saturday in leading the Tar Heels to a 38-21 comeback victory over Georgia Tech.
Stankavage passed for two touchdowns, scored another and set a school record with 271 passing yards as the Tar Heels twice overcame 14-point deficits to beat Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for both teams.
"This was probably the best performance by Stankavage all year." Crum said. "His two interceptions were balls that were off receivers hands.-
The 271 yards erased the previous standard of 268 set by Jeff Beaver against Duke in 1966.
"This probably answered the question I've been asked in Chapel Hill, Raleigh and Durham each week: What's going to happen when you get behind in a game?" Crum said.
"The way offenses are today, being behind 14-0 in the first quarter isnt as big a problem as it once was." Crum said.
N. Carolina...............................7 3 7 21:W
(ieorgia Tei'li ..................117 0 921
Tech-Lavette ,58 run (Rice kick)
Tech-Norton 22 pass from Dewherrv (Rice kick)
NC-Stankavage 7 run < Barwick kick) Tech-Whisenhunt 5 pass from Dewherry I Rice kick)
NC-FG Barwick 24
NC-Griffin 28 pass from Stankavage (Barw ick kick i .NU-Winfield :iO pass from Stankavage (Barw ick kick)
NC-Anthony 28 run (Barw ick kick)
NC-Horton ,52 run i Barw ick kick)
A-28.395
They were too good and we weren't good enough yet." Tech Coach Bill Curry sajd. "As we suspected North Carolina has a great football team and all great football teams fight back."
Stankavage, the nation's leader in pass ratings, fired a 30-yard scoring strike to Earl Winfield on the first play of the final quarter to put the Tar Heeis ahead for the first time in the game and trigger a three-touchdown explosion,
Tyrone Anthony then gave the Tar Heels some breathing room when he raced 28 yards to score with 9:27 remaining. And Ethan Horton iced it with a 52-yard touchdown scamper with 5:15 left.
Tech. falling to 0-4 for the first time since 1900, had carried the fight to the Tar Heels through three periods, getting two touchdown passes from sophomore John Dewberry and a 58-yard scoring dash from Robert Lavette.
Trailing 21-10 at intermission.
Stankavage connected on four of five passes for 54 yards in Carolina's first possession of the second half, producing a 78-yard scoring drive that ended on his 28-yard pass to Larry Griffin.
North Carolina. 5-0, trailed 14-0 in the first quarter before Stankavage scrambled seven yards for a score with 18 seconds left in ttie opening period.
The Carolina quarterback then passed for 13, 10 and 20 yards and Anthony ran for 12.19 and 16 as the Tar Heels moved 83 yards in the final 1:23 to score on Brooks Berwick's 24-yard field goaf on the final play of the first half.
Dewberry's two scoring passes covered 22 yards to Darrell Norton and five yards tokenWhisenhunt,
Lavette's 58-yard scoring run came one play after Ronny Cone hammered out a yard on a fourth-and-inches situation at the Tech 41.
Lavette. who had 141 yards on 25 carries, took a pitchout heading right, cut
back to the left side and got two key blocks along way - one from Derek Gwinn at the Carolina 35 and afiother from Whisenhunt inside the five.
Tech made it 14-0 on its next possession as Dewberry hit on passes of 15 and 5 yards and Cone had a 13-yard run before the 22-yard scoring strike to Norton.
Tech built its lead to 21-7 on a 47-yard drive that began when Dante Jones returned an interception eight yards. Lavette had runs of 13 and 14 yards in that drive.
Stankavage's passing then sparked the Tar Heels to their comeback triumph. He passed for 51 yards in the first scoring drive, 43 yards ii> the field goal drive, 54-yards in the drive at the start of the second half and 76 yards in the go-ahead drive, including a 40-yard toss to .Mark Smith one play before the touchdown.
Stankavage completed 17 of 31 passes for 271 yards, Horton had 113 yards on 17 carries and Anthony 91 on 11 attempts.
Hurricanes Best Duke At Its Own GamePassing, 56-17
Getting Yards
North Carolinas Eddie Colson (34) tries to drag the Georgia Tech line for extra yardage as Techs Rob Horton (52) and
THE
DAILY
REFLECTOR
SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 2,1983
Dante Jones (5) hang on in the first quarter of their game in Atlanta Saturday. (AP Laserphoto)
First dow ns
Rushes-yards
PassingVards
Return yards
Passes
Punts
Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Time of Possession
U\(
22
46-258
271
36
17-31-2
6-39 -0
7-45 29:50
GT
16
48-221
101
12
9-21-3
8-36
1-1
5-40
30:10
INDIV IDUAL STATISTIC'S
RUSHING - N, Carolina, Horton 17-113, Anthony 11-91, Georgia Tech, Lavette 25-141, Cone 11-55,
PASSING - N. Carolina, Stankavage 17-31-2-271. Georgia Tech, Dewberry 8-12-1-83,
RECEIVING - N. Carolina, M. Smith 3-75, Colson 3-38, Truitt 3-,35. Georgia Tech, Norton 2-40, Lavette 2-13,
State Crushes Wake
ByRICKSCOPFE Associated Press Writer DURHAM lAP) - Fifteenth-ranked Miami of Florida took to the airways Saturday to storm to a record-breaking, 56-17 victory over Duke. \
Quarterback Bernie Kosar threw for 250 yards and the Hurricanes set two school records and tied a third en route to its fourth victory in five games.
"Actually, the key to the game was when we executed, we scored and when we made mistakes, we didn't score," said Kosar, who completed 14 of 19 passes, including a 72-yard scoring strike to Ed Brown and a 43-yard touchdown toss to David Kintigh.
The Hurricanes gained a record 613 yards total offense, breaking the mark of 582 set against Elon College in 1941. They also threw for 381 yards, surpassing the old record of 343 set against Houston in* 1%9,
In the Houston game. Miami passed for four touchdowns, a mark they equalled against the Blue Devils.
"A win like this is very pleasing for me, our coaches and our young football
Miami, Flu. Duke...........
21 (I 21 U.56
7 3 7 11-17
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - North Carolina State football coach Tom Reed said his teams refusal to falter in the second half was the-key to its 38-15 Atlantic Coast Conference victory over Wake Forest Saturday.
The difference in this week and last week (a loss to Virginia) ... was how we performed in the fourth quarter," Reed said. We havent been able to come out and dominate in the second half like we did today."
One difference was in the offense, where Tim Esposito completed 17 of 27 passes for 221 yards and added a 3-yard touchdown run late in the final quarter.
You must believe in your passing game, Reed said. I thought Esposito had a very good game. It wasnt so much his passing but the poise with which he led the team in the second half.!
The victory evened N.C. States record at 2-2 and. was Its first conference triumph.
Its not too hard to look at the standings and see how important this game was to us,, Reed said. This game was crucial. Our team did a lot of soul searching this week.
Wake Forest coach A1 Groh acknowledged his team was outplayed, but said
his team hurt itself with mistakes.
I think we had some chances to make some plays we didnt make," Groh said. I dont think we played as well as we could have played. I think we had a great attitude... but we didnt play well."
The loss snapped Wake Forests three-game winning streak and dropped the Demon Deacons to 3-2 in their conference opener. Also, Michael Millers first-quarter scoring run also ended the Demon Deacon streak of 12 straight quarters without allowing a touchdown.
With the Wolfpack leading 17-7 at halftime,' linebacker Frank Bush returned an intercepted pass 37 yards for a touchdown with 2:57 left in the third period. In the fourth quarter, sophomore tailback Joe Greene scored on a 45-yard run with 9:19 left. Mike Cofer added both conversion kicks to raise the N.C. State lead to 31-7.
Later, the Demon Deacons drove 79 yards in eight plays, scoring on Gary Schofields 29-yard pass to David Richmond with 7:36 left. Schofield then passed to Tim Ryan for the two-point conversion.
Wolfpack tailback Joe McIntosh, the conferences second leading rusher with 112 yards per game, ran for 118 yards on
27 carries. Wake Forest tailback Michael Ramseur, seventh in ACC rushing, car-' (Please Turn To Page B-2)
N. (arolina St.......................10 7 7 143S
Wake Forest...........................0 7 0 815
NCS-Miller 1 run (Cofer kick I NCS-FG Cofer 33 NCS-Evans 1 run (Cofer kick) WF-Dougherty 2 pass from Schofield (Newsome kick)
I NCS-Bush 37 interception return (Cofer kick)
NCS-Greene 45 run (Cofer kick) WF-Richmond 29 pass from Schofield (Ryan pass from Schofield)
NCS-Esposito 3 run (Cofer kick)
A-28,450
NCS W'F First downs 23 18
Rushes-yards 58-258 31-147
Passing yards 221 247
Return yards 48 -5
Passes 17-27-1 18-41-2
Punts 4-39 6-49
Fumbles-lost l-l l-l
Penalti) ya' s 10-53 2-17
Time of 'ss don 36:25 23:35
NDIVIDI VI. LEADERS RUSHING- I arolina St., McIntosh 27-118, Miller eene 2-51, Wake Forest,
Ramseur 19-1').M - eller7-20,
PASSAG-.. Carolina St., Esposito 17-27-1-221, Wake Forest, Schofield 18-40-2-247, Newsome O-l-O-O,
RECEIVING-N. Carolina St., Wall 5-88, Brothers 4-53, Brown 4-25. Wake Forest, Hawkins 5-115, Richmond 1-29, Ryan 2-22
MIAKosar 2 run i Davis kick i MIA-E Brown 72 pass froin Kosar (Davis kick)
MIA-Kintigh 43 pass from Kosar (Davts kick)
DUKE-Grayson 15 pass fiom Bennett (Harper kick i DUKE-FG Harper 22 MIA-Neall4runiDaviskicki MIA-E. Brown 24 run (Davis kick i MIA-Shakespeare 47 pass from \'an derwende( Davis kick)
DUKE-Gra vson 1 run (Harper kick > MIA-Smatana 24 pass from Vanderwende (Seeligkick)
MIA-Oliver 2 run (Seehg kick)
team, Miami coach Howard Schnellenberger said. "We demonstrated concentration by coming out early and jumping on the Duke defense." '
Miami held a 21-10 halttime lead and wasted little time expanding it in'the second half. Meanwhile, the Hurricane defense kept the Blue Devils m close check.
"Our defense once again did what they have done in the past four games - bend and not break," he added. "The Duke offensive team was giving us some problems."
First-year Duke coach Steve Sloan, whose team is winless in four games, said Miami was "a very good defensive team.
"Its very difficult to score on them or make many yards on them," Sloan said. "Nobody's really done well against them. 'They just have dominant players."
Fullback Speedy Neals 14-yard run ' early in the third period made it28-10 and Browns touchdown run on a reverse raised the lead to 35-10 with 9; 52 left.
Reserve quarterback Kyle Van:^ derwende's 47-yard scoring pass to Stanley Shakespeare made it 42-10" midway through the third period. After a 1-yard plunge by Duke's Mike Grayson, Vanderwende hit John Smatana with a 24-yard scoring toss with 6:24 leftdo play.
Darryl Olivers 2-vard run with 3:50 remaining closed out the Hurricane scoring.
Duke quarterback Ben Bennett completed 27 of 47 passes for 162 yards to move into ninth place on the NCAA
career passing yardage list. Bennett now has 7,559 yards, passing John Reaves of Florida and Jim Plunkett of Stanford. He is within 78 yards of Mark Wilson of Brigham Young.
The contest was the first ever to -use lighting at Wallace Wade Stadium. Portable lights were installed to accomodate regional television coverage,
Miami scored on its first three possessions to grab its halftime lead. After stopping Duke on its opening drive. Kosar scored on a 2-yard run to cap a 57-yard, eight-play drive. Jeff Davis'kick made it 7-0 with 10:18 left in the first period.
The Hurricanes increased the lead to 14-() when Kosar hit wide receiver Ed Brown on a 72-yard pass play with 6:54 left in the period. Brown beat Duke cornerback Chester Gee on a post pattern at the Blue Devil 30.
Kintigh beat Gee for a 43-yard scoring pass play with 3:04 left.
Duke scored after defensive end Harry Ward recovered a fumble by Vanderwende at the Miami 28. Three plays later, tailback Mike Grayson caught a Bennett pass in the right flat, reversed field and completed a 15-yard scoring play. Ken Harper added thVuConvjersion kick with 19 seconds left.
The touchdown ended Miami's string of 11 quarters without allowing a point.
Harper's 22-yard field goal with 13j36 left before hal'ftime cut the deficit. The field goal was set up by Gee, who returned an interception 38 yards to the. Miami 6.
A-28,750
First dow ns Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts
Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Time of possession
Mia
26
41-232 381 39 21-31-3 3-41 3-3 7-65 27:54
Duke
17
32-32
193
69
30-,55-2
9-44
2-1
5-67
32:06
QB Young Leads BYU Past UCLA
INDIVIDUAL I.EADEK.S
RUSHINGMiami, Fla.. Bentley 8-83. Griffin 6-57, Neal 4-28. Duke, Gramham 13-34, Graysofi 9-28,
PASSI.NGMiami. Fla., Kosar 14 19-2 250, Vanderwende 7-12-1131 Duke, Bennett 27-47-2-162, Walston 3-8-0-31 RECEIVING-Miami, Fla , E. Brown 3-,95, Bentley 3-57, Shakespeare 2-56, Kintigh 2 55 Duke, Russell 6-49. Gravson 6-36, Atkinson .3-27.
PASADENA. Calif. (AP) -Quarterback Steve Young, who leads the nation in total offense, accounted for 325 yards and fired two touchdown passes Saturday to lead Brigham Young University to a 37-35 non-conference college football victory over, winless UCLA at the Rose Bowl.
Young completed 25 of 36 passes for 27(i yards and rushed for 55 yards on 13 carries as the Cougars, playing UCLA for the first time ever, raised iheir record to 3-1. The defending Rose Bowl cjiampion
Bruins, oil to tnir worst start in 4U years, fell to 0-3-1.
Despite the loss, UCLA quarterback Steve Bono, starting his first game for the Bruins, established a school record by passing for 399 yards. The junior quarterback completed 25 of his 33 throws and threw three touchdowns, the last a 36-yarder to Mike Young with 26 seconds remaining.
But' UCLA's attempted onsides kick was then recovered by the Cougars, who ran out the clock.
College Scores
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Maryland Hands Virginia First Defeat Of Year, 23-3
COLLEGE PARK, Md. lAP) - Coach Bobby Ross has been at Maryland pnlv two
years.but he is already aware that Virginia is no longer a patsy on the schedule for the
Terps.
We were very glad to get a hard win ^.^ain&t -a-jnueh-
Interception
Nick Merrick of Virginia (22) fights for the ball as Clarence Baldwin of
Maryland (23) intercepts during first half action Saturday at Maryland. (AP Laserphoto)
Waltrip Rides To Pole For Holly Farms 400
.\ 11 Kill WILKK.''B(iR(i
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W ;;ki'>l).iru .''pmiv.iA. pickfO ap hi> sixth poic \ic!or\ oi the season >aiurda\ in tjualilxing tor th Hniiv 1-arms 4oo (mand Nati na i (.kk i ikt
The two-iimc defending Uinston tup champion has uun three .-traight races and tour 0! the iivehe has driven on North U ilkesboro s -8-mile hanked oval since going to work tor local hero .Junior Johnson at the start o! the 1981 season
Waltrip wheeled a Pepsi-'pon-ored (hevrolet. Monte 11 't 1 pot lU.AW mph 111 1 ^ d enough to
hold oil Ron houchard, whose buick Regal was clocked at liaiRn
R;ck> Rudd ua> third takte-t m a Monte Carlo with a !a;.' m ; i root, tollowed In Bill KA.o" ' F.i'o; Tliundertnrd at
I'he pole '.'.a.' ^hoo.'' iia-W'aitrip. who i> tr^ng Boblw Ailikon m ai'.other heated bat- le tor the-eakon point title.
Aiii.'i.in. currently riding a hot streak with ihiiTC victories and a kecond-piace tinish m hik last three racek. qualilied 'eventh. He gock into Sunday s 4oo-lap. go-mile race ieadir.a W altrip l.iy loo point.'
"Thik Ik kind ot iike a home track tor Uk, " kuid Waltrip. reterrir.g 'o John.'on's home and race :acilit\ just lo miles trom here m Ingle Hollow, N (
"Thik team loves to come irom behind and there's still enough time." Waltrip added. "But ne ve reall\ got to get it 'tarteci here We need to'kind otkhorenthat lead up."
* Th.ore are tour race.-; lett on the .-kChedu'le toilowma thik
one. but this is the last on a Grand National short track, where the 4.vyear-old Allison, looking lor his lirst Winston Cup title, has been unsurpassed this season.
Allison has completed :5.957 ot 3.958 possible laps in the nine previous short track -shorter than one-mile -races The only race in which he failed to complete every lap was at Nashville. Tenn.. in July when he finished second, a lap-behind Waltrip.
"I guess the short tracks have been good to us." said Allison, who has won four times here, but has not gone to North Wd.kesboro's Victory Lane since the spring race in 1979.
"The mam thing at this point of the season is to finish races." he added. "Robert -Yates has been gtving us great engines and we've been able to finish just about every race, li we kei'p that up. we're going tnbeokay."
The engines have been con-s 1 s t e n t" 0 n the superspeedways, as well as the short tracks.
Allison's cars have completed 8.420 of 8.544 possible lap.k in the 25 Grand .National races this season, more than anv other driver
The race will beHelevised live on ESPN, beginning at f pm.EDT.
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ISDIVIDIM, STATISTICS
Kl'SHING - Virginia. Petiv KF36, -Morse 6-31, Jenkins 6-23. Rice 11-23. .Schuchts 6-9 Maryland, Joyner 21-116. Badanjek ii-89. Burke 2-38. Brkovich 7-31. Ksiason 1 minus2 '
P.ASklXG Virginia. Schuchts Hk26 1-92 MarWand. Esiason 13-26-2-190,
Reich M-o-ld R!i('Fl\'lN(i - Virginia Smith 6-69. Petty 3-14 (inggs 1-9 XIar\land. Jovner 5-73. Oavis 3-16. Badaniek 3-24. Fazio 1-26. Sullivan 1-21; Burke M'i
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First 25 ft. of gas line & labor
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Ingram's Pass.
improved Virginia football team, Ross said after the -~49th-ranfced-Terps frittered away three scoring opportunities before winning 23-3 Saturday to hand the stubborn Cavaliers their first defeat.
Rick Badanjek scored two touchdowns and Jess Atkinson booted three field goals as Maryland beat Virginia for the 2th straight time. But 10 of the points coming in the final 7:14.
I waf scared when they stopped us on the goal line." Ross said of Maryland's failure to score in the second quarter after reaching the four-yard line on second down.
"Between the 20s. we moved the ball well, Ross said. We stopped ourselves several times. On one. we had a motion penalty when the official told the player to put his knee pad in/'
George J^elsh. in his first year at Virginia, said he was still trying to figure the Cavaliers,
Im not making any judgments yet." Welsh said'. At times we were out-muscled out there, and at times we werent.
"They were just a better team - today.. Welsh said. "Maybe next week the game would be closer. When the score is 23-3. it usually means that you just werent good enough.
The Cavaliers harvent beaten the Terps since 1971, losing by a combined 366-85 score in the interim, but this time they made it interesting.
Virginia, 4-1. after twice stopping Maryland inside the two-yard line and intercepting a pass at the 13, was still in contention at 13-3 after Kenny Stadlin kicked a 37-yard field goal for the Cavaliers with 12:48 left.
But the Terps. 3-1, drove 75 yards to set up Badanjek's second one-yard TD run. and then Atkinson kicked his third three-pointer from 35 yards with 2:30 remaining.
.Malcolm Pittman ran 91 yards with the ensuing kickoff to the .Maryland six. but' Virginia failed to score.
Badanjek, who rushed for 89 yards, scored his first TD in the second quarter after the Terps had turned over the ball after three cracks from the Virgina three.
Atkinson kicked a 40-yard field goal with four seconds left in the second period to make it 10-0 and added another from 39 yards midway through the third quarter.
Vircinia.................................o 0 0 3- 3
Maryland ....................ii l(i ;) 10-23
Murv B.idanjtk i run .Atkin.'on kick Mary FG ,\tkin>on 4n .Marv-FG .-V.kirbim 29 VirgFG Stadlin :!7
.Mary Badanjek 1 run .Atkinson kick Marv-FG .AtkmsomiS .A -1(1.21111
(ContinuedFrom Page B-I > the Missouri 31, Byner broke a pair of tackles for a 26-yard gain to the five-yard line.
Baker gained two more yards, but the Pirates were called for illegal motion on second down. Ingrams pass for Baker was overthrown, and he lost two more yards when he tried to get outside on third down. Heath split the uprights from 26 yards out to trim the margin t*0'64with 11 seconds till the end of the quarter.
Bolch punted.41 yards to the' Tigers 40. bi|i AdlerS first-down pass was tipped by Harris and picked off by Phillips who returned it 26 yards to the Missouri 29. Three plays later. Heath and the Pirates settled for a 39-yard field goal to knot the score 6-6 with 5:09 left in the half.
The Pirates trapped 4he Tigers deep in their own territory on the kickoff. as^, Cameron Riley fumbled the ball and fell on it at the two-yard line. But Adler connected with Hill for 14 yards and a first down at the 18/ Adler's third-down pass to Craig White was broken up by Mike Grant, and the Pirate's got the ball back after a 52-yard punt on their 30 with 2:22 on the clock.
Ingram connected with Stefon Adams for 39 yards to the Missouri 31. but the Pirates failed to move the hall from there. Heath attempted a 43-yard field goal, but the boot sailed otf-course to the right with 54 seconds to be played.
The Tigers picked up 14 yards on their first two running plays, and Adler hit Tony Davis for 19 yards to the ECU 41-yard line with two seconds till" intermission. Burditfs 57-yard field goal attempt came up short as time expired.
The Tigers moved the ball to the ECL 35 on their second possesion of the third quarter.
State...
I Continued From Page B-1 > ried 19 times for 118 yards. Neither scored a touchdown.
Schofield finished with 18 completions in 40 attempts for 247 yards and two interceptions.
The Wolf pack's Benny Pe-gram recovered a fumbled punt on the Demon Deacon 23. Four plays later. Miller dove into the end zone from a yard out. -Cofer converted and the Wolfpack led 7-0 with 9:12 left in the first quarter.
N.C. State's John McRorie intercepted a Schofield pass at midfield with 5:08 left in the period. .After the drive stalled at the 17. Cofer booted a 33-yard'field goal for a 10-0 lead.
After Harry Newsome missed a 37-yard field goal attempt., the Wolfpack
But Drain fumbled, and Maury Banks fell on the ball for the Pirates to kill the drive.
The Pirates failed to sustain the drive after Walden gained 11 yards on a draw play, and the Tigers took orer on their 20 after Bolch punted 38 yards to the end zone.
Adler passed to George Shorthose for 12 yards on second down, and Barbosa blasted off right tackle for 14 more on the next play.
On second-and-seven at the Pirate 34-yard line. Adler crossed the line of scrimmage before passing to Greg Krahl in the end zone - nullifying the play. A 12-yard pass to Shorthose gained 12 more yards, and Drain gained three on the next play. But Pegues and Grant stopped Shorthose oji a reverse for a one-yard loss, and then P.J Jordan sacked Adler for an eight-yard loss.
Burditt attempted a 47-yard field goal, but again the kick was wide to the left to maintain the knotted score through the third period.
Both tems managed just four plays from scrimmage on the first four drives of the final quarter, but Adler punted 42-yards to Williams at the ECU 37 and he bolted 23 yards to the .Missouri 40.
After the ground attack picked up a first down on three plays. Bynk gained two yards to the 27-yard line before Ingram's TD aerial with 7:15 left in the game put the Pirates ahead to stay The Tigers had, two more chances to take the lead. But Randy Watts and Stephens dropped Ed Esson for a four-yard loss alter a pass from .Adler, and Watts sacked the Tiger quarterback for an eight-yard loss to stifle the first opportunity.
A pair of incomplete passes along with a sack by Jordan for a 10-yard loss moved the Tigers back to their four and
marched 80 yards in 12.plays with Vince Evans scoring on a 1-yard run with 6:38 remaining in the half.
Wake Forest drove 67 yards in 10 plays for its lone first-half touchdown. ..Schofield passed 2 yards to Dan Dougherty 29 seconds before intermission. Newsome added the extra point.
forced a punting situation with less than a minute left in the contest,
-Ingram fell on the ball three times before the clock finally expired for the ECU victory. ' I knew they were damn good on defense. " Emory said. 1 thought the kicking game might make the difference. Theyre probably deeper than we are as tar as bench-strength is concerned, but our players wanted, this game worse,
"They have a fine footbalR team; ihey'll come back and have a fine season before it's all over.
"We worked on pass rush a lot this week ; we want our line to give us s^Jive-second explosion off the ball. They played hard, but we had therii scouted well. Our kids like to line up and play that aggressive kind of defense. Clint Harris put something on one kid that won't wash off.
"It's a great win for East Carolina beating a Big Eight team like Missouri, but one game isn't going to make ^ program - it'll help us. It was a big-time win, but we've still got lots of work to do.
East Carolina plays host to Southwestern Louisiana back in Greenville on Saturday.
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Thg Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C_Sunday, Octobe'^ 2 1963 B-3Nebraska Crushes Syracuse, 63-7
LINCOLN. Neb. (AP) -Top-ranked Nebraskas high-powered offense, led by quarterback Turner Gill's three touchdowns and 1-back Mike Roziers two TDs. helped the CornhusLers to 6.3-7 rout over Syraeuse in a non-conferencejootball game.
The only bright moment for the 3-2 Orangemen was the standing ovation they received from the Huskers' fans after a 69-yard touchdown pass in the final quarter from reserve quarterback Greg Christodulu to running back Larry .Morris.
Nebraska. 5-0. e.xtended the nation's longest collegiate' winning streak fo 15 and gave-Coach Tom Osborne his 101st collegiate coaching victory.
The Huskers took a' 35-0 halftime lead on touchdown runs of 37 and 1 yards by Rozier and runs of 9 and l by Gill. Rozier finished with 142 yards on 19 carries.
Reserve quarterbacks Nate Mason and Craig Sundberg also produced Huskers' scoring drives, including Mason's 14-yard run in the firsf half.
Nebraska's defense helped produce four TDs. with interceptions by Brett Clark, Mike Knox and Gary Schneider. The Huslters also recovered an onside kick in Ihesecond quarter that lead to aTD.
Nebraska's touchdowns in the second halt came on fullback Mark Schellen's 5- ' yard run, a 5-yard run by Gill, a 20-yard pass from Sundberg to tight end Bruce Heimer. and a 6-yard run by reserve l-back Paul Miles,
Nebraska, leading the nation' in rushing, total offense and scoring, ground out more than 350 yards rushing and UKi passing.
Camels Bool ecu By 2-0
BUIES CREEK - Campbell University downed East Carolina University. 2-o. Saturday in a soccer match.
David Doyle scored the first Campbell goal \^ith 17:08 gone in the first half, with an assist by Peter McCormick Doyle then added the other goal on a penalty kick at 44:31 of the . first half East Carolina controlled the seconM half, outshooting Campbell 5-4. but neither was was ble to score in the period.
Grant Pearson had nine saves tor the Pirates, while the shutout went to Camel goalie Joe Moreschi, who had nine saves also. It marked his sixth shutout of the year.
Campbell had 13 shots and ECU. nine.
Campbell is now 8-l:i while the Pirates drop to 2-6.
Arizona (#3)......33
California 33
BERKELEY. Calif. (AP) -Gale Gilbert hit David Lewis on an 80-yard touchdown pass play to begin a California comeback after the Bears trailed Arizona 26-3. and Randy Pratt kicked a 22-yard field goal with 48 seconds remaining to give Cal a 33-33 tie with the third-ranked Wildcats Saturday.
Cal scored its first touchdown on the catch by Lewis during an incredible sequence of big plays in the third period of the regionally teleyisedli Pacific-10 football game. The Bears outscored ^Arizona 16-0 in the fourth quarter.
Gilbert, the junior quarterbatk who passed for more than 300 yards, threw a 61-yard touchdown pass to Andy Bark with 8:32 left in the game and cut Arizonas lead to 33-23, A pass from Gilbert to Bark set up a 3-yard TD run by Scott Smith with 4:26 left and Pratt's field goal came after linebacker Hardy Nickerson recovered an Arizona fumble at the Wildcat's 21-yard line.
California, playing its first Pac-10 game of the season, came out of the thriller with a 2-1-1 record. Arizona, which had allowed a total of 22 points in its first four games, is now 2-0-] in the couierence and 4-0-1 overall.
Ricky llunley. Arizona's All-American linebacker, ran .57 yards for a touchdown to open a wild seven-minute sequence of .scoring in the third quarter. That gave .Arizona its 26-3 lead, but Cal then scored .on the 80-yard pass play and, Dwight Garner's 67-yard punt return.
The Wildcats Tom Tun-nicliffe then threw a 60-yard TD pass to Brad Anderson, During the flurry of scoring, Vance Johnson of Arizona ,returned a kickoff 93 yards, but his touchdown was nullified by a penalty.
Max Zendejas kicked four field goals for the Wildcats to tie a Pac-10 record and Tun-nicliffe hit Anderson on two touchdown passes, the first going . for 21 yards in the second quarter.
Illinois..............33
Iowa (#4)...........0
CHAMPAIGN. 111. lAP) -Quarterback Jack Trudeau fired three touchdown passes in the first half and Chris White kicked four field goals Saturday as Illinois upset fourth-ranked Iowa .33-0 in a Big Ten Conference football game.
Most of the scoring came early, as the helpless Hawkeyes watched Illinois roll up a 17-0 first-quarter lead, then add 10 points before
Coming Through ,
Nebraska 1-back .Mike Rozier (JO) Lincoln. .Neb. The number one
fends off Syracuses Ron Hoddy (10) ranked Cornhuskers crushed
during first half action Saturday in Syracuse. 6J-7. (.AP Laserphoto)
the half ended.
Trudeau opened with a 54-yard scoring bomb to .Mitch Brookins and followed with
Alabama (#6)....44 Memphis State.... 13
TUSCALOOSA. Ala. (.AP) -Walter Lewis passed for three touchdowns and ran for another as Alabama took advantage of Memphis State mistakes to defeat the Tigers 44-13 in a non-conference football game Saturday.
Lewis, hitting on *12 of 19 passes for 156 yards, connected through scoring passes to Joey Jones for 7 yards. Greg* Richardson for 36. and Joe Smith for eight as the sixth ranked crimson tide ran its record to 4-.
.Memphis State jumped to a 10-0 lead on a 27-yard field goal by Don Glosson and a 4-yard pass from Danny Sparkman to Ricky Sparkman. Greg Montgomery set up the touchdown by recovering a fumble at the Alabama two.
Alabama made it 10-3 at half-time on a Van Tiffin field goal and the Tide took control in the second half, scoring 41 points while holding the 1-3 Tigers to a field goal.
Fumble recoveries by Mike Rodriquez at the 11 and Emanuel King at the nine led to two scores and a pass
interference call in the end zone putting Alabama at the one from where Lewis took it in.
Tiffin kicked three field goals, including a M-yarder that set an Alabama record.
Lewis' three scoring, passes tied a mark held by several earlier Alabama quarterbacks.
W. Virginia (#7)..24 Pittsburgh 21
MORGANTOWN. W. VA. lAP) - West Virginia quarterbac!: Jef.t- Hostetlers 6-yard keeper around right end with 6:27 left capped a 14-play. 9U-yard drive and lifted the seventh-ranked .Mountaineers to a 24-21 victory that ended seven years of frustration against arch-rival Pitt,
West Virginia, which trailed 21-14 at the intermission and had been in Pitt territory only-one other time in the second half, began its six-minute, game-winning drive at its 10-yard line after being called for clipping on a punt return.
The methodical march climaxed a second-half rally that began with Paul Woodside's 49-yard field goal late in the third quarter and gave the .Mountaineers a 5-0 record for the first time in 21 years.
The game-winning drive
against the nation's third-ranked defense included a 12-yard pass from Hostetler to Rich Hollins, runs of 10 yards by Pat Randolph and 16 by-Ron Wolfley and a key 10-yar*d keeper by -Hbsletler on thir^and-lOtothe Pitt 21.
Pitt, which suffered its second straight setback and is 2-2, had taken a 21-14 lead on John Congemis tie-breaking 35-yard touchdown pass to Bill Wallace in the second period.
Pitt spotted the Mountaineers an early 7-0 lead on a 19-yard pass from Hostetler to Wayne Brown, the first touchdown surrendered by the Panthers' defensive unit' this season.
But Pitt used two freak plays to take a 14-7 lead after one period. Hostetler dropped back to pass but was nailed by tackle Bill Maas behind the line of scrimmage. The ball > popped into the air directly into the hands of 240-pound tackle Tim Quense, who lumbered 75 yards for the tying touchdown.
Tom Flynn's long punt return after West Virginia failed to cover the bouncing ball set up a 21-yard touchdown run by-freshman Chuck Scales on his first varsity carry with 2:20 left in period.
But a fumble by Scales at his 25 on his next attempt led to King Harvey's 1-yard run that tied the score -U early in the second quarter.
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A record crowd of 64,076 jammed into 4-year-old Mountaineer Field, which officially seats 50,512.
Ohio State (#8)...69 Minnesota 18
COLUMBUS. Ohio (,APi -Tailback Keith Byars ran for three touchdowns Saturday, and eighth-ranked Ohio State converted five of eight .Minnesota turnovers into 35 points, crushing the Gophers 69-18 in a Big Ten Conference football game.
Byars, a 226-pound sophomore. was not. expected to play early in the week after suffering a sprained knee in last Saturdays 20-14 loss tO' Iowa. However, he recovered and scored on runs of l. 22 and 33 yards against the Gophers, Meanwhile, the Ohio State defenders converted a blocked punt, two fumble recoveries and two interceptions into five touchdowns. Ohio State beat Minnesota for the ninth straight time in Columbus and raised its overall record to 3-1.
' including 1-1 in the league, Minnesota fell to 1-3 overall and 0-2 in the conference.
The Gophers, who were five-touchdown underdogs, trailed only 7-3 after the first quarter before an Ohio Stadium sellout of 89,192.
However, the Buckeyes scored 55 points in the middle two quarters and enjoyed a 62-12 lead after three periods, Darryl Lee blocked a punt by Minnesota's Paul Blanchard. and teammate Cedric Anderson recovered it in the end z'one for one Ohio State touchdown.
Fumble recoveries by Tom Johnson and Doug Hill and interceptions by Tony Giuliani and .Mark Pfister'led to other Ohio State stores.
Oklaho/na (#9)...29 Kansas State 10
.M.ANH.ATTAN, Kan. AP^ - -Marcus Dupree rushed for 151 yards and three touchdowns and Spencer Tillman added 131 yards to help ninth-ranked Oklahoma overcome an early delicit tor a 29-10 victory over Kansas State Saturday in the Big Eight opener for both schools.
K-State jumped on the mistake-prone Sooners for a 10-0 lead in the firit quarter But Dupree, carrying the ball for the first time since injuring a knee two weeks earlier, zipped 48-yards- tor a, touchdown to get Oklahoma rolling in the second quarter,
Tillman's 24-yard scoring run put Oklahoma in the lead late in the half, then Dupree added scoring runs ol 4 and 5 yards as the Sooners, 3-1 took control in the third period
A Dupree fumble midway through the first period was recovered by Stu Peters and seven seconds later Doug Bogue connected with Steve Wallace on a 28-yard touchdown pass. Steve Willis kicked a 30-yard field goal in the final seconds of the first quarter.
Dupree's second touchdown gave Oklahoma a 20-10 lead with 9:23 left in the third quarter, then the Sooner defense pinned K-State against its own goalline and recorded asafetv.
(Jklahoma s final to'uchdow'n was set up by a 48-yard pass play trom Danny Bradley to George Rhymes that carried to the Wildcat 15. - Dupree plowed straight ahead to the*5. then took it in lor a 29-lO lead Dupree v.ound up with 19 carries and Tillman had 21.
Michigan State...29 Purdue.............29
WEST LAFAYETTE. Ind
APi - Rail Mojsiejenko kicked three iield goals Saturday. including a Ross-Ade Stadium record .59-yarder with one second remaining, lilting .Michigan State to a 29-29 tie with Purdue m a Bi^ Ten Conterence football game
The Spartans, who lo^t a !o-point lead late in t.he toiirth , quarter, seemed doomed alter Purdue quadferback Scott Campbell hurled his second touchdown pass with 30 sec f onds to go. But sophomore Clark Brown, making his first, collegiate <tart tor Michigan State, passed .](! yards to Donald Rolle, ran 2 yards-and passed ti yards to' Robert -.Morse to set up Mojsiejenko s tvmgtield goal.
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Sunday, October 2.1983Auburn Efses By Seminles, 7-24
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) -Randy Campbell connected with Lionel James on a 15-yard touchdown pass with l:5ff left Sturday to lift 10th-. ranked. Auburn to a 27-2-L college football victory over No. 17 Florida State.
FSU quarterback Kelly Lowery had shreaded Auburn with passes and powered over for two short second half touchdowns to give Florida State a 24-20 lead with less than six minutes to play.
But Campbell directed
- Auburn on a 74-yard scoring march with the ensuing kickoff, capping it with the scoring flip to a wide-open James before 79,600 fans.
Auburn linebacker Gregg Carr nailed down the Tigers' third victory in four games by
Colbert, In Two Shot Lead, Still Worried
SAN .ANTONIO. Texas i.AP)
- Although he had just posted the best 54-hole total of the season and led by two strokes, Jim Colbert was worried going into Sunday's final round of the S300.000 Texas Open golf tournament, and he was not sure why
T have a good feeling about the golf course, and a good feeling about my golf game," the 42-year-oId Colbert said Saturday after he'd pulled two strokes in front of Mark Pfeil
- and six ahead of anyone else - with a 4-under-par 66.
'.Maybe I've been out here too long." Colbert said. ".Maybe 18 years is too long.
"It's not a comfortable feeling that 1 have. It's not comfortable at all.
".Maybe that's why we all play, to test ourselves under stress situations.
"I'll be more interested than anyone else to see how 1 handle it tomorrow."
Colbert, ^seeking a second victory in Te.xas this season, has completed three trips over one of his favorite courses, the. 6.525-yard Oak Hills Country Club, in a spectacular 194 strokes.
That is. by four strokes, the lowest 54-hole total this season. And. for a few moments. he was flirting with a couple of all-time records.
Colbert, who had a 62 in Friday's play, was 7-under-par for the day with five holes to go. He need Mrblay Ihose five holes tn 2-un9er to tie both the all-time Tour record for 54 holes (191) and the all-time tour record for consecutive rounds (1251.
"It would have been nice. My name isn't exactly jumping out of the record books. But it just wasn't meant to be." Colbert said. He played those last five holes 1-over, missing a 2-foot par-saving putt on the 15th, then failing to convert birdie opportunities on the last three holes.
"I putted well, but not as well as yesterday. The ball wasn't just diving in the hole like it did yesterday."
Only Mark Pfeil could keep him in sight. .And it took a near-record performace by the journeyman tourist to do It?
Pfeil shot a second consecutive 63, 7-under-par., and was at 196, two strokes better than the previous low 54 for the season.
Pfeil was 7-under for the day through the first 11 holes, then parred home. He needed only one more birdie to tie the all-time Tour record for consecutive rounds.
And he had his chances,
"On the front side (which he
played in 3t)(. 1 left two putts short dead in the heart of the hole and had three others I could have made on the back." Pfeil said.
"You know, after making birdie on 10 and 11 to go 7-under. when you get that low your mind starts to run away with you. 1 was thinking maybe I could shoot 59 or 60."
It was another four shots back to defending champion Jay Haas and four others, tied at 200. 10-under but six shots off the pace. Haas, who had a 67. was tied with David Edwards. Doug Tewell. Tony Sills and George Cadle. who finished up with a four-putt double-bogey on the final hole, which finished off a round of par-70,
Haas had a 67 in what he called "perfect weather, absolutely ideal." ^Edwards shot 64. Tewell 65 and Sills 69.
The veteranr Colbert, who scored the seventh victory of his career in Fort Worth earlier this season, opened the round birdie-birdie by hitting short irons inside of four feet on the first two holes.
He had a three-putt bogey on the fourth, then got it back with a chip-in birdie on the ninth. He chipped to six inches for birdie-4 on the lOth and got iron shots close to the cup and birdied both the 12th and 13th.
intercepting a pass by Lowery at the Auburn 24 as FSU tried to storm back 'in the final seconds.
Florida State is now 2-2. Auburn fullback Tommy Agee took a short Campbell pass and slipped through several FSU tacklers on a 27-yard touchdown run with no time left on the clock before the half. The touchdown made it 2-10 Auburn and capped a furious 13-point Auburn spurt in the final six minutes of the half that was inspired by David King's one-handed interception of a Lowery pass in the end zone.
A 6-yard pass ffom Campbell to Jeff Parks put Auburn ahead 7-0 with the game less than two minutes old. But a 5-yard pass from Lowery to Cedric .Jones and a> 33-yard Phillip Hall field goal moved FSU back ahead 10-7.
Auburn's .A1 Del Greco kicked field goals of 45 and 38 yards in the first half.
Georgia (#11)....20 Mississippi State...?
ATHE.NS. Ga. (AP) -Sophomore tailback Keith Montgomery scored a pair of touchdowns Saturday to trigger llth-ranked Georgia to a 20-7 Southeastern Conference football victory over .Mississippi'State, the Bulldogs' 19th consecutive league triumph.
Georgia. 3-0-1. took a 17-7 halftime lead on a 52-yard first-period field goal by Kevin Butler and .Montgomery's 1-yard touchdown plunge and 9-yard pass reception from John Lastinger in the second quarter.
Butler added a 27-yard field goal in the fourth period to close out the Georgia scoring.
Missisippi State, 2-2 overall and 0-2 in the SEC. scored its only touchdown on quarterback John Bond's 16-yard run midway through
the second period.
Georgia, in capturing its SEC opener, has now won 22 straight games at Sanford Stadium as the Bulldogs seek their fourth consecutive SEC title.
The Bulldogs took a 3-0 lead midway in the opening period on Butler's field goal after moving 48 yards to the State 36 before stalling.
Georgia made it 10-0 at 6:38 of the second period on a 10-play. 76-yard drive capped by Montgomery's 1-yard scoring dive. Fuliback Barry Young's 46-yard burst up the middle to the State 30-yard line keyed the drive.
Mississippi State answered back only a minute later with its only scoring drive of the day. The 80-yard. 4-play drive was capped' by Bond, who swept the right side into the end zone.
Bond opened the drive with a 44-yard pass to Danny Knight before George Wamsley gained 20-yards in two running plays.
Georgia, however, came right back to score as Lastinger connected on three of three passes for 71 yards in the 80-yard scoring drive. The big play was a 48-yard throw from Lastinger to Tron Jackson to the State 12.
Two plays later. Montgomery took a pitch from Lastinger just passed the scrimmage line and scampered in from 9yards out.
Michigan (#14)...43 Indiana..... 18
.A.NN ARBOR, Mich. lAPi - Michigan tailback Kerry Smith ran for three touchdowns as the 14th-ranked Wolverines defeated stubborn Indiana 43-18 in a Big Ten football game Saturday,
Smith, who rushed for 57 yards on 8 carries, had TD runs of 1. 12 and 18 yards as Michigan improved its record
to 3-1 on the season. 2- in the Big Ten.
Indiana quarterback Steve Bradley, passing with pinpoint accuracy, had TD tosses of 5 and 30 yards for the Hoosiers whodip'pedtol-3and 0-2,
The powerful Wolverines jumped to a 14-0 first-quarter lead on a 35-yard touchdown run by Rick Rogers and a 20-y.ard TD pass from quarterback Steve Smith to Vince Bean. Kerry Smith' 1-yard TD plunge at 4:06 of the second quarter gave Michigan a 21-0 lead.
However, the Hoosiers got a 41-yard field goal from Doug Smith and Bradley flipped a 5-yard touchdown pass to Duane Gunn to narrow the score to21-ll at the half,
Notre Dame 27
Colorado............3
BOULDER. Colo. (AP) -Freshman quarterback Steve Beuerlein, making his first collegiate start, engineered five scoring drives, and sophomore tailback Allen Pinkelt rushed for 132 yards and a touchdown as Notre Dame manhandled Colorado 27-3 Saturday in college football.
The victory snapped a two-game losing streak for the Irish and squared their record at 2-2. .Colorado saw its two-game winning streak end and fell to 2-2.
Notre Dame, seemingly unstoppable on offense, generated 494 total yards, including 334 rushing.
The Irish scored on three of their five first-half possessions to take a 17-3 halftime lead, and only some fine defensive plays by Colorado kept it from being more lopsided.
Beuerlein took the Irish 80 yards for their first score, a io-yard romp by Pinkett barely three minutes into the game. Beuerlein's 58-yard pass to split end Joe Howard set up a field goal on the next series.
S. Mississippi.....27
Mississippi..........7
OXFORD, Miss, (.AP) -James Cooper returned a pass interception 38 yards for one touchdown and' Louis Lipps bolted 28 yards on a reverse for another, propelling the Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles to a 27-7 football victory over archrival .Mississippi on Saturday.
Lipps also caught a 59-yard bomb from quarterback Robert Ducksworth to set up a last quarter touchdown that dashed any Mississippi hopes for a comeback.
Despite the offensive thunderbolts. the Golden Eagles survived behind the brawny-back of its defense, which repelled the Rebels deep inside Eagle territory on four straight series in 'the third quarter
Trailing 17-7 at the time. Mississippi started with the ball on the Eagle 31, 35. 29. and 20 but did not score after two fumble recoveries, a 55-yard punt return and a 43-yard fumble return
One of the futile series ended with a punt, freshman Bill Smith missed 52 and 47-yard field goal attempts on two others and coronerback Bruce Miller block a third field goal try after the Rebels reached the five.
The victory gave Southern Mississippi a 3-1 record, while Mississippi fell to 1-4.
Southern Mississippi also scored on field goals of 33 and 29 yards by Steve Clark and on Sam Dejarnette's 4-yard run after Lipps catch of the bomb in the last period.
Penn State.........36
Rutgers............25
' EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. (AP) - Freshman tailback D.J, Dozier rushed for 196 yards, including touchdown runs of 1 and 50 yards, to lead Penn State to a 36-25 college football victory Saturday over Rutgers.
The defending national champion Nittany Lions, who won their second straight game after an 0-3 start, also were led by quarterback Doug Strang's touchdown passes of 6 and 31 yards to split end Kevin Baugh.
Strang, who completed 11 of 26 yards for 173 yards, also set up Nick Gancit'ano's 19-yard field goal in the fourth quarter with a 34-yard pass to Baugh. Gancitano also had field goals of 36 and 42 yards.
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BOSTON .AP) - Pinch-runner Carmen Castillo scored the tie-breaking run on rookie Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd's wild pitch with two out in the ninth inning and the Cleveland Indians went on to a 3-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox Saturday behind Lary Sorensen's five-hitter.
After Castillo scored, Kevin Rhomberg singled home George \ukovich with an insurance run as the Indians handed Boyd his eighth defeat in 12 decisions.
With the score tied 1-1. Andre Thornton led off 'the ninth with a double and gave way to pinch-runner Bake McBride. ,After Ron Hassey grounded out, pinch-hitter Broderick Perkins reached on an error by third baseman Wade Boggs. Castillo ran for Pe-rkins and Vukovich followed with a single, but McBride was thrown out tr^v-ing to score Castillo took third and Vukovich second on the throw. Boyd then uncorked a wild pitch, scoring Castillo,
Sorensen allowed just two hits through seven innings, then battled the Red Sox down the wire in improving his record to 12-11.
The Indians jumped to a 1-0 lead m the fourth on Ron Hassey's RBI grounder. Boston tied the score when rookie Chico Walker tripled off the wall in-the seventh and scored on rookie Lee Grahams sacrifice fly,
A crowd of 33.49 packed Fenway Park for "Yaz Day", a tribute to retiring Red Sox slugger Carl Yastrzemski.
Yaz was lavished with gifts and tributes in rain-delayed pre-game ceremonies which lasted nearly an hour. The Red Sox designated hitter grounded to the right side four times in a row
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Toronto..............4
MinnesotOTmrr^... 3
TORONTO I.AP) - Ernie Whitt crashed a tftree-run home run and Doyle Alexander won his seventh consecutive game to pace the Toronto Blue Jays to a 4-3 victory over the .Minnesota Twins Saturday,
Alexander, who lost his first eight decisions, tied a club record for most consecutive wins with his nine-hitter. He walked just one batter and struck out three in going the distance for the fifth time this season.
Whitt keyed the Jays four-run fourth inning withhis 17th homer of the season.
With one out. Willie Upshaw singled and after Jorge Orta
singled. Whitt drilled a 1-2 pitch off Jay Pettibone. 0-4. over the rightfield fence,
Jesse Barfield then followed with his 26th homer of the season,
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T 2 iiH 2'i,!.i2
Milwaukee ..10
Detroit...............1
DETROIT (.APi - Jaime Cocanower pitched a six-hitter and Roy Howell drove in five runs with a single and grand slam homer to lift the .Milwaukee Brewers to a 10-1 victory over the Tigers Saturday.
With the Brewers leading ,5-0. Howell wrapped up the victory in the seventh by belting an 0-2 pitch from Howard Bailey into the upper deck in left for his third homer
of the season and fifth career grand slam,
.Milwaukee took a 3-0 lead in the first against Jack .Morris. 20-13. on a two-run single by Cecil Tooper and an RBI single by Howell. They added two in the fourth on an RBI double by Randy Ready and Ed Romeros RB single.* Cocanower, 2-0. making his third major league start, ^ struck out one and didnt walk' a batter. The right-hander allowed one hit in each of the first three innings, but the Milwaukee infield bailed him out with three double plavs.
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(iame Winning RBI
K RHowell Romei.,, .............
1. Detroit 1 LliB Milwaukee 6, Detroit 4 2B- Romero, Readv '3B Readv HR-RHiiwell 3
IP H K KR BB S(l
Milwaukee
Cocanowr W 2-ii H I! 1 I ii ]
, Delrull
Morris 1. 20-13 4 7 ,7 5 2 2
Bailee 3 4 4 4 2 o
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T- 2 12 .A- 14.788
Kansas City.........4
Oakland............1
O.AKL.AND. Calif. (.AP) -George Brett and Wiliie
Aikens smacked back-to-back home runs in the sixth inning Saturday, carrying the Kansas City Royals to a 4-1 victory over the Oakland A's in the first game of a doubleheader.
Royals reliever Dan Quisenberry pitched the final three innings to save the game for starter Paul Splittorff. 13-8. The save extended Quisenberry's single-season, major-league record to 44,
Brett hit a two-run homer off As starter Steve .McCatty. 6-9. that erased a 1-0 Oakland lead, Aikens followed Brett's 25th homer with his 23rd.
The Royals added their final run in the eighth on a double by Brett and an RBI single by .Aikens that chased McCatty, '
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Splittorff checked the A's on five hits in six hits, three of which came in the third inning Rickey Henderson, Ricky Peters and Davey Lopes each singled to produce the Oakland run.
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(Hill HIHI
('(^r 17 Rdmerii DP Milwaukee
Brett lb Aikens dh White 2b 4 u II u Hanc'ck
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I'Wshtn ss 4 0 0 u Phillips Totals 38 4 lu 1 Totals
Kansas Citi Oakland
4 II 1 II 4 II IJ (I
2 II IJ 11 1 U II II
3 U II II SS 3 IJ U U
-31 I 5 I
Dooble Steel Baft Radial Whitewall
By
IHHI (KI3 IIHI I IMI I (MHI IMK1 I
Game-Wmning RBI - Brett 12 E-MDaiis. Phillips DP- Kansas Cm 1. Oakland 5 2B-
Brett HR-Brett 25 , Aikens 23 SB-Sheridan 11
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rookie Mark Davis and Gary Lavelle combined on a four-hitter to lead the San Francisco Giants to a 4-1 decision over the Los Angeles Dodgers Saturday.
Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda benched all his regulars following the 4-3 triumph over the Giants Friday night when they clinched the division title.
The 22-year old Davis pitched shutout ball until the ninth, when the Dodgers scored on three straight singles, the last one by Candy Moldonado. Lavelle got the last two outs for his 19th save.
Giants Win Aga
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C__Sunday. October 2. 1983 B-5
The Giants, improving their season's record over the Dodgers to 12-5, scored a run in the second inning off Burt Hooton, 9-8, when Chris Smith walked, reached second on an infield out and scored on Jeff Ransoms single.
The Giants added three runs in the sixth and chased Hooton. With two out, Guy Sularz singled to left and Jeff Leonard duplicated the shot. Both scored on Chris Smiths double to right. The next batter. John Rabb, singled to left to score Smith.
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Totals
31 I K I
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New York...........5
Montreal............4
NEW YORK (AP)-George Foster hit a three-run homer
in New Yorks four-run first inning, and the Mets held on to beat the Montreal Expos 5-4 in the first game of a doubleheader Saturday,
The second game was rained out and rescheduled as part of a doubleheader Sunday.
Mookie Wilson led off for the Mets with a double and scored on a double by Hubie Brooks. Right-hander Bill Gullickson, 17-12, then hit Darryl Strawberry with a pitch, and Foster hit his 28th homer.
Strawberry had to leave the game with a contusion on the inside of his left leg. Mets right-hander Tom Seaver also left with a sore back after pitching one scoreless inning. Rookie right-hander Brent
Gaff, 1-0, relieved and earned his first major leagie victory with 51-3 innings of work.
The Mets scored their fifth run in the third on consecuti ve two-out singles by Gary Ra-jsich, Bob Bailor and Brian Gils.
MONTREAL
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Reardon p 0 Vail ph 1 Totals 36
First Game
NEW VORK r h bi ah r h hi
1 1 0 Wilson cf 4 12 0 0 2 I Brooks 3b 4 111
0 0 0 Strwbry rf 0 0 0 0
1 1 0 Heep rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 Foster If 4 113 0 2 0 Raisich lb 3 1 3 0 0 1 0 Bailor ss 4 0 2 0 0 0 I Giles 2b
0 1 0 Ortiz c
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4 10 3 Totals
4 111
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32 5 10 5
San Francisco IIIU (103 (NNI 4
Los Angeles WNI (HIO 001 I
Game Winning RBI - Ransom 111 E-Reyes L(JH-San Francisco 5, Los Angeles (i 2B -Espy. Youngblood (Smith SB l,eonardi26i.S-MI)avis
IP II It F.R BR Sil
San Francisco MDavis ,W .6-4 8 1-3 4
2-3 0
Tribe Rallies To Nip Yale
Montreal 010 010 200- 4
New York 401 000 OOx- 5
Game-Winning RBI Brooks (8i. E-Gaff DP-.Montreal 1 LOB-Montreal 8, New York 6 2B-Wilson. Brooks, Gullickson, Little 2 HR-Foster (281 SF-Woh!ford, Wallach.
IP H R ER BR S(l
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Lady Bucs Take Win
DAVIDSON - East Carolina's Lady Pirate tennis team rolled up a 7-2 victory over Davidson College Saturday afternoon.
The Lady Pirates won four of the six singles matches, then swept through the doubles to sew up the win.
The Lady Pirates travel on to U.NC Charlotte today. Summary :
Katherine Tolson 'KCi d Sue llillon, (-1.6 2.
Janet Kussell iKC) d .Meji Short. 6-0.6-0
Miriam Beck KCi d Patricia Hahn. 6-0.6 1 Debbie PcKllin (Di d Anne .Man derlield, 5 7.6-4,6-2 (LSI Bolton iKti d Marv (triffth. 6-4.6-3
Libby Saunders iD' d Lynn Wallace, 6-1.6-1 Tolson Kussell iKCi d Hilton .Short. 6-3.6-3.
Bolton Manderfield iKC) d Hahn Fodlin, 6-4.6-4 BeckWallace 'KCi d Megan Need, 6-4,7-5
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) -Dave Scanlon rushed for 82 yards and scored on a 16-yard run Saturday to lead explosive William and Mary to a come-from-behind 26-14 victory over Yale in the 37th annual Oyster Bowl.
The Indians, 2-2, also scored on a 10-yard run by backup quarterback Dave Murphy, a fumble receovery ^by Glenn Bodnar and two field goals by Brian Morris.
Yale, which has lost its first three games only once before in the past 110 years, scored on Mike Curtains 16-yard pass to Roger Javins and a 25-yard run by Paul Andre.
Yale held a 14-7 advantage early in the third quarter. The Indians then scored 19 unanswered points, starting with a 29-yard field goal from Morris with 6:13 left in the third quarter that cut the Yale lead to 14-10.
Yale then turned the ball over three times and the Indians scored after each.
Nimms Hackett intercepted a Yale pass and returned it 45 yards to the Yale 9 to set up the first tou(:hdown. Murphy, subbing for Stan Yagiello who was sidelined with a separated shoulder, ran 10 yards for the score.
Following a Yale fumble, the Indians drove 26 yards for another touchdown to widen
the gap, 23-14. On the scoring play, Scanlon fumbled in the end zone but Bodner recovered for the touchdown.
Following a Todd Leeson interception, the Indians scored again on a 21-yard field goal by Morris.
William & Mary took a 7-0 lead when Scanlon ran 16 yards with 1:39 left in the first quarter. Yale drove 80 yards to tie the score with Javins catching a 16-yard touchdown pass from Curtain with six seconds left in the half.
Furman............49
VMI..................0
LEXINGTON, Va. (UPI) -Stanford Jennings scored three touchdowns in the first quarter Saturday and threetime defending Southern Conference champion Furman rolled to an easy 49-0 victory over winless Virginia Military Institute.
The Paladins, 4-1, scored touchdowns on their first six possessions and held a 42-0 lead at the half. With the loss, VMI fell to 0-4 for the first time since 1973.
Jennings, Furmans career rushing leader, scored the first of his three touchdowns less than two minutes into the game after Paladin strong stafety Fred Baber intercepted an A1 Comer pass and returned it 41 yards to the VMI 2.
Cincinnati...........6
Houston.............4
HOUSTON (AP) - Tom Foleys run-scoring single in
the third inning capped a four-run rally that triggered the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-4 victory over the Houston Astros Saturday.
Trailing 4-1 after two im nings, Dallas Williams walkeci and Skeeter Barnes singled with one out off loser Mike Madden, 9-5.
Paul Householder doubled Williams home and Duane Walker drew a walk to chase Madden. Bob Knepper came on and allowed a sacrifice fly by Dann Bilardello and RBI singles by Alex Trevino and Foley to put the Reds in front 5-4.
Barnes RBI single in the eighth gave the Reds an insurance run
Houston scored four runs in the first inning on Jose Cruzs run-scoring; groundout, Kevin Bass two-run single and a run-scoring single by Tim Tolman.
With two out in the second inning. Madden walked Bilardello, Trevino and Folev
to load the bases and balked Bilardello home to make it 4-1. -W'inner Frank Pastore, 9-12, scattered 11 hits. ---
to a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs Saturday.
( HK \(.()
(INdNNATI
ab r h bi
Hans 2b 5 U 2 0
Williams 11 2 2 I 0
Barnes lb* 4 1 2 1 Hoshldr cf 4 1 2 1 Walker rf 3 l o U Bilrdelo c 3 10 1 Trevino 3b 3 0 1 1 Folev ss 3 0 11
Haslore p 4 0 10
Totals 31 6 10 3
HOl.STON
ab r b bi Loucks cf 5 12 0 CRnlds 2b 4 10 0 Walling 3b 5 1 3 0 Cruz If 4 0 0 1 Bass, rf 5 112 Tolman lb 4 () 2 1 Biorkmn c 4 o 2 o BHena ss 4 0 10 Madden p 1 i) o 0 Knepper p z 0 0 0 Puhl ph 10 0 0 LaCorle p o 0 o o
Totals 3 4 II I
Bosley If 4 0 0 0 Bucknr lb 4 1 l o MHall cf 3 1 'I 2 Morelnd rf 4 0 1 0 (ey 3b 4 0 0 0 JDavis ( 4 () 1 0
3Carler pr o u o o Sndbrg 2b 4 0 0 0 DDwen ss 3 o 1 o Johnsin ph i o o o Schulze p 10 0 0 Rohn ph 1 (I 1 0 Ufferis p 0 0 0 o Totals 3:C2 2
STLOILS
ab r h bi
LoSmith If 4 0 10 Oberkfl 2b 2 0 0 0 Dovie 2b 2 0 10 Mc(iee cf 3 1 I o Hndrck lb 4 2 2 I VnSlyk 3b 4 0 2 2 Greeh rf 3 0 0 0 (uirk c 3 0 10 O.Smith ss 2 0 0 0 Forsch p 3 0 0 0 Suiter p 0 0 0 0
Letterts. 3-4, snapped a 2-2 tie.
The Cardinals took a 2-0 lead'in the first on Andy Van Slyke s triple that followed a walk to Willie McGee and a single by Hendrick.
The Cubs tied it in the fourth as Bill Buckner singled and Mel Hall slammed his I7th homer
Totals
(Oil ago (sILouis
(incinnati UM ooo OIO6
Houston iiKI 000 0(H)- I
Game Winning RBI Folev . D
r,n 'talker. W>41;ng, Knepper
DP-Houston 2 LDB Cincinna;i 9.
(MW 2(MI (WO 2
200 000 01X- 3
/s ... -'V ui;
Game Winning RBI - Hendrick ii . L-Doyle LDB Chicago 6. StLouis fi
Houston 11 2B-.Householder. Bjorkman SB Loucks 2 .21, Walker 6.. Pans 8i
2B Mcflee. LoSmith, JDavis 3B.-\anSlyke. DOwen HK MHall i: ! SB Dowen \ S-
S-Williams SF-Bilardello
IP H R ER RR SO
(incinnati
Pastore W,912 Houston
Madden L.9-5 Knepper
11 4 3 3 7
2 1-3 3 5 2-3 7
_ 1 (I >. II 1 ,
Wp- Madden BK Pastore. Madden
T- 2-.30 A 7.C57
LaCorte
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Hendrick Schulze
,. IP H K ER RB M)
Schulze -
Lefferts L.3-4 St Louis
Forsch W 1(1-12 8 5 > ) 1 -I
HBP- Drwn by Schulze WP- Forsch I 2 11 A-^JJ .543
1
1
St. Louis.............3
Chicago.............2
ST. LOUIS (AP) George Hendrick belted a tie-breaking home run in the eighth inning to lift the St. Louis Cardinals
Bob Forsch, 10-12. who pitched a no-hitter in his last start, gave up five hits'in his eight-inning stint. Bruce Sutter pitched the ninth inning to gain his 21st save.
Hendrick's 18th homer of the year, off reliever Craig
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ECU Wins One Match
COOD^
HARRISONBURG, Va. -East Carolina lost two matches and won one during the James Madison Quadrangular Tennis Meet held Saturday at James Madison University.
The Pirates fell to East Tennessee State, 6-3, and to James Madison, 9-0, and also gained a 5-1 victory over Radford.
In the latter match, Radford chose not to play out the doubles since the match had already been decided.
Summaries for the East Tennessee and Radford matches were not available.
Summary of ECU-JMU match:
SAVCNOWTHRUOCtlS
Mark Trinka (JMi d. Gaylen Treble. 6-2,6-4
Rob Smith OM i d Paul Owen, 6-3,6-2
Keith Ciocco iJ.Mi d Doug Otto. 6-1, 6-7, 6-3
Robert Bell' JMi d Bill O'Donnell, 6-2 3-6,64).
Gary Shendell (JMi d. Dave Creech 3-6.6^.6-2.
Bob Rebv (JMi d Dave Turner, 7-6 6-L
Trinka-Kenl Boerner .JMi d Treble Creech, l-3
Ciocco Shendell iJ,M> d Owen-O'Donnell. 10-3
Bill Georges-Sniith (JMi d Olio Bo) Llovd, 10-5.
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/
Late Score Lets
B\ WOODY PEELE But over 30 of that came on
Reflector Sports Editor penalties against the Ram-
ROCKY MOUNT - Jimmv pants, and the touchdown play
Vines pulled-ina-controversialleft Rampant coaches in a touchdown pass with 33 sec- near state of apople.xy.
onds left in the game to Coach Ronald Vincent was
climax a further con- so upset by the series of plays
troverasial drive that allowed Rocky Mount tO'claim a 14-7 football victory over Rose High School Friday night.
The Rampants, held virtually in check on offense throughout the night, rallied early in the final period to tie the game at 7-7 on a one-yard
run by Reggie Smith .Minutes later, what appeared to be. the go-ahead score for the Rampants was called back on a late holding call.
Rocky Mount had taken the initial lead on a four-yard run by Cedric,.Mercer in the second period of the game, then fought back after Rose lost its bid for victor} to drive 79 vards tor the final score
that climaxed the game that he refused to talk after the game and was contacted early Saturday for his comments on the contest.
.And even then, they were subdued by the fact that North Carolina High School .Athletic .Association rules forbid coaches from critizing officials in the media
The score by the Gryphons came just minutes after Rose had seen what could have been a winning score taken away by a penalty.
Rose, facing third and 14 on their own 48. saw Battle Emory - who sat on the bench with an ankle injury most of the night - connect
with Dwight Smith for a 52-yard scoring pass - only to see it called back by-a-holdtng^ penalty.
The flag, however, didn't come out of the officials' pocket until the ball was well along the way to Smith, who faked out one tackier and made it into the end zone with the ball-all in vain,
"That may have been the turning point of the ball game." Vincent said.
T\\o plays later. Rose was forced to kick and Rocky Mount took over on its own 21. Gryphon quarterback Roney Harris hit Keith Evans for six yards, then went to Scott tulloss for nine more to the 36.
On the next play. Rose was hit with a 15-yard penalty for a personal foul against Roswell .Streeter, and when Streeter protested, another 15 - 16 were actually walked off -giving the Gryphons a first
Reggie
Rampant Touchdown
Rose High .school tailback Smith i;:.M rises from the ground after a one-yard plunge into the end zone as officials signal the TI) Fridav night in Rock\ Mount*. The Ram
pants tied the score at 7-7 on the play, but the (iryphons tame back with a controversial score in the final minute to nip Rose. 14-7. (Reflector Photo bv Tonimv Forrest)
Southern Durham To Snap Four-Year Streak
Romps
B> HKK.SiOPFE AssociatediPresv Writer
Tailback Darryl .McGill rushed for a season-high 239 yards and scored two touchdowns as top-ranked Southern Durham beat East Wake 26-6 in high school football Southern Durham held East Wake, which was averaging nearly 4(Xi yards per game offensively, .to 166 yards total offense Friday night The win was the Spartans' first over East Wake m four years,
McGill, who had 115 yards on the ground after the first quarter, has rushed for 956 yards in six games Quarterback Randy Leathers added touchdown runs of 1 and 15 yards as the 3-.A Spartans upped their record to 6-0 Kannapolis, ranked No, 2 in the 3-.A division, recorded its third shutout, blanking Nprthuest Cabarrus 28-0 for i( sixth straight win Tnranked East Rowan ended a 21-game losing streak - the second longest in the state - by beating Sun Valley 35-6 Running back James Forney rushed for 165 yards and three touchdowns to lead East Rowan.
Louisburg owns the state's longest losing streak at 24.
L'nranked Statesville got a spectacular performance from quarterback Walter Walker as it downed West Iredell 27-12 for its 23rd straight Western Piedmont Conference victory.
Walker hit on 22 of 47 passes for 303 yards and four scores, Statesville, 3-3. ran out of a shotgun the, entire night and did not huddle, calling most of Its plays from the sideline.
.Meanwmle, Fayetteville Byrd, ranked second in the 4-.A division, whipped previously unbeaten Lee County 28-13.
Defensive end Ricky Shaw returned an intercepted pass 28 yards with 10:22 left to give Byrd a 21-7 lead,
Byrd. 5-0. was led by running back Steve Salley with 127 yards, Tim Whiteled Lee County. 4-1. with 142 yards.
No 6 Jacksonville, the defending 4-A champions, handed Wilmington Hoggard Its first loss. 10-0. Wilson Hunt, tied for seventh, whipped Northeastern :14-14,
Running back Juan Jackson rushed for 236 yards and scored three touchdowns, one on an 85-yard run. for 5-0 Hunt Anthony Best had touchdown passes of 34 and 8 yards.
Gastonia Ashbrcpk upended Asheville 14-0 as sophomore Darius Walker raced for 140 yards and one score. Walker has rushed for more than 100 yards in his last two games
since lieing called up to the varsity squad .Asheville, tied for seventh with Hunt, failed to get inside the.Ashbrook 30 all night Quarterback Roney Harris hit Jimmy Vines for a 12-yard scoring pass with 33 seconds left as Rocky Mount handed ninth-ranked Greenville Rose Its second straight loss, 14-7.
Harris completed 13 of 20 passes for 144 yards.
In the 2-A and 1-A class. No 2 Sylva-Webster upped its record to 6-0 with a 28-6 victory over Murphy and No. 7 Franklinton toppedpreviously undefated North Johnston 55-15.
Franklinton had three runners go over 100 yards, led by Wayne^ Branch with 117. Quentin Cannady had 114 yards and three touchdowns while Larry Andrews rushed for 106 yards and two scores, Franklinton, 5-0, had 481 yards rushing and 552 yards total offense.
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down at the Rose 30.
Vincent and his staff questioned officials as to w*hat had occurred, but it was several plays later before they finally were given one.
They never did fully explain it," Vincent said "'rtiey said that he didn't say anything bad or do anything bad, but gave no other explaination." That explaiiia-tion was for the second 15 yarder. Vincent said no explaination was ever given for the first penalty.
Rose held through three downs, but on fourth on four at-the 24. Ifefris hft Tulloss for a 12 yard gain and a first down at the 12.
On the next play. Harris hit Vines in the left cori^f of the end zone - or so it wasruled by the officials. Rose's defender protested in vain that Vines had come down outside the back of the end zone, but to no avail, and Vincent later claimed to have been relayed the word that the receiver admitted he was out of bounds when he caught the ball,
"All our people said he was out of the en(i zone That 's all I can say about it . AlUhe people^ down in that area ^id he was^ out of the end zone too."
Rose was handicapped through the game by penalties - ten for a total of 85 yards -and the inability to establish any kind of running attack. The Rampants rushed for only 32 yards on 26 carries. Their passing game also suffered with Emory sidelined for most of the game - he played only three series - as the Rose quarterbacks hit just seven of 16 passes for 128 yards with two interceptions "Our blocking is so poor right now that we really shouldn't have been in the situation to have lost the game. We're just not making good things happen to ourselves,"
The Gryphons were penalized only twice - once for delay of game as they purposly held off the snap trying to draw the Rampants offsides on a fourth down play Rocky Mount threatened first, moving from its own 41 to the Rose 36 before being forced to punt.
The Gryphons took over again on the last play of the quarter at their own 12 and marched 88 yards in 17 plays on a long 6:56 drive that resulted in their first TD. They were helped along the way by an encroachment penalty on fourth and one at the Gryphon 37 that gave them-a first down, Harris hit .Michael Earl for 14 yards two plays later, and -.Mercer rushed for 12 more on the next play. Rocky Mount ground it out slowly over the next seven plays reaching the four, where Mercer pushed over through the middle for the score Reggie Pryor's kick made it 7-0 with 5:17 left in the half.
Rose quickly came back on a 23-yard kickoff return by Streeter with a Todd Martin to Tyrone Smith adding 11 yards to the Rocky Mount 41 But the drive sputtered there, and fourth down try at the 38 failed to gain yardage. Rocky Mount then drove back to the Rose 27 before also failing to pick up a first down.
Rose then got off a quick 35 yards on a .Martin to Dwight Smith pass, putting the ball at the Gryphon 39. but Martin was intercepted on the next play, ending the first half.
Late in the third period, Rose finally got off a touchdown drive that tied it up. Starting from its own 38. Rose steadily moved it along, helped by a 15-yard pass from Martin to Billy .Michel for a first down at the Rocky Mount 41. and a 32-yard pass to Tyrone Smith, who wrestled the ball awav from Evans at the 14.
Martin sneaked to the three on fourth and ane at The five for a first down, and on third down. Reggie Smith cracked over the middle for the score and Brian Bridges' boot knotted it at 7-7 with 10:25 left in the final period.
.After an exchange of punts. Rose saw its potential touchdown pass called back and.was forced to punt. Rocky Mount then drove down field for the go-ahead score, and Rose's last ditch attempt to
get back into the game resulted in another interception that sealed it for the Gryphons.
If there was a bright spot in the game, it would have to be the punting of .Arthur Brown. \^ho averaged 42.2 yanis a boot for six*tries. WTiile the kicks didnt travel that far in the air. they were mostly high and got good bounces' once they touched down. . ;
We've got to fine some offensive linemen." Vincent said "W'p've just got to work
a little bit harder and fine people on our football team that want to block.
Having Emory sidelined "broke up continuity, that's all. Todd did a good job for the most part" Vincent said he wasn't sure how Emory would come along and it would be Monday before his status for the next game would be known.
overall and 1-1 in the league.
"I think we still have a chance to get into the playoffs." Vincent said. But if we don't play better, we won't have any chance. ;
Rose returns toaction o Thursday, playing host to Wilson Beddingfield in Ficklen Stadium at 7:30 p.m.
The loss drops the Rampants to 3-2 overall and 0-2 in the Big East. Conference
Rosf
Rockv Mourn
6
First Downs
U
26-32
Rushes-Yardage
38-99
128
Passing Yards
U4
7
Return Yards
12
6-7-2
Passing
20-13X)
6-422
Punts-Average
5-37.8
1-
Fumbles-Lost
1-1
10-85
Penalties-Yards
2-9
Rose. .
......................0 (I
0 7 7
Rockv
Mount............0 7
0 7-14
Scoring:
RM
Mercer. 4 run
iPrvor
kick
R -
R Smith, 1 run
1 Bridges
kicki
R.M Vines. 12 pass from Harris I Pr\or kick i
Individual Statistics }
Rushing R - Streeter 3-7. R Smith 11-19. Emor\- 2-i-lli. Martin 6-8. Blackwell 4-9.' RM - Mercer 12-43. Lynch 1-6. Harris 6-<-16/. Corpening 19-66 Passing: R - Emorv 4-l-lXi 0. .Martin 12-6-109-0 2. RM - Harris 20-13-114-10,
Receiving R - .MicheJ 2-34. T Smith 59. D Smith 1-35; RM -.Avent 1-4 Tulloss 5-49. Earl 3-24. Evans 3-25. Vines 1-12.
Talcing It Away
Tyrone Smith (88) of Rose High School leaps up to take away a pass from defensive back Neil .\vent (6)
of Rocky .Moun| during action Friday night in Rocky Mount. The Gryphons scored a 14-7 victory in the contest. (Reflector Photo bv Tom m v Forrest)
Thomas Sparks Aycock To 12-0 Win Over Rams
PIKEVILLE - Charles B. .Aycock High School's John Thomas proved the man with the action Friday night, leading the Falcons to a 12-0 victory over Greene Central in an Eastern Carolina Conference football game. ,
Thomas accounted for ail 12 points in the game, kicking two field goals and scoring the contest's lone touchdown.
Thomas' first field goal came in the first quarter ending a drive after the Falcon defense had forced a . punt. He booted a 32-yarder to give the Falcons a 3-0 lead.
The rest of the scoring came in the second period again after the defense forced the Rams to punt First, Thomas kicked a 26-yard field goal, then followedthat on the next drive with a three-yard scoring run.
Greene Central's offense was stymied most of the night, getting into Falcon territory only twice, fumbling it away both times. The deepes't penetration was to the 30. Aycock offered no other threats in the game.
The Rams were somewhat handicapped by their top offensive player Anthony Thompson suffering from deep cold. Although he lejkhe" defense with 11 tackles^d six assists, he was held to only 29 yards rushing on 12 carries. Quarterback Elmer Dixon
added 44 yards on six carries "We didn't catch the ball well tonight." Coach Lewis Godwin said. "We had several receivers wide open for big yards but the ball went right through their hands"
The loss drops the Rams to 1-4-1 overall and 0-2 in Eastern Carolina Conference play. Greene Central plays host to Farmville Central next Friday.
(irf<ne(.
25-106
26
15
11-2-2
6-262
3-2
3-39
Pirsl Durt Ku-shes-Vardgc Passing Yards Return Yards Pas.sing Punt-Average FumbleyLost PenaJlies-Yar/t
( K. .\\((k
13
XelOd 11 ''8U 4-HJ 7-32 6 (H)
-si.i
(ireene Central...........
( B luofk...............
Scoring CBA - Thomas .i2 F(,
CBA - Thomas 2; FG
CBA-Thomas ./run run failed
:t 9 n o-i:
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville NC
Sungo/ Ocicbe' 2 1983 g.y
'Making Tke Grab
Ayden-Griftons Maurice Berry (9) makes the grab in front <f D.H. :(onley defender John Brown (21), during Friday nights action between
the two^Fitt Countv schoo Grifton Scored twice in ttl
Avdeii-
secAid
half to take a 14-0 victorv over the Vikings in the contest. (Reflector Photo by Katie Zernhelt)
Ayden-Grihon Downs Conley By 14-0 Margin
LimEFlELD - Ayden-Grifton found things just a bit more tougher than expected against D H. Conley's Vikings in a non-conference football contest Friday night But the Chargers were still able to come away with a 14-0 victory over the Vikings.
The two teams battled on ecjual terms throughoat the first half of the contest, with neither able to push :he ball into the end zone.
Late in the third period, however, the Chargers began to move the ball, with Doug Coley hitting Gene Johnson for
a 20-yard scoring pass to finally break the ice. Billv Wiggins added the first of his two'PAT kicks for a 7-0 lead.
The other score came late in the contest as Malcolm Worthington pushed in from a yard away.
Kelvin Harris led the Ayden-Grifton offense with 126 yards on 12 carries.
Conley falls to 2-3 with the loss and opens its Coastal Conference play at White Oak next Friday.
Ayden-Grifton is now 41 overall and takes a four-game winning streak into next Fri
day night's battle with Southwest Edgecombe, the Eastern Carolina Conference favorite on- the Charger home
field.
(imlev
\vden-(iriflon
6
First Down.-
11
38-III2
Ru.shesVariiagC'
;i2-209
82
Passing Yards
;-i8
29
Reiurn 5 ards
21 Li AJI
Ij-n-i
3-26II'
Pa.vsing
Iunb-Avcfagc
3-32 (1
(HI
Fumbles Los!
11
7.5,5
lVnaltu>Y'ards
9-1115
(on lev
........'1 11
II 0- II
\vden-(i
nflon.................II 0
7 7-11
Seorine
A(; -
Juhn.'on. 20 iidss Irom Colev,
Wigjiins
kick
,A(i
Worlhinginn, 1 run
Wiggias
kick
SouthWest Rolls To 28-0 Win Over Jags
FARMVTLLE - SouthWest Edgecombe dcminated play in the first half and rolled up a 28-0 victory over Farmville Central Fridry night.
, The Jaguars, who picked up only 154 ya*ds, got only nine offensive plays in the first half against therijgged Cougars.
We probably could have kept the score at 14-0 (the halftime scorei." Coach Gil , Carroll said, "but we tried to win it and made some mistakes that cost us."
Southwest took the opening , kickoff and marched for its first score of the evening. That came on an eight yard run by Jerome Staton. Jesse Forbes then kicked the first of four ; PATs for a 7-0 lead. The touchdown drive was helped along by a pass interference call against the Ja|uars. .
A pass interference call
again helped the Cougars on their next touchdown driie. in the second period. Farmville had driven to the 20 before fumbling it away to Start an 80-yard drive climaxed by a seven yard pass from Mark Pittman to Tony Sharpe for a 14-0 halftime lead.
In the final period, a pass interception gave SouthWest good field position, and they drove in to score on a 12-yard run by Forbes. Later in the period, Pittman scooped up a Farmville fumble at the 50 and raced all the way to the end zone with it to settle the final score.
"We ran only 29 plays in the game," Carroll said. "That's probably the least of any team Ive ever been associated with. Turnovers hurt us a lot every time we started moving the ball."
Staton finished the game with 93 yards on 16 carries for the Cougars, while Forbes added 89 yards on eight lugs Dennis Tripp, highlighted the Jaguar offense with four pass receptions for 76 yards. Johnny Ford and Chris Edwards led the Farmville defense.
Farmville drops to 2-3 on the year with the defeat, and is 0-1 in Eastern Carolina Con
ference action. The Jaguars travel to Greene Central on Friday for their next outing.
33-241 128 84 8-6-1 1-31.U 3-2 12-120
14-60 94 25
15-6-2 3-29.0
2-2
6-85
Lame Duck Jets Are Really Lame
SW Kdjiecombp Farmville ('. 17 FirslDowns 6
Kushcs-Yardage Pa.ssing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-.Average Fumbles-Lost Pcnallies-Yards
SW Kdgeiombe.......7 7 0 1428
Farmville ........0 0 0 00
Scoring:
SWE - Staton, 8 run (Forbes kick I
pe, 7
Pittman I Forbes kick).
SWE - Forbes, 12 run i Forbes kick).
SWE Pittman, 50 fumble return i Forbes kick).
' NEW YORK (AP) - To ; Head Coach Joe Walton, "lame duoc has a different connotatirti than the New ' York JeU playing their last year withn the city limits.
; An unisual amount of inju-> ries to starters has hit the , Jets, vho announced earlier
* this w,*ek that they are mov-4 ing Ueir National Football ; Leagie team to New Jersey -; after this season. Among the
lateit casualties are star run-t ninj back Freeman McNeil - andJeft guard Stan t Wild'emore, who suffered
. * disabling injuries in last veeks 27-24 overtime victory <ver the Los Angeles Rams.
- Anytime you lose players of
that caliber, its got to hurt,
* said Walton. "You just hope 11 that the backup people can
come in and do the job.
|i, Ill make this clear because I dont want anybody I to write that Im making
excuses. But you always miss a starting player, at any position. Thats why hes the starter, because hes the best youve got. But thats also why you have backup people. You just have to hope they come through.
As if Walton didnt have enough injury problems already, the Jets now face the remainder of the schedule -12 games - with depleted offensive power at two key positions.
McNeil, of course, was the NFLs leading rusher last season and had piled up 320 yards before suffering a separated shoulder in the first quarter of the Rams game. He will be lost to the team for six to eight weeks.
Waldemore underwent arthoscopic surgery on his left knee last Wednesday and was, at first, expected to be out of
(Please Turn To Page B-8)
Vikes Stop Tiger String
TARBORO - Tarboro ripped off 449 yards in total offense, led by quarterback Darren Bryan and tailback Calvin Hanson, and handed Williamston its first loss of the season Friday night. 36-22.
Hanson picked up 118 yards on 24 rushes, while Bryan was nine of 11 passing for 188 yards Two of those passes went to Williw PoWell for 118 yards.
Williamston quarterback James Ward fought back against the Vikings for 234 yards, on 10 of 21 passes, with Mike Peel catching three pabses for 97'of those. But it wasn t enough
Tarboro took the opening kickoff and drove down the field for the first score o the night as both teams starred the scoreboard clicking right away. Hanson climaxed the 69-yard drive with a six-yard run and John Poindexter's
kick made it 7-0 Williamston quickly came back to tie it up. scoring on just two plays from 68 yards out. The touchdown came on a 66-yard pass from Ward to Peele, and Rodney Conner's kick tied it at 7-7.
It took Tarboro only three plays after the kickoff to move the ball 85 yards back into the end zone. The big play was the score - a 77-yard pass from Bryan to Powell that, with Poindexter's kick, upped the score to 14-7,
After recovering a fumble at the Williamston 39. Tarboro pushed ahead by 22-7. Hanson did the final damage on a two-yard run. and Bryan passed to Marvin Smith for a two-point conversion.
\\ illiamston came back tielore the half ended to score once more. Ward raced 46 yards to the end zone, as the Tigers scored on just three
plays from 74 yards away. ,A1 Willingham ran over the conversion to cut the lead to 22-15.
Tarboro drove 60 yards following the kickoff injust eight plays with Ricky Dozier scor-
Williamston
15
26-94
234
Tarboro
20'
53-261
21-lW)
3-37 0 1-1
4-50
18
12-9-1
0-00.0
1-0
6-50
0-.36
First Downs Rushes-Y'ardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
Williamston........... 7 8
Tarboro.................14 14
Scoring:
T Hanson, 6 run 1 Poindexter kick I
W - Peele, 66 pass from Ward Conner kick ^
T - Powell, 77 pass from Brvan Poindexter kick I.
T - Hanson, 2 run 1 Smith, pass from Bryan I W Ward. 46 run (Willingham rum
T - Dozier, 21 run 1 run failed 1 W Brown. 18 pass from Ward I Conner kick I T - Smith, 26 pass from Bryan Powell, pass from Bryan)
ing from 21 yards out and that raised it to 28-15
Again it was Williamston's turn to drive downfield following the kickoff. The Tigers moved it 71 yards: in ten plays with Kermit Brown scoring on an 18-yard pass from Ward. Connors PAT cut the lead to 28-22.
One last drive by the Vikings finally closed liut the scoring. On the series following the kickoff, Tarboro drove 86 yards in 12 plays, helped along on a Bryan pass to
Donald Frank for 15 vards on a fake punt on fourth and five Finally, Bryan hit Marvin Smith for 26 yards and the TD with Powell taking a pass from Bryan tor the conversion that ended the scoring
The loss was the first in six starts for the Tigers, who are now 3-1 in .Northeastern Conference play.'
Williamston has an open date this Friday night, then returns to action the following Friday- against Roanoke Rapids.
Knights Fall To Friendship
Conversions Help In 15-12 Creswell Win
GHOCOWINITY - Creswell High School used one-point 4iqd.iwu point conversions to spell the dififeFhce'Friday nighu nipping Chocowinitv.
1 he conversions were the diiference in the contest as both teams scored twice.
Creswell scored first in the second quarter on a one-yard Preston Phelps run. Michael Davenport kicked the PAT for a 7-0 lead.
Chocowinity came back later in the period with Roy Hooker scoring from 11 yards away. A try for two points failed, however, leaving-Creswell up, 7-6.
Creswell added the clincher in the third period. Scottie
Moore Leads Bullet Win
Matthew Moore scored two touchdowns and rushed for 129 yards in leading Jamesville to a 22-0 victory over Bath High School Friday night.
Moore lugged the ball 18 times, going into the end zone on two of those as the Bullets won their first Tobacco Belt Conference game against the team favored in pre-season to win it all Bath, suprisingly. is 0-2 in the league.
The victory also avenged an earlier 8-0 loss by the Bullets to Bath in a non-conference meeting of the two teams.
Moore's, first touchdown run came in the first period from nine yards away. That gave Jamesville a 6-0 lead.
The Bullets came back in the second quarter on a one-yard run by Robbie Harris to score again, .Moore ran over the PAT to up the lead to 14-0.
The final touchdown by Moore came in the last period on a 15-yard run. Quarterback Richie Ange passed to Greg Hardison for the PAT. setting the final 22-0 score.
Harris added 44 yards to the Jamesville rushing total on 10 carries.
Bath threatened only once in the game, being held on downs inside the 20.
First Downs Rushes-Yardage Passing Vards Return Yards Passing Punls-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
.......................0 It 0-
Jamesville.........................6 8 0 8-22
Scoring J-.Moore. 9 run I run failed)
J - Harris. 1 run i Moore run i J - Moore. 15 run i Hardison, pass from Ange I
4
25-85.
10
35
10-2-2
4-35.0
1-1
4-55
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.Malpass broke away for an 85-yard run for the touchdown. Evroe, Webb then caught a pass ftom Davenport to sew-up the win, ^ ,
Chocpwinity Sfn' ba eirly in tl^ final gpripd. on a 25-yard pass from Vic Baluis to Melvin Jripp to pull with three, but again a two-point conversion try failed.
The Indians had a drive late in the game inside the Creswell ten, but an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty drove them back and an interception followed, ending the Tribe's chances.
The loss left Chocowinity with a 1-.3-1 record, and a 1-1
Tobacco Belt Conference mark. The Indians return to actiqn Friday, hosting JamesviHe.
CfKk'NWnit-i
.. FirsU^pis . , - - s
kushcsAardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
(reswell
46-227
:36
,50
10-3-1 1-50.0
'3J2? 64 64 9-5-1 3-29 3 2-2 3-15 8 0-1.5 0 612
9-90
Creswell
Chocowinity..............(I
Scoring:
Cr - Phelps, 1 run (Davenport kick I
Ch - Hooker. 11 run i run failed i Cr - Malpass. 85 run W'ebb, pass from Davenport I,
Ch - Tripp. 25 pass from Balms ' pass failed)
RALEIGH - Friendship Academy got three goals in each half and took a 6-3 soccer victory over Friday afternoon.
Chris Harris got the scoring started for Greenville Christian, scoring just a minute into the contest, it stayed that way for over 2(i minutes before Friendship unleashed a flurrv of three goals to take a 3-l halftime lead Chuck Ferguson scored 23 minutes into the half, followed by Todd Jones four minutes later .Cliris .Gross scored the thjd ,Friendship eoai 36- ra Jonf-'T ^
like Brag^ sgjn^iG^ otrtb a good sfari, hitting tile second Knight goal three minutes into the second half, assisted by Brian House Jones scored for Friendship 25
minutes into the half, and Ferguson added a-second goal four minutes later, Harris then scored his second goal tor GCA on an assist by Bragg at the 31 minute mark, but .Mike Peterson s goal with 3.> minutes gone set the final score.
"It was a great game, 'GCA Coach Dale Thatcher said "1 thought our guys played their best game of the year Friendship is the best we play; one of the best soccer tea.5^ in Nort^,,4'arolina.- 1 s'v.,, >a/Val p^^d do this y^<4''#'i^ainsi ttfelh. It made ql ^ feel good about our team and gave us a good indication of how good we are Now 4-6 the Knights play host to Bethel Academy on Tuesday
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Sunday . October 2. 1983Wranglers, Blitz Swap Franchises
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purchased the Arizona franchise- f'riday from Wrangler, owner Jim Joseph and announced at a news conference here that the team would retain its name due to statewide sentiment Dieth'rich also s|id quarterback Alan Risher and otiensive tackle Jeff Kiewel w ill remain Wranglers with
Chicago keeping two yet-to-be-named players.
Before buying the Arizona club. Diethrich sold his majority interest in the Blitz to Dr, James Hoffman Jr. - a heart surgeon who is chief of the cardiovascular surgery unit at Good Samaritan Medical Center in Milwaukee.
As part of the deal. Chicago
head coach George Allen and his five assistants come to Arizona with Allen's 26-year-old son, Bruce, taking over as general manager.
"We are the new Arizona Wranglers," Diethrich told reporters. But we hope to carry on the same winning tradition that we had in Chicago."
Has George Mellowed?
V.: : Si : i'c
j.ia> Licorgc.Steinbrenner gone mellow.', ai boss 01 the New York A'ankees ...: iic'.led ]x>ace and stability pave the
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1 by a senes ot bizarre and unsettling !! -s pme-lar home run, l)a\e Wintield's "t .1 seagull, temporary loss ot the :: a pi'e-da.wn automobile accident, Billy nxim insult ot a woman reporter and M. liJa.vt-hiit Baltimore (-)rioles or the nnaiit - the traditionally impetuous, arenner has remained remarkablv
:..m snewn he wa> around during the hot nmlionares in knee-length pants c:,- .md ultimately the sport's supreme
V- f'S. *
1 -Mi'ui^tn!'miertere and"! haven't, i'here was one little problem with the '-'"m. mat it w ironed out,
.'I.:\ear lor me I thought we had the '. V. I .n'li/hi '\e .'hould have won But I .; i '..Ised thmgs, out and there was
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isli.eadai f or the lirst time blaekducks will not be allowed !" tie taken until December 28 tiecause ot their current low t.}wa\ population.
The season begins at thirty minutes before sunrise I fctolier 6 and closes at sunset ''etot'er8
.\ea Hoiitins Book A new comprehensue guide to boat-mg the coastal waters of North Carolina will be available in mid-uctober ''.tied Crui^ihs Guide to ioa>!ui .\orih Carolina, the fiook 'mve- current navigational data, warnings about speciiic danger areas to avoid and detailed miormation on mur.nas and their lacilities The tniok also includes col-. "tul nistorical sketches and ^ s:>ai legends I'iie book IS a must lor the avid sailor or power boater WHO wTiuld like To" expldre'" .'ome 0! the more isolated coastal waters ot our state.
Written b\ Claiborne .Sellars Young, an, avid and experienced boater him.self. the book sells tor S17 9,5 and will be available through the John F. Blair Publishing Co . I4U6 Plaza Drive, Winston-Salem, NC 2711)3. after October 12. 198,;
Wddile \o!e - A wild rabbit's tirsp line of defense against a predator is to lie flat on the ground and remain absolutelc still. If that doesn't work, a Wild rabbit can jump a distance of a't least eight feet, clear obstacles five feet high and reach speeds of more than 40 miles an hour.
on Yankee pinstripe glory, the favorite disciple of the late Casey Stengel
Martin is on the hot seat again - not for anything resembling his sins of the past, such as crossing Reggie Jackson, punching a marshmallow salesman and calling the club owner "convicted." but quite simply for failing to win the American League pennant,
When Steinbrenner brought back the Yankees' popular 'prodical son before the 1983 season and signed him to a five-year. S2.5 million contract, there was - according to the boss - an understanding, some of it in small type, some of it' simply understood ';! said Fd let Billy have full reign, and he told me he would win the championship," Steinbrenner said. "I kept my part of the bargain" .
Steinbrenner said he would make a decision on Billy's future in post-season meetings w ith the pepperv manager and his New Orleans attorney. Judge Ed Sapir.
"1 refuse to discuss it now. " he insisted Actually. Billy proved to be a'comparatively docile during' the year. He didn't punch anybody out. He had no open squabbles with his players It he feuded with the boss, it never surfaced.
The fiery skipper was exonerated ol charges that he insulted a woman writer who refused to leave the locker room Although the Aankees were hit with a senes of injuries - the loss of .Andre Robertson the costliest - Billy held the team together enough to.finish on a winning note - 10 to a dozen victories better than 1981,
Three Touchdown Blitz Sparks Pam Pack Win
PLYMOUTH - Washington High School quarterback Jeff Cox dashed 72 yards, on a quarterback sneak to close out a three-minute plus period of three touchdowns as the Pam Pack romped to a 47-7 victory over Plymouth Friday night.
The Pam Pack piled up 465 yards on the ground in the contest, led by Cox's 103 yards on just four carries. Ed'Pritchard added 84 vards on eight lugs
The game was close for the first period-plus. Washington scored first on a- three-yard run by Ken Holly, and'Rob Jackson booted the extra point.
Plymouth came back to tie it up. however, scoring early in the second period on one-yard plunge by Steve Hart Chuck Phifer added the point after.
Cox then scored on a nine-yard run with just o\er three minutes left in the first half. Jackson's kick made It 14-7.
Then, with just over a minute left. Holley went 13 yards to score 'the third Washington touchdown. Jackson again kicked and it was21-7.
The Pam Pack got the ball back in the closing seconds of the half on an interception at its own 28, and Washington coach Bing Mitchell sent in instructions for Cox to run a quarterback sneak to run out
the clock But suddenly Cox was in the open, dashing 72 yards for the score with no time left on the clock. Jackson's kick made it 28-7 at the intermission.
Washington got things going again early in the second half with Pritchard dashing 43, yards for the next Pam Pack touchdown. Jackson again added the boot.
The Pack closed out the third period with a 27-yard pass from Dick Cherry to Harrv .Main to run it oiit to 41-7. '
The final TD came in the closing period when Tyrone Gorhamr ran 29 yards with just minutes left to play.
The victorv boosted the Pam Pack recwd to 4-1.2-1 in the Northeastern Conference. The Pack hosts Ahoskie next Fridav.
Washmsion..............................Flimoulh
First own.s ' 9
44-4ti;) Ru.vhes-Yardage . 47.155
H4 Fas.sing Yards 18
Zo Return Yards ' u
'4-u Passing 1(1-1-.3
iHKMi Punb-.Average :.23.6
Z-1 Fumbles-Lost ' 3-1'
.lu-911 Penalties-Yards 5-55
Washineion.....................; 21 |; si;
Fli mouth......................0 ; 0 07
Scoring
W-Holle>,3run Jacksonliicitv P-Hart. Iran Phifer kick-\V-('ox,Hrun Jack.sonkick W - Hullei, l.irun Jackson kick 1,
A - Cox,72run Jack.sonkick A - Pritchard, 4;i run Jackson kick -A - .Main. 27 pass from Cherrv kick failed
A-(iorham.zsrun kicklailed
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:1 e 'he invaluable .. 've, 0.otiio .Na\s he will fiM'-e iMnnt'fi- veterans . 0" Dierking and Bruce '.rner and rookie Johnny or '.vho ha.s been i.Mti.ari,''. o-.Ned on special 'am-.. far Di.erking, who i.s a .'tarter before .McNeil .' Med in New York in I98I, is v\,ilton ' first choice and will ;> the .backiield with
fullback Dwayne Crutchfield against Buffalo .Monday night.
As for Waldemore's position. Walton has tapped Joe Pellegrini, a third-string reserve. Second-stririger John Roman is still out with an injury .According to Walton, Pellegrini played "pretty darn good " in replacing Waldemore last week against the Rams.
McNeil and Waldemore join a growing injury list that includes defensive tackle Abdul Salaam rotator cuff), wide receiver^kick returner Kurt Sohn kneei and safety George Floyd (knee). In addition, Joe Klecko is trying to find his old form after a knee operation last year and has been moved from defensive end to tackle.
"You take an All-Pro out of the- lineup and it's got to hurt." said Pellegrini. "But. what are we supposed to do' Walk around and say, "Gee, we don't have Freeman, we don t' have Stan, we might as well quit'' That doesn't mean we don't need them, just that we have confidence in the guys taking their place."
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264 By Pass Greenville
In the USFL's inaugural season last spring, the Blitz had a 12-6 record and qualified for the playoffs before being eliminated by the Philadelphia Stars.
Arizona lost its last 10 games in a row and finished 4-14 - at the bottom of the Pacific Division and tied for the league's worst record with the Washington Federis.
"People ask why would you trade a 12-6 team for a i-14 one?'There wouldnt have been a deal without it..said Marv Levy, named the Blitz' new head coach Friday.
Levy, who formerly coached the National Football League's' Kansas City Chiefs, is a Chicago native and said "this was an opportunity to coach in a place with people I like and believe in. We're not promising what was promised a year ago - a championship football team - but well be ^citing."
^ Ron Patocnik, the Blitz' new chief executive and general manager, said "the toughest thing will be selling the people on a 4-14 team instead of a playoff team. The Wranglers were the youngest team in the league last year," featuring a roster replete with rookies.
"I'm sure Chicago doesn't take his graciously, but I don't think they're getting a last-place team," Allen said. "They'll be a contending football team. Chicago's a good sports town and they'll support them."
Last year, however, the Blitz had trouble drawing fans to Soldier Field - averaging about 18.000 per game - and Levy said he would adopt a "wait and see" attitude toward attendance expectations for 1984.
Diethrich reeked of optimism for his Arizona franchise, saying he planned to make it "the best in the USFL.-'^
"Jim Joseph suffered tremendously by being an absentee owner. I'm already inside the community with mv work here," he said' "I think it really makes all the difference between success and failure."
Joseph, a real estate developer in San Mateo, Calif., lost a reported $3 million on the
Wranglers this year but seemingly swayed between selling the franchise one minute and keeping it the next.
"This was an almost impossible task." Diethrich said, "1 believe this is the first time in football history that a franchise with all its players
Ahoskie Rips 'Skins, 25-0
AHOSKIE - The Ahoskie Cougars held Roanoke High School to only 74 yards in total offense androlled up a 25- Northeastern Conference victory over the Redskins Friday night.
The Redskins never threatened in the contest as they were overwhelmed by the Cougars,
Danny Whitaker scored the. first of two Ahoskie first period touchdowns, going over from two yards out. William Whitaker followed with a 50-yard scoring dash to make it 12-0 at the end of the quarter.
That held through the end of the half, with Ahoskie adding single touchdowns in each of the final two periods.
The first came on a 28-yard run by Terry Lane with Danny Whitaker kicking the PAT. In the final period. Whitaker
passed eight yards to Derrick Parker for the final score.
The loss dropped the Roanoke record to 3-3 on the year. 1-3 in Eastern Carolina play. Ahoskie climbs to 3-2 overall and 2-2 in the conference.
Roanoke plays host to Bertie on Fridav.
have been transferred. This has been five months in the works and it's the most difficult thing I've ever tried to get accomplished."
Allen - who'coached the Washington Redskins. Chicago Bears and Los Angeles Rams in the NFL before taking over the Blitz said hes "rebuilt four franchises, but ive never gbne through this type of transition.
"It's a psychological problem with any change or shift, no matter"how smooth it is. We have a big rebuilding job here. I've got to find out what a Wrangler is myself."
Kuanuke
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Passine Vards 18
35
Heturn Yards 15
19-3-3
Passing h-2-2
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Punls-Average :i-27 ii
0-0
Fumbles Liivt 3-(i
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Penallies-V ards 1()120
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Firebirds Top
N. Pitt, 12-0
STANHOPE, - Southern Nash held North Pitt to only 41 yards in total offense and took advantage of Panther mistakes to carve out a 12-u Eastern Carolina Conference football victory Friday night.
Mike Jones'got both of the Southern Nash touchdowns, one each in the second and fourth periods.
Jones' first score came on a nine-yard run that ended only, a 33-yard drive following a punt from deep in Panther territory. The other touchdown came after an interception-and a 29-vard return that put the bail at the. Panther 25. Jones again did the honors, from three yards out.
The Panthers only threat of the evening came when a long TD run by Alvin Grimes was called back because of a penalty.
The defeat drops the Panthers to 1-4 on the year, 1-1 in ECC play They return to action on Friday, hosting Charles B, Avcock.
Fill
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0 FirstDovins (i
M.A-IZ Ku.shi^-Yarda^i' iil-ltli 29 Fussinu Yards o
17 Hclurn Yards ,i:i
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Punts .Average 4-:i(i ii Fumblns I.iis! M
Penalties Aards 7-(l5
North Pitt.................(I (I II II 0
Southern Nash..........n li ti Ci12
.Scoring S\ - Jones. 9 run*iiicl\ lailed SN" - .Iones. 3 run ' pass failed
11 3-2 7-31 3
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Palmer Warms Up For AL Playoffs
tA AcC/WtiftlAtfl DwAfo i.;___A . .
By The Associated Press Six times in the past, the Baltimore Orioles reached the American League playoffs.
and six times they counted on Jim Palmer.
The Orioles will face the Chicago White Sox in the
upcoming AL championship series, and Palmer who had not figured in Baltimore Manager Joe Altobellis starting
pitching plans - is trying to make it seven-for-seven.
Palmer. pitched seven strong innings and got the win
as the Orioles beat New York 3-2 in the second game to earn a split of their twi-night doubleheader Friday with the Yankees,
Fans Celebrate Yaz
BOSTON (API - For months he has politely, but firmly, rejected special tributes on a final swing through the American League.
However. Carl Yastrzemski of the Boston Red Sox had no escape Saturday, his next to last after 23 illustrious years with the Boston Red Sox.
* .This was to be "Yaz Day" at 'Fenway Park, with some ^.000 fans expected to jam :every corner in major league baseball's smallest park.
The gates were opened ^arly. Lirjes formed early in Ihe morning for the few stan-;ding room and bleacher tick
ets remaining.
With retirement just 72 hours away. Yaz insisted Friday that the impact hadnt hit him yet.
That figured to strike home today with a flock of gifts and tributes scheduled during pregame ceremonies around second base, starting at 1:30 p.m.
The official sendoff began Friday night shortly after Yastrzemski said he was not even thinking of another record within easy reach.
The 44-year-old slugger put his name in the record books again in igniting the Red Sox
Standing Ovation
Boston Red Sox Carl Yastrzemski tips his hat in responce to a standing ovation from the fans at Fenway Park Friday night in Boston prior to his .first at bat. Yastrzemski vvent on to his a single off Cleveland Indian pitcher Neil Heaton in the first inning. (APLaserphoto)
English Gets Temporary Stay
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -First-year coach Wally English said his son, equipped with a new court order, probably would start again at quarterback in Tulanes college football game Saturday night against Vanderbilt.
It would be young Jon Englishs fifth game as a Tulane quarterback. The first four were played under a court order in which Civil District Judge Revius Ortique forbade Tulane to obey an NCAA judgment that he is ineligible.
When Ortique finally ruled Thursday that Jon English indeed was ineligible, the quarterbacks lawyers got the states 4th Circuit Court of Appeal on Friday to forbid the National Collegiate Athletic Association from barring him from football until further notice.
By a 2-1 vote, the appeals court also gave all the lawyers until next Thursday to file written arguments and responses. They said the case will be decided on those papers only, that no hearing will be held.
It meant Jon English, who is attending his fifth school and third four-year college, would see playing time in Saturday nights cable television game against Vanderbilt in the . \ Louisiana Superdome.
His father. Coach Wally English, said Jon probably would start for the third time this year.
Jon has worked with the ' first unit all week, and hell probably start, said Coach Wally. I havent talked with Garth Hall (offensive coordinator), but well probably go with Jon."
Annoyed by all the'hoopla, Vanderbilt Coach George
MacIntyre said he didnt care who starts.
"We have to play the game if Johnny Unitas starts, MacIntyre said after a Friday workout in the Dome.
Its just a ridiculous situation. It looks like somebody is trying to make a mockery out of the NCAA.
Gibson Tucker, Englishs lawyer, said the three-judge panel took swift action because it felt that Jon would suffer irreparable harm if he was barred from playing while the case followed normal procedure.
The NCAA said Jon English was ineligible, because he violated the student-athlete transfer rule when he tried to play at Tulane without laying off a year.
Jon spent 1979 at Michigan State, then studied a year at Alleghany Junior College; he played two football seasons at Iowa State, then spent six months at Delgado Junior College in New Orleans, and enrolled at Tulane in August.
The NCAA transfer rule states a student athlete must sit out one year after transfering from his first four-year school. Jon said his first was Michigan State.
Jons college football career ends if he loses his suit and Tulane, caught in the middle, becomes subject to NCAA penalties which include forfeiture of victories of games in which Jon played, and loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars in television money.
However, a charge* of contempt of court could be resurrected against the NCAA if it decided to punish Tulane for obeying the court order to let Jon play.
to a 10-0 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
With two out in the first. Yastrzemski lined a run-scoring single to center, becoming only the second player in major league history to achieve 100 hits in 22^major league seasons.
With his fifth game-winning RBI of the year, Yastrzemski tied Hall of Famer Ty Cobb, but insisted he was not thinking of that record.
"With everything going on, getting 100 hits is the furthest thing from my mind,* he had saiieatiier.
After getting the hit.-Yaz was pulled from the gana^ by Manager Ralph Houk. Boos replaced cheers, but Houk explained later: "I want to keep him healthy for the next two games. Thats all I need, something happening to him.
With the Red Sox doomed to a sixth-place finish, under ,500 for the first time since 1966. Yaz departed from his usual disciplined routine before the team began its three-game weekend series with the Indians.
At noon Friday,- he was the honored guest at the end-of-season luncheon of the BoSox Club, a team booster group. He stayed until the end, patiently signing autographs.
> Instead of going home for a nap, he headed for Fenway Park. There was time for little rest. He moved to a clubhouse table and signed autographs - on balls, photographs and Yaz posters given away to fans attending the final three games ofhiscareer.
Finally, Yaz went to his locker, talked briefly with a few friends and donned his uniform.
"This is a tough way to get ready for a ball game he said. "Im glad I didnt have to do this throughout my career. If I had to I wouldnt be here right now.
Yastrzemski. who has not played much this year against left-handers, took batting pratice as usual and started as the designated hitter.
Houk said he may let Yaz play left field, his old position. Sunday,
The right-hander, who has been on the disabled list three times this season, upped his record to 5-4 by allowing just two hits and one earned run.
Altobelli had planned on using Scott McGregor, Mike Flanagan, Mike Boddicker and Storm Davis as his starter^.^ against the White Sftx.
But Davis, 13-7. seemed to favor his ailing neck and shoulder in^the first game, of the twi-nighter, which New York won 6-4. Davis, a 21-year-old rookie, gave up seven hits and all of the Yankees, runs in 41-3 innings.
"If Stormjs healthy. I think he should ^pitch," said the 37-year-old Palmer. "Hes earned it.
"If not, they will have to make a decision, he said. "I have no qualms about starting, If they need me, I told them I'd be ready to pitch.
Altobelli said he may wait a few days before deciding.
"Ill talk to the doctor, the trainer and the pitching coach to see how both of them came out of it, the manager said. "Im not too sure Id want to start a youngster in the playoffs when he might be
hurting somewhat. That would concern me.
Palmers victory, the 268th" of his career and 30th against New York, snapped a four-game losing streak for Baltimore that started immediately after the Orioles clinched the AL East title last Sundy. In those four games, the Orioles were outscored 33-15..
Roy Smalley and Butch Wynegar drove in two runs apiece in New Yorks first-game triumph. Winner John Montefusco is now 5-0 since joining the Yankees in late August.
Palmer got relief help from Tippy Martinez, who earned his 20th save, in the nightcap a's Jay Howell, 1-5, took the loss.
The hitting star of the doubleheader, which was delayed 1 hour. 31 minutes at the start because of rain, was' Baltimores Cal Ripken, who doubled twice and scored three runs in the first game and then drove in two runs in the second game with a home run and a sacrifice fly.
The second-year shortstop now leads the AL with 47 doubles. 1^1 runs scored and 341 total bases and is tied with Bostons Wade Boggs for the league lead with 209 hits. He is hitting .319 with 27 home runs and 101 runs batted in.
In other games, Toronto belted Minnesota 8-0, Boston hammered Cleveland 10-0,
Milwaukee beat Detroit 6-2, Texas nipped California 4-3. Chicago clubbed Seattle 9-4,' and Kansas City at Oakland .was rained out.
Red .Sox 10, Indians 0 Carl Yastrzemski lined an RBI single in the first inning to start host Boston on its way.
The single was Yastrzemskis 100th of the season and made him the second player m major-league history to get 100 or more hits in 22 .seasons. Ty Cobb was the other player to do it,
Boggs drove in three runs with three singles, raising his AL-leading average to .362 Winner Dennis Eckersley, finishing out his worst season in nine years in the majors, went seven innings and upped his record to 9-13.
Blue Jays H, Twins (I Dave .Stieb pitched a three-hitter tor his fourth shutout of the season. Stieb. 17-12. struck out seven ancj walked one in recording his 14th complete .game of the sea.son.
The right-hander retired the first 13 Minnesota batters before Dave Engle singled in the fifth.
Cliff Johnson smacked a three-run homer, his 22nd, and George Bell had a two-run blast, his second, for host Toronto.
Brewers 6, Tigers 2 -Milwaukees home run production has been down this seasonf but the Brewers hit
^four at Tiger Stadium.
Cecil Cooper hit a two-run shot, his 29th, and Ted Simmons drilled his I3th on con-. secutive pitches in the first inning.
Robin Yount hit his 17th in the eighth and Bill Schroeder hit a two-run homer, his third, in the ninth.
Bob Gibson, 3-4, and Pete Ladd, who got his 24th save, teamed on a six-hitter Rangers 4. .Angels 3 In Texas. Buddy Bells single with the bases loaded and none out in the bottom of the loth inning drove in the winning run.
The Rangers had loaded the bases against reliever Doug Corbett, 1-1, on singles by-Billy Sample and George Wright arid an intentional walk to Larry Parrish.
Sample drove in three runs with three doubles, tying a team record
White Sox 9, Mariners 1 Seattle became the first team in the majors to lose 100 games this season while Chicagos La.Marr Hovt raised his record to 24-10 Seven home runs were hit in the game, four by the White Sox (Jne of those homers was by Greg Luzmski, a two-run blast that was his 32nd of the year That broke the American League record for homers by a designated hitter - Jim Rice. Rico Carty and Andre Thornton shared the previous mark of 31.
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Dodgers Don't Back In To West Title
By The Associated Press The Los Angeles Dodgers had the National League West title in their pockets long before their game was settled \ with the San Francisco Giants, but they wanted to win. anyway. It was a matter of pride - they didnt want to b^ck in to the division championship.
"1 still wanted to win this game, even after I learned the Braves had lost," said the Dodgers' Ken Landreaux. who provided a two-run single in Friday night's 4-3 victory over the Giants. ^
The Dodgers' victory was academic, for they had already learned in the sixth inning that the Atlanta Braves
had lost 3-2 at San Diego. That loss eliminated Joe Torres team for 1983 and sent explosions of joy, pats and hand-clasps through the Dodger dugout.
The crowd of 42.928 on a rainy evening in Dodger Stadium broke into a series of standing ovations for their team.
"It was a special season for this club and its youngsters, said Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda. ifeel great."
In other NL games. Philadelphia nipped Pittsburgh 2-1, St. Louis routed Chicago 9-2 and Houston edged Cincinnati 3-2. Rain washed out the Montreal-New York game.
Fernando Valenzuela, 15-10* had shut out the Giants on three hits through the first six" innings, when the game was meaningful in the standings. After the news from San Diego, most of the Dodger starters were taken out of the lineup and Valenzu 10212 abr giving up a pair of runs in the seventh. 03:34 Landreauxs bases-loaded. two-out single in the third put Los Angeles ahead for keeps at 2-0 and rookie Dave Anderson hit his first major league homer for the Dodgers. The victory gave Los Angeles a four-game lead over the Braves with two games remaining. providing the Dodgers with their fourth
Winning Celebration
I os Angeles Dodgers manager Tom I asorda wipes the champagne from his face in the Dodger locker room fridav night after the Dodgers
clinched the National League West title in Los Angeles, beating the San Francisco Giants, 4-3. (AP Laserphoto)
Lasorda Gets Dodger
Potato Head Award
OS ANGELES i.AP) - It seems a strange, slightly ridiculous symbol for a group of grown men, but "Mr. Potato Head." that age-old childhood toy of Imaginative faces, has taken on special meaning for the Los Angeles Dodgers After the Dodgers clinched the National League West title Friday night, their fourth in seven seasons under Manager Tom Lasorda, he gleefully-waved* .Mr, Potato Head as various players showered him and the doll with champagne.
, ! finally won' it, I finally the Mr Potato Head ..ard," Lasorda shouted above the jubilant celebration in the Dodgers', clubhouse after their 4-3 victry over the San Francisco Giants,
^ That game had become meaningless In the division, however, since Atlanta's 4-,3 loss to San Diego earlier in the evening had given Los Angeles the West crown, Friday's results put the Dodgers ^our games ahead of the Braves with just two regular-season games remaining.
Los Angeles now hosts East winner Philadelphia In the best-of-five NL Championship Series beginning Tu'sday night at Dodger Stadium.
The Dodgers' last upswing in an up-and-down season began around 14 months ago, simultaneously with the birth of the Mr. Potato Head Award With Los Angeles 'railing .Atlanta by 6*2 games.
^orda gave a stern lecture 'he club. Afterward, veter- outfielder Rick Monday me out with Mr. Potato Head, a tribute to assistant trainer Paul Padilla, who is round-faced and bald.
The players laughed, the meeting ended, and Los Angeles began its comeback, with Mr. Potato Head going to* the most valuable player after each victory.
"That team meeting was the start of things and the Mr, Potato Head Award just came to symbolize our comeback," said Mike Marshall, the young Los Angeles outfielder who
also personally rallied after suffering through a hitting slump this season.
"Our spirits seemed to pick up then, "he said.
In Friday night's game. Fernando Valenzuela was shutting out the Giants on three hits and the Dodgers led 3-0 in the top. of the sixth inning when the stadium scoreboard flashed the final score of the Atlanta-San Diego game. The stadium erupted! with Dodgers in the dugout hugging and exchanging "high-five " handslaps and the crowd of 42,928 beginning a series of standing ovations.
Only the Los Angeles players in the field were left out of the celebration, and the handslaps and standing ovations began anew after Valenzuela set the Giants down in order.
"It made chills go up and down my spine when I saw that on the scoreboard," said first baseman Greg Brock,
another of the Dodger youngsters.
Ken Landreaux' two-run single off the Giants' Scott Garrelts. 2-2, in the third inning put the Dodgers ahead to stay. They added another run in the fourth when Steve Sax. who had singled and gone to third on Brock's single, scored on Dusty Baker's groundout. Rookie Dave Anderson hit his first major league homer to open the sixth inning, capping the Los Angeles scoring.
Valenzuela gave up a pair of runs, one unearned, in the seventh as Joel Younglood doubled home Chili Davis, who had reached base on an error, and scored himself on a single by Tom O.Malley.
As the Dodgers replaced most of their starters, Orel Hershiser took over for Valenzuela, 15-10, to open the eighth and gave up a leadoff homer to Darrell Evans, his
Greek Wins First Spartathon Race
SPARTA, Greece (AP) -Yannis Kourous of Greece beat a field of world record holders Saturday and won the first-ever Spartathlon, completing the race over 156 miles' from Athens to Sparta in 21 hours. 53 minutes and^_4o seconds. G
Ive never run so far in my life. I just wanted to see what 1 could do against the experienced runners, said Kouros, a 27-year-old guard at the athletic stadium in Tripolis.
Drusan Mijavlse. 30. of Yugoslavia finished second in 24.39.11. He was followed by Briton Allan Fairbrother, 47, in 27 39.13, and Alfons Everz, 36, of West Germany, 28.39.12.
Three American runners, Edward Dodd, 37, Terry Ives, 46, and Marvin Skagerberg, 45. dropped out during the night.
Therewwere among 47 runners, including one woman, who set off from the marble Panathenaic stadium at 7 a.m. Friday for the non-stop race to Sparta.
Organizers said 15 other runners Were ^till in the race, including Eleanor Adams, 35, from Nottingham, England, who was expected to arrive in Sparta Saturday afternoon.
HOGAN TALKS
NEW YORK (AP) -Legend has it that golfer Ben Hogan never talked during a gplf tournament?
Another great golfer, Sam Snead, refutes that. "Any time I played a round with him, he talked to me frequently but he always said the same thing: Youre away,)Sam.
West championship in seven years.
Padres 3, Braves 2 Solo homers by Kevin McReynolds and Juan Bonilla in the second inning and the pitching of Eric Show and Gary Lucas led San Diego over the Braves.
Show. 15-12, survived two-run homer by Dale Murphy, his 36th, in the first inning,- then shut out the Braves the rest of the way to end Atlantas last hope for a division title.
Show allowed all of the Braves seven hits, while Lucas pitched tfje ninth inning for his 17th save.
"When you see something like last night (Thursday night) where the Dodgers lose, a doubleheader (at .San Diego) and we come from behind against Houston, you think maybe a miracle is possible." said Atlanta Joe Torre. "We just ran out of miracles." Murph\ was inconsolable. 'The home run today meant nothing," he said. "There's no consolation finishing second."
Phillies 2. Pirates 1 In Philadelphia, John Denny -became the National League's tirst 19-game winner of the season as he pitched the Phillies over the Pirates.
Denny worked six innings and allowed one run on four hits. He struck out five and walked none as he boosted his
record to 19-6 and lowered his second best ERA to 2.37.
Three tSfelievers finished up with A1 Holland recording his 25th save, pitching one inning of scoreless ball. 1 The Phillies scored their winning run when they boosted their lead to 2-0 in the fifth on a bases-loaded walk to Gary Matthews by Larry McWilliams, 15-8. *
Cardinals 9, Cubs 2 In St. Louis. George Hendrick walloped three doubles and knocked in four runs to power the Cardinals over the Cubs.
Hendrick first broke a 1-1 tie in the fourth when he doubled and later scored on a passed ball by catcher Jody Davis with the bases loaded. With the bases reloaded, Reggie Patterson. 1-2, hit Lonnie Smith with a pitch to establish a 3-1 lead for St. Louis.
The Cubs rebounded to score in the fifth on Bill Buckners triple and a grounder by Mel Hall off Neil Alien. 12-13. but the Cardinals put the game away with a , four-run sixth.
Astros 3. Reds 2 In Houston. Craig Reynolds hit his first home run of the season and Mike LaCoss scattered three hits over seven innings to lead the .Astros over Cincinnati.
Reynolds' homer in the sixth snapped a 2-2 tie for the
Astroswinning run. time since June 10 with relief gained his sixth save. Charlie
LaCoss, 5-7, won for the first help from Dave Smith, who Puleo, 6-12. was the loser.
Happy Dodgers
Los Angeles Dodgers Ken Landreaux (14) celebrates with teammates Bob Welch, left. Dusty Baker (12) and others after it was announced the in sixth inning of their game with the San Francisco Giants that Atlanta had lost to San Diego, clinching the pennant for the Dodgers. (AP Laserphoto)
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SCOREBOARD
The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C _ >jjnday. Oc4ober 2. 1983 B-11
Sports Calendar
Editor s Sole: Schedules are supplied by schmils nr sponsoring agencies and are subject to chanee without notice
Today's Sports Ooir
Papa Katz....................n
Kash & Karry................
Thorpe Music................
Fives Enough..............
Farmville Gals..............i
Ebonneltes...............
Team #12.................
Our Gang ,..........
High game, Sheila
9
10 11 11 14
Watsoti,
East Carolina at Janies Madison un^ne Stokes, 220; high series,
Invitational
Tennis
East Carolina women at UNC Charlotte 112 noon 1
Mondays S|orts Soccer
Elonat East Carolina i3 p m i Softball Fall League Bailey s vs Jim 's Tires Mike's Party Center vs .Spirits Jimmy's 6t) vs. 14th Street Sunnyside Eggs vs J I) Dawson Morgan Printers vs State Credit Vermont .American vs Grog's Tennis
Greenville Juniors at Greenfield
(1 p.m I
Tuesday 's Sports \olleyball
North Pitt, Avden tiritton at
FarmvilleCentralMpm.i West Carteret,,,North Lenoir at
tonieyi4pni i Southern .Nash, SoiiihWest Edgecombe at Greene Central i4 p.m I
Tennis Plymouth at Roanoke Washington at Edenton Rose at Northeastern Ci JOp.m. i ( B Aycock at Greeni'Central Atlantic Christian at East Carolina :ip,m I
Soccer
Rose at .Northeastern 14 p m i Betht'l af Creenville Christian (4 p.m '
(ross-( ountr\
Rose at Northeastern'
W ednesday s Sports FiHitball
Rose at Beddinglield.lV i7p m i Beddingfield at E B Aveink i4
pm I
Soccer
CNC Greensboro at East Carolina i:i :i(ip 111 '
Tennis
Kinston at Greein die :i .lop mi Thursday's Sports FiHithall
(ireene Central at Farmville Central JV Aytlen-Gritton at SoulhWest EdgeeonitH.)\'
While (lak at Conley JV G p iii i Roanoke at Bertie ,iv
' Beddingfield at Rose>7 JOpm i Chowanat East Carolina .IV \olleyball .Soulbern Nash at Avden-Grifton 14p.m I
SouthUesI Edgecombe at Farmville Central - 4p ni -Conley. West Carteret at White ()ak 4 p in '
Rose at Goldsboro 4pm '
Greene Geniial at North Illt ','i
p 111 '
So((cr
Rose at Goldstioro ' 4 p m '
I'emiis
Rose al Northern .Nash \! :i(i p in I
(ireene Gcntral at Farmville Central
East Carolina women al Pe.iee i2 pin
W.istimglonatCurniuek
Soltball
E.illLe.ipue lim s Tires 'vs Vermont Amerie.m 14lh .sirec'i vs Tilomas Mobile Home^
Grog s vs ,1 I) Daw .son Slate Credit v s Bailev s Spirits V s Sunnyside Eggs Morgan Printers vs .limmy'siKI (ross-Cbuiurv Conley al New Bern
I ridav 's Sports football
Jame>ville ,ii Chocowimlv iH pm I
CB .\ycoek ;il North Pill 'K p m I
Farmville Central at Greene Central Hpni -SoulhWest Edgecombe a I Ayden-tirilton Kpm c Conley at WhileUak G ;iop m i Bertie at Roanoke 8 p m i Ahoskieat Washinglon i.fip m.i Soccer
(ioldshoro at Greenville Christian /4 p m I
Saturday s Sports
EiMilball
Southwestern Louisiana at East Carolina 11 JOp m '
Basketball
Steelwheels at Charlotte
Rachael Hardee, 594.
Rec Standings
Fall League
Jimmys 66.................
Baileys.....................
Sunnyside Eggs..........
Grogs........................
Mikes Party Cent...,!!' Thomas Mob. Homes.
J.D Dawson...............
Slate Credit................
Jilms Tires..............
All Times liUT National League Tuesday, October 4 At Los Angeles. 8:20p.m.
Wednesday, October S At Los Angeles. S: 20 p.m.
Friday. October 7 Al Philadelphia, 3:05p m
Saturday. October 8 At Philadelphia, 8:20p.m., if necessary Sunday. October 8 At Philadelphia. 4:35 p.m., if necessary American League Wednesday, October S Al Baltimore, 3 05 p.m
Thursday. October 8 Al Baltimore, 8:20p.m.
Friday. October 7 AtChlcago.8:20p.m.
Saturday. October 8 At Chicago, 1:05p.m . if necessary Sunday. October 9 Al Chicago, 8:20 p.m., if necessary
NFL Standings
By The Associated Press .American Conference
Pci.
GB
556
.519
6
.516
6',
481
12
444
18
409
23',
569
_
544
4
,525
7
,500
It
481
14
456
18
Bowling
llilUrest l.adies
W
I.
Thorpe Music
.14
2
Do IVes
,, i:i
:i
Team 1
.....10
6
Peppi's Pizza
10
Ii
Team ........
...9
7
-U ,\ While
8
HAS. Ine
8
Riverside Oyster Bar
9
Team 14........
.7
9
Pals.................
, . ti
III
Daily Reflector
.....(i
10
Arbv's
.5
11
IPCtf
.
11
Merry F ive
4
12
High game, Susun Puryear 222, Vicky Harris 248 (handicap); high series, Susan Puryear 630, Beth Grimes 661 (handicap i
Wellcome W agun
Loner.......................13 3
North State Gals...........11 5
Duit2il......................91; 6'v
Do Gooders............9 7
We Try Harder .........8 8
The Fair Ones.............?': 8'-
JwoAndAHalf .6 lU
. High game, Lynda Thompson; high series, Karin Bornslein mo scores available)
Kurroughs-Wellcome
Mix Ups......
Jedis.......
Meatballs Anonymous Rated X
H'ps.........
The Js .,
JB.s..........
6arH........
Hang Ten.....................5 15
High game, Jane Toothman 209, Bob Turnage 200; high series, Ricky Davis 564, Jane Toothman 526.
( ilv League
Hot Dogs......................12
United Machine.,
Sustlers...........
onda-Suzuki.....
Sidewinders..................8
Comedy of Errors..........7 c
Earls Pearls
Dean Oil Co.................,6
Tarheel II ..........6
Chain Reaction s':
High game -and series, James Manning, 279,740
Slrikettes
Trophy House 12 4
pvertons Super Mkt . 11 5
Jeamii4.......................ii 5
Hrinkley Moore Motors 11 , 5
........IU2
41,
........13
7
........12'z
74
......10
8
,11
9
........9
11
........8
12
.........6
10
10
12
4
10
6
10
8
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8
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10
V .
10'
Sfilirils...........................3
Vel-montAmerican........2
14th Street.....................2
Morgan Printers............o
Baseball Standings
By The Associated Press NATIONAI, LK.Mil'E F \.ST DIVISION W I,
V Philadelphia 89 71
Pittsburgh 83 77
.Montreal 82 77
.SI Louis 77 83
Chicago 71 89
New Vork 65 94
VVKST DIVISION X Los Angeles .91 69
Atlanta 87 73
Houston 84 76
San Diego 80 80
San Francisco 77 83
Cincinnati 73 87
X clinched division title
Fridav's (lames Philadelphia 2. Pittsburgh 1 Montreal al New York, . rain SI Louis 9, Chicago 2 Houston:!, Cincinnati San Diego 3, Atlanta 2 Los Angeles 4. .San Franciscos Saturday's (lames Montreal i Cullicltson 1711 and Rogers 17 12' al New Vork iTerrell 7-8 and ,Seaver9 141.2 Cincinnati iPaslore 812) at Houston 'Madden 9-4)
Chicago ' .N'oles ,5-10 or Patterson 1-11 at St Louis I Forseh 9-121 San Francisco i Davis 5-4< al Los Angeles ' Honeycutt 2-31 Piilshurgh ' DeLeon 7-3 ) at Philadelphia 'Tivstrom 6-9or Cross 4-6) Allanla iBar'ker 1 :)i at .San Diego i|,oHar7-l2i
Sunday's (lames Piilshurgh al Philadelphia Monlrealal New York ('Imagoal.SI Louis S.in Francisco at Los Angeles Atlanta at San Diego Cincinnati al Houston, ini
FAD KKt.l LAB SEASON
, V
AMKRK ANLEAt.l E f:\STDIVISION
Buffalo Miami Baltimore .New England N Y. Jefe
East W L T Pet.
t 0 1 0 2 G 2 0 2 0
750T8 750 74 500 84 500 98 500 91
X li.illimore
W
1.
Pci.
GB
97
63
606
llelrnil
92
68
.575
5
New York
90
70
563
7
rnronUi
88
72
550
9
Milwaukee
8.5
75
531
12
Uiisliin
77
nil
481
20
1 'levelaiul
69
91
431
28
HKSTDIMSION
X Chicagii,
9i
ra
608
K,iiis.is Cilv
77
82
484
19'a
Iexa.>
77
83
481
20
ii.iki.'ind
7:1
86
4.59
23',
Mmni'Mila
69
91
431
28
( .ililiirnia
68
92
42,5
29
Si',Idle
fill
KXI
375
37
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Houston
LA.Raiders Denver Seattle Kansas City San Diego
Dallas Washington N Y Giants Philadelphia St. Louis
Minnesota Green Bay Chicago Detroit Tampa Bay
San Francisco Atlanta L A Rams New Orleans
Central
3 1 0
2 2.0
1 3 0
0 4 0
West
4 0
2 2
2 2
1 3
1 3
National Cnnference East
400 1 000 114 3 1 0 750 107
2 2 0
2 2 0
1 3 0
Central 3 10
2 2 0
1 3 0
1 3 0
0 4 0
West 3 1 0
2 2
2 2
2 2
,750 99 ,500 98 250 46 000 85
0 1.000 89
0 .500 48
0 .500 81
0 250 49
0 250 101
.500 62 500 59 .250 75
750 83 .500 92 .250 84 .250 68 000 43
PA
54 57 87 99 93
84 91 64 131
37
55
85 71' 119
Monday's Game New York Giants 7, Green Bay 3 Sunday, Oct. 2 Dallas at Mini
ciinchcil division lille
Friday's (.ames New A ork6 2. Baltimore 4 3 Tornillos. Minnesotao Milwaukee 6, Detroit 2 Boston III, Cleveland0 Tex.is 4. Calilornia i. Iiljiiniiigs Kansas C.iiv al Oakland, ppd , ram Chicago9, .Seattle 4
Saturday 's (.ames Minnesota Pettifeine (i-:ii at Toronto .Alexander 6 8'
Cleveland Soren.sen 11-111 at Bastn 1 Boyd 17' ,
Afilw.iiikee ('(Kanower 1 oi at Detroit Morris 211121
K.iiisas i 'lty iJaek.son I I and .Splittorff 12 8' a! Oakland i.MeCallv 6-8 and Heiniueller:! ,ii, 2 New Aork Shirley ,i8i al Baltimore ' MeGregor 18-7i, mi Calilornia Zahn 9 III at Texas 'Tanan.i 7 9e iii'
Chii-.igo Bannister 15-iOi al Seattle Young 1114 , in
Sunday s I,ames Minnesola al Toronto Milwaukee al Detroit New York at Baltimore Cleveland at Boston California al Texas Kansas City at Oakland Chicagoat Seattle
f NDREGl LAK SFASON
League Leaders
By The Assin aled Press t\IKKli.\NLE\(,lE
BA'rTING '410al balsi Boggs, Boston, ii.2 Carew: Califurma. .340: Whitaker, Detroit, 324. Ripken, Baltimore. 319; Mosehy. Toronto. 317 Kl N'S Ripken. Baltimore, 122. .Murray. Baltimore, 113, Mosebv, Toronto, in:T Yount. .Milwaukee 102, Cooper, Milwaukee till Henderson, Oakland, 101
KBI Kiee Boston. 123, Cooper Milwaukee 122, VN'iniield, New York, 115; Parrish, Detroit, 114; Murray. Baltimore. 109
HITS Boggs, Boston, 209. Ripken, Baltimore. 209. Whitaker, Detroit, 205; Cooper, Milwaukee, 196, Rice, Boston 189
Dol BLES Ripken, Baltimore. 47;
Boggs, Boston. 44 Parrish. Detroit, 42; Yount. Milwaukee. 42, McRae, Kansas Citv,4l
TRIPLEIS: Yount, Milwaukee, 10; Gnffin, Toronto, 9; Herndon, Detroit, 9; Gibson, Detroit, 9:4 are lied with 8 HOME Rl'.NS: Rue. Boston. 38; Armas, Boston. 36; Kittle, Chicago. 34; Murray, Baltimore, 32; Luzinski, Chicago, ;!2; Winfield, New York, 32,
STOLEN B;\SES: Henderson, Oakland, 107, K Law, Chicago. 76; Wilson. Kansas Citv. ,37 J Cruz. Chicago, 56; Sample, Texas. 44
PITCHING 116 decisions I: Haas. Milwaukee. 13-3 , 813 , 3 27; Dotson, Chicago. 217, 7.30, 3 30; Flanagan.
Baltimore, 12-4, 750 , 3 30; McGregor. Baltimore, 18-7, 720, 3 19; Gossage,
New York, 12-5, 706, 2.33; Hoyt. Chicago 24 10. 706,3.66.
STKIKEOL'TS; Morns, Detroit, 230; Stieb, Toronto, 187; Bannister. Chicago, 186, Kighelti, .New York, 169; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 160 SAVES: yuisenberry Kansas City, 43; Stanley. Boston, 33: R Davis, Minnesola.
30; Caudill, Seattle, 26; Ladd, Milwaukee.
2-1
NATIDNAI. I.E.AGIE
B.ATTING 1410 at baUs): .Madlock, Pittsburgh, :i24; Cruz, Houston, 323; Lo Smith, St Louis, 320; Hendrick, St. Louis, 31,3; Murphy, Allanla. 305 KUNS; Murphy. Atlanta, 131; Raines, Montreal, 130, Dawson, Montreal, 107; Schmidt. Philadelphia, 104; Sandberg, Chicago, 95 RBI Murphy, Atlanta, 121; Dawson, Montreal. 112; Schmidt. Philadelphia. 109; Guerrero. Los Angeles, 102; Kennedy, San Diego, 98.
HITS Cruz, Houston. 189; Dawson. Montreal. 188; Oliver, Montreal. 185; Ramirez. Atlanta, 185' Raines, Montreal.
180
Dol'BLES Buckner. Chicago, 38; Ray, Pittsburgh. 38; Oliver, Montreal, 38; Carter, Montreal. 37. Dawson, Montreal,
;16, Knight. Houston. 36 TRIPLES: Butler, Allanla, 13. Dawson. Montreal. 10; Green, St Louis,
10. Redus, Cincinnati, 9: Thon, Houston,
9
HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia,
40; Murphy, Atlanta, 36; Dawson, Montreal. 32; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 32; Evans, San Franciscc30 STOLEN BASES: Raines, Montreal,
86; Wiggins. San Diego, 65; S Sax, Los Angeles, 55; Wilson. New York, 53; Lo. Smith. St. Louis, 41.
PITCHING (16 decisions I: Denny, Philadelphia, 19<, .760, 2.41; Candelaria, Pittsburgh, 15-8, .652, 3.23.McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 15-8, .652, 3.25; Perez, AtlanU. 15-8, .652, 3 43; Orosco, New York, 13-T .650,1 47.,
STRlKEOCrS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 275; Soto, Cincinnati, 242; McWilliams, PitUburghl99; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 189; Ryan, Houston, 183 SAV^ES; Le Smith, Chicago, 29; Holland. Phiiadelphia, 25; Minton, San Francisco. 22; Reardon, Montreal. 21; DiPino, Houston. 20; Sutter, St Louis. 20.
Baseball Playoffs
By The Associatt^ Press League Championsbp Schedule
unday, I inesofa Tampa Bay at Green Bay Denver at Chicago Dbtroit at Los Angeles Rams Houston at Pittsburgh San Francisco at New England Seattle al Cleveland Los Angeles Raiders at Washington Baltimore at Cincinnati Philadelphia al Atlanta St. Louts at Kansas City Miami at .New Orleans San Diego at New York Giants Mond^, Oct. 3 New York Jets at Buffalo. (n I
- Transactions
By The Associated Press BASEBALL National League CHICAGO CUBS-Acquired Mike Chris, pitcher, from waivers Released Jerry Morales, outfielder
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Reached verbal agreement with World B Free, guard, on a multi year contract DALLAS MAVERICKS-Cut Sylvester Norris, center, Sherrad Arnold, guard, Clyde Corley, guard-forward, .Rihnny Martin, forward-center, and Bill Sadler forward GOLDEN S T A T E WARRIORS-Signed Mike Bratz, guard and Pace Mannion, guard MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Signed Kevin Grevey, guard AnnouncecT that Ted Kitchei, forward, has failed lo pass his
physical. NE
iEW JERSEY NETS-Signed Bill Willoughby, Bruce Kuczenski, forwards, Horace Owens, Zack Jones and Perry Moss, guards. Leo Cunningham and Tim Carr, centers NEW YORK KNICKS-Signed Ed Sherod,guard PHoffN'IX SUNS-Signed Rod Foster, guard, to a two-year contract and Dereck Whiltenburg. guard, a three-year contract
FOOTBALL National Football League GREEN BAY PACKERS-cful Maurice
Harvey, safety LOS ANGELES RAMS-Siened Monte Jackson, cornerbaek Cut Jeff Simmons.
-Signed
antTBill
wide receiver.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed Nat Moore, wide receiver, and Joe Rose, tight end, to a series of one-year contracts,
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Activaled Greg Stemriek. cornerbaek. Cut Bill Hurley, safety PImBURGH STEELERS-Activated Tunch Ilkin, lineman Cut Mark Kirchner, offensive tackle SAN FRANCISCO 49EP5-SiBned John Choma, guard Waived Ed Judie, linebacker, and Mike Clark, defensive end
WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Activated Art Monk, wide receiver Released Dave Slief, wide receiver
United Slates Football League USFL-Announced that the Chicago Blitz and the Arizona Wranglers have switched franchises, including the entire roster of players CHICAGO BLlTZ-.Named Marv Levy head coach DENVER GOLD-Signed Wade Manning, wide receiver LOS ANGELES EXPRESS-Signed Reegie Brown, running back, fo a muTli-year contract PHILADELPHIA STARS-Duane Bell, defensive tackle Hardee, defensive back H(K'KEV
HARTFORD WHALERS-Regained the rights to Fred Arthur, defenseman, from the Philadelphia Flyers Acquired Greg Malone, center, from the Pittsourgh Penguins in exchange for a third-round 1985 draft pick LOS ANGELES KINGS-Acquired Fred Barrett, defenseman, from the Minnesota North Stars, for future considerations. Recalled Mike Blake, goaltender, from New Haven of the American Hockey League Sent Gary Laskoski, goaltender. to New Haven.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Assigned Ron Scott' and John Vanbiesbrouck g^oalies, Doug Baren, Scott Kleinendorst, Grant Ledvard, Graeme Nicolson, Chris Renaud and Stve Richmond, de-fensemen, Gary Burns. Cam Connor Gary DeGrio, Steve; Hakala, Chris pKonihs. Jim Malone. Steve Martinson and Bob Scurfield, forwards, to Tulsa of the Central Hockev League.
TORONTO MAPCfc LEAFS-Sent Bob McGill and Dave Shand, defensemen, and Ken Strong, center, to the St. Catharines Saints of the American Hockey League.
N.C.Scoreboard
By The Associated Press
Field Hockey Davidson 2, Pfeiffer 0
- Men's Tennig Don Skakle Memorial Championships First Round N Carolina 40, Duke 35, N. Carolina St. 30. Wake Forest 15, Guilford 10. Davidsian 5, N. Carolina-Asheville 5, Atlahtic Christian 0
Womens Tennis Wake Forest InviUlional First Round
TennesseeChatUnooga 26, Coll. of
DR. J THE LEADER
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Moses Malone of the Philadelphia 76ers was the NBA Most Valuable Player last season and also the MVP of the playoffs.
But Coach Billy Cunningham still rates Julius Erving the leader of the team. Hes, the leader, Cunningham said. We wouldnt be where,we are today without Dr. J. Hes the one who allowed me to establish tnyself as the coach. Julius Ervings as good as in the Hali of Fame and hes still willing to do whatever it takes to win.
Charleston IB'z, Wake Forest 16, Georgia Tech 122, Furman 9, Old Dominion 5'z, Davidson 3>2. N Carolina St. 2>2
How They Fared ,
By The Associated Press RALEIGH lAPi Here is how the top high school football teams, according to classification, in The Associated Press' prep poll fared this past week:
4-.A
1. GbbPage (4-01 vs GboGrimsley, ppd Sat
2. Fay Byrd (5-0) beat Lee County 28-13
3. Rox Person (5-Ot did not play
4. N. Durham (5-0i did not play
5. Wilson Fike (5-0) beat Kinston 26-6
6. Jacksonville (4-11 beat Wilm Hoggard 10-0
7. (tie) Wilson Hunt (5-0) heal .North-eastern34 - 14 Asheville (3-2) lost to Gast Ashbrook 14-0
9. Green Rose 13-2) lost lo Rocky Mount
1 4 - 7
10. E. Forsyth (4-0-11 beat S. Stokes 58-0
3-A
1 S, Durham (6-0) beat East Wake 26-6
2. Kannapolis (6-0) beat ,NW Cabarrus
2 8-0
3. Ashe Reynolds (5-0) beat Enka 38-6
4. Thomasville (5-0) did not play
5. W. Henderson (5-0) did not play
6. Clinton (5-0i beat W Carteret 32-7
7. E. Randolph (4-0) vs Burl Cummings p p 0 M 0 n
8. SW Edgecombe (5-li beat Farmville Central28 0
9. C. Cabarrys (3-1) did not plav.
10. (tieI Shelby Crest i5-0i beat Kings Mountain2l - 0 Alexander Central (5-0) vs. Hibritcn ppd Mon
2-.A-1-A
1 Randleman (4-0) vs. SW Guilford, p p d . S a t 2. ^Iva-Websler (6-0) beat .Murphy 28-6 3 FT. Foard (3-0-1) vs. Bunker Hill, p p d . M p n 4. Fuquay Varina (5-0i beat Erwin 19-8 5 W Montgomery (5-0) beat Norwood 2 1 - 1 4
6. Maiden (4-0-1) beat Bandys 194)
7. Franklinlon i5-0) beat N. Johnston 5 5 - 1 5
8 Wallace-Rose Hill (5-0) beat S Unoir 2 7 -1 2
9 Robbinsville (4-1) beat Hayesville 7-6 10. Albemarle (5-1) lost to Forest Hills
Prep Scores
By The Associated Press Here are results of this week's high
school football games:
Ahoskie 25, Roanoke 0
Alleghany 20, Ashe Central 16
Ashe Reynolds 38, Enka 6
Ashe Erwin 26, Roberson 21
Avery 24, Elkin 12
Avden-Grifton 14. Green Conley 0
Bartlett Yancev at Madison-Mayodan
p^ Sat
Blue Ridge, S.C 20. Trvon 19 Brevard 19, Pisgah 8 Burl Williams at Graham, ppd Sal Burl Cummings al E Randolph, pod Mon rr
C Davidson i:i. Denton 12 C B Aycock 12. (ireene Central 0 Cary 10, Ral Broughton 6 Char Latin 35. Camden Military. SC 0 Chatam.-Ya .28.StonevilleO Char Chathnlic 19. Piedmont 6 ( herrvville 14. Newton-Conover 13 Cherokee Andrews 27, Cherokee Zi Clinton 32. W (arteret 7 Concord 21, Wades boro 8 Dunn 50, Harnett Central 6 E Davidson al SW Randolph, ppd .Mon F, Forsyth 58, S .Stokes 0 E. Mecklenburg 21, W Mecklenburg 12 t Rowan 35. Sun Valiev 6 E Burkeat Hickory, ppd .Sat E Gaston 29, Rulh-'Spindale23 E Guilford 7, Morchead 0 E Bladenu. HallslioroO
Enfield Acad 54. .N E W' Acad 0 F T Foard al Bunker Hill, ppd. .Mon Fairmont 46. Tabor City 14 Fay Byrd 28, Lee Co 13 Fay Reid Ross 14. Fay Sanford 7 F ay Westover 14. Pine Forest 6 Fay 71st 20, Fay CapeF'ear6 Forest Hills 12. .Albemarle6 Franklinton 55, ,N Johnston 15 Franklin 12, .Swam 7 F^uquayVarina 19, Erwin 8 Garner2l, Athens Drived Gast .Ashbrook 14, Asheville (I GboPageat GboGrimslev ppd Sal Gbo Dudley 13, Durham 8
Goldsboro 14. New BernO HP Central at HP Andrews, ppd Sat Havelock 12. Chapel Hill 7 [lendersonville d. Mountain HerilageO Hihriten at Alexander Central, ppd Mon Hills Grange 22. W Alamance 20 Jacksonville lO.-Wilm Hoggard
Jamesville22. Baiho ,
Jordan Matthews 43. Chatham Central 7 Kannapolis 28, NW Cabbarrus u Kenan32, .MidwavB Lakewood 22, N Duplin 21 'OT' Lexington 27. Davie 13 Lincolnlon at N Iredell, ppd Mon Littlefield 6, BladenboroU Lumberton 48, Pinecrest 21 Maiden 19, Bandvs (I MelJowell 14. Hunter Hu.ss6
More Freedom at S Caldwell ppd Sat Ml AiryatSlarmount.ppd Mon N Rowan al Asheboro, ppd .Sal N Davidson at Salisburv. ppd .Sat N Buncombe :i4, Madiin 0 N Wilkes 14, E Wilkes6 N Forsvth21.W Forsvth7 N Stanly 20 Parkw(x)d 13 New Hanoxer 76. Wilm Lanev 6 Northampton West lo. Warren Co 8 Owen 18, Mitchell 14 Oxford Webbat Am-x ppd Sat Polk Central,58. West NCSDo Princeton .10 Coats 22 Providence flu\ 7, Chesterlleld. S C 6 Ragsdale 10 NF.iiuillordT K.d MillhriHik 11 HalFinlix'T Randleman at SW tiuilforrl ppd .Sal Keidsville 14. W (iuilfordO Richmond Co 33 Fax Soulhview 14 RubhmsvilleT, llayesxillei,
RiK kingham al S i,uilford, pinl Sat RiK-kx Mount 14 (.reenltose: Riisewixxl l7,.Ka>t NCSDo Thurs KosmanJO. KdnexxilleO S Alamance al K.M.tm.ince pfxl Sal S Waxnejo K Waxiif 18 S Nash 12 N Piini S Iredell 21 F Lincoln 14 -S Rowan 21). Mnnrix'O S .lohasidn 42 W ll.irneito S Kote'sim IK, I irrum ii S (iranxillelK Lnuishiirg 0
S Durham 26. E WakeB SE Guilford 21 N W uilford 7 i'' Edgecombe 28. Farmville Central Shelby (rest 21. Kings Mountain 0 Shelby 26 E Rutherford 16 South Point 41. Burns 13 Si Pauls 46 Tar Heel 6 Statesville?:,W Iredell 12 Surry Central al Forbush, ppd Sat SxIva Webster28, Murphv6 Tarboro:i4 Williamston22 Trenton Jones 22, SW Onslow 12 TnnitvatW Rowan, ppd Sal Tuscola 45 Fla.st Henderson 3 W S Parkland at W S Revnolds ppd Mon
W Davidson at l>edlord. ppd Sal W Montgomerv 21. Northwood Thurs
W Columbus 14. Whiteville 7 W W ilkes 15 Beaver Creek 6 W Stanly 22. S Stanlx 6 W Robeson 19 Fax ,S'mith7 W Lincoln 25, Bessemer Citv 0 W ('harlolle 23, ('harGannger20 Wallace Rose Hill 27. S Lenoir 12 Washington 47, Plymouth:
Wayne Counlrv Dav 24. Wake Christian 7 White Oak 26. PentierCo W ilkes Central a! Watauga ppd Mon Wil,soii'Fike26, Kinslon6 W ilson Hum .14. Northeastern 14 W ilson Beddingfield 28. N Nash 13
14
TANK FNAMA11A
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
^ MCM AfT^MTLY F^AIO^ ro&i\yeA0CEv/ewMOR
^ M&cr
I40ME-GAME ^ RXJTBALLTiOZ^Te MA\;g i^lKjnSP \UITM 6>TARTiKJ6 TlM&S SAMK TMAT'9 KJOT ME\^
f PPlKllEPlwrrA THE MAME ^ 1 OFTMeoFVDWEMrs J \FT BLAmK i^-
sir
1
PRICES GOOD OCT. 2-4
A _ jkr ,^^'V We reserve the riqht to limit qusntifies
mm S' \ restaurants,
.m J m m We qlattly accept U.SO. a. Food stamps
IL^ Better than It Has To Rft!
2105
DICKINSON
AVENUE
THESE SPECIALS ARE IN ADDITION TO THE VALUABLE COUPONS THAT APPEARED IN THE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH DAILY REFLECTOR WHICH ARE GOOD TODAY,
SUNDAY, OCT. 2ND!
PIGGLY WIGGLY
KETCHUP
32 OZ. SIZE
r
HiACH
GALLON JUG
59
WALDORF
BATHROOM TISSUE
4-ROLL
PKG.
ROLLER CHAMPION
JUICf
SELF RISING 25 LB. BAG
MELLO YELLO, TAB, SPRITE, CRUSH
SUGAR & CAFFEINE FREES
BOTTLE
NO LIMIT!
Ground
BEEF
(3 LBS. OR MORE)
t>l66LV WIGGir WORLD OF
BONELESS
tfie^ ^meAel ^uu
49
LB.
LB.
bell \
> miw .49
STEW ^48 BEEF
GWALTNEY
nuiis
12 OZ. SIZE
c
BEALES
25 LB. STAND
PIGGLY WIGGLY
LB.
ic
B-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, C Sunday. October 2, 1983
Baseball Stats
B> The Associated Press Complete through games of Fridas WIKKIt AN LKAt.l K N TKAM BATTINt.
AB R H HR RBI Pci
' 'Tf)!o 793 153-t 1S 7A6'277
Milwaukee 5593 747 1529 129 715 276
Oelroit ,5556 789 1522 1.58 74 274
New York .5589 765 1528 152 724 273
Boston 5596 7-29 1516 141 695 271
Kansas Cits .5511 681 1481 106 639 269
Baltimore .5509 796 1479 168 758 268
t'leseland 5412 700 1433 85 657 265
Chicago ,5451 800 1434 157 761 36,1
Oakland 544o 698 1423 118 652 262
Minnesola 5,586 '11 1461 141 671 261
t'aldornia 5,567 :u 1447 1,52 672 260
Tekas v78 6>14 1418 106 583 2.54
.valtle ,'26s 5,55 1264 111 ,5:!2 240
INIUMIH M BvrriNt.
1'5,'r more.' iuts
\H K H HR RBI Pet BogCs Hsc as 209 5 74 ;162
C.trew C.,, 467 56 ;5.a 2 42 140
Whilaker Iv: tsi.i 94 26 12 72 324
Kipken B:; '5.-. .33 3,19 37 loj 31;)
Biinneil Tor 1 49 12 lo .54 318
llatcner M r, I81' 5' 121 9 47 318
Mosehs Tor vm 10,1 169 18 80 317
Trammil IVl 49! 81 156 14 66 316
> aliel! IV! 188 61 121 5 44 312
\K Kae Kan 581 ,S4 182 12 81 112
Kngic Milt ,17o 47 114 8 41 308
.'immoMs Mil 600 7,5 185 13 108 .108
Yount Mil ' 578 102 178 17 80 ;i08
Brel! Kan 4.56 88 140 24 9t) .107
llarcij Tor .518 84 1,59 3 ;18 ,107
KMurras Bi: ,576 113 176 ,12 109 306
Herndon Del 598 86 18.1 20 92 .106
Haslor \5 528 81 161 21 85 ,105
Heiiique? I ai ,11.5 44 % ,1. 33 305
unites N5. 452 61 1.18 II 46 3o5
Hice Bsn 62l,l 89 189 38 123 305
I pshaw Tor .572 98 174 27 103 304
Paciorek t'hi 413 63 125 H 60 ,103
Cixiper Mil 651 lul 196 29 122 301
Xlkens Kan 4o5 47 121 . 22 70 299
sHcndesonSea 4.16 .81 128 10 .53 294
Hrtiek Mm .511 7.1 149 ' 14 80 292
Urich Cal 188 65 113 16 62 291
KHendsoniiak ,iO,5 1,01 147 8 47 291
T.ihier ('Ic Kisk 1,'hi Hargnne Cle Uaniner Mil KLiw ('hi Baines t'hi CMivire Mil Thornuin Cle iCnlield NY Randolph N5 Dei'inees ( al 'igliMe Mil Ford - Bit Uard Min Heath Uak l.opes Oak BtfellTex Mulliniks Tor .sample Tex -singfelon Bl! vCwdson Kan 55nght Tex Caslinu Min MDas is dak Collins Tor i'ranco Cle Bumbrs Bll lla.sses' iTe Ri'ms Bsn lorg Tor l.AParish Tex T.vnn Cal smalles N5 UWilsdn Del Molitiir Mil l.NT'arish Del Putnam ,sea \Banister I'le DHend.son Sea Sheridan Kan Almon dak Hurrughs 1 lak Nellies NY 5ast/mki Bsn Bern/rd Sea I .lohnson Tor URiienicke Bll Harrah Ce hite Kan dlls Kan Tolleson Tex UIHolimn Bsn l.emor, Del Boone Cai l.urir.ski Chi shelos Bit Barfield Tor Hu.sh .Min Foil i'.d hillle Chi dnltin Tor Whin Tor ,)Cru.: Chi
staplelon Hsfi Holierlsn N5 Downing I al Manning Mil Phillips I lak Uae!-: Min \5alhan Kan kem( N5 Vl,aw Chi I lent I'ex I ashliin Kan DKsans Bsn 'dlnen Tex Dempses Bll Daiier All Kalacksn 1 ai
430. ')6 125 6 65 291
482 82 140 26 86 290
462 .56 l.i.i ,i ,58 288
,59f..- 8.5 1:0 11 74 285
494 9.5 141 ,1 32 2K5
591 77 168 20 101 284
529 6,5 l.'xi 2 49 284
5oO 78 142 ,1: 77 284
59.1 100 168 .12 115 2K1
412 71 116 - 2 18 282
.16,1 47 102 18 65 281
40t; 48 114 13 66 281
40.5 64 11.1 9 *.55 279
616 74 1:2 19 8.5 279
.138 44 94 5 II 278
489 64 1.16 17 66 278
618 74 171 14 66 277
1.57 .56 99 10 49 277
546 0 l.-,l 12 58 277
,50.5 ,53 140 18 84 277
566 88 1.57 2 32 277
625 79 173 18 80 277
5.58 82 1.54 II ,56 276
43.5 ,59 120 7 59 276
400 54 110 . 1 .14 275
5.59 68 153 8 80 274
3
11 273 41 273 43 273 2 .19 272
181 62 IlH
1.17 48 92
|86 72 160
378 38 103
5.52 76 1.50 26 87 272
437 56 119 22 73 272
441 68 120 18 hi -272
.VM ,5.5 1.16 II 66 270
608 95 likl 1.5 47 270
594 79 160 27 114 269
464 '18 12.5 19 67 269
17.1 .5(1 loo * 4.5. 268
477 Vi 128 17 .56 268
2.5 42 87 7 .if, 268
446 4.5 119 4 64 267
397 4.1 106 111 ,V, 267
4.57 5,5 122 ' 19 73 267
,174 18 loo Pi ,v, 267
5.1.1 6,5 14(1 ,8 .V; 26.1
4o7 6(( 1((7 22 76 263
;i5 4.5 8.1 19 (21 261
518 81 1 16 9 5,1 26.1
)4(( 52 142 I! 77 261
1.56 1,5 93 4 41 2hl
4o4 (i4 121 I 20 261
478' ,58 124 4 4 2.59
484 78 125 24 69 2:'>8
467 4t. 120 9 ,1 257
498 73 128 12 95 2.57
,117 51 8! 5 26 2.Vi
184 .58 97 27 (28 2.5.1
,!7:l 44 94 p] V, 252
i.Ki 29 83 2 29 2,52'
512 7! 129 14 9(i 2.52
526 62,112 4 47 251
1.19 52 65 16 5.1 Ul
55 7(1 29 1 51 2.5(1
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35-1 Shot Wins Race
NEW.M.^KKET. England AP - .Sagamore, a 3.5-1 shot ridden by Welsh jockey Taffv^ Thomas, just held (jff the challenge of favored Tele-prompter to w I n . t he Cambridgeshire Handicap at a misty .Newmarket racetrack Saturday The Frankie Durr-tramed horse, with three wins in 12 previous outings this season, won hy a head after a photo finish with Teleprompter, who took second at 8-1,
Basil Boy, at 22-1, was third. After the start, the 30-horse field split into two groups on either side of the track.
The lead switched hands several times before Sagamore wnet to the front three furlongs from the end of the 12-mile race.
Teleprompter, aimifTg to become only the seventh favorite in 61 years to win the Camridgeshire, put on a tremendous late surge with W'illie Carson^n the saddle but was unable to catch Sagamore. .
Basil Boy finished a half-length behind, with American jockey Steve Cauthen fourth on Prego,
CLINTS HUNCH PHILADELPHIA (,AP) -Clint Richardson, one of the heroes of the Philadelphia 76er NBA title in 1983, knew things were going right before the season even opened in the fall of 1982,
When the 76ers traded an established star like Lionel Hollins before the season began, Richardson, then unknown, was certain he would move up on the 76er roster
-^Nowinorethaneverl
WllllfefDlXife
We're right for you! f
VORKSHIRE FINE PORCELAIN CHINA
4-PC. PLACE SETTING
WITH 4 BONUS CERTIFICATES OUR BONUS CERTIFICATE PLAN IS EASY AS 1,2,3. . .
1 SHOP YVITH US EVERY WEEK 30NUS CERTIFICATES WILL 2. SAVE YOUR BONUS CERTIFICATE YOU RECEIVE BE ISSUED THRU WED., DEC. WITH EVERY *5.00 PURCHASE (TWO WITH A MO.OO 21, 1983, AND MAY BE PURCHASE. ETC.)
REDEEMED FOF^ FREE CHINA 3. COLLECT YOUR 4 PIECE SETTING WHEN YOU SAVE THRU WED., JAN. 18, 1984. 40 CERTIFICATES.
PRICES GOOD SUN., OCT. 2ND THRU WED.. OCT. 5TH NONE TO DEALERS WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES COPYRIGHT 1983, WINN DIXIE STORES. INC
1D0Z. SUPERBRAND GRADE A' WHITE
.LARGE EGGS
IgaC
ARROW
BLEACH
V2-GAL. CTN. THRIFTY MAID
ICE MILK
(ALL FLAVORS)
WITH 10.00 OR MORE ORDER (LIMIT 2)
WITH 10.00 OR MORE ORDER (LIMIT 1)
ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY, UNTIL 9:00 P.Mk
2-LITER NO RETURN BTL. 12-OZ. CANS
PEPSI COLA
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MILLER HIGH LIFE BEER
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CTN. OF
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INSTANT COFFEE
WITH 10.00 OR MORE ORDER (LIMIT 1)
WITH 10.00 OR MORE ORDER (LIMIT 1)
18-OZ. CAN DEL MONTE CUT OR FRENCH GREEN BEANS, 17 OZ. CAN DEL MONTE PEAS OR GOLDEN
CORN
31
CANS FOR H
8 2 OZ. BOX JIFFY CORN
MUFFIN MIX 4fonM
12 OZ. CAN THRIFTY MAID
CORNED BEEF 1.29
16 OZ. BTL. KRAFT 1000 ISLAND LO CALORIE OR REG.
DRESSING ... 1.29
28 OZ. BAG COMET
RICE ...........75
22 OZ. BTL. PALMOLIVE LIQUID
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LN.
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CELERY.....
HARVESf FRESH SWEET
POTATOES ..
HARVEST FRESH
CUCUMBERS 5 f.n
V2-GAL. JUG SUPERBRAND
APPLE JUICE 1
LN.
2 LB. SIZE SEAFOOD KITCHENS
FISH STICKS . 1.99
16 OZ. SIZE SEAPAK
HUSHPUPPIES . .89
16 OZ. BAG ORE IDaX
TATER TOTS ... .99
26-OZ. SIZE MRS. SMITH'S APPLE R DUTCH APPLE
PIES ..... 2.19
(NO SALT)
3 LB. SIZE MRS. FILBERTS
SOFT SPREAD 1.69
16-OZ. SIZE PALMETTO FARMS (REG. & W PICKLES) PIMENTO
CHEESE ..... 1.79
8-OZ. SIZE SUPERBRAND SWISS STYLE & ALL NATURAL (ALL FLAVORS)
YOGURT .2 ,..99
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15-OZ. CAN THRIFTY MAID^URNIPS, C0LLARD8 OR MUSTARD
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SOUTHERN STYLE ^ 8 PAK FRESH BAKED FRENCH
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USDA
U.S. CHOICE WHOLE UNTRIMMED
W.D. BRAND i^U.S. CHOICE FULL CUT BONE IN
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W.D. BRAND U.S. CHOICE BEEF
SHORT RIBS
W.D. BRAND U.S. CHOICE BONELESS
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SMOULDER ROAST lh.2.89
W.D. BRAND U.S. CHOICE BNLS.
CHUCK
ROAST
U*mJ i
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W.D. BRAND U.Si CHOICE BNLS.
STEW BEEF . l. 1.99
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l*rc.sii}i( .Sicaks I-roni Winn Dixie
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BOX OF EIGHT 12 02. RIB EYE STEAKS
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BEEF BRISKET ... lb.2.49
choice)
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W.D. BRAND U.S. CHOICE BEEF PORTERHOUSE
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U.8. CHOICE WHOLE
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TENDERLOINS
(7/6 LB. AVG.)
399
LB
U.8. CHOICE WHOLE
BEEF HINDQUARTERS
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50^0^ RKMA.
t eat i\n ' \
WhmiM)
5
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U.8.CHOICE WHOLE
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' ' i
119
Redskins Test Raider Streak
By The Associated Press
The Super Bowl champion Washington Redskins, hot on the heels of D^allas in the National Conference East race, hope to keep pace Sunday against the Los Angeles Raiders, the only unbeaten team besides the Cowbovs in the National Football League.
The Redskins havfe won three straight games after their season-opening loss to their archrivals, the Cowboys, while the Raiders. 4-0, have a two-game lead over Denver and Seattle in the American Conference West.
At least one Washington player believes Los Angeles will be a tougher test than the Cowboys.
"The Raiders have a powerful defense and big-play offense." Redskins safety Mark Murphy said. "They are a better team than Dallas, Thev are definitely the best tear we have faced this season."
Meanwhile, the 4-0 Cowboys also face a division leader in the Minnesota Vikings, who are 3-1 atop the NFC Central.
In other Suridav NFL games, it's Denver at Chicago. Tampa Bav at Green Bay, Houston at Pittsburgh, Detroit at the Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco at New England, Seattle at Cleveland, Baltimore at Cincinnati, Philadelphia at Atlanta. St. Louis at Kansas City, Miami at New Orleans and San Diego at the .New York Giants.
The .New York Jets visit Buffalo Monday night.
In the Washington-l.os Angeles game, the Redskins hope to exploit the Raiders' sack-prone quarterback, Jim
Plunkett, while trying to prevent Los Angeles' swarming defense from teeing off on W'ashington signal-caller Joe Theismann.
Redskins defensive end Dexter Manley, who calls himself Mr. D, has a warning for Plunkett.
"I think we will be putting pressure on Mr Plunkett. He has already been sacked 14 times this season and I tell you that Mr.D will be all over Mr. Plunkett,'.Manley said But the Raiders have the NFL's top defense and a defensive line that has sacked opposing quarterbacks 17 times in four games "In seven years here 1 have never seen or played with a tougher defense, says Lester Hayes, the Raiders'Pro Bowl cornerback.
But Theismann. more mobile than Plunkett, will roll out and run to av'oid blitzing linemen, .As a result, he has been sacked just five times.
Theismann also has rushed 11 times for 7.5 yards, while Plunkett has earned 11 times lor 2 yards.
Marcus Allen, the NFL s Rookie 0 the Year in 1982. is averaging 4.1 yards per carry He will go against the Redskins 4-3 defense that is No 1 in the NFL against the run, allowing opponents just 813 yards a game.
"The Raiders are a good offensive team, a lot o! power and very explosive They are going to come in here and it is going to be a real dogfight. ' Manley said "I'm going to love this game. I can really see It .Mr D is going to go wild. " ^
Rooks' Race Is By Necessity
TORO.NTO (APi - When Nancy Rooks starts the $150.000 Toronto Marathon on Sunday, it will be by necessity, not choice. .
Rooks, 24, of Toronto, is the national record holder ovej; 10,000 meters, both on the road and on the track, but her desire to compete in the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles and the absence of a women's 10,000-meter race at the Games will result in her trying her first marathon Sunday.
T'm moving up to the marathon because its in the Olympics." said Rooks, who works as a biology lab technician when not training. "If I do really poorly Sunday, then I'll try the 3,000 meters (also included at the Los Angeles Olympics),"
Rooks, who has national 10,000-meter records of .32 minutes 23.04 seconds on the track and 32:18 on the road, said she plans to run the 26-mile, 385-vard marathon in 2:35:00.
Despite never haying run a marathon. Rooks is the prerace favorite to be the top Canadian woman - a feat which would earn her a trip to the Bermuda Marathon in December.
The favorites to win the overall women's division are Charlotte Teske of West Germany and Carey May of Ireland. Teske was thetop female finisher at the 198i Boston Marathon, while May] is a former holder of ' women's world best time. The current women's best of 2:29.24 was set by Julie Brown of the United States in June.
In the mens, division. Dave. Edge of Hamilton, Ontario., is the top Canadian hope after setting a personal best 2:11.03, good for sixth place at the
Boston Marathon earlier this year.
However, Edge, 28, a mam organizer ot the race, said those efforts may hamper his performance "1 sacriticed a little bit of mental preparation to organize the race, but it was a matter of sacrificing one runner to bring in 2o more, " Edge said.
Other'men e.xpected to compete in the elite division include Benji Durden of the Lnirws States a personal best of 2:09.58). a former winner of the .Montreal and Houston marathons. .Malcolm East oi Britain 2:11/35' and John .Anderson of the U S., a lormer winner at Boston Two-time Olympian Hadu Ebba ot Ethiopia, winner of the 1982 Houston Marathon Irishman Paul t'raig. winner of the Belfast Marathon. British steeplechase champion Peter Morns and South Amer-ican champion Domino Tibaduaza of Columbia, 'a three-time Olympian and former winner of the Rom'e. Munich and Frankfurt marathons. also are scheduled to compete The race will feature the comeback attempt of Jerome Drayton, 39. of Toronto. Drayton, who holds the Canadian best - 2:10,09, set m Japan m 1975 -.said he's looking ahead to the Olympic trials next spring.
First prize for the men is $6.tKX) and a new car. Also, cash bonuses will be awarded, for lop performances: $50,000 for a world best, currently 2:08.13 set by American Alberto Salazar in 1981 at New York: $10,)XR) for a Canadian best time and S2,000 for the race record, currently 2:13 26 set by Kevin Ryan of New Zealand in 1981
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Bumpy Path Ahead For
By (HRkSTOPHER LINDSAY AP Business Writer NEW YORK (API - Continental Airlines is battling with employees over a drastic reduction in pay and jobs. Eastern Airlines employees are fighting their boss' demand that everyone take a IS^rcent pay cut and the Air Line Pilots Association is mulling over a nationwide strike to draw attention to the airlines' plight.
The confrontation couldn't have come at a worse time for the industry." says Sindlinger & Co. Inc.. a private economic forecasting and polling organization.
The latest travails of the nation's airlines again shine a spotlight on a business struggling with high costs, unhappy employees, too many airlines and too few passengers.
The airlines, which together lost some $2 billion over the past 312 years, had looked to this summer as their salavation - a peak vacation flying period that would allow them to put away some cash for the lean winter months.
Instead, airline traffic was up only a bit from 1982's depressed levels, and a new survey points to an even darker .outlook in the next few months - a generally thin time for airlines anyway.
Sindlinger says the number of American households planning flying vacations in the next six months dropped from 14.3 million households in August to 7.1 million in September.
The drop. Sindlinger said, comes at the very time this labor-management conflict is coming to a showdown" Continental shut down a week ago and filed for bankruptcy court protection from creditors, then abrogated its union contracts and resumed business as a slimiried down New Continental ' with fewer emplovees. whose pav was cut in half
Employee*; were enraged, and pilots and flight attendants struck the ail me Saturday. Continental vowed to keep flying, strike or not, but was forced to cancel some flights.
Chairman Frank Lorenzo's bold move - using Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code to break the contracts despite having almost Stki million in the bank - faces a legal test. Lorenzo argues the law does not expect a company to wait until its
treasury is empty before it tries to reorganize.
The national pilots organization threatened a one- or twQ-day nationwide strike as "a last resort if Congress did not step in to relieve some of the pain that followed the 1978 deregulation of the industry, the pain of fare wars and Mew competitors. .
Alfred Kahn, the Cornell University economics professor who was the architect of deregulation in the Carter administration, said the current turmoil, particularly the suffering of Continental and Eastern, should come as no surprise.
If you take an industry that for 40 years has been protected from outsiders and from itself and deregulate it, this is what you get,"he said.
He said airlines that were "quick on their feet" to adjust to change would prosper. He cited People Express, USAir and Piedmont Aviation.
rSAir, the smallest of the 11 major airlines - those with annual revenue of more than $1 billion reported a record
Airline Profits Fall Off The Map
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Profits
^Billions Of Dollars
For Airlines
Blonging To Air Tf,)S|H)ft
Strike Cuts Into Continental's Schedule Of National Flights
HOUSTON 'APi - A strike by pilots nd flight attendants Saturday forced financially weak Continental Airlines to cancel or delay a half-dozen flights, but company officials said the carrier would keep flying.
.Most Continental flights departed on time even after the Air Line Pilots ,4s.socia-tion and the Union of Flight Attendants went on strike, angry over the layoffs of 70 percent of Continental s work force and pay cuts tor remaining employees of about 50 percent
"Continental is flying. " said airline spokesman Bruce Hicks.
I'ie pilots and flight attendants walked off their laii;; shorth after 2 a.m. CUT. one week after Continental filed for reorganization and protection from creditors under federal bankruptcy laws
Hundreds of pilots and flight attendants - many wearing their uniforms and carrying placards -picketed m front of ticket counters, along concourses, in hangar areas and outside airport terminals in many of the 25 cities now served by Continental.
Things are looking good," said Gary Thomas, spokesman for the Con
tinental chapter of the'pilots' association. "This is building and we re locking arms,"
But Continental Chairman Frank Lorenzo has said the airline has more than enough personnel to continue service Hicks said 43 of 50 flights scheduled up to l p.m. CDT departed as planned.
Two flights from San Francisco - one to Houston and the other to Denver -were canceled because of the strike, as were flights from Orlando. Fla., and New Orleans, Hicks said.
One other flight was canceled because of mechanical problems, he said.
One plane each was delayed in Denver and Los Angeles, Hicks said.
Pilots association spokesman Byron Whitehead said in Washington that "contrary to reports made by Continental, as of noon CDT, only three of the first 24 flights from Houston were able to depart. Continental denied the report.
A flight to Houston left Denvers Stapleton International Airport nearly three hours late because the original crew didnt show up.
Twenty-seven of the 120 passengers booked on the flight canceled their reservations, asked that their bag-. gage be removed from the plane and said they would fly on another airline.
One of >h' passengers who canceled his reservation, Joe Hart of Evergreen, Colo., ^ said he would catch a ride on another plane with a carrier that "ran more like a business."
A flight from Orlando, Fla., to Houston was delayed about an hour when the captain failed to check in, said Continental spokeswoman Stephanie Roth. A flight from Tampa was diverted to Orlando and picked up to the passengers, she said.
In New Orleans, crew members showed up and completed pre-flight checks, Hicks said, but television cameras were set up as the plane prepared for takeoff and the crew walked off the job, he said.
"Not all the pilots who said they wold fly were in the cities where they were needed, Hicks said.
Hicks said the airline had no plans to change its schedules.
Continental, formerly the nations eighth-largest carrier, is operating with less than two-thirds of the routes it had before filing under Chapter 11 of federal bankruptcy laws on Sept. 24.
The airline halted flights for two days but they resumed Tuesday.
As it filed in bankruptcy court, the airline slashed wages and laid off 70 percent of its 12.000 workers.
A union negotiating committee met with the company for about eight hours Friday, but Thomas said there was no significant progress.
Allen Brooks, a pilot for 18 years, said new work rules requiring him to fly more hours could lead to safety problems.
Leon Cal of Houston, another 18-year pilot, said he was striking not because of economics but as a matter of my own personal safety. This is going to be hard on my family, but 1 showed the proposals to my wife and she said she didnt want me to work.
Linda Woolley, who has worked as a flight attendant for 19 years, said she was upset because the company was taking away seniority.
"It will be just like starting all over, she said.
profit of $28 million in the second quarter of the year and a six-month profit of $26 million.
People Express, the no-frills new airline born after deregulation, earned $4.2 million in the second quarter, $3" million over the first half. People Express, which has low fares while charging for services like meals, earned a tidy $1 million in 1982, its first full year in operation.
Piedmont earned $4.5 million in the second three months, but lost $11.4 million in the first half, blaming fare wars.
Piedmont has been widely praised for taking on Delta Air Lines in the Southeast, carving out regional "hub operations^ in Charlotte, N.C., and Dayton, Ohio, and sparing its East Coast passengers a trip through the Atlanta hub of Delta.
Delta, in contrast, long the blue-chip airline to Wall Street, lost $86.7 million in its fiscal year that ended June 30, the first annual loss in its 36-year history.
Delta blamed fare wars. It said 82 percent of Deltas traffic in the fiscal year was on some sort.of discount ticket.
Before the Deregulation Act of, 1978, discounts were virtually unheard of, with fares, routes and participants all regulated by the Civil Aeronautics Board.
The airlines were protected from competition by limited
route duplication, and an airline in difficulty could ask for a lucrative jpute to help maintain its. finances,J^itionally;-mdustry\^e fare increases would be granted on request, typically to bail out the airline with the worst problem, to the benefit of everyone else.
Deregulation changed that and presented new freedoms, including the freedom to fail - as Braniff International proved.
Braniff was caught in an ambitious expansion program by the 1980 recession. That was followed by another recession, the air controllers strike and escalating fuel prices.
Braniff tried to reverse direction, scaling back some of the expansion and resorting to deep fare discounts to trv to keep cash coming in. It failed andlshut down May 12,1982,filing for protection from its creditors/the next day.
Eastern Airlines chairman Frank Borman has said one alternative to that airlines total shutdown might be a Chapter 11 filing.
Eastern lost $94.4 million in just the first half of the year, following losses of $75 million in 1982, $65.9 million in 1981 and $17.4 million in 1980.
Continental lost $84.1 million in the first half, after losting $41.8 million in 1982, $60.3 million in 1981 and $20.7 million in 1980.
Losses are widespread throughout the industry. Many airlines have asked their employees to forgo pay increases or accept cuts, frequently in return for some sort of profit sharing plan. .
^S'^olher 0^' Boote Sonny Stay^'
George voW
GorreMomn.Gre9
^ruasoNS
ACBS AFFILIATE
BRANCH MANAGER William R. Stallings, president of Regional Acceptance Corp., announced that Sharon S. Parker has been employed
as branch manager of the firms Aydeh office.
native, was formerly associated with Atlantic Credit Corp. here for seven years. She is married to Larry Parker, an investigator with the Pitt County Sheriffs Department.
Stallings said the Ayden branch is the newest of six offices now operated by Regional Acceptance in eastern North Carolina.
Business Notes
The Daily Refteclor Greenville N C ^ Sunday pctf;c-2 1983
B-15
NEW REPRESENTATIVE
,. Sandra C Pugh has joined the local agency of The Life Insurance Co. of Virginia as a representative, according to Harold H. Pittman, CLU, agency manager.
Pittman said that the company, with over $17 billion of life insurance in force, has more than 120 offices in the nation with over 2,000 sales and service representatives.
NAMED TO GT&T POST
Carolina Telephone announced that Ramona S. Norman,, division business office administrator with the company in New Bern, has been named business office manager in Greenville.
CT&T said that in her new position, she is responsible for the supervision of service representatives who assist residential and business telephone customers in the Greenville area.
A Vanceboro native, she attended Craven Community College and joined CT&T in 1951 as a service representative in New Bern. She and her husband, Noah, have two grown children.
SALES ASSOCI ATE
Steve Evans, president of Red Carpet Steve Evans & Associates Inc., 130 E. Greenville Blvd., announced that Coby Heath has joined the firm as a sales associate.
Evans said Heath has over 10 years experience in the real estate and building business. Heath, who is from Greenville, is a graduate of East Carolina University. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Heath of Greenville.
SALES ACHIEVEMENT
_ J. Belton Newman, field representative here for Woodman of the World Life insurance Society, was cited for outstanding life insurance service at the annual convention of the National Association of Fraternal Insurance Counselors, which met in Atlantic City. N.J.
Newman received a quality service plaque for his sales production in 1982. He qualified for the award each of the last six years and sold at least a million dollars of protection for the last three years.
He has been a representative in this area since 1966.
BANK PROMOTION
First State Bank announced the promotion of Patricia S, West, who joined the bank in 1975, to assistant vice president.
She began her banking career in 1969 with Mid City Bank in Omaha, Neb., and worked with Waccamaw Bank & Trust Co. in Whiteville.frnm lWt-74. She was employed by American Bank & Trust Co. in Charlotte before joining First State.
Ms. West, who attended Whiteville High School and Southeastern Community College, is currently secretary and president-elect of the Greenville chapter of North Carolina Credit Women-International. She and her husband, Ralph, have two children, Steven and Ralph.
BB&T BR ANCH HEAD
Donald K. (Don) Brinkley has been named branch manager of Branch Banking & Trust Companys Medical Village office in Greenville, according to Jerry W- Powell, vice president and city executive here.
Brinkley, who has lived in Greenville for the past seven years, joined BB&T in the management development program in 1980 and upon completion of training in Greenville was named loan officer at the Arlington Boulevard office. In 1982, he moved to the Medical Village office where he served as loan officer.
A graduate of East Carolina University with a degree in business administration, he is married to the former Debra Lyle of Alioskie and they have one son. Brinkley is a member of Oakmont Baptist Church.
RECORD E ARNINGS
North State Financial Corp. and subsidiaries reported record earnings of $490,000 for the first quarter of fiscaUl984. which ended June 30. Earnings were up $472,000 over figures for the first quarter of the past fiscal year.
North State said that total assets of the corporation were up to $118 millin as compared to $38 million at the end of the same period irufiscal 1983. In addition. North State acquired First Colony Savings and Loan Association, which increased the pro forma assets of the firm to approximatelv $320 million.
The firm's corporate headquarters and offices are located at 111 S. Washington St. here. With the addition of First Colony, the corporation now operates 17 offices in 15 North Carolina and Virginia cities.
BECOMESSHAREHOLDER
Pittard & Perry Inc.. certified public accounting firm with eight offices, announced that Larrv D, Keech has been named a shareholder in the company Keech is based in WillfSmston He joined the firm in 1977 as an accountant following graduation from East Carolina University with a degree in business administration, specializing in accounting.
Keech is presently a member of the .American Institute of Certified Public .Accountants and the .\ C. Association of Certified Public Accountants. **
He is married to the former Karen Davis Hardison of Williamston.
. ATTENDED SEMINARS
Dr. Steven I. Cohen, Winterville chiropractor, and Donna Poe. X-ray assistant for Cohen, recently attended seminars in Atlanta, Ga.
Cohen attended a seminar on neck injuries and the bio-mechanics of motion injury, while Ms. Poe attended a session on X-ray and X-ray analysis ofneck injury.
BB&T STAFF CHANGES Jerry Powell, vice president and city executive for Branch Banking & Trust Co.. announced two new staff members in the Greenville office and the naming of Anne H Edwards to marketing manager for the bank here John C. Williams has joined the bank as business services manager. A Greenville resident since 1974. he has worked in the finance area for over 13 years, Williams is rfiarrted to the former Jo Lentz and they have one child Gwen Speight Tyson, a Farmville native, has joined BB&T in the mortgage loan area. A graduate of Farmville High School, she attended Pitt Commurntv ( nllege Ms Tvsnn is married to L. Martin Tvson of Farmviiie and thev have nne child. She attends Farmville United Methodist Church A Smithfield native, Ms Edwa l | n l thp i k r t management deveioprnernt progr m m i98i i.d ^ n i recently assignee}-to the consumer ser res and p k products management area at BB&T % Aiiwr horn m n \ graduate of East Carolina Universitv she is a member i First .Methodist Church.
DON BRINKLEY
CYPRESS GLEN Phase one of the new retirement center, to be developed by the Methodist Retirement Home Inc. on a lOO-acre tract on East Fourth Street, calls for 123 rooms and apartments. Individual homes and condomiuniums are also part of the overall plan. Construction is scheduled to begin
when one-half the estimated cosk of $6.3 million is secured to biuld the home. The project already has a commitment of $1 million from the Methodist Retirement Home Inc. arid another SI million is expected to come from entrance and accommodation fees. .
Conferees Delay Action On Benefits
WASHINGTON (AP) -*Ht)use-Senate conferees, acting on assurances that benefit checks would not immediately stop, have postponed action on legisla-tion to continue a supplemental unemployment program that keeps many of its recipients off the welfare rolls.
Nobody loses any rqoney, said Sen. Robert Efcle. R-Kan., a conferee who ywis floor manager of the bill iilhis chamber,
:The conferees scheduled brother meeting for Monday to resolve differences between the Houses 45-day extension and the 18-month extension passed by the^ Senate.
When the House conferees insisted'on' their version. Dole said, "This is going to require that I get to a higher authority. He meant the White House, because Republicans said the president would veto the House version as too costly.
Lawmakers were worried during debate in both houses that the nearly 650,000 Americans on the program would suffer if the extension didnt beat the .midnight Friday deadline in the law.
The Labor Department said recipients will receive their checks next week, because those benefits would be based on a previous weeks unemployment.
If the extension does not become law next week, however, the jobless would re-ceive reduced checks for that period. In that event, howev
er. the jobless would still receive half their normal compensation under a provision that calls for a gradual phaseout of the program.
The conferees met after the Senate voted 89-0 for its longterm extension.
The 18-month bill would allow the supplemental benefits for six to 12 weeks after regular unemployment compensation is exhausted, with the time limit depending on a state's unemployment rate. The regular program lasts between 26 and 30 weeks.
In the House bill, which would require a new extension in mid-November, the range would be eight to 16 weeks. The current law calls for eight to 14 weeks.
The House measure also would permit workers who used up their supplemental benefits to receive up to eight additional weeks of jobless checks.
But when Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., offered the same version as was passed by the House,it was defeated 54-37.
The supplemental benefits are the last unemployment checks the jobless can receive before turning to welfare offices for additional assistance.
"Im not prepared to leave the longest of the long-term unmemployed high and dry, Byrd said in support of his amendment.
But the bills floor manager. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said, "There has to be some restraint on the cost of the
program. He added, Every time we add a couple of hundred million dollars, we're certainly not lowering the deficit,
Members of both parties and the Reagan administration agreed the program must be extended. But in ' debate. Democrats generally backed the higher number of weeks and the additional benefits for those who exhaused their supplemental checks; Republicans have opposed those provisions as too costly.
The program currently has 643,800 people on the rolls, but Rep. Harold Ford. D-Tenn.. estimated the House bill would make more than 1 million people eligible.
The Labor Department estimated the program has paid $5.6 billion in benefits to more than 5 million jobless Americans in the one year of its program's existence.
Republicans cited Labor Department estimates that the Democratic bill would cost $1.2 billion for the 45 days.WORDWORD
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B-16 . Tne Daily Renecior Grppnvillft N C Sunda>^Qcto.bef 2.1983Week's Stock Markets
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1 30 1019 83', . .
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Mutual Funds
WEEKLY INVESTING COMPANIES .NEW YORK I API - Weekly Investing Companies giving the high, low and last prices for tne week with the net change from the previous week's last price All
luotations. supplied by the National sociation of Securities Dealers. Inc ,
reflect net asset values, at which securities could have been sold
AcornFd n ADV Fund n AfutureFd n AIM Funds ConvYld Greenwav HiYield Sumil AlianTch-AlphaFnd AmBirthTr
High Low Last Chg
32 35 31,82 31 82- 57
21 73 21 38 21 38- 34 17 40 16 83 16 83 - 54
AmExpGth n Capital
Amer
13 93 13 77 13 80- 06
13 62 13 48 13 48-
10 49 10 47 10 47
5 94 5 80 5 80- TO
23 85 23 04 23 04- 74
26 98 26 30 26 30- 51
16 94 16 60 16 60- 30
15 42 15 21 15 25- 08
Comstock Fd Enterprise
14 5388 29". I Tennco 2 72 8 7297 42'.
I Tesoro 40 6 664 16
I Texaco 3 > 6.532 36b
j TexEsI 4 10 12 1145 60
I Texinsi 2 5946 117'.
I Texinl . 108 4448 6b
! TxdGas :i2b 17 2144,1 51'
I TxPac 35 25 19 29',
' Text til 2 20 7 12095 26-
, Textron 1 B(iJ,5'2692 36b Thriftv s 46 18 3107 19".
26" 41". 15-". 35b .58 111 +
28 -1' 41',- ' 15',-- ' 36 - " .58' '
113',- ' 6' : 1 45 4'
29'4 '
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' Time.M
I Timkn
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14b
18'.
- ".I
6
1 27 1193 72',
2 18 .559 86 1 80 1103 61
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TucsKP 2 20 7 1161 32"4 - I -F -VAL 6 9366 31'4
CMC 60 32 750 18'4 VNCRes 14(Xl 7'.
VSFG 3 84 10 4258 57'. VnCarb 3 40 22 7516 69'4 FnElec 1 64 6 1661 15 1 nPac 1 80 18 11962 60 '. Vmrovl 29 5995 17 .
FnBrnd 479 18'4
FSGyps 2 40 17 334 49'4 I Sind 76 15 808 16'. FShleel 1 13205 30
I nTech 2 60 11 6767 70 a VmTel 1 84 9 4383 23'4 Lnocal 1 7 1,5592 31
67-''. 84'j 59'4
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84 .- '.
60
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37'4-2'4
31 -1'4 >71.- 1.
Enterprise ExchFd n FundOfAm Growth n Harbor Fd HiYldlnv Mum Bond Pace Fnd ProvidentFd VentureFd American Funds AmBalan AmcapFd Am.Mull BondFd Fundmlnvs . GrowthKd IncomeFd InvCoA NewPerspFd TaxExpl WshMutlnv Amer Growth Amllcritge n Am Invest n Am Invine n x Am medAsc n Am NatGrth Am Natlnco Amway Mull Analytic n , Armstng n Axe Houghton Fund B IncomFd .StockFd BIX GlhFd BLC Inco Babsonlncm n Babsonlnvl n BeaconGth n BeaconHill n Berger Group loi) Fund n 101 Fund n Boston Co CapApr n Gvtln n SpGth n BostFoundin Bull 4 Bear Gp CapGih n Equill n Golcnnda n Calvert Group equity n Inco h .Sicial n Calvin Bullix'k . AggresGth BullockFd CanadianFd DividendShr HiincoShr Monlhlvlncm Nain W'de.Sec TaxFree Cap TNT n ' Cardinal CentGih
Chancellor Group
6 98 6 92 6 92- 05
14 56 14 33 14 33- 18
16 31 15 92 15 9-2^ 40
48 26 47 59 47 59- 37
15 13 14 76 14 76- 37
30 72 30 06 30 06-. 73
16 II 16 01 16 01- 09
10 14 10 12 10 14+ 02
17 45 17 39 17 45 + 08
20 51 20 21 20 21- 22
5 91 5 78 5 78- 11
12 64 12 0? 32.02- 60
11 19
8 89 15 45
12 62 12 II 1456 10 86 II 99
9 15
9 63
10 J 897 398
11 12 11 45 29 21
6 13 19 64 6.91
10 05 4 61 15 13 17 94 1558 1 50 14 26 14 92
20.50-14 90
19 76 13 85
19 18 12 71
16 38 11 25 13 00-
18 96 14 94 17 49
11 82 1907 9 26 346 11 72 11 10 10 48 9 69
10 24 10 20 12 57 12 39
CenlryShr n CharterFund n ChpsdeDollr n ChestnulSl n CIGNA Funds
14 52 13 56 22 82 16 09
Growth
1597
15 67
15 67
26
HiYld
9 92
9 90
9 9(1
Income
. 6 93
6 91
6 92 +
02
MuniBd "
7 19
7 17
7 17 +
02
Colonial Funds
CorpCsh
47 81
47 63
47 65-
12
Fund
14 00
13 84
13 84-
11
Grw'th Shrs
10 63
10 45
10'45
15
High Yield
746
7 43
7 44
01
Income
6 92
6 90
.6 92 +
01
(iption
946
936
9 36-
08
Tax Mangd
24 93
24 87
24 87 +
05-
COLl MBFix n
12 20
12 13
12 18 +
03
Lpiohn 2 28 13.X8770 58'. VSLIFE 88 7 1381 26b
I Wachov 1 56 11 587 45
I Wackht 44b 16 181 26
I WlMrt s 14 37 4978 41',
I WaltJm 1 20 9 2398 :i6b
W'rnCm 1 21278 23b
Warnrl. 1 40 12 4256 29b
WshWl 2 48 7 822 20..
WellsF 1 92 6 x2360 39',
Wn.AirL
507
WestgE 1 80 10 4112 48
W'eyerh I 30 64 5760 35".
means
MORE THAN LIFE INSURANCE
W.O.W. membership provides you with on opportunity to boost I patriotism along with low-cost life
For example, our lodges have presented more than 160,000 United States flogs to schools, Scout troops, churches and other organizations representing the public. Many awards for proficiency in American
S^Repretranve^ove also been presented to Greenville,NC students who hove excelled in the*
Office 757-1790 subiect
Home 758-142J'
For you and your fom,ily, we hove a youth program which includes summer encampments, on orphan's core program, and natural disaster relief.
Ask your Woodmen representative about our low-cost insurance plus fraternal and social benefits. Join the Society that cares!
WOODMEN OF THE WORLD LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY
HOf OfAlCt OMAHA NfBRASXA
"The FAMILY Froternify" "y
8".
8".
32'
32",+
27'.
29 p.
17".
6.
17". - '.
53'.
54'- 2I
65;
66'. 2".
14';
14".- '
55')
.55"-4'4
16'
16',-
17
17';-
48 .
48 '
15".
16 + ".
27' .
27".-2',
69 '
69',-1
22".
23 + ".
29'.
30 -'I';
56
57".+ P
25' 1
26 + P.
23
23'+
56'
57 -P>
43
43'-1-1.
24'
24'-!'.
38'
40'.+ 1",
34,
35'.-!')
20'
23.+ 1")
28';
28".- ")
19'.
20'.+
37.
37'b- ")
3'.
4 -
d3P;
32'.--1
45",
46'.-P,
'13'.
33'.-"2
ColumbGrlh n Comwlth A4B ComwTih CSil) Composite Group B&.Sn Fund n Tax n ConcordFd n ConstellGth n ContMulInv n Copley n Counl'rvCapGr Dean Vt'iUer DvGth nr DivGth HiYld IndValu NTIRsc TaxEx Delaware Group Decaturlnc UelawareFd DelchesterBd x TaxFree Pa x Della Trend DepstCap n DepslTr n DirectCap n DodgCoxBal n DodgCoxSik n DrexlBurnh n Dreyfus Grp A Bonds n CalTx Dreyfus
26 42 25 8(1 1 43 I 41
2UI 1 98
1 41-1 98-
1U85 10 69 12 15 1198
6 61 26 14 24 84 7 39 6 26 17 30
10 69-
11 98-6 59 +
6 59 25 78 25 78-24 09 24 09-
33 25 16 99
34
6 25 16 99-
999 12 68 14 32 13 26 846 10 05
9 79 12 50 14 27 12 87 8 05 10 01
9 79-12 50 14 27-12 87-
8 oslo 01+
17 13 16 92
24 12 23 61 7 88 7 73
6 84 6 81
16 25 15 80 1133 1107 18 52 18 25 I 10 1 08
27 75 27 42 26 90 26 41 18 03 17 72
16 92- 18 23 61- 35
7 73- 14
6 81
15 80- 39 1107- 24 18 27- 15 L08- 02 27,42 - 22 26 41- '40
17 72- 25
13 41 13 36
14 03 13 92
15 60 15 35
13 41 + 07 13 93- 06 I 15 35-
Whirlpl 1 80 11 4152 49'4 45". 46"-
Whittak 1 60 15 1982 ' 32'" 32' 32',,+
WilhartS 1,20 41 7717 27 U 26', 27',+ ',
WinDx 2 58 12 253 56". 55'. 55b + 'j
Winnbg 10e 35 2987 20". 17b
W'olwtfi 1 80 12 29% 37'., 35',
Wynns 60 44 185 18b 17'4
-x-v-z-
3 11 8315 44 42
32',
ieb-1'
35b-l 18'-,- "
Xerox
ZaleC^ 1 26 30 164 u34
enilhK U6 7954 32 28" 29
< opynglg by The Associated Press 1983
42"-1" 32',-1'j
29 -2'I
NKW issrE
$10,000,000
LI.MITEI) F,VRTNERSHIP INTERESTS .AND .NOTES
PS Carolinas Balanced fund, Ltd.
A LIMITKI) R\HTN1:RSHIP F( )RMEI) BY PIULK' STORAfiE, INC.
T() ('< INSTRHTAJW'N .AND OPERATE MINT-ST()R.\OE WAREHOUSES IN NORTH ('AR( )LINA .ANT) SOUTH CAROLINA.
THE rXI)ERSI(.NEI) IS NLAVVilNtiTHE.\B0\T:OFFERINd.
Carolina Securities corporation
MEMBER NEW Y( iRK STi X'K EXClLYNfiE
.'\SIIEB()R( t.( HAREf ITTE.('()N('()RD, DURILCM, EDENK)N. F.-YMITTEVIEEE (iREENSBt K( i. (iREE.NA'ILLE. KANN.APOEIS, EAL'RINBITCC, NEW HERN. R.-VLKK .II R( )CKI.N0IL-YM, H( KKY MOUNT. SMITHFIEEI)
. ' , ,jNCWATS l-NikMi(iZ-77.+)
Its ,S ,M,r f,, thi Snin uttf'ftn -f :1 tht.s} S^r.,r>t>, s 7?i/.s ufW.
tiulii* Iiilfthu fu.>
SElTEMBER.liw:V
.MEMBER SI PC-
Leverage
20 32
20 08
20 08-
.06
Mutual
10%
1067
10.67-
22
GwthO n
1209
11 69
11 69-
34
Specl n
3411
33 53
33.56-
49
NY Tx
1344
1341
13.41
Foursq n unavail Franklin Group
Specllncm n TaxExmpl n
798
792
7.98 +
04
11 30
11 23
11.23-
04
AGE Fund
386
3.85
3 86 +
03
ThirdCntn n
736
7.08
7 08-
25
DNTC
24 32
23 99
23 99-
38
EagleGth Shs Eaton Vance
11 27
11 04
11 04-
15
Growth
12 01
11 70
11,70-
27
NY Tax
1021
10 17
10 20+
03
EH Balancd
902
889
8 89-
08
OptionFd
7,06
688
6 88-
16
EH Stock
1390
1372
13 72-
12
Ufilities
577
5 76
5.77 +
04
Growth
7 16
698
6 98-
15
Income Stk
2.11
210
210
HiYield
483
482
4 83 +
.04
USGovi Sec
7 21
7 11
7 21 +
07
IncBos
8 83
880
8 83 +
05
Resh CapitI
1234
1128
11 28-+
no
Invest
872
858
8.58-
09
Resh Equity
623
608
6 08-
12
^Eqtv
TaxMgd
25 08
24 43
24AS
51
GalTFr
6 54
6.51
6 54 +
06
13 09
1305
IS 06+
03
Fd ofSW'
1644
1595
15 95-
58
VS Specl
15 43
1501
15 01-
40
Funds Inc:
Eherstadt Group
Comrcelnc x
10.76
967
967-
1.02
Chemical Fd
1226
11 %
n.%-
25
InvQual
979
973
9 77 +
05
EngyRes
12 23
11 99
11 99-
29
PilotFund
1443
14 11
14 11-
30
Surveyor
18 41
17.95
17 95-
53
SunbIt
1577
15.55
15.55-
.24
Engyl'til n
21 %
21 83
21 94 +
.24
GIT HYld n
1037
1032
10.32-
02
Evergrn n r EvrgTlI n
46 57
46 05
46 05-
29
GT Pacific n
1584
15.76
1578 +
3(K
1570
1562
1570+
06
Gatwb'Opln n Gen Elec Itlv:
15.80
1565
15 65-
15
FarmBuroGi n
14 23
1397
13 97-
20
Federated Funds
ElfunTr n
24.80
24 40
24 40-
32
Am Leaders
11 36
11 17
11 17-
16
ElfunTxEx n
11 10
II 04
11 10+
12
ExchFd n
35 19
34 29
34 29-
72
SiSn
36 41
mt-
35 72-
50
GNMA n
10 52
10 46
10 48 +
01
S4S Long n GenSecurif n
10 55
1053
10 53+
01
Hi Incm.Se
12 19
12 15
12 16 +
06
1373
1366
13.66-
04
Inco n
10 26
1022
1022+
01
GintelErisa n
37 15
36 13
36 13-:
101
Short n
10 15
10 13
10 13 +
01
Grow'thInd n
26 14
25 66
25 66-
35
TaxFree
920
9 17
9 20 +
05
GrdnPkAv
1944
19 13
1913-
24
I'SGvtSec
836
8 33
8 34 +
03
Ham HDA x
648
622
6 22-
22
Fidelity Group
HartwellGth n
1662
1606
16 06-
53
Asset I nv n
24 92
24 35
24.35-
59
Hartwlllevr n
40 23
38 94
38 94-:
1 16
CorpBond n
677
6 75
6 77 +
02
Herold n x 251 24 214 12 214 32-15 34
Congress n x
54 U)
53 20
53.20-1
i 53
Homclr.vs! n
10.04
999
10 93 +
06
I ontratnri n
1109
12 79
12 7!
31
Horace Mann n
25.52
24 83
24 83-
65
Destiny Fd n
13 32
13 01
13 01-
23
Hutton Group:
'
Equtlncm n
27 32
27 04
27 04-
16
Bond n r
1L07
11.04
11 07 +
08
ExchFd n
44 78
43 44
43 93-
66
Calif
9 69
969
969
Fredm n
12 69
12 42
12 42-
11
Emrg n r
1254
1223
12 23-
32
Magellan
38 81-
37M
.17 94-
.65
Gwth n r
15.56
15 29
15 29-
21
MuniBond n
688
686
6 86-
.01
.Natl
984
984
984
Fidelity n
20 55
20 14
20 14
35
NA' Mun
978
9.77
9,77
GovtSec n
9 35
9 33
9 35 +
03
LSI Group
IlilncoFd n
897
8 95
8% +
01
Growth
6.71
666
671 + .
04
HighYield n
II 42
11 38
11 38
Income
3 69
368
3 69+
01
Ltd Mum n
8 18
8 16
8 17 +
04
Trust Shares
10 15
10 14
1015+
03
Mercury
13 76
13 54
13 54-
13
IndustryFd n
8.37
8 14
8 14-
21
Puritan n
12 17
1208
12 08
03
Ini Investors
J4 72
13 61
3 61-1
1 15
SelEfgy
SelFncI
10 37
10 13
10 13-
26
Irivstlndictr n
164
163
163-
,01
1685
16 58
16 58-
27
InveslTr Bos
11 77
11 50
11 50-
.24
SelHlth
20 09
19 53
19 53-
57
Investors Group
SelMetl
14 98
13 69
13 69- 1
; 37
IDS Bond
483
483
483
SelTech n
26 26
25 45
25 45-
77
IDS Disc
869
839
8 39-
31
.Sell'til
14 32
14 30
14 31 +
09
IDS Growth
1997
19 41
1941-
56
Thrift n
977
977
9 77
IDS HiYield
399
394
3 99+
05
Trend n
38 90
38 05
38 05-
76
IDS NewDim x
11 28
963
9 63 -1
163
FiduCap n
19 59
19 40
19 40-
21
IDS Progr x
8 18
6 78
6 78- 1
1 41
Financial Prog
InvMutl X
11 82
1093
10 93-
85
Bond n x
704
686
6 86-
11
IDS TaxEx
348
345
3 48+
03
Dynamics n
10.50
10 21
1013-
26
Inv Stock
22 87
22 42
22 42-
39
FhclTx n
14 52
44 43
14 43-
.05
Inv Select
804
8.01
802
Industrl n
4 63
454
4 54-
07
Inv Variabl
11 53
11 24
11 24-
29
Income n x
9 16
8 93
8 93-
18
Investrs Resh
6 43
6 34
6 38-
01
W'rldTc
9 15
883
8 83-
33
IstelFd n
16 45
16 14
W Ills 10-
30
Fsi Investors
Ivv Fund n
15 27
15 10
13
Bond Apprc
14 43
14 39
14 43 +
05
JP Growth '
15 49
15 16
15 16-
23
Discovery
19 21
18 71
18 71-
44
JP Income
828
826
8 27 +
04
Growth
11 52
11 20
11 20-
29
JanusFund n
13 86
13 56
13 se
26
Income
6 74
6 71
6 74 +
01
John Hancock
Intl.Sec
14 96
14 60
14 60-
16
Bond *
14 25
14 22
ll 25+
08
NatResc
7 62
6%
6%-
71
(irowih
14 05
13 70
13 70-
31
90-10
14 02
13 8.5
14 02 +
13
IS GovI
847
846
8 47 +
04
Option
6 16
606
6 06-
11
TaxExmp
938
936
9 38 +
04
Tax Exmpt
888
8 87
8 88 +
(tB
Kaufmann n
47
45
45-
03
FlexFd n
11 91
11 911
11 91 +
02
Kemper Funds Calif
44 W all Eq
11 70
11 21
11 21-r
54
12 41
12 36
12 36-
03
44 Wall St n
19 91
19 25
19 2.5-
72
Income
8 34
8 32
8 34 +
03
FostrMar
686
6 77
6 77-
07
Growth
15%
15 52
lsa
40
Fndatn Grwlh
5 32
5 30
5 so
01
HighYield
IntlFund
1039
10 35
lo 39+
05
Founders Group
14 82
14 72
14 72 +
06
Grwth n
10 71
10 47
ld 47-
19
MunicpBnd
806
804
8 05 +
02
Incom n
1498
14 85
14 95 +
(H
Option
12 78
12 63
12 63-
15
Summit Technology Tot Return" US Gvt Kevstone Mass InvBdl n r MdBdB2 n r DisBB4 n r IncoKl B r GwthK2 n r
HGCmSl n r
Gl
UpCS4 n r Inti n r-TaxFr n r Mass Fd LeggMason n LemnnCap n Leverage n Lexington Grp Corp Loadrs Goldfund n GNMA Inc n Growth n Research n Lindner n Loomis Sayles Capital n Mutual n Lord Abbett: Affiliated Bond Deb Devel Gth Income ValuAi
V aluAp^ Lutheran Bi Fund Income
iro
Municipal vfSec
CSGov! Mass Financl IntTrBd MIT MIG MID MCD MEG MFD MFB MMB MFH SpcI Malhers n Merrill Lynch
Basic Value Capital Equi Bond Hi Incom Hi Qualtv IntTerm LtdMat
28.21
27.56
27.56-
56
1557
IS 16
15 16-
39
1607
1574
15.74-
.30
882
879
8 82 +
02
1607
1604
1607+
07
1960
1947
19 48-
07
846
843
8 44+
01
921
907
9 07-
10
940
920
9 20-
13
22 63
22,12
22.12-
.40
11 16
1086
10 86-
27
823
7%
7%-
24
535
5.28
5 28-
03
785
783
7 83 +
01
14 26
1398
13%-
19
1899
18:73
1873-
19
20 79
20 53
20.53-
18
12.04
11 59
11 59-
40
1345
13 17
13 17-
28
4 33
404
4 04-
31
772
7.69
7.72+
.03
11 11
10,91-
10.91-
17
20.90
20 31
20,31-
55
1861
18 49
18 49-
12
26.71
25.66
25 66
82
19 23
18 93
18.93-
16
10 24
10 06
10 06-
15
1089
10 85
10 89-
01
1031
10 11
10 11-
16
305
3 05
3 05+
01
939
9.19
9 19-
17
1447
14 24
14 24-
20
860
8 58
R58>
01
704
701
7 04 +
,05
9 11
908
909 +
03
10 29
10.25
1028+
03
X
1335
1294
12%-
34
14 79
14 34
14 34-
31
X
9-67
8 76
8 76-
86
X
13 16-
12,71
1271-
40
1555
15 19
15 19-
,30
X
15.59
1274
12 74-2 80
I29I
12.88
12 91 +
09
935
933
9,33 +
03
788
7.83
7 84-
04
832
8 13
8 13-
15
2,5 14
24 48
24 48-
56
14 00
1374
13 74-
20
20 91
20 66
20 se
19
11 34
11 25
ll.25-
01
8 25
823
8 24 +
01
1038
10 36
10 37 +
04
1043
1042
10 43 +
03
9 81
9 81
9 81 +
01
(Please turntoB-17)
Auto/Truck
Leasing
New & Used Any Type No Down Payment Lower Monthly Payments Daily & Weekly Rentals Also
Mid-Eastern Leasing Co.
#14. Pitt Plaza 756-4254
HERITAGE PERSONNEL SERVICE
CELEBRATES ITS SECOND ANNIVERSARY. WE SINCERELY THANK OUR MANY FRIENDS. YOUR PATRONAGE HAS BEEN OUR SUCCESS.
HERB LEE, PRESIDENT
Judy Via, Consultant
Gloria Grimes, Consultant
Jamie S. Shubert Consultant
Pam Osborne : Receptionist-;Secretarv
Looking for a job Witb /l^Future? Plan Your Tomorrow By: Using Heritage Today, Call 355*2020. Ask For One Of Tbe' Above Consultants. - t ^ :
103 Oakmont Plaza
jf
Office Hours: 9:00 A.M.*5r00 P.M.' Monday-Friday
Mutual Funds
(Continued from B-16)
MunHIYId Mum Insr Pacific Phoenix SciTech Sp Val Mid Amer MidAmHIGr MSB Fund n Mutual Benefit MdwlGvt n Mutual of Omaha: America n Growth Income Tax Free
9.16 9 15
7,07 TU6 14.5.9 1435 12 08 12.t8l
9 96 9 79
13.58 13-47 7 81 7 89
fi:!8 8 26
21 87 21 48 21 46-
14 10 13 86 13 86
10 11 10 09 1111(11
9 15i 7 1161 14 48i 12 00 9 79 13 47
7 69-
8 26-
MutlUual n ll Shrs
Mull Shrs n NaessThm n NalAviaTec n Ntllnd n r Nat Securities Balanced x
Bond X
CalTxE Growth Preferred Income Stock
Tax Exmpt TotKet X
Fairfield Fd NatTele
Nationwide Fds: NatnFd NtGwth NtBond NELife Fund: Equilv Growih Income Retire Eqt TaxExml . NeuberKer Berm Eneriv n x Guardian n Liberty n .Manhattn n Partners n NV Mum n NewtonGUth n Newtonliicm n Nicholas n Nichlnc NrestlnTr n NrestlnGl n NovaFund n NV Ventur Nuveen.Muni n Omega fund n OneVvilliam n Oppenheimer Fd Direct eqlnc
Fd
972 6 35 8 41 993 16 96 89
9 69 6 26 8:19 9 90 16 89 1
61 .52 .59 31 10 :fO 9 96
9 72 I 6 26
8 401
9 90 1691 52 78 .59 31
996 13 87
(M
Rainhow n liochTax SFT Eqt
13 81 3 55 11 72 1065 741
13 42 13 42 3 50' :l5n
964
6 .50 10,24 14 83
11 64 10 32 7;i8 7 23 9,52 o 38 8:17 9 83 14 47
1164-10:12 . 7 41 I
7 23-9.52
8 38-6:17-9R!
14 47
10 26 10 09
8 81 8 70
9 27 9 24
10 09-
8 70-
9 27 +
22 12 21 87 25 33 24 45 10 ,i4 10 ,50 22 92 22.23 6 78 6 77
21 67 24 45
III ,54
22 23- 53 6.78+ 04
hot Safeco Wur Equity n Growth n Incom n Munic n .SiPaul Invest Capital Growth Income Spt-cial n Scudder Funds Commn.Stk n Dev elop n CapGth n Income n Internatl n MangdMun n .Mcurily Funds Action Bond Equilv . _lnve,sl X llira Selected Funds .toerShrs n x _ Sfft-clshrs n Seligman Group CapilFd I oqiSfk Comuii GrowthFd Income .Sentinel Group Ralanced Bond
Common Stk Growth , .^Hiuoia n 68 ! Sentry Fund 04 j Sheai^on Funds
I 16 4 11 4 11- .03
14 50 14 40 14 41- 07
11 28 10 95 10.95- 28
10.86 10 62 10.62- 17
20 86 20 37 20.37 - 41
13 67 ,13.44 13.44- 21
II 76 11 72 11 72- 01
1446
i6:io 992 25 41
14 21 14 21- 22 15 91 15 91- 39 9 89 9.92 + 06
24 78 24 78- .63
15 43 14 98 14 98- 41 65 99 65:10 65 30- 68 15 44 15 20 15 20- 11 1186 11.84 11.85 + 02 211)9 21 00 21,09 + 26
191
787 7 87- .01
8 1(1 - 8 03
8 01 7 98
8 .55 8 :15
lirHH^ 40'60 10,57 10:19
8 03- 05 8 01+ ,05 8:i5^ 17 10,60-- 30 10 :19- 21
9 59 9 48
23 21 22 99
9 48-22,99-
14 23 13 91 14 42 14 20
9 18 797 II 93
13-91- -24 14.20- 15 8,97- .20 7 75 7 75- 22 II 89 11 89
897
946
6,28
17 60
18 49
:I5 67
9 40 9 40- 06
6.25 X 6 28 + 02
17 41 17 41- 17
18 05 18,05^ 33
:15.I3 35,61 +
25 69 25.13 25 13- .58
-Appreciatn IfiVield
'20 18 18 M 18 m-
40 97 40 62 4(166
4 14 4 13 1 14 ^
6 31 '6 21
14 74 14 46
I 08 1 117
32 38 :il .52
818 8 16
6 21 14 46-
1 08 + 31 .52-,
8 lRi
27 0.5 26 80 26 80-
3 78 11 85 II 94 17 6(1 828 '7 41
31 11 ICi
leld Mg.Mun ShrmnDean fi SierraGrth n .Sigma Fund} Capital Incom Invesl iw'cl n 'Irust Sh \'enliire Shr
18 13
19 41 13.56
I5:i4
17 82 19 22 13 49 7 26 1502
17 82- ,21 19.22- .12 13.50- 03 7 26- 78 15.02- 36
3 75 02 1 SmlhBarEql n
1171, 1171-17 20 17 20-8 12 8 12 .19 7:19-
13 60 13 23 13 2:1-22,25 21 78 21.78-
Dppenhm F' .High Yield
. Option
-S^ial
+ Target
Ta.xFree i Aim
. * Time WverCounl Sec . Paraml Mull . PaxWorld n
78*
Penn.Square n ikfui
ennkfulual n ermPrI n
Jhila Fund
Phoenix Series . BalanFd
CvF.'2ver -Growih
HiYield
* SliK'kFund , -PCCapit
, Pilgrim Grp . ^MagnaCap
- * Magna Im'om .PAR
Pilgrim Fd Pioneer Fund Pinnr Bd Pionr Fund Pionr II Inc Pionr 111 Inc Ilanndlnvsi Plilrend h PrecMll n Price Funds Growih n Gwthinc n
Income n Inil n
NewEra n New Horizn n Tax Free n
Pro Services . .MedTec n Fund n Income n Prudential Hache Equitv
GvtSv-
IliVield
- HYMuni iiptinn
. v^ualtv
Rsch 'n r x ra'Mmid, Prudeni ,s|p -Pulnam Fuiid+
I onverl I alTax
27 77 26 11 26 84-
7 78 7 64 7 64
10 37 10 08 10(18
19 08 18 98 19 03 +
24 ;6 24:19 24:I9-
22 68 22:14 22 :14
21,m 20,54 20.54
7 78 7 75
23 67 22 99
1497
34 98 :14 74
14.24 14 13
1169 11 :
9 8:! 9.59
6 4,3 6.17
12-50 12 25 10 21 9 97
14,57 .14 74 14 13 11 .55-9 .59-
12 25-9 97
12 27 2(1 67 15 88 999 15 66 14 .13
12 25 12 27 -20,56 20.56 15 79 15 79 9 88 9 88
15 44
14 21
15 44 14 28
SmihBarl . .SoGen
.Swstnlnvinc n Sovereign.Inv Slate lionid Grp Commn Stk lliversifd Progress StalFarmGth n .SlalFarmHal n 24 ' StSlreet Inv (12 I ExchFd n 35 Growih n :io fnvsi nr x 42-' Sleadman Funds 05 i Amerind n 72 i' Assi*c(aled n Invest n "
I 'ceaqogra n Stem Rot> Fd.s Balance n Bond n CapOppor n n(scovr StiK'k n SteinSpFd n
04 I TaxExempI n 06' Cmvrsen
05 StralegCap 07 I Strateglnv
20 I StratlnGih n . Strngln n
13 12 761 788 7 61 11.13 II 11 16,41 10 07 16 44 466 18 96
1293 7 59 7 76 7 18 11.(4) 1093 1608 999 16 22 466 18 78
1293
7 60 + 02 7 76- 07 7 48- 12 11.0+-- 06 10 93- 18 16 08- 28 9.99- .06 16 22- 16 4,66+ .02 18.78- 11
CapExch ? n DeposBst f n Divers f n ExchFd f n ExchBst f n FiducEx f n SecFidu f n Vanguard Group Explorer n IvestFund n x Morgan n QuaiDivI n QualDvII n QuIDvIlI n IntlPortf n x US Portf n X
GNMA n X
HiY Bond n x IG Bond n x ShrlTrm n IndexTrust n x 21.37 MunHiYd n Muniint n MumLong n -MuniShrt n Wellesley n Wellington n W(ndsor n Venturlnco WallSt Growth WeingrtnEq n Westgrd Woo(f Struthers deVeghM n Neuwirth n PineStr n
64 69 63 84 63 84- 77 42 92 41 86 41 86- 96 70 98 69 48 69 48-1 109.11 107 55 107.55-1 50 90 47 88 10 88 10-2,19 59 64 57 96 57 96-1.13 64 94 63 23 63.23-1.39
The Daily Reflector Greenvdle. N C _ Sunday October_2 1963 B-17
42 25 41.51 41,51- .67
16.36 1618 16,18-2.53 14 16 13.95 13.95- .11
17.51 17 44 17 44- 03
8 00 7.97 8.00+ 05
25,30 25 24 25 27 + 05
24.98 24 78 24 78- .01
39 18 37 84 37 84-1 24
9 18 9.09 9.12- 05
9.11 9 02 9 04- 02
8 07 8 00 8 01
987 9 86 987+ 01
20 70 20 70- .57
9 31 9.27 9 28- 01
10 84. 10 78 10 78- .04
9.61 15.21
13.27 1341 13.24 11.29 9.31
21.28 20 1196 1180
9 57- 02
15.20 15 20 12.94 12.94- 27
13.20 13.20- 16 13 .11 13 11+- .12 11,09 11 09- 19 9.01 9.02- 32
20.77- ,43 11 80- 08
44 89 44.12 44.12- 60 20 69 20.02 20 02- .56 14.38 14.16 14.16- .14 n.No load fund, fPrevious days quote. r-Redemption charge may apply. Copyright bv The Associated Press
Weekly Stocks Ups And Downs
6 18 6 47 997
6 04 636 986
11.83 1166 14 81 14 66
6 04+r. 13 6.36- 07 9 86- .09 1166- 13
14 66- .08
87 09 85,23 85 23-1 69
.57 17 78:i8
55 57-1 49 76 49-1 58
388 1 00 1 75
3 80 1 00 1.71 7 29
38(+-1 00 1 71-7 29-
23 90 23:
8 8:! 8 82
23;
!.8!-
29 62 2907 29 07-9 59 9:!6 9 36-
23 92 23 46 23 46-17 60 17 57 17 58-7 85 7 8(1 7 81-
20 64 20 36 20 36
6 :!ll 8 25 2:1 4,5 13 12
6 24 8 22 23 36 12 91
6 24 8 23 +
i StrngTof n nGr
2.I/3. 12*91
9 113
17 .-)6 12 72
9111 9 11,).
22 IK 22 IK
12 .58
17 17 12 'iK
21 :ii 21 28 21 29
16 48 16 0.5 16 05
20 68 191; 191.
15 79 15 46
13 46 13 1.
8 .32 8 ,11.
13 25 13 17
18 56 18 13
19 78 19 .ill
8 (4) K W.
15 46 1.11;
K 12 13 21 18 1! 19 ill 8 14,
11 75 11 48 11 48
10 29 loll loll
14 ,V. 14 28 14 28
.13 8,1,1,: 15 89 15' 14 88 14
19 97 14 7
14 K4 9i)5
('.iBilal
nfoS
InfaSc " Inti Kqu ' iiei.rvie (rowih , H.MlIh . High 5 odd . Income . Invest N5 TaxEx - Dpi ion
Tax Exempt
Vista
; Voyage (uasar n
23'd 14 04 1901
12 12 14 M 12'87 21 95 20 71 18 .!9 6! 54
11 84
.14.5; .
12 71
21 .17
II ,84 1.4.57. 12:1 2.1 88 20 71
.SunGrwth 02 j Tax.MngCll
08 I Templeton (iroup
15 I Kuregn
j Global I 05 Global II 44 Growth 35 ! World
09 Transam Cap 07 I Transam.New n 41 I Travelrs Eqts ,57 I TudorFd n
2oth Centurv -N I (irowthn'
!7 i .Select n
01 I Ultra n r 26 I USGv n
:! I I'SAA Group .52! Grwthn III I Income n Snbli n
24 I TxKlIV n
16 I TxEIT n
02 I TxESh n
I Umiied Mgmnl
25 \cciim n Oi Gvvihn
07 liUi.n -"i : Mull n
!4 1 t ruled Funds 01 .tccumultiv '
15 Bond '' Intkith II 6+int Income EidiicSh High Income Income 'I Municpi .'I \.vl\p!
11 .ViFngy IK 5.iiigu.ird *' I Id Service'
, Gin Fd n "I Pi.+tt D I S', (old
26 , \'.ilue Line Fd Bond n
8,!8 999 18 60 17.07 16 26
808 894 18 30 17 01 16 14
13 19 12 93 15 16 15 12
8 08-+ 29 8 94-1 15 18 30- 29 17 03 + 01 16 18- 01 12 93- 18
15 12+ 02
II INI 18 .!8 to 04 9 92 13 14 11 67 8 32 13 03
10 93 .!8 18
10 03 9 69 12 87
11 55 8 29
12 68
11 INI+ 38 18-
10 03 9 69-
12 87-
11 55-
NEW YORK I API - The following list shows the New York Sftxtk Exchange stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down the most in the past week based on percent of change No securities trading below $2 or 1000 shares are included Net and percentage changes are the difference between last week s closing and this week's closing UPS
Name Last 1 GenGwth wt 2D 46 47G 1Ul>
24
321;
11'
,3'5
40'
2 Amstar
3 HelenCurt A
4 Pueblo Ini
5 ArtraGrp
6 Rampac
7 Inti Harv
8 TelecomCp
9 IntlHarv 3pf
I 14
+ 9\ + V, + 4D
+ 1 +
10 IntlHarv
11 RCA 3 :
12 Mattel 1
13 IntlHarv wt
14 Puntn Fash
15 TW Corp w t
16 Amstar pi
17 .Mercantil s
18 BrwngFer s
19 Shaw Indusi
20 Arrow Elec
21 RecognEq
22 Winler.lack
23 Indiana Gas
24 IntrslBakr
25 Oaklndust
26 TWC 1 90pf
'6pf 27'
it .35,
+ 5'i 4 + 3, + 4
6D 21' 10' 6'. 58 42, 28 3(1'; 17 11'. 35 14 +
'4 Up
2' Up >. a': Up
2'N Lp 2'4 Up
Pet Up 500
Up 43 8
Up 25 7
Up 243
Up 215
Up 215
Up 17 1
Up 16 0
Up 14.9
Up '13.0 Up, 12 9
Up 12 5
Americon Stock Exchange _| Wall Streeters View
1985 As Pivotal Year
NEW YORK (APi - American Stock Exchange trading for the week selected issues:
Sales
TE hds High Low Last thg Acton s It 37 287 8 7D
AdRusl s ,10 16 179 26'4 25
Adobe 20 15 492 23' . 2L
AegisCp 15 - 874 4' 4
AfilPb s 64 18 40 42D 40'
Altec 335 "d '
Amdhl s 20 51 5129 20'
AMotIn .25 12 585 32'
ASciE 126 9"
25 -P 22';- " 4'
40+-P
Ampal n Armtrn Asmrg s AtlsCM Atlas wt
Banstr g.60e BergB s Bow val
12 3 10 58 731 2665 102 228
15 2091
BradNl 157 1301 19 , Brascngl 60 378 32"
ChmjpH 49 2249 5D
CircIK 74 14 1092 21' .
ConsOG 113 664 8
Cooklnt 50 8+
CoreLb 16 147 42 17'4
Cross s 1 20 21 315 35
CrulcR 10 2061 5"
Damson 19 550 11
DatPds 16 37 3337 29D
18" 31 9' 4 11- 10'; 2' 6-'' 5", 27'4 21'4 16 + 31'4
18';-1 31'4- " 9'4- ' 4'- ' IP- ' 10"- 2'- '
D-'
27\-2"i
21+-1
17'4-I
31'+- '
a-'-
19" 21'4 + 1'4
InlBknl i)6e KeyPh 20)
Kirbv MCO Hd MCO Hs 1
MSB n e .Marndq Marm pl2 35 MrshI s 2
MediaG 1 04 I
MichSg 1 20 MtchlE 241
NKiney NlPatm 4
NProc 55e 17 293 25
Nolex 29 116 3'
.NARoyl 20 13 221 18"
N'oCdO g 192 16' Numac g 6 22' OOkiep Z1550 16'
OzarkA 20 203 7585 lO" iPallCps 36 22 413 36" iPECp 271 8 481 2"
PelLew 1 491 8 2285 12 Pittwav 1 65 12 70 61
1681
6"
5",
5 '
3 5274
31".
28"
28G-2-
2393
7"
7'
! 232
15';
I3'"
45',+ *4
31586
4'
3"
3,- ',
743
5",
5"
S'*.- '
680
7-16
'. + 1-16
643
21"
21*4
21"+ '
! 1899 U27
24',
26' + !'
! 76
59'
.58
.59'+ "
0 272
28"
26'.
28';+2'.
12100
28"
25"i
26'-2'
1 225
5*4
4".
4',-
i 1383
26',
22".
23'4+2"4
23'.' 2" 18 , 15'4 21", 15*; d 9'. :!4". 2'; lO"
23'
2"
18'.
15'4- 21',- ' 15'' 10'- I :!4+- 1
21.,-I! -
8"- '4 16'-1'4 34"4 + 1'4
10"
DomeP
DorGas
6910 16 17 1266
4" 4 1-16 4 3-16-3-16
Dynlctn 25e 11 2370 FdRes v
15'; 14 14", .13 29 636 15-16 11 16
Felmnt .10 16 254 24N,
Fluked 841 27 286 u34"4
FrontHd 20b 3429 14',
GRI 18 161 IP GnlYl g 430 2P
GoldW 448 13"
GldFld 1109 2
GlLkCh .64 26 x203 70 GlfCdg 44 1136 16"
Hollya. .24 8 344 10';
HouOTr2.08e 6149 11',
Husbg 15 330 9"i
Imp(Jilgl.40 2034 33
% 1612
;En 774
22
32'
11",
10
19'
12
P
3':
15 -14 + 1 +.l-16 22 -2' 33 -1" 13",+ " IP,
19'-2' 12.-2 + ' 69"+ 1 15"- 9",-+ ", 10"-9';+ ' 3P.-I'" 3',- ' 13-lK
Ransbg
Resrt A
SecCap
Solitron
Sunair s
Sundnc
TIES
Tch.Am
Tch.Sym
Telsph n
Tx.scan
Trailer
TranEn
TubMx s
UnFood
UnivRs
Y'ernit
WangB s WrnC wt
1 76 14 1633
55';
7' i
72 32 2029
18"
16';
16 2406
46'
44
8 224
11',
10".
385
9'.
8' .
22 18 195
12';
11'.
1U88
7",
6".
.37 37.32 U40',
:!6".
110 253
6
6'
15 419
22
21
:i084
i'
d 6 +
21 495
21
19
1".
602
!
177
4*4
4'
3 744
6',
4',
20 8 346
8*4
8'
661
8'-.
8
12.15 819
14'1
14
12'29 14-348 34',
:t3
909
7-4
6*4
519
10'"
9
20 198
14
13".
12e 139
40'
:!8'.
157
5
141 545
8',
8''
60'; 60';-P
17 -1' 44',
10"-
8"-
11"-
36",-2+ 6'"-21'.- 1,
19I.-P
P,
4'
3 1'
14 -
33'.....
Wihtrd Wstbr g WstnSL Wichita
WwdeE .. ...........
Copyright by The.Associatea Press 198:!
9.-13",-:!8'; +
ByCHETClRRIER;
P Business Writer
NEW YORK (API - Fifteen months before it even gets starteii. Wall Streeters are talking about 1985 as a year to fear.
It may sound like pretty distant stuff to investors who have trouble enough divining what, the economy and the^ stock market are going to do in the next few days or weeks.
But economists and market analysts who make their living thinking ahead see several reasons why 1985 threatens to be a year of trouble, and possibly turmoil, in the markets.
It's just possible, they suggest, l^t anticipation of
Comodity
Futures
Weekly Stocks In Spotlight
NEW YORK lAP) - Yearly high low. weekly sales ,high. low, closing price and net change of the 20 most active stocks trading for more than $1
High Low Sales High Low l.asi (hg.
^^32
13', DOWNS
Name Last (I' BldwUtd pR- ro ' Ronson BaldwUtd Vendo Co ICN Pharm EstnAir plB TWA n GapStores
+ 1'
Lp
Lp
Lp
Lp
56'-;
70',
129';
34'
IP,
35",
27",
38
13" 24 13" 20" 27: 35" 17", 23'
1
31 3
98', 64 62", 33 40, 28
Ugh 17', MerLyi 56 ATT 73', IBM 19", RCA 3 EastAir Chrvsir
RepStI
CntiCp
48,
64';
61,
41
49';
36
39',
12';
AMR Cp Boeing Tandv Waste PhibS s
AExp SCalEd
7", TW
IntHarv
EsKod
Schlmb
SlOilCl
6,529.000 38" 32
6.480.600 66 64
5.762.600 129'.; 126
5.498.300 :!4' 31
5,036.800 5'-. 3
3.5.58.400 31", 28
3,I92.:i03 27", 25'
3.171.20(1 :!:!", 29
3,091.500 31 27
2.947.700 43' 37'
2,769,900 43', 38'
2,670,100 49" 46'
,2.669,400 31 29'
2.535.300 39 35'
2.528.6(i 32 35
2.505.500 :19' .37
2.408.400 IP, 9' 2,394,50(1 71'-. 68'
2.315, Kl 36 54
2.311.700 :!7' :!5
33 -65 - 126+ ', 3P,- 1'-;
CHICAGO AP The i"ange of com modity futures this past'.week on the Chicago Board ot Trade was I
Wk( VYk Open High Low ( lose Li hg Interest
WIIFYT
.'i.iHHi bu minimum, dollars per bushel
Dec Mar Mav iJuT iSe'p 1 Dec
1B3 .! 91 4 01
03
i- 05'
r
U.-,
ln.i-
Vo6'
4.! 1+19 11.24 4.:J5 6 K90
819
462
29';- 1', 26';+ >. ,30'4- 2", 27';- 3" 39' 3' ' :!8- 4 . 46,- ' 29- ', ,!6.- 2 :iO".+ 2'. :17'4 11'+ 1". 68',- '. 54"- 2 . :!5'" i'4
\
Fri to Thurs. sales 84.011 V 1 Total open interest 66,f>69 I (OKN
.4,(i bu minimum; dollars per bushel
.Dec .i.58'i:i42 54 ; *00' ill8,920
j Mar .62', i 44 , i.57', - o:L; j.5.5.4.5.i Mav :i ()'. :! 45 ; :| 58' - of 19,490
I Jul ,i6:i'. .! 44 :i 57 04', k.9.52
Sep :i.!6', i 20 .! .10 o7 |2,.i,89
Dec .)17 . ,iol i08 10 111,108
Fri to Thurs sales :io5.276 f Total open inlerest 224.512
0 \TS
.i.iXNI bu minimum dollars per bushel
those problems could creep into the market picture well before 198.5 actually arrives.
This particular' vision of the future assumes that little will be done in the next 12 months about the gaping federal budget deficit, with the White House and Congress preoccupied by the 1984 elections It also presupposes that the economic recovery will continue.- however unevenly, through the next year or so.
Provided th^it those reasonable expectations are fulfilled, analysts say. these conditions are likely to pre-, vail as 1985 begins: ' ^
A new four-year presidential term begins, whether with President Reagan back at the helm or someone else in his place. The administration. and the new Congress, face immediate and mounting pressure to cut spending, raise taxes, or both to close the gap between the gov ernment's income and its outlays.
Until this point, the bond and credit markets have been able to accommodate heavy borrowing by the Treasury without, any severe disruptions. But- now economic growth has stimulated the appetite ot\orporations' and individuals lor credit as; well.
The conflicting demand pushes interest rates higher, threatening to derail the recovery, Tax increases, or the prospect of them, cause consumers to slow -their spending, further worsening the economic outlook
"A collision course" in the financial markets in early 1985 "needs to be regarded as a. decided danger." says J a c k L a V e r y, c h i e 1 economist at Merrill Lynch, Pierce. Fenner Sc Smith
1985 has ail the makings of a very tough year." adds Greg Smith, director of research at Prudential-Bache Securities,
For investors content to worry about the present, the stock market didn't offer much consolation in the past week
Josephs
More service for your dollar A one-half to one hour cleaning, oiling, and preventive maintenance per typewriter. Ask your typewriter company if they do this as a part of their maintenance contract tor customer-owned IBM typewriters'.
355-2723
3-j
.I"'.
6
8',
13"
8,
_Uhg
- 1''." - 1'
. K4I11U n .
'I Fiin'cln'
1 vJoviii'i' n 1 ratvrgi'(,ih n
Sp4'4'l Ml n
Win+f Fxvh.irit;c
22 78
22 ,'!!
23.il-
16 6+
16 16
16 16-
26 77
26 4,!
26 43
9,59
9 :!((
9.!0-
98 02
97 87
97 97 -
J6 27
15 91
15 91
10 91
10 87
10 91 +
18 6,5
18 27
18 27
11 90
11 87
11 88-
11 29
11 24
11 28-
lo !,!
10 29
10 33 -
8 1"
81)6
8 06-
17 55
17 17
17 i;
11 4t>
1.! !.!
1! !6
12 ,52
12 !7
42 ,!7
lo 52
lo .13
lo .!.!
5 62
5 60
5 62 +
IX 52-
18 17
18 .17
1! 05
13 84
13 84
111 .34
10 0:5
,!o 05
1187
13 8.5
1! K7 -
11,!4
11 17
13 17
6 .'i:
6 34
(i ,!4
5 25
5 2"
5 20
11 70
2(1 h:i
11 41
20 .'i*i
II 41 20 ,56
12 'V!
12 5.1
12,53-
07
91
91
K IK
1 Ml
, .Vi
12 l'(
12 17
12 19 +
14ot
H'-57 '
i ,57-
7 28
7 IK
7 18
21 7(1
21 1)7
21 07-
17 .18
16 88
16 88
(9 TWA 2i5plB lU G Housewar
11 FacScien
12 (.iWstHosp L! Benguet B
14 Ailecn Inc
15 Eax4n.'\ir pi 16' Erbamonl n 17. EsinAir pfC
18 Uoleco s
19 LTV ('oxp 2() Tiger Ini 21 SamaFeInd
HeclaMn,
6'
- 4'
- 4"
- 6'
2'. - 1'
12', 14- ' 14". 31. 15'-;
- 6 - 2 - 1
Mng
23 HuttonEF
24 Texfi Ind McrilLxn i
29
19'.
.37'
Pet
Off
Off
Off
Oil
Oil
Off
Off
Off
oil
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
off
Off
0
off
Off
Off
Weekly Stock Dollar Leaders
What The Stock Market Did
111-
I Dec I Mar I Ma>
, Jul ' Sep
\ Fn to Thurs xale 8.483 Total open interest 8.4:!4 SOVBKYN.X .),il hu minimum, dollars per bushel
1 91'
2 0.1 2 09 2 14 ! 18
1 a:!'. 11 1 (*4 2 I)
1 99i , 2 I;
2 ij5 2 11',
2 08 2 l.i
h..ii:
.152
402
128
|Aov ..9 Hi',. 8,41,. K66. 68,7,29,,
NEW YORK r.APi I'he tollowing is , list of the most active stocks basetf on
the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied bv the shares traded
Name ToUllOOOi Salesihdsi Last
IBM
Amer T&T MerilLvn s Motorola RCA I'ro.Gen Motors ?? East Kixlak 14 (j Ford.Mot m: Schlumhrg ;i4 WasteMg!
14 4 ^mg 14 NauSemi ,4- Tands Digi-i.Eq ^ Chr.s.er
Weekly Amex Dollar Leaders
$7:!6,172 57626 126 S423.669 XM8()6 65 $2.31.779 6.5291.1 .!3 $187.372 l;!tJl2 140 $180,7.56 5498:! il , $171,598 2:ii372 R:!". $167,615 2:i945 68 , $144 ,!99 228.0 61', $128,777 2:il31 54". $128 164 26701 4fL. $119 7 50 214)77 39 $115.885 21118 .52'. $112 527 27699 !8s $11" KM 1,)!#, lo2 , SM:.196 L5.584 29'.
' Advances I Declines I Unchanged I Total issues I New vri.v hghs I New vearlv Iw
Total tor -week Week ago Year ago Jan 1 to date 1982 to date ,\MERICAN B( Total for week Week ago Year ago
,lan
9 23 '
K51. RKl
42 28.ti24
' Mar
9.4
Ryf)'
44 . 18.6.50
Two
Mav
9.!6
8^1 -
47' 7,4"4
Ihis Pr+v
Year Years
JuT
9 28
8 8 HI ~
47 11 627
V$eek tt+ek ago ago
Tug
K 97
H 22 H .Vi
47+ 2.''29
.19)
1.420
822 1..5.3.5
Sep
Nov
8 1!
7 -y) 7 74
!6 2.324
1.169
6o4
1.044 ,!79
7 !5
bHl 7 m
.!.! 7 7,iT
2.51
182
2i5 . 197
, Fn !
0 Thurs sales .;ko.221
2.206
162.
2,'2o6
2.101 .2.1H
Total
open (merest 14K o24
215
215 8
XOVHFIN iill
i:i
26
lo 706
(i ixxi lbs: (iollars per )(Ki IPs.
" 1
4 t-xi
in b") ,
1 22 >. 89,1
4,990'I
Dev'
15 17
H7 ij 2.)
2 92 31.549
.!7,71i).ix)
Jan
35 12
1 .2 2.!
J'Xi 11 151
2l.')6o.iXii)
Mar
.!4 80
ill b .12 'Ml
2 80 ,10 707
1.64:3.400.0110
Mav
14 20
2H H*! U 'Ml
! 20 5,072
NDS
1.6i>4.97(),!KXi
JuT .
i.i IK
2i^' '5 24 I
.1 26 2.876
Yug
31 7.5
28 211 28 2.
.1 5o i49
S5 470,000 '
Sep
.29 25
2y Vi 2b 4b
2 85 1..5.16
$,5,llo,ii.i
1 (C!
JT mi
24 2.') 2,in')
2 (,5 770
$6,4Ko.iX)o
Dec
2b Ml
24 I'f 2.^.2.'. -
1 52 444
NE55 YIiRK AP The lollowing gives the range of Dow Jones averages Tor- the
Thur -ale lo4iiWi$ Tni.ii "n[':, interest
f'r
Hotel Tax Starts
' week ended Sep io
STOtK \VKK\(.F>
(ipen Hivh Low (lose thg
Ind 1260 77 12GI 77 123.1 l.i 12.U 1! 22 46
)wing IS asea on
NEW YtiRK list of ihe most active slocks baset the dolkir volume The total is based on the median price of the .stiK'k traded multiplied bv Ihe sh.ires traded
Name To|i$|ili Sales'hds i Last
WangLdbB s Imp ( hem Kev Pharm TIE Comm s Resrtint A .Amdahl s DataPrd s Prent Hall NYTimes A Ozark Air
,33'
$48,603 14348 $41.725 51355 8".
$15.887 5274 28,
$14,.121 :!732 36',
$10.857. 2406 44",
$9,937 5129 18';
$9.635 3337 28",
$8.838 T633 53'+,
$3.750 1048 82",
r.490 7.585 10'
CHARlonE. N.C, (APi -A 3 percent hotel-motel tax enacted by the Mecklenburg County commissioners earlier this month was scheduled to go into effect this weekend.
The extra tax will mean an average $40 room will cost $42.80, the total of the 3 percent tax and the curr.ent 4 ^percent sales tax.
Tran: Utils 65 Stk;
582 66 582 W ,')6l .58 561 58 '22 U4 78 l:!4 97 l:!4 25 1:14 68 + 1 25 ,5(l 76 o'Ki 76 48 97 488 97- 10 41 BUM) \VKR\t.FS 2u Bonds 7191 72 ii 7171 :2'! + 0 ,59 t ills 7li 65 70 82 7ll ,!2 7o 82 -0 9u
Indus 73 17 7! 30 73 o7 7.!:iO+o28
(tlMMODITY FUTURES INDEX
151 03 151 03 146 26 146 92 . 98
soybkvCmfm
|ii tuns, dullars per ton
i'17 'VI 22.5 00 2!5 .vi
242 50 '229 2:i9 5o
243 5o 2:!0 I| 2.19 '91
245 INI 2.1 INI 2.19 8o
246 li St1.50 240 li 246 I' 2!1 'I 241 50 2.)6 I) 222 '91 2.12 91 2J8 ii 21" "0 22'2 2',: I' 192 'i 20.i 0"
.Dec
.Ian
Mar
Mav
Jul
Aug
.Sc[)
4 2" 4 00
29 2K.i 10.1)26 6.4;i !.'H5 2,827
Hoiiie Cleaneis Inc.
LSOI Dickinson Ave. Owned And Operated By
MARVIN SUTTON
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B-18 The Daily Retlector. Greenville N C
Silver
Futures
Decline
By KEITH E. LEIGHTY AF Business Writer Silver futures prices fell ^ sharply for the second straight session Friday on the Commodity Exchange in New York, with silver for current delivery slipping below $11 an ounce.'
The selloff was^triggered Thursday by reports that stocks certified for'delivery against the futures contracts are at record high levels, said Jack Boyd, director of commodity research in New York with brexel Burnham Lambert Inc.
The exchange had reported earlier in the week that stocks had reached 128 million ounces.
That selling pushed silver for delivery in December below Sll.8(j a troy ounce, which many analysts said was a strategically important price. Traders said sell orders rose sharply when prices fell below that level.
Gold prices also declined, but only moderately.
Boyd said fewer speculators have been holding gold contracts, which meant there were fewer contracts to sell and drive prices down.
Gold settled $3.40 to $5.40 lower with the contract for delivery in October at $401.90 a troy ounce; silver settled 39 cents to 50 cents lower with October at $10.90 a troy ounce, and copper settled 0.7 cent to 0.80 cent lower with October at 65.80 cents a pound,
' Livestock and meat prices fell on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
Cattle prices were under pressure as the expected strengthen wholesale prices of carcass beef failed to materialize. said Chuck Levitt, a livestock analyst in Chicago with Shearson-American Express Inc The slaughter was 3 percent higher this week than last, Levitt said, and that came after meat packers^ had pushed prices higher As a result, retailers were less willing to resupply their inventories, "and the beef market became a lot more sluggish.
The hogs market came under pressure from excessive supplies.
'We're coming into the very large crop of hogs that was born last spring, Levitt said. He noted that the slaughter Thursday was revised on Friday to 362.000 animals and that the Friday slaughter was estimated at 360.iK).
"We may not be able to as-borb that kind ofslaughter based on the demand-we-have -now. 'Levitt said.
Anticipation of the exceptionally heavy slaughter also weighed on frozen pork bellies, which fell for the second straight session despite a light increase of the price on wholesale cash markets. ;
Live cattle settled 0.10 cent to 0 35 cent lower with the contract for delivery in October at 60,77 cents, a pound , feeder cattle were 0.13 cent to 0.55 cent lower with October at 59.67 cents a pound: live hogs were 0,80 cent lower to 0.10 cent higher with October at 40.95 cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies were 0.32 cent to 0.60 cent lower with February at 57.72 cents a pound.
Grain and soybean futures prices closed higher on the Chicago Board of Trade Soybean prides finished with a,^ late surge after choppy-trading during the session while corn prices were higher throughout the day.
Dale Gustafson, a grain analyst with Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc., said corn prices were |upported by follow-through buying after a rally late in Thursday's session. A USdA report on corn exports also was encouraging and prompted buying, Gustafson said.
Soybeans rebounded after coming under pressure midway through the session, when selling was strong by commercial concerns handling accounts for producers, he said.
Wheat trading was quiet and prices generally followed the other markets, Gustafson said. Some buying by exporting firms was noted he added.
Wheat settled 14 cents lower to 14 cents higher with the contract for delivery in December at S3,70'G a bushel; corn was 4 cent to 6 cents higher with December ^at $3,544 a bushel; 'oats were 2 cents to 2^*1 cents higher with December at $1,904 a bushel; and soybeans were 94 cents to 194 cents higher with November at $8.66 a bushel, r
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Gail RobersonWritings Her Joy and Her Job
. a By CAROL TVER
Reflector Staff Writer
When prize-winning author Gail Roberson was a child, she kept notebooks stashed everywhere to hide her secret writings from four inquisitive younger brotiiers. Her favorite writing hideaway was her father s tobacco packhouse.
Today si.e writes in the book- and memento-lined study of her home in the Farm Life community of Martin County and she has planned to the minutest detail a studio her husband. Riley, will build for her in their back yard. The studio of her, dreams will be not unlike the packhouse where she composed those journals of her childhood.
I'll have a pine tajale and a hutch to hold some of the things I love, she said, and an old cookstove. it will be built of unfinished wood like a packhouse and will just as rustic.
Riley has already staked off the 20-by-20 structure of Gails dreams and shes started plying azaleas and crape myrtles and herbs in beds surrounding the site. Its here that Ill write, she said, hopefully till I'm an old, old lady - just as long as I can pound a typewriter. Farmers Daughter Born in iwffllhdian Woods community of Bertie County, she is the oldest child and only daughter of Joe and Mamie Clyde Leggett, who still reside there, .15 miles from Gails present home. I worked in the fields as a child, she said, after school and every day during the summer. It was hard and I was sick a lot, because the allergies I now am able to keep somewhat under control with treatment, I had then. Some of the very crops we grew, 1 was allergic to. Still 1 have good memories of wwking alongside my father and brothers till late afternoon and then enjoying a baseball game out in front of the house while the smell of mama frying fish let us know the wonderful supper that awaited us.
T cried when my youngest brother, David, was born because he wasnt the little sister Id wished for. I was only 8 then. But later I came to enjoy being the only girl and I love every one of my brothers each for his own special seif. Her brothers are Donnie, Ricky, Joseph and David. All live in the Windsor area. '
Gail graduated from Bertie Senior High School and attended Hardbargers Business College in Raleigh. D worked as a legal secretary for several years. she said, and then for the Martin County Department of Social Services for a while. 1 also learned a lot about interior decorating and started taking decorating projects and have taught some interior decorating classes for Martin and Beaufort community colleges. 1 still occasionally accept decorating jobs, but whal rve_,always loved to do most is write.
"I owe my husband, Riley, full credit for any success I've had. she said. He has encouraged me to stay home and write full time and let him provide the major Ssupport. Id have to be a moonlight \yriter if it werent for his financial and emotional support.
Flamboyant Lady!
Gail is flamboyant in her dress, speech, and decorating and leisure-time-use tastes. And she says she is country, too. She says she loves straw hats and baskets, cats, old wood cookstoves, herbs she grows herself, crape myrtle trees, candles some lit throughout the house throughout the day, houseplants, taking long walks barefooted, lots of birds around her several feeders, fishing, furniture built by her husband, ham biscuits, collards, cornbread, attending tractor pulls and feasting on the sight of an unexpected rainbow'. All of these show up over and over in images worked into her writing.
She writes consistently every day that shes at home. I often wake up with a scene on my mind and go straight to the typewriter, she said. But more often than not, I get our lunch preparation under way, straighten up the house and then go into the study and set my alarm clock for 11 oclock. 1 can write freely then until its time to stop and get lunch ready for my^, hungry husband.
Writing Isnt Lonely ^
Writing can be a lonely profession if you let it, she said. I dont. Nothing means mor to me than my family and friends. I stop to make telephone calls, go across the road or into town for a visit, or to entertain someone who visits me. These interruptions are good. Often, though, I work into the night. Riley has learned to sleep to the tune of a typewriter and I often choose the wee hours to make plots and outlines that Squire deep concentration and solitude.
Everywhere she goes, Gail takes a notebook. And she has large files of what she writes, whether its a visual image seen on a trip or a description of her feelings during a moment of anger or sadness. She also takes photographs of scenes and people and objects which capture her attention and sometimes cuts out magazine pictures of people and things she finds fascinating enough to work into a story. Later, then, she can actually look at the picture while she writes the description of a person, place or thing.
For more than two years she has been researching and drafting one novel, a saga that will be set in eastern North Carolina with local references. Recently she has also started plotting a second.
She enjoys research and interviewing and pleasure trips, ideally combining the three. Recently shes been called on to do some speaking out of town, something she considers fun and fulfilling, especially when shes encouraging others who aspire to write.
Acquired Ability I dont believe writing is' necessarily a ^ talent, she tells those who seek her advice. I
Her home study is Gail Robersons domain a place to spin stories and surround herself with notebooks and references and objects she loves. Its also a place to welcome friends who share her love of writing or who have interest in her writings.
think its more of an acquired skill. Many years of hard work and firactice have helped me to smooth the rough edges, but I dont think Ill ever be entirely satisfied with my work. I do many rough drafts. And I throw away a lot and start over. I am constantly revising and redoing. I
send out articles and stories ar. i aoems and queries about art cles and storio' several a week. Some are accepted'; somt aren't. But every reject slip is ;ny cue in try ai.alner market. I never give up. I'm not a patient person about everything, but about writing, 1 am I know it's what 1 must do with my life and I'm doing it Ive had my rejections, but I've also had my victories. I get complimentary mail from all over the country and I turn many of the people who write to me into correspondents. I love people and I love getting and receiving mail from them. I send out about 60 pieces,of mail a week.
Her work has appeared in several women s. farm, pet, confession and literary magazines, as well as area newspapers and poetry collections, including Ideals. This year she was the first-place winner in the Tar Heel Writers' Roundtable feature-writing competition
Photos by Elizabeth Roberson &
Carol Tyer
Casey, a favorite doll from Gails childhood, oc* cupies a place of honor on the hearth. I keep her as a reminder of advice my aunt gave me years ago,
Dont let all the child in you disappear, she said.
Her Tarheel Writers Roundtable Silver Bowl, award for a first place in a statewide article-writing contest, is displayed in Mrs. Robersons country kitchen.
Pictures on an idea board for a novel she is writing provide Gail the images that enable her characters and settings to live within her mind as she puts them on paper.
%
Herbs and pines and crape myrtles are among the plantings around the site' of the writing studio Gail has planned behind her and her husband, Rileys home in the Farm Life community of Martin County.
C-2 The Daily Refk'Ctor Greenviik>, N C Sundav. October 2.1983
. \elsoii-Newsome Vows Were Said in Ahoskie
Sack
AllO.SKlE - Elizabeth Ann Newsome and James Arthur Nelson Jr. were united in marriage Saturday at 3:00 p m. in the First Baptist '('hurchh'erem a double-ri'ng. ceremony conducted by the Rev ^James Langford and Father John Williams.
Parents of the couple are "'Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor Newsome of Ahoskie and Mr. and Mrs. James Arthur Nelson Sr. of Rl. 1. Bethel.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal-length gown of candlelight bridal satin designed With a high neckline encircled with silk venise lace The fitted bodice teatured a sheer yoke in English net and outlined m reembroidered Alencon lace. The lull skirt and chapel-length tram were appliqued with lace She wore a chaptd-length illusion mantilla edged in Alencon lace and carried a bouquet'of arthuriums.
The maid'of honor was Sandra P Newsome, sister ot the bride, ii! Raleigh.-She wore a tormai-lengrh go,wn of niing voile tafieta fashioned with an open ,v neckline banded with .h-H tabric.and edged in a taifeta ruffle styled witti three-quarter-length pout sieeves and gathered skirt A ^ash of matching latteta enhanced the waistline Jiid ^he carried a t)ouquet of birds of paradise
Bridesmaids were Suzanne Newsome ot Lewisville,
Jacqueline Ragland of Bethel. Catherine Nelson of Greenville, Karen Long of Roxboro, Charlotte Miller of " New Orleans. La.. Janet N'eese of High Poinf. and Elena Holak of Chapel Hill. Their dresses were identical to that of the maid of honor.
Honorary bridesmaids were Kathy Nelson of Greenville. Kimbery McGuire of Wilmington and.^ Rita Myers of .Ahoskie.
Music was provided by Tommy Kiff. organist; Ruth Moskop. harpist., and Lynn Marks, flutist.
Ushers were Jerry Nelson. Tommy Parker and Ronald Ragland, all of Bethel. Joseph and Jordan Nelson, both of Greenville, Gregory Pittman of .Arlington' Va., and Jeffrey Nelson of Boone.
After a wedding trip to Asheville and Cancn, Mexico. the couple will live in. Greenville,
The bride has been a reporter with the Wilmington Morning Star newspaper. She has accepted a position with the Office of Information and Publications of the ast Carolina University School of Medicine. The bridegroom is a graduate of the UNC-CH where he was a Morehead scholar He is a 198(1 graduate of the Campbell University School ot Law and a partner in the law firm of Owens, Rouse
and Nelson of Greenville and Farmville.
The wedding reception w as given by the brides parents in the church fellowship hall. The parents of the bridegroom entertained at the rehearsal dinner and friends gave a rehearsal party and dance following the dinner.
Kids Influence
Family Choice
NEW YORK lAP) -Parents are usually loath to take advice from their children on buying a home appliance, but when it comes to acquiring a family computer many say the children influenced their decision on which model to purchase.
Some 67 per cent of the parents who responded to a survey by "Enter." a monthly computer magazine for youngsters from 10 to 16, said their children had provided influence ranging from "some" to strong " and even total" on the final seleciton of the computer they bought.
When asked to explain this choice, many parents felt that "the kids know more about computers than we do. from exposure at school, m video games and television."
Strength
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The engagement of Princess Elizabeth of England to Lt Philip Mounbatten was officially announced July 9. 1947
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DIANA LYNN GRIFFITH...is the daughter of and Mrs. Charles Gnftith of Deep Run. who anhpunce her engagement to Curtis Randell Mill, son of Curtis Mills and Mrs. Jean Keeter MilIs,^t)oth of Greenville. The wedding will take place injate October.
Love that has passed the lest of Time
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Vi eddiiiirlnvitation
Mr and Mrs. Willie L. Williams request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter. Brenda Sue. to Herbert .Adams Smith, on Oct. 8 at 2 p.m. in the Universitv Church of Christ I'n Greenville. A reception will follow in the church fellowship hall. No invitations were mailed.
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PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)- Shipping sacks can be used to hold such products as petfood, fertilizer, sugar or-chemicals.
Because the bags need to hold as much as 50 pounds of fertilizer, for example, the paper must be strong enough to withstand abuse, such as being thrown off the back of a truck.
A recent development called Stress Kraft paper by St. Regis has allowed the company to use only two sheets of the paper in a bag rather than three sheets normally required of regular paper.
The two-wall construction provides a stronger bag than the three-ply model, said Sanford G. Scheller, a St. Regis vice president. ^
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Miss Quincy Wed Saturday Afternoon
i)f\rvv I<fATT\ra> l i i- r.i .. ^
ROCKY MOUNT - Miss Nancy Lynn Quincy of Rocky Mount and Charles Wesley Spain of Wendell were married in the Englewood Baptist Church here Saturday at 3:00 p.m.
The Rev. William A. Wallace officiated at the doiible-ring ceremony. Pafents of the bride are Mrs. Jeanette H. Barbee of Rocky Mount and Earl Fleming Quincy, also of Rocky Mount. Parents of the bridegroom are'Mr. and Mrs. C.B.'Spain of Wendell,
Qiven in marriage by her father the bride wore a floor-length gown with a cathedral train of organza and beaded chantilly lace over taffeta. The fitted bodice featured a sweetheart neckline outlined with scalloped chantilly lace, , organza Juliet pouff sleeves and natural waistline. Scajloped chantilly lace etched with seed pearl appli-qued the bodice and trimmed the'sleeves. The flared skirt and trained were encircled with tiered scalloped chantilly lace. She chose a fingertip veil of illusion bordered with scallped chantilly lace with a blusher flowing from a lace Camelot cap etched with seed pearls for her headpiece.
Music was provided by Lenny Collins, organist; Allen Campbell, pianist and soloist; and Mrs. Larry Woodcock, Tony Russ, and Mrs. Allen Campbell, soloists. .
The honor attendant was Mrs. Tim Sullivan of Scotch Plains, N.J. She wore
sash, and lightly gather skirt. She carried a lighted lantern with Williamsburg blue and mauve silk flowers.
The bridesmaids were Ms. Helen Williams of Rocky Mount; Ms. Jewel Baines and Ms. Michelle Edwards, both of Greenville; Ms. Carol Burgess of Wendell; and Mrs. Carl Whitfield III of Spring Hope. Theif raspberry-colored dresse| were styled like those of the honor attendant.
Brandy Edwards of Greenville was the miniature bride. She wore a white gown of organza with beaded chantilly lace. The natural fitted fcxiice was fashioned with a rounded neckline and lace extended downlhe full bishop sleeves. Lace accented the skirt and the attached train. She carried a white basket of silk rose petals.
Ushers were Tim Edward of Greenville, William S. Surles of Four Oaks, Tim Burgess and Charles Lane of Wendell, Marty Holmes of Winston-Salem, and Jonathan Barbee of Hampton, Va The brides parents, Mr, and Mrs. W.C. Barbee Sr. and Earl F. Quincy, entertained guests with a reception in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Barbee. Assisting were Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Holmes Sr. of Rocky Mount, Mr. and Mrs. Zack Hinton of Momeyer, Mrs. Sara Barbee of Rocky Mount, Mrs. Milton Spain of Greenville, Miss Nancy Trent of Greenville, Mrs. Larry Pittman of Wilson, Mrs. Tommy Joyner
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C.
Sunday. October 2.1983 0-3
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor ^ J)LNNERFORTWO Chili Drumsticks & Rice Refried Beans & Salad Flan & Coffee CHILI DRUMSTICKS 4 chicken drumsticks (1>4 pounds)
3 tablespoons unbleached all-purpose flour 2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ( or to taste i chili powder
2 tablespoons butter -2 tablespoons oil
Wipe drumsticks with paper toweling. On wax paper throroughly stir together flour, salt and chili powder; coat drumsticks with mixture. In ,a 10-inch skillet heat butter and oil; add chicken and over moderate heat brown, turning once midway, for about 10 minutes.
Cover skillet and cook gently, turning once midway, until drumsticks are tender - 30 minutes. Remove drumsticks. Skim some of the fat from the drippings, if you like, and serve drippings with chicken and rice Makes 2 servings.
tomatoes ^4 cup heavy cream 1 tablespoon medium sherry Sugar, salt and pepper to taste
In an electric blender or food processor puree tomatoes; do not
strain Just before ser^, heat to simmering. Add cream and heat again to simmering. Off heat stir in sherry, sugar 'Stewed tomatoes vary in their sweetness I salt and pepper Serve at once Makes 2'2 cups.
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and Mrs. Gene Simmons of Ralefgh. Musjc was provided by the Rocky Mount Brass Quintet. Mrs. Phillip Williams of Rocky Mount made the wedding cake.
Mrs. Alton Cain, Mrs. Janelle Greene, Mrs, Hazel Taylor of Rocky Mount and Mrs. Eugene Simmons of Raleigh hosted a bridesmaids luncheon Friday. The rehearsal dinner was hosted by the bridegrooms parents.
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Bridal Policy
A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.
Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.
Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.
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Mrs. C.B.'Spain Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. Tim Edwards of Greenville. An afterrehearsal patio party was given at the home of Miss Helen Williams of Rocky Mount by Miss Williams and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Williams.
After a wedding trip enroute to New Mexico, the couple will live in White Sands, N.M. The bride has been employed by the East Carolina University School of Medicine. Bride and bridegroom are graduates of East Carolina University.
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W orthiii^ton-Sinith Wedding At Noon
AYDEN - Darlene Smith' and Dr Ralph Conley Worthington Jr were married Saturday in a high noon service in the Avden Christian Church presided over by
the Rev. \'ictor M. Wilson oi Charlotte.
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. David Harold Smith ok Ayden and Mrs Ralph C. Worthington, also of
MRS. R.ALPH CONLEY WORTHINGTON JR.
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.Ayden.
Music was provided by organist, Mrs, Sue Branch; soloist. Mrs. Richard Tucker; and violinist, Mrs. MaryDixon.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents. Martha Bright Stancil. cousin of the bride, of Lakeland, Fla., was honor attendant. Bridesmaids were Lisa Hart Smith of Ayden; Janipat Worthington Whaley Y)t Grifton; Gwen Rogers of Greenville, Karen Oehrli and Wendy Wooten of Ayden, and Laurie Springett of Durham, .and Margaret Johnson of Tampa. Fla Karen Williams of Ayden was flower girl.
Dr. Dail McLawhorn, cousin of the bridegroom, ' was best man Ushers were Lawrence Whaley and Billy McLawhorn of Grifton; Kenneth Smith. Steve McLawhorn and Andy .McLawhorn, all of Ayden; James E Langston of Win-terville. and R.H. Byrd of Bunn Level. Wesley McLawhorn of .Ayden was ringbearer.y The brid chose a formal gown of white satin. English net. and re-embroidered Alencon lace adorned with pearls and crystals. The gown was designed with fitted sleeves and bodice of English net and a Queen Anne neckline of sculptured lace, each overlaid with pearled and syrstalled re-embroidered Alencon lace. A deep scalloped border of re-embroidered Alencon lace enhanced the satin skirt of the bfide's chapel-length mantilla of silk illusion finished with a rolled edge and accented with scattered appliques of Alencon lace which fell from a reembroidered Alencon lace cap beaded with pearls. The bride's accessories included a pearl necklace given her by the groom. She.carried cascading bouquet of gardenias. orchids, stephanotis, and white-roses with string smilax strands The honor' attendant and bridesmaids wore navy blue satin gowns designed with spaghetti shoulder straps, fitted bodice, and A-line floor-length skirts. Enhanc
ing the gowns were jackets of matching ndvy chiffon edged with navy satin.
The honor attendant and bridesmaids each carried a crescent bouquet of gold lilies, bronze daisies, and burgundy and white poms with, smilax and ivy strands. Matching flowers adorned their hair.
The flower girl was dressed in a formal navy satin gown featuring a round neckline with a navy chiffo'n ruffle and chiffon cum-berbund. She carried a white wicker basket filled with rose petals and wore flowers in her hair
The mother of the bride won a formal mint green gowi and phalaenopsis orchids adorned her handbag The wedding was directed by Mrs. Tommy Craft. Mrs. A1 Gordon presided over the register.
A reception was held at the home of the bride. Assisting were Dr. and Mrs. Odell Bright, Mrs. Thomas Langston, Mrs.- Ruth Grayiel. Mrs. Margaret Oehrli, Mrs. Frances Hall, Mrs. Billy McLawhorn, Mrs. Winston Wooten, Mr. and Mrs. R.H. McLawhorn, Mr. and Mrs. A1 Springett, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wooten. Music was provided by Miss Mary Dixon on the violin.
An after-rehearsal dinner, hosted by the groom's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Whaley, and Mrs. Thomsas Langston, was held at the Beef Barn, Greenville A 'bridesmaids' luncheon, given by Mrs. Willie Rogers and Miss gwen Rogers, was held at the Greenville home of Mrs Rogers.
After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside at Rt. 1, Ayden. The bride is a graduate of Meredith College and East Carolina University. She is works at Colonial Acre Farms and teaches at Pitt Community College. The bridegroom has earned degrees from East Carolina University and University of Texas at Austin. He is assistant director of continuing education at East Carolina University.
At Wit s End
By Erma Bombeck
Hey, dont get me wrong.
Im not anti-school sports or anything, but you have to admit, coaches change not only the metabolism, but the entire personality of a child in a matter of weeks.
Its like a miracle. In late summer, parents send them a kid who hates showers, cannot stoop to pick up a towel, has a grip ' that wont support a bag of garbage, wouldnt walk 50 yards to close a door during a blizzard and considers a haircut a violation of his civil rights.
Several weeks later, a subservient football player emerges.
Just think about it. What" do you ^ think your son would say if you asked him to "slip into these purple satin knee-length pants and put a helmet on your head and in the driving rain run this little football 73 yards and then report back to me"?
I know what my son would do. He would take legal steps to put me in a home. He wont even wear a shirt at the dinner table.
The problem is that the parts of the body developed by the coaoh only work when he is around.
The same kid who can commit 35 plays to memory on the football field cant remember to put gas in the car.
The magic fingers of the receiver who can pick a ball out of the air with the grace of a ballet dancer cannot turn off a simple light switch when he gets home.
The same body that can endure below-zero weather; rainstorms and searing heat cant stand to go out and bring the paper inside.
Parents are obviously doing something wrong.
Maybe we need to get tougher If they're late for dinner, maybe they ought to sit on the benoh for .a couple of weeks and w atch us eatrif they drop their fork at the table; maybe a couple of laps around the house w'ould shape them up. If they stay out too late and break the house rules, why not order them not to sweat for two weeks?
A friend of mine discussed this miracle of transformation with her sons coach and he said. "Theres nothing to it. Ali you have to do to shape a kid up is to find out what he likes to do and then threaten to take it away from him if his attitude isnt good
Sb^alled her son to the kitMn and said. "What do you love about your life here'?'
He said. "Nothin .
It's going to be a lot harder than she thought.
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GALLERY...of Wearable Art is the venture of Bronnie Stoich Kupris (pictured). A face on the fashion scene, you can find in her gallery the handiwork of some 300 designer-artists from around the world. She is wearing a one-of-a-kind costume. (UPI Photo)
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Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. - Rhone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
Family Stood At Altar With Bridal Couple
AYDEN - Rudy Nileen Morris and William Edward Schulte were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at three oclock in Timothy Christian Church near here. Father Jerry, M. Sherba, pastor of St. Gabriels Catholic Church, officiated at the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Morris of Route 1, V^an-ceboro. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard C. Schulte of Nokomis, Fla., are the parents of the bridegroom.
The ceremony was directed by Katheryn Lewis of Pactolus and Susan Haddock presided at the register. Wilma Smith presented a program of organ music.
The oride was given in marriage by her family and escorted by her father. The brides mother was matron of honor. The families of the bridal couple stood at the altar with them.
The brides brother and cousin, Quinn Morris and Rooney Haddock, both of Route 1, Vanceboro, and the bridegrooms brother. Gary B. Schulte of Mt. Clemens, Mich, were ushers. The fa
ther ot the bridegroom was best man.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Haddock were honorary parents of the bride.
The bride wore a formal gown of white satin, silkened organza and re-embroidered alencon lace. The fitted satin bodice, sheer .yoke and Queen Anne neckline featured an overlay of re-, embroidered alencon lace with bridal buttons closing the yoke. Calla point cuffs of satin closed with buttons enhanced the long fitted sleeves appliqued and shirred at the shoulders. The satin appliqued front skirt and sheer cathedral length train were enhanced with a scalloped b order of reembroidered alencon lace with motifs of lace cascading from the waist and scattered on the train. She chose a cathedral mantilla of imported silk illusion bordered with re-embroidered alencon lace which fell from an open Camelot cap of reembroidered alencon lace accented with pearls. She carried a teardrop shaped formal cascade of white orchids, rosebuds and stephanotis.
The brides mother wore a formal dusty rose gown of qiana fashioned with long sleeves and featuring an empire waistline. The mother of the bridegroom selected a long sleeved sachet pink formal gown of chiffon. Both wore wrist corsages of white orchids. Grandmother of the bride, Mrs. Nina Morris, was remembered with a white shoulder corsage of carnations.
A reception followed the ceremony at Brook Valley Golf and Country Club five-piece band played for dancing. Several of the brides cousins assisted at the reception. Pat and Paul James greeted guests. Tami Gregory cut the cake and Carolyn Sabatino poured punch. Goodbyes were said by Jeannie Brown.
An after-rehearsal buffet was held Friday night at the country dub and was given
The Daily Reflector. Green^rille. N C
by the parents of the bridegroom. Kathy Wilson and Jane Summerlin honored the bride at a miscellaneous shower and she was honored at a lingerie shower given by Susan Haddock and Carolyn Sabatino. Friends of the bride also gave a shower and Mr. and Mrs. Guilford Lewis and Mr, and Mrs. Eugene Morris gave a cocktail buffet for the bridal party and out-of-town guests.
The bride is a graduate of East Carolina University and iS cmpioyed at Eastern Carolina Vocational Center. The bridegroom graduated from the University of Michigan and is employed at TRW,
Inc. in Greenville.
After a wedding trip to unannounced points the couple will live in Greenville.
Sunday Ocober2 1963 Q.5
Eastern
Electrolysis
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BROOKVILLE, N.Y. -Lisa Kathleen Anderson of Rockville Centre, N.Y. and Francis Marion Eddings HI of Greenville, N.C. were united in marriage Saturday at 6:30 p.m. in a ceremony performed in St. Paul The Apostle Church. Msgr. Thomas Cribbin conducted the ceremony.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Anderson of Rockville Centre, N.Y., the bride was given in marriage by her father. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Marion Eddings Jr. of Route 2, Greenville.
Carolyn O'Brien of Old Bethpage, N.Y. was maid of honor.Bridesmaids were Debbie Kelly of Oakdale, N.Y., Jackie Vreeland Brentwood, N.Y. and Bonnie Eddings of Washington, N.C., sister-in-law of the bridegroom.
Heather Ann Caristo Hauppauge, N.Y. was flower girl.
Kevin Rawls o Washington, N.C. was ring bearer and the best man was Wayne Hammett of Franklin, Tenn. Ushers were Dna Eddings of Washington, N.C. and Steven Eddings of Charlotte, brothers of the bridegroom, and Christopher Anderson of Rockville Centre, brother of the bride.
Dr. Mendlesohn presented a program of wedding music.
The bride wore a gown of white silk moire Victorian style gown with leg-of-mutton sleeves. The upper bodice and neck'were embroidered white lace. Her beil was fingertip length and was attached to a white rose
silk flowered headplce. The bouquet was stephanotis, pink roses, babys breatrh tied with white lace ribbon.
The attendants worse dresses with white lace bodices with high n ecklines and long sleeves and dusty rose taffeta skirts. The maid of honors bouquet was of mini carnations, pink rxi^s and babys breath tied white (Continued on page 6)
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M88 Jordan, Mr. May Wed , Saturday Evening
WILMINGTON - The First Chnsnan Church here was the scene of the wedding ceremony of \'icki Jo Jordan and John Milton May Jr Saturday evening at seven o'clock The double ring ceremony was conducted by Dr, Larry Patterson ' A program ot. wedding music was prestmted b\ Michael Regan, .jorganisi, Chris Funr, Rick Brewer, soloist and pianist, Lynne Mclianey. or; handix-lls. and Me\e Morgan, irumpt'lcr Parents oi the couple are .Mr. and Mrs ,'ene Dewe\ Jordan I'i Uiin:i!tn,i'i and Mr andMi> Jo;; MMon May o: W nvrv.cc liiama K'ca :
Beach, ol
honor for her sister and the maid of tjpnor .was Martha Hernandez of Boone. Bridesmaids were Kim Pope of Chapel Hill. Jacki Everette and Caroline Rhodes of Wilmington, Mary Elizabeth Butler of Morganton and Linda Wilson ol Winston-Salem. Kim Jordan of Raleigh, niece of th,e bride, was junior bridesmaid and the flower girl was Mai-y Katherine Buck of Wiliiiiiigton, cousin of the bride The lather of the bridegroom served as best man and the. ring bearer was Ryan Jordan of Boone, nephew ot the bride. Ushers were Ggi'rge Franke ol Austin, Te\ , cousin 0! the bride-
Penn Dutch Country & Reading, Pennsylvania November 3, 4, & 5,1983
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groom. Keith Petree and Robert Hall of Wilmington. Tony Smart of Winterville. Jene Jordan of Boone, brother of the bride, and John Lojko of Raleigh.
The acolyte was Chad Jordan of Raleigh, nephew of the bride.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a traditional bridal gown of white satin featuring a sweetheart neckline overlaid with alencon lace and seed pearls. The gown's leg o'mutton sleeves were highlighted with gauntlets of alencon lace. The full skirt . extended into a chapel train edged in alencon lace. She wore a Camelot cap with fingetip and blusher veils trimmed in silk Venise lace. She carried a bouquet of stephanotis. gyjssophila and cymbidium orchids cascading with accents of greenery.
Each of the honor attendants wore a formal gown of nordic rose taffeta featuring off the shoulder ruffled neckline and fitted waistline with a tulip skirt.. Each carried an arm bouquet of miniature carnations, pom pons, gvpsophila in shades of nordic rose, pink and
strasting shades of pink, rose and burgundy.
The flower girl wore a formal gown of white tissue taffeta with a hand-smocked belt of nordic rose and carried a flower basket of rose petals.
A reception was held in the church fellowship hall and was hosted by the ladies of the church coordinated by Mrs. Bruce Bryant and Mrs. Riley Smith Jane Edwards presided at the guest register.
The couple will live in Leland after a cruise to the Bahamas.
The bride attended Appalachian State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is a dental assistant employed with Ryan Stanley. D.D.S. in Wrightiville Beach. The bridegroom is a fiber process engineering supervisor for Federal Paperboard Co. in Reigelwood. He graduated
from N.C. State University withaB.S. degree.
Several parties and showers were given for the couple prior to the wedding including a river cruise, cookout, reception and tea. The bridegroom's parents gave a buffet reception in Winterv'ille A rehearsal dinner was held at the Pilot House given by-Mr. and Mrs. Robert Franke, uncle and aunt of the bridegroom.
burgundy
* The other attendants wer& dressed identically and car-1 led dim buuqueiB of mmiatui'e carnations, poin pons and gypsophila in con-
A
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(Continued from page 51
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ribbon. The bridesmaids' bouquets were of minicarnations. stephanotis and baby's breath.
The flower girl wore a midi-length dress of white dotted swiss.'She carried a white basket holding baby's breath and pink roses.
A reception was held Saturday evening at the Harrison Conference Center in Glen Cove. Long Island, N.'\.
After a wedding trip to Montego Bay. Jamaica, the couple will live in Belhpage. NY,
The bride, who attended Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y .will manage a horse farm in Muttontown, N.Y. The bridegroom, who attended N C. State University, will be a soil technician for Soil Mechanics Inc. in Seaford, NY
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Could Our Restaurants Make Space for Nursers?
By Abigail Van Buren
' 19B3 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABHY: As a new nursing mother I have a complaint: Where can I nurse my baby in public? I feel comfortable in movie theaters if I sit in an inconspicuous place and am fully covered. But I keep running into trouble at restaurants. I dont want to offend anyone, and I would gladly retire to the rest room to nurse my baby if I am asked to by the management, but nine times out of 10 there is nowhere to sit, so 1 have to sit in a stall. Not only IS It uncomfortable for me, its irritating for those who may be standing in line waiting to get in.
Obviously nursing mothers should avoid restaurants at nursing time, but thats not always possible. If restaurant owners would place a chair in their rest rooms, there are thousands of us who would be grateful. Abby, will you please make a plea for us?
T.S. IN BLOOMINGTON, ILL.
DEAR T.S.: Tis said, All the world loves'a lover, * but unfortunately, the same cannot be said of the nursing mother, judging from the. dlffieuliy she encounters while trying to nurse her baby in a public place. It would be ideal if all restaurants" provided comfortable accommodations for nursing mothers, but few restaurants can afford that luxury.
Meanwhile, mothers would be wise to nurse their babies almost anywhere else if possible, since most restaurant rest rooms are crowded, poorly ventilated and invariably smoke-filled. Theyre hardly a suitable place to feed Junior.
DEAR ABBY: A wonderful man wants to marry me. Weve gone together for two years and I know he loves me. He s .10 and Im 28. He has just about everything a profession, flawless character, hes kind and generous and would make an ideal husband. So whats the problem? He is so physically unattractive. Hes short, very wide (though muscular not fat) and balding. Because of his winning personality 1 hardly notice his looks except when we make love Then 1 find him physically unattractive, and think, Oh J/ird . . what if our children look like him!
^ 1 cant be objective about this because Im too close to it. Should 1 marry him? He wants an answer.
CANT DECIDE
DEAR CANT: If you have to ask, the answer is no. Set him free, and let him find a woman who will love him just the way he is.
DEAR ABBY: Ever since grade school Ive been called a slut," and Im 17 and 1 still have that reputation. Im ready to settle down with one guy and have a meaningful relationship, but what guy is going to want to settle down with a girl who has that kind of reputation?
1 m decent now, but whenever 1 make new friends, one of my old friends passes on the old rumors, Abby, I want so much to have a husband, home and children. I have so much love to give, but no one will give me the chance.
How do 1 prove that 1 have changed? My life is so empty without someone to love.
JUDGED WITHOUT A TRIAL
DEAR JUDGED: You are to be commended for changing your ways, but its very difficult to change your reputation. If you are able to move to another neighborhood or town and make a fresh start, do
so.
If thats not possible, determine to conduct yourself in a decent, respectable manner, and the word will spread. Dont waste your energy regretting your past; learn from it. Good luck and God bless.
Every teen-ager should know the truth about drugs, sex and how to be happy; For Abbys booklet,'send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to: Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Japanese Look For Hairstyles
.MEW YORK lUPIl - The Japanese look now extends to hairstyles.
.New York hairdresser Donald Scott calls his new cuts The Re-Oriented Look. They are geometric, close to the head but not flat.
Scott is among five hair
dressers from the United States, France, England, Italy and Japan scheduled to attend the Beautrec Hair Festival 83 in Tokyo Oct.
%4-23. The event is sponsored by Takigawa & Co., Japans largest beauty products supplier.
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Anne Klein II Sportswear
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Oleg Cassini Silk Dresses
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C-8 The Daily Retleclof. Greenville N C Sunday. October 2. 1983
Lighthouses Now Automated Controversy Over Earrings
B\ DAN I)AY '
Associated Press Writer
MILWAUKEE lAP) -Lonely watches for lighthouse keepers are already a thing of the past at the UK) beacons that dot the shores of the stormy Great Lakes, and soon the last two of them will become fullv automated.
This fall, the lighthouse at h e r w 0 0 d Point near Sturgeon Bay, Wis.. will be fully mechanized. Other than regular visits for maintenance, it is already unmanned,
About the same time, the Coast Guard lighthouse at Point Betsie north of Frankfort, .Mich,, also will be fully automated, Capt. David Freeborn, chief of navigation services at the Coast Guard's 9th District headquarters in Cleveland, said recently.
The Sherwood Point light, sweeping its beam across Green Bay and Sturgeon Bay from a narrow peninsula about 140 miles north of Milwaukee, is a century old this year.
"When we opened it up this .April, we had a 500-watt
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light, a fog signal and a radio beacon," Petty Officer Dennis Cleary of Sturgeon Bay
said.
But since then, he said, the automated fog signal was put on a lighted buoy (offshore). They took the radio beacon completely out.
The 500-watt bulb is still in there. If we have a report that it's out. we'll go out and fix it We still go out there and check the place out and make sure there are no vandals.
The daily job of turning the light on and off is handled now by an electronic light detector.
The last step in automating the 35-foot tower - installation of a mechanical bulb changer - will come within two months. Cleary said. He likened the six-bub changer to a Ferris wheel. When one bulb burns out, the mechanism rotates and the next bulb turns on.
The, Coast Guard began automating its Great Lakes lighthouses in 196, largely to cut down on personnel costs, said Lt. Brian Tousley of the Coast Guard in Cleveland. He is head of the Ocean Engineering Section for the Great Lakes and oversees the Lighthouse Automation and Maintenance Program.
Tousley said another reason for automating was that the lighthouse keeper's job was a dreary one done equally well by machines.
"It's usually unpleasant duty," he said. ""Contrary to the romantic idea people have, it's isolated, it's lonelv"
His sentiments were echoed by Raymond G. Ellithorpe. who manned Sherwood Point for more than 20 years, until he retired in 1965, and still lives in a
HARTFORD, Ky. (AP) -The Kentucky Civil Liberties Union may go to court over a male high school students right to wear an earring.
home he buHt almost Jn its
shadow.
I've always been of the bent of creating automatic equipment that will do a job. save money and relieve personnel. Ellithorpe said. I made a few pieces of equipment that did just that"
He said the automated lighthouse, except possibly in extreme weather, should safely guide ships, especially since the larger ones equipped with such aii radar.
"For the people that are running large craft, such as tankers and freighters, I don't think it matters. he said. I think for the little guys, they should be abl to find their way if theyre a little bit careful and have enough reasoning power to use common sense"
William OHern, 84, who worked with Ellithorpe at Sherwood Point for 18 months before retiring in the mid 1950s, said the timing for the move to automation was appropriate.
"'The old keepers were retiring, he said, and the new fellows didn't like to stay up as long as we did. "
Tousley said the Coast Guard also wants to automate many of the lakes' 540 other lights, ranging from steel skeleton towers to simple light-and-pole ar-rangments.
Ohio County High School Principal David Leach told
student David Miller on Sept. 1 that he would be barred from school if he continued to wear an earring. Leach called the jewelry a distracting influence on other students.
Then the county school board considered the issue at a meeting, and ended up backing Leach. After an hour of sometimes heated debate, a board member proposed amending the ^school districts dress code to allow male students to wear small earrings - but the motion died for lack of a second.
Now KCL general counsel Geneva Parris says the unions directors will be seriously concerned with the matter when it meets Oct. 12 to decide whether to file suit against the school district.
The dress code may infringe on students First Amendment right to freedom of expression, and violates federal regulations against
sex discrimination. Ms. Parris told the school board Thursday.
If you allow young women to wear earrings, I dont see how you cannot allow young men to (te the same, she said.
Ms. Parris also noted that the student handbook mentions the schools commitment to independent thinking. But board chairman Robert Henry Young countered that too much independence sometimes hinders education.
We're still dealing with a school environment. If free thinkingiand free action were totally permissible, we would have to have no rules at all, he said. If there is no discipline, there is no education.
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Book News
FH( )M SHFPP.ARU MEMORIAL LIBRARY
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TRA\ ELING SHOW This silk and velvet Torah curtain, with matching valance, is to be among the 350 artifacts in a new exhibit. The Precious Legacy: Judiac Treasures from the Czechoslovak State Collections, sponsored by the Smithsonian Institutions Traveling Exhibitions Service. The show will tour Washington. .Miami Beach, New York, San Diego, Detroit and Hartford. (AP Laserphoto)
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B> JULIE HICKS
Much has been written about how people should take care of their pets. Betty Whites Pet-Love: How Pets Take Care of Us is a fascinating documented account of how pets can and do take care of people. In addition to being a noted actress, Betty White is an animal lover who has drawn on personal experience and the studies of leading authorities to show how science has confirmed what pet owners have known instinctively all along - that pets contribute to the health and well-being of their owners.
Pet-love. defined as "the human,/companion animal bond, is a mutually rewarding relationship. Pet therapy" or pet facilitated therapy" is currently being used to treat the mentally ill. revitalize the elderly, and motivate the handicapped. This book describes some remarkable case histories. .Many animals give owners who live alone a feeling of security. Walking a dog provides exercp^or people who might otherwise never get out of the hwse. The companionship of pets dramatically reduces feelings of isolation and loneliness. Perhaps most important, pets provoke a strong caring response in their owners. Pets reiiuce stress, may lower a person's blood pressure, and in other words, prolong life
W'hen Diana Cooper moved into a rattletrap Victorian House in the English countryside, and decided to open a boarding home of dogs, everyone thought she was crazy. Her husband was recovering from a heart attack and her previous business schemes had been qualified flops. Nevertheless, she forged ahead with her new adventure and found herself
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1. "'Poland, James Michener
2. Changes, Danielle Steel
3. "Hollywood Wives. Jackie Collins
4. Who Killed the Robins Family"? Adler & Chastain
5. "'Christine,' Stephen King
6. "August. Judith Rossner
7. '"The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco
8. "The Seduction of Peter S., Lawrence Sanders
plunged into a summer of wild misadventures.
. ".Animal Hotel is the story of her zany experiences. Her
boarding kennel turns into a boarding house with the very first customer. Bustle, who will only sleep on Diana's bed. Thereafter, she cannot stand to exile her subsequent guests to those nasty, drafty kennels. This openhearted attitude brings Diana a siege of animals, each with his or her own peculiarities. There's Mattie, who keeps a collection of dead gophers and mice handy to drop at Diana's feet whenever shes trying to impress a visitor; Ruthless, the Alsatian with a dread of cats: an antisocial canary; and a Chihuhua in need of behavior modification: not to mention the three children who descend on Diana.
NON-FK TION
1. '"In Search of Excellence, Peters & Waterman
2. "The One-Minute Manager, Blanchard & Johnson
3. "Creating Wealth, Robert Allen
4. "Megatrends, John Naisbitt
5. '"Motherhood. Erma Bombeck
6. "On Wings of Eagles, KenFollett
7. "Out on a Limb, Shipley MacLaine
8. The Best of James Herriot
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Custom-made ruffled country curtains are coming this week! Come by & Compare Our Prices!
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NCSA Music Fund
^ \ WINSTON-SALEM - The' Saul and Augusta Cheslock Music Fund has been ; . established at the North Carolina School of the Arts as a ' iributetoMr.^dMrs. S. R. Cheslock of Morganton by family members on the occasion of the couples 50th wedding anniversary.
Both the Cheslocks studied at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore and have been leading .advocates for the arts in the Morganton area throughout the years.
Earnings form the Cheslock Music Fund will be
designed for the purchase of musical scores to be kept in the Semans Library on the NCSA campus. The library, named in honor of Dr. and Mrs. James H. Semans of Durham, has a collection of more than 27,500 recordings, 65,000 books and 25,000 musical scores.
Anyone wishing to honor the Cheslocks at this time may send contributions to the Saul and August Cheslock Fund, N. C. School of the Arts Foundation, Inc., P. 0. Box 12189, Winston-Salem, N. Cr, 27107. Gifts are tax-deductible.
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October Is Zoofest Month
ASHBORO - ZooFest, a month-long celebration of animals, autumn and the arts, awaits visitors to the State Zoo in October.
The whole park is getting into the act, said director Robert F. Fry. The leaves are turning color, the animats are growing sleek winter coats, and weve lined up great entertainment for all five weekends.
Performances by students from the North Carolina School of the Arts, an original Dixieland Jazz musical by members of the Carolina Regional Theater, a weekend of Bluegrass, wildlife artists working at the animal habitats and Touchmime Theater are among the attractions scheduled during October. ' *
ZooFest is being sponsored by the North Carolina Zoological Park and Randolph Arts Guild in conjunction with FalPFestival, the Guilds annual street fair in downtown Asheboro.
The State Zoo is located six miles southeast of Asheboro off U.S. 64. Hours are 9-5 weekdays and 10-6 weekends until Oct. 15. After that date, the hours are 9-5 daily.
Listed below is the calendar of arts-entertainment attractions scheduled to be held at thje zoo. All are free, and will be at the Zoo Amphitheatr unless otherwise noted.
Today - 2 and 3 p.m.. Southern Win'd plays country rock.
Saturday - 2 p.m., Jennings Morgan - 3 p.m.. The Carolina Regional Theater presents musicals Briarpatch and an original Dixieland musical by Ira David Wood.
Oct. 9-2 p.m., Glenn Davis and the Buffaloe Gap Boys -3 p.m.. Balsam Gap Boys.
Oct. 15-16 The North Carolina School of the Arts in a program to be announced.
Oct. ^-23 - Wildlife painters, sculptors and woodcarvers working at the animal habitats at various areas throughout the day. (Their work can be seen at the Leopards Spot Gift Shop in the Plaza). Artists to be working are: Ed Presnell, Banner Elk; Tom Wolfe, Vance, S. C.; Sue and Hal McClue, Warne; Bill Crow, Cherokee; Michael Harney, zoo design staff artist, and John Paul Harris, zoo design sculptor.
Oct. 29-2 and 2:45 p.m., Touchmime Theater.
Oct. 30-2 p.m., Greg Hyslop and Friends will play percussive jazz; 3 p.m.. Red Herring, Masters of Rhyme and Ridicule.
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C
Sunday, October 2.1983 -^Q.g
UNCCH To Get 300 Rare Books
CHAPEL HILL - The University of North Carolina will receive a special birthday gift this year: The addition of the 3 millionth volume to its library.
The book, part of a gift of 300 16th-century books donated by the Hanes Foundation for the Study of the Origin and Development of the Book, will be presented at University Day ceremonies Oct. 12.
The addition of the 3 millionth book solidifies our position as one of the outstanding research libraries in the United States, said Dr. Paul Koda, head of the Rare Book Collection in the university library.
The event also marks the
ATW Auditions
AYDEN - Open auditions for the Ayden Theater Workshops forthcoming production of Annie will be wheld Oct. 10 and Oct. 11 at 7:30 p.m. in the Ayden-Grifton High School Auditorium. For details on roles and other information, call 746^782 or 756-7209.
The first printing of Charles Darwins The Origin of Species came to only 1,250 copies and sold out on its first day of sale.
third library milestone at UNC-CH to be celebrated with a gift from the Hanes Foundation, tn 1964 and again in 1974, the foundation donated rare single volumes to the library as its 1 millionth and 2 millionth books.
The 1983 gift is a collection, but all 300 volumes came from the publishing houses of one family, the Estinnes of Paris and Geneva The public celebration of University Day will start with a faculty procession at 10:40 a.m. at the Old Well,
Music will be provided by the Men's Glee Culb, the Womens Glee Cub, the Carolina Choir and the Chamber Singers, Classes will be suspended from 10 a.m. to l p.m. so that students and faculty may attend the program.
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Senior Show Now On View
ECU News Bureau
Art work in various media by Linda May Mupdell Womack, a senior in the East Carolina University School of Art, will be displayed tegin-ning today and continuing through Saturday in the second floor foyer of the Jenkins Fine Arts Center on campus.
The exhibition will include terra cotta, aluminun cast, bronze and plastic sculptures, photographs, acrylic paintings, ink drawings, and other items. She is a candidate for the BS degree in art education with a minor concentration in sculpture.
Ms. Womack will be an intern teacher at Rose High School and Cox Elementary School in Winterville later this fall. A native of New Castle, Del., she and her husband Paul now live in Snow Hill.
Concerts Set
WILLIAMBURG, Va. -Concerts scheduled at Busch Gardens during the first part of October are: Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers, and Tanya Tucker on Oct. 9; and B. J. Thomas and Janie Fricke on Oct. 16. Performance times are 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. on both dates. Admission is $2, in addition to the general admission fee of $13.50.
Artist James McNeill Whistler, famous for his portrait of his mother, was born in 1834.
X
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C-10 Ttie Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C.
Sunday. October 2. 1983Columbian Rose Growers Capturing Market
By WILLIAM H. INMAN I PI Farm Writer
DALLAS tUPD - Plant nurserymen and greenhouse operators across the nation's midsection claim they have been bush-whacked in an international War of Roses.
The sweet smell of victory belongs to an unlikely foe -the South American nation of Colombia.
Eleven years ago ' Colombia accounted for less than 1 percent of ail rosys
sold in the U.S. Today, Col-ombians control an estimated .quarter of the U.S. cut-rose market, and are expanding their share by 40 percent a year.
A lot of American growers are tn distress," said Barney Klaus, a Kansas City, Mo., grower who sells a
million long-stern roses a ,year. Colombian growers have chiseled in and dumped their stuff on the market. We've been victimized just like the auto industry."
Plant nurserymen in Colorado, Missouri, Texas, and other greenhouse industry states, say they have much to fear.
Consider what Colombia . did to the carnation growers.
Five years ago. that industry was thriving, profitable, centered in Colorado and exporting around the wo-rld. But inexpensive Colombian imports plucked business away year by year. Two years ago. the Denver-based American Carnation Society was forced to isiJand because of the home-grown slump. South
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Countdown to Super Bowl Sundy
Water Tree Terrace Lounge will open at 1:00 PAA on Sunday. Watch your favorite teams on our large T.V. screen Hot dogs and all the fixings 25
Monday night countdown begins at 9;00 PM. Hotdogs and fixings 25'
Water Tree
American carnations now hold a dominant 60 percent of the American market.
They (Colombians) can
Grant For N.C. Book
RAELIGH - The National Endowment for the Humanities has awarded a $55,000 grant tif^North Carolina preservationists to help support the compilation of a major study of the states historic buildings.
Tentatively titled Buildings of North Carolina, the projected book isg . joint project of the Federation of North Carolina Historical Socities, which receives the grant; the national Society of Architectural Historians, and the Survey and Planning Branch of the Archaeology and Historic Preservation Section, a unit of the Division of Archives and History.
The book is a pilot state project in a national series, The Buildings of the United States." initiated by the national SAH.
Material for the book will be drawn from surveys of historic places and structures conducted throughout North Carolina during the past 15 years.
The scope of the book will encompass a representative sampling of all types of the states complex architectural heritage, and will include simple farmsteads, great mansions and the first suburbs.
Catherine Bishir, head of the survey and planning branch, and Michael Southern of the archaeology and historic preservation staff will be co-editors. Other staff members working on the project are Davyd Foard Hood, Douglas Swaim, JoAnn Williford, Dru Haley, Peter Kaplan and Allison Harris.
Work on The Buildings of North Carolina" should begin in early 1984 and be ended by December 1985.
Wanted: Artifacts Of Black Families
WILMI.NGTON - The New Hanover Countv Museum,
8 14 M a r k e't St. in Wilmington, is seeking artifacts and objects of in- terest from black individuals and families for the museum's collection.
Items being sought for the collection are ones relating to black families, churches, organizations and schools relative to the history of the Lower Cape Fear community.
A recent contribution has been that of family papers and photographs donated by Margaret Sampson Rogers.'
Anyone with items of interest may write to the address above, or call the museum at 763-0852.
Located in Holiday Inn-Memorial Drive
grow flowers cheaper with low energy or labor costs. said Dick Kingman, executive vice president of the Colorado Greenhouse Growers and former head of the Carnation Society.
Its grossly unfair when you think that the Colombians are subsidized by their own government," he said, then get tariff breaks from our government which wants to encourage Third World development.
> In Colorado, we ran the New England growers out of the carnation business. And now the Colombians are doing the same to us."
However, most retailers insisyhat a rose is a rose, whatever its origin, and Colombia sends 85 percent of its crop to the American market.
Colombia flowers are prettier and cheaper than many of their American counterparts," said Mark
LATE SU.MMER WHITE - The snow white flower of the clematis vine in late summer and earlv autumn adds a sparkling note to the landscape. The showy clusters of flowers are borne on vines producing an abundance of bright green leaves. (Reflector Photo bv Jerrv Riavnor)
Mariners Museum Events
BEAUFORT - Five events, including an overnight tour to Manteo, have been scheduled by Hampton Mariners Museum in Beaufort for the coming week. All events are free unless otherwise noted. For activities requiring reservations, interested people may call 728-7317. The calendar for the week is:
Monday - Juvenile fish exhibit opens,, with photographs made from slides showing juvenile stages of 10 South Atlantic fish species. Available also as a traveling exhibit.
Tuesday - 1 to 4 p.m. - Bird shoal field trip, birding and wildlife. Pee$5. Reservations required.
Wednesday - 2 to.4 p.m. - Tree trek field trip through old Beaufort Town. Reservations required.
Wednesday - 7:30 p.m. - Evening event. Elizabeth II, North Carolinas 400th Anniversary Ship," Horace Whitfield, captain of the ship.
Friday-Saturday - Our maritime beginnings field trip, touring Roanoke Island, visiting the Elizabeth II ship, the Elizabethan Gardens-Ft. Raleigh site. Overnight in Manteo, then to Somerset Place near Creswell. Reservations required. Car-pool museum van. $25 fee. Leaves museum 6:30 a.m. Friday, returns late Saturday. Fee $15 if drive own car. To be limited to 20 people.
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Chamblee, president of Chamblee Roses and Gifts in Tyler, Texas, billed as the Rose Capital of the World" for its field-grown rose bushes.
"The leaves and foliage are big and bright, the price is up-to a dime cheaper per stem," he said. They are shipped in ice. and usually arrive in excellent condition. Besides, the customer doesnt care if the roses come from Africa. India or Timbuktu, as long as he gets his flower in a box.
He said Texas growers were not hurt as badly as some in California and other stat^' because Texas roses did not directly compete with the long-stemmed Colombian crop.
St. Louis florist Dianne Carr purchases about 20 -percent ot her rose inventory from Sth America, but isnt happy about it.
I know this doesn't help the American industry," she said. But retailers must remain competitive."
She said customers already complain of the high cost - a dozen long-stems average between $25 and $60 - but without the imports prices would skyrocket.
Despite the attitude of retailers, rose growers have not thrownin the trowel.
Growers are lobbying Congress to raise the imported rose tariff from 8 percent to European Common Market levels. 17 to 24 percent.
In the U.S. House of Representatives. a rose tariff bill has garnered more than 25 co-sponsors including Reps. Robert Young. D-Mo and Ike Skelton. D-Mo.
Sure the tariff should be raised." said Bob Euser, owner of Colorados huge Euser Greenhouses. We have' to be protected if were to survive.
"We have a highly perishable business. And like the rose, once its gone, its gone,"
Spain surrendered to the United States at Santiago, Cuba, July 17, 1898, to end the Spanish-American War,
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$20 Million Atlanta Museum To Open Thursday
The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C Sunday. October 2. 1983 C-11
DIRECTOR . . . Gudmund Vigtel, director of the High Museum since I96:i, views the museums new facilitv from a staircase
recently. The $iO million building is scheduled for dedication Oct. b and opens officially to the public Oct. 15. (AP Laserphoto by Joe Sebo)
N.G. Poetry Series Set
GREENSBORO - Building Community Among North Carolina Writers is the theme of a series of readings and seminars featuring poets whose work is appearing in Portfolio 1983. The portolio contains representative poetry by 15 Tar Heel poets.
Sponsored by Poetry Center Southeast Inc., a non-profit organization for the promotion of writing, the readings and seminars have been scheduled for the autumn months of September, October and November. The first reading-seminar took place Sept. 23-24.
Readings and seminars for October and November are:
Oct. 28-8 p.m.. readings by Mary Belle Campbell, Evalyn P. Gill, Lois Holt, William Porter, and Marc Williams.
Oct. 29 - Seminar sessions - 9 a.m., Mary Belle Campbell, Spreading the Printed Word: Publication and the Public; Evalyn P. Gill, "International Poetry Review; and William Porter, The Burlington Times. - 11 a.m., Dannye Romine of The Charlotte Observer, The Press and the Writing Commuhity. -1 2 ; 3 0 p . m . , a
Poetry Forum Meets Thursday
The ECU Poetry Forum will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center. Room 248. Anyone wanting criticism on his or her poetry should bring six to eight copies of the poem.
The forum is open, without charge, to all interested poets and poetry lovers.
brainstorming-Iunch session, How to Publicize, Publish, and Sell in the Local Com-miinity.
Nov. 25 - 8 p.m., readings by Janet Adkins, Ishomas Heffernan, Heather Ross Miller, Mary C. Snotherly, and Charles P. R. Tisdale.
Nov. 26 - Seminar sessions - Barbara Rosson Davis, Poetry Center Southeast, The Tie That Binds: Netw'orking Among Writers;" Marie Gilbert,
Greensboro Writers Club; Mary C. Snotherly, The North Carolina Poetry Society. - 11 a.m., Sam Ragan, publisher-editor of The Pilot, "Writers Friendships in North Carolina. - 12;30 p.m., brainstorming-lunch, How To Keep in Touch. Persons wanting to know more about the activities of Poetry Center Southeast, Inc. are to contact; Poetry Center Southeast Inc., Library, Guilford College, Greensboro, N.C., 27410.
PAINTINGS OF THE SOUTH William Johnsons "Chain Gang (1939-40) is one of the works in an exhibition of five centuries of paintings on the South now on view at the Virginia >Iuseum of Fine .\rts in Richmond. The painting is on loan from the National Museum of American .Art, Smithsonian Insitution. (UPI Photo)
By DAVID PACE Associated Press Writer ATLANTA (AP) - Gudmund Vigtel stood on a stairway overlooking "Atlantas new $20 million High Museum of Art and thought back 15 years to jie opening of the Atlanta Memorial Arts Center next door.
If anyone had told me then that we would be opening a $20 million museum building this month, I simply would not have believed it, said Vigtel, the museums director since 1963. Weve cornea long way.
The new museum, which will be dedicated Thursday and opened officially to the public Oct. 15, represents an important milestone in Atlantas effort to develop its international image as the Souths cultural, as well as financial, capital.
The citys enthusiasm for the project is.^eyidenced by the fact thpViiot a single penny^bf; Uii ioey,,was needed to Jinafcb it. More than $20 millid|w>riis^ io. just three and one-half years* in contributions from individuals, foundations and corporations.
Our colleagues in the field couldnt believe it, Vigtel said of the fund-raising drive. But the time was absolutely ripe for it. There had been some sales, of major companies that put people in tax brackets that made large gifts possible. ,
By far the largest gift was a $7.5 million challenge grant from Robert W. Woodruff, the major stockholder of the Coca-Cola Co. More than $9.8 million in matching funds was contributed following Woodruffs gift, and the remainder of the money came in a $900,000' grant from the Callaway Foundation of LaGrange and $1.8 million in matching contributions.
The new museum was sold to the city with a campaign anchored on the slogan, Lets build a museum big enough for Atlanta. The museum previously had been located in the arts center, and its limited space had kept the city from landing many of the major traveling art exhibitions.
WRITING AWARD
NEW YORK (AP) -Charles Scribners Sons says it is offering a new prize designed to encourage excellence in science writing.
It says the Scribner Science Writing Prize will be awarded annually for an unpublished work of nonfiction involving natural history or the physical sciences or the sciences of man and may be either a full-length treatment of one subject or a collection of essays.
The author must be an American citizen or a permanent resident of the U.S. who has not previously published a book about science for general readers.
The prize will consist of a $5.000 advance against royalties and a $5.000 advertising and promotion guarantee.
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VIDEO
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ALICE IN WONDERLAND AMITYVILLE HORROR AMOS & ANDY BAD BOYS BLADE RUNNER FIRST BLOOD ADVENTURES OF CHIP AND DALE AFRICAN QUEEN
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We would like to thank each of our loyal club members and look forward to seeing you, and meeting all New members at our NEW location.
214 Arlington Blvd. 756-4392
We will extend our hours:
Fri. & Sat. 10:30 AM - 8:00 PM Mon.-Thurs. 10:30 AM - 7:00 PM
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HERBIE RIDES AGAIN IN COLD BLOOD JAWS I JAWS II
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Until now, we were in old and highly inadequate quarters that were not large enough to show our cg|lection or attract the traveling shows, Vigtel said. Now we have a piece of architecture by one of the great living architects of our time.
Hes designed us a space three times as large as we had and one that is inviting, exciting and pleasant to be in. It lends itself well to the display of the arts.
The 135,000 square-foot building, designed by New York architect Richard Meier, features white, porcelain-enameled panels on the outside and a 5,000-square foot atrium topped by skylights on the inside.
A double-ramp system follows the museums front wall and opens off the atrium to gallaries on each level. Every gallery visible from the atrium is painted white because of Meiers insistence that color not distpct from ^ forni of the bulling. -^Wieiers.^e$ign has at-, j tracf^d^ hatifer*'and>in-i^ ternational media attentitm, with one critic describing it as Atlantas major work of contemporary architecture.
The enthusiasm the new museum has generated in Atlantas arts community has produced several byproducts in addition to the successful fund-raising drive.
Vigtel said a $l million endowment given the museum to purchase decorative art was an outgrowth of the new museum, as was the acquisition of an American decorative art collection financed by museum board member Virginia Carroll Crawford.
The Crawford collection, 150 objects of furniture, silver, ceramics and metal ware, covers the period from 1825 to 1915 and, according to Vigtel, is considered the finest collection of its kind in the country. It will be on display for the first time when the new museum opens.
We could not have shown it (the Crawford collection) or even acquired it had it not been for the new museum, Vigtel said. We began buying it in the spring of 1979 when we first had an inkling of the new museum.
Vigtel said he believes the opening of the new museum will spark an even more intense interest in the visual artfe jn Atlanta and the ^^east.
#%CT^peqple have seenit' -afl^hem iey^reaTize^lhe reception it has received in the international press, they will come to realize that were really getting something very important for the city, he said.
The opening is going to help Atlanta become a much more attractive city and a much more mature city.
>)i
m
MADE A THROW ... 65-year-old Lula Vaughns laughs after throwing her first of three frisbees at the 8th Annual Senior Citizens Olympics held in Augusta, Ga. About 900 people took part in the events which included watermelon seed spitting contest, hula hooping, and horseshoes. (AP Laserphoto by JudyOndrey)
Collection Saved
WILMINGTON - The New Hanover County Museum Foundation has saved the Blockade Runner Museum Collection by making the final payment to Jack Faw of Hickory, former owner of the Blockade Runner Musum. Funds needed to complete the final payment were contributed by the Champion MacDowell Davis Foundation and the Corning Foundation.
The Civil War museum located at Carolina Beach closed in September 1982 and the contents were offered for sale. Purchase by collectors would have split up the collection. To keep the collection intact, the New Hanover County Museum Foundation stepped in with a fund-raising campaign to buy the collection.
The New Hanover County Board of Commissioners appropriated $60,000 to purchase a portion of the collection, with the foundation agreeing to raise $90,000 to purchase the remainder of the artifacts.
A $10,000 legislative appropriation sponsored by state Rep. Harry Payne will be used to supplement the county allocation.
Museum Director Janet Seapker has announced that the popular .Wilmington waterfront diorama will be readied and opened in December. Other exhibits from the former Blockade Runner Museum collection dealing directly with the Civil War era in the Lower Cape Fear will be unveiled in April.
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Comedy Is Opening ATW's New
AVDEN "See How They Run." a complicated, involved farce is the opening fare for Ayden Theater Workshop's 1983-84 season.
The production will open at 8 p m. Thursday, with other performances scheduled for 8 p.m. Saturday and at 3 p.m.. Sunday. All performances will be given in the .Ayden-G rift on High School Auditorium, tickets are priced at S3 each at the door. Season tickets are still available Jor Sui for all five 1983-84 productions For details on securing tickets, call 748-8782 or 7,36-7209.
Philip King's comedy."See How Thev Run." has in its
leason
confusion an American actor and actress, a maid who has seen too many American movies, an old maid who touches alcohol for the first time in her life, and four men in clergyman's suits - all galloping ii) and out of the four doors of an English vicarage.
\inu)\ directs
HOLLYWOOD il'PL -Leonard N'imoy will find himself, more or less, when he directs "Star Trek 111: The Search for Spock," inasmuch as he plays Mr. Spock. the pointed-eared Vulcan ot the movie series.
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- Richard Corliss, WE MAGAZINE
How much love, sex, fun and inendship can a person take?
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Jerry Jolley New Director Of Boys Choir
\E\\ l)IHK( TOR .lerry Jolley, music minister at Jarvis Memiirial I niled Methodist Church, is the new director of the (.rccnville Ho\s Choir. The choir begins rehearsals for the l!is:i-si season on Thursday. (Reflector Photo by Jerry
Raxnori
Opera Scenes To Be Given Friday
Four scenes from two operas are to be presented by members ot the East Carolina Lniversity Opera Theater on Friday at 8:1,3 p.m. in the A ,J Fletcher Recital Hall on campus The performance IS free and open to the public with seating to be on a tirst-come, first-served basis The A J Fletcher Recital Hall is located on Fast Tenth .Street on the ECL campus.
School of Music faculty member Clyde Hiss, director ot the ECl' Opera Theater, is directing scenes from Wolfgang .Mozart's "The Magic Flute" and Gaetano Donizetti s "The Daughter Of the Regiment"
The program will open w'.th <cene 1 trom .-\ct 1 of "The Magic Flute" The quintet of performers m this scene are Matthew Cox as Tamino. .lane Richardson,
. First Lad} (,lyda .Nicholson, Second Lady: Mary'A. Parker,' Third Lady; and Philip Fvancho. Papageno, All the lingers are students in the KCC .School of Music except tor Fvancho, who is Visiting Artist at Pitt Community College For the second selection, .'ccne 2 ol .Vet 11 of "The Magic Flute.' the cast will he the same as .for the opening selection.
The third scene, and the final one before intermission, is also drawn irom .Mozart's
opera. This will be the scene from the finale of Act II and will feature Nicholson, Parker and Richardson as the three spirits, and Julie A. Clemens as Pamina.
Followng the intermission, the concluding selection for the evening will be a scene from Act II of Donizettis The Daughter of the Regiment." The quartet of performers for this scene are; DeVera Thomas as Marie; Clemens as Marquise de Berkenfeld; Evancho as Sulpice.andCoxasTonio.
Accompanist/coach for this production is ECU music student Mark Gansor. Costumer is Patricia, choral director at Aycock Junior Higft:^
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer Jerry Jolley, music minister at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, has been appointed director of the Greenville Boys Choir. Jolley succeeds Carolyn Ip-pck, who has resigned to devote full time to teaching.
"I want soon to get into some of the local schools," Jolley commented about one of his plans as the new director. 1 feel this is the best way to promote the boys choir, to create interest in it.
A native of Cliffside, a village in the western foothills of North Carolina, Jolley has been music minister at Jarvis since 1980. In this position, he has been responsible for the churchs total music program - seven singing choirs and three bell choirs.
His wife is the former Mary Luckadoo of Mooresboro, another foothill village. The couple has three sons. "1 like working with young people in music. I'm looking forward to rehearsals and performances with these boys, Jolley remarked. * * ,
The Greenville Boys Choir, at this time limited to 30 boys, has singers drawn from boys in the third through the seventh grade. "This wider age range permits us to keep a boy for two, three or more years, until he has a change of voice," Jolley said.
Noting that earlier com-.^ posers such as Bach and Mozart "did not per se write music for boys voices, there are many fine pieces adaptable to boys voices" He mentioned that some of the composers whose music he particularly enjoys using are Bach. Handel and Schubert, "Some contemporary com posers, notably Natalie Sleeth, do write music especially for boys voices." Other composers whose music he turns to frequently for young people to sing include Martin Shaw, Dufay. Robert Powell and Hal Hopson.
Despite the demands of the church choirs at Jarvis, plus the new responsibility for the boys choir. Jolley, a bass singer, still finds time for an occasional personal performance . In January he is scheduled to ,sing at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in a production of Handels oratorio.
Ihe .South American Country of Colombia declared it,; independence in
IHIii
OUTLET
Big Mens Wear Sizes To 54
ECU Music Calendar
Music events sponsored by the School of Music, E'ast Carolina University, for the month of October have been announced. All are free and open to the public and will be held in the A. J, Fletcher Recital Hall on campus unless otherwise indicated.
Events are subject to change or cancellation with iittie or no previous notice. Before driving long distances, it is suggested that patrons contact Janice Brown. School of Music at 757-6331 for confirmation.
The calendar for the month is:
Today - 8 p.m. Guest artist David Jolley. French horn, a Festial'83-84 event,
Monday, Oct. 3 10 a.m. to noon and 2-4 p.m. David Jolley masterclasses. A Festival event.
Friday, Oct. 7-8:15 p.m. - Opera scenes from "The Magic Flute" and "The Daughter of the Regiment."
Sunday. Oct. 9-8:15 p.m. - Donna Coleman, pianist, faculty recital.
Wednesday, Oct. 12 8:15 p.m. Percussion Ensemble concert.
Friday-Saturday. Oct. 21-22 - All day, Electr5onic Music Plus Festival.
Sunday, Oct, 23 8:15 p.m. Symphonic Wind Ensemble concert. Wright Auditociurm.
Monday, Oct, 24 - 7:30 p.m. - Senior recitals, Richard Witherspoon, trumpet, and Keith Beck, percussion.
Wednesday. Oct. 26 - 7:30 p.m. - Graduate recital, David Hass, trombone.
Thursday. Oct. 27 - 7:30 p.m. - Graduate recital, Kelly Via, flute,
Friday. Oct. 28 - 7:30 p.m. - Senior recitals, Tim Ward, voice and Kim Gatlin, piano.
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NASHVILLE, TN Oct. 6-9, Oct. 27-30 OZARKS (Graceland, Eureka Springs, Passion Play, Mountain Music Jamboree, Churchill Downs) Oct. 1-9 N.C. 4 TN MOUNTAINS Oct. 13-16 PA DUTCH Nov. 3-6 NEW YORK Nov. 17-20
NEW YORK CULTURAL TOUR (Winterthur Museum and
Gardens, St. Patricks and St. Johns Cathedral, Opera, Metropolitan Museum, Kennedy Center, Radig City Music Hall Christmas Spectacular) Dec. 7-11
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Write or Call lor more information on these and other tours available Our 1983 catalog is available: Ask lot yours today!!
"Elijah." This is one of several works which he says I have sung many times." His performing experience has included numerous appearances with symphony orchestras, and in oratorios by Mendelssohn, Handel, Haydn and works by Brubeck. Verdi. Faure, Brahms and Bach;
A graduate of Gardner-Webb College. Jolley also attended Furman University and Mars Hill College, where he received the bachelor of arts degree in religion. He earned the masters degree in church music at the New . Orleans Baptist theological Seminary.
Prior to coming to Greenville in 1980, Jolley served as music minister at churches in Elberton. Ga., and Greenville. S.C.
The calendar for the boys choir is beginning to be^ sprinkled with engagements" for the new season just getting under way. "The boys will perform their traditional Vesper Service at Thanksgiving. They will sing for the Newcomers Club in December, for the Jaycees
MA.NET snow
NEW YORK lAP) -".Manet, " a retrospective exhibition of 190 important works by the French artist. Edouard Manet, is on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art through Nov, 27.
Ladies Night sometimes during the winter months, and will have a spring concert in April," Jolley enumerated.
Churches, civic or other local groups who may be interested in having the Greenville Boys Choir perforpi are to contact Jolley at Jarvis Church, 752-3101,
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TWIST CONTEST FINALS: Oct. 6 with CHUBBY CHECKER. Winner will receive an ALL EXPENSE PAID TRIP TO NEW YORK CITY 'PLUS $1.000.00 CASH!
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Friday. Oct. 7
Friday. Oct. 7 DELBERT McCLINTON with STEVE BASSETT
_ Saturday. Oct. 8
DELBERT McCLINTON with STEVE BASSETT. Saturday. Oct. 8: Bring Your ECU Football Ticket Stub And Receive $2.00 Off Admission. Come Enjoy Our Happy Hour From 8:30 10:30.
Buy A Carolina Opry House Membership For The Regular Price Of $10.00 And Receive One Ticket Of Your Choice To See Either; Chubby Checker. Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Or Delbert McClinton with Steve Bassett.___
The Carolina Opry House is a private club for members and guest.
All ABC Permits
The Daily R^-fliclor Groenville fJ G
Rock Musical Openihg ECU Playhouse Season
iTpaLtharchaeology and Margaret Franckhouser will give details on the Mattamuskeet Medical
Sm, ii0" Carolina Today, SlimTh ? show over WNCT-TV. Channel 9.
forThe weekis .^^fnaby are co-hosts. The calendar
Children with learning disabilities; Pi ri, if K '^mehlad. chairman of the
Sd Pani v m Commerce; 7:25 a.m., Ivey Smith
and PaurMiller with details on the Greene Countv Fall Festival, <:40a.m.. Dr. Don Brown talks about meditation
PhpSprn ^ Healthbreak; 7:15 a.m.. Dr. David
Pneips ot bCU with comments on the archeology project for
Tffif.t anniversary; 7:25 a.m.. Sam Hocutt with facts on the Wilhamston Shriners Fish Frv; 7:40 a.m , piano man James King IS the guest
Wednesdday - 6:40 a.m'., Leslie Brinson and Mary Alice Yarbrough on critical thinking skills; 7:15 a.m., Debbie Justen asks what's new in make-up'?;" 7:25 a.m. a spokesman talks about the Air Force K.O.T.C.; 7:40 a m Dr
^hs how to feel good about yourself and
Thursda^ - 6:40 a.m., Margaret Franckhouser com-men s on he Mattamuskeet Medical Center; 7:15 a.m. Pirate football is John Zernhelts subject; 7:25 a.m., a spokesman for the Pactolus Volunteer Fire Department: 7:40 a.m.^ what s new around the house"?
Friday -- 6:40 a.m., Rod Clark on .\ational Emplov the Handic'apped Week; 7:25 a.m., Shirley Morrison and Tom Alarch have details on Bike Along '8:i; 7:25 a.m^ Cindy Kittrell s subject is "Ain't it Great to Tailgate',' 7 40 a m plant doctor Eddie Harrington.
TRK.MK.NDOl S HDBK Actor Timothy Parker, who plays the role of .lesiis of .Na/areth in the KCl Playhouse production of ".lesus ( hrist Superstar," is shown in a special gown that required II,' yards of material and weighs 40 pounds. The rock musical opens Wednesday at .McGinnis Theater on the K( I campus. Tickets are available from the box office or by calling 7.')7-k:{!IO, (4'hoto by Carlton Benz I
'Snoopy' To Open Martin Co. Season
I.\ RKCITAI, TODAY French hornisl [)avid Jolley will be in recital at S o'clock tonight in the A. ,1. Fletcher Recital Hall, Fast (arolina I niversit\ campus. The recital, a School of Music 'i;i-SI Festival event, is free and open to the public. Jolley will be accompanied by pianist Jonatban Feldman in a program of music by Bach. Beethoven, Schumann, Dukas, Poulenc and four Russian composers.
WILL I AM STUN "Snoopy," along with othc|. Peanuts characters Charlie Brown, Lucy, , Pepperm.int Patty. Sally Brown, and Woodstock will be hand to open the 191;,, ;!4 season of The .Martin Cum-munitv Plavers.
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Snoopy," the musical comedy by Charles M. Schulz, will be presented at 8 p.m. on Oct. 6.7 and 8 in the Martin County Auditorium. The auditorium is located at Williamston High School, just south of Williamston on U.S. 17.
Two other productions, the musical "Oliver" and a comedy-mystery "Catch Me If You Can, will complete the seasons offering by The Martin Community Players.
Adult season fitkets are priced at $10, with senior citizen and students tickets costing $7. These can be ordered by mail by sending a check or money order payable to Martin Community Players! 300 N. Watts St., Williamston. N.C., 27892.
Individual tickets at the door will be available on the nights of performance. These are priced at $5 for adults and $4 for students and senior citizens.
The Mont Blanc tunnel which links France and Italy was opened in 1965.
rrr
ON STAGE AT THE
EastX!anplina EastI
iarplina
Playhouse V
layhouse
OCTOBER 5-8 IWednesday.$aluTdavl & OCTOBER 10 |Monday|-8:IS P.M.-MCGINMS THEATRE (Corner of 5th and Eastern)
"NOTHING SHORT OF BRILLIANT! Newsweek
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR
m
TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE CALL 757-6390 FOR RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATION
ECU STUDENTS: $4.00 GENERAL PUBLIC: $6.00
A HIGH AND MIGHTY ROCK-OPERA
SUPERSTAR has to be the greatest pop music produced since the first African ever pounded a drum.
~Los Angeles Free Press
f "Jesus Christ Superstar," one of the most famous and elaborate of all rock-operas, will open the 1983-84 season at the East Carolina Playhouse on Wednesday, with subsequent performances Thursday through Saturday, and on Oct. 10. Performances will be in McGinnis Theater on' the East Carolina University campus, with curtain time nightly at 8:15.
The production, a cooperative effort ot the ECU Drama Department and the ECU School of Music, is a revival of the Broadway musical that was highly controversial when first produced. It signaled a resurrection of contemporary religious concern, and is a rock music treatment of Christs Passion, the last week in his life, culminating in his crucifixion and his followers searching cries for meaning in his death.
Even before the show opened in New York, the now legendary two-record album had been released in the United States. Some religious groups were up-in-arms about what was termed "the irreverent and blasphemous way in which Christs Passion is performed, Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber countered with the comment, The idea of our wtole opera is to have Christ
Remember
TOP TUNES 40 YEARS AGO Your Hit Parade October 2,1943
(The number in parenthesis following each song .indicates the number of weeks the song has been in the top ten listing).
1. Sunday, Monday Or Always (8)
2. People Will Say We re In Love (13) .
3. I Heard You Cried Last .Night (7)
4. Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey (8)
5. Youll Never Know (22)
6. All Or Nothing At All (12)
7. Paper Doll (4)
8. In My Arms (7)
9. Pistol Packin' Mama
(1)
seen through the eyes of Judas, with Christ as a man. not as a God."
The Broadway production opened in 1971 'to standing-room only audiences, with headlines across the country and reviews proclaiming it to be everything from a "modern miracle" to "musical heresy ofthe first rank."
Director Edgar Loessin and choreographer Mavis, Ray say they have put a verv large cast on stag^, about 4 people, in order to get the full rich sound the show demands. Additonally, a tidf orchestra and innovative scenic effects are being used to "make this production as exhilarating to see as it is to hear"
One of the special effects mentioned by Loessin is a lavish gold gown (o be worn by actor Timothy Parker who portrays Jesus Christ, In a dramatic mjoment. the gown is draped over Jesus Christ, the superstar, as he rises 10 feet in the air. At the top of the rise, the crowd rips the gown from the messiah. revealing him crucified.
Patrice Alexander, designer of the costume, com menied "In all, the gown has 40 yards of fabric, 75 yards ot highly reflective metallic, weighs about 40 pounds and is designed to drape Irom the actors shoulders down lo feet to the floor where it spreads out another live feet."
Commenting on the pro-duction s music. Loessin said: "This music is mastertully conceived and overflows with energy and a rock style that 1 think reveals the story in a Iresh and ' honest way. it is one of the most important musical tlie-ater work> of our generation"
Reserved tickets tor "Jesus Christ Superstar" and season tickets for the enure Playhouse season are oh sale at the .McGinns Theater Box Dftice at the corner ol Fifth and Eastern streets The box oil ice is upc-n each weekday from 10 a m. to 4pm and reserva-tion.-- mav also he made by calliim7.'>7-0:{00.
COMES TO
CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD SUNDAY, OCT. 2
COMING IN OCTOBER:
Oct. 6 - Chubby Checker Oct. 7 - Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Oct. 8 - Delbert McCiinton with Steve Bassett Qct. 28 - Jerry Lee Lewis
Buy a Carolina Opry House Membership for the regular price of $10.00 and receive one ticket of your choice to see either: Chubby Checker, Nitty Gritty Dirt BandfmnPellMrt McCiinton with Steve Bassett.
The Carolina 0pry*l^^l^5"a private club for members and guests. All ABC Permits
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Friday Nite October 7th
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Doors Open 6:30 Show Starts 7:30
Wednesday Nite
Greenvilles First & Still *\ Ladies Lock-Out
8:30-10:00 Specials All Nite Saturday Nite
John Moores Beach Party
Members Free & Happy Hour Til 9:30
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Papa Katz Is A Private Club For Members & Guests We Have All ABC Permits
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Q.-J4 The Daily Retiecior Gteenvilie NC Sunday. October 2. 19B3Third Annual Street-A-Fair Scheduled For Oct. 9 In Kinston
KINSTON - The third annual Street-A-Fair celebration in Kinston will take place Oct. 9 in downtown Kinston. Sponsored by the Community Council for the .Arts, the focus of events are oriented to providing entertainment to children and teen-agers,
A children's area located on Caswell Street will feature two separate entertainment stages with back-to-back performances.
Among attractions to be presented are the Suzuki
Players, young violinists of Kinslon: Oran Perry's Kinston High School Ovation" Troupe and Moppets; a 4-H Talent Show; Doc Stioud's martial arts; mime .artists Myron and Patty Cartp;; and young dancers from both the Jackie Howell School of Dance and the Dons Whitfield School of Dance. -
Whitney The Hobo of television station WITN-TV. Washington, will be in the area as this year's special guet. He Will perform on
Lost Colony Singers Received Cash Awards
MANTEO - Two singers in the 1983 production season of The Lost Colony" -Thomas Nichols and Jan Simon, have received cash awards totaling $1.500 to help them as they begin their careers in the professional theater.
Nichols was this year's recipient of the Evelyn Russell Layton Award, a SI.000 stipend given annually since 1978 in memory of the late actress. Ms Russell, wife of The Lost Colony" director Joe Lavton. con-
Top Ten
1 Puttin' on the RitZr'-^aco
2, The Safety Dance." Men,Without Hats
3. Every Breath You Take. "Police
4 Total Eclipse of the Heart. "BonnieTyler
5. -Tell Her About It." Billy Joel
6. Maniac. " Michael Sem bello
7. ;iShe's) Sexy and 17," Stray Cats
8. Sweet Dreams, ' Eurythmics
9 Don't Cry,' .Asia 10, Human Nature. Michael Jackson
Top Country
1 Baby. What About You. "CrystalGayle 2. Why Do I Have To Choose." Willie Nelson 3. Don't You Know How Much I Love You." Ronnie Milsap
4: 'N'ew Looks From an Old Lover." B.J. Thomas
5 Paradise Tonight, " McClain & Gilley
6 - Flight 309 to Tennessee." Shelly West
7 'What .Am 1 Gonna Do." Merle Haggard
B -Nobody but You." Don Williams ... -
9 Lady Down on Love. Alabama".
10 ' How Could I Love Her So Much." Johnny Rodriguez
stantly championed the cause of young performers getting a break in professional theater.
Nichols. 23. is a native of Clarksburg. W Va. This past summer was his second season with the Paul Green outdoor drama.
Ms. Simon, a soprano, received S500 as the first recipient of the Karen Carpenter Award. This new annual award will be given to a member ot -The Lost Colony" choir and is intended to be applied toward further vocal study The award is funded by- female singers who knew Ms. Carpenter and is being administered jomUy by Layton and singer Olivia Newton-John.
Ms Simon. 22, is a resident of Greensboro, is a student of voice and performs in both musical comedies and classical concerts.
Appointed To Professorship
WILMINGTON -.Coastal ecologist Dr. .Armando A. de la Cruz has been appointed to the Foundation Visiting Distinguished Professorship at I'NC-Wilmington for the 1983-84 academicV^ar.
He is being presented to the public in a lecture at 8 p.m. Monday m room 100 of the University Union. A-reception will follow. The public IS invited to attend.
He IS the first scientist to hold the professorship since it was established in 1980. Previous recipients were actress Jean .Muir. 1982-83 and classical guitarist .Michael Lorimer. 1980-82.
During the War oi 812. .American-- troops sackeT Toronto and burned the Parliament buildings In reprisal, the Canadians burned public buildings in Washington
Announcing the
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offer good for portraits taken thru October 8
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stage and will mingle with the crowd, signing autographs from 2 to 5 p.m.
In the arts sphere, children will have opportunities to take part in various activities. from learing about pet rocks to face painting, from marble painting to spatter painting, instrument making. Halloween masks and street chalking.
Another special for the youngsters will be the chance to climb in and out. to examine, a National Guard helicopter and an armored personnel carrier.
.Additionally. Dr. Floyd Waddle of Fayetteville State' University's biology de
partment will have snakes and rodents on hand. Visitors will be invited to touch and
This Week In THE LOFT
iiandle the snakes, gerbels and other mamals in his collection.
Mon. & Tues.
From Jacksonville, the Keystone Kops will be locking up people whose friends
take out a warrant and it will cost 25 cents to get them out.
The Street-A-Fair celebra-. tion gels under way at 1 p.m. and will continue until 6 p.m.
AtThfc
Happy Hour 5-7 P.M. Vegetables
Piano & Vocals Pizza Nite
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Ronnie & Teen Guitar & Vocals Ladies Vt Price 5 PM Til 9 PM Chicken Wings Chipsn Dip
Walter Plemmer Piano & Vocals Happy Hours 5 PM Til 7 PM 10 PM Til 11 PM
Ned Mills Piano & Vocals late Nite Happy Hour
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The Daily Reflector Greenville N C
NOT A LE\F-E\TI\(. DHAiiON ... as it might appear at first glance. Instead, it is the handiwork of caterpillars which have encased their web around a small sourwood sapling,
with one detached leaf attached to the main web. This type of discovery is intriguing to children on a nature trek.
IN ADDITION TO YELLOW WILDFLOWERS . such as goldenrod, evening primrose, various sunflowers and bur marigold that flower in October, theres a wide range of flowers with purplish hues, such as the member of the liatris family shown here. Other showy purplish examples include trilisa, swamp thistle, aster, and gerardia, which can all be found with a bit of careful searching.
Text And Photos By Jerry Raynor
With the possible exception of the early weeks of April, the Indian Summer period of October is the most comfortable time of the year to take leisurely rambles in Greenvilles parks and in the countryside adjacent to Greenville.
Daytime weather at this time is perfect for random strolls. Gone are the humid days of a few weeks past, the discomfort of numerous annoying insects.
In early spring nature paints the earth in pastels soft, misty greens, pinks, and whites. In October natures palette displays a lavish spread of harvest colors rich golds, glowing purples, bronzed browns, with the green of summer foliage beginning to be touched with autumns fire.
Along rural roadsides deserted buildings bear the burden of another summers mantle of vines. Grasses, w^eeds and shrubs obscure dirt paths that once were trodden by workers going to barns and fields.
Spiders abandon their fine-spun architectural miracles, and molting insects have left behind the husks of their bodies.
Breezes, chilly in the early hours but refreshing in the midday warmth, bring a touch of meloncholy in the realization that winter is not far behind.
Indian Summer is a time that invites people into the open air, to observe with pleasure and gratitude the fulfilment of spring and summer days. Its a time when color and fragrance mingle beneath the sparkling blue of autumn skies.
I.SOI.ATF.l) DOORWAYS . .md iranes are ideal places to >eek mil ,i \, web urrannemeiiis. I'lic one simw
window muipies the lower corner o the entr\ door to
ifieiv ot ,111 .ibandoned lidiacco barn pictured in the
u beif photograph below.
Indian Summer Days Perfect For Rambling
I w
SATINY ('LISTERS ... of the beauty berry fruit grow on a shrub with long graceful branches. It thrives as a cultivated plant in yards and gardens, and is another autumn attraction in the range of purple colors.
ARRANGEMENT IN BROWN . . . The base of a pine cone still attached to a small dead limb has the appearance of a flower in brown wood. October brings to fruition a number of flower seed pods with their own interest and beautv.
- ^ i tai % ^
N.ATl RE .AS A DECORATOR ... When left tints own dcMccs. rectangle oi a permanently open barn door, with sunlight nature becomes a master decorator, creating pleasing effects silhouetting the growth against the dark interior ol the barn, such as this arrangement of grasses and vines before the open
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C
Sunday. October 2.1983
op." oi ni} a.^paragu." plant." off in the
."ilould ! C.;i 'hf ('.I liiidt-bran \ ! 'he top- (ii: your a?^aragu" plant," when they begin tii.tu: '; -.eao'A or broun Thi." is u."Uall\ December .Asparagus :ci.e::'> iron, tieinu mulched one of the best mulches lor .i.'Parauu" :,'"ra'A that has been tumigated
')fi afiioiu.' corms have to be dug each tall or will they I oerv. ir'.er in 'he soil"' VC Mebane V oiuoaosj" corni" do not overwinter well in .North * aro.a..; \",tr the tohage hU" dried, dig the corms, remove, an\ .'01: ana cut oit the dead tops. Dry the corms tor three or tour da;.' .\' .v'l extra precaution you may dust the corms '.utn in ;:bectic;de.>uch as .Sevin and a fungicide such as Beniote 'o help keep awa> in.sects and help prevent rotting.^ More Che corm.' in dr\ ,'awdu.sl or peat moss at about 40 d'eareo
' D I '-eed intormalion on how to treat iutta gourds to make them Tito ,'ponge' like I've "een m stores, 'K.T.W., Fa;.efo\iHe
\ \ilov^ iulta aourds aDo i,a.t|ed luotah goutUs or dishrag aour'!.' .ripen and dr> on the vine. WheiHhe gourds are t.t::;. tr;. 'tie seeds xill rattle, the gourds will turn brown and tt.'M 'Kit, .\:li be hard utid brmle Cut the tip oft the uideend 'o: a->urd and shake out the seeds Some seeds may be
loitaoO in.suie the sponge, and there will be a dried gummy, ntaoTial 'hroughout the fibers. Dissolve this tilm of gummy rr.iCoiu:; t,;. .Miaking the sponges in hot water. This will also n.ohf thf spimges softer and dislodge any remaining seeds.
'Tf- clean sprmges dry in a warm spot. Dry sponges will bo 'C.t but they will become sott when immersed in water. Th-' 'p i.naes will become lighter in color and softer every time ho;, are used It some sponges have discolored spots bo,T.i.'o oi^ improper drying, soak the sponges m a solution ol oiio part iileach and three parts water It you want smaller sp' r.vc' ^ut the lutfas into desired lengths before removing tho-Kin to make the final cleaning easier,
'iipplu'd In he \ C Agricultural Extension Service
Former Football Player BecbmesDecorator
Q 1 have a rooted branch from a pomegranate bush. Should I leave it in the ground or put it in a container and keep it inside for the winter'.I.A.S.. Hickory I ; *
.A Pomegrantes are originally from the Mediterannean region, but they will grow in North Carolina. They will withstand temperatures as low as lu to 15 degrees Farenheit and even lower temperatures if they are given some protection In colder areas pomegranates are more common as tub plants tor terraces or patios. This is especially true of the miniature pomegranate. Pomegranates growing in pots should tv watered once or twice a week or more often in hot weather
.Since }our pomegranate does not have an established root s\ stem, protect the plant by keeping it in a protected spot such as a back porch Plant it outside in the spring. .Pomegranate." prefer tull sun and will grow in almost any
garden sni!
D Does there have to be a frost before persimmons are ripe ciKiughtoeaC F H .Rockwell!
,A The lime persimmons rippen vanes Generally those nptmmg !>etore trost are considered to have'the best flavor. Frost.jc..in jiyurf' the Ipuit quality, but the fruit of late cuitivaie.' cnnnnues to ripen on warm days through the fall and into ear!\ winter Persimmons are astringent when green, hut the astnngeiic\ disappears as the fruit ripens and . '(it'.cns
g Hi.'w do 1 keep a eucalyptus from freezing' i.A.C.. Iron .station
A The weaknos of eiicalytus adaptability in North t'aroiiPui and much oi the Southeast is because the plants do not ha\(> a distinct dormant period They will grow rapidly when tempaeratures are warm and moisture and nutrients are a'.ailatile In area." that have consistently cooling fall 'weather to "low the plant's growth, such as m the Pacific Norihwc"! and the British Isles, eucalyptus will harden to greater trost resistance In North Carolina this may happen ,>ome }eai". but a mild, wet tall will stimulate growth, .making the plant .more likely to be severely damaged by a hard trcc/e
The tvsl culture tor eucalyptus survival in North Carolina IS to Rivp the plants hardened and growing as little as pos.'ihlf This means no fertilizer or extra water, .An addii;or..il eitor to help the eucalyptus make it through the .unier is to encircle, the lower three teet avt the trunk with r.ibbi; w nv or chicken w ire and till the cylinder with leaves or mne furk K\en with these precautions don't be disappointed :' ''.ir eiic.th pt us dies or 'free'z'es't'o the ground.
g Ue are going to replant our lawn ihis fail What is a good g:\iss .\e can sow' I ,M . Emerald Isle
The lurtgrasses that do best in your area of the state are .wirm season grassC' such as Bermuda, zoysia. centipt'de and
Augustine The} shciuld be sown or planted in the spring ho'v.e'.ei r:o u: the t.ill It ypu.need a cover ot grass now. you ca.". ,'ov. .ut'nual i>egra.'s and'till It into the soil in the spring .iKe .T eel. m.irnil'e crop
g .srio'Ui,: 1 prune a/aleas.now lir later in the talF () 1).
MalSnl.
.\ A.noea' shoul i tie pruned in the spring when they finish blooming 1; ;.oa prune now vou will, tie culling awa> next spring'" lowers iHvause the.shrubs have already set flower t)U(is '[he same is rue tor lorsythia, tlowering quince, camellia and mock orange, '
By B.ARB.AR.A MAYER AP Newsfeatures
Fans may think of them as too tough to care. But even the guys who play football wearing the uniform of the Green Bay Packers respond to the finer things in life -such as their surroundings, says Gary Knafelc, former Packer tight end and wide receiver.
Knafelc. who believes he is the only ex-pro football player currently working as an interior designer, landed t.he job when the Packers decided to redecorate the 53,O-square-foot team headquarters in Green Bay. Wis.
Finished in time for this year's training season, the building now sports a new image which calls attention to the team's proud history without being too gaudy, according to the designer. For one thing, the color scheme he selected includes the Packer colors of green and gold.
Details such as the G-shaped reception desk and bronze Super Bowl trophy-table. the custom green carpeting with gold G's and several large photo-murals of some Packer great mo
ments help call to mind the team's exploits.
But the design element \yhich Kanfelc is most pleased with is the custom-made conference table he designed, which is shaped like a football.
The table was built to order by Kimball International and features a green leather top. It measures 16 feet in length and eight feet in width at its widest point.
The 1,950-pound table is the only football shaped conference table in existence, according to Knafelc. A bronze inverted footballshaped lighting fixture which he also designed is mounted above the table in the Packer executive conference room.
The Packer building houses both administrative offices and the team training area. Such niceties as a player's lounge and reception area, a film studio, a dressing room with a whirlpool bath large enough to accommodate up to 12 players at a time, racquet-bali courts and a weight room help take the chill out of the long Wisconsin winters. according to the Packer organization. '
A desire to create an at-
No. 9608 Leland
Unique Design Supplies Sunny Interior
by Jerry Bishop
Shaped like a wedge of pie, Leland offers individuality and an interior bathed in natural light Overhead clerestory window s brighten the kitchen-family room, probably the central point of Leland,. although light floods in from all sides. Three large bedrooms and two full baths edge the left side, and the master bedroom boasts Its ow n enclosed private patio You reach the rear ter-
rac not only through the family rogm but through a bedroom and bath as well The formal living room which accommodates a fireplace, is set to the right of the ^oyer and another half bath for this area adjoins the family room. You'll catch up on your paperwork in the den or office.
Area
First floor
Garage
Storage
Sq. Ft.
- 2,071
- 412
- 112
TO ORDER PLA.NS FOR THE LELA.ND
Pkase send me the sei(s) checked bekm;
Z 5 sets 1.Minimum Const. Pkg.) $70
Z 1 set (Stud) Pkg. I ..................$35
Additional sets.................$15 each
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Materials List And Energv Saving Specifcation Guide Included ORMIRS SENT L.P.S. OR PRIORITY MAIL
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HvYNDVLANG \P Newsfeatures
t,! The h(ij"f we moved into several ye;r- ,.-ao had painl on the masonry 'ha'inent walls If was all right for a while, hut now has started to fade in some ared^ Fan this bf' repainted and, if so, what kind of paint should I use'
A Aes It can f>e repainted, but you should know ot the possibility that the fading may lie the result of water seepage._ It can't be too severe or you Would have noticed, but might be just enough to cause the discoloration. To be sure of getting a result that will not be disappointing, first scrape any places where the paint has chipped or peeled Go to your hardware or other dealer and explain what the problem is and tell him you want a primer that is designed to be used on masonry walls. Alter using that, apply a finish paint, also made for masonry
Q, - We have a wooden house which we plan to cover soon with vinyl or aluminum siding The p.uni on if has
been there lor many years anu is spotted and rather messy looking in places. We were going to repaint it. then decided on the new siding. We are concerned about whether to repaint anyway and then go ahead or just have the siding installed without bothering with the paint. My husband doesn't see any necessity for the paint. He says thatj^if we have to go to all the trouble of repainting, we might as well leave it that way,
A, - Your husband is right. The painting is unnecessary. However, there are times when the wood needs some kind of preparatory work, such as caulking and nailing down of loose boards. Good contractors will dh this automatically, but be aware uf the possibility tfidt the one you hire might have to be reminded.
Q. - I had never replaced a pane of glass m a window until recently, when two of them were damaged by boys playing ball while we were away for a month I followed all the instructions in a
tractive and appealing space led to the redesign. Green Bay offers few of the opportunities for film or television work New York or Los Angeles provide for players, and the team was seeking a way to attract and keep the best young players, according to Knafelc. who spent 10 years in the 1950s and 1960s as a pro football player, mostly with the Packers.
He retired from football to devote himself to business interests, including spjrts
and business equipment and office furniture sales.
Knafelc backed into the interior design field as a result of his establishment of Valley Business"Interiors. He discovered he had a knack for and interest in furniture and interior design, took courses in the subject and applied for certification. Most of his work now involves the design of business interiors, he said in an interview.
The Packer building is the first football facility his firm has tackled. However, he is hoping this one will lead to other similar assignments.
As a former football player, (he still.announces Packer games locally). Knafelc believes he has something special to offer. He says most football training facilities leave a great deal to be desired in looks, comfort and utility. They are drab, boring and often downright shabby, perhaps because players are
not supposed to care about their surroundings.
According to Knafelc. however, surroundings can play an important role in winning. He says calling attention to past successes -as he did in the photo-murals he created of winning Packer moments - can inspire current players to keep up the tradition.
Knafelc says that with the Packer lineup and the new team headquarters, the 1983 season should be a good one
Old Indian Canoe Recovered
DIXIE. La. (AP) - A remarkably well preserved Indian canoe, believed to be one of only a few in the country over l.OOO years old, was hauled up the banks of the Red River near here last week.
The quiet excavation had taken five weeks after the
nose of the 31-foot dugout was discovered sticking out at the foot^^pf a 3(Ffoot river bank
Kendall and Rose Kelly of Dixie, their 15-year-old son. Kevin, took on the project with the aid of the Louisiana Archaeological Society.
Now begins the task of
unearthing the history behind it.
"If only it could talk," said, one of the workers as the* excavation drew to a close.
Well preserved but with some small holes caused by-bugs and worms, the canoe weighs about a ton and could be older than 1.000 vears.
By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures
Millions of homes in the United States still have old-style toilet tanks and their guide wires, floatballs, overflow tubes and rubber stoppers.
The tank components are said to have been used, in one form or another, nearly 4,000 years ago by the Egyptians. Whether or not that is true consi(iering their structurally sound pyramids - it certainly is true that people have had more trouble liberating themselves from old-fashioned tank parts than they have had accepting men on the moon, messages from satellites, cooking by microwave and give-and-take with computers.
You don't have to he told that a lot can go wrong with the inside of a tank. The float ball can fill up with water or become corroded The guide wires can become worn or bent or attract a buildup of scale. The rubber tank stopper at the bottom of the tank that is pulled lip for the flush often rots. And scale and rubber debris can build up around the valve seat so that the stopper never provides a true .seal.
Poorly conceived' One would not think so. considering its^ many years of service. But Fred Schmuck says he believes so, pointing out that "it's no wonder .America is flushing away millions of dollars a year in wasted water. " His opinion is not surprising, since he IS the vice president of sales for the manufacturer of a newer type of toilet tank repair valve. Rather than the old float ball that works with mechanical leverage, the newer valve works strictly- on water pressure. The valve is either, fully open or completely rInspH cn 'that the tank fills faster with less
noise. In addition to positive shutoff. water capacity can be adjusted to a Ipwer level while still providing an adequate flush.
Water is saved with the new valve because a lower water volume is used and because the unit gives off an audible signal if there is a leak. In the old tank, the rubber stopper at the bottom bobs up and down, connected to lift wires. If a toilet is leaking, it is often because the stopper is not working properly due to corrosion, bent wires and twisted chains. The newer product is one-piece, with a stainless steel, non-corrodible seat that is hinged together. The vinyl flapper goes up and down from the same place because of the hinge action, so nothing can get out of alignment.
About 90 percent of the toilets in the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. Calif., have been retrofitted with the newer type valves. .Asked about them, the hotel's chief engineer. Paul Sowa, said they were easier to install and maintain. He said it took his men 40 minutes to repair a traditional ballcock, but only 15 minutes to make a modification of the newer valve
It would be unrealistic to suppose that people still using the old toilet tanks are.going to make changes if everything is working properly. But when trouble occurs and you have to call in a plumber, it might be wise to consider replacement of the entire unit with modern parts.
(Do-it-yourselfers will find much helpful information in Andy Lang's handbook, "Practical Home Repairs," which can be. obtained by sending $1.5 to this newspaper at Box 5. Teaneck, .\J 07666. i
said Dr. Clarence Webb, an archaeologist and one of the excavators of the famous Indian mounds near here.
He said dugouts have been made in the Southeast for 3,000 years, and one canoe datedl200 B.C. was foupd in kjorida
This one. burned and then scraped out of a bald cypress log. will be dated by carbon testing at the University of Georgia. Webb said that if it proves to be of the Caddo Indians, it will somehow be connected to the mounds in the area.
The front end is 22 inches wide and has two seats - one six inches higher than the other. The back is four inches larger, with the same arrangement of seats.
ADD SPACE AND VALUE TO YOUR HOME..-
I SUN SYSTEM
FOR FREE BROCHURE AND MORE INFORMATION
Coniact Harold Creech i Associales P 0. Box 1563. Greenxille. N.C 2735 Telephone (919) 752-4348
Dealer Inquiries Invited
SUN SYSTEM
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magazine on how to buy and cut the glass and how to fit it into the openings. I also was very careful about how I inserted the glaziers points into the fr^me and how I used a glazing compound. Everything seemed great and I was congratulating myself about doing a good job when, lo and behold, first one pane cracked and then the other. Neither had been hit or otherwise damaged What caused the cracking and how can I avoid this happening again when 1 redo the windows?
A. - It seems quite likely that the glass was too tight inside the frame. Did you allow about an eighth of an inch for expansion' When you cut the glass, it should be a bit less than the dimensions ,of the opening - just enough so that it pill lit into the frame loosely, but not so loose that it won't stay there by itself Then, when the glass expands, as it inevitably will, there will be a little room for it to do so without cracking the glass. Follow the previous instructions on how to use the glaziers points and the glazing compound
If youre planning a garage sale, theres no better time than NOW! Theres no better day than today to make your plans. Put those no longer used Items around your home to good use. Turn them Into cash with a fast-acting, low-cost Classified Ad.
The Daily Reflector Classified Ads
CALL 752-6166
Sometimes the simplest things work the best like a simple little ad in dassitied For a simple solution to your selling problem, try classified
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IN THE GENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCK, DECEASED ' NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of the estafe of EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCK, late of Piff County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persorts having claims against the estate of EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCK to pres ent them to the undersigned Executrix, or her attorneys, on or betore March 27, 1984, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make imrtfediate payment, this 20 day of September, 1983. JEAN HODGESAYCOCK 128 Longmeadow Road Greenville, NC 27834 Executrix of the Estate of Edwin Burtis Aycock, Deceased GAYLORD, SINGLETON, McNALLY A STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law P O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 September 25, October 2, 9,1, 1983
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Madle Lee Langley lafe of Pitf County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before March 19, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.
This 14th day of September, 1983. Ronald B. Langley Rt 11, Box 158 Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutor of the estate of
Madie Lee Langley, deceased September 18, 25, October 2,9,1983
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
PROCESS BY PUBLICATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT INTHEGENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION FILE NUMBER 83CVD675 Margie.Marie Miller Plaintiff vs. ,
Abner Miiier Defendant TO: Abner Miller TAKE NOTICE THAT a pleading seeking relief has been filed against you in the above entitled action The nature of the relief being sought is as follows:
1 An absolute Divorce based on one (1) year of separation j
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than November 14, 1983, said date being forty (40) days from publication. Upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This the 29 day of September, 1983.
Gwyneft Hilburn Office of Frank M. Wooten 113 West Third Street Post Office Box 5063 Greenville, North Carolina Phone919 752 3129 October 2, 9, 16, 1983
FRANK & ERNEST
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Classified Ads 752-6166The Dally Reflector. GreenvjHe. N C
002
PERSONALS
NEW CREDIT card! Nobody ref used! Also Visa/Mastercard Call 805 687 6000Ext C 8752
STEPHANIE: Happiness is having your own gunshot with ail the guns you want Ecstasy is having you Love Walter
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 af 757 0438 or Robert at 757 0451 for further details.
FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mai' for free gift to be given away weekly No purchase necessary.
NOW OPEN M a. W's Country jCrafts and Gifts Located 'v 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 for everyone Free gift wrapping 758 4045 WE PAY CASH for 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 top dollar
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitf County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114
012
AMC
1974 GREMLIN. Power steering, air, FM, radiaals $695. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5
013
Buick
1975 BUICK REGAL. Good condi fion clean $1250 752 1705.
1975 LIMITED. Good condition All equipment $1500 746 3788
1977 BUICK LeSABRE. V8, 4 door, automatic power steering and brakes, vinyl top, stereo, tilt steer inq, white walls $2600 Call 752 6065
1980 BUICK REGAL - Blue 2 door with sunroof and Landau top Bucket seats, low mileage, loaded! Excellent condition $6500 negotia ble 756 4069
1982 BUICK REGAL Limited 13,000 miles, show room condition Call 756 6336 before 5, 355 6120 after 5 and on weekends
1982 BUICK REGAL. 4 door. AM/FM stereo, air, wire wheel covers. Call 756 2769after 7p m
Sunday. October 2.1983 D-3
021
Oldsmobile
1978 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition 756 0835 anytime.
1 978 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
1975 Ouster, 6 cylinder, good condition, new paint job, air, AM/FM stereo radio, $1200. Call anytime after 4, 752 9486
1975 PLYMOUTH FURY.
Automatic, power steering and brakes, cruise Excellent condition $995 756 5244 or 756 2892 a tter 5.
1977 GRAN FURY Brougham 4 door, automatic, air Sell or trade $1595 757 3278
1980 PLYMOUTH Volarle, 27,000 miles. Fully equipped Excellent condition $3700 Must leave the country Call after 5 pm, 756 4262
023
Pontiac
1974 GRAND PRIX, Motor excellent condition $995. 746 3788
1976 PONTIAC SUNBIRD.- Good condition. $1900 752 5679 after 6.
1977 GRAND PRIX. Yellow 2 door 1 owner. Fully loaded Good condi tion. $2500 756 0284
024
Foreign
OATSUN 240Z, 1972 Good condi tion Ice blue $2200 Call 756 0740
OATSUN 280ZX 2^-2, 1979 Blue,
59,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package Excellent condition $7700 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights
DATSUN 280Z, 1977. Real nice $4995 negotiable Call days 758 7402, night 524 5384
MAZDA GLC. 1979 Deluxe 61,000 miles, 4 speed, AM'FM radio. Very good condition. $2300. Call 756 9820 after 6pm
MGB GT, 1974. Black, 43,000 miles, AM FM, new upholstery, clean Good condition Phone 758 8662.
SAAB, 1973 New engine, tires and interior Must sell. 412 West Fourth Street, 756 4645
1 9 7 3 TOYOTA COROLLA
Stationwagon Low miles, nice 752 3436
1974 OPEL. 4 cylinder, automatic transmission Good running condi tion $450 355 2803
1974 TR6. Excellent condition. Low mileage Monza exhaust. 4 new Michelin reds, AM/FM stereo Call 746 2552
1976 HONDA ACCORD Hatchback Air, 5 speed, AM/FM stereo cassette, Michelin Radials, 56,000 miles 29,000 miles on Honda rebuilt engine. $3250 or best offer 756 9797 days, 758 2703 nights
1976 MGB, red, good condition, rebuilt engine, Weber carbs, $3,000 firm 756 4904
1979 DATSUN 280ZX 5 speed, red with black- interior New radials Must sell, best otter Call 753 5454 after 8 pm
1980 OATSUN stationwagon, on ginal owner, 46,000 miles, new tires, new brakes, luggage rack, $3895 756 3879after 6p m
1981 MAZDA 626. 4 door. 5 speed, air, AM/FM stereo with cassette tape Price negotiable Call 1 792 7990 after 6.
1982 BUICK REGAL Extra Clean! Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Ayden, 746 3141.
015
Chevrolet
CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto Sales 756 7765
MALIBU CLASSIC WAGON, 1976 Good condition $1400 firm 752 5326 anytime.
1970 CAMARO. Runs good Good condition. $750. 758 0185or 758 0547.
1972 CAMARO Good condition Call 758 3319
1973 LTl CAMARO. 3 speed from factory, 350 engine. $1295 Price negotiable, cash talks! 746 4748
1974 VEGA GT. $325 Call 757 3820
1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2+2, 5
speed, good mechanical condition $1500 758 2300 days.
1976 MALIBU 4 door Automatic Air conditioned AM FM Radials Very clean $1275. 756 8855
1976 VEGA STATIONWAGON. 4
speed, air, AM Excellent mechanical and body, 63,000 miles $1495 752 1581
1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Loaded, clean Reduced from $4250 to $3250 Call Henry, 752 4332
1977 MALIBU WAGON. Power steering and brakes, air Excellent condition $2495 Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5
1977 VEGA. 4 speed Excellent condition $595. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5
1979 CHEVROLET LUV PICK UP-
Good Condition! Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Aydn, 746 3141.
1980 CHEVETTE. 4 door, low mile age. Good condition. Price negotiable $3550 758 9119
1981 MALIBU CLASSIC. 4 door, air, AM/FM radio, power steering and brakes I 792 7428
1981 MERCEDES, 300 SD. manilla beige Fully eouipped including sunroof Immaculate condition One owner $27,500. Contact Lonnie Pierce 753 3582 office, 753 3177 home
1982 DATSUN 280 ZX Loaded with all options. T top, AM'FM stereo Priced to sell. William Handley, BB&T, 752 6889
1982 NISSAN SENTRA. 2 door $1CXX) down and assume payments of $155 a month Excellent running condition. Contact Cherri at FlO Wilson Acres.
029 Auto Parts & Service
030
Bicycles For Sale
20" GIRL'S BICYCLE. 4 years old $25. 758 5263
032
Boats For Sale
1982 CHEVROLET* CAPRICE
Extra Clean! Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Ayden, 746 3141..
1983 CHEVETTE. Automatic transmission, AM/FM stereo, air conditioning, 9,000 miles, red with black interior $6,495 Call 756 9874.
017
Dodge
1981 DODGE OMNI, excellent con dition. 25,000 miles. Call 758 5587
018
Ford
FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON.
1979 Fully loaded, new tires. Excellent condition. Low mileage $4200. Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights.
1970 FORD MAVERICK, 6 cylinder Good condition $750. 758 0185 or 758 0547.
1970 MUSTANG, rUns good. 756 0975.
1973 FORD GALAXY, 2 door sedan, air, new radial tires, good condi tion. 756 6985.
1973 LTD. Good transportation As is: $350. Phone 756 4933
1973 PINTO SQUIRE Wagon Looks good. $800 or best otter. Call 758 8767 anytime
1974 FORD CATALINA, Motor Chevy 350, 4 bolt main engine, $250 Car is $500. 757 3385, ask for Mike.
1974 PINTO Stationwagon Good condition. $695. 756 0108.
1974 T BIRD. Loaded Call 758 3319
1975 MAVERICK. Power steering and brakes, air. Excellent condi tion. $1095. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5.
1976 FORD GRANADA. Good con dition. $1700 or best offer. Call 758 8767 anytime.
1977 LTD II. 1 owner, 41,000 miles, red with white vinyl top, wire wheels, new radials. Immaculate condition. Loaded! $3200. Call 756 8664
1978 THUNDERBIRD. 1 owner, low mileage, lady, fully equipped 753 5422 days, 753 5504 after 6.
1979 LTD WAGON AM FM, power steering, power brakes, cruise, $1000 in rebuilt engine $4495 re duced to $3295, Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5,
020
Mercury
1976 MERCURY MONARCH. Good condition. $1200. 756 3243.
021
Oldsmobile
CUTLASS OLDSMOBILE, 1974 $375 or best otter. Fair condition, 753 3907 after 4
OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS.' 1974 Excellent condition. Low mileage. $1400 firm. 752-5326 anytime.
1970 OLDSMOBILE.
753 4302 or 756 6810.
$500. Call
1976 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS. Air
condition, power steering and brakes, excellent condition. $1900 negotiable. 756 8019 after 4,
1978 CUTLASS. Loaded! Excellent condition. $4495. Call 756 5244 or 756 2892 after 5
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774
036
Cycles For Sale
HONDA XL 250 on oft road $375 Call 758 7005
1971 750 HONDA tor sale Very good condition $900 negotiable. 756 9912 after 5 p.m
1979 HONDA "EXPRESS II NA50, engine runs well, $200. Call 756 3481 between 4 p.m. 9 p.m
1983 SUZUKI GS5S0E, clean, very quick. $2100 negotiable. 758 6679.
1983 V45 HONDA SABRE. Brand new. $2900. 758 0860.
039
Trucks For Sale
DODGE PICKUP TRUCK, 1966 6 cylinder, 3 speed, tool box, new fires, new inspection Excellent condition $1200 or best otter 757 3762.
FORD SUPER CAB, 1975. 752 0840
Call
JEEP CJ5, 1974 Excellent condi tion. Chrome rims, 2 tops, AM/FM. Call after 5, 752 3920
1953 WILLIS JEEP. Runs good 756 7703
1963 FORD PICKUP. 360 V8 Good condition. $600. 758 0906
1966 CHEVROLET PICKUP.
Automatic transmission, V 8. $700 Call 1 792 7990 after 6
1971 CHEVY VAN G20 Only 55,000 miles Runs great. Good tires Asking $900 negotiable. Call 355 6513 after 6 p m Monday Friday or weekends anytime.
1971 SCOUT, 4 wheel drive, tor sale Call 746 4350.
039
Trucks For Sale
1973 DODGE PICKUP. 318 engine, automatic transmission $675. 355 2803
051
Help Wanted
1976 FORD ECONOLINE 150 VAN
Asking $1495 1-827 5760
197 CHEVROLET BONANZA 10
pickup truck, air conditioned, AM/FM radio Blue and gray Low mileage Excellent condition Can be seen or call from 10 a m to 130 p m or from 4 p m to 10 p m 753 5229
1979 GMC STARCRAFT Van
Custom interior, 4 captain chairs, AM/FM cassette, power steering, cruise control Excellent condition Call 355 6080
ENTRY LEVEL SUPERVISOR
title Local company has an opening for an Entry Level Supervisor Industrial background helpful, but not necessary Send resume to Supervisor, PO Box 1 967, Greenville, NC 27834.
1979 MAZDA 62000 pickup with camper $3500 Call 758 7883 after 5.
1980 CHEROKEE CHIEF Jeep Loaded Excellent condition 746 2489
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY -
Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales repre sentafive Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition, and show progress for age Business or sales background helpful In requesting a personal interview, please submit resume stating personal history, education, and business experience Write PO Box 406, Greenville, NC 27835
1983 JEEP WAGONEER Ltd , dark blue, dark tan interior Loaded completely less sun roof 5800 miles, brand new 752 7950
5 1979 FORD TRUCK rims and Uni Royal radials and mag type hub caps Less than 15,0(X) miles $150 or best offer 757 3762
EXCELLENT EARNING
opportunity for local insurance agent Starting salary up to $300 a week Full fringe benefit package Send resume to Opportunity, PO :, NC 27834
Box 509, Greenville,
040
Child Care
CHRISTIAN MOTHER wants to keep companion for 2 year old daughter 3 miles from Greenville, just off Stantonsburg Road Ideal for Farmville to Greenville com muters 758 6807
Executive director. Group
home for autistic adults Pitt County MA (preferred)in Educa tion Psych., social work, or related field XMusf quality as QMRP) Salary competitive Write: Paul Dowell, Apartment 30 B, Stratford Arms, Greenville, NC 27834
EXPERIENCED SHEET ROCK
finishers. 4 years or more experi ence Call 756 0053
PART TIME Daoysirter needed in my home for 2 year old and new born Mature individual with prior work experience and references desired Respond tq# Babysitter PO Box 527, Greenville, NC 27834
WEEKLY CHILD CARE for
anytime Located in Contentnea Trailer Park, Farmville. Call 753 2404
WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home Ages infant to 2 years old Stantonsburg Road 758 4282
WOULD LIKE to keep children In my home Flexible hours Have experience Grimes land and Washington area Call 758 1290
WOULD LIKE SOMEONE to come in home to babysit infant Refer enees required Pay negotiable Starting November 1 756 9656
Thinking of selling that motorcycle? Now's the time to do it! Call Classfied today 752 6166
FASHION FORWARD. Junior de partmental manager Needs to be energetic and creative Can I motivate peers and take charge in I developing junior department.
I Great chance tor advancement in I fashion retail Apply Brody's, Pitt Plaza, Monday Friday 2 5, see Mrs ! Kinley
! FISHERMEN
(MALE AND FEMALE)
TOP LEVEL POSITIONS now
available with national expanding fishing magazine 10 years oT expe rience has taken our company into 21 states from Florida to Minnesota Excellent opportunity to work at your hobby in advertising sales Outside sales and management experience necessary Call 305 423 2012 during business hours
046
PETS
1982 VOLKSWAGEN Rabbit Diesel. 27,000 miles, 4 speed, air, AM/FM cassette, super gas mileage 756 2684
AKC PEKINGESE. Shots, .pedi q^ree, 6 month males, $75. 1 795 4901, Robersonville
AKC REGISTERED male boxer, 9 months old Very good health $125 Call 752 8510
AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel puppies, 2 males and 2 females Call after 3 30 p m 758 6633.
AKC REGISTEREDCocker Spaniel puppies. 1 black, 1 blonde 756 8 260 after 5pm
AKC REGISTERED Brittany pups Excellent stock 758 2874
Need part time work from now until the holdays You'll find a position m Ciassitied
FOOD manager TRAINEE.
Outstanding opportunity for ag gressive individuals Should be able to relocate Expected earnings after training, $25K $48K. Cal Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling.
FRAMING CARPENTERS
Minimum 4 5 years experience. Call 756 8700
AKC REGISTERED Lab puppies Wormed, all'shots $100 753 3692 or 753 3958
FULL TIME Blackjack dealers for casinos in Las Vegas. Will train. $40,0(X)- Trial trip possible All expenses paid Cali Bunny at 312 920 9725
FULL TIME TELLER needed with at least 2 to 3 years experience Opportunity employment Contact Juanice Scott, 752 6889
RULL TIME SALES PERSON
needed tor retail firm Call Gloria al'Heritage Personnel, 355 2020
AKC REGISTERED solid black male German Shepherd, 2 years old, $200 752 6733 after 6 p.m
FEMALE DOBERMAN
746 2370
FOR SALE: Registered Golden Retriever, 9 months old to good home Phone 756 8768
GOLDEN RETRIEVER puppies jWKC) Ready in 4 weeks Wormed and shots, $125 753 3081
SIAMESE KITTENS, beautiful lilac female. $40 1 827 4594
2 BEAGLES, for sale Together only Gall after 7pm, 752 3063
051
Help Wanted
ACCOUNTANT. College degree required Experience not neces sary Should have had a 3.2 grade point average Call Ted! 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling
HOUSEKEEPING SUPERVISOR.
Evening shift, full time. Beaufort County Hospital is in need of an experienced individual with supervisory capabilities Good benefits Please apply to Employment Security Commission, 112 West 3rd Street, Washington, NC 27889
INSURANCE Marketing Company looking for opportunity minded in dividual to represent our company in this area We offer top quality products, top commissions, advance system as well as draw. Field and classroom training, un limited growth potential Call Ex ecutive (.orporation, 919 291 8249 for a personal interview, an explana tion of a fantastic opportunity or write Box 2647, Wilson, NC 27893
1983 DATSUN 280ZX, 2+2, T roof, loaded, 4,200 miles $14,850 Call 758 0041 after 4
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, )09 Trade Street, 756 3228
14' FIBERGLASS tri hull with IB horsepower electric start Evinrude Rebuilt trailer with nevy tires, bearings and wheels Boat! motor, and trailer, $800 firm 756 9615.
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.
1976 DIXIE with 1980 90 horsepower Mercury Stainless prop, low hours, no salt, electric motor, galvanized trailer 756 3977 after 6
21' COBIA with cuddy cabin 135 Evinrude with power tilt and long tandem galvanized trailer 55 channel VHP, compass, depth find er, and porta potti. Other extras available Boat motor and trailer in great shape! Moving, must sell! 756 9615.
23' O'DAY, 1979, 6 Evinrude, main, genoa, 2 jibs, all extras Fresh wafer use only Immaculate. $11,500 946 7412.
JAYCO POPUPS Seahawk and Cobra truck covers Camptown
RV's, Ayden, NC. 746 3530.
1974 TRAIL BLAZER CAMPER.
21', air, $2395 Can be seen at 1206 Mumford Road After 6, 752 5217.
1976 XPLORER motor home. Dodge 360 engine, self contained, sleeps 7, cab, air, stereo, 42,000 miles. $8600 756 4987
1980 HONDA CM 200T. Excellent condition. 800 actual miles $900. Call 758 0906.
1981 HONDA 200. 2,900 miles. Housed and well kept Selling due to illness. $700.758 1718 after 5 p.m.
ACCOUNTING MANAGER for CBS
affiliate TV station in Greenville, NC 4 year accounting degree and a minimum of 2 years accounting experience required. Prior broad cast and or Columbine Computer experince considered a plus Areas ot responsibility will include gener al ledger, accounts receivable and payable, payroll, financial state ment preparation, budgeting, credit and collections, special projects as well as supervison of accounting personnel No phone calls Please send resume with salary history to the General Manger, WNCT TV, Box 898, Greenville, NC 27834 EOE M F
ADVANCEMENT potential excellent tor expereinced sales person Salary plus commission Call Gloria al Heritage Personnel, 355 2020
ASSISTANT MANAGER. Mature person with retail experience needed Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelhng ASSISTANT HOUSEKEEPER and Laundry Supervisor Must have management atiility Work weekdays and weekends Apply Heritage Inn Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday from 10 3. BOOKKEEPER AND office man ager for small firm Good book keeping, typing and telephone skills essential. File maintenance skill also necessary Experience pre terred. Send resume and references to PO Box 3018, Greenville, NC 27834, Contact for interview will be made after 5pm
BRODY'S has an opening for full time salesperson in children's de partment Mature, outgoing Expe rience required Apply Brody's Pitt Plaza, Monday Thursday, 2 to 5, Mrs Kinley
CAN YOU SELL? Are you worth more than what you are presently making? We are seeking an experi enced sales person who is money motivated! Our products, speciality chemicals, janitorial supplies, and equipment create high repeat sales. If you would like to explore the possibility of determining the amount of your own earnings, send your resume in Confidence to Sales, PO Box 3756, Greenville, NC 27834
CASHIERS NEEDED. For full and part time positions Apply in person to The Dodge Store, South Memori al Drive
CLAIM ADJUSTER. 4 year degree requiredwith insurance experience in supervision or claims area. Extensive training program. All ma|or benefits $15K $16K Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling
CLERICAL. Challenging position with local company needs person who enjoys various responsibilities Must be accurate typist Speed of 50 55 wpm Good pay and excellent benefits For confidential con sideration send resume to Clerical, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834.
INTERESTING POSITION for ex
perienced real estate salesperson. Can lead to a management positon Commercial experience desired, but will train qualified applicant Call Gloria af Heritage Personnel,
' 355 2020
' INTERIOR DESIGNER.
1 Experience preferred. Call 355 2250
j LAND SORVEY/Field Personnel 1 needed in Washington area Expe ' rience helpibl Send resume to PO j Box 1804. Washington, NC 27889
LICENSED HAIR DRESSER
wanted Apply after 4 at George's I Coiffeurs, Pitt Plaza,
i MANAGER TRAINEE - Move up j the ladder of success with an established Company. If you're I looking for a career, and not just a job, this could be tor you!! Super ' benefits Call Judy, 355 2020 ; Heritage Personnel
i MANAGER TRAINEE.
Outstanding opportunities ottered in the fantastic world ot retail clothing and shoe management Don't miss out on these opportunities. Call Ted,
: 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling,
MATURE FINE Christian, depen : dable lady to sleep in with elderly I lady tor $37 week (all 758 4011.
' MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have fools Excellent company benefits i 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
MEDICAL SECRETARY
Pitt County Memorial Hospital has an immediate opening for a medical secretary Must be a high school graduate with a minimum ot 1 years experience in a medical office Prefer experience in surgical pathology transcription. PCMH of fers a competitive salary and ! excellent fringe benefits. For con ! sideration, send resume or apply at:
employment OFFICE Pitt County Memorial Hospital P O Box 6028 Greenville, N.C 27834 919 757 4556 EOE
I MULTI OFFICE facility needs building superintendent with tenitorial and handyman skills Some day hours, some night hours Retired individual acceptable. Send ; resume and references to: Superin tendent, PO Box 1967, Greenville,
, NC 27834
I NATIONAL COMPANY expanding : into Eastern NC needs mature and I family oriented management peo pie Individuals selected must be j able to accept training and assume i major responsibilities Send replies I to PO Box 4007, Greenville, NC.
I NATIONAL COMPANY opening new offices in Eastern NC. we need sales representatives, field manag ers, office managers, and service personnel Must have a car. For interview call 756 8352,
CLINICALCHEAAISTRY
SUPERVISOR
needed for the progressive, growing clinical laboratory of our Med School An excellent op^portunity for s'omeone with a BSMT degree and supervisory experience in clinical chemistry MT(ASCP) or the equivalent preferred Join the pro lessional staff of a rapidly growing medical school with a competitive salary and fringe benefits package Submit detailed resume to Personnel Dept., East Carolina University, Greenville N. C 27834. 919 757 6352. An Equal Opportuni ty/Aftirmative Action Employer.
CDMPANY PROVIDES all leads, for this sales representative posi tion Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020
COORDINATOR. Person interested in school food service and teaching to assist in 9 month training project. MS preferred. Some in state travel required. Starting date October 15. Apply to Dr. Kathy Kolasa. School of Home Economics, East Carolina University, 757 6917
DECORATOR OR DESIGNER.
Degree or experience preferred Interviews by appointment only 757 1441
1972 CHEVY VAN 10. 1976 6 cylinder new motor. Straight stick, new clutch. $1800 negotiable. Can be seen at 407 Perkins Street. 756 5482
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
HOKE COUNTY EMERGENCY
Medical Service Positions Availa ble EMT Starting salary $11,500, EMT 1 Starting salary $12,750. Applications and information may be obtained al 227 North Main St., Raetord, N.C, 28376 (919) 875 8751 (Ms Olefa Lopez). Closing date tor receiving applications: 12 Noon,
Tuesday, October ii, 1983
NEED EPXERIENCED Aluminum and yinyl siding mechanics. Must have own equipment and ready to start immediately! Top pay. Full time work 756 8555 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. only.
NEEDED SHEET METAL worker^ for installation ot duct work. Will take experienced and non experienced applicants between 8 and 9 a.m. at Larmar Mechanical Contractors, 756 4624
NEEDED: FULL TIME and part time help to sell Avon in Cannon Court, Cherry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas Earn extra money tor Christmas Please call 758 3159
PART TIME police officer. NC certified Weekends, daytime work Contact Chief of Police, Town ot Fountain, 749 2881
PART TIME help needed Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10 until 2 Apply in person Leather & Wood, Carolina East Mall No phone calls please.
PART TIME Phone Solicitors Start now ! Good compensation plan 756 8555 from 9 until 11 a m. only
PLUG BUILDER. Needed immed ately, must be familiar with con struction of wooden plugs tor fiberglass molds. Must have pre cisin woodworking ability. (Jnly experienced need apply Call Grady White Boats, 752 2111, extension 252 between 9a m 4 p.m
REED'S JEWELERS is now hiring Christmas help Full and part time positions available. Jewelry experi ence preferred Apply in person No phone calls please.
RN, LPN positions available. Full
PART TIME POSITIONS ALSO AVAILABLE.
An Equal Opportunity Employer Snow Hill, 747 2868
time and part time, 7 to 3 and 3 to 11, shifts. 75 bed ICF Oak Manor, Inc.,*
Q-4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Sunday. October 2.1983
A
051
Help Wanted
044
Fuel, Wood, Coal
RN Rehabilitation tirm seeks KN AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for on a part time basis Experienced | sale J P Stancil, 7S2 6331 in comprehensive medical assessment coordination ot treatment resources and innovative rehabilifa,tion planning tor the Eastern NC area Send resume to RN. PO Box 1967, Greenville NC 27834
Miscellaneous
COfMPLfclE SET of World Book Encyclop^ia and.Child Graft with bOOVc.75 Phone 756 1075.
COMPLETE LtNE of woodstoves ^ ^ ,
chimney pipe and accessories af | COMPUTER TABLES in sfock at
Tar Road Antiques, Winterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007
RN'S, LPN'S Are you interested in giving real patient care to those who are in need If yes. then we can offer you an excellent salary scale and employee benefit package Contact Director of Nursing 792 1616 Monday thru Friday 9to3 RfTs AND TpNs Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact Barbara McDonald RN Director of Nursing, 943 2111
ROUTE SALES. Excellent opportu ! nity tor individual that en|Oys tun m the sun Relocate to Myrtle Beach, ' SC Experience desired Call Tect i 758 0541 Snelling & Snelling
FIREWOOD: Mixed hard wood $35 a load Deliver anywhere in Greenville area Call 757 1772 after 6pm
OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready to go Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5pm
SEARS woodburning heater $10(/ negotiable Call 746 4140 weekends
only
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD $45
a truck load delivered $40 it you pick up 758 3797 or 752 5488
SY0^NED0AK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buyi- 758 5590 or 752 1359
Cargo Furniture 10 Greenville Square Solid wood table, size 28" wide by 24" deep by 27" high Top shelf is removable fo accomodate both detached and single unit models Priced at only $98. Call 355 6050 today!
065
Farm Equipment
r ELECTRK TYPEWRITER, $75. i Ladder rack, $35 Call after 6, 756 1209
; ELECTROLUX VACUUM cleaner, ' 1981 Olympia I all attachments. I Excellentcondition $350 756 9034.
FOR SALE: 2 sofas, $15 each; 1 i small mefal desk, $10. Call 752 4823 I after 6pm
FOR YOUR WIRING Needs old, new residential or commercial. Call tor estimate Tyson Electric & Appliance, Winterville 756 2929
SALES OPPORTUNITY attention hog farmers
FOUR 13
752 3770.
rims with used tires
074
Miscellaneous
-MEW 5000 BTU Air Conditioners Pick up in box, $220. Tyson Electric & Appliance, Winterville. 756-2929.
CLEARANCE SALE
Mowers. Goodyear West End Shopping Dickinson Avenue.
on Snapper Tire Center, Center And
OAK POST office, set bentwood chains, $70. Square odk dining table, $165. 3 oak washstands, $65-$ll5. Lots of glassware. Cable & Craft, 818 Dickinson Avenue.
PA SYSTEM for sale with nttics and stands $500 negotiable. Call 746 2236 after 5.
QUEEN SIZE sle^r sofa, tan tweed, 2 years old Originally $500, will sell for $250. 756 9136.
REPOSSESSIONS. Vacuums and shampooers. Call Dealer. 756 6711.
Salesperson needed Auto sales ex perience preferred Excellent company benefits Call <
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY GMC
756 4267 -
For Appointment
SALES Pait time Management type to $1250 per month Work with local businesses merchandising top record albums and tapes Cah. today ,U) 662 0381 GLOBAL RE CORDS INC
^LES R'PRES'TTIV 'mT
|0r national company has an open ing for a Sales Associate in the Greenville area Pnor sales experi ence not as important as ability and v.llinqness to learn Salary neqotiable Excellent benefit package For a confidential in terview send resume to Manager PO Box .,985 Greenville NC 27835 Fqual Opportunity Employer
SALES RP needed to call on
grocery and retail t.rm Must
possess some grocery store experi ence Call Gloria at Heritage^ Personnel 355 2020
SECRETA~RY CLE~RK is needed by I a Greenville retail store Duties' would consist ot typing maintain aig various files lOurnal posting answering switchboard and other related duties Hours will be 8 5
Monday thru Friday plus every
third Saturday 8 12 Paid vacation hospitalization, ' hte insurnce are included It interested please write Secretary PO Box 33 5-3 Greenville NC 27834 .
Heat lamps and shades for these i FURNITURE STRIPPING and re
finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center 756 9123.
GE REFRIGERATOR. Frost free, ice maker, large. Works perfect. $125 752 8976
I cool nights' Lamps $16 95 per case j ofl2 (10 or more casesi Shades 8 I cord, 6 per case $34 95 per case 6 I cord 12 per case $55 95 per case I" Agri Supply Greenville NC 752 3999
I ATTENTION PEANUT FARMERS
Points to tit Long Lilliston, KMC and Paulk $29 95 per pair We carry peanut teeth to tit Long and L,:ii5fon Harvester We also have vine cutters Agri Supply.
Greenville NC 752 3999
COTTON PICKER PARTS Dofters to lit International or John Deere $4 vv each John Deere puiy
urethane Dofters $9 49 Interna______
tional or John Deere Spindles $2 49 | JUNIOR SIZE pcx)l table Excellent
tor 100 or more Moistener pads I condition Standard size sticks $60
International SI 09 John Deere j Call 758 0906,
$1 19 Spindle grease $18 95 35 pound
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Stripping, Repairing & Refinishing (Formerly of East Carolina Voca lional Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway 752 3509
; JEANETTE fEMbT 5 beauty Shop Open new hours Thursday I and Friday 9 to 6; Saturday 9 to 2 I Located on Falkland Highway 43N I Phone 758 8086 for appointment
can Spindle oil $186 49 55 gallon drum Agri Supply Greenville. NC 752 3999
GET READY TO CUT Firewood with Agri Supply We carry a large selection ot saw chains starting at $8 49 Bar oil $3 49 per gallon, 2 cycle engine oil 79c tor 8 ounce can We also carry axes, wedges spht ting mauls , hand'es and wood splitters Agri Supply Greenville NC 752 3.999
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil lot clearing, backhoe also available 756 4742 after 6 p m., Jim
Hudson
LOG SPLITTERS, lawn and garden equipment Sales and Rentals. Call 756 0090 anytime .
066
FURNITURE
SOCIAL WORKER 150 bed acute care hospital is seeking a highly .. moljvated-.individual. with BSW minimum and-experience ifr-tieauti. related field, especially! cris'is' m terveplion short term counseling desired Will worx with elderly ecu ICU discharge planning eh It interested please send resume to Miss Fray 'Inomas Personnel Manager Beaufor* County Hospi tal Washington NC 27889
STAFF PSYCHOLOGIST Level II Master s or Doctorate in Chnical Psychology Position involves group psyctio therapy .identityinq pro blem behavioi and designing im piemen ting and monitorinq betiavior management programs tor a psychoeducational vocational program with 8 emotionally dis turbed adolescents Experience required Send resume to Cheryl" Barnes M ED Director ot Day Treatment Pitt County Mental Health Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Center. 306 Stan tonsburg Road Greenville NC 27834'
'TEACHEP: Master s Degree m
"Vocational Education Posit-on m volves developing and implement inq a psychoeducal'onal vocational program for 8 emolionai'y dis turned adolescents Experience required Must nave G Teaching Certificate Send resume *o Chery' Barnes M ED Director ot Day Treatment Pitt County - Mental-Health Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Center 306 Stan tonsburg Road Greenville NC 27834
T E"L ETO M M nH CAT I O N S
Fngineei- w-m experience m 2 way radio, microwave and FCC regula t'Oiis Immediate opening Similar . positions also ava-lable part time and 3 months contract basis Send . resume and salary requirements to Lawrence Behr Associates PO Box 8026 Greenville NC 27834
BEDDING&WATERBEDS
LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest pnces Bedding sets. $69 Waterbeds $'49 Factory Mat tress (i Waterbeds next to Pitt , Plaza 355 2626
HERE'S ALL YOU have to do Call the classified department with your ad tor a still good item and you II make some extra cashi Call 7.5^6166 .
DrE5SR''!WITH MIRROP, $4U
d trame $5 Twm matt'rs $10
LOST OR GAINED WEIGHT???
Are you in need ot an inexpensive wardrobe until you reach your qoaP Transition Wardrobes has beautiful previously owned large size women's clothing af reasonable prices Clothing accepted on con signment purchased, and sold in sizes 14 and up 355 2508 after 1 p.m
MAGIC CHEF CHOPPER block
portable dishwasher- $65 00 Call
752 9574
MARY KAY cosmetics Phone 756 3659 to reach your consultant for a facial or reorders MURRAY riding lawnmower, 8 horsepower, *30" cut, electric starter, used less than 10 hours, $800 756 3745 after 5
; PICK UP A little extra money by selling used items in the classified
Toy chest'55 Car seat" s'f5''PoVt2t ' .5fi'!0" this newspaper Call .b $25 Wood stove grate $5 Big 'jx9'66 ^
aoden barrel. $15 Boston Rocker. $30 Standing shelves $40 Tennis racket with frame $15 Call 758 0727 after 4 p m
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CASH NOW
FOR
Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voillns, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques, anything Of vallue.
COIN&RINGAAAN
On The Corner
SCANNERS New and used Bearcat and Regency Alt kinds Lowest prices. 756 0270
SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company
SHARP^SONY a GE closeout sale now at Gouuyear Tire Ceter, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue Prices start at $69 88
SOFA FOR SALE. Browns and beiges, excellent condition $200. 756 0623 after 5
THREE piece bedrcxim suite. $200. lawn furniture cast iron, $50, formal dining table with 6 chairs, $200, children's swing set, $75, firescreen and tool set. $25, bar stools 3, $20, etagere with 6 shelves, $100, sewing chair, $20. rabbit cage and 3 grown rabbits. $20. black poodle, 3 months old, AKC, $85 756 0120
TSR-80 COLOk COMPUTER. I6K Extended Basic plus data set. 2 joy sticks and $75 worth of software $250 or best offer. Contact Steve at 752 6949 after 12 a.m.
TWO 10 SPEEDS. $40 each and one 20" bicycle, $25. Call 752 8510.
UPRIGHT PIANO, Boltwood
355 2053
Call
VACUUM CLEANER repair and service Bags and belts tor ail machines New, used, and rebuilt vacuums lor sale Red Oak Plaza. 756 8352
WASHER - Heavy duty Very good condition $125. 746 2072.
GLASS fireplace screen, wide, 32'high $45. 756 1530.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
072
Livestock
ENTIRE STABLE for lease 7 stajis and tack room 20 acres pasture Automatic water tank $250 per month Call 756 9315 or 756 5097
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarmdn Stables 752 5237
LEATHER REPAIR '
, North Hills Saddlery 746 2134
WESYeRN B^RIDLE and saddle in good condition $85 or best otter Call 746 3042
074
Miscellaneous
ADMIRAL PORTABLE color TV, good condition $145 GE upright freezer good condition $135 Kelvmator clothes dryer good condition $125 Magic Chet electric stove $100 746 6929 after 4
T I O N E R S
reezers. ranges.
AIR C O N D
re'r.qerators washers and dryers are reduced tor quick sale Rebuilt like new Call B-J Mills 746 2446 at Black Jac k
IMMEDIATE OPENING
Dynamic TV & Miorowave Wholesale Distributor has immediate opening due to tremendous growth. Sell major brands, company car, expenses, draw versus commission and great earning potential. Working 22 counties with limited overnight travel.
Do not apply unless you are aggressive, have knowledge of TV-Miorowave oven business, willing to work long hours, can relate to people, and have burning desire to make money and be a top notch professional. Send
resume to: i
P. 0. Box 240435 Charlotte, NC 28224
WANTED ADMISSION Counselor Recruiter SGA Advisor Prefer m dividua' With a masters degree m guidance and counseling or student development Prior experience m recruiting student government functions, guidance and counseling and student career developmen* 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 Pe'sonnei Dept , Pitt Community College P O Drawer 700 7 Greenville NC 27834 Phone 756' 3'30 Ext 289 An AA EO Employer
WANTED: Experienced Dozer (Dp erator Contact Ted Guilford Dickerson Utility Inc 919 757 0263 night 9'9 946 3622 EOE M F
ALEXANDERS, Ettanbees others Highway 96 i. miles North Zebulon located at Bobbitt s Bakery Wednesday Saturday 9 6 1 269 8140 01 1 365 5335
BASS A^MPLIFIER Ampeq~B~^ 'r 15 D I40f bass speakers Dolly covers Good condition $400 752
0387 after 7pm
BROWN/BEIGE Herculon sofa and chair $275 Herculon recliner $95 All three. $350 Like new Call 756 9964
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale 4 models Delivery setup 919 763 9734
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for srriall loads ot sand, topsoil and Slone Also driveway work
CASH
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.
WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open mg for an experienced Real Estate Broker For more Information or an appointment call Rod Tugwe.ll at Century 21 Tipton 8. Associates. 756 6810
WEEKEb'PLAf SupeTvTsor Local manufacturer of rubber products has immediate opening for a weekend plant supervsor Re sporisibilifies will include some supervision ot production workers performing' certain |Obs to help alleviate operational bottle necks and plant security Applicants should apply at GFH Corporation. Kingold Boulevard Snow Hill, NC 28580 We Are An Equal Opportuni ty Employer
WORkING~GUYS & GALIT Are you
really happy with your lOb' Do you enioy going to work everyday Are you earning the money you're worth If you have answered no to any of the questions, I would like to help you (Lontidentially ot course Please cll Judy,355 2020 Heritage Personnel
.From the oldest most reliable buyer ot gold, silver and any items ot value
COIN&RINGMAN
On The Corner CLASSIFIED biSPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
75Z 6116
SALESPERSON
WANTED
To learn automobile business. We will train. Must be neat and ready to work. Must have references. Others need not call. For appointment only call Cliff Frelke at
756-5861
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE
Lirensed and fully insured Trim ming cutting and remoyal Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331
B f H AND KITCHEN repairs' Counter tops, plumbing and carpentry State License 746 2657 or 752 .i064
BRICK OR BLOCK WORK Addi tions or repairs II years exper ence Call 825 6591 after 7pm
CONSTRUCTION New and addi tipns Call Dillon Watson at 756 8232
after 6pm
DOmIstTc V^Iik'wanted. Call
756 2940
XPERIENGEO TiOUSE Painter Reasonable rates Call 746 6555
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Greenvilie Utilities Commission
PLANT ELECTRICAL TECHNICIAN
Salary Range $12,002 - $19,594
Position available for person who has a working knowledge of AC/DC motors, control systems, instrumentation. and telemetry systems. A working knowledge of the National Electric Code is required. Previous experience is desirable.
^Apply at the Personnel Office. Greenville Utilities Commission, 200 W. Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27835.
"An Equal Opportunity Employer"
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices All size yards Call.752 5583
^vTTTD" BUSVThOG work Lots and fields 752 6522 after 5
PAINTING Interior and exterior Free estimates References, work guaranteed 13 years experience 756 6873 alter 6 p m
PAINTING
At reasonable prices, free estimates, no |0b too small Call anytime, 756 4967 or 758 0966
PICKUP FOR HIRE. Will anything Yard work , done 757 3847
haul
Call
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering Gold and silver leaf lettering Call Rudi Hamvai 746 6156 WOULD LIKE TO take ca7e~i elderly person from 8 to 4 Have experience! Phone 758 7453 WOULD LIKE to care of person ih the home Have experience with working with skilled nursing pa lients Also have reference Work by the hour or live In Salary negotiable Anywhere in Eastern NC Call 756 0877 ask for Pam, or leave a message
060
FOR SALE
062
Auctions
FARM MACHINERY AUCTION
Sale Tuesday, October 4th at 10 a m 150 tractors, 300 implements We buy and sell used equipment dailyi Wayne Implement Auction Corporation, PO Box 233, Highway 117 South. Goldsboro, NC 27530 NC 4188 Phone 734 4234
BOB BARBOUR, INC.
Due to our growth and expansion, we arc npw taking applications for the following positions:
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 manage^ ment experience, preferably with Honda cars. Need self-motivating person that can help stimulate .growth.
Assistant Service Manager / Honda / Needs technical skills, preferably with Honda cars. Management and warranty experience will be helpful.
Pre-Submit resume with salary requirements to:
Bob Barbour, Inc.
3300 S. Memorial Drive ^ Greenville, N.C. 27834
T
074
Miscellaneous
14' FREEZER. 1 couch with mat ching chair. 21" color tv. 2 frost free refrigerators. 753-5158.
2 KEROSENE HEATERS, 10.000 and 7.000 BTU. $175 both 19" portable black and white tv, $25 756 5713
2 STEEL TOOL boxes for 8' Pickup Truck side mounts. 756 0994 after 6 p.m.
bed
Call
3 STANDING woodstove 756 7089
4 STEEL BELTED tires on Custom Toyota rims. $150 negotiable. 756 2404.
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
12 X M WALKER mobile home Central air, good condition. Asking $5,600 Call 746 6790 before 6. 756 2156 after 6
12.>5% FINANCING on selected homes. Call Conner Homes, 756 0333.
12X60, 1977, Conner, 2 bedrooms, I'-j baths. Partially furnished. 756 2626
9,100 BTU Kerosene heater, never been used, $100 or best offer 756j9933, ask for Elmer anytime.
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
DOUBLEWIDE, 24x60, large family room with woodstove, central air, microwave, underpinning and lots of extras. Excellent condition. $19,900. Owner/financing available. Call 752 7860after 5:30.
MOVING, MUST SELL! 12x65, 1979 Brigader 2 bedrooms, central heat and air, partially furnished Located af Branches Estates. 758 4491 or 355-6683 after 5 p.m.
NO MONEY DOWN.
Two day delivery. Homes, 756 0333
VA financing. Call Conner
NO MONEY DOWN
VA 100% Financing
New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms. I bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, appliances, total electric Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 ner mnnth
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191
OWN YOUR OWN land and want to buy a home? We can normally arrange that with no down pay ment! Want fo buy land and a home together? We can do that too! Call Tri County Homes, 756 0131 for details today!
SMH LISTING SERVICE will list your mobile home, advertise it, sell it, and finance the transaction all at a LOW COST to you See George King, SMH Listing Service, Hiway 11 Ayden, 746 2078.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
12x65 1976 OAKWOOD mobile home Set up on private lot. Price negotiable 757 3179, serious inqui riesonly
1969 12x70 Marlette, 2 bedroom with expanding den, underpinned, deck, excellent condition. See to appreci ate $4300 negotiable. 756 8863.
1971 12x60 MONARCH. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, refrigerator, stove, air, and deck. Good conditjon $5500 758 0646.
1972 12X52 HATTERAS; excellent condition, fully furnished $4500 negotiable. Call 752 7233
1972 12x65 2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, washer/dryer, air, furnished. And lot with 10x12 wood storage shed Will sell seperately. Call 756 0975
WeLove America Special NO MONEY DO^N!
SINGLE WIDE .68,495
DOUBLE WIDE..,$I7,995
(Loaded)
Anything of Value In Trade Boats. Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In lows
OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
10 X 60 DESK
M79
Corner of Pitt & Green St.
WANTED
PART TIME HELP FOR
TELEPHONE SOLICITATION
Sun.-Thurs 6-10pm HOURLY WAGES PLUS BONUS
CALL FOR WEW V APPOINTMENT. #9#*12||V
AUTOMOBILE SALESPERSON
Experience helpful but not necessary. Excellent earnings opportunity. Apply in person only 9-10 A.M. and 3-4 P.M., Monday-Friday. See Van Slocks or Charlie Goodman.
Joe Cullipher
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge-Peugeot
Hwy. 11 & 264 By-pass Greenville, N.C.
STAFF DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR
Requires current license as Registered Nurse In North Carolina. BS is desirable. Must be able to provide orientation for all employees. Coordinate and implement in-service programs and maintain related documentation. Competitive benefits and salary. Call Alawoise Flanagen, 753-5547, 8:30 - 5:00 p.m., Monday -Friday.
Guardian Care Of Farmville
A Hillhaven Facility Rt. 1 Box 96, Farmville, N.C.
REGISTERED NURSE
Full time positions available in labor and delivery at Lenoir Memorial Hospital. Must be registered in the State of North Carolina. Highly competitive salary, excellent benefits package. Contact:
Robert Brown, Asst. Personnel Manager LENOIR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 100 Airport Road P.O. Drawer 1678 Kinston, NC 28501 919-522-7385 EOE M/F
SAVE ^2000 OR MORE ONAKAYPROn.
Fur 51 S'^5, K.ivpRi viui a hiMiUNk aimputur J'' 'inplftL' ak niachini'k aKinu 52AY m 5 xW nmrc Tlx- K.ivpro II amxk aimplctc with (i4K R.'\M Z'V miLTi'pnu'k'kir 'tutor Duakihk Lln\'osl-RYK capacir\ I IntL'tl.io."- tor a pntitcr atxl 'nnminicatioti" K(.'vK'arL atxl nunrurk' kovp.ij CTA1, with complete C( 'mplcmciit i it hiMtX'sk applicatu'fi'- kottwarc CYmc in ukIiv tor a o'tiiplctc Kavpri'II LicrnonNtration
llh CumpltU liiiMtU"k,4impiikr
OMPUllME me
_____(919) 355-6687
2007-B S E*ni SI . P 0 Boi 1682 OiMfOlll* NC 2763$
SALES PERSONNEL
Successful Firm Wilh A Background Of Thirty Years In The Business Systems Industry. We Represent One Of The Leading Fortune 500 Corporations And Market A Full Line Of Cost Effective Equipment And Systems. Our Growth Has Created A Need For Additional Sales Personnel. We Need Individuals To Sell The Following Systems. ,
AUDIO-VISUAL
COPYING
ACCOUNTING
The Position Has Strong Growth Potential For The Person Wilh Desire And Ability. We Offer A Competitive Compensation Package With Excellent Fringe Benefits. Comprehensive Training Will Be Provided.
REPLY TO: SALES PERSONNEL P.O. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, N.C. 27835
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY*EMPLOYER M/F
Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide rang% of available units listed in the Classified columns of fo day's paper _ _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SELL YOUR OLD car in classHied and youJI have extra money tor a new onfall 752 6166.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
QUALITY CONTROL INSPECTOR
A steel fabricator in Eastern North Carolina has an opening for a Quality Control Inspector. A high school diploma plus additional training is required. The successful candidate will have experience in metal fabricating, welding and assembly,^ working knowledge of quality control instruments and be able to read blueprints. Salary commensurate with experiene. Send resume and salary requirements to.
QUALITY CONTROL INSPECTOR
P.O. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, NC 27835 ;
TRAFFIC
TECHNICIAN
Progressive, dynamic manufacturing plant in Greenvilie
has 3 position avatlabfe for a traffic technician. *
In our fast paced environment we need someone who understands ICC regulations, DD-250 forms, bills ot lading, deregulation and its effect on traffic operations, tracing of inbound freight, and calculation of freight rates. Starting salary range. S1100 to $1300 per month.
Send resume to;
EATON CORP. Route 11, Box 287 Greenville, NC 27834
EOE M/F ,
<At Sfast
13.5% Interest on ALL NEW HOMES
NO GIMMICKS NO GAMES NO GIVEAWAYS
Our Interest Is Your Best Interest
756-0191
631)
Greenville
Blvd.
SUBARU
Redi CarsUsed Cars
1982 Mazda RX-7 GLS - 5 Speed, air conditioning, power brakes, power win-,: dows, 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. i
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 Malibu Classic 4 door. White, Cruise, power windows, 31,000; miles. '
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo White with Blue landau roof, automatic, air condi- tioning, 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. i
1980 Dodge Omni - Creme color, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steer- ing, AM/FM, 39,000 miles. I
1980 Mercurv Grand Marquis Black, 50,000 miles. Loaded! ;
1980 Plymouth Volare Green, 2 door/automatic, air conditioning, power steer--mg, 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, cru'ise control, AM/FM stereo, 44,000 miles. ;'
1976 Oldsmobile 98 - Creme color, automatic, power steering, power brakes, aii; 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! ' >
Subaru Of Greenville
605 W. Greenville Blvd. Greenvilie
Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
1976 Conner Mobile Home, call Conner AAobile Homes, 756-0333
1914 14x70 FLEETWOOD. 2
bedrooms, I'/z baths, furnished, storm windows, frost free, deluxe range, plywood floors. $12,995. Call Calavry Mobile Homes, 1 946 0929.
1979 CONNER AAobile Home. 6S'x 12*. Take over payments of $199.16 par month. Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756-0333.
1979 TAYLOR. Owner must sell' 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, new carpet, new furniture, central heat and air. This home is nice Was asking $14,500. Will sacrifice now for $11,500. Call 752 2366or 757 0451.
1984 24x56 SKY LINE. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, fireplace, patio door, pannel fan, garden tub, storm windows, stainless steel sink, masonite shinglek, $25,995. Call Calavry Mobile Hoibes, 1 946 0929.
1981 14x70 COMMODORE. 3
bedrooms, t'-z baths, total electric Already set and blocked in Evans Mobile Home Park. Call 758 6805
076 AAobile Hoil^e Insurance
MDBU^HDMEDwWer Insurance _ the bftf'^ov^age for less money. Smith InsuranCe-emd Realty, 752
1982 BRIGADIER mobile home, 14x70, 3 bedroom, I'/z bath with garden^tub. Fully furnished. Totally electric. Asking $l,000, take over payments. 752 9009.
077 ^ Musical Instruments
1*83 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068.
ARIA AC - 15 classical concert guitar and case. 4 years old, hardly touched, excellent condition. $70 or best offer 752-9773.
Sell your used television the
Classified way Call 752 6166
CLARINET, used 1 year. New condition $195 Call 758-1927.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANT TO BUY
TOBACCO POUNDS
Any Amount TOP MONEY
WORTHINGTOfi FARMS, iNC.
Day 756-3827 Nigm 756-3732
SCHLAGE LOCK
Schlage, a division of Ingersoll-Rand, is a leading manufacturer of door hardware. We are a high volume assembly plant with approximately 900 employees located in Rockv Mount, North Carplin|. We are currently recruiting for thre^rMuctic* Sup^rvjsots. ^
PRODUCTION ' ^ SUPERVISOR
We are looking for seasoned supervisors for our day shift and afternoon shift operation. 1-3 yeaVs of supervisory experience in a high volume assembly as well as a proven track record in production management, cost reduction, employee relations, safety and quality assurance is required. A degree in Industrial Engineering or Industrial Technology or Business is preferred.
A competitive salary and benefits package in our growing company awaits your talent. If you are a qualified professional, please send your resume and salary history in confidence to:
SCHLAGE
LOCK
Personnel Manager PO Box 552 Rocky Mount, NC 27801
Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
AGRICULTURE SALES OPPORTUNITY
Perdue, Inc. is one of the nations largest and fastest growing privately owned Ag businesses. A recognized leader in the Poultry industry, Perdue has experienced 17% average growth rate for the past 10 consecutive years.
Due to our expansion in eastern North Carolina, we are currently seeking a Broiler house sales representative to present our Contract Broiler growing program to interested farmers and other potential growers in a territory which includes Nash, Pitt, Edgecombe and Halifax counties.
Qualified candidates will be recent college graduates or Community College graduates with several years experience in an agriculture related field. Excellent communication*^ skills and analytical ability. Rural or farm background preferred. The candidate selected for this position must reside in or be willing to relocate within the sales territory.
To apply, send a current resume including salary history to: Terry Murphy, Perdue, Inc.; P.O. Box 428, Roberson-ville, N.C. 27871; No telephone calls please.
PJERDUr
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
MANAGEMENT
A Learning Experience at Eckerd Drugs!
Immediate Openings!
Our company expansion continues to create opportunities for career-minded men and women to advance with the nations fastest growing retail drug store chain. Our corporate success has led to expansion throughout 15 states.
Upon the successful completion of our accellerated training program you will be eligible for promotion to Assistant Manager and a good competitive salary in addition to a truly attractive benefits program. We can offer ambitious individuals excellent opportunities for income and career growth based on performance and a progressive internal promotion program.
Retail experience would be a plus.
If you have the potential to manage a high volume retail store and would like to learn more about building your career with Eckerd Drugs, apply in person on Monday, October 3rd, between 9 am-4 pm at ECKERD DRUGS, 700 Greenville Boulevard, Greenville, N.C. NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE!
dRuqcoMpANy
SuiSioi*y or JACK icotOD cob<>otion
Ecktrd In Principl tnd Prtctict.
An Eguti Opponunity Employtr
T
077 Musical Instruments
DRUMS FOR SALE. 12 piece TAMA Imperial Star. Excellent condition, hardware included. S1600 negotiable. 753 S19S.
LIKE NEW but '/2 price! Snare drum, case, stand, and 2 sets of sticks $175. 752 5528.
PA CABINET. 2 V32 cabinets Cerwinveqa. Each contains 12" speakers, 2 tweeders, 1 horn. $625. 1 795 4332.
PIANO A ORGAN DISTRIBUTORS
- presents new Kimbqll piano, bench delivery tuning, and free private lessons. Only $14.89, just $49.90 a month! Limited time offer. 329 Artington Boulevard, 355-6002.
PIANO TUNING - W. M. HUDSON.
20 years experience. 752-4682.
SUZUKI VIOLIN and case, l/8th size. $110. Call 752 4806.
078
Sporting Goods
742 REMINGTON 30-06 rifle with 3 9 Weaver scope and sling. $325 or best offer Call 758 4523.
080
INSTRUCTION
PRIVATE piano LESSONS to
begin in October for children and adults. Call 758 2897 . A
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: BLACK CAT, female Be tween Bethel and Stokes. Possibly heading toward Staton Mill Road area. Please call R7S-oi4
093
OPPORTUNITY
EXCITING .... business for sale by owners. Personal reasons. Only $4,000. 756-3161 after 6.
FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE
business tor sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758-0702.
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT
for sale or lease by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 758 5156 after 5.
INDOOR MINIATURE Golf Courses. Any store-loft barn suit able. Maximum profit-minimum investment $3,900. Financing. LOMMA, Box 955R, Scranton, PA 18503. Telephone (717) 346 5559.
LAUNDROMAT FOR SALE. Good location. Reasonable rent. Call 756 6890after 5 p.m.
LOST: MIXED BREED dog looks like Golden Retriever. Last seen 10th Street and 264 Bypass. Has collar with name. It found call 752 0390.
LOST; Tan and black male Doberman, 12 weeks, .fars recently cropped. Reward. Ridge and Hooker Road area 757 6009 or 756 6643
LOST: 2 male miniature Dachs hunds (red) old one answers to Max. Other one is a puppy. Lost around Galloway's Cross Roads. Call 355 2495 after 5 p.m.
Business Services
SOIL SAMPLING by Professional tor fertility, lime, and nematode control recommendations also fall weed mapping. Call McLawhorn Crop Services, Inc. collect nights 524 4925
WANTED Commercial building to lease as paint shop. Preferably in Greenville area. Minimum 700 square feet. Call 758-0809.
093
OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS FOR SELL! Over 3,750 square feet Metal building, 5 offices Excellent location close to downtown. Lot 158x175, plus 2 extra lots. Fir^cing ^v.ailable.jCalLJor , dqtaits!' $85,000. DSvis ReSlty *752 -aOOOii756-2904,;.nights Mary-at 756 1W7 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4lt ''
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
YOUR OWN BUSINESS
NEEDLEPOINT A little Bit of Heaven. Beautiful shop in regional mall. Needlepoint, gifts, crafts and arts. Excellent Tease. Very profitable. Asking $125,000
BEDROOM SHOP Specialities shops Very unusual Good location. Attractive. Ideal for wife or second income $15,000.
TV SERVICE 8. SALES Esiabiisned 20 years. Enjoys growing business in both service and saTes. Well located tor conve nience and visibility. A money maker and can do much better with aggressive ownership Must sell because of health. $60,000
LAUNDRYMATS Three laundry mats in Rocky Mount. Money makers $15,000 down and assume equipment and location leases
FAST FOOD Best corner in town in college community. Currently doing well, but can do better with menu changes. Modern building with drive-thru. $130,000 Possible terms (Personal endorsements not re quiredon lease.)
CARD SHOP Cards and gifts. Attractive, small shop in strip center. Excellent situation for retiree, couple or wife. Buy for $5,000.00 plus current in ventory. Selling for health reasons.
COUNTRY GRILL 8, STORE Buy or lease this fine store and grill. Well equipped On main highway tour miles from Greenville. Has been closed tor three months due to death of owner. Property also Includes fine home Good situation for the right people.
^SN0WDEtASS&^AT5!;
V - **^01 ,W. Fir$FStreet ''v -752-3575
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
QUALITY CONTROL ENGINEER
A steel fabricator in Eastern North Carolina has an immediate opening for a Quality Control Engineer. The successful candidate should possess the following minimum requirements: a BS degree, 2 years quality control experience and 1 year supervisory experience. Send resume and salary requirements to:
Q C ENGINEER
P.O. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, NC 27835
093
OPPORTUNITY
LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris 8. Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N.C. 757 0001, nights 753 4015.
PROFESSIONAL EMPLP3MENT
Service. Local tranchisf office of world's largest employm^t spr,vice looking tor owner/man^ experience necessary, fuli training provided, truly a turn ke opera tion, files, records and flrniture included. Call Roger All|n, 919 291 8249 days, 291 6254 night-
095
PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP. Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.
END OF YEAR SPECIAL on
shampooing carpets in home or trailer. Gall D 8. F Carpet Cleaning Services, 758 4437.
WHY PAY A fortune tor wedding pictures? Call 756 4048 day or night
102 Comtnercial Property
ACRE LOT in Industrial Park with water and sewer. Priced to sell. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500 nights Don Southerland 756 5260.
FOR SALE by owner. 2 buildings and land. Location: 1500 and 1.507 North Greene 752 2481 or 758 1437. Shown by appointment only.
FOR SALE: 5,000 square foot, commercial building in the downtown area Currently leases tor $1400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302
NEW RENOVATION downtown, office or retail Economical to heat and cool. A must see if you need space, Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 7741
10
Farms For Sale
WANT TO BUY 2,000 pounds of tobacco allotment in Pitt County Call 1 584 7372after6:30p m
47 ACRES - 26 cleared, 1983 allot menfs, 4,018 pour^ tobacco, 3,838 peanuts On Pa^d Road 1517, approximately 1 mile oft NC 903 Stokes area. Call 758 2734 atter 7
109
Houses For Sale
109
Houses For Sale
A SHOW PLACE. This beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home has handmade brick fireplace with 200 year old mantle CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 752 4707.
ABOUT 5 MILES from Hospital Brick Veneer Ranch with carport, 3 'beiShJpnjs, -sljdine* dooH mo-
breakfast room; decfcwi^ige :.-b^kiiai-d;'biS^h'rvs 1h deh^nly $42,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
AFFORDABLE 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, large fenced in backyard Possible FHA loan assumpiton Low $40's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 752 4707
ALMOST LIKE NEW! Assume loan. Cedar siding, wooded lot Quiet and peaceful neighborhood in the country About 1,560 square feet tastefully decorated 3 large bedrooms, country kitchen, heat pump, beautiful family room and dining area, deck. Low $60's Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
ASSISTANT.MANAGER/ MEDICAL RECORDS
Responsible for incomplete record processing and ICD-9-CM coding. Must be ART with RRA preferred. Previous supervisory experience preferred.
STATISTICAL CLERK
Responsible tor utilizing ICD-9-CM coding system tor indexing of all inpatient and outpatient medical records. Strong background in anatomy, physiology and medical terminology preferred. Coding experience necessary. Contact.
Robert Brown, Asst. Personnel Manager LENOIR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 100 Airport Road P.O. Drawer 1678 Kinston, NC 28501 919-522-7385
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
thiy payments - Any make or model. New or Used
Ayto Rentals
Daily, Weekly, Monthly Low Rates
Mid-Eastern
Brokers
#14 Pitt Plaza 756-4254
Snowden
c^ssociates
Business Brokers
752-3575
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the countjy 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and djning room, huge family room with fireplace * Heat pump Located on over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank (inane ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756 5716
BELVOIR. Best buy in this area Very nice 2 bedroom, 1 bath, large living room, den, eat in kitchen and carport. $30's. Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9)42
MAVIS BUTTS REALTY
758-0655
LOAN ASSUMPTIONS AVAILABLE
VA LOAN ASSUMPTION available on this fine home with no quali tying! Possible owner financing on equity ^Iso available. Convenient floor plan offers 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, living room with fireplace and french doors to dining room, kifch en with eating area, fenced in back yard with storage building and cozy country front porch $36,900
ASSUME THIS LOAN in Pineridge Perfect starter home ready tor immediate occupancy! Owner transferred and willing to deal may finance part of equity Otters living room, large eat in kitchen, laundry room, 3 bedrooms, I'j baths, Cz bath can be made into full has already, been plumbed), carport with storage and deep lot $45,500
THE CHARM OF A CORNPR LOT can be found here! Assume this 7^t% FHA loan with no qualifying Payments as low as $282 34 Pifl with $19,300( * ) down Features include living and dining rooms, eat in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, I'z ceramic baths, carport and fenced in back yard $47,000.
ASSUMABLE FHA 235 LOAN witty low monthly payments to qulifed buyer on this like new 3 bedroom, 2 bath contemporary rancher in choice location Features eat in kitchen, attractively lantftcaped yard with new 6' privacy fencing, and large frame storage building $54,900
EXCELL^T FHA LOAN assump tion means no qualifying for ,you! Quiet, friendly neighborhood just minutes from town. Home features 3 bedrooms, split baths, living room with dining area, work kitchen,
laundry room, garage and patio Payments could be as low as $421.74 PITI $55,000
Elaine Troiano, REALTOR jOn AalL)^,,^,/.i,, 758*346
SftSitPy MqtrisonrSKoker . 758 5468
J'ane Butts, Broker.............756 2851
Mavis Butts, REALTOR, GRI,
CRS................................752 7073
NOT ONLY CAN you sell good used items quickly in classified, but you can also get your asking price Try a classified ad today Call 752 6166
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE
2500 SQ. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
T&H
BURNER
SERVICE
All types of gas& oil equipment
SERVICE AND REPAIRS
753-3048
Nights 753-3987 or 753-4150
1965
VOLKSWAGEN
Completely rebuilt engine, rebuilt brakes, new battery, good tires Clean body, inside snd out. AM radio. Everything works good. A real classic.
$1050
752-5596
AFTER 6 PM
AUCTION
2 BIG PUBLIC AUCTIONS FRI. Oct. 7 10:00 A.M. Sale Site-l-95 South,
Exit 105 Bagley Rd. Kenly, N.C.
Farm Impl.-Industrial Equip.
Big Trucks & Trailers To Consign to Auction-Call:
(919) 284-5541 AYCOCK AUCTION
Kenly. N.C.-N.C.A.L. 2997 N.C.A.L 266
109
Houses For Sale
bethel. Be first to see this lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home situated on acre lot Large kitch en/dining room, garage and storage building 84% VA loan Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142
BRICK HOME West ot Greenville, 3'j miles on Stantonsburg Road 1600 sq ft , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, fireplace, formal dining, re duced to $58,000 758 7354
BRICK HOUSE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, kitchen, dining room, foyer, large Walk in closet, utility
109
Houses For Sale
room, 1 car oarage 1500 square feet Also separate garage consisting of 1500 square teet, on a 1z acre lot In the country, 2 miles from hospital 758 6321
BUILT AMONG the Pines Brick Veneer ranch Oirfet and peaceful neighborhood No city taxes Good school district About 1,375 square teet, 3 bedrooms, I'l baths, central heat and woodstove Call for details Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road 1900 square teet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable By appointment, R H McLawhorn, 756 2750 or 975 2688
CAME LQT You'll love the cathedral ceiling and beams, not to mention the stone fireplace in the great room Home also features formal dining room, 3 bedrixims with spacious walk in closets Great assumption below market rate Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 or Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500
Our community's best selection oi .furniture and accessories is available every day in these columns
AYDEN
MUST SELL - Spacious home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace (includes Fisher wood stove), living room, large eat-in kitchen, utility room, 2 car garage with storage room, large wooded lot Ask tor more details 2000 sq ft living area $69,000
IDEAL FOR SMALL family Large den vzilh fireplace, living room, 2 bedrooms, bath, eat in kitchen, util ity room, large carport, central air heat Beautiful location $38,0(X)
OLDER HOME, 4 bedrooms, kitch en, living room, bath on large lot $18,000
GREENVILLE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY, 2
bedrooms, living room, eat in kitchen; bath, ample storage, lot 94 I X 100 $22,000 '
i Ayden Loan & Insurance
: COMPANY, INC.
1746-3761 -746-6474
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
To Buy Or Sell A Business In Confidence
coniac* Hsrcid Crsec!?
The Marketplace, he.
2723E. 10th St. 752-3666
-ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
OF
AMBULATORY PROGRAMS-
Assist in the planning, operation and direction of the ambulatory services and program tor the East Carolina University School of Medicine.
Position requires extensive involvement in the activities of a major Outpatient Center, providing service to over 40,000 outpatients annually. In-jlividual must have MHA/MBA with 3-5 years direct or related experience. Individual must be experiervced with computer based billing systems and the reimbursement requirements of the third party payers for health care.
Current references mus be provided on request. Applications accepted until October 7.1983. Submit resume, salary history and requirements to:
Paul D. Gatens. Sr. Director of Ambulatory Program
Eiist Carolina University
SCHOOL OF MEUionsL
Outpatient Center Greenville. NC 27834
ECU
OVER 300 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
AT NCCS OCTOBER 14-15 CAREER CONFERENCE
Some 15 plus hiring companies will be conducting interviews tor various middle to entry level positions at National Career Center s next career conference interview and meet all these company representatives at one time and one place. Absolutely NO COST OR OBLIGATION to you as a job applicant. Salary range from SI8.000 to S35.000. Professional careers now available lor women and men with non-lechnical or technical Bachelor's or Master degrees in the the fields of:
BUSINESS
Sales
Finance (MBA)
Production
Manufacturing
Accounting
Marketing
Others
ENGINEERING
Mechanical
Electrical
Electronic
Nuclear
Industrial
Systems/Services
Others
SYSTEMS/E DP Programmei Prog Analyst Systems Analyst Project Leader Computer Science Bus Applications Others
The following companies regularly recruit at, National Career Centers Conferences
Elk Corporation
Chrysler
Avon
Prudential , Con Edisqn
Goodyear Honeywell Maybelline Target Stores General Motors
American Hospital Supply
Pfizer
IBM
Owens-Illinois Plus Others
TO APPLY: Forward within 48 hours 5 copies of your up-to-date resume (with contact information) for approval. You will receive a reply Conference details to be provided upon receipt ol your resumes. Minority applicants urged to apply.
f
MAIL to
Glenn i-ord M.- L-ei
National Career Centers-USA inc.
Drawer 2347
Fayetteville, N C. 28302-2347
iJn 1 Sg., iPsU^Eot ljuifi tilE station, (jua^zon... cNoj, foi 1 gSl, ipEUgsot iia Ijuifi tfiE liation ujagon! \
^xom inEiiot ijifEndoz, comfoii and ag^E (landiing, to exexLox itgfing ifiat dEntifiEL
tflE lUflEtLOlitg
ujitliLn... ipEugEoV L in a c[a Ijg itE[f. ^(isg a/if nEUj foi igS4.
JoeCullipher
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
Peugeot
3401 S. Memorial Or.
Greenville. N.C 756-0186
We have 51982 Ford Courier
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
Executive Units
*
per month
*Selling price $4895.00, $700 Cash or Trade, 14% APR, 48 Monthly Payments, Total of Payments $5502.46.
N.C. Sales Tax not included.
THIS WEEKS SPECIAL!
1977 19 Cruise Boat, 115 Horsepower engine, electric wench. Life preservers and anchor. Ready to use. Only $3595.00!
H
ASTING
FORD
S
Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass
Dealer No. 5720
758-0114
Greenville, N C 27834
Q-6 The Daily Heilector. Groeovnie. n o
juiiua>.'-/'..ooeflabo
109
Houses For Sale
109
Houses For Sale
CLUB PINES by Owner brick , ranch 4 bedrooms 3 baths, 2 300 i square feet Phone 355 2979 |
COLLEGE COURT, 2 bedrooms 1 | den, large corner lot 2 porches, ! carport large kitchen, 1300 square'! feet, $47 500 By owner 752 1628 !
COLONIAL HEIGHTS 3 bd7^ j brick ranch carpet hardwood I floors, fireplace, pool deck, totally , - private Reduced by owner $59.400 758 1355 after 9 15pm Sunday i anytime
^TW2T '
BASS REALTY
756-6666 or 756-5868
BrokCf On ('al' Eddie Pain
NEW CONSTRUCTION IN ^ . ker Estates R.md.'ph n, ,rf
putting tn, , 1.' V 'on n on
this-2 stor, . r .J-It ncv. , f voi are looking tor s r.'le n syie you deserve a good onq loos ,y this one priced at S89 900 call tg.lav tpr the details h59;
ASSUME THIS LOAN Aith pay ments of S28t PITI and save closing uostsi .'.luc 'duar'e teer th pts of potentia. r nndrooms 'arge
n-,nnj eossession Pr.ced aii S-eui
CENTURY21
TIPTON .ASSOCIATES
$20,000. Lot with mobile hom^
$25,000. Nice 2 bedroom bunga low,8% FHA assumption.
$35,000. 3 bedroom home with up stairs apartment; good investment property
$39,900. Stokes Farmers Home Assumption Two bedroom brick ranch with carport.
$41,500 Farmville 3 bedroom, I'l baths, brick ranch on large wooded lot FmHA assumption
$43,000 Country Squire, 3 bedrgqms 1 bath corner lot Assumable FmHA loan
$44,900. Country 3 bedrooms, 2 baths huge lot with fruit trees ' ' .-o FHA Assumption
$45,000. Duple* Stantonsburg Road area 3 bedrooms 1 bath each side Possible owner financing
$49,000 Stokes area Brick ranch A ith double garage on 2 acres
$57,000. University area. Two story home featuring over 1800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms 1baths, carport
109
Houses For Sale
CONTEMPORARY and cute! Master bedroom on first level, 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs. Vaulted ceiling, indirect lighting just a tew of the extras. Must seel Aldridge & Southeriand 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 W42
COUNTRY HOME Reedy Branch area 4 bedrooms, 2'i baths, ap proximately 2,900 square feet living area, plus 783 square feet garage. 3.79 acres of land Reduced $86,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.
ENJOY PRIVACY and nature in this country home located on I' j acre lot surrounded by quiet trees. 4 bedrooms, family room, garage Low $50's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
WHY RENT .v'b" home ,4t -his pr.ii would hr "ip
S000 he
Good rpit.i - -
CLUB PINES T-
spnir't''. i'a ; ri
rept ^.p- U-
with, the -IOS ''Q
grea'roo'^ .y m ench doors iead nq to d' Je^.qnor * 'i.hey 1 bedroums .no .\o ba'iis Cai cr
moredi;. r'.-.lOO -.',56
OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows, I* s imoor'.yni to pit'dse you Ana wo reyoivo hi ndreqy o' tos' monups
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
win Puy a payments on this 3 n pethel
) k. k,e I hr Td,
0-ua-Hd and w ili c buy or help
1-osts Spacious
Al Baldwi H droid hewitt Rod Tugwell
Nights Call
756 7836 756 2570 753 4302
EXCELLENT OLDER Brick Veneer home Spacious, 3 large bedrooms, I'j baths, huge attic, spacious den and dining room. Almost new gas heat, detached car garage Assume loan tor less than $10,000 (Owner will possibly do some financing). Payment less than $220 approximately Call Davis Re alty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756
4144
FANTASTIC $40's. It .this is your price range, you need to call me today! I have 4 in this range, located in different areas of town All in excellent condition Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
JOHNSENS ANTIQUES & LAIVIP SHOP
SELECTION OF SMALL ANTIQUES
LAMPS-GLASS-SttAOES & ..CHtMNEVS
HANDMADE FABRIC SHADES
OLD LAMPS REPAIRED AND REWIRED
NEW LOCATION
758-4839
315E. 11THST GRFFNVniF
CENTURY21
. TIPTON & ASSOCIATES
$62,500. Ho seshoe Acres Builder says sell this newly constructed traditional 3 bedroom. 2 bath home on largo lot *hat features large den wth fireplace, dming area, den with tirepiace, dinmg area chair railing irqwn molding and lots of *tras
$61,000. Eastwood ll'.io loan assumption on this 3 bedroom. 2 bath br yk ranch that features large :ot dining area, den fireplace, largo deck oft den
$87 000. Farmville Excellent 4 I'earoom 3 bath home on large, hea . ly vvooded lot That features all o-n-ai areas Lovely screened in porch
$125,000 Commercial building m downtown area Over 5000 square leet
NEW CONSTRUCTION: Call today about our new construction m Club Pines Belvedere, Brentwood and Lynndale We also custom build quality homes Call one of our, brokers today
Nights Cal
Al Baldwin Harold Hewitt Rod Tugwell
FARMVILLE. Call now about this 3 I bedroom, 1 bath home which j features sun room with fireplace, I large eat in kitchen, detached garage or workshop. Excellent loan assumption below market rate. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 35(X) or Sue Dunn, 355 2588
109 Houses For Sale
FOR sale by owner. Very attractive passive soLar two bedroom house located in Straw berry Banks in Ayden. FMFA Assumption. 746^6346 after 5
FOR SALE BY OWNER. 3
bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Living room, kitchen and den combination, with tirepiace and wood heater insert Single garage, corner lot with fenced in patio. Elmhurst school district. 756 9615
FOR SALE BY OWNER. 2 bedroom home with upstairs apartment (presently rented) Located in university area on large lot with garage Owner will finance with $15,(XX) down. Call 746 6375 or 752 2648. No Realtors please
109 Houses For Sale
LYNNDALE. Marvelous home tor large family! 4 bedrooms. 2 full and 2 half baths, all formal areas, playroom and office. Beautiful de cor, mint condition, plus dual heat pumps. Every^ing you always wanted! Aldridge & Southerland 756 35<X); Jean Hopper 756 9142.
109
Houses For Sale
MAKE AN OFFER on this beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath contemporary home Wooded lot CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 752 4707
GRIMESLAND. This brick ranch in the country is on approximately 1 acre of land and has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen/den combination, additional 16x24 workshop, $47,500. Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 or Aldridge .Southerland, 756 3500
HARDEE ACRES. Pay equity and assume FHA loan below market rate on this 3 bedrcxjm, 2 bath ranch which features, great room with fireplace, eat in kitchen and large screened in country porch Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or Sue Dunn, 355 2588 ^
FARMVILLE For sale by owner Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, with' large family room, dining room, deck o,u t s i d e
workshop playroom in beautiful neighborhood 753 5940
756 7836 756 2570 753 4302
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AUCTION
BUILDING & LOT
Saturday. Oct. 8,1983 - 11 ;00 A.M. Location; Hwy 258 in Fountain, N.C.
Building with 1750 square feet on 100 X 1,50 ft. lot. Was a restauraltt. Can also be modified into a convenience store, outlet, home or duplex.
Terms: 10% Day of Sale. Balance in 30 days upon delivery of deed. Owner reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids.
Salt Conducted by
COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. P. 0. Box 123S Washington, North Carolina Phone: 9H6 6007 State License No. 765
"Featured Houses"
' GRAYLEIGH: Nearing completion I Choose your own colors, carpet, light fixtures Chair rail and crown moulding 4 bedrooms (1 down), 3 I baths, large deck Custom built 1 cabinets, 2 car garage, corner lot, j presently ottered at S142.5(X)
GRAYLEIGH. Wiin'amsbut^style ' featuring 3 bedrooms, 2'5 baths, formal living and dining rooms,.den with fireplace, bookcases, deck and garage Large wooded lot ottered at |-$110,500
CLUB PINES: Brick two story, great room with tirepiace and bookcases, 3 bedrooms, 2'3 baths, dining room, garage, great location Priced $84.500
WINDY RIDGE: New, listing, brick Colonial, 4 bedrooms, 2'3 baths, formal 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. Blounts, Assoc.
756-3000
IMMACULATE and well kept brick veneer ranch Carport Beautifully manicured lawn surrounded by trees Corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck Low $SO s Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756-1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144,
NO MONEY DOWN
That's right! We will build on your lot Plentylot mortgage money, no red tape (.all 758 3171 tor Darrell.
NEAT OLDER HOME. Well kept 3 bedrooms, large front porch, kitch en remodeled Large backyard. Low $20's Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
NEW CONSTRUCTION Price re duced on this Traditional that 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! Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 68)0, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.
NEW LISTING. Shaded lot, 3 bedroom, I'g bath brick ranch Large family room, also features approximately 600 square feet de tached" garage and workshop, excellent location Call now to see this one Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland,. 756 3500; nights 756 5716
Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden
975 3179 756 7911 756 3880 756 1617
FIXED RATE Assumption at 12% available on this well kept Williamsburg in Belvedere A spacious floor plan plus financing that makes ownership easy! Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane. 752 8819
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
DOUC CURKINS Creerville, N C 758 'B-'S
RALPH RESPESS| Aashington, N. C. 946-8478
SPECIAL I Safe
Model S-1 Special Price
M22">
Reg. Price $177 00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
NEW LISTING. $48.900 Spacious 3 bedroom, I's bath home, formal living and dining room Convenient location Call June Wyrick, Aldridge-8. Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 5716
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
MAVIS BUTTS REALTY
758-0655
NEWCONSTRUCTION
READY FOR IMMEDIATE oc cupancy this lovely new home in Orchard Hills is perfect for the couple moving up! Floor plan offers living room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and as an added bonus builder will pay points and closing expenses $54,200
GREENWOOD FOREST Rustic salt box styling as well as lovely tree lined lot adds character and charm to this tine new home Features include 3 bedrooms (2 loft bedrooms overlook country kitchen and dining area). 2 baths, great room with fireplace front porch Still time to choose all interior color schemes and floor coverings $56,500
HORSESHOE ACRES Newly finished brick rancher features neutral tones throughout floor plan otters country kitchen with dining area and sliding glass doors to 20 x 20 patio, great room with fireplace arid built ins, large foyer wiih rinsnt space, 3 bedrooms, 2 good sized baths, carport with storage and extra deep lot! $61,900
DREAMING OF THAT SPECIAL HOME But afraid you can't afford one? Don't dream any longer let us build one to suit your tastes and budget We have beautiful wooded '2 acre( - ) lots ready for you Call one of our qualified brokers today and let us customize a package to fit your needs Prices start at $45,900 *
FlaineTroiano, REALTOR (On
call)......... . 756 6346
Shirley Morrison, Broker. .758 5463 Jane Butts, Broker ..'.-r.a,7562851 Mavis Butts,-REALTOR, GRI,
CRS...... 752 7073
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORTING MILITARY GOODS
Over 1000 Different ftems New and Used >
ARMV-NAVY STORE
1501 S. Evans !
569 S Evans St.
752-2175
Special Truck Deab On ArercaG Best!
1984 RANGER
NO DOWN PAYMENT-NO OUT-OF-POCKET-EXPENSE
H 35.65
per month*
Based on a 48 Month Lease Closed End Lease
WERE DEALING ON ALL FORD TRUCKS!
H
ASTING
I F 0 R D
s
(Jvd ( di ( ompdny
I b, Pass 758-0114 Greenville N C 27^4
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS
Greenbilar iVi
illage
746-2020
Off Highway 11 Across from Hardee's Ayden, North Carolina
1-Story, ('('(j.ir-HKlr (I ( (iloni.ils
Fiillv carpttthruTih r.tnyc rclritiiTalor liirnishcd
W'asticr / (Irvcr liook-iips
KniTLv-fllK lent milukIii.iHv I'oiilrolh'd lic.il iiuiiip
S|),i(Toiis. uI ll-ni.iini.iiiH'd Lrouiids .Hid oiililoiii sIum^i
1 - Bedroom Irom 8180
2 - Bi'droom irom 8195
3 - Bi'droom irom 8215
Call for information and appointment;
Teresa Stallings, Manager
1:30-5 p.m. Daily Except Tuesdays.
AYDE\'S SEWEST AlWK l MEM ( OMMI MTY
YEAR-END
CLEARANCE!
...SAVE...
Plymouth Reliant 4-Door
The 84*s Are Already Arriving. Now Is The Time To Save Big On All 83s In Stock
Joe Cullipher
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
Peugeot
3401 S. Memorial Dr.
Cyteenvilie, N C Phone 756-0186
; NEW LISTING: Contemporary I with gorgeous cathedral ceilinq and I fireplace in greatroom split bedrooms, two baths, and priced in the $SO's Call Darrell at Hignite Realtors, 756 1306, nights 355 2556
NEW LISTING. Located 16 miles from Greenville on Highway 11, 12 miles from Kinston, custom built brick ranch on large lot Slate foyer, sunken living room, den with tirepiace, 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, double garage, screened porch and large brick patio Loads of closets, cabinets, storage Exceptionally nice. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142
109
Houses For Sale
NEW LISTING. Just off Greenville Boulevard on quiet lovely street, story and a half cape cod features huge living/dining room, eat in kitchen, laundry room, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Dual heal pumps. Priced right for quick sale. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142
NW LISTING! Brick Veneer home with, carport 6'miles trom' Greenville Owner bei^hg transferred Neat neighborhood?., bedrooms, 1'2 baths Assu FmHA 107*% loan Only $41,
Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
109
Houses For Sale
NEW LISTING. Almost like new Brick Veneer ranch, 2 large bedrooms, spacious family room, lots of storage Excellent for young family. $41,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
NEW LISTING - Country, large lot Brick Veneer doll house. Tastefully decorated in earth tones, 3 bedrooms. 1'2 baths Ideal tor young family Assume 107-4% loan Only $41,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
CHERjRY OAM> $10,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3^ bedroom 2' 2 bath Owner 756 8073
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NO CREDIT CHECK $3,000 will get you in this 3 home
Neat starter home Ideal W young couple Central heat, woodstove Assume this loan less than $x per month. Reduced $4,500 Only $33,000. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
NO FRILLS Just deals, on this 4 bedroom, 1'2 bath home just the right distance from the hustle and bustle of town CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 121 or 752 4707.
YOU'LL BE PROUD to call this home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room woodstove, and storage Immaculant condition. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 752 4707
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NO REASONABLE OFFER
refused! Owner must sell Reduced $7,300 Almost 1,600 square feet About 3'2 miies from Greenville (Assume 9'2% loan, payment less than $450 per month Cozy den with fireplace, kitchen with all extras, good size bedrooms, formal areas Call for further details. Only $57,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, bights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
not FAR from shopping. 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, dining room, fireplace, outside storage building CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 752 4707
OPEN HOUSE! Club Pines 509 Crestline Boulevard, 1 to 5. 4 bedroom Cedar Ranch, 2 baths, large great rcxjm with fireplace. Lotsof extras! I 756 7575
OWNER MUST SELL! Brick Veneer home with double car garage Corner wooded lot Custom built Beautiful great room with tirepiace, cheerful kitchen and dining area Excellent neighborhood and good school dis trict $60's. Call Davis Realty 72 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
OWNER SAYS SELL. 9'2% APR
assumption. Screened patio, fireplace, fenced yard, 3 bedrooms, 1'2 baths Ready to negotiate. Low $50's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 212) Qr.752 4707.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TRANSPOfiTATIOiii SPtCiALS
ONLY 6 1983 Dodge Executive Aries Left - 2 and l door Sedans SAVE!'
1982 Chevrolet Camaro. T-top. automatic transmission, loaded, charcoal gray .........$10,995.
1982 Plymouth Colt 2 door 4 speed, red............................. $5499
1982 Mazda RX-7 GSL Coupe S speec. an condition, sunroof. Silver. Low mileage ... .......$11,995
1982 Chevrolet Chevette 4 speed, air conditioning. 13.000 miles. Burgundy and Beige,... t.... $5995 1982 Dodge B-200 Maxivan Automalic. 318 engine, air Conditioning, Blue, Soecial!
1981 Dodge Colt 2 door, automatic transmissiftfi. Silver............................. $4994
1981 Chevrolet ChevcHe -admatic. air conditioning. Nice. Burgundy,. ........ $4995
198LUodge Aries - 4 door, automatic, air cqodiuonmg extradean, white...................$6995
1981 Honda CM400 Motorcycle- 1800 miles $990
1980 Dodge Colt - 2 door, automatic transmission, luggage rack, Beige........................$4995
1980 Plymouth Champ - 2 door, automatic transmission, air conditioned, one owner.............$4995
1979 Audi 5000 S Diesel 5 speed. Bronze, Fully equipped.................................$7995
1979 Dodge Challenger 2 door automatic transmission, air condition. Red and Silver...........$5995
1978 Pontiac Catalina 4 door. Blue ................................................... $3995
1978 Ford Squire Pinto Wagon 4 speed, air condition Silver ' .......... $3495
1978 Buich Skylark - 4 door, automatic. Dark Green......... $3995
1978 Dodge Aspen - 2 door, auto.matic transmission. 6 cylinder, air condition.............$2995
1978 Oldsmobile Qmega 4 door, automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, air conditioned. Dark green . $3995
1978 Chevrolet Beauville - 8 passengers. Window van. Fully equipped. Beige........... $6995
1977 Chrysler*Newport-4 door, Fully eguidped. While with Burgundy vmyl roof ........... $4995
1977 AMC Gremlin - automatic transmission. 6 cylinder. Blue........ $2995
1977 Mercury Monarcn z door, Silver ,............................................ $2995
1977 Lincoln Continental Mark V - Cartier Designer Series. All factory options, extra Clean,. ., $7995 1976 Oldsmobile 98 Regency 4 door, white $3495
1976 Ford Granada 2 door. White...........................................$2995
1976 Oldsmobile Luxury Sedan 4 door. White $3495
1965 Oldsmobile 98 Luxury - 4 door. White $2495
1961 Studebaker-4 door, 6 cylinder, standard. Green ...... $2495
TRUCKS
$4995
$3995
1980 Plymouth Arrow Pick up 5 speed sport package. Yellow.................
1978 Chevy Luv Pick-up - automatic, ar conditioning, B.lue......... * ,.
1977 Dodge Cargo Van - 3 speed. 318 engine, power steering. Blue........................ $3995
1976FordChateauVan-Cuslomizedpackage. straight drive, 8 cylinder. Silver and Black , ... $4995
1971 Toyota Land Cruiser-4x4 Rea and White ,........ $3995
1971 Chevy CIO Pick-up 3 speed. 350 engine. Excellent Condition. Blue. Special
Joe Cullipher Chrysler-PIvmouth-Dodge
Greenville. N C
Peugeot
3401 S. Memorial Dr,
756-0186
Your Old Car Is Your Down Payment On A Used Car!
This month, buy (jnf of these great used cars fri^m Toyota Hast, and use the car you have now a? tiie doun pavment. with approved credit . regardless of it's condition . ,IS long as you can drive it in This offer good thru October 4. 1983,
Stock No. Description
4199-A 1970 Oldsmobile Gutlass Yellow 4537-A 1977 Chevrolet Truck Brown 4565-A 1983 Subaru Wagon Beige 4595-A- 1981 Dodge Truck - White 4628-A 1982 Toyota Truck White
4727-A 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass Silver
4728-A 1981 Honda Civic Silver 4737-A 1982 Toyota Truck Beige 4739-B - 1980 Mazda 626 - Gold 4751-A 1979 Chevrolet Camaro Blue 4795-A 1976 Mercury Cougar Silver
4856-A 1979 Ford Mustang Blue
4857-A - 1980 Buick Regal - Black
4867-B - 1972 Mercedes-Benz SEL 450 - Blue 4894-A 1978 Lincoln Continental Green 4903-A - 1981 Ford Escort - Black 4905-A 1978 Toyota Corona Brown 4924-A 1980 Chevrolet Monza Brown P-8260 1982 Toyota Corolla Yellow P-8261 1982 Toyota Corolla Red P-8274 1982 Toyota Corolla White P-8276 1982 Toyota Corolla White P-8284 1982 Toyota Corolla Red P-8295 1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Brown P-8316 1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass Burgundy P-8325 1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Burgundy P-8331 1982 Chevrolet Chevette Dark blue P-8348 1982 Toyota Corolla Silver P-8352 1979 Chevrokt Corvette White P-8354- 1979 Toyota 1401 - Yellow P-8355 - 1982 Toyota Clica - White P-8358 1982 Toyota Clica Gray P-8359 1983 Toyota Corolla Champagne P-8360 1979 Toyota Corolla Blue P-8361 1982 Chevrolet Chevette Blue P-8362 1982 Datsun Stanza Silver "
R-7127 - 1981 Toyota 4X4 Truck - Blue R-7128 - 1982 Toyota 4X4 Truck - Blue R-7130-A 1981 Toyota Corolla Red R-7137 - 1982 Toyota Truck - Blue R-7140 1981 Toyota Corolla Brown R-7141 1983 Toyota Clica Blue R-7145 - 1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7 - Copper R-7146 1982 Toyota Clica White R-7T47 1982 Toyota Corollfi Red
TOYOTA
EAST
109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228
4
'
109 Houses For Sale
'O -Houses For Sale
PRICE REDUCED! University area 2 story home featuring over 1,800 square feet on wooded corner lot 3 bedrooms, Iij baths, caroort $57,000 Call CENTURY 21 Tipt^ g, Associates 756 6810, nights AI Baldwin 756 7836
Veneer
N^rUv neighborhood d^istrM^A^*!. Excellent school d^lnct Almost 1,400 square feet, 3
and J central heat for dJ. Low $50's. Call
756 2wf n h?il 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or
Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
PRICE REDUCED! Eastwood $13,500 assumes I1i2% loan with
payments of S545 PITI. 3 bedroom 2 bath brick ranch that features living room, dining area, den with fireplace, large deck $61,000 Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8, Associates 756 6810, nights Harold Hewitt 756
hills. New 3 bedroom, 2 oatn ranch on beautiful wooded lot, 7 decks, great floor plan. Aldridqe & Sout^herland 756 3500; Jean Hopper
'-''ejY J bedroom.
QUIET CUL DE SAC. Guarantees your privacy while keeping you close to urban activity! Almost I new, great room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths Master bedroom has deck, large storage room fenced dog run Huge lot Aldridge
3 bath, split level, features living room, tamily room with fireplace, irirge kitchen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat pump Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 756 5716 756 3500, nights
& Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142
STATtLY ELEGANCE. True comfort and grace is yours in this
RED BANKS ROAD This lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch features all formal areas Kitchen has skylight and butcher block work island for her convenience along with great 1 room with fireplace Priced to sell Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 or Aldridge 8. Southerland. 756 3500
line 4 bedroom, 3 bath traditional home All formal areas, mint con dition, many extras. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper
yiVA^ LA DIFFERENCE! Tired of
hk P'"- see Jnis delightful rustic contemoorarv
RED OAK. Assume the FHA loan and move right into this beautiful brick home! Excellent condition, terrific kitchen, garage the worksi Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500 Jean Hopper 756 9M2
beauty 2,000' on acre lot K d came directly from the pages ot House Beautiful. Come see for Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500. Jean Hopper 756 9142
WANT A NEW HOME and wnnr
REDUCED. 4 bedroom modular I Fcome is too low? Been turned home Living room dining room, befbre? Why keiemBaying rent game room, fireplace and carport you can build it yourself with $29,900 CENTURY 21 B Forbes i down payment? 9 9% APR Agency 756 412*i)r 752 4707 1 848 3220 collect, A Paftrway Home.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
BOYD
ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
.0. BOX 1705, GR^Vn^. NORTH CAROUNA 27IM4
general contractors
758-4284
RENOVATIONS
Momi I
IIOMI S
ATTENTION
VETERANS
VA FINANCING
Now Available On The N^w Home Of Your Choice ~ ~
No down payment
'No advance payments
24 Hour delivery available (with approved credit)
Over 25 new homes to select from
Interest rates are at an all time low
Visit CONNER HOMES Today!
WHY BUY FROM CONNERS
Greenville, N.C.
(Open Weeknights Until ,10 P M i (Week-Ends Until 8 P M i
call 756-0333 13.75% FHA
PRICED TO SELL - PRICED TO SELL - PRICED TO
CLIFF FRELKE MOTORS
PHONl 756-5861
264 By Pm ai Moo*r Rd
"WfHi* Thf Ptic* And Tn Cuilomai Ai* Always Right
Gian,a N C 27834
1983 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup
Blue with blue interior. 4 cylinder. AM-FM stereo, sliding rear glass, step bumper. 11.000 miles, one owner Slock no. P-1053-A
1981 Pontiac Bonneville
4 door, gold on gold. 33.000 miles, one owner, fully equipped, cloth interior. Slock no. P-1055.
1981 Pontiac Firebird
Silver.(.red interior. 6 cylinder, automatic, till wheel. AM-FM stereo with cassette Must see to appreciate Stock no. P-1056.
1980 Mazda RX-7
Silver with black interior. Fully equipped, one owner. Stock no. P-1054.
1980 Ford Thunderbird *
Split seat, gray on gray, stereo radio with cassette. 33,000 miles, one owner. Slock no. P-1079.
1980 Ford Bronco
Ranger XLT. Automatic, 4 wheel drive, stereo radio. Red and while with red interior! one owner. Stock no, P-1076
1980 Olds Delta Royale Brougham
Brown with brown cloth interior Gels 28 miles per gallon, new tires. Priced to sell at $4650 plus tax and tags.
1979 Buick LeSabre Limited
Fully equipped, one owner. Dark brown, brown cloth Interior. In showroom condition. Stock no. P-1070
1980 Pontiac Firebird
Economy special. 6 cylinder, automatic, red with white interior Must see to appreciate. Fully equipped. Stock no P-1057.
1979 Toyota Corona Deluxe Wagon
One owner. 43,000 miles. Silver with black interior. AM-FM radio, automatic, many extras. Stock no. P-t077
1979 Buick Regal
White with saddle interior. Fully equipped, one owner. 6 cylinder. Stock no. P-1061.
1978 Ford Granada
4 door. Dark blue, blue interior. SO.CHK miles, 6 cylinder. Automatic^ AM-FM radio. Stock no P-1069
1978 Mercury Cougar XR-7
j iloor Black, red interior. One owne
owner car We sold rt new Fully (|iiipped Including wire wheel covers Slock no P-1073
1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
i||lv4i with black interior, sunroof, automatic in floor, many other ii|iilori4 this car won't be around long. Stock no P-106S
197B Chevrolet Malibu Classic
t ilnm (lold, white lop, aulomatie. AM-FM stereo, rally wheels, mny nlher lealure* Stock no. P-1060
I97H Cadillac Sedan De Ville
Riirgundy and silvtr, burgundy leather imerior. This car Is hieded Priced to sell Slock no. P-1049,
1978 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
4 door, automatic, ak condition, stereo, wire wheel covers. Medium green wHh grMn cloth Interior Stock no. P-1070.
1977 Olds Cullsii Supreme
2 door Silver wHh btKk Interior, fully equipped, sharp car. this weeks special. Slock qo. P-1071.
1977 Buick Electra 225
4 door Fully equipped. Must see to apprtciale. Stock no. P-1072
1976 Pontiac Astre Wagon
Automettc. ak condition, luggage rack. Special this week. 1850 00 Slock no. P-t045-A.
113S 01 QTDIBd ~ 113S 01 a30lkld - 133S 01 Q30ltd
109
Houses For Sale
WESTWOOD. Seller anxious tor offer on this exceptionally nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch home. All formal areas, includinj|s^n with fireplace, garage and isevered pafio. Smart shoppers call now. Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500; Jean He^xper 756 9142
WINDY RIOGE. Excellent living tor kids and adults. 3 bedrooms, 2'/V baths. Tennis Court, Sauna, Club House. Average monthly utilities, $65. 756 5385.
WINTERVILLE. You'll love the floor plan and decor of this 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home. Living room with fireplace, den, breakfast bar, office, carport. Assumable loan. Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500; Jean Hopper 756-9142.
UNIVERSITY AREA. Excellent access to ECU and downtown. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room with fireplace, detached garage, screened porch. Excellent condl tion. $40's. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756-9142.
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-6666 or 756-5868
Broker On Call: Eddie Pate 752-6560
THIS OOUBLEWIDE is 3 years young and features a woodburning stove, wet baixf and sits on an acre of-Awooded land, just 5 minutei from town. Priced aft $41,900 this doll deserves a look! V601.
ASSUME THIS VA loan at 1t',% with payments ot $491.94 month and save Closing costs. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, living room with fireplace, den with woodstove, and energy saving heat pump Only 6 years old. Call today for your personal show ing, $56,000. 599.
BELVEDERE 3 bedroom doll house fresh on the market, and well worth a look! The spacious yard is great to putter in before you go inside to relax on these pleasant fall evenings. Priced at just $66.900 this could be the one you've been waiting (or 597
RETIREMENT SPOT Couple moving back North fo be near their 4 grandchildren, selling their 1 acre lot with doublewide, workshop, and carport. A good place for you to work or relax. Features formal areas, 3 bedrooms, and 2 baths. Listed at $33,500 #610
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
109
Houses For Sale
2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large landscaped lot, workshop-16x36 plus shed and shelter. 1677 square feet of living area. Bill Williams Real Estate,
752 2615.
$4500 DOWN and assume payments on this new 2 bedroom home with cathedral ceiling, eat-in kitchen, deck and wooded lot. 5 miles from Greenville. Call Leonard at HIgnite Realtors, 756-1306.
5 BEDROOM, 2 story older home 2 kitchens, 2 baths. Ideal rental property Priced to move at $24,995 Call Jimrny Langston at 756 9874.
l'/i% ASSUMABLE. 3 bedrooms, I'-i baths, large lot. Call 756-3968, 756-3134, or 752 4661
111 Investment Property
INVESMENTPROPERTY
VILLAGE EAST: 2 bedrooms, t'^j bath fownhouses. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances furnished. Central heat and air, GE heatpump, patio, outside storage. Conveniently located on Cedar Court. Excellent property for stu dent rental, priced at $41,900.
bRESDEN PLACE: 2 bedroom, l>/j bath condominiums. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances furnished. Ideal location for student rental market. Corner of llfh St 8. Charles St. Priced at $43,600.
GftlFTON: 7 brick houses are being sold to settle an estate. These houses have from 900 1400 square feet, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath 3 bedrooms IVj bath. They are located in an-excetlent location and in very good condition. Priced at $145,000
W. G. Blount & Assoc.
756-3000
If^iBarker 975 3179
Bill Blount 756 7911
Betty Beacham 756 3880
Stanley Peaden 756 1617
NURSERY All equipment, stock, 2 trucks, doublewide and singlewide mobile homes, greenhouses, and wholesale routes. Owner financing available. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 752 4707.
$35,000 - 3 bedroom house with upstairs apartment Total rent $420 per month. Good investment pro perty. CalT CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 756-6810.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Indian Trails Countir Club
Invites You To Play Our Unique And Beautiful Course
Come walk the rolling hills and forest where the Tuscarora lived.
GREENS FEES
Weekdays $5.00 - Students S4.00 Sat. & Sun. $7.00 - Students $6.00
BRING A Friend, rent a cart and ride double DEDUCT $1.00 EACH FROM GREENS FEE.
Grifton. NC
524-5485
division just off I4th Street Irregular shaped lot has 70' fron tage right side 130' left side 160' and rear width of 120' $11,000.00
BEAUTIFUL HEAVILY WCX)DED lot above water. Only a short drive from Greenville, this lovely lot is in the Captain's Walk community of Beaufort. Over tOO' frontage perfect location for the home away from home $25,000
Elaine Troiano, REALTOR (On
call).................................. 756 6346
Shirley Morrison, Broker 758 5463
Jane Butts, Broker............756 2851
Mavis Butts, REALTOR, GRl,
CRS ....................... 752 7Q73
The Daily Reflector, GrrenviMe t; C
111 Investment Property
115 Lots For Sale
121 Apartments For Rent |
$45,000 - Duplex. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, each side. Possible owner financing. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates. 756 6810. ^7-
PAMLICO RIVER LOT. HTgfTon cliff at Blounts Bay Great view, sandy beach 30 minutes from Greenville For sale by owner, $24,000. 946 8071 or 946 8551 nights
AZALEA GARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely. furnished one bedroom i
113 Land For Sale
PRICE REOUCEDI 3 2 acre wooded lot, 8 miles East ot Greenville, SR 1538 $12,000 752 1915.
apartments ]
All energy efficient designed 1
Queen size beds and studio ' couches 1
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance
All apartments on ground floor with porches
Frost free refrigerators
Located m Azalea Gardens near !
20 ACRES WOODED land for sale Own your own firewood supply. Located near Black Jack area, and is covered with mostly hard wood This tract is very secluded and could be used tor horse stable, hog operation, etc. Will consider trade tor at least 2 acres ot land suitable
THE PINES in Ayden 130 x 180 corner lot Excellent location Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood $10,500 Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details
tor mobile homes. Asking $10,000. Bentord Realty 758 2386, 752 0661.
117 Resort Property For Sa le
Brook Valley Country Club Shown | by appointment only Couples or singles No pets 1
115 Lots For Sale
RESORT PROPERTY for sale or trade 4 apartment complex 3 bedrooms, I'j baths, central heat and air. 415 Ocean Drive, Club
Vi ACRE COUNTRY lots 10 minutes from town on VOA Road
i Contact J T or Tommy Williams I ; 756 7815
near Proposed 264 Bypass 752 7877.
'/t ACRE LOT for sale Ayden Grifton. Call 756 2682after 5 p m
LOTS FOR SALE. Old River Road Call 752 7561.
A.
Colony, Atlantic Beach Asking $225,000 Will trade for property in Greenville area Call 752 2366 or 757 0451.
BRAND NEW tastefully decorated i 1 townhouse, 2 bedrooms, I'j baths, washer dryer hookups, heat pump,
! no pets $310 per month 752 2040 or i
RIVER COTTAGE on wooded wafer front lot on the Pamlico
756 8904
Cherry Court
1 ^ - bedr-oo/x townhouses ; with r': baths Also 1 bedroom
LOTS IN ESTABLIS4ED
neighborhood starting at $8800 Call 756 8904 after 7 p m.
River 1 mile from Wafcngton, NC Quiet, established nef^rborhood Call 758^02 days, 752 0310 nights
MAVIS BUTTS REALTY 758-0655 ^ :
RESIDENTIAL BUILDIN^LOT available in beaumul Gandlewick sfStes 100' frontage on W Cambridge Drive (Ole London Road) lot is 217' deep. Call office tor showing and more details $9,000 00
NEW LISTIN. Conveniently located subdivision near schoois
120 RENTALS ^
apartments Carpet, dishwashers, corrSpactors, pafio tre-'abe T^'; washer dryer hook ups, la.unrxL room, sauna, tennis court, tP-' houseand POOL 752 1557
LO'TS FOR RENT^Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Security deposits required, no pets Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5
DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre i wooded lot at Frog Leve' 2 ' [ bedrooms', bath, kitchen and ' 1 living room, no pets allowed $265 per month 756 4624
NEED S1v3RAGE? Wehave any ' size to meet your storage need Call Arling^ton Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933,
121 Apartments For Rent
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Sun.-Jay Oc;oDer2 1933 0-7
121 Apartments For Rent " EFFICIENCYAPARTMENTS
Dial direct phones
Cable TV Maid Service
Furnished
All Utilities
Weekly Monthly Rates .
756 5555
HERITAGE INNMOTEL
townhouse in woods Washer dryer hookups $310 756 6295 after6p m
FOR Rent to a tamily 3 bedroom duplex apartment 1 month rent tor
quired Call 757 7808 (rom 9am to
IN WINTERV.ILLE. 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children no pets Deposit and lease $710 month 756 5007
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Expenend^^eiifetgetic dMrtes 'position Wf controller/f.infncia manager with local firm Will consider part time position lor small company. Reply to. -
CPA
P 0 Box 179 ,
Greenville. N C 27834
MOBILE HOME lot approximate ly 1 acre in Winterville school district. Partial owner financing available Call Bill at 756 7097
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 7814 Winnie Evans, Listing Broker, 752 4224 Faye Bowen, 756 5258.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
^ EASTBROOK-AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS 4 AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton. Co
752 bl 16
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PLASTIC SLIPCOVERS
Custom fitted in home. Heavy clear plastic. Protects (urniture from smoko, dust, steins, wearing.
fflf
t J.AUSBY ^ Sofa and Chair Covered '
(4 Pillows or less) S95.00 Ausby Plastic Covers 536-4793 Weldon
FOR SALE BY OWNER 198 ACRE FARM
Suited for Peanuts and other row crops. 43,245 pounds of peanuts. Located in Williamston Township, Va mile west of Williamston on State Road 1444. Owner financing available. For further information call:
Federal Land Bank Association Of Washington ^
946-4116
Greenville's Finest Used Cars!
.Anyr lus: !;kt; neu autorr.aDc 'd'.r
(Located At Honda Store)
1983 Honda Accord
4 ioor 5 spt^^d transmissiopr. miies, one
1982 Honda Accord LX
B!uc '-) sptvJ !ransrr;5s;on .AM F.M stereo radio
1981 Mazda RX-7
Siivvr 1 door automatic transmission
1980 Honda Prelude
Auiomaf.c irar.sm.'.ssion bv. miieage
1980 Datsun B-21Q.
4 doer
1980 Volkswagen Sport Truck
R 5 spic'd :rdr,sm;5s:on r.i.c Ra! n;c
1980 Ford Granada
-td'or bi.ui auiomaix 4,.UfK'i m:is oneo.crer
1980 Honda Accord LX
Bronze .c:;n '.e!our .nterior Autqm.aiic. ,air cond.-non sierto v.;;n casseiie. d;g:ta: dock, hatch release Loca! one o'.vner car
1979 Honda Prelude
S:!t.er autom.aticiransrr.ission
1979 Honda Accord
B!:;^ 5 speed iransrri'.ssion, air'condition
1979 Ford Granada
Re-'eade Bi'je Jus; iike branc new
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
2 doer Be:e brountop .o'.c mileage one 0'*r,er
1980 Datsun 210
30 OO'.t miles, 5 sceed iransm.ss.o''.
Bob Barbour
3.300 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355 2500
1979 Honda Accord
4 door speed lo.c m deage ec ^
1979 MGB Convertible
Like neiA 47.h(ii m.ies .gree- :r,-.scs.--r' top AM FM-terco
(Located At Volvo Store)
1982 Datsun Pickup
M'vPpackage .O'a m Icage n,cetro-
1982 GMCS-15 Pickup
Gcpsc A!, tr.e evrra^ n^!.,: -; a,r : ,"ct
1982 AMC Jeep Wagoner
' E-r; '.'pT!''" ,0a t
1981 Datsun 200SX
Poy.er steer.ng and brar-.cs pt,,cer i tape loaded
1981 Honda Accord LX
L'U',.r;, model ,A:r concmc - Ljx^r . c, ,m .
1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7
Renegade Oneo.sr.er In exceFer*-.nape
198l01dsToronadoXCS
22.1'i't'm.ies all ;he'jpt,:Ke hra-'e.-.
1981 Honda CV-650 Custom
Motorcjc.e 47ihjm..es ces-'-.rc
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
Povser steering and oraK-.s ar autorr.obile
1980 Datsun 210 Wagon
5 speed rrar.irriiSiio'-
1979 Mazda 626
4 cocr White Automat;: tra'sm.e; ,- a-
Bob Barbour
V()LVOA.\K' Xcp Rcniiiih
117 W. Tenth St. Greenvtlie 758-7200
FARM AUCTION
Saturday, October 29,1983 10:00 A.M. Rain Date November 5th Rasberry-Sherman Farm
Located: SR1110 3.7 miles East of Intersection Hwy. 1! & SR1110. This Intersection located 6 miles North of Dupont Plant & 1.5 miles South of Ayden Grifton High School.
Consisting of:
Acres Cropland +
Acres Woodland
Acres Total
Acres Tobacco Pounds Tobacco
1983
Basic
Allotment
This Farm will be sold as 5 farm tracts and several desirable road front residential lots. More details will follow.
Live Music
REALTY & -AUCTION COMPANY
WelinoughtOf
Used Cars
THINK
But Never Abused Used Cars
1983 Cadillac SbvIIIb 4 ooor Stiver sano eafner iritr' Equipoec with rpos! factory ocho's c-', 4 000 Tiies. local trade 1983 Pontiac 2000 Two tone green with cio:n f'.m -ower steering and praxes, automatic, at' 'aoio :o,-se locai trade
1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Sia:e gray witn Blue cio;- mtenor tnue oadded landau ;op Extras include tii. wheel, air cdnddion, stereo radio 60-40 spidsea; w 'e wnee. covers 24,000 miles 1982 Cadillac Sdan De Ville Dark piue
meta-.'C with tan ciotn !-im, <uii> eouidpeddnciudmg wire wneeis, locaH'ade 25 000mnes 1982 Honda Accord 2 door. Medium oiue metallic with c.otn tnm 5 speed AM FM stereo witn cassette. 25,(XD0mi es locai trace 1981 Mercury Lynx Wagon Medium piue witn blue vinyl intr. automatic, ai'. AM.FM radio luggage rack, local car
1981 Pontiac T-1000 4 aoor Sitver metaihc
with burgundy vinyl tnm, 4 jpeed. ai' condition. AM.FM stereo. 26.000 miles local one owner trade 1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme Sliver metallic
with blue doth trim Power steering and brakes automatic, air condition, AMtFM radio rally wheels 27.000 miles
1980 Olds Delta Royale :a o:
metallic Du'gunc,, top a"C f.n- oct'0..'.s powe' wmaows t!'t wree :'--5s :o'-"c stereo 60-40 split sea's we v.nee ccve'S 1980 Mazda RX? - S ,e- -etai . burgunay trim 5 speec "a'S~-5s-C'' a' :c ste'eo local trace
1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme Dan. metallic witn green lanoau .in, top ana t'lm-steering ana daxes automa'ic a-' AM FM 46.000 miles, iocai face
a rra
=owe'
ste-ec
1980 AMC Eagle Wagon 'a- - =' .
pcv.e' 5'ee--; a-c p-a-es a- .cgage 'a;- ; w-ee c .e s'-re: -a:: es pea t-ace 1979 Pontiac Grand Prix e .. an'pa.. 'pc p.s-e- , t-" E<"as .pe ::
..'-3065 .5-ee p'u se s'e'ep 'ac p -e pp.e'S pp*e""p;"c: 52 3C0 n- es p:a "ape
Dickinson Ave.
Brown-Wood, Inc.
and you will bujr
752-7111
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix ba'-e :e ;e
1978 Pontiac Bonneville :a
1978 Cadillac Sedan De Ville :a-- p 1978 Buick LeSabre Landau '.'e:
1977 Cadillac Sedan De Ville 5.-..
1977 Ford Thunderbird L a. -e: .
1973 Pontiac Grand Prix b a:- p
D-8 Th(Oaily Rfle *or (irt.etu-iii
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY !
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
AUCTION
FARM LAND
3 TRACTS
Saturday, Oct. 15,1983 11:00 A.M.
Location: Take Hwy 903 north from Robersonville, N.C., go approximately 3 miles to Gold Point. Turn right on Rural Paved Road 1309. Go approximately 1 mile to sale sight.
Tract 1: 60 Acres (Approx), 43 acres cleared. 17 acres wfoods, 3.57 acres tobacco, 8172 pounds. Peanuts 19,700 pounds. Small house and outbuildings.
Tract 2: 89 Acres (Approx), 51 acres cleared, 38 acres woods. 2.92 acres tobacco, 6673 pounds. Peanuts 17,511 pounds. 2 houses and outbuildings.
Tract 3; 86 Acres (Approx), 49 acres cleared, 37 acres woods, 2.92 acres tobacco, 6674 pounds. Peanuts 17,511 pounds. -
Terms: 5% day of sale. Balance in 30 days upon delivery of deed. Owner has the right to accept or reject and and all bids.
Farms Sold Subject To Timber Deed
Sale Condii .ted ly
COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND pEALTY CO. P. 0. Box 1235 Washington, North Carolina Phone: 946 6007 State License No. 765
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month Option to buy. U REN CO 756 3862
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS '
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Otficehours 10a m toSp.m Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at /
756-4800 ^
You've decided to sell your resort property this fall You can get the |0b done quickly using Classified
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and PCX3L. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869 GRIFTON AREA. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Central air. carpet and drapes. Call 524 4239 or 524 4821. EHO.-
NEAR HOSPITAL. New duplexes currently under construction. Available September 1. $300 per month No pets Call 752 3152 8 to 5,' ask tor John or Bryant
Want to sell livestock? Run
Classified ad for quick response
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex in Fairlane Farms Range refrigera lor, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. No pets. $310. 756 2121, ask for David
OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTMENTS 5
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, central air ahd heat, appliances $210 758 3311
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HONEYWELL FUEL SAVING THERMOSTATS
(Below Wholesale Prices)
irtsiaii Yourself And Save Uff To 30% On Fuel Bills
List Your Cost
Clock Night Setback T8082A1031...............$144.32 $44.25
24 Hour Program T8100A1005..................$100.18 $44.95
?Day ProgramabieTSOOAIOOZ......... $175.74 $79.50
Limited Quantities Available- Dealers Welcome
Also, we have purchased the Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Inventory from the now closed Carolina Sales. All parts at unbelievably low prices.
DOUC CURKINS Greenville, N i 58 1875
RALPH RESPESS
ko'r Ryspi>s<:it! t p'h \, inn:srs
304 Hooker Rd.
756-2104 Greenville, N.C.
121 Apartments For Rent
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.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just off lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!'
^At pur affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent Call Iris Cannort at 758 65 or 746 2639, Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029.
MOORE & SAUTER no South Evans 758 6050
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall-to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insula tion.
Office Open 9 5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 15 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756 5067
CLASStFIED DISPLAY
603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C
THE TRUCKS ARE ROLLING!!
1984 MAZDA B2000 SHORT BED
$
5389.00
Plus N.C. Tax, Service And Handling Charge
1984 MAZDA B2000 LONG BED
5569.00
Plus N.C. Tax, Service And Handling Charge1984 MAZDA SE-5 SPORT TRUCK (Long Or Short Bed)
5989.00
Plus N.C. Tax, Service And Handling Charge
Check Now, While The Supply Is Good!
Weekdays: 8:30-6:30 Saturday: 9:00-2:00
Phone: 756-1877
T
121 Apartments For Rent
TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Villge. $350. CairLorelleat7S6 6336.
TARRIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer
hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU.
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community. Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, quiet, professional neighborhood in convenient loca tion, 1 year old No pets. Deposit required. $330 per month. 756 7314 days, 756 4980 nights _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
ONE BEDROOM apartment country. Call 756-9132.
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT,
carpeted, central air and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup BrytonHills $275. 758 3311.
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom, l'z bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. *
756-0987
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT 201
North Woodlawn. Heat and hot water furnished. $215 . 756-0545 or 758 0635.
1 BEDROOM near campus Hot water furnished. No pets. $215 per month Phone Stuart Buchanan, 756 3923
106 B JARVIS STREET. 2
bedrooms, old but liveable. Prefer female students. $125. Call 756-3611 or 756 3936.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SHOPTHE BEST
SHOP HOLT
QUALITY USED CARS
1983 Nissan Stanza
2 door. Silver with gray velour interior. Automatic, air, AM/FM radio.
1983 Oldsmobile Firenza
4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM/FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.
1983 Buick Regal
2 door, white with burgundy velour interior. Loaded,
1983 Olds 98 Regency
2 door. Two tone gray with green cloth interior. Loaded.
1983 Olds Cutlass Cruiser Wagon
Diesel, sable brown with woodgrain, brown cloth interior, loaded.
1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme
2 door, Maroon with maroon cloth interior, bucket seats and console. '
1 982 Chevrolet Maiibu Wagon
Beige with beige vinyl interior, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-PW stereo.
1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera
4 door. Brougham. White with blue vinyl roof, blue velour interior.
1982 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon
White with burgundy velour interior. 3 seats, luggage rack.
1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera
4 door. Dark green with light green cloth interior.
1982 Mazda RX-7GS
Silver with black velour interior. Sun roof, spoilers, loaded.
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon
Beige with tan vinyl inferior. Automatic, air condition, AM/FM stereo,
1981 Honda Civic Wagon
Light green with tan vinyl interior. 5 speed transmission, air condition, AM/FM radio, low mileage, like new.
1981 Ford Thunderbird
Red with white interior, one owner, loaded ,
1981 Pontiac LeMans Wagon
White with woodgrain siding Beige vinyl interior,
1981 Datsun280-ZX
2 plus 2. Loaded. White with red vinyl interior, one owner
1981 Datsun 210 Wagon
Light brown with light brown vinyl interior, 5 speed, AM/FM radio
1981 Olds 98 Regency
2 door.' Beige with green velour interior, landau roof, loaded.
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Light green with light green vinyl interior, bucket seats and console, loaded
1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Beige with brown vinyl interior, automatic, air condition,, tilt wheel, cruise control, low mileage.
1980 Pontiac Phoenix
4 door. Gold with tan vinyl interior, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, 42,000 miles, riicecar.
1980 Chevrolet Mallbu Classic
4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.
1980 Olds Toronado
Gray with gray leather interior, nice car, low mileage.
1980 Datsun Truck
Blue with blue interior, 5 speed, air, AM/FM radio low mileage.
1980 BuIck Regal
2 door, light blue with landau r,oof. blue vinyl interior, bucket seats, automatic, air, AM/FM radio.
1979 Mercury Cougar XR-7
Burgundy with burgundy interior and white landau roof. Loaded, 30,000 actual miles, like new.
1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale
4 door, dark blue with light blue velour interior.
1979 Ford Thunderbird
Blue with white landau roof, white vinyl interior, T-tops, loaded, nice car.
1978 Datsun Truck
Short bed. Red with black interior, AM/FM radio, sliding glass window, sport wheels, ver^ nice.
1978 Olds Delta 88
4 door. Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.
1978 Buick Century Wagon
Blue with blue vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM/FM radio, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks,
1978 Olds 98 Re(
2 door, light blue witii blue landau roof, light blue velour
gency
in blue It
interior, loaded, like new, 27,000 actual miles.GM EXECUTIVE CARS SAVINGS UP TO $2000.001983 Olds Cutlass Brougham
4 door. White with light gray velour interior. Loaded, 3,121 miles.1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham '
Red with gray velour interior. Loaded, 6 122 miles.1983 Olds Omega
4 door. Maroon with maroon velour interior. Loaded, 3,785 miles.HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
GMQUAUTY SERVICE PARTS
OINKAl MOTOII COWOIAnON
HI Apartments For Rent
J ROOM APARTMENT for rent Located close to unlverisfy. Call after 4p.m., 756 0528
122
Business Rentals
DOWNTOWN. 600 square feet. New rennovation. Economical to heat and cool. Ideal for office or retail 758 7741 night Owner/Broker.
PO** -EASE, PRIME RETAIL or
SI!S sP^ce. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 souare feet. Only *3.60 per f'o' information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348
23,000 SQUARE FEET of
warehouse space available Will subdivide. Call 756 5097 or 756 9315.
127
Houses For Rent
'*9 bedrooms, 2 UMhs^ent with option fo buy *355
COUNTRY CLUB. Ranch style home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4'3 baths Over 3000 square feet Available immediately S600 per month Call Lorelle at 756*6336.
CHARMING LARGE 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, study, 4 oak fireplaces, fenced yard, washer/dryer Ayden, $360 756 8160
DO YOU NEED a nice, completely furnished house? 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, couple only. $395. Shown by appointment. Grier Rental Agency, 110 Charles Boulevard
EDWARDS ACRES New 3
bedroom, l'2 bath home $400 per month. Lynndale: 4 bedrooms, 3 baths $600 per month MacGregor Downs:'5 bedrooms, 2'2 baths $700 Lease and security deposit required. Duffus Realty, Inc. 756 0811.
FOR RENf: 1,400 square foot 4 bedroom house with 2 full baths, central heat and air Located near the Hospital Couples or families preferred $360 a month Call be tweeny30ana9p.m., 758 0905
HOUSE FOR RENT 3 years old 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, central air, heat, fenced in yard Winferville $380 per month Call 756 4700 10 to 5, after 6call 355 2875
HOUSES AND Apartments in country 8 mniles south of Greenville 746 3284 and 524 3V80
WINDY RIDGE. Three bedroom townhouse available mid October. Marrieds preferred $395 00 per month Lease and deposit required Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025.
102 SOUTH EASTERN. 3 bedrooms, air conditioned, nice neighborhood. Marrieds only $285, Tease and deposit 756 1888 9 fo 5 weekdays
2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Griffon Phone 1 524 4147, nights 1 524 4007,
3 BEDROOMS newly remodeled, on quiet West Greenville Street. $265 plus deposit. 752 2615 days
3 BEOROOm, 1'2 bath, fireplace, heat pump, $310 month. Lease, deposit Family only 758 3028 after 5 30 or weekend
3-4 BEDROOMS. 2 full baths, Sherwood Greens $350 month' Lease and security deposit re quired. 752 4139
4 BEDROOM RANCH Over 2000 square .feet with workshop in Griffon Available immediately for $425 per month Call Realty Wor.ld, Clark Branch, 756 6336 or Tim Smith, 752 9811
4 YEAR OLD HOUSE. 3 bedrooms, 1'2 baths. 1 mile West of Pitt Community Dishwasher, Beat the Peak water heater, newly painted interior, carpeted floors, large backyard $350 752 3993 evenings
5 BEDROO.M oider home in Win terville Will consider rental purchase agreement $250 per month, $250 deposit, plus first months rent m advance Call Jimmy Langston at 756 9874
129
Lots For Rent
VILLAGE TRAILER Park Ayden Paved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection First month tree or we pay moving expenses. 746 2425 or 752 7148
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
MOBILE HOME FOR RENT. Call 756 4687
tRAlCfR~lR^R^ENT near col lege, 2 large bedrooms, I'j baths No pets. Call after 5 p m . 746 3279
12 X *0. 3 bedrooms, $150 Also 2 bedrooms, $135 No pets, no children 758 0745
12X60, 2 bedrooms, I'j baths Un furnished except tor air conditioner, washer dryer, dishwasher and re trigerator 758 6042 from 7 to9p m
12x65 MOBILE HOME. Furnished or unfurnished near Opry House. Washer/dryer, deposit required No pets Call 746 4164 after 6
12x65 2 BEDROOMS,
Washer dryer, central air and heat 2 miles from the hospital Available October 3 756 4545
2 AND 3 BEDROOMS, central heat, lease and deposit. No pets. Lot space. 752 3286, nights 1 825 5391.
2 BEDROOM, located in country off New Bern Highway No pets 756 0975
2 BEDROOMS, furnished No chiidren, no pets. Located in Col onial Park. Call 758 6679
2 BEDROOMS, air conditioned, washer, under pinned, furnished 1 child only Private lot in Mead owbrook. 756 3377
2 OR 3 B E DROOMS near Greenville Deposit. Call 746 6847 or 524 4349 from 6 to 9
135 Office Space For Rent
OFFICE SPACE for rent 4 office suite in Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc. buildmg Call Jeannette Cox, 756 1322
OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE, Off
264 By pass. 2100 square feet, private parking $1200 per month; Arlington Blvd , new, 1465 square feet $1050 per month Front and rear entrance, custom finish; In dustrlal Park. 9000 square teet. 5400 square feet carpeted. Remainder available for office. $4042 per month. Call Clark Branch Management. 756 6336.
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J .T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
ilNGLE 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.
137 Resort Property For Rent
BEECH MOUNTAIN condo for rent by the day, week or month. Tennis, golf and swimming Call 946 3248 days, 946 0694 nights
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE professional to share 2 bedroom apartment moving to Greenville in December. CaM 1 493 2803 after 7 p.m.
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom unfurnished brick home. $100 a month rent, 'd utilities. 5 miles from ECU campus. Pre terably a college student. Call 758 0966, ask for Lucille.
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
to share '2 expenses. Birchwood Sands Mobile Homes, 752 3040
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share 2 bedroom apartment close to campus. $92,50 month. 758 0714 or 752 3484.
RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE to
share 2 bedroom duplexi Serious student or professional, nqn smoker preferred. $150 per month plus halt utilities and phone. CaTl after -5, 756 9489.
WANTED; FEMALE Roommates to share country home. Children welcome. For further Information, contact: Mariene, PO Box 7312, Greenville.
144
Wanted To Buy
BEASLEY LUMBER Products will pay up to $150 per M for good grade standing Pine Timber. Also top prices paid for good grade Pine logs delivered to Scotland Neck mill. Call Gene Baker 826 4121 or 826 4203.
NEED TOBACCO CLOTH.
Reasonable price. 756-3634.
WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc 756 8615The Dady Reflector, Gr'eijnville N C ' Sunday. OcTober 2 1983 Q-9
The Ral Estate
Corner iTheBB&TDifference
WATERFRONT
LOTS
This is a unique offering of waterfront lots located on scenic Blounts Bay, approximately 16 miles from Washington and 30 miles from Greenville. One to four acres from 514,500 to 521,000. If you have been looking for waterfront property you owe it tor yourself to compare.
REALTOR
210 N. Market SI. Washington. N.C. 27889
946-7151
Lexington Square Townhomes
Near The Greenville Athletic Club
Model Open Daily 1-5 P.M.
Phase II, Unit 31
2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered
J.R.Yorke Construction Co., Inc.
355-2286
210 N. Market St. Washington, N. C
Phone
946-7151
213 MALLARD DRIVE MACSWOODS
Custom built, spacious 4 or 5 bedroom New England cottage style home located adjacent to 12 acre pond. Well appointed formal living room and dining room, kitchen with built in hutch and good storage area, large family room with random width pegged oak flooring, solid cypress beams, extensive built in storage space and oversized old brick fireplace. Three large ceramic tile baths. Double garage and deck with screened in area. This home offers gracious living in an extremely private setting.
8V2% Loan Assumption
.$125,000
The ABC'S of AAoney Management
Adjustable Rate Mortgage
nn
Affordable, this may be your key to home ownership. Call or come see us for information.
HOM FCDCIUL SAVMGS
AWlOAMAJSOOAim E5C
Of lAjnM NOATH CaAOUHA
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE- 758-3421 ARLINGTON BOULEVARD 756-2772
NEW LISTING!
ELMHURST
This roomy Dutch Colonial features 4 bedrooms, family size country kitchen, living room and den, garage with 2nd story workshop plus a fenced backyard. All this is located in a quiet established neighborhood.
^ ^64,900
ball & lane
752-0025
Richard Lane, Listing Broker. 752-8819
Gwen
Tyson
I m Gwen Ivsnli. MiirUjflye l.oati Representdlive <il BBT Mam office <m the corner of riiircl and (ireene Streets m Cireeinille There s an attitude at BBlVT that makes us mure than )Ust an or dinarv bank It s our commitment to meeting the banking, needs of even,' BBlV F customer vcith quali tv services and skill l_f_you ever need sometfiinq, come bv the of fice or call me at 7.S2 If 1 can t meet vour need. III find so meone who can 1 liere s a special pride at BBiT to do our verv best for voLi,
Utncr looit'oii' ter vour - (iiuenicnte .Arlmgtoti Bkd .Mc-ilU). VlildyC Stiiriloi.scj'; Ri)dO .Mccdci'ihall Student Lenter j4 f.'iur inoitinn iMii,
. 24 hniir n,inking rr,achine arailar.e.
BMT
Its Mom Ihan Aliank. Its ;\ll T\llltU(G.
Mt nfht 7 f-tdt Kil Ih pn'.it hisiimiii C Ration
dixJy'Vj ROOrvv. RoOAy.
AaJ
JOiNBri dcoRz -foit
ei'/'Aed Pie
dooj yieA 'Ao
A/vJ p/l^A
OUcJ /vj
it 'ib ryiAiS-h/t <D/e up- oo/dk /ds 00//y
2dAI2-
dey
,75^/37^ Q
RE/WTOm
/ /o- 7^^
o Daily Retleclor. Greenville. N C__Sunday. Octobefr&^^83
BELVEDERE
BY OWNER
12 7/8 interest rate available fo' qualified buyer. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath, family room with fireplace, cedar siding, carport. Huge woodfid lot with tremendous wood deck oft beck Great neighborhood
206 E. WOODSTOCK DRIVE 756-4618 (HPmil 758-0055 (Business)
JEANNETTECOX
agency
REALTOR 756 1322
'f Greenville Bivn
VO-
TO-
rC. ARE - t E N . '. S
Vi ' r.\' or A- re R 0 Bov ftAl .er-vL-e ^ vOurtrp^copV H^r-i.iv :ir ^ V'nq emonmiv 0 ..ro-'. DOvkeo w'*e Dic'ureb '0 I- .vno pr ces 0* nomes ana
- t' -X.1 'y
- y 0-U AR WOVING TO A N W
yovr *ree ;opv or Homes or . V ng n me cUy you are sO'ng } Know the real estafe market letpre you get tnerc vour.copy -iS r our ott le We can nelp you buy ve ' O'* Vade a riome any place m r-e.nat'On
THE REAL
ESTATE CORNER
LDCLo^Ltil.
For Information Contact:
Hay Field Log Homes
NEW LISTINGS
TIMELESS BEAUTY offered along with this new home under construction on a lovely wooded lot in TucKer Estates. Boasts formal foyer & dining room with select oak floors, entertainment see great room with fireplace, a well-planned kitchen with breakfast area, 3 bedrooms, 2; baths, 12x14 rear deck & additional outside storage. The very best designs last forever.
83,500
UPTOWN QUALITY-DOWNHOME VALUE
featured in this distinctive home less than 1 year old. Extensive wood mouldings & textured. w'allpaper compliment the great room with fireplace complete with Black Bart ..insert. Also otters country kitchen highlighted by built-in china cabinet & mofeile work island. 3 bedrooms. T'; baths, deck with Chippendale accents, carport, added bonus of detached 16x16 office & woodshed.
*65,000
Listing Broker. .
Elaine Troiano 756-6346
(919) 746-4616
BY OWNER
BAYWOOD
TENNIS BUFFS 2500 Sq Ft contemporary on wooded lo! over an acre. Near Terinis Club 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, double garage,
LOADED WITH EXTRAS! Sun room, great room with central two wa^ fireplace, lots of decking. Must see $120.000's.
CALL 756-2340
The Best Kept
Real Estate Secret biGieenviUe.
(.iiiKToii-Hrowm.
Koal estate people in nLiny North (Carolina towns and eines kmnv us, \\e\e sei sed tlieni tor yeais. ikit not enough jvoplo in Ciieens'ille kiiou (laiji^tii-Brinvn--yet. We r'ttei the leal estate niai ket as inueh as a lleude r in town.
In mans eases, ini'ie.
Size -WeVe among the laiueRt nn'i tgage hankeis in the country with a servicing pttrrtolio exeeeiling S3 hillii'ii. We tinaneed over *1(41(1 hoiiK's last year manv ot them here in North (larolma. Strength We've Iven in luisiness since l'M6 and we're a subsidiary of i iivt Union Uorpi'iation. one ot the N>utheast's largest hank holding eonipanies with assets exceeding hillion. Service W'e quaiih- Kiyeix wrtli a complete range ot etmsentional. I t l.'\ N \'.'\ loans tor detached and attached housing. We process loans locally and close u|uiekly. Anil we always have money available.
Now you know us. Wli\' not try us?
Contact lerri Williams, .Manager leresa Swindell. IVoeessor |osve 1 inison. Processor, .31( kiS. .Memorial -Cireeinille. N.(2~>.\3 'd'f ,\33"2(Mh . .
Cameron-Brown
Mortc A r.'s' 0
Mortgage Bankers A r .'S' Urv-J" Company
I Jeannette
COX
Agencv, Inc.
BUYING OR SELLING
We Get Right On It!
1)1 Fll X tlOSL ro IMVLKSITY. 'ui , oe I - : Sf>5 000
Il 11 I I si-\Klf K HOMI o r
S4I500' 1
BKOOh V.Al 1 f S - . b'
HOI IN Hil l S
Blia BANKS
1 SI AllS I'l HI I I I
IN I VI KN W AN
AXISOI ISIDI ( UN Bl 1 (ONVT
: SSSOOl)
MOIHI H DAD AND ( Hll DHl N
591 900
A VUlRl I) 01 I 11 (,AN( I
TOP SHLI.I TOW/NHOUSL AT A BOTTOM lINK FKICL Conifti potdty s!,linq m this .on-li-.n i-'iut- wiV. a beet uld u paii.o 'o' atideu uutdou.t nmvinin; d'ld a-Oasempnt area mat could bn madi..' in'o .o.-anf-'-oom 0'lOud as stcaqe $41,000
rvr CiOTTA GO sa,- V)f oAnu- Hf v;us' soi b, Vic cn.'i u' iTiS mon'h and ns'un to /.ha: he s sel'ihh Ai- pnck 3 heC'oom .-anch 2 baths den A-itn n-cpidce catpo't and ehced backyard $60.900 O' maye us an o"er
1)01 S VOUH HOMI HAVI, GROWING PAINS.'
I'', n,. 'u'- bcinc .-"an'i.ea Toqthhi- Uic'e s no 'cdSL'i ,ou- have to be m this cnchantin..: 'an bhnq 'ds-n Ai'h .'sGigan:i Faviiy Room with 'iie,cace a-- T Ded'ooms ovrai amine; an.1 liymq ",.oms d'i " ' d' ddtaqe on ,',ooced lot I'.ith tencco tank -d'C O-'V' 200!' SGud'e '/(! Iivmq d'ea Mid 80s Ch.-. O.vs
It s 111 llii' hiiitdrtds A Hl(, OPPORTl A. ;Y to 1 IVI IN l.NNNDALL
-os .; 'eatures
c 1' /,' ch..d'- ' .al areas.,
Vi ' , 'vsm "em.end,. ,s p,d.'I '.qht y.it
bd"/v's and ''e baths '.CaC and ie:
, u aO'jo' ad 'he ey'a 'ea'u'es /.'mch m.ake . disiinc $120.000.
IHI K1 IS STILL IIMI a " i - ,f ,-ju
/, '^ris "sr-.-, -.n if.i 'iv'e' vviii dehqht ,ou' , j,Greatroohh tou' ben'osrps, bur'-ead ;,C' anG r.oa'-basm
5140 000
wot II) YOU DOSOML LXTKA WORKTO GET I H A I BARG AIN HOMI YOU VL BLLN LOOK IN(, OR' don.- --.s',A,r A the.
Oa-c hS. .1 ;e' h. n a' ; -ea",
.'.a-'S :..nd'00' '.ome .'.'.h /.r,
,i'-S a' ''." .a- 'i''P'd(.e ;jius qarrie
, "T $67.000
OPPORTUNHY ISN I KNOf KING AT YOUR DOOR ' , S c.,' : , - I ii-e 'his '
-_,rTC n,, . Pr-es a-s 'i/;'.
P.POKfRS RORCiA. , $67,900 j' : s.-.nn- r
SOI THLRN HOSPITALi rV WT.LCOMLS YOU
"I. a'l' n ,a' I /a'' 'Vei.e m/r
i/.''r. ,'!/. id 'OS'' viSide Bvq
t sv/-.'d. '.'s.ases "f-'-.cU porch
I,. r-S'-c arc Side Five st,j.d/ Puli'.in pookcases Super.'
ppranrium VA loan assumption of $83,000 .a.p'd'i or non veteran can qualify $99,400.
UNIVI RSITY ARLA
Cl ..'en I'K; dpa"'tc $59.900',
"k
UNDLR CONSTRUCTION n one 0 't,. 'aSt. S! ,.'jMhq '^eiqnbor'OoGs tojin 'you /.iii tirnj true ^'a'c, s'Oy -pnck 'lome Conve'nc''' irpinri , ..ms am , -jOit one bedro&rn JO'/. .,ii d t'lee UP StmC'd. '-.-atures th'OuqtiOUt Act no/,.a' :
a- .cv dm C'atinq ,ou'Selt Becl*Ord $13.5.000
COMLORTABLl AND ROOMY BIST DESCRIBES I HIS LOVELY RANCH IN ROBl R-SONVll.LE O'liy tcu' yea'S Old and'm excfiiien! con.p'ion Ove' iOOO.squa'e leet of living area in. 'fuduiq .ivinq and dminq combination 'arriily room V'.'ee bedroprrs ana double qaraqe $79.900
l.N'NNDALE-his none ccuid pe 'fa'u'e: m H's,Eeau'dul 'or peau'i'ui d is m i-verv uetaii Eis-qah' .,inq 'oom a'.d ovC'tsi.'ed' dininq 'o.om Ciiee-y den /,i;n fireplace bright breakfast room ana we'i equ'pped kitcnen Treniendous playroom our Dedroom.s 3'. baths and extras loo numerous too name $147,800 , .
QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD for this attnaclive 2-story with double garage Bay window in the kitchen- 3 bedrooms 2. baths, all'with VJilliamsburg charm $79.900
EXQUISITE ATTENTION to detail in this stately ] traditional home beautifully sited on'a natural lot From the marble floor m the entrance 10 the I refreshing sun-filled glassed porch ove.rlooking the | private yard this four bedroom home has a distinction seldom seen Call for details 133.900.
SO MUCH ROOM and so much privacy is offered in this lijvely tn-leyei home m Cherry Oaks There are 4 bedroorris 3 baths The kitchen with its eat-m area overlooks 'he generous oen with fireplace and built ms Tnere is an additional rec room for the Kids to 'orr.p in and a screened-in back porch Lovely lot $87,500
LOCATED ON A CAREFREE, well shaded lot in Stratford, this adorable Salt Box with cedar siding is ready for your inspection Features great room with fireplace and woodstove insert, country kitchen with It s own fireplace, study three bedrooms and two baths This home is full of Colonial detail and charm $81,900 00
SAY HELLO" TO A GOOD BLY-and the
discovery of a King-si/e family home 4 or 5 bedrooms, and 3 full baths Brook Valley $119.000 00.
uednnette
COX
REALTOR
756-1322 Anytime!
I Agency, Inc.
mSkd
the tes
"Ji/.'F'/,
U*
V\'heii you first enter IhTutops, you think you iux (Miteiing a gi'ai'ious eountiy estate.
lnno\ati\e design, piime location, eestatieally ex('iting, eanifitie living and aftordahl( (lu'ality ('onstmetion aiT* only a fiivv ot thi; a('('olad(s which have been used to describe tliis new (oni'ept in gracious living.
Hoiik's nestled in tliis iKiauliHiI enviitinnient lut; enhanced by nitural landscaping, ('ntating a piu'k-like atmosphere.
Ihietops is designe^d for people who value goi)d design and fine . workmanship at afiordahle prices.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2:00-6:00 a.
Quiet eul-de-saes add to the liveability, privacy and security.
rhe lloor plans indutie both a one level and a Wvo level design and can best he described as a villa or tovvTiiiouse There ai^e Wv o hedixiorn plans with two baths and tliree bedniom plans with two and a half baths. Piiees stall at $56,900.
V isit lixH'tops today and learn how you can attbrd to be pu1 of tliis exciting eommunity. Your Hostess: ts-Gfmflon
DIRECTIONS
Go South On Evans Street One Mile Past T.V. Station, Turn Left At First Cross Roads, Go One Block And Turn Right IntoTreetops.
Built By: Chapin & Associates s. .Memorial Dr.
7.)fi-12:54
.Marketed By: Moore & Sauter Associates lid S. Kvans St. .8-(;0.iL
%
WATERFRONT ACREAGE
cess. Contact:
m
PEAlTOR*
633-6484
CHUCK MOODY, Land Broker Trident Realty Services, Inc.
2407 Grace Avenue P.O. Box 2365 New Bern, North Carolina 28560
FLI
Cci'lj
633-3382
The Real Estate Corner
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Sunday. October 2. 1983 D-11
\
COME SEE WHAT YOURE MISSIW5!
AT
Heritage Village
For Only ^ '38,500
These brand new homes are conveniently located off 14th Street near Red Banks Road. FHA/VA or Conventional Financing Available.
Open Today 2-5 PM.
ball & lane
OVERTON & POWERS
ESTATE REALTY CG.
752-5058
Vou will De impressed wiin tnis fuiiy carpetea inree bedroom home. Spacious kitchen with pantry; living room has ceiling fan. Very tastefully decorated; patio, storage building, fenced backyard, corner lot; assumable 8% FHA loan. OWNER ^YS SELL!! The price has been reduced to 547,900.
COUNTRY HOME only five miles west of Winterville with three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas, family room with glass doors viewing the 1.57 landscaped acre lot; 16x20 storage building-574,900.
Three bedroom home in popular College Court; spacious kitchen, family room or ideally situated for recreation room; detached garage with workshop area-552,900.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER on this country home 14 miles west consisting of three bedrooms, two baths, detached garage and shop, swimming pool. Price reduced to 565,000.
Billy Wilson 758-4476 '
Jarvis or Dorlis Mills 752-3647
VALUE FOR SALE!
Very lovely one (1) acre (150x300) homesite with old house that can be remodeled or removed for new home-Lots of large oak and pecan trees, old barn on ste-Only eight (8) miles from Greenville or Farmville.
AndOne more just like above.
Lovely-livable four (4) bedroom brick home in Farmville, central heat and air, only one (1) block from business area.
Unusually nice three (3) bedroom, brick-veneer home with central heat in Fountain, N.C.
Excellent advantages of above are reasonably priced for you.
Call Today!
SUMMIT, INC. of Pin* COUNTY
Real Estate-lnsurance Farmville, N.C.
753-3327 or 753-3745
w.g. blount & associates
REALTORS - DEVELOPERS 756-3000
Cypress Creek Towijkoipes
MODELS OPEN C' EACH
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2 - 6
123/4% Fixed Rate Financing Available
Bob Barker 975-3179 Betty Beacham . 756-3880
Bill Blount 756-7911 Stanley Peaden. 756-1617
Duffus
Realty
Inc.
201 Commerce Street
MEMBER
756-5395
RELO,
REDUCED $5000
This pretty ranch on it's very pretty lot has been reduced substantially in price You need to see it now! Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, great room with fireplace, dining room, wood deck, garage. Now only $79,900!
ON CALL THIS WEEKEND
Kay Davis Broker
During Non-Office Hours Please Call 756-6966
COUNTRY
Private and pretty. Two lovely wooded acres. Four bedrooms and three baths. Foyer, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, screened porch, double garage. A beauty. $108,000.
BROAD STREET
AYDEN
PARIS AVENUE EARNER S HOME ASSUMPTION
LOAN ASSUMPTION
REDUCED IN COGHILL
f ...r Yi'.'wur,.*' .!i '. .'Ij, ,: ' , I.1
1I'S' '' '* I.' :.' 'j ' -'
, tOUNfRY
A I* , II- s
I'V, ! *f. ;wi,.-' I.,.,! ,
-II.. r-,', II ..I'. : . T,I". ;r.M"
I'.-iM . c.Mi.; t 1 . I, , _+.. :
PLEASANT RDGE
V.. l-..,.,. V.:,, '
HOW ABOUT ONLY 10' 2% APR
PAMLICO BEACH
COUNTRY SQUIRE
EET
C HESTNUT STREET
POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION
PARIS AVENUE
' .1 . A.i' .,j
if Cvi.in .11 B..K-: P o'lr. ' .f.lmfi'i - pp iMpr-i,
VACATION COnAGE
Pip, . .'ii.vi- . ,11.1,;. pj, II lU., pfai.iii, j r,p, Iiu'.j 11,-.1 .ir.r.ji.pa| s.in, vi,ij' 2-',: 'jiiii
REDUCED AND ASSUMPTION
fd ,11 I'-.-nil pi'i. Aliit.ia.'i III., jii.lid
.,11 ,ii..ii. I'f l-HA ,d> ,f d Ai ,1 pavnifii 'I,' -fifi 1,1 dll,f pdii ,' |if I ,A.i,- I'lf. vli ;i.-palh,
i.lm- ii.M '.iri, ,, 1 ,11 ill.
t>r
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
PRETTY RANCH
TWIN OAKS
TWIN OAKS
REDUCED IN BELVEDERE
POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION
NEAR HOSPITAL
CAN YOU BEAT THIS PRICE?
0 >1
dP k
Bf
TENNIS ANYONE?
A homf With fvfrfthiny (pi'ludirg a tfnnis court' In 'AdMonbuig about twfriK minutfs trom Gtffnvilif Fivf bfdioomi ?' 2 balhi iicing loom icilh tiifplacf spacious .dining room panpc lamik room or study music room suttpoicb, doubt gaiagf large lot $63 OlKI
WESTHAVEN
Ranch home or, a cornet lot Thiee bedrooms two baths fotet bvngtoom formal dmmg room famik room with fitepla.e carport fencing $63 mr.)
HARDEE ACRES
This prettv spin level in ihe older area of Hardee Acres has ihtce bedrooms and Iwo balhs Great room with fireplace dining area wuodsloie papo and storage buiktmg Possible n,an assumplion $63 TO
E ELLSWORTH
Ihe pool clubhouse and tennis ooms iwu balhs lover living lamilv room with fireplace pat-o
yrtHim
EASTWOOD RANCH
A rats'-1-,.me and a great ucalion Three Bedrooms tw - Barbs -v;ng tucm lamiiy room with fireplace J,n.rig area wood deck double .arpon Jacu22i
$00 INIl
RED OAK
A p,.ijtt tkjok and .mmacdiate tr- teve.-or. a guiel ,j J. sa. T-.tee bedrooms two baths aving-room,' ir ngtoom familv njom garage storage building $6? 2m
KILBY ISUND con AGE
't -jjt ,.pporTs.ntv 10 ,jwr a crjTtage in this fine area three Bedrooms I'r baths living room dining ate s.ieereJp.ic'- great-. eis Psai ,anding $0.b UOH
CAMELOT
C'jii'er Hit wt". pienv larmhouse sivie home T'ree. Bedta.ras pi, Balhs lover wiih hardwood floors . gre.ii i,ji,m wiiB. fireplace d.nmg room wood deck lenr. A.te range $60TOi
CHERRYOAKS
T*,, .ear ,id .,,rner ranch home Three Bedrooms iw , Bai'i- love: great r,jom wilh Iirepiace dining r^aim garage h-,jrt *a.k !, recreational area
RED BANKS ROAD
Appealing coniemporarv wiih posSiBie loan assjm;f
Three bedrooms two baths, fuver diningroom
uieaiT ,omw,|h!itep,a.e Veivnke $73,SIX)
REDUCED HIWAV 43 SOUTH
This ptetls 'ume r i'll- .ountrv Bas Beer
suii5iartia,lv reduced r pnce Four bedrooms three eaihs bjver' Irving rooni dining noum famiiv room iwo iitepiaces dua. hear pumps carpirt N,jw only
GRinON
Jiiaiious and gracious Four Bedrooms 3'2 baths "jvei lu ng room dmmg room breakfast area lam'ivruomwitf. !,repa.e garage $7,rkXi
STRATFORD
This beautilu! home is omy rhiee years old and is
loedied on a guiet sPeet Convenient to almost
escivihing this 2 s|,jtv paditionai has three
Bedrooms 2 balhs greai room with fireplace room wood deck $7b h(i(l
PLANTATION HOME
loui 'ipportun'tv to own that sourhern plantation sivie h.jme In Ihe .uunirv, neat Simpson wiih appiocimareiy T'k acres of ,and and a two sia,l siabie Behind -those beauPful while columns is a luver library with firepiace Irving room dining room
lamiiy n.om wiih fireplace Four bedrooms and urn
iiaihs Spill,tail fence Assumable VA loan $76 SOU
BIG REDUCTION
sets pretty tanch home Beautilully .andscaped or .lubsianliai.reducriut'm price' Three bedrooms Po baihs foyer great room wilh fireplace exposed
Beam ceiling dining area wood deck Possible
.issuraption in Tucker Estates and now only $76 TO
REDUCED $5000
This pretty ranch on it s very prelTy lol has been teouceo subslanrially in price Yoa need to see il ,'ow I hree bedrucims two baths foyer great r-oum W'lh Iirepiace dih-ng room wood deck garage Sow oniy$7')TOI'
CHERRY OAKS
Only a few years .nd Three bedrooms two Baihs 'oyer great room wilh firepiace formal d.nmg r.Hsm lols of Closer space Possible assurnplioi $7'>Xkl
CONTEMPORARY
In Weslhaven III Greal room wilh fuepiace. dining area three bedrooms Iwo baths office wood deck .arpon Possible loan assumption $b3 5(Ki
TUCKER CONTEMPORARY
IS cuniemporary in Tucker Estates has been reduced m price Really nice with an enpance foyer formal dining room breaklasl area three bedrooms and two balhs Wood deck Now only $B3 tXKJ WESTHAVENIII
An impressive and appealing Iwo slory with lour bedrooms and 2' 2 balhs Foyer living tuom dining loom lamiiy room with fireplace storage building playhouse Nicely landscaped ceniipede grass
$isisfi(iii
CLUB PINES
A leaily pretty Williamsburg with three berJrooms and 2'2 Baths Foyer living.room forma, dining room family rooni with firepace Nicely decorated mlenoi' ESB Bllti
CLUB PINES
Owner may consider teni w-ilh an .option lu Buy Corner lot iwo-SIory Four Bedrooms three Baths foyer itving room dr.mg room family room with fireplace solar hoi water storage FiW 'Syr
COUNTRY
Pr-vale-and preiry Two loveiy wooOed acres Four Bedrooms and three Baths Foyer, living room dining room family room with firep,dce screened porch JuuBie garage A beaut. $luhlkKi
BROOK VALLEY GOLF COURSE
On the lenth hoe Wooded corner lot f -jur or f-c. Bedrooms three Baths foyer Irving room dm ng room family T-Airr, with 'fiiepia.e ,.brary' garage-Brck patio spacious $132 TO LYNNDALE
A really choice 1 >nrdae home Traditiona. two stor, w.lh lour Bedrooms ano 2'; Barhs Foyer living room formal dining room family room wih fiiepiace wood deck garage Possibe assumpiiun Redjcedtv$:H*i(i
LYNDALE
Luveiy Beaulitu. and spacious A four bedroom a.no 2'. Bath ranch home -with foyer living room and Jin.ng room a. with hardwood lioors tamny room with firepiace Breakfast area soianum double garage or playroom walk up stairs to aitic Beparale storage bund.ng $13 M
DELIGHTFUL CONTEMPORARY
On a ,arge wooded iui Four or five bedrooms and 2'baths Foyer living room dining room arge lamik room wilh fireplace pretty kitchen wood deck screened porch garage $15fiO(X.i
BROOK GREEN
Exceplional F'y-e bedrooms and three baths Foyer livtng room dining room soianum dining area lower level famify room three fireplaces sewing and laundry room workshop carport Many many extras $1b3UU(I
BUILDING LOTS
On Ram Horn Roayi,ihR 523i aboui 1 2 miles from the by pass Lols are approximately 100 x 25(1 $7500 each
FOUR ACRES
In. Beihe 2oned for Business Liwk al ihis location' $40 000
RED OAK LOT
Spacious lol wilh nice Pees Build your new home here $4 500
PINEWOOD FOREST
Choice wooded ,ol in Pmewood Forest Perfect sire for your new hcime $l6TO
HIWAV 33 EAST
Approx maielv 2 acres of cleared land nor lai from
ciN limiis $601100
AYDEN<JRIFT0N10T
Betweei, Ayden and Gnfton this tor may be |usl whal you are rooking for' $' (XXj
WOODED-CHERRY OAKS
A really .pacious wooded lot for your new home-115 X 400leel $14 500
CAMELOT
A fine lOI in this nice subdivision Buiici your new home here or purchase for your future invesimeni $0 500
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
A* bO X 100 ft mera, buildi'ng Excellent kxation on 2b4 By pass Faimviiie Covered unloading area outside fenced sloiage area large parking bt buiiaole lor a wide range ot .ommerciai enterprises SWTOi
WE SELL GREENVILLE
Kay Davis. Broker.........................^.....................756-6966
Sue Henson, REALTOR ....................756-3375
Evelyn Darden, Broker........................................758-9878
Thelma Whitehurst, REALTOR, GRI, CRS 355-2996
Catherine Creech. REALTOR..............................756-6537
Sue Casteilow, Broker And Insurance ..... 756-3082
Charlene Nielsen. REALTOR, Rentals.................752-6961
Anne Duffus, REALTOR, GRI..............................756-2666
Jack DuHus, REALTOR. GRI, CRS ........756-5395
Shirley Tacker, Broker........................................756-6835
SUPER BUYS FOR SUPER BUYERS!!!
NEW LISTING-BEAUTIFUL LOT loaded Azaleas, dogwoods and camellias highlight this great buy at 122 King George Road in popular Brook Valley Subdivision, This well planned home features three extra large bedrooms, formal living and dining areas, family room with fireplace, well designed kitchen with island, cozy breakfast nook, built m china closet, two baths, double garage and loads of closet and storage space. Heavily wooded lot $98,500.
NEW LISTING-IDEALLY LOCATED! JUST RIGHT FOR'tHAT FIRST HOME! Get out of renting and ovm your own home Located at 2701 East Third Street this cute tiome features living roo.m with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, two bedrooms, one bath, den and porch. Located on a corner lot. Priced at S37.500.'
GREAT HOME-iF. the country m the Winterville area Well designed floor plan features great room with, fireplace and wood stove insert Kitchen and tug dmmg area, three bedrooms, two full baths, extra large utility area ano storage room, tremendous play room or family area has just been added to the rear Nice big wooded four acre lot with room to expanr Cal for a showing Priced right at $87,500.
$55,500-SELLER PAYS ALL POINTS AND CLOSING COSTS. Uni
que floor plan with walk around fire place, great room dmmg area, three bedrooms: two full baths FHA-VA , FINANCING AVAILABLE
$56.000-BACK ON THE MARKET-Great VA Loan Assumption. Great room with fireplace, dmmg room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Loan Bal. of approx. S45.100. 10''2 '.I FIXED RATE, payments of S484.54 PITI. Located at 101 Lancaster Drive. Cambridge Subdivision ,
$62,000-HORSESHOE ACRES-Near the Hospital area. Immaculate Home with great room and dmmg area with fireplace, nice kitchen, three good sized bedrooms, two full baths, big lot with storage area and garden area. Located at 119 Blacksmith Lane
$64,500-BRAND NEW LISTING-College Court area. Good floor plan in this fine home at 1113 Ragsdale Road. Living room and dining area, amily room, kilchen-eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths, screened m back porch. Big carport area with storage. Big corner lot.
$64,900-WINTERV.ILLE AREA. Custom built home on large corner lot. Approx, 1800 square feet of area. Foyer, formal living and dmmg rooms, family room with fireplace, big kitchen with eating rea, three bedrooms, two full baths, large garage with storage area. Fenced m back yard. 104 Ragland Road Great buy for tne money'
$69.500-CAMELOT-FOUR BEDROOMS AJ A GREAT PRICE!
Located at'402 Lancelot Drive on a large wooded lot with lots of privacy. Plan offers family room with fireplace, dmmg area, convenient kitchen, two bedrooms, down, two up. big garage, nice deck S69.500,
$69,500-LOVELY HOME IN GREAT AREA. Conveniently located at 102 Graham Street m College Court Immaculate plan ..features foyer, formal hvmg and dmmg rooms, very nice kitchen with pretty breakfast nook, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two fuil baths, Nice lot Lots of extras.
$72,500-OWNER WANTS TO FINANCE! Nearly 1900 square feet of area on a wooded corner lot m a great location at 802 Forest Hills Circle. Lots of features m this one owner home like hardwood floors, two fireplaces. & porches highlight the floor plan with foyer, formal living and dmmg rooms, den or study, kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, two tu/"baths.
$116.000-OLD WILLIAMSBURG COMES ALIVE! Lovely two story with ovet 2500 square feet of area. Floor plan features big foyer, formal living and dmmg rooms, family room with fireplace, big kitchen with eating area, four bedrooms. 2' 2 baths, big deck, double garage. Large wooded lot
COUNTRY LIVING-$125,000 Located near the Med School and Hopsital on NC #43 about 2 miles from the hospital 3100 square feet of house and' 3' 2 acres of land plus additional acreage available. Large barn good for many uses. Four or five bedrooms, great kitchen, many, many extra's too numerous to mention,
$165,000-ON THE GOLF COU^E! Beautiful two story with everything. 3600 s|(<jare feet of heated area plus a big basement. Big f^er. living and dmmg rooms, family room with firejMfete. large kitchen, four bedrooms, three full baths, extra big utility area, double garage, lovely wooded lot. Must see to appreciate!
$185,000-TREMENDOUS HOME IN THE COUNTRY. Large 1'r story with over 4000 square feet of area. Everything's big including formal living and dmmg rooms, kitchen, five bedrooms, big play or rec area. Also a 2000 square foot garage or multi purpose building Located on 5 acres of land just minutes from Greenville
The D.G. Nichols Agency
752-4012
Katherine Vinson 752-5778
David Nichols 355-6414
r
\
. D-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday October 2. t9J
THE REAL
ESTATE CORNER
NEW LISTINGS
Look What We Have To Offer!
LISTINGS
rdthb
SHAM
RACE
'3 b'ClrOOrlS V. stove insert Dock
;r Faye Bovven.
.WHISPERING PINES. SIMPSON
- SINGLETREE SUBDIVISION
FHA 235 loan assumption 3 bedrooms. I'r baths. Big deck looks out-over a yard full of fruit trees, tiowers Decorated m earth tones using finest quality wall coverings, carpet, etc Faye Bowen, listing broker
CAMELOT
New house under construction. Be your own decorator if you buy now. Choose your own color schemes, carpet, vinyl, wallpaper.
LOTS
sr:3ci.m
C'eaut'f'tii lot with lots o trees 3 3 'uil baths 1254 square *eet SufrkerL. T'fiich doors Dimng'Tobm, 546 500 Fave Bowen
ELWOOD PINES
NEW HOMES
',1 -u.tr Candiewick Spnt-level hc'ns ".s 2 . baths Formal living ana di Huae-'ec room wdh fireplace .yer Favt Bo.ven listing broker
LAKE ELLSWORTH
2 loiuf
r.ii brick home w-ith 3 bedroom Bo qarcce oerteC or ha'VJ,r^otr hobb, 'as '.ts o' storage.oabinets ami ...i' spcice ',>'0 r^Qnn. fo,e.'large den with -.re: lac':' rr nas breastast .room 562 500 Favt. Bowm'
CHERRY OAKS
A mal s'hovymlace with.lots of extras. 3 bedrooms, all with ,',.aik in closets Master bedroom has private bath ,\iih dressing, area Large great room with fireplace Foyer dmmg room. Kitchen has breakfast area, with shdmg glass door and separate utility roo'm 571.500 . '
CHERRY OAKS
Just s.Uirte.d construction, buy now and choose your own ;"air',;, ;.Farpet. wali-cverings. etc. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths Dining room, activity room, foyer.
ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION
Winterville area, community water. Must build minimum 1300 square foot home $7500.
MILLBROOK SUBDIVISION
Wooded lot i 120'xl70. Located inSimpson area. Eastern Pines water system. $8000
NORTH RIVER ESTATES
Several nice lots to sell or will build home for you according to your plans.
CAMELOT
Nice wooded lots in established subdivision $12,000.
LOTS TO BUILD
SINGLETREE
118C. square fet't of well-planned living area, 3 bedrooms, 1'. baths Lcicdtf'.d.ofl-cul-de-sac on large.lot VViJJ4?ev-4^.sc-plus closing costs
Will build your home on this large wooded lot on Hooker Rd.
752-2814
Wili build to suit you in Cherry Oaks, Camelot, Tucker Estates. Lot of plans to choose from. Some nicely wooded lots.
701 W. Fourteenth St.
Greenville
Faye Bowen 756-5258
Winnie Evans 752-4224
[B
mgs
VACATION RIGHT - Bring your clothes and move in. 3 Bedroom. 1 bath cottage. Furnished. Listing Broker: Evelyn Bullock - 752-4707.
TIRED OF CITY LIVING? See this 3 bedroom. 1 ' 2 bath brick ranch. Excellent condition VA 9' 2 APR loan assumption. Listing Broker: Blanche Forbes 756-3438.
DREAM COME TRUE. Your own 3 bedroom cottage completely furnished, with water a'ccess Listing Broker. Evelyn Bullock - 752-4707
BEAUTIFUL 4 Bedroom, two story home. Formal areas, fireplace, deck, hardwood floors. Ex-cellent^condition. Possible loan assumption. ListingBroker: Blanche Forbes 7563438
WATCH THE BOATS from your screened in front porch. Excellent condition 3 Bedrooms, living room/kitcheh. dining. Listing Broker: Evelyn Bullock 752-4707
BEAUTIFUL Ranch style 3 bedroom 2 bath home with approximately 18 acres of land Approximately 15 acres fenced in Lots of extras Listing Broker: Ray Everett 75o 9549
CENTURY 21 BFORBES
2717 S. Memorial Drive ^ Greenville's First Century 21 Location
756-2121
Evelyn Bullock - Broker - On Call.....752-4707
David Heniford - REALTOR.........758-0180
J.C. Bowen - REALTOR, GRI 756-7426
Ray Everett REALTOR 758-9549
Blanche Forbes - REALTOR. GRI 756-3438
Each Office Independently Owned and Operated
WERE THE RESULTS PEOPLE IN GREENVILLE!
W-r,.
of Il .!>''. .1- a button hedrooni. 1 2 bath townhouse
A 10.. Kh'i' Includes drapes downstairs, glass fire screen and . e. ,r I'r.cei*. at 's4'i 20(1 and Convenient to the pool
HERES A LOG home with over 1114 square feet of living space that's )ust right for the, first investment Singles and couples love the value of the Homestead II log home which features 3 bedrooms, 1' 2 baths and a full front porch' on over *4 o( an acre Priced to sell in the mid $40's
GET A GOOD BUY m Windv Hidge with tra- three , t townhouse with loaiis of extras Jenn Aire gnii wa'lter ,1: built in bookcase, house fan. extra wallpapet plus tri.n; , parking available Offered at 553 0(1(1
I ' 1.1-
I 'I'; ..-
\ RANCH on Hillside Drive in Elmhurst n- kitchen with dinette area, oversized den with ais 3 bedrooms, 12 baths, carpet over Cl, --tiaiied lot on dead end street Priced in the
CHERRY OAKS Seeing is believing the space in this contemporarv ranch with over 1700 square feet Access to deck from dining area and great room Large master bedroom with separate powder room, bath and walk-in closet Well decorated and energy efficient Offered at $74.800
ribe- till-, '-i
DREXELBROOK Reduced Immaculate best ..
bedroom^ home with all large rooms and spaicms ba k ,.ir i not to mention the rear screened porch Over 200li square teet in one ui Greenville s most prestigious areas .New heat pump and toot C.il! today Offered at 5Kb.900, ,
uui plai.i now and lake advantage of -K, lu^l<l^n features and 1(1 1.5C itiei; toiii.d in an 1100 ,square foot 11.0 I'slr.i energv efficient
4 BEDROOMS Tins home in Grifton lust iieeii teino.leled inside New roof, heat pump, freshk painieil and lots inoie N'ou won't believe the price Over 200(1 -quare Prick ranch Cal!
ldv for, your exclusive showing- Available foi lease o' sale at 5,59,900
SIX ACRL BUILDING MIL ,n Kro.;: ,A. Baywood Restrictive covenants 'citv .c 12"u wiih2.')'i. down piivmeii! 53-1 OiMi
()v. r (
.xith, so much roijiii priced under . Cl 1-0 ain: iree shaded backvard and the ik in-place Extra room with beauty shop 1' tioiiie o! fxira bedroom Come out and
RED OAK 4 bedrooms offered in upper oils o-.,.. 3111KI stjuare feet with fenced in back yard and pleiitv of loom .-i ail large loorns
Recently painted and ready for OCX upatu V
BUILD YOUR HOME on'this -' adiacent to (ir-floii Coiinitv Cltib 1
.) .v:
,lls
i K1N(
..ptM Woi
iv,-: r. : o,.
'i; built counirv hrick ranch Beautifully I'ek one ai le 111 Coneloe Brick patio with I'Je Offered a! 549,9(11) F.xcelleni owner
SELLERS ARE READY' to move Yon i.m -nove ii.' imn No touch up required Cottvenieiit to itu- Universiiv, scii shopping 3 hedroonis, 2 full baths INned lo sell ,1. i|- ; , Cali for details
LAND 13 iR KAl.l. ij7 (Uies I'tope;; .. ius he puti.tinse.i as one trait o! nui'. be sC, sections iweioded.) 51.G iiHOorYki 5oH|
latek
IS aiut
5i)li's
531)0 DOWN on >2 acre lot 12
Pactolus Higtiwav Cash price 5.5.300 Owner fina-icing .ivmkble a'
Y' iCYNcIl
.n .Avde'- features great room with f.iv iind .idioining area that can be used i'edrooms 2 baths Lovely wallpaper iiping With Covered patio and fish pond itage tioiise double car garage A must
iR^ (.
BE'I'HEL COUNTRY HOME with 21oo sq n io, e.l o,- d mre wooded lot 4 miles West of Beltiel on ll.gnw.K o-i Home has .formal living room, large family room with dii.mg loom and kittben, 3 bedrooms. 2 full hatlis i arport plus a i.itge outside stoiiige building that can he easily cowverii'd to suit ovcnei .Must see to appreciate home's many .(me exinis L5 miles north of (.reeiiVille Offered in 7()'s '
12"a rate for ,K ve-irs Mondiiv piivme'r,' Jackson, 7.5(i 43(>()
BROOK N'ALLEY' Beautiful .voodee (ireat site for building tn<it dream lion 524(100
WOODED LOT alreadv cleared' f. Catiii'lewick Estate's, 5s 2(10 00
ik ra'icli Is only 2 vears old and is located in lood' Assume this loan of 538.000 and pay irter home .ind priced right at 557 ,500
OWNER EINANCING l.rlcated on Si,inionsbnrg Road 2170 square feet 3 bedrooms, 2'. baths, brick raiuii Excellent conditKcn 575,9011
WOODED ACRE lot on 1 iigtrwav Id 1 (juiet surroundings 55i)00 Oil O.cn.'r fir.-'iiii.
HINC'I' N 111 !; Ji'l
rikil:'
't' Ne
liare foot 2 stray hrick home with Florida basement and out-,ide storage )! oood crmditiori
's : libf'.. .Y'l
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.MH '.-YN.XIOUS to leiutii to their horneplace and have - i;e:i new f bedn;om. 2 bath brick ranch which is only '.n'fi of Greenville Over G- of an acre, circular'" I: i't .a!letalbed garage used as a workshop Priced to
COUNTRY HOME with 2100 si|uaie fee-t loeaied on 3: aae wooded 1(1 4 miles West of Bethel cm lligfiway o4 Home has formal living room with dining room and kiii lien, ,1 hed/oonis 2 full baths, carptjrt plus a large outside slot,ige,building ilu.ri'can be easily converted to suit owner. Must see to afiprectat,' lirimt'-s nianv fine extras 15 miles north of Greenville OHered in the .mid 570's
COMMERCIAL PKOPl.Kl'Y
RESIAURANT BUILDING Commercial buiidin.g ,i!i(i seven rental units available for sale and located oti Mumfptd. Ho,id (miss lenls -T ildOOper month Priced at 5134,000 Steariy income poteiiihii
CLUB PINES Loan assumption avmilahle on tins iovek'home in Club Pines Extra large den with voodhuriiing stove All forma!
THIS COMMERCIAL BLIII.DINCi in Griineslaiui m.ic be lUst wiiat you need to start that business youke been thinking ,ibout Gorni location and priced 10 s^dl at 527 000 Call torkiv for cmr peis,,nal appointmeni , ^
'IN! K AY'fjl.N New home available with 3 bedrooms, 2 full .1' ; ,'.er 145(1 iriuate feel ,4 living space This home has a ..n ,, ! loii: wiiii lirepl,ii I' sep,iri)te utility room and an energy n. ,it pump Calhoday Offered in the 5.50's
areas, garage, built ins. intercom system and inuch, muri, more $K? 500
LOT ON 2ti4 By p,iss <ictos's from Heilig Meyets ,J urn.tuie t'orner lot with 12.0 feet road frontage 575.000
LOTS
I'.'- ,/l I
' 41 I.ft, . I 1, '. 2 ., I-
IlMt ' Y'ol'i can ti,' seitieii in tins ror,my 3 bedroom home' r.ke siii(,(7 .listiKi hy fall Great low interest loan 1' o'c ,. .Modern huilt in kiiclim and attractive great *' r.'.n pia..Mi,ll')Os Call todriy for showing
LOOKING FOR LAND to build a home or business on-' Over 4' acres available right rjff Highway 11 between Aydeii and Grifton Owner financing available
GOMMEKCIAI. LOT off ,d .Memorial Drive 1 ,Kte Parkers B.irbeqtie 525 00(1
Office Open Today 2-5 P.M.
.Ac loss fr.ni
0!,'
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a l<,ati assuinptirai in Qciail.Hidge, this i K'L variable k;an with payments of well landscaped and in front of pool 11 557 .oOO Sound good-" It is Call
COUNTRY LOTS near Lake (deiiwrcod easi of Greenville Approximately > 1 acre, 57,500 e,rch
HEAVILY WOODED LOT in Camelot Nearly 1 2acre 513,2(10 SPACIOUS LOT in Cherry Oaks Offered at 511 OOO
\
Ray Holloman..................ON CALL..................753-5147
Teresa Hewitt...................................................756-1188
Gene Quinn......................................................756-6037
Richard Allen 756-4553
Tim Smith..............................;.........................752-9811
Marie Davis......................................................756-5402
John Jackson............................................. 756-4360
Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK- BRANCH, REALTORS
REALTY WORLD 756-6336 ,1
REALTOR*
MtS
^ I fit? udiry neiiecior. ureenvTHE REAL ESTATE CORNER
The-Daily Rededor. Greenville, N C Sunday. October |_i%3 D-13
UNDER
CONSTRUCTION
Re-Discover Lake Ellsworth
With this beautiful Williamsburg style home Great room, formal dining room, dynamic eat-in kitchen with greenhouse window, three bedrooms, two fuir baths and lots-of storage space. Large lot. energy efficient (Built to exceed E-300 standards) and quality built. Swimming pool, tennis courts, and lake for fishing. All located within walking Distance,
Located At.3209 Morton Lane
*69,900
BOWSER
I'he Ncime Of (^imlity Call Now For Details
756-7647
iHoBetegilarnt0 i&ealtg
Your Way to Better Living 746-2166
Open Today From 1 to 5 PM
BEAUTIFUL brick home in prestigious neighborhood. Owner says sell or rent with option to buy. Features 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room yyifh fireplace, garage with lots of cabinets and much more. Call and let us show you this home at the Ayden Country Club 567,500.
AUTUMNS HUES! Lovely brick ranch in Ayden featuring 3 bedrooms^, 1'; baths, large den with wood burning stove. You'll love the back yard with plenty of trees which is ideal for cookouts Good location 543.500.
SIT BACK AND ENJOY this well maintained brick ranch located in an excellent neighborhood. Features 3 bedrooms,
2 full baths, family room with wood stove, covered patio, workshop and many other extras 565,500.
LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME? Reedy TO RETIRE Then take a look at this home in'the country. 2 bedrooms, bath, living room, family room with wood stove, central heat large kit; Chen. Only 529.900.
OWNER FINANCING available on this older home in Ayden. Central .heat. 3 or 4 bedrooms, formal areas, huge den. big kitchen with pantry. Located on a corner lot vwth plenty of fruit trees 543,500
A GOOD PRICE on this 3 bedroom. 2 bath. 1600 square foot home in Ayden You' family will enjoy the spaciousness of the rooms Conveniently ioc,ated in a good neighborhood
547.500..
WE'VE GOT A GOOD THING GOING tor you here in this 2 bedroom heme in Gnfton. Situated on a hill m beautiful Forrest Acres It features a Texas si;;e ceramic tile kitchen with cooking island and*buil!-i.ns, two fireplaces, screened patio with baf-be-gufi grill. 2 verandas and large basement 556.500.
DUPLEX in Ayden. Good location Each side has living room, 2 bedrooms, kitchen and bath
COMMERCIAL BUILDING downtown Ayden. 2 story with 12,800 square feet Needs work but the pnce is right Call for details
525.000.
LOT IN AYDEN with trees ?oned residential. City water, sewage fire and police Droteution 54,000.
LAND FOR SALE about 4 milo.s east of Aydc-n, 5 acres wooded 510,000. Same area approximateiy 11 acres cleared
ON CALL - LOUISE H. MOSELEY GRI NON OFFICE HOURS 746-3472
CENTURY 21 Bass Realty
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Tony Mallard
BELVEDERE 201 Belvedere 565,000
Location counts! This charmi-ng brick ranch is located m a fovely area and features many extras such as targe corner lot. deck, heat pump, living room, dmmg room, family room, and much more. Come see for yourself
Qntuo
Charles S. Forbes. Jr
BELVEDERE 213 Staffordshire 569,900
This 'wo stopv home- nest'ed am-,no ;h-: answer to yoi-' home bu,"!,g- ;s ' ' hed'coms. 2 baths f "" :'e's .: , n
.look at this chd'TiO' e,r. -
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BASS REALTY
2424 S. Charles 756-6666 or
756-5868 SEE OUR OTHER LISTINGS IN CLASSIFIED
Broker on Call; Eddie Pate 752-6560
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INVESTMENT PROPERTIES 45,000Duplex University area 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side. 47,500Only 3 blocks Irom university Excellent investment on this duplex with rental meme ol S405 per month Priced to sell
106 Emma s Place Duplex 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side S400 per month income
House, duplex and commercial lot Rent potential of 56.600 yearly
Gnme'sland Service station with 5 acres ot land. T9.
DUPLEX 56,000 per year income, close to ECU. good condilion. excellent return Cl 2
Riverblutf Duplex 1550 square feet total. 2 bedrooms each side assumable financing, balance of 537,000.00 Age 2'/years
Commercial building. Dickinson Avenue. 6640 square feet heated large paved parking lot
Nine Unit Apartments on coiner ot Pans Avenue and Halifax St neaiDicksmson Ave Excellent rental history
49,900-
50.000-
55.000-
55.000-
59.500-
65.000-
150.000-
220.000-276,000-
-Eight unit, afnililent Iblildirlj. Jalking distance from E C U ExcelValm\&lnciaiMlLiu6aintenance Commercial^ Building. Over 35,000 sq. ft. with railroad siding on Dickinson Ave Parking available.
185.000Homes ol this caliber are not available in the Greenville area vpry often Located around several outstanding properties at Route 9. the home has 3800 square feet, sits on 3 acres ot land with horse stable riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential lor 5. formal areas, huge lamily room with fireplace, recreation room many extras
139.000LynndaleCedar farmhouse 4 bedrooms, formal onto foyer, stained hardwood floors, 2 fireplaces, solar hW water heat, kitchen with Jenn-AIre, many extras.
129.900Magnificent 3000 square foot traditional home in Cherry Oaks Lovely decor, immaculate condition. Features all formal areas with master suite downstairs, 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs, plus mother-in-law suite with bedroom, kitchen/sitting room and bath
OPEN HOUSES TODAY
2-5 P.M.
CHERRY OAKS212 Harrell Street. Lovely 3 bedroom. 2 bath Cape Cod with all formal areas; great room with fireplace, -spacious decks and double garage. Located on lovely corner lot. Your Hostess: Sue Dunn.
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SHENANDOAH VILLAGE 12 Units Left)
2 bedroom, 1y bath, townhouse with family room, kitchen with eating area, private patio, fully equipped kitchen. .$39,500.00. If you qualify, possible financing available on these terms: Down payment and closing costs: $3500.00. (Monthly payment (Includes taxes, insurance & association fee) $420.00.
756-3500
98.000
92.500
89.900
89.900
89.500 87 500
82.500
79.900
79.900
79.500-
78.000 77,400
76.900
76.500
74.500
73.900-73.500'
71.500-
69.900-
69.500-
69.000-
67.500-
67.500-66 900-
66.900-
66.900-
RAY
This stately home features all formal areas. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths and 2 halt baths office and playroom! Dual heal pumps and a beauliAii lot complete the picture Definitely for the discriniinaling family Farmville Located in one of the finest areas, this home is a delight Beautiful entrance toyer, formal areas, jaecan paneled family room two fireplaces, 9 foot ceilings, and much more
-Brook Valley Attractive 2 story in this wonderful area. 4 bedrooms 2 / baths, formal entry loyer, living room and dining room
Brook Valley Dramatic contemporary ranch! 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths dll furmal areas, den with lireplqce. deck, playroom and beautiful fenced back yard Peace and quiet Beautiful home on over an acre sized lot 2100 square leet of healed area, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large family room with fireplace, formal areas, double garage Low interest tinancing available.
Over 5.000 square feet within walking distance of the downtown area. Excellent house for fraternity.
Pamlico River Beautiful permanent home only 25 miles horn Greenville' On the water with pier, 3 bedrooms. 3 balhs. huge family room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace Deck circl^^ home with screened porch, lull basement-qaraqe.
Rustic contemporary situated on 1 acre wooded lot. Large great room with vaulted ceiling and fireplace, with loft overlooking room, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, huge deck, garage and storage room. Just lovely'
Drexelbrook Beautiful brick ranch in this desirable area. Corner lot with fenced back yard. Interior features formal areas, large den with fireplace 3 bedrooms plus ollice, decorated in Williamsburg decor.
Overlook Drive - Space' Over 3 000 square leet ot heated area for less than S80.000! 4 bedrooms. 2 lull balhs, lormal areas, family room with fireplace, oltice tor dad. workshop, wooded lot in this wonderful location. Better hurry on this one'
Country living wth convenience Abundant acreage with beauiitul Williamsburg, located only 5 miles Irom Greenville This 4 bedroom home could be the one' Call tor details
606 Eleanor Street Unique contemporary in Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2'; baths, large great room with fireplace and 9#iagd
Tucker Estates Beautiful WiUiamsburg!3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, formal areas, huge kitchen with separate eatipg area, family room with fireplace, El 8,
Grifion Country Club Well built custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial Formal areas, large den Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken greaf room with old bricM^jeplacg^l^e foyej^uper floor plan!
Tucker Esta^^f^ewolm. French Provencial.
Formal enlr^ftfcel livllJroo anl dining room. Kitchen with eating ^aAi^M^rliiiMi Vm^-aze.
Gritlon Custom built many extras Slate loyer, sunken living room, 3 bedrooms. 2'? baths, garage, screened porch plusbrick patio
Camelol Solar heat Supports highlights this fine home. Formal living room, 'xitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace 3 bedrooms, 2 full balhs. Call us for more details.
Great Assumption! FHA loan below market rate. You'll love the cathedral ceiling and beams, not to mention the romantic stone fireplace In the great room. Features formal dining room, 3 bedrooms with spacious walk-in closets in each
Large 3 bedroom ranch located on over 13 acres of land, only 10 miles from Greenville. For country lovers, this could be the one possible Federal Land Bank financing. Fairlane Charming 2 story Cape Cod in great location. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, large kitchen master bedroom downstairs. Really nice'
River Hills. Under construction. Contemporary ranch on wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, great room with fireplace, deck.
Red Banks Road Beaulifu! 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch. Kitchen with eating area and extra cabinet space, family room with fireplace, lormal areas. Like new interior, fenced private backyard
Wesiwood Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in mint condition Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.
'Westhaven Just ive now brick ranoh in this wonderful area. 3 bedrooms full baths, super great room with fireplace, Cunip...iriy new kitchen with island and Jenn-Aire raiiye.'v.ouJrd lot Better hurry!
Red Oak G.eat loum with vaulted ceiling is the highlight ol this chaiming coriieniporary. Large corner lot extra insulation, indirect lighting are just a tew extras. This is a must,see!
Ragland Acres. Beautiful floor plan includes formal areas, study, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport. Lovely decor, large rooms Assumable 94 VAIoan.
ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND ' SPEARS........................758-4362
Aldridge Sr* Southerland Realtors
66.900Red Oak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, traftic tree circle 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, (ormal areas, family room with fireplace.
65,900^Camelol. Very attractive split level in this popular area Family room with fireplace, formal areas. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths. Possible rent with option, also
65.900 Lake Ellsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suite, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with fireplace, immaculate inferior
65.500Four bedrooms in this affordable price range Located in Lake Ellsworth with pool membership available. Interior features formal areas, family room with fireplace and roomy kitchen with separate eating area A real bargain:
63.000Country Living. Yet only a couple miles from Greenville city limits, or the industrial, park This Southern Coloniai;>has the charm of another time 4 bedrooms. 2 balhs. family room with fireplace, modern kitchen
62.900Riverhills. This, 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch) on an extra deep wooded lot is in immaculate condition With living room, dining room and separate lamily room with lireplaee. It's a great find for S62.900.
62.500Westwood Excellent all brick ranch on well landscaped lot. All formal areas. 3 bedrooms. 2 full balhs. garage, covered patio. Owner will sell FHA. VA or conventional.
62.500Forest Acres. 3 bedrooms. 2? balhs, formal areas family room with fireplace and wood insert. Beautiful wooded lot!
59.900Contemporary close to schools and shopp.ng. Decks and glass 9 Huge great room, step saving kitchen, two large bedrooms. 2 full balhs. loft area and full basement
59.900Grifion Country Club. 3 bedrooms 2 full baths, formal areas, kitchen with eating area, playroom, and super lot
59.500Singletree. Almost, new brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull balhs. family room with fireplace, fenced back yard with detached double garage. Assumable 9' / "c financing
59.500Move right into this freshly painted 3 bedroom home in Red Oak! 8% FHA loan gives you the best payments in town
59.000Orchard Hills. Darling 3 bedroom home on a private cul-de-sac. 3 bedrooms, including master with sliding doors to deck. Great room with fireplace kitchen with many extras, mud room. Great price!
57.900Red Oak. 4 bedroom ranch like this one is hard to find. Formal entry foyer and living room, family room, garage
with automatic door opener. Now the best part, 9'/
assumable loan with loW eauity Better hurry!
55.900Hardee Acres, 9; assumption! 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs. great room with fireplace, screened back porck, carport and storage.
55.900Ayden. Choice brick ranch on large lenced corner lot. 3 bedrooms. 2 full balhs, large den with fireplace kitchen with eating area A lot for the money'
55.900Hardee Acres FHA 245 10 ' Yes. you can atlord ;i Cute as a button, 3 bedrooms, 1 baths, beaulilui deck and pool. Don't miss it!.
55.500Gnfton Country Club area. Maintenance tree 3 bedioom ranch. Formal areas large back porch and Ouuble ga'aye Beautifully landscaped.
55.000Grimesland. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths den with fireplace formal living room, fenced back yard double detached garage.
55.000Elm Street. Super location, great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. 3 bedrooms, fenced yard. Cape Cod styling.
54.900Orchard Hills. New cedar siding ranch with energy saving wood furnace as back up unit. Custom kitchen from Kitchen & Bath Designs, double sinks in both baths.
54.900Ragland Acres. Large 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet cul-de-sac. Well landscaped lawn, double carport Interior features 3 bedrooms. 2 baths kitchen with eating area den with fireplace 086.
53.500Charming all brick ranch in Pleasant Ridge. 3 bediooms. 2 balhs, great room with fireplace, kitchen with' many built-ins. Almost new!
52.900Hardee Acres. Lovely 3 bedroom ranch in this tine'area Great room kitchen with many extras, breakfast area Beautifully decorated.
52.500Griffon. Good assumable loan! Br*^ 'anch features lormal areas, large lamily room with fil jkoe, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths and large screened porch
52.500Singletree. 3 bedroom brick ranch, immaculate interior 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, central air. family room with fireplace, fenced yard. Low equity on assumption
49.900Edwards Acres. 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet circle Almost new. with family room, and roomy kitchen with separate breakfast area Assumable financing available with affordable monthly payments
49.500Ayden This three bedrooms, 2 baih lar.cn features a large country kitchen lor entertaining your lamily and triends. Call about the 8 VA loa-n assumption available on this well kept home.
46.900Eastwood area. 3 bedrooms, great room, kitchen with eating area, excellent condition, central air
47,9d0Bethel. Spacious 3 bedrqom, 2 bath brick ranch Large storage buildingjn rear on nice lot
47.9003 bedrooms, 2 bath brick home on an acre lot in Bethel. Excellent condition. Central heat and air, garage.
47.500Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, bath, lamily room, kitchen with eating area. Only minutes from Greenville.
46.500Sylvan Drive. Lovely 3 bedroom cottage nestled on beautifully wooded corner lot. Huge dogwoods, magnolias, pines are gorgeous! Hardwood floors, built in china cabinet are just a tew ot the extras
45.900Bilfmore. Duplex less than block Irom campus. 2 bedrooms each side, recently remodeled Rent 5500.00 a month.
45.500Starter Home! Very nice 3 bedroom, 1'/ bafh ranch. Includes refrigerator and fireplace woodstove Insert. Fully carpeted, large back yard, just outside city limits Hardee Acres. A great opportunity.
45.000Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home. Living room with fireplace, pine paneled den. garage and workshop. J33.
44.500Rock SpringsCute 2 or 3 bedroom ranch on quiet traffic free circle. Family room with fireplace, wooded shady lot.
I Better hurry!
42900Wildwood Villas. 2 bedroom, 12 bath townhouse close to
/ the university. Full basement can be finished to give
almost 1500 square feel of living area. Excellent condition with central ait and lenced patio.
42,500-
3,500-
39.000-
35.000-
27,900-
27,500-
4 bedroom 2 bath cottage style house in Meadowb'ook area. Family room with tirepiace kitcnen with eating aiea detached storage building aneiworkshop -University Area^ 2 bedroom bungalow only a block t;om campus' Recent: remodeled wilt< nev carpel and wallpaper Modem Kitchen witti new cabinet'., and c^untei lops Really spac.ai'
E C U Area 3 bedrooms den with tirepiace forma dming room Could be starter home or investment property -Reduced' Seller anxioiis Make an ollei O" ih.s exceptionally nice 2 or 3 bedroom home L.irye xilchen with many cabinets, carport nice, lot Just outiide city limits.
-Farmville Cute 3 bedroom one oath bunga'ow Sunroom with fireplace lorma! living and dmmg rooms attached garage Excellent loan assumption .MacGregor Downs Over 3 acre wooded buiidmg sit m this tine area
Ayden 3 bed^^^o^if o'del nSfc'.e on 'irge 'ol.m good location, Root^I eAAsioil byjlinishmq Iwo upstairs
bedrooms X / 1 - !_>/
Country Living 3 bedroon' f.anch in ine Pac'olus area Attractive owner financing to qoanlied bu,er Farr,ay room, kitchen with ealmg area trees'
PREiMl ON TME
MflfikET
BEDFORDNew brick Southern Colonial Iwo story 4 spacious bedrooms, including master suite formal areas with stained hardwood floors, family room with fireplace, large inviting kitchen. $128,500.
A
UNIVERSITY AREA-Nice quiet neighborhood Three large bedrooms, 1'v bath brick home New heating system with 10 year warranty. Hardwood floors Very nice! S47.500.
103 WARREN STREET 3 bedroom 1 bath, deck, hving room, fireplace. Separate garage or workshop. $49.500
SROOK VALLEY This three or four bedroom Williamsburg with great room, dining room, kitchen andf three baths Is ready for Immediate occupancy. Sil In the screened m porch and watch the action ot the 2nd tee in this new offering. Lower $90s.
Dick Evans...............................................758-1119
Jean Hopper.............................................756-9142
Sue Dunn........................... 355-2588
June Wyrick.............. 756-5716 Jeff Aldridge
Myra Day................................ 524-5004 Mike Aldridge
Ray Spears........................................... 7.58-4362 Don Southerland
Alita Carroll_... 7Sb 8278 Ross RtiudvI
355-6700
756-7871
756-5260
752-5149
I
from the Carroll RIghtar Institua
FORECAST FOR SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1983
GENERAt TENDENCIES: A wonderful Sunday for you to decide )usf where and how you want your life to extend Itself in the future and to study whatever schools of thought or philosophy of life will aid you ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr 19) Concentrate on the spiritual values that can enhance your life in the future. Spend some time alone to meditate TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Study your romantic life and know how you can improve it in some way Youve been too hasty m judgments lately GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Plan how to get on the good side of influential persons and gam more favors from them Also get into some civic work MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul 21) Plan time for showing gratitude to those who have done you special favors m the past and gam added good will LEO (Jul 22 to Aug 21) Good morning to get entertainment plans made with your friends Later on, youll be able to enjoy yourself fully.
VIRGO (Aug 22 to Sept 22) Home is your best bet today and discuss:,ng importarft affairs with your family to plan the future more wisely.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Get out to lectures so that you can improve your philosophy of life and make the future more successful.
SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov 21) Study into ways for adding to your present abundance and you get fine ideas for doing so
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) Go on with those plans you commenced yesterday and be quite self-serving for a change and get good results CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 20) Have a meeting with Clever enoerts and gam the knowledge you need for some enterprise you have in mmd.
, AQUARIUS (Jan 21 to Feb 19) Go to those who are devoted to you and get that support you need right now The results will be quite beneficial PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar 20) Study your present status and nncvv what should be done m order to improve it, then formulate a good plan IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY he or she will be one of those cna'^'ing young persons who will appeal to bigwigs wherever they are met and get along very well with them There will pe sc.me ad's' talent,here, so foster it wisely With a good educ.:'ipr
FORECAST FOR MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1983
general tendencies until noon you are under beautiful .aspects for placing i:i rr'ioricn your most com- prenensive and multitudinous pians o' actions, so be up early and go after what you want ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr 19) Get busy putting those big deals across which you had planned over the weekend, and they could prove quite successful TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Early get into financial affairs you had planned yesterday and r^andle them wisely, but don t run off on a tangent iater GEMINI (May 21 to June 21; Be more direct in gaming your intimate aims and get good results Then do nothing , that your loved one would dislike MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul 21) Get your financial affairs m good order and especially get collections m.ade Also get business handiecf wisely LEO (Jul 22 to Aug 2i) Be happy with your mate early but ake It easy later Drive most carefully and avoid accidents Relax at home tonight VIRGO (Aug 22 to Seot 22) Some home problem can be handled well with the advice you need from experts Don t commit yourself to any heavy expenditures later LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct '22) Morning is the best time to be with friends and plan new activities with them, but later avoid family arguments SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov 21) If you want to discuss something with an influential persgn, be sure to use tact, generosity and later drive most carefully SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) You get fine ideas m the morning, and the.n you can put them in operation quiCKiy but try to be econom, caMater CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 20) Get busy with work you have to do and meetings you have to attend Private matters work out well, but don t be pushy AQUARIUS (Jan 21 to Feb 19) Look to a good associate for the assistance you need now, and get it, but avoid going off on a silly tangent late.r PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar 20i Some worldly condition can make your environment more charming, or it may be through the'good auspices of a bigwig IF your child is BORN TODAY .he or she will be one of these delightful young persons who early m life will want to learn a great deal and will want to accomplish great-things in life Encourage this by providing a fine, classical education Stress spiritual training, as well
The Stars impel they do not compel " What you make ,-.Q^our life is largely up to you'
The McNaught Syndicate, Inc
1983
Life As It's Lived
Phillip may have the distinction of being the only person on earth who is openly and actively hostile toward the Smurfs.
I'n not that crazy about them myself, but their very mention does not make my skin crawl. They're innocuous,"' I told him. Granted, they are agonizingly stupid, but then so is the majority of children's programming."
' Not like the Smurfs, it i^n't That cartoon is the most'Tatuous trash that was ever passed off as entertainment, It's a marketing gimmick, and that's all. Somebody dreamed up the idea of plastering the face of the earth with the image of inane blue .midgets an(i figured that, a cartoon in which every third word is Smurf would be a good way of doing it."
Well. I for one am glad somebody thought it up." Meg said. "It was a srnurfy idea."
The hair on the back of Phillips neck began to rise. Of all the things he hates about the Smurfs. Megs infatuation with them irks him the most. She never misses an opportunity to give us a blow-by-blow account of the latest Smurf advendure.
.And. of course, remembering all the details is a cinch because there are only about three or four adventures which are rerun every third or fourth week.
Look. 1 am trying not to be a tyrant about this," Phillip told her. I let you watch that junk even though I know that it's probably converting large portions of your brain into oatmeal. But I would prefer that you do not mention that nasty little name in my presence ever again."
She was nothing if not accommodating. She simply saved her discourses for me. And when I began to show signs of irritation, she responded by appropriating my vexation as her own.
Those Smurfs are so ridiculous! They don't even have a mother. she snorted before she launched into a vivid description of domestic life inSmurfdom.
She didnt fool me though. I knew that she would covet something Srnurfy of her very own, especially if she could keep it in the house. (Santa Claus had broken down and bought her a Smurf-Cycle, but it was relegated to the backyard.) I could .see it in her eyes
GOREN
BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc
C)I^GAS CASHES OCT
DEAR READERS; We have had many requests over the years for those hands that we consider to be our favorites. That makes quite a list. For the time being, therefore, we are devoting the Sunday column ,to a series of famous hands. At the end of the series, we will go back to our weekly question and answer column.
Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH
A 108 TK6
OQ987
A973 WEST EAST
KJ964 73
A 108 J 97 532 63 ; K5
J85 AQ42
SOUTH
Q52
TQ4
AJ1042
K106 The bidding:
South West ^'orth East
1 , Pass 2 Pass
2 ; Pass 4 C Pass
5 4 Pass 5 Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead: Three of . .
In the mid '70s, Brazil
emerged .is a power in world bridge. Us team was built around the brilliance of superstar (iabriel Chagas. Watch him defend with the West cards on this hand from the Open Pairs Champion ship at the 197h World Olympiad.
.North ."south cleverly managed to stay out of their best contract - three no trump. .As It was, five diamonds could have been made had the defense been routine.
."since he was reluctant to open any suit for declarer. Chagas chose to attack with a trump. Declarer captured Last's king with the ace and immediately led a low heart Chagas jumped in with the ace and exited with a trump. Declarer won and led a low . spade, but again Chagas rose to the occasion by playing the jack. Now declarer could not avoid losing a spade and a club trick lor down one.
Note that if Chagas does not go up with the ace of hearts when that suit is first led, declarer can get home. The king of hearts wins, the outstanding trumps are drawn and Chagas is thrown in with the ijueen of hearts to his ace. .Now he would either have to yield a ruffsluff or lead a spade. In either case declarer comes to 11 tricks by establishing the thir leenth club lor a discard.
.Similarly, had Chagas played a.low ^I)ade when that suit was broached, declarer would have linesscd the ten, cashed the ace and his high heart, and then thrown Chagas in with a spade to. force him to break cldbs. By playing for split honors, declarer could pick up that .suit.
Now yani have seen how to avoid an end play - win your tricks early, before declarer has stripped you of exit cards.
By GAIL MICHAELS
whenever she spotted one of the creatures, The (Jiri Scout Catalogue even has Smurf wrapping paper for Christmas,' she once siglied wisttully But I don't suppose that Daddy would stand for that sort of thing, would he"" .
.No, I could not imagine that we would adorn his beloved Christmas tree with Smurfs. But I did see some sign of softening when he walked into Hardee's and saw the Smurf glass display.
We had had a very disappointing afternoon. We had taken the children to the fair for a treat, but after petting an elephant, standing for an hour under a bandstand during a thunderstorm with the local square-dancing competition;including one group of punk doggers, and spending a week's salary on three rides, we left,
"Go ahead and get one for each of the kids," he said, "It will cheer them up."
Thus they were each treated to a Srnurfy Coke Meg was astounded. "Do you think Daddy has had a change of hearC? she whispered.
I wouldnt go that far," I' whispered back, but I do know that he loves you."
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A
Tonight Shows 21st Anniversary
By JAY BOBBIN Tonight broadcasts. Carson is ^
By JAY BOBBIN Tonight" broadcasts. Carson is Challengers have come and pleased with the way the half-gone during the past two dec- hour installments are being ades, but one program and its edited: "Since no monologues host remain the kings of late- ^re included, they arent partic-night televisin. NBCs The ularly dated. Were using the Tonight Show Starring Johnny comedy pieces, some sketches Carson is set to celebrate its ^nd commercial blackouts.
21st anniversary in a two-hour prime-time special airing Monday, Oct. 3. The inimitable Carson sees it as a definite milestone: We thought the oth anniversary show was just that last year, because it was an even number, but I guess weve come of age with this one Carson, sidekick Ed McMahon and bandleaders Doc Severinsen and Tommy Newsom ritually mark each year with a selection of clips exemplifying what Tonight is all about: comedy and variety, including bizarre happenings that could only be precipitated by Carson himself. If something happens on the show that we really like." he explains, we set it aside immediately. In fact, we did a sketch just a few weeks ago about a Malibu restaurant with Betty Wbite, and well probably include just the last minute when things really became hectic. As we go along, we pick out certain spots and say, let s see if thatll work into our plans for the anniversary show. Other scheduled segments will feature child stars, exotic animals and such celebrities as Bob Hope, Dean Martin, Dolly Parton, Richard Pryor and now-permanent "Tonight" guest host Joan Rivers.
The selection process itself is difficult, since many cherished pieces have often been repeated. the Ed Ames tomahawk throw, the Burt Reynolds-Dom DeLuise shaving-cream battle and the "stolen copper clappers" takeoff on Dragnet" with the late Jack Webb. Carson realizes that some fans cant get enough of these particular relics, but we try to add enough new things to keep it exciting. It really becomes a question of what youre going to eliminate, since we have so much material. No matter what you do, though, some people will still say, Why didnt you include so-and-sol' It comes down to the simple fact that we have to make a choice, and we wont please everybody, since some favorites are bound to be missing
Some of those moments will be recaptured in another form, though. A syndicated program, Carsons Comedy Classics,
\ will be offered next fall, compiling certain sections of past
some of the animal spots and other things. We have original music and graphics, so it looks like a completely new show Many people see the Tonight monologue, then go to bed. so a lot of them have never seen this material before.
Tonight made headlines recently with the announcement that Joan Rivers would be the host whenever Carson was absent. However, he claims, Its not as much of a change as people think, because Joan was doing about six weeks a year anyway. We wanted to lock somebody in' on a permanent basis so we wouldnt have to scramble around, doing one night here with somebody and two nights there with somebody else. Shes actually doing four more weeks* than she was already doing.
Carson s own interviewing technique is in sharp contrast to that practiced by Miss Rivers.
I think they know Im not going to attack them, he says.
Im not bringing them out there to have some kind of a contest, if a guest looks good, the show looks good, and thats the end result youre aiming for
In addition to Tonight," Carson has a lot on his mind these days. His production company, which also turns out NBCs Late Night with David Letter-man," is preparing a new detective series starring Loni Anderson and Lynda Carter for the network; its also responsible for the just-released and critically acclaimed movie "The Big Chill" (its first theatrical venture) Therefore, he doesnt worry himself over how Thicke - as in Alan the late-night TV rivalry may become. I just do own show and let whoevers on opposite me do theirs. Thats the only way I can look at it; I just have to go and do what I do best, and let somebody else worry about the rest
As Tonight starts year number 21, Carson plans to remain firmly in control. Its a job he still enjoys, largely due to his own savvy for picking coworkers who blend nicely, Weve got a good group of people, he says, and a lot of them have been with the show for a long time. We get along well, and thats what makes it pleasant.
TV-2
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday, October^^^j^
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(NICK) LA. Jas Los Angeles Times music critic Leonard Feather hosts an evening at the Lighthouse Cafe in Hermosa Beach, California, featuring such jazz musicians as The
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12:35 For Our Times 12:45 O Jim Loodermilk (HBO) When Women Kill Actress Lee Grant directed and narrates this documentary, which profiles six women serving prison sentences for murder convictions. (1 hr.)
1:000 Zola Levitt E Dsvld SttssUnd In Touch
1:05 Movie Good Sam (1948) Gary Cooper, Ann Sheridan. (2 hrs., 45 min.)
(SHOW) Morie The Sin (1979) Anne Heywood, Donald Pleasence. (1 hr,, 20 min.)
1:30 O Jewish Voice Broadcast (SPN) Looking East 1:45 (HBO) Movie "The Road Warrior" (1981) Mel Gibson, Bruce Spence. (1 hr , 35 min.)
2:00 Q 700 Qub O CBS News Nightwatch Jim Bakker 2:30 (SPN) Movie "Its A Joke, Son" (1947) Kenny Delmar, Una Merkel. (1 hr, 30 mm.)
(SHOW) Movie Chariots Of Fire " (1981) Ben Cross, Ian Charleson. (2 hrs, 5 mm 1 3:00 O Eyesat Kenneth Copeland (ESPN) SportsCenter
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The Daily Rphecior. Gfeenville, N.C. ^^nday. October 2. 1983_
Monday Friday Daytime
5:00 5 Eyesat(Frl) ONews(Tue-Fri)
O Jimmy Swaggart(Fri)
O JimBakker 0 Health Field
eg PTL Qub (Frtath) (Tue)
Pattern For Living (Wed) God's News Behind The News (Thu, Fri)
(SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) John Barbours World (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Wed) Venom (1982)
(USA) Movie (Tue) Bless This House" (1973)(Wed) True Confessions" (1937XThu) Law And Disorder (1958XFri) Double Take'O
5:050 Winners (Tue) World At Large (Wed, Thu)
5:10 (HBO) Inside The NFL (Fri) 5:20 0 World At Large (Mon) 5:300 Another Life O Jimmy Swaggart O News (Mon)
O Lie Detector (Moo-Thu)
0 Its Your Burinen (Mon) Christian Childrens Fund (Wed,
I Thu) Agriculture U.S.A. (Fri)
PTL Qnb (Italian) (Tue) In Touch (Wed, Fri) Westbrook Hospital (Thu)
(SHOW) Mark Twain Theatre
(Moo)
(ESPN) Racquetball (Tue) Soccer In America (R) (Fri)
5:35 0 World At Laiie (Toe)
5:55 (HBO) HBO Coming Attractions (liin)
6:00 ORomp Room O O ABC News This Morning X Panorama
O Carolina In The Morning O Almanac O Carolina Today 0 CBS Early Morning News 0 AgDay 0News
Q) The Blackwood Brothers (Mon) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Tue) The Kroeze Brothers (Wed) Spiritual Awakening (Thu) Sound Of The Spirit (Fri)
(SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Stoned (Tue)
(ESPN) Business Tiines (HBO) The Marvelous Land Of Oz(Mon)
(USA) Wrestling (Mon, Wed)
6:15 (SHOW) Tlie Thunderblrds (Thu)
6:20 (SHOW) Movie (Wed) "Mystery At Castle House" (1982) 6:300 Jimmy Swaggart
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0 CBS Early Morning News 0 ABC News This MtHiilng 0 Ben Haden (Mon) Oral Roberts (Tue) The LaHayes (Wed) Stan Rosenthal (Thu) Bible Pathways (Fri)
(SHOW) Advoiture Of Marco Polo, Jr. (Fri)
(HBO) The Year Of The Gentle Tiger (Tue) Incredible Book Escape (Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Thu) "The Glacier Fox (1978)
(HBO) Its Hard To Be A Penguin (Fri)
(SHOW) The Thunderblrds (Thu) 7:000 Movie (Mon) Dinner At The Ritz" (1937)(Tue) The Abductors (1957KWed) Duel At Apache Wells (1956XThu) The Big Tip-Off (1955XFri) The Cruel Tower (1956)
O O Good Morning Amtfi-ca
(X Bugs Bunny And Friends OO Today 0 CBS Monlng News 0Funtime 0JlmBakker
(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Mac-Arthur(1977)
(SHOW) Irene Moves In (Tue) (ESPN) BusinessTima (R) (NICK)Livewire (USA) Cartoons
7:15 (SHOW) The Thunderblrds (Thu)
7:30 (X Great Space Coaster (SHOW) The Hasty Heart (Tue) (HBO) Dolly Parton Meets The Kids (Tue) Fraggle Rock (Wed) (HBO) Movie (Fri) Trail Of The Pink Panther (1982)
7:35 01 Dream Of Jeannie 8:00 X Popeye And Friends O CBS Morning News 0 Christian Forum (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Sunshines On The Way (Thu) A Country Music Tribute To Kitty Wells (Fri)
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie (Mon) Legend Of The Wild" (1980XTue) Treasure Of The Four Crowns" (19827(Wed) "Dance Of The Dwarfs'll hr ,30min.)
(HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert (Thu)
(NICK) Mr. Wiiards World (Mon, Wed, Fri) What Will They Think Of Nexf (Tue, Thu)
(USA) Calliope 8:05 0 Bewitched 8:15 (ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) (Tue) SportsForum (R) (Wed) Soccer In America (R) (Thu) SporisWeek (R) (Fri)
8:300 Movie (Mon) Fighter Attack" (1953XTue) Stagecoach To Fury" (1956XWed) Private Hell 36" (1954XThu) The Man Who Died Twice (1958XFri) "The Plainsman And The Lady (1946)
51 Tom And Jerry 0 Paul Yonggi Cho (Mon) Jim
Bakker (Tue) The Camerons (Wed) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Thu) Contact (Fri)
0 Educational Programming (SHOW) C.B. Heroes (Wed)
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(NICK) Todays ^tedal 8:35 01 Love Lucy 8:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter (Tue-Fri)
9:000 The Waltons
0 O Hour Magaztne (XILoveLucy O Richard Simmons 0 0 Dtmahue 0 Jimmy Swaggart 0 Sesame Street (R)n (SHOW) Stoned (au)^
(ESPN) Rodeo (R) (Mon) Auto Racing (Tue) PKA Full ConUct Karate (R) (Wed) Billiards (Thu) Australian Rules Football (Fri) (HBO) Flashback: Fire At Hie Cocoannt Grove (Thu) (NICK)PlnwheeI (USA) Alive And WeU!
(CAL) Calliope 9:05 0 Movie (Mon) "Who Killed Teddy Bear (1966XTue) "The Black Orchid (1959KWed) Charlie Bubbles (1968Xau) "Naked Alibi (1954KFri) Hello Down There (1969)
9:30 (X Leave It To Beaver OAUInnieFamUy 0 Contact (Moo) Shiloh Christian Retreat (Tue) Frederick K. Price (Wed) Light And Lively (Thu) Heritage U.S.A. Update (Fri)
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10:000 700 Qub O Donahue O Frog Hollow X Andy Griffith O O DUrrent Strokes (R)
O 0 The New I2S.000 Pyramid
0 Love Connection 0 Harvester Hour (Mon) Sing Out America (Tue) Power Of Pentecost (Thu) Something Beautiful (Fri)
0 Educational Programming (Mon-Wed) Footsteps (Thu. Fri) (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Crisis (1950)(Tue) The Cobweb (1955)(Wed) Cry Terror! (1958)(Thu) "Andy Hardy Comes Home" (l958)(Fri) Dream Wife "(1953)
(ESPN) Horse Racing Weekly (R)(Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) "Paternity (1981)(Tue) "The Toy (1982XWed) Waltz Across Texas (1982XThu) Tell Me A Riddle' (1980XFri) "Treasure Of The Four Crowns (1982)
10:300 Edge Of Night X Bewitched O O Sale Of "The Century O0 Press Your Luck 0 Lveme & Shirley & Company
0 Gods News Behind The News (Wed)
0 Hi^ Feather (Wed) Educational Programming (Thu, Fri) (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Tue) Play Your Best Tennis (Wed) Sportswoman (R) (Thu) SportsForum (Fri)
11:000 O0Benson(R)
5 Medical Center OO Wheel Of Fortune O0 The Price Is Right 0 JimBakker
0 Educational Programming (Wed)
(ESPN) Australian Rules Football (R) (Mon, Thu) CFL Football (Tue) Sportswoman (R) (Wed) Auto Racing (Fri)
(USA) Designs For Liviiig 11:050 The Catlins 11:30 O Another Life OO0 Loving O Jim Bums O Dream House (ESPN) Gymnastics (Wed)
(HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert (Mon) Video Jukebox (Thu)
(USA) You: Magazine For Women
11:350 Texas
12:000 Movie (Mon) 'My Man Godfrey" (1936XTue) "The Man (Jn The Eiffel Tower (1949XWed) Champ For A Day
(1951XThu) "Fighting Coast Guard (1951KFri) Sidewalks Of London (1940) OOOOOffiNews XPinorama 0 Family Feud 0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 0 Educational Progranuning (SPN) Your Hour (SHOW) Movie (Mon) True Confessions (1981KWed) "Rich And Famous (1981)(Thu) My Favorite Year (1982)
(SHOW) Murder Among Friends (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) Five Days One Summer (1982)
(HBO) Flashback: Tbe Great Plague Of 1918 (Wed) Sitcom (Thu) HBO Coming Attractions (Fri)
(USA) Movie (Mon) Bless This House (1973XTue) The Green Man (1957XWed) Tme Confessions (1937KThu) "Law And Disorder (1958XFri) "Double Take()
12:06 0 FWiy Mason (Mon, Fri) (SHOW) Movie (Tue) Trail Of The Pink Panther (1982)
12:300 OORyusHope OOSearchForT
__Tomorrow
O 0 ne Young And The Restless
0Cunp Meeting, U.SJL 0 Electric Oimptny (R)
(ESPN) Instructloatl Series (Mon) International Diving (Wed) Saturday Night At The Fights (R) (Thu)
(raO) Ifovle (Mon) "A Cry For Love (1980KThu) Legend Of The Wild (1980KFri) Goin South(1978)
12:U0 Perry Mason (Tue-Thu) Hazel (Fri)
1:000 O0AU My ChUdren X Movie (Mon) Clambake (1967)(Tue) Lets Dance (1950XWed) "Desperate Characters (I971XThu) "Angels In The Outfield (1951XFri) Tell Me Where It Hurts (1974)
O O Days Of Our Lives 0 Educational Programming (Mon, Wed-Fri) Short Story Showcase (Tue)
(SPN) Exercises (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri) Microwaves Are For Cooking (Wed)
(ESPN) CoUege FootbaU (Mon) PKA Full Contact Karate (R) (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Wed) Taps (1981)
1:050 Movie (Mon) "Safari (1956XTue) "The Lonely Profession (1969XWed) Elephant Walk (1954XThu) The Violent Men (1955XFri) "Mississippi Gambler (1953)
1:30 O 0 As The Wm'ld Turns 0 Derins Coffee Shop (SPN) Good Life (Mon) American Baby (Tue) Personal Computer (Wed) Companion Dog Training (Thu) Telephone Auction (Fri)
(ESPN) Best Of Top Rank Boxing (R) (Tue)
1:45 0 Educational Pit^ram-ming(Tue)
2:000 My UtUe Margie (Mon) Sewing Etc. (Tue) Make It Easy, Make It Microwave (Wed) Keeping Time (Thu) American Baby (Fri)
(Continued On Page 9)
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Michele Will Tell
By Michele Marks DKAR MKHKLE: 1 think V. Thomas Howell is great in the
new TV show Two Marriages." Could you please give me some information on him.' I would also like to know where 1 can write to him. C AROl. I.EWIS. FAISON, N.C.
TO CAROL IN FAISON: C. Thomas Howell was bom December 7. in Los Angeles, California. The 16-year-old actor, who has light brown hair, has recently portrayed Scott Morgan on "Two Marriages. ' and starred as Ponyboy in the film "The Outsiders. " Howell has a featured role in the soon-to-be released movie "Tank.'' starring Shirley Jones and James Garner Toms parents are divorced and his father, Chris Howell, is a stuntman He lives with his mother and stepfather,
' Frank Hallow, a producer, in the San Fernando Valley. A tormer California Junior Rodeo Association Champion. Tom has five horses at home In addition to caring for them, he also enjovs football, snow and water skiing, and riding his dirt bike. Write him in c o ABC TV, 2040 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles. Ca., 90067.
DEAR MICHELE: Can you give me some information about Richard Hatch, who played Apollo on Battlestar Galaetica? Also, has he starred on anything else? BETH MASSEY, DURHAM, N.C.
TO BETH IN DURHAM: Richard is a native of California, born in Santa Monica. He currently resides in the Benedict Canyon area of Los Angeles. Hatch successfully made the switch from daytime ( "All My Children's ' Phil Brent) to primetime, first m The Streets of San Francisco, " later in "Battlestar Galaetica He made his feature film debut in "Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen ' He has also appeared in several 'Circus of4he Stars' and "Battle of the Network Stars " specials A musician, singer and songwriter, he has hopes to do-a nightclub act The 511 1 2," 165-pound actor remains a bachelor.
DEAR MKHEI.E: Please settle something for me. Was Granny on The Beverly Hillbillies from Tennessee? If not, where M\ brother says she was from California, I disagree. Also, how old was she when she died? CHET THOMAS, TOWNSVILLE. \.C.
TO CHET IN TOWNSVILI.E, rhere aren't too many native Californians Irene Ryan, who portrayed Granny, was born October 17. 1903. in El I'aso, Texas. She was seventy years old at the time ot her death,
DEAR MIt 1 ELE: 1 watch American Bandstand and would like'to know how old Dick Clark is. My mom says she watc hed him when she was young and that he hasnt changed an\. I sa\ hes in his late 50s and she says hes in his late 60s or cariN 70s. AW ( LIETON. FAISON. N.C.
ro ,\,\N IN FAISON: Although Dick Clark never seems to age, he s not as old as youi mother thinks. He will celebrate his .)4lli biithdav on November 30.
(FOR ANSWERS 10 VOUR (iUESTlONS ABOUT TV SHOWS ANDPERSONALITIES, WRITE TO MICHELE, c o This newspaper. 32'2 East Broadway, Hopewell, Va. 23860.)
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0 Fathu- John Bertolucci 0 North Carolina I^le (SPN) Scuba World (ESPN) Inside Baseball (HBO) Fraggle Rock (NICK) The Adventures Black Beauty (USA) S^wrts Look 7:350 Good News 6:00 O.HA Chaparral O O 0 Thats Incredible! A baby who weighed only one pound and one ounce at birth; a Doberman that is also a top model; a race between a quarter horse, a car and a cheetah; a man who eats live crabs. (1 hr.) P.M. Magaiine Break dancing - the spinning street dance seen in Flashdance; a woman who ran away and joined the circus.
O O Boone The Sawyers adoption of a young orphan named Banjo (Julie Ann Haddock) makes youngest family member Squirt jealous. (1 hr.)
O 0 Scarecrow And Mrs. King
(Premiere) Washington, D.C, divorcee and mother Amanda King (Kate Jackson) helps intelligence agent Lee Stetson (Bruce Boxleitner) stop an enemy plot. (1 hr.)
0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
0 Shock Of The New The Future That Was" In the concluding program of his eight-part series, Robert Hughes discusses the impact museums have had on modern art. (R) (1 hr.)
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(SPN) Photographers Eye (SHOW) Movie "Halloween III: Season Of The Witch (1982) Tom Atkins, SUcey Nelkin. A young woman is aided by an emergency room physician in her investigation of a Halloween mask manufacturer who may have been responsible for her fathers gruesome murder. R (i hr., 35 min.)
(ESPN) NFLi Greatest Moments "1970 Oakland Raiders / "1973 Buffalo Bills (1
(HBO) Movie "Paternity (1981) Burt Reynolds, Beverly DAn-gelo. A bachelor in his forties who wants to be a father searches for the right woman to bear his child. PC (1 hr., 35 min.)
(NICK) The Third Eye "Under The Mountain A sightseeing trip to Aucklands dormant volcanoes brings further evidence that the twins have a dangerous
mission. (Part 2) ^.....
(USA) Movie Natural Enemies (1980) Hal Holbrook. Louise Fletcher. A successful publisher is haunted by the urge to murder his family. R (1 hr.,
- 44 min.)
8:050 Movie Mister Roberts (1955) Henry Fonda, James Cagney. A U.S. Navy cargo ship runs into many misadventures because of the second officer on board and his great desire to be in combat. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
8:30 Carol Burnett And Friends
(SPN) Post Time
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
"The Slaves Of Jedikiah" Stephen has disappeared and Kenny loses the only clue to his whereabouts. (Part 2)
9:00 Q 700 Club Featured: the Soviet Unions strategy to export communism; how to be a "one-minute" father. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 NFL FootbaU New York Jets at Buffalo Bills n (3 hrs.) ^
8% Griffirt i h O O^nighrt 21st Anlver-s*ry The late-night programs I earlier years are highlighted in clips introduced by Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon; bandleaders Doc Severinsen and Tommy Newsom are featured, as are guests including Bob Hope. Burt Reynolds and Joan Rivers (2 hrs.)
O 0 AfterMASH Soon-Lee (Rosalind Chao) pressures Klinger to arrange for her family to emigrate from Kore to the United States.
0 Jim Bakker
0 Great Performances Alice In Wonderland Richard Burton and his daughter Kate star in this adaptation of Eva Le Galli-ennes Broadway production of Lewis Carrolls classic. (1 hr., 30 min.)
(SPN) Telefrance U5JL ^ (ESPN) Auto Ractog NA^R Holly Farms 400 (from North Wilkesboro, N.C.).(R)(2hrs.) (NICK) At Hie Met MetropoU-tan Cats The fact and fancv of cats as animali and artifacts are revealed in this amusing and whimsical look at one mankinds most mysterious companions.
8:30 O 0 Tbe Jeffersons George continues to places his faith in swindler Jimmy Townsend, though he and Tom Willis could both end up being conned. (Part
(HBO) HBO Coning Attractions 8:35 (M^ Joan Mlro - Hieatre Of Dreams This documentary about the 20th-Century Spanish painter explores in deUil her unique style, often consisting of , amoebic forms in rhythmically balanced compositions. (1 hr.) 10:00 News O CD Emerald Point N.A.S. Classified talks on aerial encounters bring a Russian admiral (Robert Loggia) to the naval base. (l hr.)
0 Lester Sumrall Teaching (SHOW) Movie True Confessions (1981) Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall. The usually separate worlds of two brothers, a Los Angeles police detective and an ambitious Roman Catholic priest, converge during a murder investigation. R (1 hr., 50 min.)
(HBO) Movie "I, The Jury (1982) Armande Assante, Barbara Carrera. Private eye Mike Hammer tangles with a coterie of villains as he attempts to avenge a war buddys murder, R(l hr., 50 min.)
(USA) Fascinated With Cheryl Ladd This video features Cheryl Ladd dancing and singing such hits as Think It Over and "Just Like Old Times. (1 hr ) 10:300 News 0 Jerry Savelle 0 Grant Woods America Iowa-born artist Grant Wood, fmous for his painting American Gothic, is profiled. (1 hr.)
10:35 (NICK) Women In Jazz; The Vocalists - From Bessie To Billie The jazz tradition is traced from the black spiritual music of a New Orleans gospel choir to Billie Holliday and the merging of the big band style and the blues.
11.00 e Another Life Soap
OOO0 News 0 Introduction To Life (ESPN) SportsCenter
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
11:10 (NICK) Great Poets, Great Writers Featured: Herman Melvilles Moby Dick.
11:15 (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (R)
11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Topic horror Guests: writer Stephen King, film director George Romero and Tom Savini, special effects creator for Friday The 13th.
11:300 Star Time Thicke Of The Night p O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: Michael Caine, Gilda Radner. (1 hr.)
O Hart To Hart Jennifer is kidnapped after being mistaken for an exact look-alike. (R) (l hr. 10 min.)
0 Entertainment Tonight Kate Jackson talks about her new TV series.
0 The Blackwood Brothers 0 Doctor In The House 11:350 The Catlins 13:00000 News IDTHuu-Hes Angels 0 Jim Bakker
(SHOW) Movie Dark Eyes (1978) Britt Ekland, Lana Wood (1 hr, 30 min.)
(|^) Kenny Rogers In Concert
The Grammy-Award winning country-western star performs such favorites as "The Gambler, Lucille and "Lady, as well as a duet of We Have Tonight with guest star Sheena Easton, from the Greensboro (NC) Coliseum. (1 hr.)
(USA) Radio 1880 12:050 Movie "Roman Holiday (1953) Gregory Peck, Audrey Hepburn. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
12:300 Jack Benny OO0 ABC News NlghtUne O O Late Night With David Letterman (R)
(USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
12:400 Columbo An American chess champion (Laurence Harvey) murders his Russian opponent in order to protect his title. (R)(l hr.,20 min.)
1:00 OI Married Joan O More Real People O0News
0Thicke Of The Night 0Faithline (SPN) Travellers World (HBO) Movie Mad Max (1980) Mel Gibson, Joanne Samuel. (1 hr, 29 min.)
(USA) Hockey Special U.S.
Olympic Team vs. Washington Capitals (from Washington, D.C.).(R)(3hrs.)
1:300 Love That Bob OONews
O O NBC News Overnight (SPN) Movie The Rage Of Paris (1938) Danielle Darrieux, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (1 hr. 40 min.)
l.S5(SH0W) Movie "Das Boot' (1981) Juergen Prochnow, Arthur Gruenemeyer. (2 hrs., 25 min./
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Sunday. October 2, 1983 TV-5
O News Nlghtwatch ' 0 Jim Bakker 2:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:300 Life Of Riley O All In The Family O News
(ESPN) College Football Brigham Young vs, UCLA (R)(3 hrs.) 2:850 Movie Arsenic And Old Lace" (1944) Cary Grant Josephine Hull. (2 hrs., 30 min.) 2:40 (HBO) Movie "Blood Relatives (1977) Donald Sutherland Aude Landry. (1 hr, 40 min.) 3:000 700 Oub Featured: the Soviet Unions strategy to export communism; how to be a "one-minute father. (1 hr., 30 min.)
ONews
0 Robert Schuller 8:10 (SPN) Movie Texas, Brooklyn And Heaven (1948) Guy Madison, Diana Lynn. (1 hr., 50 min.)
3:30 ONews 4:00 ONews
0 Today With Lester Sumrall (USA) Wrestling (R)
4:10 (SHOW) Movie "Halloween III: Season Of The Witch (1982) Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkin. (1 hr., 35 min.)
4:20 (HBO) Movie I, The Jury (1982) Armande Assante, Barbara Carrera. (1 hr, 50 min.)
4:300 Ross Bagley O All In The Family
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The Daily Reilector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. October 2, 1983
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(SHOW) The Sound Of Murder (HBO) Movie "Treasure Of The Four Crowns" (1982)
(USA) Cartoons 6:05 0 Little House On The Prairie
6:S0 O The Rifleman O0 ABCNewsn ijTaxl - ^
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Cl O M*A*S*H O Family Feud O Tic Tac Dough 00 Alice 0 Oral Roberts 0 Folk Ways
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(NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Sports Look 7:350 Good News 8:00 O High Chaparral O O 0 Just Our Luck 5 P.M. Magazine O O Baseball NL Playoff Game 1 NL East Champion at NL West Champion (3 hrs.)
O 0 The Mississippi (1 hr)
0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
0 Nova "Animal Impostors (SPN) This Is New Zealand (SHOW) Movie Trail Of The Pink Panther (1982) Peter Sellers, David Niven. Following the disappearance of bumbling French police detective Inspector Clouseau. a TV reporter interviews friends, family and enemies to put together a profile of his life. PG' (1 hr., 35 min.)
(HBO) Movie "The Toy (1982) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason A multimillionaire "purchases an unemployed black man as a plaything for his spoiled young son. 'PG'd hr., 40 min.)
(NICK) Against The Odds
lives and careers of magician Harry Houdini and master showman P T. Barnum are depicted
(USA) Wrestling From Madison Square Garden in New York. (3 hrs.)
8:05 0 Movie A Countess From Hong Kong (1967) Marlon Brando, Sophia Loren. A beauti-. ful young immigrant stows away in the stateroom of an American diplomat. (2 hrs., 15 min.) St 8:30000 Happy Days di Carol Burnett And Friends (NICK) The Tomorrow People The Slaves Of Jedikiah Its up to Kenny to save the Tomorrow People from the trap Jedikiah has set for them. (Part 3)
9:000 700 Gub O O 0 Threes Company d Merv Grlfflii O 0 Movie Secrets Of A Mother And Daughter (Premiere) Katharine Ross, Linda Hamilton. A widow and her daughter, who is experiencing marital problems, both fall deeply in love with a charming restaurateur. (2 hrs.) 0JlmBakker
0 Vietnam: A Television History Roots Of WarAlthough relations between American intelligence and Ho Chi Minh remain cordial after World War II, French and British hostility
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to the Vietnamese revolution lays the groundwork for war. (1 hr.)
(SPN)TelefranceU,SA (NICK) Arts PUyhouse: Long Days Journey Into Night Ruby Dee and Earle Hyman star in the first all-black cast to perform Eugene ONeiUs Pulitzer prize-winning classic, depicting the conflicts that tie together members of a middle class family in the early 1900s. (3 hrs.)
9:300 O 0 Oh, MadelineTV Chatter
d)New^
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(SHOW) The Hasty Heart Gregory Harrison, Cheryl Ladd and Perry King star in this dramatic special about a dying World War II soldier who is drawn out of his bitterness by his fellow sick-mates and a warm-hearted nurse. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(ESPN) Womens Billiards World Invitational 7-Ball Championship - Lorie Shampo vs. Billie Billing (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie Venom (1982) Nicol Williamson, Klaus Kinski. Kidnappers hold a young American boy hostage in his parents London home, alternately contending with the police outside and a deadly mamba snake in the buildings ventilation system. R (1 hr., 33 min.)
10:200 News 10:300 John Osteen 11:000 Another Ufe OOOOO00News (SSoap
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11:15 (ESPN) College Football Colorado vs. Notre Dame (R) (3 hrs.)
11:300 Star Time OO0ABCNewsNightline (SThlcke Of The Night O O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Peter Ustinov, Tony Bennett. (1 hr.)
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0 Entertainment Tnii^t An interview with Andy Williams. 0TheCatIins
By Polly Vonetes
Too bad JOHN COLEMAN, the renowned weather forecaster. could not forecast the hurricane" conditions his weather channel would encounter in Atlanta. The storm of controversy when abated left JOHN without his Weather Channel and relieved of his duties as meteorologist on ABCs (iood Morning America." However, now in a calmer atmosphere. JOHN is predicting the weather for WCBS-TV in New York 1 hope there will be smoother sailing from now on for my favorite "weatherman."
wizard of Oz" fans will have an opportunity to see JUDY GARLAND, RAY BOLGER, BERT LAHR and JACK HALEY in a musical number that was cut from the original movie That clip-, which is slated to air on this week's edition of ABCs Ripley s Believe ft or Not!," mysteriously disappeared before finally being recovered before airtime Hostess HOLLY PAL.NCE will recall a series of strange disasters that plagued the making of this classic film.
If the portrait of the late Wade Champion, patriarch of "The Yellow Rose " (an NBC series that premieres Sunday. Oct. 2), seems vaguelv familiar - it should! The portrait is a composite of "sons' DAVID SOUL and SAM ELLIOTT. Commissioned to a local artist, the painting was completed in just four days.
TED DANSON, who stars as Sam Malone on "C!heers," is plea.sed to be on Playgirl Magazine s new list of the 10 sexiest men in America. "What the heck," he said. "I'm playing a sexy guy on Cheers. 1 figure making the list is kind of a nice reflection of my work. Also, on occasion. I enjoy pulling out the magazine to remind my wife Casey how lucky she is."
0 Life Anew 0 Doctor In The House 11:35 (HBO) Movie Amityville II: The Possession (1982) Burt Young, James Olson. A family experiences supernaturally influenced problems after moving into a Long Island house. R (1 hr, 45 min.)
12:00 0 Gurlies Angela 0 Movie "One Step To Hell (1968) Ty Hardin, Rossano Braz-zi. (2hrs.)
0 JimBakker (USA) Radio 1990 (R)
12:300 Jack Benny OTic Tac Dough O Public Affain O O Ute Night With David Letterman Guest: comedian Jay
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0Thicke Of The Night (SHOW) Loving Frienda And Perfect Couplea (USA) Sporta Look (R)
12:400 McGoud 1:0001 Married Joan O More Real People O0Newa d) Minion: Impoaaible 0Weatbrook Hospital (SPN) Paul Ryan (SHOW) Movie Sitting Ducks (1980) Michael Emil, Zach Norman. (1 hr, 30 min.)
(USA) CoUege Foothall Florida vs. LSU (R) (2 hrs,, 30 min.)
1:25 (HBO) Movie Five Days One Summer (1982) Sean Connery, Betsy Brantley. (1 hr., 50 min.)special Truck Deab Oi/Vneric2G Best!
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O O BaaebaU NL Playoff Game 2 - NL East Champion at NL West Champion (3 hrs.)
O 0 Whiz Kids (Premiere) A young genius (Matthew Labor-teaux) and three of his friends (Andrea Elson, Jeffrey Jacquet, Todd Porter) use his talking computer to probe an elderly womans death. (1 hr.)
0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
0 Castle Animation and live action are used to demonstrate the planning, building, habitation and siege of a fictional 13th century castle, with additional on-location visits to castles throughout Wales. (1 hr,)
(SPN) American Baby Featured: infant exercise classes.
(SHOW) Movie Rich And Famous (1981) Candice Bergen, Jacqueline Bisset. Throughout the ups and downs of their respective literary careers and romantic lives, two women depend on their friendship for stability. R(l hr , 55min.) (HBO) Movie The World According To Garp (1982) Robin Williams, Mary Beth Hurt. The son of an unmarried prep school nurse enjoys a life full of adventures, coincidences and bizarre characters. R (2 hrs., 15 min.)
(NICK) Tbe Third Eye "Under The Mountain A sudden shark attack embroils the twins in the life and death struggle between Mr. Jones and the enemy. (Part
3)
(USA) Tennis Ladies Legends Of Tennis (from Hartford, Ct ). (3 hrs.)
8:050 Movie "Sabrina (1954) Humphrey Bogart, Audrey Hepburn. The daughter of the family chauffeur is sought after by two wealthy socialite brothers. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
8:30(1) Movie Guns Of Diablo (1964) Charles Bronson, Susan Oliver. A tough wagonmaster encounters a man whom he had injured in self-defense years before. (1 hr, 30 min.)
(SPN) In Good Taste (ESPN) The World Sportsman Ballooning / Shark Fishing Guests: Peter Benchley, Phil Harris. (1 hr.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
The Slaves Of Jedikiah Kenny has disappeared, but Stephen is reluctant to help find him. (Part
4)
9:00 O 700 Club Featured: how to invest your money in our non-inflationary economy. (2 hrs.) 0{> O 0 Dynasty Krystle defends Mark (Geoffrey Scott),
who is suspected of setting the cabin fire, and Alexis realizes that a killer is after her. n (1 hr.) "
O 0 Movie "Carpool (Premiere) Harvey Korman, Ernest Borgnine. The four members of a carpool come into conflict over a million-dollar cache they retrieved when it accidentally fell from an armored car. (2 hrs.)
0 Jim Bakker
0 Vietnam: A Television History The First Vietnam War (1946-1954) The French expect to defeat Ho Chi Minhs guerillas, but the fighting drags on for eight years, culminating in the defeat of the French at Dien Bien Phu. (1 hr.)
(SPN) Telefrance U.SA (NICK) Moaes Pendleton Presents Moaes Pendan The unique American choreographer is visited in his 22-room Victorian mansion, where he weaves everyday activities into the creative process of choreography. (1 hr, 5 min.)
9:30 (ESPN) PKA Full Contact Karate (R)
10:000 O 0 Hotel (I) News
0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 0 The Navigators This documentary researches the ancient Polynesian skill of navigating without charts, compasses or sextants, and profiles one native who is determined to keep this art alive. (1 hr.)
(SHOW) Movie H.O.-T.S.! (1979) Susan Kiger, Lisa London A sorority reject decides to form her own club of co-eds who concentrate on gratifying sex-starved collegians. R (1 hr., 35 min.)
10:05 (NICK) Alley Dances Alvin Ailey and the American Dance Theater present three selections from their permanent repertoire in this performance hosted by former American Dance Theater star Judith Jamison, along with an interview with dancer Donna Wood. (1 hr., 55 min.) ,
10:300 News 0 John Aukerberg (HBO) HBO Coming Attractions
11:00 Q Another Life POQflO00New8 (DSoap
0 Bible Pathways 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie "Ghost Story (1981) Fred. Astaire, John Houseman. Mysterious deaths begin to decimate the ranks of a small circle of elderly men who share both a monthly storytelling get-together and a 50-year-old secret. R(lhr., 50 min.) (USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, October 2, 1983 '
Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
11:15 (ESPN) Auto Racing Formula I Italian Grand Prix (from Monza, Italy) (R) (1 hr., 30 min.)
11:30 estar Time OO0 ABC News Nlghtline (DlUcke Of The Night Q e Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Sean Connery ("Never Say Never Again), Brazilian pianist Tania Tania Maria. (1 hr.)
O Police Story A Mexican-American police sergeant (Pedro Armendariz Jr.) tries to prevent a gang war in his olcf neighborhood. (R)(l hr., 10 min.) 0 Entertainment Tonight Kevin Kline talks about his upcoming movie.
0 Sound Of The Spirit 0 Doctor In The House (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
11:350 The Catllns
11:40 (SHOW) Movie The Toy (1982) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason. A multimillionaire purchases" an unemployed black man as a plaything for his spoiled young son. PG (1 hr,, 40 min.)
12:00 0 Charlies Angela 0 Jim Bakker
12:050 Movie The Last Dinosaur (1977) Richard Boone, Joan Van Ark. (2 hrs., 10 min.)
12:30 O Jack Benny O Tic Tac Dough O Public Affairs O O Late Night With David Lettennan Guests: comedian David Wood, Warren Eckstein with exotic animals. (1 hr.) 0Thicke Of The Night (USA) Pick The Proa
13:400 Movie The Longest Drive (1976) Kurt Russell, Tim Matheson. (1 hr, 20'min.)
12:45 (ESPN) Ringside Review 1:00 BI Married Joan O More Real People O0 News (D Mission: Impossible 0Gene Scott (SPN) Personal (^mputer (SHOW) Movie Prince Of The City (1981) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach. (2 hrs., 45 min) (HBO) Movie The Bell Jar (1979) Marilyn Hassett, Julie Harris. (1 hr ,-54 min.)
(USA) Tennis "Ladies Legends Of Tennis (from Hartford, Ct.) (R)(3hrs.)
1:300 Love That Bob OBNews
O O NBC News Overnight (SPN) Movie "Nothing Sacred (1937) Fredric March, Carole Lombard. (2 hrs)
2:00 B Bachelor Father BCD News
B CBS News Nlghtwatch 0 Jim Bakker
2:15 Movie One For The ~ Book (1947) Eleanor Parker Ronald Reagan (2 hrs , 10 min i (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:300 Life Of RUey O All In The Famllv ONews
(ESPN) Horse Racing Weekly (R) ^
3:00 B 700 Club Featured: how to invest your money in our non-inflationary economy. (1 hr., 30 min.)
ONews
0 Lowell Lundstrom (ESPN) PKA Full Contact Karate (R)
(HBO) Movie Prince Of The City (1981) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach. (2 hrs , 45 min.)
3:30 ONews 0^ Humbard (SPN) Movie Make A Wish (1937) Basil Rathbone, Leon Errol. (1 hr, 30 min.)
4:00 B News 0 How Can I Live?
(USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights ^
and previews of worldwide pre- ' Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
4:20 (SHOW) Movie Ball Of Fire (1942) Gary Cooper, Barbara SUnwyck. (1 hr., 55 min.)
4:25 0 The Americans 4:30 B Ross Bagley O All In The Family 0 The Blackwood Brothers (ESPN) Auto Racing NASCAR Harvest 150 (from Richmond, Va.),(R)(ihr.,30 min.)
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(SPN) TraveUers World (SHOW) John Barbours World (HBO) Sitcom
(NICK), Against The Odds Hitler And Napoleon Napoleon Bonaparte and Adolf Hitler, two of the most powerful conquerors of all time, rose through chaos to rule the continent of Europe 8:0501 NCAA FootbaU 8:30(13 Carol Burnett And Friends
Diagnosis; AIDS The latest medical information and research about this frightening disease is presented from Seattle, Washington where the fifth annual meeting of members of a group that studies sexually transmitted diseases was held. (SPN) Sharper Image (HBO) Movie "So Fine (1981) Ryan ONeal, Jack Warden. A stuffy college professor saves his fathers floundering garment factory by invenng a new type of ladies jeans. R (i hr., 31 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
The Slaves Of Jedikiah In an attempt to rescue Kenny, the Tomorrow People become trapped in a spaceship thats about to explode. (Parts)
9:000 700 Qub Featured: Hee Haw star Lulu Roman talks about her 90-pound weight loss; why we sell high-tech secrets to the Soviets. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 9 To 5 The female office workers compete for the affections of handsome salesman Michael (George DeLoy). d) Merv Griffin Guests; Ann Jilliany^obin Cook, David Gnjh, Elizabeth Crow, Doug Domokos, Gus Hardin. (1 hr.)
O0 Simon A Simon (1 hr.)
0 Jim Bakker
0 The Emigrant Saga The Emigrants A Swedish couple, Christina and Karl Oskar, set sail for America in hopes of settling in the rich farm country of the midwest. (2 hrs.)
(SPN) Telefrance UAA.
(SHOW) Movie It Came From Hollywood (1982) John Candy, Dan Aykroyd. The worst scenes from old B movies are presented, offering humorous glimpses of Japanese monster epics, exploiution films and the works of Edward D. Wood Jr., director of "Plan 9 From Outer Space and "Glen Or Glenda. TC' (i hr., 20 min.)
(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Mike Tinley / Mark McPherson 10-round Middleweight bout (live from Atlantic City, N.J.) (2 hrs.,
30 min.)
(NICK) Performers Showcase' The Open Wall - Yehudi Returns To China World renowned violinist Yehudi Menuhin reflects on life in China during this documentary tracing his second trip to that country in 1982.(1 hr, 10 min.)
9:300 O 0 Its Not Easy Sharon is shocked to discover that her husband Neal spent the night at his ex-wifes home 10:000 0020/20(1 hr.)
1. News
O 0 Knots Landing Chip convinces Diana to trust him, and Val's new relationship with Ben Gibson (Douglas Sheehan) is jeopardized. (1 hr)
! 0 Lester Sumrall Teaching j (HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert
The Grammy-Award winning
country-western star performs such favorites as -The Gambler" 'Lucille and "Lady, as well as a duet of We Have Tonight" with guest star Sheena Easton, from the Greensboro (NC) Coliseum. (1 hr j 10:10 (NICK) Netherlands Wind Ensemble Members of major Dutch orchestras who comprise this celebrated ensemble perform a variety of music while on tour in England and Scotland (1 hr, 5 min)
10:300 Eagles Nest (SHOW)Biiarre (USA) Winning GoH Ups 11:000 Another Life OOOOO00News (DSoap
0 Today In Bible Prophecy 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(SHOW) Movie My Favorite Year (1982) Peter O'Toole, Jessica Harper. A dipsomaniacal former matinee idol has difficulty coping with thw pressures of a live TV performance during televisions golden age. PG (1 hr., 35 min.)
(HBO) Movie "I, The Jury (1982) Armande Assante, Barbara Carrera. Private eye Mike Hammer tangles with a coterie of villains as he attempts to avenge a war buddys murder. Rdhr., 50 min.)
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Pre-seuts 11:150 News (NICK) Great Palntingi Featured: Vincent Van Goghs Self Portrait.
11:300 Star Time O O 0 ABC Newt Nlghtline (SlUcke or Hie Night O O Tonight Host; Johnny Carson. Guests: Elaine Stritch, actor James Stephens (The Paper Chase"), Police Chief Ronnie Porter (from Weleetka, Okla.). (1 hr.)
O Trapper John, MJ). Several unusual people are the first participants in a cooperative care program instituted by Trapper andGonzo. (R)(l hr, lOmin.)
0 Entalainmeot Tonight Way-lon Jennings on tour in Florida.
0 Contact
0 Doctor In The House rtsCenter
11:35 (NICK) Nightcap Topic: architecture. Guests; Paul Gold-berger, daily architecture critic for the New York Times; leading architects Robert A.M. Stern and Charles Gwathmey.
11:45 (ESPN) NFLa Greatest Moments 1970 Oakland Raiders / "1973 Buffalo Bills (R) (Ihr.)
13:000 Charlies Angeb 0Jlm Bakker (USA) Radio 1990 (R)
12:050 The Catlins 13:300 Jack Benny O Tic Tac Dough OPubUc Affairs O O Late Night With David Letterman Guest: cooking expert Julia Child. (1 hr.) 0Thlcke Of The Night (USA) Pick The Pros (R)
1350 Movie Man Alone ((1955) B|y Milhid, Mi|f Mur- phy. (2 hrs.)
12:400 Movie Doctors Private Lives (1978) John Gavin, Donna Mills. (1 hr., 20 min.)
13:45 (SHOW) Loving Friends And Perfect Couples
(ESPN) Billiards Jimmy Caras vs. Cowboy Jimmy Mooie (R) (1 hr.)
1:0001 Married Joan O More Real People OONewf
d) Miaaion: Impossible 0 Jewish Voice Broadcait (SPN) Sharper Image , , (miO) Movft "The Eifbrcist (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair. (2 hrs., 2 min.)
(USA) NHL Hockey New York Islanders at Montreal Canadiens (3 hrs.)
1:15 (SHOW) Movie Gray Lady Down (1978) Chariton Heston, Dajyd Carradine. (1 hr., 51 min.) 1:300 Love That Bob OONewi
O O NBC News Overnight 0GoodNewi
(SPN) Moyle "Love Laughs At Andy Hardy" (1947) Uwis Stone, Mickey Rooney. (2 hrs.)
1:45 (ESPN) SportsWook(R)
3.-00 O Badidor Father OCDNewi
O CBS News NIgbtwatch 0 Jim Bakker 2:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:300 Life Of RUey O All In Ihe Family ONewa
(ESPN) Auto Radng NASCAR Holly Farms 400 (from North Wilkesboro, N.C.). (R)(3hrs.)
3:35 0 Movie "Two Guys From Texas (1948) Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson. (1 hr., 55 min.) 3:000 700 Qub Featured; ' Hee Haw star Lulu Roman talks about her 90-pound weight loss; why we sell high-tech secrets to the Soviets. (1 hr., 30 min.) ONews 0 Jerry Falwell 3:05 (HBO) Movie Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer. (1 hr., 55 min.)
8:10 (SHOW) Movie Sex Ray (1 hr., 10 min.)
3:30 ONews (SPN) Movie "Mickey The Great (1932) Mickey Rooney, Bill Barty. (1 hr., 30 min.)
4:00 ONews 0Tbe Camerons (USA) Waterskling "Seni All-American Championships (R)
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4:80 (SHOW) Bliarre 4:300 Roas Bagley
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11:10 OSUr Him OO0ABCNewiNi|htllM
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6:00 OTraanr* Hunt OOOOO(D0Ne>
iSWKRPInClndnnatl 0HritafeU.&A. Update MmNoU / Lehrar Newibov (SPN)raephoneAnctloa (SHOW) Phenomenon Of BeoJl (^) HBO Coming Attractloa (USA)Cartoooi
6:050 little Houk On The Prairie
6:500 The Rifleman O0ABCNewin Taxl
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0 Good Nem America (SHOW) Murder Among Frlendi (OBO) Sugar Rays All-Stars (NICK) Mr. Wiiards World 7:00QB(nansa O WKRP In Cincinnati e ABC News g 0 Threes t^pany O O 0 The Jeffosons O Jokers WUd 0Larry Allen 0 Business Report (SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Inside The NFL (NICK) You Cant Do Ihat On Television (USA) Radio 1900 7:050 Carol Burnett And Friends 7:500 Threes Company O PM. Magaxlne OM*A*S*H O Family Feud O He Tac Dough 00 Alice 0Tbe Camerons 0 Statellne: Legislative Report (SPN) Investors Action line (ESPN) Inside FootbaU (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Sports Probe 7:550 Good News 8:000 High Ch^tfrral O O 0 Benson Kraus asks Benson to pose as her husband in a plan to show her visiting mother (Sudie Bond) that shes
nwrried.
Pit'
O O BaaehaD AL Playoff Game 5 - AL East Champion at Chicago White Soi (5 hrs.)
O O Hie Dukea Of Haiard 0 Camp Meeting. UBJL 0 WaAingtoo WeA In Review (SPN)InGoodTaate (SHOW) Movie The Exorcist (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair. The young daughter of a popular actress becomes posset by a demonic spirit which commits evil acts through the occupation of her mind and body. R (2 hrs., 2 min.)
(ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week
(HBO) Movie Jinxed! (1982) Bette Midler, Ken Wahl. A singer talks an unlucky casino dealer into helping her do away with her obnoxious boyfriend. R (1 hr., 45 min.) a (NICK) The Third Eye 'Under The Mountain Mr. Jones voice seems to drift throught the fog from the weird Wilberforce house, and the twins steal through the dark night to his rescue. (Part 4)
(USA) Boxing From Madison Square Garden in New York. (3 hrs.)
8:050 Movie "The Love God? (1969) Don Knotts, Edmond OBrien. The editor of a nature magazine returns from a trip to find himself the object of massive affection and two lawsuits. (2 hrs., 5 min.)
8:50 O O 0 Webster Carol Burnett And Friends 0WaU|treetWeek (SPN) Country Kids (ESPN) Auto Racing USAC Stocks (from Rossburg, Ohio). (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
The Medusa Strain Something so incredible has happened that the Tomorrow People are unable to believe their eyes. (Part II
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Merv Griffin O 0 Dallas (1 hr.)
0 Jim Bakker
0 Hie Emigrant Saga A New
Beginning Arriving in New York after a terrifying voyage across the Atlantic, the Oskars find the long journey to Wisconsin hampered by hardships and Christinas pregnancy. (2 hrs.) (SPN)TdefniiceUjL (NICK) Sixth Van Cllbum International Piano Competition Contestants in this acclaimed competition held in Forth Worth, Texas, in 1981, reveal their hopes and fears and are seen practicing and performing. (Partl)(lhr., 5min.)
10:000 o 0 Matt Houston News
O 0 Falcon Crest (1 hr.)
0 Lester Sumrall Teaching (HBO) Movie The World According To Garp (1982) Robin Williams, Mary Beth Hurt. The son of an unmarried prep school nurse enjoys a life full of adventures, coincidences and bizarre characters. R (2 hrs., 15 min.)
10:05 (SHOW) Movie Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) Richard Burton, Linda Blair. Young Regan MacNeil is still haunted by bizarre visions and dreams of flying, a situation which a priest and a female psychologist try to end for her. R (1 hr., 57 min.) (NICK) First EdlUoo Guest: Paul Theroux, author of The Mosquito Coast.
10:100 News 10:300 Ben Haden (NICK) At Ihe Met: MetropoU-tan Cats The fact and fancy of cats as animals and artifacts are revealed in this amusing and whimsical look at one of mankind's most mysterious companions.
11:00 O-Aoother Life OOOOO00News Smp
0 K-Dlmension Magazine 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Egon Schiele This documentary profiles the Australian expresssionist whose paintings offered a psychological flavor influenced by FreuJs then-new theories, and whose w k went virtually unnoticed unui some 50 years after his death. (1 hr.) (USA) Night Flight Champagne (4 hrs.)
11:050 All In The Family 11:15 (ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Mike Tinley / Mark McPherson lO-round Middleweight bout (f tlanfk n:- N.J.)(R)(2
and Ray). (1 hr.)
O Movie The Bermuda Depths (1978) Burl Ives, Leigh M(loskey. Scientists encounter a beautiful girl who seems to have returned from the dead and is being pursued by a prehistoric creature. (R) (2 hrs., 15 min.)
0 Entertalnmat Tonight A
special report on TV commercials looks at why stars plug products for cash.
0Lifeguide 0 Doctor In Hie Honae 11:550 The Catllna 15:00 0 The Many Worldi Of Ray Charlea The winner of ten Grammy Awards is joined by a star-studded cast. (2 hrs.) 0JimBakkor
(SHOT^ Duran Duran Eleven rock videos of the biggest hits of the English rock band Duran Duran are featured in this exciting music special. (1 hr.)
15:050 Night Tracks 1SJO(HBO) Movie "Amityville II: The Possession (1982) Burt Young, James Olson. (1 hr., 45 njin.)
15:500 Jack Benny OHc Tac Dough O Public Afteln O O Friday Night Videoe Musical mini-features highlight tunes by Phil Collins, Elvis Costello, Cheap Trick, Billy Idol and The Cars. (1 hr., 30 min.) 0Thicke Of Hw Night 1:0001 Married Joan O More Real People ONews
Movie "The Legend Of Hell House (1973) Pamela Franklin, Roddy McDowaii. (2 hrs.) 0ZoIaLevltt (SPN)NikklHaakeU (SHOW) Movie Halloween III: Season Of The Witch (1982) Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkin. (1 hr., 35 min.)
1:05 0 Night Tracks 1:500 Love That Bob OONews
0 Heritage U.SA. Update (SPN) Movie Jungle Book (1942) Sabu, Joseph Calleia. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
1:45 (ESPN) ^de FootbaU 2:00 OBacb^ Father O 0 News \
OO NBC News Overnight 0 Jim Bakker 2:050 Night Tnicks
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(Continued From Page 4)
OO0OneUfeToUve OO Another Worid 0 How Can I Live? (Mon) Good News (Tue) Westbrook Hospital (Wed) Jerry Falwell (Thu) Jimmy Swaggart (Fri) @Sd!oc!Spetdl (SPN) Crafts N Things (Tue) Sewing With Nancy (Wed) American Baby (Thu)
(SHOW) Aerobldse (Mon, Wed, Fri)
(SHOW) Movie (Tue) The Irishman (1978XThu) "It Came From Hollywood^1982)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) Harrys War (1981)
(NICK) Todays Special (USA)Sooya 2:200 At Home With Beverly Nye (Moo) Family Chef (Tue) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Cleaning Up Your Act (Thu) Together: Shirley And Pat Boone (Fri) Inight(Frl)
O0 Capitol
0 The Leasoo (Moo) Oral Roberts (Tue) Pattern For Living (Wed)
0 What On Earth (Moo) Equal Justice (rue) Educational Programming (Wed) Case Studies (rhu, Fri)
(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (Moo) Japan 120 (TYie, Thu) Scandinavian Weekly (Wed) Holland On Satellite (Fri)
(SHOW) Stoned (Moo)
(SHOW) Movie (Wed) The Toy (1982KFri) Crisis (1950)
(ESPI^ Horseshow Jumping (Wed) Rodeo (R) (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) "Legend Of The Wild (1980XFri) Trail Of The Pink Panther (1982)
(BDBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert (Thu)
(NIC^DustysTrechouse 5:000 700 Qub O O 0 General Hospital He-Man / Masters Of The Universe
O O Fantasy (Mon, Tue, Thu)
Baseball (Wed, Fri)
o 0 Guiding Ught
0PTLSaninar
0 To Be Announced (Mon, Wed,
Fri) Staff Development (Tue.
Thu)
(ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) (Tue) Auto Racing (Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Wed) Dance Of The Dwarfs (1 hr., 30 min.)
(NICK) What Will They Think Of Next? (Mon, Wed, Fri) Kids' Writes (Tue. Thu)* j, (USA)AaveAndpl! " ^ 3:05OFlntlme'***^
5:50 The FUhtstbbes 0 Pre<ieneral Educational Development (Moo) General Educational Development (Tue, Thu) Adult Basic Education (Wed, Fri)
(SPN) Hello Jerusalem (Wed)
This Is New Zealand (Fri)
(SHOW) Anna To Hie Infinite Power (Moo) Mark Twain Theatre (Thu)
(ESPN) CoUege Football (Tue) (HBO) Video Jukebox (Thu)
(NICK) Yon Cant Do That Oa Television (Mon, Wed, Fri) Going Great (Tue, Thu)
5:550 The FUntstooes 4:00 e Another Ufe O Whats Happening!! (Moo, Tue, Thu, Fri) Young Peoples SpeciaUliMl)
O Woo^ Woodpecker And Friends
TomAndJerry
O Little House On The Prairie
(Mon,Tue,Hia)
O Witney 'Rie Hobo (Mon, Tue, Thu)
O The Waltons 0 Eight Is Enough 0Cartooos
0 Today With Lester Sumrall (Moo) Kenneth Copeland (Tue) Time Of Deliverance (Wed) Calvary Temple Hour (Thu) Ford Philpot (Fri)
0 Sesame Street (R) n (SHOW) Irene Moves Itf (Tue) (ESPN) CoUege FootbaU (Mon) (HBO) DoUy Parton Meets The Kl*(Tue)
(HBO) Movte (Thu) "The Glacier Fox (1978)
(NICK) The Adventures Of Bla(^ Beauty 4:050 The Munsters 4:S0OBull8eye O CHIPS Patrol (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri) ABC Afterschool Special (Wed)
(Continued On Page 12)
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Saturday Daytime
5:000 All In Hie FunUy S) Eaglei Nert S:0SONlchtTncks 5:MONewi S) Today In BlUe Prophecy (HBO) Sugar Rays All-Stan 1:00 B The BlarkW(d Brothen OiDNewB
(S Bags Bunny And Friends OUttle House On ne Prairie (D Captain Kangaroo CTelestory Zola Levitt
(SHOW) Phenomenon Of Benjl (ESPN) Rodeo (R)
(HBO) Movie "Paternity" (1981) 6:30 O Jimmy Houston Ontdoon OCartooDS (DPopeyeAndFrinds OUtUe Rascals Great Space Coaster S) Pirate Adventures (SPN) Movie Gulliver's Travels" (1939)
(SHOW) Irene Moves In .7:000 Superbook O Post S Reports (D Vegetable Soup O0CartooDs O A Better Way O Captain Kangaroo (D Kidsworld Q)JimBakker
0 Genera! Educational Devel-opnoent
(NICK) Pinwbeel (USA) Alive And Well!
7:05 0 Between The Lines 7:15 O Rocky And Friends 7:30 O Flying House O B The Jetsoos Cs Newsbag O Treehouse Gub 0 Benjl, Zaz And The Alien Prince
0 General Educational Development
(SHOW) Movie The Cobweb (1955)
(HBO) Video Jukebox 7:35 0 Romper Room 8:00 B Contact B O 0 Scooby Doo / Menudo (D The Jetaons O O The FUntstone Funnies O0TheBiakitts 0 Mr. Mustache And CtHnpany 0 Making It Count (SPN) Poet Time (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (HBO) Movie "Harrys War (1981)
(USA) Spwts Probe 8:05 0 Starcade
8:30 B O 0 The Moochhichls / Little Rascals / Richie Rich CIj Tom And Jerry OO The Shirt Tales O 0 Saturday Supercade 0 Contact 0 Making It Count (SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoors (ESPN)SportsCenter (USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
8:35 0 Movie "Gunfight At Black Horse Canyon (1962)
8:45 (ESPN) Instructlooal Series :00BneLeaBOD (D Incredible Hulk BQSmur&n 0 Circle Square 0 Understanding Human Behavior . (SPN) Craftshr lUngs (ESPN)Motocroe8 (USA) Co-Ed
8:30 B Weekend Gardener B B 0 Pac-Man / Rubik Cube/Menudo O 0 Dungeon And Dragons 0InsldeTnck
0 Understanding Human Behavior
(SPN) Sewing With Nancy (SHOW) Movie "The Pride Of The Yankees" (1942)
(USA) Woman Watch 10:00 B Movie "The Plunderers (1948)
CD Six Mlllioo Dollar Man O0The Dukes 0 Jimmy
0BusioeasOfC__
(SPN) Country Kids (ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week(R)
(HBO) Inside The NFL (USA) Do^ For Living 1O;3OBB0 The Littles B Q Alvin And The Chipmunks
O 0 Charlie Brown And Snoopy
0 Business Of Management (SPN) Good Life (ESPN) Inside FootbaU(R)
(USA) You; Magazioe For Women
10:35 0 Movie "King Rat" (1965) 11:00 B B 0 Puppy / Scooby ^ / Schoolhouse Rock 1, Movie Seven Blows Of The Dragon" (1976)
BOMr.T
O Benjl, Zaz And The Allen Prince
0SoulTrain 0 JlmBakker 0 Money Puzzle (ESPN)SportsWeek(R)
(HBO) Sitcom (NICK) KidsWrites (USA) Adventures In Paradise 11:30 O O Amazing Spider-Man / Incredible Hulk B Bugs Bunny / Road Runner 0 Money Punle (SPN)TheAPUy (ESPN) Play Your Best Tennis (HBO) Morie Dance Of The Dwarfs (1 hr, 30 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People 12:00 B The Westemen B Lome Greenes New Wilderness
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B World Series Unsung Heroes BSportsWorld
0 College Football 83; Playboy All-Amolca Team 0PTL Gob (planish)
(aehie back on GH?; Y&R star on Dynasty
(NICK) Yon Cant Do That On TdevisiOD
(USA) Movie "Loophole (1981) 12;3eB Wild Bill Hlckok B B 0 American BandMand CD Movie For A Few Dollars More (1967)
OCaiioons
QThundarr
B Bugs Bunny / Road Runner 0SignOfTheTlmei 0Deiding In Discipline (ESPN) PKA FnU ConUct Karate (R)
(NICK) Standby...Lights! Camera! Action!
18:59 OOBaiebaU 1:00 B Movie "Escape From Red Rock" (1958)
OSiz Million Dollar Man OSoulTraln
Movie "Shoot Out (1971)
0 Father John Bertolucci 0Sopersoccer
(SPN) Name Of The Game Is Golf
(HBO) Movie "Five Days One Summer (1982)
1:30 B Wrestling B Movie The Last Safari
(1967)
Country Gold 0 Movie Custer Of The West
(1968)
0 Heritage U.S.A. Update (SPN) Photographers Eye (SHOW) Movie Star Wars
, (1977)
(NICK) Going Great 2:000 Movie Inspector Clouseau(1968)
O Awaken 0 Joy Junction Doctor Who (SPN) Pmonal Computer (ESPN) Tw Rank Boxing (NICK) Ine Adventures Of Black Beauty
(USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
2:30 BCaU Of The West B Country Gold 0 To Be Announced Doctor Who
(SPN) Companion IX^ Training (NICK) Livewire (USA) Sports Probe 3:00 B Movie Lawless Riders" (1935)
S) Movie Black Oak Conspiracy (1977)
0 Reel Perspectives 0 Athletes In Action Doctor Who (SPN) Financial Inquiry (HBO) Video Jukebox (USA) Sports Look 3:300 Men Of October n BCartoons 60 NCAA Today Zola Levitt 0 AmericanAdventure (SPN) Scuba World (SHOW) Movie MacArthur (1977)
(HBO) Movie A Cry For Love
(1980)
(NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Pick The Pros 3:45 00 NCAA FootbaU
By Kimberly Redmond
All the details have not been finalized yet, but General Hospital fans should know that Genie Francis is slated for a guest-starring stint on "GH" in November. When all the facts are released, well pass them on to you.
Also from the West Coast comes the news that Deborah Adair (Jill Abbott) has abdicated from The Young and The Restless for a new role on the evening soap Dynasty. Brenda Dickson, who created the role of Jill before leaving Y&R for marriage and greener acting pastures, will be taking over once again as Jill,
Beginning Wednesday, Octol^r 12, Donna Pescow (of Saturday Night Fever fame) will be seen for two months on All My Children as a character known simply as Lynn.
Incidentally, Miss Pescow is the real-life steady girlfriend of AMC's" Jason Kincaid, who is seen intermittently as Opal's ex-boyfriend, Sam Brady.
Over at "As The World Turns," Elaine Princi has received a reprieve and her character, Miranda Hughes, will not be shipped out of town as soon as expected.
The powers-that-be have extended her stay through this month, and there's even talk that Miranda might not walk off into the sunset with her French lover Antoine (played by Jean LeClerc, who was last seen as Jean Marc Gauthier on The Doctors) after all.
"Often it feels like someone has a stake on every single moment of my day, says
Quilting
(SPN) MeditOTunean Echoa (USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Lou Angeles 4:300 Wagon Train OBSportsBeat B Wild Kingdom 0 High Chaparral Folk Ways
(NICK) Yon Cant Do That On Television
(USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
5:000 B 0 Wide World OT'
Marie Cheatham (Stephanie
CD Soul Train OWrestUng
0 Heritage U,A. Update 0 WoodwrightsShop (ESPN) Auto Racing (NICK) Against The Odds (USA) Co-Ed 5:30 Lowell Lundstrom This Old House (HBO) Movie "Harrys
(1981)
(NICK) Reggie Jacksons World Of Sports
(USA) You: Magazine For Women
5:35 0 Motorweek Dlnstrated
War
UStOHI
Brenda Dickson
Tomorrow), who is busy with her production company and other acting commitments
besides hBr role dh SFT!"3ut ' to help organize her life, Cheatham has staked several would-be actors in past years.
I have made it a practice to hire a young performer who has just arrived in town to be my secretary, says Miss Cheatham. The newcomer learns about New York City and what it takes to be an actor here and they get paid for it.
Stephen Joyce is currently 'doing double duty and both . roles have naval connections. During the day hes seen on Guiding Light as former Navy Commander Eli Sims, while at night he has been appearing in the limited-run production of Herman Wouks play, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, off-Broadway at the Circle in the Square . Theatre.
(Have a question about soap operas? Write Kimberly Redmond at 200 Park Avenue, Room 602, New York, NY 10166.)
Ricardo Montalban (seated), who stars as the mysterious Mr. Roarke in ABCs Fantasy Island, is joined this season by Christopher Hewett, who will portray the urbane, erudite and consummate personal aide, Lawrence, when the series makes its sixth season premiere Saturday, Oct. 8.
(SUUons reserve the right to make last-minute changes)
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Sports This Week
SUNDAYS 3P0RTS OCTOBERl.im 10:00 Q Tarheel Foethall fflghUAts 11-000 Tom Reed O North Carolina State CoadMBShow ODickCram IS:M O Duke FootbaU Hlfhllchta ONFltS O NFL Today
IKM O Soothem Sportanan O NFL Football Los Angeles Raiders at Washington Redskins (3hrs.)
O NFL FootbaU Dallas Cowboys at Minnesota Vikings (3 hrs., 30 nnin.)
SMQ Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Philadelphia Phillies (Scheduled at press time) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
4JIO NFL Football Coverage of Miami at New Orleans or San Diego at New York Giants (3 hrs.)
SATURDAYS SPORTS OCTOBERS, 1083
12:500 BasebaU AL Playoff Game 4 - AL East Champion at Chicago White Sox (If necessary) (3 hrs., 31 min.)
S:S0O Men Of October U This program looks at the foremost dominant Major League Baseball teams of the 60s and 70s, and examines the reasons why they were such volatile forces in the game.
O NCAA Today (Starting time subject to change.)
1450 NCAA FootbaU (SUrting time subject to change.) (3 hrs., 15 min.)
4MO World Seriea Uimini Heroes Exciting action
highlights of five of the greatest World Series, and interviews with the unsung heroes and others who played a part in baseball history.
4:30OlWaBeat 5:000 Wide World Of Sports Scheduled: Eusebio Pedroza / Jose Caba 15-round WBA Feath-^rweight Championship bout (live from San Vicente, Italy); World Womens Table Tennis Championships (from Tokyo, Japan). (1 hr., 30 min.) OWreetllDf 7:500 BasebaU NL Playoff Game 4 - NL West Champion at NL East Champion (If necessary)
11:50 O ACC FootbaU mgbUghts 11:450 Wrestling
MONDAYS SPORTS
OCTOBER S. 1813
9MO NFL FootbaU New York Jets at Buffalo Bills q (3 hrs.)
Divisional rivalry high in Jets/Bills game
TUESDAYS SPORTS OCTOBER 4,1083 8:000 BasebaU NL Playoff
Game 1 - NL East Champion at NL West Champion (3 hrs.)
WEDNESDAYS SPORTS OCTOBERS, 1983 3:000 BaaebaU AL Playoff Game 1 - Chicago White Sox at AL Elast Champion (3 hrs.) 8:000 BasebaU NL Playoff Game 2 - NL East Champion at NL West Champion (3 hrs.)
THURSDAYS SPORTS OCTOBER 6,1983
8:000 BaaebaU AL Playoff Game 2 - Chicago White Sox at AL Elast Champion (3 hrs.)
The New York Jets will take a Although the playoffs seem a short hop west to the Astro Turf reasonable goal for the Jets, they of Rich Stadium to play the are in a tough division headed by Buffalo Bills in an AFC East the Miami Dolphins, who last game airing on ABC's "Monday year defeated New York twice in Night Football. " Oct. 3 i9 p.m - the regular season and blanked conclusion). This will be the first them 14-0 in the AFC Champion-of two regular-season meetings ship game, between the clubs Buffalo holds If we concentrate on winning a 25-20 edge over New York in our division, that's going to be a the series, which began in 1%0. key force in helping us get some The Jets are under the gui- 'home field advantage (in the dance of first-year head coach playoffs).' said Walton. "We Joe Walton, who succeeded the have great fans here in the New-retired Walt .Michaels to become York area and having the players the ninth man to hold that posi- supported by them is a definite
FRTOAYS SPORTS OCTOBER?, 1983 3KMO BaaebaU NL Playoff Game 3 - NL West Champion at NL East Champion (3 hrs.) 8JMO BasebaU AL Playoff Game 3 - AL East Champion at Chicago White Sox (3 hrs.)
tion in Jets history Before the promotion. Walton served as New York's offensive coordinator and helped develop Richard Todd into one of the finest quarterbacks in the NFL.
Joe commands a great deal of respect, yet he doesn't put himself above you.' said Todd "Joe knows how to get the best out of everybody. The guys, though, should button up their
advantage.
The Jets need to come out swinging against the Bills to bolster their confidence for a Oct. 16 meeting against the Don Shula-coached Dolphins. Coincidentally. 25 years ago. Walton and Shula were both Washington Redskins - the rookie Walton being tried at left cornerback and Shula at right cornerback. Walton's football philosophy is
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chin straps because Joe can also to win with discipline and the be very tough." basics, while being clever in how
Despite Walton s influence, you execute them. "I like to have New York has gotten off to a some fun with the game, not only shakv start this season and has as a coach." he says, "but I think vet to gel into the same team that the players enjoy doing some-made the playoffs the last two thing different once in a while, vears. Two weeks ago the New Football s tough enough as it is. England Fatroits put together a you can't make it a complete strong ground game to roll over drudgery. It's good to have some the Jets, and prior to that defeat, fun \vith it. also.
the Seattle Seahawks forced New York into an embarrassing eight turnovers, including three interceptions.
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Lisa Brown, who plays unpredictable Nola Chamberlain on the (luiding Light.' and her husband. Tom Nielsen, seen as Hoyd Parker on the serial, are expecting their first mild in early 1984 This means that Miss Brown will be leaving her current Broadway role, the lead in the hit musical "42nd Street." at the end of this month (after more than a year of starring in both the serial and the musical). But the energetic Miss Brown will not be leaving "Guiding Light." and not be taking it easy either she and her husband are scheduled to perform on a cruise ship in Florida in early October and then it s time tor an anniversay cruise on the ship (the Nielsens were married a year ago. October 101.
6:000 The Mooroet KungFu OONewi
Q) The Blackwood Brothen 0 Sneak Prevlewi (SPN)HoUaixl On Satellite (SHOW)USFeatival-Dayl (USA) Hot Spots 0:10 0 WresUlng 8:300 Happy Days Again ONews
OONBCNewt 0 Austin City Limits OBitathOfLiie 0 The Mysterious World Of Arthur C. Clarke (NICK) Mr. Wliards World 7:00 O Allas Smith And Jones O O Bee Haw OGood Times S) Threes Company O Dance Fever QSoUdGold 0News OWrestling
0 Gods News Briilnd The News
0 Hillarys Challenge: Race To TheSky
(SPN) Japan 120
(ESPN) NFL Game Of The
Week(R)
(NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Dragnet 7:30 O Carolina Saturday M*A*S*H O Americas Top Ten 0 Reflections 0 Rock Church
(SHOW) Movie It Came From Hollywood(1982) (ESPN)SportsCenter (HBO) Sitcom (USA) Dragnet 7:55 0 Red Man Football Report 7:5900 Baseball 8:000 Movie The Eternal Sea (1954) Sterling Hayden, Alexis Smith. A devoted Navy officer struggles to remain in active duty after losing a limb in World War II. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 T.J. Hooker SUcy puts her life on the line to infiltrate and expose an international white-slavery ring. n(l hr.) StarSearch O O Dif Trent Strokes n O Cutter To Houston (iTr.) 0HeeHaw
0 UndwMa World Of Jacques Cousteau
(HBO) Not Necessarily The
News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric takeoff.
(NICK) Going Great Meet a 13-year-old champion rodeo rider; sail a tall ship with its teenage crew; a teenage ventriloquist shows how to throw your voice. (USA) Tennis "All American Tournament (from Hilton Head Island, S.C.). (4 hrs.)
8J)5 0 NCAA Fooball Louisiana State vs. Tennessee (3 hrs., 15 min.)
8:3000 Silver Spoons 0 Jack Van Impe (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (Live) (2 hrs., 30 min.) (HBO) Movie "The Sender (1982) Kathryn Harrold, Zeljko Ivanek. A flurry of telepaUiic hallucinations is unleashed on the sUff and patients at a Georgia psychiatric hospital when a suicidal patient with uncontrollable psychic powers is admitted. R (1 hr., 30 min.) (NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain A sightseeing trip to Aucklands dormant volcanoes brings further evidence that the twins have a dangerous mission. (Part 2)
9:000 O 0 Love Boat Doc learns that he has a son (Timothy Patrick Murphy), an advertising man (Brodie Greer) tries to carry out a new campaign, and a male escort (Ted McGin-ley) falls for a fellow passenger (Constance Forslund) while accompanying an older woman.
g(l hr.)
Merv Griffin Guests: Jerry Van Dyke, Stephen Schwartz, William Peter Blatty, Dennis Gallegos, Gary Dawson, Deana Martin, Karen Knotts. (1 hr.)
O O The Rousten O0 Movie September Gun (Premiere) Robert Preston, Patty Duke Astin. An aging gun-fighter is recruited to assist a Catholi^un who has dedicated herself ^providing for a group of unwanted Apache children. (2 hrs.)
0 JimBakker 0 The Emigrant Saga (SPN)TelefranceU.SA (SHOW) Movie SUr (1977) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford. A motley collection of rebels and robots band together to attack the huge space fort of an oppressive galactic empire. PG (2 hrs.)
(NICK) Samaom And Delilah
Jon Vickers and Shirley Verrett star in Saint-Saens opera, performed at'the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden, London. (2 hrs., 40 min.)
10:000 Sing Out America O O 0 Fantasy Island (Season Premiere) Mr. Roarke becomes the object of an engaged womans (Stephanie Faracy) affections, while a wid-
(Continued On Page 12)
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TV-12 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
Sunday. October 2.1963
(Continued From P^c 11)
ow (Juliet Prowse) and her 'daughter (Jamie Rosei fall for the same man n' 1 hr i i. News ^ Q8TbeYeUowRose Q) Kenneth Copeland (HBO) Movie Paternity H981) Burt Reynolds. Beverly D'.\n-gelo A bachelor m his forties who wants to be a father searches for the right woman to bear his child PG (1 hr. 35 min 1 10 SO i Page Five Grant Wood's America Iowa-born artist Grant Wood, famous for his painting- American Gothic,^^is profiled 11:000 Rock Church Proclaims OOOOOffiCDNews r 1 Odd Couple In Touch Twilight Zone (SHOW) Blxarre (ESPN) SportsCenter 11:1500 0AfiCNews 11:200 News 11:30 O John Ankerberg O Solid Gold
O ACC Football Highllgfats V i5 Movie With Six You Get Eggroll" (1968; Dons Day, Brian Keith Despite the fact that their children don't get along, a widow and a widower decide to marry (2 hrs.)
O Saturday Night Live (Season Premiere) Host: NBC Entertainment President Brandon Tarti-koff (1 hr, 30 min.)
O Christopher aoaeup O Dance Fever
0 Movie 'Flight From Ashiya " (1964) Yul Brynner, Richard Widmark Three aviators recall their varied pasts while involved in rescue operations during World War II in the
Pacific (2 hrs.)
0 Movie
Lowell Lundstrom Twilight Zone
(SHOW) Movie HOT S ' (1979) Susan Kiger l.isa London A sorority reject decides to form her own club of co-eds who concentrate on gratifying sex-starved collegians R (1 hr., 35 min)
(ESPN) CFL Football Ottawa Rough Riders at Calgary Stampeders(3 hrs)
11:40 (H^) Movie Venom ' (1982) Nicol Williamson. Klaus Kinski Kidnappers hold a young American boy hostage in his parent's London home, alternately contending with the police outside and a deadly mamba snake in the building's ventilation system. R'd hr., 33 min.)
(NICK) Great Palatinga Featured Goya's "The Naked Maja
11:450 Wrestling
11:50 0Ni^t Tracks
12:000 Beyond The Horiion. U.S,/ Japan Magasine OStarSeart^
Jim Bakker (SPN) Looking East (USA) Night Flight "Donnie Iris" (from Cleveland, Ohio). (3 hrs.. 30 min.)
12:200 Soul Train 12:450 Movie "No Way To Treat A Lady" (1968) Rod Steiger,
GeorgeSegal (lhr ,55min.)
1:00 O The American Trail O Music Magasine PTLClnb(Spaniah)
(SPN) Joe Burton Jan 1:05 0 Night Tncks 1:10 (SHOW) Movie "A Stranger Is Watching" (1982) Rip Tom, Kate Mulgrew (1 hr.,30 min.)
1:15 (HBO) Movie "Five Days One Summer" (1982) Sean Connery,
Betsy Brantley. (1 hr,, 50 min ) 1:300 700 Qub (D Movie "Fail-Safe" (1964) Henry Fonda, Dan O'Herlihy (2 hrs.)
O America s Top Ten O0News 1:500 Movie 2:000 All In The Family Jim Bakker
(SPN) Movie Destination Saturn" 0939) Buster Crabbe, Constance Moore (2 hrs)
2:05 0 Night Tracks 2:300 News (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:400 News
2:45 (SHOW) Movie The Sin " (1979) Anne Heywood, Donald Pleascnce (1 hr ,20 min i 3:00 O Heritage Singers RexHumbard (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (R)
3:050 Night Tracks 3:10 (HBO) Movie "The Sender " (1982) Kathryn Harrold, Zeljko Ivanek.d hr., 30 mm.)
3:300 Hi, Doug ( Movie "The Comedians" (1967) Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
O All In The Family Phil Anns
(USA) Night Flight Donnie Iris (from Cleveland, Ohio). (R)4:00 O Westbrook Hospital OONews
0. James Kennedy (SPN) Movie Navy Blues (1930) William Haines, Anita Page. (2 hrs.)
4:05 0 Night Tracks 4:10 (SHOW) Bizarre 4:300 Ross Bagley 4:45 (SHOW) Movie The Pride Of The Yankees" (1942) Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright.
(HBO) Sitcom ,
Monday-Fridav Dautime Cont
(Continued From Page 9)
O Good Times (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri) ABC Afterschool Special
(Wed)
5 Pink Panther
O The Brady Bunch (Mon, Tue. Thu)
0 BJ / Lobo (Mon. Tue, Thu, Fri) ABC Afterschool Special (Wed)
Sign Of The Times (Wed)
How Can 1 Live" (Fri)
(SPN) Paul Ryan
(SHOW) Movie due) Mystery
At Castle House (1982)
(SHOW) The Thunderhirds (Wed) Adventures Of Marco Polo, Jr iFri,
(ESPM) Sportswoman (Wed)
Top Rank Boxing (Fri)
(HBO) The Marvelous Land Of
Oz (Mon) Dr Seuss On The LiKjve due/ Fragglfc Rock Wed) It s Hard To Be A Penguin il- rii (NICK) The Third Elye (Mon, Wed, Fri) Against The Odds (Tue, Thu 4:35 0 The Brady Bunch 5 00 Tic Tac Dough O Sanford And Son ('Mon Tue, Thu, Fri)
5 Love Boat
O People's Court (Mon, Tue, Thu)
O Gomer Pyle (Mon, Tue, Thu)
Andy Griffith 0 Three's Company ffi 100 Huntley Street Mister Rogers (R)
(SPN) Life Of Riley (Mon) Telephone Auction (Tue Thu) In.sight (Wed) Looking EasKFrii (SHOW) The Thunderhirds (Wed) Sunshine s On The Wav (Thu; (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Wed)
(HBO) The Year Of The Gentle Tiger (Tue) Incredible Book Escape (Wed)
^ (NICK) The Tomorrow People (USA) Adventures In Paradise 5:05 0 Starcade 5:30 Lets Make A Deal O Sanford And Son
Andy Griffith O News (Mon, Tue, Thu)
O WKRP In Cincinnati (Mon, Tue, Thu)
O MA'SH 0 0 Peoples Court Doctor Who
(SPN) Money, Money, Money (Mon) Investors Action Line (Wed)
(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Mac-Arthur"(1977)
(SHOW) The Thunderhirds (Wed) (ESPN) Soccer In America (Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Thu) Tell Me A Riddle" (1980)
(HBO) Fraggle Rock (Fri) (NICK) Livewlre 5:35 Beverly Hillbillies
Jeff (John James) encounters a despondent Kirby (Kathleen Belief) who is struggling over her dilemma of telling him the truth about her pregnancy, in The Bungalow," on ABCs Dynasty, airing Wednesday, Oct. 5.
iSutiona rewrvc the nght to nuke Ust-nUnute cluoges.)
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Eacti of ttMM advertised items H required to be readliv r^-i
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CENTER CUT
Boneless Pork Chops lb
CENTER AND END CUT
Smoked
Pork Chops. Lb1
V4P0RKL0m CUT UP INTO
Pork Chops
$158
a M
CN.DE VILUCE REGULAR OR
Polish Smoked Sausage ib^l
OSCAR MAYER
All Meat Sliced Bologna
ALL VARIETES SBIVEN SAVE SLICED
Luncheon Meats
4-6 LB. AVC. WCT.
U.S.D.A. GOVT INSPECTED FROZEN,
Baking Hens.
.68
(
OSCAR MAYER
All Meat
wieners
1-lb.
Pko.
$^68
1-lb.
.m.
$218
HILLSHIRE FARMS REGULAR
Smoked sausage u,
RATH BUCK HAWK OR MAPIERAVORED
STiced
Bacon......Lb1^
PC8BFM
KWCKKRISP
Sliced
Bacon
98^
U.Si>AOOI^MSPeCTH) OCfN 10-14 liAVO. WCT.
Young Hen ^TUrkeYS
2SL_
12-C.
Pkg.
RATH HOT OR MILO
Pork
Sausage..
$^38
78
ALL VARIETIES
JIMMY DEAN HOT OR MILD
Pork <pi68
Sausage....
FRESH MILK FED
V8al <.g8
Loin Chops..
etter meat
U.S. GOVT INSPECTED COST CUTTER
Breakfast
Beef Sausage $
I
|M
fili
2-U).
Roll
U.S.0 A GOVT INSPECTED QUALITY CONTROLLED GENUINr
U.S.DA
OUAUTY COmmUD CBNJINE
Ground Round.
Ground
Chuck.
9-
50-55 LB. AVC. WEIGHT DOMESTIC
Whole Fresh Lamb
Lb.
$i68
I QltUF I Ulranr
up& wrapped Free!
U.S. GOVT INSPECTED
Extra Lean <^40 Ground Beef u> I
CUT UP INTO SHOULDER ROASTS. RIB CHOPS AND GROUND LAMB
Fresh Lamb Forequarter. to
WHOLE DOMESTIC
Fresh Lamb _
shoulder Roast ib M
FROZEN
Whiting
Fillets
fiesH! , Farm Pond Raised Dressed .Catfish
Lb.
$^99
Ocean Perch Fillets
FRESH!
Boston
lb
$29
GORTON S LIGHTLY BREADED
GORTONS
BONE IN FRESH MILK FED
VmI
Round Steak. ib ^6^
Fish
Fillets. . . .Pkg.
Batter Fried S $929 Flounder.. pkd a
CORTON'S
Crunchy Nsh i 79 FHIets.. I
FRESH MILK FED THIN SLICED
veal
Scallopini... Lb ^o^
Pkg.
GORTON'S CRUNCHY
ELDORADO COOKED
Salad 6 Shrimp...
12
Sticks.... 1%.
Fish
*1
coinoN's
79
Batter Fried
Fish Sticks . .Pki
PG9BFM
Rediowiuud
9-PiECE BASKET C"
Wishbone ^ ,
Fried Chicken
FEEDS 4 HUNGRY PEOPLE
Super
Sub Lb
dokeim
IN STORE BAKED
Sugar
Cookies
Bahed GdicA CHERRY, TurkGy mc cacq
^RIETIES PEACH OR 5^59
ilfp AnniP naffl .... Lb. L
ALL VARIETIES
Cake Donuts
Apple Fried Pies tropical
V IKUKIU^L Jh
aM SSS'*'..f 159 2!11
FRESH BAKED
French
Bread
CAKE OF THE WEEK 2 LAYER 8 INCH
Fudge
Supreme
Shrimp ..... Pkg
MILD FLAVOR
Orange Roughy
Shrimp .Pkg
FRESHORE
CRAB SHAPES BRAND
Imitation Crab Meat
contains
? 40% ;
Crabmeat
Perch Filets
$i69
1-Lb. I
1-Pkg.
FRESHORE
I Cod Fillets
Fillets.....Pkg
PC TOM
BULK PACKAGED CRAB SHAPES BRAND
Imitation Crab Syigg Shapes.......Lb
SERVE N SAVE COOKED
Salad 602
Shrimp .... PI'S
FRESHORE
Haddock Fillets ..
4 199
FRESHORE
LOW Calorie Perch.....
Lb.
Pkg.
ir/2
oz
Pkg.
FRESHORE
$299
$^69
$-199
LOW Calorie Cod......
^^$169
Pkg.
g'Pleezer
Ke Cream Treats
FREEZER PLEEZER
icecream
Sandwiches
iSE extra
COST CHER
^ DiViDENDS
With These Bonus Sp^ials! FIUL over 5
S&as*
CLIP & SAVE
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
Pumpkin Pie
CRUSH
Assorted
Pops ...
12-Ct.
BOX
FREEZER PLEEZER
Assorted
pops
$159
24-a. I BOX
FREEZER PLEEZER MONSTER
Fun Shapes pops
H59
12 BOX
FREEZER PLEEZER
Fudge
Bars
$1
12-Ct.
Pkg.
I
valid Thru ^October 8.1983
s
I
n
lOOO
MVC
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
Sun Giant Raisins
12 OZ. PKC.
valid Thru October 8,1983 Bbbhbhbmbi
I I I I I I I
! valid Thru October 8,1983
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
Italian
Sausage
IN STORE MADE/
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
2 Pkgs. cookies
I
valid Thru ictober 8.1983
ANY BRAND
f
I
I
I
I
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
2 Bags Shredded Cheese
valid Thru I October 8,1983
5 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
1 Greeting Card
I valid Thru Octobers 1983
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
Dozen Cake Donuts
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
IN THE DELI
valid Thru October 8,1983
20 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIVDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
2 Lbs. Harmony Natural Snacks
valid Thru October 8.1983
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
Country Club Ham Or Cheese Patties
Valid Thru October 8,1983
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
2 Bags Cold Crest Baking Nuts
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
valid Thru October 8,1983
10 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
Ceramic Pie Plate
valid Thru October 8,1983
i
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
20 BONUS
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
WITH PURCHASE OF
2 Bags Hailowen Candy
valid Thru
October 8.1983
PC 11 M
One Stop Shopping
AUTOPRIDE
Anti-
Freeze
WRr family pride
REG.. OILY OR EXTRA BODY BALSAM & PROTEIN
Shampoo
1602.
Rtl.
KROGER FAMILY PRIDE
Cosmetic PufFs
i 2 99^
PC 12 ABDEFGHJKLMNQVWX
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
PC 13 M
I Your Choice!
LOMA
Plastic
Containers
Kroger
Celeb
CUTLERY TRAY
STACKABLE STORAGE BINS. ALMOND
DISH PAN. CHOCOLATE OR ALMOND
LAUNDRY BASKBT, -YELLOW OR ALMOND
11 OT. PAIL. ALMOND
11 OT. WASTE BASKET
Earn Dividends On These Doiiar Days Speciais
PC 14 ALL
ECKO
Baker's
Secret
'OUAKEr
.STATE.
HmhSONO
WOTORQL
QUAKER STATE
Super Blend 10 w 30
Motor Oil
C.E. 60, 75 OR TOO WATT
soft White
f light Bulbs
D
Reg.
$299
SQUARE CAKE PANS
^ OBLONG CAKE f>AN
6-CUP MUFFIN PAN
LOAF PAN
COOKIE SHEET
PIZZA PAN
ENSAR
Kitchen
Utensils
SPOON
SLOHED SPOON
FORK
LADLE
MASHER
TURNER
HAMBURGER TURNER
ENSAR
Kitchen Accessories
EMBASSY PLATE HANGER OR
Aluminum
Funnel
Your
Choice
4 STYLES SEAGRASS
Place
Mats
EMBASSY ROUND COPPER MOLD OR
Egg
Beater
EMBASSY 3-PIECE WOODENMixing Spoons
Pkg.
PG15 AU
i
the Kroger Car
U.S. N0.1 ALL PURPOSE
White
Potatoes
Fn Frff Mw -English
Pw Speciab
walnuts.
FRESH
Shelled
Almonds
FRESH
Shelled Pecans .
Lb.
Lb.
Lb.
^AQci Crcsns...
97^^ SWEET
^ Red
Grapes ^b
WASHINGTON STATE
$29
Bartlett Pears
Lb.
79
59
Caramel
Covered
Apples
FRESH
Florida A Avocados A For ^ I
.. Sdiid Fimt
^99^.
FRESH
Colorful Mums
POt DECORATIVE
Beautiful ...
Narcissus pot
DECORATIVE
Lovely ...
Spathiphyllum . pot
$599
U.S. FANCY EASTERN COLOENOR
Red Delicious
Apples
TENDER
Red Leaf Lettuce
GREEN TOP
Bunch Carrots
GREEN TOP
Bunch Radishes
SLICER SIZE
Pr^BSh j|
Cucumbers . "P For I
21
3^*1
1tED RIPE
saiad
Tomatoes
0DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEE!
we'll Double your money back if you're not satisfied with the fruits and vegetables you buy at Kroger.
PCI6M
^ Each ol these advertised items is required to be readily available lor sale at or below the advertised price m each AAP Store, eicepi as specifically noted in this ad
PRKESEITECTIVESUtlOAY, OCT. 2 THmj SATURDAY OCT. 8 AT A&P STORES IN NC A SC EXCEPT SPARTANBURG GAFFNEY. BEAUFORT. SC. ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS
BghtOdock
RMULAfl BEAN COFFEE
LENT ONE
11b.
bag
CrisGO Shortening
PUI VEGETABLE
Save up to 61*
LMTONE
3 lb. can
Breyers
Cream
ALL NATURAL
Save .18 /i/4gal. ctn.
UWTONEAnn Paye ColaTFabREGULAR OR DIET
25* OFF LABEL.Rqc|#r:37btl. Jl I box LIMIT TWO LIMITOME
DOUBU COUPtmS
5 NiwHiciiiri rmm, BMmtmfmtm %mfm
. CKIBMiiK * .IICIMIIL INIFMnMK HIMB.
AOOI110NALCOIJPOlSRBArFiACEVAlJ^
tmkmaninatwflliMiFt tmi $MnS$ COttOKSI
PCS
OOUM
rc
-gmorv-
MTMMO TOMLCOUVOM -CMfsovr <J*v
COUPONA
25*
25* SC .
COUPONB
18*
18* 38>
COUPONC
50*
50- 81.00
COUPONO
75*
25* 1 S1JM
1MFN8
INEON THESE AND MANY MORE!
Lucks Beans
PINTO GREAT NORTHERN NAVYW PORKSAVE 12
Duncan Hines
0
CAKE MIXES
ALL
VARIETIES
iX
15 oz. cans
18V2 oz. Pkg.
69
BLACKEYE-HELD PEAS-W/PORK
Lucks Peas 2 88^
LE SUEUR
Asparagus Spears 1
WHITE HOUSE REGULAR NATURAL
Applesauce
2 25 0Z. cans
1
Sm*'Frosting
DUNCAN HINES SPICY APPLE BANANA NUT
Muffin Mix Cookie Mix
11% oz. pkg.
17 oz. pkg.
1
F
1
giiomatoes
(I A kl kl f% A ^ p-
ANN PAGE
Apple Juice T Rice Krispies
WHITE HOUSE
KELLOGGS
16 oz. cans
chefboy-ar-dee
gy SPAGHETTI a MEAT BALLS OR
ftiBeefaroni
PURE VEGETABLE
Crisco Oii
SeSIu'r ' Z- 3H-)
Tomato Paste 2
48 OZ.
jug
su
19 oz. box
189
I
15 oz. can
79
F
DONALD DUCK PINK UNSWEETENED
Grapefruit Juice 59^
OUR OWN
Tea Bags 100
ELBOW MACARONI OR THIN
Skinner Spaghetti
ct.
pkg.
3
7 02. pkgs.
F
F
ISoz.
pkg.
OLD FASHION REG. QUICK
Quaker Oatmeal
POSTTOASTIES
Com Flakes
LOG CABIN
Syrup F
89
99
Sauop f Raisin Bran
RAGU PLAIN MEAT MUSHROOM
I 32 oz. r 7 jar
POST
SAVE 18
Hi Dri Towels
ASSORTED EARTH TONE
SAVE 10<
12100 I
rolls B
KLEENEX (COCKTAIL NAPKINS 50 CT)
Family Napkins
KLEENEX ASSORTED
Facial Tissue
KLEENEX ASSORTED
Casuai Tissue
250 ct. pkg
90 ct.
pkg.
TRIGGER BOTTLE ,
Spray N Starch
LIQUID
Yhs Detergent
CLEANER
Pine Soi
32 oz. iug
15 oz. btl.
Flex Shampoo
OR CONDITIONER
' CHUNK DOG FOOD
Field Trial
CHUNX
Champ Dog Food
DRY
Chatham Dog Food 99^
Barbasol &
^GULAR MENTHOL LEMON/LIME
Rubbe
15 oz. btl.
liPpTQ
1^1 'IS- m w
0
Food Keepers
SAVE 40*
Alka Seltzer
SAVE 60*
Pert Shampoo
40* OFF LABEL SAVE 70*
Signal Mouthwash
36 ct. Ml.
15 oz. Ml.
You Pay Only 18 oz. Ml.
209
239
1
SAVE 40*
Bayer Aspirin
BONUS PACK 75 FREE SAVE 50*
Q-Tip Swahs
15* OFF UBEL SAVE 30*
Aqua-Fresh
100 ct.
Ml.
375 ct. phg.
You Pay Only 4.6 oz. tube
1
1
109
rmai
SAVE 60
8-Cup Size
SAVE 80* ^eo
12-Cup Size r
Listerine Mouthwash
KILLS GERMS ON CONTACT
32 oz. btl.
Pepsodent Toothpaste I Soft-White Suite
you I ^ 4o-eo-75.,oo watt
6V2 OZ.
tube
II
Each ot these advertised items is requ-red to be readily available lor sale at or below the advertised pnce m each A&P Store eicept as
specilically noted in this ad
ARMOUR MEAT SALEMeat Franks
ARMOUR
or Beef Franks
ARMOUR
Sliced
Bacon
11b.
pkg.
ARMOUR
I
Canned
Ham
31b.
can
R99
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH
FALL BE
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF BONELESSBottom Round F
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEFBoneless Chuck
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEFBoneless Beef S
Wmw ORAM FED BEEF B0NB88 BOTTOMRound Steak
Jfg^QRAIM FED BEEF BONELESSChuck SteakmrfiN(MUMFB>aEff WHOLE
Bottom & Eye Houml
WESTERN ORAM FED BEEF
Al
Bonom Round london Broil
AAP SLICED (BEEF 1 LB. 1.1
Meat Bologna
AAP CHOPPED (ALL VARIETIES)
Chipped Meats
AAP HOT OR MILO
Pork Sausage
FROZEN OCEAN (5 LB. 6.99)
Perch Fillet
EFSALE
H*** '.'*"1 '* to be readily available to( A
sgecft!iy0o7ed pnceTn ,.ch A*P Store e.cepi as J
Roast
kRoast. 1** . 1
Stew
WESTERN QRAMFH) BEEF
Cubed Steak
AAP QUALITY FRESH
I
. 2*
. 1*
.2"
Sliced QO Beeftwer. liO
BtmrmIRoumI
gg*ww
Shoulder Roast
AAPQUAUnr
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF BONE-IN
FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM
Boston
Butt
Poik Roast
FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM COUNTRY STYLE
Pork Spare Ribs
FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM RBEND
Boneless Pork Roast
FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM SUCED
Vd Pork Loin
lb.
lb.
lb.
lb.
r>
P
2
1
HILLSHIREFARM
Smoked Bratwurst or Knockwurst ib.
HILLSHiRE FARMS SMOKED
Beef Sausage
HILLSHiRE FARMS HOT LINK
Smoked Sausage
HILLSMRE FARMS SMOKED
Link Sausage
MLLSHME FARMS
Polska Keilbasa
RUDY FARMS HOT OR MH.D
I
o( ths# advefi'S#0 ittms ts rquird (ot>rdiiy available vaif at o t>eto m* advefiis*d price m oc^ AiP Store eicept spec'tcaif "Oled >n ihi$ ao
telor A
'LJOF SAVINGSSAVE 30^
SAVE 63
SAVE 20^
Shedds Spread I Yoplait Yogurt I Pie Shells
T9
IN QUARTERS
1 lb.
REGULAR-CUSTARD
6 oz. ctns.
10^oz.| pkg. I
PET RITZ REGULAR
69
IPILLSBURY
/ Crescent Rolls
ANN PAGE CHED-O-BIT
PILLSBURY
w
FLAV-O-RICH
8oz.
can
41)0 Cheese I Slices
16 OZ. pkg.
199 Buttemilk 4 qq0 I Biscuits r 99
Whipping
Cream
SUPREME (17 OZ. 2.49)
HAMBURGER (16 OZ.) PEPPERONI (15 OZ.)
V2
pint
ctn.
CQ0 liNiys Pizza
Your
Choice
929
Tre^MM
FLAV-O-RICH REGULAR & LIGHT
ANN PAGE
fir
Cottage
Cheese
24 oz. ctn.
-|49
Ice Cream Sandwiches pk
12 ct.
39
TOOPICANA GOLD N PURE
Orange
Juice
ANN PAGE
Handi
Whip
12 oz. ctn.
SAVE 20-
SAVE 50-SAVE $1.18
SealtestDip | Polar Bars I Breyers
Ice
Cream
ONION CUCUMBER ONION CLAM
SEALTEST
ALL NATURAL
8 OZ.
ctn.
69
179
V2 gal.
LIMIT ONE
FmZENFOOD
FESnWIL
Ech of IhOM dveMiSOO iiomt ,% f*qu>'td to Oo roaddy
I <y boiow ihtjdveflisod pf>ct <n ch AAP Si<y ncepi ipocif>Cdy nottd in ths *0
ijbiofo \ :epi*4 \
SAVE 40<
SAVE 20<^
Totinos Pizza I Lean Cuisine
FROZEN STOUFFERS
I CLIP THIS COUPON I
N.C. FROZEN FOOD 5*P^cS^ic I
SHOPPING
I'W RaB0X3124 I
CHAH^M.C. 28231 I
SPREE
3 - *100. FROZEN FOOD CERTIFICATES
10 oz.
pkg-
99
0
PiiP
Chicken Chow Mein
Spaghetti with
A4P and the Frozen Food Council invite you to enter the 1963 October Shopping Spree Contest.
To win one of the 3 *100.00 Frozen Food Shopping Spree Certificates, mail this coupon with two end flaps, or cut out the name (or facsimile) from any two different frozen food packages. Entries must be postmarked by October 31,1983. Drawing will be held Nov. 11,1983.
NAME,
WHfTC SHOCKQ COM BROCCOU SPEARS M BUTTER SAUCE CUT BROCCOU M CHEESE SAUCE JAPANESE STYLE VEGETABLES
Green Giant Vegetabfes
11V4 OZ. pkg.
STOUFFERS GLAZED CHICKEN (8V2 OZ. 2.79) ORIENTAL (9 OZ. 2.49) OR
1
I I I
I ADDRESS I CITY, STATE
I
10 OZ. pkg.
000 Lasagna .159 LeanCuisme m I
GREEN GIANT NIBLETS CORN WITH BUTTER
SAUCE (10 OZ. 99*) OR ORE IDA
Crinkle Cut
only . Potatoes pkg.
Gears
109
21b.
Com On Cob
TURKEY SALISBURY STEAK CHICKEN BEEF TURKEY SAUS. STEAK
CHOPPED BEEF MEAT LOAF CHIPPED BEEF (4 OZ.) CHICKEN A LA KING
Banquet Banquet
DinnersId CookinBags
RAISIN N HONEY PLAIN
Lenders
Bagels
A&P FROZEN
1 Orange Juice
12 OZ.
pkg.
16 oz. can
69
99
BANQUET LEMON COCONUT CHOCOLATE
ream Pies
14 oz.
pkg.
89
SAVE 59^
SAVE 20^
Meat Pies I Buffet SuppersI Fruit Pies
BANQUET
BANQUET
BANQUET
Chicken
Turkey
Beef
Spaghetti Macaroni i Cheese
Sails. Steak Turkey
Chicken & Dumplings Macaroni & Cheese Spaghetti &
Meatballs o IK
Peach
Cherry
Apple
Blueberry
20 oz.
0
pkgs.
w
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, OCT. 8 AT ALL A&P STORES IN NC & SC EXCEPT SPARTANBURG, GAFFNEY, BEAUFORT, SC
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS
Fresh With Quality
At the Farm, we give you low prices on fresh from-the-farm fruits and vegetables.! Quality produce. Because were quality people. With over a hundred buyers out there shopping for us. And for you.
FRESH TENDER
Broccoli A
CRISP SOLID
Carrots
2 lb.
green m ^nn MURRArS
Cabbage 1 ^Apple Cider
popsrtte AAMk
Mow OnionsRTlmPopcom 88^
CMlfiower
':swww|nE
bunch2 Quart Covered Sauce PanNow... Save AP Gold Register li^lbr great savings on quality
HERES HOW rr WORKS...
When you have the amount of
WITH $200 WORTH OF AAP GOLD REGISTER TAPES
IWirallKyou^sM saving mom AU>gaUrat^ tains for aaiHKt^o^^
Item you plan to select
^remember, ^ iteme are 00 sale for the duaOoii of fhte scheduled to end Saturday. December 17.1983.
* fr.y ly
Sale starts Monday, October 3;
ends Saturday, Oct. 8, unless otherwise specified.
Most items at reduced prices.
[^D(o
There's quality detailing in our flannel and tweed blazers tor itiisses
Get trennendous value from a special purchase. Choose flannel of polyester and wool blend m solid colors or tweed of polyester, wool and acrylic in assorted patterns. Blazers fully detailed and fully acetate lined.
12
Another special purchase! Flannel or tweed skirts of polyester and wool to coordinate with blazers. Assorted styles in plaids, stripes and solids. Misses sizes. Limited quantities.
g99
Blouse SAVE *5
Our suit-style blouses are accented with ruffle. Easy-care polyester. Misses sizes Reg. $15.
Entire stock of misses dresSes and pantsuits
Dress sharp, shop smart! All our misses dresses and pantsuits are on sale now! In sizes for misses, petites and half sizes.
*30 OFF
J. Gallery ... warmly quilted ^ winter coats
64
99
The quality and styling you expect from J. Gallery coats but at a Sears price. Great looks with lustrous polyester and nylon shells quilted to warm polyester fiberfill. Warm tones and fashion colors.
Misses, petites and half sizes.
Utoe Hwns woh u appliance and lumllure am Inventoried In OHr 'dlatrlbudon Mnter and will be acheduled for
. pIck-up dr delhmiy. DelWeiy I not Included 'n**"? >1^
Pricing Poiley ...Mm Item Is not described ae reduo^ or e epedil purch^ It le^ Ite reguler price. A
P*clil puicheee, mough not reduced, le an exceptional velue. , u-; , 'J
*l|f|ctlop Qoifmteed or Your Money Back ./ : '
[ANOQOi > .
10/2/83
III
. r
Long sleeve shirt Reg. $13.99
NATIONAL WORK CLOTHES SALE
SAVE
4 to *5
Sears Best men's twill work outfit
10
pair
Sears Best Perma-Prest shirt and pants of Dacron polyester and cotton have soil release finish. Mens sizes.
SAVE *3
Men's Perma-Presl flannel shirf
599
.
Be warm and comfortable in all your activities in our flannel shirt of cotton and polyester. Mens sizes S, M, L, XL
SAVE 7
Men's quilt-lined flannel shirt
1199
Reg. $18.99 I I
Has Perma-Prest shell of cotton and polyester, pluSswarm polyester fiberfill quilted ter nylon lining. Mens sizes S, M, L, XL.
SAVE n
Pocket T-shirt
Reg. $3.49 *2.^^
Colorful tops of cotton and polyester.
Reg. $45.99
Officially licensed NFL parka is rugged, warm and machine washable; Choose from your favorite teams emblems. Big boys sizes.
Reg $5.99 T-shirt in team colors. Cotton and polyester knit.
Sizes 8 to 20.....................................4.49
Reg $6.99 Logo T-shirt has 3/4 length sleeves. Cotton and polyester, izes S, M, L, XL......................... 4.99
SAVE *3 to *4
LEVI'S and Wrangler
2 great names in corduroy jeans for bigger boys and girls
LEVrS, Reg. $16.99 to $18.99
12 to 14!
Wrangler , Reg. $14.99 to $16.99
10M2
These are the cords kids clamor for in all cotton or cotton and polyester. Woven shirts are cotton and polyester. Bigger boys and girls sizes.
$15.99 Bigger boys plaid shirt 11.99
$13.99 Bigger girls'shirt ..........9.99
Do your Holiday shopping early from our 1983 Wish Book and SAVE 10%
When you order $75 or more thru October 18. Avoid the ru^h!
SAVE OVER 1/2
Craftsman 200-pc. mechanics' tool set
Imagine a 200-pc. tool set for this price. An ideal set for many repairs around the home. It will help you make repairs on your auto, too. Set includes: 3 quick-release ratchets, sockets, wrenches, accessories and more! Reg. sep. prices total $493.84. Thru Oct. 29.
Craftsman Hand Tool Full Unlimited Warranty; If any Craftsman hand tool ever fails to give complete satisfaction, return it for free replacement.
Ask about Sears credit plans
SAVE OVER 1/2
Craftsman 90*pc. tool set
Have the right tool handy when you need it for home and auto repairs. 1/4, 3/8 and 172-in. drive sockets and drive tool accessories, wrenches, more. Reg. sep. prices total $206.38. Thru Oct. 29.
$72.15* 18pc. routar bit s*t
49
*Reg. sep. prices total
6S4W'
51 OFF Craftsman 3/8-in. drill
Sears Best variable speed reversible drill with speeds up to 1200 RPM. Reverses to back out bits. With cord lock. Thru Oct. 22. Reg. sep. prices total $91.18.
59
46 OFF Craftsman router with case
Craftsman 1V-HP router. Ring-type depth gauge. Built-in worklight. Includes case. Thru Oct. 29. Reg. sep. prices total $106.98.
SAVE '7
Matte flat or ceiling white, gal.
Our lowest price of the year on Easy Living latex
Sears Best interior latex offers you washable 1-coat coverage that resists spots and fading. Dries fast, hands and tools clean up with just soap and water. In 23 colors. Reg. $15.99. Thru October 15.
$17.99 Low-lustersemi gloss, gal .....................to.99
For one-coat results, all Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed.
SAVE M50
Craftsman chest and cabinet
6-drawer chest,
5-drawer cabinet. Easy-glide drawers.
I Hbg sep. prices
lotal $379.98
$159.99, 6-drawer
chest...........84.99
$219.99, 5-drawer
c^inet........114.99
Sale ends Oct. 15
SAVE M50
Polyurethane foam provides up to 175% greater insulating effectiveness than our fiber glass insulated water heaters.
Savings calculated in accord with DOE test procedures comparing operating costs of the Power Miser^" 8 and our 52-gal. electric model, using an electricity rate of 6.75c per kilowatt hour. Your savings may vary.
SAVE >40
ono
40-gallon electric M Reg. $249.99
Kenmore Power Miser^** 8 gas and electric water heaters
Save $371 in gas bills or $532 in electric bills over the next 8 years with a Power Miser^w 8 water heater when compared to our standard model water heaters.* Water heaters equipped with safety relief valves. Ask about Sears authorized installation. FREE ESTIMATES!
$279.99,52-gallon electric model................. .239.99
$259.99,30-gallon natural gas model.............*.. .219.99
$279.99,40-gallon natural gas model .......239.99
140 OFF Kenmore water softener
Enjoy all the advantages of softened water. Use less soap, detergent. Reg. $439.99. Sale ends Oct. 29.
299
99
139
Your choice Reg. $189.99
SAVE 50 on Sears well jet pumps
Pump delivers 20 to 40 lbs. pressure. Thru Oct. 22.
A. Quality convertible jet pump. Shallow or deep wells.
B. Quality shallow well jet pump for wells as deep as 20-ft
Custom storm windows
10% OFF
Sears "Good" series
20% OFF
Sears "Better" series
25% OFF
Sears "Best" series
Help save your homes valuable energy. Install now and save. Sale ends October 22. Installation available by Sears Authorized Installers. FREE ESTIMATES!
17421
349
1-HP air compressor
Delivers 6 6 SCFM at 40 PSI. too PSI max. With 12-gal air tank, air hose Reg $499 99' Thru Oct, 22,
Spray gun. Sale enas Oct 29 Reg $6999 59.99
Check local codes for permitted use
70 OFF 9,300 BTU reflection heater
Portable kerosene wick heater heats up to 16 hours on 1.1 gal. fuel. Electric ignition, automatic tip-over switch. Reg. $169.99. Thru Oct. 22.
Housewares not sold In Gastonia. Rock Hill, Ashland, Shelby, Williamson
300 OFF 10-HP eiectric-start tractor
Craftsman. 3-speed transaxle; automotive-type differential. Iso-Vib engine mounts. 36-in. twin-blade mower deck. Reg. $1299.99. Thru Oct. 22.
10065
Reg. sep. prices of 14, 3-lb. boxes total $27.86
*7 OFF 42-lb. box laundry dotorgent
Includes free box of Cling Free sheets. Thru Oct. 31.
1/2 PRICE 4-pc. canister set
Ceramic set, mushroom design. Reg. $39.99. Thru Oct. 31.
1/2 PRICE 5-pc. cutlery set
Includes solid oak storage block. Reg. $39.99. Thru Oct. 31.
1/2 PRICE 7-piece cookware set with SilverStone interiors
stamped aluminum with easy-to-clean SilverStone interiors; almond porcelain exteriors. Thru Oct. 31. Reg. sep. prices total $60.96.
35714
Partially
assembled
199 Case
included *100 OFF Craftsman gas chain saw
16-in. 2.3 CID. Built-in sharpener. Reg. $299.99. Thru Oct. 22.Sears 1983 Home Improvement Specialog includes loads of materials for modernizing, redecprating and security! Come by to pick-up your copy and pioce your order today!
Monday through Soturdoy
Front whc^l alignment
with coupon described below $19.99 without coupon. Well set caster/camber and toe to manufacturers specifications. Well also inspect front end. Includes torsion bar adjustment if needed. In addition. Sears offers front end parts that have a limited warranty against defects for as long as you own the vehicle, including labor if parts are bought installed.
Tune-up
diagnosis
^99
with coupon described below $19.99 without coupon. Well set timing, adjust carburetor and perform scope analysis, infrared emissions test when applicable, check of vacuum hoses and fittings, wires and clamps, distributor cap, belts and filters. Well then recommend only the parts and services you need.
Two-wheel disc or drum brake job
With coupon '
described below w W $69.99 without coupon We'll replace shoes or pads, brake fluid, brake springs and front oil seals. Turn and true drums or rotors p/os rebuild cylinders or calipers. Repack bearings. Other parts extra.
Service for most American-made cars, many imports. Not in Shelby or Williamson.
SAVE ^8
on Steady Ridei RT, Sears Best shocks
Radial-tuned and temperature-compensated to help give a smooth ride with most tires. Fit most cars and light trucks.
Sale ends Oct. 29.
Reg. $22.99 each
*8.10 OFF
A(r-Ad|uttabie shocks For roar of vohicio
Regular $69 99pr.
Booster shocks to incrooso capacity
39.
Regular $49.99 pr
. Sale ends Oct. 29
StoadyRidor^ LT for oxtra-tough driving
Regular | ^99
$22 99ea. |4 ea.
SAVE *20
10-amp charger
Regular 0099
$49.99 X#
Works twice as fast as our 4-amp charger. Sale ends
litt&gMHi
on steel-belted all-season radials
P1550R12 WW ill 99
Reg. $59.99 XE I
Plus$1.41 FET*
Computer-designed tread gives great grip on wot and dry roads, pius ice and snow. Low roiling-resistance heips save gasoiine. Two steei beits resist impact and tread squirm.
* Federal Excise Tax Tire saie ends Oct. 29
Limited warranty against tire wearout.
For the specified mites, Sears wril replace the tire or give a refund charging only for the miles used
Off '83 catalog price on our best belted tire
A78-13WW 0099
Cat. price $59.99 M
pius$1.67FET Mm M
50% off our 1983 Fall General Catalog price. Hurry, quantities are limited! Two fiber*glass belts stabilize the tread for good wear. Two polyester plies add a smooth, comfortable ride. Tread grooves channel water" for good traction on wet roads. Save 50% now!
Sears 36 battery for fast starts, low cost
39!
Regular $49.99
with trade-in ' _ _ *
Exch.
325 amps cold cranking power. In Groups 24, 24F and 74. Also for Groups 45 and 71. For most American-made cars and many, imports. Installation included. Sale ends Oct. 8.
SAVE >50
High-power AM/FM cassette
14-watts. High fidelity. Dolby noise- Reg $19999 reduction system. Auto-reverse cassette, locking fast forward, 1 i|099
reverse. Power-off auto-eject. Installa- I 47
tion extra. Sale ends Oct. 29.'
SAVE *15
Kroco spookart
Regular i|i|99
$59.99 44
3-way. 6 x 9-In. woofer. Midrange, tweeter. Thru
ittik
SAVE 20%
All-woothar oil
84^ qt.
Regular $1.09
10W30 weight thats right for most all driving conditions.
CAR CARE COUPON BOOK
SAVE $88 off regular Yours for
labor prices of se- 1Q99
lected services when IV
you use all the coupons
Titn)or(
SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE
NC: Burlington, Charlotte, (Eastlond, Southpork), Concord, Durhom, Fayetteville, Gastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Greenville, Hickory, High Point, Jacksonville, Raleigh,
Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Salem SCj Charleston (Citpdel, Northwoods), Columbia, Florenrfe, Myrtle Beach, Rock Hill VA: Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke KY: Ashlono
WV: Borboursville, Beckley, Bluefieid, Cnarleston ^
Sotisfoctlon guorontMd or your monoy bock
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
Good At All Sears Auto Centers Nationwide
Front wheel alignment, front end parts, Wheel bearing repack
MacPhereon struts or 4 shocks installed Tranamlaalon fluld/fllter
4-wheel electronic balance change or cooling system flush
Engine tune-up Startlng-diarglng syvtem check
Oll/fllter change, lube (2 each) Bonus coupon $5 OFF
Brake 8ervice^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Bo>rwg^ogy|gn^|o^ogF^
^eozr,soFT, plush, rich golo WHIIH sal!aaakes dreams come
Extra thick and luxurious' These soft, super absorbent , solid-color terry towels are...made- oProtTda and 1 polyester with decorative dohbv-well^e^berde^r^^^Our ... .w.. l.f 16x26 Hand Towel..........V.. 2.97 I
5.88
(Special Purchase** Twin Size Limit 2 Lovely 3-pc. Sheet Sets By Cannon'
Of crisp, carefree polyester/cotton. Set includes 1 flat, 1 fitted sheet, 1 pillowcase.
with 2 pHlowcases '' Limited quantities available
15.88
, Our Reg. 19.97 Twin Size
VelluxSensotion^ Blankets Of Du Pont Nylon
Fibers for a deep, soft, velvety fabric; bonded layers for warmth without weight. Save.
Our 12.96,24x42" Rug,... 8.44 Our 8.74,24x42" Contour, 6.37
Our 4.27, Lid Cover.......3.27
Our 8.96,2-pc. Tank Set... 6.44 9.96,5x6'Carpet... 19.88
Our Reg. 8.96 21x36
Pteotlnflly Plush **Usa'* Both Rugs In Popular Colors
Of easy-care nylon plush that enhances traditional or temporary decors. With nonskkt backing^ in cMce
Stores In Roanoke, Va and Salern;ira. Closed/on Sunday
Sale Starts Sun., Oct. 2, Ends Sat, Oct. 8
The Saving Place'^
5!p ii^Si
fe)
mi-n
RP]
K m.rtVADVEHTISEO UFRPHAiani^F pm irv
V-/
4
BRAND
NAMES
DISCOUNT
PRICES
LAYAWAY
PLAN
MASTERCARD
VISA
FRIENDLY
SERVICE
SATISFACTION
ALWAYS
Kmart iso proud sponsor o( both the winter.and
IlMId U' I'Ofch or- ,ni' Shervt'. M d'' edve-iised ite"> \ 4vi-iah*e Ilm pu
1 hse due U- any unrceseen easor.
k m*r1 ni Oheih V- goes.'-ti *hr cvie ter^ eStin
Famous brands you know'n trust.
First Quality... Everyday low prices.
Now encompoMs most departments.
We accept bank credit cardi
We care about our customers.
Our pdiicy lor over 20 years.
summer Olyfnpic games on ABC TV.
'i .
Ah*e lemcy jua'ititv i lo V l>u'i. havo ai^ h*' sa^ fxve <vfe'Teve avd iib*e ck w.k mw: y(K A Linparr>le fli.cHl% 'P S! A . f>n,a|| latke ed-n iMV
lA
DAN RIVER
U
yy '
.-rfe
O'i! ^ .. -iee'
Our2<>'>7----. *>'. S-'
Our V>97 K'irtgSP ' f O'ji 3fl ftB IwinCo, :
Ouf >4.t)8, f ull Cornortor S' :' ' Oot 6B b8 (wuer> Cofi'O'H-t S-
Vi'!!'*>''r>".
9.96
Our Reg. 14.97 Twin Set
Homettyle** Sheet Set With Geometric Pattern
3-pc. set of crisp polyester/cotton sheets Includes 1 flat, 1 fitted sheet and 1 pillowcase.
6.97
Our Reg. 8.97 Twin Sheet*
Soft, DouMe-purpote Flannelette Sheets
Gently napped polyester/cotton sheet is warm in winter, doubles as lightweight blanket in summer.
12.96113.88
Our 18.97 Twin Set
S*pe. "Courtship Lace Percale Sheet Set
Sheet set of deHghtfully soft cotton/polyester includes 1 pHlowcose, 1 flat and 1 fitted sheet.
Our Reg 19.97 Twin*
3*pc. Print Sheet Sets For Childrens ledrooms
In long-wearing, carefree polyester//cotton. Savings. Our Peg. 28.97, FuN'tlze Set**....................19.88
iffited, inotihMt,tpK>wcaM **WWt2pHowcoiM
Our
7.97
"Laurel* Acrylic llanki
Lightweight comfort. Wit| ing. 72x90-lnch size flt^
8.88
Our Reg. 11.57 Pr. 98x45" Curtains
Beautiful Voile Priscilla Curtains At Savings
Brighten your home with decorative curtains of long-wearing polyester. Choice of lovely colors.
18.97
Our Reg. 23.97 Pr 50x84"
"Carmel Insulating Slub*weave Draperies
Attractive draperies of rayon/polyester with self-lined, cotton-flocked vinyl foam backing.
Our Reg.
29.88 Twin
Decorative "Country Fair" GuHted Bedspreads
BeouttfuHy designed spread with polyester/
trico
25%W33.I
DELUXE ITHIRSTY
PRINCESS
Our 17.96, M Pod.....1Z97
Our 20.96, OuMn Pod, 16.97
Our 14.96 Twin
Fitted Mattress Pod
Long-wearing polyester/cotton. polyester fill.
9.97^ 4.88 1.19
cotton top, polyester fM and nylon
wm
back.
All Mini Blinds, Roll-ups, Roman Shades in Stock
Uitrathin, 1" aluminum louver mini bMlds plus roll-ups and Roman shades in many styles, colors and widths.
Attractive Pole Lamps To
Two-arm hurricane style or temporary styles. Each wit
PLACE
Absorbent Both Mot Terry KItehen Towels llegontToblecloMi
19x31* cotton terry Thlrsfy towels of easy- Polyester/cotton cloth
mat in solid colors, care cotton. 16x26. with soH-release finish.
* Umwl quammw OMUabt*
# MUP^nmp
Lovely polyest* tonnopMniLlTXirii^
3 m A mjb\e
m Each Decorator Pillows
Rich cotton corduroy with polyester fUi.14Vt" square.
*3k
Sheer "Shantung
rster
Easy-core polyestr in neutral shades.
Corduroy JMrtt,* 5.57
Our Reg. 5.97
Tot Boys Sweat Shirts
Cotton/polyester. 2-4.
Our 6.97, Jeans.... S.57
Cotton/poTyHf
wim
Wooden
Frame
8i88
PH01OFINISHIICQ SPECliit
BxlO Convos-loek Inkirgement From Yur Cotor Negolh^ Or Side
Q. Tektured enlargement from 36mm Focol*. KodqcolorP or C-41 noijtatlve.
K mart IS A PROUD SPONSOR OF BOTH THE WINTER AND SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES ON ABC TV.
Star in Motion" - t980 LA Otympic Committee 198t ABC Inc
< t . .y 'f
'jontievo .1984
COUPON
fontt-oll* How
Nylon, cotton panel. Misses S/M, MT/T and aueen size.
.OF CZY.SOFT, PLUSH, RICH COLORS. WHITE SALiAAAKES DREAMS COME TE
Extra thick and luxurious' These soft, super absorbent solid-color terry towels are made of cotton and
Our Reg. 1.97,13x13 Wtashcloth ....^ .. 1.57
Our R^^.47,16x26 Hand Towel.............2.97
5.88
(Speciai Purchase" Twin Size Limit 2 Lovely 3*pc. Sheet Sets By Cannon
Of crisp, carefree polyester/cotton. Set in-ciudes 1 flat, 1 fitted sheet, 1 pillowcase.
with 2 pillowcases * Limited quantities avaiiobie
Our 24 9 ! Full Size , . 19 < Our 79 97 Queen Size, 23,
15.88
Our Reg. 19.97 Twin Size
VelluxSensatlon^ Blankets Of Du Pont' Nylon
Fibers for a deep, soft, velvety fabric; bonded layers for warmth without weight. Save.
Jit,III j/jif>, i\ ii 11
vellux
SENSATION
Stores In \ Roanoke, Va. and Salem, Va. Closed on Sunday
DUB
BRAND NAMES
Famous brands you know n trust.
Our 12.96,24x42 Rug,... 8.44 Our 8.74,24x42 Coritour, 6.37
Our 4.27, Ud Cover. 3.27
Our 8.96,2-jx. Tank Set... 6.44 ,96.5x6Carpet... 19.88
Our Reg. 8.96 21x36
6.44
KMlfiglynuth*
aty^e nyk ripofonfdec^mnpn^
C JWlWRlir Nutli UMi Blti Rugi In Popular Colo|
v * pH ocity-coro nylon plush that enhaocoi.....
wmpofofyde
Sale Starts Sun., Oct. 2, Ends Sat., Oct. 8
DISCOUNT
PRICES
Firsr Qualltv... Everyday low prices.
LAYAWAY
PLAN
Now encompasses most departments.
MASTERCARD ' VISA
We accept bank credit cards.
The Saving Place^
FRIENDLY
SERVICE
We care about our customers.
SATISFACTION
ALWAYS
Our pdllcy for over 20 years.
WVI IP
Kmart is a proud sponsor of both the winter and summer Olyfnpic games on ABC TV.
K mirt* ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE POLICV
Our hrm toiention n to heve every eOyr. hted Item itock on our thetves tf en advedised item i not aveiiebte tor purchase due to any unloretaen reason K mad will issue a Ram Check on request' tor the mercharxJise lone item or reason able larmty quantity^ to be purchased aji.^'he
Coupon Good Thru Oct. 8.1983
6 Pr. Men's Socks
Creslon acrylic/ nylon. Grey with stripes. Over-the-coif. 10-13. Save.
* Af)Vt,cun C^nomid R0.1M
Umit3Pkgs. COUPON
Coupon Good Thru Oct. 8,1983 r j U " '
- r-' - ' ' v-ji
12*oz. Cashews
Delicious, whole cashew nuts In vacuum tin. Great for snacking.
Sale Price
Limit 3
WITH
COUPON
103
Coupon Good Thnj Oct 8.1983
^ ggs Sandwich-Mate
f -. 12-oz.* pkg. of 16
processed cheese / V., . slices. Individual-
, f! I ly wrapped. Good!
H- y/: ^'NOlwt
Sole Price
-.J
104
Limit 3 Pkgs.
Coupon Good Thru Ocf 8,1983
99
WITH
COUPON
VU'Oi.' Macaroni ' ^ 4nd Cheddar I U:ir4i^ - A perfect addition
Ufjar to any meal or a Ched^ Maf?^^^meal in Itself.
Quick and filling.
COUPON
Cricket Lighters
Package of 3 adjustable, disposable cigarette lighters.
K mart COUPONS ARf NOT REQUIRED AT K mart STORES IN ILLINOIS
lA
jo-ia
THERMAL-
[NO]
f
T
i In Decorator Colors
matching 4" nylon blnd-both twin and full beds.
Our
Reo.
17.97
Twin
12.97
Worm Thermol ledspreods In **l^ Polnr Pattern
Thermal-weave cotton with luxurious fringe. 79x106. Our Reg. 20.97, FulMse ledspreod, 92x106".....Ii.97
CEDAR
Our Reg. 12.97
_ _ _ ^ 20x26
euollofll Sleep PINow With Dacron 113 FHI
Standard-slze pHlow with Dacron 113 polyester flberfWI and polyester/cotton ticking.
*DuPonlRg.IM
2.57
Sale Price
22x44" Ea. Practically Priced "Santa Cruz" Bath Towels Plush and thirsty cotton/polyester terry towel with jacquard border and decorative fringed ends.
3.44
Our Reg. 4.97
22x44"Ea. Cheerful "Christy" Both Towels Of Thirsty Terry
Cotton/polyester woven in vivid colors to decorate your bathroom. Generously sized, frugally priced.
FOR PLANTS
'-'Vi
m
t'
A
'i 'our 7.27, Table Ptantef. 4.97
sowmi Good(bot.
8r 29i97i^ 16i97i. 24a88i. 7a97
.Ight Up Your Rooms - - .
choice of three-arm con-brass-finished pole.
WIckeMook FootloCkers With Cedor UnIng
Enchanting wlcker-look footlocker lined wHh cedar for your special storage needs. 30 sbe.
Space-saving 5-shelf Unit For Any Corner
15x15x66 unit of durable plastic adapts to any rooms decor. Choice of colors. For dorms, more.
Our Reg. 10.47
Practical 5-shelf Wall Unit Creates Space
For books, records, toys, onythlrrg that needs a place of Its own. Of durable plastic. 12x30x66".
Attractive Mlnl-throne Planter Of Wicker
Perfect showcase for small house plants, with the cool, troplcaljook of natural wicker. Savingsl
yWilULOW
4.9i
Infonft'Cozy Knit Sets For sleep and play. Pd-yester. Newbom-M-L
Our 3.8S-3.97
Clear Class Jon
1-or l!4-gt. capacity. With tight-fit wire dosure. Save.
MotalRecIpe Boxes
HoK]^x9*oardAln psstlydsd^ Save.
'Our 4.88-4.97
Ughtwelght Scissors
Stainless steel with sturdy Luclte handles.
lOur Reg. 6.97
Chest WHh Tray
Plastic; holds all sewing needs. 14x9/ix8y4.
7is
m For I Each
Polyester Thread
225-yd. spools. Array of popular colors.
20x34" Bath Rug
Plush nylon, solid colors. NonskId latex bock.
FniH Baskets
Of natural willow pro tected with vamlsh
7.97^
Laundry Basket
Generously sized, oblong wUlQw basket.
CAFETERIA SPECIAL
Ten^Hng Hot Turkey Sandwich torvod With Whipped Pototoos, Oravy And Cranberry Souco. DoHoIoimI
1.75
Avciabla Omy m SKmm WRI) CoMfa
40-24)
50-12)
f Inramy Towels
per tow-,1$. 60, nx]4' : r.sheets per roll colors.
! i
Sale Price
WITH 4 COUPON
aisvd* For Holt 'ariety of shani oot and corjd ners. 28-fl, oz each. Snvc
Sale Price
WITH f COUPON
Ofltey Tissue
4*rotl pack o 2-. tissue. 330, 4.5x44 sheets. Wtwe or colors.
Llmif2
.110
Coupon Good rhfu Oct 8,1983
Tissue
2
pty. 9.20x850 [Sheets. Hthite or *^olors;i.Save
Sale Price ^
wm
Limit 2'
III
Coupon Good Thru Oct 8 1983
WITH
COUPON
.A. .tm
UPOM
OaLOfClorox'
Liquid laundry bleach whitens, cleans and disinfects. Save.
Umn2
,l,j CouponGoodThruOcf 8,1983
32-oz: Palmolive^
Liquid detergent for dishwashing. Softens hands.
R.oz.
rilit CoPeoodIhiuOcil.Vl93
i ''^ .........
i i:' ' 'j,' ^
K mart COUPONS R NOT REQuTreD AT K mart STORES IN ILLINOIS
PRICE m m
AFTER
REBATE ^1^
The Game System Of The Future The Super System Atari" 5200'
Atari brings you the system that features a sleek, compact design. Pair of joy sticks, pause feature to freeze the action and much more. Atari' Missile Command' Game Cartridge,* 27.47; Centipede' Cartridge,*.. 29.97 Parker Brothers' Frogger' Game Cartridge*................................34.97
$
Kr
PRICE
AFTER
REBATE
The Atari 2600 Video Computer Sy$tem' Puts You Into The Action
Comes complete with Video Computer System console, 2 joy sticks, Combat' 'n Pac-Man' cartridges. True-to-life sounds, colors. Skill levels.
Vanguard' Game Cartridge........................................ 22.97
Kangaroo' Or Ms. Pac-Man' Cartridge............. la. 26.97
fO' Aton- 5200
K mart' Sale Price *14$ Less Factory Rebate
Afft? Reboce
119
A
ATARI
Kmart* Sale Price *88 Less Factory Rebate *30
Your Net Cost SCO After Rebate 90
Rebate limited to mtr s tlpuiatlon
MISSILE I
COMMAND CENTIPEDE' # N't,
i^r'. ' j
lilil................... mil
07.I-J 20Q7 ;I^-. id,;-, 34 97
/UU\IU/Ut.\
SSTrffBR-
Li'flK#!
H'l f
VANGU/VitO
KANGARCX5
MS, PAC MAN
CASIO
39.991?. '^274
I Sale Price
Handy Wet/Dry Vacuum
With hose, extension wand.
Take-with Sale Price AM/FM Stereo System
8-track, cassette, speakers.
29.97?4^^'
AM/FM stereo Radio
Headset, balance control.
Batteries not InckJded
8.97;
Your Choice Sole Price Mens, Women's Watches
Fine L.C,D. quartz watches.
Batteries Included
49.97
Sale
mm H mm Price Disc 4000 with Flash
Includes 15-exp. disc film.
19.88
Available Only In Stores With Service Additlonol parts, services extra. Single unit (welded) systems excluded.
Sale Price
Arrestor Plus* Heavy-duty Muffler Installed
Double wrapped and zinc coated. For many U.S. cars and light trucks. Complete exhaust system available.
10.97?3T-
Metal Parts Cabinet
With 50 plastic drawers.
19.971?
Variable-speed Drill
%" general-purpose drill.
.'.mv
4 \
2C #OurReg.
W f 3.17 Outdoor Thermometer
5/4". Fahrenheit and Celsius.
najXHghl
J ^ J.
r2i
89.88
Pair On Sale Sale Price Thru Oct. 15 MacPherson'* Replacement Cartridges Installed
We will replace front strut cartridges in many import cars. Help improve ride and handling. Kmart priced.
12.97te^ 9.97 s?r~
4-plece Mat Set
1.97
Your Choice
Handy Fire Extinguisher Flashlight And Batteries Quality Focal Optics
Rubber or clear vinyl. ^SCG approved. Heavy-duty. 2 D" batteries. Telescope or binoculars.
.....Sold m Sporting Good Dept.
6(1-12)
The Saving Place*
7(1-6.12)
THIS GREAT EVENT STARTS MONDAY, OaOBER 3, HURRY TO SEARS! End. s..rd.,,nd,c,
r
SAVEn20! SAVEM20!
Table-top Color TV with Precise Quartz Tuning
379
Reg. $49&,99, Channel Touch selection. One-button color. Super Chromix' picture tube for bright, natural color. 19-in. diag. meas, picture. Thru Oct 29
BetaVision 5-hr. 3>day/ 1-program Video Recorder
379
Reg $499 99. 3-day advance programming. BetaScan picture search. Edit with pause Electronic tuner. Thru October 29.
SAVE noo!
Console Color TV in 2 elegant styles
599
^ ^ each, Your Choice Reg. $699.99. Precision quartz tuner. 105-Channel Touch selection. Super Chromix- picture tube for bright natural color. 25-in. di'ag. meas, picture Thru Oct. 29
ft
I
M
* 1 rrTd
mm^
__
40262
SAVE *90! Personal-size
Color Television
249
Reg $339 99 13-m dag measure picture i^..Klel Chromix* picture ti')e Thru October 29
SAVE *501 Go-onywhere Block/white Portable TV
I -aiMici, iriiu o unms
from 80-20,000 Hz, with total harmonic distortion of not more than ii
1/2 0FF! io-wa
Reg $129.99, Indoor/outdoor TV 12-in. diagonal measure picture Baner, pack extra Thru Oct 29
79
99
Mini Hi-Fi Stereo System
149
"nr; $299 99 Cassette PiuVfrecord, Metal tape capability, S-band graphic equalizer, much more! Sale ends October 29
SAVE ^20! Portable
Stereo Cassette Recorder
Reg $79 99 Cassette stereo play/re.ord ISM PM stereo if'DC Sale ends Oct. 29
59
99
Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised
Sears Pricing Poli.cy... If an item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value.
V
Satisfaction Guaranteed or ypur money back.
Large items such as appliances are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pick-up, delivery is extra.
10/2/83
SAVE ^30!
Dual-Cassette Stereo System
169
Regular $299.99. Dual cassette decks for dubbing from one cassette to another. Record from AM/FM stereo receiver. Full-size record player and 2 speakers. On sale until October 29 at Sears!
SAVE M50!
Remote Control Color TV with Quartz Tuner
J0099
Mj^L ^ 19-in. diagonal
Jw measure picture
Regular $579.99. Channel Scan selection. One-button color adjusts color, tint, brightness, more! Remote control scans channels, adjusts volume, mutes sound and turns, set on/off. Thru Oct. 29.
SAVEMOO!
Kenmore Power-AAate Vacuum
199
Regular $299.99. Powerful 3.2 peak HP suction (1.05 HP VCMA) and beater bar brush power out deep dirt. Active edge cleaning. Overload protection. Adjusts to 4 pile heights. On sale until October 29!
SAVE *100!
size Color TV
Reg $419.99, 1-button color. 15-In. dlag. measure picture. On sale until October 8.
319
SAVE 200! Storeo
System with Rock
Reg $59939. Cassette play/record, AM/FM stereo, two 3-way speakers. Thru Oct. 29. ^ m
32601/
3610
SAVE *601 Kenmore 10-
SAVE 40! Kenmore Upright Vac wHh Tools
89
WW-:
Reg sap. price $129.99. Twin-fan euctlon and bealer-bar brush. Thru Oct. 29.
FANTASTIC BUYS on Kenmore Appliances i
SCARS SERVICE FOUjOWS ^ YOU WHERE YOU MOVE
^snewfaiweI., nguonwae OnecMpuK
^ WI 0. o( out 16,000 8pert i*ci^
EJW IKTK) and tr,a lo-wofii only on >f-d dWs S-5 wc afrange.lor s*fvicitn ol
,W*fS()to<)UCI H DI
SAVE ^40!
Electronic-touch Control Microwave Oven
359
99
Regular $499.99. Features temperature probe, hold/warm. Has a 2-stage memory; set to defrost, then roast. Or any other 2 functions. Large-capacity oven. On sale until Oct. 22.
SAVE noo!
SPACEMASTER Microwave Oven
49999
Regular $599.99. Fits conveniently over your range to help save valuable counter space! Loaded with features like temperature probe and electronic touch controls. Thru Oct. 22.
SAVE ^80!
Continuous^cleaning Electric Range
399
99
"Special coating gradually dissolves most grease as you bake. Clean major spills, racks and windows by band.
Regular $579.99. Oven that cleans itself as you bake*! Fully automatic oven can be preset to turn on, cook, then turn off Visi-Bake window. On sale until October 29
Compact Kenmore Microwave Oven
Kenmore space saving microwave oven helps you save valuable counter space.
199
f5 84101
SAVE ^10! Convenient Cart for your Microwave
Reg $59.99. Frees counter space. Rolls easi ly on casters. Thru Oct 29. Unassembled.
SAVE ^ 100 Portable LP
Gas Grill with Shelf
4999
Each of these advertised items is readll^available for sale as advertised
Reg. $249.99. Dual controls, match-free ignition. Unassembled Thru October 29.
14999
SAVE ^100! Continuous
cleaning Gas Range
399
Reg $499.99 Clock with timer 30-in. oven On sale until Oct 29
require coririecfor,' eirtra.
-
Exclusive Dual-Action' agitator gets large loads uniformly clean.
Self-cleaoing lint filter. traps fuzz and lint. No more mess.
Large capacity to dry big laundry loads Helps to save time and energy
SAVE ^40!
Kenmore Large-capacity _ Heavy-duty Washer
299
99
13211
Regular $339.99. Features 2-cycles, including permanent press. 3 wash/rinse wafer temperatures. On sale until October 15. j
4B
Large items such as appliances are inventoried
SAVE 210
on this Deluxe Laundry Pair!
Large-capacity Kenmore Washer
Regular $499.l?9.
Kenmore Heavy-duty washer is feature packed!
3 water levels, 5 wash cycles and more!
On sale thru Oct. 29.
379
99
Large-capacity Electric Dryer
Regular $369 99 .Automatic termination. . heat shuts off automatically at preset iJry-iiess level. Also has timed drying with touch-up and air-only setting. Thru Oct. 22.
Dryers require connector, sold separately
There is an installation charge on washers and dryers
279
99
SAVE ^20!
Kenmore Large-capacity Electric Dryer
249
Regular $269.99. Features 3 timed cycles. Has air-only for fluff drying items. Touch-up setting. On sale until October 15!
65451
in
SAVE <501
Kenmore 13.1 cu. ft. capacity Upright Freezer
379
Regular $429.99. Features Power Miser switch to help save energy. Has adjustable cold control. Key-eject lock. Sale ends October 22!
our distribution center and will be scheduled for deliverer pick-up, delivery is extra.
Textured steel finish doors add a decorator touch to any kitchen
Four rollers help make moving a snap, so cleaning behind is easy.
SAVE >110!
All-frestless 17.0 cu. ft. Refrigerator
Regular $689.99. No defrosting ever! 12.24 cu. ft. fresh food section with Spacemaster interior and 4.75 cu. ft. freezer with shelf. Porcelain-on-steel liner resists rust, is easy to clean. On rollers. Sale ends Oct. 29!
579
99
white
All-frostless convenience! No frost build-up, no defrosting jobs.
Handy door storage. Easy to see. organize and select food
SAVE 150!
Kenmore 19.0 cu. ft. Side-by-Side
Regular $749.99. All-frostless, no frost build-up ever! 12.20 cu. ft. fresh food section, 6.80 cu. ft. freezer section. Plenty of storage room in the doors. Thru Saturday.
599
^ white only
SAVE ^60!
Kenmore 12.0 cu. ft. capacity Chest-type Freezer
99
369
Regular $429.99. DynaWhite epoxy-coated lighted interior. With key-eject lock and cold control. On sale until October 22.
SAVE noo!
Kenmore 18.0 cu. ft. capacity Refrigerator-freezer
49999
Regular$599.99. Frostless... 13.90 cu. ft. fresh food section with twin crispers, adjustable shelves, 4.10 cu. ft. freezer. Thru October 15.
Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.
SAVE 80!
Kenmore 2.8 cu. ft. capacity Compact Refrigerator
249
Regular^ $329.99. Great for dorm, den or office! Colored door panels. Flush door hinging, magnetic door gaskets. Sale ends Oct. 15.
Ask about Sears credit plans
SB
SAVE *100-350
imi
^>j
-^<n.
Sofa and sofq sleeper
specfacular
Regular $599.99 to $699.99
' cor ^p^^"-
rr' P"" PS a sola spacious
comjorl as aqueen size bed Quilled collon print
S "Durahrr?'' comlorlable
n olefin upholstery.
armSws 00l*r P"P
arm pillows. Opens to queen Size bed
STe7eer' "''""pp s'p '"'o
Traditional Sofa
Reg. $799.99. Comfortable Dacron* polyester JJAAS corduroy velvet. 447
SAVE >100
ALL CHAIRS AND RECLINERS ON SALE!
19988
Swivel rocker
Classic style rocker with Herculon* olefin velvet cover. Reg. $299.99.
SAVE M60
259*
SAVE *100
He-man
recliner
Heater and vibrator features. Nylon cover. Reg. $419.95.
3-way
recliner
Easy-to-clean vinyl cover.
Handy maga zine pouch.
"Kami
SAVE MOO
19988
Edgeworl wing chai
fj Well-craftec
with a polyester velvet up-b 0 I s t e r y cover. Reg $299.99.
Don't Mkt Th* FABIROUS SAVINGS DuHng our Foil ItofiM Sabi Thoro oro loft of tovingt on FumHuro, Corpot, Boddinf ond loft moro.
Stop in Todoy ond SAVE BIC of Soorti
Moot item ot foductel prtcos
CUT 43-48% I
Sculptured nylon plush pile carpets from our Touch Collection. Save!
touch of Delight
Reg. $15.99
8
99
sq. yd.
Distinctive sculptured pile plus soil-hiding multicolors add up to a great carpet for almost any room. Treated with Scotchgard Brand Carpet Protector resists soil, stains.
$21.99 Touch of Tenderness, 30-oz. pile 11.99
$27.99 Touch of Charm,
36-oz. pile..........14.99
$34.99 Touch of Grandeur, 54-oz. pile..........17.99
Cushion, installation extra.
Not sold in: Cpncord, Danville, Goldsboro. Greenville, Rock Hill. Sale ends October 22.
Touch on Brass Lamps on Sale
Custom Decorating Sale !
SAVE 30%-50%
Buy any custom drdpety fabric, get FREE LINING!
SAVE 30% on a fabulous selection of custom,drapery fabrics and receive FREE lining! Choose from antique satins, casements, prints, sheers, more!
SAVE 30-50% on custom aluminum horizontal blinds made by Levolor Lorentzen Inc. or selected vertical blinds.
SAVE 30-50% on custom woven woods in Roman shade or roil-up styles.
SAVE 30% on custom shutters of pine and shades in many styles.
Labor and installation extra. Ask about Sears Credit Plans
*20-*40 OFF
Reg. $79.99 to $129.99
59 to 89
Touch the metal part to turn on/off. With brass plated finish, pinch pleated shade.
Availabte in larger stores.
fm . ^
Custom shop not available in Ashiand, Greenville, Rock Hill, Williamson.
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
sCs
UieMX
1/2 OFF
Our best-selling bedding Elegance and Supreme!
Extro-firm Sears-O-Pedic supreme
99
nipt
> A I X
- W;
Twin mattress or box spring Reg. $199.99
$249.99 Full mattress or
box spring .....124.88
$599.99 Queen set ..........299.88
$799.99 King set......... .399.88
Super-flrm Seors-0-Pedk degance
Twin mattress or box spring.
Reg. $239.^
$289.^ Full mattress or
box spring.................144.88
$699.99 Queen set ........349.88
$899.99 King set............449.88
119*
Soolchoaiii
All bedding sets available in polyurethane foam or innerspring.
Bedding sale ends October 28
Bedding not sold ir,. Concord, Greenville High Point Rock Hill.
Special Purchase
solid color terry towel
While Quantities Last^
099
m3
batt
With important features found in Sears Best $10 towel...
Both are same size, weight. Cotton, polyester. In 7 colors. Sears Best in 8.'
Special purchase solid color polyester pile 24x36-!n bath rug or contour rug prices 50% less than in our Spring General Catalog.
Cover...........5.99, Tark cover .........9.99
each bath size
799
m each
SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAH STORE
NC: Burlington. Charlotte. (Eastland. Southpark). Concord. Durham. Fayetteville. Gastonia. Goldsboro. Greensboro. Greenville. Hickory. High Point. Jacksonville. Raleigh Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Salem SC: Charleston (Citadel, Northwoods), Columbia, Florence, Myrtle Beoch, Rock Hill VA: Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke KY: Ashland
WV: Barboursville, Beckley, Bluefield, Charleston
BB
Satitfoction guaranteed or your money bock
SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO
e'Schaho1^e'0'-"='
O"' "TS *" V":^'S5ss3"H|5
, rat)iefe<3bC^'jjewe Oo\
Honoi
SALE ENDS SAT., OCT. 8,1983
iSoalrSadd
PRICE AFTER _
REIATE Galt.
Prattone^ II Antifreeze Cardigan Sweaters For Men
Antifreeze/coolant for cars. Save. Front-ixxJialfilyle of soft acrylic.
$40 Our Reg. im 16.97 Ea.
*4
Our Reg.
5.96-6.96
Misses* Brushed Tops For Fall
Updated styles In soft fabrics.
Styl SMown Is Reo'Asentative Of Group
2*way*powered* AM/FM Radio
Built-In AFC, sllde-rule dial. Save.
' Batteries rrot Included
lA-lA(4-5 & 12)
Your Cnoice m m 9 m Our Reg. 9.97
Solar'powered Calculators
8-dlgit readout. With memory.
Price
Portable Kerosene Heater
9,800 BTU's. 1.9-gal. capacity.
Not ovolkible In Southern Florida
The Savinq Place
Our 3^. 39.96 Our Reg. 19.96 Ea. Our 1^.95. i7 96 Ea*28 *16 *13
Co^ForOlrb Jr.. MImm-Joekrt fatMonjWs
k!?. Super styles Include
'3/4-19/2d
boot coals In4-14. s'kraiid'wr tSr tSWjw
Im A Great
UYAWAY
Bargain!
\ StylMArs Rpresnlatlv* 0 Ih
i^z ,'!T'
*v4i.
Tops
Our 10.96-^^96 Eq.
Skirts^ O' cb2^-^-v^
^-ox Sizes
P"''- All Of polyeslSll^L'!} iWs
^-6 8T^2)
I flih 1 rOur Reg-, 25.97
_ _ ii Cftf Toddler Boys
Warm Super pile lining and
hi.97
V.97
K
Variety or Fabrics ArxlCoiort
Boys'. GirU'SiZM ,347
547R 44s.^n?worn"-*-n"sSu.ge,sW>es.Sove.
Sizes 2/3,4/5 1.97
5.47
Our Reg. 17.97 Ea
Our Reg. 19.97 Ea.
12^ 15.97
Denim Fashion Jeans For Styie-minded Men
'Comfortable jeans of long-wearing cotton with attractive back-pocket detailing. Save.
Mens Versatiie Shifts OffVeivety Soft Velour
Attractive shirts of easy-care cotton/polyester with collar contrasting trim. Shop Kmarf
Our 7.57. V" genuine leather jeans belt in mens sizes..........$6
5A-5A(4 & 12)
Our Reg. 27.97
90.1&
Ment ** Leoltier Worif tools
Comfortable leather boots: Goodyear welt, cushtoned irv sole OTKl oil-resistant sole.
Men's leoMier Oxfords
Fuii-grain leather with full cushion insole, steel shank support, oN-reslstant sole.
Men's 6 Leolher Work toelt
Moc-toe styling in fUlHfraln leather. With Goodyear welt, padded coliar, storm welt.
6A-6A(4-6 & 12)
vur Reg. 4.474.97.3.77.
MJm#' Ledierds Misses' Leg Warmers
^-sleeve style. Form- Orion' acrylic In solid col-mtlng stretch nylon. Save. ors. Stylish ribbed design, thort-slesve style, 4.97 j1^C2i27. Oiris' Pr.,2 57
a.,,..,,,,,
1.63 68
Cotton/nylon terry. Opaque nylon.
Extra Extra Protection
ffO
>Sale Price
Soft Sense^**
15-oz* skin lotion.
Sole ^ Price
Niveo^ Lotion
For smoother skin.
Sole Price
4*oz; Sea Breeze'
Scrub or cleanser.
Sole Price ^
Noxzemo^ Cream
Medicated. 10 oz.*
IE^Sale 9 m Price Vitamin E Lotion
With aloe vera.
*ri oi
<mpur Choice Sale I Price Conali^ Hair Core
For beautiful hair.
FI 02.
'Sale Price
Style' Conditioner
Gives hair body.
Ctoioe Of Formulas foice
^Sale Price
Style- Shampoo
16-oz.*-size bottle.
FI 02
ShompQoO Keratin Shaippoo
Your_Ct
$QSole
For W Price
Natural Care^
For lovelier hair.
FI. 02
Umlt4 :e Of Formulas
^oCir Choice Sale Price
Style * Hair Spray
Large 8-oz.* size.
Nefwi.
iSale Price
Instant Shave
11-oz.* aerosol can.
Nf wt.
8-8(1-12)
Pepsodent
6.5-oz.* toothpaste.
wmon you buy 2 Nat wt
50 Dristan
Sinus tablets.
AAOSale
Price
Cough Syrup
For cough relief.
2AFysale
Af Price
Robltussln*DM
4-oz.* cough syrup.
FI 02
5.23. 4.97. 6.97^ 4.97% 3.86
K mart' Formula 36 100 Centra-Vite'
Vitamins/minerals. Vitamin tablets.
130 Theragran*M^
Vitamin tablets.
Kmart' NaturalE
4001.U. capsules.
Sale Price
100 Nutrl-Plus'*
Vitamin E capsules.
I
^Sale Price
60 NutriPlus ** C
With rose hips.
^%^lfcSale 9# Price , 100 A/D Vitamins
Nutri-Plus"" capsules
tour Choice
4.96%
Stresstabs' 600
Regular, iron, zinc.
Sale Price
lOOKmart C
500-mg tablets.
3.33
I Sale ) Price
100 Vitamin C
lOOO-mg tablets.
2.88% 2.08
I Sale ^Prlce
Tylenol Tablets
Regular strength.
Your Choice^
' Sale Price
Sinutab Tablets
Aid sinus relief.
1.97% n.3.97 1.86
Sale PrOT
'Sale
Price Pkgs.
Mylanto Liquid Mylanto Tablets
Antacid. 12-fl. oz. Low sodium. lOO.
Sale Price
Neo'Synephrine
12-hr. nasal spray.
9-9(1-12)
aDgffllla!
Our Reg. 8.97 Each6.97
Solor-powered Models
Credii-card size with 8 digits and memory plus percent or square root.
No battfi0S needed
19.97s29.975
Bottenesnot^ncK^ '
"Sale Price Two-pock Kodak^ Disc Film
15 exposures per disc, total of 30 exposures ifugock. Save
.88
'Sale Price 1200Z Telephoto Camera
Built-in automatic flash. Power wind. 110 Mini Camera Pouch,..........2.88
154.88
PRICE AFTER REBATE
Carousel^ Slide Projector
Remote control forward and reverse. Tray not included.
10-10(1-12)
A^Save *7
I f Our 24.97 Eq.
M*n*t, Women's Chronograph
"Water sports model with alarm feature. In black.
4A A7$ave*2
I9a9 f Our 21.97
"Water Sports" Alarm Watch
Five functions, stopwatch, plus countdown alarm. Mens.
S'y<es for
Save 14%
Our Reg. 6.97
Hand-wind Travel Akmn Clock
Illuminated hands artd hour dots. Folding^ plastic case.
Save *4
Our Reg. 11.97
KMC LE.D. Alarm Clock
Easy-to-read ted readout. Snooze feature; solid state.
10.97
Save *3
Our Reg. 13.97 KMC Digital Alarm aock
Power failure indicator. Snooze bar. 24-hour alarm system.
11-11(1-12)
K mart- COUPONS ARE NOT REQUIRED
10-12(1.12)
6 Prs. Knee'his
Stretchnylon with nude heel.
ies 8^5-11
lED AT K mart' STORES IN ILLINOIS
17-130-12)
23.97
Out
Reg. 29.97
Save *6
'p?aSp%;V^Tbowls.cupsandsouce.^
13.97
2<^pc. Mekimine Set
Lovefy service for 4.
Our 16.97
24-piece Tumbler Set
Glassware. 8 each size.
.Our Mo.97 Mugs In 4-pock
Glass, in 16-oz. size
8 And lO Saute Pons
SilverStone interior.
DuPofitReo IM
> , V MAMt SMM
\\^WSS?
/
6-piece Knife Set
Wood handles. With block
17.97
6-pc. Steak Knife Set
Wooden handles. Block.
Our 14.97
Self-sharpening Knife
Handy vegetable knife.
'Our 7.44 Ea. Cookie Jars With Lid
Large. 3-liter size.Oi
12-14(1-12)
'4.97 Ea.
Pyrex^ Server Choice
Microwave safe. Glass.
Sof^FofUseln Micfbwave And Conventional Ovens o
Our 3.94-5.33 Ea. Pyrex Bakeware
Oven to table. Glass.
26.88%
Plates, 4 medium plates. 4^i5wte 4'm Jgs
Our 2.77-
U.97Ea. 11.97Pkg.
Choice Of Bakeware Serving Plates, Bowls
Clear Pyrex glassware. Pkg. of 4. Patterns.
2'pc. Casserole Set
r/2-and 2'/2-qt.* sizes.
'Our 25.96
10 Covered Skillet
Corning. Color choice.
Our 16.97
Little SIzzler Grill
12/4x7browning grill.
with cover
Our H4.48
TwoHurri-Candles
2,8/2" globes and bases.
13-150-12)
wm
THESWEEPSriAKES
expense-paid )^republic round trips for 2 via
to the Queen Mary Hotel for 4 carefree days and 3 nights in Long Beach,Cal.
Plus ^1000 shopping spree for 1 couple at their ocal K mart* store.
OfnCIAlRUUS: N MMT/NOtOIC WAH SWIIMTANIt
' <ou ore ent.rea lo win one or 2 ocononj lor two wnen *ou compier. ono ote me S5 00 reoaie couoon OV Oecwnbet 3I 1983 In. couoon rnult oe occomoonreo Dv rtre ODpropnO'e quMe'l m otoei lo recewe me reoore (NOIt tiMii ON BfOutSI ACS NM| *no 0 *DD5S) Moa
sweepiioke. enir> iioie couoon to matt Noioic wot. Sweepiioiiei 8 0 o I4i;i St loun 8011 MN JJ4I4 Enttiei mu> De lecentea ov Oecemoei 31 1983 '0 oe engcie f ocn iweeostoei entroni oMumes r.sootmcntv 01 oeitvetv oy doii oece reioonnotwy <i ouumea tot te mijOitecM 01 oil moil
2 Alternate tneans ot ertrv NC PURCHASE NECESSARV NO MEChancallV REPRODUCED ENTRIES On 0 3 5 oapet tiona ixint 90ut name oOdteK ona 2ic cede ana He words Ktnan/Nordic A'ate Sweeosfdies Ma sweecKtakes entry to Kmarf/Noroic Ware Sweeostaies. PC Bo,33RO Svossei NV '1775 On the outside ot you enveiooe wnte the words Sweecstaies Only Enter as otter os you nke Out eoch entry must De mailea sec-arotey Entries must De received Dy Decemcer 31 1R83 0 De engcte Edcn sweeostokes entrant assumes resoonsioiiity ot aetivery Dy oos oftce Nc responsiokity is assumed tor ae misoireced or los mail
3 Iwenry.iiv. giona pme wmnei 8ne coniuii ot louna rno Kketi lor two via BeouBkc Aymei lot me city neareti winner i reiiaence irvicea Dy BeouDW Aini plus loogmg lot two loouoie occuoon cy) O' me Oueen Mary Hoi.i m long ieocn CoMornKi lor 4 ooyi ona 3 nighn 8ritet wai Be leieclea
Oiowmg Horn oil enrei rece.yeo One winner win oe leiecrM m o ronaom orowmg from in* r*nrv itve grand DfU* Kinn*fj fo'm* SI 000 K-noti Shoopmg Sor CHo*ng$ wiii d* conducted on of aoouf JonuOfv ov McGiddfev nendfcujon on .naeoendent tudama
orgomiafon whose decisions ore imoi
4 vvinnen wm be notified bv ^oi' No onze suDsnijfions AH pfiei wim oe owofoed One onie per 'amiiy Gfond pme wmners whi d# required to sign ona affidovif of etigiOiw# ono reteoie ona we be soieiv responsioie tor any oopcoOie iaes on me pufes the o eapense potd vocation must oe tanen during the rnonrhj of PeOfuOry ond Moren 984 Airline and hotel reieryofions for grand priie win
fc nen are suOtec to avoHobihry on ootes requested by winners ff a minoi wins a prije tf wiii be oworo ed in the nome of me paren* or legoi guO'dioni Mmofs must oe occomponied Oy on oduit on the f'lp Alt entries remain m* propertv ot Nordic ntore nsone win oe 'eturneo
5 SweeosfOHes open to 'esvaems of rne u S a Employees ona tne'i fommes ot Noitniona Aiummum Products .nc tts subsidiaiies xmort *s divisions ona luosidioriei thetr ooveftismg ogencies ond McGiodtevKenoncfcionaienoiegiD*e t/oid where prohOitea AtHederoi sfote ana tocoi tows ond reguioficms apply Oods of wmnmg depend upon me lofoi number of entries received fot me homes of me grona onje wirnwr$ serxj o sfamped seif oddressea envetope to 4 mort/Nofdic ware Sweeosfoices Wnnets dq Be* 3359 Syosset NV 11775
Nordic Ware * Accessories For Microwave Cooking
Cookware mokes microwave cooking effortless and predictable. MIcro-Oo-Round..........29.97
(1J5 S5 Bebat* Witti Coupon Price Arier fiebate 24 97)
Our 21.97, Siizlin Skillet... 17.97 Our 13.97, Coffee Brewer.... 10.97 Our 6.28,12-cup Bundt Pan.. 4.97
2497
After Rebate
NORDIC WARE* Used and Recommended By Famous Cooking Expert
CHEF TELL
Kmart- sweepstakes
OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
like to win the Kmart /Nordic Ware Sweepstakes Idease enter my nome in the dfowtng Mail entry blank to Kmart/Nofdic Ware Sweeostokes po Box 33<?o Syosset NV, 11775
Name _____
Address.
City L
Zip-
14-16(1-12)
$6 Rebate coupon! ! available at your
I 1/__ /..!A8. I
I local K-mart with I the purchase of o i I Micro-Go-Round | I when moiled I
I to manufacturer. I
Rebate limited to mfi s stipulation J
WIN
THE
r ALL SHOPPINGSWlGRAND PRIZE
12 WINNERS*1000
K marf* Shopping SpreeSECOND PRIZE
18 WINNERS*500
K mart Shopping SpreeTHIRD PRIZE
60 WINNERS*100
K mart Shopping Spree
A Notional Promotion With A Total Distribution Of $27,000 In Merchandise Prizes
T
OFFICIAL RULES
No purchase necessary
1 To enter, complete the official entry form Deposit the lorm al the service counter of any Kmart store No mechanically reproduced en tries are allowed
2 Sweepstakes entries must be received by October i5, 1903 Washinflton residents must enter by October 12 1983 Not responsible for illegible, lost, delayed or damaged entries
3 Winners will be selected in a random drawing among all entries received by Westport Marketing Group, Inc , an independent ludgmg organization whose decisions are,final The odds of winning will be determined by the number of entries received
4. This sweepstakes IS open to residents of the continental U S who are 18 years of age or older, except employees and their families of Kmart Corp , Orackett Co., their subsidiaries and affiliates and their advertising and promotion agencies The sweepstakes is void where prohibited by law. Taxes are the sole responsibility of the prize winners All federal, state and local regulations apply No substitution of prizes permitted. Limit one prize per individual or household Prizes are not transterrable. By submitting and entry, a potential winner agrees to allow use of his or her name and/or photograph in advertising this or similar promotions Winners will be notified by mail on or about December 1,1983
5. Each winner will receive a voucher for the prize level won that must be spent in a K mart store prior to January 26,1984. Prizes not redeemable for cash Any item sold in a Kmart store may be purchased with this voucher. Total value of the prize structure is $27,000
6. For a list of prize winners, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Kmart Shopping Spree Winners List P.O Box 727, Westville. N J 08093.
NOTE: Ohio residents may mail their entries to:
Ohio K mart Sweepstakes Entries. P.O. Box 5165. Norwalk. CT 06852
Famous DracketT^ Household Helpers Save You Energy
Frath 'n Dry Air Frashanar.Ea. 99i 2-lltar* Liquid Windax^ Rafill.. 1.74
lO'OZ.-net.-wt. Endutt........1.77
2-litar' Liquid Drano.........1.96
Dyna-motic" Rollar Mop .... 5.97
(Less 1 50 Mfr $ Rebate. Prtce After Rebate. 447)
Dyna-matic" Mop Refill 2.27
Big Angler Plattic Broom. 4.97
(Less 1.50 Mtr.'s Rebate Pricp After Rebate. 3 47)
Ocedai Cotton Dutt Mop ... 4.97
(Less 1 50 Mfr $ Rebate. Price Atter Rebate, 3.47)
Vanish Bowl Freshener, Ea. 776
.67-fl OZ.
3.47
After Rebate
-Or*
y
K mart^ FALL SHOPPING SPREE OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
Id like to Win in the Kmarf "Fall Shopping Spree Sweepstakes." Please enter my name in the drawing NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
Name.
Address.
City.
Zip-
State.
Phone,
NGt.Wt. 77C Ea.
4/>-02. Net Wt 99C Ea.
4.47
After Rebate
Rebates Limited To Mtr.'s Stipulation
15-17(1-12)
24i96?ffi
Table Lamps With Tasteful Fabric Shades
28-in. lamp of rich wood with brass pccjits_ Our 43.96,23-In. Earty American Lamps, Ea., 34.97
Our Reg.
m 22.88Ea.
Contemporary Cylinder Swag Lamps With Chain
Add a warm glow to every room with swag lamps in an array of decorator patterns and colors.
Our Reg. 69^88-72.88
57.88
Our Reg. 33.88
Our Reg. 24.88
Each
Attractive And Practical Library Units
Richly finished, oak-look units of laminated particleboard in open or sliding-door style.
18-18(1-12)
24.88 19.97
-piece Tray Table Set Set Of 3 Stack Tables
'o" nished accent rack for convenient storage, tables: each 15x15x15.
Plice Sal Priro
^ ^ _ Sale Price49.87 99 87 A. Q7
Oil-filled Electric Heater io.soo-htii m
Portable radiator with 3 heat settings from 600-1500 watts.
10,500-BTU Radiant Heater
With 1.3-gal. kerosene tank. 5-gallon Kerosene Can*, 5.57
Quartz Heater/Humidifier
3 heat settings, safety tip-over switch and more. 1500 watt
Sale Price
4.44
Styling Brush/Iron
With cool tip and tangle-resistant bristles.
9er-Eo
Pro-Style Hair Dryers
1250-watt dryers with many special features.29.47 13.97
Ten-cup Coffee Maker Ught n lasy^ Iron
Automatic Brew Starter!" With 27 steam vents. Robeson *^ Convenient Hand-held Can Opener. 11.87
Inslnmienls* Home
I home enrWiment for the Whole forniy. With r, music, graphics OTKi bult-in II BASIC: wide array
Uacto Cartridge, 19.97 ^
RemotM^fiif rollers., ;Pr., 26.84
Eariy R&odin Cartridge, 42
Extended BASIC Cartridge, $79
MANUFACTURER'S SFiaAL OFFER
Buy Any 6 Texas instruments^ Cartridges Artd Receive MonufocturerACoi Speech Synthesizer A $94 VALUE
Details m Store
'21e97sale Price
i.Oompoet Stereo Cassette Player
Personal stereo with headset.
42e97Sole Price
C.Oossette Player With PM Tuner
Lightweight stereo headphones.
9 0d.'
^TPricaEa. 25-in. Fluorescent Light
Includes bulb, cord, switch.
Mtr May VofV
'V *
QT ^ ^Our Oe^ f 4.47 Ea.
Handy 50- or 75-W Floodlights
Indoor light with reflector.
Ift^Our Reg. 9f 2.48 Eo.
6-V Battery Or Lantern
Long-life battery or lantern.
5^
IBllJ
fU'
n
^X(s
J_
h
|!!g
5orr wHTTtr^
8.97
9A*yOurReg. 91 15.97 Gal. Fresh LooK^ Semhgloss
1-coat latex paint in white and custom-tinted colors.
8.97
5^
Latex Flat
mu Paint
Our Reg. 11.97 Gal. Fallon Fresh^ Semi-gloss
Durable latex interior paint: white, custom-tinted colors.
8.97
Our Reg. 14.97 Gal. Fresh Loolr^ Interior Latex
White celling paint; wall paint in white, custom tints.
7 07^
Our Reg. 10.97 Gal.
7.97 Fashion Fresh^" Latex Flat
Wall paint In white, custom tints; ceiling white.
Mfr. MOV Vary
Mfr. May Vary
0*7 OO Our Reg.
Mm f 0034.96 Ea. Outdoor Quartz Light
Long-burning, 300-watt light.
74.96r.
70-watt Sodium Fixture
High pressure. With larnp.
Not AvotkJbtolnluscon, Arizona ^
Embroidered Toilet Seats
Vinyl; variety of patterns.
21(1-12)
NotAvaaaMkiN
$44QSave*30
I l5Jour Reg. 149.97 AM/FM Cassette With Mike
Radio plus recorder/player.
Our Reg. 49.88 Deluxe Signature Seat Covers
Hi- or low-back bucket seats. *
PRICE AFTER REBATE
Flush *n Fiir Kit Or Tester
Name brand Prestone' products.
OA U J nnriLALiiunge w m Sale Price Remanufactured Alternators.
For many U.S. cars. Save.
$ A Each W Sale Price
14 Metal Lug Wrenches
Choice of SAE or metric.
16.88
Sale Price Compact 12*volt Car Vac
With accessories. 16 cord.
30-22(1-12)
^ A A7 With Exchange Sale Price
Motorvotor 60*mo. Bottery
For many U.S.. foreign cars.
19.88
On Sale Thru Oct. 15
H.D. Muffler Installed
For many U.S. cars, trucks.
58.88
Aooticrci ocn Mifvces -c''
'ceo :cs? mc*'. .
cf**gr zQii ..grf 'wCs >
30vts 5 C
Two*wheel Brake Special
Two drum or front disc brakes.
9 A*yCarryout 9 Sole Price Ea.
Monro-motlc^ Shocks
Many U. S.. Import oars.
O A OO ' Pronts 09e00 Sole Price
Mac Pherson * Replacement Struts
Installed in many Toyotos, VWs, mote.
9.99 Sale Price
K mart OU, Lube And Filter
For many U.S. cars, light trucks.
31-23(1-12)
The Savmg Place* introduces
KEKJH
FrrrEO^^eli
ELEGANCE
PkiwE
OPB
Keleh^Ftili^ut DM Shirts Neat (used collar 9eeve placket Our 9.f7 Shirts/Strtpes
OvCheto.........la. $8
4.f7 la, Coordtnoted Ties 2 For $7
Our Exclusive Answer To Every Mans Fashion Needs
with the elotsic good looks ond stItclHorftltch tailored quality you*ve come to expect in todays fashion world. Mode of easy-care, eosy-wear polyester/cotfon. Priced unbelievably low.
10?*10
Our
12.97
Ea.
fnvoy^Fltted Dress Shirts
Contemporary style Neat fused collar Sleeve placket Embrol,dered label Our6.97, Coerdinaled invoyraTles, Ea. 5.97
Private GMtP*
Classic Shirts
Button-down collar Traditional styling Bock box pleat Button sleeve placket Our 5.97, Privle ChilP' Clossic KnH Ties, Ea. 4.47
32-24.(1-12)
xi:% r'
'^^dBwood fine bone china Save 20% on place settings
The traditional prerequisites for your formal dining. Race setting; dinner, salad, bread and butter plates, cup, saucer.
A r, ^9- Sale
A Runnymede Dark Blue
(on page 3) 195.OO 156XK)
B Medici 115.00 92iH)
C Palatia 120.00 96.00
Coven Cavendish 120.00 96.00
Save open stock Cover/Cavendish
Coffeepot* 132.00 11120
Sugar 66.00 56.10
51.00 43.35
Lasting Impressions Save 20% on place settii^s
Create a table setting guests are sure to remember. Place setting: dinner, salad, bread and butter plates, cup, saucer. DRosedale 75.00 59S5
Save 15% on open stock
Wedgwood Queens Ware Save 30% on place settings
Casually formal or formally casual, always tasteful dinnerware.
Place setting; dinner, salad, bread and butter plates, cup, saucer.
E Potpourri 70.00 49.00
F Queen's Plain 40.00 28.00
Wedgwood Peter Rabbit Giftware Pink Jasperware Save 15%
Q Peter Rabbit 3-pc. set; plate, porringer, mug. 39.00 33.15
H Round Tray 20.00 17.00
J Diamond Mini Box 26.50 99^2
K Bud Vase 54.00 45J0
Beitjamin M. Jabara & Sons 26% off matching placemat set
L Compliment your Runnymede china with a linen set of 4:13X19" mats, 18" napkins. 100.00 75.00
Coven
Wedgwood Monarch Crystal
Toast your table setting with tall lead crystal stemware. Wine, goblet, flute champagne or iced *03- Each 32.50
Kamp & Beatley
Sava 25% on napkin rings
Brushed Florentine napkin rings ^ ingold-tone. 2.00 4.00
fcBelk
lif Shop for Wedgwood designs and save usirrg your credit card
WEDGWOOD DESIGN?^ FOR TABLE, HOME AT CLASSIC SAVINGS ni 15% TO 30%
LENOX CREATES MASTERPIECES^? %BE
=' - ,
* >>..- A - .. _
^-, '; Xf" ; .. =
" --. ; *V .; V jQuaker Lace *'White House
A Cover your Uiblo in ao elegant re
pfixjuclion ol ()resi(iential fir^ery
/2X90'' ov
al. oblony
H2O0
61.50
/2XU)H" II
val, obloiKj 1
?f).00
93.75
/2" loiiiiil
H2.
61.50
t.:
Reflections Mirrored Placemats
B H(flli;(.l yiiiM Miii'.c ol slylt! witti
iiiirioKfil |)l,ii,i'iii,it'. Ir,iliinn(| a
lii-VfltMl c(l()c atui |)rol(;(
iivi-o.k.k 1?/I ' :iO()() 22.50
Save on Lenox "Aulgrnn accessories See copy page 4
I ),! yolii I (Cl III I all I to '. Iiji Ihi-M- lalili- lop r.avil
GIN WITH 25%SAVINGS ON THESE TABLETOP FASHIONS
DINNER COMPANIONS^Y GORHAM AND REED & BARTON NOW 25% TO 30% OFF
I:v\M'fl/1
Qofham
Saw 25% o fuil lad crystal
Gobiet, A-^e or ue c^a'^oag'^e =^eg
A Catreo^a 24 95
iceo !ea 23 95
Bins'Ms: '9.95
Iceo Tea 23 95
C Ki-'g EdXa^g i9 95
iceo "^ea 23 95
DCr'e^7AOOG 27,95
loeo 'ea 32 95
Sava 25% on stainless flatware A ,va/S aoooo' ae, o" a"/ 'ao e Ge: a oo'wS :a'-. 'g se: ca'-- ''g o'\. <' 'e a''0 s''a'oe" 'g :oo -vre- ,0(. 0-; 3-5 o: o se:: "gs E Co O' a o: F No./ea.-G ^ occ' Eoge
5 0 909 0 39" '0 5C 3C
^eg Sale 24 95 18,70
23 95 21,70
'9.95 14,95
23 95 17,95
19 95 14,95
23 95 17,95
27,95 20,95
5C 3C 37,50
Reed 4 Barton
Let t oe <''o.v' that tne 'Tecc9ss,'9s 'eed not oe ordmar'/.
Save 30% on silverplated flatware
A, act-/e oatteHs. o:,e" stoc^
H D'esde" Rose
J Eng S' C'OA'
K Fre-on Cn'OOe'Ca 9 5 0 ece 0:ace setL'g 35.00 59,50 Save 30o on stainless flatware
B.; a se^'/'ce c' 3 O 12 'oa and ge: a oo'.s 'osess se: co'd n^eat ''o''^, Oj:ten Sjga ao^esooon, LCcon,aShe:i M Barcia/ N 1800 Sevioeo^ 3 320.00 224,
Se'V'ce or 12 430 00 336,
Sa/e 30% O' 006's:ocK
is.
EXCEPTIO
ENTERTAINING A^NTIALS BY
ONEIDA, GORHAM, TOSCANY
Oneida. Save 20% to 60%
Silverplated Holloware.
A 15 pc. Punch set B 3 pc. Salad set C 5 pc. Tidbit set Also; Chafing dish 10" Sandwich tray
500.00 1M.00
225.00 1 49.86
Toecany. Save 32%
Serve guests in sparkling style.
Cake server or knife with 24% lead crystal handle, stainless blade
Reg. Sale
D Server or knife 22.00 1 4.86
Gofham. Save 30%
Intensify the mood of your eve-rnng with candlelight. Silver-plated candlesticks are elegant touches to the table for two or twelve. Weighted base.
E Candlestick pair 65.00 44.95
/TjGET TWO PLACE SETTINGS FOR THE PRICE 0
Royal Doulton Lambethware
Distinctively attractive dmnerware with the practical advantages of being safe in dishwasher, oven and freezer.
Get two 4 piece place settings for the price of one
Setting includes: dinner and salad plates, cup. saucer.
All active Lambethware patterns.
A Florinda place setting 45.00
B Bredon Hill place setting 45.00
C Cornwall place setting 45.00
Save 25o on open stock
Franciscan Classics
The unmistakable collection of hand-painted designs that have been gracing American tables in tradition for years.
Get two 5 piece place settings for the price of one
Setting: dinner and salad plates, cereal, cup, saucer.
All active Classic patterns.
D Desert Rose place setting 52.50
E Fresh Fruit place setting 52.50
F Apple place setting 52.50
Save 20% on open stock.
01 ONE IN THESE FAMOUS NAME PATTERNS
i
thnson Brothers
innerware that displays, as well as, serves fine meals.
St two 5 piece place settings for the price of one
itting: dinner and bread plates, cereal, cup, saucer. All active pat-rns. Save 20% on open stock, 40% on the five piece completer set: ivered sugar, cream, round vegetable, small platter.
Reg. Sale
Provincial setting 35^0 Completer set 88.00 52.80
Heritage: setting 28.75 Completer set 63.65 38.19
thena: setting 2Z50 Completer set 55.35 33.21
Stonehenge by Midwinter
Contemporary dinnerware that looks so good on the table its hard to believe its oven-to-table-to-freezer safe.
Get two 5 piece place settings for the price of on
Setting: dinner and bread plates, cereal, cup, saucer.
All active Midwinter patterns.
K Wild Oats place setting 48.00
L Seascapes place setting 48.00
M Rangoon place setting 48.00
Save 20% on open stock.
EVERYTHING TO MAKE YOUR HOME
THE HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYSr.
Tabic top savinga of 2S'o State Pride by Sunweave
A The Belfast solid color Imen look tablecloth, napkins, placemats Cotton/polyester, Red. beige or white Reg Sale
52X70" oval, oblong 13.00 9.75
60X86" oval, oblong 20.00 15.00
60X104" oval, oblong 24.00 19iX)
70" round, 21.00 15.75
Napkin 17X17" 2.00 1.50
Placemat (not shown) 4.00 3XK)
Sunweave
B Poinsettia design tablecloth, napkins, placemats from the Empress of China Collection. Polyester/cotton. Machine care. 65X86" oval, oblong 35.00 26J5
65X102" oval, oblong 40.00 30.00
65" round 25.00 18.75
8 PC. placemat set 20.00 15iX)
Napkin 17X17" 2.00 1.50
Apron (not shown) 10.00 7.50
A
h"ex'
M.
/i
,-A -
i'-i
Urwx Holiday
15*/ on 5 pc. sotting
^flace setting
Reg Sala
98 00 83.30
<9har Holiday placas, ragular prica.
Wleat dish
44.00
Treat Bowl
2C.00
t Demi cup, saucer
38.00
pso available:
fiondiment dish
23.00
tcher
68.00
Ruare server
58.00
Rdraa Wast Caramic Plantara
Small kitten
13.50
Large goose
45.00
pttia Onas by Marri
a Chris little boy Christmas doll
S^rcelam Limited Edition 196JX)
lanox
K Crystal tree top ornament 50.00
Wadgwood
i Blue Jasperware orname-t 29.95
I
Xl
n\s
Delight family and friends by setting a table with gracefully proportioned pieces that say you care. 5 piece place setting: dinner, salad, bread and butter plates, cup, saucer; 4 piece setting: dinner and salad plates, cup, saucer; 3 piece setting: dinner plate, cup, saucer.
Royal Doulton Fina Bona ' Sava 25% on 3,4 or 5 placa sattings
Includes all active patterns Reg. Sala A Carlyle 5 pc. 195.00 146.25
B Carnation 5 pc 77.00 57.75
Save 20% on serving pieces, accessories.
Royal Doulton Minton Bona Sava 25% on 3,4 or 5 placa sattings
Includes all active patterns. V C Jasmine 5 pc. 155.00 116.25
""X D Consort 5 pc. 185.00 1 38.75
Save 20% on serving pieces,
accessories.
Royal Doulton Romanea Bona Sava 25% on tha 5 placa aatting
Includes all active patterns.
Reg. Sale E Juliet 5 pc. 76.00 S7.00
F Diana 5 pc. 64.00 4l!oo
Save 20% on serving pieces, accessories.
Royal Doulton Ma)aslic Save 30% on 3,4 or 5 place sattings
Includes all active patterns. 5 piece place settings: G Real Old Willow 72.00 49.BS
H Southdown 60.00 42.00
Save 25% on serving pieces, accessories.Belk
Shop for Royal Doulton savings using your credit card
Y
% ><
AL DOULTON
f!
EGAL OCCASION
VE 20% TO 30%
M
-
NORITAKE: TABLETOP TRADITIONS FOR TODAY 25% to 30% OFF
Stvt 30'-i on p>l*ce ve!tir>gi
-e'. Site
A-i'<9 0G
e i--: :.: 3570
<2%
DE-'i'-i V'l: 29.2G
S>en '-. on full ke*C cr/ili
WATERFORD-
I NO OTHER ONE
WORD CAN SAY
SO MUCH
904
ROCKY MOUNT Uptown GOLDSBORO Berkeley Mall ELIZABETH CITY Southgate Mall GREENVILLE Carolina East Mall WILSON Parkwood Mall
KINSTON Vernon Park Mall
Supplement to:
The Evening Telegram, the News Argus, The Daily Advance, The Daily Times,
The Daily Reflector, The Free Press October 1 & 2, 1983
Begins October 3, 1983
RCC/10-83
Physicians Mutual
Insurance Company Omaha, Nebraska
The Xll-NewPROTECnON mi HoenitalHan
That Guarantees You
li$:{5o.()o CWKI^1,500.00 4 MOXTHHospital Cash Benefits
from the very FIRST DAY for coveredSICKNESS! ACCIDENTS!Pays Increased Benefits for
Pays full cash benefits at any age, even after 65 Pays in addition to any other insurance Pays $1,000.00 Accidental Death BenefitsYOU CANNOT BE TURNED DOWN!
NO SALESMAN WILL CALL
Reply before October 15,1983
Why you need the PROTECTION fW Hospital Plan
It's a well known fact that the cost of hospital care continues to climb at an alarming rate. Thats why most of us carry some form of health insurancewhether it be a group policy, m<yor medical coverage or even Medicareto share in the cost of a hospital stay.
But have you stopped to consider that as hos pital charges go up, so does your share of the bill'.'
Most health policies pay only 80'ti of your hos pital billand in years past, that may have been enough. But today, with the average cost of a trip to the ho.spilal reaching over $1,900.(K)*, your share could be difficult to handle.
If you were just returning home from the hos
pital, would you be able to write acheck for your share of the bill? If not, would you have to take money out of your savings? Or worse yet, would you have to look for help?
Thats why weve designed the all new PRO TBtTION PLUS Hospital Plan. The cash benefits you collect could mean the difference between getting through a financial crisis and having to look to your savings or elsewhere for help.
Thats why we .say:
Were here when you need us.
.American Hospital A.s.s<Kation
Heres how your PROTECTION HI Hospitifl Plan helps you beat the rising cost of hospital care!
^ iOo-^ -^-y^Aje.
a crUX ff
Physicians Mutual Insurance Company Attn: Claims Department
Gentlemen:
It certainly was a fortunate day for me when I received your brochure and decided immediately to enroll in your company for insurance protection. My insurance became effective November 1st, then, on December 23, I had the misfortune of falling and as a result of that fall, I was hospitalized four different times up to April 26.
I was very dubious that you would even consider a claim from me because of the short time since enrollment, but after calling your office (toll-free!) and being advised that "yes, your insurance is good just send in your claim form," I was very pleased to know I had the insurance bo fall back on and could count on your company as being trustworthy.
I am now in receipt of your four checks covering my , four periods of hospital confinement. Thank you very much for this payment and for the prompt and efficient manner in processing my complicated claim.
I certainly will always remain a satisfied policyholder and will recommend Physicians Mutual highly to anyone in need of a good reliable insurance company.
Thank you again.
Neoma E. HannumPays you $50.00 a day, $1,500.00 a month!
Youll collect the.se cash benefits whenever you are hospitalized for a covered sickne.ss or acci dent. In fact, youll collect when your doctor places you in the hospital for any reasoneven a simple check up.Pays you $75.00 a day, $2,250.00 a month for Cancer, Heart Attack
Your benefits increase 50'i(, if you or any covered member of your family is ho.spitalized for cancer (including leukemia and Hodgkins di.sease) or heart attack (acute mywardial infarction).Pays you double benefits $200.00 a day^6,000.00 a month for you and your spouse
Under the Hu.sband Wife or All Family Plan.s, youll collect double your regular benefits during the time you and your spouse are both in the hospitaldue to the same or different accidents.Pays cash benefits in addition to any other insurance
You'll collect benefits over and above any other insuranceincluding gn>up policie.s, miyor med ical, workers com[)ensationeven Medicare.
Thats what makes your PROTEtTlON PLUS Ho.spital Plan so importantbecause many health polic ies pay only 8()'V of your hospital bil. This is the ideal way to get the cash you need to help cover the remaining costs.Pays benefits directly to you
Your benefit check will go directly to you unless you tell us otherwise. The money is yours to spend as you wishto help pay the ho.spital bill, the diH tors bill, or even hous<*hold expenses.
You'll Ik in dinct contact with us fn>m the time you enrollright up to when you receive your Ix'nefit check in the mail. Youll get fast, direct .service everytime! Furthermore, your benefits are not subject to state or Federal income tax.You get lifetime coverage and benefits
Then* is no limit to the number of days you can collect benefits. That means you'll be protected even ifyoun* hospitalized for the rest of your life!Pays maternity benefits, too
Youre covered for nonnal childbirth when preg nancy wcurs anytime after your policy is i.ssued. And theres no added cost for this coverage!We cant cancel your protection or raise your rates individually i
No matter how old you become or how many claims you have, we GUARANTEE never to cancel or refuse to renew your PROTEtTlON PLUS Hospital Plan. Only you can cancel your coverage.
Whats more, you can never be singled out fora rate increase. In fact, the only way we can raise your rates is if we do .so for all policies like yours in the entire .state. Your rate will not change when you move from one age group to another... even if your health changes.Pays fiill benefits for all ages
Now you can protect your entire family with $50a day benefits for all, regardless of age.
Since ho.spitals charge the same rate, we feel its only fair that everyone collect equal benefits. So unlike some plan.s, this PROTECTION PLUS Hospital Plan pays full cash benefits for everyone. Pays ft-om the very first day Youll collect cash benefits the FIRST DAY and EVERY day youre ho.spitalized for a covered sickness or accident.
Youre covered in any hospital in the world, including federal and VA hospitals. However, nursing homes and convalescent, extended-care or self-care units of hospitals do not qualify.Now you can build an accidental death benefit up to $10,000.00
For the first time. Physic ians Mutual has included $1.0()().()0 accidental death benefits for every family member you cover in your hospital plan.
And your premium buys more! A spec iai pro vision gives your family a maximum benefit of $10,000.00. Every ptomium you pay is added to your $1.()0().0() benefit-up'to $10.000.00. The longer your policy is in force, the more benefits for your family .
Bc*nefits are paid when death occurs within 90 days of an acc ident that happens while your policy is in force. Of course, they are not payable for death due to sickness, intoxication or non-prescribed drugs.Pre-existing conditions are not covered for the first year
Old health problems (those that became evident or were treated before the effective date of your policy ) arc* not coverc*d for the first year of your policy. But once that year is up, these pre exi.sting conditions an* covered!
If ym are 65 or over you will be coverod for c-anc'er, heart attack, stroke, hernia, disea.se or disorder of the prostate, tuberculosis, cataracts, emphysema, cirrho.sis or diabetes if your hospital confinement commences more than six months after the effective date of your policy.Reduced benefits for mental illness
Half benefits an* paid for up to 30 days confine ment due to mental illne.ss.You cant be turned down!
We guarantee to i.ssue your PROTEtTlON PLUS Hospital Plan (P510 Series) regardle.ss of your age, health or family size. As soon as we receive your completed application, we will issue your policy and put it in force.
Your coverage begins immediatelyeven before your policy arrives in the mail.
Of course, we can issue only one policy to you on a guaranteed i.ssue basis.
If youn* already a Physicians Mutual policyowner and would like infonnation about addi tional coverage available, plea.se write for details.Enroll today! No salesman will call
Simply fill out the brief application and mail it back to Physicians Mutual along with $1.00 for your first months coverage. There is no medical exam required, no health questions to answer.
There are no .salesmen, no middlemen involved. So dont hesitatemail your applica tion and $1.(M) today!
We guarantee to issue this insurance regardless of your age, health or family size.
For as long as you live and keep your policy in force, we guarantee never to cancel or refuse to renew your policy.
We guarantee to refund your money if, for any reason, you decide you do not want this protection, and you return your policy within 30 days.
First Choose the Plan That Fits Your Needs Best.
With these plans, you can insure family members at a greater savings than buying separate policiesand all collect full cash benefits!
Ideal for the single person ... or for the individual family member who needs protection and wants separate insurance.
Offers protection for the entire family- father, mother and all eligible dependent childrenwith full benefits for all. Future additions to the family are covered automatically at no extra cost.
Designed for the married couple without children or whose children are grown. Pays full benefits for both of you no reductions for the spouse.
Created for the special needs of the single parent. Covers you and all eligible dependent children with full benefits for all.
Now Choose the Cash Benefit Option You Need. Remember^Your First Months Premium is Only ii.ooi Then Continue at the Low Monthly Rate Shown Below.
Pays $50.00 a day ($1,500.00 a month) from the very first day of hospitalization for a covered sickness or accident.
Pays $30.00 a day ($900.00 a month) from the very first day of hospitalization for a covered sickness or accident.
Individual Husband-Wife All-Family One Parent Family 21.75
39 > under 40-64 SSaowtr
(use age of pnncipal insured)
$14.95 $17.95 $29.95 28.95 34.95 58.95 35.75 41.75 65.75
24.75 36.75
Individual Husband-Wife All-Family One-Parent Family
39 a under 40-64 65 > over
(use age of principal insured)
$ 9.55 $11.55 $19.15
18.55 22.35 37.75
22.95 26.75 42.15
13.95 15.95 23.55
NOTE: Your renewal rate does not increase and your benefits do not decrease as you move from one age group to another.
When your policy arrives, youll be given the opportunity to save 81/3% by paying your premium once a year, instead of each month. If you choose to do so, you^U be getting 12 months for the price of 11!
A Special Note to People 65 and Over...
Too many people 65 and over have seen a serious accident or illness wipe out their life savings almost overnight. Our PROTECTION PLUS Hospital Plan can help prevent that from happening to you.
You cannot be turned down for this coverage no matter what your age. Youll receive copies of the North Carolina Buyers Guides with your policy. If you wish to have the Guides before you apply, you may request them from us.
Rememberwe pay full cash benefits in addition to any other insurance you have, including Medicareno matter how long you are in the hospital. Doesnt it make good sense to mail your application today?
ACT NOW! Get IMs Handsome Document Holder With Your Policy
Protect all your valuable personal papers in one safe place!
This durable vinyl document holder is yours to keep even if you decide not to continue your proteaion.
New, Easy-to-Read Policy!
At lasta policy written in plain, everyday language that everyone can understand. It takes only a few minutes to read, and youll know exactly what youre covered for.
Fill out and mall Application to: Mr. J.L. Hutton, Jr., PO Bo* 2257, Asheville, NC 28802
-Just complete the simple application below and mail with $1.00 today. You cannot be covered until we receive your application. No salesman will call.
Vt I ACH ALUM DOTTED LINE AND INSERT IN POSTAGE PAID ENVELOPE
APPLICATION
Physicians Mutual
Protection PllS Hospital Plan
Individual Plan* All-Family Plan' f f
Husband-Wife Plan^ One-Parent Family Plan^ p nepW
If you select the All-Family or Husband-Wife Plan, please ^ Oct. 15,1983 list name, date of birth and sex of your spouse below.
mOPTIONA 512 rnOPTIONB 511
Pays $50 00 a day ($1,500 00 a month) Pays $30.00 a day ($900.00 a month) .
from the very first day from the very first day
(or sickness or accident for sickness or accident
First
PLEASE PRINT .
Middle Initial
Last
AGE
DATE OF BIRTH
Month Day Year
SEX
M F
INSURED'S NAME
SPOUSE'S NAME
AnnaF<(<
CITY
(Street)
STATE
(^No.)
zipCj^......
PHONE NO. J_) (for customer service only)
I enclose my first month's premium of $1.00 and apply to Physicians Mutual Insurance Comoany Omaha, Nebraska, for the Physicians Mutual Hospital Policy (P510 Series) and the Plan selected above, I understand the policy is not in force until actually issued, and benefits will not be paid for pre-existing conditions (health problems that became evident or were treated prior to the effective date of the policy) unless confinement begins one year after the issue date.
Licensed Resident Agent
DATE _
SIGNED X.
Insured's Signature SIGNDO NOT PRINT Please make check or money order payable to PHYSICIANS MUTUAL.
FORME-510-1 645 26 28 30 32 34 512/511-4313NCWere just a free phone caU away!
CaU 800-228-9100. We pay for the call.
If we can answer any questions or be of help in any way, dont hesitate to call us. Dial toll-free from any where in the continental United States Our Customer Service staff is here to serve you anytime from 8 a m to 8 p.m.. Central Time. Monday through Friday.
Were here when you need us.
Physicians Mutual
Rated A+ (Excellent)
Physicians Mutual has been awarded the highest rating A+ (Excellent) from A M Best Company, recognizing our linancial stability and sound operating performance.
At its founding in 1902, the Company specialized in health insurance for physicians, surgeons and dentists only. Then in 1962, recognizing the growing need for extra protection against the rising cost of hospitalization, we began ollcring supplemental insurance to the general public
Headquartered in Omaha . . . licensed in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, Physicians Mutual is proud of its record ol service. Last year alone, we paid claims totalling over $90,000,000 on all policies.
No matter how large or how small your claim,' you can depend on us ...
"This policy is the greaiesi tnesimcni I cwr made and I cannot thank von enough for all i (mr help and consideration. Evcrvonc should ha\c this kind of extra help. It has been a (iod.scnd Mrs. Ivois G. Glad. Idaho
... to back your policy with fast claims service.
"I want to thank you for your e.xpcri .service and vour prompt care for rnv illness from mv stroke.
You are a wonderful company and I will always he thankful to vou jor vour great .service.
I don't know what I would have done without m L policy which I have had for about fifty years.
I have almost fullv recovered from my stroke and I want to thank you for all you have done. " Dr. Nelson B. Truesdell,^ Kansas
Were here when you need us
Here is your temporary Identification Card. Fill it out and carry it with you. After we receive your application and issue your policy you will receive your permanent, Identification Card.
Were here when
you need us
Physicians Mutual Insurance Company
Omaha, Nebratka 68103
NAMF
DATE MAILED
AMOUNT SENTS
TEMPORARY IDENTIFICATION CARD
Physicians Mutual
Insurance Company Omaha, Nebraska
The All-NewPROTECTION S Hospital HanThat Guarantees You$U0(M)0 A MOXTiH
Hospital Cash Benefits from the very FIRST DAY for coveredSICKNESS! ACCIDENTS!
PaysIncreased Benefits for
Pays full cash benefits at any age, even after 65
Pays in addition to any other insurance
Pays $1,000.00 A ccidental Death BenefitsYOU CANNOT BE TURNED DOWN!
NO SALESMAN WILL CALL Reply before October 15,1983
THEDAE.Y8EFLECrOR
oREamiftRC
'S*.
OCTOBIR?, 1983
BY BLAINE DENHLTZ
/'I
' r'.
BROOKE SHIELDS
Now that youre at Princeton. what is going to happen to your acting career? W.S., Las Vegas, Nev.
Princeton will come first for the next four years. If a film comes my wav that I like KK percent, i'll tr> to do it in my free time or in the summer. So chances are I'll be making one film a year. And if there are (dd days when I m not too busy. 1 might squeeze in some modeling work or T\ specials. At the beginning, though, i plan to devote my time ex-clusi\el> to m\ studies, because I ve made up my mind !o do the ver\ best that I can.TOM SELUCK
stor o/ Magnum P I
Which do you enjoy more, TV or movies? C.E., Biloxi, Miss.
1 consider myself veiy lucky to be doing both: each area is enjovable and a challenge. Right now I can have my cake and eat it too. If I had a choice. I'd pick movies that duplicate those that starred Flynn'. Bogail. Gable and Grant My favorite film of all time is Gunqa Dm with Caiy Grant, which 1 must have seen around 20 times. I like romantic adventures, for which the old days were famousFROM THE "ASK" iPITORS
LOS A.NGELES Before he got hooked on greasepaint. Robert Redford was an
aspiring artist, so it makes sense that he is now hoping to get the screen rights to The Thmeenth Apostle. Eugene Vale's novel about a tortured painter who tra\ els to Central
Kissinger gearing up for a powerful new position
American jungles to work. Redford. who has been looking for a second picture to direct ever since his Oscar-winning debut with Ordinary People, would also star in the film.. . Actress Heather Locklear. 22. is becoming a hot propertv'. She's currently starring in two prime-time series (Dynasty and T.J Hooker) and has been signed for her first feature film, Dino DiLaurentiis's Firestarter in which she will play Drew Barrymore's mother and David Keith's wife. After the filming. Heather returns to both series her Hooker role has been expanded, and as Sammy Jo on Dynasty shell be "still mean and rotten. I love it as long as they keep me mean Joan Collins and I are having a wonderful time. Irving "Swifty Lazar. 76. a top literarv agent since the 1940's and the first ever to negotiate million-dollar advances for literaiy clients, will also deal generously with his famous colleagues in his upcoming auto
biography. The book, as yet untitled, features benign tales of his two dozen or so movie-star clients, as well as anecdotes about writer-director Moas Hart and historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr But costume designer TravUla promises to., unveil more in his forthcoming memoirs, including. "The secrets behind dressing-room doors '
Robetl Wmdeter
\EV\' YORK - Pat Stacy
John Wayne s secretaiy is now promoting her fxiok about her romance with the late actor. Duke A Lot e Sion (Atheneum). but her husband of 18 months, real-estate man Richard Donahugh. doesn't seem cowed by Pat's highlv publicized relationship with the screen cowboN. Sa\s Stacy "He's ver\ proud of me and the bcKik V^hen I'm on TV. he stops working, turns on the set and makes sure eveiy-one in the office watches. ... If the musical rumored to be in the works about romance novelist Barbara Cartland is e\er \mten. who would Cartland. 82. love to see in the leading role^ Barbara, who is also the step-grandmother of Bri-tain s Princess Diana, fantasizes that Zsa Zsa Gabor would be a good choice. DoUy Parton however, would not be ideal.
Shes a bit too down-to-earth for me." remarks Cartland. Yes, her wigs match the color of mv hair, but my hair is my ow n not someone else's."
Anita Summer
W.ASHINGTON The much-
publicized "debategate " con-troversc involving secret briefing material from President Carter that somehow found Its wav into candidate Ronald Reagan s camp is actuallc ver\ old news in fact more than two years old: Two newspa[>ers reported in IPHiion a Michigan speech by then-Representative David Stockman (now director of the Office of Management and Budget) during which Stockman casualK revealed that he had u.sed a pilfered " copv of a Carter briefing fxiok to prep Reagan for the Presidential debates The astonishing ad-missiuii was dutifullv printed in the Elktiart (Ind ) tnjih and
Loi kleur s lureer healing up
the Dowagiac (Mich.) Daily ^eu s Nobod\ noticed it, and not until the publication earlier this vear of Laurence
Redford pursues an of dire( ,
Barrett's book Gamh;:-:^ u ith History (Doubled \ which contains the stoo ; anybody in the media u -:.-up. We all know it t.:r.' v drive to get ahead, so it w.iv surprising when Henry Ki.v singer as Secretan, of convinced the DC. g('\>r:,-ment to create a tw(Kai -parking zone in the crow > : street in front of his G( town home. It dro\e neighbors crazv but always had a place to ;
Five years later. Kissiru::' -obviously back in the lane. By the time he sworn in as head of the !' dent's Commission on . America, his name ap[H ! : on one of the few design.is : spots in the State Departn : garage. Not just any sp'' -he's right next to Secretan ' State George Schultz U.st week, the National \-chives opened the prr. papers of Richard Nixon and all the former Presub : ' -men to the public. Deput' \-chivist George Scaboo aiu:' team of 12 spent four -reading the 628 cubic fot: ; papers to weed out the ;t-sonal and presene
political. . Seii.i'^ ' and Presiden' candidate Alan Cranston (D-( a, is known as a u.n who likes natnr.i things. He eats natur i. foods and likes runinuc outdoors. But .sometimt > natural doesn't win nctn-inations. Recently, to tf,-surprise of many. Cranst' appeared at a gathering w ith the hair on his balding head a lot less gray than it used to be. Cranston doesn't deny his ham dyeing ploy for a seo ond. "Why notl Tin President does it." And Ih-sides, Cranston's wife is rooting for him: "She likes it Kathleen .\1a\d Jane Ottenbei^ and Ernest Volknuu:
(. ovt'f illustration bv Garv Kellev
1983 FAMILY WEEKLY. All rights rese'. o
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4 Family Weekly . (ictobkk j liwj
NEW RESEARCH ON WIVES AND INFIDELITYBY ELAINE DENHOLTZ
/ UX2S lonely, so lonely," says Susan. / just wanted someone to hold me and talk to me."
"I did it to get euen. My husband was cheating for years." explains Pat Why? I fell in love, says Chns
lor a long time
Its bwn acknowledged that married men have affairs: In 1953, researcher ^fr^ Kinsey reported that half of all husbands were unfaithful by age 40; in 1981, The Hite Report on Male Sexuality placed that figure at nearly three out of four husbands. But the wife as infidel, until recently, has been a topic generally shunned in polite company.
That s no longer so. Although magazine surveys on unfaithful wives vary in regard to their numbers (a Ladies Home Journal poll found that 21 percent cheat while 54 percent of Cosmopolitans readers reported they had extramarital affairsjt psychologists believe that infidelity among married women is on the rise. My own research, de-
rived from three years spent interview ing more than 100 women about the subject, supports this, though unfaith ful wives do remain a minority.
The women I talked with were not jet setters or swingers"; the majority were fespected in their communities, and took their responsibilities as wives and mothers seriously. They were mid die-class females with average sex drives. For some, the duration of the affair was brief, for others it became a long-term relationship, lasting several years.
Why have an increasing number of women chosen to forsake traditional marriage mores? The explanations are varied and complex and include both age-old reasons for infidelity and some new ones.
In the past, many psychologists have viewed infidelity aS a symptom of emotional disturbance and the extramarital affair as a sign of a deeply troubled marriage. And intolerable conditions at home a husband whos abusive, a womanizer, a drunk can prompt a wife to turn to another man. This was certainly true for Ada. a 36-year-old court stenographer. "The hostility was building up. she says. "My husband hated his life, his boss, complained about me. the kids, everything. It was state of war. I used to say to myself, When the kids grow up Ill get divorce. Then Larry [her lover] came along, and he was an oasis from the hostility at home."
An affair can also arise from a need to feel self-worth and that another person values you. A spouse is in a powerful position to feed or starve his or her partners ego. The woman who feels sexually, emotionally or'intellectually deprived at home becomes extremely vulnerable. If shes depressed, abused or unappreciated and another man considers her desirable and worthwhile. thats a real temptation.
"What got me into an affair? asks Ellen, a young wife living in Connecticut. A chance to talk with someone. Companionship. Communication. You wont believe this, but sex wasnt the important part. For Fran, an attractive speech therapist, the need to feel sexually desirable did serve as the catalyst for her affair. Im pushing 40, getting older, losing my looks. What would I do without my lover to tell me Im wonderful? Its ego. He makes me feel pretty and sexy.
A crisis, such as the death of a family member, bankruptcy or a husbands unfaithfulness, can also trigger an extramarital relationship. Sociological factors have played a role in this trend, too. Today, the majority of wives are no longer tethered to their homes during the day. taking care of the children.
The unman who feels emotionally or intellectually deprived at home becomes extremely vulnerable.
Comprising 43 percent of the work force, they meet attractive men on the pb whose interests they share. Women lunch and unwind over an after-work cocktail with these men. Even the most monogamous men and women occasionally have to wrestle with old-fashioned temptation," says Avodah K. Of-fit, a New York City psychiatrist and author of The Sexual Self (Lippincott). Working together on an exciting project, they may yield to this and find themselves propelled into sexual intimacy.
"Jerry was vice president of the company. 1 became his secretary so I saw lim every day, explains Betty, who is 25 and the mother of two small children. He was married. But at the Christmas party I gave him a kiss. It wasn 't a peck. I mean we kissed. After that we met after work, and in two months we became lovers. i^other force that may have caused infidelity to increase is our permissive society. The media flaunt sexual freedom. Movies, television and even books hammer the message home; Sexual exclusivity is dead; fidelity, passe; modern marriage can handle a love affair. A lover on the side has begun to seem more commonplace. Certainly, the stigma of an affair has lost much of its shock value.
Womens attitudes about themselves have changed, too. While our mothers were taught to obey, keep the house clean, raise nice kids and stand by their husbands, contemporary women assert that theres more to life than serving others. They want their fair share of self-fulfillment. Dr. Arnold A. Lazarus,
a professor of psychology at Rutgers University, has talked with many corporate men and their wives. Husbands cant understand how their deferential wives have changed," he says. Lazarus often hears remarks like; She used to be fine. Now all she does is complain
As women feel better bout themselves, they reject antiquated attitudes and become assertive. Feminism has taught them to value themselves and slowly, women have begun to do so. They verbalize their needs and expect their husbands to meet them. They feel entitled to happiness. For some, this means working until the needs of both partners are met within the boundaries of the marriage.
Other women see this happiness as having it both ways - married life and a lover. Women from bad marriciges take lovers, perhaps not surprisingly, but so do women from good marriages. A married woman involved in a 10-year-long affair told me, Im a firm believer in marriage. Im committed to my family. But its naive to think only one person on earth can be everything to you. I can love two men."
The woman who can successfully juggle two intimate relationships without experiencing emotional repercussions may be the exception, however. After the glow wears off, many wives wonder if the affair w^ worth risking theiWnarriages. Morton Hunt, author of The Universe Within (Simon and Schuster), observes that for most people an affair undermines and endangers the most important human relationship in their lives Many women become guilt-ridden. Sneaking around for three years and having a lover was living a lie. It was terrible. 1 was exhausted. I look back and it seems it was a different person, not me, says one young mother.
Interestingly enough, some investigators report a womans guilt declines in direct proportion to her level of fulfillment. The more satisfying the affair, the less guilt. A computer programmer. 45, denies any remorse. No I dont feel guilty. Im not hurting mv husband, and its making me happier. Whats so shocking?"
Even if a woman feels positive toward her affair, other risks remain. Irena, 39, had a number of romantic flings throughout her marriage. ' I can sleep with a guy without getting emotionally involved. she told me. But when her husband found out, it destroyed the marriage. He divorced her and took the children to live with him. Another wife, Leslie, ended her two-year affair, but when she tried to reconcile with her husband, he had already found someone else.
Can an affair ever help a marriage? In some cases, an, extramarital affair forces a couple to address the marriages problems; a wife feeling neglected, a husband obsessed with his own goals. It could be the catalyst for repairing a marriage and re-evauating the long-standing bond of husband and wife. And years ago. Albert Ellis. Ph.D. and author of A Guide to Personal Happiness (Wilshire Book Co.). argued there was more to gain than to lose from an affair. He said marriages can be confining and boring (many women 1 spoke with cited boredom as the impetus for their infidelity) and that an affair could reduce husband-wife tension and actually improve the marriage. Some unfaithful wives agreed with this. They viewed an affair as an act of courage and felt stronger than wives
A m(yority of wives do remain faithful, even if some have regrets. They work at a continuing love affair with their husbands.
who accept their marriages as their fate. "An affair keeps vou on vour toes, looking more attractive. It rnakes life exciting. 1 feel younger. Im happier, so 1 look on it as helping mv marriage, says a graphic artist.
A majorify' of wives do remain faithful, even if some have regrets. Thev work at a continuing love affair with their husbands, an emotional-sexual bond in which commitment, responsibility and passion exist. But we can no longer ignore that more and more women, for a myriad of reasons, have opted to seek those things elsewhere. FW
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EFORE YOU SIGN ON THE DOTTED LINE, READ THIS
By Gary Fidel
Ten months after buying a new car, Joe and Mary find that because of an unexpected illpess in their family, they cannot meet the high monthly loan payments. The car is repossessed by their credit union and sold at an auction. Joe and Mary are notified, however, that they still owe nearly as much on the loan as they did before their car was repossessed. The credit union sues them and wins a judgment that is greater than the amount of the original loan.
How is this possible? You know the answer: fine print. With any contract you sign, its not what you know that will hurt you, but what you dont know. Wading through the swamp of complicated language in an everyday contract becomes a tedious chore. Yet u can protect yourself from what appened to Joe and Mary by taking
Gary Fidel is an attorney and writer living in New York.
the time to study a written agreement before you sign. Those long, twisted sentences filled with legalese" can be made more digestible by following a few simple rules. (You may want to take the papers home to read, or at the very least, resolve not to be intimidated by^heavy-breathing salesprople!)
First, underline the major promises made by each party. In typical contracts, such as loan a^eements, leases, work orders for home or car repairs or agreements to buy or sell personal property, the exchar^ of promises at the heart of the deal should be obvious. Im Joe and Marys case, they promised to repay their car loan, aloM with a large sum of interest, in a ^lecific number of monthly payments.
After youve pinpointed the major promises, you need to tackle the fine print, which will boil down to secondary promises tacked onto your side of the 2^reement. These are known as conditions because you promise to perform them only under special circumstances. The best way to approach fine print is to examine one sentence at a
time, then list the conditions in your own language on a separate piece of paper. Feel free to ask for clarification (but remember that only written words are binding); if you still don't underhand something, consider asking an attorneys help.
Joe and Marys contract included conditions that greatly increased their
financial risk. The first stated that if they defaulted (failed to pay), the full amount of the loan including interest would come due. That meant Joe and Mary owed far more than the actual value of the car. In a second condition, Joe and Mary agreed that the credit union could auction off the car to recover money owed and that the credit union could deduct expenses for the sale of the car from the amount received for the car. As a result, the car was sold for less money than book value, then hundreds of dollars were deducted from that amount. In the end, there was little left to put toward Joes and Marys debt. The final condition was a "promise by Joe and Mary to pay court costs and attorneys fees if the credit union sued and won. All perfectly legal, yet for Joe and Mary it spelled financial disaster.
If Joe and Mary had read the fine print, at the very least they wouldnt have had such a surprise. They might even have decided to buy a cheaper car (with more manageable loan payments) or have found a way, when trouble loomed, to sell the car themselves for more money. The question you should ask yourself is this: What is the worst that can happen to me as a result of this agreement? Once you know that, you can decide whether the risk is worth the possible gain. RV
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GETTING PERSONAL WITH
THE MAN WHO WROTE THE BOOK ON LATE-NIGHT TV TALKS
A
W^hen Jack Poor fnally found success at age 39 as host of NBC's Tonight. he was already a l eteran of more than 20 years in the entertainment business who had been a radio announcer. Gl comic, summer replacement tor Jack Benin and moi le actor But in his hi e years as Tonight s emcee (957-621. this late-night bloomer more than made up for lost time Paar attracted 35 million weekly viewers, earned NBC a gross income of $ 10 million yearly from adcertisers and doubled the network's late-night ratings After turning over Tonight to Johnny Carson, he went on to host a weekly show and numerous 7T ' specials More recently. Paar. now 65. has been leading a peaceful and ven private life with his wife of 40 years. Min-am. (daughter Randy is an attorney! pursuing favoiite hobbies such as gardening. tennis and reading He has also written an autobiography. P S, Jack Paar: An Entertainment (Douhle-dayi Paar took time the other day to reminisce with F.aiMiLf Weekly's Mary Ellin Bruns
Bruns: You write in your book, "I doubt that anyone will ever come near Johnny Carsons success. What is Carsons secret?
Paar: Anybody- whos been on the air in that format for 19 years has got to be the most extraordinary performer, and thats what Johnny really is, more than he is a conversationalist. He is a very-fine performer I dont think anvone will ever last as long as Johnny.
Q: Did it ever annoy you that Johnny took your show and ran with it?
Paar; No. no, gosh. no. Honev, if 1 wanted it, I would *ha\e it. I would
come back. 1 don't think there s ,i w'ork that wouldnt try- to work with ni on some idea if I wished to do it Bs that. I can assure you, I will not d"
Q: Did you ever feel intimidatei by a guest?
Paar: Oh. of course Ive been mt dated. Confidence, being in charge- -lot of thats an act. I probably was nmr sensitive than most people who art -1 the air today.
Q: How do you feel about tin amount of sex on TV and radio to day?
Paar: It offends me. I find it vulg.ir find some of the performers vulgar It such a tacky group of people toda\ Fht audiences are tacky, the performers ,irt quite tacky. Im glad Im out of it
Q: What is the secret of being good conversationalist?
Paar: The answer is to be a gcxtd list, n er. Those that dont listen cannot inn verse. And also, be really interested
Q: You once described your child hood as lonely. Why was that?
Paar: Did I say I was lonely Th i>' quite surprising. I dont think I've -..! been lonely, but we have ditferrn moods. But honestly, honey. 1 am tl.t one person you can almost be cert.ni of w-ho does not miss or need peei'lt around him ever, ever.
Q: Was it difficult for yourl daughter to have such a famous father?
Paar: Indeed it was very-. ver\ dif ficult. Yes, Randy had a very toiigl time. She also had a wonderful titiic She w'ould sit at the knee of Rdbert Morley and listen to his stories. Pin llh Diller would send her postcards Lnok what she got out of it. But it was tough Did she ever go to a dance or ha\ e <m\ fun as a kid? I would say she did ridt She became an adult when she was T and she lived like an adult.
Q: What makes you happy?
Paar: Not being on television. beinL secure. Theres nothing I need, then s nothing I want. I have good health M\ wife is well. My daughter is ha[)[iil\ married, successful. Now wh\ shouldnt I be happy' Wouldnt I he crazy if I wasnC
Q: If you could add a P.P.S. to your book, what would it be?
Paar: Ive made it. and Ive made it nii my own terms and with my ow n limita tions, which are considerable. How ( an -I be a failure? How could anyone hurt me I mean. 1 did it my way. I should learn to sing that sorig. shouldn t 1 because I think that reallv applies to me. FW
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To Celebrate Our 10 Millionth Sale!Quartz Watches Only ^2 With This AdThis is NOT a misprint.
This special offer is being made to celebrate the 10 miilionth watch Mfe of the famous New York jewelry firm of Abernathy & Closther. It is open to every person who mails this original printed ad to the company address (below) before Midnight, October 31,1983.
To celebrate its 10 millionth watch sale, the prestigious New York jewelry firm of Abernathy & Closther will distribute one million famous
LCD Quartz Calen-__
dan Watches for only $2 apiece to the first one million people who mail this printed ad to the company address before Midnight, Oct. 31, 1983.
These are the same famous LCD Quartz Calendar Watches to be< demonstrated on national TV and advertised in The New York Times and other leading publications.
A true calendar watch, it displays the hour, minute and secondas well as the month and day^in full quartz digital mode. Its built-in quartz computer is so powerful it never needs winding and is accurate to within seconds per month.
These famous LCD Quartz Calendar Watches will not be sold at this price by the company in any store.
NOTE: This original printed ad must accompany your request. Copies or photostats are not acceptable.
To obtain one at this price, mail this original printed ad to the company address below no later than Midnight, October 31, 1983.
Each watch carries a full money-back guarantee and w ill be replaced by the company, free of charge, if it ever fails to function.
There is a limit of 2 watches per address at this price, but requests which are mailed early enough (before October 22) are permitted to request up to 7 watches.
To obtain your watch, mail this original printed ad, together with your name and address and $2 for 'each watch. Add only $2 shipping and handling no matter how many watches you are requesting. Specifv Men's (Item #A22451) or Ladies'' (Item #A22452). Mail to: Abernathy : & Closther, $2 Watch Offer, Dept. 603-112, Box 1736, Hicksville, New York 11802. (A22450)
CAN
SCARE OFF DAYTIME . GUILT?
i-' By John E. GibsonTRUE OR FALSE?
I 1. Challenging your own values can be liazardous to your well-being.
I 2. Children rarely feel guilt>' about their behavior.
3. Nightmares tend to be therapeutic.
4. Sexually active people feel more uiltv about their behavior than sexual-l\ inactive persons.
5. Some people are burdened with ktuilt feelings for a lifetime because of
I their parents.ANSWERS
I 1. Tnie. Guilt results when a boundaiy',
; set by the conscience, is touched or i transgressed. According to Dr. James A. i Knight, professor of psychiatiy at Louisiana State Universib' School of Medicine, when you challenge or vio-l<ite your principles, you encounter i mn.sequences, such as guilt. But the , more you behave in the way you feel I \()u should, the less guilb' you'll feel about vour lifesbie.
2. False Heniy Clay Lindgren, professor of psycholog> at San Francisco Stale Universib, found in his personali-tv studies that adult consciences tend to be clearer than those of children, Be-eause the guilt inflicted by the const lence is sometimes more painful than punishment from a parent, many children magniK- their misdeeds and often tell their parents about mischief that would otherwise have escaped notice,
3. Tnje Severe, repetitive nightmares e.iti result from guilt that is consciously re[)ressed. For example; A person who doesn't want to address the guilt he feels trecause of something he's done mav ,stop thinking about it. But the anxieb becomes repres.sed in his unconscious and then finds an outlet in terrorizing dreams. However, these nightmares can be a relief. According to John E, Mack, a Har\ard psychiatrist, a person burdened with anxiety during the da\1ime may be unable to function effectively, if his feelings of guilt dont find expression,
4. False A L'niversib of Kansas stud\ showed that sexually inactive people have significantly higher feelings of sex guilt than sexually active people, Lniversib of Connecticut, studies concur w'~ and also suggest that sex guilt tends to go hand in hand with a belief in sexual m\ ths. for example, that certain foods act as aphrodisiacs.
5. True Psychological studies at Southern Methodist l'niversib (Texas) found that conditioned guilt " can persist for a lifetime. This guilt mav result from a child's being conditioned bv his
Famiia Wr.t:w> iktohc.k j ism 11
parents to feel that unless he achieves success in the areas of life they deem important, he is an inadequate, underachieving failure of whom they can't be proud. Some individuals can overcome
the guilt that parental expectations can inspire, but many never completely rid themselves of the feeling that they are to blame for their parents' disappointments. IW
1.* Tenms vaunon
lDtToaL)Co$U
HOM ati Sot tistiad
CaiiDmu-MooiOM Amricir
PItr oluE aiT >( wtirsips
Select one prize, enter on the form below it could become yours.mneli
Exact priifcs to be sclecti'd bv Scott Winners ntav exchange anv sueepstakes prize for 10 feet ofSlO.OO bills (S200.00).
OFFICIAL RULES NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Sweepstakes
1 If you wish to participate in the sweepstakes hand-pnnt or type your name address and zip code on the official entry certificate Place your entry along with 1 Cottonelle Seal of Quality or the name Cottonelle printed on a separate 3" x 5' piece of paper in a hand-addressed envelope no larger than 4 x9'i" (No lOenveiopel.affixfirst-classpostageandsendto Cottonelle Anniversary Sweepstakes
PO Box 82337 St Paul Minnesota 55162
No purchase is necejsary to enter Enter as often as you wish but mail each entry separately
2 All entries must be received by 12 15 83 Only official entry forms will be accepted Odds of winning a sweepstakes prize will be determined by the number of qualified entries received All sweepstakes prizes will be awarded No substitution of prizes is permitted Entry is void unless your choice of prize IS indicated *
3 All winners will be selected in a random drawing from among all entnes received by Carlson Marketing Group, an independent ludgmg organization whose decisions are final For a complete list of Sweepstakes prize winners send a self-addressed stamped envelope to Winners List PO Box 82340 St Paul Minnesota 55182
4 Prizes will be awarded as soon as compliance of winning entries with these rules is verified In order to be awarded a prize winning entrants must be able to be reached by mail at the address shown on their entry blanks or they must furnish a proper forwarding address prior to 12 15 83 to sweepstakes officials at PO Box 82322 St Paul Minnesota 55182
5 Sweepstakes are open to all residents of the United States except employees and their families of Scott Paper Company its agencies subsidiaries or affiliates. Void where prohibited or restricted by law Void via entry blanks distributed m retail outlets in Missouri which are alcoholic beverage licensees All federal state and local laws and regulations apply Limit one sweepstakes prize per family household or address
OFFICIAL SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY FORM
Check the prize of youi choice II. 12. 13.
16. -17. 18.
or10 leet of S10 Dills
15.
no.
AjC'iSS.
State.
Mail Comaieteti Suveeostakes entry to Coitonelle lOth Anniversary SAeeosiakes PO Box 82337 St Paul Minnesota 55182
NOTICE-ALL UNCHECKED ENTRY FORMS ARE VOID
^c.'" -APfc cc.w,. SCO .ire.p-
Announcing a first'time ever colkcting opportunity ...
Solid 14kt Gold Miniatures of the^rlds Great Gold Coins
The fifty most significant gold coins from all over the world as chosen by leading numismatic experts authentically re-created in finely detailed solid gold miniatures.
Miniiitunr ct>ms left 'hiiwn jctul mx; ai right, enlarged to \h(i* fine detail r
Edition limited to 25,000 sets world*wide.
Issue price: Just $35 for each solid 14kt gold miniature.
As rich as Croesus" ... the Midas touch ... After more than 2500 years, we still speak of Croesus and Midas rulers of the ancient realm of Lydia in Asia Minor, a land wfutse rivers were rich in gold, and where the worlds first gold coins were issued. And through all the centuries since, gold coins have heen the mtist precious and universally recognized form of money.
Now, for the first time, you have the opportunity to acquire a collection that emKxJies all the romance, beauty and historical interest of gold coins through the ages. A collection of fifty fine miniatures in solid 14 karat gold, re-creating in authentic and unparalleled detailthe great gold coins of the world.
A remarkable achievement
More than two years have heen spent in /oniting all the original coins arul arranging to have them represented in this collection. Thus, it will include authentic replicas m miniature of fifty of the greatest gold coins the wt>rld has knownfrom the Suiter of fCing Croesus to the Brasher DiiuNtHin ... from the Persiun Dane of Darius the Great to the stTulo Jtiro of Florence under the Medici ... from the 200 Mi^wrs of Shah jahanthe largest gold coin ever issuedto the high relief U.S. $20 taold Piece created by the .American sculptor Augustus St. Gaudenswidely regarded as the most beautiful gold coin of mixlcm times.
To re-create these great gold coins in miniature was an
enormous challenge fur The Franklin Mints skilled artists, die-makers and engravers. For it was necessary that each miniature gold coin be totally faithful to the original. Achieving the required fineness of detail in such a restricted space requires craftsmanship of the utmost skill. To preserve accuracy and authenticity, moreover, the miniatures will be in pToportfim to the originals. The collection will therefore include gold coins of various sfupes and sis.
As a subscriber, you will build your collection at the convenient rate of one gold miniature coin per month. And the issue price of $35 . will be guaranteed to you for each of the solid 14 karat gold miniatures in the collection. In addition, you will receive a handsome presentation case, magnifier and collectors tongs at no added charge.
Strictly limited edition
This collection of .solid 14 karat gold miniatures is available only by direct subscription ... only from The Franklin Mint ... and only in this single edition. Furthermore, the total edition is permanently limited to just 25,000 complete sets a rather small number for a numismatic issue. When each subscriber has received all his miniature gold pieces, the minting dies will be destroyed thereby assuring the rarity of the collection.
An exciting, educational adventure
There could hardly be a more worthwhile adventure in collecting than to acquire authentic miniatures of the great gold coins of the world. It will provide etrdless hours of enjoyment for you and your family. And your collection will be a significant legacy for future generarioru.
To subscribe, mail the application at right to The Franklin Mint, Franklin Center. PA 19091, by November 30th.
Sl BSi RIPTION APPLICATION
c IMS py 1
3145Solid 14 Karat Gold Miniatures of the Worlds Great Gold Coins
A limited edition of 25,000 complete sets.
VPlease mail by November 30, 1983.
The Franklin Mint Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19091 YES. 1 wish to subscribe to Solid 14 Karat Gold Miniatures of the World's Great Gold Coins, consisting of fifty finely detailed ^ miniatures, to be sent at the rate of one each month, at $35.* each. 1 will also receive a presentation case, magnifier, and collectors tongs, at no additional cost.
I need send no money now. 1 will be billed for each miniature gold coin in advance of its shipment. *Pku, uj
Signature. Mr. Mrs.
Miss_
Address. City.
State, Zip.
TMC HIANHLifil I ArriLiATio <
IHT it TMg AiO*LO'S LACCT lf|iVATC MiNT IT Ift *OT I THt ft Mint 01 ANY OTMtH COVtANMftNT AGtNCV
FOR THIS BASEBALL FAMILY.. .
There js joy
IN MUDVILLE
By Barry Jacobs
About an hour before play begins in the American and National League playoffs later this week and then during the World Series, the homeplate ump will give five or six dozen baseballs a thorough massage with a modified. })riraordial substance ^ mud, to be sfjecific, Lena Blackbumes Baseball Rub-(ling Mud.
Mud is applied to the baseball's cow-tiide surface to remove the gloss\ sheen (xirne by the ball vstien it emerges from ttie factor\. Without treatment, a new ball would be too slippery for a pitcher to grip ])roperly.
Lena Blackburne Mud is unique. Mixed with a little water, it forms a slight-! Iv sticky poultice that removes the slick-I ness from a baseball while leaving its surface virtually untainted.
Tm in tliis mud business for the betterment of baseball," says Bums Bintliff. who with his wife, Catherine, produces the secret-recipe ointment. We do this t)Kause we love baseball."
Bintliff, a 63-year-old retired carpenter, learned the formula for the black mud from his wifes father. He had received the recipe from his friend. Russell Lena" Blackburne, w'ho played major league t)aseball between 191 and 1919.
Blackburne eventually wound up coaching third base for Connie Macks Philadelphia Athletics. Mack asked Blackburne, who lived north of Philadelphia along the Delaware River, to I reate a rubbing compound for treating the balls used by the team. Blackburne < reated a concoction so good it gained quick acceptance.
Blackburne died without heirs in 1968 but passed along, his secret formula. Now Bintliff, who lives in Will-ingboro. N J., along the same east bank of the Delaware River, spends his winters creating about 4(X) pounds of Blackburnes baseball elixir.
Bintliff wont divulge where he gets his mud or what he mixes into it. Its more complicated than people think." he says. Bintliff supplies the mud in regular household coffee cans. Two cans will last through a teams full complement of more than 100 exhibition and regular-season home games.
Generally, an umpire spends about 15 minutes before a game rubbing up new balls. First he dampens the mud, gets a few dabs on his fingers, the palm ,
Bum Jacobs is a freelance u riter based in Hills-houiu^h. \ C
of his hand and the ball. Then he rubs the mud in until the leather sphere turns a creamier white.
To simplify and standardize the process, baseball executives have asked
ball manufacturers Spalding and Rawlings to come up with a modern substitute for Bintliffs rubbing compound. Thus far, no one has succeeded. Meanwhile, pitchers who wish to im
prove on the good works of the Bintliffs will just have to stick with thumb tacks, belt buckles, emor>' boards, petroleum jellv, hair 'cream and plain old saliva. W
Family Welki y (htobek j i 13
If you have questions like thes^get the free Family Insurance Checkup now.
Slate Farm Agent Doyle Ol.son. St. Charles. Illinois
Does my wife need life insurance?
With the expensive cars on the road tottay, is our anio insurance adequate?'
k
j me determine ^ What about personal how much life insurance Iriiility coven^e on
I need? i our boat?"
*Do we need extra health coverage in addition to my group?
I rent Do I redly need insurance?
Can State Farm help us Shoidd we carry hospital with business income
insurance?" Insurance?"
*1f our bouse bums down, Can you help us budget our
c have enough insurance insurance better?
to replace it '
WiO my auto liability cover a serious accident?
Wbuld an DtA plan be good for us?
"A Slate Fanil agent will show you where you stand on your auto. home, life and health insurance and leave any dt*cisioiis to you. See your bellow Pages and get a free Family Insurance (Iheckup now.
Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.
MAII MKMI\M KWI MiMI'\M|> llimi. nffi,,, ll!,.niii:i:ii'i: lliinm.
Quaker is about to tempt you again...
' ^
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...give in to temptation!
Quaker
Chewy Granola Bars.
New Quaker Peanut Butter & Chocolate Chip or r Chunky Nut & Raisin ; Che^ Granola Bars
sees
RETMLER: Quaker will reimburse you tor the tace value ot this coupon plus H when accepted trom your re tail customers in accordance with our redemption policy (copy avail able on request) and on the pur chase ot productts) specitied Only ittailers and Quaker authorized clearing houses send ta The Quaker Oats Company. 815 Commerce Drive, Oak Brook. It 60521 LIMIT ONE COU PON PER TRANSACTION Vbid it trans-terred, assigned, copied, taxed, licensed, or where prohibited Good only m US A, A PO s, EPOs Cash value OOK - 1983 QOC
WROM SOHO, THE ART OF ^OOD COOKING
By Marilyn Hansen
What better way to learn the craft of creative cooking than from the proprietors of the Soho Charcuterie, a successful restaurant in New York Citys Soho gallery district. To help you bnjsh up on your culinary skills. Charcuterie coowners Francine Scherer and Madeline Poley have created The Soho Charcuterie Cookbook, from which we selected the following recipes.
GRAPU ROUID 111 CMIVMAMPPlCAIiS
1 cup pecana
2 Ubieapoont tvalnut oil
2 ouncea cream cheeae. room temperature 24 green aeedlesa grapea 6 ouncea chvre (goaQ cheeae, room temperature
1. Over low heat, briefly saut pecans in oil until golden brown, drain on paper towels, and chop finely. Set aside.
2. Mix cheesesuntil creamy. To make balls flatten cheese .about 2 tablespoons at a time and gentK press grape into it; cheese should surround the grape. Roll cheese ball until smooth and round. Roll ball in pecans until completely covered Refrigerate at least 30 minutes before seizing. Makes 24 ^rape<heese ball;
nilNCH TOAST
2 loaves challah or brioche bread 6 extra-large eggs, at room temperature 2 tablespoons brandy (optional)
'b cup heavy cream
V4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
2 tablespoons maple syrup
3 tablespoons freshly squeezed orange Juice
Vi teaspoon grated cinnamon stick I cup clarlfled butter Butter and syrup Orange slices
1. Using a serrated knife, trim 'A inch off ends of challah loaves, then turn each loaf upside down to slice. Make slices 1 inches thick. (Reserve excess for bread crumbs.) Spread slices so thev can drv slightly.
2. In a large mixing bowl, combine remaining ingredients, except clarified butter. Tilt bowl as you stir to insure a smooth mixture. (Stir again before each use; otherwise the egg whites settle to the bottom and cinnamon floats to the top.)
3. At medium-high temperature, heat '/2 cup clarified butter in a pan until small bubbles form around the edge.
4. Place a slice of challah in batter, pressing down gently. Turn over and repeat on other side. Lightly squeeze soaked bread to eliminate excess batter, place in the melted butter, and cook 1'/: minutes, or until
^Cipn from The Softo Cfurcunrie CooAbook. . 1983 oy Fnnclne Schww and Madaline Polay. Reprinted by permission of trie publisrier, William Monow and Company Inc.
golden brown. With spatula, chip awav e.x-cess batter. Lower heat, gently slide spatula under slice, turn over, then rook other side 30 seconds, or until golden brown.
5. Remove pan from burner to prevent butter from overheating while dipping
each slice. Before frying remaining slices, remove from butter any small bits of batter or bread.
6. Place all cooked slices on a baking sheet and place in preheated 450F oven for ap-proximatelv 10 minutes. Serve with fla
vored butter and syrup, such as orange butter and maple-cinnamon symp, and garnish with thin slices of orange. After fr\-ing four pieces of French toast, its necessary to add 'A cup more clarified butter to pan Makes 4 sen ings
How to play the market without risking your life*
Family Weekly oaoBER 2 isss 15
It used to he sc^ easy.
Risk some money in the market for growth. Keep the rest in the bank and buy a life insurance policy for security. Inflation has changed all that, and a lot of people are risking that security tcxlay just to stay even with the economy.
Theres cinother way.
John Hanccx:k Variable Life. Unlike most other plans, John Hancock Variable Life lets you invest some of your premiums in stocks, K)nds, or the
money market, with the oppoitunit> to i---------7-----1
addtothe value of your coverage without I
increasing your pre-1 mium. At the same | time, it guarantees | the face cimount of I
1 need to review my life insurance program.
I'liMM M nd iiif niori' n>mplftc mfnrin.ition and a ln>spci.' tii>, iiuliidinj; iliarcc!. ,ind ixptn'i I'd like to rc.id thf m.iteri.ils v.irdullv k-tun- mvc'tini; or forwardini; funds.
the policy you buy no matter what.
Send us the coupon for more information, including a Prospectus. Learn how John Hancock Variable Life can help you create a certain estate in m all tcx) uncertain world.
I wikjIJ liki- to Hx j lolin 1 l.ini.oik ri-^otcrcj rfprcscnfatixc
I iinili.Tsr.ind I .iin iindiT no oMn;,inini VU I'h.m.
miniKr is___
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S.iniT,
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I Mail l(K lohn I l.mcosk N'ari.ihk' I ilo Insiir.iiKc t o
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I I
Ikosfon. M.isvuhusftrs (.'2117
1j0l(^00283j
We can help you here and now. Not just hereafter.
Lenox.
Springtime
Frmenade
tremiere issue in a Lenox ' to .American fashioncreated under the guidance of our countrys leading costume experts.
Individually crafted of fine hand-painted porcelain. Available by advance reservation only.
It I' thf -priiivj of IM.iand a lady of fa>hion taking; her itternoon 'troll throu^jh the park. .\s she walk>, the eleki.int la\er>ot >ilk taffeta rustle with every step. Her t.;enti\ 'I .illoped "nieltinK candle" sleeves, lace collar, kid i^love^ and eyelet parasol identify her as a ladv of iiTipeccable >tyle and ta>te.
>pnnK'time Iromenade" i> the hiytissut in the .\iiierican Fa>hion Fi>;urine Collection by Leno\. created under the K'uidance of a distmiiuished panel of fashion authoritie>Vera .Maxwell, world-renowned desi>,mer; Carrie Robbins, award w inning Broadway costume de>igner: Robert Riley. The Fashion Institute of Teclinolo).i\ and .Matthew Kiernan. The Costume .Society ot .\merica. i'hi> lovelv fiirurine i> historicallv accurate down to the fitie't detail.
A Handcrafted Work of .Art
Co!kei\ed and desi^^ied by the artists of Lenox and creati'd exclu'ivelv under their direction by master cralt'inen in Japan, each ti^iurine is individuallv crafted ot ihe fine't bi'C^ue p<rcelaincaptunnK ixtraordman ,i> tml in mi the ro'ettes on the boi^-t to the ribbons on the drt" and the lace on the sleeves, collar and parasol.
\ Skilled artisans p;iint eaiitipiece fn hand, creating a delicately colored work of ,irt of incomparable beauty. \nd. each figurine is embellished on its base in pim24 karat c/(/ with the title and the world-famous Lenox trademark, the sunbol of unsurpassed quality and cnift'inan'hip.
Available Only Direct from Lenox
Sprinqtinie I'ronienade is available only bv advance reservation direct tnmi Lenox and will not be sold throuh even the most pre'ti^nous dealers or alienes. The original is^ue price i' .'H.'). payable m iik mthly installments of onlv.SlH with no tuiam f I har^t Kach fiurine is accompanied b\ a Certificateof Authenticitv and litera-. ture on the histor v of .American fashion.
As the owner of this first is*.ue. you will have the opportunity to acquire subsequent historical fashmn fijiurinesas they become available. However, vou will not be obligated to purchtise subsequent issues and. of course, your satisfaction X'^compkh h^tuaranUrd.
isince each fi,urine is individually handcrafted, please .allow six to eight weeks for deliverv. Resen ations are accepted in strict sequence of receipt and should !x' postmarked by .November Bit. Iftb.'f. Topl.ace vour resenation. mail the application or call TOLL-FREE
r
RESERVATION.APPLICATION-----
Ilea^ enter my reservation for 'Sprinirtinie 1ronien.ide." the first issue in The American Fashi. hurine Collection by Lenox. I need send no money now and prefer topa\ as follows:
lilRKc 1.1 will be billed for a deposit of .>19 r plus .>2.2.')
'hippin and handlin. in .idv ance of shipment. After shipment. I will bt' billed tor the balance in 4 equal monthiv installim-nts of $19each.
10 cRKHlT C.ARF). Please bill the follow mg credit lard acci lunt the lull amount of .>9.')? plus ,>2.2.A shipping and handling, after my figurine has been shipped to me.
M.islerc.irri Vls\ .Vmeruan Kxpress plu' New Jersev s.ies lax it applicaWe.
Acciiuni No
-Kxpire-
V! '<rdfr
Mail to:
Lenox Collections
1 Prince Street. CN lil.RH Trenton. New Jersey uH'W-OhJt
Please mail by .November 3. 1983
L
J
MAKING THE GRADE WITH YOUR CHILDS TEACHER
By Norman Lobsenz
Im having a conference with my childs teacher tomorrow. a young Los Angeles mother told me recently, and I feel like a kid being sent to the principal's office! Its common for parents to feel nervous about paren t-teacher meetings, where their beloved childs progress \m1I be analy2)ed and disaused. Yet, with nervousness set aside, these meetings can be ke\ opportunities to help the voung student.
Most American schools si hedule parent-teacher corv ferences two to four times a \ear, in kindergarten through eighth grade, to augment the information the report card provides. But because each conference is crften terribly short, its up to the parent to make the most erf that time. Here are some ways to make these meetings productive.
Come to the meetng with an mind. Some parents arrive ready to defend their child against any and all criticism, says Harpid Silver-stein, president of the Santa Monica, Calif., Classroom Teachers Association, and they take any native comment as an attack on themselves. But its much better to think of the conference as a chance to share information to help the youngster, rather than a confrontation."
Be prepared with specific questions, not vague ones, suggests Susan White of Takoma Park, Md., a grade-school teacher in the Wnce Georges County school ^stem.
I nstead of asking, Hows Susie doing?, ask about her reading skills or why shes in a remedial math group, says White. Ask, How often does Jane volunteer in class? or, What are Billys best and worst subjects? or, How does Nancy get along with her classmates?
Insist on spedflc angers, too, advises Patience Tekulski, a special-education
teacher in the Los Angeles school system. Its not enough for the teacher to say, Michael needs to do better in English. You need to know where the child is falling behind and how he can improve.
Ask to see samfdes of
Borman Lobsenz is author of Equal imefDoubkday).
your childs classroom work. This is one way to find out, Tekulski says, whether a youngster who says hes doing fine is reporting accurately.
Avoid comparing this teacher with others your child has had. There is no one right way to teach a sub-
IMtoreBits!
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RETAILER Quaker will leimtiufse m tor the lace value of this coupon plus 71 when accepted from your retai customers m accordance witn our redemption pokey (copy available on request) and on the purchase of productfs) specified Only retailers and Oualerauthorded clearing houses send to The Quaker Oats (forr^. 815 Commerce Drive. Oak Brook. IL 60S21 UMT ONE COUm PER TNANMCTKM. Vbk) if transferred copied, taxed, kcensed. or where prohitxtod Good only i USA , APOs. . <i Is Cash value OOlf vU96300C
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ject or work with a youngster, Silverstein points out. And in fairness to your child and his or her classmates, dont ask the teacher to compare your child with others in the class.
Ask ahout the curriculum. You have a right to know why there is more emphasis on, say, spelling than reading. Share your concerns if you feel, for example, that your child is getting too little of one subject and too much of another.
If the teacher uses academic jargon, ask him or her to rephrase the comment in simple En^h.
Some teachers, says White! use phrases such as developmental problems or lack of social skills' out of habit. But jargon makes simple situations sound much worse than they may actually be, So by all means, ask, What exactly do you mean by that?
Have the child present at the conference if the school permits. Try not to let yourigsters feel that two grown-ups are talkirig secretly about them, says Silverstein. A child whos included in the meeting is less likely to feel ganged up on.
After the conference, fnd a way to compliment your child. Youngsters worry about whats said at these meetings," says Tekulski. Itll ease a childs concern if you say something like, I see how hard your schoolwork is or, I really like your teacher By the same token, its a good idea to gently discuss the teachers su^estions. Constructive criticism is a base on which to build.
Tell the teacher about any special home circumstances. If theres marital trouble, a new baby, a serious illness or other pressure, a childs schoolwork may be affected. Access to such inside information can help the teacher be more sensitive to vour childs needs. RV
FaMIIV WkKKI V (laoBER 2 19S.I 17
HOME ON THE PRICE RANGE >
Real estate prices vary-widely from city to city-, which makes it' hard to know where you stand when you're thinking of moving to another town. Will that
Grapes of Wrath ' homeseekers
SlOO.OiiX) house you have in Indianapolis^cost you more than $250.000 in Los ! .Angeles^
I A new guidebook called ^ The Home Pnce Comparative ' Index may help solve this price dilemma. It lists housing costs in 115 cities across the I country, based on a typical ; one-family house with three i bedrooms, two baths, living ' room, family room, twocar I garage and basement. Such a i house, according to the index,
I would cost around S75,OiXJ in ' Mobile, Ala,, $135,000 in a New York City suburb and S325,(XX) in Los Angeles. For the free guidebook, call (toll-. free): 800-323-7097; in Illinois,
. 8on-942-:ii)!8BIG SISTER IS WAKHING OUT FOR YOU
Toda nov
to I
lay s security firms are now finding it necessary to supply female bodyguards for ihe increasing number of women in VIP jobs. And though you d think that men would require more brawn in their protectors, male execs are beginning to ask for women guards, too, partly because it's easier to pass off a woman guard as a secretary or a friend.
Women in the protective services" usually have the same training as their male counterparts, but the women do have a special talent that makes them extremely valuable. Says Herman Marx, president of Personal Protection Service in Los Angeles, 'Today's worst security threats come from terrorists and no one is more dedicated and vicious than a female terrorist. Women agents, he explains, are especially good at spotting these dangerous ladies.JUST UKE MOM'S
allege cafeteria food has |Probably never been *No. 1 on any student's
Hi
SI5MCA>WAr St A tou. N
hit parade, but the University of California-Davis has decided to do something about that. In an effort to make their food taste more like Moms, UC-Davis has invited parents to send their offsprings favorite recipes to school. So far, a committee of University chefs, students, nutritionists and food service managers have tested 48 of the more than 600 recipes sent in, and about 10 of these have been Incorporated into the menu.GOVERNMENT TRUST BUSTED
ave you heard a lot of stories lately about how we Americans no longer trust one another^ Well, don't believe them. According to The Merit Report, a public-opinion survey, Americans place an exceptionally high level of trust in family members and close friends. Nearly all of the 1,207 adults surveyed report having a family member (98 percent) and a non-family member (92 percent) to whom they can turn when the going gets rough.
Very few, though, are ready to put their faith in Government officials and institutions. Only 39 percent of those surveyed think that the Government is run for the people rather than for big interests
The researchers also were able to demographlcally sift the faithful from the doubting Thomases. High trust people, they found, tend to be men. Republicans and blessed are the believers the affluent. Low trust" people most often are women, people age 50 or over, those with incomes under $15,000, large<ity dwellers and Democrats.Fs^llllv^^cckly
Says Dr. Donald J. Treiman, professor of sociology at U.C.LA. and a Report consultant, The degree of trust people have in others generally reflects the amount of control they have over their own lives. For this reason, higher-income people tend to be more trusting than lower-income people, and those who live in large cities tend to be less trusting than othersBIRTHDAYS
(All. Libra) Monday
Chubbv Checker 42: Gore Vidal 58.
Tuesday Charlton Heston 59: Susan Sarandon 37. Wednesday
Glynis Johns 60. Thursday
Thor Heyerdahl 69: Janet Gaynor 77. Friday June Allyson 60. Saturday Chevy Chase 40; Jesse Jackson 42.
.turns 42 on Monday. Indeed, he^lpurs extensively, and his shovv regularly sells out in Europe. Japan and South .Africa as well as in the United States. .And next year will bring exposure with a new twist. Hell star with Mia Farrow and Bmce Dern in a movie about a man's tran.sfor-mative weight loss, a subject Checker whos no Ic
WHERE HAVE YOU GONE. CHUBBY CHECKER-
Debutantes did it. Dick Clark did it. Even the Duke and Duchess of Windsor did it. But nobody did The Twist the way Chubby Checker, the King of Twist, did it. Twentv-three years ago, he swivelled onto ihe scene with the hit record that made him a household word Today he still barnstorms the country, inviting young and old alike to come onstage and throw out their backs with a true rock n' roll music legend. .
Tm not making a comeback, because Ive never been awav. savs Checker, who
Tubby Chubby (right), slim emersin (left).
chubby knows well I must have jogged 8,0(X) miles in the last few years." he says.
Today Checker lives in a Philadelphia suburb with his wife. Rina Lodders. a former Miss World, and their three children. Early ne.xt year, though, the family will move to a 280-acre farm in Delaware where Checker will try his hand at raising Arabian horses.
Tve gotten eveiything I wanted out of my life,' says Checker. ' Ive had people do me wrong, but I just keep on going, trying to give a good performance and make people happy"
Thats why, he theorizes, when you say Chubbv Checker to people, they smile. Its almost as though I'm the Bugs Bunny of rock 'n' roll."
Next week in FAifoy WiEEXur: Has a Russian mole infiltrated theCJ A?
PfMldMil tnd Pub*h*f
Patrick M Lmskey
Vice PrMldwil and Ad OIractor
Gerald Wroe
VIca PraaManI and Oanl. Mgt
Jonathan Thompson
Chatnnan Emartlua, Mo''or
18 Famii> Wr.KKi.v u nihkr >. iwt
Exacuiive Editcx Kate Wue Managing Editot T,m MuHigan Design Oirectot Rooen Aitemus Senior Editors. Pair ee Aacrott E ioi Kawn Food Editor Man yn Hansen Assoc Editor Mary Eiiin Bruns Asslslani Editor E 'en Kunes Copy Editor D'ana Browne Research. Karen Emmons Photo Editor, Victoria Biair Art Director. Rich Starn Art Services Director. Richaro Vaidan Asst Art Director Susan Pereua Art Associate. Baroara JaPon Contributing Writers. Robert Coies Norman Loosenr Anita Summer Katharine Lowry (Teas) Kathleen Maxa ana Jane Ottenoerg iWashmgionj Robert Wmoeier iLos Ange'est
VP Mtg 4 Dir of Operations. Richard Minen Prod Dir. Ch'isime Carman Planning, Michael Montemurro Makeup Mgt, WiHiam Kenny Typographer, Deora Rose V P-Assoc Ad Dir. joe Fraser jr Eastern Mgr. Lewis G Green Dir, Client 4 Agency Relations, James B Powers Assoc Eastern Mgt. Richard K Carroii Southern Mgr Kenneth j Sherry Detroit Mgt, Lawrence M Finn Caiit, Permns Sperling von de'Lieth and Jones V.P. Marketing Dit, Siamey Rosenieid MarKeting Mgt, Kent D Alessandro Promotion Dir Pat- cia Kyie Creative Dir, Robert Banker Sis Pro Mgr. Dorothy Schoenieid Merchandising Mgr, Donna Gentiie Spec Events Mgr. Lydia Janow
NewspaperRelatlons V P.. LeeEiiis V P Newspaper Services, Rooen j Christian Newspaper Rel Mgrs., James G Baher Robert H Marnott RonSeivaggio JoseonC Wise Transpor-tation Mgr. jim McCann Distribution Mgr., Phyii.s Pihero Consumer Svcs.. Lmoa Mount Admin. Asst. Ba'oa-a Snapno V P.-Finance. Anan Rabmowi'z Controller. James T Enngntjr
MORETHANA
NEW LOOK,
A NEW OUTLOOK.AT&T
Were the new AT&T. A new company with a new symbol. But were not exactly a newcomer. We have more than a hundred years experience and a worldwide reputation. With the breakup of the Bell System, we know we must earn your confidence all over againunder new circumstances.
As we compete for your business, well stand out from the aowd by giving you better service than anyone. Thats a commitment.
And well offer you the most advanced technology from our world-renowned Bell Laboratories. Thats a guarantee.
Well be the brand name that means dependable, state-of-the-art phones for your home, the best information systems for your business and the one and only long distance service that lets you reach out and touch anyone, any timeaaoss the nation and around the world.
Well use our research, development and marketing talents to keep American communications technology the best in the world.
Were the new AT&T. Our new outlook is also our competitive strategy and our goal: to give you every reason, every day, to choose us.
Another Great Night For Flannel Sheets!
|[f|| amp, bone-chilling fogs, icy rain and snow, fierce winds roaring in off of stormy seas.
Just the thought of bleak English winters used to give me the shivers. But then I discovered the secret way the British cope with all their cold, dreary weather.
Theres more to it than thick country tweeds, wooly sweaters and tea in front of cheery fire!
At night you snuggle down in the most marvelous old-fashioned, flannel sheets and pillowcases. They keep you warm as toast, no matter how cold the room. Honestly, its like being wrapped in a comfy cocoon all night long.
What makes these amazing sheets so very extra special?
They are made of 100% virgin cotton flannel, a fabric universally acknowledged to be the worlds finest.
Feather light and downy thick, these incredibly lush sheets are nothing like those flimsy, pilled kind kids used to have for summer camp. You
have to feel them to believe them. They are so densely woven,fashionable interior decorators use them for slipcovers, bedspreads and draperies.
Because this flannel is pure and natural, your sheets are completely non-allergenic and non-static. They machine wash like a dream, getting better and better with years of use, just like fine old English silver. In summer they are perfect when you want a light cover.
It used to be that Americans had to go abroad to find 100% cotton flannel sheets. Now you can get them quickly and easily from Agathas Cozy Corner. Its the best way I know to pamper yourself in winter.
I also have exceptional
down comforters and some other wonderful things as well as unique flannel sheets in a wide variety of colors. Ill be happy to send you my new catalog. Its printed in full color, and gives the pictures and story of everything we sell. Send for your FREE copy today.
c 1983 Agatha s Cozy Corner
AGATHA'S COZY CORNER DEPT. 90393 Woodbury Plaza Portsmouth, N.H.
03801
Yes! 1 would like to receive a FREE copy of Agathas Cozy Corner Catalog. Please send it right away.
Print Mamo.
Address_
Citv__
State.
. Zip_
YOU Ft FJkVOFtMTE
conticsTHE DAILY REFLECTOR*
GREENVILLE, N.C.
KEWS
FEATURES SFORTS
PEANUTS
SI NOW. OCTOBtR 1 I98J
PIP YOU SEE TWAX SIR?
I threw the ball,
AMP IT CAME RI6HT
by Charles Schulz
/MARCIE! I TOLP YOU TO WAIT 'TIL I 60T POWN THE PIELP!,'
1993 United Feature Syndicate, inc.
ANOy CAPP
I MLST GET MESELF TO BED. I'VE BOOKED A FISHIN' TRIP POR THE MORNIN' - OPE I DON'T, OVERSLEEP
7
by
TOP IN an' ask FLO ID GIVE VOU AN EARLV CALL
BEETLE BAILEY
by Mort Walker
CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? There are at least six diHer enees in drawing details between top and bottom panels. How quickly can you find them? Check answers with those below
by Hal Kaufman
WHAT HOI What can you put in a pail of water to make it weigh less? A hole. What can you double and still have the same number? Your fists. What is it that everybody
in the world is doing at the same time? Growing older.
# Name Game! Complete each word with a three
letter girl's or boy's name; 1. ________ato. 2. O
--._..ful.3. ona.4, alty.5. ious.
6.------aritan. Ex.: EVEning.
1
2
3
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WORDSQUARE WITS TESTER
Five words corresponding to the definitions below complete the word square problem above. How quickly can you find the miss mg words? (Word number 1, FROST, is already in place).
1. This is often on the pumpkin in Fall.
2. One who handles a lasso with skill.
3. Express a view.
4. Mails a letter.
5. A lock of hair. Remember, a word
square consists of words that read the same both across and down.
s i.puds r <uiclo [ juduy c iwjj ( jvv^uv
uiws 9 p*i$ UJ|X t *or luoi I ssitMiqisiOd
# Sum Coins! Place four U.S. coins in a row so that the first equals V3 the second plus fourth; the fourth is 1/5 the second; and the third and fourth are 3/5 of the first. What is the order?
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Pun Crock! Fanfare cost of traveling to stadium. Bobolink a kind of brook. Heedless a cold house. Neuritis novices in the publishing field.
PACK MAN! Apply colors neatly to enhance the racing scene above: 1Red. 2Lt. blue. 3Yellow. 4Lt. brown, 5Flesh 6-Lt. green. 7-Dk. brown. 8-Dk. blue. 9-Lt. purple. 10-Gray^
THERE are 12 squirrels in the scene above one tending to business, 11 frolicking about. See if you can locate all 12.
SPELLBINDER .....
SCORE 10 points for using all the
two complete words:
OBEDIENT
........
THEN score 2 points each for ail
found among the letters.
Try to score at least 50 points.
dUOq '(910
THE PHANtOM
by Lee Falk
FLASH GORDON
by Dan Barry
^LA^H, WANPBRING LOST ON TAB PLAl^BT KKORBU, RUNS /A/TO A 5UPPBN SNAO ...
WHO AR& ycu, yLLOW- I AM FLA6M 60^P0N .
HAIR ? HOW COMB FROM A FAR WORLC?
you TO OUR LANO? . SEVONP tHB 5TAR9,
seeking lost PRIENP5
you ARE FAR /^FIELP, STRANGE ONs/ why have you COME SO FAR OFF
r AM HERB BECAUSE / HE IS A *^/ONLY A fAAN-60P CAN CROSS
A whirlpool ANP
AN UNREROROUNO CURRENT CARRIBP ME HERE
FU6ITIVB' SEE? HE IS IN THE PRESS OF A SA0AN OLAPIATOR'SLAVE / y
THE STAR'S OR SURVIVE THE KiVER BENEATH THE R6EF=S".' LBT
HIS WORRS, BRAVE LEAPOR I
BARNEY
a lid
REDEYE
by Gordon Bess
/ TANleLEF?OT/,FATMER 5AIC you MAD started WEARll^e TWD FEATMERS
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by Braut parkcr and Johnny hart
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MY FEUUOM/ UNFORTUNftTE
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HAS RESTOREP PEACE
TO the town oforr;
BRITONS ANP SAXONS RESOLVE TO LIVE AS NEIGHBORS. FOR THE MO/V^ENT, HATREP IS PUT ASIPE AS BOTH PEOPLES TURN TO THE WORK AT HANP. AFTER YEARS OF PILLASE THE LAMPS OF-ORR ARE IN POOR SHAPE INPEEP.
HOMES MUST BE REBUILT ROOFS THATCHEP. ROAPS PATCHEP. THERE IS NO TIME TO WASTE; SOON IT WILL BE WINTER. ARN OVERSEES THE WORK AlPEP BY MUNGO, WHOM HE APPOINTS FOREMAN OF THE ROYAL ESTATES.
ABOVE ALL, THE PAMS ANP WEIRS MUST BE REPAIREP lest AUTUMNAL RAINS RAVAGE THE PLAIN. AT THIS THE SAXONS, LEP BY HEN6IST THEIR CHIEFTAIN, PROVE APEPT FOR THEIR LOW- LYING HOMELANP WAS LIKEWISE KEPT FROM THE SEA'S EMBRACE ONLY BY THE HANPOF MAN.
BUT THE SAXONS ARE SLOW TO GRASP SOME OF THE FINER POINTS OF CIVILIZATION. THE FORMER PIRATES MAKE SKILLEP FISHER-MEN, BUT ONE PAY THEY RETURN WITH A SHIP IN TOW ANP MORE THAN HERRING IN THEIR HOLPS. FOR RANSOM,"
HENG15T EXPLAINS PROUPLY.
ARN 0RPER5 THE CAPTIVES RELEA5EP, FEEP5 THEM ROYALLY, ANP THE NEXT MORN GIVES THEM BACK THEIR SHIP. BUT NOT LONG AFTERWARPS HENGIST HAS ANOTHER IPEA. "//?/zV/G//7;" HE TELLS ARN, PUT OUT mPNlNS U&HT THERE AND BUfLD NEW FIRE HERE, SHIPS CRASH ONTO POCKS AND tNE PLUNDER CARGOS AND SELL CREW AS SLAVES."
2^ 3^ (? 1963 King Features Syndicate, Inc World rights reserved. 10-A
^'YES, YES, 1 GUARANTEE," HE CONTINUES. "VIEMAKE MUCH PROFIT FOR OUR KING." ARN CONCLUPES THAT LIFE AS THE PARKER OF ORR WILL NOT BE PULL.
NEXT WEEK: TKc SummOUS
PONYTAILby Lee HolleyTHATG GREAT /
YOULU HAVE TO COME OUT ANP WATCH ME PLAY'
V"
1983 Kwg Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved
LAST VEAI? VOJl? POSITION WAS