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DEDICATION
The new Howard Dawkins wing of the Eastern Carolina Vocational Center has been dedicated. Story on A-15.
SIGH OF RELIEF
East Carolina pulled out a 21-18 victory over stubborn Southwestern Louisiana Saturday afternoon. Page B-1
Today's Reading
Abby ..........C-9
Arts....,.......... C-10-13
Bridge......................A-16
Building....................D-4
Business...:........B-13-15
Classified............D-6-11
Crossword................D-5
Editorial....................A-4
Enter'ment.........C-14-16
Opinion.....................A-5THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 223
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE, N.C. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 9, 1983
120 PAGES9 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTS
r
East Carolina...........21
SW Louisiana..........18
Clemson................42
Virginia ..... .wf;. ..21
Virginia Tech..7^7.....27 Duke ..........14
North Carolina.........30
Wake Forest.........,..10
Georgia Tech...........20
N.C. State..............10
Texas....................28
Oklahoma..............16
Penn State..............34 i
Alabama ......28 .
Pittsburgh..............17
Florida State .....16 '
i
Nebraska .....14
Oklahoma State.......10
h .\T.\L (OLLIMON ,\ Kuiisus Cll\ miiii was rpporled killed Saturday nii>hi m the iidlision ol an automobile and a van on \.('. II south of (ireenville. .Members of the Winterville Heseiie squad and tii, unrm adnimister emergency aid toone ol the crash \ietims above. Details of the- trash were not
a\ailahle, hut the impact appaitilth oevurred on (he driver's side of the ear, \ spokesman tor Pill (omil\ Mtmorial Hospital said two other ititn were iiijuied. \o names were released. (Helleeioi f'lioiu hv iommv Forrest)
Senate Passes New Tobacco Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI The Senate has approved legislation to overhaul the current grower-financed federal tobacco program, including a provision to gradually phase out the practice of non-growers holding tobacco allotments.
The tobacco program was included in afarm bill which
passed by voice vote Friday after two days of debate. The bill is still pending in the House,
The legislation gives new tobacco growers a greater percentage of tobacco quotas, eliminates the so-called double assessment on growers and abolishes the practice of lease and transfer
by 1987.
"Double assessment occurs when allotment holders hike rental prices to include federal assessment costs, forcing the grower to pay not only his own assessment but the allotment holders-
Guided through by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-S.C., chairman of the Agriculture
Committee and tobaccos Senate champion, the bill faced its greatest challenge Thursday in an effort by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, to eliminate the program altogether.
Metzenbaum said it was an "offensive paradox for the government to promote the production of tobacco
through a "feudal price support system while urging its citizens not to smoke.
Helms called the charge "highly charged emotionalism." Metzen-baums amendment was killed, 57-33.
The bill includes an amendment introduced by Sen. Mack Mattingly. R-Ga',
By SI K HINSON Kefieclor Staff Writer
If you choose to ignore the new driving while impaired law and get caught, you might just end up spending several weekends or weekdays picking up trash at one of the citys parks, being a courier or even helping paint a county office building.
Tasks such as these, while
DWI? Broom May Be Next
nnt thiJ nnl\' Antinnc- Arv/vn 1a n ...
not the only options open to convicted offenders, are a sampling of what you may have to do if convicted of driving while impaired. Twenty-six people were charged in the first week in Pitt County with DWI after the law went into effect at 12 a.m. Oct. 1. The court date of the first trial has been tentatively set for Oct. 17. .All those arrested for driving
under the influence before Oct. 1 will be tried under the old law.
Not all .offenders will be eligible for communitv service, however. "Only lower level offenders will be eligible for community service, Tami Kernen, Pitt and Craven County coordinator of Alternative Community Services Inc. the agency that will be re
sponsible for those sen-denced to community service, said.
"Part of our position here will be to find out what skills and interests a person has and arrange for community work that corresponds," Mrs. Kernen said. "A professional may be sentenced to hold a lecture at Pitt Community College, a plumber sentenced to repair
some leaky pipes in one of the county buildings or a writer may be told to go to a non-profit nursing home and write letters or read for people who cannot do this for themselves. Others will be sentenced to clean up parks or perhaps clean up vacant lots in the city and county."
Some of the agencies an offender can expect to work iFIeaseLurniA-31
that treats small allotments the same as large ones. The original bill would not have phased out allotments on quotas less than 3,0(XI pounds until 1989.- Mattinglv's amendment phases them out m 1986.
"If you owned a tobacco allotment, you would have through 1986 to lease it," said Richard Moore, a spokesman for Mattingly. "After that." you have to start growing tobacco yourself or sell to an active grower. "
Price supports remain frozen at 1982 levels under the bill until at least 1984, which Helms and other tobacco state leaders believe will enable domestic crops to again become competitive in international markets.
The 1982 "no net cost program set up a system that has the nation's 276,OO tobacco growers in 22 states picking up the costs of the federal tobacco program through assessments.
CEREAL AND CONVERSATION ... Chuckie Grant, right, of Snow Hill gets his breakfast from Winterville-Ayden-Grifton Center teacher Kim Edwards, left, as a classmate waits his turn. The center provides care for mentally and physically
retarded children ages 6 months to 10 years. Breakfast, above, is the start of a typcial day at the center. (Reflector Photo By MarySchulken)
Child Center Offers Basics
ByMARYSCHlLKE.N Reflector Staff Writer GRIFTON ~ At breakfast lime early-morning sun peeps through the windows in the bright kitchen.
Hungry kids stir in their chairs, occasionallv knocking their legs against the rungs, a gesture of child-like impatience One by one theyre fed cereal and conversation and their faces fill with smiles.
Another day is under way at the Winterville-Ayden-Grifton (WAG) Child Development Center, a place where moderately, severely and profoundly mentally anil phvsicallv retarded youth receive basic training.
According to director Sandra Hardison, the 18 children the center currently serves range from 6 months to 7 years old and from moderately to profoundly retarded.
Mrs. Hardison, one special education teacher and four assistant teachers staff the WAG Center and teach things like language skills, muscle coordination and motor skills. They also offer speech, physical and occupational therapv and have a l-to-5 teacheb-to-ctudent ratio,
"We work with each individual child according to his or her areas of deficits, said Mrs, Hardison. "We work on hand-eye coordination, we work on large muscle coordination, we work on cognitive learning, or learning through repetition - for example the alphabet, shapes, colors. The center also stresses behavior modification and self-help skills such as Chewing and swallowing.
According to Mrs. Hardison, the typical child at the WAG Center is a "mentally retarded child with an IQ of, say, around 50, with language problems,
(Please turn to A-HI
Reagan Says Soviets Are Resupplying Syrian Army
. . A R. ALLEN
~ President Reagan said Saturday that the Soviet I nion has installed new offensive SS-21 missiles in Syria, drawing into question Svrias "protestations ol peaceful intentions" in the Lebanese conflict In his weekly radio address, Reagan confirmed what F S otlicials had hinted - that new Soviet SS-21 surface-to-surface missiles capable of hitting Israel, I'.S, Marines near Beirut and Navy ships in the Mediterranean had been installed on Syrian territory.
H^sgan- speaking from Camp David, .Md . said Israel and Lebanon had reached a security agreement "But Syria which had earlier agreed to withdraw if Israel did, changed its mind and today has some 5,000 .Soviet advisers and technicians and a massive amount of new Soviet equipment in its countrv including a new generation of surface-to-surface missiles - the SS-21 We have to wonder aloud about Syrian protestations of their peaceful intentions " ' he said.
In a related development, Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Dam said Italian and Greek military observers mav Wvused to monitor the two-week-old cease-fire between the Lebanese government and Moslem rebels
I can confirm it is a possibility ' Dam told reporters in Hot Springs, Va.. at a Business Council meeting AVe would hope the agreement on neutral oiiservers could be reached immediately. It depends on the various partie> agreeing " ' Syria had objected to a I'.S plan tor L'.N. supervision of the cease-fire that ended a month of bloody fighting Reagan did not say -what the L'.S. response to the new missile deployment, it any, would be.
Eastern, Unions Near Settlement
MIAMI I CPI I - A settlement reportedly was near Saturday in contract^ talks between flight attendants and Eastern Airlines, which went to the brink, of bankruptcN' before winning a truce with its labor unions
After a 13-hour bargaining session Friday, contract talks resumed Saturday, and negotiators reported unprecedented progess in the wage talks.
"For the first time, we have reason to be optimistic." said federal mediator Harry Bickford. "We . have seen the most significant movement in the negotiations thus far "
In another development, police reported a break-in at the offices of Local 553, headquarters of the 5,8U0-member Eastern chapter of Transport Workers Cnion. Police spokesman Doug Reese said there was no information available on what was taken, if anything.
The Eastern flight attendants have worked without a contract lor 18 months and have said they are prepared to strike at 12:01 a m. EDT
Thursdav 11 they do. machnist.N and pilots - the remainder of Eastern's 16.000 unionized employees also have vowed to walk out
Sources close to the talks told The .Miami-Herald Eastern had dropped its demand for productivity increases and the only remaining issue was pay The ilight attendants were holding out for a 29 percent pay hike. Eastern officials were willing to grant onl\ a 20,3 percent increase.
The contract talks began to gam momentum Friday after Eastern President Frank R.ornian and leaders ol the companv's three unions agreed to work toward a solution on the air carrier's demand for 15 percent across-the-board pay cuts.
The airline had said jf there was not some concession by the unions, it would file for bankrupcty.
The flight attendants' union had taken the stand it could not talk about a pay cut until agreement was reached.
Full details of the pact agreed upon by Eastern and its three unions were not disclosed.
PUT GOAL
" C A -V "S r I'* i
V# Vw -k*- W t
Raised To Date
$169,673.00
UnlbedW^y
In The Area
Two Died In Accident
Professors To Present Book
Tmo women were killed south ot Jamesville on a Martin County road Friday morning when their car and a tractor-trailer collided head-on. Killed were driver Agnes Biggs Howard. 66. and her companion. Cadaira Cardn Smith, both o Rt 2. Jamesville.
Acccordmg to Troopi'r J P Raby. the accident occurred on \.C. 171 alter Ms. Howard's vehicle crossed the center line and collided with a tractor-trailer driven by Jasper James Hamilton of Route 2. Seven Springs. .No charges were filed.
Shriners Plan Chicken Fry
The Grifton Shrme Club will hold a chicken fry Wednesday from 11a m. until 7 p.m. at two locations - in Grifton. on the town lot on the corner of Queen and Pitt streets, and in Ayden. at the railroad lot across from the town hall.
Each plate will consist of three pieces of chicken, boiled potatoes and string beans. All profits will go to the Shriners' Crippled and Burned Children's Hospitals.
A delegation of professors from the East Carolina University School of Education will present a book dedicated in his honor Friday to Dr. Ralph Brimley, retired former chairman of the ECU Department of Educational Administration. in ceremonies in High Point.
Brimley, 76. also a former teacher, coach and high school principal m Winston-Salem and for 10 years superintendent of schools is Forsyth County, now lives at the Presbyterian Honfe in High Point.
Brimley retired in 1973 after 41 years of service to the public schools and higher education in North Carolina.
The book. "The School Principalship: A Source Book of Readings and Activities for Administrative Interns." published by Ginn Custom Publishing. Lexington, Mass.. was written by Drs. Keith C. Hudson, Wilton G. Joyner, Maylon E. McDonald. William C. Sanderson. Richard L. Preston, and Clinton R, Downing, all professors at ECU.
Exercise Program Scheduled
The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department and Barbara Whitehead will sponsor a new exercise session for mothers and babies beginning Tuesday.
Class will meet Tuesdays and Fridays from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the Jaycee Park Auditorium. Classes include post partum exercise for mothers, exercise with mothers and babies, and a special time during each session for supervised interaction with the baby. Mothers can join the class anytime after they have given birth provided they have had either their six-week check-up or doctors approval. Babies should be non-walking. For further information or preregistration, call 752-4137. ext. 200,
Fire Prevention Week Set
Greenville Mayor Percy R. Cox has proclaimed Oct. 10-15 as Fire Prevention Week. He called upon area individuals and families to participate in programs to help all citizens "realize the true values.of fire prevention."
According to a Bureau ot Census survey, one in every 16 households has a fire annually.
Talks Scheduled On Teens
Parents Group To Meet
rh ^ r t Ik \sf u Lam /t 1 uicm v roup will hold its
fri [jeaK r ntei ng fu di t 7::i() p.m. in the p il 1 itjui I Alt 111 11 It iiied \ieiti di i church.
The topic, iirsi aid and saieiv lor imams and children, will _bc gre L11 t) In i) d v\i u ihe East Carolina
I mversitv Dcparimeni oi Heafin Education B lb lu 11, 1 il bif du 1 ig ihe mmnig. which will be open to the public
Worthington Seeks Town Post
Fields Worthington, 28. has filed for the Wmterville Board of Aldermen subject to the November election. Worthington, assistant tire chiet and a member ot the Wmterville Resecue Squad, is seeking one ot two posts open on the board A resident of .5ii:) E Cooper St. Worthington has lived in Winterville all his hie He is a tormer Wmterville policeman and now serves on the Greenville police force.
Media Society To Meet Tuesday
The Pitt-Greenville Media Society will meet at the Western Steer Restaurant Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
The program will consist of a panel discussion on time management. Panel members will be Emily Boyce, chairman of the ECU Library Science Department; Ruth Katz, director of ECU Joyner Library ; Willie Nelms, director of Sheppard Memorial Public Library; Barbara Clark, director of the Pitt Community College Ljbrary; JoAnn Bell, director of the Health Science's Library o? the ECU Schoolof Medicine; and Martha Averette, librarian at PMrmville Central High School.
The meeting is open to all local librarians. Reservations are not necessary. ^
Accidents Investigated
Officers of the Greenville Police Department reported three accidents Friday and Saturday with resulting property damages totaling more than $300.
Vehicles driven by Woodrow Tripp of 413 Line Ave. and Thomas Gray Wadford of 209 Heather Lane collided Friday at 1:30 p.m. on N. Green St. Damages to the Tripp vehcile wW estimated at $2.100 and $1,700 to the Wadford Car. No arrests were made.
Also on Friday, cars driven by Rodrick Dean Best of Route 4. Greenville, and Pamela Denise Davis of Route 1. Farmville. collided on Dickinson Avenue. Damages to the Best car were estimated at $800 and $1,100 to the Davis car. No charges were pressed.
No arrests were made in ah accient Saturday on Cotanche Stree involving Sandra Helen Root of Semla and Jerry Stephen Gahagan. 3413 Forest Dr. Damages to the Root vehcile were estimated at $300 and $450 to thetJahagan car.
The Pitt County Action Coalition for Teens will present a series of "Lets Talk" meetings this month for teen-gers and adults interested in the concerns of adolescents and their families.
Discussions will focus on the problems faced by adolescents in Pitt County with particular attention paid to unemployment, substance abuse and teen parenthood, and to difficulties experienced by parents as they deal with their teens, especially in regard to communications and disruptive behavior.
Meetings are scheduled at the following times: Monday. Pine Grove Community Building, Farmville, 7-9 p.m.; Oct. 18. Cornerstone Baptist Church, Greenville. 7:30-9:36 p.m.; Oct. 19, First Presbyterian Church, Greenville. 7-9 p.m.; Oct. 24. Jarvis Memorial' United Methodist Church. Greenville, 7-9 p.m.. and Oct. 27. home of Rosa and Clifton Daniels. 505 S. Lee St.. Ayden, 7-9 p.m.
For additional information, call 752-4141.
Shaw Alumni To Meet
The Pitt County chapter of the Shaw University Alumni .Association will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m.. at the home of Esther Rich and Lucille Rich, ,509 W. 14th .Street.
Phoenix To Meet Thursday
The Phoenix Organization, a volunteer organization in criminal justice, will meet Thursda\ at 7:.30 pm. at the Pre-Releaee and Aftercare Center, l(i8 Drexel St A slide pre.sentation on the pre-release and altercare community program will be presented by the center Contact persons have been announced tor those wishing to offer volunteer .services m Greenville and Pitt County The volunteer program is coordinated by Jayne Silliman under the auspices .of the Phoenix (irganization.
Contacts include: Pitt t'ounty .Mental Health. .Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Center. Dr Barbara N, Vosk, 7.52-7151; Agnes Fullilove f'ommunity .School Extended School Program. Tony Gray, 7.58-0817, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Edsal .Mason. 7,57-4491. Pitt County Department ot Social Services. Ellen B Gray. 7.58-2167; Juvenile Services Restitution Program, Lena McLamb. 7.58-4223. and Pitt Juvenile Court Volunteer Program, Brenda II Teel. 7,52-1811 Persons interested in general intormation on volunteer programs in Greenville and Pitt County may call Ms. Silliman at 7.56-97,37
Lunch Week Observance Set
Local schools Aill participate in the National School Lunch Week I'c! 9-15.-"Schooi Lunch America's No ' 1 Energ\ Source, is the 1982-1986 program theme developed tiy the American .Schot.d Food .Service Association.
First observed in 1962. National School Lunch Week has changed o\er the \ears and the current theme picks up on those change.s. The nationwide menu is an example from which Students get their "Power Now"
Social Workers Hold Session
The -North Carolina Association of Black Social Workers recently held its ninth annual conference at the Registry Inn in Charlotte. The theme oi the conference was "Affecting Trends for the Future in the African-American Community ."
Attending from the eastern North Carolina regional organization were Mildred A. Council and Shelly Henderson of Greenville.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Queenie Hardy Harris wishes to express their heartfelt thanks for the many kind deeds, expressions of sympathy, visitations, telegrams, floral designs and prayers extended to them during her illness and passing. Your thoughtful concern will be a source of comfort for days to corrie.
The Hardy Family
Card Of Thanks
Very Special
\ youngster tries his hand at s|)in art at the \ery Special .Arts Festival, held Friday by Pitt Countv and Greenville schocds. The
festival is held annually for the special" students in each system and is designed to expose them to arts activities.
The family of Marie A Frizzell would like to personally express to the doctois. nurses and friends our deep appreciation for the concern, love, food, gifts and prayers that all of you expressed during the illness and the death of our beloved Marie. All of you will always be remembered in our hearts. May God's richest blessings be with you now and forever more.
The Family Of Marie Arnold Frizzell ^
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Trooper's Trial Will Resume
WASHINGTON. N ( - Te.stimony m the trial ot Kenneth Ross, a state trooper who has been charged with arson, will be continued at 10 a.m. .Monday in Beaufort County Superior Court. Some question was raised last week as to whether the trial should have been delayed or declared a mistrial due to the defendant's apparent illness.
Ross. 19^year N.C. Highway Patrol veteran, was taken to Beaufort County Hospital W'ednesdgy after complaining of severe chest pains as the third day ot testimony against him was about to begin.
Dr Henry L. Stephenson Jr. ot W'ashington. who has been keeping the court up to date on Ross' condition, presiding Judge R. .Michael Bruce of Mount Olive Friday: "1 don't think at this time he has had anything that resembles a heart attack"
The hospital said Ross was released Saturday Stephenson said he thought the defendant would be able to attend court .Monday,
Ross IS on trial on charges ot arson and conspiracy to commit arson in connection with the burning oi two mobile homes m Beaufort County on Oct. 6,1982.
The state rested its case against Ross Thursday morning, after puUingon witnesses who said Ro.ss paid .lasper Earl Grimes ol W interville to burn the two hou.se trailers.
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eYECAKCCHICR'
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Obituaries 1 Mndale Leads Iowa Straw Poll
Blount
AURORA Mr Robert Blount of Aurora died Tues-^ day in Greenport, N.Y. The funeral service will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at St. Peter Missionary Baptist Church in Aurora by the Rev. Leroy Admans. Burial will be in Ardelia Cemetery.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Ethel T. Blount of^ Aurora; six daughters, Mrs. Theresa Wiggins, Miss Velma Blount. Mrs. Bernice Fromville, Miss Paulette Blount, Yvonne Blount and Lyn Blount, all of Aurora; four sons. Roger Blount of Williamston, Jimmy Blount, Robert Blount Jr. and Anthony Blount of Aurora; his mother, Mrs. Annie Blunt of Aurora; three sisters, Mrs. Annie Kelly of Grantsboro. and Miss Flora Blount and Mrs. Delzora Ham, both of Aurora; a brother, Roosevelt Blount of Franklin, Ala., and nine grandchildren.
Funeral arrangments are being handled by Flangans Funeral home.
Coley
GRIFTQN - Mr. Herbert Coley Jr. of 1800 Contentnea Road, Grifton, died Saturday at Pitt County Memorial Hosptial. He was the husband of Eldress Virgie Mae Jones Coley of the Home. Funeral arrangments are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home in Ayden.
Stokes
Mr. John Lee Stokes, 52, died Friday. Funeral arrangments will be announced by Wilkerson Funeral Home.
Suggs
GRIFTON - Mrs. Eva Tripp Suggs, 62. diedSatur-day. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Monday in the Wilkerson Funeral Home in Greenville
by the Rev. Neil Grimes. Burial will be in Pinelawn Memorial Park in Kinston.
Mrs. Suggs, a former resident of Ayden, had been a resident of Grifton for 40 years where she was a member of the First Christian Church. She is survived by a son, Robert Carroll Suggs of Wendell; three sisters, Mrs. Mae Belle Cox Cameron of Greenville, and Mrs. Magoline Tripp and Mrs. Helen Simms, both of Tarboro; two brothers, Marshall (Mark) Tripp of Tarboro and J.R. Tripp of North Augusta, S.C.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9p.m. Sunday.
Taft
Mr. Johnnie Taft of 703 Cherry St, died Friday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Vinetta Taft of Wilmington, Del., the father of Diane Taft of New Jersey and the brother of Mrs. Priscilla Tyson and Mrs. Esther White, both of Greenville. Funeral arrangments will be announced by Flar.gan's Funeral Home.
Tvson
St. ALBANS, N.Y. - Mr. Alfred Tyson Sr. died in Saint Albans Thursday. He was the brother of J.T. Tyson and Charles Tyson, both formerly, of Greenville, N.C. Funeral arrangments will be announced later by Phillips Brothers Mortuary, Greenville.
Wilson
NEW BERN - Mr. Julius Wilson died in New Bern Oct. 6. He was the father of Miss Shirley Atkinson of Greenville. Funeral arrangments will be announced by Phillips Brothers Mortuary.
Police Spoil Poison Plot
LONDON (AP) - The arrest of a man in Switzerland has foiled a blackmail plot to poison food in British supermarkets, Scotland Yard said Saturday.
A spokesman for the metropolitan police headquarters said senior detectives from its Serious Crimes Squad were preparing to fly to Geneva to interview the man.
Provided the Swiss authorities agree, he will be extradited to stand trial in this country," said the spokesman, who declined to be identified.
The spokesman did not disclose the man's identity or details of the plot. However, Yard sources said the man was arrested by agents of the Paris-based International Police Organization, or Interpol, as he tried to collect a ransom.
The sources, who insisted on anonymity, said a letter
.MASONIC.NOTICE
Mount Herman Lodge No. 35 will hold a regular communication Monday at 7:30 p.m.
was sent to a British supermarket chain threatening to smuggle poisoned food and drink on to store shelves if 50,000 pounds ($75,000) was not paid. Subsequent letters said the money would be a down payment, and that another big supermarket chain could also suffer if more money was not paid, the sources said.
Police conferred with heads of Britain-'s five major supermarket groups and it was agreed to pretend to pay the money so Interpol agents could make the arrest, the sources said.
By MIKE GLOVER Associated Press Writer DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Former Vice President
Shuttle
Delay
Possible
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Exhaust damage to one of the space shuttles solid rocket boosters could delay the scheduled Oct. 28 launch of Spacelab 1 until next year, NASA officials said Friday.
One of the 149-foot-long, $25 million boosters suffered unexpectedly severe damage during the Aug. 30 launch of the space shuttle Challenger, said shuttle project manager Bob Lindstrom.
During the first two minutes after takeoff, the rocket exhaust burned through the boosters protective lining to within two-tenths of an inch of the metal nozzle itself, he said.
If the exhaust had burned through, the shuttle would have been sent careening off course, he said.
The rockets are being reused to launch the shuttle Columbia, which is sched-uled to carry the European-built orbiting laboratory aloft later this month.
Replacing the boosters, if necessary, could take several weeks and delay the mission until February because many Spacelab experiments depend on seasonal conditions, said NASA spokesman James Kukowski.
Lindstrom, based at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., said tests are being run at the booster manufacturer, Morton-Thiokol Inc. of Brigham City, Utah.
Company officials are looking for possible problems in the manufacturing process, he said in a telephone interview from Morton-Thiokol headquarters.
The space agency is also trying to determine why the problem went undetected or unreported until late September, after the boosters had been disassembled by the manufacturer for eventual reuse.
Launch officials knew of the problem when they rolled the Columbia out to its Kennedy Center launch pad, said Kukowski. However, they decided to conduct their investigation simultaneously with preparations for the launch in an effort to avoid snags in the Spacelab mission, Kukowski said.
Unity Christ Church
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Greenville, N.C. 27835 (An Inter-Denominational Church) Meeting At Seventh-Day Adventist Church 2611 E. 10th St. Extended
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Walter Mndale won a presidential straw poll of more than 4,000 Iowa Democratic activists Saturday night, winning 47 percent of the votes cast.
California Sen. Alan Cranston polled 37 percent, followed by Ohio Sen. John Glenn with 5.9 percent.
Of the 4,143 votes cast. Mndale polled 1,948 to Cranstons 1,534.
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart scored 3.5 percent, while former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, the partys 1972 presidential nominee, scored 1.8 percent.
Former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew and South Carolina Sen. Ernest Rollings each drew less than 1 percent of the vote, and 2.8 percent of the activists said they had no preference. The straw poll was conducted by The Associated Press.
Both Mndale and Cranston had launched substantial organizing efforts to turn out suppi^-ters at the
DWI...
(Continued from A-1) for include Pitt County Memorial Hospital, the Red Cross, or any other non-profit or governmental tax funded organization.
By being punished in this way, having to do community work, restitution is being made to the tax payers for their costs of getting this person through the courts. Mrs. Kernen said.
According to the severity of the offense, a person can be sentenced to do 24,48 or 72 hours of community service work as designated by the court. Chief District Court Judge Robert Wheeler said.
Those sentenced to 72 hours of community service will have three months to complete the work; 48 hours, two months; and 24 hours, one month. The maximum amount of time that can be
Democratic Partys annual Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner, where Jimmy Carter brought his name to prominence eight years ago.
Two of the presidential contenders told party loyalists Saturday that the party must change if it is to command a new national majority.
I must tell you frankly that you and I are not the only real Democrats, said Askew. "And if we truly want our party to become a genuine majority party in America once more, then we must hope that we may never be the only real Democrats.
That belief was echoed by Hart, who said, You and I also know that traditional Democratic slogans, speeches andrhetoric will not make old factories run again and that only a new policy for training an in--, vestment will restore your jobs.
Cranston used his speech
spent working a sentence off is eight hours a day.
Not only will this program serve as a deterrent to drinking drivers, it will benefit the community, Judge Wheeler said. "Well use the talents of the people to get things done that wouldnt normally get done ... Once the program goes into effect the people of this county are going to see tremendous benefits.
The Pitt County Alternative Community Service and new programs like it across the state, are based on programs recently
to blast President Reagan but warned we wont defeat a movie actor with personality. Were going to do it with a commitment to a positive vision for Americas future.
The dinner is the Iowa partys biggest annua! fundraiser, and party of ficials have turned it into a showcase for candidates during presidential election years.
In 1975, Carter came into the dinner with virtually no standing in the polls, but won a straw poll and brought his name into prominence.
Candidates came Saturday in hopes of gaining delegates for the Feb. 27 Iowa precinct caucuses, which will select the first delegates to the Democratic National Convention. Like the New Hampshire primary, an early victory here can give a big boost to a presidential campaign.
Mndale worked hard here because hes widely seen as a local favorite, being from
done in Carteret County and Florida, according to Wheeler. "We had some real good response from the Carteret program. In fact, four to five people got permanent jobs as a result of doing community service, he said.
The Florida program was just as successful according to Mrs. Kernen. "During the first eight months of the new tough drunk driving laws there, $750,000 worth of community work was done. I hope we can do half that much for Pitt County, she said.
neighboring Minnesota.
Cranston tried to do well to demonstrate that the race is more than a two-person battle between Mndale and Glenn.
Before the days events. Cranston .backers accused the Mndale campaign of using organized labor as a shill to pack the dinner with supporters. .Mndale staffers charged Cranston was trying to pack the dinner himself.
"Mndale has used organized labor as his agent m this operation. said John Law. who runs Cranston's
Iowa campaign. "Once we decided to compete, we certainly couldn't allow labor to buy out the house."
But Mndale staffers charged that Cranston devoted time to little else. They obviously dropped everything they were doing for four to six weeks, said Pete Sloan. Mondale's campaign chairman in Iowa.,
Glenn's manager here. Maureen Roach, earlier played down the ' polling, saying, "We have not had any extra people in here, we haven't rente(l any buses or hotel rooms and we haven't bought anv tickets"
DiahA-Prayer
752-1362
A Great Supernatural Happening And 1st Annual Convention At
Deliverance Back To God Revival Temple
207 Moore St., Greenviiie October 8th Thru October 16th
Saturday Night. Pastor Lawrence Boigea From Tabernacle of Prayer For All People, Goldsboro, N.C.
Sunday. 11:30 A.M., Pastor Charles Covil Will Be The Speaker. 3 Speakers On Sunday Night. Sunday Night At 7:30: Pastor Horace Joyner. Mt. Shiloh, Fountain, N.C.: Pastor Moore. Tabernacle of Faith Ministry: Deacon Roger Peele. Deliverance Temple.
Oct. 8th:
Oct. 9th:
Oct. 10th:
Oct. 11th:
Monday Night Spea-. astor Thomas Dixon, Bells Chapel Holiness Church, Greenville, N.C,
Tuesday Night, Pastor W.C. Elliott, Saint Rest Holiness Church, Winterville. N.C
Oct. 12th & 14th: Wednesday Night. Pastor Jimmy Everette From Jesus Is Coming Assn., Newark, N.J. Will Be The Speaker Wednesday Thru Friday, Time 7:30 Nightly
Oct. 15th: * Our 1st Annual Convention Dinner Will
Be Held At The Ramada Inn, Greenville. N.C. Admission Is $15,00. Everyone Is Welcome. Time 7:30 P.M.
Oct. 16th: Pastor Charles Covil Will Be The
Speaker At 11:30 A.M.: 3 P.M., Pastor Lois Goodman Will Be The Guest Speaker Along With Her Chorus From The Lexington Deliverance Center Lexington. N.C.
Pastor Charles Covil Invites The Public To Attend.
aaOLINA EAST CENTRE
CBSAFRLATE
presents
c H ST^RS!
01
4th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
PRIZES AUTOGRAPHS PICTURES LOOK-A-UKE 2 Pni) Oct* 1 5th Register at any
^ participating store before Oct. 15.
f QWTFCT Winners receive dinner with the Stars
and a $50 Gift Certificate.
star appearances by frank RUNYEON 8. KRISTA TESREAU^
Oct. 22, Center Court 11 a.m. & 4 p.m. Carolina East Centre Noon
Joyce Beckers Soap Opera Festivals Must be 18 or older to enter Must have at least 5 entrants jDer category to validate contest
EMPLOYEES ARE NOT ELIGIBLE
i"
The Daily Reflector Greenville_(^ _ Sunday. October 9. 1983
Sunday
Opinion
Holmes Brings Fresh Outloc^ To City Police
'lovd H 'Ted" Holnio-s has begun his duties as !ie city's ehiel of police.
The d-year-okl Holmes will obviously givt' new direction to the local policing ellorts. He is the lirsl chief in niany years to he chosen irom outside the department and. since much ol his experience has been in the western United Slates, he will I'ling a tresh outlook, to police organization and methods in Creenville.
Ilohnes uas a police otlicer in Berkley, Calif., chief ot police in Vail. ('olo.. a consultant with the International .Association of Chiefs ot Police and in management with the National (iovernor's Conference. He served with the C S, State De[)artment as an adviser to the \'ietnamese National Police for a year and for to years he has lieen a police management specialist with .Arthur \'(HingiS-- Co of .Austin, Texas,
Clearly Chief Holmes has broad experience in police management.
Here he will face a unique challenge of developing a police de[)artment which has grown from sinall-toun dimensions into one of metro [folitan size. He and his force of officers and othei' p(r'Oimel also face the sonu'tmu's delicate situation of policing a city which includes thousand^ of college-aged students, ilus many visitors who come here at night tor the entertainment offered.
The department under Chief Holme growing traffic protilems. which mean conti'ol will be important as well educational program on traffic safety Finally, as with all (lej)artments, the local police face the usual array of hard core crimes and tile constant dangers of meeting up with criminis who won't fiat an e\e at doing an olfUcr harm,
Tims, local police will fiave to f)c diplomats, ^tratcgisis and tough m certain situations. It will take much organization and considerable training for liK'aT officers to deal with the myriad -itiiationsthey can expect to face It i> [lart ol Creenville's development from a town to a major city, and the police department, 'if necessity, must continue to'ievelop, too.
aces
atfic
an
Fellowship Club Provides Forum For Easterners
The North Tar River Fellowship Cluii. which met at the Marvin Blount River Road Ranch last week, is not supposed to be political but there were surely many politicians there.
' President Fd Warren said the fellowshiii was formed to "get more political clout for eastern North Fanilma." although no political speechos van e allowed A number ot candidates for state office next \ear won' 'boro as well as niany of !l,e most powerful people m the state Legislature, b'ellowship was the word, but easterners had the chance to put in a good word for some of our most pressing needs.
The Doily Reflector
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FROM SNooPiNG! VIHaTS FoR BReaKFa&T?
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Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Quest
Alvin
Taylor
Sunday Morning Notes
There's nothing wrong with, commercial flying. Millions of people do it every year and the flights are comfortable and, most importantly, safe. In fact the safety record of the commercial airlines is outstanding compared to auto travel.
Yet. almost everyone tenses a little when the big planes take off and land, and almost everyone who has flown has a story to tell about a time when they perceived that the plane was in trouble.
, Your columnist' took a trip to London iH'cently. The flight was on a Fan Am 747. Big.^ The pictures don't do it justice. One wonders lutw such a huge craft can takf' otf and land and cruise at37.00Ufeet.
The plane is 10 seats wide with two isles. .Stewardesses work constantly providing passengers with food and drink during the
flight, which is six to seven hours depending on which way you are going. There are also in-flight movies to while away the hours.
Thus our flight was indeed comfortable and uneventful until the landing. Once the plane was on the ground the captain came on the intercom to announce that the plane would be stopping on the runway.
We had a backfire stall in the outside starboard engine, he said. There was considerable smoke. He explained that there would be fire trucks around the plane to inspect the engine.
Somehow it didnt seem so bad with the plane sitting on the runway. I had visions of sliding down the escape shoots which are provided at plane exits. It didnt wmrk out that way, however. Once the inspection was complete the pilot taxied on to the terminal and we debarked in
the conventional manner.
As I said, the flight was smooth and uneventful, and the pilot made a perfect landing despite the problem.
... And I never did find out what a backfire stall was.
From 37,000 feet we went underground, the London underground, that is. The underground, or tubes, will get you anywhere in London safely and rapidly. From Heathrow Airport to Euston station in central London is a good number of miles. But it only requires one train change, and if you can handle your own luggage for long walks, on escalators and possibly on crowded trains at certain times, it is a good way to go. Otherwise, there are special buses which run into London, or the most expensive way, by taxi.
WASHINGTON - It is not just an unending succession of endorsements that makes Democratic presidential front-runner Walter F. Mondales autumn looks so golden. It is also the fact that his close pursuer. Sen. John Glenn, has flinched from the calculated gamble that is his basic strategy.
Glenns strategy is to ignore the Democratic coalitions special-interest components and appeal over their heads to Democrats more interest^ in his own obvious values than in Mondales positions. But that gamble now so frightens the senators campaign strategists that he has let himself drift into imitation Mondaleism: a reckless quest for special-interest constituencies long locked in Fritz Mondale's hip pocket.
Glenn gave precisely that impression on successive days in mid-September when he delivered speeches to allay the suspicions of environmentalists and Jewish Americans, two prominent chips in the Mndale mosaic. But weeks before that, the senators campaign had backed away from hammering home the difference between him and Mndale.
This is less a conscious change in strategy than the tactical flabbiness of Glenns campaign. Bill White, his campaign manager, has not lost faith in the idea that Mondales October bag of endorsement and state convention straw votes only makes him look ever more the politician, while Glenn stands apart from politics as a leader - helped no little by fortuitous release of the film version of Tom Wolfes astronaut saga, The Right Stuff. The senators headquarters was thrilled that Newsweeks cover showed the actor portraying Glenn.
This fits the apt metaphor of Greg Schneiders. Glenns press secretary, in devaluing the Mndale apparatus of organization, endorsements, fund-raising and computer technology - sand castles to be swept away next year by a Glenn tidal wave. Certainly George McGovern in 1972 and Jimmy Carter in 1976 did not win the nomination by building sand castles.
But Glenn has been dabbling in the sand himself lately. Under attack is critically-important New Hampshire on acid rain, he courted environmentalists with a speech in Keene, N.H., Sept. 12. That was merely an appetizer for his pro-Israeli address in New York City the next day.
Its purpose was strictly micro-politics. Glenn's fund-raisers claimed a hemorrhage of Jewish support that required a major speech affirming support for Israel Former ambassador Milton Wolf, a Shaker Heights, Ohio, millionaire and one of Glenns key supporters, was particularly insistent.
The Glenn camp was divided. According to insiders, Schneiders was not happy and changed some langauge. So did Glenn, particularly in softening his recognition of Jerusalem as Israels capital. After the speech, Schneiders urged future care in seemingly courting special-interest groups.
Instead, the Glenn high command suddenly began casting envious eyes at Mondales most important sand castle: the AFL-CIO endorsement. Word was suddenly leaked by a Glenn staffer of a hard fight at Miami Beach to deny Mndale labors backing, though the AFL-CIO's decision was locked long ago. The erring staffer was duly chastised, but his comments betrayed tactical flabbiness. Washington lobbyist Robert Keefe, a Glenn stratregist closely tied to organized labor, was belatedly ordered to Miami Beach for damage repair.
Glenn, who in 1979 voted against Senate confirmation of SALT IL seemed to be wooing nuclear freezers when a columnist reported him embracing the Soviet position in the intermediate arms talks. Although the report was mistaken, the Glenn campaign was not as diligent in pointing out the error. When we brought up the column, two Glenn staffers actually defended the erroneous position before his foreign policy expert finally knocked it down.
Glenns spokesmen argue that the Keene and New York speeches only reiterated old positions and that, anyway, most voters are no more interested in such nuances than in straw voles in Maine. In truth, however, it will be harder henceforth for Glenn to accuse Mndale of pandering to special-interest groups:
Harder or not, the accusations have started because they are necessary to Glenns strategy. At a party forum in Syracuse. N.Y.. last week, he said appeasing the special interests would kill Democratic hopes in 1984. Campaigning in northern New Hampshire last Friday, he called for moderation. He may soon go farther in highlighting arms control difference with Mndale.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
Paul
O'Connor
Forestry Management Could Be Improved
K.ALKICll You doni have 111 (invf \(>rv tar duv.n the i'ark I'nads ol North Caioltua to roali/.e that tta.' state'.' got a heekiiva lot oi trees, \lniost two-thirds ot Itu- .'tate'.' acreage is t'lrosted and aliout a quarter million North I'aroliiiians own coininercial forest iaiid.
lou call enjov those trees witiioii' owning a single one ot Itiein Thoso lori 'is niak'' North ''oiohna lieaiititiil lor ever.oiie Ihit. while they're standing -tliere gniwiiig and looking pretty, those trees are nuiking money tor llieir owners Ttie torest products industry is one ol the biggest in the state with one out ol ev(i'v L'li Nortti (arolmians
working in either the lumber, paper or turniture industries.
Hut North Carolinians aren't making the best use ol their torest resources, the N'.' Center tor Public Policy Ucsearch reports. While demand lor torest products is expected to double within the next f)!) years. North (aroli-nians aren't being very efficient III the nianagement of their torest resources.
"North Carolinians are cutting down more timber tliaii they are replanting and the timbei already growing is not even approaching its potential," the center reports in the summer issue of N.C. Insight magazine.
Ill the decade preceding
1974. 4.5 percent of the commercial forest land cleared was neither replanted nor allowed to regenerate itselt Another :ffi percent of the land was allowed to grow back wild -a practice which will yield low-quality trees which do not have much of a market value.
Commercial forestry is an industry that in recent years has moved back into the South One N.(' State professor told Insight that the South is becoming the "wood basket of the nation. " While most ot the forest land m the West is owned by the government and regulated hy the U.S Forest Service, most of the forest land in the South
is owned privately. For that reason, lumlrer companies find it much easier to operate here
But lumber companies, whose land holdings are big enough to provide only a small portion oi their needs from North Carolina, are finding that many small woodlot owners don't farm trees properly. They're likely to allow land to stand idle, without replanting Or. they might just let whatever pops out of the ground grow. They don't thin forests and they use the wrong equipment to harvest. So. the lumber companies have started management programs for the small woodlot owners
upon whom they depend for their wood. They provide advice and forestry products aimed at securing the best vields from the land.
The state has taken several steps to improve the private forests here. A reforestation program was started in 1969. Four years later, changes were made in the laws governing ad valorem taxes so as to protect woodlot owners and eliminate their need to cut off wood to pay taxes. And, in 1977, the state got into a program with the federal government of reforesting land.
As the center sees the problem, most woodlot owners do not have as great
a stake in woodland management as do the large lumber companies! A woodlot is a 30-year investment and people who own only a small amount of land, and who make their principal incomes elsewhere, can't really be expected to know how to properly manage a forest.
But the center reminds us of how imoortant it is to properly manage our wooded lands, in addition to all the jobs the forest products industry creates, the 20 million acres of commercial forests in the state make up the state's premier natural resource, essential for soil conservation, watershed quality, wildlife protection, scenery and recreation."
James J. Kilpatrick
Crotchety Columnist Makes His Point
The argument over persuade " and "convince has been going on forever, and those writers who cannot Ix* persuaded to preserve a distinctmn will remain convinced that no distinction exists I am crotchety on the point, and would beg your indulgence.
I rom The Washington Post: "If Venezuela can convince its banks to convert many ot the short-term debts to long-term loans. "Wrong'*
From People magazine: "Pianist Marian McPartland. who entertained on the same bill with Phyllis Diller. convinced the comedienne to take out her horn and join the jazz trio..." Wrong'
Again, trom people: "The critical acclaim following his recent performance of Beethoven's Triple Concerto' at Carnegie HaH has convinced Dudley Moore to cut his first cla.ssical LP Wrongl
From U.S. News & World Report, in a piece about lobbyist Thomas Boggs: "He is often credited with helping convince Congress to grant a loan guarantee to Chrysler in 1979. Wrong'
Again Irorn the same Sept. 19 issue of U.S. News, a specula!!';)!! that the death of Sen. Henry Jackson, on top of the stress resulling from Lebanon and from the Korean airliner incident, "will convince the president and his wife that they don't need four more years of high pressure. Right' This time U.S. .News got it right I
This is the rule, to which such authorities as Follett, Bernstein. Copperud and the American Heritage panel subscribe: "Persuade " may take an infinitiv>e; convince
. never should. Wilson Follett is emphatic: "We can convince a person that a statement is correct; we can convince him of its correctness; we cannot convince (though we can persuade) him to belive it or to act on the belief.
Theodore Bernstein offers this explanation: "Convince' has the meaning of to satisfy beyond doubt by argument or evidence appealing to the reason.Persuade' has the meaning of ;o induce or win over by argument or entreaty appealing to the reason and feeling."'Thus, "convince" implies a static situation, with no consequent action expected. By contrast, "persuade" carries a meaning of continuing action and usually implies further action to come.
Looking back at the examples: "If Venezuela can persuade its' banks to convert "...McPartland persuaded the comedienne to lake out her horn...The critical acclaim persuaded Moore to cut or "convinced Moore that he should cut "..."Boggs is often credited with helping persuade Congress.
The only authority who spurns the rule, so far as I know, is Professor John Bremner of the University of Kansas. In a moment of uncharacteristic permissiveness, Bremner says I that convince to" is now accepted." We should persuade him to change his mind; if we are successful, he may be convinced that he should sin no more.
Verb of the week: to cowboy." from a piece in The Seattle Times about women in pioneer days. Some women were homemakers; some were political activists. Other women went cowboying or homesteading by themselves.
Adjectives of the week: Birdieable, as in, The. 17th hole
at the British .Open is birdieable. Also, "ovenable," as in a recipe from Maple Leaf Farms: Leave portion in ovenable
try."
Redundancies of the week: From Time magazine, in a story about bad weather: For farmers, such talk is not idle chitchat. From Newsweek: Take the old adage that good hitters watch the ball all the way to the catcher's glove. Perhaps Times editors will engage in chitchat that is not idle, and perhaps Newsweeks editors will find adages that are not old, and perhaps pigs will take wing and fly - but I wouldn't bet on the prospects.
In the courts, "to demur" has a specific and well-understood meaning. When a defendant files a demurrer he is saying, in effect, that even if everything the plaintiff says is true, the plaintiff stillhas no cause of action. More generally, to demur is to object or to take exception, I don't believe we can demur "from" anything.
Not long ago we awarded a verb-of-the-week prize to NBC's Joe Garagiola for ",to nonchalant." meaning to err in baseball by reason of overconfidence. This remarkable verb turned up in the usually literate sports pages of The Washington Post in an account of a game between the Orioles of Baltimore and the Blue Jays of Toronto: "Flanagan tried to nonchalant a sacrifice bunt attempt by Martinez and left the ball laying in the grass for an error." What was the ball laying' Bricks? Taxes? Bets' Eggs'? Forget to nonchalant." Let us first learn lay" and lie."
Copyright Universal Press Syndicate
The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N C, Sunday. October 9. 1983 A-5Public Forum Views On Theater, Traps, Nursing, Schools
To the editor:
Last Sunday I was fortunate to have attended the matinee performance of Damn Yankees" in Farmville. I say "fortunate" because this 1950s musical classic was expertly performed in nearly all respects - a tribute to its director, cast and crew. The Farmville Arts Council should be proud of everyone connected with the show. As the song from the show says, this production truly had heart!"
^ . But. one thing puzzles me: Why didnt The Daily Reflector
review the show; or did I miss seeing it? (I sincerely hope that the absence of a review wasn't a deliberate omission.) The production was most enjoyable - a welcome return to the good ol days of baseball" - a melodramatic theatrical vehicle wherein Good triumphs over evil; whereas our hero. Joe. and Lola, the devils advocate, get their just rewards. Particularly effective was Don Roebucks staging, the shows pace, the musical numbers, and that empathetic bond between the cast and the audience that was forged from the shows opening number. It was hard to believe that the cast was composed entirely of amateur actors. (I could go on and on. but this is supposed to be a letter - not a review.)
This Damn Yankees" production was truly good theater, and it deserved a review They know that they did a good job. but its only human to want to be told so.
Thank you for allowing me to air my views.
Arch E. Manning
To The editor:
About a week ago a letter authored by William C. Byrd III appeared in the Forum" which raised questions about the changes in deanships at ECU. I dont know the substance upon which the writer based his complaint or fears.
Since 1 happen to wear almost the same name, and since the ECU telephone directory inaccurately gives me the name of William C. Byrd III. 1 feel the need to state my very own views regarding our present administration.
1 have the highest regard for and confidence in Chancellor Howell and Vice Chancellor Volpe and I believe their involvement in personnel actions would be based on their regard for the best interests of ECU. Secondly. I believe they would have a balanced and fair concern for the faculty person) s) involved.
My dean. Dr. Ron Thiele, was characterized as a sole survivor of whatever "scheme" might be afoot. Dr. Thieles survival" reflects his administrative abilities and documented support of the faculty of the school of allied health.
If and when a good fight is available and has substantive issues. 1 might join in with William III.*But in this case. I must opt out.
William Carlton Byrd Sr.
Professor of Community Health
East Carolina University
To The editor:
Many Greenville area residents have recently been contacted by a United Way volunteer or will soon be. Im one of the lucky volunteers because 1 see United Way dollars working every day.. You see, my two sons are part of the over 700 Pitt Couiity boys served by the Pitt County Boys Club. Through this wonderful United Way Agency my children are able to participate in various sports activities as well as develop good sportsmanship and citizenship.
When making your United Way decision please consider the following:
1. Have you or someone youve known received a blood transfusion from blood collected by the Red Cross
2. Have you known someone counseled by the REAL Crisis Center
3. Do you know an elderly person who has received free meals sponsored by the Pitt County Council on Aging?
4. Do you know an advanced cancer patient or family served by Hospice.
These are just a few of the 28 agencies funded by your United Way contributions.
Please give generously to your United Way volunteer and if you would like to contribute and are not contacted, please feel free to call me or come by the downtown office of .\C.\B. Thanks to you it works for all of us'
Katherine (iray
Special Gifts Chairman
Pitt County United Way
To the editor:
1 must express my grave conerns resulting from Mr. Richardsons decision to relieve Betty Trought of her duties at Pitt County .Memorial Hospital. I understand that PCMH administrators may be redefining the roles and responsibilities of the position - vice president for nursing services. This redefinition raises two serious questions: who will ultimately control nursing practice, and what type of management philosophy will be operationalized for the department of nursing services
In order to maintain the same quality of nursing care which has been provided to PCMH patients during the past three years it is essential that serious consideration be given to the following recommendations when future decisions are made about the nursing services department:
The director of nursing services should be an integral component of executive level management i North Carolina Task Force on Nursing Practice 1982)
Nursing should have authority over its own practice (National Commission on Nursing 1983)
The organizational structure of the nursing department should incorporate participatory management and decentralized decision-making processes (American Academy of Nursing Magnet Hospital Study" 1983)
The ramifications of not allowing nursing to maintain control over its practice via the implementation of participatory management, decentralized decision making, and the vice president functioning at the exectutive level of the organizational structure of PCMH may include:
The inability to recruit and retain professional nursing staff at PCMH
A decrease in the quality of care received by PCMH patients
It is essential that those individuals who will influence the final decisions regarding this issue carefully weigh the possible deleterious consequences of their position.
Susan A. Sutcliffe. RN, .MSN
To the editor:
In the Sunday. Oct. 2. edition of The Daily Reflector, a report from the Pitt County Mental Health Department reported twocases of trichanosis. pork tape worm."
Trichinosis, caused by the parasite Trichinella. and the pork tape worm are two different parasites having different life cycles and belong to two different groups of animals. The symptoms resulting from infection by these two organisms are also different.
The article is correct in saying that pork should be thoroughly cooked so these parasites will be killed if present. Carlton Heckrotte Greenville
To the editor :
Recently you ran an ECU News Bureau release about a new Pirate logo. The primary spokesman in the release was a Mr. David Stevens, a university attorney. Mr. Stevens was chairman of the committee that chose the new logo. Mr. Stevens indicated he was embarassed by our previous symbol.
Several things in that news release trouble me. First of all. does it not seem a trifle peculiar that a Tar Heel born-and-bred attorney is picking a new East Carolina Pirate logo? Secondly the previous pirate, which embarasses Mr,
Stevens, was the product of months of historical research by Mr. Wayne Newnam (ECU 1972), a professional artist, Newnams Pirate, created in 1978, is a composite of many actual pirates that roamed the coast in these parts many years age. Newnams Pirate is indeed a fearsome creature but authentic to a fault. The pirate chosen by Mr. Stevens committee, on the other hand, seems little more than a theme copy of UNCs puffed up ram in a pirate suit! I am embarassed by the similarity.
I believe the university symbol belongs to the students and alumni. I believe the new logo was chosen with too little attention paid to either group.
I believe ECUs main shortcomings are in the areas of tradition and authenticity. The logo committee seems intent on stripping us of a little more of those items.
.Mike York
Greenville
To The Editor;
I have been an operating room nurse at PCMH for about five years. During this time, I have scrubbed, circulated or assisted on countless operations. 1 have worked with dedicated people of many different educational backgrounds and levels of preparation, and with patients who have been unique in his or her own ways.
To me, the one thing that any person in the service professions learns is that you must accept each person as an individual, looking beyond the labels - be they ".MD." LPN" or patient with gall bladder disease."
1 have seen people with minimal educational preparation trying to learn from every operation, and I have seen BSNs who never open a current nursing journal. But as long as we all offer out patients the best ot our individual abilities, and work to keep out skills current, I feel that we are promoting excellent patient care, no matter what out label.
In Oriental and many European cultures the older person is highly respected for wisdom that a lifetime of experience has taught him Here in the U.S. we see the opposite take place.
I learned things my first year as an RN that no school ever teaches, I am a far better nurse now than 1 ever dreamed 1 would be. 1 feel that a dedicated LFN with 2(i years ol experience has seen things that 1 have not and probably is a
In 2(1 years 1 plan to be one o the 'atever facility will be fortunate )vee.
better nurse than' best nurses w> enough to have Michele .Miller, RN Route S Greenville
To the editor:
1 want to express my concern about our city ot Greenville loaning out traps to catch such things as squirrels, which 1
2, \0^'i c
"VWR? YJU V&Ui Its H 'SIMtMW. OF tlfe fTOT?'"
James
Gerstenzang
Reagan Learns A Lesson On The Phone
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wherever President Reagan goes, he is never far from a telephone. And the telephone can put him in touch with just about anyone.
Of course, there are telephones in cars, airplanes and helicopters. But when he steps out of his airplane, on his way to his car, there is often a telephone available for him on the ground somewhere between the airplane steps and the waiting limousine. The same goes for the groundbetween the helicopter and limousine.
'Ielephones have sprouted on baseball fields, running tracks and other helicopter landing sites. I.
To keep Reagan in touch, crews from the White House Communications Agency set out to install switchboards, wires, and telephone units before each presidential trip.
Shortly after taking office 2'i- years ago. the president related recently, he tried out the telephone system.
He told about the experience in an interview with television personality Merv Griffin.
The president had flown by helicopter bn a Sunday for lunch with conservative columnist James Kilpatrick, at Kilpatricks farm in rural Virginia.
Reagan said that he was walking from the helicopter to the house, when the journalist told him that a White House crew had been working at the farm for several days installing telephones that could put the president in touch with anyone in the world.
So. Kilpatrick decided to test the system before the presidents arrival and asked to speak with a son in the Marines, stationed in Africa. He reached him instantlv. When he
tried to place another call, to speak with a son on duty with the Sixth Fleet, he was told only the president could do that because the fleet was on maneuvers in the Mediterranean Sea.
After hearing the story, Reagan said, 1 went back outside and I said to the fellows. Is this right? I could get hold of a fellow on the USS Prate?'They said yes. 1 said, 'Get him."
Having accomplished this. Reagan said, he let the sailor's wife, who was also visiting at the farm, talk with him.
She was very appreciative and 1 was very pleased with myself that I thought of such a thing and had done this. And it wasn't until 1 got a letter from the young man that I realized quite what I had done. He wrote to me to tell me that when the fleet is on maneuvers, the airwaves are just full of traffic ... so I imagine
Craig
Webb
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -Now that new revenue is finally coming in, education officials statewide are trying to decide where to begin spending the $1.8 billion needed for school building construction and repairs.
Nearly three-fourths of the counties have opened the taps by approving a half-cent sales tax increase, and more counties are joining the list daily. How much will be spent is still uncertain, however, because revenue estimates change constantly and county commissioners havent decided how much to give to education.
In any case, school officials will discover the extra dollars will come in much smaller installments than previous state help, and will r'equirq a much different sort
Public Schools Look To The Future
of planning.
The last school bond referendum in 1973 raised $300 million, and you could spend your share of it as soon as your plan was approved, said T. Darrell Spencer, associate director of the state Division of School Planning. With the half-cent sales tax, it will be coming in small amounts, and you may have to phase in construction.
The legislative act authorizing the sales tax hike requires that at least 40 percent of the countys share of the proceeds must be spent on schools.
If the tax had begun with the start of the fiscal year July 1, and if every county had taken part, school of-yficials could have counted on teceiving at least $38 million
of the $135 million that would have been generated in 1983-84.
But the actual amount should be much less. The tax began Oct. 1 in just 55 counties and some of the states major tax-collecting counties, including Wake and Mecklenburg, have not joined.
Nevertheless, Spencer predicts some significant projects" will be financed by the tax hike. His division is planning seminars this month in Williamston, Wilmington, Asheville and Asheboro to help school officials draft their spending plans.
The need is substantial. A 1981 survey found that nearly a quarter of the states school buildings should be replaced within 15 years.
More than 4,500 classrooms are temporary or improvised.
Gene Causby, executive director of the North Carolina School Boards Association, said his group is lobbying county commissioners to reserve all the countys money for education.
Rutherford County- already has agreed to do so, but getting others to join may be difficult. County commissioners promoted increased sales taxes partly to hold down property tax rate hikes.
Were optimistic," said Causby, who lobbied for a half-dozen years to get the tax. The new focus on education ought to be usable (to help get as much revenue as possible). There have been people who expressed
doubt about the commitment to education, but I think the recent events show it is there.
Ron Aycock. head of the North Carolina Association of County Commissioners, said he gets the feeling counties will use several approaches in their education spending,
"You will see the placement of the money in some reserve fund until there is some accumulated to make
capital improvements." he said. But there are also a lot of renovations that need to be done in order to bring schools up to a good standard and its not in all cases that we have to build a $5 million high school. We might have to repair a roof or add some new classrooms. Although there may not be a large amount coming in every quarter, the construction needs dont all happen at one timeeither,"
think are so beautiful to see running around and plavmg and standing on their hind feet.
If we leave out traps to catch them, some people will be on trips for days and weeks and the squirrei uill ha\e no choice but to die of lack of water and food, 1 think they ought to be as free as possible to get what food and water tticv can. I feed them cracked corn everyday that 1 am home to make it a better life tor them,
I also have a cat that goes off two or three days at a time and to think ot traps'set about town does not .'-eem fair (mce a ruling is made, a lot of people will torget the trap and let them sutler in the trap, so I am eoncerned about the lew animalswe have left
I think there is no law on the animal^ and think they ought to have all the freedom they can have because I thmk they beautify the dity so much. 1 would hate to thmk that my cat
might get caught in a trap with nothina to do but die.
Clinton B. ( ox
Greenville
To the editor;
1 want to compliment The Daily Rt-tlcctor on its editorial in Sunday s paper regarding the educational process in Greenville and merger This has long been considered a critical issue by m.any in the commiinit\ and the RTl studv simply reaffirms the tact
^Not only does every student in ihtt ('ounty. including Greenville, need an optimal education m order to deal with todays complex and technological society but the very economic health ot our county and c;'y depend upon this process. Jobs for the unemployed depend upon new industry and business and the first question which new industry and business ask when visiting the community has to do with the educational system: what preparation'does the labor force have to deal with these issues ot today.
The necessity of merging our school systems for the health ot the community is now weli demonstrated. It is-no longer a matter of should we merge, but when shall we merge and very clearly the sooner this takes place the greater the benefit we can gain from it.
As you have correctly stated in yimr editorial there will be difficulties. However, there are none that an interested and concerned community can not readily overcome.
Thank you again for your wisdom in supporting thi:\ crucial issue to our area.
James W. ( arter, .M.I).
his end ot the conversation was out there on the air for the whole Sixth Fleet to hear.
He wound up his letter with this line, which 1 think is a treasure He said the idea ot him. a lowly (luartermaster. being called to the phone, one person in the entire Sixth Fleet . he wrote it was as if God had called the \atican and asked for an altar bo\ by name. "
Reagan added that the young sailor noted that in the midst ot all the Sixth Fleet traffic, suddenly one voice said. 'White House calling."
Then, said Reagan, another voice asked, What-codeisthat''"
And a third added. .Maybe it is the White House."
The lesson, satd Reagan, was this: "I'd better watch what 1 say and whereT say it. because things could start happening."
George
GallopPoll
PRINCETON, N.J. - Despite the brightening economic picture. President Reagan has a long way to go to regain ma jority approval for his handling ot economic conditions in the naliori In the early honeymoon" days ot his presidency, approval outweighed disapproval by a wide ffo percent to''29 percent margin. In subsequent measurements approval declined steadily, to 29 percent in January of the current year In the latest survey :'A percent approve while .34 percent disapprove, A similar pattern is found tor the public's rating ot Reagan's handling of the specific economic problems ol intlation and unemployment,
In an early April 1981 survey ot Reagan's handling of inflation. approval outweighed disapproval 2-to-l, percent to 28 percent. The approval rating then declined at a steady rate, reaching a low of :1G percent in January 198:5 Ttic president has succeeded in reversing this trend, but his gams on this issue are modest. In the latest survey.'41 percent approve and 49 percent disapprove President Reagan has ne\er scored well on the unemplox-ment issue. In a .M.irch 1981 survev he won the approval 01-4.5 percent ot Americans on thb bsue. but approval then <ank to 19 percent to.Ianuary 198:-) The president's .'atinu on this issue has rebounded considerably since ,!anuary hiit' the current approval figure 28 percent ^ remain.-- unimoressive.
This question wa> asked in 29 nationa; (ialiup j.urve\s since -March. 1981:
.As Tread oft each ot the tollowing problems, would you tell me whether you approve or disapprove -it the wax' President Reagan is handling that ,problem'.' Economic conditions in .this country'? Inflation'? Unemployment
Here are the trends, showing an ;'.Ht.,ii h'2!. o.-'.nt. the low dr near low point to date, and the cim ,
Reagai! Il.indliii. ii Economic (.'oiuiiiiniN
No
.\])|)ro\c Disapproxc Opinion
April 1981 January .1983 Augustl983
April 1981 January 1983 August'l 983
.April 1981 January 1983 August 1983
J9'(,
84
.')4
Reagan handling 01 Of inflation
No
.\ppro\e Disapproxe Opinion
38
41
Reagan Handling Of Cnemplox ment
28^7,
,')8
49
140?,
8
lU
No
Approx e l)Nappro\e Opinion
430?,
19
28
34%
82
23%
8
U)
'(enderfiap' Reflected In Fcoiioinic R.itings
Analysis ot the results bx key groups .-hows that women are more negattve than men in their apprai-al ot Reagan's handling of economic conditions, lu.-t as thex are on loreign policy. A total of 44 percent ot men', t)ut only :>i percent of xx omen. say they approve of the president's handling ot economic conditions.
Sharp differences also are found on the basis of racial background, with whites five times as likely to approve as non-whites.
Here are the results on the question of economic conditions: Reagan Handling Of Economic Conditioiis
NATIONAL Men Women
Whites.....
Non-whites
East ......
.Midwest South West
S25.00 & over (familv income 1
520.000-S24.999
515.000-S19.999 .....
510.000-S14.999 .........
$5,000-S9,999 Under S5.000 Republicans Democrats Independents Prof. & business Clerical & sales Manual workers
The latest results are based on personal interviews with 1,506 adults. 18 and older, conducted in over :5oo scientifically selected localities across the nation during the period August 19-22.
For results based on a sample of this size, one can say with 95 percent confidence that the error attriliutable to sampling and other random effects could be 3 percentage jwints m either direction.
(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
No
.Approve
Disapprove
Opinion
37%
34%
n
44
49
1
, ,..:31
38
11
43
49
8
8
79
13
31
61
8
40
47
13
39
33
8
.33
43
4
47
48
5
. 35
32
13,
. 30
6:5
22
62
16
,12 ,
87
21
65
23
10
20
To
10
12
,3:5
5
31
41
8
,46
46
8
.33
61,
6
A-6 The Daily .Reflector. Greenville. N.C
Sunday, Octobers, 1983
THE QUIZ
Answers On A-10
End Of Golden
THE WEEKLY QUIZ IS PART OF THIS NEWSPAPER'S SCHOOL PROGRAM
worldscope
(10 points for each question answered correctly)
1 Tcdcheis in (CH0S1 \: Chi(,ii;o. Los Anyt'Ifsi, the n,ition\ third larsu-si school riistiKt. vM'iit on striko uht'ii nnitoti.ilors IdiU'ii to it'soK't' .1 (iis[)uii' (HIT s,il,ir\ in-
( OMst's.
2 Dnmot rain prnsidnntial hopntui, ^ . loi nnrk won kov ondorsnnirnts trom the Afl-C IO and Natutnal [duration Xvsor laiion.
3 \s a Ir'asotii(> took hold in II'I'anon liMtlt'rs ot that (ountu s inliqiou' .tnd tolitu.il t,K-tions (iit't to roronrilo dittciniUc' th.it h.isn dnitlnd tho nation llio ni.i|onI\ ot Ltdiant'st" dtl/nn^ aio (CHS L)\l Movlnms, C hiiCt
tians
Dredm Baffling
4 Prr'sidciit Rnar^an - tonimisMon on ( niitial Amorna. hoadnd In 7 , ii.unlnd to tho ft'Uion on a t.u t-tindinq tour hnloin niakiny poln r itHoinmnnd.itKmv
a-Rii hard \i\on h-ttnnrr K^^inuoi t-r,frald Inid
5 Ihc undinr iit AnuMu.iM' (i5 .ind oldnr is inr it'a--int; .1a (H()()'>IL)\I t.i-tnr slnuni' r.itn th.m ''ir 'rv'nt'c puji.i'.itiiin, ,u r nidinu
newspicture
(10 points if you answer this question correctly)
irvo soars JHO a Chicago suburb sparked gun comrol proposals ac ross the nation when it banned citizens from owning handguns On the first dav ot the new Supreme Court session the Ju'tuis.agreed that the handgun ban (CHOOSE ONE: violates, not violatei the consiitutiona,! right to bear arms
peoplewatch/sportlight
to a ri'fi" * ( . iiMi' Rn(n i" a
newsname
(10 points it you can identity this person in the news)
Ihc sotimmc t liuH ic-1 cn;\ ticrt.in ,i ness 'c--VI,,'- In 1%i Pif'Klcni \i\on ,i[i()oinlcd me L tncl lijvin c lit tlic Su()-
rcn'ic ( oud I innunidind |i j |,f I unodriing rctirc-n V, i(,r V\'hi) ,ini I >
(2 points for each question answered correctly)
1 arl Vastr/emski of the (CHOOSE ONE: New York Yankees. Boston Red SoxI retired trom baseball thisseason. Vastrzemski IS theonlv plaser with more than 3.000 hits and 400 home runs
2 BasehaH's VYorld Series opens this week at the ballpark ot the Ameruan League ( hampioqa The iCHOOSE ONE: American leaque. NationaT EV'auuck, has won the most VAorld Series titles
3 The titth weekend ot National Eoothall League ac tion saw the Uashimtion Reciskins deteat the L A Raiders 37-35. It was the R.Tiders tirst loss, and lett the 7 as the onlv undeleated team in the NIL attc*r tis(vseeks.
a-Minnc'soia \ikings b-Dallas Cowbovs c-Pittsburgh Sleelers
matchwords
(4 points for each correct match)
a-.nd.n.,lie iien
1-ile()l( u
2-de!.ls
3-dellote 4:det,u e 5-dei-.
b-'i .ilte v()le,id I nit c-ni,e divtnpiie d-i l'.,r.e!.s;e d.irc e-pid I'd jio-tiione
4 Reientlv. "A Choius Line became the longest-runnmg mijsii at in Broacfwav hislorv. Its T,3ti9lh performance topped the record (Keviouslv held bv i( HOOSE ONE: "Grease ,
Annie I.
5 A 167 sear old "tairs tale which was discoserecf recentls ssill he puftlished next sear. The tale will |om "Snow U hite and C inderella in the world famous collec tion c)t "tans tales" bs
iCHOOSE ONE Hans Christian Andersen. The Brothers
Gnnini'
roundtable
YOUR SCORE 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE' 81 to Knowledge Industries
Family discussion (no score)
should It tie ( onsidered a c rime tor a person to use ,i (onipulei to ijain unauthorized access to information so long as the inloimalion is not damagerf m ans was? V\hs or s\hs not:
90 points - Excellent 71 to 80 points Good 61 to 70 points F^r Inc. 1010-83
States Feud Over Patient
,\AX FECANClSfT'i .\E^ -Mayor Dianne Fein.'tein has sent an angrs lelearam to the governor of Flornia, elaimmg a hospital there got rid ot an unwanted .AIDS
S', a
patient i,\ having him to San Francisco.
Mrs, Fein'siein Morgan .MaeDonaid. ;
Vero Beach. Fla brought here Tuesday in a chartered jet atter lieinu discharged trom Shands Hospital at the L'niversity ot Florida at Gainesville
The mavor released a let
ter dated Sept, :f(i and signed by a Shands lawyer ordering .AiacDonald to leave the hospital by Oct. 7,
The telegram sent Friday asked Florida Gov, Bob (raham "urgently to "investigate the circumstances surrounding the. shipment trom Gainesville, Fla , to .^an Francisco ot a man dying as a result ot .AIDS
The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Al.icDonald was accompanied on the ilight by a physician, a social service worker and a woman believed to he a nurse.
Graham's press .secretary, Steve Hull, said state health
officials contacted Shands and learned that the hospital apparently acted independently. He said MacDonald had been at Shands since July 14,
\Ve have no indication ot
state involvement." Hull said, ".And trom the information we've received trom Shands. they thought they were doing the correct thing in sending the patient to San Francisco."
By LINDA DEUTSCH
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Alan David Saxons death in a haze of carbon monoxidc fumes marked the end of a golden dream for him and 35,000 investors in his Bullion Reserve of North America.
Saxon, who apparently took his own life, died less than two weeks ago in the sauna of his $685,000 condominium on the edge of Marina del Rey, a mecca for Southern Californias youthful nouveau riche.
But the trappings of wealth, it would soon become clear, were a facade. Saxons gold and silver trading business was near bankruptcy.
Much of the gold he had sold to some 35,000 investors was gone or had never existed except on pieces of paper traded in the futures market. Authorities were demanding to see his financial records.
Enough mystery surrounded Saxons demise to lead Los Angeles County District Attorney Robert Philibosian to seek a coroners inquest into the circumstances surrounding the death.
"We dont have any reason to believe it is not a suicide, said Philibosian. "Its a matter of closing every loophole in the case,
Saxon, 39, was found dead Sept. 28. A hose from a motorcycle exhaust led to the sauna at the house where he lived with his wife, Susan.
Philibosian refused to discuss the contents of a tape recording found near Saxons body. David Fishlow, spokesman for New York Attorney General Robert Abrams, had said Saxon left a tape-recorded message saying he committed suicide in part because of business difficulties.
Philibosian warned that thousands of investors were unlikely to get any money back.
The district attorney said last week that his department was investigating whether investors might be the victims of theft, but he added: "We are not convinced a crime was committed at this time.
After a preliminary audit. Bullion Reserve last Monday filed for protection from creditors under Chapter 11 of
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federal bankruptcy laws. The company also filed suit seeking the return of some $23 million in assets from individuals and companies, including $16.4 million in homes, cars, business holdings and cash from Saxons estate and wife.
Investors, who New York authorities said may have lost as much as $60 million, were left with an expensive lesson in the world of bullion trading - a multimillion-dollar international racetrack where gamblers get no insurance and amateurs are out of their league.
But it is amateurs who feed the growing industry of bullion traders - a relatively new breed, subject to no regulatory agencys control.
Only 5 percent of Americans invest in precious metals, Gordon Briggs, a consultant specializing in the bullion market, said in an interview. Many people "are ignorant about how to invest in gold, silver and platinum.
As a result, he said, they wind up buying precious metals from groups such as Bullion Reserve of North America or International Bullion Exchange, a Fort Lauderdale firm that folded last February.
Briggs, based in Beverly Hills, publishes the "Bullion Letter, a privately circulated newsletter for insiders in the bullion trade. He also is the author of a novel, Bullion, about the 1980 gold rush in which the price of gold more than doubled in a few months.
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People in the bullion business are often amateurs, sometimes inept and, because its unregulated, theres an open door, he said.
Through that door in 1981 walked Saxon, a former employee of an advertising company. He launched Bullion Reserve of North America with an advertising blitz promising to provide investors with solid gold, the best "hedge against inflation in uncertain markets.
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y^.8 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C
Sunday, October 9.1983
Republicans Await Watt's Decision
W.ASHIM'.TDN AF -Senate Kopubiicans. a!reuii\ ed\ about the a84eiee:;on.'. don't want t'l tv fareeo 'o vote on whethe'' Interior Secretar} .Jaille^ V.aji >houid remain in utnc. For them. It s a poiiticji ;o'Ain Situation ot the tu-'-t rsi^nitude-That was the consensus view that emerged as Congress headed home- to face constituents tor a weeklong congressional .Columbus Da\' recess - and to await Watt's
decison on whether to resign.
When the\ return on Oct. 17, a Democratic-spohsored "sense oi the Senate" resolution urging Watt's dismissal Will tv the tirst order oi business pending on the Senate calendar.
Senate GOF leaders have made it clear to the While House that, while they were able to delay such a \ote until after tfie recess, they will be unable to block it any longer - and that if Watt
insists on trying to keep his post, he will lose the vote, probably by a wide bipartisan margin.
And Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., who calls himself an honest messenger" between the Senate and the White House on the Watt matter, reportedly relayed this sentiment in the clearest of terms last week to White House aides.
People tin the Senate)
are waiting to hear what happens, Baker said.
GOP sources who sptAe on the condition they not be identified said. Baker and other top Senate Republicans desparately hope that the Watt issue will have resolved itself by the time the recess ends and that Senate Republicans, already facii^
a tough challenge in retaining control of the chamber
they won in the Reagan landslide of 1980, wont have
Continued t rom A-1
In addition, the child would have "poor motor skills (coordination I and would be 3-4 years old "
Also, typically, they have a poor image of themselves, ' said Mrs. Hardison "They realize they are different, and this is frustrating and adds to their problems"
The WAG center opened in 1974 and was funded by state and federal grants designed to "see if there was a need in Pitt County for a center tor mentally and physically retarded . preschool children,' said Mr^ fiardison Since 1974. 80-KK) children have been :r tho program, a number she feels indicates a great need The center is a component ol the Pitt County Mental Health Center and contracts with Greenville City and Fitt County (Schools to provide training for kids those systems are not able to serve.
"There are situations where our 'the center's' edcuational setting is more suitable for their <kids needs than their particular environments in the schools," said Mrs. Hardison. "We feel like we give them more in terms of training and attention than they would receive elsewhere"
The two school systems pay, according to Mrs. Hardison. S330 per month for each school-age child attending the W.AG Center. She estimates it costs the center S350-4U(i per child per month to operate.
In addition to the compensation from the schools, the center operates exclusively on state and federal funds, which according to .Mrs Hardison, have been cut severely in the last two years. , .
WAG Center operates on a SKKi.ihh) budget, said .Mrs:
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Hardison, which has been cut by $20-25,000. Out of this amount we pay salaries for five persons whose wages average S5.70 per hour, we pay fringe benefits, utilities and rent on our facility, we must pay for the maintenance of our van and for supplies and materials," she said.
The federal cuts have hampered our budget to say the Heast," said the director. We barely managed to keep our staff here, and we cannot provide transportation for children."
Hardison said the center receives no funds from Pitt County, even though they are a county agency.
"I got into fund-raising for the first time last year and Ill have to get further into it this year," Mrs. Hardison said. It's a different experience."
She fears the center will have to close if the funding issue is not resolved, but says in the long run it will be more expensive to the county if it does.
If W.AG was to close, all school-age children would immediately be the total responsibility of their school district." she explained. By law. the schools have to provide care for their heeds and they would be absorbed into existing classes or new ones would have to be created. This, of course, would be very expensive."
In addition, if the center closed. Mrs. Hardison said the Pitt County Department of Social Services would have to take custody of 4-5 of the center's children and place tham in foster care at a cost to the taxpayer of $150 per month per child.
"Finally, the children themselves would suffer because parents would be forced to pay extreme costs to try and obtain similar services, or more likely, they would keep their child home due to these extreme costs or the non-availablity of nearby serv ices." Mrs, Hardison said.
A typical day at the center, said the director, goes like this:
The children arrive at 8-9 a.m. and have breakfast. Later, a recreation period is provided, then they go to their individual classes. After class, it's time for playing outside, then time for lunch. In the afternoons, another recreation period is scheduled, then naptime. Finally, the day ends with individualized training.
"In addition to these normal, everyday activities, we take them swimming once a week in the summer, and we schedule field trips," said .Mrs. Hardison, For example, weve been to the .\orth Carolina zoo and we take them out to eat frequently.
"Trips are a learning experience for the children and one we like to give them." she atided.
An infant stimulation class has recently been developed at the center, said the diretor, and provides training in all areas of growth including tactile, visual and motor skills.
The center sent its first graduate" home recently, said Mrs. Hardison, a victory for the program. The childs IQ reached a level where he could not funded, so he went home at age three."
Not all the credit goes to the program, however, she noted. 'We've found out a lot of things can be worked out - not overcome, but worked out," she said. "His worked out beautifully.
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to carry any additional political baggage into next years elections.
Watt, meanwhile, on continued his vaetion in California. The Interior De partment said in a statement Saturday that Ije plans to return to Washington in the next few days.
Sen. Richard G. Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Republican Campaign Committee, disputed that whether Watt slays or goes is going "to make any difference on the election prospects of individual senators.
We are going to retain control of the Senate with some margin to spare, he asserted. I have been saying for months that what is going to be important is Ronald Reagan and improvement of the economy.
Lugar conceded, however, that "there is a cumulative effect of Watts environmental policies and his off-the-cuff remarks that is not exactly helping the Republican Party in its efforts, to widen its base among voters.
Many GOP colleagues have been far less charitable towards the interior secretary.
I think hes a liability to the party, said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Robert Dole, R-Kans., Theres a very, very strong feeling that Secretary Watt should leave,
"When credibility and confidence are gone in Congress, a Cabinet officer must face up to that, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., said Friday.
Sen. Charles H. Percy. R-IIL, said at a news conference in Galesburg. 111., on Saturday that he expects Watt will resign Monday.
"I think he will do that (resign) Monday," Percy said, I have directly said he must be honor-bound and
leave the decision to the president. My judgment is that he will do so on Monday and the president will accept it.
Even before the Watt matter, Senate Republicans, who gave President Reagans programs near solid votes of approval early in his*term, had been drifting steadily away from the V/hite House fold and exhibiting a streak of new independence and rebelliousness as the 1984 elections approach.
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A-10 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C
Sunday, October 9,1983
Revolt Grows Over Social Security Cutotts
M I' By CHRIS CONNELL states. Instead, they express not comnlvine fullv with the Appeals in California has
The Adopt-a-Pets of the Week are nine cats 6 months and under, all colors, Grifton, 524-5001.
Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Hurnane Society are the following:
Three 6-week-old kittens - one white, one black and white and one gray tabby. 758-6621.
A white 9-week-old kitten, housebroken. 752-9978.
Two female black and kittens 8 weeks old and a 3-month-old black and white kitten. 355-6086.
A white neutered male terrier, housebroken, good with children, has all shots. 756-4813.
Three 8-week-old kittens - two gray and white, one black and white, and one solid black. Humane Society. 756-3251.
A 5-week-old Lab-terrier female puppy, black. Humane Society, 756-3251.
Two female kittens one calico, one dark. 8-9 weeks old, 756-3314.
Five 7-week-old part cocker spaniel puppies, two black, three beige. 756-7521.
A female 8-month-old tan part-shepherd dog; a 2-year-old male mixed breed, both very friendly. 753-4369.
A 1'2-year-old male dark chocolate poodle, house dog. Humane Society, 752-9922.
A 4-month-old female schnauzer-poodle; a male collie-shepherd that needs fenced-in yard or country home. Humane Society, Avden.'746-'246ff --
Lost - a solid grav cat with a white flea collar. 752-0025 or 752-8819. . ,
Six 4-month-old kittens - two black and white, one gray tabby, one calico, and two tri-colors. 746-4791.
Found - a white puppy about 12 weeks old - ears clipped and tail bobbed, 756-0324or 756-2130.
A 4-month-old female part-schnauzer puppy. 756-7056.
Five 8-week-old shepherd-lab puppies, w'ormed and with shots; a female 12-week-old mixed lab puppy and three 8-week-old beagle puppies, wormed and with shots; a 7-month-old female collie puppy; a-2-month-old male black and white retriever puppy. Humane Society, 756-1268.
Found in Winterville - a male beagle. 756-2839.
A female multi-colored cat and two 8-week-old kittens -one black and white, one black, brown and white. 752-3364 or 752-5077.
A 1-year-old small part-yellow male lab. Call 758-6333 Monday. '
A spayed female mixed black Lab. needs country home or fenced yard. 756-6i;i5.
A 6-week-old black kitten with blue eyes; a 9-week-old white male kitten; two spayed female tri-colored cats, spayed, with shots; a male black and white neutered cat; two spayed female black cats, shots. Humane Society. 756-1268.
To place an animal for free adoption through this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage, 756-4867; Bobbie Parsons. 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; Barbara Haddock, 752-9922; Cathy Ketron, 746-2468 (Ayden); or Carol Tver. 752-6166.
By CHRIS CONNELL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A goveriiors rebellion is spreading against Social Securitys rules for handling disability reviews, with eight states riow unilaterally^ declaring moratoriums on cutting people off the rolls.
In many other states, court rulings are forcing the federal government to keep people on disability unless examiners can show that the recipients medical condition has improved since he or she initially won benefits.
Some observers have called it the most wanton disregard of federal rules since the 1960s w'hen several governors in the South resisted federal efforts to force desegregation of their public schools.
Alabama Gov. George Wallace, who. was one of those governors, is also among those now refusing to follow:_the Social Security Administrations rulebook for determining which of the 2.6 million disabled workers should lose their benefits.
The Reagan administration has taken no punitive action against any of the states involved in the rebellion. Top Social Security officials disavow any intention of cracking down on the
states. Instead, they express confidence that legislation now pending in Congress will straighten out the bureaucratic imbroglio.
The federal government paid the states $540 million last year to administer the disability program according to federal rules. It has the authority to take over a state-run disability office, but it has never done so in the 17-year history of the program.
This has always been a federal-state partnership and we want to keep it that way. I dont want to talk about a federal takeover. Lou Enoff, Social Securitys acting deputy commissioner for programs and policy, said in an interview. We want to work it out with the Congress and try to come up with some medical improvement standard . _
Enoff added, I'm not sure how many cases aren't being processed at this time,
Since New York declared a moratorium on July 22, seven states haye followed suit: Alabama, North Carolina. W'est Virginia," Virginia, New Jersey. Maryland and Pennsylvania.
Several other states, including Massachusetts. Georgia, Arkansas. Oklahoma and Kansas, are
not complying fully with the federal rules, according to Social Security spokesman JohnTrollinger.
Pennsylvania was latest to join the rebellion when Gov. Richard Thornburgh imposed a temporary moratorium last Thursday. Thornburgh became the first Republican governor to do so. Maryland and Pennsylvania also imposed their moratoriums last week.
Enoff said he has been asking his regional offices to ascertain just what each of the moratoriums entails. He said he believed that in most cases, the governors orders protected people whose medical conditions had not improved.
Frankly, some of these executive orders - theres a long way between what is written by a governor and ^what is actually implemented,he said.
From 1969 to .1976, Social-Security did not allow the state disability agencies to terminate peoples benefits unless an improvement in their medical conditions could be demonstrated. But then the agency abandoned that policy through internal directives.
Several courts have ruled that that action was illegal. The 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals in California has twice ruled that Social Security must demonstrate either medical improvement or .clear errors in the original award. As a consequence, a medical improvement standard is in force in nine western states, California, Arizona, Hawaii, Nevada, Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and Montana.
The disability program pays $18 billion a year in benefits to nearly 2.6 million disabled workers and more than 1 million of their relatives. Because of estimates by auditors that a sizeable minority of these beneficiaries - 20 percent or more were actually ineligible, Congress in 1980 ordered Soeial Security to begin periodically recWk-ing the eligibility of all those with non-permanent disabilities.
- Previously, Social Security had only rechecked those it expected to recover. Since Mareh 1981. when the reviews began, through August 1983, some 1,007,000 eases were reviewed and 445,000 people, or 44 percent, ordered off the rolls. About one-third of all the reviews were regularly scheduled re-examinations. The rest were the new, periodic reviews.
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ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP) An apparent electrical fire on a Western Airlines jet that landed safely after smoke filled the cockpit could have turned sour immediately," a federal official said Saturday.
After Flight 705* touched down Friday evening at An-chorage International Airport, mechanics switched on the electrical system and found the cabin of the Boeing 727 filling with smoke, said James Michelangelo,, chief of the National Transportation Safety Board.
The whole aft cabin was filled with smoke. It was like fog. The fire department responded, but as of today (Saturday), we still havent found any electrical fire, Michelangelo said.
He said it was fortunate that smoke was confined to the cockpit during the flight from Juneau with 80 passengers and seven crew members. We might have had a fire back there (in the cabin). Michelangelo said, adding that the situation could have turned sour-im-mediately," he said.
The pilot and co-pilot smelled acrid smoke in the
cockpit shortly after leaving Juneau, Michelangelo said. They donned oxygen masks and shut down part of the electrical system - a move that cleared the smoke, he said.
The crew decided not to turn back to Juneau because they thought Anchorage was a better place to land in an emergency," Michelangelo said.
There were, no injuries on the flight, which landed at 5:35 p.m. Alaska Daylight Time, a Western spokeswoman in Los Angeles said.
Rescue and firefighting equipment stood by as the plane touched down.
Michelangelo said the crew low-keyed it" with the passengers. telling them only that the temperature in the plane would be colder. Airline spokeswoman Linda Dozier said the plane lost its heating system when the crew shut down part of the electrical system.
The plane was able to operate with generators providing about two-thirds of its normal electrical power, she said.
The flight originated in Palm Springs. Calif., with intermediate stops in San Francisco, Seattle and Juneau.
On June 2, a fire broke out on an Air Canada DC-9, killing 23 of the 46 people aboard. The plane, en route from Dallas to Toronto, was forced to make an emergency landing at Greater Cincinnati Airport.
The fire started near a rear lavatory and spewed smoke and toxic fumes into the cabin. Many of the victims, who showed signs of carbon monoxide poisoning, were piled up near the emergency exits trying to flee after the plane landed.
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' WASHINGTON (APi -: Sixteen senators say they cant believe the Pentagon ^ can wisely spend $4.2 billion " in one day. and they want an ' investigation info the De ^ fense Department's buving r spree on the last day ot the 1983 iiscal year.
"Year-end spending sprees have been found in past investigations by the Congress and others to have ~ resulted in exactly the sort of wasteful, unnecessary and even frivolous spending which needs to be eliminated," 11 of the senators said in a letter sent Thursday to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger.
In another letter, six senators asked that those contracts be held up for 30 days. The lawmakers told Weinberger. "We find it very difficult -to believe that the department could have processed so many contracts in so short a time" while meeting directives to hold down costs.
On Sept. 30. the final day of fiscal 1983. the Pentagon announced 234 contracts worth $4.2 billion. Veteran Pentagon observers told the Associated Press it was the largest one-day spending spree since the end of the Vietnam War.
.Normally, the Pentagon announces between two dozen to four dozen contracts daily. For example. 40 contracts worth $777 million were let on the previous Friday. Sept. 23.
Unless a department is specifically authorized to spend money after the fiscal year ends, any left-over funds revert back to the Treasury.
Weinberger planned to reply to the letter, but it had not yet been received, said a Pentagon spokesman who declined tobe named.
However, Weinberger, on an appearance last week on ABCs "Good Morning. America." ,said the spending was "to fuitill the contracts that have been under negotiation and in the normal course come up for allocation and award at any particular lime. The fact that it happens to be the last month of the fiscal year is what gets the attention"
Weinberger said, "none ol the spending was done in order to make sure we didn't have anything left. Spending was done entirely in accordance with a plan that is a very large plan and the ver\ size of our spending is dictated by the tact that we did fall seriously behind in the 1970s and we have a great deal to do as quickly as we can. It's very expensive."
The Defense Department is in the midst ot a tive-year, $1.7 trillion build-up, a record peacetime defense spending figure designed to cure what Weinberger and President Reagan say has been a decade of neglect of America's militarv machine.
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. Octobe 2 1983 A*11
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A-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, October 9,1983
Kissinger To Tour Central America
By GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP - Henry A ivissinger and his Bipartisan National Commission on Central America leave Sunday night on a week-long trip to the region in quest of new ideas on how the United States should handle one of its most troublesome foreign policy areas For a diplomat who once negotiated questions of war and peace in the Middle East. Hissinger's mandate in Central America will be modest.
The commission's goal is to gather facts, not negotiate. It is scheduled to meet with leaders of the government, the democratic opposition, the church, academia, labor groups and peasant organizations. No meetings are planned with guerrilla leaders of either the left or the right.
"I think what we will get out of the trip is a flavor for .the country, a judgment of the personalities, an opportunity to ask questions that have been bothering us." Kissinger said when summing up the panels goals.
From Monday through next Saturday, the commission will start early each day and work until after dark with few interruptions in their visits to Panama. Costa Rica. El Salvador. Guatemala. Honduras and Nicaragua.
"Obviously, in a week, in a day in each country, we will not
become expert in each country." Kissinger said recently, adding with a smile. "We may manage it m one or two."
Lamenting the dizzying pace and the brief stop in each country, Rep. Michael Barnes. D-Md., said, "This is an awful way to do it. I hope a lot can be learned even under these circumstances."
Barnes, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Inter-American Relations, is one of about six "senior counselors" who will accompanv the panel on the trip.
Of the 12 commission members, all but elections expert Richard Scammon and former Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart are expected to make the trip. Both had scheduling conflicts, commission spokesman Herbert Hetu said.
The commission was formed last summer to help President Reagan formulate a long-term, unified national approach to the political and economic problems of Central America.
Kissinger had planned to submit a final report to Reagan in Feburary but the deadline has since been moved up to January 10. Hetu said the panel wants to avoid any suggestion that its deliberations are being influenced by the presidential primary campaign, expected to be in full swing by late January.
The commission is an ideologically diverse group.
China Plans To Purge Maoists
PEKING lAP) - Chinese leaders will purge at least 3 million of the Communist Party's 40 million members in a re-registration campaign aimed at expelling adherents to the late Chairman Mao Tse-tung's radical views, diplomatic sources said Saturday,
the sources, who requested anonymity, said they have information that the party's investigators are gathering evidence on 3 million members in order to build cases against them in a purge expected to last for about three years.
China's state-run press refers to the campaign as a rectification,'' a housecleaning to rid the^ party of leftist opponents to the policies of China's ranking leader Deng Xiaoping. But official accounts have never specified how many party members are likely to
be expelled.
^ Deng is the ranking member of the party's ruling Politburo and chairman of the Military Affairs Commission. He rose to power following Mao's death in 1976 and the arrest of Mao's subordinates, an unpopular radical clique known as the "Gang of Four." including Mao's wife Jiang Qing.
In contrast to Mao. Deng has allowed peasants to engage in limited private enterprise, invited foreigners to invest in China, reinstituted aptitude testing in colleges, shifted the economic emphasis to consumer goods and made state-run industry more accountable for profit and loss
These changes have angered party members who adhere to Mao's philosophy of unending revolution, class struggle and self-reliance. Manv of these members
were able to join the partv during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, a chaotic period inspired by Mao's radical directives aimed at expelling those he considered rightist
"capitalist readers" - such as Deng.'
Much of Deng's work in the last seven years has been aimed at putting associates in senior positions
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Members include former Texas Gov. William P. Clements on the conservative side arid San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros, offering a more liberal viewpoint.
Since the commission was formed this past July, American interests in Central America appear to have been set back.
After an extended peiod of tranquillity in El Salvador, leftist guerrillas and rightist "death squads" recently have been stepping up their activities. Meantime, the Salvadoran economy has contiued its downward slide.
U.S. relations with Nicaragua have continued to deteriorate following recent reports that the Central Intelligence Agency has been providing planes to anti-government rebels based both in Honduras and Costa Rica.
The Reagan administration, meanwhile, continues to view Nicaragua as a threat to the region because of its heavy military buildup, its close ties to the Soviet bloc and its alleged support for the Salvadoran rebel movement.
On the positive side, the five Central American countries formally agreed this past week to a 21-point proposal for resolving the regions diverse political problems. The key proposals include pledges of non-intervention by each country and reductions'in the number of foreign military advisers.
The principles were the result of a mediation process that began last January under the auspices of Panama. Mexico. Venezuela, and Colombia the so-called Contadora group.
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Liquor deliveries in North Carolina are down for the first time in the history of the state Alcoholic Beverage Control office, officials say,
The statistics indicate that North Carolinians are drinking less but paying more for it, said William Hester, state ABC administrator.
In July and August, for the first time, our deliveries were off." said Hester, The two-month decline amounted to about cases or 6.3 percent less than last year.
The trend is showing up in Mecklenburg County, said Henry Severs, general manager of its ABC system. In fiscal 1979, the county system sold more than two gallons of liquor for every resident - 1,090,292 gallons or 4,955,553 bottles. But in the fiscal year that ended in June, the total gallons sold had dropped to 984,323 or 4,545.862 bottles.
The many factors influencing the decline include an increasingly hostile public attitude to.ward drunken drivers and rising prices, mostly due tb tax boosts, officials say.
The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N C
"It you asked me three years ago, the average price of a bottle would- have been about $5," Hester said. "It has gone up about $2 a bottle."
Before liquor gets to North Carolina, distillers pay a S10.50 tax per 100-proof gallon. The state adds a 64 cents markup, with 22.5 cents going for general state use and the remainder to help run the ABC system.
A surcharge of 66 cents per case was added in 1982 to pay for a new $5.5 million ABC warehouse in Raleigh. This year, a 5-cents-per-bottle tax was added for inflation and another $1.04 per case surchage was voted to support alcohol law enforcement.
People who drink in bars arent exempt from higher taxes, either. This years General Assembly increased liquor-by-the-drink fees from $500 to $750 for a first-time license and from $250 to $500 for renewal.
Hester said North Carolina drinkers also have been buying more beer and wine because its cheaper than liquor.
_Sui^day October 9. 1983 A*13
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Mourners Pay Tribute To New York Cardinal
Shrine
A 32-foot stainless steel statue of the Virgin Mary, credited by some with miraculous properties, has been dedicated at a shrine near San Jose, Calif.
About 1 ,'500 people gathered for the dedication of the six-acre Shrine of Our Lady of Peace, located on flatlands near the southern edge of San Krancisco Bay, The statue created by artist Charles Cropper Parks drew crowds across the nation as it was transported across the country from Wilmington. Del., to California,
The statue Was installed Sept. 25 at the shrine beside Our Lady of Peace Church. lAPLaserphoto)
NEW YORK (UPI) - A host of mourners with prayer books in their hands and silent prayers on their lips filed past the body of Cardinal Terence Cooke in St. Patrick's Cathedral Saturday to pay their last respects to the man who reigned over the archdiocese of New York for more than a decade.
Long lines began forming outside St. Patricks shortly after the two huge bronze doors were opened at 6:.30 a.m. for the first full day of mourning for Cooke, who died of leukemia at the age of 62 after losing an eight-year battle with cancer.
At a rate of 2,000 an hour, the mourners filed past the coffin of the cardinal who had been the spiritual leader of 1.8 million New York Catholics and, as military vicar, of an additional 2 million Catholics in the armed forces.
Most of the mourners wore dresses and conservative three-piece suits as they slowly mched towards the cathedral where the cardinal had been brought in a funeral procession the night before. Others were more casually dressed and wore jeans and sneakers.
As they inched forward between scores of police barricades many of the mourners held
rosary beads or prayer books. Some said silent prayers while others told stories about the cardinal they recalled from years past.
Inside the cathedral the body of the cardinal, clad in the white and gold vestments of a bishop, lay in a simple brown coffin placed slightly to the left of the head of the main aisle.
On the cardinals head was a bishopss miter. A string of rosary beads was clasped in his hands.
Two police officers and two firefighters, wearing full dress uniforms, formed an honor guard that stood by the coffin.
Police said the street alongside the church would remain blocked until the church closed for the night at l;30 p.m. Viewing was to continue Sunday.
The Rev. Peter Finn, an archdiocese spokesman, said guests at Cooke's funeral Monday would inclpde former President Richard Nixon. Former President Jimmv Carter and comedian Bob Hope have also indicated they will attend. Finn said,
Cookes body will be interred in the crypt beneath the main altar of the cathedral.
Invitation To Complain
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Postal Service has never had any\shortage of complaints. bufbeHqye it or not. it's now asking for them.
.As part of a campaign to 'improve service, the agency is inviting customers to voice their complaints on Con
sumer Service Cards available through letter carriers and at post offices.
"We seriously want people to tell us what's wrong with the Postal Service and how we can do a better job." Postmaster General William F, Bolger said in an in
terview to explain the new all services campaign."
We have to know whats bothering people so we can remedy the situation." he said.
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A-14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, October 9,1983
Suit Challenges Assembly Districts
B> MARY AWE RHYNE .Associated Press W riter
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) North Carolina blacks are being denied equal access to the political system because of past policies and recent legislative redistricting, court documents contend.
The documents were filed Friday by attorneys for the Legal Defense Fund, wjaich has been joined by a group of Republicans in challenging state House and Senate districts drawn bv the General Assembly in 1981 and 1982.
The documents follow a week-long trial in July and precede final arguments before a three-judge panel in U.S. District Court.
Attorneys for the state also filed documents Friday that say even the black community is divided over tlie outcome of redistricting and that there is no indication the present state House and Senate multi-member districts cause fewer blacks to be elected than in single-member districts.
The suit says that House districts in .Mecklenburg. Forsyth. Durham. Wake, Wilson. Edgecombe and Nash counties and a Senate district in Mecklenburg and Cabarrus counties submerge concentrations of black.
voters in larger white populations to unconstitutionally dilute minority voting strength.
"The defendants appear to take the view that simply because blacks can register and vote m North Carolina, and have recently been elected to a few offices in the state, there can be no dilution of minority voting strength," said Leslie J. Winner. NAACP attorney.
Ms. Winner said the state has ignored her clients' evidence showing racial bloc voting, subtle racial appeals in elections, the depressed socio-economic status of blacks and the electoral defeat of minority candidates over an extended period of time.
Jim Wallace of the state attorney general's office said the state's evidence shows that blacks freely register and vote, play important roles in party politics and are appointed to influential statewide boards. He said the minority groups are seeking an unfair advantage.
"The plaintiffs' case rests not upon a denial of access to the political system, but upon the contention that success of black candidates is not guaranteed." Wallace said in his briefs.
"The plaintiffs have essentially asked this court to remove black voters and candidates
from the competitive electoral arena and to
protect them from the vagaries of political foi......
fortune," he said.
The black voters also contend they have demonstrated that the redistricting was done with the foreseeable result of diluting minority voting strength, which the state denies.
The black voters are asking the court to order the state to draw districts that recognize the voting strength of minorities and to
prohibit the state from using multi-member districts for future elections in the contested areas.
The state advises the court, however, that it cannot consider isolated aspects of a statewide apportionment plan without affecting other areas. It says each district is interrelated and asks the court|o consider whether the political process as a whole was unfairly closed to minorities.
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Tobacco
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B\ The Associated Press
Grades prices and quality of flue-cured tobacco slumped this week as .North Carolina's three markets ended their lth week of sales.
On the Old & .Middle Belt, quality was similar to the pr^jou^ week, but loan receiptsicreased a substantial amount. Volume was moderate to heavy and. based on the September crop estimate, about 68 percent of the 1983 type 11 production has been sold.
The week's average of S175.94 was down $3.10 from last week's sales. The proportion of sales placed under loan increased as 21.4 percent of weekly sales was delivered to the stabilization corporation. For the season, 16,8 percent has been placed under loan compared to 19.9 percent during the same period last year.
\olume of sales on the Border Belt was moderate to heavy and loan receipts increased slightly. Due to a holiday on .Monmday, sales next week will be limited to three days Based on the latest crop estimate, 96.7 percent of type-13 tobacco has been sold
The weekly average of S1H6 94 was down S4.50 From the previous week. During the same period last year, 202,828.224 pounds averaged S173 68,
Grade prices were lower in over 70 percent of the cases compared with the previous week. .Most losses ranged from SI to $4 per hundred and appeared in all groups. The top average for the week was S207 tor a tew sheets of good orange cutters with n2 the lowest at $109.
Lower quality was a result of an increase in low. poor and nondescript offerings with a decrease in good and fair grades Demand for Eastern Belt tobacco was not as strong during the tenth week of auctions. Grade averages were lower than last week in most cases and quality was less desirable.
The percentage placed under loan increased steadily this week. Volume remained heavy at practically all markets. Sales are scheduled Tuesday through Thursday next week as Columbus Day will be observed .Mondav.
Gross sales for the week through Oct. 6 totaled 31.310.796 pounds and averaged $182.77 per hundred - down S6.02 from the previous week. The season figure stands at 270.336.935 pounds averaging $182.77.
Averages were lower for a vast majority of grades this week. Losses ranged mainly from $1 to $7 per hundred pounds Practical top price held at S2o5 per hundred, although a few sheets sold for $1 or $2 above this figure.
This week's marketings consisted of a smaller percentage of third and fourth quality leaf with more fifth, sixth and nondescript. Tobacco designated as being unripe or immature increased to around two-thijds of sales.
The stabilization corporation received 10.5 percent of sales this week with the season percentage at 15.3. For the same period last year. 28.5 percent was placed under loan.
(
Mild Weather May Increase Funds For Heat
'By The Associated Press
While the National Weather Service has predicted abovenormal temperatures and below-normal precipitation in North Carolina and South Carolina this winter, state-funded energy assistance in expected to increase, officials say.
Already, Weather Service officials have estimated the Piedmont will have the lowest fuel needs for any October since 1975. And both North Carolina and South Carolina are in an area given more than a .55 percent chance of a milder-than-normal winter in the NWS 90-day forecast.
"It looks like more of the country is a^ve normal than below normal for the October period," said Bob Dickson, meterologist for the service's Long-range Prediction Center in Camp Springs. Md. "The core of the winter (December. January and February) looks pretty mild."
Meanwhile, about 85,000 more residents in the two states are expected to get energy assistance payments than received them last year,
N.C. Low-Income Energy .Assistance Program officials say they will serve 200.000 residents, compared with 144,000 last winter and 143,000 the winter before. While program funding increased from $21 million in 1981 to $29 million in 1982, officials were not sure how much money will be available this winter. They estimated, however, that the average payment would fall from $204 to about $167.
In South Carolina, the Low-lncome Home Energy Assistance Program may serve 100,000 people, compared with 71,000 last winter, officials said. If the program receives an anticipated $13 million, the average payment will equal last year's $140 average, said Grey Adams, program information officer.
Eligible recipients must have assets of less than $2,200 and pay their own heating bills.
Forecasters use heating degree days to measure the need for fuel. A heating degree day is counted each time the temperature dips a degree below a daily average temperature of 65 degrees When the temperature is 65 degrees outside, a building requires heating to maintain 70 degrees inside
For every additional heating degree day. more fuel is needed If the average outdoor temperature is 35 degrees -an equivalent of 30 heating degree days - twice as much fuel would be needed as for a day averaging 50 degrees, or 15 heating degree days.
Carolinas residents are expected to have 130 heating degree days in October, compared with 191 in October 1982.
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Vocational Center's Dawkins Unit Dedicated
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
May we always remember the purpose of Eastern Carolina Vocational Center, to offer the person with a disability a secure setting in which to develop his or her fullest potential, the Rev. Howard G. Dawkins said during the dedication of a wing bearing his name at the center.
I call on all of you to care and to share with those who iiml you, said Dawkins, a former director of the center In his dedicatory address, Gov. Jim Hunt Jr. said the addition of the center makes it the largest such center in the Southeast and one of the largest, most modern vocational centers in the nation.
Hunt, in rwognizing Dawkins contribution to the center, said the ministers strength has been our strength. He is the most persistent man I have ever met, a man who would not give up ... someone who has shown us what excellence, what service to his fellow man can be. He is a man who has not been changed by life, but one who changes lives.
Often, there is one architect who is primarily responsible for getting things done. In this case, .that architects name is Howard Dawkins.
Hunt also praised supporters of the center in Pitt County and the surrounding area for the caring support you have given this center.
Numerous officials, local businessmen, East Carolina University School of Medicine representatives, former chairmen and members of the centers board of directors, along with the centers clients, were on hand for the ceremony.
These included Morris Brody, who spearheaded a fundraising campaign for money to finish construction of the new wing, state Sen. Vernon White, state Rep. Walter B. Jones Jr. who appeared on behalf of his father, U.S. Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., state Rep. John Gillam, Greenville Mayor Percy Cox and County Commissioner Charles Gaskins. ECU Chancellor-Emeritus Leo Jenkins also attended,
Dawkins expressed gratitude that members of his former congregations had made the trip to Greenville for the ceremony. Prior to becoming actively involved full time in work with the handicapped, Dawkins was minister of three Baptist Churches - in Hertford, Kinston and Concord.
This is a day Ive been looking forward to for a number of years, White said. Howard Dawkins has always wanted to do something better for the handicapped than was being done, and he has worked hard to bring his dream to completion. It has been his concern, and it has always been my concern, too, to help the handicapped in getting trained, in getting jobs, so that they do not have to live off someone else. We all want to be productive citizens, and Howard has given many this chance.
Joseph Gantz, chairman of the centers board of directors and master of ceremonies for the dedication, praised Dawkins and added, This center is also a tribute to all who have pitched in to make this building a reality. And it is a tribute to the clients here who have taken the opportunity to make their lives more productive.
Claude Myer, director of the North Carolina Department of
square feet in 1970, the center has continually been expanded. The annual budget is now nearly $4 million. Dawkins noted that in 1970, 93 percent of our funds were supplied by state and federal sources. By the end of 1981 state and federal support amounted to only 20 percent of the budget. We have been earning the rest. This, I think, speaks for itself,BE SURE
POLYGRAPH
TIDEW.4TER SECIRITY & POLVGR.\PH 223 W. lOTH ST. GREE.WTLLE .\C
758-4489
OVATION - The Rev. Howard Dawkins Sr., third from left, acknowledges a standing ovation following Gov. Jim Hunts address Friday' afternoon dedicating the new wing at the
Vocational Rehabilitation, said Dawkins efforts have been significant. There is no viable alternative to rehabilitation for our handicapped people. There is no viable alternative to a place like this beautiful center, a place that enables the handicapped to take part as we all want to do, in work. You people here have every reason to be proud of this center, this accomplishment.
Music for the ceremony was presented by the Washington, N.C., Community Band with Bennie L. Ferguson conducting. The invocation was given by Francis H. Mebane, and Thomas Taft, a member of the centers board of directors, introduced Hunt.
The unveiling of a portrait of Dawkins immediately followed Dawkinss response to Hunts dedication address, with Dawkinss four grandchildren jointly performing the unveiling. All members of his immediate family were present - his wife. Carmen Morgan Dawkins; two sons. Dr. Howard
Eastern Carolina Vocational Center as the Howard G. Dawkins Wing. Hunt stands immediately behind Dawkins. (Reflector Staff Photo)
G. Dawkins Jr. of Greenville, a surgeon; Dr. Frank M.
. Dawkins, a faculty member at William Carey College in Hattiesburg, Miss., and a daughter, Elaine Nichols Daves of Winston-Salem.
The final event of the ceremony was a ribbon cutting at the entrance of the new wing. Participants were Dawkins, Hunt, Cox and Dot Jean Tice, a client at the center.
The Howard G. Dawkins wing was,.gOmpleted in January of this year. It contains 183,000 squ-e feet of space, and was constructed at a cost of $5.2 million. Three major services are provided in the wing - recreation, including the pool and gymnasium; a residential area which houses 84 clients over the age of 16; and the kitchen and dining area, as well as some office spaces.
Dawkins retired as director on Jan. 1. 1982. He was succeeded by Daneel LeRoux, the center's current director.
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Pirates Survive Cajun Attack
B> WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor Tony Baker scored twice and raced for Kt yards as East Carolinas Pirates hung on for a 21-18 football victory over winless Southwestern-Louisiana Saturday afternoon in Ficklen Stadium.
It was a game that must have left ECU Coach Ed Emory screaming and shaking as if coming out of a nightmare that was first dreamed four years ago when the two teams last met in Ficklen Stadium.
In that game, East Carolina, leading 7-3 at the half, lost five fumbles in the third period to allow USL to rally for what turned into a 27-21 victory.
Saturday afternoon, the Pirates lost four of four fumbles in the second half and Southwest used two of them to push
into an 18-14 lead early in the final period before the Pirates finally mapaged ot hang onto the ball long enough to get into the end zone Deja vu? You better believe it.
I didn't think it would be as bad as 1980 when we set a national record for fumbles in a quarter, Emory said. But we went out there in the second half as if we were going to try and break that. Earnest Byner, who has had two fumbles nearly haunt him this year, misplayed two of those Saturday, while Baker was guilty of the other two lapses.
Ironically, three of those came when the Pirates were driving down the field as if to take control of a game that saw ECU lead. 14-3, at halftime with only half as many plays as the Ragin Cajun in
those first 30 minutes.
Weve been pretty good at protecting the ball until today, Emory said I dont know if they brought fumblitis in here or what. They had lost it 19 times coming in. The Cajuns lost it only once in two fumbles this time!
While the Cajuns moved the ball almost at will in the first half against the Pirate defense, they were denied the end zone. Their first drive resulted in their only score of the half, an 18 yard field goal by Oscar Speer. The Cajuns had six plays inside the five yard line during two series, failing each time to push it in.
East Carolina came back on a two-yard run by Baker to take the lead, and later Kevin Ingram dashed 51 yards down the sidelines for the second Pirate tally.
Flat-Out Speed behind in the fourth quarter for a 21-18 victory to
East Carolina fullback Earnest Byner turns the snap a two-game Ficklen Stadium losing streak
corner against the Ragin Cajuns of Southwestern against the Cajuns. (Reflector photo by Tommy
Louisiana Saturday. The Pirates rallied from Forrest)
Then, after Thomas Jackson had dashed 37 yards and Donnie Schexnider had passed five yards to Zach Dennis, the Pirates had to rally with Baker scoring from one yard out for the fateful TD that won it.
Even then, it took some fine defensive play plus a clipping call against USL that may have been the key play of the day for the Pirates to pull it out.
USL ran 81 offensive ^ays in the game, 13 more than did the Pirates, rolling up 468 yards, while ECU had 393. At the half, USL held a 49-24 margin in plays and a 240 to 156 yardage advantage.
In that amazing first half, USL kept the ball for 21:11, while the Pirates held it just 8:49 - yet still led at the half.
' I had been concerned all week about our team, Emory said, and today we didnt move. We were sound but. we couldnt keep the ball and move ij igit ^'e,: looked sluggish all day. We must have missed 15 or 20 tackles for 200 yards, were last week we missed only five for minus 25 yards. We controlled the line of scrimmage, but we could not score.
But youve got to win those kind to have a good record and a good team. When things dont go right you got to find a way to win. It was sure upset city out there today.
Southwest, using a passing game that picked apart the Pirate secondary - 22 of 33 for 241 yards - moved on its first possession down to the ECU 1 but couldn't get it in. Starting quarterback Dwayne Wallace twice passed for double-diget yardage, 10 and 11 yards along the way, while scrambling fon 13 on another play. Jackson broke away for 27 down to the six, setting up what turned into the field goal after a fine goal line stance by the Pirates. From the six, USL hit into the line three tim^s, gaining to the two on first down. Then, after an off-sides penalty moved it to the one, they had two chances from there before calling on Speer for the field goal and a 3-0 lead with 8:59 showing.
East Carolina promptly drove back down the field but came up short at the USL 39 and punted it dead on the five..
-Four plays later, Jackson fumbled and the Pirates grabbed it at the 18. After a five-yarder for USL being offsides, the Pirates got 11 yards on a blast up the middle by Baker, who then took the ball around the left side for the final two. Jeft Heaths first of three PAT kicks made it 7-3 with 3:37 left in the quarter.
USL immediately drove back down the field, as Wallace- hit 16, 18 and 17-yard I Please turn to page B-2 i
ECU Coach Ed Emory Long Day For Bucs
UNC Trio Tops!00 Yards; Tar Heels Hold Off Deacs
Hv RI( KS( ()PPE
.\ssociated Press Writer CHAPEL HILL, .\ C. ^\Pl -Fourlh-ranked and undefeated North Carolina, its passing attack having gone cold, turned to its running game Saturday to whip Wake Forest :50-lii in Atlantic Coast Conference football.
Eddie (olson, Tyrone Anthony and Ethan Horton each rushed tor more than 101) \ards as the Tar Heels claimed their sixth victory without a loss. North (arolina is 2- in the ACC.
' I was a little surprised at the way we ran the ball on them," North Carolina coach Dick Crum said i think they worked to take the pass away trom us and that opened up our running game. " Colson rushed for 119 yards on i;l carries and scored two second-hull touchdowns as the Tar Heels rallied trom a 10-10 halftime tie. it was the first time in his collegiate career that Colson had rushed for more than lOO yards "Their ends were dropping back real deep," Colson said. "When they did, ue ran."
Tailback Ethan Horton rushed for 116 yards on 13 carries, including a 20-yard scoring run with 25 seconds left in the third period to give the Tar Heels a 24-10 lead.
"They're obviously a very strong and powerful team, and efficient in so many areas." Wake Forest coach A1 Groh said. "They're the No. 3 or No. 4 football team in the country ... It probably would have taken No. 2 or No, 3 to beat them on a 60-minute span today."
Tyrone Anthony led North Carolina with 157 yards rushing on 19 carries, 112 of those yards coming in the first half. If was the first time in Tar Heel history that three running backs have run tor 100 yards or more in the same game.
Colson's 4-yard touchdown reception from .Scott Stankavage with 8:07 left in the third period enabled the Tar Heels to break a 10-10 tie Colson, who had the first ino-yard game ot his collegiate career, scored on a 12-yard run with 9:10 left to play to cap a .56-\ard drive m which he carried on all three plays.
North (tirolina, fourth in the nation in
total offense, gained 440 yards rushing and had a total of 488 yards. The Demon Deacons Were held to 27 yards in the second half and finished with 235 yards of oftense.
Wake Forest reserve tailback Topper Clemons rushed for 111 yards in 26 carries. The Demon Deacons. 3-3 and 0-2. were without leading runners Michael Ramseur and Ira McKeller, both suffering trom ankle injuries After stopping Wake Forest on its initial possession. North Carolina drove to the Demon Deacon 23, but Wake' Forest's Rory Holt recovered Colson's fumble at the 17 to end the march.
Wake Forest marched to the North Carolina 4 but a penalty and a sack forced the IXemon Deacons to settle for a :iU-\ard Harry Newsome field goal to make it 3-0 with 2::i3 remaining in the period
Anthony contributed 77 yards to the ensuing Tar Heel drive but his apparent 12-yard touchdown reception was nullified by an illegal motion penaltv and / Please turn to page B-5 >Georgia Tech Takes First ACC Win From Pack
RALEIGH, N'.C. (AP) - For Georgia Tech coach Bill Curry, two things had been a long time coming - his teams first Atlantic Coast Conference football victory and some old-fashioned pride.
1 havent been this proud of a team in a long, long time, Curry said Saturday after previously winless Georgia Tech defeated North Carolina State 20-10. Right now. Im just going to sit back and enjoy it. Im real proud of these guys.
Robert Lavette dashed 29 yards for a touchdown and Ron Rice kicked two field goals as the Ramblin Wreck won its first game after four losses and evened its ACC mark at 1-1. Lavette finished with 125 yards on 31 carries.
Curry said his injury-plagued team would have had a good reason for losing.
"It would have been easy just to sit back and use (injuries) as an excuse, he said. "It was an absolutely great physi cal effort.
Rices first-quarter field goal broke a string of misses and came after an early-week telephone conversation with Green Bay Packers kicker Jan Stenerud.
"Ron had a much more positive outlook and made a couple of short field goals he had been missing, Curry said.
Coach Tom Reed, whose Wolfpack fell to 2-3 and 1-2, said his team continued to reap the consequences of poor concentration.
"Were not a team of spirit and emotion, Reed said. We dont look like we wanted to play. Weve got to work and concentrate, and we've got to find the
players who really want to play.
The Ramblin Wreck took a 13-10 lead at intermission and held the sputtering Wolfpack offense scoreless in the second half.
Georgia Tech scored the only second-half points, with 13:46 left.
After N.C. State drove to the Georgia Tech 25. Joe McIntosh fumbled and Dante Jones recovered for Georgia Tech, The Ramblin Wreck moved 45 yards in four plays before Lavette. a 6-foot 195-pound junior tailback, burst over right tackle and raced 29 yards for the touchdown. Rice added the extra point.
An ineligible receiver penalty wiped out a Wolfpack first-down pass at the Georgia Tech 45, and Jack Westbrook intercepted a Tim Esposito toss at the Wolfpack 30 with 1:40 left. A roughing the
kicker penalty cost the Wolfpack a key fourth-quarter possession.
McIntosh, the ACCs second leading rusher averaging 113.5 yards pex game, gained 92 yards on 19 carries. Georgia Tech had 335 vards total offense to 298 for N.C. State.
Georgia Tech's Reginald Rutland recovered a punt dropped by N.C. State's Don Wilson at the Wolfpack 33 and marched to the Wolfpack 8 to set up Ron Rices 24-yard field goal - his first in four attempts this season - with 10:45 left in the opening period.
After the Wolfpack faltered, the Ramblin' Wreck took an N.C. State punt and moved 50 yards in nine plays before stalling at the Wolfpack 10. Rice made it 6-0 with a 26-yard field goal at the 2:06 mark.
Early in the second period, N.C. State drove 58 yards in 14 plays to the Georgia Tech 22. where Mike Cofer's 39-yard field goal made it 6-3.
On Georgia Techs next drive, flanker Daryl Wise faked a reverse and passed 34 yards to-Richard Salem to the Wolfpack t setting up Ronny Cones 1-yard touchdown plunge with 5:17 remaining in the half.
An apparent 19-yard touchdown pass from Esposito to Phil Brothers was nullified because Brothers stepped out of bounds before the catch. But the two teamed up for a 4-yard touchdown pass three plays later to end a 14-play, 70-yard drive and pull within 13-10.
(iforgia -Tech.........................fi 7 0 7Id
N, Carolina St ...........0 10 0 010
GT-FG Kic-c 24 GT-FG KiCf 20 N('S-FGC()I(t:W GT-Cone 1 run Hitt-kick'
NCS-Brolhers :!
pass from
Esposito
1 Coler kick i GT- Lavette 29 run
Rice kick i
(.aT
.\CS
First down.s
20
16
Rushes-yards
.5,5-217
39-131
Iassing yards
118
167
Return yards
21
01
Passes
lO-lH-O
16-28-1
Punts
4-148
5-167
Fumbles-lost
3-0
3;2
Penalties-yards
4-20
5-35
IMdMIH AI.I.KADKKS
Hl'SHINti-Georgia Tech. Lavette 31-125, Conel2-tki N Carolina St. McIntosh 19-92.
PASSINti-cieorgia Tech. Dewberry 9-15-0 K4. Wise, 1 1-0 34 N Carolina St,, Esposito 15-27-1119. Brothers 1-1-0 4K KFCEIVI.N'G -Georgia Tech, Lavette 4-33, Cone 3 24 N Carolina St. Cook 3-71, Isom 3-31
Orioles Escape 'Weaver Era' With 1983 World Series Berth
CHIC.AGO (AP) The Baltimore Orioles have emerged from the shadow of Earl Weaver and into aneraof JoeAltobelli.
Winners of five American League pennants under Weaver, who managed the club for 15 vears, the Orioles won their first under Altobelli Saturday by beating the Chicago White Sox 3-0 in 10 innings.
The victory, engineered by the combined 10-hit pitching of Storm Davis and Tippy Marfinez and sparked by Tito Landrum's lOth-inning homer, gave the Orioles a three-games-to-one victory in the best-of-five AL Championship Series.
We are.all heroes, Landrum said afterward. We had to get to this game for me to do what I did today.
The Most Valuable Player award of the series went to rookie right-handed pitcher Mike Boddicker of Baltimore, who pitched a five-hitter and struck out 14 batters in the Orioles pivotal 4-0 victory in Game Two. That victory came on the heels of Chicagos opening-day 2-i victory at Baltimore in which LaMarr Hoyt tossed a five-hitter.
"We just try to stick with what we do best. Boddicker said. "Most of our guys know the hitters pretty well, and those who dont go to the older guys, like (Jim) Palmer or (Scott) McGregor.
Pitching was perhaps the overriding reason the Orioles continued as the winningest team in baseball. They allowed the White Sox, who scored a league-leading 800 runs during the season, to score only three times in four games. After winning Game Two 4-0, they won Game Three 11-1, then shut out the White Sox again Saturday.
The Orioles now have played in more playoff games^26), won more games (18) andplayed in
more series (7) than any other club in league playott history.
Landrum may have typified the Orioles' success m this series. There was Boddicker. the rookie; platoon player Gary Roenicke, who, in three playoff games, drove in four runs, had three hits, including a homer, and walked five times, and Eddie Murray, who had gone O-for-29 in postseason games datirig back to 1979 before hitting a three-run homer in the first inning of Game Three.
They were, in some ways, the least likely heroes.
And then, there was Landrum, who joined the Orioles from St. Louis on Aug. 31, the final day tor eligibility in the playoffs, in a deal that sent third baseman Floyd Rayford to the Cardinals. Landrum began the season with the Cards, but he was at their AAA farm club in Louisville when he got the call.
He only started Games Two and Four because Dan Ford reinjured his right foot in Game One.
"I found out about the trade on the 28th (ol August), Landrum said. "We were in Indianapolis, so I packed my bags and joined the team in Toronto.
It was definitely a blessing for me, he said. "I start the season with St. Louis, go down to Louisville, and here I am with the Baltimore Orioles.
And for Altobelli, the man who had to answer all the questions about succeeding Earl Weaver, this win was a relief.
This was a big game, because if we had lost, we would have had to face a very tough pitcher (LaMarr Hoyt) tomorrow, Altobeli said. "Boy. am I glad we wontnisone.
White Sox Manager Tony LaRussa had no ^ (Please turn to page B-5)
Phillies Clinch National FlagChampionship Form
Baltimore teammates (L-R) Todd Cruz, Rick Dempsey and Cal Ripken Jr. celebrate the Orioles 3-0, 10-inning win over Chicago to clinch the AMerican League title Saturday at Comiskey Park. (APLad^rphoto)
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Hot-hitting Gary Matthews smashed a three-run home run and Sixto Lezcano added a two-run shot Saturday night, leading Philadelphia to a 7-2 victory over Los Angeles that clinched the National League pennant and sent the Phillies into the 1983 World Series.
Philadelphia, celebrating its centennial season of professional baseball with its fourth league title, opens the Series Tuesday night in Baltimore, against the American League champion Orioles with 19-game winner John Denny likely to pitch tor the Phillies against Scott McGregor.
Matthews, selected the Most Valuable Player in the four-game National League Championship Series, staked Steve Carlton to a quick lead when he drilled his third homer of the playoffs in the first inning against loser Jerry Reuss. It was his fifth straight hit, setting am NLCS record, and gave him eight runs batted in, tying a playoff record set by the Dodgers Dusty Baker in 1977.
Carlton, the 300-game winner who combined with reliever A1 Holland to shut out the Dodgers 1-0 in the first game of the series, was not nearly as sharp this time. But he had more margin for error, thanks to the three-run shot by Matthews. He work^ six innings with Ronrk^
Reed and Holland finishing up.
Reuss, who has never won a playoff game in six decisions, retired the first two Philadelphia hitters before Mike Schmidt, whose homer beat him in the opener, singled, Lezcano followed with another single, bringing up Matthews.
The man the Phillies call "Sarge took one ball, then crushed Reuss' next pitch, sending it high and deep int the cool, clear night. Left fielder Baker never moved, shaking his head as the ball smashed into the press level between the first and second decks at Veterans Stadium, soaring directly over the sign commemorating Philadelphias 1980 world championship.
The fired-up crowd of 64,494 demanded a curtain call from Matthews, just as they had on Friday And he obliged, again flashing a snappy salute to the fans.
Largely ignored in the team's dash to the East Division crown. Matthews came off the bench to flourish in the playoffs with six hits and four runs scored as the Phillies avenged NLCS losses to the Dodgers in 1977 and 1978. His home runs in three successive games tied the playoff record set by Hank Aaron in 1969, the year division play began.
mm
0-2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
Sunday. October 9.1983
B\ The Asswialed Press KA.ST
Air Force W. Navy 17 Armv 20. Rutgers 12 Boslon (ollege 42. Vale?
Brown 24 Penn 24. lie lielaware It). Massachusetts i:l Delaware !8. James Madison 28 EdinboroSt 28 Slipp*>r\ Rock2o (lettvsburgJl Hampden .Sydney i:i Ht)h'l'ross21. '.\>!uaie 18 Lehigh i:l. t'onneclicut 7 New Hampshire 42 Buckiiell J.i Penn Si ,14. Alahama 28
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'Ho-Hum' Tigers Gash Wahoos
CLEMSON. S.C. (.API -Clemson Coach Danny Ford described his Clernson Tigers as a ho-hum" football team Saturday after they defeated Virginia 42-2i. but two iate Cavalier touchdowns kept the Homecoming crowd from yawning.
"We are a ho-hum football team right now." Ford said. Well do just enough and theyll scare the devil out of you and thats not what we would like. Thats not consistent football
The Tigers got 109 yards and two first-half touchdowns from senior tailback Kevin Mack to take a 21-6 halftime
lead over the Cavaliers. In the third period, Kenny Flowers scored his second and third touchdowns of the game to send the Tigers ahead 35-6.
Virginia rallied with touchdowns by Billy Smith and Antonio Rice and a two-point conversion by substitute quarterback Don Majkowski to pull with 14 points with seven minutes to play.
The first three times we got the football, I don't think we could have played better. We looked like a machine," Ford said. But Virginia kept coming back.
Virginia Coach George Welsh said he had renewed
hope after the Cavs closed the gap to 35-21. But ClemsM^then marched 80 yards ana Terrance Roulhac scored on a 17-yard pass from Mike Eppiey.
"If we had stopped them at 35-21, maybe we could have gotten back in the game, Welsh said. But we didn't. That was the story all day."
Scoring two touchdowns for the Tigers was Kevin Mack, whose scoring runs of 8 and 21 yards helped Clemson to a 21-6 halftime lead.
Virginia scored on two field goals by Kenny Stadlin in the first half.
Saturday's victory was
Clemson's 23rd straight win over Virginia against no ItKses in the series.
Clemson is now 3-1-1 while Virginia lost its second straight, after winning its first four games.
The Tigm took advantage of Virginia miscues to build its first-half advantage. An interception by Henry Walls led to Flowers' first score while a Virginia penalty for roughing Clem'son quarterback Mike Eppiey was a key play in the Tigers' second touchdown drive.
A roughing-the-kicker penalty on fourth down kept Clemson's third touchdown
Bucs Outlast SW Louisiana
I Continued from page B-I > completions, the last overcoming a ten-yard holding penalty. Finally, the Cajuns had a first down at the four, but again failed to move it over the goal line, and brought in Speer for the field goal.
It was a fake, however, Wallace, holding, picked up the ball, but was pulled down at the three by Larry Berry.
1 think it was a stupid call on my part," USL Coach Sam Robertson later said. I thought the ball was at the four, lit was at the sixi and if it was at the four, we had six ipoints), That cost us bad,"
Instead, it led to a 96-yard march to the end zone by the Pirates, highlighted by a 12-yard run by Byner to get things started and a 20-yard pass from Ingram to Bynum to move it to the ECU 49.
From there, Ingram kept the ball around the right side, spun away from several potential tacklers and danced down the sideline for the 51-yarder that made it 4-3with6:58left.
The Cajuns came back for more, however, moving it to the ECU 24 with 1:49 left, where a Speer field goal was partially blocked by Kevin Walker, and the Pirates took over.
Unable to move the ball, however, they kicked it away with 55 seconds left, and USL promptly moved it back into ECU territory moving from its own 11 to the ECU 33 before Rally Caparas intercepted as returned the ball 38 yards to midfield to end the half.
The Pirates came back on the field as if intent to run the Cajuns back to Louisiana with an offensive show. From the 39. the Pirates moved to the three before Byner coughed up the ball. Fumble No. 1.
USL drove it back downfield all the way to the 23 before a reverse on third and tour turned into an II yard reverse when Chris Santa Cruz slammed Greg Hobbs down at the 34.
The Pirates.' after receiving the punt, took over at their nine and drove to the
USL 44 before Baker turned it OAer. Fumble No. 2.
It took only six plays for the Cajuns to get on the scoreboard .Schexnider hit Hobbs for 11 yards for a first down on the third play and then after an incomple-tion, scrambled for six to the ECU 37. Jackson then took a quick pitch around the left, broke at least four tackles and spun into the end zone. Schexnider hit Jackson with a two-point conversion pass, cutting the Pirate lead to 14-11 with 49 seconds left in the third period.
Three plays after the kickoff, Byner took it up the middle and hobbled it away at the ECU 36. Fumble No. 3.
That turned into a six-plav drive as USL took the lead. 18-14 with 13:06 left. Along the way, Schexnider overcame a second and 19 with a 17 yard completion, then passed for nine more for a first down at the ECU 8. After a three-yard keeper by the quarterback, he hit Dennis in the back of the end zone for the score and Speer's boot put the Cajuns ahead.
But not for long. The Pirates powered back on a 13 play drive, including a key third and seven completion of 14 yards by Ingram to Stefon .Adams that kept it alive.Finally, after reaching the seven for a first down. Baker rushed for six to the one. Two plays later. Ingram pitched to Baker who went the final yard for his second touchdown and that put the Pirates into a shakev 21-18 lead with 7:3U left.
Schexnider came out throwing, hitting Johnny Canova for a 29-yard game to the USL 4*2 and on the next play hit Jackson down to the ECU 42.
But on the play, USL clipped and instead of a first and ten at the ECU 42. they faced a first and 28 at their own 24 and the Pirates hung on to force a punt from the 38.
From their own 33, the Pirates drove again, moving all the way to the USL 13 where - vou guessed it - Raker coughed it up. r umDie.\(x.
With 45 seconds left, it put all the
pressure on the defense, and this time, it bent but didnt break. Schexnider passed to Clarence Verdin for 30 yards on first down, but after a three yard gain to the USL 47, a screen pass was sniffed out for a seven yards loss back to the 40. Curtis Wyatt batted down Schexniders third down passing try. and on the next play, he was forced out of the pocket and hauled down for no gain - turning the ball over with five seconds left.
The Pirates were finally able to breathe a sigh of relief.
The win kept the Pirate streak alive at four games in a row. They are now 4-1 on the year. ECU travels to Temple next Saturday for a game which still is unsettled in time and site - depending on Phiadelphias success in the National League playoffs.
USL goes to 0-4 on the year and faces Tulane next week in New Orleans.
drive alive.
Flowers scored twice in the third period to put the game out of reach.
Virginia scored touchdowns on a 59-yard pass play-from quarterback Wayne Schuchts to receiver Billy Smith in the third period and on a 3-yard run by Antonio Rice in the fourth period.
Clemson capped the scoring on a 17-yard pass form Eppiey to Terrance Roulhac with two minutes to play in the game.
Eppiey. who passed for 199 yards on 12 completions and 14 attempts, kept the Cavs defense off balance by directing a ground attack that netted 310 yards.
Mack, who rushed for 80 yafds in the first half, finished with 109 and reserve tailback Stacey Driver had 98 yards rushing. But the Virginia offense piled up 414 yards as Schuchts completed 16 of 31 passes for 220 yards and Rice rushed for 98 yards. 7-.
Pittsburgh 17
Florida ot..........16
PITTSBURGH (AP) - University of Pittsburgh Coach Foge Fazio said his Panthers apparently learned their lesson in losing to rival West Virginia for the first time in eight years.
Taking a play from fifth-ranked West Virginias
playbook, the Panthers held the ball for the final 8:29 of the game Saturday to keep Florida States high-powered offense off the field as Pitt edged the Seminles 17-16,
The Panthers, 3-2, rallied from a 13-point deficit behind the passing of sophomore John Congemi and Joe McCall's running to end a two-game losing streak.
The last two games, we didnt do anything in the second half," said Fazio, who watched West Virginia drive 90 yards in the fourth quarter for the deciding touchdown in their 24-21 victory over Pitt.
"Today our offense scored some points and our defense shut them down. he said.
Florida State Coach Bobby Bowden felt nothing but frustration as Pitt moved the ball from its own 12 to the Seminles 5 before letting time run out.
"I really thought wed stop them on that last drive, but they kept coming up with the doggone big third down plays. They just outfoxed us, Bowden said.
As far as Im concerned, the offense won the game," said Pitt safety Tom Flynn.
Congemi, who completed 20
of 33 passes for 202 yards, lofted a 20-yard scoring pass to freshman Chuck Scales on the first play of the fourth quarter tn give the Panthers their first lead at 17-13.
Florida State then came storming back to earn a first down at the Pitt 8. but hadjo settle for a 24-yard Philip field goal. The Seminles never saw the ball again.
Joe McCall, used sparingly since Pitt's first game, keyed the drive and ended with % yards on 18 carries and eight catches for 62 yards.
Joe McCall not only got yards, he got the real tough yardage late in the game. Fazio said.
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241
(I
:i:!-22-l 2-29 I)
First Downs Hushes Yardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Iunts Average Fumbles-Losl i'enaltiesYards
K. Carolina
21
3,5-312
80
II
38
13-5-0
2-37.5
4-4
10^9
718
721
(i-51
SW Louisiana Fast Carolina
Scoring:
I'SL - .Speer 18 FG
KCP- Raker, 2 run (Heath kick I,
ECl' Ingram, 51 run i Heath kick i ISL - .Jackson, :)7 run (Jackson, pa.ss from SchexniderI I'SL Dennis, 5 pass from Schexnider I Speer kick I,
ECl' - Baker. 1 run i Heath kick).
Teens Aflame League
GraceFWB .............18 8-28
Temple EW'B................18 8-22
Scoring: G Troy Stox. 10 run; T Tim L'mphlette, 20 pass from Hex Manning (Mark Teel, pass from Manning I; G - T Stox, 40 run; T Teel, :10 pass from Manning i Derrick Williams, pass trom .ManningI; G - T Stox. 15 pass from C Stox; G - C. Stox. 30 run (Mark Holloman, pass to T Stoxi; T Manning, 17 run
Individual Statistics
Rushing: I
.-41, Jackson 19-1,35. Green 8-25. Davis 3-17. Williams 2-2, Hobbs 1-i-lH; ECL' - Ingram 8-72, Walden ,5-H, Baker'23-108: Byner 1-7-96. Branch 4-23
Passing: LSI, - Wallace 15-10-99-0 0. Schex-mder 17-12142 1 1, IRjbbs l-o-o-o 0: ECL -Ingram i:i-5-Hii-oii Receiving: LSI, - Jackson 2-'-HD. Verdin 8-78. Hobbs 8 72, Dennis 4-43. Perkins 1-11. Casanova 1-29. Williams 1-17. Davis 1-3, ECL Bvner 2-4:1, Nichols 2-23, S .Adams 1-14
Belvoir FWB...............22 :iO-,52
Ml. Calvary FWB 0 0- 0
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C
Sunday. October 9,1983 B*3
Nebraska Rally Wins
Out Of Bounds
Preston Gothard, Alabama tight end, juggles a pass in the end zone in the left photo and falls out of bounds in the end zone as he failed to score a touchdown against Penn State on the next to last
play of the game as the umpire ruled him out of bounds. Penn State stopped Alabama on the final play of the game to take a :4-28 upset victory. (AP Laserphoto)
Penn State Stuns 'Bama
STATE COLLEGE. Pa. (AP) - Quarterback Doug Strang led a big-play offense by firing three touchdown passes Saturday as Penn State took advantage of six Alabama turnovers and held on to stun the third-ranked Crimson Tide 34-28.
Alabama, which rallied from a 34-7 deficit, took over after a blocked field goal on their own 49 with 2:56 left. They moved to the Penn State 2 with one second remaining, but the Penn State- defense stopped Kerry Goode short of the goal line as the clock ran out.
Strang, a junior, hit on scoring tosses of 80.38 and 16 yards and freshman D.J. Dozier rushed for 163 yards to become only the fifth Penn State runner - and the first freshman - to eclipse 100 yards in four straight games.
The opportunistic Nittany Lions defense intercepted three passes from quarterback Walter Lewis, and recovered three fumbles.
Penn State, holding a 17-7 halftime lead, scored on touchdown drives of 80 and 72 yards in the third quarter, and Nick Gancitano booted a 39-yard field goal to make it 34-7.
But Lewis led the Crimson Tide on fourth quarter drives of 87 , 69 and 78 yards to 34-28 in the final period to cut the lead to 34-21. Kerry Goode scored from the 1 to make it 34-14. and Lewis hit Jesse Bendross for a 24-yard score to make it 34-21 with 11:14 to play.
Then Lewis hit Bendross again, this time from 8 yards away, to make it 34-28 with 5:36 left in the game.
Penn State took the
second-half kickoff and moved 80 yards in six plays, with Strang ending the drive with his third touchdown pass of the game, a 16-yard strike to a wide-open Kenny Jackson to make it 24-7.
Recovering another fumble at their own 28. the Lions made it 31-7 after Dozier rumbled 64 yards to the Alabama 8 on the series first play. Following a pass interference penalty. Dozier bulled in from 1 yard out to make it 31-7.
Gancitanos field goal made it .34-7 with 6:31 left in the third quarter.
Penn State took advantage of Alabama turnovers to take a 17-7 lead at the half.
A Crimson Tide fumble and an interception led to 10 Nittany Lion points.
The Tide went 88'yards in 13 plays for a touchdown on its second possession of the game to take a 7-0 lead. The only pass of the drive was quarterback Walter Lewis' 8-yard scoring toss to Joey Jones with 4:34 left in the quarter.
But on the play after the kickoff, Penn State quarterback Doug Strang found tight end Dean DiMidio behind the defense and hit him for an 80-yard touchdown that knotted the score at 7-7.
Penn State took the lead 14-7 after Mike Russo recovered a fumble by Linnie Patrick at the Penn State 47.
Three plays later, Strang hit Kevin Baugh on a 38-yard scoring toss down the right sideline.
The Lions went on top 17-7 on a 21-yard field goal by Nick
Gancitano, capping a 51 yard drive that began when Shane Conlan intercepted a Lewis pass at the Penn State 44.\
Ohio St. (6)............33
Purdue .............22
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Garcia Lane returned punts 71 and 63 yards for touchdowns Saturday, leading sixth-ranked Ohio State to a 33-22 beating of Purdue in Big Ten Conference football.
The victory played before Siesta Bowl scouts and 89,384 fans, kept the Buckeyes in the Big Ten title chase with a 2-1 record. Purdue suffered its first league defeat and fell to a 1-1-1 record. Ohio State is 4-1 overall and Purdue 1-3-1.
Lanes punt returns broke open close game in the third quarter. The heavily favored Buckeyes led 12-7 at halftime before Lane, a senior cor-nerback, lifted Ohio State out of danger.
llis first punt return of 63 yards gave the Buckeyes a 19-7 lead with less than two minutes gone in the second half. Nearly 11 minutes later, his 71-yard touchdown provided Ohio State a 26-7 lead.
Keith Byars, a 226-pound tailback, rushed 23 times for a career-high 135 yards and touchdowns of 4 and 3 yards for Ohio State, lie also caught four passes for 120 yards.
Ohio State took a 6-0 lead in the first 10*2 minutes on Paul Allens field goals of 21 and 41 yards. However. Purdue moved on top 7-6 in the first quarter on fullback Eric Jordans 40-yard touchdown run.
Ohio State regained the lead
on Byars 4-yard touchdown run with 5:23 left until halftime.
STILLWATER. Okla. (AP) - Turner Gills second touchdown pass of the game, a 32-yarder to Todd Frain, capped a quick 92-yard strike early in the third period Saturday that rallied No. 1 rated Nebraska to a scary 14-10 victory over previously unbeaten but unranked Oklahoma State.
The 6-0 Cornhuskers, rolling up points and yards at a record clip in their first five games, turned the ball Over four times in Oklahoma State territory, twice at the goal line in the second half. Their closest game previously this season had been a 42-10 rout of UCLA.
Nebraska, which had been averaging 57.8 points a game but struggled all afternoon against the nations 10th-ranked defense, scored its first touchdown on a 62-yard pass play from Gil to wingback Irving Fryar midway through the second period.*
That look-in pass gave the Cornhuskers a 7-3 lead just 47 seconds after Oklahoma States Larry Roach started the scoring with a 26-yard field goal.
The Cowboys. 0-21-1 against Big. Eight rival Nebraska in the last 22 years, scored their only touchdown with 1:39 left in the second period on a 15-yard pass from second-string quarterback Ike Jackson to flanker Jamie Harris and finished off an 81-yard drive.
But the 10-7 halftime lead stood up for only 5:07 as Nebraska used three long gainers in a six-play drive that produced the only points of the second half The outcome was in doubt until the final gun when Nebraska free safety Bret Clark intercepted a desperation pass by Jackson from the 42-yard line to the end zone.
Oklahoma State, which has not been 5-0 since 1945, had won its first four games for the first time in eight years. The winning touchdown came on Nebraskas second possession of the second half after the Cornhuskers had managed only 135 yards in total offense to that point.
Starting from its own 8-yard line after Jeff Smith lost 2 yards on a punt return, Nebraska needed only 2:09 to regain the lead for good.
A second-anH4T)ass from Gill to split end Scott Kimball gained 16 yards to the 24. Fullback Mark Schellen picked up two yards before a double reverse from Gill to tailback Mike Rozier to Fryar around right end carried for 42 yards to the Oklahoma State 32. where cornerback Chris Rockins rode him out of bounds.
Texas (2)..........28
Oklahoma (Sj 16
DALLAS (AP) - Second-ranked Texas struck for three touchdowns late in the third period highlighted by freshman ^Edwin Simmons
67-yard gallop and the unbeaten Longhorns rallied to whip the No. 8 rated Oklahoma Sooners 28-16 Saturday in the 78th renewal of their bitter rivalry.
Texas, now 4-(j, fell behind 7-0 and 10-7, but its nation-leading defense clamped a lock on the Sooners while the fumble-plagued Horn offense finally sprang toliie.
Ronnie Robinson bulled across from 2 yards out to climax ah 80-yard drive that put Texas ahead 14-10. Mossy Cades pass interception positioned Texas for another touchdown at the Oklahoma 2o just three minutes later.
Freshman fullback Ervin Davis dashed over from 2 yards out. The touchdowns by Robinson and Davis were the first of their collegiate careers.
With Texas leading 21-lii. Simmons, who had scored m the second quarter on an eight-yard run. broke several tackles and outdistanced the Sooner secondary for the long distance touchdown*
Oklahoma quarterback Dannv Bradlev ran :5(i vards
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for a touchdown m the fourth quarter to give the Sooners some hope, Bradley threw an 8-yard scoring pass to Steve Sewell to give the Sooners a 7- first-period lead.
Simmons' eight-yard scoring run tied it in the second quarter, but Oklahomas Tim Lashar drilled a 28-yard field goal to put the Sooners up 107. Then Texas unleashed its touchdown avalanche,
Simmons gamed KK) yards on 14 carries as Oklahomas record dropped to 3-2.
The Horn defense held Oklahoma star running back Marcus Dupree to ')(\ards on 14 carries
The Longhorns got into hot water by losing three fumbles. They had been the least turnover-plagued teanr in the nation coming into the game.
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Sunday. October 9.1983
Perry Making No Confessions
H\ WOODY FKFl.E Heflector Sports Editor
That's It,' Gaylord Perry said. "It's a!! over"
Well, niaytie.
Yesterday, Perry was given what has heeomt' an annual luncheon by W, M. "Booger' Scales and other sponsors, and he contirined his earlier announcment that he will hang up his spikes - and \aseline tube -to retire to his Williamston farm.
When he finished this season at Kansas City after being released by the Seattle Mariners at inidseason. Perry had accomplished about e\erything he could. He had become the only pitcher to have won the Cy Young .Award in both the .American and National leagues. He is the only pitcher to have won U)0 or more games in each league. He's number three on the all-time strike out list behind Steve Carlton and Nolan Hyan, having passed the legendary Walter Johnson during the season. He has claimed his Jdtith victory, a level only IJ o'hers have reached. He and hisjirother ,Iim. a former .Minnesota Twins hurler. are the onlv
brother combination to have won 100 or more games each.
But is he really throughjA couple of years ago, he announced on a local television station that he was hanging it up. He went back. What now if the offer is made?
Perry sidestepped: "Theyre not going to make me an offer," was his only comment.
Some years back. Perry had expressed an interest in coaching or managing or working in the front office. That still may be in the back of his mind. For now however, that's where he feels it will stay. "I might think alx)ut that later," he did admit.
Over the years, there have Ijeen many big league thrills for the big righthander. "Just making the big leagues was a thrill." he said. "The no-hitter (against St. Louis while with the San Francisco Giants); the two Cy Young .Awards (both coming after he was traded away by the Giants as being too old); winning 301) games; passing Walter Johnson in strikeouts. They were all thrills"' -
But the biggest1 "I guess it would have to be the no-hitter."
For now. anyway. Five or so years from now, another big thill, probably the biggest ever awaits Perry - induction into the Baseball Hall of fame He becomes eligible in 1988, along with two other greats, Bostons Carl Yastrzemski and Cincinnatis Johnny Bench. ^
Perry was asked if he thoii|ht the voters would select as many as three "rookies" in 1988. "I don't know There may be four," he said, referring to Atlantas Phil Niekro. who has hinted he, too. might retire this year.
While there have been thrills, there have been disappointments too. Perry, despite his success, never got to pitch in the World Series, "It would have been awful nice to have pitched in it. but it was just one of those things that wasnt."
Perry looks back on his Giant days fondly. "They had so many great players.*! always wanted to be with a team that wins, and they were winners."
^ .While P.grry may be settling down on his Martin County farfir-anollier Williamston product is just getting started in the big
leagues, former East Carolina outfielder Butch Davis. Davis, signed by the Kansas City Royals when he finished at ECU, was called up to the majors in the late season as a replacement for the injured Willie Wilson.
And he promptly made his mark, batting well over .300, hitting a couple of homers and triples. "He was very impressive," Perry said, having finished the season with Davis on the Royals. "Hes aggressive and very fast. He has'a bright future, and I really expect him to stay up with the Royals."
While Perry might not be seen on the mound anymore, that doesnt mean he wont be showing up on television: He recently made a "proof shot" with Miller Lite beer, and hopes that the commercial will be shown on national television shortly. Its currently being tested in the Milwaukee area.
Does it have to do with the spitter, that illegal pitch Perry was oft-times accused of throwing*? "In a round about way," he said.
Now that its over, is there a confession in the works? "I'm not confessin to anything," Perry said with grin. - -
Happy Fan
Jii,seJy;^jt-^;eal (iaylord len\ signs a cmiple of haseiaH caTlls t(>r f;yi.Tiaci Shelton.
who came all the way from Ashehoro to attend the annual luncheon honoring Pmry in (.ri'cnville Thursday. Tiaci's shirt retmred to Pmrv's part in the Pine TarHncident hetweiui New A in k and Kansas t ity. I'he l.'i-year-old \et(*ran announci'd earlier this fall that he has retired from hascliall. (Hefh'ctor jihoto)
Gotors Bite Vandy, 29-10
Boddicker I9 Most Valuoble
/1I1('\G() ,\P Mikt
liiM,lilivk(>r aradiuited Irom hi^
* t!is! tul! nui.ior IcauiH' x'ason v.ith th(' right to put tiic ' L;t!iu' - most covctcti iiiitiaN ins iiaiiie M\P ;\nia,'iiig." the J(i yrar-oni i'!!:l!t li.iiKicr sail! oltci- Innng srlts'tfi.i tor iliat honor Satur-
ia\ loliouing the orioles' .'\iiu'rican League Cham-inoiisiiip .Series eliiKiiiiig .l-o Metor\'\iiVer the Chicago While jusl thankful
to Ik'- 'M! a t^ar like this 1 lhaiil. tlie Lord lor [lutung me otli'tih hunch of mi\s' '
fSoiidickei' was Pi;! durum 'hr regular season with .1 L' 77 h 1; \ ,md a league-leading live dll.llollls I'e.'pile ajipeaiing in jUst ri.r, game. Bdddu'ker was pelillrd nr lour o! tile tiVr til.'-' 'aincn haiiitis. V,mning the 'dn-c \aluaCe Pla'.ri' aw'ard
r.(! !e,,;mnnle ami ciosr \ I IS-: I i,i! \ Koer.icke, who got ''ir ! I" aiiiing tirsi [ilace \oir
soiiir III the gu\s said r 'her Uhmn lioeiiieke or 1 n'.lid be driMlia !Ik' othrl' iih, th'" now. ('iievrolet *l;;i: -'.'r- Ith tlie awards'' tlw hiv.a ' 'i'\ n,il"ir s:iid \l'i ' ap'pearmg in.one gaim M, die ini'.') .sr.ison, two gamr-a. ;n,;i. and .'iweii last season, i.niidick'T cracked the or-hile- rotation by adding a pitch Ills teammates luu'e ti lined the "tosh ,1 It's a tm'khah ihriiv.n slowleiiough so di.it the s[)iii makes the pitrh tad oit. Mot unlike a s.'nwlial!
b w,is one III tour pitches in III' ;ii sena; that registercii a
Cha m |o oil ship Se r 1 es record tying 1-1 strikeouts m a 4-0 win 111 Game Two that just might have turned the series around, '
.\sked It he telt pre.ssured to match the domineering per tormance ilial (,'hicago righthander LaMarr Hoyt had in (iame (Hie the White Sox only victory Hodilicker-ia[)lied, "I didn't think about It I just iigured 1 had to keep Us close through seven innings and took them one hitter at ;i tune "
Ills [)re[aration tor (kime Two was much the same as it had been all season.
"I [ilayed with m\ bab\ a littir bit, and lut a <15 radio . m my truck bec.iuse Gary and I were heading tor lowa atter die series. ' said. Boddieker "Then wt Went down to tho tiallp.irk ai;ii placed smiie video garni'.'
\tter (a'lieral Motors ( or|i iit'ici.il' presented him with 'tie koy til a brand new t'.iliUi.lii the corwersation
!" hunting, an awd ir IJipitdickei. ,\p[).u' lie had in mind was
GAINK.SVILLK. Fla 'AIG Florida Coach Cluirley Pell lirushed aside (|uestions ,S;it-urday about the mounting pressure generated by his ninth ranked .Gators' best start since I'tCih Instead, he directed his comments to whiit he, dc: scribed as an outstanding team ettorl that cruslied Vatnlerbilt T*Jo and enabled the s(juad to I'emam unbeateti dirough SIX games tor the first t ime since I'lhtr '.'The [ilayers \vorked .iwlully liard tor this victory," said Ihdl "They actually worked harder than the score iiuiicati's bec;iiise we had more [troduciioii on ottense than We got points,"
, Fullback .lolrn L, Williams led the olteiisive assualt on .\'andy. running tor KG yards ,md scoring three touchdowns, two on pass receptions Irom Wayne Peace Williams, a Jlti-iiound sophomore from Palalkti. amassed Ins game high rushing total on 17 carries and went over the too yard mark on a ;i'2-yard scoring romp midway through the!mal(|uarte,r The A ictoi'\- avenged a M 39 loss to Candy a year ago. and Pell said it came against lii'lter [ii'isnniiel than the ('onmioUores iielded in KiiG "Ihi.s .is.a more talented team Cia'. a ;.ear ago. the Floi ida coach , s;iid "I'm sur-'prisei.! tliey haven't won more gi'.mes than thev have are cert.unh
lhe\
uirnt;:
hoJ.fi'.
elite.
( oach 0
George
SoU.o'P-
loi.g : .-iac'e
'le I,lies o|
tiecausc cajiable Vaiiderl Maclni;.re said he telt the (.aloi's greatly improved as well
' f'h.i' ida is a mighty good lootbali team ver\ tal-
Cu! apparentiy too shy to broach die sulpecl. Boddicker
turned away alter the vnted.' be said AV" just ceremony and began telling triends about tfie merit's ot a tour-wheel (Irjve \ elude that would Would t.iki' him into tiu solitude 01 the countryside he likes so much
"It It be nice to, get awav,' he .said, "and let Ihi.ssinLuwT-
weren t good enough, to beat them today Peace passed lor, 314 yards and till' Gators' b.ilanced ol-tensive attack oiitgained \'aiidy s [lass oriented show 4::ti-281
The seiinir uarlm'back's (i- vard scoring t oss- 10
Pirate Netters Finish Second
day fa 1 Men' High Point n-,. .sauird-a.'. Ii( lore di'nppmg a,7-'2 iecisioi; to '111' I Madel m the pivot,d malcli "Tionneij the lUiru
tlight and Lord ihe tilth with 4-0 reconis, as the Pirates ek''iid imjiroved their mark to O-d on
the season l)avid Creech was In then tour nmtches ot the the runner-up m the tourth twoMay e\eii1 the Pirate.s ilight at ,;-l deteated High Point (i-;i and The Pirates will host N C. ( am[)bell 1,,; on the opening State Wednesdav.
tiLlKS ( RKKK Bii; ; I I 'omiel! and (.irog Loyd led tin Pirates ot I'iasl ('arojiiki I 'nr t'tsily to a. second pao'e lmis|i b'eiiind The (jt.eiel ;il tile ) .m.plK'll College Men ' L,iil rennis Tour.n.imen! this
Williatiis ciiiipleted a 12-play eo-yard march oir Florida's tirst possessien ot the game, and .Ills arder to the lullback gave the Gators a commanding 2u :-l advantage early untie third (juarter Place k n'k e r Hobiiy Kaymond .il'so booted iield goals ot 27. 2(1 and 18 yards as ilie )-()-1 G.iioi's tioosted their
record to 3-u in the SEC. the school's best start in league play since 197t>.
Vanderbilt, which got 262 yards passing from junior (|uarterback Kurt Page, fell to 2-:-l overall, o-l' in the conference.
The Gators dominated much ot the afternoon belore a Florida Field crowd ot 73.7(i4. but Vandy made it interesting, atter linebacker Bob ()Connor intercepted a Peace pass and returned it 13 yards to the Florida 2i) with 0:43 left m the third period Five plays later. Page caught the Gators' defense m a blitz and hit Chuck vScott with a 0-yard scoring pass to trim Florida's lead to 2(i-Ki.
But Raymond's third field goal ot the game, and Williams' 32-yard touchdown burst to cap an eight-play, (iH-yard. drive put the game away
Florida rolled to a 13-3 luilttime lead, but penalties cost the Gators two touchdowns and kept Vandy in the game.
Peace directed a drive from his own 311-yard line to the Commodores 1 on Florida's second possession ol the game, but an illegal procedure penalty moved the ball back to theii.
The (iators quarterback hit a wide-open Williams for an apparent 'touchdown on the next play, but Florida had an illegal receixer down field and was torc'ed to settle lor Raymond's 27-yard field goal tora in-olead.
Raymond added his 2o-y arder .'ergi later, three plays alter an illegal motion penalty nullitied an apparent (i-yard scoring toss to Ricky Nattiel Florida controlled the ball lor nearly 19 minutes in the tirst hall, but Vanderbilt still managed Kid yards of ottense, 14.') through the air Two \'andy drives ended when Anderson missed tield goal attempts ol 4(i and 24 yards, wtule..lhe Cummocbres u.sed the linal :i7 seconds ol the halt to move 52 yards to set up Ricky Anderson's successful try irom 47 yards away as tune expired.
Peace, litth on the SFC's all-time total ottense list. Implied with 22 completions in 32 attempts and was intercepted once.
Page entered the game ranked No. 2 in the nation in
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total offense and completed 26 of 46 passes and threw one interception.
Georgia (11)......36
Mississippi .......11
OXFORD. Miss. (API -Keith Montgomery scored two touchdowns on short runs and Barry Young sprinted 54 yards for another as 11th-ranked Georgia ground out a methodical 36-11 victory over .Mississippi in a Southeastern Conferefice football game Saturday
Georgia quarterback John Lastinger hit 12 of 18 passing attempts for 161 yards, including a 15-yard touchdown completion to Herman Archie
Young, a blocker through his first three years ol college tpotball, was the game's leading rusher with 83 yards on eight carries, including his 54-yard third-quarter touchdown sprint.
Montgomery, sharing tailback duties, finished with 55 yards on 18 carries. David .McGluskey, another tailback, had 48 yards on 11 cari'ies for Georgia.
Georgias defense got the initial score of the game when a lineman knocked the ball loose from Mississippi's Bulord Mcfiee and the ball bounced into the end zone to be covered by Mississippi center Nubbin Ross.
Kevin Butler booted field goals of :50 yards and 28 yards for Georgia.
Mississippi scores came on a 35-yard field goal by Neil Teevan in the third quarter and a 5-yard touchdown burst by .Nathan Wonsley with 1:22 left in the game. Kelly Powell threw for a two-poinf conversion.
Georgia is now 4-u-l overall and 2-0 in the SEC. Mississippi is 1-5 overall and 0-2 in the conference.
Miami (12)........42
ville..........14
Louisvill
MIAMI ).AP) - Fullback Albert Bentley ran for two touchdowns while (|uarterback Bernie Kosar accounted for two more .Saturday as 12th-ranked .Miami of Fiorida.beat Louisville 42-14 in college football action.
The victory pushed the Hurricanes to 5-1 as the Cardinals evened their rnid-season record at :i-3.
Bentley, a senior from Immokaiee. collected 152 yards on the ground with 18 carries, including a pair of 1-yard scoring runs,
Kosar tut 15 of 19 passes for 170 yards and one interception. not throwing an incompletion until the third quarter The red-shirt freshman was 6 of 6 for 101
yards in the first half.
Defensive back Ken Calhoun keyed fhe defense for Miami by rambling 92 yards for a touchdown and stopping the Cardinals from scoring on a fake field goal late in the first half.
Kosar scored on a 1-yard run with 6::17 to play and hit tight end Glenn Dennison with a 17-yard scoring pass in the second quarter.
Fullback Speedy Neal accounted for the other Miami touchdown on a 1-yard run in the first quarter.
The Cardinals tallied on a. 2-vard run bv tailback Willie
Shelby in the second quarter and linebacker Todd Navarros 57-yard return of an interception of Kosar.
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Wolverines' Alert Defense Leads Win
EAST LANSING. Mich. IAP) - Michigan quarterback Sieve Smith passed for one touchdown and ran for another, while an, alert defense throttled Michigan State in the 14th-ranked Wolverines' 42-0 Big Ten football victory Saturday.
Smith completed 11 of 16 passes for 149 yards with no interceptions, That gave the 6-foot. 195-pound senior 259 career completions, breaking the school completion record of 250 set by Rick Leach between 1975-78.
The powerful Wolverines scored the first four times they had the ball in the first half and rolled up a comfortable 25-0 halftime lead.
The record-breaker was a 23-yard touchdown toss from Smith to tight end Milt (arthens at 4:55 of the first
quarter. .....
The Wolverines got a 1-yard
touchdown run from fullback Jim Rice on the first play of the second quarter and Rick Rogers ran 8 yards for a TD at 3; 19 of the second quarter.
Smith scored on a 3-yard keeper at 1:25 of the fourth quarter. The Wolverines played reserves the rest of the way. with third-string tailback Ben Logue diving three yards for the final TD at 13:51.
Michigan place-kicker Bob Bergeron booted field goals of 38.41 and 23 yards.
The Wolverines improved their record to 4-1 on the season. 3-0 in the Big Ten. Michigan State dipped to 2-2-2 overall and 0-2-1 in the conference.
Iowa (15).........61
Northwestern 21
IOWA CITY. Iowa (AP) -Senior quarterback Chuck Lon g psi se d o r.t h r e e touchdowns and ran for
^another Saturday as the No. 15-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes defeated Northwestrfi^l-2.
Iowa set a Big conference record with 713 total yards offense. Michigan State set the old record in 1971 with 698 yards against Purdue.
Iowa is 4-1 on the season, 2 and 1 in conference -play. Northwestern is still winless in five tries, 0 and 3 in conference play.
Long put on a clinic completing 23 of 33 attempts for 420 yards before being taken out with 11 minutes left in the game. He broke his own school record of 344 yards set two weeks ago against Ohio State and he moves into second place on the Hawkeyes all-time passing yard list.
Long now has 3,161 yards in his career, passing Larry Lawrence who finished with 2,987 yards. Long still trails Gary Snook ( 3,738 ). =
Baltimore Clinches...
(fontinuedirom pageB-B postmorten to make at the days end.
"They outplayed us. and they deserved "to win, he said. "We werent quite good enough at the end.
The Orioles had squandered one scoring opportunity after another Saturday against White Sox left-hander Britt Burns, and they finally ended it on an unlikely note.
Burns, who had struck out eight and walked four, fanned John Shelby to start the lth. and he had the count 1-0 when Landrum hit his fourth major league homer into the upper deck in left field against a howling wind. Landrum had hit one homer in 41 at-bats for the Orioles.
The homer chased Burns in favor of Salome Barojas, who yielded consecutive singles to Cal Ripken, Eddie Murray and Roenicke, the last driving in Baltimore's second run. The Orioles made it 3-0 on Benny Ayalas sacrifice fly.
The victor in this clinching game was Martinez, who pitched the final four innings.
The game was only the seventh in AL Championship Series history to go into extra innings, and Baltimore has been involved in five of them, winning four.
The only other game to go into extra innings in a scoreless tie was in 1969 when Baltimore beat Minnesota in 11 innings. 1-0.
Neither team was able to generate much offense on this cold Saturday, with 20 mph winds blowing in from left field and temperatures in the 50s.
The Chicago offense was further hampered by the absence of outfielder Ron Kittle who missed the game with a swollen left knee, the spot where .he was hit by a Mike Flanagan pitch Friday night.
The White Sox got a runner as far as third with two out in the third inning, but they came up dry. With one out, Julio Cruz walked. He had stolen 57 bases during the regular season, and he stole another one Saturday. When Rudy Law, who had seven hits in the first three games of the series, hit a fly deep to right, Cruz advanced to third.
But he was stranded there when Storm Davis got Carlton
Fisk to pop up to at first base.
The Orioles had two men aboard in the second inning, but they, too, came up empty.
Murray led off the inning with a single off Burns, who then walked Roenicke on four pitches.
He struck out Ken Singleton, Rich Dauer lined to left and Todd Cruz grounded into a forceout.
Julio Cruz singled and stole his second base - tying an American League playoff record held by many - in the fifth inning. His hit came with two out, though, and after he stole second. Law popped to short center. Shelby, a rookie outfielder, nearly misjudged the ball as it drifted closer to the infield in the wind, but he got there in time to keep the game scoreless.
The Orioles again had the first two men aboard in the sixth inning, but Burns was equal to the challenge.
Landrum led off with an infield single to deep shortstop, the fourth hit off Burns, and Ripken walked. But Burns fanned Murray, and Roenicke hit into a double play started by third baseman Vance Law.
Davis, who had allowed a baserunner in each inning he pitched, left after yielding a leadoff single to Greg Walker in the seventh. Davis had yielded just five hits with two walks and two strikeouts, but
he had thrown 91 pitches in a less-then-perfect effort.
Martinez picked up where Davis left off. Vance Law singled, sending pinch-runner Uke Squires to second, and Jerry Dybzinski, trying to sacrifice, bunted into a foreceout at third.
When the next hitter, Julio Cruz, singled to left. Law was held at third, but Dybzinski overran second. Dybzinski was caught off the bag by-relay man Todd Cruz, who threw to Dauer at second. When the throw was made. Law broke for home, and Dauer threw him out easily at the plate.
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Washington (16).34 Oregon..............7
SEATTLE (AP) ^Tailback Jacque Robinson ignited a second-half Washington offensive explosion with a 68-yard burst to set up one touchdown and scored a pair of TDs on short runs Saturday as the leth-ranked Huskies defeated Oregon State 34-7 in the Huskies Pacific-10 Conference football opener.
Robinson, the Pac-lO rushing champion as a sophomore but a disappointment in his first four games as a junior, rushed for 121 yards on 11 carries, all in the second half.
The Huskies, 4-1 and prohibitive favorites againt the Beavers, coughed up four fumbles in the opening half and came away with only a 7-7 intermission deadlock.
But it was all Washington in the second half. Oregon State fell to 1-5 overall and -3 in the Pac-lO.
Robinsons 68-yard ramble on the second play of the second half set up a tive-yard touchdown pass from Steve Pelluer to Tony Wroten with just 1:58 into the third period to put the Huskies ahead for good.
He capped a .54-yard, six-
play drive with a six-yard touchdown run with 7:46 gone in the third quarter.
He got his second touchdown of the day on a one-yard run with 4:29* gone in the final quarter to climax a 60-yard. six-play drive.
Freshman Jeff Jaeger drilled a.52-yard field goal, the second longest in the Huskies history, and also kicked a 27-yard field goal in the third quarter.
Pelluer. Washingtons standout senior quarterback, .completed 11 of 18 passes for 120 yards and one touchdown before he left the game in the fourth quarter. He was not intercepted.
Robinson, MVP of the 1982 Rose Bowl as a freshman, more than doubled his 1983 rushing total. He ran for 108 yards in 24 carries in Washingtons previous four games this season.
Robinson got his first start of the season against .Navy last weekend but was demoted to the third string tor the Oregon State game behind Ron "Cookie Jackson and Canadian .Sterling Hinds.
The Beavers, who have not won a Pac-lO game and are now 3-35-1 in four seasons under Coach Joe Avezzano, took a d v a n t a g ( o t
Washingtons inability to hang onto the football in the first half.
Oregon State scored a touchdown on a 59-yard pass ifrom Ladd .McKi'ttrick to Larry Clemons just 59 seconds before halftime. The Beavers went 88 yards in seven plays after Reggie DuPee fell on a fumble by Hinds on the Oregon State 12 with 3:03 remaining in the first half..
Hinds turnover came on a first-down play on the Oregon State 7.
. The Huskies scored on their first possession of the day, marching 54 yards in six plays, with Jackson going into the end zone on a three-yard run only 3:35 into the contest.
Illinois (19)........27
Wisconsin .15
M.ADISON. Wis. i.APi -Tailback Thomas Rooks ,scored two third quarter touchdowns and quarterback Jack Trudeau hooked up with .Mitchell Brookins on a 72-yard bomb as 19th ranked Illinois came back from 9-3 halttime -deficit to defeat Wisconsin 27-15 Saturday.
Rooks hammered for 88 yards, including scoring runs
play was Trudeau's long touchdown pass, which stretched av slim 17-15 fourth quarter lead to 24-15 Illinois bulge.
Rooks touchdowns put the mini up 17-9. but early in the fourth quarter Wnght snuck over from 1 yard to pull the Badgers to within 17-15 His two-point conversion pass tell incomplete.
Less than 1:3d larer, Trudeau and Brookins made their big play and another White tieid io,:1 lat_e in the game compleied the sx'oring
BYU (20)..........41
Wyoming..........10
LAR.AMIE. Wyo, 'APi -Quarterback Steve Young engineered five first-half scoring drives to lead No 2ii Brigham Young L'niversiiv over rival Wyoming 4i-in m a Western .Athlet loi a lu football game h( t s m d \ Young, itie iia lor-s totfft offense leader, p td i i yards and two tou hd ns and ran for another rd against the outmanned Cowboys. Cougar running backs Casey Tiumalu and Wavmon Hamilton each scored" two touchdowns,
to 3-3 overall'afid 2-1 in the conference.
Wyoming scored first, with fullback Mike Wiedeman capping an 8D-yard drive opening drive u ith a five-yard touchdown that followed his 50-yard burst up the middle.
But Young got the Cougars started on their second pos.session. and the Cougars scored live of the next six times they got the ball.
BYC's deten.se shut down Wyoming's vaunted wishbone rushing attack and quieted a
record W\oming crowd of
1,084
of IB and 1 yards. Fullback''^ The victory gave BYU a 4-1 Dwight Beverly added 109 overall record and a 2-o mark yards. But the game's biggest in the WAC Wvoming dronoed
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Totals
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UNC Tops WF...
(Continued from page B-1) Brooks Barwick tied it with a 33-yard field goal with 13:01 left in the half.
When a Wake Forests drive stopped at the Tar Heel 27. North Carolina retaliated for a 10-3 lead on Hortons 14-yard touchdown run with 4:25 left.
The Demon Deacons drove 80 yards for the tie on Schofields 7-yard pass to wide receiver Duane Owens with 23 seconds left. Schofield hit four of five passes for 36 yards in the drive.
Scouts from the Cotton Bowl were among the 51,171 at Kenan Stadium.
Wake Koresl......................2 7 I) Dlit
N. Carolina........................0 ill II T>2
WF- FCi Newsome 2(1 NC- FO Barwvck 22 .\C- Horlon llrun i Barw ick kick i WF-Owens \ pass from Schofield I Newsome kick J NC~Colson 4 pass from Slankavage I Barwick kick I NC- Horlon 2U run ' Barw ick kick'
NC-> Colson 12 run ' kick tailed i A-31,171
First downs Rushes-vards Passing yards Return yards Passes'
Punts
Fumbleslost Penalties-vards Time of possession
II 21- 7-21) U-0 4-.U 2H:51
INDIVIDI ALI.KADKKS
RCSHING-Wake Forest, Clemons 26-111, Daugherty 11-3U N Carolina, T Anthonv 19-157, Colson 19-119, Horton 13-116,
PASSING-Wake Forest, Schofield 11-21-0-102 N. Carolina. Stankavage 7-15-0-48
RECEIVING-Wake Forest, Ryan 5 29, Richmond 2-25 N Carolina, Franklin 2-15. T Anthonv 214
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NO. 1 IN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
B-6 Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C___Sunoay. Ociober 9.1983Staton, Southwest Roll Over Chargers
By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer LITTLEFIELD - Jerome Staton rolled over Ayden-Grifton for 142 yards and three touchdowns to lead ninth-ranked Southwest Edgecombe to a 36-0 shutout over the Chargers and remain unbeaten in three Eastern Carolina 3-A Conference football ^outings.
The Cougars dominated the football, allowing the Chargers just 31 plays from scrimmage while they handled 63 for 317 total yards. On 54 running plays. Southwest rolled up 250 yards with Jessie Forbes contributing 89 on 17 carries.
Kelvin Harris carried the ball 10 times for 47 yards for the Chargers, while Malcolm Worthington handled it seven times for 34. Quarterback Doug Coley connected on three of six passes for 27 yards with one interception.
"We knew they were a fine football team," A-G coach
Dixon Sauls said. "We were hoping to stack up their inside running game better than we did, but theyre a strong football team.They certainly controlled the fdbtball; it's a credit to their defense as well.
"They're known for their defense, but they ran the ball well tonight. Right now, they appear to be stronger than anyone else in our division."
the Cougars trapped the Chargers at their 23-yard line on the first series of the game, and Southwest took over at the A-G 40. After nine running plays up the heart of the Charger defense. Staton lumbered over from six yards out and Forbes booted the first of four point-after kicks for a 74) edge early in the game.
But the Chargers bounced back, returning the kickoff to their 38-yard line. Worthington took a quick pitch around the-right end ji@pJ54^rds on the first play, and Staton plowed through'on a draw for 26 yards two plays later. But after a
, .leninic block l)\
Making A Cut
SoiilliW fst I'ducc itnibe Staton i 12 lollcwv the la m Ml ale Dan \ 1 .1 oy iicr i,) 1 lliidiigh the \\(Icii-fii'iltoii defense lor I'.xtra 'ardaue as ( harger
t
linebacker Quentin Barrett (5(1) moves down the line. The Cougars maintained their unblemished Eastern Carolina :J-A Conference mark with a :!(l-() shutout of the Chargers. (Heflector photo by Katie Zernhelt)
Dunn Rallies Aycock Past Panthers/ 27-22
Wilson Races To TD For Roanoke Rally
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tine a pa." at the Roanoke li \aifi line Quarterback Steve i!a}e' '.u-nt in trom a yard ouf .ind .\ndreA Hvan ran over iheP.\Toran:-;-olead Roaiiokr drove back aUer the kiekiit. but couldn't get it ir. ciiii! -ettied lor a 22-yard lorge .Martincii field goal Then, betore the halt was ii. er Bertie drove liack again, scoring on a 21-yard pass trom lla.'.es to David Williams. K\an kicked the PAT this !in;e and made' it 15-3 at . intermi.'.'ioir
It stayed that v\ay until the ::nai period when Wallace connected with Wilson tor 22 yard- and a score late in the enr.-" Mart me?' kick
Qualifiers For
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Optimistic 500 Race
brought the lead back to 1.5-10,
The Redskins then tried tor the on-side kick, but it was recovered by Bertie at the Roanoke 48 The Redskins tmally stopped the Falcons on downs, however, at their own 18 with just 17 seconds left in the contest.
A Wallace pass fell incomplete with seven seconds left, setting up the final desperation play. While a Bertie defender managed to get his hand on the ball, it fell into the hands of Wilson, who raced downfield for the TD. crossing the goal line after time had expired.
The win boosted the Roanoke record to 4-3 on the season and 2-3 against Northeastern Conference competition The Redskins travel to Tarboro on Friday, Bertie, 4-2 overall and 2-2 iti the league, plays host to tVashington,
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By.IKFF AI.LEN Reflector Sports Writer BETHEL - Tommy Dunn scored two second halt touchdowns as Charlt's B. Aycock High School held off a North Pitt rally m the final period Friday night, and took a 27-22 lootball victory Capitalizing on first halt mistakes. Aycock jumped to a 14-6 start by the end of the halt The first score of the game came on a five yard pass trom John Thomas to Jeff Lynch, giving the Falcons, aT-ulead.
With North Pitt unable to generate any scoring on the next drive, the Falcons again rushed ihto Panther territory and scored on a one yard plunge by Ray DuPont North Pitt finally got on the board with a drive that started with an Aycock fumble near midfield and ended with a six yard dash by quarterback Quintn Varrell. That cut the lead to 14-6 and it stayed that way for the rest of the half.
In the third quarter. Alvin Grimes pulled in an Aycock punt and returned it .58 yards tor the second Panther touchdown. A two'-point conversion try that could have tied it up, failed however, leaving the Panthers down, 14-12.
On A y c 0 c ks next possession, it marched the ball straight down the field and scored on a two yard leap by Dunn tor his first touchdown. That raised the score to 21-12.
Aycock attempted an onside kick, but North Pitt recovered on their own 47 to get good field position. However, a costly tumble by North Pitt was again turned into a Falcon touchdown, Aycock drove from the Panther -47 and Dunn scored on a 14-yard run to make it 27-12 earlv in the
final period.
North Pitt used a rizzle-dazzle play on the flea-flicker. gaming 57 yards, '5'arrell hit Daniel Keel on the pass, who then lateraled to Gentry Sneed, putting the ball to the Falcon 21. Keith Clark finally scored on a five-yard run, and with the two-point conversion by Clark, the Falcon lead was cut to 27-20.
A tough defense kept the Falcons trom moving the ball forward, and Tony Ross led a charge that dropped thb Aycock quarterback tor a lost of fifteen yards and a sattey. cutting the lead to 27-22 and putting the outcome m in doubt.
After a Falcon fumble. North Pitt regrouped and attempted to put one more score on the board, but it was not to be. Giving up the ball on downs. North Pitt tried desperately to get the ball back and try again, but was not successful.
.Next week the Falcons fly into Farmville Central country tor a duel with the Jags. North Pitt travels outside the conference for a game with Plvmouth
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three-yard gain by Worthington, the A-G offense stalled at the Cougar 15 where Southwest took over on downs.
The inspired .Southwest offense rushed for a first down on three plays before Zack Crandle connected with Tony Sharpe for 21 yards on a bootleg pass to the Cougar 45. The Cougars continued to grind away yardage on the ground, with Forbes collecting eight and 15 yards on seperate sweeps around each end,
Staton broke a pair of tackles to crash the final 14 yards to the end zone to give the Cougars a 14-0 edge with 8:30 remaining in the second quarter.
Coley connected with Mike Dixon for a 13-yard gain on the Chargers' next possession, but two plays later a pass^.yvAY. ..tipp^ "by Crandie and intercepted by Mark Pittman to set up the final Southwest scoring drive of the first half.
The Cougars continued to grind ouf yardage with the pitch to Forbes around the ends, but they needed a 13-yard pass froin Crandle to Forbes on fourth and seven at the A-G 27 to sustain the drive;
After a Southwest timeout with a minute iiH intermission, Crandle dropped back to pass on second and 16 at the 2U and had to scramble out of the pocket. .As he rolled toward the right sideline. Crandle fired the ball across the field to Forbes in the end zone for a 20-u advantage A fake extra-point kick ended with Crandle passing to Sharpe for the two-point conversion and a 22-0 bulge to' take to the locker room.
The Chargers came out alter halflime and stopped the Cougars for the first lime in the contest, forcing a punt from the Southwest 39-yard line. But Harris fumbled on second down, and J R. Jenkins recovered for the Cougars at the.VG28,
Forbes plowed-through the Charger defense tor a first down at the 17. and Slaton broke tackles the remaining yards to put the Cougars, in control 29-U after Forbes P.AT.
The Chargers got the ball at
midfield with a minute left in the third quarter for their best field position of the night. But after gaining a first down with a nine-yard run. Worthington and Crandle were ejected from the game on dual personal fouls as the quarter-ended.
Coley lateraled to Harris on first down at the SWE 35. but the halfback pass sailed into the hands of linebacker Mike Varnell of Southwest at the 28. The Charger defense held to prevent further damage on that series, but Cougar punter Ron Mayo drove the ball .38 yards to the Ayden-Grifton eight-yard line.
After three plays, the Chargers punted the ball, and the Cougars took over at the A-G 38. After one first down, the Charger defense , s,trer)gtheBP.d .to, iourih and four at the 16.
But when backup quarterback Mark Pittman fumbled, a Southwest lineman recovered for first-down yardage at the Charger 12. Jeff Coopr powered his way into the end zone from one yard out with 2:03 left in the game, and Forbes' PAT set the final margin.
"We've got to regroup now," Sauls said after hij team dropped to 4-2 ovierall
with a 1-1 conference mark. "1 tried to tell our players before the game that this one game would not make or bre^k our season. We still have a chance to come back and have a good season."
Southwest Edgecombe hosts Southern Nash next Friday, while the Chargers travel to Greene Central.
Southwest
Avden-f.rifton
19 Fir.st Downs
4
54-2.3(1 Rushes-Vardage
22- 89
H7 Passing Yards
27
5 Return Yards
0
U J >
3-32 u Punts-Average
3-:l2ii
l-(i Fumbles-Lost
3-2
l-(i Penalties-Yards
Southwest...............7 1.5
7 7:!(!
\\den-(irifton.........ii (i
(1 ( K
.Scoring'
SWF7 Slaton o run.
- Forbes
kick
SWL-Staton 14 run.
Forbes
kick
SWK-k orbes 20 pass Irom
ral idle. StiiiffieAjass irom i ran-
SWK-Slaton 17 run.
Forbes
kick
.-'\\F-(ooper 1 run.
6 ornes
kick
Individual Stalislic'
9
Rushing SWK-Slaton
31-142,
Forbes 17-K9. Rhodes .2-7.
Putman
2-7, Cooper 1-1. .Mayo 1-4
A(.
Harris Ui-47. Worlhington 7-:)4. Dix on 1-Ki. .Juhn.s^m 1-4. West 1-1
Wiggins'2 Fassing: SWK-frandle 7-3-(l7-ii 1. A-G-t'oley 43-27-I o. Harris 2-II--1 (I, Wlggms 1 I-IMMI Receptions: SWF.-Sharpe 1-21. Forbes 1-13. Cooper l-:i3. A-G--Worthington 1-2 Berrv 1-2. Dixon 1-13. Best 1-0
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Cox Paces Pam Pack In Rout Of Ahoskie
W A S H UN G T 0 N -Quarterback Jeff Cox scored three touchdowns as Washington romped to a 35-19 football victory over Ahoskie in a Northeastern Conference game Friday night.
The win boosted the Washington record to 5-1 on the season. 3-1 in the league. Ahoskie drops off to 3-3. 2-3 against league opposition.
Ed Pritchard got things going for the Pam Pack, scoring the first touchdown of the evening on a 15-yard run that climaxed a drive that started with the opening kickoff. Rob Jackson booted the extra point.
Ahoskie took the following kickoff and drove back down -the field for the tying score -ijiacy 'Modre' took the bal in from seven yards away and then kicked the PAT to knot it at 7-7.
Washington quickly moved back into the lead, driving from the next kickoff as Cox got his first talley with a two-yard run. Jackson again kicked to make it 14-7. '
Washington had a drive stopped by the Cougars at the Ahoskie 13. but then, seconds later. Ahoskie fumbled and Brian Williamson recovered on the 16 for Washington. That set up a two-yard run by Cox with 42 seconds left in the half, and Jackson's kick made it 21-7 at intermission.
Late in the third period. Washington scored again, after a 22-yard punt return by-Shane Manuel set things up. Cox got his third score, this on a four-yard drive but Jackson missed this time, leaving it at 27-7,
Ahoskie took the kickoff and
drove down the field with William Whitaker hitting Moore on a 21-yard pass for the touchdown earjy in the final period.
Washington came back later in the period with Manuel scoring on a two-yard run and Dickie Cherry added a two-point conversion.
Ahoskie scored again after the kickoff, driving with Moore and Whitaker again teaming up on a 28-yard pass for the TD.
Cox finished the game with 85 yards on 14 carries, while Manuel had 79 yards on 12 lugs,
Washington returns to action on Friday, traveling to
Bertie for a key league game. Ahoskie plays host to Edenton.
.\hoskip
II
33-111
64
0
11-5-0
3-30.3
2-2
6-47
Washingtun
18
53-281
47
60
4-3-0
1-24.0
2-1
8-96
1219
833
First Downs Rushes-Yardage Passing Yards Return Yards Passing Punts-Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
Ahoskie...................7 (I 0
Washington 14 7 6
Scoring:
W - Pritchard, 15 run (Jackson kick).
A Moore. 7 run (Moore kick:
W Cox. 2 run (Jackson kick.
W - Cox, 2run (Jackson kick).
W-Cox, 4 run (kick failed).
A Moore, 21 pass from Whitaker (runfailed).
W Manuel. 2 run (Cherry run i
A - Moore, 28 pass from Whitaker (run failed)
Poll Leaders Still Unbeaten
By TOM FORE.MA.N Jr.
AP Sports Writer The top-ranked teams in the Associated Press high school football polls maintained their unbeaten records Friday night, while several more teams saw their unbeaten strings abruptly ended.
Greensboro Page, tops in the 4-A poll, claimed a 55-30 victory over East Forsyth. Southern Durham ran its 3-A winning streak to six games w ith a 40-19 trouncing of Apex.
In the combined 2A-1A rankings, first-place Randleman crushed SW Randolph 75-0 as running back Tony Goss carried four times for 77 yards and three
Goldsboro Nips Knights By 3-2
Doug Spiron scored all three goals as Goldsboro Christian Academy gained a 3-2 soccer victory over Greenville Christian Academy Friday in an overtime contest.
The score was tied at 2-2 at the end of regulation time, forcing the extra period.
Racquetball Tourney Set
The Greenville Athletic Club will host the second annual Down East Fall Racquetball Tourament on October 21-23.
Some of the top players in the state are expected to challenge local players for a total prize purse of over $1,500. Play will get underway on Friday, Oct. 21 at 4 p.m. and continue throughout Saturday. The finals will be played Sunday afternoon.
For further information contact Pete Paradossi at the Greenville Athletic Club, 140 Oakmont Dr., Greenville. 23834orcall (919) 756-9175.
Spiron scored the first goal in the first half - the only score of that half - at the 21 minute mark.
Greenville Christian rallied, however, on gois by .Mike Griner and Chris Harris to take a 2-1 lead during the first six minutes of the second half. The latter goal came -on an assist by .Mike Bragg.
However. Spiron scored at the 26 minute mark to knot it and then sqored the fateful goal in the overtime. Both of the goals came on penalty kicks.
"We had some mental breakdowns in the game that eventually cost us the win." Coach Dale Thatcher said. "We re playing good soccer now. but we have to get our mental game down.
. Thatcher cited Bragg for his play, and noted that goalie Darrell Harris was injured in the contest. We're going to have to make some changes because of that." the coach said.
Now 4-6. GCA will play .at Bethel Christian in Kinston^on Mondav.
touchdowns - all in the first quarter.
Page's Pirates took their sixth straight victory as Michael Brooks ran for three touchdowns and Todd Ellis passed for three more scores. Ellis was a substitute for quarterback Stafford Moser. Because of injuries to two wide receivers. Moser was switched from his-, normal quarterbacking duties to the wide receiver slot and caught two of Ellis scoring strikes.
For No. 8 East Forsyth, which lost its first game after four victories and a tie. quarterback Calvin Davis passed for 316 yards and touchdown tosses of 92 and 73 yards to Gregory Scales.
Senior tailback Darryl McGill topped the 1.000-yard barrier for the second straight season to lead Southern Durham to victory. McGill rushed 33 times for 224 yards and three touchdowns. He now has 1,280 yards in seven games.
Fayetteville Byrd remained unbeaten after six games with a 42-0 whipping of Pine Forest. Steve Salley rushed for 117 yards. aU but 11 yards in the first half, and scored three touchdowns.
Two of the top 10 in 4-A saw their undefeated streaks end. Besides East Forsyth. No. 5 Wilson Fike dropped a 28-14 decision to No. 6 Wilson Hunt. Juan Jackson did most of the damage, rushing 27 times for 147 yards and three touchdowns. He also had a 96-yard kickoff return for the other Hunt touchdown. Fike dropped to 5-1.
Second-ranked Kannapolis Brown got a 9-yard touchdown run from fullback Willie Graham and a 31-yard scoring dash from Tony Smith to post a 14-0 victory over No. 10 Central Cabarrus in 3-A action.
Third-rated Asheville Reynolds escaped with a 23-22 overtime victory over Pisgah, 1-5. Reynolds rallied to tie the scor^in regulation on Howie Moody's 23-yard field goal with 1 second left.
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Late Score Gives Jags 10-3 Victory
SNOW HILL - Toronto Moye scored with 30 seconds left in the ball game to give Farmville Central a 10-3 Eastern Carolina Conference football victory over Greene Central Friday night.
The contest was a defensive struggle for the most part. Farmville amassed 217 yards in total offense, while holding the Rams to just 106, including stopping Anthony Thompson to just 20 yards.
Four interceptions against Ram quarterback Elmer Dixon also kept the Rams from offering a real threat in the game. Donald Tyson picked off three of those, while Kent Hardv grabbed the other.
, Farmv jie g^ or the
period after a long drive ended in a 24-vard field goal by Patrick Nilsson. During that drive, fullback Tyrone Forbes hit Tyson for a 39-yard 'gain. V
Greene Central rallied in the third period to tie it up, driving from near midfield to
the four where Dixon booted a 21-yard field goal.
It stayed that way until late in the game when the Jaguars bottled the Rams up deep in their own territory and forced a punt to around midfield. The Jaguars drove down over about four minutes until Moye went in from five yards out to give the Jaguars the win.
The win boosts the Farmville record to 3-3 overall and 1-1 in ECC play. Greene Central falls to 1-5-1 and 0-3 in the conference.
Farmville piavs host to Charles B. Aycock on Friday, while Greene Central entertains Ayden-Grifton.
(IrppneC-.
Moore Scores Three As Bullets Rip Tribe
harnuillP^
Rushes-^ ardage Passing V ards Return ^ ards Passing Punis-Average FumblesLosi
rcriidjiit:-1 ui
Farmville ('..............() : (i
Greenp Central.........0 () :i o-
Scoring:
FC Nilsson 24 FG
GC Dixon 21 FG
FC Move, 5 run (Nilsson kicl(
11 36 1 2 4 a 2-1
i-i.) -1(1 ) 3
CHOCOWINITY -Jamesville's Matthew Moore scored three touchdowns while Robbie Harris added two as the Bullets spoiled Chocowinity's Homecoming with a 42-6 football victory Friday night.
The victory kept Jamesville in at least a share of the Tobacco Belt lead with a 2-1 league record. The Bullets are 4-2 overall.
Harris, who carried 15 times for 121 vards. scored the first iwo touchdowns oi ihc game both coming in the first period. He went in trom four vards oui, ihen loiiowed.tha u),) with ,a piiv, GTreg Hardison look a -conversion pass trom Richie
Ange to raise the score to 14-0 at the end of the first period.
Jamesville got only one score in the second period, as Neal Lilly scored on a ten-yard run and Moore ran over the PAT to make it 22-0 at the half.
Moore got the first of his
touchdowns in the third period. That came on a 65-,yard sprint, moving the score to 28-0.
Moore came back with two more touchdowns in the final quarter. One came on a four-yard run and the other on a ten-yard scramble. Ange ran ovVr the PAT following the first of those to give the Bullets a 42-0 lead.
C h 0 c 0 w i n i t y f i n a 11 v managed to break the ice late in the contest, with Roy Hooker scoring on a five yard run.
.Moore finished the..game V. h lit ctrcT
-coffiBiiitT fo^ 1 the 3(3 vards ihe Bullets rolled upon the ground.
Chocowinitv falls to 1-4-1
in the Indians
with the loss, 1-2 Tobacco Belt, The travel to Belhaven next Fri day. while Jamesville plays host to .Aurora.
laniPNxillp Chocowinilx
22 P'irst Downs 9
.52-373 Rushes-Yardage 144 Passing Yards
(I Return Yards
15-7-u Passing 1-0 (.) Punts-.Average
0-0 Fumbles-Lost
14-125 Penalties-Yards
25-96
59
0
8-2-1
2-290
6-4
5-40
Jamesville.............U
I hotowiniiv ;....()
lurun ' Moore run I .) - .Moore. 65 run run failed i .) - .Moore. 4 run > Ange run)
J -- .Moore, 10 run ' run tailed i C - Hooker, 5 run run tailed i
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Murray's Blast Leads O's To Win
I'HK'.Mio ,\P Kddu' Murra\ (.'anu' nut ot hi> two-ame daldrunis with a three run homor to cirhanco Baltinioro> ponnaiit hopos, bat It miuht have Ivor, an old iashioiioti boan tiali war that put tho rhioaito Whito So\ on tholinnkot oliniinatiiin
,Murra> -r.appod an o-tor-.s shnnp with ht> homo Iun in tho tir.'t innino Friday niaht to send thiL-Onoio.s slroakinp to an 11-1 \jo!or> .md a 2-1 load m tho bost-oi tivo .\nionoan l.oapiiot haptpion'h!!)So^'ios
if tho Sox our.noi >top tho onolos Satuixia} aitornoon whon Britt' Burns taoos Baltimoro's Storm !)a\is. tho onoies will ropro<ont tho .\1. in tho World Sorio>
White Sox Manager Tony LaHussa denied Cal Hipken had been hit b\, a pitch intentionally in the tilth inning. but Sox starter Richard Dotson indR-aied otherwise.
In all started in the fourth when winning pitcher Mike Flanagan hit rookie slugger Ron Kittle in the knee with a breaking ball on a T2 pitch to load oil, the inning Kittle turned toward Flanagan and both benches emptied liut order wa> quicki} restored
Dotson retired the first two men w tH' fifth and then hit Kipkon in tho side, Ripken aoooptod what appeared to bo tho expected but when Dotson's next pitch backed olt Murray and .ilurray shouted to the nitcher. both boHchos
emptied again.
At this point home plae umpire .Vick Bremigan warned both benches and the pitchers. John Lowenstein then doubled to score both runners, which gave the Orioles a (M lead.
Ripken was not hit intentionally." said LaHussa flatly. ^Both clubs are emotional but we re not here to escort the (trioles into the World Series."
Dotson said. 'Something had to be done. They hit seven batters all season,and they've hit ihree in this .series alreadv.
"I didn't talk to Tony." said Dotson, "but let's put it this way. 1 got the word. Get the first two guys and hit the third. "
Ripken, asked if he was expecting to be hit in that situation, said "No. I wasnt. 1 never go to the plate expecting to be hit. I agree that a pitcher has to pitch inside.
"But I dont know, if Tony said it wasn't intentional, then it wasnt intentional." said. Ripken. "You get frustrated, emotions run high and then you regret it later."
The White Sox. who hadn't lost two straight since Aug, 26. cant afford a third defeat. Meanwhile. Baltimore scored four , runs- in the ninth on just one hit and the Orioles 10-run margin tied the record. set when the New York Yankees defeated Oakland 13-3 in the 1981 playoffs.
Baltimore Manager Joe Altobelli insisted Flanagan did not hit Kittle intentionally.
"The count was 3-and-2 and he was the leadoff man so that's not necessarily what you want to do. said .Aliobeih. "Flanagan was having trouble getting the outside corner so he threw inside to find the happy medium,
Dotson was having the same kind of problem." reasoned Altobelli. The first time at bat. he also chased Eddie."
That was the first inning. Jim Dwyer doubled with one out and Ripken beat out an infield single before .Murray cracked his homer deep into the upper deck in right-center.
It broke an Ofor-29 streak in post season play for Murray, who went hitless in his last 21 times at bat in the 1979 World Senes, which Baltimore lost to Pittsburgh in seven games.
.Murray refused to talk to reporters about his shouting back at Dotson or about his home run or about the four times he scored.
A1 Bumbry doubled in a run in the second inning and
Sweet Swing
P.altiinnrc Oriole Kddie Munax ualches his three-run homei' in the lirsi iiiniiiu of tln \mtriean I.eag plavoli u.iine ,iu;iiiisi lii( ( liiea
lie
Uo
White .Sox in ( hieago Friday . Haltiinore won game three lor a 2-1 lead with ail ll-l score. (AF I aserphoto)
Chicago came up with its run in the bottom of the second when Kittle doubled and scored on Vance Laws single.
The Orioles picked up a run in the eighth and most in the crowd of 46.635 were on the way home when the Orioles
Phillies Pop Dodgers
Pllil.ADKi.l ii,\ -F
Char!-- F.uF !...... Jw;,
Mat:r,.V ri - u ;m-Fhiia<wiph;a I'riiiu'- ta ihr-dmirstep Ilf the Wurki Acncs
^ti'Ve C.ii-'ti.a / ;!1 tl". !.ii ca-rrv :n'-in .Wl'.- 'hre.-h-
I 'a'rit-on; , ba>et;ai > miisi
nwciit .Dii-aa;i;e aaar. '..n'e try to clii.''r I'Ut l!':f iit's-ol-li.H National leaitu< i ham piun.'hip .Series in (iame 4 .Saturday nmht against the Los Amteles Dodaers.
The Dodders started letl-ha.nder .lerrx Reuss. a !-o iii:-er''o Cantim n the iW't eanie of the 'cne- in I.ns .\ngeies.
Hudson, who as! '.ear pitched m the ('lass A Carolina Leatiue, tossed a niasiertul four-hit ter,
and walking ".'.o. while .\!at-theus. the -..'i-.ir w.-'eFi >
- ;. l Hu'mip, was an
....I AraKei. ki'i 11! the spriim i.eede-: m.iliire at the '1 Tiple ,\ l"\e!
"We brought iimi up .when we knew he was ready "
iiweri' said he wasn't surprised with Hudson's perior-mance
"It was a typical Hudson iiame 'I'he kind he has given Us m his last three or tour -tarts. It 's similar to the game where he beat Steve Rogers ' in Montreal Sept. 22. If he keeps the ball down he's tough to hit,"
For .Matthews it was a sort 0! vindication. He was disgruntled in-the linal month ot the season when he didn't play much,
"It cetamly was one ot the low points _ot my career, sitting on the'bench, but T
tk
nd
provided ne '.'o! home rum '..o tour RBI a- me lA'iiines prevailed 7-2 Fratav'to take a 2-1 leadintheserie<
The only runs Hudson allowed came on a two-run homer by .Mike .Marshall in the fourth inning.
After .Marshall's blast-, the Dodgers didn't get a hit. Only three batters reached base: Steve Sax. who walked in the fifth.Ken Landreaux on an error in the sixth, and .Marshall on a ninth-inning walk
Hudson was called up from Portland ot the Pacific Coast League on .May :il and posted an 8 8 record in the Phillies' drive to the M. East title.
Philadelphia .Manager Paul Owens w as asked wh,\ Hudson didn't make the Phillies' ro-ienn-pring training.
He responded.
"Do you have your new baby boy pieddling pap'Os the day after hej.omes home trom the hospital''"
tried not to get ton down. On the days when I w.isn't playing I took extra hatting piraticeymd I always try to '.vatchmydiet.
When -I saw the job people like Greg Gross and Joe Lefebvre did, I really couldn't complain .. We wouldn't have won without them. You are never happy when you dont play, but winning makek it easier"
.Matthews hedged when asked it he felt the Phillies couldend it tonight.
"You can never take anything for granted when you are playing the Dodgers. We just have to play good defense and not make any mistakes... You can never count the Dodgers out, "
Dodgers' Manager Tom Lasorda wasn't in a conceding mood.
1 understood before this thing started that it was the best of five. They've only won two \'ou have to win three. Intil. they win three we're still in thisthing."
((wens tried not to be smug, t)ut his confidence was evident ,
"I always teel good when Carlton is going," Owens said.
The Dodgers have been in tour NL playoff series and have yet to lose.
The Phillies took a 2-0 lead in the second inning Friday when Dodgers starter Bob Welch walked .Matthews and Gross. The big right-hander then had to leave the game with a recurrence of a bursitis condition in his left hip.
"He reinjured it on a pitch to .Mike Schmidt in the first inning." said Lasorda.
Alejandro Pena relieved and threw a wild pitch on which the runners advanced to second and third. Then came a passed baH^ and .Matthews scoredTGross taking third.
After Bo Diaz walked, Ivan DeJesus grounded out and (iross scored the Phillies had two runs without a hit.
The Phillies made it 3-0 in the third on singles by 40-year-old Joe Morgan and 42-year-old Pete Rose and a sacrifice fly by Lefebvre.
Dusty Baker singled to start the Dodgers fourth, and after Hudson settled down to get two out, .Marshall slammed an 0-1 pitch over the left field fence to make it 3-2.
Schmidt said the Dodgers had grabbed the momentum on Marshalls homer, and felt the home run Matthews hit starting the Phillies fourth regained it for Philadelphia.
The Phillies boosted it to 6-2 in the fifth on the second of Rose's three singles, a double by Schmidt, and Matthews
two-run single.
The rest was taken care of by Hudson, who stayed away from the off speed pitches after Marshalls blast, and turned back the Dodgers with a fastball and slider.
Hudson said he didnt have his best stuff.
"Some days Ive gone out there and thrown the ball better. Earlier in the year my arm felt real good, but Ive thrown a lot of innings since 1982. and theyve taken their toll. 1 trv not to think about it."
Hudson said he was hardly able to sleep Thursday night.,
"I was nervous when I got to the ball park. And when I heard the start of the game was delayed (by an accident that tied up traffic) I just read a newspaper until it was time to start warming up.
What did Morgan say to Hudson after Marshall hit the homer"?
"He said, Dont worry. You still have the lead. Make them hit you. Dont lighten up. Keep using your best stuff.
Marshall said the Dodgers went after too many bad pitches, especially high fastballs.
"What we have to do is lay off them and we werent doing it.
Matthews appeared after the game in a T-shirt with "I am the Sarge emblazed across the front.
"Thats because Im a take charge guy, Matthews explained, resting his case on five hits, including two homers, in the three playoff series games.
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scored four more runs in the ninth which included a double by Ripken, a couple of walks and an error.
The White Sox have managed only three runs in this series and one of those was unearned
"Give the'Orioles pitchers the credit." said LaRussa, When we hit em hard, the balls are caught. We re not finding the' holes and Baltimore is pitching verv tough.
"I thought Lowensteins
double w'as the biggest hit of the game." said LaRussa. "Dotson doesnt have to hang his head. If he had gotten Lowenstein out. wed have won the game."
Maybe. The White Sox have had a total of onlv 18 hits in
the series, seven by leadoif man Budy Law. who collected two of their total six hits Friday night against Flanagan and Sammy Stewart, who pitched one-hit ball over the final four in-ningsfo earn the save.
White Oak Rips Conley
JACKSONVILLE - White Oak High School romped to a 37-0 victory over D.H. Conley behind three touchdowns by Lucky Chappell Friday night, * Stanley Monk added two TDs while Paul Obernesser kicked four extra points and a 30-yard field goal.
Conley was fairly well bottled up'in the game, gaining only 162 yards total. White Oak rambled for 325, all but 22 on the ground.
Monk scored the first White Oak touchdowm in the opening period on a one-yard run and
Obernessers kick made it 7-0.
Chappell got the first of his three touchdowns in the second quarter, scoring from 16 yards away, and that gave the Vikings a 14-0 lead over Conley at the half.
Monk raced 54 yards for the first one, while Chappell took a five-yard pass from Riley for the final one.
Chappell scored again in the third period on an eight-yard run. and Obernesser followed that with his field goal, running the lead out to 24-10.
The victory got White Oaks Coastal Conference season off to a fine start. The Vikings are now 5-1. having won five straight since losing their opener to 4-A Jacksonville.
lonlfv
1
30-71
91
28-9-5 2--2 5 (HI 8-90
First Downs Rushes-Yardage Passing Yards Passing Punts-.Average Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
While Oak
3
45-303
22
8-2-0
1-380
1-0
While Oak 1) ll.( onle\
U U II
13-37 0- II
T w 0- f i n a 1 period touchdowms. one each by Monk and Chappell finished off the scoring for the evening.
Conley drops to 2-4 on the year, and 0-1 in league play, the Conley Vikes play host to West Carteret on Friday, while White Oak's Vikings entertain North Lenoir.
Storing
wo - Monk, 1 run Obernesser kick'
WO - Chappell. .16 run '(iber.nesscr kick
WO - Chappell, ,8 run obernesser
kick -
WO-olxrnesser30FG
WO - Monk. 54 run Obernesser kick
Wo - Chappell. 5 pass (rom Riley kick failed-
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities
Holly Farms Grade A
Whole Fryers
Holly Farms Hrade A
Chicken
98
lb.
Holly Farms Grade A
Pick of the Chix
T
Holly Farms Grada A
Chicken
Drumsticks
78
lb.
Holly Farms Grads A Chiekan
Livers and Oizzards
Holly Farms Grade A
Chicken
Breasts
These Prices Gooid October 9 Through October 15,1983
Montana Aids High-Scoring 49ers Offense
By The Associated Press The San Francisco 49ers. with quarterback Joe Montana leading a high-scoring offense, have already won more games than they did during last year's strike-torn season.
The Us Angeles Rams, with a rookie head coach and a high-flying rookie running back, have also bettered last season's Natonal Football League mark.
On Sunday, they'll meet before a sellout crowd in San Francisco in an early test of strength in the NFC West,
In other NFL games Sunday. it's Washin^on at St. Louis; Denver at St. Louis; Minnesota at Chicago; the New York Jets at Cleveland; Green Bay at Detroit: New Orleans at Atlanta; Buffalo at Miami; New" Fngland at Baltimore; Seattle at San Diego; Kansas City at the Los Angeles Raiders: Tampa Bay at Dallas: and Philadelphia at the New York Giants Pittsburgh is at Cincinnati on Monday night.
Montana, who took the 49ers to the Super Bowl championship two years ago, saw the team drop to H last season. But this season he's thrown for 1,2:18 yards as San Francisco, after losing its opener, has won four straight to lead the NFC West. Montana has thrown 12 touchdown passes during the winning streak.
The 49ers ha\e scored 164 points this season, the most in the NFL The Rams count on rookie running back Eric Dickerson, who leads the NFL rushing chart with 64.i yards. He's gained 192 and 199 yards in his last two games.
Los Angeles, which went 2-7 last season but is :i-2 under first-yeai^ Coach John Robinson, has given up just 97 points th's year, second-best in the NFC The last time Robinson and 49ers Coach Bill Walsh met on the field was in 1978. That's when Robinson coached at Southern California and Walsh was with Stanford.
Robinson said he's aware of the rivalry the 49ers and Rams have had over the years.
"1 grew up in San Francisco and I've lived in Los Angeles, so 1 know something about it." he said.
One of Walsh's mam concerns is Dickerson, who was drafted from Southern .Methodist. Last year, Walsh thought Marcus Allen of the Raiders, who Robinson coached at Southern Cal, was the best running back in the NFL.
I can't conceive of anybody being better than .Marcus Allen, but Dickerson certainly is in the same category." Walsh said. 'Tie's big and has extremely good speed, artd he has good stamina, which a back has to have to curry the football 30 times in a game," Dickerson's move into the Rams' backfield was made easier when Los Angeles traded Wendell Tyler,, who had two 1,000-yard sea.sons for the team, to the 49ers this vear.
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Nekro Shopping For Pitching Job
ATLANTA (APi - Phil Niekro could have pitched another season with the Atlanta Braves, but he refused to stay where he feels he's not wanted
Niekro: announcing Friday that he had received his unconditional release at his own request said Braves owner Ted Turner gave him several, options during a meeting Wednesday when the team formally asked the 20-year veteran to retire.
"Ted told me that he has overridden his decisionmakers before." Niekro said. "He said. 'Just tell me if you uant to pitch for the Braves and you've got a job.' I'm not going to spring training holding Ted Turner's hanl The L'Odvhmg aff doesn't want me here any more. I'd be very uncomiortablc"
"One of the coaches actually-thought I should have retired
back in May or June." Niekro said without naming the coach. "He told a couple of reporters from here that Phil is 100-years-old and should retire now.'"
Niekro said he and his agent, Bruce Church, would begin contacting teams seeking a pitching assignment for next season.
Niekro struggled in the early months of 1983 and finished with an 11-10 record, posting a team-best 9-1 mark after the All-Star break.
He was the most successful right-hander in the three-city history of the Braves, which began in Boston in 1876, moved to Milwaukee in 1953 and finally to Atlanta in 1966.
Niekro had a 268-230 lifetime, record, all in a Braves uniform. He had three 20-victory seasons, hurled a nn-hifteV against San Diego on Aug. 5, 1973, and had one one-hitter
and eight two-tkters.
Niekro said he hoped to be pitching somewhere next
season when after turns .April 1.
"If you're looking for
45
Unlikely Duo Did The Trick
OUTDOORS
With
Joe Albea
Cnkxi .Veit.'.- - North Carolina's wildlile will be better off because ot two contributions recently by the N C Wildlife Resources Commission. The Central Carolina Chapter of Quail L'nlimited. a private conservation organization dedicated to. improving the habitat and management ot quail, recently contributed S573 to the commission for Quail management in North Carolina Also, the Parker Cutlery Company was honored for its gilt of 'S8.tH.Hi to the Wildlile Endowment .Fund, In 1982. the Parker Cutlery Company issued a special series ot knivci. commemorating the "Year of the Eagle, " and a portion from the sale ot each oi these knives was donated to the Wildlile Endowment Fund.
"The wildlife commission is very grateful for these con- ' tnbutions." said J. Robert Gordon of Laurinburg, chairman of the wildlife commission. "Quail Unlimited IS a fine organization, and we look forward to working with these dedicated sportsmen to improve quail hunting in the future We also appreciate the contributior\ made by the Parker Cutlery Company. This substantial donation to the Wildlife Endowment Fund will aid wildlife conservation for years to come."
Muzzle-Loading Deer Season - The season for takina whitptoil deer with a
muzzle-loader comes in this Monday, Oct. l and runs through Oct. 15. Only antlered deer may be taken during this special season.
The regular gun season opens .Monday. Oct. 17. From all indications, the deer population in Pitt County is in good shape.
Squirrel Season For those who hunt the wily bushytail. the season also op|ens .Monday, Oct. 17, Bag limits are eight daily. , 16 in possession and 75 for the season. The season closes Jan, 31.19984.
Wildlife Note Each year, the nation's largest estuary, the 4.400 square mie Chesapeake Bay. yields an average of 125 pounds of seafood per acre to sport and commercial fishermen including 90 percent of the country's soft-shelled crabs The Chesapeake is also the dumping ground for 400 million gallons of municipal sewage every day.
Fishing Report - The fall fishing season is in full swing and the fish are biting. King .Mackeral have been caught in good numbers ranging in the 20-25 pound class off MoreheadCity,
The piers on the outer banks have been doing well on small trout, bluefish and croaker over the last several weeks.
Largemouth bass have been active in the tributaries of the Pamlico River.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -They must have seemed an unlikely winning combination.
Left fielder Gary Matthews had his usual nickname of "Sarge" modified to platoon sergeant" earlier this season because he was spending a lot of time on the bench. And Charles Hudson had never pitched in the major leagues before the vear started But the two were just the combination the Philadelphia Phillies needed Friday to whip the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-2 and take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five National League championship series.
Hudson struck out nine and seemed to get stronger as the game progressed. Matthews beltelfthis second homer of the playoff series in the fourth inning and drove in three more runs with two singles.
"I don't want to dwell on the past. said Matthews, whose T-shirt proclaimed I Am the Sarge."
"I would have liked to play-more than 1 did this season. Not playing is the low point. But I tried to just stay sharp and stay in sha^. he said.
Hudson, a 24-year-old right-hander called up May 31 from the Phillies' Tripie-A team in Portland, Ore.. said he had trouble sleeping the night before the game. But he showed no signs of nervousness on the mound.
After he gave up a two-run homer to Mike Marshall in the fourth, Hudson said, his coaches told him his breaking pitch and his fastball were still working well.
"From that point on, 1 stayed with my hard stuff," he said. And the Dodgers got no more hits nor runs.
Los Angeles beat the Phillies 11 out of 12 times during the regular season, but Philadelphia's Pete Rose, who had three singles Friday, said those statistics are outdated.
"We've got some new guys and we're playing with a lot of spirit, a lot of momentum." Rose said In the Dodgers' dressing room. Manager Tommy Lasorda remained optimistic.'
"When we started this playoff 1 understood it to be best-of-five. Theyve only won two. You have to win three," he said, "Until they win three, we re still in this thing.
Dodgers starter Bob Welch pitched just 1 1-3 innings before aggravating painful
bursitis in his left hip. Welch seemed to be "100 percent physically before the game. Lasorda said.
Welch reinjured the hip on a pitch to Mike Schmidt in the first inning, and he thought when he went out there (in the second inning) tbat he could kind of adjust a little bit. but he wasn't able to throw the ball over the plate." Lasorda said.
Welch issued consecutive walks to Matthews and Greg Gross before being relieved with one out,
Alejandro Pena, who replaced Welch, immediately threw a wild pitch that led to both runners scoring.
The -Dodger manager said he brought in Pena, who gave up four hits and two earned runs in 2 2-3 innings, "because he was the one I thought could come in and hold them."
statement, thanks, but no thanks. I don't feel like retiring." Niekro said Friday when he returned to Atlanta. Stadium to remove his personal belongings from his locker.
The decision to ask Niekro to retire was. made during a staff meeting one week before the end of the season. The first inkling that Niekro might go came when Manager Joe Torre failed to mention the knuckleballer when he was naming his possible starting rotation for the 1984 season.
Torre said he telephoned Niekro on Friday night after returning from an out-of-town trip.
"With all that's gone on and all that's been said. I felt uncomfortable calling him. but 1 knew it was something 1 had to do," Torre said, "Phil is a class guy."
"I obviously was one of the ones who made it (the decision) unanimous," Torre said. "I don't want to shun my responsibility of decison-making here. We do everything by committee but, yes, if I make it clear I want somebody, then they will listen. 1 am one of the ones who felt we had to go in a different direction. It's time to go with
a different starting pitcher."
"Evidently he doesn't know me as well as I know me," Niekro said. Theyre going by their pane! of decisionmakers. You've got to respect em for making a tough decisionlike this.
Niekro said he wasn't bitter. He said he knew of no rules of order covering how a veteran should be released.
"I spent 25 years with an organization, he said. "Ive never had to move. Definitely I'm going to keep my home.
Everything I own. everything in that house, except my wife and kids, came from the Braves. I got them (wife, children) myself.
"Its been a great marriage, he said. "I guess right now it's come to a divorce."
Women's Match Play
Gordon Fulp, center, pro at the Greenville Country Club, presents the championship trophy to Betty Lou Howard for winning the clubs
Womens .Match Play Championship. :\t left is Peg Haigwood, w ho finished in the runner-up position. (Reflector Photo)
Highway 264 Bypass and Hooker Road
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TIRE & SatVICE CnTER
Greenville, O.C. 756-2841
Tire Center Open 9-8 Monday-Friday 9-6 Saturday Prices Effective thru Saturday
nn
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OUR BEST BIAS PLY TIRE
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SIZE
SALE
B78-13
27.88
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31.88
F78-14
33.88
G78-14
35.88
G78-15
35.88
H78-15
37.88
L78-15
39.88
TREAD DESIGN MAY VARY S RIB TREAD DESIGN PLUS F.E.T. 11.46 TO IZIO
A DIVISION OF KELLY SPRINGFIElO
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METRIC
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33.38
1.42
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iSCOREBOARD
The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N C.
Sunday. October 9.1983 B-11
Sports Calendar
Editor's Sole: Schedules ore supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice
'ii!a\S Sports Softball Fall League Slate Credit vs. Vermont American Sunnyside Eggs vs. Grog's Thomas Mobile Homes vs Morgan Printers J D. Dawson vs Jim's Tires Baile\ s vs. Jimmy's Wi nth Street vs .Mike'.s Parlv Center
Ternnis
Wayne Country Dav at Greenville Jri:i:30pm.i N.C State at East Carolina women i3 pm. I
Soccer
Greenville Christian at Hethel I
p.m. I
Tuesday's Sports \ olleliall
Conley at West Craven 14 p m i KoseatLaney i4pm.i
Tennis
Washington at Tarboro Rocky Mount at Rose - :i :{o p ni -
Greenville Jr at Ridgecrolt :i::in p.m. I
C B Aycock at Farmville Central Soccer
Rocky Mount at Rose ' 4 p m i Greenville {'hristian at Ridgecrolt 4 p m. i
( ross-('mintr\
Conley. .N'orthern Nash at Rose jSorthern Nash at Rose girls Wednesday's Sports Soccer
East ('arolina at I \C
Wilmmgtwnpm i
Volley hall
Virginia ('ommoimeallti at East Carolina 7pm ^
Tennis
N < Slate at East Caroliiia i:i p ni I
Washington at linanoke Kapids TIuirsdav's Sports I iiolhall
Farmville ( cutral at CB Aycock JV
Grei'ne Central at AvdeirGrillon JV
Conley a! West Carleret JV '7 pm I-
larboroa! Roanoke Rapids.IV Rose at Kinston .l\' 7 p in ' Kinston at E R Aycock 4 p m
rennis
Roanoke R.ipids at Roanoke Ply inoiilh at Washington
Roseat Beddingfield CLJOp.m.i (ireene Central at C B Aycock Soccer
Rose at Beddingfield 14 p.m. i Golf
East Carolina at Duke Invitational
Soflhall
Fall League Morgan Printers vs 14th Street J D Dawson vs. Mike's Party Center
Slate ( redil vs. Sunnyside Eggs Vermonl-American vs Spirits Jimmy s()6 vs Jim's Tires Thomas .Mobile Home vs. (irog's ( ross-( oiintry Conley at New Bern
Fridays Sports Fool ha 11
Ciyocoyvmily at Bclhaven iHp m i Aurora at Jamesville i8 p.m. i North Pitt at Plymouth i p m. i .Ayden (irilton at Greene Central
iHp.m.i
(' B Aycock at Farmville ('cutral 'hp.m.i
W't*st Carterei at Conley ' H p m i Roanokeal Tarboro iMp in > W'ashingloii at Bertie 8 p m Roanoke Rapids at W'llliarnston '8p m '
Kinston at Rose '8 p m i (.oil
East Carolina at Duke Invita
tional ____
Tennis
ECAC-South Tournament at Navy Saturday's Spurts Football
East Carolina at Temple it;30 p.m.or7:30p m I
Golf
East Carolina at Duke Invitational
Tennis
EC.AC-South Tournament at Navy \olleyball
East Carolina at Virginia t^ua drangular .Meet
Sunday s Sports
ECAC South Tournament at N'avv
Rec Standings
m Printers o 10
Clinched League Championship
Bowling
City League
Hustlers
Lniled Machine Team 9 Hot Dogs Earl s Fearls Comedy ol F.rrors Cham Reaction Sidewinders Deans (111 (0 Tarheel II
mu
< AUlWOi?lTlE^ AR KJfOTiAlKje'
iDRDRCEra&OSBOF-rWE I^9lGKJA'TtP MiTTCRATTi4^
U(2u?
8
9
IC.-j
111.,
12
13
14
Tarheel II.................6 14
High game. Mart Spain 236. high series. Linwood Wetherington 634
V\elcome Wagon Loner 13 7
Duil2it....................... 12', 71-
Do Gooders 12 8
North State Gals 12 8
We Try Harder 12 8
The Fair Ones 11'- 8
Tyco And A Hall 7 13
High game. Dorothy George 195; high series. Barbara (^apeletti 496
I Please turn to page B-12 >
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
\tJEVE GOT OKI TME UIME.
Fall Softball
1
.ljmr|iy's 66..............., p
Bailey's.............;
Sunnyside Eggs .....
(:rog''s
Thomas Mob Homes 1
.lim'sTires ...............1
Mike's Parly Cen.........
State Credit.............t
J 1) Dayvson
Spirits .............
\'crmont .\merican........:
14th Street................:
TMANKeGlVlvJ 0injkJ6R,60Z0. GET ME GOK/tegOPY \WITM
cLour'.eexm
7
XI-
:^mi
TRAV&U/
AaetOftY
12
Get Cort Cutter DMdends On Everything YOU Buy At Kroger
ADVERTISCD ITEM POLICY Each Of these advertiser items Is required to be readily available for sale in each Kroger sav-on except as speclflcaiiv noted in this ad if we do run out of an Item we will offer you your choice of a comparable Item when available, reflecting the ame savings or a ralnchecK which win entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30 days Limit one manufacturer s coupon per Item
get double
COST CUTTER DIVIDENDS
THIS WEEK ON Prescriptions Photo Processing
SENIOR CITIZENS GET
ROUBLE
Cost Cutter Dividends
This Week with Coupon
copyright 1983 items and Prices
Effective thru Sat.
2nn Oct. 15, 1983.
None Sold To Dealers
Simply present this coupon to the cashier when you check out. valid through i Saturday, Oct. 15.1983. |
MISS BRECK
With 1 Filled cost Cutter Dividend
Savings Certificate
Hair Spray
DISPOSABLE CRICKET
Lighters
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BAYER
NORTHERN
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Bath Tissue
KROGER FROZEN
With 1 Filled cost Cutter Dividend Savings Certificate
orangeJuice
12-Oz.
Can
Aspirin
HPASTE
est
With 1 Filled cost Cutter Dividend Savings Certificate
100-Ct. > Btl.
With 1 Filled Cost Cutter Dividend Savings Certificate
e.a-oz.
Tube
SMOOTH EDGE
With 1 Filled Cost Cutter Dividend Savings certificate
Shave Cream
78
OSCAR MAYER
With 1 Filled cost Cutter Dividend
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DECONGESTANT
Sliced Bacon
U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE
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PLAIN OR SELF RISING PILLSBURY
White Potatoes
With 1 Filled Cost Cutter Dividend
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B-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C Sunda/october 9, 1
1983SCOREBOARD
I Continued from page B-11 >
Baseball Playoffs
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Cinrinnali
Houston
(enlral
:i 0 tilKI lllic tUH
:i 2 0 6(Kl II ini
Phil,
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idelphia KHi IKKI (KKi I
'Vsteles IKHI (NMI INKI (I
111 Holland '8' and I)ia Keuss
I. A Haiders Seattle Denver Kansas Cits San Diego
; uer 9 and Veager W Carlton, lieuss. 111 'HR Philadelphia,
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'vueles 10(1 02(1 OlV ,4 ll 1
I, Keed 7 and Diaz, \'alenituela. ler 9 and Finiple W -.via. 1 II L Dennv, o-i HRs-
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\ngeles Heuss 1211' at
tvil'hia Carlton I 'l hi ,K 2np ni siiiidas. (leloher 9 \ngeles at Philadelphia, 4 :ii p ni .
Dallas Washington Philadelphia N V (iianis St Louis
National I oiiierenee Kasi
0 1
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I 000 l.M Hihi 144 Ooo 87 400 90 200 89
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Hid Dempses XV
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San Fraiieiseo L A Rams New (irleaiis Atlanta.
Suiidas s (.ames
Washington at St Louis Denver at Houston Minnesota at Chieago New York Jets at Cit'veland lirtvn Ba.\ at Delroil New (Irleiins at .Atlanta Buttaloat Miami New Knglandat Baltimore Seattle at San Diego Kansas Cits at Los Angeles Raiders Los Xngeles Rams at San Franeiseo Tampa Bax at D.illas Philadelphia at New A orktiiaiits XIondas s(.jiiies Pittsburghat Cineinnati. n
Iiiore
niester Bai'i Boddivker ,li'-ker I II Laltiinor
' Transactions
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Minda', Hetiihei 9 ('lire ,i! i'hu.igii 8 20 pm it
Tidri.w I Fisk I I HR
Kx The XssiH-iated Press K X.SKB Xl.l,
Xnieriean League sFXTTLK MARINKRS Fired Dan iiRrien president Named Hal Keller Me iresident baseball ofieralions and geiier.ii manager Named .let! Seott
direelor ol plaxer de\elopmeol ftXSKKTKXI I
NHL Standings
it Il l
NX K.iiigers Philaielphia NX Isles Plltslitigh XXashmgioi! New )/Tse\
lix Ihe Xsso, lal
XX ales ( oiitei eiiee
Piltrok Ihxismn
I I Pts
Boston Bui:,lie tj'uetxee , Montrea: ILirtlord
Xdaiiis Dix isiiiii
Chicago St LoUl: Detroit Mmnesot Tor into
ampliell ( oiilei eiii e Norns llixisioii
National Basketball Xssih I.iIioo PiiRTLXVD TR.XIL BL.A/.KRS Cut Paul Little ana .lohn Smith guards Traded Hank MeDowell. lorward center, to the Indiana Pacers'lof a 1980 third round dralt pick SAN Dll-ftlii CLIPPKRS Cut Urrx Xnilersoii, lorward guard. Billx Alleii, Lowes XliHire .mil Dwight Anderson, guards
FtltlTBXI I National Football I eague _SKATILK .sF.XHAXXKS Placed Fugeiie XXilli.iiiis liiiebaeker on mjiired reserxf list- XetiMaled Mark llieks. linebacker TA.MPX B\X hlCCXNFFK.s Mgned lett KonMn ' i|u.irtxTli,u k Reaclixated Mark t'.ilne.x '.iletx Pl.ieed Boh Hewko. quartertiaek. on miiired reserve t anadian FiHilball League HAMll.roN TIi.KRt ATS Tired Bud Rilex. head coach N.imed XI Bruno interim he.id co.u ti tor the remainder of
the se.isoi,
HIM KLX
N.ilion.il lloi kex I eague
HXR rFiiRD XXH.XLFRS Assigned Ro's X.iies c.'idei' i|i Bmghanilon oT the
American Hockex League (i.irx XXeicker I'tXg,! ol the Xtlailtic Coast
go.
1 1
Kdni'intiin C.ilg.irx Xa ncoux.i Los Xllgeii XVinnipeg
snixthe Dix jsioii
1 I
f I idax s ti.imes
N X K.ingers : New Jersex I , Kdni/iri'iii 8 XXmnipegii X .oiceiixei 10 XLnnesota 9 s.iliii (tax s Ixines B'istoii,i! Il.irliiird, ii ButI.ile.i! i^uetiec n NX Isl.mders .it XXashiiigton n Ni'w leisex ,.t Detroit n Phil.elelidiia at Montreal n NX R.mgersal Pillshurgh, n Chk.igo.it St Louis, n
T'lroiilii.i' Los Xngeles n sundax s l.aines
IL.rt.ii'i!.it Boston, n XX.i-tmigtonat'Bullalo, ri P i'i'O.rgh ,i! Philadelphi.i, n M.i.nes.ita at Kdnionlon n I .i.g.ir. .it XXinmixeg n De'i .0 aM'hicago. n T"r".,:o.il X alicouxer. ii
Ilocke.x League .old Doug Fxans, left wing, to Flint 111 the Inleriiiitional Hockex League Signed P.uil Fenton x'enter and tierrx McDonaJd and .Sean Coadx. de-tens(inien
NKXX XiiRK RANt.KRS Signed Mark Morrison, center to the C.madian iilxmpic team ST Lulls HU KS Released . Blair I hapm.in .old Rich.ird Daxid, right wings Sent P.iul Skidmore, goali.e Alain Xigneault. delen.sem.m and Perrx (ian char right wing, to Montana 'o( the ratlliKkex Le.igue
How They Fared
Bx Lhe Xssociated Press
Here are the results oi North ( arohna l),igh school liKgtiall games inxdlxing te.iiiis in 'he lop to polls lor 1X l.X .Old the2.\ l.X cl.issilie.iiions
IX
NFL Standings
-B.c
M .
N X .
\, o i
I.x Die Xssociated Press Xmeric an t oiifei eiii e Fast
XX I I Pci PL PX
I'v 2 ( '.IKI 118 118
(NKi 78 88
(KKI 81 74
t>iKi'12.'/ lo, 4ik' 111 1 ;j
1 lireeiisliiiro P.ige il-o deleatcd K f orsx ih. ,7.7 ;o . .
2 F.ixellexdlc Bxrd o-o delealedfine f ores! 42 "
; N Durham teo. dele.dec] Durham Hil|si(je ,18 7 4 Roxtioro Person ii o dele.ili'd Hen ilerson X anee I4 2b
' XXdsiinfiKe 7 1 lost to XX ilsiin Hunt. 28 14 -
" XXilsiiii Hun' (.0 dele.ited XVilson Fike 28 14 7 .Jacksoiix die 7 1 dele Beds XXavne '28 0 .
H K Forsxih 4 1 1 lost to (ireenslairo Page. 77 In
/lelealed \i
ingloii New w I tem 27 9
O's, Sox Engage In Beanball Duel
Dca.
m:
' H'
F
til'.
> iHC.AGO \P< - They .-'icH'd the evening playing ixis' i all. but found tim to sa:. ixvich in a game of "Chicken." .And when it xvas over the Baltimore Orioles were pointed in the same dirf'ction as when they started ard the World Series.
.'^till go by I former I'Ci ' ' ,'trc .Manager Earli ' .' s basic rule - never ' at the other team. :use if they hit one of our 've'll lose a better player they will," Baltimore's "ingleton said after the .cs' 11-1 rout of the White Sox in Game 3 ' night ol the American 'Championship,Series, riumph gave Baltimore . adge in the series, but was no yelling .and no blaring stereos to be tound. It's not so much that winning has become old in this lockerroom. as celebrating would he premature,
"It's like climbing Mount Everest You don't know how hard it is to win a five-game series until you try." said finles Manager Joe Altobelli. "1 guess we re a little further up the mountain now than Chicago."
The Orioles 10-run margin of victory tied one AL pla.xotl record Friday night winner Mike Flanagan had a hand in tying a second by drilling the third Chicago batter with a pitch this series.
After that, the Orioles got plenty of help from the White Sox to attain yet another championship standard -rr ' hit batsmen by two era; ,
And all those hit batsmen after the Oriole pitching staff went through the 162-game regular season with just seven opposing casualties - a league low,
"When I'm ahead 4-1 and trying to keep the leadolf man I Ron Kittle in the fourth i off base, I always go after him," said Flanagan, laughing. "He's never looking for the ball inside when its a 3-2 count
Ol^t
I
Crunching Kittle brought a half-hearted response from the benches and the predictable retaliation the next inning. After two were out, Chicago loser Rich Dotson hit Cal Ripken on the left thigh.
"There's an old addage in baseball that if you think your man was throxvn at. you retaliate and then you're even," said home plate umpire N'lck Bremigan. "That's the way baseball people think and that's the wax umpires think, too. It looked like retaliation, so I let it go because now they 're even,
, "I hoped the players would look at the situation. he added, "and ccept that fact. Bad guess.i
After nailing Ripken, Dotson then came in close with his first pitch to the next batter, Eddie \lurray - apparently too close from .Murray's vantage point. With the bat resting on his shoulder. Murray glared at Dotson and delivered a brief, but pointed message Murray, who earlier had ripped Dotson for a towering three-run homer, refused to discuss the incident. In fact, he refused to discuss anything with reporters afterward.
Bremigan said he was too busy yelling at eveybody to hear what Kittle said to Flanagan after being struck, and again when Murray pointed a menacing finger at Dotson.
But Dotson gave this PG-rated version:
"Murray said I should have been warned after I hit Ripken not after I threw the pitch tohim.'hesaid.
And then, continuing to answer questions dutifully m a somber Chicago lockerroom, Dotson hadn't made up his mind whether he did or didn't go after Murray.
"I think I did it on purpose. My fastball moved inside on me," he said, "Then, again, I had to question myself during the courvL ol the game In the end. 1 don I think I did it on
purpiiSB
19 Charlotlf Mx(rs Park ti (ii aelealeil ('harlott Hxnipiv, >4 18 '
4 Ficii T Fixarii 411 delt'aled XV Linviilii i.'x 29
9 0(KI 97 148
IM
:tx
1 Southern Durham 7 iii delealed
Ape\,49l9
2 Kaiiiiapoii.' Bioxxii ' 7 ii deieaied
Central Caharrus. 14 9
:t -Xsheville Hevnolds /ti-tii deleated
Pi9SJh,2:!220T ,
4 Thomasxille 891' delealtnl Lex
ington. :I4 12
7 Clinton 1,9 dcliMled Mxxunt Airx 42 17
8 XX Hendx'rxin 81) defeated Oxvt'n 42 14
7 F ILiiiikolph .7-1' deleated B.irllell X .invex :',o 8
8 Shell'X t'revt 8o deleated Burns.
,(9-9
9 S\\ Kduecomlie 8 1 deleated Avden (inlton. 18 o
'ill Cx9ilr,d. C,iliarrus 4 2 lost to Kannapolis Bnnxii, 14 o
7 XX" Monianmerx - 8 9 deleated. hathain t enlral. 27 8
XXallaxe-Hose Hill 8-9/ deleated LakexxoiKliiKi
7 Fr.inki;r,ti),-; 6 m .drx-aid Louishurj;.8LH
8 Mainen 4 1-1 lost to Bessemer Citx
_ 9 Robbinsvillc 7 1. delealed Franklin.
HI tie' Albemarle .71 deleated W Slanlv. 14-9
tie' Charlotte Calholiv '4-D did not
plax
High School Scores
Bx rhe AssiH'ialed Press
Here are Ihe latrel North Carolina high
svhiNil limlball scores ,
2XIX
1 R.mdlemaii 8-ii dole.iied SXX Ran dolph. 77 0
2 Sxlxa XXoIksIci so didliol pl.ix .( Fuquax X'arin.i ' ' ' '
2811
UlU Iini pi,IN
I, II ilcic.iti'ii Bunn.
Albemarle 14. XX Stanlvn \ndrexxs28 Culloxxhee'7 .Ashe Rex nold,s 28. Pisgah 221 IT Asheville .7:!. S Caldxxell ii Beaver Creek 41. Averx Co 18 Belhaven 18, Columbia 8 Brevard 20 Fnk.i 14 Bunker Hill 14 Cherrx, illc8 BurK'ummings 14 ||i,(i(n-.Hii;e(,
Burl XXIlhams 21.'W Alamance 14
C B Ax cock 27. N Pitt 22
Carx 9 Ral MillbnwkT
Cen Davidson 14. W iXavidsonO
Chapt'l Hill 12. Durham It
Charlndcpendence 21. S .Mecklenburg 14
Ciaxloiiio, .s (iranx iiieu
Clinton 42. Mount Airx 15
Concord 18. S Koxxanl.i
CresI 29. Burns 11
Currituck 7. Dales Co 6
Davie Co 29. XV Roxxanl:!
Dunn 14. Jordan 8 K Surr) 18. .Madison Mavodano K Waxhe22. Wilm Hoggard 12 K .Mecklenburg 21, W Mecklenburg 14 K Carierel 22, SW (fnsloxx 8 E Wilkes 25. Elkin 6 E Davidson 17. Ledford 15 E Wake88, Harnelt Cntrale E Gaston 12, Chase 9 E Davidson 17. Ledford 15 Enfield.Xcad.H-. Northe-asf .Acad f8 Erxxin:i2. E Henderson 15 Karmville Central 10. Greene Central 3 Kay Byrd 42. Pine Forest 9 Fay .Sanford 12. Pinecrest 12 Fax Ross to. Hoke Co 9 FayTIsI 14. Lee Co 9 Franklintonei, LouishurgS FreriT Foard 27, XV Lincoln :tii Fuquav Vanna 28, Bunn 9 Gast Ifuss 29 Freedom (I
GboGnmslev62. S .Stokes 6 Gbo Page 55. E Forsyth:)
Goldsboro42. XVilm Eanex 21 HP Andrexxs 42, W Forsyth 21 HallsboroS. N Brunsxxjckn Havelock 211, XX' Carlerel o Hendersonville21. N Buncombe 15 Hibrilen34. S Iredell ti Hickorv 10, GasI Ashbrook n Jackso'nville 28. S Wavneo James Kenan 22. Hobliion 12 Jamesville42. Chocimimly 6 Johnson Co . Tenn '27. .Mountain Heritage 17
Jordan-Malthexxs 22, N Moore 8 Kannapolis Broxxn 14. C Cabarrus 0 KingSxMountam 27. N (iaslon 0 Laurinburg InsI 28. Ravenscroll 19 Lumberton 4(i. XV Robeson 8 Manteo 28. C a m d en I ,! McDoxxell22.E Burke 8 Mitchell I t. Madison 6 Morehead'28: SE GUiliiird 14 Murfreesboro i:i, Perquimans Co 7 MurphviH. Havesville 18 N XXlilies33,A'she('ntralo \ Stanly 14. Forest Hills?
,N Roxxan 17, E Roxxan 10 N Iredell 16. W Iredell 8 N Davidson 28. Asheboro 14 N Durham 18. Durham Hillside?
N Duplin 49,1'monO N Forsxih9. HP ( enlral 11
NE (iuilliird 18, RiH'kingh,im Co 7 \W Ashe 29 XV XVilkesti Nexxlon-i iimiver:!:!. li.mdxs 15 .Northampton West 14. SEllahlax 8 .Nnrtheaslern 12. Kinston n t)rruni28. Biadenlioniii Oxiord Webb 28, S Johnston 14 Pender .(4. W Brunsxxick 2 Polk Cent 21. Cherokee 211 Princelon42. ENCSD 14 Providence Day 29. Charlolle Lalin 19 Kandleman 75 SW Randolph n HI Springs 28 SI Paul si Reidsville 24 Jamestoxxn Kagsdale 25 Rohbinsville,. Franklin (I Rocky .Mount 21. N .Nash 14 Hosexx(Kid28. Coalsii Rosnian24.Lox'kharI.SC 8 Koxxland 12, Fairmoiil II Roxhoro Person :14. Henderson X'ance 28 S Alamance 17. Graham i:| (IT.
S Nicsh-1-2 S Lenoir 7 S (.uilliinl28. NXVGuillordbi S Durham 4(i, Apex 19 S Rolxeson 12. Fairmont II SW Edgecomlteiiti, Avden I Inlton 0 Sahsburx 23, Trinity ii ScotlantfCo 27. Fax Sniithil Shelby 20. E Rutherford 17 .Smilhlield .Selma 2ii. Kal Enlix'?
South Point 14. R S Central II St Stephens?, XVal.iugaII Sun Vallex 20 Mnnnx' I i
Tarboro28. Roanoke Rapid.s 14 Thomasville34. Lexington 12 Tryon25. EdnevvilleB Tuscola 2U. T (' Roberson 17 W Caldxxell 25, Wilkes Central 8 V. Montgomerx 27. Chatham Cent 6 XX Henderson 42. Oxxen 14 W Guilford 40. E Guilford 6 W Charl(iUe31-Char Harding 12 XX Harnett 26, L'nion Pines 25 WS Parkland 21). Gbo Dudlev 8 WS Reynolds 20. GboSmilh'14 Wallace-Rose Hill.30 Lakexxood 0 XX'ashington 25. Ahpskie 19 Way neCountrv Pax 26. Pender Acado XVestoxer ,)4, ,S'outh\'iexx 8 Whileltak :17 Greenville Conlev 0 Wilson Hunt 28, XVilson Fike 14 Wilm Nexx Hanovycr 25'^ N'evx Bern 9 ZebuliiiV48. N Johnston 6
College Football
Bx The Xssociated Press Pridax Night Scores Marisl 19 Broiiklyn 14 Kean24..St Peter so Johns Hopkins 19,1'rsinus 17 KamapoCollege 19..Jersex Cilx St 9 Kutztoxxn I'mversitx 21 'Glasshoro SI
Iona 28 HPI 1.!
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-Business Notes
sim;ss
(.reat Soulhern Finance announced ih;ii Altred Wheeler
^SmannnS
Smith iK'gan his career uiih-Fersoiial IiuluMrial bankers nc. headwl by (arl |{ Woxmaii Sr., prcM'iit chairman ot Great Southern. Since iDt;;!, Smith has been director ot loan supervisors lor Kentncky Finance Co m .\lahaina Ten nessee. North (arolma. South Carolina, and West \ irmnia '
PHGMOTIGNSNoTKI)
Empire Brushes Inc announced two promotions at the Greenville plant
The iirm said that Stanley W Zicherman has" been n a m e d m a n a g e r o I manulacturinti operations, with operational control over automatics, packing, twist and wire, conventional and loam molding, tool crib, mop sheepskin, broom and purchasing ot maintenance repair items. Zicherman. who joined the company iii ititiii, resides here with Ins wili'. Barbara.
Edward E. .M((ks has been promoted, to third sliilt suprTvisor with responsibility tor all third shut operations lii the conventional and loam molding departments Meeks, who was tormerly associated with Carawan <il Co . resides 111 Farmville with Ins wife, Svbil. and their two children
st\m,i;v/i(|ii;b\i\\
Economist Sees Upswing Ahead
Cll.AKEOTTE. N.C w\li - Economic recovery will continue at least through Christmas, but t he turnaround won t be com plete until the nation s uii employment rate tails drastically, a First Cmoii Corp. economist says Boh .-Mlsbrook, chiel e c 0 n 0 m i s t lor I h e Charlotte-based bank^ said Friday he based Ins optimistic asse.ssment on C ,S Labor Department ligures showing an"*im'ease in tjie average factory work wi'ck and rising overtime The average lactory work week rose trom 4ii :i hours in .August to 40.7 hours in .Sep teinber while uneniplo\inent tell trom !).,") percent to !):i pmcent.
Coupled with that, we had a sigmiicant increase trom 3.1 hours m .August to 3,3 hours in September in a e r a g e o \ e r I i in e. " .Mlsbrook said
"What is particularly ini portant is that they are pretty reliable indicators about luture changes in the unemployment rate." he said 'The tactorv has got to
make a decision about whether to hire mori* people or to slow down production. We Ihmk this iiniicates they will start hiring again."
.Allsbrook said consumers who avoided spending lor lear that their jobs were in jeoparih '-caii teel better about keeping a job "
"I'm jiist I'eally convmeed dhis will meiiii ,a good Christmas as tar as consumer spending is con cerned," Allsbrook said, ml-dmg that the next positive indication might be con sumer willingness to buy big-tickel Items
'Even back m lti!l3, the consumers were iiist kind ot waiting to see what was next 'in the economyc " he added. "We're ,sa\ mg what's next is going to be oka\ "
Allsbrook cautioned that the economic recovery would not be complete until something IS (lone about the millions ot unemployed peo pie without skills ihat this eeononiy re(|Uires now,"
He said training those peo pie should be addressed as a national economic jiolicy. .
Triangle Sees Housing Boom
DURHAM, N'C. (APi - Rapid development in the Research Triangle area has taken its toll on the housing market, as construction fails to keep pace with demaiKl, officials say.
Occupancy rates are increasing m Wake. Orange and Durham counties, according to a survey of the Haleigh-Durham Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area, Data for the survey includes vacancies in single-family and multi-family units, as well as mobile homes.
"Durham currently has a vacancy rate ol 3 3 percent, which is significantly lower than 198)'s rate of percent," said Roger Walden of fhe Triangle ,I Council of Governments. "The flip side of vacancy is occupancy, so Durham's 2..3 percent vacancy rate means there is a 97 5 percent occupancy rate,
"This is just a great area to live in because the economy is so stable." Walden said. "People are coming down here in droves."
Vacancy rate for the three-county area is 1.9 percent, an insignificant difference from Durham's rate, Walden said. Chapel Hills vacancy rate is 1.4 percent, and Hillsborough reports a rate of 2.4 percent,
Zebulon posts the area's highest rate at 2.7 percent and Apex has the lowest at (1.7 percent.
"Apex had a ceiling on housing construction because of construction of a waste water treatment plant, so their rate is low because of terrific demand." Walden said.
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Piltard & Perry incx, certified public accounting firm, announced that .Mrs. %udy Corbett Respess has joined the firm's Williamston offi^ as an accountant.
\ graduate of Grraw Central High School in .Snow Hill and Atlantic Christiaiyfmllege in Wilson, she Is the daughter of Mr. and .Mrs W^ter F. Corbett of Walstonburg She and her JiusbandM^fghf. live near Plymouth,
(T&T(ITEI)EMPI.DVEKS -
lartha West and Jean Tyburski, operators in the operator sei|vices department of Carolina Telephone in Greenville, were recently honored by the company for having completed 20and to years of service, respectively.
Ms. West, a native of Greenville, has one son and resides on East 14th Street, She attends Hooker .Memorial Christian Church.
A Hampton. Va,, native, Ms. Tyburski has three children and lives on Pearl Drive here. She attends People's Baptist Temple Church.
DECl.ABEl) DIVIDEND
The Planters Corp. board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of 19 cents per share, payable Dec. 1') to shareholders of record on Nov. 30.
Planters said that alter restatement for the too pei'cent stock dividend distributed to shareholders on April 29, the cash dividend represents an 11.8 percent increase over the 17 cents dividend for 1982's fourfh quarter.
Planters National Bank, a wholly-owned subsidiary ol The Planters Corp., has 48offices in 19 NWfh Carolina cities.
MANAGE.MEN'K ll.Wt.E
Reed's Jewelers announced that following a change in management. Randy Edens is now manager at the Carolina East Mall store and .Jeffrey Best is assistant manager Both have lived in eastern North Carolina kir a number ot years and have been employed by Reed's .jewelers for several years, according to the firm.
NAMED.SIPEHVI.SOR
Barbara C. Ross, business office advisor with Carolina Telephone in New Bern, has been named busine.ss office supervisor with the company in Greenville.
Mrs Ross su[)ervises service representatives who assist residential and business telephone customers in the Greenville district, which includes the Ayden. Bethel. Farmville. Fountain and Snow Hill exchanges. s.
A New Bern native, she joined the company in 1971 as a service representative. She and her husband, James, have two children and two grandchildren.
HEtAl.I.PI.AWED
J.C, Penney Co. Inc. announced a voluntary recall ol 4.3(H) Penney brand coffeemakers manufactured in May 1980 that could overheat and cause scorching for countertops.
The company said that coffeemakers subject to recall are identified by the model number 2278 and the date code CiHi.) stamped on the bottom of the unit. It advised owners of the coffeemakers to discontinue use and return them to the nearest Penney store or catalog desk for an exchange or lull refund.
REtOHD TOTALS
Rite Aid Corp. announced record sales and earnings tor the second quarter of fiscal 1984 ended Aug. 27,
The company said net income advanced 17..') percent to $12)83,(H)(), while sales were S349.(i9t;,iHi(), an increase ot 1T8 frcent over the previous year For the 2 weeks, net income rose 18.7 percent to $23.983.0(10 and sales dimed to .$(i94.307.ooo in the first half, up 10.4 percent from a year ago.
Last year, net income was,$lo.712.(i(io for the 13 weeks and $20.200,000 for fhe 20 weeks. Sales reached S302.119.000 for the first (|uarter and $,59()..373 lor the first half.
P( E MI I TINt.M T
,Jlhe Coastal Plains Chapler ol Proievsiotial ('on.'lniction Estimators will have it.-i monlhl\ meeting Thur'-dax at (i 3o p.m. at the National Guard Arniorv ni Fai tin die
MWAt.EMENTPO.SI
Stephen Tyler Hart biisi ness oftice manager with (,ir olina Telephone here, lia-beien promoted to district commercial and marketing manager m Wliiteville llart IS responsible loi the operation ol Ihe (T&T biM nessAdfiee in \\hite\illc and tor-^'matters involving the exchanges ser\ ing Uhiteville Bladenboro. Chadbourn Clarkton. Elizabethtown, L<ik*' Waccaraaw and Tabor ( it v A New A'ork native, he i^ a graduate ol Atlantic ('hri''tiaii College and joined ("I'M in 1973 as a central ottice re pairer. Hart is married to the lormer Cynthia Cratch oi Tarboro and the\ ha\e two chtldren
^11 Ill!A ll\l!l
(.R WDldl \l\(,
Grand opening acti.vitie.v tor .S'lpeum l,uta >, -t-inf j:;u; s Evans SC, are st'hi-fkiji'd jiar TlitftTxg,,A,>:} rtv announced
The new corporation will handit- c,i-h rrghtrr- Iiin systems, computer^ and >u|iphe-, with tii|-:in-- hmir' tioii, 8:3i)a,m,imtildp.m, . , '
The lirtti s retail ,>ales iIwmhi .jm'! .luind ,'.ii! Iir .I'.ihn Vestal. Walter.Motlitt aml.loini!,'' 11 aird
Announcing Our New
Buck-BuBdmgSystmi.
7-31 days 2-3 mos.
Foryears, Federal regulations determined thewaywedidbusiness with savings customers.
As a result,on most certificates, $1,000 deposits would earn the same rateas $10,000 deposits.
Often,short-term plans were permitted higher rates than longer term investments.
Finally, the regulators, not the savers,fixed the timeframes for deposits. None of this made much sense to us.
But ifs all over now.
AfterOctoberl,the Depository InstitutionsDeregulationCommittee (DIDC) has said that we can set certificates up any way we like. And were making it very simple:
l.The more money you invest, the higheryour rate.
4-11 mos. 12-23 mos,
2. The longer you leave your money with us, the higher your rate.
3. You pickthe maturityfrom 7 days to 36 months or longer, or any time in between.
^ ()ntthiiii>lh(il thisn'l (hti'n^xl \Ulli Sli IJ K K) in ii
a'rtitii(it(.\iHi^('lallJhi'(idiiinln^i's(iflh'liL\('Hiinkini'
Onmaturitiesof31daysorless, you have to invest $2,5(X) or more, but on maturities over 32 days, you can start with as little as $1,(KK).
In short, the system is flexible enough to pay you a good rate on --your money for the time that works best for ypu.
24-35 mos. . over 36 mos.
We compound interest daily, so you earn the maximum yield.
Whafs more, if you have some emergency and need your mi mey early, weve reduced the penalty to . the minimum the law allows.
The chart shows yi lu the basic idea.Now, the specific rateswill change from time to time, but the idea wont change; your bucks can now build up a lot faster with us.
So,whetheryou have money to invest or a CD maturing with us or someplace else,ask for the details, along with our current rates.
Now you dont have to leave the neighborhood for the late,st way to put more muscle in your money.
RiCKS
Mcnilni II >h
Suhst(mhalf;enal^r(^iiir(^f()rearl\withdraK]l(>^me(le(X)sitsJntm^ralesclisf)l(\i\iareusedf<)rilliLs!rati()iiAnKilrtcsruci\(iw 'Whtciinvninik's.
B-14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, October 9,1983Week's Stock MOrkets
Mutual Funds
NEW YORK lAPi - New York Slock Exchange trading for the week selected issues
Sales
' IK hds High la) Last Chg.
- \- \
ACE 14(lfrl.>6 50,1 49'., ,50
AMK .50 2724 17'j 16', 17'+ '
AMRl'p 4,1,15839 3027 2'ef,
ASA 13a ,5021 59 53'. 58'4-H'
Ahtlah t :Si77u52>. 4ais 52.+4
.Aerflx s 17 282 18',
Aetnli 2 04 7 7930 39
AirPrd 1 13 4271 48*.
AlskAir 12 12 943 IB
Alcan
Alglnl
90 1 40
1408,5 38 1797 33'
.Midi p
AlldSfr
AllisOh
Alcoa
Ama\
Alg
AllgPw 2 00 8 0108 U2 .Alldt'p 2 40 9 11579 57 1 80 9 4344 .50 .548 17 1 20 1,9.517 45
20 4415 25
AmMes 1 l(l 13 24740 31 .Am.Agr 1051 2
ABrand .l OO 9 2037 .57'
.ABdcsl 1 Oo 12 :1034 03 Ann an 2 90 xl2172 43^ 42'
Al'van 1 75 21 10748 .58'4 53 '4 AElPw 2 20 11 29415 U20is 18-, AExps 1 28 12 x41757 40 35'4
AKamil Ml 13 308 23'4 22')
AHonie 2 40 14 10000 51's 48's
.\Ho,s[) I 18 12947 40' 4L'4
.\m\lol 9544 8' 7'-,
ANalRs 3 10 0 x984 42' 41'4 AmSid 1.00 20 3040 35 \ 32 4
ATT 5 40a 8t441 05\ 64' , .\.\llln 1 00 31 3304 ull0i lOO'i .\nchor 1 30 15 500 32', 31' ,\nthnv 44b 15 87 15\'l3's
Archlin 14b 17 11228 23,, 21'
\ri,PS 2 00 7 19008 25 23
Armco 40 3.500 20' 1 19-''
ArmVVIn 1 10 17 .5204 29 25"4
A.sarco 4o 40.15 34' 30',
\shlOil 100 o,U;57 29'j
.AsdDti 2 20 13.1010 00,, .04' All Rich 2 40 7 28705 40 44
Allast'p .50 4 127 23'- 23'
Augat 32.17 x1420 43' 40
AvcoCp 1 20 10 4441 U,1H - 34',
AVEAlC .58 12 114 22 - 21'j
Averx 9o 15 . 384 049 - 46-j
Avnet s 5ii .H 4o48 45 i 42
Avon 2 9 1.5893 24 ' 23' ,
- K-K -
Bkrinll 92 9841 21-i 19
BaldwT 22i 1 9949 3' 3'-
BallxMf 20 14 6100 24 - 23'.
BaitliE 3 8.1988 U.12. 29-
BangP 80 191 '20 19'-
Bnk.'Am 1 52 7 1.141.1 21 2o
Bausch I 50 29 2031 uoo 1 50
BaxlTr .50 219*179 Oo 1 .58 BaxlT wi 58 30 29"-
BcalKd 1 Oo 10-18014 u.ir-29'-Beker looixi 1 i , 8 -
BelHw s .50 10 1.189 20 22',
BenlCu 2 12 2821 u.l4- .13
BcnglB 2oc 8 4080 0 , 5',
BeslPd '.12 14 3791 38 - 35'-BelhSlI 00 10212 25 - 22',
BevrU s 28 20 2.525 .10 ,' 35'
Blacki) .52 170.59 u20 - 22'
BIckHH 2 08 14 .519 47 44-
Boeing 1 40 12 18858 42- 39"-
BoiseC 190 29 1089' 43'- 40', Borden 2 44 In 1891 .58 55
Borg^Wa 1 tl8 13 1089 48 , 47'-BosEd 2 88 8 x1052 28 27',
Brist.M si 20 17 X23035 u40', 40-, BritPt 1 49c 10 1823 26'1 25'. Brnswk 1 20 .1007 u3140".,
BucxEr 44 1,103 16', 15',
Burlind I .52 17 4973 40 38
BrlNlh 1 80 14 7011 101 i- 90 -Burrgh 2 Oo 24 x 22739 54'j 51 - ( (
CBS 2 80 15 10*;i5 u80'i 73''. ClIi.NA 2 48 7 0909 47'- 43 l'PClnl2 2o 9 4781 42 39'.
CS.X 12 11 .5898 U77' 72", CSX XM 178 u20 25
Caesar .5.527 14'- 1.1
CKLk g 48 4117 24- 21'-
CamSp 2 2o 12 \1.505 u57- 53 CapCiIs 20 20 1.1.10 1.50', 148',
Caring ,g 40 748 19 - 18 -
CarPw 2 52 8 \1.12o4 u24', 22 C.irrol s 18 ,8191 10', 8
A'arlHw 1 22 14 2227 24', 2C'
C.islICk 0084 U17. 10
CatrpT 1,50 ,8.102 45'-. 43
Cclan.se 4 I80O 77', 72'
Cen.soVV 1 78 7 20981 u20 CnIlPS 1 ,52a 10 300*5 16'
,84 9 .507 1.5 .
, c4'j
17'.- -I 39 -^2', 47',- I, 15',- ', 38 , 1', 33', c2". 26''-cl 57'-c ' 49- ', 17
45',-0 ', 25',-29-l 2'
57' + I, 63'
42' 57\s-3' 19", cl 39-'+3' 23 -I 5C+3', 40' , C4 S',*-41',- ' 35' '+2 ' 64''- ' 110 c8 32'.. c I5'''4-23'.. cl I, 24' .,c ., 19
28" 34'-c2'-30 - ' 65- ' 44- 1'
23 '.- ' 42 c| I 35', c ' 31,. 49''-c2i 44- 1 '
24 -c 5
Mwtot hi Brief
N.Y.S.E. Issues Consoidated Trading Friday, Oct 7
Voksne Shares 122.312.570
r Market Analysis
20-' '-.59' -3
59- c .30 ,
31',-l '-9',- 1-23',-2". .14- '-
24.c 1-
30
Down
645
N Y S E Index
98.72 40.28
S &P Comp
170.80 +0.52
Dow Jones Ind /p 1,272.15 +3.35
.M.ARKET .\.\.\I,V-SIS The Dow Jones JO {ndustriais closed Friday at I27J.15. up J0.02 irom the previous week. i.lPLaserphoto)
24
MrpRw n 80 9 xl9 10 ,
20' I - Harris 88 22 0510 .19
HarlH s ;Vl lO .554 25
23 HeclaM 17 8787 21
31. c I. Herculs 1 44 15 11707 37'
HewPks 18 29 240.50 44'-
Holiday 84 25 5442 .55 ,
Hollv.S' 1 371 54
Hmslk s 20 31 11957 30'.
Honwll 3 00 13 12201 U127'.' 120 120
HospC s .40 19 14*192 47'. 45 47
Hotelln 2 00 15 172 25
Houslnt 1 70 II ,54*10 31-
Houlnd 2 32 i; 18125 u24'. __
HouNt; 182 10 5801 48' 43
38'. cl',.+JughTI 84 78 5092 21 19
- - _ |_| _
1C Ind 2 ,10 10 934 40'- 44
H int 115h-17 4055 28' 20
IdahoP 3 08 7 290OU34- 33 IdealB 30j *189 22'-
lllPowr 2 4it 8 x1.5884 23'
ImpiCp 1775 II'I
INCO 20 24889 10'-
Inexco 14 12 2447 12 ,
40',c5Ij IngerR 2 00 .1628 .50',
20 - ', InldSlI 50 0313 31'.
51',c4i. Intrf.st 1 20 0 12812 20 -16 - ', Intrik 2 00 38 228 42'.
39 IBM 3 80 16 .53670 UI32'
101'-c4 InlFlav 1 04 20 4992 U35 ,
.54 cl InlHarv 11254 11-
IniMin 2 00 15 2044 40
I 'n.Soxa ( cntrDl J.'rt 'ccd CcAir Chmpin I'hfimsp t'hari* II I har; 'w! Chase
995 23 4.51 4'I 2.103 4li 12 0907 4ii 21 2182 1 l20:i8 .115 4 4158'
49
, 19'. 15'-14 . 23', 21'
80 c5',
47 c2",
41',-cl', 1 75+ 2'-26
13', c I, 24,c ,57c4u 15,5' .c 51, 19'.c .' 24'ci;.-10'c I-
23. cp, 17'-c \ 44'c 1 77', clT'
20', r '4 10',c
15
24', '-
10
17' .14', 40'-.53', .5.1'-
23-
30'.
KeiehC
Kep,Sl|
Kevlon
Revnln
RevMlI
RileA s
Rdhins
Kekw I s
Riihrln
Kiirer
ChesPn 184 1.1 41*1.1 42'
CWt-l
ChiPn'I Chris* -I'hrxsir Citierp I 'i!\ Inx I'larkK ( levEl Clnrnx
* iK'a*
* Dice,
40*18 LI.5*)' 18.1 1*1 . 481 51 /2.5J u2.5' I 2*'.,.13,12 12 1 ,88 t. 11.448 ' IT
1 8*1 11 xL'mi.l 17 ; I" 551 15 .
2 4i> T 1885'* u23
1 '4 11 1"528 29 -
41, '*411,1 . 14 ,
2 08 14 1724" 50 8 11*192 .!.! ,
I'lilgPa'I I 28 1" 147"*, 24.-I iiiPeri 14" I" 24,19 2.!'.
I'oil Ind 2 2" 17 2017 48 ,
* 111*.,IS ,1 "2 8 474" .13',
' mbKn 1 84 7 18.13 13 -
' iiMidr s 10 (1H1 4:, ,
I nvaK '7 29942 28 ,
Cnis.il - 1 2" 14 5229 4.1 .
' DtlsKd 1 88 7l817;iu25'
* imKds 2 .12 9 1347 u.5o
CnsNC 2 9 X820 33
I 'linsP'.* 2 52 7 H1193 21'. I ntll'p 2 0*1 7 4429 31
I nlK.rp 2 0" 11 2312 u48 .
* on! Ill 2 7 021! 23 I
I 'onlTel I 1,4 M 2o59 25'-CtUala *>0 1.1910*1 .54. I'i.ipr 1 52 45 1783 ,14s *'orn*i 2 12 III 14.52 79', CriH'kX 2 4" 9 x.liiti 31 ,
* r-anl'k 11 '113 33-, I rwZel -1 83'Ht 30 '.
Cdr'W 1 2" 1" 251 45 ,
- I)-I) -DanaCp 1 00 28 2991 42
21
24'.
10',
4' .
49'- - r. 42 > 1 ,
48',.cP, 10 ,
IntPapr 2 4*1 17 4942 ,54'
InlTT 2 70 10 11.533 45',
InlNrth 2 32 13 2114 4o'
lowaPS 2.50 8 394 U25'-
- J-.I -JohnJn 110 18 20214 48 JonLog s .54 10 299 22 '-Justen 1 13 425 29, JoxMlg 1 40 31 x3329 29
- K-K -Kmart 108 13 24825 37'. KaisrAl 00 .1887 21',
Kaneb 104 0 4001 I7. KanGE 2 24 7 2131 21'-KanPLl 2 .50 8 707 u28-Kalvln I3 4247 u30-KaufBc 40 223 1408 10 Kellogg 1 00 10 2382 .10 , Kenai 820 5'
KerrMc 1 10 8 7410 32-KimbCl 4 20 12 2808 u99 KnghlR 1 12 17 X2184 .'lO-,
Kopers 8*1 9180 18 ,
Kroger 2 lo 19711 .18'-
- I.-I -LTV 25 1720(1 10
LearPt 2*1 1.1 1077 27
Lear.Sg 100 111488 43
ini s .10
91 20 95 25'
.13 'MliMt.r II '. *1 .iMacmil 44 - -1. ;Mae\ s 28-. -1 , ' MdsEd 43 -2 '. ;\IagiCt
24 , *p
llartKr
iJalaGn
llaxeo
liaxlH s
l)a>!ll.
Dt'cre
IieilaAr
Ilennxs
D-'tEd
; 84 11 5279 71 72 4111 79', 1*) .10 x070 13. 00 IT 11750 37' 2 7 20428 U19'
1 0087 41
*>0 2.5312 37
72 1.1 5514 35 . 1 08 8 I1343 U15' Diams .1 70 1.1 20423 24. lOgltal 21 22278 100'I
iJlsriex I 20 22 X.5885 03'.
llrPepp 84 85.1408 10 .
DomR.s
I'owCh
I)ow,Jr, '
Dre-r
dulonl
DukeP
liucjl.t
2 40 8 14473 2.1'-
1 80 17 IKIHO 37'
*ki 1.1 20,18 .53 HO 708 10.194 21
2 40 14 151.17 51 i
2 .1*1 8 22205 li25
2 1*1.5.198 17 ,
Ea-t.Air 24847 0
Ea.'iGF PiO II i%I 25
E-Kod Elon Eehlir. El Paso
ia I : 25728 72. 80 *iI7" U48' I
04 17 2008 23 '-
08 24 8273 23 .
EmrsEI 2 10 15 5284 u07 Eilsereh 1 0*1 12 5202 23 ,
E.smrk si 84 II 7l>40 U85
Ethxl s 85 12 2877'u29 '.
ExanP 1 071 970 1.5',
ExCelo 1 0011 975 044'. Exxon .1 2" 7 18.VU 17 ,
- E-E -
F.MC 180 II 959 U47
Eairehd h airtd ; Eeder-FedWI
8" IT 2918 20' 12 1.1 180 15 1727 0
10 2.5008 28
k'ediJSI 2 21)11x 175159 19*1 7
III) 11 5*100 20
Fn.sHar Firesin
FBkFI.i 1 08 I"
Fsl* hie 1 12 7 4.575 20 . Flm.-te 2 24 8 2082 40'. Flei'lE s 10 21 .x27H .19 . FllglSI 20 19 1042 28 . FlaPl. Uki 8I21I8U4I
FiaPrg 1 92 9 12.5.18 o21
Flwi.en 222*) lO'
Fluor 80 1*. 4490 20
Eord.M .Ilk'8*1 19815 uOO
Erpl.M* Oob28*il4 24 ;
Fruehl 40 .1251 45'
- -I.A1-' 05j 27 935 15
GTE 3 9 17015 45'. l.aiinell 1 80 18 4098 *k" . iinOxn 1 1 1 5451 5*1'. (icnEks I 90 13 352.52 50'-(iflEds 2 40 9 45.59 49 -Gnilous 20 10 710 18. Gliln.sl .50 15 143,5*1 .14' Gn.MiIJs 2 04 10 X13955 53 (Mol 2 4oe 12 18.580 77 GPI 14 8203 8
GnSignll 68 r, 1998 48' (Tire I .=>*)b .10 1480 .15 '. (en.seo 1495 9.
(aPae 00 1377.3 20= .
(ierbPd 1 48 13 1918 u41 Geltv 2 60*' 12 8833 67- GibrEn 10.1700 13', Gillette 2 30 119249 ,50 , GId.N'g s 19 10815 18'.
Gdrich 1.50 .5807 15'.
((Xidvr 140 12 14010 31-(OUllt 172 18 0740 13'1
Grace 2 80 14 27.58 49 .
GIAlPc 18 2752 1.1
GtWEin 40 10473 20.
(revh I 20 9 1.5804 22 , 21
(rum s 90 14 178.5 29', 28
(.IfWst 9*1 12 .5999 28 '. 27"
(.ulilili 2 80 10 39708 44 , 40"
(IfStn I 04 , 7 12943 Ul5', 14.
(ulH'td I .2 9 2890 28'. 27
- H-H -308 4 3'.
1 00 1.1 19238 43' 40
70 17 177 39'. :18',
46",
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LcviP ,i*i 2.1 \22i41 u4*i
L(*E 120 27 2251 41,. Llllx 2 90 12 959.1 l>4'. Litl'on I 80b 12 .1034 o4
Lekhd s 12 21239 u47 '
Loews I 20 7 .521 102
LnStar I 90 1747 28
l.ll.Co, 2 02 lixl:->430 10
l.Land n lb 1*1 4974 27 , LaPae 811b .55 2934 27 Lu*kxS 1 II, 10 8127 22 i - M-\l -44 27 1.574 15',
80 18 1708 12.
80 15 *,*.10 ,57
528 17 ,
72 15 1818 40' , 519*, 11.
1 12 2834 25', MarMid 1 40 5 14,54 24 . Marnol lo 19 H.4K 74', MarlM 1 92 1.1.1974 , *,2 . MarM wi 5 12
Masco ,s 44 20 7825; ,15 MasexE 3iKl:i 5 ,
.MavliS 2 9 5207 52 -Ma'vtg 2 20 14 1151 50
Mc'Uri nl 80 17 87o3 25
McDnId 1 1.1 0910 07' McDnl) 1 42 9 35.11 54 . McGEd 2 14 819 38' McGrll si 08 21 2123 50' MeKess 2 4o 12 1095 41 . Mead 1 ,14*>1 u37
.Melvil s 1 09 14 7745 .19', Merck 2 80 17 12008, u 10.1 MerLv s 80 0 50141 37'-MesaP n 9 12087 14', MidSCl 1 70 7 1.508*, ulti
MMM 3 30 10 11,581 89
MinPL 2 40 8 898 U20-Mobil 2 8 28187 31'-MohkDt 18 1913 15 -Monsan 4 20 14 7330 115', MntDL 2 44 8 372 u29 '. .MonPw 2 08 7 1151 U28-.Morgan3 7ii 0 lo92l 09-Morlon 1 00 15 2700 u79' Motrola 1 0*) ,11 BiiTO 144 ,
.NCR 2 6*1 15 6330 U135 NL Ind 1 75*xi 18'
NabscB 2 28 9 6*412 41 , NalCan 1 17 18*, 26',
NalDist 2 20 18 1012 28 -,
NalEG 3 44 7 8! 16 . NalGvp 1,56 22 1148 34 -Ml 25 1392,31'.
NSemi 18772 .58' i
NevPw 2 72 10 xl.517 u28 NEngEl3 20 8 1746 U40 , New ml 1 23:18.55 49', NiaMP 192 7 6748 UI8', Norfk.So 2 80 16 .5397 70 Norlek 08 10 1216 14", No.APhI 1.70 12 211 7(1 . NoesILl 1 38 7 12864 13 NlndPS I ,50 12 12221 ul5' .No-StPw 2 90 7 ,3051 16. Nortrp 1 80 19 189*, 83 Nw'Sl.Air 80 48 .5968 40' 4 Nwtlnd 2 68 43 2000 43 .Norton 2 l.io 1412 45 Norw'st 180 11,14.57 10'.
. 20'.
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08 13 1820 u29" 88 12 8950 29'. 8.VI90 32"
I 04 15 1143 28 Rowan 08 9 20470 12 HCCixs 104 14 740 27" Rovll) 2 82c 5 11400 40' RxderS I 08b 15 1448 00 ^ s
SCM 2 13 x3108 35', .Salwv s I 40 9 0439 '28'. .SiHegis 1 12 40 5870 29' SFeInd I 15 11849 31 , .SchrPlo 1 08 12 0759 43', Schlnib 1 04 13 23444 .54",4 SottP 1 17 11008 u29' SearleG .52 22 0,501 ,52'" Sears I .52 13 31922 40' ShellO 18*1 9 3903 44 ShellT 1 9'2e 7 109 36' .Shrwins 00 13 2490 27 Signal 90 77 10115 3.5' SimpPl 13 1051 11'4 Singer lOe 6104 20' Skxline 48 27 2714 19" 2.60 11 30109 00' 1,55 7 4110 38'' lOe 49 233.50 lO", 0242 2(0
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UAL 6 13911 30 28" SO".el
UMC 60 33 2147 18'4 17" 18' +
UNCRes 905 7'4 7 7
USFG 3 84 11 3440 58 54' 58 e3
USFGwd 1035 057*4 54 57 "4
UnCarb 3 40 23 6566 68'2 65' 68'4e2
UnElec 1.64 6 5559 15 14" I5" + l UnPac 1 80 187161 56 55 56'4 +
UnirovI 30 6558U17 16' 17'4+ "
UnBrnd 849 19 17' I9'"el
USGvps 2 40 17 920 49 47'- 48'4- '
USInd .76 15 750 16',, 15 16"+ "
U'SSteel 1 14658 29' 27'4 28"4 + l'
UnTech 2 60 11 7123 68 66 68'4-l
t'niTel 1.84 10 7416 U25 22*4 25 +2
U'lKXal 1 7 x29866 30'4 28" 29'- i Upjohn 2.28,14 6654 62 57" 61"4 + 4'
USLlFE 88 7 1822 27 26" 26"4
UtaPL 2 28 9 2028 U24" 23', 24 + '
- V-V -
Vanan s .26 32 2270 60 56 59"4+2"
Wachovl 56II 667 u45" 43 45"+2'
W'ackhl 44b 15 714 24" 21'- 23'4-l Wl.Mrl s 14 38 8087 42'- 40*4 42 +1', WaltJml 20 9 4176 36'- 34" 36'4 + l'
WrnCm 1 x7066 23'-.
WarnrL 1 40 13 9937 30 WshWl 2 48 7 1060 20"4 WellsF 1 92 6 14(H 39" WnAirL 3117 4>4
W'Union 1.40 9 10172 33" WeslgE 1.80 10 15368 47 Weverh 1 30 69 10042 35" Whirlpl 1 80 11 4215 47"4 Whittak 1 60 15 x,5948 33" William 1.20 40 3324 27" WinDx 2 58 12 x226 56 Winnbg lOe 35 3786 19" Wolwth 1 80 13 5028 u38 Wynns 60 45 278 18':.
-X-A-Z^ Xerox 3 12 13151 46' ZaleCp I ZemthR*
22'-28" 20' 37'4 4
31"
44*4
32
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Copyright by The Associated Press 1983
Weekly Stock Dollar Leaders
NEW YORK ' AP' - The following is a list of the most active sUx-ks baseti on the dollar volume The tcilal is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied bv the shares traded
TotiSlOOOl Salesihdsi Last $694.433 ,53676 132'4
46" 48" 28' ' 26' 18' 42".,
xjHRT
llalbtn
Harind
OcciPet 2,50
olin 120 1,5 746 u3:'4
Omark 1 04 33 i8:i 24'
ONEOK 2 40 11 633 U32 4
OwenC 1 20 18 3534 38
Owenlil 1 68 28 2472 33'
Oxfrdls 64 11 703 49 - P-Q -PPG s I 28 14 .139:1 u:i7
Pac(E si 60 7 18801 16 '
PacLig 3 10 7 1740 u:tO
PacPw 2 10 7 4,517 24',
PanAm 17091 7',
PanhEC 2 30 9 2149 :16' Parsns .1 i:i 1004 u23' Penney 2 Hi 12 x7.500 02', PaPL 2 40 7 0107 23', Pennzol 2 20 II ,5:17:1 36". PepsiCo I 02 19 17971 :10 PerkEI 50 .12 *784 . 30', Pfizer s I 10 18 28948 44'' PheipL) 7651 24'., PhilaEI 2 12 7 19250 17*4 Phll.Mr 2 90 11 16710 U70 '. PhilPet 2 20 8 17893 :14' 4 Pilsbrv 2 80 11 0180 u74 Pioneer I 10 12 2047 28". PitnvB s 92 13 8948 31', Piltstn 20 2:101 17',
Pneum s 50 12 2022 28'. Poland I 44 11845 u35 '4 PorlGE 1 78 5 69:10 14-
PSInd 2 88 7 10874 27 -PSvEG 2 04 8 I:I0.50u25'4 PugetP 170'8 7178 15 , PulteH s 10 18 :i:i82 28 Pyro 14 2072 7
(JuakO 2 20 21 4011 U.50 (^uak.SO 80 II 1961 18'.
KK 90 21 4:1.59:1 U.'l.','-20.55.1107 17', 84 22 i:l474 u27', I08IM) 10 4 84 21 207 18
14 7515 10'.
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SCalEd 3 80 7 18999 u40 ', :i7''
SouthCo 1,80 8 15029 U17', 16"
'SouPc S 1 .50 4 19*X)8 39*4 35"
Sperrx 1 92 17 x29170 u47' 44",
SquarE 1 84 101111 35" 33'.. :15' + 1
Squibb I :14 18 6297 U.54 ', 50 ', 54"+ 3
.SKOICI 2 4(1 ,8 17:184 :15', :14' :15"-
-SlOInd 2.80 8 17,526 49
SIdOlIh 2 60 7 14414 5!
StaulCh 1 44 27 :1799 29
SterlDg 1 12 13 24664 28'
Slevn,I I 20 19 .X4.593 19'
SunCi, 2 :iO 10 .5087 45'
Svbrnn 1 08 ,566 26'
140 14 1:1064 61'., 57'
:12 20 I703 38' .:15'
- T-T -2* 9:1,527 u25"4 24
2 60 1.5 1123 75', 74
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15 4072 166"-I4:i421 28.
' 7 9140 42',
40 0 16.57 154
I 7 160.50 :I6 TexEsI 4 10 12 26.50 00 Texinst 2 8.527 110''
Texinl 117 79,50 7'..
TxiOi.i .121, 10 X17IKI5 44'i TxPac :!.5 25 05 29',
TexClil 2 20 7 14047 U27'.
Te\tri,n I 80 10 4194 :1.5 ',
Thnftx - 4t> 19 3119 19',
2048 O' 4 1, 27 01.58 70,
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1 80 298 OO' 4
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Synlex
Sysco
TECH
TRW
TacBl s
Tallex
Tandy
Tndvi'ft
Tekirnx
Teldvn
Telex
Tenneo 21
Tesoro
Texaco
Tigerfn
Timel
TimeM
Timkn
Tokhm
Tosco
47'-! 51 - " 29 c ' 28'.. 12' 18*4 44 , 25'''-6(l'-c2 38' t 2"
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Name IBM
Amer T&T Gen Motors FordMot SmithBeck DigitalEq GenlElect s East Kodak MerilLvn s Gulf (til Chrysler AmExpress Honevwell RCA'
Exxon
$432,697 66441 64 $287,348 :t8.586 76" $252.825 :!9815 66" $233,742:16169 65 $230,020 22278 103" $190.801 3.5252 56 $182,025 25728 72 $173,613 50141 36'' $169,255 :)9708 44' $163,268,53312 :12' $157,110 X 417.57 :i9 $150.987 12201 126' $143,311 43.593 34' $141,236 3856:! .37'
WEEKLY INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK *APi - Weekly Investing (ompanies giving the high, low and la.si prices for the week with the nel change from the previous week's Iasi price All quotations, supplied by the National Association of securities Dealers. Inc . reflect nel asset values, al which securities could have been sold
High Low !2 3<.' 31.64 21 89 21 31 17 16 16.72
AoornFd n ADV Fund n AfulureFd n AIM Funds ConvAId (reenwav HiYield Sumil AlianTch AlphaFnd AmBirthTr AmE.xpGth n Amer Capital CorpBcf Comstock Fd Enterprise ExchFd n FundOfAm Growth n Harbor Fd HiYldlnv MuniBond Pace Fnd ProvidentFd VentureFd American Funds AmBalan AmcapFd AmMutI BondFd Fundmlnvs GrowthFd x IncomeFd x InvCoA NewPerspFd TaxExpt WshMutinv Amer Growth AmHeritge n Am Invest n Am Invine n Am medAsc n Am NatGrth Am Natlnco Amway MutI Analytic n Armstng n Axe Houghton
LaM Chg
2L89+ M 17 16+ .33
1393 13 75 10 37 598 2144 26 91 17.01 1541
13 78 1348 1049
2294 23 44 26.21 26 91 * 1651 15 10
13,93+ .13 13,75* 27 10.57 * 10 5.98+ 18 40 61
17 01+ 41 1:5 41 + 16
6.99
1468
1626
6 99+ ,07 14.68+ 35 16 26+ .34
693 1429 15.81
48 78 47 36 48 78+1.19
15 08 14.66 15.08 + 32
30.30 29.61 30.50+ .44
16 44 16.01 16 44 + 43
10.22 10.14 10.22+ .08
17.51 17.44 17.50 + 05
20 63 20 08 20 63 + 42
5 89 5.75 5.89+ .11
32.71 31.87 32.71 +
Weekly Amex Dollar Leaders
.NEW YORK i.AP) -The following is a list of the most active slocks basedf on the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock Iraded multiplied bv the shares traded
Tol*$IIMNl) .Salesihdsi LasI
$78.655 21925, 38"
Name WangLabK Imp Chem
Imp them TIE Comm s KeyPharm Amdahl s .Alza Corp Resrtint A DataPrd s NYTimes A Guilford s
$48.650 57210 $17.891 4803 $13.118 4485 $12.177 6538 $1L2!8 6116
$10,494 2i:i2 45
$9,094 :1245 :i0
$8,108 947 ^O*
$7,987 3195 25'',
;!2',' .14' +1"
What The Stock Market Did
Advances Declines Unchanged Total issues New yrly hghs New yearly Iws
Total lor week Week ago Year ago Jan 1 lo date 1982 lo dale AMERICAN BONDS Total for week Week ago Year ago
Two
This Pre* Year Years Week Week ago ago
1,412
786
630
1,169
184
251
2.226
2.206
243
162
22
:
2o:i
138
012
17
7*
:i9,880,IKXI
:i4,99O,0IXI
:2.50*i.o*x)
L08:i.28ll,(XXI
l,617..5:!0,(XXI
ST.190,000 $5.470.0(K) $9.060.000
Weekly Stocks In Spotlight
} u , ' high low weekly sales,
high, I0X, ell,.-, ig price and nel change of the 20 most active sliH'ks trading lor more than $1
High Low Sales High Low Last (hg
0,044,11X1 05,
5,:i07,6Xl 1.12'
5,331.2(X) :12'
5.014.UK) 37'
4.:i.59.:ioo :15'-4,175,700 40
3.981..5*X) 00',
3.9711,81x1 44 4 3.8,58,MX) 77 ;i,8.50.:llXl ,7'4 :i.044,8lX) :17 3.010,91X1 00".
3583,9(X) :i(l'.
3..525.2(K)
:.4:i(i,o*xj :i.l92,21XJ 3.1X13.:i(Xi 2.994.2IX)
2.986.000 2,941,5(X) 20'-
70' 1
-56''.
ATT
i:!2'
73',
IBM
,15'.
8',
Chrvslr
,5(>' .
17' 4
.Mer'l.v s
:!5'.
19',
RCA
49'
2:I'4
A Exp s
*9i'i
26
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45'.
27 .
(UllOll
77'
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Exxim
46'.
27
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77".
62"
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13.
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22' .
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17
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04' 120' 4 28-:12'4 :i0'4 :15'4
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i:i2',- .5 :!2'-+ 2" :16"- + :i" :14 .+ 2" :i9't ;t-tki '- i 4" 44'-+ 2 70"-+ 2' :17',+ " :',.+
29'" 1"
18'
,50'- 52',
19 17'
4*1'' :i(i'. 4*1',
41 .37'. :i9'
28', 20", 28','
:iO', 28' 29',
18' 19,,
xe Hougl Fund B IncomFd StockFd BLC GthFd BLC Ineo BeaconGth n BeaconHill n Berger Group:
KW Fund n 101 Fund n Boston,Co CapApr n GvUn n SpGth n BoslFoundtn Bull & Bear Gp: CapGth n EquitI n Goiconda n Calvert Group; equity n x
Inco h X
Sicial n X
Calvin Bullock: AggresGth BuIlockFd CanadianFd DividendShr x HilncoShr Monthly I ncm Natn \ideSec TaxFree Cap TNT n Cardinal x CentGth
Chancellor Group NwDecd CentryShr n Chart'erFund n ChpsdeDollr n ChestnutSt n C1(NA Funds Growth HiYld Income MuniBd Colonial Funds: CorpCsh Fund
Grw th Shrs High Yield Income Option Tax .Mangd COLUMBFix n ColumbC.rlh n Comwlth A&B Comwlih C&D (ornposil6 (jfouD B&.S h Fund n Tax n ConcordFd n CoastellGth n ConlMulInv n Copley n CounlrvCapGr Dean Witter DvGth nr x DivGth HiYld
IndValu x NtlR.sc TaxEx Delaware (roup Decaturinc DelawareFd DelchesterBd TaxFree Pa Delta Trend DepslCap n DepslTr n DireclCap n DodgCoxBal n DodgCoxStk n DrexlBurnh n x Drey fus Grp:
A Bonds n x CalTx Dreyfus Leverage Gwtho n NY Tx
^cllnem n x TaxExmpI n ThirdCntry n EagleGth Sns Eaton Vance EH Balanc'd x EH StiK'k X Growth
HiYieid X
IncBos
Invest
SpecEqIv
ftxMgd'
VS Sped Eberstadt Group: Chemical Fd x EngyRes Surveyor x
EngyUtil n x
Evergrn n r EvrgTtl n x
FarmBuroGi n Federated Funds: Am t-eaders ExchFd n GNMA n Hi IncmSe
11.25 11.06 8.99 8 72
15.70 15,23
12.71 12.61 12.34 11.83 12,34 + 13.96 13.60 13.96 1049 10.22
11.18 9.00 9.61 9.93 8.66 3.85 10.63 10.98
29 25 28.62 29.25+ .53 6.17 5.95 617+ .21
19.61 19.26 19.61+ .37 6,81 6 75 6.81+ ,02
X 140.44 138.33 140.34 + 85 X 9 03 8.87 9.03- .46
11.57 9.28 9.65 10.30 8.77 386 10.76 11 07
11.25+ .20 8,99+ .23 15.70+ .46 12.71+ .09 49 34
10.49- .24 11,57+ .38 9.28+ .25 9.64+ .01 10.30+ .38 8.75+ .03 3.85- 04 10.76- .13 10 98- 09
Inco n Short n TaxFree USGvLSec Fidelity Group: AssetInv n CorpBond n Congress n Contrafnd n DestinyFd n F.niitlnrm n xchFd n Fredm n Magellan MuniBond n Fidelity n Govtt n HilncoFd n HighYield n Ltd Mum n Mercury Puritan n i SelErg
10.27 10 12 9.21 8 39
10,26 1010 9 18 838
920 8 38+
10.26
4.65
1550
18.38
15.93
15.61
10.04
4,62
15.15
1786
15.55
15.02
SelErgv SelFncl SelHllh SelMell SelTech n SelUtil Thrift n Trend n FiduCap n Financial Prog: Bond n Dynamics n FnclTx n Industrl n Income n WrIdTc Fst Investors: Bond Apprc x Discovery Growth Income x IntlSec NatRfsc 90-10 Option Tax Exmpt FlexFdn 44 Wall Eq 44 Wall St n FostrMar Fndatn Grwth Founders Group: Grwth n Incom n Mutual Sped n 10 26 + 21 f'oursq n unavail 4 65 + 04 Frankfin Group: 15.50+ .37 'uqd 8
DNTC Growth NY Tax
24 63 24.22 24.59+
6 80 6 76 6.79+
55.32 53.31 55.32 +2
12 96 12,75 12.88+
13 43 12.99 13 43+
12.73 12.39 12.73 + 31 38 88 37.75 38 88 + 94 6 86 6 85 6.85- 01
20.66 20.11 20 66 +
9,40 9.34 9.39 + 04
8.97 9.04+ .08
11.36 1138 8.15 8)15- .02
13 44 13.74+ 11.88 12,12+
9 81 9.88- .25
16.51 16.92+ 34 19 49 20 35+ 82 12.92 13 92 + 23 26.16 25.31 26 16+ .71 14 82 14 38 14.77+ .46 9 80 9.77 9.79+ .02
39.22 37 88 39.22 + 1.17 19.75 19 38 19.75+ .35
9.04 II 38 8 17 13.74 12.12 1001
16.92 20 35
13.92
693 1038 14 41 465 9.12 9,02
6.85
10.15
1440
4.53
891
6.92+ 06 10.38+15 14.40- 03 4.65+ .11 9.12+ .19 9.02+ .19
14.36
18.31
11.10
671
14,13
7,05
14.07
6.11
1427
17.96
10.98
6.67
14.36- 07 18 06- .65 11.04- .16 6J1- .03 13 89 44,13- .47 6.59 7 05+ .09
13.98 14.06+ .04 6.04 6 10+ .04
8 88 8.88 11.92 11 93 + 02 11.11 11.32) .11 19.02 18.70 18 70- 55 6 86 6,74 6.86+ .09
5.33 5 30 5 31+ ,01
11 93 11.32
10.89 10 45 10 89+ .42
15 15 14.95 15.15+ .20
10 98 10 66 10 98 + 31
33 59 33.28 33.59+ .03
18.38+ .44. 15,93+ 35 15.61+ .69
21.00 20.38 21.00 + 50 15 0! 14 78 15.03 )- 13
28 39 27 61 1072 10.68
19 25
12 87
1657 II 51
13 17
I9.(H
15.10
17.65
1170 1965 9.38 3.57 11.77 11 19 1070 9.73 10.24 11.85 13,42
28,39+ 78 10,72+ .04 18.99 19 25 + 07 12 70 12.87+ .16
16.25 16 57 +
11.25 11.51 +
12.57 1317 +
18 67- .29 1505+ 11 17 41- .12
17.12 16.47 17.12+ .70
Llilities Income Slk U.SGovt Sec Resh CapitI Resh Equity CalTFr Fd ofSW Funds Inc ComrreInc InvQual PilolFund Sunblt GIT HYId n GT Pacific n Galw+'Optn n Gen Elec Inv ElfunTr n ElfUnTxEx n S&S n S&S Long n GenSecurit n GintelErisa n GintelFd n Growl hind n GrdnPkAv Ham HDA HartwellGth n HartwllLevr n Herold n
14.92 14 40 14.92 + 40 Homelnvsl n 14.01 Li.iie 14 01+ 45 23.81 22-87 2:!.81 + 99 16 48 16 03 16 48+ 09 48,96 47 71 48 96 + l.(K)
1867 1498 17 41
11 63 1909 9 15 332 11.74 11 12 10.49 971 10.00 11 54 13 18
11 70- 12
19.65+ 58 938+ 12 3.32- ,14 11,77
11 19+ 08 10,69+ 21 9.73+ 01 10.10-- ,13 11.85- 54 13,42+ .08
OpIionFd Ufil
3.83 24 11 12 II 10.13 7.10 6.02 2 14 7 17 11,56 620 6,50 1602
9.80
9.84 14.55 15.83 1035 16.06 15 80
3.82 3 &3- 03
23 88 24 11 + 12
11.76 12.11+ 41
10.09 10.11- .09
6.80 7 10 + 22
5.99+ 22 2.13+ .03 7,17- .04 11 56+
6 20+ .12 6.50- ,(M
580 2 10 7.13 10.73 6.07 6.49
15 80 16 02 + 07
9.65 9.80 +
9 75 9 84 +
14.04 14 55 + 15 40 15 &3 +
10 28 10,35 + 15 67 16 06 + 15 60 15 80 +
24.87 II 13 .16.84 1058 1379
1595 lU.OO 6.96 7 17
48 II 14 05 10 64 7.49 6 95 9 51 25 52 12 25
15 59 992
6 93
7 16
47,67 13.81 1041 7 46 692 9:!6
15 59-9.W + 6,96 + 7 16-
24 95 25.;iO+ 12 1
47.94 + 29 14 05 + .21 10 64+ 19 7.49+ .05 6.95+ (i:i 951 * ,15 43
26 66 25 72 26 66 + 861
1 43 1.39 1,43+ 021
2 01 1 95 2 01 + 03
10.94
12 29 6,58
25 91 24 51 7.4(1 6 40 17.46
980
12.84
I4:!6
13 23 804 10 01
17 28 24 : 7,85 6 83 15 89 II 58 18,54 1 10 28,00 27 23 17 87
10.69 II 94 6.56 25.67 23 94 7:!4 625 1693
12 74 7 89 999
16 85 17 28 23.:!6 24:13
7,73 6 81 15 7! 11.07 18 II LOT
27 45 28 0(1 + 26 47 27 23 + 17.70 17 84 *
Horace Mann n Hutton Group: Bond n r j Calif Emrg n r Gwth n r ) .Natl
NY .Mun IRI Stk LSI Group: Growth Income Trust Shares IndustryFd n Int Investors Invsllndictr n InveslTr Bos 124+ 06 Investors Group IDS Bond IDS Disc IDS Growth IDS HiVield IDS NewDim IDS Progr InvMutI IDS TaxEx Inv Stock Inv Select Inv VariabI Investrs Resh LslelFd n Ivv Fund n JP Growth JP Income JanusFund n John Hancock Bond Growth US Govt TaxExmp Jones ii Babson: Babslncm n Babslnvt n UMB Bond n UMB Stock n Kaufmann n Kemper Funds
24.31 24 87+ .47 11 11 11.13+ 03 35 75 36 84 + 1 12 10 53 10.58 + 05 13.62 13.78+ 12 36 26 35.90 36 22 + 09 85 95 85 83 85.83 26.02 25 54 26 02+ ;!6 19 55 1903 19 55+ 42 6.33 6 17 6 33+ .11
16.50 16 02 16.50 + 44 38 92 38 59 38 92- .02 215 64 211 60 215 64 + 1 32 10 09 10 02 10.08+ .05 25 54 24.80 25 54 + 71
10.78
968
12.14 15.2:1 9.80 9-75
15.85
6.71
3,69
10.15 806 12,97
1 62 11 .56
10.94 + 12 29 + 6,56-25.91 + 24.51 -737 + 6.38 + 17.46 *
4.83 8 29 19.25 3.98 958 676 10.92 3.47
9 68 9 68-
12.49 12,84 +
14 24 I4:!4+ 07
13 23+ ,:16
8 04- ,01
10 00 - 01
7 85 + 6 83 15 88 II 58 * 18 54 + 1.09 +
13:19 1330 13 39-13 90 13 80 13 90-15 63 15:!0 15.63+ .28 20,70 20.08 20 70 + 61 11 95 11,62 11 95+ 26 1334 7 84 11 18 7.01 10.91
13 41 7 94 11.24 7.21 11.06
13.40 - (H 7.94- .04 1124+ 01
-.21 + 11 06 +
8.74
13.57 695 4.71)
884
8.57
25 06 24.38 25 06 + 13 51 13 13 13 42 1479
894
13.-88 7 19 4.72 892 878
15.IKI
12 20 11 89 18:17 22.71 46,24 15.97 14 37
1133 :14 92 10.57
8 94+ 05 13.88'+ 7,19+ .21 4 72-8,91+ .08 8.78+ 20 63 36
15,00-- 01
II 91 11.72 15,87 21 92
12.20+ ,24 11.72- .27 15.87 - 2 08 22,55+ .61
45.86 46 24 + 15 71 15.80 + 13.90 14 37 +
II 15 11.33+ 16
:!4,20 :!4.92+ .63
10 49 10 57+ ,09
12.17 12.25+ 09
The BB&T Difference
Kyle Braswell
Im Kyle Braswell at BB&Ts Arlington Boulevard Office in Greenville. Theres an attitude at BB&T that makes us more than just an ordinary bank. Its our commitment to meeting the banking needs of every BB&T customer with quality services and skill. If you ever need something, come by the office or call me at 752-6889, If I can't meet your need, Ill find someone who can. Theres a special pride at BB&T to do our very best for you.
Other locations for your convenience. Mam Office-Corner of Third & Greene Medical Village Stantonsburg Road . .Mendenhall Student Center-'24 hour location only)
24 hour.bankmg machine available
ItsMoneThanABank. Its An Attitude.
Mfmber hderal r/msil InsiiraiireOirpiiraliini.
10 84 968
12 34 1583 984 978 16.24
676 3.72
10 19 8.09
13 83 1 65
11 96
484
836 19 75 3,99 9.67 694 11.17 3.47 23.16 8.05 11 50 6 57 16 28 15,56 15.59 8.35 13.94
14.:!7
14 28 8.52 9 42
1 51 1467 10.10 11.93 44
1237 8.40
15 67 13 86 10.49 10 41 14 88 14 66 8 09 8.05 12.79 12.59
10 84- .23 9 68- 01 12.34+ 11
15 83 + ,54 9.82- 02 9.78+ .01
16 24
6.76+ 3 71 * 10,18 + 8,09-13 83 + 1 65 + 11 96 +
4 84 + 01
8 :!6- 03 19.75+ ,;!4 3.99
9 67+ (H BM+ .16
11,17+ 24 3.47- 01 22.40 23 16 + 74 8 01 8 05+ .03
11,.50+ 26 6.57+ ,19 16 28+ 14 15,56+ 46 15 56 + 40 8 35+ 08 13 W+ :!8
1 LopCS4 n r 1 Intl n r
8 15
7.91
8 15+
.IS
1 Equity
14.62
14 22
14,62 +
34
5.42
5,25
5.42 +
14
1 GvtSc
9 89
984
989+
06
TaxFr n r
7.83
7.79
7.79-
04
: HiYield
1033
10.28
10.33 +
06
1 Mass Fd
1433
13.95
14.33+
35
i HYMuni
1378
1375
13.77-
02
LeggMason n 1 LenmnCap n
1902
1862
19 02 +
29
1 Option X
1574
15.46
15.74 +
22
20.65
20 42
20 65 +
12
; Oualty Rsch n r
1495
1485
14.92 +
.08
1 Leverage n : Lexington Grp:
11.96
11.51
11.% +
37
963
947
9.63 +
18
TaxMngd Prudent SIP
20 50
1999
20.36 +
41
1 Corp Leadrs (oldfund n
13.43
13.11
13 43 +
.26
1445
13%
14 45 +
45
4 12
386
4.12 +
08
Putnam Funds
.26
, ONMA Inc n
7 78
7 79
7-8 +
06
Convert
1566
15.38
15.66 +
(irowth n
11.05
10.79
11 05 +
14
('alTax
1384
13.77
13.84-
01
Research n
20 79
20.12
20.79+
48
Capital
Inlfcc
23 15
22.48
23.15+
.58
Lindner n
18.65
1848
18.65+
16
1388
1351
13.88 +
32
Loomis Say les:
Intl Equ
19,55
18%
19.55+
60
Capital n
27.07
25 64
27 07 + 1 41
George
Growth
15:!6
14.%
15.36+
.40
Mutual n
19.47
18.91
19.47 +
,54
13 31
1294
13.31-
.38
Lord Abbett:
Health
1968
19 12
19 68 +
56
Affiliated
10.38
10.05
10.38 +
32
High Yield
1765
17,52
1765+
16
Bond Deb
1096
10.87
10.% +
07
Income
6 85
6.79
6 85 +
06
Devel Gth
10.18
10.04
10,18+
07
Invest
1231
II 81
12 31 +
.47
Income
308
3.05
3.08 +
03
NY TaxEx
14.58
14 50
14.58 +
01
ValuAppr Lutheran Bro:
9.32
9 12
9.32 +
.13
Option x Tax Exempt
12.69
22.02
12.18
21.59
12.41-22 02 +
.30
14
Fund
14.42
14.21
14.42+
.18
Vista
20.74
20.05
20 74 +
.03
Income
8,63
8,60
8 63+
05
Vovage
18,51
17 91
18,51 +
.52
Municipal USGovt Sec
7 07 9.15
703
9.07
7.06+
9.07-
.02
.02
(iuasar n x Rainbow n
61.99 4 18
49 91 4.11
49.91 4 18 +
07
Mass Financl:
RochTax
14.75
14 40
14 75 +
34
InlTrBd x
1036
10.30
1036+
08
SET Eqt Safeco Secur:
1127
10 87
11.27 +
.32
MIT
13.37
12.96
13 37 +
.43
MIG
1484
14.30
14.84 +
50
Equitv n
1089
10.59
10.89 +
.27
MID
9.00
878
9.00 +
.24
Growth n
20.72
20 26
20.72+
35
MCD
13.15
12.67
13 15+
44
Incom n
1371
1344
13 71 +
.27
MEG
15.31
15 11
15.31+
12
Munic n
11.72
11 67
11.67-
05
MFD
13.18
12.72
13.18 +
44
StPaul Invest:
MFB
13.00
12.94
13.00 +
.09
Capital
14.61
14 18
14.61 +
.40
MMB X
9.27
9.25
9 26-
,07
Growth
1618
15,80
16 18+
,27
MFH
7.84
7.76
7.84
Income
9.98
9,91
9.98
07
SpcI Mathers n
8 40
8.09
8.40+
.27
Special n
' 25 .19
2459
25.19+
41
25.04
24.52
25.04 +
56
Scudder Funds
Merrill Lynch: Basic V'alue
CommnStk n
15 19
14.85
15 19+' 1
14.02
13.72
14.02+
28
Develop n x
65,41
64 93
65.41 +
11
Capital
21.13
20 65
21 13 +
47
CapGth 11
15 45
15.12
15 45 +
25
Equi Bond
1140
1125
41.40+
.15
Income n
11 95
11 87
11 94 +
09
Hi Incom
8.26
823
8.26+
,02
Internatl n
21 49
20.91
21.49+
.40
Hi Qualty IntTerni
10.44
10.36
10.44 +
.07
MangdMun n
7,87
785
7 86 -
01
10.49
1042
10.49+
06
Securilv Funds:
LtdMat
9.82
9.81
9 82 +
01
Action
8.1*1
7%
8 10 +
07
MunHiYld
9.15
,9 13
9,14-
.01
Bond
8.06
8 01
806 +
05
Muni Insr
7.06
703
7.03-
.03
Equity
8.58
8.31
8 58 +
23
Pacific
14,97
1444
14.97 +
49
Invest
1061
10.50
10 61 +
01
Phoenix
12.10
11 88
12.10+
.10
Ultra
1044
10 33
1044 +
05
SciTech
10.01
9.76
10.01 +
.22
Selected Funds
Sp Val Mid Amer
13.40
13.31
13 40-
.07
AnjorShrs n
9 69
9 39
9,69+
33
7.94
7.70
7.94+
,25
SpeclShrs n
23 .+4
22 98
23 45 +
46
MidAmHiGr
6.43
6.26
6 43 +
,17
Seligman Group:
MSB Fund n
21 76
21.40
21,76+
.30
CapitFd
14 12
13 77
14 12 +
.21
Mutual Benefit
14 17
1381
14.17 +
31
Com Stk
14 56
14 19
14.56 +
36
MdwIGvt n
10,14
10 10
10 13 +
03
C omun
9.01
892
9,01 +
04
Mutual of Omaha
GrowthFd
8 07
773
8 07 +
32
America n
9.80
972
9 8(1 +
,08
Income
12 08
11 89
12 06
17
Growth
641
624
6,41 +
15
Sentinel Group
Income
8 48
841
8.48 +
.08
Balanced
9.62
9.42
9 62 +
22
Tax Free
991
985
9.91 *
,01
Bond
6.32
6.27
6 31 +
03
MutlOual n
17 12
1684
17 12 *
.21
Common Stk
1801
17 45
18 01 +
60
.Mull Shrs n
53 25
52 54
53.25 *
47
Growth
IH.,55
17.97
18 55 +
50
NaessThm n
59 42
,58.89
.59 42 +
.11
Sequoia o '"
:!6 76
:i5 47
:!6 76L15
NatAviaTec n
10 17
9-97
1017 +
21
Sentry Fund
25.59
25117
25 59 6
46
NtlInd n r
14 43
1393
14 43 +
56
Shearson Funds
Nat .Securities
Appreciatn Hi Yield
1832
17.77
18.32
50
Balanced
13 65
13;!9
13 65-*
23
19,:i9
19.24
19 39 +
17
Bond
3.51
349
3,51 +
01
MgMun
13 50
13 43
13 50
CalTxE
11 65
11 .56
11 65 +
01
ShrmnDean n
7 45
7 13
7 33 *
,07
Growth
1038
10 25
I0,;i8
06
SierraGrIh n
15.05
14 93
15 05 t
n:i
Preferred
7 46
7 40
7.46
05
Sigma Funds:
Income
7,38
7 25
7:!8*
.15
Capital
13 28
1285
13 28 *
35
Slock
9,83
9,52
9.8:!*
31
Incom
77:1
761
7 73
13
Tax Exmpt
8 39
8 33
8:i9t
01
Invest
802
7 77
8 02 +
26
Tot Ret
6 51
6:i6
6 51 *
14
SW'cl n Trust Sh
7 69
7 40
7 69
21
Fairfield Fd
9.86
964
9 86 +
03
11 27
11 03
11 27 *
2:1
NalTele
14 61
14 41
14 61 +
14
Venture Shr
10 93
10 80
10 93
Nationwide F'ds:
SmthBarEql n
16 45
16 03
1(1 45
37
NalnFd
1037
10 10
10:17 *
28
SmlhBarl G
10 16
10 01
10 16
17
NlGwth
8.96
8 70
8% +
26
SoGen
16 49
16 14
16 49 +
YT
NIBond
9 34
9 21!
9:14*
07
Swslnlnvlnc n
4*19
466
4 69 +
o:i
NELife Fund:
.Sovereign Inv
19 40
1878
19 40
62
Equilv
22.50
21 66
22 .XI f
83
State Bond Grp
Growfh
25,73
24 43
25 73 + 1 28
Commii Stk
6 18
6.02
6.18
14
Income
1061
1053
10 ,,8
04
Diversifd
6.58
6 35
6 58
22
Retire Eqt
23 48
22.25
23 48 1 25
Progress
9 99
9.79
9 99
13
TaxExmt
6 78
676
6 78
SlatFarmtith n
11 86
11 61
II 86
20
Neuberger Berm:
SlalKiirmBal n
14 89
14 63
14 89
2:1
Energy n
18 II
1790
18 10*
06
StSlriTl Inv
(uard'ian n
42 01
40 60
42.01 * 1 48
ExchFd n
88 10
8.5 10
88 10 + 2 87
Liberty n
4 18
4 14
4 18 *
04
Growth n
57 19
55 :i7
57 19+1 62
Manhttn n
6:i9
6 18
6 39
18
Invst n r
78,:17
76 (17
78:17+1 88
Partners n
14 98
1445
14 98 *
Sleadnian Funds
NY Muni n
1 118
1 08
1 08
Ami'rlnd n
:18J
3 75
3 82 *
02
NewtonGw'th n
:i2 12
:ii 26
32 12
60
As.siK'ialed n
1 01
09
1 00
N'ewtonlncm n
8 25
8 18
8 2.1'*
05
Invesi 11
17:i
1 69
1 73
02
Nicholas n
27 23
26 65
27 23 *
43
(Iceanogra n
7 29
7 19
7 26
03
Nichinc
3.78
1! 75
3 78
o:i
Stem Hoe Eds
11.13 6:!6 15,&! 1508 15 19 828 13.47
14 26 1367 8.48 938
1 51 14.22 10(19 II 89 42
1231
8.35
14:!7+ 12 14 28+ .58 8 51 + (H 9.41+ .03
1.51
14 67+ 41 10.10 11 93 42- .03
,emper Cafit Income Growth HighYield IntlFund MunicpBnd Option Summit Technology
TotRelurn 15.96 15.62
US Gvi 8 88 8.82
Keystone Mass:
IhvBdl nr x 16 05 15 91 MdBdB2 n r X 18 90 18.80
DisBB4 n r 8 47 8 45
IneoKl n r 9 26 9 07
GwthK2nr 9 53 9 16
HGUmSl n r x 21 55 20 86 GlhS3 nr x 9 93 9,55
12 34- .02 8 40+ .06 13.86-1 66 10 49 + 10 14 79+ .07 81)9+ 04 12 79+ .16 27 89 25.61 25.61-1 95 15.53 15 09 15.53+ .37
15.96+ 8 88+
N'restlnTr n NrestlnGt n NovaFund n NY Ventur Nuveen.Muni n Omega fund n OneWilliam n Oppenheimer Fd Direct eqinc
Oppenhm Fd High Yield Option ' ' Social , Target TaxFr(+
Aim Time OverCount .Sec Parami MutI PaxWorld n Penn.Square n x Penn.Mutual n PermPri n Phila Fund Phoenix Series BalanFd UvFilSer Growth HiVield SlockFund PC Capil Pilgrim Grp: MagnaCap .Magna Incom PAR X
Pilgrim Fd Pioneer Fund Pionr Bd Pionr Fund Pionr II Inc Pionr III Inc x Planndlnvst Plilrend n PrecMtl n Price Funds: Growth n Gw'thInc n Income n Inti n .
NewEra n NewHorizn n Tax Free n Pro Services: MedTec n Fund n Income n Prudential Bache
11 90
11 85
11 90*
07,
Balance n
24 27
23 75
24 27 ,
12 in
11 68
12 10 +
:I9
Blind n x
8 68
8 63
8 68
17 :!0
17 05
I7:iii*
10
('apOp[x,rn
29.25
28 74
2*9 19
8:12
8 07
8 :!2 *
20
Discnvr
9 52
9 23
9 52
7 40
7 '19
7 4*1 *
01
SliK'k 0
2) 98
22 91
2:198*
13 66
13 19
13 66 *
4:1
SleinSpKd n
17 8:1
17 43
17 Kl*
22.39
2f 76
22 :I9
61
TaxExcmpt n
7 H4
7 79
7 84
I'nivrse n
20 85
20 27
20 85
27 ,XI
26 72
27 Ml
66
Slralegi'ap
8 16
7 %
8 16*
7,76
7 60
7 7*1 *
12
Straicglnv
9 21
8 .18
9 21
10 26
9 98
10 26 t
18
SlratliiGlh n
18 ,53
18 14
18 53
19 14
19 IH
19 14
11
Sirngin n
17 :i7
17 05
17 :i7 *
24 91
24 4*1
24 91
52
SirngToi 11
16 55
16 18
16 55
22 99
22 22
22 99
65
Sunlirwlh
1,1 40
12 92
13 40 *
20 7:i
20 :!8
20 7:l t
19
TaxMngUtl
1,5 63
15 19
15,58
7 81
7 77
7 81
0.1
Templeiiin Group
23 29
22 67
2:1 29
:io
Eoregn
II 13
10 94
11 i:T
15 10
14)54
15 10 +
,53
Global 1
.18 45
.17 87
:18 45 *
34 76
:I4 .55
:!4 76 +
02
Global II
10 (Ml
998
10 % *
14 :i4
14 05
14 :14
21
Growth
10 00
9*H
10 00*
II 86
11 ,Xl
11 86
:il
Vi orld
1.1 *1
12 80
13 23
9 70
9,44
9 70 +
II
Transarn Cap
11 80
11 49
II 80
641
6,35
6 41 *
(H
Transam.New n
8:17
8 30
8;i7t
12,29
12,08
12 29
IHi
Travelrs Eqls
1:1 06
12 68
13 06
10 18
984
10 18
21 TudnrKd n
'22 60
22 60*
201 h Century
1242
12 27
12 42 *
15
Gniwlh n"
17 (Iti
16 15
17 06
20,58
20,3:1
20 47
09
Slecl 11
27 25
26:19,
16 :!2
15 81
16.32 *
.5:1
Ultra n r
9 46
9 21
'9 46
10 01
989
10 01
1:1
I S(\ n
98 21
97 87
98 04*
I5 7:i
15:19
1.5 73
29
I SAA Group
14 61
14.:!2
14 6!
:!:t
Grwlh 0
11, 18
15 84
16 18
8.22
23,25 23 22 23 22 13 11 12 84 13 11
6.31
828
6,31 + 8 28 +
9 07 9(H 9 07+ 04
22 63 22.09 22 63 + 45
17 43 17.05 17 43 + 26
12.56,12.31 12 31- 27
21 47 21 25 21 47 + 16 56 15 94 16.56 + 1886 18 15 1876-
16IH 15.49 1610+ ',58 13.42 13 01 13 42+ :!6 8.35 8.:!3 8 35 + 0:1
13 60 13,18 13 60 39
18.39 18 03 18 39 + 26
19.47 19 13 19 47 + ,17
8,66 8,65 8 66
11.76 1U.:17 8 75
II 44
10.09
866
1176+ 28 1U:!7+ 26 8 75+ ,08
I Please turn to B-151
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
Goodbye Emerw
Watch out ^derail Here comes Airborne.
Airborne has passed Emery!
For the first time in history. Airborne has passed Emery in the number of air express shipments picked up and delivered within the U.S. And yes, Federal Express still has the lead, but we ve become the alternative How come
Airborne IS satisfying so trying until we delf
many new customers VI ioo%.
Airborne OvemigW. Were shooting for 100% on time delivery.
Maybe its because we re never satisfied, We won t rest until we become the first air express company to hit 100% on time delivery in every city and every state in these United States.
We ve got the people, the planes and the spirit and we won t stop ii%iL trying until we deliver
IRNF -100%.
With A Local Office To Better Serve You...Phone 758-0696
r
Mutual Funds
I Continued from B-14)
Income n Snbll n TxEHYn TxEIT n TxESh n Unified Mgmnt: Accum n Gwth n Inco n Mull n Lniled r unds. Accumultiv Bond IntlGth Cont Income FiducSh High Income Income MunicpI NwCcpt SciEngy Vanguard Ltd Services: GBT Fd n Prospct USvGold Value Line Fd: Bond n x Fund n Income n Levrge Gth n SpeclSit n Vance Exchange: CapExch f n DeposBst f n
10.72 10.64 10.71- 20
18.46 18 10 18 46+ .19
11.96 11.84 11.%+ .08
11 27 11.26 11.27- .01
10.34 10.33 1034+ 01
8 17 8,05 8.15+ .09
17.07 17.01 17.06- II
13.46 13 33 13.46+ 10
12.62 12.29 12 62 + 25
1064 10.33 5.66 5.62
18.93 18.32 14.21 13.90
30.93 30.05 14.02 13.88
. 13.77 13 17 6,36 6 31 5.25 5.19
1181 11.41 2101 20.52
10.64+ .31 5.66+ .04 18 93 + 56 14.21+ .37 30 93+ .88 14.02+ .15 13.77+ 60 6 36+ .02 5.25+ 05 11.81+ .40 2101+ .45
12.85 12.48 12.85 + 32 90 .86 .90- .01
7.79 7.12 7.79+ .23
12.29 11.70 11.70- 49 13.98 13.51 13 98 + 41 7.30 7.15 7.30+ .12
21,76 21.06 21.76+ .69 17 29 16.81 17.29+ .41
64.53 63.00 64 53 + 69 42.04 41.17 42 04+ 18
What The Stock Market Did
.NEW YORK lAP) - American Stock Exchange trading for the week selected issues:
Sales
PE hds High Low Last (hg
Acton s It 36 626 8'k 7u 7'
AdRusls 10 16 413 25' 24'4 24\-
.Adobe 20 14 528 22' 20'4 20'i-2'4
AegisCp 15 480 4'4 4 4
AtiTPb s .64 18 56 41
Altec V 1272
Amdhl s 20 53 6538 19
AMotln 25 13 2117 34
ASciE 219 9
Ampal n .12 3 1132 P d 3
Armtrn 12 912 14 11'
Asmrgs 3195 It'4 9'
AllsCM 2818 2'4 2
Allas wl 31 7 6'
Hanstrg60e 202 5 d 5", 5',+
HergBs 32 21 1238 30 v 27', 3(P + 3
RowVal 15 280 21' 20', 21'-
BradNt 1.50 1201 17'; 16'. 16'.-
Brascngieo 614 31' 29\ 30^-ChmpH :16 2I39 5'
t'lrclK 74 15 1643 23',
ConsOG 157 2463 ull'
Cixiklnt 18 8' ,
CoreLb 16 144 :18 le'i 15 l.ii;-
1'ro.sss 1 20 21 528 35 34' 34
(YulcR 9 1411 5'4d4', 5
Damson 22 1058 12' 10' 12' 11' .
DatPds I6 38 3245 U31 28i 30 +1 '
DomeP 13654 4 3 16 3', 3 15 16
DorGas 16 17 1492 15 14' 14-
Dynlctn 25e II 1179 14', 13'. 13',-FdKes V 33 486 1 3-16 1 +
Felmnt 10 16 369 22' 21' 21 '4-
KlukeJ 841 27 118 33', 32' . 32-
Frontlld 20b 504 13' . 12 12,-
GRl 16 511 11. 10' 10',-1
GntVI g 616 18 17'
GoldW 225 12 13'
GIdFId 1395 1 1'
(ilLkCh 64 27 1061 71' 68'
Gift'd g 44 3470 15' 14'
HollyO) 24 9 244 11 9
llouOTr I 91e 3039 10'', 10"
Husky g 15 499 9'; 8
Imp((ilgl 40 25:ii :ti:i. w
InslSy IntgEn IntBknt 06e KeyPh 20 Kirby .M0 Hd .Mt'O Rs MSR n g Marndq Marm pf2:15 Mrshl s
Divers I n ExchFd f n ExchBst f n FiducEx f n SecFidu f n Vanguard Group Explorer n IvestFund n Morgan n QualDivI n (ualDvII n QuIDvlII n IiiUPorii n US Portf n GNMAn HiY Bond n IG Bond n ShrtTrm n IndexTrust n MunHiYd n Munilnt n MuniLong n MuniShrt n Wellesley n Wellington n Windsor n Venturlnco WallSt Growth WeingrtnEq n Westgrd WoodStruthers: deVeghM n Neuwirth n PineStr n
69 97 68.24 69 97+ .49
107.31 105.18 107.31- .24 88.59 86.81 88.59+ .49
58.25 56 86 58.25+ ,29 63.35 62.12 63.35+ .12
41 35 41.22 41.35- .16 16,44 16.08 16.44+ .26
14.26 13,93 14.26+ .31 17.79 17.48 17.79+ .35 8.03 8,00 8.03+ 03
25 29 25.20 25.21- .06 24.86 24.46 24.86+ ,08 38.63 37.62 38.63+ ,79 9.19 9.12 9.18+ .06 9 09 9 05 9.09+ ,05
8.07 8 02 8.06 + 05
9 91 9.87 9.90+ .03
21.29 20.67 21,29+ .59 9.28 9.22 9.28 10.78 10.72 10.78 9.57 9.51 9.57
15.21 15.18 15.21+ .01 13.09 12% 13.05+ .11 13.48 13.20 13,48+ .28
13.31 13.12 13.31+ .20 11 19 11,05 11.19+ .10 9.15 8.94 9.13+ .11
21.55 20.74 21.55+ .78 11 98 11.73 11.%+ ,18
Wall Street Projects Strong Upswing In Corporate Reports
The Daily Hetlector, Ureenville, N.. Sunday. October 9.1983 B-15
1873-83
45.21 43.78 45.21 + 1.09
20.23 19.88 20.23+ .21
^ 14.40 14.12 14.40+ .24
n No load fund, fPrevious days quote r-Redemption charge may apply
Copyright by The Associated Press
4fl"4 4l',+ ",
'+
18' 19',+
31 34'+2,
8 8---', ' 3",- ", i:i+2 II + ", 2'
7
5', 5"
21', 23', t 2 7'; II +31 8" 8';+ '
Weekly Stocks Ups And Downs
NEW YORK ( AP) - The lollowing list shows the New York Stock Exchange stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down the most in the past week based on percent of change.
No securities trading below $2 or 1000 shares are included. Net and percentage changes are the difference between last week s closing and this week's closing CPS
iNaine Last I GenGwth wt 3'
2',.
4",
3;',
14
21'
4",
7',
11"
13'
31', + 4 + 11
2 LehValInd
3 Ronson
4 EAL wtO
5 EastnAir pf
6 Trinity
7 World Airw
8 Burl Nor pf
9 SterlngBncp GtWstHosp
18-12 - 1- ' 71 +1' 15'- ', II +1 10"-9 -30'- 1
2256
3'
3
3',-
418
7
";
13-16
1025
6
5'
5
.52
4485
31
27'
31'; f2'
1841
7'
6";
6",- '
3
300
15';
14';
15"+ '
15
319
3
3';
3" '
476
5';
d 5'
5'^- 1
971
.
85
21';
21"
21""
25
1012 1
028'
24"
27";+U
12
119
59';
58',
58',-
8
8981
o30
28"
30'; + 2
15
1831
27
25';
25- '
3
235
4";
4';
4';- '
51
2103
25';
22';
24';+!'
18
X453
25';
22
25'; + !
30
84
3
2";
3 + '
MtchlE NKiney NtPatnt NProc .Nolex
NARoyl 15j 12 8O8 18" G", 17
NofdOg 189 15'; 15' 15',
Numac g 179 21' 20', 20' .
OOkiep Z40.O 15", 15', 15'
Dzark.A 20 203 46.57 10" 9 10'
PallCps 36 24 1849 37", 34 37 + 2",
PECp 27t 8 537 2\ 2" 2' .
1etUw 1 49t 8 2357 11", 10'; It)'- "
Pittway 1.65 12 3 60 Otl", 60',+ ',
Prenllal76l 4 347 54', 52 .53'.+ "
Ransbg 72 33 703 18' 16'; 17',+ ',
ResrtA 16 2332 46' 44 45 + '.
SecCap 9 504 12' 10'; 12'+ 1
Solitron 32 509 9'; 8'
Sunairs 22 18 210 12"4 II-'-
Sundnc TlEs TchAm TchSvm Telsph n Txscan Trafler TranEn TubMx s
9 11',
7"+ '4 37'; +
1.561 7..
38 4803 38" 36 110 224 6 6'; 6'
24 710 21" 18 20';- 3950 8"4 7
20 2289 19 359 451 3 902
,. V'h + 17'; 18 -1'
I FoodB 20 8 383 8',
I'nivRs 722 8
Vemit 12 15 1011 15
WanaB s 12 33 21925 38
WrnC wt 701 7",
664 10', 278 1.3", 712 41- 123 5-'
1368 8',
I", 1'; 1 ,
4 d 2 3',-
5', 4
Wthfrd Wstbr g 20 WstnSL 12e W'lehita WwdeE 44t
41.I, 7",- ';
i;i, 14'-.+ ' 33 38"+4
6", 6"4-1
91 ; 9.-,^_ I
12 12- 38' 41';+3 5' 5';
7';-
CopyrightbyTheAssocialedPress'l983
Sea-Land Chief Plans To Retire
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (UPI) - The chairman and chief executive officer of Sea-Land Industries Investments Inc., Charles I. Hiltzheimer, has decided to take early retirement within the next few weeks to pursue personal interests.
Hiltzheimer had more than 21 years service at Sea-Land, a subsidiary of R.J.Reynolds Industries Inc.
Joseph Abely, Reynolds vice chairman of the board, said Hiltzheimer has made a great contribution to the development of Sea-Land as a containerized ocean carrier.
Abely heads a special task force looking at the possible divestment of Sea-Land.
7 +1
6'4 +
50'; + 7
50'; + 6
30" + 4'
16", + 2'
10'4 + 1"
24"4 + 3'
+ 2
10 GtWstHosp
11 Lifemark s
12 Katyind pfB 78
13 Clorox Co 29'
14 Berkey Pho
15 EaslnAirL
16 Medtronic
17 CravRsch
18 Katy Ind
19 EsInAir pfC
20 HorizonCp
21 Kroehler
22 TiCaro s
23 Alleen Inc . ,
24 EstnAir pfB 15" + 2
25 Arkans Best 24'4 + 3',
IHIWNS Name Usi Chg
1 Elect Assoc 7", -
2 ToscoCp
3 Puriln Fash
4 Divers Ind
5 Mesabi Tr
6 Cook Unit
7 Beker Ind
8 ModulCmSvs
9 Pac.Scien
10 LLCCorp
11 KN Energy
12 SPSTech'
13 WoodsPtr
14 Damon Cp
Chg Pet + P Up 61.1
+ " Up 38.5
+ 1'4 Up 35,7
+ Up 30.4
+ 2"4 Up 22.7
+ 3"4 Up 21.6
+ 4 Up 18.8
+ 1' Up 18.4
+ 1"4 Up 18.2
+ 2 Up 18.0
Up 17.6 Up 17,1 + 4'4 Up 17.0
Up 16.7
Up 16.3 Up 16,1 Up 15.8 Up 15.7 Up 155 Up 15.5 Up 15.1 Up 14.8 Up 147 Up 14.7 Up 14.5
Pet Off 386 Off 36.3
6' - 3".,
14 - 6'; Off 30 4
4"4 - 1' Off 191
6" - 1" Off 177
4" - Off 16.7
9'; - 1 Off 16,5
10' - 1 Off 15.6 23' - 4'4 Off 15.5
3'; - " Off 15 2
45'4 -7'; Off 14.2 18'; - 2"4 Off 12 9
22 - 3" Off 12 9
22'4 - 3'4 Off 12.7
15 GapStores s 22'; - 3'4 Off 12,6
16 viMestaMch 6' Off 12 5
17 IMetromed s 29"4 - 4'4 Off 12.5
18 InexcoOil
19 NobleAfil
20 AndrsnGrn
21 .NewprkRs
22 Intermed n
23 ApacheCp
24 BellHowI pf 462 58
25 Fedders 5" ",
26 PopeTalbt 24 - 2,
11 - 1'; Off 12.0
16"4 - 2'4 Off 118
12" - 1.......
5", -15'; -2 11 -1
Off 116 Off 11.5 Off 114 Off 11.2 Off 11.2 Off 104 Off 10.4
DOW Jones Averages
NEW YORK (APi - The following gives the range of Dow Jones averages for the week ended Oct 7
STOCK AVERAGES Open High Low Close ghg.
Ind 1231 :iO 1272 15 1231 30 1272 15+:19 02 Trans 560 79 586 70 560.79 586 70 + 25 12 Utils 135.16 140 08 135 16 138.97 + 4 29 65 Stks 488 58 506 37 488 58 506 37 + 17 40 BOND AVERAGES 20 Bonds 72.07 72 24 72 06 72.21+0 15 Utils 70.76 70 93 70.68 70 87 + 0 05 Indus 73.38 73.56 73 38 73.56 + 0 26 (OMMODITY Fl Tl RES INDEX
144 89 147 63 143 84 146 44-0 57
Economy Boost
WINSTON-SALEM. N.C. (UPI) - Officials of Stroh Brewery Co. say their North operations pumped more than $249 milion into the economy last year.
Stroh became a member of the states business community in 1982 with the acquisition of Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., including its brewing and container manufacturing facility in Winston-Salem.
The North Carolina plants, which employ about 1,060 people, generated almost $34 million in payroll earnings and fringe benefits last year. The plants also paid nearly $1 million in property and real estate taxes.
The two plants consumed more than $174 million in materials, supplies and services from inside and outside the state and made capital improvements of nearly $2 million last year.
Michael A. Colombo
and
W. Walton Kitchin, Jr.
Announce
The Formation Of A Partnership For The General Practice Of Law
Office At:
216 s. Washington St.
P.O. Drawer 7143 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: 758-5835
By CHET CURRIER AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Wall Street is looking for big things in the quarterly earqings reports to be issued by corporate America over the next few weeks.
As measured by the gross national product, the growth of the economy slowed only slightly in the third quarter from its rapid pace in the previous three months.
And analysts expect the operating resul^ of many businesses for the July-September period to show the beneficial effects of that continued revival.
Corporate profits are exploding, the Value Line Investment Survey declared. For investors, this one vital point about the current U.S. economic environment overshadows all others.
The advisory service acknowledged that stock-market participants cannot ignore such matters as interest rates, the federal budget deficit and the debt problems of countries like* Brazil, Argentina and Mexico.
But these worries, serious though they may be, should not deflect investors focus from what is most important, it said. Value Line is confident that the business expansion will continue for at least another year, and potentially well
Futures Prices Slow To Move
By KEITH E. LEIGHTY AP Business Writer
Grain and soybean futures prices were lower at the close of trading Friday on the Chicago Board of Trade.
Sources at the floor said trading was slow and there were few new features to affect prices.
A harvest projection released Thursday by private crop analyst Conrad Leslie o.f Chicago had little effect, although some traders said it encouraged selling.
Bob Lekberg, a grain analyst in Chicago with Shearson American Express, said traders were reluctant to take on new positions because of the weekend the release next Wednesday of the Agriculture Departments updated crop forecast.
But some selling by producers emerged Friday, Lekberg said, as farmers are making rapid progress on the harvest and selling at least some of their grain.
Wheat settled 2*4 cents to 5'4 cents lower with the contract for delivery in December at $3.694 a bushel; corn was 3 cents to 44 cents lower with December at $3.494 a bushel; oats were 1 cent to 2 cents lower with December at $1.874 a bushel; and soybeans were 8 cents to 154> cents lower with December at $8.452 a bushel.
Livestock and meat prices were lower in moderate volume on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
The primary source of pressure was the red meat supply, said Robert Saathoff, vice president for commodity research with Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc.
He noted that the total supply of red meat is 9 percent greater than at this time last year. In addition, the hog slaughter was estimated at 369,000 animals, which is sufficient to keep a more-than-ample supply of pork available, he said.
Steady prices on cash markets overnight prompted some light buying that supported prices across the board early in the session but the oppressive supply of meat pushed prices back down later in the session.
You cannot get a bull market started with that kind of meat supply, said Saathoff.
Live cattle settled .40 cent to 1.13 cents lower with the contract for delivery in October at 60.35 cents a pound; feeder cattle were .25 cent to .95 cent lower with October at 58.70 cents a
pound; live hogs were .15 cent to .53 cent lower with October at 41.65 cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies were .45 cent to .78 cent lower with February at 56.97 cents a pound.
Precious metals prices advanced moderately on the Commodity Exchange in New York.
Buying early in the session was follow through from Thursday, said Jack Boyd, director of commodity research in New York with Drexel Burnham Lambert, Inc.
The markets took heart from a persistently weak dollar, said Boyd. And the advance ignored the potential that the decline in unemployment might prompt higher interest rates as the economic recovery creates competition for funds between businesses and the government, Boyd added.
Gold settled $4.80 to $5.10 higher with October at $400.30 a troy ounce; silver settled 15.9 cents to 18.1 cents higher with October at $10.442 a troy ounce.
(HR AGO 'APi The rantje of tom modily futures this past week on the Chicago Board of Trade was
Wk. Wk. Open
WHF vr "''''sl
J.lMNl bu miiiimuni: dollars per bushel
Dec 3 74 3.65'; 3,69'. - 01'1 39.84
Mar 3 88 3.80'; 3.83', - 01', 12.867
.May 3 92'; 3 85". 3 87 -.03' 4.101
3 82 3.74 3 74"; - 07', 6.562
3 89'; 3.81 3.83 - 1)8 1,218
4 01 3 94'i 3 94'; -.06'; 661
Kri to Thurs sales 53,837
Total open interest 65,249 CORN
5.000 bu minimum: dollars per bushel
Dec 3 55". 3.43'; 3,49'I 05'.. 108.845
Mar . 3 58', 3.46'i 3 51", 0.5', .58,101
Mav 3.59", 3.48'; 3,53 ,05'; 20.320
Jul . 3 58", 3.47 3 51", 05", 27,244
Sep 3 31 3 22 3 24 - ()6 2,891
Dec 3.08'; 3 (X) 3.02', .05", 11,691
Fri to Thurs sales 241,2,58 Total open interest 229.092 DATS
5.000 bu minimum: dollars per busbel
Dec 1.91'; 1 85 1.87", - 02", 6,026
Mar 200"; 1 94 1 97 - 03 1,455
Mav 2.06 1.99 2.02'; - 03' 371
Jul 2.10 2 05'; 2.06'; - ()4
Jul
.Sep
Dec
Sep 2.12'; 2.07 2.09 -.04"; 99
Fri to Thurs sales 4.'353 Total open interest 8,313 .SDYBEANS
5.000 bu minimum: dollars per busbel
Nov 8.65 8,16 8.45'; ,-.20'62.717
Jan 8 79 8 :iO 8 59' . - 21' -. 31,072
Mar' 8.88 8.41'; 8.7i -.19'. 22,321
May 8.88 8.43 8 72 -.18 7,537
8.82 8 38 8 61'; - .19'; 12.366
8.54 8,13 8.32 -.18 :i.039
7.76 7,47 7.58 -.16'; 2,428
7.02 6 74 6 85'; -.16 8,470
Fri. to Thurs sales 384,297 Total open interest 149,950.
SOYBEAN OIL
60.000 lbs: dollars per 100 lbs
Jul
Aug
Sep
Nov
31.45 29.40 30.15 -1.50 1.927
32.00 29.78 30.61 -1.64 36.884
32.05 29 90 30.75 -1,48 11527
31.75 29.65 30.78 -1.22 13,108
30.95 29.05 30.10 -.90 6,265
30.00 28.20 29.25 -.65 4,607
28.37 27 00 27,80 -.45 700
27 00 25.50 26.50'- +.10 1,411
25.30 24.10 24.50 -.55 913
25 00 23.90 24.25 -1 00 440
Fri to Thurs sales 109,746 Total open interest 77.782 SOYBEAN MEAL 100 tons: dollars per ton Oct 234.00 221.00 228.50 -7.00 1,474
Dec 237.70 226.00 233.30 -6.20 30,058
Jan 239.00 227.00 234.00 -5 50 11,147
Mar 240.00 228.50 236.00 -3.80 7,197
May 241.00 229.00 236.50 -3.50 3,514
242.00 229.50 237.00 -4.50 2,975
233.00 223.50 227.30 -5.20 1,702
221 00 213,50 220.00 -2.00 1,888
203.00 193.00 200.00 -3.00 1,290
202.00 192.00 199.00 -7.00 339
Fri, to Thurs, sales 93,089
Total open interest 61.584.
Oct
Dec
Jan
Mar
May
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Dec
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Dec
beyond that. For corporate earnings, the best is yet to come.
The stock markets behavior in the past week suggested that many others shared that kind nf enth'.isiasm. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials climbed to record highs, rising 39.02 points to 1,272.15.
Other market indicators, though still below their early-summer peaks, also turned in strong showings. The New York Stock Exchange composite index gained 1.48 to 98.72, and the American Stock Exchange market value index was up 1.99 at 232.27.
Big Board volume averaged 98.22 million shares a day, against 77.58 million the week before.
If most everyone agrees that third-quarter earnings reports will make cheery reading, not all analysts are so sure that the trend will remain as strong into next year.
S. Jay Levy and David Levy, economists who publish a newsletter called Industry Forecast, predict a "flattening of the upward trend around the turn of the year. High interest rates are largely responsible for the impending slowdown, they maintain.
But the Levys also note that, with inflation remaining at low rates by recent standards, the quality of profits is extraordinarily high.
In the late 1970s, when inflation accelerated, many a businesss reported earnings were fattened by price increases on merchandise in its inventories, while costs charged to depreciation were understated. Now these sources of illusory profits have largely disappeared.
Value Line says the current strength of profits is in part a favorable side effect of the 1981-82 recession. Though it was a truly calamitous period for Americas industrial^ heartland, the firm acknowledges it forced businesses to cut costs and streamline their operations, setting the stage for todays gains.
Managers came to the harsh realization that inflation would no longer bail them out of any casual attitude toward controlling overhead and purchasing practices, Value Line said. Businessmen saw that in neither the recession nor the subsequent recovery could they simply pass on to their customers a generous labor settlement, or high interest expense, or the added cost of inefficient facilities.
Indeed, in the recession, white-collar managers found that their own jobs and compensation levels were subject to cutbacks as never before - as loud and clear a message to discipline their costs as could be sounded.
Aide Defends Loan Program
WASHINGTON (AP) - A spokeswoman for Vice President George Bush on Saturday defended a program to help Southwest border areas that ended up funneling nearly $95 million in loan guarantees to a private company for oilrigs.
The federal loan guarantees amounting to $94.8 million were approved by the Department of Transportation and helped Global Marine Inc. of Houston, Texas, obtain private financing for oil rig construction in the United States, said Shirley Green, a spokeswoman for Bush.
She added, however, that some $11 million ol ihe guarantees will underwrite construction of an offshore rig at Brownsville, Texas, and will provide 500 jobs. She did not immediately know the location of the other oil rigs.
Over two weeks in September, Bushs office reported some $116 million in federal projects that it said would help the border areas financially ailing economies.
Asked why so many loan guarantees under the program went to a single company, Mrs. Green pointed out that this was something the transportation department felt was a worthwhile project. The application was
filed, considered and approved on the merits.
If Global Marine defaults on the private loans it obtains, the federal government would be forced to step in and pay them back.
Bush heads the Reagan administrations Southwest Border Action Group, which was set up to help border areas hurt by devaluation of the Mexican peso.
Mexican commerce in border areas has been brought almost to a standstill by devaluations of the peso.
Rep. Ron Coleman, D-Texas, whose district includes the border city of El Paso, earlier in the week criticized the loan guarantees to Global Marine. He said in a statement issued by his Washington office that the credibility of the Vice Presidents border working group has been called into question and may be seriously damaged.
Coleman said the administration is merely slapping a 'border aid' label on any federal money that goes to areas on the border, whether it has anything to do with the devaluation of the peso or not.
I think maybe he (Coleman) doesnt have a clear understanding of the pro-gram^ said Mrs. Green.
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Pitt Plaza
Greenville.................. 756-3950
A DIVISION or lANOV COHPOIIATION
T
pwces APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS
FORECAST FOR SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1983
from Carroll RIghter Institua
di.:.
\ERAu 'OE.\CjES: An opportunity is now yours ' '0 :" vOo' j'smess affairs in a very efficient fashion "c a-id ,'.. a'e them as well as you can. However,
torcing issues.
; - M.i to Apr. 19) Concentrate on a philosophy
>v. "TiaKe your burdens lighter Enjoy a fine fami-
< ' d:e evening
A p .A, C to May 20) Do whatever is your civic
me get the new weeks activities well schedul-
' /Cv. eiire-
. ' vu -21 to June 21) Concentrate on yourhnest ' ge'.'hem working properly so that the general
oe ea.^ed
. '-^i; ..'REN iJurie 22 to Jul 21) Plan time to do
at WI1 bring you added good will from ' e evening a riappy family affair.
21) Smiie and be cheerful and that Be vjre to control your temper, also Be ' tviding you . _2 tc Sept 22)Get that vital cor- *-an, tor best results Then rest on your ng and be happy.
tc Oct 221 If repairs are needed at ;.Q Tiai.e tnem Do whatever you can anc be wise 22 tr Nov -21) Meet with the right peo-pvtracted monetary affairs wisel^ ay tamily affairs later.
22 tcDec 2i) Makeabetter'plan ' ittarsAnai goals very quicklv. Get
^ CFTyO
r\ 22tcuan 20) Fine for whatever has , I'l- .t^'mg the daytime, but take care
" ' tc Feb 19) During the daytime,
g tc'go along with your ideas, but
. .Id, 2Ct Your hunches are good , .V tn'^ but later you are too busy
;ORN"ODAY he or she will be ..ng persons who will be able A. t to it that this IS not over-. ..'u j become so involved with . 0.. 1 be accomplished.
R MONDAV OCTOBER 10, 1983
Hi
'i! Righter Institute
. .C ES Upsets and changes that are . De dramatic occur today but you r- as catastrophies since immediate--r / oppprtunities,
' ' '9'LOOk into new enterprises e A.ilmg to let go of the obsolete;
. .'ay 20) A business matter you aga c but take it m your stride ' ..a'e^ make better plans.
. u^e 21) Some changes where
"lav come suddenly, but go
,is cheerfully as you can me 2? *0 Jul 21) Study any new vOrpufdie into your work so that
''. -e amusement plans may
ma: 0..' or the better Don't take
V ' 22 vlatters at home could be - g and everything calms
-'"a " until evening,
'2'2 Juch care m motion is need-
"e^ts that might otherwise
;'I Some practical matter ' ion t lost control and you
m'.. e V mtion
- 2._- !c _ac 21) You get different ' A s 'biiow them and get good
' b-Y 'eaxing ) ' . m 20) Relieve yourself of - : m. -ling more worthwhile and ' ' iOd say no
' ; b 9) Be more objective and
: ac ng right or you are not be-
... sro.,id be
/m 20 ' you brmg up some con-- .; - '.'d' be criticized severely now,
..''C ' .mportance ) OR'-"ODAY He or she will be ; ,, j^'ig persons who may have to nrj tne lifetime and will be able '. .d earby give good religious tram-
V j hiv compel What you make
- ^ f C
vyhb ;ate. Inc
Life As It's Lived
By GAIL MICHAELS After a year and a half of living in this house, I decided that it was about time to get curtains for the master bedroom. Upon reaching such a momentous decision.
a sensible person would have driven to a store and made an immediate purchase. But good sense never having been one of my frequently exercised attributes, I couldnt bring myself to do
Paniel To Study Nuclear Plant
.ATLANTA (AP) - The national Centers for Disease Control is assembling a panel of experts to review the safety and health effects of the Savannah River Plant in South Carolina.
The idea is to sit down and look at the studies that have been done and then see if theres anything else that can be done. said Dr. Glyn Caldwell, a.ssistant director of (he CDC and head of the panel.
It will be the first time the federal government has allowed an independent group - other than government-contracted health and environmental
experts - to conduct a review of the studies on the effects of radiation exposure on plant workers at the 300-square-mile installation run E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. under contract with the U.S. Department of Energy.
The plant, which has three operating reactors, produces weapons grade tritium and plutonium for nuclear weapons, which are built elsewhere.
Environmental groups and politicians have raised concerns about the effects of restarting the plants fourth reactor, idle since the 1960s.
that. No, I had to pursue all the decorating magazines I could find until I at last settled upon the lavishly ruffled country curtains.
Now, of course, living on a budget aS I do, I was not too thrilled about the prices I saw quoted. So I decided to make the curtains instead. I figured that I could make them for about half of what it would cost me otherwise.
Phillip begged me to reconsider. Remember those draperies you made.
I remembered. Weeks of struggling with yards of heavy chintz had resulted in drapes that were passable after Phillip put up the curtain rods at 45 degree angles from the tops of the windows.
But even that memory failed to deter me. I am not planning to line these, I explained.
What I hadnt counted on was the enormous psychological cost of ruffling. The piece of fabric required for just one of those ruffles was longer than the length of my house. I spent hour after hour after monotonous hour sewing
endless seems.
And then came the ruffling itself. I spent every spare minute pulling temperamental threads to make the material bunch up into tiny gathers. When the thread didnt break, I was barely civil. When it did break, I was a bit peevish.
Meg kept accidentally stepping on the material I was always dragging around behind me, and I kept chiding her for her clumsiness at the top of my voice. Zachary asked if I had grown a tail. Phillip would give me a kiss in the evening when he returned from work, and I would give him an answering snarl.
In short, I began to suspect that I was not promoting a peaceful home atmosphere.
I warned you that it would be like this, Phillip told me. Gail, I said, please, pretty please, buy them and put us into debt, but no, you wouldnt listen. I just pray that youre almost finished.
I have about a fourth done.
He groaned. The savings arent worth this.
Youre telling me. Im saving exactly $6 a pair. But I thought you were going to save half. *
I underestimated the amount of fabric I needed. Of
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course, the figure I quoted doesnt include electricity or the wear and tear on the sewing machine.
"Or the wear and tear on me.
I-
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1201 Charles Blvd.
In Greenville:
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Rivergate Shopping Cntr.
1983 Domino's Pizza Inc Limited delivery areas: Drivers carry under S20.
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En)oy 2 of your favorite pizza toppings | FREE when you order | any large 16 pizza Monday-Thursday 4PM-8PM only
Expires: 10/31/83 One coupon per pizza In Qraanvllla call: 752-6996
At ecu call;
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In Graanville call:
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At ecu call:
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"FIVE, SJX, SE VEN,..Mrs,- Parsons accounts for a full litter as she feeds the motherless puppies she has only days before pulled from underneath a barn near her home.
A FLEA BATH...for a litter of pups makes use of a childs pool in the Parsons back yard. Sometimes the pool also provides romping good times for the dogs that are water lovers.
Parsons Place Is An Animal Haven
By NANCY SHIRES
The Parsons place is a sprawling, comfortable home with an old-fashioned porch and two a:d half acres of land in tl ''oun' \ just outside (, reCi ile. A typical day begins ' uv, and soon all the hous'*^' ,ld is stirring - Bobbie Parsons, her husband, Tom, son Eugene, and mother, Roberta Brooks, And, 12 dogs and eight cats, more or less,
Bobbie, who is foster home coordinator of the Pitt County Humane Society, operates a licensed foster home for animals given into the care of the Humane Society, She is an unpaid volunteer, as are other members of her family.
Since shes allergic to dust and fur, she begins the day with two antihistimines. She then starts the morning feeding of the minimenagerie amid much tail-wagging and purring. Most of the dogs and cats dont even belong to Bobbie, Theyre just staying until theyre adopted.
After the feeding, Bobbie administers the necessary medications.
On a recent morning, all the dogs got heartworm medicine, and Midnight, a cat, unwillingly took some antibiotics to help heb fight infection after surgery. Bobbie then gave flea baths in a wading pool to seven puppies mothered by a wild dog who left the litter under a rural Pitt County barn.
Tom Parsons has given over most of his photographic darkroom to storage of bags of dog food and cat litter.
Eugenes job is to each day clean the acre of fenced backyard where the animals romp while awaiting homes.
The whole Parsons family pitches in.
First of all by putting up with all this, says Bobbie.
Chewed cupboards, late meals, puddles on the kitchen floor, houseplants
overturned and a constantly ringing telephone are all part of a typical day at the Parsons' place.
Theres never a dull moment around this house, says Mrs. Brooks.
()f her daughter, she adds, Bobbies a worker, I dont know where she gets the energy or the patience. Wearing simple shorts on a hot summer morning, Bobbie Parsons tends the animals with easy, out-going vitality. One might never guess that she's "basically a city girl and three times a grandmother. She handles even the difficult situations with love and assurance.
How did this unusual life come about?
Mrs, Brooks laughs, Well, we always had a few dogs and cats around, but nothing like this. But Bobbie always did like animals, animals and children.
"When she was little, she used to bring kids down from the orphanage and invite them to raid the refrigerator. Which they did.
Bobbie was born in Connecticut but has lived, she says, "all over - m.ore in the south than in the north. That's because her husband, Lt. Col. Tom Parsons, served 23 years with the Army. Seven years ago they retired to Greenville with the youngest of their three children.
Tom planted a garden, and Bobbie learned to can. He became active with the Boy Scouts, and she with teaching majorettes through the Greenville Recreation Department. They are both active with their church. St. Peters Catholic here.
We used to raise Labrador retrievers, Bobbie explains. Then we joined the Humane Society and started taking care of one or two extras at a time. About a year and a half ago, we became a full-fledged foster home.
When she talks about her
He fill
work, she speaks with deep conviction.
Children and animals are the most misused among us. Theres such a need for this kind of work in this area, she says.
Then she adds with a laugh, "This is what happens when your kids all get grown up.
The need for her work is emphasized by the telephone that rings every 15 minutes most days. People ask, I need a good watchdog. Not too big. Can you help me?
Or; Somebody went and left a box of nine kittens in my driveway. I cant keep em. What can I do?
Or: This guys got the dog tied around the neck so tight and short - its cruel. Cant you do something about it
Thanks to Bobbie Parsons, her family and co-workers, many of these calls have happy endings.
Bruno is the St. Bernard dog who was tied so tight and short. The rope had cut so deeply into his neck that it had to be surgically removed.' Then he went home with the Parsons to recuperate. Eugene was watering the flowers one day when he called his mother to look at this. Lovable Bruno, after taking a long drink from the hose, wanted the water on his head and then on his body.
Fill the swimming pool for him, Bobbie said.
Eugene had only started to
11 the wading pool when a happy Bruno jumped in with a splash.
He is such a friendly, gentle dog, in spite of what hed been through, and he loves water, Bobbie says.
Bruno was adopted by loving family which, chance, has a full-sized swimming pool where he takes a dip every day.
Hes one of our success stories, Bobbie says.
Bobbie is successful in placing about a dozen animals every month in new homes.
a
by
We get the most help from the Adopt-A-Pet column in The Daily Reflector. We get calls from all over -Robersonville, Washington. Wilson, New Bern - besides Greenville. There are some wonderful people in the world, Bobbie says.
Bobbies phone log records every call and serves as a sort of lost and found, matching people and animals.
This week a man called about finding a collie. A few days later a lady called trying to find her collie. We put them in contact. I feel good about that one. Bobbie says.
The round table in the kitchen is the formal gathering place for the family. It is pleasantly cluttered with flowers, mail, a fruit basket and iced tea glasses. Around the family gather the dogs and eats, all looking remarkably healthy and well-adjusted. They all want attention, but they dont fight.
Each animal is loved and picked up or patted daily,
We handle each one of them and housebreak them as much as we can. so theyll be ready to go right into someones home, Bobbie says.
The cats, for example, are taught to stay off the kitchen table. Instead, they curl in a lap and purr.
Right now all visitors are encouraged to stop and pet Ginny, a pretty blond dog who was beaten by a former owner. Ginny stays alone in her chair in the living room and stiffens when a stranger touches her, but she no longer runs and sometimes wags her tail now. The Parsons are pleased with her progress.
The Parsons still have two of their own Labradors, Ladybeth and Princess. They also claim three cats. Pepper, Romeo and Midnight. The dogs who are awaiting homes - Ginny, Ginger, Mike and the seven
puppies - mingle with them. As do the cats - Police Car (your basic black and white with a siren. Tom Parsons jokes). Max the Manx, Sylvester and three as yet unnamed ones, an orange tabby, a calico and. a gray and white.
The whole crew receives basic veterinary care. Sick animals are kept separate from the healthy ones, males from females, fighters from more peaceable ones.
"Thats why we plead for people to just give us a call instead of dumping an animal over the fence, Bobbie says.
A supper of stuffed green peppers is making the whole house smell good when the Wiley Neal family comes to see about adopting a puppy. Their dog Silver was poisoned by a trespasser, and they want another dog.
"To guard me, Marie Neal says.
The excited puppies, all fat and fluffy, jump around as if to say. "Take mel Take me'
"Which one do you like, Boris Wiley Neal asks his son with a broad grin.
Everyone stands around and talks and laughs and watches the puppies, occasionally picking one up.
"If you cant make up your mind, take two or three or six, says Tom.
Theyre part German shepherd, but their paws are small. I dont think theyll be real big dogs, says Bobbie,
"They are cute, Marie says.
Finally, success. The .Neals find the puppy they want. Another orphan is adopted.
Bobbie says she could not do her foster home coordination job without the help of the other volunteer foster homes which take care of a few animals at a time.
Theres always a need for this kind of foster home, Bobbie says. "If my house is too full, or if one animal has to be kept apart from the
"We hope some day to have a bona fide Humane Society animal shelter in Greenville. Thats what were aiming for, Bobbie says, and her blue eyes light up.
In the evenings, some of the cats stroll with Mrs. Brooks, who walks every day for her health.
"Im a diabetic and have heart trouble and am as much trouble as the animals, she laughs, "Fvery night before they go to bed, the dogs have to come in my room for biscuits. Then they go off to bed, most of them in Bobbies room .
If there is no late emergency call, everyone -and everything, great and small . in the Parsons household curls up to the singing of the crickets.
others, 1 call on these volunteers. Janet Uhlmann is my right-hand person in this.
"Others in the community help too. The ECU medical school has donated pens and isolation cages. Dr. J.F. Barwick and Dr. Michael House of the Animal Hospital continue to be invaluable. Theyve taught me a lot about handling and treating the animals, Bobbie savs.
ST. FRANCIS...triend ol the helple.ss. stands in statuary in the Parsons back vard. an inspiration to members of a famiiy who give of themselves every day to heli) homeless animals of Pitt County through their volunteer work for the Humane Soviet V
"Im always calling on them for something,
The county and city pounds work with the Human Society in helping people to find lost animals. And, finally, dona-, tions made by those who adopt pets help to pay for the food and medicine that the foster homes require. Recently barrels been placed in some local grocery stores for shoppers to buy a bag or can of dog food and place there
for use by the Humane Society.
This summer Bobbie re-ceued certification from the state ot North Carolina as a registered foster home. Inspectors checked for such things as adequate food and water, shade and shelter, isolation tacilities and the general condition of the animals Bobbie's is the only foster home in the area to be so cert died.
Pliotoj^rapli^ li\
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A CAT HAVEN, TOO...Dogs abound at the Parsons. And so do cats. All await placement, usually co-existing quite well with one another, the Parsons say.
A MOMENT TO RELAX...becomes a time to give some attention to Ginny. a people-shy dog that the Parsons are coaxing into being a pet for someone again. She trusts Bobbie and is learning to trust others.
Brenda Williams, Herbert Smith Wed Saturday
Brenda Sue Williams and Herbert A Smith were married Saturday at 2:00 p.m. in the University Church of Christ here by the Rev Thomas Biggs of Edenton.
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs Willie L. Williams of Rt. 1. Scranton, and LaFayetle Smith and .Mrs .Mane Spears, both of Kiriiton,
^^TJTven in marriage by her parents, the bride wore a formal white gown of sheerganza and English embroidered lace. It was fashioned with a high neckline and a sheer V yoke which featured a lace ruffle. Matching lace encircled the waistline The sheer cuffed bishop sleeves closed with lace and bridal buttons. The I'Soft flowing .skirt accented With scallped triple lace ruffles flowed into an attached chapel tram The fingertip veil of Silk illusion was at
tached to a matching lace capulet. Her bouquet was a formal full cascad^ with swirls of Rosana aubergine, king cardinal and regina alstromerias and orchids tied with plum satin ribbon.
The matron of honor was Mrs Beverly Randalls, sister of the bride, of Scranton. She wore an aubergine dress of chiffon lined with taffeta. It featured' a neckline rounded in the front and scooped in the back. The formal raised waist was accented with a satin tie ribbon belt. The skirt was a flowing one.' She carried a nosegay of plum, orchid and mauve alstromerias with silver pink Dianthus tied with orchid satin ribbon
The bridesmaids were .Mrs. Gale Puckett of Kinston, sister of the bridegroom. and .Mrs. Christy Fillyaw of Hampton, Va Their dresses were stvled
identically to that of the matron of honor in orchid and pink Their bouquets were similar to that of the matron of honor
The bridegrooms father was his best man Ushers were Josh Randalls of .Scranton and Paul Puckett of Kinston.
The mistress of ceremony was .Mrs. j^gfies Gibbs of Scranton. .Music was provided by .Mrs. Joiiiee Rice of Kinston, organistland .Mrs. Karen Archer J also of Kinston, s' 1 o i s t .
The mother of the bride wore as mauve long-sleeved chiffon silk dress; the bridegroom's mother, a long-sleeved silk champagne-colored dress. Both wore orchid corsages.
The reception was given in the fellowship hall of the church. Mrs. Becky Davenport served cake and .Mrs. Debbie Kinston, punch. Mrs.
Myrtle Kirk presided at the bridal register.
TTie rehearsal dinner was held Friday night at the Beef Bam here. It was given by the bridegrooms mother, Mrs. Marie Spears, and Bob Spears of Kinston.
The bride is a graduate ahd an employee of Pitt Community College. The bridegroom is a graduate of North Lenoir High School and has attended schools in diesel mechanics. He i'^ employed by Tidewater Transit of Kinston.
After a wedding trip to Orlando. Fla. they will live at Rt.l. Dover.
TAKE 20 MINUTES
It takes 20 minutes for the body to feel satisfied once you start eating. The longer you take to eat. the less food it will take to make you feel full.
orthington-Faulkner Wedding Outdoors
V
.MK.SUKKBEHTA.S.MITH
Cooking Is Fun
l.inda Teresa Faulkner and William Franklin Worthington III were united in marriage Saturday at 3:WJ p.m in an outdfxir wedding at the home of the bride The bride is the daughter ol .Mr and .Mrs Clarence Faulkner ol Kt 2. Avden; the
bridegroom, the son ol Mr and .Mrs. William Franklin Worthington Jr.. also of Kt 2. Ayden.
The Rev .Mac Flynn officiated at the double-ring ceremony. The bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her
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fwili
2 t'abl'-'pcin- 'O', 'aoct-.\ji' and [ii-pficr '0 ta-tf l.n a iara' -aureijo' ta-.n oil a'!'! onion ari-Mi p-pp'-r .iiio' 1CI-! o'.i-r rm-'liuin la-a a,ah a loir, fna'ti ta-i-i un'il-i^ io-c.-- a- C'-o I'oior \d(l aiirin' 'o:;.,i'o p.o'-o ori-aano.' hn-il and -o', -aud- < o'.t-r and -iinincr -iir rina ol'oji unll la'tn-r tliirk jn '0 10 iniiiiiti- Slir III 'df! and p'-()p'-i ,soi".ihol .'.ilti'paahclli
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Capture That Adijrablf"
Fac* Fort-xf-r On
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Tuesdays
at Deans Photography
Children's Day'
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prices on sittings
and portraits
Tuesday s Only
.1
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Call 752-3980 to
schedule your
--.-T ^
childs appointment
Deans Photography
203 tvana Street
lather.
.She wore a dress of sheer polyester knit with chantilly lace lined in taffeta. Featured were a modified Queen Anne neckline, an empire bodice accented iwth pearls and sequins and lace sleeves with puffed elbows.
The maid of honor was Pamela Faulkner, sister of the bride, of Rt 2. Ayden. She wore a gown of lustrous polyester knit, sleeveless with a V neckline and a gathered empire waist. A matching chiffon capelet had a rolled neckline. .She carried a bouquet in spring colors.
The bridesmaids, Susan Taylor of Ayden and Debbie Buck, aunt of the bride, of Kt. 2. Ayden, each wore a blue satin dress with sheer flower lace cov ering and blue ribbon down the front. The back of the dress had a bustle effect. Each carried white mums tipped in blue.
The flower girl. Jackie Stocks of Kt. 2. Ayden. wore a long white satin dress with blue ribbon down the front. She dropped white flower petals.
.Michael Everett of
Greenville was best man; Frankie Worthington V was ringbearer. Ushers wre Clifton Faulkner of Rt. 2. Ayden. brother of the bride; and James Faulkner, uncle of the bride.
Music was provided by Susan Byers of Greenville, organist, and Kennith Edwards of Rt. 2, Ayden, soloist.
Following the ceremony, a reception ws given by the parents and Audry Brown at the home of the bride. Cake was served by Audrey Brown of Ayden; punch by Jane Brown of Ayden.
After a wedding trip to the Morehead area, the coule will live on Rt, 2, Winterville. The bridegroom is employed by Fred Webb Grain Company; the bride by Empire Brushes Company. The bride is a graduate of Ayden-GriftonHigh School.
Eastern
Electrolysis
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Square Dance Classes
Square dance classes for beginners of any age will be held Tuesday evenings at 7;00 P.M. at Wellcome Middle School. No previous dance experience is needed. For more information call Jerry Powell at 752-1049 or 752-7942. Its great family fun!
Hiilli
Cox
Born to .Mr. and Mrs. William Earl Cox, Bethel, a son, Daniel Antonio, Sept. 28 in Pitt County .Memorial Hospital.
October Lingerie Sale
rom
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Twd)styles to choose from: .
itetty Me
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4.04s Ryg "FI 1 .50
a
Body Shimmers $1039
:f)7oh.v(j 51^50
Offer good until
Oct. 22nd
Hurry While Supplies Last!
Downtown Pitt Plaza
NAXITY F^NIR
-oungewear Promotion Oct. 10th thru 22nc
Featuring:
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$3699
C. Spellbinders Robe
Simply beguiling Shirred insets of Gisanda" adorn the shoulders and cuffs of this long-sleeved robe And the neckline is highlighted with a flattering ruffle It's the perfect robe to begin the day in Reg $12
sometning
exciting. IS happening sweek.
at Be
23
99
October Run...
This is the second time around for our October Run. It is a Ten Kilometer run to be held early morning on October 22. Registration blanks are available in our Sporting Goods Department. See today s ad^ for more details. /
Soap Opera Stars Comingrrr-^'^"
Its a big day, Saturday, October 22! We will be host to three daytime stars on CBS, Steve An-dropolus (Frank Runyeon in real life) from As The World Turns will make his second appearance in Greenville. As you will probably recall, he was host on the local telethon for Cystic Fibrosis last winter. Mindy Lewis (Krista Tesereau) of The Guiding Light will accompany him. There will be two presentations by the stars on Saturday-one at eleven oclock and the other one at four in the afternoon. The mistress <jf ceremonies will be Rita Walter who at one time played Steves wife, Carol, on As The WoHd Turns. Come out for autographs and introductions to the stars.
Star Look-A-Like Contest...
A look-a-like contest for Steve Andropolus and Mindy Lewis, Soap Opera Stars on CBS in As The World Turns and The Guiding Light, will be held on Saturday, October 15 at 2:00 P.M. at Carolina East Mall. Applications tor participation in this contest may be obtained froin the Mall Office or participating stores. Winners will receive a $50 gift certificate redeemable at any store in Carolina East Mall or Caroling East Centre and an opportunity to have dinner with the stars Saturday night, October 22. For further details, call 756-1311
Sweet Shop Chocolates...
We have just received the handmade gourmet chocolates and confections by Sweet Shop where only the finest ingredients are used. These are mixed by hand and hand dipped allowing the chocolate to remain creamy and smooth. These great chocolates are mellow and have a warm, wonderful lingering taste. Available in our Wine and Cheese Shop.
Color Me Beautiful...
Mrs. Sissy Weil of Goldsboro, the only certified Color Me Beautiful consultant in our area, will be back in our store on November 21 and 22. This is the last visit for Mrs. Weil during this calendar year. She will be conducting several sessions for no more than six ladies and reservations are available on a first come basis. There are just a few spaces left so please call 756-2355 as soon as possible if you are interested. The session schedule is as follows:
Monday, Nbvember 21 2:00-4:00 P.M.
6:00-8:00 P.M.
10:00-12:00 P.M.
Tuesday, November 22 2:00-4:00 P.M.
6:00-8:00 P.M.
Coming Soon...
We have a most exciting brass bed promotion coming! These will be authentic reproductions of beds of yesteryear in solid brass and white enameled iron with brass trim by Wesley Allen, one of Americas foremost brass bed manufacturers. Come see this lovely collection in our Bed and Bath Shop.
Decorators Available...
We have trained interior decorators to discuss your desires and needs for your home or business. We will do a window or an entire house or building. There are many wallpaper books and drapery samples for your approval. Come browse. Also, we have a great selection of carpet samples beginning at $8.50 a square yard. Whether your taste is traditional or contemporary, we have furniture and accessories that will satisfy your taste and budget. Visit our Interior Design Department soon. The welcome mat is always out for you.
Williamsburg Hams...
The Smokehouse of Gwaltney proudly presents the Williamsburg Brand in the finest cured hams you will have ever tasted. This dry cured ham is smoked and gently aged in an age old traditional manner perpetuating the gourmet traditions of our early American history. A true connoisseurs delight. Available in our Wine and Cheese Shop.
Ultra Suede Piece Goods...
For the lady who sews, we have just received a shipment of ultra suede piece goods in beautiful fall colors-brick, vanilla, brown, navy, purple, forest, and teal. This luxurious fabric is 45 wide at $57.00 a yard. This is the same high quality piece goods found in great designer clothes. Come see it in our Piece Goods Department.
Mens Fall Outerwear...
There is a hint of fall in the air-cool evenings, coo er mornings! What better way to overcome the chill than with a fashionable fall jacket from our great collection. You are able to select from leather jackets, ski parkas, rugged mountain climbing looks as well as traditional styles. We offer them all by such leading manufacturers as London Fog, CB Sports, Woolrich, Catalina, and Christian Dior. Use layaway.
Wedding Invitations, Napklns.l
We have another service to offer in our China and Silver Department. For that special day in your life, we offer a great selection of wedding invitations, thank you notes, stationery, and cocktail napkins. You may choose a ready verse or compose your own wording at great competitive verses: Come see us and compare.
I
. r
The Daily Rellectof. Greenville N C_Sunday October 9 1983 C-3
Persona.
Haberdashery
14K Gold
Jewelry Sale
Monday Only
20%
Ooff
Add to your fall wardrobe and save at the same time. Navy, black, rose, teal, grey, and, sable.
Also available in larger sizes.
Reg.
Floating Heart Charm . 4 no
Starfish Charm.......... 12 00
Seashell Charm......... 12.00
Sanddollar Charm I6.00
7" Serpentine Bracelet 15.00
Brodys Own Crewneck Sweater
Reg.. $1H $1 088
Now
l.Oi)"., cicrvlic in Fallv inosi
lolurs red. iitUi.. luiturdl.
poudi'r bliit'. pink, -.dpphirf, hi'rry, iur(niubt', ki-llv -ilvt'r iind purpk-Lol^ (if color At (1 yrc.it price' Buy Trco
Now
1.99
5.99
5.99
5.99
5.99
16 Serpentine Necklace.. .3200 16.99 18 Serpentine Necklace,. ,45.00 18.99
7 Herringbone ds.oo 19.99
16 Herringbone 50.00 20.99
18" Herringbone oo.oo 35.99
Colvin Klein
Denim Jeans
$2999
Junior Blazer
Wool modified blazer kith the new untailored siylmg Sapphire, teal wine, grey, black, navy, mushrcjom
New Solid Fall Fashion Colors Flave Just Arrived'
Come in now while we s'lll have your size
Fashion
Casua
Dresses
by Serbin and Others
Reg j.o S/5(iO Sizes 2(1 In btnpes. >(jlids arid Dr:nt>
i90
Reg
$38 & $44 Now
(Monday On
Oxford Cloth Shirt
$1499
Reg. $18
Now
The designer jean with the designer fit Blue denim ,ind black denim at great -.avings
pon ter
Fall Wool Separates
A wuriderful ha>ic to co ordinate with thk fallA ties and vest., This long-sleece buiton dinvir ,-hirt In faIN best colors- white, pink, maize, lilac, blue, grey, purple, royal, and turquoise
Beautiful Fall
Velour Tops For Misses
All-Weather ' Coats
Trench and wrap styles in petites and regulars.
Reg. $155.00
$1 A099
(Pitt Plaza Only)
25%
99
Off
Reg S22 f^OW
COUNTRY
SUBURBANS
Fall Corduroy
Co-ordinates
Monday Only
20%
Beautiful C'.ruuto', p.u;:- -ku blazers with ecceiiert o : print b!(.u>e', Nwe.;:,':- c ; Rust, loden. '.i.int
Off
Wool skirts and pants complimented bv blouses in escitmy prints inw solids Nary. grey, camel and burgundy
SKE Blazers
Corduroy blazers in plum, wine, berry, grey and camel.
$
99
Reg. $40
(ireai fall stviing in this vei.jur top for misses the "V" neck top with banded b,-.ttom and long sleeves, or the long sleece velour with ,p!it crew neck. . ,
s Select Group of
Ladies Fall Suits
20%
Up to
Ooff
Beautiful wools in smart colors and styles.
Entire Stock Of
Shoes
Glamour Rings
Genuine and artificial stones in a huge assortment of settings.
Values to 35.00
$799
Entire Stock of \A.MPAIR
Slips
20%off
(Monday Only!)
Ladies Panties
Q $c:97
.........vJPor 0
Pump, sandal
Childrens
Levis
Boot Cut Corduroy (7-14 and Preteen).............$8.99
4-7 Boys Super Straight Corduroy (Reg. 15.00).....$12.80
4-6x Girls Elastic Back Cords (Reg. $14.00)........$11.80
7-14 Girls Super Straight Cords (Reg. $20.00)......$14.80
Preteen Girls Super-Straight Cords (Reg. $22.00).. $17.80
Save On
Childrens Coats
15*20%o,.
Wide variety of styles, sizes and colors.
0 Off
(). 1A;_ (
F;yy .Mnn.-gmmmmg G:ri>
Acrylic
Crewneck
Sweaters
4hx. 714. Ptvtyyn
\Aydilable ba.^;c tU';.'. '
(.'olors.
Reg '11 tin h. Ih tin
$099
Ntv.v O
Topsider
Ladies "Seamate Reg. $27
90
Durable canvas upper on non-skid sole. In navy, white & natural, (One Dav Only')
Suede Clogs
Reg. $29.00
18
90
In navy brown & wine (One Day Only!)
Downtown, Pitt Plaza
'Come in anc ''discover other ' unadvertised specials!
Royal-Gaylor Wedding Held in Ayden Saturday
The wedding ceremony celebrating the union of Catherine Louise Gaylor and Donald Wilton.Royal Jr was held Saturday at 4:00 p.m. in the Ayden Christ fan Church .
The double-ring ceremony way pt-rtormed by the Rev
Victor Wilson of Mint Hill, former pastor of the bride.
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Glenn Gaylor of Ayden and Mr. and'Mrs. Donald W. Royal Sr. of Rt. 1. Wade - program of wedding
music was presented by Mrs. Sue Branch, organist, and Mrs. Julie Tucker, soloist. Ms Christina Drye of Ayden was mistress of ceremonies and Miss Margeia Fields of Farmville presided at the guest register.
Given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father, the bride wore a formal gown" with a chapel train of organza and silk venise lace over taffeta. Venise lace motifs with seed pearls outlined the Queen Anne neck, appliqued the organza sleeves and adorned the bodice. Garlands of silk venise lace and lace motifs cascaded from the torso waist to the hem of the train. Scalloped venise lace encircled the hemline. She wore a veil of fingertip il
lusion edged in the flWiil lace attached to a Juliet headpiece trimmed in lace, pearls and sequins. She carried a colonial bouquet of white silk roses, stephanotis. and baby's breath highlighted with a blue delphinium and burgundy carnations. She wore her mothers gold and pearl lavelier and matching earrings.
Jeanne Gaylor of Greenville, sister-in-law of the bride, was matron of honor She wore a burgundy taffeta formal gown with a fitted bodice f^eatured an off-the-shoulder neckline outlined with taffeta pouff bows, elbow-length puff sleeves, a natural waist, and a gathered floor-length skirt. She carried a continental mixed bouquet of shade of
bui^undy and dusty rose silk flowers.
Bridesmaids were Jamie Cherry of Washington, cousin of the bride; Susan Mortori of Wilmington and Sarah Royal of Wade, sisters of the bridegroom; and Gail Let-chworth of Kinston. Their attire and bouquets were-identical to that of the matron of honor.
Junior bridesmaids were .Amy Royal of Wade, sister of the bridegroom, and Jennifer Drye of Ayden. They wore Jorinal gowns of fr(t rose taffeta with off-the-shoulder necklines and natural waists. The gathered skirts were designed like those of the bridesmaids and their bouquets were identical.
The bridegroom's father
At Wits End
Bv Emia Bom heck
MK.S.OO.N'ALD WILTON ROY.AL JR.
The other day 1 pulled on a sweater and my mother's arm came through the sleeve The circle is now complete, 1 have turned into my mother.
The physical transformation is the least of it. 1 am now doing all the things she used to do that drove me crazy I save twist tie wires from bread wrappers by the pound. When 1 get into the car. 1 don't even turn on the
For less than *25, give a priceless Reed & Barton gift.
isiness Card Case SI5 tX)
.or a case for slim calculators. Sib. SO
itr'" little luxuries in shimmering silverplate.
.\nbnd\ i.m m.tkeeves sparkleiike Reed & Barton Silversmiths,
\:! 'hr -sr dapper .;itt idea^ are --uitahle tor engraving. .Neath' gift-boxed.
KEElD),^]BAm.TOM
LAUTARES JEWELERS
DIAMOND SPECIAJSTS Registered JewelersCertified Gemologists 414 Evans Street
We do not sell discount or promotional jewelry.
motor until I checi^all the mirrors, the position of the seat and arrange my dress under me so it won't
muss.
1 can hear water dripping a half mile from the house and I can't stand to be near a sweater without picking it up and folding it like they do in department stores.
It's only a matter of time before 1 put a fake flower on the antennae of my car at the shopping center, and have a flashlight attached to my handbag to help me locate my car keys.
I can't believe it. I used to be so fun-loving, so impetuous. so impractical. Why. I used to go out in the dead of winter with no hose or anklets on and she'd say. You're going to die before lunch, mark my word. " I never did just to make my point.
Or. I'd wash my hair at midnight and she'd bang on the bathroom door and say. You're going to die of pneumonia before m'or-ning. " I never did that either, ,
.Now, I'm saying things to my children like. 'Never grow old" dike the alternative is better! i. Or I just sorta drift up to them when they're reading in the dark and turn on a light and look condescending,
I save a thimbleful of potatoes for soup that I used to throw down the garbage disposal before my mother caught me. And 1 get my bed made each day - sometimes just before I climb into it. I hate myself for doing this.
Mother was going for a walk the other morning when I said. "Where are your socks. Missy"? You're going to die from a cold."
She said. 'I didn't last week."
' Do you hear something dripping"? "
.Nope," she said, then added. "You know who
EXERCISE TOO
Dieting" Then exercise, too Some 95 percent of all the people who diet without exercise gain that weight right back.
Casual is the way to go with Andalusia Interiors
Come Sec The Super Savings In Rattan And Visit Our White Wicker Gallery
Natural rattan etageres, Reg.$660.00.......Now $442.00
White rattan drop-leaf
table Hi 2 chairs, Reg. $775.00.............Now $549.00
Natural Wicker chair & sofa, Reg. $2575.00. . Now $1809:00 Fr Matching cocktails, Reg. $308.00 pr.. . .Now $216.00 pr.
AND MUCH MORE!
White wicker rockers, planters, tables, tea cart, fern stands, acressory pieces all marked down-
425 Greenville Blvd.
Natural rattan chair Reg. $175.00 nowS139* Mon.-Fri. 9;3t-6:00
you sound like" My mother. We had an expression for it. 'Don't buy any green bananas.'"
"What's that supposed to mean""' I asked.
"It means you're getting yourself ready to go and your room isn't ready yet."
She's right. I'm gonna hang around a few more years just to see if she gets pneumonia from not wearing socks.
was best man. Groomsmen were Gregory Gaylor of Greenville and Mark Gaylor of Ayden. brothers of the bride. Terry Royal of Central. S.C. and Barry Fagg ofLaGrange.Ga.
The mo^r of the bride wore a formal gown of dusty-blue silk taffeta; the bridegrooms mother, a formal gowm of pink chiffon. Both wore corsages of white cat-tleya orc.hids.
"The brides grandmother,. Mrs, Henry R. Batson of Stonewall, and the bridegroom's grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. C.W. Sessoms of St. Paul, were honored guests. The grandmothers were remembered with white cymbidium orchids.
Following the ceremony, the bride's parents enteV-t|^ with a reception at the .en Golf and Country uub. .Assisting were Mr. and Mrs. Rober Van Andres of Wilson. Mrs. Spurgeon Royal of Fayetteville. Mrs. James Steed of Ayden. Mrs. Marvin Blackbun of Lumberton. Mrs. Harold Stroh of Ayden, and Dr. and Mrs. Donald Bailey of Greenville
The bridegroom's parents gave a dinner following the wedding rehearsal at the Holiday Inn here. A cham-/pagne brunch was hosted by-Mrs. Janet Johnson and Ms. Christina Drve,-.^aturdav
The Village Groomer
We Will Be
Closed Oct. 12-16
Riiergate Shopping Center Barbara Walker-Ouner
morning.
Following a wedding trip to Charleston. S.C.. the couple will live iii Virginia Beach. Va.
The bride is a graduate of Ayden-Grifton High school. She attended East Carolina University and graduated
from Coastal Carolina Community College of Jacksonville as a dental hvgienist. The bridegroom is a' graduate of Cape Fear High School and UNC-Chapel Hill. He is a loan officer with Virginia National Bank Credit of Portsmouth, Va.
EASTLANO
CHILDRENS CLASSICS
Rich leathers, quality construction and caresful detailing assure comfort, style and fit. It.s no wonder that Eastland shoes are America s best value.
cllany ^ianz
f
^ina
&
'j3autUu[ /cL'
r 1 Li/lit
1 '
of lS-dd
: \'
fi Casino Colors Cafe Monte Carlo
From Fashion Fair Cosmetics... Sure-Fire Winners For This Season
Now you can place your bet on Cafe Monte Carlo. Your chance of a lifetime beauty bonus with any fashion fair purchase of $8.50 or more.
Your Winning Combination Contains: Cafe' Monte Carlo Lipstick Cafe' Monte Carlo Noil Polish Golden Glow Eye Shadow Eye Makeup Remover Fashion Fair No. 1 Cologne
Cafe' Monte Carlo...New For Lips And Noils From Fashion Fair's Casino Colors Collection.
Offer good while limited supply lasts.
Pitt Plaza
Open nightly until 9:00
Sigmn-Helmer Vows Said Saturday
Mice Pamfilo I fm 11^1^ tf 1 . ^
Births
Miss Pamela Lynn Helmer and David Edward Sigmon Jr. were united in marriage Saturday afternoon in the Elm City United Methodist Church. The Rev. John Andrews officiated.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rad-bourne Helmer are the brides parents. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Sigmon of Greenville.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a white formal gowmof bridal satin over peau de soie fashioned with a scoop neckline accented with reembroidered alencon lace. The bodice and raised waist featured an overlay of English net, Appliques of re-embroidered alencon lace enhanced the front of the A-line skirt while reembroidered alencon lace edged the skirt and chapel train. Her fingertip veil of silk illusion bordered with lace was accented on the side with three chiffon rosettes. She carried a cascading bouquet of platinum roses and gypsophilia interspersed with English miniature ivy and centered with a white jophet orchid and showered with white streamers and sprengeri fern.
Miss Nancy Jernigan of Elm City was the maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Cathy Helmer, Miss Marjorie Helmer and Mrs. Clay Johnson, sisters of the bride, and Miss Karen Peebles of Greenville, Miss Mandy Sigmon, niece of the bridegroom, was the flower girl. Harry^Jladbourne Helmer HIT nephw-of the bride, was the ring bearer.
The attendants and flower girl wore floor-length gowns of mallard taffeta. The fitted bodices featured yoke necklines outlined with taffeta pouff bows, elbow-length puff sleeves edged with ruffles and with natural waists. Each attendant wore a spray of pink gypsophilia in her hair and carried a bouquet of cascading rubrum lilies, light pink and dusty rose miniature carnations enhanced with sprengeri fern and pink satin streamers.
Honor attendants were Miss Mitzi Jordan of Greenville; Miss Marsha Vick of Wilson, Miss Lee Braswell and Miss Laurie Doles of Elm City, Mrs. Ann Nwman, Mrs. Bonnie Lawrihce, and Mrs. Debbie Hults, all of Morehead City. Each carried a long-stemmed white carnation with sprengeri fern.
Mr. Sigmon was his sons best man. Ushers were Kenny and Don Sigmon of Greenville, brothers of the bridegroom, Harry Helmer Jr. of Elm City, brother o the bride; Cliff Coats of Charlotte and John Proctor of Raleigh.
Mrs. Louise Winstead, organist, and Tim DuFore of Winston-Salem presented the wedding music.
Following the ceremony, the brides parents entertained at a reception at The Legacy.
Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Doles. Mr. and Mrs. Tom W. Cobb of Elm City and Mr. and Mrs. George Arapage of Wilson. Assisting were Mrs. Norris Barnes, Mrs. J.M. Braswell Jr. of Elm City, Mrs. Don Sigmon of Greenville, Mrs. J.O. Brewer, Mrs. Charles Anthony of Wilson and Mrs. John Thorne of Greensboro.
Friday night the bridegrooms parents entertained at the rehearsal dinner at The Legacy in Elm City.
After the wedding trip to Maggie Valley in western North Carolina, the couple will reside at 208 N. Library Street. Greenville.
The bride is a graduate of East Carolina University and is employed at North State Savings and Loan.
FORGETSECONDS Want to slim down? Try to do without seconds. The ^st way to do this is to serve yourself and your family in the kitchen, rather than putting full tempting bowls of food on the table right in front of you.
Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.
Greenville. The bridegroom graduated from Sand Hills Community College and has a business degree from East
Carolina University. He is the manager of the Mercedes-Benz Department of Toyota East, Greenville.
Peaden Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gregory Peaden. Rt. 4, Greenville, a daughter, Victoria Leigh, Sept. 28 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Leech
Born to Mr. and Mrs. David Andrew Leech, 303 Lindell Road, a son, Michael Lawrence, Sept. 28 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Colwell
Born to Mr. and Mrs. James Colwell. 704 S. East
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday Octobef 9. 1983 Q.5
Third Street, Snow Hill, a son, Timothy Ray, Sept. 29 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Gardner Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tyrone Gardner. Ayden, a son, Travis Demetrius. Sept. 29 in Pitt Countv Memorial Hospital.
iSs?weignniit!r
Jack LaLanne
Meadow Fresh Diet Drink tastes like a delicious shake. Three flavors to choose from.
Phone 752-1201 or 756-8720
MRS. DAVID EDWARD SIGMON JR.
^laniition Q/Vaidiolj
Now Accepting Good Quality Fall & Winter Clothing On Consignment
Sizes 14 & Up
Losing Weight?
Ask About Our Exchange Program
Call 355-2508 After 2 P.M.7 Days
qreeiivilk^
Ladies' All-New Deck Hugger'^ Shoes for Casual Wear at a Great Introductory Price!
22.00
This fantastic new Deck Hugger shoe featues a mock 2-eye tie with Velcro* closure, terry inner sole, tricot lining, quilted nylon upper and rubber duck sole. They're lightweight and so comfortable. Availablejn fashionable fall colors and only in ladies' sizes. So hurry on in and start the trend in your town!
V
Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. until 9 p.m.Phone 756-B-E-L-K \ 756-235br
EASTERN CAROLINA'S MOST COMPLETE COSMETIC AND FRAGRANCE STORE
Carolina east mall ^^qreenvilleCoast-to-Coastrs
The New Autumn itinerary from Revlon
Adventurous new colors that stay alive and fresh all day and all night. Choose from Advanced Formula Lipstick, 7.50; 1 /-oz. Advanced Formula Make Up, 15.00; Creamy Powder Blush, 9.00; Dual Pan Patina Eye Shadow, 9.50. All fabulous colors for your eyes, lips and cheeks.The Color Case yours for just 7.50 with any 8,50 purchase of Ultima II
The Color Case is full of many nice surprises for you! It features eight shimmering shades for your lips, cheeks and eyes in an easy-to-carry, multi-level compact.
Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. until 9 p.m.-^Phone 756-B-E-L K {756-2355}
C-i -.--a.
Aliss Lee. Air. Buneh Alarried In Pactolus
T'.e Ae^rc.'-t' 'x Connie L.c.r.e Lee ar.c Ja.nr.e ';nnv>pner Bun/:!'i yj,-e.T.nizec Satjrca;. at i n n. n tr.e Pacto.j; M^i.onar. Bapt.y CLarcn Pi'er/.:- or' rr.e oo^p.e are an: Mrs Lc*arc tar^ . ix^arr;'-' and Mr-: James ^r. c r. r.i.. 0!
Tr^ 'i, ^ Tomm;. J Pa;.r,e neam '>- p.eCce- ,r. '.n^ "om.e-^ ra .erem;m.
-as prefer, ren / r.y .'.a Cra; or-aar,.-' ! - - a.'/. Ann
Tm,.- -.'a Lonaer T-s .'. Ly-ne.; Pe^jp.e irn .' -na.naPraver '- ' - >. r/. ner
a''. .vor>
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or pet; *iih crar.iiii) .ace apphqjei aric trie Dem *au; enc.rcie: Aith. rjr'Ce leiainns main Tne cro cha dL^
*as I (. e^ *1 and no'Af-m and ena^ 3
Her
iir:eriip- ierir a r/yj je / * n le " 1J re Ca.m.a i p > e^*-
rO;f P ^ d e c-r^ jdhc s prearn Tamm;. D.ar.e Lee xas her siister s rriaiC of nonor and Jackie Lynn xas ner qsier s hridej.ma.r: They Aore fo!"mai-ier.ath aoxr of violet voiie taffeta xith Et:xa.'diar. , necKiine: ojti.nec m bnisseis ' iace Tne:: fjttet: rxxfices xere or oeep v;o:e* ve.vet m.rr.met: :n rJora. nrisseii .ace The snort py>jr -.eetes xere .ace-enae': arc the m'/r.f.e'-: nat..ra. y.a;st.nes xere ^at.n rmoon rx;,tec
Each cameo a purpie-tipped fTi u m X It h m a I c h 1 n g st.'-eamers The best man xas the nndegroom s father Ushers xere Roy Bunch of .Vair.ir.gton. brother of the bridegroom, and Gray
Langley of .North Wdkesboro. cousin the iMTde For her daughter s wedding .Mrs Lee wore a powder blue sweater suit and a white c>Tnbidium orchid The bridegroom s mother w ore an azure blue dress and
Santa's Stelpers
Craft Shop
Over 8,000 Items On Display Will Be Open ONLY Oct. 10-29
^fJpllqu^'s Calligraphy .Monograrnmed Jpui-lrc ampshades Brass Or Peuter Eiec-rrif Caridks Fillous Housi^ Signs Wreaths
Wood Items Bab^ Items Country Pillous
For Info. Call 756-7877
Hfjurs Mondin-fhursddV 7 [; ni -9 p rn SrtturddV 10 <3 rn 'j p rn i'l.r'Hu.v 1 1 itj.Acird Kinstrjn tfj sKjn ihdi rr-dds VC H Hr jrr.s'f.ri Sr tityrjl turn rirjht rjf> ttj stryp sirjn 2 sltjrv r,..s^ rifi l^tl dt stnp siqri
Carolina Carpet
Dyeing & Cleaning
(If^diiinq idl
Living Room & Hall $34.95
Any Additional Rooms $14.95
Phone 752-5008
C.arpet Ketolorino or lAeing i>i f arolina Carpet Dyeinrj & Cleaning
H^ i . ^ridl^s ' dr[j.'t 'in. ir,u a rn-u rt[j[j<'drrttif i-1 .i-r'. JuC ( ustnrr.
I nsls rnui h Ir-ss thdri rir-u t drpel
(Jnri.- nti l'if.dtKin in vnur iKirnr- nr r.ifir p r n.i-rs fdflin'J dtjri stdins
lO-sInrr-s nriuiiidl ( ninr nr t tidtirj^s < ninr
I'l-rtiirt tii't:! r <>lnrs uudrdnrci'd
lO-sirli-ntidl K ( nrrirtir-rc idl
Free Estimates Call 752-5008 8:30 A.M. to 10 P.M.
.MRS JA.ME.S CHRLSTOPHER BU.NCH
Cooking Is Fun
J
ii\ I p( I
i,)lr
' o',:e
I \ [ll:n\\\>[()\K (i f'ri " fttiKl Kditor
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FALL
IS . fOR^M PLANTING
TREES SHRUBS LAWNS BULBS
FRUIT or SHADE TREES
2
MIX or MATCH
iric-jdirig Dog/yoo.ds, Maples, App^e',. Peaches, Pears, Plurris, F,gs, Lcguafs. Black Pines, etc
.C'.':'.T 00
m g'cz/n fio transplant shock
mAZALEAS
tdC.h
M.99
or
Biootri ncmt cpnng
T scroo
U 'lor J
LANDSCAPE
EVERGREENS
10 J19*
Bonus Special
W'\ ' Kiru; Alfred
Daffodil Bulbs
' 'r 100 12.00
..u.
The GREAT BIG GREENHOUSE
Indoor Plant
SALE
Buy the first,
Get the Second for
Blocrrnnrj L/yr/^ Giari!
PANSIES
' m
a cymbidiuin orchid The bnde s grandmoihers. Mrs .Noel Lee Jr and .Mrs Hyacinth Toler, and the bnde-groom s grandmother. Mrs \rchie Bunch, were remembered with white cama OD corsages.
Mrs. Katberyn Lewis d Greenville directed the candlelight ceremony. Miss Edie Duff <rf Greenvilie presided at the register
FoDowmg the ceremwiy. the bnde s parents iter-tained guests in the fellowsEp hall of the church Family members and fnends assisted at the reception Punch w as poured by .Mrs Oliver Josmer and XLA J R Lee served w edding cake
The Bunch family entertained after the rehearsal with a pig-pickin' Pnor to the wedding, the couple was entertained in the home of .Mr and .Mrs Noel Lee Jr. with Mr and Mrs Noel Lee III assisting .A shower was given the bnde by fnends at the Wachovia Operations Center
.Ufter a wedding tnp to the Pocono Mountains, the couple will reside on Rt 3. Washington
The bnde is a graduate of North Pitt High School and East Carolina University She IS employed at'the Wachovia Operations Center The bndegroom graduated, from Washington High school and is self-employed in Bunch Trucking Company
MaiwrU
Bom to Mr and .Mrs .\rthur Dudley Maxwell Jr. 1506 E. Fifth Street, a daughter. Claire Elizabeth. Oct. 1 in Pitt County .Memonal Hospital
Taft
Bora to Mr and Mrs. diaries Jasper Taft Sr. 119 Trent Circle, a daughter. Tercia Ptenee. Oct ! ir. Pm County Memonal Hospitai
Garris
Bora to Mr and Mrs Brian Keith Gams. Rt l. St(*es. a daughter. Stephanie Lauren. Oct. 1 m Pitt County Memorial Hospital
Smith
Born to .Mr and .Mrs Raymond Emn Smith. Rt 1. Snow Hill, a son. Evan Tyler. Oct. 2 in Pitt County Memonal Hospital
Perfect for small rooms! 5 Pieces in 1
Boo Sheit. Ch*$i Dw Chiir. I 2 Bunt Beds ONLY
655
PINEWOOD CRAFT & FURNITURE
200 E Greeniille BKd Ni To Greemille TV * Appliince
I bak e ryI
'Greenville' finest bakery for 63 years"
815 Dickinson Ave.
A Varietv Of Breads Baked Fresh Daily
French. Cheese. Raisin. German Rye Whole Wheat & Butter Top
752-5251
f? BULLETIN
As one of the largest buyers in this area, we are paying
HIGH PREMIUMS FOR
LARGER QUALITY DIAMONDS
(,^4 carat and up)
, '.t-'.p'Xrir. r, z.dT.-'.-.Ci iappr.rt.^ eT.era.ci r:'z J.ea.T
rOlN ^ ring flfiQiit
OF EV saies CO.,ih^N
The Most Unique Shop In Eastern North Carolina 400 S. Evans Street 752-3866
2504 South Charles Street
(Oakmont Plaza)
i America Discovers Cirfumtms
CP, le
^ - * i 1" -i J , IA
'''-'/v V 'U'
."' ..J
ti
American Velvet Collection Bedford Hills
Scotchgard - 5 Yr Wear .
lOfJ'U Enkalon....... , .wasl3.95 sq.. yd.
40 Colors
10
95
W(
.ilrv- '
Now Jik sq. yd.
Flying Colors
Nylon - Colortech Multicolor Scotchgard was 10.95 sq. yd.
8
95
Now sq. yd.
Natural Beauty
Ultron Nylon - Saxony - Scotchgard Wear Dated was 12.95 sq, yd.
Now
9
95
FROM
m COLUMBUS
sq. yd.
JpDCIGo
Now, you i.dn Ji^uuver ifit ijredt .,udiiiy di.d long lerm-vdlue ofCdtpii by COLUMBUS MILLS, because we ve pul our most populdt Culumbub Curpels on idle dl unbe.iidble"prices' M,iny ol ihese dte Wcdr Ddied* Crirpeis.ldsluoiii'd with Monsunios ijmous Ullron' libers 10 resisl soil.sldiic ji'id crushing - dnd all are
ireaied with Scotchguard for added proiection - so you 11 have years of beautiful wear
Come explore the gorgeous styles and colors only Columbus can create with its exclusive Colortech' dyeing system. At these special prices, it s a discovery you II treasure
Idck&i
Scotchgard
2')(i4 South Charle' Street dkrnoni Platal Store Hours Mondac-f ridav AM ,h P,M Expert Installation Available
756-6422
Births
Nichols
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Benjamine Ernest Nichols, Rt. 4, Greenville, a daughter, Amanda Elizabeth, Sept. 29 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Lilley
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Eason Lilley Jr., Williamston, a son, Laurence Eason Lilley III, Sept. 29 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Burnett
Born to Mr, and Mrs. Bill Burnette, Collinsville, Va., a
Lecture For Antiquers
CHAPEL HILL - A slide-lecture by Ann Daniel of Raleigh will highlight the Chapel Hill Preservation Society's ninth annual Antiques Show and Sale to be held Oct. 21-23 at the Community Center on Estes Drive.
During her lecture to be given during a 9 a.m. breakfast Saturday, Oct. 22, Daniel \yill discuss shows and callogues that North Carolinians do not usually
have opportunity to see. She will tell what has brought the top auction dollar during the past year and will also point out ordinary items that sell well.
The show hours are 8 to 10 p.m. Friday; 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday; and 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $2 KT, day. For further iri-ormation on the show, call 942-7818.
Milidle Eastern Dance Maiikeh & fiania Uarilis
Available To Perform For Christmas Parties, Beliygrams, Clubs & Organizations
756-1240
London Fog."
5-
Paige
Lea\e it to London Fog' to make a coat that works as well with a pretty silk dress as it does with a smart business suit. This tie belted coat is slim, yet roomy, with generous sleeves and deep front pockets. What a fresh, easy look' And it's conipletelv wash n wear. London Fog lets you laugh at all kinds of weather.
Downtown Greenville Shofi Daily 10 to 5:30
Vs.
Carolina East Mall Shop Daily 10 to 9
Miss Allen Has Noon Wedding
The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N C
Return To Sender
Sunday October 9, 1983 Q.J
son, Michael David, Oct. 3 in Memorial Hospital of Martinsville and Henry County. Mrs. Burnett is the former Peg Horne of Greenville.
- - Todd
Born to Mr. and Mrs. R6y Keith Todd of Kinston, a son, Roy Reid, Sept. 30 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital
Riddle
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kirk Riddle, 302 King Arthur Road, a daughter, Susan Nicole, Sept. 30 in Pitt Count Memorial Hospital.
WINSTON-SALEM -Katherine Anne Allen became the bride of Lindsay Garth Gray Jr. in an intimate family wedding held Saturday at noon in the Home Moravian Church here. Dr. Kenneth Robinson officiated at the double-ring ceremony.
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Young Hawkins Allen Jr. of Kinston and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gray of Wiijston-Salem.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of ivory satin finished crepe over crepe. The gown was designed with a scoop neckline, a Bertha collar edged with reembroidered Alenccon lace, a raised waistline, and long fitted sleeves which ended with Alencon lace and closed with traditional bridal buttons. The chapel train was enhanced and edged with re-embroidered lace. The bridal bouquet was composed of ivory Faberge roses with ivy and she wore a halo of sweetpea blossoms and babys breath.,
The "maid of honor was Melissa Young Allen, sister of the bride, of Chapel Hill; the best man, Herbert Worth Jackson IV of Durham.
After the ceremony a luncheon was held at the home of the bridegrooms parents for the family members in attendance.
After a wedding trip to New England, the couple will live at 8 Lexington Square Condominiums, Greenville.
The bride attended high school at SSt. Marvs Junior
PALO ALTO, Calif.. (API - In a neat twist, a California homeowner will be sending energy to the local utility company.
Architect Dennis Kobza is completing construction of his totally solar-energy-dependenf hom.e, which features 90 photovoltaic panels for converting sunlight into energy.
When completed, the panels are expected to generate 3,185 watts an hour during peak collecting hours, enough to start the electric meter spinning backward and send the surplus energy back to the utility company.
A Quilters Blessing;
Go Now And Piece! Free Demonstration
Quick Pieciny Method/risii Chain Tues . Oct. 11 10:30 AM
Call For More Information
CALICOS
Quih & Gift Shop
Weekdays 10-5; Sat. 10-4 805 S. Evans St.
Across From The Museum Of Art 758-4317
J
i
MRS. LINDSAY GARTH GRAY
College in Raleigh and is a graduate of the Art and Design Department of East Carolina University. The bridegroom attended Wood-berry Forest School and is a graduate of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
He is the co-owner/operator of AccuCopy of Greenville.
Fact of Life
LEICESTER, England (AP) - People take for granted the miracle of human development and few understand how rapidly an embryo develops from the moment of conception, says Dr. Marjorie England, British embryologist and author.
In her book, The Color Atlas of Life Before Birth, she says a human embryos face is already beginning to form by day 32, by the eighth week all basic body systems have been laid down, by the ninth week the sex of the baby can be determined, and by week 10 the fingernails have formed.
SON FLOR
Sisfa
jDces ^
announces
THE SECOND ANNUAL
Benefiting the Amie Karen Cancer Funa for Cnilaren Have funi Win national reco.gnmon' He.c encaren to get well again'
Rules
WHAT TO ENTER: An original work of art using stickers of any kind as a decorative element. It can be done on paper (or anything else). It can be three-oimensional'ia mobile, sculpture, op construction). But it CANNOT be bigger than 12" in any direction. ,
WHERETO FNTFR- ,iFFFFRc;nM FLORIST
HOW TO ENTER: You may enter as many works of art as you wish but EACH one must be accompanied by;
25' for children up through grade 6 for EACH submission 50 for people from grades 7-12 for EACH submission.
51.00 for college students and adults for EACH submission
55.00 for professional artists for EACH submission.
be postmarked no later than Halloween. Cctober After regional judging, firs.t-pnze winners from each category will be sent fAlisg,r-;83'" " .he week
SUPER LOCAL PRIZES f^NATIOMAi PPi7irc
For additional information, contact; Jet Glenn 752-6195
West Fifth Street
HMnnitEi
MHt3.
While you lose up to a pound a day.
You don't hove fo starve yourself to lose weight. At Nutfi/System, you con reduce while enjoying three delicious, satisfying meals o defy.
355-2470
Engagement Announced
MARGARET ELAINE BAKER...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Tyson of Greenville, who announce her engagement to William Phillip Worthington, son of Mrs. Doris Worthington of Greenville and the late Alfred Poe Worthington Sr. The wedding will take place December 4.
GET PER.SONAI.!
WITH
^afiicott 1 PXiona <Siiofifiin^ cSeiuLce
Let Us Select And Deliver That Special Gift
Gift Card Enclosed With Your Message
Decorative Brass Items Custom Engraving ' Flower Arrangements Custom Wood Items
Custom Framing Limited Edition & Original Prints Christmas Shoppe Lamps & Accessories
Glassware & Crystal By Balos & Pilgrim Claire Burke Potpourri
i)f c/fuaitaljfs cStaxiLncj crjt $ l O
ncjuixUi. ^Ecoms.
757-3558
M-Sat. 10-6
Cecille Plelps^ Julia ClKrk Anne Grtgory
Tapscott csigps
Interior Design And Gift Shoppe Fifth & Reade Streets Downtown Greenville
Kate Phillips Owner/Designer Associate Member ASID
OUR TEAM WILL MAKE A BETTER YOU!!
r*
I
I
I
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Jim says, Ckime to Nutri/Systaml I feel this is the best reward you could give yourself. I've never feft better in my iife.'
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$19900
Does not include cost of food
Expires Oct. 14, 1983
Pat Humj^rey
iwiwwmmmJI
IHAVEKEPTMY WEIGifTOIfNOWFOR 21^ YEARS
Pat says, i had been overweight off & on during most of my {ife, then I found Nutri-/ System and tost 30 pounds come |on us today*"
Jim Hutson
CILL TOUr FOR FREE NO OBUOtTION CORSIILTATIOR
355-2470
m Arlington Blvd.
nutri/system
weight loss medical centers
Grawnrllla, NX.
C-8 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C._Sunday. October9.1983
Engagements
Announced
Large Selection of Miniatures
Neu Items Arriving For Christmas Gifts Watch For Christmas Opening
JdCkicS Week End
Ole House
11 Miles West of Greenville, ' 2 Mile Off 264 On Huv 13 iSnou Hill-Goldsboro Rd.)
753-3944
Fri.-Sat. 10-5 Sun. 2-5
J^incfzxi XlL ou us. C \CJt cSssn i HBsfois!
For your intimate apparel needs-
, LorVs
Carolina East Centre
756-6846
Hours': Monday-Wednesday 10-6 Thursday & Friday 10-9 Saturday 10-6
DIANE LEAK HUTCHINS...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Harold Hutchins of High Point, who announce her engagement to Robert Lee Guy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lee Guy of Fayetteville. A Dec. 3 w-edding is planned.
SHERRY RANETTE BEACHAM...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin D. Beacham of Washington, N.C., who announce her engagement to Jesse Braswell, son of Mrs. Ruby Crabb of Arkansas. The wedding will take place Dec. 4.
Cooking Is Fun
S.VACKTl.MEF.ARE Prune Bars & Milk PRUNE B.ARS
The sponge-eake variety.
1 cup pitted prunes Strong hot tea
1 cup fork-stirred unbleached all-purpose flour
: teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
3 large eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 cup sugar
1 cup chopped iraisin-sizei walnuts
Cover prunes with tea; cover container and let stand overnight; drain thoroughly; cut prunes the size of raisins. On wax paper stir together flour, baking powder and salt; add prunes pd toss well. In a medium bowl beat eggs and vanilla until foamy; gradually beat in sugar until thickened and pale yellow. Gradually fold in flour-prune mixture and walnuts. Turn into buttered and floured 13 by 9 by 2-inch pan. Bake in preheated 3.50-degree oven until cake tester inserted in center comes out clean - about 20 minutes. With small metal spatula loosen edges. Cool. Cut into bars and remove,
The
Yardage Shoope
/
Get Ready For
Workshops
Sat., Oct. 22
Small Sculptured Doll Faces Oct. 28, 7 PM and Nov. 4, 7 PM Workshop On Pillow Making.
Complete Your Own Cross Stitch And Candlewicking Pillows.
Coming Soon:
Christmas Wreaths And Country Lamp Shades Workshops
Call For Information
f(i
Farmville
Furniture
Company
A Complete Home Furnishings Center Furniturc-Carpet-Drapery Oriental Rugs Lamps-Picturcs-Mirrors Crystal-Silvcr-China Professional Design Service Fine Wall Covering By Albert Van Luit Katzenbach & Wanen
Farmville
Furniture
Company
122-126 S. MAIN ST FARMVILLE. N.C 753-3101
ANN GREENE...is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Duncan E. Greene of Laurinburg, who announce her engagement to Fred Featherstone of Washington, N.C. A January wedding is planned.
I
The
Yardage Shoppe
OPEN 10 'TIL-6 MON THRU SAT.
2802 E. 10th St. Greenville
752-7250
Carolines Ruffled Curtains
Rocky Point, NC 28457 Oct. 9 thru Oct. 15
We are proud to announce that Farm Life Florist in Vanceboro is our official representative for this area. As a special introductory offer, prices are as low as $52.95 for a 96 Curtain.
Many Different Fabrics & Styles to Choose From
Call Kay Stocks at
244-2519
or
244-1287
KIRSCH MINI BLINDS are also on Sale at
55 50% Off
South Charles St., Oakmont Plaza
iPatmatLo
J-oxd acc <Saon
o-
^[snujood PtacE Pandoxa
(Hiway43) Countxy cianoi
a
LC
^ozdaci
am
cSummitt
cMamfit on
cHajifiLj ' Cind^ Co[[ini. c^kdxianna Jltd.
Arriving Daily And At Least 30% Reduction From Manufacturers Suggested Prices.
Hours Mon.-Sat. 10:00-6:30 Phone 756-8991
Greenville Blvd
Phone
756-8991
I
Our
Pirate's
Stadium
H
C -0 ro Cl
mmmm-
mm
Fulfilling Fantasy Could Jeopardize Job
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: Please dont think Im crazy or completely without morals, but I have this overwhelming desire to go to bed with a very special man I work with. Hes my boss.
I am not a tramp, and I have never gone to bed with a man other than my husband, but I will never be satisfied until I experience this ultimate intimacy with my boss. L is not my intention to start a love affair with him because I know hes a happily married man. I want him to make love to me just once, Abby, then I will be totally fulfilled. I wouldnt care if he fired me afterward thats how much I want this fantasyto come true.
How should I approach him? Should I write to him expressing my desire in a non-threatening way? If I write a letter, how should I word it?
UNFULFILLED FANTASY
DEAR UNFULFILLED: Please dont ask your boss to go to bed with you unless you are prepared to end up humiliated, rejected and jobless.
You need professional help in order to deal realistically with a fantasy that has become a futile, self-destructive obsession. If you dont know how to find a therapist, ask your physician to recommend one without delay.
DEAR ABBY: There ought to be a law against tall men marrying tall women. Or if they insist on marrying, they
Countr^ Collectibles
Want Top Quality At Low Prices?
Shop With Us For Special Gifts Special Orders Arc Welcomed, But We Urge You To Order Early On Handmade Crafts.
(Many Are Under $5.00)!
Store Hours: Wed.-Sal.. 10-5:30 PM Look For Us Across From Sunshine Garden Center
FLY PIEDMONT ANYWHERE
I
Anywhere in the Carolinas... *29.00
Round trip to DENVER if ski pkg included *229.00
Children to FLORIDA - 50% Off
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QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.
319 Cotanche St.
Greenville, N.C. 27834 Phone 757-0234
shouldnt have children. My father was 6 foot 5 and my mother was 5 foot 11. They produced three children all girls, now fully grown, and all of us are over 6-2.
Please dont give me your stock answer, Tall women make marvelous models. We are all big-boned women with a lot of meat on our bones, and not one of us is model material.
I realize that most tall women feel more comfortable with tall men, but when they mate, their female children are usually amazons.
There is an old saying, Opposites attract. How I wish it were true, but it isnt. Please comment.
TOO TALL IN TEXAS
DEAR TOO TALL: People with big intellects pay little attention to how tall or short a person is. Moreover, the truly secure person is comfortable in the company of people regardless of their stature. One should measure a person from his or her eyebrows up, but alas, most do not.
DEAR ABBY; Linda and I are planning to marry. This will be my first and Lindas second. (I am 30 and she is 27.) When Linda was 21 she was married for 16 months, then her marriage ended by dissolution. I have accepted this and have never made an issue of it.
I think we should have a simple church ceremony, but Linda wants a repeat of her first wedding bridesmaids, bridal gown, escorted down the aisle on her fathers arm to Here Comes the Bride virtually ignoring the fact that she was once married. She insists that the dissolution erased her former marriage and shes entitled to a traditional church wedding. All the etiquette books I have read support my position.
Your opinion, please.
UNEASY IN OHIO
DEAR UNEASY: A dissolution does not erase a marriage. But more important than what the etiquette books say is the fact that Linda refuses to consider your wishes in the matter.
Today, many brides who marry for a second time do have traditional church weddings, but only if their first was a simple one. Linda should consult with the clergyperson who will perform the ceremony. I think he or she will vote with you. 1 do.
If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Getting married? Whether you want a formal church wedding or a simple, do-your-own-thing ceremony, get Abbys booklet. Send $1 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to: Abbys Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Service Leaguers
Activity Results Given
had one returned.
Mrs. James Carter thanked members who manned a booth at Carolina East Mall Oct. 1 for the Childrens Home Society of North Carolina. It was voted to reprint the Service League Handbook this year, since many corrections need to be made.
1984 Charity Ball chairman, Mrs. Fredric Robbins announced a ball-planning .meeting at her home. Mrs. Ed Harris, sustaining member representative. announced plans for a luncheon meeting Oct. 19 at Plain Janes Restaurant.
The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C
Sunday. October 9. 1983
On The Young Side
ByCLAY DEANHARDT
Nominees for the John Motley Morehead scholarship from Rose High have been announced and are as follows: Hunter Bost, Elizabeth Ellen, David Jester, Marjorie Jones, Cissy Taft and Cindy Wallace. These students will compete in a statewide competition in which they could possibly win a fully paid four-year scholarship to UNC-Chapel Hill.
Rose is also proud that four of its vocational classes won awards for their booths in the county fair. The Food Services class won first place and a $100 prize for their booth titled Country Gold, which gave a listing of county agricultural products
Mrs. Kelly Barnhill, Bloodmobile chairman, reported during the October Service League meeting held Monday that 320 units wre collected during two September visits to Tyler Dormitory and the Moose Lodge. 44 members worked 148*2 hours, she said. She reminded members to sign up for the upcoming two-day Bloodmobile visit at Mendenhall Student Center Oct. 5 ande.
It was announced that Eli Bloom has offered to deliver flowers from the Pitt Memorial Service League Gift Shop when he is on duty at the hospital information desk.
Mrs. Horton Rountree reported receiving two memo-rials from the Laughinghouse Fund last month and answering six requests for assistance. Mrs. Norwood Whitehurst furnished one layette last month and Ms. Jo Betts Barrett provided an item of convalescent equipment and
Births
Harris
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Don Lavon Harris, Winterville, a daughter, Doneika Latrece, Oct. 2 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Gurganus
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Travis Gurganus, Maysville. a son, Jason Thomas, Oct. 2 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Rose
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Ray Rose, Washington, N.C., a daughter, Lauren Rebecca, Oct. 2 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Faulkner
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Claude Ray Faulkner, Ayden, a daughter, Angel Mae, Oct. 3 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Hayes
Born to Mr. and Mrs. David James Hayes, Roanoke Rapids, a son, Douglas James, Oct. 3 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Rushe
Born to Mr. and Mrs. James Alfred Rushe, Rt. 11, Greenville, a daughter, Tracy Nicole, Oct. 3 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
The Greenville Police Department s Crime Prevention Officer will provide a security inventory at your home on request. You wiil be advis'e' on proper locks, burglary prevention and safety measures. Call 752-3342 for more information.
Announcing the
Grand Opening
of the new Sears Portrait Studios in: 240 Carolina East Mall
sears
Last time
this package available for
Christmas jGift Giving
OCTOBER 10TH-OCTOBER21ST
Carpet.. Vinyl.
Reduced
Select
Wallcoverings
Fabricut Fabrics
20%Off
Normans Draperies & Bedspreads
20%
'OOfi
20%o,
15%.
30%.
Window Treatments
20%,.40%o,,
See our Ad ih The Daily Reflector TV Showtime!
3-5*7 15 wallet size
includes 954 deposit
HOME
IMPROVEMENT UNLIMITED
Peggy Peaden & Becky Wood, Owners
West End Shopping Center
Phone
355-2250
Sears studios specialize in photographic portraits of babies, children, adults and family groups. No appointment necessary. 954 for each additional subject In a portrait package Poses our selection.
Alto Available In Addition To This Offer
Black Background & Double Feature Portraits Passport Photos Copy & Restoration
Offer for portraits taken thru Oct. 15
Studios located in most larger Sears retail stores. Studio Hours: Sunday 1 pm-5 pm (where store is open). Mon. & Tues. 10 am-5 pm, Wed.-Sat. 10 am-8 pm, (or until store closing if prior to 8 pm).
Use. youi Sear^hargfc
Portrait
You can count on
Sears
and showed several dishes that could be prepared using these products. Second place and $90 went to VICA. Third place went to the masonry class, and fourth went to the FBLA. These organizatons would like to thank the people who came to visit their displays while they were at the fair.
Eight students from Rose have been chosen for all-state orchestra. They are Andrea Bath, Elizabeth Ellen, Rogert Haggard, Amy Moore, Carol Moore, and Vicki Petrie from the string section and Chris Love and Bruce Thompson representing the brass section. These students will join with other students from across the state the weekend of November 18-20 in Winston-Salem and practice for a join concert to be given on the 20th.
This is homecoming week at Rose and events have been planned throughout the week to celebrate. Tuesday is Spanish Day, Wednesday is French Day, and Thursday is Spirit Day. Friday is Anything Goes Day, and there will be a pep rally that day at 2 p.m.. After school Rose will hold its homecoming parade featuring the Rose High Marching Band, the Kinston Marching Band, the homecoming court, cheerleaders, teamp sponsors and club entries. At
8 oclock that evening the Rampants will play the Kinston Eages in the annual homecoming game, followed at 9:30 p.m. by the homecoming dance. The dance will be held in the Rose High Cafeteriu ?nd will feature the band, Xennon.
C-9
Tickets are $10 for couples and $5 for singles. .AfMtose High graduates are invited to the dance will be admitted free of charge. The dance is being sponsored by the Key Club and the Anchor Club. This years theme is It's A Small World."
The Official Languages Act of 1969 made French and English the official languages of Canada.
TUXEM^HENI^
SPECIAL
SAVE UP TO $24.00
Choose from all the latest styles and colors Contemporary looks traditional tails cutaways & stroller looks Wing collar shirts in colors & white Red & lavender cummerbund S ties You II find just what you want
WHERE ELSE BUT...
'^teibes
MEN'S SHOP
Downtown 752-7076 Carolina East Mall 756-6286
CERTIFIED DEALER
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Book News
FROM SHEPPARD MEMORIAL LIBRARY
By MEREDITH FOLT/
Although' it is only Octiber. you want to join the merchants and start looking ahead to Christmas. The books below, al,l added to the Sheppard I.ihrary collection this year, feature ideas for Christmas crafts and gift-giving, background on Christmas tradition' and suggestions for enhancing your personal celebration n the holiday.
'the Decorated Tree L- creating Traditional Christmas Ornaments," by Carol Sterbenz and Nancy Johnson, includes color photographs and historical background for ten styles of Christmas tree decoration (English. Pennsylvania Dutch, Lichtstock, etc.). For each style, complete directions are given for making the ornaments. The skill level (elementary, intermediate, advance) and materials needed for each project are indicated.
"Leslie Linsley's Christmas Ornaments and Stockings" will teach you how to make a variety of Christmas stockings and tree hangings from fabric, yarn or thread, wood and scraps. Patterns.- step-by-step instructions, and black-and-white pictures are supplemented by a center section of vivid color photographs. The items shown range from the stately to the w himsical Some of the ornaments would also be appropriate tor seasons other than Christmas and for uses other than as tree decorations.
It you are having trouble choosing the perfect gift to go under the tree or into the stocking, you may want to consult The Greatest Gift Guide Evr" by Judith King. There you will find more than 3,000 gift ideas for people in different age croups and with specific interests. Most of these ideas are for presents costing less than $50. For children and others with limited tunds. there are instruction for homemade gifts,
(Jnce you have chosen or made a gift. Sandra Rothand Beverl} Bieker's "Creative Gift Wrapping" will offer tips on attractive packaging for it. A variety of materials is used for unusual wrappings on gifts for Christmas and other holiday and ,'pecial occasions.
()ne of the enduring traditions of the Christmas season is the performance of_ the "Messiah" oratorio. Pert Jacobis The .Messiah Book" describes "the life and times of G.F. Handel's greatest hit." Little-known facts about the composition ot the work, premier and subsequent performances, and the quirks of its creator are revealed here. The libretto and partial score round out Jacobis book, "The Messiah Book" All! enable performers and listeners to bring a better ,:ppreciation to their next experience with Handels masierwork.
Christmas is one of 20 holidays and special occasions T.cluded in " The Celebration Book of Great .American Traditions" by Wicke Chambers and Spring Asher. Most of each chapter is devoted to the customs which individuals and tamilies have developed to share the joys, and sometimes 'adnesses. of major life events and special days, A different ;. respective on Christmas traditions is offered in "Unplug The '"hristmas .Machine: How to Have the Christmas Youve 'liways Wanted." by Jo Robinson and Jean Staeheli. Helping :>aders, especially women, eliminate the stress from aristmas preparations and celebrations is the goal of authors, who also conduct workshops on the same theme. Their format in the book is to describe stressful situations ci.mmon during the Christmas season and then to indicate ."lo'vv others have handled these problems. The thought-provoking questions and useful gift suggestions and recipies here can guide you to a simplified and more enjoyable Christmas holidav.
Green Hill Gallery Sculpture Exhibit
Oyster Festival Next Weekend
SHALLOTTE - The Third Annual North Carolina Oyster Festival will be held Saturday and Sunday within the South Brunswick Islands along the Atlantic coast area south of Wilmington.
The South Brunswick Islands area consists of the Brunswick County towns of Calabash, Holden Beach, Ocean Isle Beach, Shallotte and Sunset Beach.
The main event will be the Saturday Oyster Roast and Fish Fry to be held at the Ocean Isle Beach Airport on Route 179 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets for the dinners will be sold at the site.
Events on Saturday will include an arts and crafts show, and live music to be provided throughout the day by the Golden River Band, a country/pdp group. Also scheduled is the N.C. Oyster Shucking Contest, with the
winner to compete later in Maryland for the national championship. The national winner will travel to Galway, Ireland for the international championship competition. _Other Saturday events will include marathon and fun runs to be held on Holden Beach, beginning at 10 a.m At 8 p.m. music by The Coulters will be performed in Calabash.
Sunday events will include tricycle, bicycle, and If It Rolls, Use It races at Sunset Beach, beginning at 1 p.m. At 2 p.m. a surfing contest will be held, and at 4 p.m., a windsurfing competition will take place.
Persons interested in more complete details on the festival can write to: South Brunswick Islands Chamber of Commerce, P. 0. Box 1380, Shallotte, N.C., 28459, or call 754-6644.
Complete
Restoration & Preservation
Oil Paintings
Cleaning
Repairing
Retouching
Varnishing Cali Dan Morgan
756-0200
P.O. Box 1923-Grcenvllle, N.C. 27834
NEW HAT STYLES An employee of Centex Corp. places a newly manufactured military helmet onto a shelf after installing a headband inside the helmet in the companys Carbondale, Pa., plant. The new .Army-issue helmets have 19 layers of resin-coated Kevlar fiber that are heated and pressed into shape. (AP Laserphoto)
Writers Marine Center
Will Meet Events Listed
Fellowship Award Winners Announced
The first meeting of the Greenville Writers Club for the month of October will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Rusch, 120 Oxford Road. Brook Valley.
This meeting will be devoted to a reading and critique of a tobacco play by Ida Wooten Tripp of Pactolus. The script-in-progress is the play chosen for a workshop production at the Best Lunch Theater Ever at the Greenville Museum of Art at noon on the third Wednesday of November.
Anyone interested in any form of creative writing is welcome at the writers meetings. There are no fees involved in being a part of the group.
GREENSBORO - The (..reen Hill Art Gallery. 2uO .N Davie St., Greensboro, vill :eature regional con-:emporary sculpture by Virginia, North and South Carolina sculptors working in all media in a major
exhibition from Oct. 16 through Nov. 13.
A reception, open to the public, will be held from 8 to 10 p.m. Saturday, Green Hill hours are 105 Tuesdays through Fridays, and 2-5 Saturdays and Sundavs.
The winner of one of the longest auto races in history - from New York to Paris via Siberia - covered 13,341 miles, not including ocean crossings. The race was won in 1908 by an American-made Thomas Flyer, which beat a German Protos. Time: just under five months,
BEAUFORT - Events scheduled for today and the coming week at the N. C. Marine Resources Center at Bogue Banks are:
Today - 3 p.m., a slide presentation on "Octopus and Squid." - 4 p.m., hsh feeding.
Monday - 1 p.m., mixed media art'class, instructor, John Alpar. Pre-registration required,
Tuesday - 1 p.m., "Horticulture for Coastal Carolina," instructor, John Alpar, Pre-registration required.
Wednesday - 10 a.m., library storytime. - 7 p.m.. "The Living Sea," channel 10, Vision Cable.
Saturday - 1:15 p.m., library storytime. - 3 p.m., "Dangerous Marine Life." a slide presentation. - 4 p.m.. fish feeding.
For activities requiring pre-registration, call 247-4003 or 4007.
RALEIGH Winners of the North Carolina Fellowships Awards have been announced by Gov. Jim HUnt and and Cultural Resources Secretary Sara R Hodgkins.
The four receiving fellowships of $5,000 each are: Lee Wenger, a choreographer from Durham; Dr. Frank McCarty, a composer from Greensboro; Edison Dupree, a poet from Chapel Hill, and Pamolu Oldham, a writer from Cameron.
The fellowships are given to provide direct support to artists who, over a period of years, have made substantive contributions through their art.,It allows artists to set aside time to work, to purchase supplies and mate
rials in order to achieve specific career goals.
The Artists Fellowship Program was begun in 1980. During even-numbered years, fellowships are given to visual artists. In odd-numbered years, the fellowships go to poets, writers, playwrights, composers and choreographers.
Lee Wenger is artistic director of the New Performance Dance Company in Durham. Dr. McCarty teachers music theory and composition at UNC-Greensboro. Poet Edison Dupree is working toward completing his first book ot poetry, and Pamolu Oldham teaches in the English department at Fayetteville Technical Institute.
United Figure Salon
offers you low-cost, tuH-time use of our quality facility No limits on number of classes
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Burial plots in land-starved Hong Kong arc not only expensive, but also risk relocation as the living crowd out the dead.
Penn Dutch Country & Reading, Pennsylvania November 3, 4, & 5, 1983
Trip includes motel, bus, discount shopping at manufacturers outlets, tour of Amish country and one Amish feast.
Price per person $114 (dbl. occ.)
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Were Having A Pumpkin Of A Special
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The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N C. Sunday. October 9.1983 C-11
Grants Available Through RDI
SUNLIT RIDE Sunlight reflecting off tar patches in a street in Fayetteville make these two bikers appear to be riding on water. A long telephoto lens compressed the scene to complete the effect. (AP Laserphoto by Cramer Gallimore)
Written Word Festival Set
BOONE - "A Sense of Place" is the theme of the sixth annual Festival of the Written Word, to be held on the campus of Appalachian State University Monday and Tuesday.
Two lectures and two workshops are offered free to the public, and will focus on the many ways to write about a region.
Richard Lebovitz and students from the Cape Hat-teras School will conduct the first workshop, Writing About Your Community" from 1:30 to 3:30 Monday. Lebovitz supervises the school's Sea Chest publication, an award winning magazine centered on life on the Outer Banks.
At 8 p.m. Monday Noel Perrin will lecture on "Capturing the Rural Experi
ence Perrin, a farmer, is also a professor of English at Dartmouth College and is the author of two books on rural life.
On Tuesday, William Blake wi1 conduct The Writer/Photographer workshop from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. His works include three books on the American South, and he will discuss the relationship between photography and writing.
The final writing festival event will oe John Ehels lecture, The Novelists Vision of Appalachia to be given at 8 p.m. Ehel is the author of five Appalachian novels, and he will talk about what it means to write about an area.
The festival is sponsored by the ASU English department.
Has Work Published
Greenville writer^ Gerda Nischan has had work published in a new collection, "News From the .States: German Literature in the U.S. The 323 page paperback collection has been published by the Olms Press of New York. Zurich, and Hildesheim, West Germanv.
Mrs. Nishcan's contribution is an excerpt from her novel, "Ein Haus Im Suden (A House In a Southern Place)." The novel is currently being considered for publication by a German publisher.
The Dims publication contains excerpts from larger works, essays and poetry, written in German by 20 German women writers living in the U.S. Many of the writers were born in Germany.
.Mrs. .Nischan, wife of Dr. Bodo Nischan of the history faculty at East Carolina University, is a native of Frankenthal, West Germany. She came to the U.S. in 1%7 and has lived in Greenville since 1969. She is the author of a volume of poetry, "Red Sky At Night," which has been published both in English and German.
New Shows Opening Af Weatherspoon
GREENSBORO - Several new shows are scheduled for exhibition beginning in October at the Weatherspoon Art Gallery, UNC-Greensboro. These are:
Opening today and on view through Nov. 6are:
Paintings and drawings by realist artist Martha Mayer Erlebacher of Philadelphia. She will also be a visiting artist Oct. 10-13.
Large scale prints by expressionist artist Robert Longo of New York City. Longo will be a visiting artist Oct. 31-Nov. 3.
German-American Artists, featuring art works from the Weatherspoon permanent collection of artists Max Beckman, Jan Muller,
Joseph Albers and Carl Holty.
Art by UNC-G alumni, featuring works by graduates of the UNC-G Department of Art. The pieces will be drawn from the gallery's permanent\ollection.
Also, oV Oct. 16 at Weatherspoon Downtown Gallery, an exhibit, "Figurative Art," a survey of figurative art in America since World War II. The exhibit will include drawings, paintings, sculpture and prints from the, gallerys permanent collection. Weatherspoon Downtown is located in thetGreensboro Arts Center at 200 N. Davie Street.
The Weatherspoon on campus will be closed Oct. 15-18 for ball break.
Droll Appointed
App
'eathi
At Weatherspoon
GREENSBORO - Donald E. Droll, art dealer and gllery director in New York City for over 30 years, has been appointed as the first full-time assistant director of Weatherspoon Art Gallery at t|ie University of North Carolina, Greensboro.
He also holds an appoint^ ment as lecturer in the' UNC-G department of art. In New York, he held management positions with New York galleries and was coowner of two galleries.
Currently, a continuing project at UNC-G is that of raising funds for a new art center in the universitys $12 million Prospectus III Camp^gn.
Poetry Festival
Lions sleep as much as 20 bours a day.
FICTION
1. Poland, James Michener '
2. Changes," Danielle Steel
3. Hollywood Wives," Jackie Collins
4. Who Killed the Robins Family? Thomas Chastain
5. Christine, Stephen King
6. The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco
7. August, Judith Rossner
8. The Seduction of Peter S.," Lawrence Sanders
9. "Monimbo, Moss & De Borchgrave
NON-FICTION
1. In Search of Excellence, Peters & Waterman
2. On Wings of Eagles, KenFollett
3. The One-Minute Manager, Blanchard & Johnson
4. Creating Wealth, Robert G. Allen
5. Megatrends, John Naisbitt
6. Motherhood, Erma Bombeck
7. The Best of James Herriot
8; Seeds of Greatness, Denis E. Waitley
9. Tough Times Never Last," Rotert H. Schuller
RALEIGH In cooperation with the Regional Envelopment Institute at East Carolina University, the Northeastern Historic Places Office (NFHPO) of the N. C. Division of .Archives and History has announced a new series of grants available to historic attractions in northeastern North Carolina.
Any non-profit historic site or historic properties group in northeastern North Carolina is eligible to receive a grant of up to $5,000. Grant proposals will be evaluated and awarded based on their potential for creating a lasting improvement in visitor services, for offering visitors a broad perspective of North
Carolina history, and for providing support for Americas 400th Anniversa^ celebration, which begins in July, 1984.
Examples of projects qualifying for liie NEHPO grants include combined tours of two or more historic properties, booklets or other social history publications appealing to the general public - particularly those publications linking two or
more historic properties, oral audiovisual history projects resulting in material for broadcast or in-school use, and permanent or traveling exliibiis.
For information on
grant-related services provided by RDI. contact Dr. Richard Laing, Regional Development Institute. Willis Building, East Carolina University, Greenville, N.C.. 27834, telephone 757-6650.
The pygmy shrew is the smallest mammal in North America. It weighs no more than a dime and could fit into a teaspoon.
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CULLOWHEE - The annual fall festival of the Poetry Council of North Carolina will be held Saturday at the Sheraton Motor Inn, 22 Woodfin St., Asheville.
Awards will be presented to poets in several categories, including the $100 prize and an engraved cup for the winner of the best book of poetry written in 1982.
The poetry day is open to the public. For reservations and more details, contact: Mrs. Carl Dan Killian Sr., Box 1959, Cullowehee, N. C., 28723, tel)hone 704/293-9611.
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Peruvians Hope To Save Neglected Archaeological Treasures
B\ TRACVWILKI.NSON
LIMA, Peru ' LPl > - Peru IS trying to reverse the steady deterioration of its
archaeological treasures.
In a dark museum storeroom in Lima. 2.OO ancient mummies in burlap bags lie stacked on top of each other. Most have not
been examined since their discovery decades ago and some have been eaten by rats.
Peru's principal archaeo-
iKWwUL RKFLECTIONS - A grove of 'null native willows, some growing straight, Mttier' in a leaning position, and one bent at a richi angle, are reflected in the calm waters of
a pond at River Park North in Greenville on a late afternoon in September. (Reflector Photo bv Jerrv Ravnor)
logical museum does not have the money, staff, equipment or space to conserve and study thousands of years worth of rich cultural heritage.
Some of the hemispheres most important pre-Columbian and Incan weavings. ceramics and art objects are rotting away in makeshift warehouses, and backroom shelves, J
The situation is very precarious," says Victor Pimentel, director of Lima's National Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
Many archaeological treasures are in a frank process of deterioration. It could all slip from our hands"
Pimentel and a group of Peruvians, including some of the top figures in politics, the arts and society, have embarked on an ambitious project to prevent that from happening: a new. $30 million museum that will be the largest in Latin America.
It will display 12,000 years of history, starting with mans arrival on the continent.. the evolution of the Chavin. Huari. Paracas, Nazca and dozens of other civilizations, leading eventually to the vast Incan empire.
Archaeologists say Peru, along South Americas estern Pacific coast, was he principal center for
rious ethnic groups that ventually reached the highest and most diversified level of culture and thought in the hemisphere.
"This museum will keep alive civilizations legacy, inherited by the Andean peoples." Peruvian President Fernando Belaunde Terry said in recent groundbreaking ceremonies.
The museum, with eight display pavilions, laboratories and auditoriums, will spread over 20 acres in a Lima suburb. It is being built, appropriately, alongside an 1,800-year-old "huaca" (sac r e dburial ground). .Architectural plans had to be readjusted when, during preliminary construction, a pre-Inca aqueduct was discovered.
jl^^eum organizers expect to receive $20 million from the U.S. Inter-American Development Bank, and plan to raise another $5 million in Peru.
A non-profit foundation has been set up in Washington. D.C., to raise another $5 million. France, Spain and the Soviet U.nion are other target nations, according to Haydee Rodriguez Pastor, a special adviser to the project.
The preservation of a culture as transcendentally important as ours must be an international goal," she said.
IB.M is donating computers to catalogue museum pieces, and security experts from the Los Angeles and Berlin museums have been consulted, Guerrilla violence in Peru makes security a priority concern.
.Mrs, Rodriguez Pastor, herself a painter trained at the University of California
at Berkeley, and wife of Perus finance minister, rejected criticism that the museum, scheduled to open in 1985, is a grandiose project for an impoverished Third World nation.
The country is ripe for this. H is givifrg everybody, all political and social classes, something to unite over at this time of crisis and violence," she said.
The current museum, a renovated colonial-era home, possesses an estimated 400,000 pieces - the exact number is unknown because officials have never done a complete inventory,
Pimentel said pieces of 12th century Chancay pottery, left on unsheltered patios at the old museum because there was no other place to put them, have dissolved into powder. Six-hundred-year-old wooden Chimu idols and Incan Quero" ceremonial vases have been gnawed away by termites.
An important group of about 250 mummies dating from about 200 A.D. sat neglected on museum shelves until someone two years ago noticed rats were eating them.
We are talking about irreparable loss." Pimentel said.
The opening of a mummy bundle" is especially important because the petrified skeletons are wrapped in skillfully woven textiles, showing lines and geometric designs in bright orange and earth tones.
Some of these fabrics, dis-
Survey Of Archaeology Across North Carolina
HLsroRK SITE BRIDGE - A recently riinipleted tdO-lool bridge, spanning Doughs (reek at Manteo, will provide access to the Elizabeth II Staie ilisioric .Sue. The center will open .luly 13. I9S4. It will house exhibits on the Roanoke Vovages of 1.S4-S7. displays on
northeastern North ( arolina attractions, an auditorium and a gift shop. It will also provide a berth for the Elizabeth II. the 16th-century type sailing vessel being built at Manteo as part of Americas 4(M)th Anniversary. (Photo by (. R, Cannon, Dare County Tourist Bureau)
RALEIGH-Archaeologists, amateur and professional alike, will find a new book on the prehistory of North Carolina useful.
The Prehistory of North Carolina: An Archaeological Symposium." published by the N. C. Department of Cultural Resources, is the first book which offers the public an overall summary of updated information on the states past, according to the editors.
The 206-page soft-cover book, edited by Mark A. Mathis, staff archaeologist with the Archaeology Branch, and Jeffrey J. Crow, administrator of the Historical Publications Section, covers a period of more than 12.000 years and offers a look at the prehistory of all three sections of the state.
It is an expanded version of four essays by prominent archaeologists presented in Raleigh in March 1980.
The book includes essays entitled Archaeology of the North Carolina Coast and Coastal Plain: Problems and Hypotheses" by David Phelps of East Carolina University; A Review of Archaeology in the North Carolina Piedmont: A Study of Change* by H. Trawick Ward of UNC-Chapel Hill; "Ancient Mountaineers: An Overview of the Preshistoric Archaeology of North Carolinas Western Mountain Region" by Burton L. Pur-rington of Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield; and Through a Glass Darkly: An Archaeological View of North Carolinas More Distant Past" bv
Joffre L. Coe, UNC-Chapel Hill professor emeritus.
The volume contains 50 maps, charts and photographs of site excavations and artifacts, and is of particular value to anyone interested in prehistoric Indians and artifacts in North Carolina. The essays describe research and excavations that have been conducted across the state over the last century and provide insights into the ways archaeologists reconstruct the past.
The book is available at $6 a copy, plus $1 postage and handling for the first copy and 25 cents postage for additional copies. Orders are to be sent to: Archaeology Branch, Department of Cultural Resources, 109 E. Jones Street, Raleigh, N. C.. 27611.
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FORT HUACHUCA, Ariz. (.AP) - The small group had traveled hundreds of miles to keep a centuries-old ritual alive. The Apache Indians were here again, gathering acorns.
.Most Arizonans view the oak tree as a source of shade-from the hot sun; the acorns that fall from it are raked up and thrown away.
But to the Apache Indians the acorns are a food.
'My great-grandma taught me how to gather acorns when 1 was about 4," Sally Antonio said. "We used to ride on horseback to get them,"
Sally and her husband John traveled 160 miles from the .San Carlos Apache Reservation to Fort Huachuca to gather acorns. Their daughter Gilly lives on post- with her husband. Spec, 5 Merrill Avatchoya, who is stationed' here.
Gilly s sister. Allison Robertson. came from Phoenix to take part in the familys annual nut-gathering. Tradition plays a large part in their family lives.
There arent many nuts this year," Mrs. Antonio said. Two years ago my husband and I filled two gunnysacks a day." Each gunnysack holds about 150 pounds of nuts. This year they gathered about 250 pounds after two days of work.
The group carefully raked a small area of ground and then sat down to sort the good nuts from the bad, and from dirt, stones and other materials. The family spoke to each other in English and Apache as they worked, Dorothy. 3. and Talia, 4, the Robertsons daughters, also, speak Hopi, their fathers language,
Mrs. Robertson pointed out that only the nuts that have already fallen could be gathered. The nuts that are on the trees are still too green to use, she said. We have to wait until they fall by themselves and then they have to be picked up soon after they fall from the trees.
Timing is important. Nuts that have been rained on too often turn black while theyre still on the tree. Others have small insect holes.
The little girls cracked the acorn shells and ate the nuts as they helped fill the buckets.
After the acorns are taken home, they will be spread out to dry. Later they will be loosely ground in a meat grinder and the shells will be separated from the nuts.
Then the acorns are cleaned and a second grinding turns them into a powder that the women then use in a variety of ways. It doesnt really take a long time to make the flour from the nuts, Mrs. Avatchoya said. It depends on whether youre lazy or not.
The process of gathering the nuts and then taking them through all the steps to turn them into flour is a collective effort. When the acorns are brought home from the gathering, family members-and friends pitch in and help.
Sally Antonio has been gathering, eating and cooking with acorns all of her life. We shell them and eat them raw, use the flour for dumplings or breading meat and boil it to make soup. The acorns are a big part of the Apache diet, she said. .
Family gatherings under the trees at Fort Huachuca are also a big part of the Apache tradition. Other members of the reservation also travel to the post to camp out, gather the nuts and reminisce about the old days when there wasnt much in the area besides the post and the people who loved and lived off the mountains and desert.
covered in Chilca, south of Lima, are 8,000years old and are believed to be the oldest woven textiles in the world.
But its been four years since one of some 2.000 waiting Peruvian mummies was unwrapped, said Rel^iajUr ho ra- E d 0ua r d Versteylan, the museums head conservationist.
- Versteylan - who at $200 a month he is one of the museums highest-paid officials - studied conservation techniques as a Fullbright Scholar in several U.S. museums in 1977.
He says the budget he receives is one-tenth of what is necessary and he has only four people to work with him in the textiles department when he needs 15.
The National Culture Institute. which oversees museums, says its total annual budget for all conservation and investigation at archaeological sites and museums throughout Peru is less than $350.000.
Restoration of an ancient piece of weaving, often crumbling from age and neglect. can fake a year.
Storage is improvised with plywood frames stuffed with cotton.
Versteylan has managed to place about 7,000 of the museums 30,000 textiles in a modernized storeroom where humidity is kept at 60 percent (30 points less than Limas average) and temperature at 64 degrees.
Perus private collectors in part blame legislation for the poor conditions of art and archaeological objects.
Under a 1926 law, most patrimony" belongs to the state. Citizens can be possessors" but must register their pottery,, silver and colonial paintings with the government and cannot remove them from the country.
Many private collectors say they do not register their possessions because they would risk having them confiscated by the government, only to end up in corrupt officials' homes or left to rot in overburdened museums.
Another threat to Peru's treasures has been decades of huaca" grave-robbing, with hundreds of valuable pieces smuggled annually.
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. Nl C Sunday. October 9 1983 C-13
OPKNING AT NCMA - Paintings and drawings by Jim Starrett, a faculty member of the \. C. State University School of Design, will be exhibited at the .\. Museum of Art, Raleigh, from Oct. l,>I)ec. Jl. The exhibition, to be shown in the N. ('. Gallery, comprises 1 works produced from litTti to llisi A reception with the artist on hand to meet the public will
be held from 4 to ,i p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16. Raised in the Catholic Church, the artist is deeply concerned with the failure of the church under Pope Pius XII to actively oppose Nazism. The work illustrated here is an untitled 1976 acrylic and graphite on paper piece. (Photo Courtesy N. C. Museum of Art)
Three Shows At Gray Gallery
Three new exhibits are currently on view at the Gray Art Gallery on the East Carolina University campus. The largest of the exhibits
.Photo Shows At The Wotersworks
SALISBURY - "Weston and Laughlin in Louisiana: Two Photographic Visions," the first joint exhibition of these two artists, and Drawings/Paintings by Ellen Sutherland and Photo-graphsby Stephen Sutherland" are now at view (through Oct. 25> at the Waterworks Gallery. Number One Water Street. Salsibury.
The Weston/Laughlin show is jointly curated by the New Orleans Museum of Art and has been organized as a traveling exhibition. It is being circulated by the Southern Arts Federation.
Mrs. Sutherland is exhibiting watercolors. and her husband. Stephen, specializes in abstract color photography. Also on view at this time is the Pigurative Sculpture Show in the sculpture garden.
NCSA Events
WINSTON-SALEM - Two entertainments are being presented during the coming week at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem. Both are free and open to the public, but reservations are required. These can be made by calling 785-0173.
On Thursday, and conti-ipng through Sunday. Stage Two Drama will present Frank Wedekinds "Spring Awakening." in the NCSA Sound Studio, directed by Jared Sakren. Performances will be at 8:15 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, with matinees on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m.
On Friday and Saturday, the Onyx Contemporary Ensemble, Peter Hodges, directing, will present "An Evening of Student Works in Drama, Music and Video at 8:15 p.m. in the Agnes de Mille Theater.
is the 1983-84 "Traveling Exhibition" of the .Society of Illustrators from the Museum of American Illustration in .New York City. This large, varied show with work by well-known illustrators will be on view only through Oct. 23.
"Food for Thought" is the title of a mixed media installation piece by three East Carolina University School of Art graduate students -Karyn Drum, Kappy Mc-Cleneghan and S^eve Rifee.
The third exhibit is a loan of 17 graphic works of the 18th to 20th centuries from the William Schab Gallery in New York City. It includes examples of woodcut, lithography, mezzotint drypoint, color aquatint, engraving, etching, and stipple engraving. These works are for sale from the Schab Gallery.
Gray Gallery is open to the public from 10-5 Mondays through Fridays and from 1-4 on Sundays. For additinal details, call 757-6336.
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A TENDRIL ART... In the Indian Summer days of October, nature still provides continuing delights of green things growing, such as this intricately formed tendril on the vine of a Passion Flower. (Reflector PhotobvJerrv Raynor)
Greenville Winners In Annual Art Show
LANCASTER, S.C. -Three Greenville artists are among winners in this years 25th Annual Springs Art Show sponsored by Springs Industries, Inc. of Fort Mill, S.C., a show open to artists in the two Carolinas.
Greenville artist Ed Midg-ett was one ,of five who received a $500 Merit award for All Dressed Up and Nowhere-to Go, his entry in the graphics category.
Two other Greenville residents, Karyn Drum and Michael Voors each won an honorable mention in the show. Honorable mention works carry a $50 cash prize.
This years top award winner for the $2,500 prize was Mark E. Flowers of Bluffton, S.C. an art teacher at Sea Pines Academy, Hilton Head Island, S.C., and also an instructor at Savannah College of Art and Design in Savannah.
The other four winners of $500 Merit awards are: Colin Dodd of Columbia, S.C., easel painting; Deborah ''Lengel 'Of Columbia, S.C., mixed media; W. Glenn Phifer of Boone, sculpture; and Doris DeSha Savage of Matthews, paintings or drawings on paper.
Judge for the 1983 Springs show was Stephen Greene, artist and professor in the Tyler School of Art at Temple University, Elkins Park, Pa.
Works selected from 800 entries by Greene for the show will be on view at the National Guard Armory on Nichols Road in Lancaster until Oct. 16. After that the show, comprised of works by 39 North and South Carolina artists will be in the 1983-84 traveling show which will be seen in various Carolina locations.
Greenville Museum Seeking Volunteers
The Greenville Museum of Art, 802 South Evans Street, n^ds volunteers. A volunteer does not have to be a member of the museum or the museum guild. The only requirement is to be a person, male or female, interested in helping in community work.
Any special skill or talents - such as typing, calligraphy, photography, or art skills can be utilized by the museum, but many committees only require simple office or work skills
The museums programs and committees include: in-house information desk committee, telephone committee floral/decorating committee, hostess for museum-funde(i receptions, office work, drama committee, and music committee.
Yearly, volunteers are needed for work on various fund raising committees. The museum calendar, membership drive, fine arts balls, and the sidewalk art show comprise some of the activities of the fund raising committees.
To volunteer, or to receive additional information on vo unteer needs, interested persons are to contact the volunteer co-chairman, Joanne Honeycutt, at 756-5432 or Chris Detwiler at 355-2486.
SPRINGS WINNERS... Three of the works of art receiving Merit awards of $500 each are shown in this photograph. From left to right are: a painting by Doris de Sha Savage, a
graphic by Ed .Midgett, and a sculpture by W Glenn Phifer. The show's juror, Stephen Greene, is in the foreground. i Photo (ourtesy Springs Industries. Int.i
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Two new exhibits of art work are now on view at the Greenville Museum of Art, 802 South Evans Street. Both are located in the North Gallery.
Lynn Mallison Morrow, ceramists from Laurinburg, studied in Perugia, Italy and received the MFA degree from UNC-Greensboro. Her work evolve in series vases with iris motifs, lidded forms, and pieces in which glazes are the dominant factor.
David Loren Bass, painter, lives in Greensboro where he attended UNC-G graduate school. His paintings, mostly landscapes in spring and summer greens, are realistic depictions.
During October, other exhibits on view at the musuem are: Items from the Jugtown pottery collection given to the museum by' Mrs. Elisabeth Savage, displayed in the entry hall case anil in the reception room; and a showing of watercolors drawm from the museums permanent collection. These are hung in the South Galleries.
The museum is open to the public free of charge. Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays, and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturdays. The telephone number of the musuem is 758-1946.
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Chrysanthemum Fete In New Bern Oct. 15-16
PIANIST DONNA COLEMAN ... a faculty member in the school of music, East Carolina University, will be in recital at 8:15 p m today in the A. J, Fletcher Recital Hall on campus. She will perform pieces by five composers. The recital is free and open to the public.
Donna Coleman Recital Today
NEW BERN - An array of chrysanthemums at historic Tryon Palace gardens and the lively brass of the Little German Band throughout the downtown will be two highlights of New Berns Swiss Bear Chrysanthemum Festival October 15 and 16.
Featured events are the Autumn Antiques Show and Sale in the Sudan Temple and the annual Crafts Show in the 0. Marks building. All of the many events that comprise the Festival are to be held within easy walking distance of one another in the historic downtown business district and waterfront.
For the first time in the fall of the year, Tryon Palace, North Carolinas colonial capitel and royal governors mansion, will open its gardens free to the public on both Saturday and Sunday. Visitors may stroll the 18th century styfe gardens from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday. (The Tryon Palace Complex interior tours will beat the usual prices).
Herb Rea, Tryon Palace Horticulturist, said; ''This -promises to be our most spectacular October ever. The mum plants look great, and we've planted more than ever before. We'll have over
45 varieties of chrysanthemums this season, and it should be~a colorful show of thousands of blossoms.
The popular Little German Band from Raleigh will give a concert on the great lawn of Tryon Palace at 3 p.m. Sunday. The public is invited to come and bring lawn chairs or blankets. This is one of a number of concerts that the Little German Band plans to give at varying downtown locations throughout the festival.
Potted chrysanthemums provide color in the Sudan Temple, 403 East Front St.. when the Antiques Show and Sale opens at 10 a.m. on the 15th, with displays by 19 dealers. Mrs. Elizabeth Bright of Lexington hosts a Quilt Evaluation Clinic on Saturday morning. The evaluation is $2 per item.
Tickets for the Antiques Show are $2 for adults, $1.50 for senior citizens and $1 for children under 12. Adult advance tickets at $1.50 may be obtained by writing: Swiss Bear, Box 597, New Bern. N.C.. 28560 or phoning -(919 ) 638-5781. The show runs from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on the 15th and from Lto 5 p.m. on the 16th.
Hours and dates for the Swiss Bear Crafts show are
the same as that of the Antiques Show. The location is the 0. Marks building at 233 Middle Street. Twenty craftspersons will demonstrate crafts ranging from duck decoys and folk art to needlework and pottery, all available for purchase. Admission is 50 cents for adults. Children under 12 are free if accompanied by parent.
At 371 Middle Street, the newly restored turn-of-the-century Bank of the Arts offers a show entitled North Carolina Arts and Crafts.
On Saturday evening, from 6 to 8 p.m., a German style beer garden opens in the inner court of the Holiday Inn, East Front Street. Refreshments are for sale at this event which is otherwise free to the public. The Little German Band will play for two hours.
Other events during the Swiss Bear Chrysanthemum Festival include performances by the Pepsi dan cers, juggler Ken Kaye, the Dick Hubbard Cloggers, and the Tryon Twirlers" A brochure showing the varied downtown locations will be available upoh arrival. For further information, contact Swiss Bear, Box 597, New Bern, N.C., 28560, or phone (919 ) 638-5781.
Pianist Donna Coleman will perform in a faculty recital at 8:15 p.m. today in the AJ Fletcher Recital Hall on the East Carolina University campus The, recitar is free and open to the public
For her program. Ms Coleman will play works by-five composers She will open the recital with the J.S. Bach Busoni 'Num komm. der Heiden Heiland. ' then play "Through the Mask." a piece written tor her by the young composer Richard Lavenda
Next wilf be Beethoven's 'Sonata in E. Opus 19 " f'ollowing an intermission, she will play .Mozart's "Sonata in B flat." and conclude her recital with Frederic ChopinN "Sonata m B minor.
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Ms. Coleman is director of "Instead. ' a contemporary chamber music ensemble. She holds the master of music degree from the University of Michigan. Among honors she has received have been second-prize winner in the First Rockefeller Foundation International Competition for Excellence in the Performance of American Music, and first-prize winner in the National Guild of Piano Teachers International Piano Recording Contest.
She IS a devotee of 20th century American music, particularly the piano music of Charles Ives. She appears regularly in concerts and lecture-recitals across the country.
Recital At Duke Oct. 13
DI RH.A.M - feliist Seima Gokcen and pianist Paul Tardif, both faculty members of the East Carolina University .School of .Music, will perform in a faculty invitation recital in East Duke Building on the Duke University campus, Durham at 8:15 p.m Thursday Compositions selected by the two for the recital are: J S Bach's ana from "Pa.sto-rale in F .Major," for ogran; Beethovens 'Sonata in"^ Major, Opus 69; " and the Piatigorsky arrangement of Igor Stravinsky's Suite Italienne"
Following an intermission, pieces to Ix' performed are: Gabriel Faure's "Berceuse, Opus 16," Claude Debussy's Sonate: ' and David Popper's ' Hungarian Rhapsody. Opus68 '
Percussion Ensemble Concert
The East Carolina University Percussion Ensemble, directed by faculty member Harold Jones and assisted by graduate teaching assistants Thomas Cunane and John Brewington, will present a concert Wednesday on the ECU campus.
The concert will begin at 8:15 p.m. and will be held in the A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall, It is free and open to the public.
Seven selections have been listed for the program, which will open with Theodore C. Frazeurs Uhuru. This will be followed by "Inventions on a Motive by Michael Colgrass and Robert Russells Symphony for Six. The symphony is in four movements marked "fast, fast, slow, quick.
A composition by Samuel Barber, Adagio for Strings, arranged by
Freeman, is next on the program, to be followed by the Peters arrangement of Rimskey-Korsakovs Flight of the Bumblebee.
After this the piece to be featured will be David Kechleys "Dancing, which comprises four dances -"One-legged Dance. "Bug Dance, Dream Dance. and "War Dance. The concert will conclude with John J. Beckers "Abongo.
'Hartbeat
HOLLYWOOD (UPl) -The television series "Hart to Hart completed two episodes in Greece with cast members Robert Wagner, Stefanie Powers and Lionel Stander sharing billing with guest stars Ray Milland and Samantha Eggar.
"Hart to Hart " begins its fifth season on ABC-TV this month with Karen Arthur directing for producers Hugh Benson and Leigh Vance.
The Greek location episodes involve Milland as Miss Powers' wealthy father who discovers he has fathered another daughter during his years as a spy in England during World War II. Miss Eggar portrays his long lost daughter.
LYRICAL LESSONS ON LOVE AND WAR - Opera tenor Luciano Pavorotti assumes the role of Radames in the Guispppe Verdi opera, Aida, at a dress rehearsal for the Chicago Lyric Operas production. In this scene, Radames, the victorious warrior, returns to Thebes in ancient Egypt, with the spoils of war. (AP Laserphoto)
Fayetteville Season
FAYETTEVILLE - Five concerts have been scheduled for the 1983-1984 season of the Fayetteville Symphony Orchestra Association, with concerts from November through early April. All events will be at Reeves Auditorium at Methodist College, with curtain time at 8p.m.
Nov. 12 - The orchestra will perform Dvoraks New World Symphnony and Symphony No. 41 by Mozart.
Dec. 10 The orchestra, with the Fayetteville Civic Choir and guest soloists will present Handel's "Messiah.
Jan, 21 - An all orchestral concert,
March 3 - Tchaikovskys Concerto No. I with guest
T PUTT THIATIIt
MOUNTAIN MUSIC MAKER Mountain musician David Holt, right, engages in a dueling hambones performance with singer-songwriter John Hartord during a recent Nashville show. Holt, who hosts his own cable TV show, "Fire on the Mountain," learned to play mountain music by stopping at peoples homes to pick a tune and start a conversation. (AP Laserphoto by Don Putnam)
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Stphanie Mills Back In 'The Wiz'Musical
ByJAYSHARBlTT AP Drama Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Stephanie Mills was only 17 when she first eased on down the road to Broadway in The Wiz, She and the hit all-black musical version of The Wizard of Oz kept it up for four years.
Then the show, which opened in January 1975, cosed after 1,672 performances. And the tiny girl with the very big voice went off do concerts with The Commodores and Teddy Pendergrass and become a X)p, disco and rhythm-and-)lues star.
Now shes back playing Dorothy again in a revival of The Wiz, just beginning a six-month, 13-city tour which opened this month in Boston. If all goes well, the show will return to Broadway in March.
Good, she says with -fervor when-asked how she felt when the originals first run here ended. After four years, I was ready to move on to something else.
Why do it again now? Well, she says, Geoffrey Holder, director of the original and the revival, asked her to have another go a year ago, but she'was busy. A little later, Broadways Shubert Organization and other parties got involved, and she said yes.
"They offered me a deal I, er, couldnt refuse, she says. Ive never done the show in other cities. And Ive been recording albums for the last four, five years, and going on the road. 1 was ready for a change,.
Shes recorded five albums to date. Her'first and second
went gold, each selling more than 500,000 copies.
Her latest, called Merciless, is doing quite well, according to the sales charts of Cashtex, a leading music . industry magazine.
The Wiz and the publicity therefrom has helped that part of her career, she says. However, song, not the stage, really has been her true love ever since she was a toddling amateur in Brooklyn.
Ive always been a singer, says Miss Mills, now a Hollywood resident. I never really considered myself an actress even though I did my first Broadway show when I was 9.
The show was Maggie Flynn, co-starring Shirley Jones and the late Jack Cassidy. She got the job after her brother, Allen, noticed a newspaper ad requestihg" tykes to come -for an audition.
When Flynn folded, she went back to school. As for her show-biz career, it wasnt quite the big time: I performed at my sisters college homecoming dance, sang in church, and performed at an amateur hour at the Apollo Theater and won a professional booking.
Miss Mills, who is now all of 26, is asked why The Wiz is returning so soon after its departure from Broadway.
Well, she says, its like, why does Yul Brynner do The King and 1'? Certain shows have no end, and The Wiz is one of those kind of shows. Besides, everyone I run into keeps asking me
BRITISU. CELEBRATION British singer Elton John stands before Time Magazine covers at the Royal Festival Hall, London last week when more than 400 of Britains best known names gathered for the opening of an exhibition featuring 240 British personalities who have appeared on the magazines cover from 1923 to 1983. It is part of the British celebrations of the magazines 60th anniversary. (AP Laserphoto)
when Im going to do the show again.
But she doesnt want to stay four more years in The Wiz, even if it does as-well at the Broadway box office as before.
I dont plan to stay in it more than seven, eight months, insists Miss Mills, who says shes the only member of the cast of 75 returning in the revival.
She wants to continue her singing career, and eventually appear in films.
How about a straight play?
No, she says, laughing. Not now. Maybe when Im older. Now Im young and I like to dance and I like to sing, and thats all I want to do
Remember-----
TOP TUNES 40 YEARS AGO Your Hit Parade October 9,1943
(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 (9)
2. People Will Say Were In Love (14)
3. I Heard You Cried Last Night(8)
4. Paper Doll (5)
5. Pistol Packin Mama (2)
6. Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey (9)
7. Youll Never Know (23)
8. If You Pleased) '
9. In My Arms (10)
Top Ten
1. The Safety Dance, Men Without Hats
2. Total Eclipse of the Heart, Bonnie Tvler
3. Tell Her'About It, Billy Joel
4. Puttin on the Ritz, Taco ,
5. Sexy and 17, Stray Cats
6. Every Breath You Take, The Police
7. Making Love Out of Nothing at All, Air Supply
8. Maniac, Michael Sembello
9. King of Pain, The Police
10. Sweet Dreams, Eurythmics.
Top Country
1. Dont You Know How Much I love You, Ronnie Milsap
2. New Looks from an Old Lover, B.J. Thomas
3. Paradise Tonight, McClain and Gilley
4. What Am 1 Gonna Do. Merle Haggard
5. Nobody But You, Don Williams
6. "Lady Down on Love, Alabama
7. Scarlet Fever." Kenny Rogers
8. How Could I Love Her So Much, Johnny Rodriguez
9. Youve Got a Lover, Ricky Skaggs
10. Islands in the Stream. Kenny Rogers
Nine tourists were killed in 1979 by rocks and hot ash from Mount Etna in Sicily.
The Daily Reflector. Green"
Sun-:a'. October 9. -|983 C-1 5
OPENING NIGHT Actor Kevin Kline attended a reception at New Yorks Lincoln Center to mark the opening night of the New York Film Festival, Kline is appearing in the film, The Big Chill, which opened the annual festival. (AP Laserphoto)
Caroling Today
Auditions Set For ECU Dance Theater Concert
Peat mining and rocking chair philosophy are among topics to be presented by guests on Carolina Today, the WNCT-TV early morning show airing over Channel 9 each weekday morning from 6 to 8 a.m. Co-hosts for the show are Slim Short and Shauna Barnaby.
The calendar for the week is:
Monday - 6:40 a.m.. Dr. Parmalle Hawk on a study of first year teachers; 7:15 a.m., Caralista jewelry; 7:25 a.m., Susan Nobles on the community health fair; 7:40 a.m., Cora Whishant, international president of Alpha Delta Kappa.
Tuesday - 6:40 a.m., healthbreak; 7:15 a.m., guests are John Maiolo and Paul Tschetter; 7:25 a.m., Widgie Kornegary of the Paint and Decorating Association; 7:40 a.m., ECUs Playhouse Album.
Wednesday - 6:40 a.m., Stephanie Creech and Martha Rollins talk about the Governors School; 7:15 a.m., Feeling Good; Whats Normal?; 7:25 a.m.. Social Security; 7:40 a.m.. Dr. Frank Thomas on seafood.
Thursday 6:40 a.m., Peat Mining is the topic of Peat Methanol Associates; 7:15 a.m., Tom Throckmorton on Pirate football; 7:25 a.m.. Employment Security Commission; 7:40 a.m., Linda Boyette on caring for and sewing on silk.
Friday - 6:40 a.m., Connie Garris of the National Association of Education Office Personnel; 7:15 a.m., rocking chair philosopher Eddie Nickleson; 7:45 a.m., plant doctor Eddie Harrington.
>
Mariners Museum Events Scheduled
BEAUFORT - The calendar of events for the coming week at Hampton Mariners Museum contains four seven offerings to the public, some at the museum, others farther afield. The weeks calendar is:
Monday - Art exhibit opens. Shell Art of Helen Denny. a portion of the Watson Shell Collection prepared by Helen Denny in association with the Watson family.
Monday - Ship to Shackleford field trip. Depart museum 9 a.m.. return 4:30 p.m. Prepare to wade in walking the outer banks island. Reservations required. Fee $12.
Tuesday - East Bogue Banks Birding field trip. 10 a.m. to noon. Dress warmly. Meet at Fort Macon parking lot. Reservations required. No fee.
Friday - Tour of traditional boatbuilding facilities in Carteret County, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Reservations required. $5 fee.
For activities requiring reservations, interested persons are to call 728-7317 as early in advance as possible. All tours are subject to limitations on the number of people that can be accommodated.
Dance auditions for the East Carolina Dance Theatre have been scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, in ie Messick Theatre Arts Center on the East Caroiina .University campus.
Band Boosters Meet Tuesday
The first general meeting of the Greenville Band Boosters will take place at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rose High cafeteria.
The Rose High Early Bird Jazz Band will perform. Chuck Allen, the new band instructor at Rose High, will direct the band. A reception to welcome Allen and his wife, Clydeene, will be held in the band room following the meeting,
The annual benefit sale of fruit by the Boosters Club is now underway by members of the middle school, junior and senior high school bands.
WGHB To Air Awards Show
FARMVILLE - The 17th annual Country Music Association Awards Show will be carried on WGHB Radio, Farmville, 1250 on the radio dial at 9 p.m. Monday.
The presentation, also being televised on CBS-TV, is the centerpiece of WGHBs three-hour CMA special. The program will include a 30-minute stage-setting preview of nominees and a 60-minute post-show part, live from Nashville.
Hosts of the awards presentation will be Willie Nelson and Anne Murray. Lee Arnold, WHN/New York and disc jockey of the year, will host the CMA Preview Awards, featuring music of the nominated artists.
The auditions will begin at 7:30 p.m. each evening in Dance Studio 114. Each year, the East Carolina Dance Theatre produces a concert representing ballet, modern and jazz styles. The pieces are choreographed by members of the Dance faculty in the ECU Department of Drama and Speech. For the past eight years, the concerts have played to standing-room-only audiences. Ac-cording to Dance Coordinator Patti Weeks an extra performance has been added this year because of the trememdous response the dance theatre receives from the area.
Weeks went on to say that those who wish to audition
should wear leotards and footless tights, and if they have them to bring ballet, pointe and/or jazz shoes. Dancers should be warmed up and ready to dance at 7:30 p.m. The choreographers will give combinations in the different styles. Those who are called back will be asked to show a short combination in the style of their choice. The call-back date and time* will be announced at the audition. ECU students, faculty, staff and local residents are all invited to audition. The Dance Theatre concert is scheduled for February 24, 25 and 27-29 in McGinnis Theatre on the ECU Campus.
For further information call 757-6390.
Star trio HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - A trio of espisodic TV stars has been signed to head the cast of a two-hour TV movie, First Affair, dealing with the adventures of a girl in her first year at college.
Loretta S\.it, formerly of the M.A.S.H series, plays an English professor. Melissa Sue Anderson, who played the blind girl'in Little House on the Prairie, plays the confused coed. Joel Higgins, of Silver Spoons, portrays the professors husband with whom the young girl falls in love.
The cast also includes Charley Lang. Kim Delaney. Robin Morse, Amanda Bearse and Diane Shalet.
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STl BBORN LADY L'lismiling and erect, in the station's waiting room for eight years
her chin held high, Princess Wilayat Mahal, and refuses to leave until she gets a palace,
the princess of Dudh. poses for a picture in the d PI Photo)
New Delhi railway station. She has been living ----
Original Texas Cowgirls Are Still Going Strong
KILGORE. Texas* LTD-In :hei; red. white and blue cowgirl costumes, the Kilgore College Rangerettes have become as American as apple pie In their 4:i-year history, the high-kicking All-American girls have traveled 4 million miles around the globe, and have been covergirls on-Newsweek. Lite. Esquire. '.Saturday Evening Post, and even Pans .Match.
. T h e y introduced "shoubi/" at the halftime of football names before the Dallas Cowgirls were even born. Red Grange once called ' them "the Sweethearts ol the nation's gridirons. '
The Rangerettes were the brainchild ot a physical education teacher trom Earm-ersviile. Texa>. \>,ho>e love oi dance changed the look of American football forever While teachng phys ed at Green\iile, Texas. Gussie Nell Davis decided there should be something more exciting to do at halftime than opening a crate of pmeons and let them scatter into the sky When she was hired by Kilgore College, the dean fi)ld her he wanted to attract more i^is to the male-dominated college - and add some entertainment at halftime. The Rangerettes were born.
Since the first "line" marched onto a football field in 1440, there have been innumerable copycats over the years, m prolessional sports, in college and high schools across the nation.
Precision, however, still sets the Rangerettes apart trom the others. They are the best, " says Jeanne D. .Hale, director ol public relations.
The uniform and the name ha\e been copyrighted for self protection "We don't want the name to be used to promote toothbrushes or 'grapefruit, which has been tried." said .Mrs. Hale.
The Rangerettes, who have their own showcase museum on the campus of the East Texas junior college, remain so popular that five girls apply each August for every opening on the 65-member line.
The number of openings each year depends on the number of sophomores returning. About 150 girls compete each year for about JO openings. Sixteen states are represented on the current "line." .
The girls must be between 5-foot-l and 5-foot-lO, of normal weight and be prepared to keep up with a rigorous 20 hours of practice a week plus maintain at least a "C" average in cla,ss. They receive no pay nor schol-arhips. only one credit hour.
Rangerette Kathlyn Ciccio of Chicago was attracted to Kilgore 'enrollment 4,0(J0i because of the team's reputation Like many of the Rangerettes, she had been in a high school drill team.
"My instructors interested me in the Rangerettes. and I had seen them on TV," she said
It was much the same story for Rangerette Kelly?^ Williams of Tyler, whose mother was an Apache Belle at Tyler Junior College. She
didn't push me though; 1 wanted to be part of this organization"
After 43 years. Rangerette tradition is strong as the sophomores take a hand in teaching the freshmen. More than l.otK) former members make up the Rangerettes h'orever The Rangerettes look much the same as they did four decades ago. The crowns of their white cowboy hats are lower and their skirts are a few inches shorter Otherwise, the costumes remain as originally designed by New York City architect Earl Ford.
Manners and poise are impressed on the girls and when they are criticized, they always say. "thank you "
"There are life long benefits, " says Deana Bolton, who took over direction of the Rangerettes when Miss Davis retired in 1979.
.Miss Davis. 74, still lives i Kilgore.'
"They learn to take .criticism gracefully and work beyond what some would '
One of the disappointments tor Mrs Bolton and the girls
is that they cannot accept all the invitations they get. many because of the cost of transporting the girls and the the 100-piece Ranger Band or stage band which acccom-paniesthem.
China, the Soviet Union. Germany. Spam, and Canada all have been turned down in recent years, "They couldnt foot the bill, and we couldn't either, "saidMrs Hale.
In 1975. however, they did tour Hong Kong, Macao, Korea, and Hawaii for 16 days on a trip sponsored by the State Department and the CIS. Chamber of Commerce. In 1973 they visited Venezuela and in 1977 Romania.
Since Kilgore is a state-supported college, those who invite them usually have to pay all or part of the expenses. The college also has a strict rule against any of the girls missing classtime.
"Although the Rangerettes have given the college national and international exposure, this college is well known for its academic excellence. These girls are students first and foremost." said Mrs. Hale.
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Klinger Finds Civiiian Life is Tough
By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)-In all the years he was assigned to the*4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital, Cpl. Maxwell Klinger thought of little else except getting out.
Now that the Korean War is over, citizen Maxwell Klinger's attention is directed toward hanging onto his low-paid job as ad ministrative assistarit to the chief of staff at a veterans hospital in Missouri.
"I'm no longer trying to get out. Im trying to .stay in," says Jamie Farr, who carries his role from "M-A-S-H " to tTie new CBS series "AfterM.ASH."
"The admimsTratois secretary is out to get rid of me. Shes a killer."
Two other discharged vet-
WINMNG COUPLE MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. -A Greenville couple, Don Bunn and Linda Williams, are among five winning couples in the preliminary competition of the Beach Music,,Award Novie Shag competition.
They will compete in the finalsto be held Nov. 20 at the Myrtle Beach Concention Center.
erans from the 4077th join him in the comedy. Harry Morgan, who was Col, Sherman Potter, is now Dr Potter, chief of staff, William Christopher, who was Father Mulcahy, is still Father Mulcahy, the VA hospitals chaplain.
It's the early 1950s:' The Korean War is over. Hawkeye has gone back to Maine. B.J. back to his practice in California. Winchester back to Boston (where else?) and Hot Lips (excuse me. Margaret) is staying in the Army.
The new series fakes up where "M-A-S-H" left off. at least as far as Potter, Klinger and Father Mulcahy are concerned. They are also joined by Rosalind Chao, who plays Soon Lee. the Korean woman Klinger married in the final episode.
J.AZZ CONCERT FAYEHEVILLE - In the live jazz downtown Thursday concerts in Fayettevilles Cross Creek Park,- the program this Thursday will be Jazz Invention by the Paul Reichle Trio. Admissip is free. Concert hours are from noon to 1:30 p.m. Rain site is. First Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall.
The show has been called one of the new seasons surefire hits. "That makes, me a bit nervous. says Farr.
The other thing people are asking is how can the series survive without Alan Alda. Which is silly for a number of reasons. Alan is the No. 1 TVQ, you know, the list of the most popular TV stars, which isn't supposed to exist. Well. Harry Morgan is No. 2. Jamie Farr is No. 10.1 think that means we do have something of a following.
He says the characters are not the* same, nor are the actors the same. "We're older." he says, "and we're not dealing with the same subject matter. The war is over. This is 1953 and weve got a hospital that has veterans from past wars.
"Besi(Jes the hospital weve got the one-room apartment I share with Rosalind Chao. Its got a Murphy bed. We have Father Mulcahy's apartment. And Potters house. W'e meet his wife, .Mildred, for the first time"
In ".M-A-S-H" they found that war was hell, but in "Atter.MASH" they will find that peace ' can be pretty tough. Klinger. Potter and
Mulcahy will be up against the bureaucracy of a government-run institution. The personification of that
will be the administrator, played by John Chappell, and his secretary, Brandis Kemp,
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Dr. David Phelps Guides Archaeological Explorations In Northeastern North Carolina
Seeking Clues On The Carolina Algonkians
Text By Jerry Raynor
Photographs By David Phelps
Archaeologists turn the pages of earth to write history," Dr. David Phelps remarked recently in an interview about the progress of his work to unearth clues on the history and lifestyles of coastal North Carolina Indians in the I6th century.
Since joining the faculty at East Carolina University in 1970, Phelps has periodically, along with teaching duties, been involved in research and excavation work throughout eastern and northeastern North Carolina counties in a continuing effort to discover more about the Algonkian Indians who were the major inhabitants of the area before the arrival of European colonists.
Now. with focus intensified on North Carolina's early history in conjunction with the forthcoming 400th anniversary of the first attempted settlements by English colonists on our shores. Phelps has fortunately been given full time and a greater degree of financial support to pursue his quest to learn more about the now vanished Indians and their relatively complex culture.
Working W ith (irant Our current school year projects are being undertaken with the help of a grant from America's 400th Anniversary Committee, with $140,000 funded by The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation." Phelps pointed out.
We have two primary goals in our research. One is to trv to discover things that will help us understand the Carolina Algonkian culture, particularly in the 16th century. The other is to identify and excavate sites where we know there was contact between settlers and Indians."
He noted that "first in North Carolina, then all along the Atlantic coast, the English confrontation with the Algonkian culture was really like a last moment encounter,"
Very little information on the Algonkians. Phelps observes, is recorded. Thomas Harriot's descriptions are good, but incomplete. There are possible discrepancies in his writings. For example, he speaks of the burial of leaders in temples. W'hether leaders and common people were buried toget'her or separately is one of the things we are trying to reconstruct from evidence." Contrary to Harriot's observation, it has been established that the common burial practice among Algonkians is that of mass burial - one common pit in which the deceased were interred. In fact, a burial site recently uncovered in Currituck contained the skeletons of .56 persons. (Harriot was a mathematician and astronomer sent by .Sir Walter Raleigh as scientific adviser for the expedition of 1585-86 to Roanoke Island.)
Summer Exeavations
For two and one-half months in the summer ol 1983, Phelps was able to have a sizeable research-excavation crew at work in the field. Work was carried out at two sites, one near Harrellsville in Hertford County, the other across the Chowan River in Gates County.
Choanoke, in Hertford County, is the major of the two sites, and the location where most excavation work took place. The Gates County site is near Robert's Wharf on Bennett ('reek, a Choanokejeservation town occupied from 1677 to 17,50.
The Choanoke Indians, the largest Tifld-mosUpohticaljv^ powerful of Algonkian groups in what is now northeastern North Carolina, were headquartered in their capital town 'of the same name as the tribe." Phelps said. Their settlement was the easiest to locate, mainly from the description Ralph Lane left in 1586 of the settlement on the Chowan River near the present village of Harrellsville.''
Phelps indicated "the site stretches for a mile on the west bank of the Chowan. We first found and tested the site in 972, sampling various areas, some residential, some given over to public functions.
This summer we dealt primarily with the residential area in an effort to authencticate this known site. It's long and large. Estimates from early descriptions indicate that the Choanokes could put 700 fighting men in the field, and that the settlement's population was about 2,000 or more at the time of the first English attempts to settle on the coast. The extent of the residential areas we have uncovered tends to confirm this."
Dramatic Find
During the summer explorations, Phelps related our most dramatic find was the discovery of the burial site of a dog. From this evidence, we have concluded that the Choanokes buried their dogs in the same manner they used to bury humans.
We also gathered good information on tools, utensils, food remains not found before," Phelps added. Their foods included a full range of fish and animals, and hickory nuts as well as agricultural products. Hickory nut trees are still common in the' area. We'll know more about their eating habits when a botanical analysis is made of our finds."
Another significant discovery has been that of different type of net weights, the use of conch shells to hold down cast nets. Those we found at Choanoke are medium-sized shells, with holes bored in one end for use in attaching the shells to the net.
We first found conch shells used for this purpose five years ago in Bertie County," Phelps said. Then two years ago we discovered more at Currituck. We know now the native Indians used cast nets as well as hook and line devices to catch fish."
Good Specimens
Excavations in Choanoke this summer resulted in considerable specimens unearthed. We brought back 30 cubic feet of specimens, including some good Algonkian finds," Phelps commented. "We have numerous small pieces of pottery. Basically these are the same patterns we knew alreacly existed, although there is some variation in decorative treatment.
Stone and pottery artifacts are helpful in determining changes in culture through time," Phelps explained. "They're important in judging the possible correlation to some specific town or location."
Phelps indicated there was "surprisingly little stone in the site area. Mostly arrow heads, some blades, a few stone drills. There was one place, however, where excavations exposed lots of evidence of stone working. This is unusual."
Other findings encompassed beads, standard marginella shells with holes drilled in one end for stringing, and a couple of small shell disc beads.
Relative to wood remains, Phelps said we have not unearthed burned house fragments, but we have found a number of post molds, perhaps evidence of a wall partition. Eventually we will expose a larger area and hope t'o find more house remains,"
Residents Cooperative
Current excavation a.t the Choanoke site is being carried out where residential cottages line the riverfront. This could have presented some real problems," Phelps commented, but the people who live there are most cooperative, helpful, interested. Naturally, at points where we dig in their front yards, we have to take more care so that we disturb landscaping as little as possible.
One positive factor about the location, Phelps indicated, is that this cuts down considerably on the possibility of vandalism while we're away from the site. Many of the residents live there year-round. so we have their presence as a safeguard."
Concern about vandalism of a site is but one of many problems. facing team members carrying out excavation work. "There's always the problems of dryness, of heat that affects recording soil differences." Phelps said. "Sometimes sandy areas are powder dry, while clay areas are brick hard.
Mosquitoes are a constant pest. We've found out the best way to (leal with them is to get used to them." he observed. Yellow flies, or deer flies, were the worst this summer in years."
Algonkians W idespread
The word Algonkian. Phelps explained, is a linguistic term covering a widespread language family from North Carolina into present day Canada. The Carolina Algonkian group included about 16 societies, among them the Choanoke.
HARD WORK UNDER A SUMMER SUN . . . Theres no substitute for tedious, careful work in excavating a site. The three workers here, on hands and knees, look with trained eves
Roanoke, Croatan and Weapemeoc. There are no reliable population figures of the Carolina societies, but work is being done on demographic studies. Current estimates range from a 16th century population of 7 to 15 thousand. If I had to guess. I'd pick the higher number."
Sites and Plans
The extensive number of Algonkian sites will perhaps come as a surprise to most eastern North Carolinians.'"We know of about 200 Algonkian town or camp locations," Phelps said, "and about 20 of these should give us maximum information in our search for more knowledge about these Indians. "
Future excavation plans call for a return to the Choanoke siteinF'eburaryor March.
In the com'ing months and on into the winter, we will concentrate on Roanoke Island." Phelps said, We hope to determine whether a village mentioned by Barlow in 1,584 has evidence, still intact, or whether it has been washed away. We 11 also be searching for evidence of the lost colonv people on the north end of Roanoke Island. In fact." Phelps added, we will emphasize the search for the lost colony village, as this is important in the overall picture in the relationship of Indian and colonists at that time,
One of the things we're still missing out on is locating a site reportedly discovered by Talcott Williams in 1896. We re' continuing our efforts to locate the site, where 12 skeletons in a burial pit were reportedly uncovered by Williams. His notes indicating the location of the site cannot be found. We'd like to find the site. It may not be important, then again it could be a valuable Algonkian camp or town trom our sta.idpoint.
On Hatteras we'll conduct a test excavation to see il anything is left of a Croatan site near Buxton, There's a couple of sites near the south end of Hatteras. The Croatan is the most important of these. Another part of the winter area work will be devoted to a survey of a Nags Heads wood site. "
Professional Staff The Z. Smith Reynolds Grant has made possible the employmen~(ri~pi^ssm^^ staff to help accelerate excavation and research of Algonkian sites. The grant includes paid staff as well as students." Phelps said. In addition to myself, there are two senior archaeologists and two junior ones.
My assistant is Paul Green. The chief of field activities is Kenneth Hartsell. We also have Loretta Lautzenheiser and P J. F. Westlake, Westlake has a degree from Oxford University and is getting his American experience with us" Student help. Phelps noted 'is invaluable, They work in the lab here, drafting, drawing, helping to sort things. " At the time. Phelps and his assistants occupy an area in the old cafeteria building. The limited space is crowded with tables filled with specimens from the Choanoke digs, along with specimens from other sources to be used for comparatixe study and identification purposes.
for signs of any possible evidence. The three were at work at the Bennett's Creek site in (lates {oiint\.
Asked if the crowded conditions m an old. ill-lit area was dcscouraging, Phelps smiled, It's a place to work, and we have windows so that.we can get a viewot the out.side What we really hope to have somedax,'-' he added, is an Indian Museum tor eastern North Carolina "
Previous Dig
Before excavation assignments got under way at the Hertford and Gates Counties sites. Phelps and crexvs ot university students carried out summer months excavation at Jordan's Landing betxveen 1971 and 1978 The landing is on the Roanoke River in Bertie County between Williamston and Windsor
We used this site to tram field students." Phelps explained. It turned out to be a neat Tuscaroran village. We uncovered a lot of information on Tuscaroran trade with the Algonkians. There xve found Algonkian pots, and evidence of trade in supply things such as Vaupon leaves and perhaps dried fish.
' One interesting thing was the discoverx of the use of terrapin shells as storage utensils.'
Phelps added that the site and the nearbx Francis Gillam house are in the process of being-put on the National Register of Historic Places. The house dates liacklo I7:;v:;;ti
.\rca N;ili\(*
Phelps, a natixe of Gates County, commented that his father's family grew up in the area where he is now excavating. When asked it being from the area made it easier to gam acce.ss to sites and get the cuoperation of local residents, he smiled. Fdsay it doesn't hVi't our chances,
I ve been interested in coastal studies tor a long time," he commented, both along the Gulf Coast and in'the North Carolina coastal area '
Phelps received a doctorate in anthropology trom Tulane University, and has taught and done research work in anthropology and in archaeology. He came to East Carolina University in 197ii from Flordia State University.
If Phelps can continue to receive support, there are many years of excavation and research ahead tor him and hi's fellow workers in eastern and northeastern North Carolina At Choanoke alone, only a small section ol the settlement has been e.xcavated," Phelps commimted To do justice to that site it will take ten years oi work 1 hope the research here and at other sites can goon There's much we want to, learn"An America's 400th Anniversary Article
DRAMATIC D1SC0\ERY .., The discoverv ul the skeleton of a dog in a burial site at Choanoke is, according to Dr. Phelps, dramatic evidence that Algonkians buried their dogs in the
f
same manner used for burial of humans. From evidence such as this, vital insight is gained into the Algonkian culture.
.SORTING FINDS . . . ECU graduate student Larry Belli... seated, studies fragments from the 3(1 cubic feet of material brought from the Choanoke site to the archaeology laboratory
at East Carolina University. The program's directdr. Dr. David Phelps^discusses identification of an item with Beilis, (Reflector Photo bv ,)err\ Ravnor i
Metropolitan Opera Celebrating 100th Anniversary
EDITOR S NOTE - The Metropolitan Opera, one of the most famous houses in the world, celebrate^ its iouth anniversary this year. The event spurs memories for many on stage as weif as those who have enjoyed the Met from the gallery' One of its biggest fans, thea.Mets archivist, also remembers. By .MARY CAMPBELL AP Newsfeatures Writer * .NEW YORK ,AP) - The .\fetropolitan Opera qpens its season tomorrow, with Jessye Norman and Placido Domingo in Berlioz' "The Trojans ' The performance marks the .Met's looth anniversary. It opened with Christine Nilsson in Gounod's "Faust," in 1883.
The Met performed during world wars, the Depression, had a shortened season after a labor dispute in 1%9. Only a fire in 1892 caused cancellation of. the season, but there was a tour.
The annual tour goes back the entire lUO years. Enrico Caruso sang in "Carmen" on the .Met tour in San Francisco the evening of the earthquake in 1996. '.
The Metropolitan Opera was built because .'the -nouveau.x riches, with names like Vanderbilt, Roosevelt. Iselin. Goelet, Astor and .Morgan, whose money dated from the Civil War. couldn't get opera boxes at the Academy of Music, The boxes there were held by "the Knickerbocker gentry." whose money dated from the Revolution .Monday night, by tradition, was the dressiest night at the Met. and it still is. But the rich in their finerv aren t
seen as mubh at opening nights any mor^ ^
At the* old Mefvcalled a "yellow brick brewery" by those who thought the outside of it looked common, the main entrance was on Broadway, There also was an entrance on 40th Street and a "carriage entrance" on 39th Street, On opening nights, the press stood on bleachers at the carriage 'entrance, noting who came through and what they were wearing.
When the new Met opened in Lincoln Center in I960,, a plan to have arches and entrances on three sides was deemed too costly. Now everybody comes in the same front door. The "carnage trade" has decided that mid-September is just too early to come back from summer homes and trips abroad.
But music lovers without wealth weren't ignored when the Met was built. There has been space for standees since 1883 and the top balcony, with the cheapest seats, is , the biggest one.
. Operf well sung and well presented, is tte reason for. .- the .MeUfApthony A, Bliss, general "manager says. It always has been and will be for tlie next 100 years as well, he is confident. During his tenure, an endowment fund has been started. He says, "I hope we will succeed, gradually through the years, to further solidify our financial security so-that there will be an even higher standard of excellencie in the years ahead." ,
"Everybody here is concerned with the next produc-
( ENbORSHIP Author ( al Thomas addresses the probhm of censorship" of religious hooks in his current book tithd Book Burning.' (AP l.aserphotoi
tion, archivist Robert Tuggle says cheerfully. Were only concerned with everything that is over."
The archivists desk, on Level B-at the Met. is'in the midst of basement storage space. On a table nearly is Birgit Nilsson's headgear as Turandot and Olive Fremstad's helmet, with ^ white turkey feathers over the ears, as Brunnhilde.
The Turandol has just arrived, Tuggle says. Somebody found a box that said 'Throw Out' and asked if I wanted it." He did. From a cupboard he takes Maria Jeritza's Turandot headdress. It'll be in the big exhibit at the Performing Arts Library at Lincoln Center.
"It's Thai Nilssons is Korean, Turandot is supposed to be Mandarin. volunteers Gail Frohlinger, costumes expert.
Tuggle gets out the archives' oldest possession, a book of minutes, in which it says, in beautiful, clear handwriting, that it has been moved and seconded at a board meeting on Apj;il JjO, 1880. that an inquiry be made into a proper site , for, an opera house.
Tuggle gets out a big "pay book," for 1920-21, Each singer has a page with his or her name at the top and on each line, the date and name of the opera in which he or she sang and how much he or she was paid. Performances scheduled but not sung are written in red ink. Caruso's Christmas Eve La Juive" is on his page, followed by two lines in red. It was his 607th .Met performance, his last in opera anywhere
"We have some pay books from the 1890s." Tuggle says. "They keep asking me if they can stop doing it and I tel them they have to keep it up"
.Mary Ellis Peltz, who started Opera News in 1936, left the magazine in 1957 and started the archives, Tuggle says. "She scrounged the building for things that belonged in archives instead of sitting in closets and under water in the basement. They gave her space. So. when the building came down, with all that chaos, they gave her space in the new building. That we have anything at ail is due to her "
Mrs. Peltz collected correspondence, contracts, receipts, reviews, programs, photographs, costumes, stage properties. She resigned in 1981. Tuggle followed her as archivist.
Some think that any yesterday is the Mets golden age of voices and that Price. Caball, Sutherland, Nilsson, Horne, Tucker. Pavarotti. Domingo, Vickers, Merrill and Milnes will be thought of tomorrow as the golden age.
Others, like Tuggle, think 1996 to 1922 was the Met's golden age of voices. Caruso, who sang at the Met from 1903 to 1920, is his favorite among them.
"With his voice and personality. he was everything everv other tenor tries to
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be,he says.
He was the biggest practical joker, too, Tuggle says. Theres a wonderful account 1 found in an old
long, the swan with which he was supposed to make his exit sailed away on an orchestral cue. Slezak asked the audience. What time
newspaper of a Bohemr--
that he and Antonio Scotti ' ^ -
completely disrupted. Andre de Segurla, who used to sing Colline. wore a monocle. At a performance in Philadelphia, , both Scotti and Caruso wore monocles. They picked up a hat and. water poured out of it. An orange was nailed to the table,
Frances Alda was singing Mimi, By the end of the third act, they had her singing her arias with her eyes crossed.
It was just her contribution.
She said in a book that at the end of the performance,
Giulio Gatti-Casazza. who was her husband, raced backstage and fined them all. They agreed it was one of the best expenditures they'd ever made. I suspect it was one of those performances everybody claims to have been at.
A picture I couldn't find for my book that 1 was dying to find was Leo Slezak as Radames with his eyes crossed. The entire choruj-^
W'Ss convulsed wlm.be did
leave' The fine for that one wasSlOO.
The most popular of the 26 operas premiered at the Met is Puccinis 1910 The Girl of the Golden West. Tuggle considers the most exciting debut at the Met to have been Kirsten Flagstad's, because nobody here knew anything about her. It was a 1935 Saturday afternoon broadcast performance of Die Walkure" in which she sang Sieglinde.
Bliss tells about starting to listen on his car radio, turning the car around and joining his father, Cornelius Bliss, chairman of the Met's board, both of them rapt for the rest of the opera, in the directors' box.
There's also been non-opeijatic tragedy on stage. Two singers died during per-formances: the great baritone Leonard Warren, during "La Forza del Destino" in 1960. and bass Arman^ C^isjle^ij^y, -Ip heart jailed atjfiie en the second ac^ '*Marta ftr j
that at an 'Aii^' perfor manee. Thev were allTinecFii:^''''- -t; -
and he paid the fine." Slezak Tugglesa\s. Nellie Melba
also spoke a famous line during a Lohengrin." Having held his last note over
had a rivalry with anybody she felt got close in terms of popular response"
REl MTED The Everly Brothers, rock and roll legends from the 1950^ buried the hatchet in London recently to end a fractious split which had lasted ten years. Don (left) and
Phil, singing duo with a string of hits from the 50s and 60s, will sing together at reunion concerts in Albert Hall. (AP Laserphoto)
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Keeps Promise
To Use Horses In Farming
EDITORS NOTE -George Andrew knows them by name. Tulip. And Belle. And the others. And they know him. Others may follow the way of progress, the way of the combustion engine and the tractor. But George Andrew still gets pleasure from a team of trusty farm horses.
By TERRENCE PETTY Associated Press Writer
EAGLE BRIDGE, N.Y. (AP) - When George Andrew bought his dairy farm in rolling fields among wooded hills along the New York-Vermont border 39 years ago, he promised himself he wouldn't get a tractor unless he could afford one.
Thats a promise he never broke. But this dedicated horsemans principles may be more equine than economical.
No one can tell George Andrew that twisting a tractors ignition switch offers the same pleasure he gets from starting up a team of trusty horses with a hyep.cmere girls."
Andrew did end up buying a tractor, although at first he would use it only to turn belts to operate machinery. And he bought more automated contraptions for the increased work that came as he expanded his operations
- from 60 head of Holsteins in 1944 to 250 today, and from 204 acres to 450.
But he never went into debt, and he got a good start for his son, Howard, whos now running Andland Farm
- the Holsteins. 20 sheep, hogs, poultry, and 12 horses
- still solvent and pretty much debt free, says Andrew. ,
And for all those 39 years, Andrew has always had at least one team of horses to. put to work.
Now that hes retired, Andrew is doing what he wants - ignoring the tractors and getting out into the hardscrabble fields every _day with work horses Percherons. Belgians, and crosses of the two.
Andrew is 71, his face grapefruit-pink, tight and weathered, beneath silky white hair. He gets up every morning at 6, says so long to his wife. Carolyn, and drives two miles from his house in the Rensselaer County community of Eagle Bridge, about 35 miles northeast of Albany, to the farm where he once lived.
Andrew usually calls it quits after 12 hours.
im supposed to be retired, but I come up here every morning, he says. As his son and grandsons scramble aboard the tractors like pilots onto the wings of fighter planes, Andrew is in the horse barn, getting a team ready for whatever can still be done practically by horses - hauling manure out of the cow barns and spreading it, raking, fixing fences or picking up boulders.
"I came here and I figured I wouldnt buy any tractor unless I could pay for it, says Andrew, pushing back his engineers cap as he sits on a" nay bale in the horse barn. "A lot of fellows have a hard time keeping up with " their payments. I never had that trouble.
There are three horses in the barn, all Belgians -one-ton draft dnimals with necks like tree trunks, fluffy hairs called feathers falling from their knees to their large hooves, and soft, blonde tails streaming nearly to the hay-scattered wooden floor. Hanging from the ceiling above Andrew are tangles of leather and rope harnesses he has collected over the years. He has no idea where he got them all.
The first girl I ever took out, we went in a horse and wagon, says Andrew, now standing up and holding onto one of the harnesses. We didnt get there so quick, but we didnt get back so quick, either.
Crows feet form at the far ends of his eyebrows when Andrew smiles. He smiles a lot like this - elfishly, peeping out of the upper edges of his eyes - once you get to know him.
He becomes solemn when talking about ailing and old horses hes brought up to one of his meadows and shot an qnen-air equine cemetery. He ligures > theyd rather
have that than the glue factory.
I put down 10 horses on the hill, says Andrew, still clinging to a leather harness.
He gets up, walks to the open door, thumbs wrapped around the straps of his denim coveralls, spits, and comes back.
Its like my father always said, you dont want to have too much money in them. Then you dont have to worry about it when you hear them thrashing around at night, he says. Nonetheless, draft horses often cost about $2,000 each.
Andrew developed a reputation as a breeder and trainer of draft horses, and he only recently got out of that business.
When 1 started farming, I broke colts for $25 a horse, Andrew says. If I didnt like the way they turned out, I wouldnt take the money.
When I was a kid, I was pretty happy to work with horses. I just took to them, thats all. I always liked to drive 'em, be around em. You might as well do something you want to.
Outside. Andrew hitches up Tulip and Belle, both Belgians, to one of those old single-blade plows that looks like a wooden wishbone, strapping the worn reins around his back. The plow blade jumps out of the furrow after hitting a rock. Andrew is caught off guard, but leans back against the reins strapped under his armpits and easily stops the same team that earlier dragged a spreader.
"They say there wasnt so many people around with back trouble when they used horses. What do you think asks Andrew in his manner of suggesting he may or may not be serious about what hes saying.
A good team plows about two acres a day, says Andrew. This probably isnt economical. But if you like them, you might as well have them, hadnt you? Andrew says he never thought about doing anything but farming. His father, a Vermonter as was Andrews mother, rented farms for many years. Andrew, in fact, was born on a rented farm near Hoosick Falls, N.Y., and operated two others before setting down $7,000 for this one.
I thought if I could get a farm with 20 cows and four horses. Id be satisfied, says Andrew, looking across the meadow at the battleship-size milking barn.
Andrew, a church-going Baptist, believes good fortune comes with hard work and faith.
Thats what this country is founded on - thats why it was so prosperous. How could anything fall together like this if there was no God? asks Andrew.
And being a believer, he thinks about death and the hereafter now and then. And always about horses.
Says George Andrew, These are the first things I drove, and theyll probably be the last.
Boat' blast HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The Love Boat goes musical in a two-hour special of country music ditties with a boat load of guest stars that includes Melba Moore and Jimmy Osmond.
Among songs to be heard on the special will be Pick Yourself Up, Heat Wave. "With You On My Arm and Youre Just In Love, scheduled to be sung by guest stars and the shows regular cast.
Also appearing on the special edition of the ABC-TV series will be Dean Jones, David. L. Lander, Juliet Prowse, Alexis Smith and Ben Vereen.
Gould signs HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Elliott Gould has been added to the cast of The Naked Face, based on the bestselling novel by Sidney Sheldon, for The Cannon Group film company.
Gould joins Roger Moore and Rod Steiger in the thriller, which includes comedian Marty Allen in the role of a stand-up comic.
Gould recently starred for the Cannon Group in Over the Brooklyn Bridge with Margaux Hemingway, Sid Caesar and Shelley Winters. . ^
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Consumers Show More Concern About Value
By BARBARA MAYER AP Newsfeatures Observers have noted that American consumers are more value-cqnscious than they used tobe,
. seem to be looking for pro
ducts that* refleh their own sense of individuality. " says Barbara Roller of Burlineton industries in New York. ^ The.Oirm recently conducted studies with consumer focus groups to determine possible new product directions. As a result 01 the studies. Ms. Roller, who is manager of new product development for Burlington House Draperies, says the company believes it is on the right track :n offering more custom detailing in its ready-made window curtains and draperies
A trend toward more custom detailing in window coverings, bedspreads and
related products appears to be industry-wide. At a recent wholesale market' for curtains and draperies, for example, a number of companies introduced new ideas in ready-mades which should provide more options for consumers.
These ideas include reversible drapery and matching bedspread ensembles, custom-like swag and jabot treatments for windows and a wider assortment of colors than were formerly available in ready-mades.
Reversible products are popular with customers, according to retailers, because they offer two looks in one product.
Those shopping for window coverings this fall should find dressier fabrics and more elaborate treatments in the stores.
Tapestry, damask and satin draperies
(often in easy-care synthetic fibers) are more widely available than they used to be. coinciding with the reintroduction of more formal window treatments. The new draperies often have a softer feel l^ause more fabric is being used in fuller, more gathered constructions.
Dressmaker details which give window coverings a more formal look include intricate stitching, ruffles, ruching. as well as braid, ribbon and lace trim. Such details used to be found only on custom-made window coverings.
Besides providing more elaborate ready-made curtains, some manufacturers have expanded custom and made-to-measure programs giving consumers the option of specifying the length and width of their draperies as well as selecting from among several header treatments
Not too long ago, Ms. Roller said, the . ready-made drapery market was largely dominated by pinch pleated draperies in a rather narrow selection of fabrics and colors. Today, other options are available, including curtains and draperies sewn to accommodate the so-called Euro[an-style flat rod or made with an oversize rod pocket.
Ms. Roller says the new products are industr\s way of satisfying consumer demand. Burlingtons focus group of consumers said recently that they would prefer to buy more decorative domestics but that such products were not readily available in the stores at reasonable prices. Todays emphasis on traditional decor has also stimulated the development of these softer window treatments.
Even desire to save energy has played
a part, since more elaborate layered window treatments are energy con-servers.
Consumers are seeking more sophisticated home decorations than in the past under the influence of shelter magazines in whose pages they see pictures of interesting new window treatments which they then wish to duplicate, added Ms. Roller.
The winds of change in the drapery field have stirred up a breeze in the drapery hardware end of the business, as wel. One hardware producer has found that one of its more successful items is the 4>2-inch-wide curtain rod. Use of such a rod with a curtain creates a shirred effect. Another best-seller is the recently-introduced brass-plated curtain rod.
Formerly, mass manufacturers tended
to steer away from too many specialty items, said Roseann Fairchild, manager of publications and publicity for Rirsch Inc., but today they offer them because they are in greater demand.
Drapery hardware producers - as well as makers of ready-made draperies -are also developing do-it-yourself information on how to measure, select hardware for, and hang draperies. '
We have found there is simply no experienced help in the stores. In order to sell our products, we have to make sure people know how to use them, explainea Ms. Fairchild.
Both Rirsch and the Graber Co recently prepared practical consumer information on how to select and hang window treatments. These materials will be found in retail outlets carrj'ing their products across the country.
New Daffodils Offer Variety
By EARl. ARO.NSO.N AF .Newsfealures
.Mo'' ilo'.u-r gardeners are quite familiar with the popular. f)eau!i-:ur Tulips that you plant in the fall. So let's consider, for a cha.'.gi', thv lovely, spnng-blooming daffodils that also are put :.'ito the groiund as bulbs before frost comes.
1: you hink all-daffodils are yellow you haven't kept up wh '.at- ne'A breeds There are daffodils that produce pink and -shite, red ,md yellow and - surprise - green blossoms, "ther.- die rimmed with frilly yellow and white petals that :'e.'emi)ie >vrambled eggs. And they're as easy to grow as the Tdditiondi golden varieties Her- are >onie of the newer Dutch daffodils available at garde,'. ven'er> or through catalogs:
.M'-' R i) Backhouse, large-cPpped blossom with white trump<^f: Salome, large cupped, white outer petaB and''p7kTsh'-yeTroTTrtimpefs Both \vill look good in iron! o: e\ergreen." or other shrubbery, or grouped near tulip.'
\'erger i.' a .'inali-cupped daffodil with white petals and a red 'runipe: A large cupped variety with the same coloring is Prote^sorKinstein (rag'tord i.- a tazetta daffodil that'bears'several flowers on each 'tern and ha.' a sweet aroma Its small red cup lies flat dgain.'t white petals We've had quite a few of these delightful niooiii.' lor wwerai yeari- other red-and-yellow varieties are 'he Idrge-cupped Quirinus and tazetta Scarlet Gem, l nu.'jdl umone newer daffodils are the doubles, with 2 , row> oi.vuriy petal.' replacing the center trumpet. Tahiti has \elina outer petal.' and a rutfled center of red and yellow petal.- .Mary Copeland combines white and yellow petals. Van ''ionail \ ellow and White Lion is all white The green one i> Actea, which belongs to the poeticus divi>,or, Fragrant, it.'cup is edged in red and yellow The-e exotic varieties will multiply through the years.
A.' 'uiip' do, datiodils need well-drained soil If your soil is ciay-hea.vv, v,ork in peat moss, sand or compost before pianir.g :ult),' Loosen soil to a depth of one foot Plant the tjui.b.' inclie,' deep, (i inches apart, .Sprinkle a handful of honemeal under each bulb. Cover the bulbs halfway with soil .md :i pinch oi H-H-F fertilizer. Water thoroughly, replace reiiWiir.ing conditioned soil and water again A mulch o; wood chips, hay or pine needles will help retain moisture and ,'tabilize underground temperature.
A.' the dattoiiils appear in spring, spread more 8-8-8 fertilizer . Ifispcu- KW square feet) to give the bulbs a boost. When tiower> fade, cut them off just below the blossom ba.'o Let the loliage ripen to for'ify the bulbs and encourage the (taitofiils to multiply and bloom n, fotureyears.
Properly planted with nutrients and well tended, fall-planted, .-pring-flowering bulbs should bloom with renewed vigor and beauty for many years. The three keys are weii-prepared and well-drained soil; adequate fertilization, anil proper w atering and mulching.
Re>oarchers at North Carolina Stale University advise that bull)' .-.ood a combination of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, bor.f n'leai and essential micronutrients. A new, high-tech, >iow-reiea>e fertilizer called Holland Bulb Booster has been developed tor bulb gardeners.,
A >ingle application in the fall, mixed with planting soil one tablespoon per square foot) reportedly will increase the bull^ perennialization and provide more vivid, longer-lasting tlowor.' and loliage. The fertilizer should be reapplied to bulbs
((dCTi !dii
PLAN YOUR HOM
Carl Sandburg As A Nafionol
Split Foyer Plan Excellent For Sloping Lot
by Jerry Bishop
Utilizing a sloping lot to create a striking design, the Oldbury boasts outdoor living areas and highly livable lower level. Front-facing and opening to terrace, the family room dominates the lower level, which also includes bedroom, hobby room, and full bath with shower. Above, the dining and living rooms are edged by a sun deck A tiled country kitchen, complete with cooking island and built-in laundry make worktime more efficient. Three bedrooms and two full baths comprise the sleeping wing.
By ELISSA McCRARV
FLAT ROCR, N.C. (,AP)-When Pulitzer-prize winning writer Carl Sandburg died 16 years ago, his family decidetJ to preserve the mountain farm where he spent the last two decades of his life.
They left Sandburgs typewriter perched on an orange crate in his upstairs study and his old blue sweater draped over his chair.
In the living room, where Sandburg and his friends gathered after dinner for music conversation. Sandburgs guitar leans against a piano where he left it.
Its as if the Sandburgs never left the house, sai(^ Jay Shuler of the National Park Service, which took over operation of the Sandburg estate in 1968.
The Carl Sandburg National Historic Site, called Connemara, attracts 50,0(X) visitors, a year. Sandburg, whose writings glorified the
working man, lived 22 years at Connemara. He died there at age 89 in l%7.
Shortly after Sandburg died, a movement began to preserve the farm as a national historic site. Congress approved the proposal in October 1968. The property was acquired from the Sandburg family the next year, along with more than ioo.ooo documents, books and pieces of memorabilia.
Sandburg and his wife, Lillian Paula Steichen. bought the 241-acre farm in 1945. Connemara, which sits halfway up Glassy Mountain in the Flat Rock section of Henderson County, consisted of a white-frame, two-story house, a house for servants
- called the Swedish house
- and a barn and several outbuildings.
It was Mrs. Sandburg who convinced Sandburg to buy the farm and move from Harbert, Mich. Mrs. Sandburg wanted to relocate her prize-winning dairy goat
Area
Main level Lower level Garage
Sq. Ft.
- 1,748
- 932
- 768
No. 9714 Oldbury
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C 1 set (Stud) Pkg.) ..................$35
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I saw this house in the-
Name-
Address -
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Nunc o( Ncwipipcr
Zip
.Make check or money order payable to and send to:, UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE (DEPT. 6-A) i\ ' 200 Park Avenue, New Yiwk, N.Y. 10166 .'
lore's the Answer
\\i)\ l,\\(-.
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i'j::. i/ocdU'C \ee
- Uik'- advanlaoc oi wood un i \\(.' waxed ihe ' ,ound It difl not
produce the nice shine the same wax did on our dining room floor, made ot the same wood, which we assume is oak. Why would the wax shine so nicely onone floor and not on the other'.'
A. - Did you remove from the living room floor any old
wax that might have been on it'.' It there is a wax buildup over a period ot time, the new application sometimes does not give the desired gloss. Try using a commercial wax remover, then applying the wax, .Should it fail to produce a .shine, try
Lumber Museum Traces History Of Logging Days
' OUbLRSPORT, Pa. 'APi - The Pennsylvania Lumber Museum near (oudersport offers visitors a trip back to the early days oi logging
The museum, which opened in 1969. traces the story ot Pennsylvania's big timber from - when the state was So. 1 in the 1,'nited States and Williamsport was the lumbering capital of the world - to the days of the (ivilian Comservation Corps iCCCi camps in the l'ri()s
The story continues to the present, when lumbering is still a major state industry and .52 pzmcent oi the state is forest land.
Museum hostess Delores Bucksen said that more than 2.5,()()() people, most from Ptmrisyivania. New York and Ohio, annually visit the museum at Denton Hill, on U.S. Route fi between Coudersport and Galeton in Potter County.
At the state museum, the visitor will see ||ings like the single blade ax that felled many
a tree in the early forests, uniforms worn by the CCC boys, the cots they slept on and the projects still being enjoyed as a result of their work.
The visitor will go back in time to the horses and railroads that hauled the logs, the tools used in this endeavor, to life in the bunkhouses that the loggers called home as they cut through Penns Woods.
The visitor will see photos of the "quiet temperament horse used in log hauling, because a nervous horse could not move half the load."
One recent day, weekly crafts classes were under way in the picnic area near the bunkhouse. Jack McConnell of Emmaus, who comes to Coudersport to camp each year, was engaged in woodcarving, making a lifelike bear from a chunk of wood. About a dozen others were doiiw similar things in the shadow of the peaceful aid picturesque mountains.
another brand, though the cause more likely is the wax buildup.
Q. - 1 used a chemical non-clogger to clear stopped-up sink a few months ago. It worked fine and everything was all right for about a month, then it happened again. After I cleared the clogging once,more. I had the same trouble, also about a month later. Isn't there some way I can prevent the drain from stopping up other than using a "chemical cleaner, which I am afraid might harm the pipes over a long period of time','
A. - For some reason which isn't apparent, there have been a flock of similar questions in recent months. There are many reasons why certain sinks clog periodically, but one way to keep them clear is to fush them occasionally with very hot water. Put some baking-soda into the sink, then let the hot water run for a few minutes. It is assumed that you are careful about what goes down the drain.
Q. - If I use a commercial bleach after stripping the varnish from an ofo bureau, can the wood be re-stained or will the residue of the bleach interfere with the stain?
A. - Not if you follow the bleach manufacturers instructions about how to remove the residue. To be extra certain, however, apply a coat of clear sealer before vou use the stain
Home Is Kept Historic Site
onIhe
HOUSE
By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures
Unfinished attics that stayed that way for a long time got new attention in recent years as homeowners began to look at their own houses for needed extra space.
Large areas that had been nothing more than places for storage were transformed into living quarters. Two bedrooms and a bath were added at a cost far less than the price of a new house with the same amount of habitable square footage as the remodeled one. Curiously, many persons, especially teenagers, prefer the privacy and isolation of attic living if there is even a modicum of comfort and appeal to the accommodations.
Your choices of the type and size of the renovation, as well as the kinds of materials used will depend on the available space and the available money. For the purposes of this and ensuing articles about the finishing process, it will be assumed yo.u have the ordinary expansion attic suitable for two fairly sizable rooms, considerable storage space and. if desired, a bathroom.
As for the money, you either have it or can get it or you would not be considering finishing the attic. If you contemplate a loan, remember that lending institutions are highly competitive these days and you should spend some time shopping around for the best terms.
Before you spend a penny or contract for anything, such as plumbing and electricity, get an idea of how you want the new rooms to look. Do this by visiting the finished attics of friends, relations and establishments that have them or parts of them on display. Take a pencil and paper with you and write down anything you want to remember or most assuredly facts will become a bit jumbled in your memory after you have seen four or five places.
What you see not only will give you ideas on arrangements, but will allow you to determine first-hand which materials catch your eye and might be fine for your own home. Ask questions about prices when it is practical and tactful.
When you have decided you know fairly well what you want, make a sketch of a floor plan, the kind you have seen hundreds of times in newspapers and magazines. Never mind ho ii.'tistic it looks. Just be sure the rooms as you outlined them fit the actual dimensions of the workable space in the attic. Decide where everything will be - doors, windows, plumbing lines, outlets, closets, etc. You can'db an extra good job by using graph paper with a one inch equals one foot scale.
One of the things to consider is whether a dormer is required for extra space and light. Some persons think this is always necessary when finishing an attic, but we have seen some excellent renovations without the addition of a dormer. New installation methods permit this to be done by professionals without the danger that bad weather might cause damage to the house while the work is under way. Sometimes, when a dormer is not needed, the existing windows can be enlarged to provide extra light, but there are times when the present windows are sufficient.
Whatever the size of your attic, the space can be made to appear larger with the use of built-ins, such as bureaus, cabinets, bookcases and closets. You will have to weigh the cost of this additional construction against the price of new furniture or the use of whatever furniture you already have. Be sure to make your decision before you begin the work, as it Is easier to make the built-ins as you go along and while the walls are still open rather than later.
It is at the open-walL stage, by the way, that you also take care of the electrical outlets and such. That means you must hire an electrician to arrive at a certain stage of the construction to make his installations. Consider the possibility of rejuventating the entire electrical system at the same time, since the wiring in many old homes is inadequate today because of extra demands from modern appliances and. in this case, from the additional living quarters.
The chances are that new attic insulation will be needed.
Thats a ^ject for discussion in a future article.---
(Do-it-yourselfers will find much helpful information in Andy Langs handbook, "Practical Home Repairs, which can be obtained by sending $1.50 to this newspaper at Box 5, I Teaneck,NJ07666.)
herd to a milder climate.
The story is that she took one look at the long driveway with its huge trees and the white house up on the hill and fell in love with it, Shuler said.
Visitors , to the Sandburg home today wind their way up the same curving drive lined with towering white pines and hemlocks. Inside the house, the rooms are much the same as when the Sandburgs lived there.
Yellowing magazines from the" 1940s and 1950s cover tables in the hall and living room. Sandburg's collection of canes stand beside the fireplace.
In the dining room, a place is set for Sandburgs late-morning breakfast, complete with a thermos for his favorite drink - a mixture of coffee, goat's milk and honey. In his second-floor bedroom. Sandburgs worn brown slippers are carelessly strewn beside his rough-hewn, narrow bed.
More than 14,000 books on subjects ranging from Abraham Lincoln to farming line bookshelves in every room.
Furnishings in the Sandburg house are simple and serviceable a throwback, park service guides say, to Sandburgs austere upbringing by Sw^-ish immigrant parents and his life as a social thinker.
He just didnt care about luxury, Shuler said. He was interested only in the working man. To him, money was something received' for working. He didnt throw it away on things he considered unnecessarv.
One of Connemaras key attractions is the goat herd, which the park service has maintained. Mrs. Sandburgs prized Chikaming herd has dwindled from the 200 she kept to about 15. But most of the goats are descendants of the original herd.
Because her husband wrote until the wee hours of the morning and slept part of the day, Mrs. Sandburg ran the farm. A lower-level kitchen in the house still features a trough with four small metal bowls where Mrs. Sandburg brought new lambs for feeding.
ADD SPACE AND VALUE TO YQURHOME..,..
SUNSrSTEM
PBfI^(n<AIiD
SOLARSUNBOOM
FOR FREE BROCHURE AND MORE INFORMATION
Contact Hirokl Creech & Associates P.O. Box 1563. Greenaille. N.C. 27635 Telephone (919) 752-4346
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75Z-4187
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C ^^day. Ociober 9,1983
38 Chemistry 52 Road sign 9 Mideast man
S.C. Man To Become Second Black In Space
D-5
ACROSS
1 Cut off 4 Grizzly 8 Notoriety
12 Aussie bird
13 Jacobs son
14 Spoken
15 Conflict '
16 Elvis-Presley
17 Banister
18 Changing room feature
21 Corroded
22 Place down
23 Wharves
26 Critic Reed
27 Actor Voight SOLesEtats
31 Dine
32 Tug, for " instance
33 Lubricate
34 Attempt
35 Canines
36 Baseballs - Brock
37 Pose
38 Chemistry class topic
45 Rara-
46 Baal, e.g.
47 Puffins kin
48 Departed
49 French noggin
50 Before
51 Folding money
52 Road sign
53 British Z DOWN
1 Lascivious
2 Sharif
3 Chaste
4 Explosions
5 Strange
6 Bards river
7 Curl
8 Raid
Avg. solution tme: 24 min.
gili Mnmawnaiaii lasisg gsll mm
oil Qsi
10-8
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
9 Mideast man
10 Post
11 French pronoun
19 Utters
20 Levy
23 Status-
24 Numerical prefix
25 Be sick
26 Sunbeam
27 Sgt. Friday
28 Grain
29 Ultimate
31 Scholarly
32 Greek letter
34 Excessively
35 Names
36 Inventories
37 F.-Fitzgerald
38-Alto
39 Flat
40 Teeming
41 Brainstorm
42 Singer Joan
43 Attraction
44 Just got by
23
24
25
39 40
36
34
26
22
46
49
37
20
35
32
27
42
147
10 11
28
43
29
44
CRYPTOQUIP 10-8
ORL KTFA US RUZDLD RUUK TSNFHV-
LV AHNR EZLIO KUUOIEL.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip: WINE MERCHANT SEARCHES IN BASEMENTS; WANTS BEST CELIJVRS.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: R equals H.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
1983 King Fwlures Syndicate. Inc
School Menus
Menus for Greenville elementary schools this week as announced are:
Monday-nomenu.
Tuesday - assorted sandwiches or hoagie sandwich, potatoe salad, carrot or celery sticks, peanut butter cake and milk.
Wednesday - power source burger, printout potatoes, vegetable chips, apple bytes and milk.
Thursday - roasted turkey, cornbread stuffing, sweet pottoes, green beans, buttermilk busices with butter and milk.
Friday - spaghetti with meat sauce, baked potato with butter, tossed salad, sliced peaches, french bread and milk.
Lunch menus for Pitt County schools this week as announced are:
Monday hot dog, french fries with catsup, coleslaw, hot dog roll and milk.
Tuesday -. roasted turkey, cornbread stuffing, sweet potatoes, green beans, biscuit and honeybutter, and milk.
Wednesday - cheeseburger, french fries with catsup, raw, vegetables, apple and milk.
Thursday - lasagna, tossed salad with dressig, buttered corn, french bread and milk.
Friday - barbecue pork, french fries with catsup, coleslaw, hamburger bun and milk.
No Treatment Due To Tattoo
SAN JOSE, Calif. lAP) -An appendicitis patient who was refused treatment by a Jewish doctor because of his swastika tattoo says he tried to explain it symbolized white power, not Nazi Germany.
Dr. Jason Balaban said Wednesday he referred John Brickell, 24, to another doctor after telling him the swastika means white power to you, but it means
entirely different things to me. The symbol was used by Adolf Hitlers Nazi Party, which led Germany to exterminate 6 million Jews in World War II.
The mother of Brickells fiance said she has considered suing over Tuesday nights incident. However, the state hospital association said doctors may treat whom they wish in nonemergencies.
IsYoyr"", Delivery Okay?
We take particular pride in the efficiency of our carriers who deliver the Daily Reflector to your home.
If the doily delivery of your Doily Reflector is^ less than satisfactory, please tell us about it. Call our Circulation Department and we will do our best to work out the
problem.
752-3952
Between 8:30 A.M. and 6:30 P.M. Weekdays and 8 'til 9 A.M. on Sundays
By DAVID TOMLIN Associated Press Writer
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - The second black man ever to fly in space will be a physicist from rural Lake City, S.C., who says his early education in segregated public schools taught him never to give up.
Coming out of an environment like that, even though you may not have the best available to you academically, I think theres something to be gained with just having to deal with adversity, said astronaut Ronald E. McNair.
McNair will be a mission specialist, helping to launch commercial satellites and conduct experiments on an ight-day flight of the space shuttle Challenger scheduled to begin Jan. 29.
Hes one of two South Carolina natives in the space program. The other is Marine Lt. Col. Charles F. Bolden Jr. of Columbia, who is also one of the four blacks in the 78-member astronaut corps.
McNair first began dreaming about space travel at age 7. when the first Sputnik satellite went into orbit. But he didnt seriously consider joining the program until he had gotten his
Ph.D. in physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and joined the staff of Hughes Research Laboratories in California.
It was in 1977 when NASA announced they were looking for scientists to perform tasks on the shuttle, he recalls. I said, Theres my chance.
This time it was not dreaming or fantasy. It was real. I was very, very serious, and I figured if they were sincere about the qualifications, I was confident I had a good chance at it. \
McNair joined tire program in 1978 in the same group with Guion Bluford and Sally Ride, who became the first black and
efirs
the first woman in space respectively earlier thi^ear. ......... dtex
Bolden joined in 1980 and hopes to be named next year as a pilot on a mission to be flown in 1985. The fourth black in the program is Frederick T. Gregory, an Air Force officer from Washington, D.C.
McNairs career includes a string of academic and professional achievements and honors, but he traces it all to his Lake City upbringing with his two brothers.
Not just my mother, who was a teacher, but my father.
who had little formal education but is as well educated as many people who did, McNair says. "They created an atmosphere where education was a fun thing, not a task, not a duty.
With the teaching and everything, I guess we didnt focus on our own children, said Pearl M. McNair, who retires next year after 35 years as a teacher and administrator with the Lake City schools.
They were just good children. They studied. We didn't have to push them. He was just like any other American boy to us at that time. He played all sports, and he tried to play ail musical instruments. He was a Boy Scout. He was a quiet, reserved, casual person.
Bolden, a Marine pilot, grew up in Columbia, graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis and later earned amasters degree from the University of Southern California.
Bolden has some advice for others who dream of space flight.
Dont place the artificial limits on vourself the wav I did the first time," he said. "Dont count yoursell out. Had 1 not done that, had I applied then. 1 might have flown alreadv. "
INTRODUCING
Computer accuracy makes it easier to build it yourself!
Heres a sampling of some of the most popular and attractive home designs available today homes of The Wickes Collection. And, with the help of Computer-Assisted Planning, you can make your Wickes home an expression of your personal ideas and tastes.
Wickes' innovative Computer-Assisted Planning Service allows you to make a variety of changes to our home plans. Trained operators, at the computer, are prepared to make alterations to the basic plans, instantly re-calulating every piece
of material required, so that we can offer the most flexible, efficient, and accurate home building system you'll find anywhere!
And theres more to owning a home from The Wickes Collection It means a wide choice and a ready source of the quality building materials needed to finish your home competively priced at Wickes Lumber. We invite you to come into our store to learn more bout the entire Wickes Collection and how it can give you more for your housing dollar.
COLLECTION
Wickes Affordable Buildings
ST
mui
We also offer a wide selection of Garages, Pole Buildings, and Cabins. Stop in^ and ask one of our trained ^sales professionals how you, can save when you build the Wickes way!
The Vintage
The Vintage is basically a four-bedroom ranch, ideal for a family with three growing children But the fourth room easily adapts to a den, sewing room or private TV room A compact and comfortable home, it features a large living room and a covered patio adjacent to it There is a separate entry hall, a step-saving kitchen next to a large dining area. The center hallway has three closets and each bedroom has ample closet' space An attractive home with many conveniences
L.T.
LrJ.
13,799
Basic
Shell
Basic
Shell*
The Phoenix "
13,599
Basic
Shell*
Basic Shell Not Exactly
As Illustrated
ET
Basic
Shell*
Prices sliown lor consttuclion on slab inclories wall anfl ceiling insulalionandmsuialedsbealhing SlopalWickesandreviewinenialerialsontneabovepi.ms Duelotbecriangesinrnarketconditionsatier me publication dale pnces n tnis ad a'esubieci !c cnange n!". j' .e B>\a..se .e *dt' .anen, inCodes WiCkes cannoiguaianieelhe matenailisteoabove will meet your Codeiequiremenis I Wedo noiguaianiee mecornplelenessoimesepians
IVfc/ies Lumber...Your. Best Choice!
125 West Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C.
Phone 756-7144 Open Mon.-Fri. 8 to 6, Sat. 8 to 5
Highway 264 ByPass Farmville, N.C.
Phone 753-3111 Open Mon.-Fri. 8 to 5, Sat. 8 to 1
Wickes
Lumber
D-6
Green.'ine N CSunda,. October 9. 1983
PUBLIC
NOTICES
NOTICE
Hav ng quali.'ied as Executor of 'he esa'e o* Madie Lee Langley la'e 0* Pi" County North Carolina this's 'O no' ty ah persons havmg cia rns agams' the es'a'e o' said deceased 'o pi-esen' 'nem 'o -ne unders qned Eecu'or on or .f.e'ore Warch y y()4 or 'hiS no'ice or same pe pleaded n par o' 'he" recoye'" P i persons mOeP'ed '0 sa a -s'a'e p ease mae mmeo ae pay me"-'
i 4'n Ody o'Sep'emper yb3, Ppna d B Langle.
015
Chevrolet
:039
Trucks For Sale
051
Help Wanted
CASH FOR your car Warwick Auto Sales 75 7765
170 CAMARO good condition Call 758 0'85
JEEP just as new pickup and 27' | ENTRY LEVEL SUPERVISOR
Holiday fifth wheel camper for i title Local company has an opening price of new leep 758 6562 I for an Entry Level Supervisor.
Industrial background helpful, but
1970 MONTE CARLO Super Sport Good running condition S550 without key stone rims, S650 with 355 2803
T9tFmonte carlo landau
Fully equipped New pam' Good condi'on 825 283 Or 758 539 ask for John
r97'4 MALIBU
756 2692 after
SONY 7 FORD F ISO Good condi tion Straight drive Air, FM stereo with cassette $2175 Call 752 3400 or 355 2621
not necessary Send resume to Supervisor PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
051
Help Wanted
059
Work Wanted
072
Livestock
PLUG hUILDER. Needed immediately, must be familiar with construction of wooden plugs tor fiberglass molds Must have pre cisin woodworking ability Only experienced need apply Call Grady White Boats. 752 2111 extension 252 between9a m 4p m
I ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE. ENTIRE STABLE tor lease 7 stalls I Licensed and tuMy insured Trim .and tack room. 20 acres pasture
1953 WILLIS
756 7703
JEEP. Runs good
Aii equipment $1295
1954 CHEVROLET PICKUP fully res'ored excellent condition Extra parts Call 756 9726
1965 CHEVROLET BUS 6 cylinder $800 negotiable 746 2253
fnsructcl? ^ wTlI^ tea^ch'' kdi? ! WLICE OFFICER TRAINEE. The Quired to provide horse cdre< in ' City of Greenville has immediate eluding feeding stalling, health ; opportunities for individuaL^king manMement, breeding and train ing BS required VS preferred Minimum o^f 5 years in horse industry
professional law enforAi^ent . Greenville ^ea career as a poli officer w^'a^ homeomer (on a time and
- - - ..... ^materTat-ba^ Contact Jim, 758
Teaching experience I ^ituen safety Candidates mu$t be
ming, cuttinc estimates J f
arid removal. Free Stancil, 752 6331
074
Miscellaneous
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Stripping, Repairing & Refinishing t Ei "
Automatic wafer tank. $250 per i (Formerly of East Carolina Voca
month Call 756 9315 or 756 5097
CONSTRUCTION New and addi tions Call Dillon Watson at 756 8 232 after 6p m
FOR SALE: LARGE Bay Gelding 14 2 7 year old pony Call 355 2841
after 9pm
ECU STUDENT with 5 years field experience! in .frame and trim
: FOR SALE:
! and Angus
Yearling bulls Angus Simenfal Hertford
.1 ' -
carpentry an^'iPCears experience in i crosses A C Turnage, 753 4728 ks r'
tional Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway 752 3509.
GREEN SOFA, $69, Atari video with 3 games, $59, 2 Marantz
speakers, $29each. 758 3592._
drafting seeks the Greenville
Sjdenfial work in Will work tor
HORSEBACK RIDING.
Stables,752 5237
HARVEST GOLD refrigerator, automatic icemaker, 3 months old, $500 or best otter 3 cushion sofa, brand new, $100 or best otter. Call 752 7469 after 7:30 p m
975 MAZDA CHEVROLET Red
AV. FV jes'en stereo automatic Good COhO t on S iXK) Call 825 1008
bOi 58
Vadie i
V'Onda, O'
t,'- ;p<."'>.-d
N C tgiiJ o' the- (sa't.- *
. anqlu, decr-ased 25 Or non
983
NOTICE
' the genera s'a'utes na S,- * on 43 29 -I s Of- 'e'le, .eo by riT '.Oil am on uer ! '983 and w-.i ,- the Commissioners ob.-' 983 n 'he
a ,d 'or um. on the p County
I -0 ' ,1'ed a' '7'7
- O'ee'*! ^ -e North
-- -ase purchase o'
.'iS-e* ' D sr Storage
Tape Storage
1976 CHEVROLET MONZA 2 2, 5
speed good mechanicai condition S500 758 2.300 days
1977 CAPRICE CLASSCoaded clean Reduced from SJ250 to S3250 CaiiHenr, 752 4332
1977 MALIB~^GN Power steering and brakes a" Fxreilent condition S'995 756 2892 a "O'-5
977 M^TE CARLO po.ver steer ing, air AV FM radials, rpns good 757 1 '88-
1981 CHEVROLeT "Ch^ette ' jT000 m.les etra ''ean tuiiy equipped S3895 Ca ,56 79:5 after 4 p n
iVil 11L V E^ C H V E TTe ' Ti.i y equipped au'om.atic, cw rn leaqe S4300 Caii'752 iitQ? or S's 2250 at-' 5p m
1966 FORD PICKUP heavy duty body. 16 whee's automatic transmission, good wood truck S795 Can after 5 30 756 0122
96<r>OHD PICKUP good condi tion S600 758 1905
high school graduates in excellent physical mental health and must pass Employment Security Com mission testing with a high score Degree preferred Salary range $12.584 $17.722. Apply at
preferred Position available January 2 Applications accepted to November 1st to Job Service,
Employment Security Commission Wilhamston, NC 27892 Martin Community College and Equal Op portunity Affirmative Action __ ___ Employer
1971 CHEVY VAN G20 Only 55,000 pypFp.ciurpn TV TFrHMiriAN IXc aa'5c
miles Runs qreat Good tires ^P^RIENCED TV TECHNICIAN . E(bE AA M F
for established appliance firm ; aon/'OAkA rtiocrrno Prtcixioij Excellent opportunity Good PROGRAM DIRECTOR POSITION
benefits Will listen to any otter I ' Prograrn Director t^ a Devel
from trained technician Call 756 opmental Day Care Center operated
3240
0401
Employment Security Commission, I 3101 Bismark Street, Greenville, NC by Friday November 4
EXPERIENCED NURSE'S AIDE
wishes to take care of an elderly person in your home From 7am until 3 or 4 p.m. Phone 756 4600 the I anytime
regisfered*^ Validated herd89 Bred i wfjitaT^olletibTes'^
I CATUCD DCDA ID Guard Armory, East Highland
LIaM inClx RCrMII\ Avenue, Saturday. 9 6; Sunday 10-5
Admission $1.50. Door prizes
North Hills Saddlery, 746 2134
miles Runs great Good tires Ask,ng $900 negotiable Call 355 6513 a'ter 6 pm Monday Frday or /.t*kends ^nytimf
1973 TOYOT A PIC K U P j'^speed' Good condition $ 95 756 008
EXPERIENCED resfauraunf 2 TENNESSEE WALKER Horses, I worker and experienced carpenter mares 1 four year old Sorrel, 1 10 worker 749 6851 anytime : year old Roam Call 752 1137 days
GRASS CUTTIN-G"It"Tiaionable ' 8254 nights, ask tor James
I prices All size yards Call 752 5583 I
1976 FORD PICKUP Straight shift 6fylmder $1700 Can 355 2081
1977 CJ5 JEEP Extra good condi t.on Call 758 5' '7 a"er 6pm
018
Ford
1981 TOYOTA TRUCK onq bed air
condition, blue, 60 000 miles $4750 75? 0779 or 758 4990
TpbT jeTpIvA^ON E E R~Ltd daTk blue, dark tan ntenor Loaded completely less sun root 5800 m.les brand ew 752 7950
FOREMAN NEEDED for
door and frame shop Basic math skills required Experience with w.re welder helpful Responsible for shop paper work and inventory Come by and till out applications C H Edwards Inc , Highway 11 South
HOME COMPANION available Beaufort County Devel | October 16 Call 752 3380
__ , opmental Center. Inc Children MATURE FINE Christian depen metal | served in this program are from
two years old (pre school) through 537
INSTANT CASH
LOANS ON & BUYING TVs, Stereos, gold & silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2464.
074
Miscellaneous
school age (18 years old) with
I dable lady to sleep in with elderly Call 758 4011
mental retardation and physical j PAINTING Interior and exterior
FRAMING CARPENTERS
Minimum 4 5 years experience Call 756 8700
,pqx id>-
a'O'-
FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON
Cc
oad-d
2 DATSUN TRUCKS 1980 and 1982 and . 'Of Good condition Great bargain '5? 6440
FUN! PART TIME. Nation s ! Toy Party Company now hiring de monstrators Free $300 kit No collecting, no delivery No experi ence needed Toys sell themselves. Call 753 2534or 756 6610,
,1' ons d'c on * I-fi Gray County 4 -s o' -same can ''juc-st Monaay
- .iC a rn '0 5 00
b<- .- ot'siderea uu-ic-d D, a bid or r(.,-rt I Od
:;a' K 0' t'u'.'
. F-d'.-ra, Depo'. ','oora'ion 1 an
"an I y<, 5
:. .i b d bonds b rid'"*.,-.'. be ' ,is b ds. am d
, r. 4ara o' Co"!
-S th- r gh'
-'Ojjsa s a.nd
' -S r b'd bOAPDOF ,
cond on Lew 756 6ji6 days or
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
tp'. ' F - . R .e^iCATiON
,b-n CW&Cl.iNA
CE
Pos
G'l
pt Gi('
' D f '
?9 day of S('pt(.-mb(;r
0" iio. S61
rags
78,1 'rpm P .inni- n* - SS,on P G
nqtqn NO'",
lb
fyt
007
SPECIAL NOTICES
CREDIT PROBLEMS N', Cmdi
a,I M,ke 75, 045'
STUDENTS! Nr-t-d c ' ,1 1 ' 7/ -I' , K ,11
''j'.rr q j- '52 34 1'
WE PAY CASH
I ' yd 0 R'ybmsb' ry,'-. 7/a Do.vr.tb
1 qreat h,i
Oil
Autos For Sale
SELL rOUR CAR the
013
Buick
PA sy.'en 'j,'05 after y
1978 REGAL LIMITED L ke new
355 2'796 after 7pm
r
Fx'e -r-$4yjC C,i n gms
1964 ,GALAXY~FbRD 500 RUtts good $'50 se '4_r.
1968 FORD, Runs good''$'400 Call '56 '469
1973 FORD GALAXY ? dOQr sedan, -1 r new -ad,a 'es good condi ,or $700 56 6985
1977' FORD GRAadA ^Good^'on a tion $'800 or b'.y- -j'fi.r Call 758 855'7 at'er 5 3"
'f9 7 7 lTq ST at I ~Va'gon! ec. en' worx .a' Pertnct with most opt ons Sac'- ce $50 Call 56 74'7^_ . ... - ,
1978 MUSTANG il Ha'rhback V' au'oma c 'ransm ss-on power brakes powe- S'mr ng c_r_^.5..c,on-
040
Child Care
les ^ radials
tro A.M-F-Vn-smr-nr '64 000 a r o'n , SOC "
$3400 Ca 58 '206 between 1 a rr and 2 30 p m or ,
1978 RED ' MUSTANG, aTr'co'nd tioneq ow " 'eaqe Can bet/.ee s 30 and 6 or after 9pm 756 2884
Shopping (or a ne,-, car - '
CHILD CARE TEACHER for 3 and
4 year olds Ca 52 9660 EXPERIENCED babysitter would ; like '0 eep small children m my home weexdays Homestead Estates on Oid R yer Road 758
573?___
EJ^TriENCED person needed to care O' I'tan m'their home References req.j.reo Pay negotia ble 758 55" 5pm 9pm
j'wbULD LIKE to keep ohildren-m-m.y-home D H 'Conley area Call S-nyt|-me 756 663
INFANT CARE needed My home own trahSp_or_!aiIoi.-, Experienced, references Star' November 14 Red Oak 756 2684
LOVrGl:AR FOR your children I would ke to keep children in my home dayt me oniy AM 6pm Also after school care Cannon Court, 758 56G
GREAT OPPORTUNITY tor am
bitious person who seeks a sales career with management potential Must be 21 or Over and have car Potential $15.0(30 to $20,000 per year Fo' interview call 752 6440
GROUP HOME RELIEF Manager Position Immediate openings tor two Adult Group Home Relief Managers Relief Managers will work from Friday 3 30 p m until Sunday 3 30 pm and Wednesday 6 00 p m until 12 00 midnight each week Approximately 37 hours each week Applicants should have framing, .and~or- experience in a h'man services related area, pre ferrably with deveiopmentally dis abled persons Must be in gqoil physical. menta-F- and emotional health and of good character For application information, contact; Rosiland. W Walker, Program Director Beaufort County Devel opmental Center Telephone: 1
946 0151, Applications must be submitted by October 14, 1983-
Affirmative Action Equal Opporfu nity Employer and Services
046
PETS
GROWING FIRM seeks ambitious and aggresive sales person.Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020
ADORABLE AKC CAIRN Terr,or pupp.es 3 ma es 757 3270 after 6
021
Oldsmobile
1 9 78 O L D S M.O B I L E C .
S.p-em,., Ex:c- en' co,( 58 . - J,i. x- q-w 56 8604 '
AKC BLACK LAB Retneyer pup pn--s Champion bloodline $125, 756 487 be'weor and '0 pm anytime weekc-'ds
022
! f W- nqa ed on 1 ,'- ng 50,,qn'
Iter than la'- being ,b,n at,on 'tie pan, you A lithe ri-l.et
Plymouth
1980 PLYMOUTH CHAMP A r
cond ' on n.g am 8.M 'ad 0 one owner W wa'-'a- rg-ne cfr ye na ned ,>' a ''an'jm.ssior 'or ? 000 rn les or '2 nionlns 4 speed manua w th a po2/er st,' k, s- ver with b.act r t e r, r 5 0 0 G a c' u a 1 miles E-e;i-'n: conn ' on '.'a' K nstun ' 52> .735
I97B PLYMOUTH ARROW Good (.ondi'ion Color is green Can '56 85days i 823 8986 n.gh's ask (or (< honda
AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER
Span eis weeks o0 $125 Call
752 5493
"kC^EGLISH BU LLDOG puppy Pnone 746 -4797
AKC R E G I S TE R 0^ m 1 a'(Vr e
Pood e twam' 2 years old. black 56 b4j8
AKC R E GiSTE RE D Coek
pupp t.-s , -na.es and 2 (emales Call a((en j 30 p m 758 6633
A'kc' R E G I ST R E o' Airdal7s ~3 males. 3 females $200 each 752 4400or 757 3919
IF YOU ARE DISILLUSIONED
wi(h (he rate of your present career, you may find a fast rising pace i( you qualify for (his position m a (op financial consulting firm Must possess a NC Real Estate license Unlimited income Call Gloria Grimes tor a confidential interview 355 2020
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 trainin limited growth potential ecutive (Jorporation, 919 291 8249 for a personal interview, an explana tion of a fantastic opportunity or write Box 2647, Wilson, NC 27893
disabilities This is an ad ministrative management position responsible for supervising the day fo day operations of the program through interaction and observation of assigned staff, assuring the instructional enviornmenf affords
the clients the opportunity fo devel ...... -
op skills needed to attain their I tractors high prices highest level of independent tunc j painters All work tionmg possible Minimum Oualiti cations Requirements: Must have a Master's Degree, teaching certificate in Special Educa tion Mental Retardation, or Bachelor's level d^ree in Special Education Mental
three years experience in the field of mental retardation; or a Bachelor's Degree in Special Edu
Free estimates References, work guaranteed 13 years experience 756 6873 after 6pm
PAINTING Inside and out Rea sonable prices 15 years experience Free estimates Call 758 7815 PAINTING Tired of paying con s Experienced guaranteed 752 0902
AIR CONDITIONERS,
refrigerators, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale Rebuilt, like new Call B J Mills. 746 2446 at Black Jack
ALADDIN 18,000 BTU kerosene healer Used 3 weeks, with 5 gallon can $160 752 3997 dllet 3 p.m.
ALEXANDERS, Ettanbees, others Highway 96 I'z miles North Zebulon, located at Bobbitt's Bakery Wednesday Saturday 9 6 1 269 8140 or 1 365 5335.
PICKUP
I anything 757 3847
FOR HIRE.
Yard work
Will
done
haul
Call
ANTIQUE BUFFET, china cabinet, drop leaf dining table All solid mahogany Phone 1 825 4931 alter
,,, ______ SHIRLEY'S CLEANING
etardation and , SERVICE Have your home cleaned
: from top to bottom or general
cleaning weekly every 2 weeks or I monthly We also do wmdovvs and
cation'Mental Retardation with a carpets Call 753 5098 after 3 30 pm
minimum of five years experience in programming in similar agency Administrative experience pre terre. Send resume to Jack C Wynne, III, Executive Director, Beaufort Co Developmental Center, Inc , 1534 West 5th Street' Washington, ,NC 27889 Application must be submitted by October 15, 1983 Affirmative Action Equal Op portunity Employer and Services-
BARGAINS! Water bed, 2 weeks i old, semi waveless, queen size;
35mm SLR camera, flash and I telephoto electric typewriter. All items in mint condition. Call 756 3618 after 5 or anytime Saturday, i 757 6331 daytime. __
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering Gold and silver leaf lettering Call. ! Rudi Hamvai 746 6156
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN cast iron wood heater, attach to fireplace Call 756 8785
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
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
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale. J P Stancil, 752 6331._. ,
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale 4 models. Delivery setup 919 763 9734
RESIDENT COUNSELOR
Primarily looking for someone m the Human Services field, inter esfed in gaining experience as a counselor. No monetary compensa tion, however room, utilities, and phone provided Those interested call Mary Smith at The Real Crisis Center, 758 4357
RESTAURANT MIT Super oppor tunity for fast energetic individual. Should be able to handle the public as well as organize and maintain records Outstanding pay Great advancement opportunity Call Ted, 758 0541, Shelling & Snelling Personnel Services,
COMPLETE LINE of woodstoves chimney pipe and accessories at Tar Road Antiques, Winterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007
CUT YOUR OWN FIREWOOD. 3'2
miles from Stokes, on Beargrass Highway Call 753 2043 for ap pointment
FIREWOOD. Split oak, $40 pickup load: mixed hardwood, $35 pickup load 757 1772
OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready to go Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5 pm.
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD.
Delivered and stacked 758 6143,,
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 or 758 5590
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand. tOpsoil and stone Also driveway work.
CASH NOW
FOR
JEANETTE HEMBY'S Beauty Shoo. Open new hours Thursday and Friday 9 fo 6; Saturday 9 fo 2 Located on Falkland Highway 43N Phone 758 8086 tor appointment.
KING SIZE WATER bed Great condition New mattress, heater, and safety liner A steal for $250
Call 758 6383after 4p m
KIYAK with paddle, helmet and rack for car, $300 75Z 2564,
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 _
LOWREY ORGAN. Excellent con dition Finncing available Atlantic Credit, 756 5185
MARY KAY cosmetics. Phone 756 3659 to reach your consultant tor a facial or reorders
MOVING, MUST SELL! Portable Maytag washer and dryer, $225. Sears Coldspof trosfless refrigera tor, $195. Sears exerciser vibrator machine, $45 Sears glass fireplace insert with heater blowers and fireplace accessories, $75 Duo therm' oil circulator heater with electric blowers, $45. Office coat, hat, and umbrella rack, $10. Phone 756 6783.
cameras, guitars, old I West Erid^ Shopping Center And amps, portable tape '
Electric typewriters, stereo com
ponents, clocks,
players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques, anything of vallue
COIN&RING MAN
On The Corner
NEW AND USED mixers, chairs, blodgett ovens, etc. Greenville Res tauranf Equipment, 758 7042.
CLEARANCE SALE
Mowers, Goodyear Tire
clfC
Dickinson Avenue
ONE SIEGLER OIL heater. One Sears oil heater. One 285 gallon oil drum 746 4739
CHEST FREEZER, bicycles, dou ble bed headboard, Teak wood table for sale Call 355 2841 after 9 p.m.
OSBORNE COMPUTER with software, Epson MX80 FT Dot Matrix printer with cable All new $1300. 752 8072
RENT TO OWN!! New 19" Sharp color TV Payments, $22.42 per month. Furniture World ll/Sfereo
065
Farm Equipment
CHIPPENDALE SOFA, 2 Jabots ' City, 757 0438, ask tor Mike with swags, corded, Custom made, but fits standard windows. Never used Call 758 8376 after 6
RN, LPN positions available Full time and part time, 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts 75 bed ICE Oak Manor, Inc., Snow Hill, 747 2868
RN Rehabilitation firm seeks RN on a part time basis Experienced in comprehensive medical assessment, coordination ot Call Ex I treatment resources and innovative rehabilitation planning for the Eastern NC area Send resume to RN, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
023
Pontiac
19 7 6 PONTIAC
E lent rondi'.'on pr.ce tS? -)67V
1977 GRAN PRIX Ye o.-. ner F.,', loaded ' 0' '56 Oil!,;
1983 PONTIAC 2,000
S U N B I R D
Rcdsonable
0.'. ? doo- ' Good ( onci
BLACK LAB pupp'C'. available 8 weeks old $25 Mother registered C.lll 752 4976 alter 6 p. m
FOR S'ArE:AKC CockerTpanT^s" Pomc-amans, and SchnauzOrs Rat lerriors Cali 758 2681
JOB OPENING. Convenience store clerk, full and part time evening stiifts. good work history required. Hours 7 3 Short Stop Food Marts -1928 East Greenville Boulevard No phone calls please
AIR COMPRESSORS Electric i powered '2 horsepower 10 gallon tank, $169 95 2 horsepower 22
gallon tank, $425,49 5 horsepower
60 gallon tank $618 49, Gasoline I powered 5 horsepower 22 gallon ! tank $557 49 10 gallon carry tank
$29 49 We carry Sanborn repair [ parts and many types of air line I fittings Agri Supply, Greenville,
, NC, 752 3999
CITRUSFRUIT
ORDERS FOR ORANGES and
grapefruit are being taken until Oct 17 by Greenville City School Band students Delivery Dec. 1,2,3. $7 50per box.
Call 756 1686or 758 1447
024
Foreign
DATSUN 280ZX , 'v V'V B
39-JO 'Iii.'es 4 sp.n.-d wi", deiu".-
tr.m pockaqi-- Excellenl condition i700 Cd. 7,6 fit it 6,1 fS or '56 ' ,49
GOLDEN RETRIEVER puppies AKC, Read/ n 2 3 weeks $100' female s'?5 male 753 3081
LONG HARED KITTENS.' 6 weeks ',:d . Ldter box trained Freetoqood '(I'ne '46 4'68
male'BLACK LAB needs'rmom'To pa/ 6 mo-fh-s old. extremely 'end / Ca 752 ?2'0
051
Help Wanted
SAAB
J,
F ou
S'teet .'56 464-,
1969 MGB Good ,ond.tiOn R,.-l,ij. ' enq r. aOL 56 01/5
1969 VOLKSWAGEN BUG w 'h 97/
.e^gme rad ,1 iO 't.nes per'
q<i''on $60r '56 '3 ,i"-r 4 p in
1973 220D MERCEDES: dart b. aj 6/ ,.ct > I,-. $6-,00 $500
d ssou-t * p ."t.-rtse't bv 0< tQbe' '5 '56 ',2.-. -',1;' 01,s 'iq -J- V
FIAT X19. Good C,i ^ 6'y_24 OPEL
door a "omatic ' 'n 'loor buc X e< nq.ne, 30 mdes .to ew Good t.inn,nq - best offer -55
ond'ion Low
Monza exb.i -eds At/, F M
1976 HONDA ACCORD H.itchbac-A ' ;,.-eq Z..M F ,V sbeo
'.isse"e p,Kl,ais 56 OuLi
' . f UOO -n e,, or, rlijxidn
^'b , ' e, q n- $j25(. :,r t,es' o"er ;x 97'y,'-!.ws -,8 2/03 n.qtits
1976 HONDA CVCC
$65-'i
924
A 7/ F7/,
.'56 ')974
1977 PORSCHE
7 56 689
1977 TOYOTA COROLLA
A7/, F,Vc,e,se"e 5,2500 '57 rj6
1979 FIAT STRADA $70,0 Pnone . ,t 460
1979'TOYOTA Corb'i a De : xe 'Ond 'On, a ' p-eq 65 .'/)G 30G Ca.;;:,-,6,' c)' >,!, 094'z-
SR.
qood
iiles-
A SUCCESSFUL SALES
t,,i'.xq'-0'.,na could and you this pos'tion Exienert '.lartmq salary a'-fj ir nq. Dm e' s C.iH Gloria at Her tqe Pfrsoooe' 455 /;)20-
ACCOUNTANT. C.oi'eqe and expo r ence de' i-ed 'sbouid have a high grade pomt average Excellent pay C ah .Ted 7511 0541.. Sneihnq 8, Snel 1 nq Personnel Ser v'ces .
AGGRESSIVE 'SALES RE P'r'F SENTATIVES needed who don't tieiie-ve the.r futures have to be in trie tu'urr- I am now v.orkinq with sevt-ral established companies look ,rg lor talented people For further information p ea ,e contact Jamie. Herdaqe Personnel Service, 355
2020 --------
AN E'XCELLET"ppo7tunit/ exists in FayetPillti, NC for an exper.ienced electro mechanical ser/ (I- lectmician International lorporat.pn -t'ets $'4$19K com pa' V Vl-n I .- I.jnltorms. tools. compan/ paid 'rair-inq schools and a benef i pack.iqe unmatched any .'.here You owe it to /Ourself to ctiecx "US one out' Tho.mas 8 T t! 0 m a s / 0 c a 11 o n a I Services
Personnel Ser^iii- D vision 1 757 3398 V .
ASSISTANT. Mns' be outgoing Pa" t mn Apply n person Z/londay 0'--:y a Sears Portrait Studio be tween 2 4.P M Carolina Eas' Mall
AUTO SALESPE RSON'
M rou .are an aggressive individual and have the ,ibi' t/ to deal -with the [jvbn-: ":is I. oid be an excellent
oppor'un '/ Top ea-n.ngs and bonuses for the right person Expe r.ence he'p' ,1 but not required See Joe Welch. Saies Mianaqer at Joe Pecheles Volkswaqen, Greenville f- .'d
I960 AUDI 400C 4 duor
AM FM
excellent
r ond
622
eq'isler at
1962 MAZDA 626 4 door 5 speed, ait - '/ F X r,'ient condition
C,l - J',', 26 ; ,|fter 9 p rr
1983 RENAULT ALLIANCE 2 door AM FV 4 speed, air ronditionmq, po.ve' irr St : jnder' warranty
$Xv 6GC ' ego'-,ib-- Must seh Call 746 466-.' or -j24 5-4^4
029
Auto Parts & Service
TV entry Crafts and GTts ,[, ', ' da / , 2 5 fo- yb'jr
' - -V veme'ice Open T ,es
' , .rday 9 '0 5 Lorated .
' ,'i, P " c.ounty F,i,r Grrjijnd horr Poad If you need ' a
b.iby .house b rlhday. fje'
erd or ybijx'.eii come- see js yOu_r Ctir-.'maS Shopp.ng
-, "1 ',s and Fjl-e e your sp<-.' al r r.,e q," w'-ippmq ",8
TOYOTA AUTHORIZED SERVICE
; ' yhrider tune-jp $19 95 Oil and f.:ter change $'2 99 1 most models: // ne reepmg your Toyota Cheap To Keep Toyota East. 109 Trade Street 756 t?28
030
Bicycles For Sale
LADIES 10 SPEED bike for sale. $65 or best offer Call 758 4421, ask
-032
Boats For Sale
BOOKKEEPER Part time only Send'-resume to PO Box 702, Greenville NC 27835
CLaTmS ADJUSTER. Tic^fem
oppurtunity for person who has experience or supervision back q'-ound in n.siirance 4 year degree Fxrelle.n' tr,lining'program Super tienet.ts $;5K $ 6K Can Ted 758 J34I, Sfie , nq 8 Snellinq Personnel
CLERICAL. Challenqmq position v,ith 101 al c'ompany needs person who enioys various responsibilities Must be accurate typist Speed of 50 55 wpm Good pay and excellent benefits For confidential con sideratiun send resume to Clerical, ' PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834
ELECTRONICS IStR"cfOR'''m '
Electron ' > tectmology proqrarri at Pill Community Cclle.qe Prefer BS degree m electronics or electrical engineerinq A A S degree in 1 ' electronics and 3 to 5 years ot industrial electronics experience will be considered Salary based on College's Salary Formula Position available November 28 Applica | tions arcepted through November 1 'II Contact Persone! Offixe, Pitt , Cornrriunity College, Greenville, NC 756 3130, extension 289 AA bCJE rr.ployer
JOBS JOBS
The Personnel Service Division ot Thomas 8 Thomas Vocational Services currently is recruiting candidates for the following posi tions which are IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE Apprentice Meat Cutter Electronics Technician Fleld Service Technician
F inance Assistant Manager
F nance Manager
Finance Trairtee Freight 8 Shipping Clerk
Machinist Superinlendant Production Foreman (Woods) Production Supervisor Route Salesperson Secretaries tSeveral)
Additional information regarding these and other positions is availa ble Call us for an appointment at 757 3398
KINDERGARTEN TEACHER.
Experience or certification needed Call Gertie, '758 0541, Snelling 8 Snellinq Personnel Services
KROGER SAV ON
PHARMACISTS
Kroger Sav on has openings for Registered Pharmacists in' Greenville, North Carolina. Benefits include
Dental (Optional)
Vision. ,
Life Insurance
Maior Medical
Prescription Plan
Hospitalization
Retirement Many'Other Benefits
It interested please contact Bill Morgan, Kroger Sav on, 600 Greenville Boulevard, Greenville, NC 27834, 919 756 7031 or Jack
Dawson, 1 800 532 0300 EOE M F
UeGAL secretary. Experience needed Should be able to operate a word processor, maintain all records $12K Fee negotiable Call Ted, 758 0541, Snellinq 8 Snelling Personnel Services
lTcENSED HAIR DRESSER
wanted Apply after 4 at George's Coilfeurs, Pitt Plaza.
LICENSED experienced hairdress er or cosmetologist for established salon in Greenville 756 0769
MACHINIST needed immediately, Electrical Utilities Company, 753 2631 Set up and operate various types of machine tools. Perform necessary hand operations such as filing, fitting, scraping, etc. Dye and Mold experience helpful.
MANAGER. Experience needed in retail Excellent opportunity for advancement with super benefits including profit sharing SISK Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling 8 Snelling Personnel Services
mTa nager tra"inee.
Outstanding opportunities are of tered for individuals who are seek mg a career oriented position Some positions require relocation Excellent pay potential with out standing benefits. Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling 8 Snelling Personnel
SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer ot home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area A go getter attitude, energy, creativity Earnings based on performance Benefits and in centives Promotions from within Call 756 6711.
SALES. Experience in route sales will land you this position. Enjoy meeting and handling the public ] and arranging displays. Opportune I ty for advancement into manage I menf Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling 8 ; Snelling Personnel Services
SALES. Super opportunity for strong aggressive individual who enioys a challenge Travel Eastern NC; Excellent benefits Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling 8 Snelhng I Personnel Services
SALESOPPORTUNITY
Salesperson needed Auto sales ex perience preferred Excellent company benefits Call:
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-AAERCURY-GAAC
756-4267
For Appointment
BALING tf/IRE and twine 14'z gallon wire 6500' per box $44 49 for 5 or more boxes Sisal twine 10.000' bales $21.95 each for 10 or more. Pla$tic twine 9,0(K)' baig $20 60 each for 10 or more 20,000' bale tor round baler $2J.49 each tor 10 or more Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752 3999
GET YOUR COMBINE ready for spybeans with Agri Supply Cutter bars to tit John Deere 9 $84 49, Allis Chalmers 13' $96 49. Massey Ferguson 15' $139 95 International, Ford. New Holland and others m stock Sickle sections and rivets to fit most combines in stock. We also carry roller chain and repair links. Agri Supply Greenville, NC, 752 3999
PEANUT DIGGER PARTS fo^
quality digger. points to fit Long. Lilliston, KMC and Paulk $29 95 per pair We have a limited supply of digger teeth to fit Long and Lilliston harvesters Coulter blades for vine cutters available' Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752 3999
, COINS, RINGS, Civil War Relics Find valuable items. Get into metal ' detecting. Call for catalog Baker's Sports Equipment, 756 8840.
DINING ROOM. Williamsburg Queen Anne, solid cherry, new $7,000; asking $3500, make otter Call 756 7297 or 756 3613
REPOSSESSIONS: Vacuums and shampooers. Call dealer, 756 6711
SANDBLASTER EMPIRE P 160
portable unit with two 25' sand blasting hoses 100' air hose, moisture and oil separafer, 3 ceramics and 12 di corb nossels, stegl gloves and blast hood with extra glasses Used twice $1,000 firm. Call 752 7629
SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental TooliTompany
SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69 88
DISHWASHER FOR SALE.
good condition, $85. 756 0905.
very
ELECTRIC DRYER Call after 6 on
Friday, 758 6705
FIREPLACE FURNISHINGS
Super buys on merchandise from Little Fireside Shop Let me know your needs Estimates without ob ligations Save big! Glass doors, screens, grates, tool sets, all furnishings which the shop pre viously carried less overhead, 756 1507
FISHER GRANDPA woodburning
stove, $400 752 7411.
FOR SALE- Like new radial tire tor pickup $35 Call 746 2710 FOR SALE: Sofa and matching chair, Herculon rust plaid, good condition 756 0977,
SOLID BRASS BED. Best otter accepted. 758 6765 or 756 3543
SQUIRE woodstove with blower Used 1 season Can be used as insert or free standing Excellent condition 753 4647after 5p m
TWIN SQLID DAK beds; antique marble top table. Call 752 6503 after 5pm
]
066
FOUR 13"
756 3770
rims with used tires.
FURNITURE
BEDDING&WATERBEDS
LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices Bedding sets, $69 Waterbeds, $149 Factory Mat tress 8 Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626
SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma
|or national company,Jias an open
ing for a Sales Associate in the__
Greenville area Prior sales experi CONTEMPORARY SOFA, very
ence,not as important as ability and good condition 1 year old $125
willingness to learn Salary I 758 2685
negotiable. Excellent benefit ;-
package For a confidential in QUEEN SIZE Meeper
terview send resume to Manager,
PO Box 1985. Greenville, NC 27835 Equal Opportunity Employer
FREEZER. 16 cubic toot, upright, 10 months old, $275 negotiable, 756 3291 anytime.
FURNITURE STRIPPING and re '
finishing at Tar Road Antiques. 1 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden | Center 756 9123
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
UPRIGHT PIANO, refinished, excellent condition, $600 Lowry Citation Organ, full lighted panel double keyboard, like new Brocade couch with 2 velvet chairs, excellent condition 1 927 3301.
USED REFRIGERATORS $75 up Also heating, air conditioning, electrical and plumbing service Call 752 9333
WOODSTOVE, Dare IV, Magnavox j floor model stereo. AM'FM tape, 2
! black and white tvs 756 2988
! 1 PAIR OF Loveseats, 1 with bed ' Blues, tan and rust 756 7478
I 10 SPEED bicycle, 24 ", $39
I Clarinet, usefl 1 year, $195 756 6840 atterpm
19" COLOR CONSOLE TV, good condition, $150 Call 752 7691
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
QUEEN SIZE
tweed, and rec liner I 756 9136.
sofa.
Must
tan
SOFA. 2 end tables: 2 den chairs; 2 Should be able to ' ''ea size shag carpets 756 2988
SECRETARY
handle receptionist responsibilities, typing, tiling and arranging ap pointments Legal experience de sired Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling 8 Snelling Personnel Services.
SERVICE PERSON. Mechani^ minded Experience repairing ap pliances will land you this super opportunity Excellent pay
SOFA AND CHAIR by Broyhill Floral print, herculoh fabric. $300 Call 756 7984
067 Garage-Yard Sale
COMMUNITY YARD SALE,
Sunday. October 9, 1 p m Sunshine , . with I Garden Parking lot New and used
company truck Call Ted, 758 0541, 1 clothing, brushes, posters, artwork, Snelling 8 Snelling Personnel, clock radios, light fixtures, lamps,
SHEET METAL WORKERS ' '''''^9 room furniture, rugs, linings needed Salary $5 00 plus depending on past experience Contact Gener al Heating, 1100 Evans Street,
752 4187
kitchen chairs, mattress and other household items
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANTED
PART TIME HELP FOR
TELEPHONE SOLICITATION
Sun.-Thurs., 6-10pm HOURLY WAGES PLUS BONUS
CALL FOR WKW 1 ^AA
APPOINTMENT #9#12VU
MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have tools Excellent company benefits Apply to Robert Starling or Bill Brown, Brown & Wood, Inc. 1205 Dickinson Avenue.
: MECHANIC WANTED Preferably I with Ford experience. Front End I experience helpful Must have own I jools Excellent benefits Call 756 8432 I zv
18' DIXIE 200 horse Mercury
0'j1bor'j dri/e on Cox trailer B/'i- I - r,jr;dition fully loaded f B sK-rf-u depth tinder and all ir.'.tr /Vill sacrifice $5,995
''I 2626 or 756 4122
INTERVIEWER I
BEFORE YOU SELL or
CARS S200! TRUCKS'!
-f.jr.'-J.jbie, ' 6 '/,
uri '50.) for d rc-r to la'.e 24hO'jrs
19' MFG
JOi-ir.-^ori I qal /arilzed .!' tup ,10
day.
CAPRICE, 1977 200
and trim tandum
d trailer CB, depth find lOd side curtains, all in Coridi*iGP $6500 758 2300
resume and references to: Superin tendent, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
034
Campers For Sale
Natior,al ' ri 0 r' / e d H.i'.tinqs
JAYCO POP UPS Seah'awk and Cobra ti-.ri, covers Camptown R '/'s. Ayden NC Z.t6 3530
NEED ONE Person to help in a hog operation Phone 753 2744,
1974 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4,000 .'j'hr 40 'tiar.ue, CB and
$ 'X/j negotiable Z57 jO p rr
1975 REGAL f/'-ellerii 'ondition ,'ery ''e,)i. -Lrjaded, $'750 Call 753 36'/ i a'ter 4 p rn
1976 BUICK REGAL, .i door Good -o/.di'O' $' 195 Call Atlantif '.red 7',6 , 85
NC
TRUCK COVERS a7i si/es, colors" Leer Fibergiass ,ind Sportsman tops 250 unit', m stork O'Briants, Raleiqti. N C tii4 2774
1977 24' WILDERNESS Camp'er" A/.rinq and a" Trailer package irr jded -Lurated on rented lot in Orienta: T,i Rose at I 524 5314
036
Cycles For Sale
MINI BIKE in qood condition $150 Call 746 4944 after 5pm
1979 HONDA EjTpR'S II MO, engine runs z/ell, $200 Call 756 3481 bet//een4pm 9pm
1980 YAMAHA ITI25, streerTo'n version low miles, excellent condi tion, $70fi or best otter 756 9294
MEDIA SALES Representative
I needed Degreed, professional, and
PAAPinVAAPMT , willing to broaden career Radio or
L-iVtiL.Vut I IVILLlii I , television advertising sales experi
ence desired Write Sales Manager or call WNCT TV, PO Box 898,
J Greenville, NC 27834 We are An
PITT COUNTY MEMORIAL! EqualOpportunity Employer
Hospital IS currently accepting 1 r- tt-t-r-
applications for an Employment OFFICE facility needs
Intprvie.ver I Primary re superintendent with
SDonsibiiiti.-s //ill include the and handyman skills
: screening and interviewing of can j ^
didates for PCMH |0b vacancies !
Minimum requirements include 2 to 3 years progressively responsible experience as an Employment In terviewer Interviewing experience in a hospital or health care related I field is preferred PCMH offers a ; competitive salary and excellent ; fringe benefits For prompt con ' sideration send resume or apply al Employment Office Pi'T COUNi t MEMOP.Au hospital P O Box 6028 Greenville, NC 27834 757 4556 EOE
ENROTl APPLICANTS into employment and training activities Must be able to communicate with I the public and knowledgeable of community resources Dependable transportation Post high school education desirable, but experience 'working with disadvantaged persons may be substituted Salary is $10,337, plus 18'/ fringe benefits Submit resume to PO Box 970,
Equal Employment Oppor Close out date is October
NEEDED: FULL TIME and part
time help to sell Avon in Cannon Court, herry Court, Eastbrook Apartments, and other areas Earn extra money for Christmas, Please call 758 3159 "
STOP!!
OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKS
Earn $15,000, $20,000, $30,000 or more a year your very first year We will send you to school for two weeks expenses paid, train you in the field, selling and servicing established accounts guaranteed to start Must be over 21, have car, bondable, ambitious, and have sue cessful sales experience Hospi talization and profit sharing
An Equal Opportunity Company M/ F
Call For An Appointment 758 3401 For Mr. Weaver Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 am 1p.m.
TELEPHONE OPERATOR Re
ceptionist, A well established Eas ern NC industry has an opening f< r a person to operate switchboai d and act as plant receptionist Mu t be an accurate and rapid fypiCT, alertness, pleasing personality, good judgement and tact are essen fials tor the successful candidate to possess Minimum experience of I year Send resume to Telephone Operator, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
TOP INSURANCE COMPANY
needs sales person to open office in Greenville Prefer applicant that has no prior insurance experience Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020
TRAINEE for security system sales. Established NC firm seeking to expand market in this fast growing field. Compensation negotiable Call Floyd Allmond, (919) 781 1195
TV TECHNICIAN. Experience in repair of electronics and tv equipment needed Excellent oppor tunity for growth and benefits. (Company maybe willing to buy out persons shop in order to hire). Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling 8 Snelling Personnel Services
NOW HIRING. Offshore Oil Drilling Overseas and Domestic WiM train, $35,000 $50,000 plus poss Call Pet roleum Services at 1 3)2 920 9364, extension 1074 Also open evenings.
PART TIME police officer NC certified Weekends, daytime work Contact Chief ot Police, Town ot Fountain, 749 2881
Bethel
tunity,
14,1983
PART TIME help needed Monday. Wednesday, and Friday from 10 until 2 Apply in person Leather & Wood, Carolina East Mall No phone calls please
PLASTERS AND TILE
wanted Phone 355 2354.
WAITER OR WAITRESS tor lunch shifts 10 to 2 and 12 to 3. 118 East 5th Street after 2 p m
WANTED PLUMMER. Residential helpers. Experience necessary. Apply in person at Stuart Shinn Inc , 612 Norris Street
WANTED RESIDENTIAL Electri cian helpers Experience neces sary Apply in person at Stuart Shinn Inc., 612 Norris Street.
WANTED: PART TIME night
auditor Experience please or ap fitude with numbers Apply front desk at Ramada Inn
WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open ing tor an experienced Real Estate Broker. For more information or an appointment, call Rod Tugwell al Century 21 Tipton 8 Associates, 56 6810.
SUBARU
Redi CarsUsed Cars
1982 Buick Regal automatic. Brown, 2 door, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, cruise, stereo cassette, 34,000 miles.
1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass - Brown, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, 27.000 miles.
1982 Buick Regal - Green metallic. 4 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, stereo cassette, 38,600 miles.
1982 Chevrolet Malibu Classic 4 door, White, Cruise, power windows, 31,000 miles,
1981 Oldsmobile Regency - Blue, 2 door, 38,000 miles.
1981 Buick Regal - Tan and Maroon, 2 door, Power equipment, 41,000 miles.
1981 Toyota Corolla Liftback5 sp^ed, air conditioning, 44,000 miles.
1980 Dodge Omni - Creme color, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, AM/FM, 39,000 miles.
1980 Mercury Grand Marquis - Black. 50,000 miles. Loaded!
1980 Plymouth Volare - Green, 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, 50.000 miles.
1979 Buick Regal Limited - Silver and Gray, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM/FM stereo, 44,000 miles.
1976 Oldsmobile 98 Creme color, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, power windows, power seats, AM/FM stereo; 82,500 miles.
1975 Volkswagen Bus - 7 passengers. Very Clean! 80,000 miles.
1978 Mazda Pick-up - Camper Shell, 5 Speed, Good Condition!
Subaru Of Greenville
605 W. Greenville Blvd.
Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885
Greenville
w
074
A^scellaneous
200'+ CHAIN LINK fence; I drive
The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C
077 Musical Instruments
way gate and 2 walk thru gates,
"'"I 75' ----
S300 75 4474.
21" ZENITH color console looks like new, good picture, $165. Adult tricycle, $85 Guitar $19. 8 track player tor automobile $11. Bell Howell camera (with meter), $15 Rug (9x12), $25. Sturdy table ap proximately 3'x8'$25. GE stereo record player (like new) $29. KAWI reel reel tape player/recorder, $39. 9'2 men's shoes (cost $54) like new, $15. Youth size box springs and
$15. Youth size box springs and mattress, $9.00. 21" Philco black and while console, $19. Trumpet $75. Polaroid Swinger camera, $7. Telephone speaker (amplifier), $6 355 2211.
24' ROUND POOL for sale Call 752 2372 after 5 p.m.
30 FORMICA TABLE TOP
cabinets, measures 30"x60" with drawers, ideal for garage and home workshop storage 756 8335.
50" BIG SCREEN GE TV, remote control. Quartz tuning, cabinet model. Call Glenn at 756 9842
7.5 HORSEPOWER outboard motor, $150 One 12,000 BTU Frigidare air conditioner, $100 2 Fanon 6 channel 5 watt portable radios. $100 746 2498 after 6
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
DOUBLEWIOE, 24x60, large farnily room with woodstove, central air, microwave, underpinning and lots of extras Excellent condition. $19,900. Owner .'financing available Call 752 7860 after 5:30.
MUST SELL! Moving. 979 Two bedroom Brigadier, 12x45, central heat and air, partially furnished, very nice Call 758 4491 or 355 6683 after 5
NEW 1984 HORTON doublewide, masonite Siding, shingle root, furnished. $17,995 Come by and see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, 756 9841.
NO MONEY down; VA finandng. Two day delivery Call Conner Homes. 756 0333
NO MONEY DOWN VA 100% Financing
New 1984 Singlowido, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, appliances, total electric Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191
Now Open In Farmville!
PIANO TUNING W. M. HUDSON
20 years experience. 752-4682.
SOLID WALNUT YAMAHA piano tor sale. Call 756 8785.
WANTED; GOOD USED console Piano. Call 752 9660 or 758 1064 after 7:30p.m.
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST Tuesday red leather change purse at Pitt Plaza. 758 7462.
LOST; MIXED BREED dog looks like Golden Retriever Last seen 10th Street and 264 Bypass. Has collar with name If found call 752 0390.
085 Loans And Mortgages
ARtYOU HOLDING-
A MORTGAGE ONPROPERTY YOU SOLD?
SELL IT FOR CASH. ANYWHERE IN USA 1ST OR 2ND. FINANCIAL INVESTMENT GROUP INC. CALL COLLECT 1 704 274 0863
093
OPPORTUNITY
EXCITING .... business for sale by owners. Personal reasons. Only $5,000 756 3161 after 6
FbRllLIZER 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 res taurant, 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, all ABC permits, some owner financing Call Gary Quintard 758 5156 alter 5.
LAUNDROMAT FOR SALE. Good location Reasonable rent. Call 756 6890 after 5 p m.
LIST OR BUY your business with C.J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & ftAarkoting Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.
LOG HOME SALES SKY ROCKET
1 BILLION DOLLARS IN LOG KITSALEC PROJECTED FOR 1983
Manufacturer taking applications tor a dealer in this area. Dealer can average $4,500 on a log kit sale alone.
-FEATURING-
TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING
HOME OF THE NO DOWNPAYMENT
featuring
REDMAN Quality Homes
Highway 264, Farmville, NC
CALL 753-2033
8 ' solid, uniform, treated logs
Fiat or round interior walls
Hand hewn exterior look
Custom, commercial and con temporary buildings available
Protected territory
Two day free training school
Now introducing to the industry pre assembled log walls (1 day I shell erection on most models)
102 Commercial Property 109 Houses For Sale
I4 ACRE LOT in Industrial Park with water and sewer Priced to sell. Contact Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 756 35(X) nights Don Southerland 756 5240
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
RESTAURANT BUILDING Commercial building and seven rental units available for sale and located on Mumford Road Gross rents of $14(K) per month Priced at $134,000 Steady income potential.
THIS COMMERCIAL BUILDING in Grimesland may be just whak you need to start that business ycu've been thinking about. Good location and priced to sell at $27,000. Call today for your personal appoint ment.
LOT ON 264 By pass across from Heilig Meyers Furniture Corner lot with 120 feet road frontage $75,000.
COMMERCIAL LOT off of Memo rial Drive. 1 acre. Across from Parkers Barbeque $25,000.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.
REALTORS 756-6336
Marie Davis .ON CALL
Teresa Hewitt.................
Gene Ouinn.....................
Richard Allen................
Ray Holloman...............
Tim Smith
.756 5402 ...756 1188 .. .756 6037 . 756 4553 . 753 5147 .,. .752 9811
John Jackson ...............756 4360
Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
COMMERCIAL LOTS North Greene Street Between Farrner's Warehouse'' arid Wachovia Bank. Call 752 3684
FOR SALE by owner. 2 buildings and land Location: VSOO and 1502 North Greene 752 2481 or 758 1437. Shown by appointment only
FOR SALE: 5,000 square fool
commercial building in the downtown area Currently leases for $1400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756 6810. nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302
ABOUT 5 MILES from Hospital. Brick Veneer Ranch with carport, 3 bedrooms, glass sliding doors in breakfast room, deck, large backyard, bookshelves in den. Only $42,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
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.
BELVOIR. Best buy in this area. Very nice 2 bedroom, 1 bath, large living room, den, eat in kitchen and carport $30's, Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142.
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. 8'/a% VA loan. Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
BRICK HOME West of Greenville, 3'2 miles on Stantonsburg Road. 1600 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, fireplace, formal dining, re duced to $57,000, 758 7354. Owner.
104 Condominiums For Sale
REPO 1981 Parkway, 14x70, 3 bedrooms, $500 down, $215 month Come by and see at Art Dellanj Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, 756 9841
REPO 1981 Fleetwood, 3 bedrooms. As low as $500 down Come by znd see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, 756 9841
SMH LISTING SERVICE will list your mobile home, advertise it, sell it, and finance the transaction all at a LOW COST to you See George King SMH Listing Service, Hiway II Ayden, 746 2078.
SPECIAL FOR YOUNG coiples or college students For ony $700 down, $160 month you can <ow own a 1984 Horton Come by ard see at Art Dellano Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville, (We have loS avalla blei 756 9841
WANTED LATE MODIL mobile home Will trade HammJnd organ.
We Love Americc Special NOMONEYEOWN!
SINGLE WIDE. $8,495
DOUBLE WID...$17,995
(Loadd)
Anything of Vaue In Trade Boats Horses Monkeys Sorry Noln laws OVE? 30 FINANCE PLAIS AVAILABLE
UNLIMITED Income Potential
REQUIREMENTS-
Must be capable of purchasing a $13,275 model home
Meet our high standards
Desire to succeed
Call Mr. Taylor COLLECT for an application (704) 932 0137.
Yesteryear Log Homes, P.O Box 1046, Mooresville, N C 28115
PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT
Service. Local franchise office of world's largest employment service looking for , owner/manager no experience necessary, full training provided, truly a turn key opera tion, files, records and furniture included. Call Roger Allen, 919 291 8249 days; 291 6254 nights.
095
PROFESSIONAL
BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME with a sprayed ceiling. Plaster, painting, tile, and sheetrock repair 757 0678 or 756 2689
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 Call D & F Carpet Cleaning Services, 758 4437
WHY PAY A fortune for wedding pictures? Call 756 4048 day or night
CALL NO)V! 756-4833 | classified display
$42,900 2 bedroom, I'v bath con dominium within biking distance of the University The full basement can be finished to give almost 1500 square teet of living area Excellent condition with central air and fenced patio For more details call Alita Carroll, Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278
106
Farms For Sale
GOOD YIELDING farm land with excellent road frontage Over 12,300 pounds tobacco and 16,000 pounds peanuts. Six miles in good location Call Carl for details. Darden Real 1y, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230.
CENTURY21
TIPTON & ASSOCIATES 756-6810
$62,500. Horseshoe Acres. Builder says sell this newly constructed traditional 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on large lot that features large den with fireplace, dining area, chair railing, crown molding and lots of extras
$61,000. Eastvyood. 11 >2% loan assumplion on this 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch that features large lot, dining area, .den, fireplace, large deck oft den
$87,000. Farmville. Excellent 4 bedroom, 3 bath home on large, heavHy-wboded lot that features all formal areas. Lovely screened in porch,
$125,000. Commercial building in downtown area. Over 5,000 square feet.
NEW CONSTRUCTION; Call today about our new construction in Club Pines, Belvedere, Brentwood and Lynndale We also custom build quality homes Call one of our brokers today
Nights Call
Al Baldwin On Call............ 756 7836
Harold Hewitt.....................756 2570
Rod Tugwell.....................753 4302
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
107
Farms For Lease
WANTED TO RENT tobacco poundage and farm land in Pitt County 756 4634
Need part time work from now until the holda Classitioi
the holdays? Vou II find a position i id
109
Houses For Sale
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country 3, bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace Heat pump Located on over ,1 acre (also available tor purchase 2 ad|0ininq acres) Possibly Federal Land Bank financ ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8. , Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756 5716
Drntal
Receptionist
Receptionist with a growing group practice. Good salary and fringe benefits. Six months experience as a receptionist and typing skills. Send Resume to; Dental Receptionist, P.O. Box T967, Greenville, N.C., 27834.
Sunday. October 9.1983 Q-7
109 Houses For Sale
BRICK HOUSE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, kitchen, dining room, foyer, large walk in closet, utility room, 1 car garage 1500 square teet Also separate garage consisting of 1500 square feet, on a 1 ' } acre lot in the country, 2 miles from hospital. 758 6321.__
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$50'S8,$60'S
QUAIL RIDGE. Only one two bedroom flat available. Complete in Novemeber. Convenient to town off 14th Street. Shaded patio Let us pay your closing costs Select your own carpet and wallpaper All appliances included Offered at $55,500. Call today.
CAME LOT Just started You can select your own decor. This 3 bedroom brick ranch otters nearly 1300 square feet, large kitchen, great room with fireplace, patio Ottered in the mid $50's. Fixed rate financing available at 12'2%.
GRIFTON, Special of the week. You won't believe the space in this brick ranch Offers over 2,000 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large workshop, two fireplaces Conve niently located near schools and shopping. Call today for your exclusive showing. May be leased with option.Upper $50's.
RED OAK. 4 bedrooms ottered in upper 60's. Over 2000 square feet with fenced in back yard and plenty of room in all large rooms. Recently painted and ready for occupancy.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.
REALTORS_____
756-6336
Marie Davis ...ON CALL... 756 5402
Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188
Gene Quinrv........... ...756 6037
Richard Allen.....................756 4553
Ray Holloman.....................753 5U7
Tim Smith.........................752 9811
John Jackson......................756 4360
Toll Free: I 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
109 Houses For Sale
109
Houses For Sale
109
Houses For Sate
BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable By appointment, R H McLawhorn, 756 2750 or 975 2688
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$60's& $70's
COUNTRY HOME with 2100 square feet located on 3' 2 acre wooded lot 4 miles West of Bethel on Highway 64 Home has formal living room with dining room ano kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, carport plus a large outside storage building that can be easily converted to suit owner Must see to appreciate home's many fine extras 15 miles north of Greenville Offered in the mid$70's
SELLERS ARE READY to move , You can , move in immediately No ' touch up required Convenient to , the University, schools and shop ; ping. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. ' Priced to sell in the low $60's Call ' for details |
BUlLf AMONG the Pines Brick veneer ranch Quiet and peaceful neighborhood No city taxes Good school district About 1,375 square teet, 3 bedrooms, 1'2 baths, central heat and woodstove Call tor details Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
D.G, NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
CAMELOT Looking for that ' exceptional buy in a new home | Look at these stats Nearly 1500 square feet, fully apphanced, patio, , exceeds E 300 energy standards, large great room with fireplace Builder pays points for fixed rate | financing All for $63,800 Call , today, you'll be pleasantly sur prised I
PRIVACY GALORE! Azaleas, camellias, and dogwoods every where Well designed floor plan features three very large bedrooms, large living and dining room, family room with fireplace, great kitchen area, double garage, lots of storage and closet space Located in Brook Valley at 122 King George Road $98,500
NEW OFFERING Owner says sell fast and you'll want to see what you can get for $76,000 on Ellsworth Drive Williamsburg colors and decor. Well kept yard plus Cpirport and outside storage Four spacious bedrooms, 2'2 baths, coxy den, large dining room for entertaining this Thanksgiving Choice of schools and recreational facrlities availa ble Call today
CHERRY OAKS, Over 1700 square feet of well used space m this contemporary ranch Otters formal areas as well as convenient porch,'deck area oft great room Large master bedroom with sepa rate powder room and walk in closet. Fully af^lianced with quail
THIS HOME SAYS 'Come m and make yourself at home' ideally located on a dead end street and within vjalking distance to campus Features, living room with fireplace, formal dmmg room, cheery k'lchcn th dinnette area sepraied tiy a ..-ji Over si.'ed den with a fireplace and built ins Three bedrooms. I', baths, deck and storage house Heating system less than 2 y<ars o'd All drapes rom,am Reduced to sell at $65.500.
BIG TWO STORY on the Golf Course! Located, on I7th tee at Brook Valley this one of a kind home offers over 3600 sq, ft of living area All formal areas, great kitchen and eating area, lovely foyer with winding stairway, family room, big utility room Full base men! for rec or work area. Four big bedrooms, three full baths Double lots of extras 218 Churchill ve $165.000
OWNER FINANCING Located on Stantonsburg Road 2170 square feet 3 bedrooms, 2i. baths, bnck ranch Excellent condition $75,900
closet. Fully amjlianced with quail ty throughout. Enjoy country living across from pool and tennis courts 12'2% financing available
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCHJNC.
REALTORS 756-6336
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCHJNC.
REALTORS 756 6536
NEW LISTING! Great home in the country in the Winterville anea. Well designed floor plan features great room with fireplace and wood stove insert Kitchen and big dining area three bedrooms, two full baths, extra large utility area and storage room tremendous play room, or tamuy area has just been added to the rear Nice big wooded tour acre lot with room to expand Call for a showing Priced right at $87,500
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Marie Davis, ON CALL- 756,5402' Teresa Hewitt ... " 7.56 1188
Gene Quinn ............... 756 6037
Richard Allen.............. 756 4553
Ray Holloman................753 5147
Tim Smith............752 9811
John Jackson,; . , .756 4360
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43
Mane Davis ON CAL
-Taresa- HewiU .---
Gene Ouinn,. , .
Richard Allen Ray Holloman
_Tim Smith. ......,
John Jackson
756 5402 - 7-56-1 i-88 756 6037 756 4553 753 5147
-,,.-752 98! 1 756 4360
Toll Free 1 600 525 8910. ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
$64,500 GREAT LOCATION, Col
fgc Court .^rea Good floor plan in t-rtms"trrre-home-aT'.n 13". .RagsdaTe Road Living room and dining area, family roonn kitchen eating area, three, bedrooms two full bathsr .screened'in back porch Biq carp"orl ^ area with storage Big corner lot
i Katherin?Vinson I David Nichois
' 752 5778 355 6414
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
REGISTERED
DEAN OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES
At Pitt Community College
Position requires a BS degree in Business Administration or related field. Prefer Masters degree in Business Administration or related field. Prefer experience in two year college/technical institute.
Salary based on PCC salary formula. Position available Jan. 1, 1984; applications accepted thru Nov. 4, 1983. Contact:
Personnel Department PITT COMMUNITY COLLEGE P.O. Drawer 7007 Greenville.lJC
Phone 756-3130. Ext. 289 AA/EO
DIETICIAN
Nepd+d for the School of Medicine to work with the Outpatient Center. Department of Medicine and Pediatrics. Requires a Bachelors Degree in Dietetics, Food Science, or related field, with 2 years of clinical experience. Prefers registration by the American Dietician Association. Position available November 1, 1983. Work schedule will be Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Send detailed resume to:
PIRSONNtL DL PAKTMI NT
East Carolina
University
GREENVILLE,
NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352
ECU
BELVEDERE. Club .Pines, 1900 square feet Owner financing available 752 6523 appointments
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
TRADEWINDfAMILY HOUSING 705 West Grwnville Boulevard
13.75b
homes
0333
FINAICING on selected Call .'onner Homes, 756
I97 RITZCRAFT, 12x60 2
bedrooms,_ Ornished, ajr condi iioned; washrr and dryer Excellent condition <6295 Call 756 2702 or 758 1048 afhr 6pm
1972 HOMISTEAD, 2 bedrooms, appliance', partially furnished, underpinniig, $4800 negotiable Call 756 5588 or 1 946 6567
1972 12x6' 2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, washer d'yer, air, furnished. And lot with 10x12 wood storage shed. Will sell perately Call 756 0975.
BOYD
ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
P.O. BOX 1705. GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA 27834
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
RENOVATIONS
758-4284
1973 FIRWAY 12 X 70. 3 bedroom.
2 baths, See or call George King, Sikinq Mobile Homes, Highway It
By pais, Ayden, 746 2078
1974 WINSTON, 12x70, 2 bedroom, centnl air and heat, underpinning, deck In Shady Knoll Trailer Park
$65Ci' -756 0730 before 1 p.m.
1974 Conner Mobile Home 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
514.500 Will sacrifice now for
511.500 Call 752 2366or 757 0451.
I9BI 14x70 COMMODORE. 3
oedrooms, I'j baths, total eleotric. Already set and blocked in Evans Mobile Home Park Call 758 6805
1982 BRIGADIER mobile home, 14x70, 3 bedroom, I'z bath with garden tub. Fully furnished. Totally electric Asking $1,000; take over payments. 752 9009
1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Grgenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068.
1984 14x70 FLEETWOOD. 2
bedrooms, t'z baths, furnished, storm windows, frost free, deluxe range, plywood floors. $12,995. Call Calvary Mobile Homes, I 946 0929.
I984~ 24x56 SKY LINE. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, fireplace, patio door pannel fan, garden tub, storm windows, stainless steel sink, masonite shingles, $25,995, Call Calvary Mobile Homes, 1 946 0929.
60X12, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, air conditioned, washer. $5500. Call 752 4938
65 X 12 MOBILE home No money down Take up payments of $167.00. Ask for Doris. 756 5045
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.
077 Musical Instruments
ARMSTRONG FLUTE with carry ing case for sale Excellent .con diton. $200 Call 746 4944 after 5 p.m.
ARMSTRONG CLOSED WHOLE
flute, excellent conditon, $199. 758 3592.
BUNDY ALTO Saxophine, excellent condition, $350. Call after 4 p.m., 756 0677
FENDER LEAD M. Black with maple neck, $250. Peavey Deuce Amp , 120 watts wilh an effect peddle, $200 1 523 0459
FENDER SUPER REVEIB, new
speakers. $250 or best otter. Call anytime, 756 4797.
GUITAR PLAYER with some keyboard ability looking weekend country and country rockband. Call after 7, 795 4360.
LIKE NEW but 'j price! Snare drum, case, stand, ani 2 sets of sticks. $175 752 5528
PIANO & ORGAN OISI'RIBUTORS
presents new Kirtball piano, bench delivery tunirB, add
private lessons. Onl/ $1489, just $49 90 a month! Limjed time offer. 329 Arlinglari Boulevard. 355 6002.
PRODUCT COORDINATOR
DESCRIPTION: Unique entry level marketing position Is being created at one of the countrys largest household products manufacturers. The Product Coordinator will be responsible lor the management of our existing pfoduct line. This will include writing yearly marketing plans, looking tor new markets for existing products and gathering competitive intormation.
QUALIFICATIONS: BA or BS in a business discipline with at least 2 years experience in sales or marketing, preferably in the hardware or housewares industry, or a MBA with more limited experience.
Salary commensurate to experience and responsibilities Complete benefits package. Please send resume with salary history and requirements to:
EMPIRE BRUSHES, INC.
P.O. Box 1606
Attention: Personnel Manager US Highway 13 N
Greenville, NC 27834
919-758-4111
An Equal Opportunity Empi&yer
Leading Manufacturer of small appliances has an opening for an
IBM 4341
PROGRAMMER ANALYST
CTCS command level and DL1 experience highly desirable. Challenging opportunity for the successful can-didale who desires broad based knowledge this system can offer. Send resume and salary history to:
Mark W. Eakes Employee Relations Manager HAMILTON BEACH P.O. Box 1158,Washington, NC 27889 EOE M/F/H/V
CONTRACTORS
WANTED
Contractors capable of producing 500 dozen or more per week of childrens slacks. Long range programs. C.M.T. available.
Contact: Richard Rosenstock Devil Dog Mfg. Co. ^
Zebulon, N.C. 27597 Phone (919) 269-7485
CaggicCo/iSioui
&ctoheh 16,1983
Starts 10:00A.M.
lister Until I P.M.
The Old Moores Building Supply Lo Greenville Blvd., Greenville
1970 AND OLDER CARS AND TRUCKS
$1000
Cash Awards Plus Tronhies
This Show Sponsored By:
Regional Acceptance Corp. Cox Armature Works Phelps Chevrolet Pughs Tire Service Doodles Auto Parts
Joe Cullipher Chrysler
Plymouth-Dodge
Bland & Newsome Body Shop
Grant Buick
Bill Askew Motors
Mack Beale Insurance Agency
For More Information .Call: Brinkley Moore Motors 756-9966
WWWD-8 Tne Daily Reflector. Greenville.
Sunday. October 9,1983
109
Houses For Sale
109
Houses For Sale
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY
756-6666 or 756-5868
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
SSO's & Uf
Broker On Call Tony Mallard 752 6560
starting out? Then let us show you this 3 bedroom 1' 2 bath in quiet desirable neighborhood Super iarqe kitchen and dming area, carport and all on a lovely wooded lot Take a look S45.900. 590
CLUB PINES. Loan assumption available on this lovely home in Club Pines. Extra large den with woodburning stove. All formal areas, garage, built ins, intercom system and much, much more. S82.500. .
NEW LISTING You'll be impressed with t s like new appearance too! Les'- than two years old with lasti'ti traditional decor, and beautiti ' hardwood floors In foyer at'd dining room plus spacious I ,.ng areas Ask us. about the V n e a V s i' VI n q improvements. .SCI- vsO 6'4
DREXELBROOK. Reduced. Im maculate best describes this 3 bedroom home with all large rooms and spacious back yard not to mention the rear screened porch Over 2000 square feet in one of Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and roof. Call today. Ottered at $86,900
LOTS OF POSSIBILITIES! You' can rt>^ de upstair-, with 3; bedrooms . 2 baths, den with, t'replaci' eat m kitchen, formal I ari-ts and' lease fhe downstairs h a few Ilinor changes, tor that n. me propi r'v Call today and let - ' '. . V. 5" 500 574
INVESTORS Try on a 33% after lax return plus net cash return in 3 years viThis quadraplex near the hospital will be -complete in first quarter ot 1984 Excellent construe tion with option to sell as individual units 90% financing available. Of fered at $144,000
"HA LOAN ASSUMPTION With noi
.1,. liyino BeatituI 3 bedroom. I'?! M'h with qaraqe and tireplace 1
''iv $52 900 -S.;T :
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
iip and carport A good; .ou to work or relax/ lima areas 3 bedrooms,! , L siedatS33 500 610
756-6336
Marie Davis ON CALL ,756 5402 Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188
CHERRY OAKS $10,000 cash iiSi.me 's', ina 2nd mortqaqes, . bed.10m 2',ba'r Owner 756 8073
Gone Quii Richard Allen. Ray Holloman
Tim Smith......
John Jackson
,756 6037 756 4553 .753 5147 752 9811 756 4360
Cl. ASSlFlED ADS Will go to work O'- ,i 0 hncl Lash buyers tor your . ru.Mb iti-ms 1 o place your ad
ph.Ill" -I.' .ilkfi
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910, ext, AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
109
Houses For Sale
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
$69,500 - CAMELOT. Four bedrooms at a great price! Located at 402 Lancelot Drive on a large wooded lot with lots of privacy. Plan otters family room with
fireplace, dining area, convenient
:hi
kitchen, two bedrooms down, two up, big garage, nice deck. $69,500
$69,500-LOVELY HOME in great area. Conveniently located at 102 Graham St. in College Court. Im maculate plan features foyer, formal living and dining rooms, very nice kitchen with pretty breakfast nook, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, nice lot. Lots of extras.
$72,500 -OWNER WANTS to fi
nance! Nearly 1900 square teet of area on a wooded corner lot in a great location at 802 Forest Hills Circle. Lots of features in this one owner home like hardwood floors, two fireplaces, and porches highlight the floor plan with foyer, formal living and dining rooms, den or study, kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths
$125,000 BRAND NEW LISTING
near the Med School and Hospital 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 extras too numerous to mention.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
$185,000 TREMENDOUS HOME in
the country Large I'l story with over 4000 square teet ot area Everythings big including formal living and dining rooms, kitchen, five bedrooms, big play nr rec area. Also a 2000 square foot garage or multi purpose building. Located on 5 acres of land just minutes from Greenville
Katherine Vinson David Nichols
752 5778 355 6414
SALES AND OFFICE
I
Busy local store in one of the nation's largest retail jewelry lTui'ps Tias opening for mature, personable associate for 'biDinriiion sales and office work. Appreciation of fine eweirv a must: experience in consumer sales very desirable: 12 iracv essential. Work schedule may vary. Must be able to work evenings and Saturday,
Benefits include' life, medical and dental insurance, paid vac tion and personal leave. Christmas bonus, discount ourcrasmg.
Pick up application at: Carlyle & Co., Carolina East Mall.
SALES & MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE
i.Timediate opening for an experienced salesperson to market the fuliy insured 10 year warranty program
to builders.
You Must;
Be Mature And Dependable
Be Well Organized
Be Self-Motivated
Be Desirous Of High Income
Have A Successful Sales Record We Offer:
Excellent Salary And Commissions
Company Car And Expenses
Unlimited Potential
Send resume and references to: Residential Warran
ty Corporation. P.O. Box 641, Harrisburg, Pa. 17108.
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 for more details 2000 sq ft living area $69,000
109 Houses For Sale
CENTURY21 '
TIPTON & ASSOCIATES 756-6810 .
$20,000. Lot with mobile home.
fl21Nice 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.
109
Houses For Sale
BY OWNER - Club Pines. Make offer! 4 bedroom Cedar Ranch, 2 baths, large great room with fireplace. Lots of extras! 509 Crestline Boulevard, 756 7575,
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
$55,500 - SELLER PAYS all points and closing costs. Unique floor plan with walk around fireplace, great room, dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths. FHA VA financing available. Must see inside.
$41,500. Farmville 3 bedroony, IW baths, brick ranch on large wooded lot. FmHA assumption.
$43,000. Country Squire. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, corner lot. Assumable FmHA loan.
$44,900. Country. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge lot with fruit trees. 11'2% FHA Assumption
$45,000. Duplex. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath each side. Possible owner financing.
$49,000. Stokes area. Brick ranch with double garage on 2 acres.
$57,000. University area. Two story home featuring over 1800 square feet .on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 1' 2 baths, carport.
Nights Call Al Baldwin On Call........
756 7836
Harold Hewitt.....................756 2570
Rod Tugwell.......................753 4302
Have pets to sell? Reach more poo pie with an economical Classified ad Call 752 6166,
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
$56,000 - BACK ON the market Great V,A Loon oswmption. Great room with fireplace, dining room kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Loan balance of approxi mately $45,100, 10'2% FIXED
RATE, payments of $484 54 PITI. Located at 101 Lancaster Drive, Cambridge Subdivision.
$62,000 HORSESHOE ACRES
Near the hospital area. Immaculate home with great room and dining area with fireplace, nice kitchen, three good sized be^ooms, two full baths, big lot with steraqe area and garden area Located at 119 Black smith L.ane
$64,900 WINTERVILLE AREA.
Custom built home on large corner lot Approximately 1800 square teet of area. Foyer, formal living and dining rooms, family room with fireplace, big kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, two fUll baths, large garage with storage area. Fenced in back yard 104 Ragland Road Great buy tor the money!
Katherine Vinson David Nichols '
752 5778 355 6414
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
SUPERVISOR
IDEAL FOR SMALL family Large den with fireplace, living room, 2 bedrooms, bath, eat in kitchen, util ity room, large carport, central air heat Beautiful location. $38,000.
OLDER HOME, 4 bedrooms, kitch en living room, bath on large lot $18.000
Needed for the progressive growing clinical laboratory of our Med School. An excellent opportunity for someone with a BSMT degree and supervisory experience in clinical chemistry. MT (ASCP) or the equivalent preferred. Join the professional staff of a rapidly growing medical school with a competitive salary and fringe benefits package.
Submit detailed resume to:
GREENVILLE
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
INVESTMENT PROPERTY, 2|
bedrooms, living room, eat in kitchen, bath, ample storage, lot 94 X 100 $22,000
East Carolina
: Ayden Loan & Insurance
COMPANY, INC.
I 746-3761 746-6474
University
GREENVILLE,
NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
/
,4.
ECU
JOHNSENS
ANTIQUES
& LAMP SHOP
SELECTION OF SMALL ANTIQUES
LAMPS-GLASS SHADES & CHIMNEYS
HANDMADE FABRIC SHADES
OLD LAMPS REPAIRED AND REWIRED
NEW LOCATION
758-4839
315E. IITHST. GREENVILLE
OPHTHALMIC SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Open [oil into letsiog
Jo Down Payment Lower Mon-
No Down Payment Lower Monthly payments - Any make or model. New or Used
Auto Rentals
Daily, Weekly, Monthly Low Rates
ASHEVILLE AREA
BARNES-HINE HYDROCURVE, a leading manutacturer of contact ler.ses and solutions is now interviewing.
Four yeAr_cqllege degree preferred. -Successful sales-background helpful. Must be willing to relocate to Asheville.
N C al own expense.
Mid-Eastern
Brokers
#14 Pitt Plaza 756-4254
BANK
OFFICER
Manteo, N.C.
Recent growth combined with promotions has created unusual opportunity for Bank Officer with excellent performance record. Realistic candidate will be a college graduate with 5 years banking experience to include:
strong commercial lending, consumer lending, business development, branch administration and real estate lending.
Excellent salary and benefits. Send resume with salary history in complete confidence.
Dept. DDK35 P.O. Box 58484 Raleigh, N.C. 27658
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Excellent starting salary, plus incentive commission and bonus Outstanding comprehensive benefits program, plus company auto and expenses.
Send detailed resume with salary history to: OPHTHALMIC SALES P. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE. N.G. 27835'
BARNES41IND
HYDROCURVE
O A Pe'Tion Vision Care Company
An Affirmative Action Employer M / F / H
OCTOBER IS TRUCK MONTH AT
HASTINGS FORD
Spedal'Truck Deals Cn/Ynerc2G Bestl
WERE DEALING ON ALL FORD TRUCKS!
1984 RANGER
NO DOWN PAYMENT-NO OUT-OF-POCKET-EXPENSE
M 35.65 per month*
Based on a 48 Month Red Carpet Lease Closed End Lease
You Can Afford A Ford At
Am-n<d s I Uwd Cit Company
264 By Pass
H
ASTING
FORD
s
758-0114
Gieenville N C 27834
f
USED GARS AND TRUCKS
]_ SATISFACTION
VALUE J SELECTION
Priced To Sell
1981 Buick Park Avenue, Loaded.................. $9695
1980 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, Loaded......... $8995
1981 Chevrolet Chevette, 4 door ...... Stock Number 441A
1980 Malibu Wagon .....-................ $6695
1980 Volkswagen Rabbit..............................$4695
1980 Cldsmoblle Cmega............. .$4995
1980 Chevrolet Caprice Wagon... $7695
1979 Toyota Corolla .............. $3995
1978 Chevrolet Chevette............ .............$1995
1977 Ford Granada ..... $3795
1977 Pontiac Catalina Wagon.......... $2695
1976 Chevrolet Impala Wagon............... $1995
TRUCKS
1983 Ford Pick-Up ...................... $9695
1983 Ford Ranger Pick-Up........................ $6395
1982 Chevrolet Silverado Pick-Up.................... $9595
1979 Chevrolet V# Ton Pick-Up. ......... $3995
1974 Chevrolet Blazer, 45,000 miles.......... $5395
1969 Chevrolet Pick-Up...............................$2595
GREENVILLE
GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DHnSION
109
Houses For Sale
BYCWNER
107 Azalea Drive. Il'iAPR assumable loan. Living room, dining room, den with tirepiace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, central air, natural gas heat, fenced backyard, patio Will consider another house as trade 756 8281. if no answer 752 4844.
BY OWNER. 3 bedroom brick, 2 baths, den, utility, dining, living room 8./kitchen. Double garage. Inground swimming pool Griffon, 1 524 5478.
CAMELOT. You'll love the cathedral ceiling and beams, not to mention the stone tireplace in the great room Home also features formal dining room, 3 bedrooms with spacious walk in closets. Gr^eat |
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
assumption below market rate. Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 or Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500
CLUB PINES By Owner. Brick ranch, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2,300 square feet. Phone 355 2979
COLONIAL HEIGHTS : 3 bedroom brick ranch, carpet, hardwood floors, fireplace, pool, deck, totally private Reduced by owner, $59,400 758 1355 after 9:15 p m., Sunday anytime.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
QUALITY CONTROL MANAGER
Major manufacturer of children's sportswear including jeans, jackets, slacks, and knits looking lor a professional Quality Control Manager.
The desired applicant will have 5 to 10 years experience in garment manufacturing with heavy emphasis in Quality Control. Must be totally familiar with equipment, be knowledgable of garment construction and must be able to sew.
Salary commensurate with ability and experience. Excellent benefit package.
Send detailed resume to:
Personnel Manager DEVIL DOG MFG. CO., INC. P.O. Box 66 Zebulon, N.C. 27597 EOE
GreenvilleY Finest Used Cars!
{Located At Honda Store)
1983 Honda Accord
1979 Honda Accord
4 door 5 speed, low mileage, one owner
4 door, b speed transmission. 12.000 miles, one owner
1982 Honda Accord LX
Blue, 5 speed transmission, AM FM stereo, radio,
1980 Honda Prelude
Automatic transmission, low mileage
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
Grav. cruisecontrol. AM-FM stereo radio
(Located At Volvo Store)
1983 AMCJeep CJ-7
Renegade. Like new Chrome veheels. b.OOO miles.
1982 GMCS-15 Pickup
Gypsv All the extras including air condition
1981Datsun200SX
Power steering and brakes, power windows, cassette tape, loaded
1980 Volkswagen Sport 1981 Honda Accord LX
Truck
Luxury model Air xoiulition l.uxury with
Red 5 speedtransmission, like new Real
1980 Ford Granada
1981 Honda CV-650 Custom
4 door, beige, automatic. 4.b.(KK) miles, one Moiorcvcle. 47()()mi!es. clean bik
1980 Honda Accord LX
1980 Chevrolet Citation
Bronze with velour interior. Automatic, air condition, stereo '.eith cassette, digital clock, hatch release. Local one owner car
Air condition. AM-FM stereo, affordable, low monitrly payments
exiremelv
1979 Mazda 626
1979 Honda Prelude
Silver, automatic,transmission
1979 Ford Granada
Renegade Blue. Just like brand new.
1980 Datsun 210
4 door. White. Aut'^matic transmission, air
condition
1979 MGB Convertible
Like new. 47.S(K) mir?s,-green with black convertible top. AM FM stereo
30.000 miles, b speed traPsi-nission
Bob Barbour
.'^.'^00 s. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500
BobBarbour
ViMVOWlC Jttp kcnaiili
117 W. Tenth St Greenvill? 758-7200
Your Old Car Is Your Down Payment
On A Used Car!
We've extended this offer for a limited timel With approved credit, you can buy one of these exceptional used cars and use your present car as your dy.vn payment . .. regardless of it's condition... as long as you can drive it in.
Stock No.
Description
4199-A
4537-A
4565-A
4595-A
4628-A
4727-A
4728-A 4737-A
4739-B
4751-A
4795-A
4856-A
4857-A 4867-B 4894-A 4903-A 4905-A 4924-A P-8260 P-8261 P-8274 P-8276 P-8284 P-8295 P-8316 P-8325 P-8331 P-8348 P-8352 P-8354 P-8355 P-8358 P-8359 P-8360 P-8361 P-8362 R-7127 R-7128 R-7130 R-7137 R-7140 R-7141 R-7145 R-7146 R-7147
1970 Oldsmobile Cutlass Yellow
1977 Chevrolet Truck Brown
1983 Subaru Wagon Beige
1981 Dodge Truck White
1982 Toyota Truck White
1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass Silver
1981 Honda Civic Silver
1982 Toyota Truck Beige
1980 Mazda 626-Gold
1979 Chevrolet Camaro Blue
1976 Mercury Cougar Silver
1979 Ford Mustang Blue
1980 Buick Regal Black
1972 Mercedes-Benz SEL 450 Blue
1978 Lincoln Continental Green
1981 Ford Escort Black
1978 Toyota Corona Brown
1980 Chevrolet Monza Brown
1982 Toyota Corolla Yellow
1982 Toyota Corolla Red
1982 Toyota Corolla White
1982 Toyota Corolla White
1982 Toyota Corolla Red
1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Brown
1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass Burgundy
1982 Pontiac Grand Prix Burgundy
1982 Chevrolet Chevette Dark blue
1982 Toyota Corolla Silver
1979 Chevrolet Corvette White
1979 Toyota 1401 - Yellow
1982 Toyota Clica White
1982 Toyota Clica Gray
1983 Toyota Corolla Champagne
1979 Toyota Corolla Blue
1982.Chevrolet Chevette Blue
1982 Datsun Stanza Silver -1981 Toyota 4X4 Truck - Blue
1982 Toyota 4X4 Truck - Blue -A 1981 Toyota Corolla Red
1982 Toyota'Truck Blue
1981 Toyota Corolla Brown
1983 Toyota Clica Blue
1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7 - Copper
1982 Toyota Clica White
1982 Toyota Corolla Red
TOYOTA
EAST
Authonzod Mercedes-Benz Dealer
109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228
11
109
Houses For Sale
CONTEMPORARY and cute! Master bedroom on first level, 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs Vauited ceiling, indirect lighting just a few of the extras. Must see! Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9U2.
COUNTRY HOME - Reedy Branch area. 4 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, approximately 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 IW 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.
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 for 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. If this is-yr 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.
Featured Houses"
GRAYLEIGH; Nearing completion Choose your own colors, carpet, light fixtures. Chair rail and crown moulding. 4 bedrooms (1 down), 3 baths, large deck. Custom built cabinets, 2 car garage, corner lot, presently offered at $142,500.
GRAYLEIGH: Williamsburg style featuring 3 bedrooms, 2'j baths, formal living and dining rooms, den with fireplace, bookcases, deck and garage. Large wooded lot offered at $110,500.
CLUB PINES: Brick two story, great room with fireplace and bookcases, 3 bedrooms, 2'? baths, dining room, garage, great location Priced $84,500.
WINDY RIDGE: New listing, brick Colonial, 4 bedrooms, 2'i baths, formal living room, dining room, den with fireplac e. Covered patio with privacy fence. Owner transfered, needs to sell. A good buy at $66,900.
W.G. Blount & Assoc.
756-3000
Bob Barker Bill Blount Betty Beacham Stanley Peaden
975 3179 756 7911 756 3880 756 1617
FOR A CHARMING home in a great neighborhood take a look at this Cherry Oaks offering from the glazed brick entryway to the many custom built ins and beautiful old brick fireplace wall, this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home is ''special". Mid $70's. To see call Alita Carroll at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278.
FOR SALE BY OWNER. 3
bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Living room, kitchen and den combination, with fireplace and wood heater insert. Single garage, corner lot with fenced in patio. Elmhurst school district. 756 9615
FOR SALE BY OWNER. FHA
Assumption, $15,000, equity and assume loan Current payment $512 PITI. Lake Glenwood, $70,000 Ervin Gray 1 524 4148 or 1 524 5042
GET OUT OF the "city" and enjoy the "smali town" living in Ayden. The center of activity in this well kept 3 bednbom, 2 bath home is the large couryfry kitchen Priced in the $40 s with an 8% assumable loan, balance of approximately $28,000 For more information call Alita Carroil at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278.
HOMESOFQUALITY
HARDEE ACRES Vets, points and ciosing costs paid by owner on this 3 bedroom, I'j bath ranch with living room, den with fireplace, fence, and corner lot! Excellent for the first home buyer $48,500
DEERFIELD Farmer's Home assumption in Ayden. Payments are based on your income on this three bedroom ranch in excellent condition. Only $41,900.
COUNTRY Two miles from Greenville with exceilent assumption. Call quick on this great buy . $40's.
Five miles from Greenville Only $4,500 to assume the payments on this cute contemporary with cathedral ceiling. No credit check! $40's
Hignite, Realtors
756-1306
Weekends
Darrell Hignite...................355 2556
Leonard Hignite..................756 1921
IMMACULATE and well kept brick veneer ranch. Carport. Beautifully manicured lawn surrounded by trees Corner lot 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck Low $50's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
LAKE ELLSWORTH, by owner. 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch home with formal areas. Den with fireplace, hardwood floors in kitchen and utility room, plush carpet, Williamsburg decor throughout. Large deck with fenced in backyard $65,500. Call 756 8466 anytime.
LYNNDALE. Marvelous home tor large family! 4 bedrooms, 2 full and 2 halt baths, all formal areas, playroom and office. Beautiful de cor, mint condition, plus dual heat pumps. Everything you always wanted! Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142...
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Snowden
Business Brokers
752-3575
FOR LEASE
2500 SO. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
SPECIAL Safe
Model S-1 Special Price
512250
Reg. PriceS177 00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 s. Evans St.
t
752-2175
109
Houses For Sale
iipVING, MUST SELL! By owner ll'/i% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, brick ranch located on a large corner lot. Also features, great room with fireplace, garage and sundeck. Priced at $53,900 negotiable. No realtors please. 756-8715.
NEAT OLDER HOME. Well kept. 3 bedrooms, large front porch, kitch en remodeled. Large backyard, l^w $20's. Call Davfs 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 756-6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.
NEW LISTING. Shaded lot, 3 bedroom, f's bath brick ranch. Large family room, also features approximately 600 square feet detached garage and workshop, excellent location. Call now to see this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756-5716.
NEW LISTING. $48,900 Spacious 3 bedroom, l'-2 bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient location. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 571,6.
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 fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, double garage, screened porch and large brick patio. Loads of closets, cabinets, storage. Exceptionally nice. Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142,
NEW LISTING. Just off Greenville Boulevard on quiet lovely street, story and a halt cape cod features huge living/dining room, eat-in kitchen, laundry room, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Dual heat pumps. Priced right for quick sale. Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
NEW LISTING Quality home! Built by owner with lots of extra attention. You'll have 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, all formal areas, plus a rec room with fireplace and grill for cooking those hamburgers on cool weekends. All this and priced at only $79,750. 4616. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666 or 756 5868.
NEW LISTING - Country, large lot. Brick Veneer doll house. Tastefully decorated in earth tones, 3 bedrooms, I'j baths, ideal for young family. Assume 10%% loan. Only $41,500 Call Davis Reaify 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
NEW LISTING! Brick Veneer home with carport 6 miles trom Greenville. Owner being transferred. Neaf neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, I'z baths. Assume FmHA 10%% loan. Only $41,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
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.
NO CREDIT CHECK - $3,000 will get you in this 3 bedroom home. Neaf starter home. Ideal for young couple Central heat, woodsfove. Assume this loan less than $400 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 REASONABLE OFFER
refused! Owner must sell Reduced $7,300 Almost 1,600 square feet. About 3'? miles 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 CalJ Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144
OWNER MUST SELL! Brick Veneer home with double car garage. Corner wooded lot Custom built. BeautituI great room with fireplace, cheerful kitchen and dining area Excellent neighborhood and good school dis trict $60's Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAYThe Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
109 Houses For Sale
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 8i Southerland, 756 3500.
PRICE REDUCEDI University area. 2 story home featuring over 1,800 square teet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, carport. $57,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756-6810, nights Al Baldwin 756 7836.
PRICE REDUCEOI Eastwood. $13,500 assumes 11'/,% loan with payments of $545 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 2570
QUIET CUL-DE-SAC. Guarantees your privacy , while keeping you close to urban activity! Almost new, great room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Master bedroom has deck, large storage room, fenced dog run. Huge lot. Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
RED BANKS ROAD This lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch features all formal areas Kitchen has skylight and butcher block work island for her convenience along with great room with fireplace. Priced to sell. Call Sue Dunn, 355 2588 or Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500
RED OAK. Assume the FHA loan and move right into this beautiful brick home! Excellent condition, terrific' kitchen, garage the works! Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
REDUCED $3,500. Brick Veneer Ranch established neighborhood. No city taxes. Excellent school district. Almost 1,400 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 12 baths, central heat and air, woodstove. Low $50's. Call for details Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.
RIVER HILLS. New 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch on beautiful wooded lot, 2 decks, great floor plan. Aldridge 8. Southerland 756-3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
RIVERHILLS. Lovely 3 bedroom, 2'2 bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat pump. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756 5716
RIVERHILLS - Enjoy over 1750 square feet of living area in this immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. All the formal areas, plus a family room with fireplace, and a large wooded lot make this a very inviting property. $60's. For more information, call Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278.
SPLIT LEVEL with 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, living room and family room with fireplace. The greenhouse window in the kitchen gives a
f>leasant view of the brick patio and ovely wooded lot. Riverhills, lower $60's. T(J9see this home, call Alita Carroll, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278-----------
HOMESOF QUALITY
LAKE ELLSWORTH 4 bedrooms, large rec room, formal areas, den with fireplace, eat in kitchen, carport. Only $81,900
LAKE GLENW(X)D Excellent assumption with gradu ated payments! Living room, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, two baths, garage on cul de sac. Only $70,900
TUCKAHOE Want Winterville schools? A proven plan with tormal living room, den with fireplace and wood burning insert, 3 bedrooms, 2 tile baths, eat in kitchen and double garage. Only $58,900
TWINOAKS Lovely contemporary with 3 split bedrooms, two baths, fireplace in the great room, privacy fence and located close to schools and shop ping. $55,900.
Hignite, Realtors
756-1306
Weekends
Darrell Hignite...................355 2556
Leonard Hignite..................756 1921
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Sunday. October 9. 1983 Q.g
109
Houses For Sale
STATELY ELEGANCE. True comfort and grace Is yours In this fine 4 bedroom, 3 bath traditional home. All formal areas, mint condition, many extras. Aldridge 8> Southerland 756-3500; Jean Hopper 7569142.
THIS 3 OR 4 bedroom, 3 bath home in lovely Brook Valley has many extras including great room with fireplace, built in bookcases and tape player; dining room with built in china cabinet, and master bath with sunken tub. Only seven years old, with heat pump and central air, this home is ready for immediate occupancy. Lower 90's. For more information, call Alita Carroll at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278.
UNIVERSITY AREA. Excellent access to ECU and downtown. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room with fireplace, detached garage, screened porch. Excellent condi tion. $40's. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756-9142.
VIVA, LA DIFFERENCE! Tired of the same old floor plan? Come see this delighttui rustic contemporary beauty. 2,000' on acre lot, looks like it came directly from the pages of House Beautiful. Come see tor yourself. Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.
WANT A NEW HOME and your income is too low? Been turned down before? Why keep paying rent when you can build it yourself with no down payment? 9.9% APR 848 3220collect, A Pathway Home
WESTWOOD. Seller anxious for offer on this exceptionally nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch home. All formal areas, including den with fireplace, garage and covered patio. Smart shoppers call now Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142. -
WINDY RIDGE. Excellent living for kids and adults. 3 bedrooms, 2'z baths. Tennis Court, Sauna, Club House. Average monthly utilities, $65. 756 5385.
WINTERVILLE. You'll love the tioor plan and decor ot this 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home. Living room with fireplace, den, breakfast bar, office, carport. Assumable loan. Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142.
CENTURY21 BASS REALTY 756-6666 or 756-5868
Broker On Call; Tony Mallard 752 6560
PRIVACY, BUT CONVENIENCE!
Close,jJp schools and shopping! I'z story'^nfemporary with large loft upstairs, on a heavily wooded lot. Features 2 bedrooms and 1 bath, with 1280 square feet, in an excellent location. Priced in the 50's. 4506.
OWNERS HAVE RELOCATED and
will rent with option, or help with closing costs. Two story home in Club Pines with spacious greatroom with french doors leading to a deck, designer kitchen with custom cabinets and desk, and located on a shaded wooded lot. Reduced to $97,000. 256.
TUCKER ESTATES- This farm style home offers a floor plan copied from Grandma's home. Greatroom with fireplace, country kitchen, screened in back porch Owners anxious to seii take a look and make an offer. $78,900. 441.
EASTWOOD SUBDIVISION
located on a wooded lot this 3 bedroom brick ranch offers formal living room, den with fireplace, and lots bt charm. All this for just $57,900, it really deserves a look. 584.
2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop 16x36 plus sned and shelter. 1677 square feel of living area. Bill Williams Reai .Estate, 752 2615.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
FARM AUCTION
Saturday, October 29,1983 10:00 A.M. Rain Date November 5th
Rasberry-Sherman Farm
Located: SR1110 3.7 miles East ot Intersection Hwy. 11 & SR1110. This Intersection located 6 miles North of Dupont Plant & 1.5 miles South of Ayden Grifton High School.
Consisting of:
274 ' Acres Cropland +
9 Acres.Woodland 4:
283 Acres Total +
32.45 Acres Tobacco
57,566 Pounds Tobacco *
This Farm will be sold as 19 one half acre residential lots and 5 farm tracts ranging in size from 29 acres to 66 acres, all containing tobacco allotment. Lumping of any and all amounts will be allowed.
Free BBQ
Live Music
REALTY &
AUCTION
COMPANY
105 W. Caswell Kinston, N.C.
Rick Holder N.C. Auction Firm No. 3112
Phone
523-9090
Horace King. Jr. NCREL No. 63090
109
Houses For Sale
$29,900 TERRIFIC LOCATION near hospital. Property very valuable in this area. 2 bedrooms, pretty country kitchen. Nice garden spot.
$30,900 CONDOMINIUM LIVING is the way to go. This price is the best! You won't beat it! Special details available in office.
$35,900 IT'S RARE, but we've got it! Nice 3 bedroom brick home just outside city limits. Many nice-features include central heat and air and carport. At this price it will sell quickly. Call ERA today.
$46,soo shamrock terrace, a
much desired neighborhood and school district. You'll like this home and it's extra features. 3 bedrooms, I's baths, large open kitchen dining living combination. Garage
Clus carport and privately fenced ackyard. Corner lot.
$49,500 SHAMROCK TERRACE Invite your triends to live near you Located only a few doors down from above Very nice brick home featuring 4 bedrooms, new carpet in some areas over hardwood floors,
?arage plus extra carport neqoliable). Fenced backyard. ERA one full year home equipment warranty.
$64,900 ERA'S TOP CHOICE is this lovely home in Elmhurst. Terrific location on large corner lot. This home is well kept inside and out. 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace, large kitchen dining combination, dining room or downstairs bedroom. Must see to appreciate. All working components guaranteed through ERA for one full year.
OVERTON & POWERS
355-6500
8'/2% ASSUMABLE, 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, large lot. Call 756 3968; 756 3134, or 752 4661.
91 j% LOAN ASSUMPTION on this 3 bedroom, t bath home located in Farmville. Nice lot with 15x18 storage building. 5 years old. Payments of $326.93 PITI. Call 753 2406 after 6 p.m. weekdays.
Ill Investment Property
REDUCED $4,000.00. Office and apartment complex. Assumable fi nancing. Owner will also finance. $57,500. Darden Realty, 758.1983, nights and weekends 758 2230.
$35,000 - 3 bedroom house with upstairs apartment. Total rent $420 per month. Good investment pro perty. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756-6810.
$45,000 - Duplex. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, each side. Possible owner financing Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
111 Investment Property
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
VILLAGE EAST: 2 bedrooms, I'z bath townhouses. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances furnished. Central heat and air,,GE heatpump, patio, outside storage Conveniently located on Cedar Court. Exceilent property for sfu dent rental, priced at $41,900. DRESDEN PLACE: 2 bedroom, bath condominiums. Washer/dryer location, all kitchen appliances furnished Ideal location for student rental market. Corner ot 11th St. & Charles St. Priced at $43,600. GRIFTON: 7 brick houses are being sold to settle an estate. These houses have from 900 1400 square
feet, 2 bedrooms, i bath 3 bdrooms"' li? bath. They are located in an excellent location and in very good condition Priced at $145,000
W.G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000
Bob Barker 975 3179
Bill Blount , 756 7911
Betty Beacham 756 3880
Stanley Peaden 756 1617
115
Lots For Sale
1/2 ACRE COUNTRY lots 10 minutes from town on VOA Road near Proposed 264 Bypass. 752 7877
1/2 ACRE LOT for sale Ayden Grifton. Call 756 2682 after 5 p m
115
Lots For Sale
113
Land For Sale
WOODED LOT, 3 26 acres. State Road 1764 Near Simpson. Owner will finance. Call 756 6955after 4.
115
Lots For Sale
LOTS IN ESTABLISHED
neighborhood starting at $8800 Call 756 8904 after 7 p.m
LYNNDALE LOT on Queen Annes Road. Call 355 2221 after 6pm
MOBILE HOME lot approximate ly 1 acre in Winterville school district. Partial owner financing available^Call Bill at 757 1898; after 3, 756 8764
NO CROWDING your neighbors on these exceptionally large mobile homej lots. Off River Road, Greenville On Greenville city water Owner financing The Evans Co., 752 2814 Winnie Evans, Listing Broker, 752 4224 Faye Bowen, 756 5258.
PRICE REDUCED. State Road 1538, 8 miles east 3 2 wooded acres $12,000.752 1915
READY TO BUILD ON Colonial Heights area. Call 752 7915 after 6 pm.
RESIDENTIAL LOT in established neighborhood, super buy 756 1844.
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
5 MILES OFF New Bern Highway, approximately iz acre Reduced $5,500. 758 7709
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANT TO BUY
TOBACCO POUNDS
Any Amount TOP MONEY
WORTHINGTON FARMS, INC.
Day 756-3827 Night 756-3732
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
LOTS
LOOKING FOR LAND to build a home or business on? Over 4'2 acres available right off Highway 11 between Ayden and Grifton Owner financing available
WOODED LOT in Lake Ellsworth Back section. Priced to sell at $10,000
COUNTRY LOTS near Lake Glenwood east of Greenville Ap proximately 1 aacre. $7500each
HEAVILY WOODED LOT in Camelot Nearly 1/2 acre $13,200
SPACIOUS LOT in Cherry Oaks Ottered at $11,000
SIX ACRE BUILDING SITE in Knoll Acres subdivision, adjacent to I Baywood Restrictive covenants, city water. Owner will finance at 12% with 25% down payment ! $33,000
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Marie Davis. ..ON CALL 756 5402
Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188
Gene Quinn........................756 6037
Richard Allen.......-......... 756 4553
Ray Holloman..................753 5147
Tim Smith........................752 9811
John Jackson............... 756 4360
Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLb THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
LOTS
BUILD YOUR HOME on this ^3 acre wooded lot Quiet area ad|a cent to Griffon Country Club Priced to sell at $8,000
LAND FOR SALE 67 acres Pro perty just outside of Winterville can be purchased as one tract or may, be sold in increments ot 5 acre sections (wooded) $134,000 or j $16,500 per 5 acres
I $300 DOWN on >2 acre lot 12 miles least ot Greenville on the Paclolus I Highway Cash price $5,300 Owner I financing available at 12% rate for 8 I years AAonthly payment of $176 53 I Call John Jackson. 756 4360
BROOK VALLEY Beautiful ; wooded lot located on a cul de sac 1 Great site for building that dream i home. Call for details. Offered at $24,000.
IwCX/DED lOI already cleared for ' house or corner lot in Candlewick i Estates $8,200.00
WOODED ' 2 ACRE lot on Highway I 42, 1 mile west of Conetoe Quiet i surroundings $5000 00 Owner f, i nancing available
REALTY WORLD
' CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS i 756-6336
Mane Davis ON CALL 756 5402 Teresa Hewitt 756 1188
Gene Quinn ......... 756 6037
Richard Allen ...... 756 4553
Ray Holloman...... 753 5147
Tim Smith ..... 752 98H
John Jackson . 756 4360
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910. ext AF43 An Equat Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
AJAX MAGNETHERMIC CORPORATION. AN INTERNATIONAL LEADER IN THE PRODUCTION OF INDUCTION HEATING AND MELTING EQUIPMENT IS NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: ~---
MACHINISTS
Applicants must possess a broad knowledge of machining technology and have long term experience. The ability to work from complex blueprints and operate conventional and special purpose machine tools (such as boring mills, milling machines, and lathes) is a must.
COIL & TRANSFORMER BUILDERS
Applicants must have at least two years experience working in a manufacturing environment. Excellent mechanical skills, and aptitude, along with the ability to read blueprints, do brazing weld, and work with various automatic and hand tools Is a definite plus. Welders will be given strong consideration,
AJAX OFFERS AN EXCELLENT BENEFIT PACKAGE AND COMPETITIVE WAGES. INTERESTED APPLICANTS MUST APPLY THROUGH THE GREENVILLE EMPLOYMENT SECURITY OFFICE.
Ajax Magnethermic Corporation
Winterville, N.C. MMKM Equal Opportunity Employer
WE NEED YOUR CAR!
If You Have A 1978 -1982 Ford Fairmont, Granada Or Other Mid-Size Car WE NEED IT!--
Due to tremendous demand for these cars, we can give you TOP DOLLAR for your car on a purchase or a trade.
TOP TRADE ALLOWANCES ON ALL 1983 OR 1984 CARS AND TRUCKS
1984 Tempo
1984 Ranger
1984 F-100
1984 Escort
HURRY WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD!
YOU CAN AFFORD A FORD AT HASTINGS FORD
Americas #1 Used Car Company
Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass
ASTIINIG
758-0114
Greenville, N. C. 27834
mm.
0-1 o The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. October 9.1983
117 Resort Property For Sale 121 Apartments For Rent
BUILDING CONSISTING of 2,600 square feet with loading dock, storage area with offices Has been used as an auto garage, church, and warehouse for sales distributor unlimited potential; 317' road tron tage with three acres land: east of Farmville on Highway 264 Price reduced to S41.900. Estate Realty Co , 752 5058 nights 758 4476
NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on "water Reduced tor quick sale 946 7824 after 7 752 3058 work
RESORT PROPERTY tor sale or trade 4 apartment complex. 3 bedrooms I'j baths, central heat and air 415 Ocean Drive, Club Colony Atlantic Beach. Asking $225 000 Will trade for property in Greenville area. Call 752 2366 or 757 0451
RETIRING OR LOOKING for
vacation type property on the water Then call us We have lots cottages and mobile homes on the Pamhco and Pungo Rivers in beautiful Eastern NC Sally Robinson, I 964 4711 Woodstock Roaby Belhaven 1 943 3352
ANOTHER RENT INCREASE???
Now you can have monthly pay ......I not
ments lower than rent that will not increase! Five locations with 2 and 3 bedroom units. Call Iris Cannon at 746 2639 or 758 6050, Owen Norvell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, Wil Reid at 756 0446 or 758 6050 or Jane Warren at 758 7029 or 758 6050
AAOORE& SAUTE R
no South Evans 758-6050
121 Apartments For Rent
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1: baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and PCX3L. 752 1557'
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
121 Apartments For Rent
GRIFTON XREA. New 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Starting at S210. Carpet and drapes. Call 524-4239or 524 4821 EHO
LOVE TREES?
AZALEAGARDENS
RIVER COTTAGE on wooded
woter front lot .on the Pamlico
water front lot .on the Pamlico River mile trorrAWbshingron NC Quiet estdbl'shed neighborhood Cc.l 758 002 days, 752 0310 night's.
120
RENTALS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments
All energy efticienf designed
Queen size beds and studio couches
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost tree refrigerators
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
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
Dial direct phones Cable TV
Maid Service
Furnished
All Utilities Weekly Monthly Rates
756 5555
HERITAGE INN MOTEL
OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows
It s important *o please you. And we receive hundreds of testimonials every year
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom rnob le homes. Security deposits requ'ed no pets. Call 7'ib 44'.! Detween 8 and 5
Located m Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets
Contact J T or Tommy Wil 756 7815
lams
NEED STORAGE? We have any
S'.-e to rnee* your storage need. Call Arlington Se't Storage, Open Mon dav F'idav9s Call 756 9933
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse in woods. Washer/dryer hook ups $310. 756 6295 after 6 p m
; BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, I'z baths,
I washer dryer hpok ups, efficient No pets $325 per month 756 8904 or | 752 2040
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SHOPTHE BEST
SHOP HOLT
QUALITY USED CARS
1983 Oldsmobile Firenza
1 , I, Dii'i- Diue with blue velour mte'ior Automatic, air '.j''cn At/FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control
1983 Buick Regal
. !, .'. ..'I''burgundy velour m'te'ior LOnded
1983 Olds 98 Regency
.1 ".'.o ic'ne gray with green cloth mtenor Loaded
1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme
. 3" Varoon with maroon cloth interior Ducket seats and
scie
1982 Chevrolet Malibu Wagon
f wiin beige vinyl interior, tilt wheel, cruise control. -V stereo
2 Olds Cutlass Ciera
Brougham White with blue vinyl roof, blue velour
}82 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon
- Durgundy velour interior 3 seats, luggage rack
1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera
: ' Dark green With lignt green cloth interior
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon
B-'ce with tan vmyi interior Automatic, air condition, AM FM
1981 Honda Civic Wagon
green witn tan^myl interior. 5 speed transmission, air ; 'iCTiGri. AM FM radio, low mileage, like new
1981 Ford Thunderbird
j W'tn .v.'-'fe interior, one owner loaded
1981 Pontiac LeMans Wagon
.odgrain siding Beige vinyl interior
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
,.s2 Loaned Write with red vinyl interior, one owner
1981 Datsun 210 Wagon '
^ c".'.'7 .vitr- cght brow" .myl interior. 5 speed. AM FM
1981 Olds 98 Regency
- c:c Beige wCh green velour inicricr. landau roof. Loaded
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
c-een vvdh lignt green vmyi mtenor. bucket seats and
; ' loaded
1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme
with__DTown.yinyl interior, automatic air condition, tilt .'m.eei. cruise conuoi. low mileage
1980 Pontiac Phoenix
J : ' Gcd w'th 'an .myl mtenc.' au; m,atic. air condition,
A/'V'a't -; -2,000 m ie's. nibe Crt'a
1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
u : ' Aj' ''at'C dir brown with OuCkSKin .elour interior
1980 Olds Toronado
C' l. .'. " c'-j, mdtTe' interior, nice car lew miiearge
1980 Datsun Truck
B, . Due interior 5 speed, -jr. AMl^M radio, low.
1980 Buick Regal
2 j.cc' .gn* blue wdh landau took blue vmyl mtunoT. bucket ac.orTatiC, dT AM FM radio
1979 Mercury Cougar XR*7
Bmgund/ with burgundy interior and white landau roof 30,000 actual miles, like new
1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale
c .100' dark blue. With hcht blue ve'lour interior
1979 Ford Thunderbird
B.ue .vi'th white ian;,iu roof, white vinyl interior, T-tops T.aded n-cecar
1978 Datsun Truck
Tf-d Red with black interior. AM FM radio, sliding glass .'.mdo.',' sport wneeis, very nice
1978 Olds Delta 88
-t 10 / D'osei Blue With white vmyl interior, loaded.
GM EXECUTIVE CARS SAVINGS UP TO $2000.00
1983 Olds Cutlass 3rougham
door White with ligm gray velour interior Loaded. 3.121 miles
1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham
Red with gray velour merior Loaded. 6,122 miles
1983 Olds Omega
4 door Maroon with maroon velour interior. Loaded 3.785 miles
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
'01 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
GM QUALITY
SERVICE MRTS
GENERAL MOTORS CORRORATKM
To Buy Or Sell A Business In Confidence
contact Harold Creech
The MarkEfCplace, he.
2723 E. 10th St. 75Z-3666
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV,Wall to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd. 756-5067
If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it fhis fall in these
columns Call 752 6166
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
10 X 60 DESK
M79
CMOIIIU OFFICE [OOIPMIH CO.
Corner of Pitt & Green St.
Rent To Own
CURTIS
dOtASSIFIED DISPLAY
mmiii
756-8990
No Credit Check
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
MOBILE
HOMES
ATTENTION
VETERANS
VA RNANCING
Now Available On The New 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 CONNER?
25 vesis in ihe Mobile Home Business 20 Years m Mobile Home Manulaclunno Con ner Financed Conner Service Conner Insurance Free Oelieery and Set Up
Greenville, N.C.
(Open Weeknights Until 10 P.M;) (Week-Ends Until 8 P.M.)
call 756-0333
filftW Hlvd
(vrpf'nvilifv N C
13.75% FHA
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALERS ANNOUNCE 1984... _
OTO 50 IN 5.8 SECONDS.
RRST AMERICAN FRONTWHEEL DRIVE E-fE SPORTS CAR.
Now, performance and luury come tOQOthar m an au^tmg new sports car 1984 Chryeler User XE
10
^ Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot
3401 S Memorial Or
(ireenville. N C 756 0186
GRANT MAZDA
603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.
THE TRUCKS ARE ROLLING!!
1984 MAZDA B2000 SHORT BED
$
5389.00
i Plus N.C. Tax, Service And Handling Charge
1984 MAZDA B2000 LONG BED
$
5569.00
Plus N.C. Tax, Service And Handling Charge
1984 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
.';C3
Saturday: 9:00-2:00
\
Phone: 756-1877
V
121 Apartments For Rent
IN WINTERVILLE. 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $210 month. 756 5007
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 oft lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
NEAR HOSPITAL. New duplexes currently under construction. Available September 1. $300 per month. No pets. Call 752 3152 8U0 5, ask for John or Bryant
129
Lots For Rent
^LLAt TRAILER Park Ayden. raved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection First month free or we pay moving expenses. 744 2425 or 752 7148
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
? . option to buy 14x74
mobile home, heating and air, furnished, 3 months old AAany extras. 752 4802, evening 754 1185 days
furnished TRAILER for renf
With porch on nice lot in country 2
758 77oT^' deposit, Stao rent.
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
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, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams. 754 7815
ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, central air ahd heat, appliances. $210. 75 3311
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79 00 per month. Option to buy; U REN CO, 754 3842
RIVER BLUFF offers 1 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments 4 month leases. For more information call 758-4015 Monday Friday,-. 10 a m 6 p.m
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10a.m toSp m Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
STUDENT HOUSING. Pirates Landing Available second semester off Reade Circle Private rooms, cooking facilities $150 per month For information call Clark Branch Management, 754 4334.
NICE QUIET home for nice quiet person. Near mall and hospital. La^t, washer 754 2471 or 758 1 543
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hookups, 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
THREE BEDROOM duplex, nice for family, close to Wahl Coates and St Peter's School Yard, large attic, driveway, storm windows, central air, washer and dryer hookups, quiet neighborhood I year lease Rent $285 monthly 758 0502 from 49 p m Friday; Sunday 12 noon 9 p.m
TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedioj^ili ,"T baths, quiet, professional neighborhood in convenient loca tion, 1 year old No pets Deposit required. $330 per month 754 7314 days; 754 4980 nights
TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Village $350 Call Lorelle at 754 4334
TWO BEDROOM APARtTwTnt;
carpeted, central air and heal, appliances, washer dryer hookup Bryton Hills. $275 758 3311
wedgewoodarW
2 bedroom, 1' j bath townhouses. Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer nookups, pool, tennis court
756 0987
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT 201
North Woodlawn Heat and hot water furnished $215 754 0545 or
758 0435
1 bedroom' near campus Hot water turnished No pets $215 per month Phone Stuart Buchanan, 754 3923
2 BEDROOM duplex apartments available on 1 acre woocied lots at Frog Level for $235 to $265 No pets allowed 754 4424 After 5 p m. 754 5148_
2 BEDROOM townhouse, I'v bath on Stantonsburg Road, 4 miles West of hospital Available November 1 Call 754 5780 days, 752 0181 nights
122
Business Rentals
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or
office space Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet Only $3 40 per square foot For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 7S2 4348
127
Houses For Rent
AYDEN. 3/4 large bedrooms, 2 baths. Rent with option to buy $355 754-&140
AYDEN COUNTRY CLUB. Ranch style home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4' 7 baths. Over 3000 square feet. Available immediately $400 per month Call Lorelle at 754 6336.
CHARMING LARGE 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, study, 4 oak fireplaces, fenced yard, washer/dryer Ayden, $360.756 8160
CHERRY OAKS. Brick home.ll bedrooms, 2'2 baths, living room, family room, dining room, large kitchen. 2 car garage. 758 4706 after 5p.m. i
COUNTRY HOME for rent Three! bedrooms. Phone 756 2457 i
EDWARDS ACRES New 3 I
bedroom, P2 bath home $400 per month. Lynndale 4 bedrooms, 3 baths $600 per month MacGregor Downs. 5 bedrooms, 21,2 baths $700. Lease and security deposit required. Duffus Realty, Inc 756 0811.
FpR RENT; 3 or 4 bedroom house with central heat, wall to wall carpet, and blinds. 1 mile from schools in Farmville. Rent, $300 per month. Available October 15. Call 753 3101 days, 753 4785 nights
FOR RENT: 3 bedrooms, 1'2 baths, dishwasher, carpets, large yard, new paint, Fairfield, $350 752 3993
FOU SALE or rent 3 bedrooms In Greenville. Call 754 6444.
HOUSE - COUNTRY. AppToxTrii^t^ ly 8 miles from city, past hospital. References required 1 523 3562 HOUSE FOR RENT J years old~3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, central air, heat, fenced in yard. Winterville. $380 per month Call 756 4700 10 to 5, after4call 355 2875 HoUSE FOR RENT.Xbedrooms, IV2 baths, excellent condition and location. $425. 758 2682.
HOUSES AND Apartments in country. 8 mniles south of Greenville. 746 3284and 524 3180
NICE 2 bedroom house in country near Grimesland. CP8.L utilities, woodstove, $200 month Couples preferred. 752 0367.
2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Grifton. Phone 1 524 4147, nights 1 524-4007,
3 BEDROOM, IL2 bath, fireplace, heat pump, $310 month. Lease, deposit Family only. 758 3028 atter 5;30 or weekend.
3 BEDROOMS, I'v baths, heat pump. Available late October. Hardee Acres. Couples or families only. No pets. $350 a month. Lease and security. 355 2996affer 7 p m
3 BEDROOMS, 1'2 baths, brick ranch with garage $275. Lily Rich ardson Realty, 752 6535.
4 BEDROOM RANCH Over 2000 square feet with workshop In Grifton. Available immediately for $425 per monfh. Call Really World, ClarkBranch, 754 4334 or Tim Smith, 752 9811
4 YAR OLD HOUSE. 3 bedrooms^ baths. 1 mile West ot Pitt Community. Dishwasher, Beat the Peak water heater, newly painted intarlor, carpeted floors, large backyard.BS50. 752 3993 evenings
I
TWO BEDROOM. 2 full bafhs, good condition. $275 month plus deposit 758 6904 atter 4.
TWO BEDROOM, furnished or un furnished, washer Good location, no pets 756 0801 after5pm
12 X 40. 2 bedrooms with carpet and air $165. Also 3 bedrooms with carpet aftd air $150. No pets, no children 758 0745or 756 9491
12*55, 2 BEDROOMS. Furnished; washer; quiet area $160. 754 6903
12x45 3 BEDROOMS Nice Trailer electric, washer, dryer, air, carpet No pets Call 756 1235.
2 BEDROOM, completely turnished, 2 miles east of Greenville No pets, no children. 756 7381
2 BEDROOMS, washer and air. Call 756 1444 after 3 p.m.
2 BEDROOMS - turnished Near Burrough's Welcome. $140 per month. Call 756 1900
2 BEDROOMS, furnished No children, no pets. Located in Col onial Park Call 758 6679.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
PLASTIC SLIP COVERS
Custom fitfefl in home Heavy clear plastic Protects furniture from smoke, dust, stains, wearing
J. AUSBY Sofa and Chair Covered (4 Pillows or less) $85.00 Ausby Plastic Covers 536-4793 Weldon
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath on private wooded lot. Highway 33 east. Couples preferred. No pets. Lease and security. $260 a month. 355-2994 after 7 p.m.
135 Office Space For Rent
OFFiqE SPACE AVAILABLE. Off
264 By pass. 2100 square feet, private parking. $1200 per month; Arlington Blvd., new, 1445 square feet. $1050 per month. Front and rear entrance, custom finish; In dustrial Park, 9000 square feet, 5400 square feet carpeted. Remainder available for office. $4042 per month. Call Clark-Branch Management, 754 6334.
OFFICES FOR LEASE. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 754-7815.
SINGLE OFFICE, 154 square feet, JoynerLanier 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.
Want to sell livestock? Run a
Classified ad for quick response.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Sunday October9 1983 D-11
137 Resort Property For Rent
BEECH MOUNTAIN condo for rent by the day, week or month. Tennis, golf and swimming. Call 944-3248 days, 944-0494 nights.
138
Rooms For Rent
FURNISHED, full house privileges, responsible female, non-smoker. $105 month. 752-7411.
PRIVATE ROOM. Girl students, near college. 758 2201.
142 Roommate Wanted
ROOM TO RENT In private home. Femaleonly. 758-6677.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
COMMANDO SWEATERS
FLIGH^ JAChFTS MAI L-2B N-2B leather bomber B-1S. SNORKELS. PARKERS, fields A2 DECK PEA
ARMY-NAVY STORE
1 501 S Evans
Salesman Of The Month
Clyn Barber
Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevrolet is pleased to announce that Clyn Barber is the winner of the Salesman of The Month Award. Clyn won this (or his outstanding sales performance during the month of September.
PHELPS GHEYR0i:tT
West End Circle
756-2150
142 Roommate Wanted
ROOMMATE WANTED to shar smalt comfortable home In Ayden. Good access to Greenville, male dr female. Professional preferred. Contact for details 746 2678 after 7.
ully
furnished, deposit required. Call 758 3010, ask for Denise.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
144
Wanted To Buy
BARBELL SET, cast iron plates and press bench. 758-3592.
WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 756 8415.
Sell your used television the
Classified way. Call 752 6164
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
OE
AUCTION
FARM LAND
3 TRACTS
Saturday, Oct. 15,1983 11:00 A.M.
Location: Take Hwy 903 north from Robersonville, N.C., go approximateiy 3 miies to Gold Point. Turn right on Rural Paved Road 1309. Go approximately 1 mile to sale sight.
Tract 1: 60 Acres (Approx), 43 acres cleared, 17 acres woods, 3.57 acres tobacco, 8172 pounds. Peanuts 19,700 pounds. Small house and outbuildings.
Tract 2: 89 Acres (Approx), 51 acres cleared, 38 acres woods, 2.92 acres tobacco, 6673 pounds. Peanuts 17,511 pounds. 2 houses and outbuildings.
Tract 3: 86 Acres (Approx), 49 acres cleared, 37 acres woods, 2.92 acres tobacco, 6674 pounds. Peanuts 17,511 pounds.
Terms: 5% day of sale. Balance in 30 days upon delivery ot deed. Owner has the right to accept or reject and and all bids.
Farms Sold Subject To Timber Deed
Sale Conducted by
COUN-I-RY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. P. 0. 'Box 1235 Washington, North Carolina Phone: 946 6007 State License No. 765
144
Wanted To Buy
SEASLEY 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 824 4203
144
Wanted To Buy
NEED TOBACCO CLOTH Reason able price 756 3634
146
Wanted To Lease
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANT TO LEASE or rent farm land around Farmville Phone 753 2488
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS
Greenbilar
^illaere
Off Highway 11 Across from Hardee's Ayden, North Carolina
l-story, (((iar sidi (I ( (iIuiikiK
Fully carpt icd wiih f.iiiuc rr!nt>cr<Unr luriushi il
Washer drver linnk up'-
fhierny-elh( leiii iiidiv idu.illv conlrolled he.u p.uinp
Spaemus. \m li-m.iiiii.iiin d linitiiids .111(1 mirdi.iii -irii.i-/
T-Bedroom ironi SI80
2 - Bedroom Irom SI05
3 - Bedr^om Irom S215
Call for information and appointment:
Teresa Stallings. .Manager
1:30-5 p.m. Daily Except Tuesdays.
AYDEX'S XEWES'l I MEM' COMMl XEI Y
The Real Estate
Corner
BY OWNER
BAYWOOD
TENNIS BUFFS - 2500 sq ft c.on-temporary on woocied loi over an acre Near Tennis Club 4 bedrooms. 3 batbs, double garage
LOADED WTTH EXTRAS! Sun
room, great room with central two way fireplace, lots'of decking Musi see $120,000's.
CALL 756-2340
LOTS FOR SALE
5 Acre lot. approximately one acre cleared for frontage; frontage consists of approximately 300 feet. 2 Miles East of Calico. Located on State Road 1796. Financing Available.
Call 757-1191 days. Nights Call 758-3761 Or 756-2246.
SELLING OR BUYING
Contact The Neighborhood Professionals CENTURY 21 B. FORBES AGENCY
Thillri^
For Information Contact:
NEW LISTING, Starter Home in country Two bedrooms, detached ooLible garage, and storage area. Large lot Priced to sell in the 20 s.
NEW LISTING- Under Construction 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, heatpump. sliding glass doors, wood sun deck Pick your colors 40's. REDUCED, Three bedroom. Modular home in Country Approximately 1 acre lot fenced m Car-pori and storage buildings. $42,500.
JOIN US at the water - 3 bedroom.
1 bath cottage. Furnished Water access S18.500.
FALL BARGAIN. 3 Bedroom. 1 bath cottage Furnished Only $20.000. DO YOU NEED A spacious 3 bedroom home with a low price? This one is for you Family room, wood stove insert, garage and carport $22.900,
FOR THE LARGE FAMILY - 5
Bedroom home with approximately 2100 square feet Family room, dining room two fireplaces. Large lot $28,500.
BUY TODAY. MOVE IN tomorrow 4 Bedro^%
home^^rftai BBas.IftAplace.
RETIREMENT OR STARTER home Two bedrooms living room, family room, dining room, large lot Possibility of some owner financing $28,500.
PRICED TO SELL. Three bedrooms, living room, kitchen, celling fan. ulilily. and hardwood floors. $29,900.
FUN HOUSE-This 4 bedroom, 2 bath modular home has a game room, fireplace, carport, and more. Large lot in country. $29,900.
DAO YOULL LIKE the workshop with '-2 bath:, that comes with this 3 bedroom home Possible FHA loan assumption $33,500. FARMERS HOME loan assumption on this 3 bedroom home with carport and hardwood floors. Large lot $36,500.
LOVELY 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in Greenfield Terrace. Possible FHA loan assumption, $40,500.
IMAGINATION WON'T DO-you
must ^^M^b|drol11|^ bath log f^^l Lilil rlorf with fireplliAviMdbiriMnt.
OWNERS ANXIOUS to sell 3 Bedroom brick ranch, eat-in kitchen, carport, and utility. Beautiful wooded lot $40,000.
NEED MORE ROOM? See this beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Living room, family room, large fenced m back yard $42,900.
NEED A HOME YESTERDAY? This home IS available immediately. 3 Bedrooms, living room, dining room, and carport. $43,000.
WELL LANDSCAPED CORNER lot 4 Bedroom ranch with possible Farmers Home loan assumption. $43,900.
WANT YOUR PLACE under the sun? This is it-at the water. 3 Bedrooms, screened in front porch. Must see $47,900. COUNTRY LIVING! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath Modufar home only 3 years old Living room and family room, fireplace. Partially furnished. $49,500.
POSSIBLE VA 9Vz% APR loan assumption. 3 Bedroom brick ranch with carport, storage, and patio $49,900.
THREE OR FOUR BEDROOM brick ranch. Family room with fireplace. Custom curtains, microwave and deck $51,900.
ONLY arfi^Home
loan ^^plj o| lis 3 bedroMld^l^iMiidieck. WAITING FOR YOU is this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Living room, sunroom, fireplace, and storage. Corner lot $51,900.
NOT FAR FROM SHOPPING. Lovely 3 bedroom home. Living room with fireplace, dining room, and storage building. $52,000.
MAKE US AN OFFER on this beautiful 3 bedroom, 1'/2 bath home Living room with fireplace, screened-in patio, fenced yard, and garage. Possible 9'/z% FHA-245 loan assumption. $52,400.
PACKAGE DEALI Home and income or Investment 3 Bedroom home on corner lot with separate 2 bedroom apartment. $53,500. WITH WINTER JUST around the corner you'll enjoy the large fireplace in this 3 bedroom home on corner lot. $59,000.
IF YOUVE BEEN LOOKING tor a contemporary with loft, see this 2 bedroom, 2 bath home. Family room with fireplace, deck, and garage. $59,900.
BOTH MOM AND DAD will enjoy this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Family room, living room, fireplace, patio, and carport. Large workshop. $62,000.
LET THE KIDS LOOSE on approximately 11 acres with this 5 bedroom home. Screened In porch $62,500.
APPROXIMATELY 2.6 ACRE wooded lot in country with this 4 bedroom contemporary home. Many extra features. $68,000.
CHARM AND CHARACTER in the
country. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, family room, wood stove. Large lot with trees. $69.900.
IMMACULATE 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home in convenient location. Formal areas, wood stove, carport, large screened porch. Beautiful lot $69,900.
A SHOW PLACE. Beautiful 3 bedroom. 2 bath home Great room with fireplace, fenced in back yard. Special features you must see. $72,500.
BEAUTIFUL 3 Bedroom, two story home in Cherry Oaks. 2/2 Baths, double garage, corner lot. Many ext,ras. $88,500.
PLENTY OF ROOM in this 4 bedroo^^^l^^home on corner
what DREAMS are made of. Beautiful 4 bedroom, 2V bath, two story home Formal areas, fireplace, and deck. Possible loan assumption.
ACREAGE PLUS-3 Bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on approximately 19 acres. Fireplace double garage, and carport. $115,000.
PRESTIGIOUS LYNNDALE-
Beautiful 3 bedroom. 2 bath home. Formal areas, fireplace, and Indoor grill. $118,500. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY-Convenient type store with well established business. Owner financing available. $69.900.
NURSERY-Equipment, slotk, 2 trucks, doublewide and singlewide mobile home, greenhouses, and wholesale routes Owner financing available $200,000.
DUPLEX-1440 square feet. One side remodeled, other side was used as church. $24,900.
INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY-3
Mobile homes and one house in country. Rental income of $595. per month. $32,000.
OWN YOUR OWN business Motel, restaurant, and approximately 14 acres of land. $69,900.
FARM-Approximately 72 acres, 10,000 lbs. tobacco allotment. Possibility of some owner financinq.
LOOKING FOR A LOT? We have Residential, Commercial, Wooded, lots, in the country, and in the city.
CEDARDALE LOG HOMES Solid cedar beauty, energy efficient. See plans by calling today.
(919) 746-4616
NEW HOME THREE BED, 2/2 bath, living, dining, kitchen, garage. Best View of Neuse River all this on a large corner lot, you pick your carpetPriced at $85,000.
I
LOCATED IN BUCCANEER BAY, on the water with pier, newthree large bedrooms, country kitchen, fireplace, screened porch, open deck, outside storage Sail Loft Realty has this priced at only $85,000. Tell us what you think of this value' _
t
HOW ABOUT THIS DUPLEX, good income pro- ORIENTAL ON THE NEUSE RIVER, this beautiful
perty as well as a place to live and rent, only home five years old. 1'; story, large decks on
one block from wafer, one acre landscaped front and back, garage, take a hard look at this,
under trees. Owner will finance 90%, Priced at it is only S106.000.
$65,000.
t REALTY, INC.
249-1787
BROAD STREET ORIENTAL. N.C.
2717 S. Memorial Drive Greenvilles First Century 21 Location
756-2121 OFFICE OPEN TODAY 1-5
David Heniford, REALTOR (On Call) 758-0180
J.C. Bowtn, REALTOR, GRI...................756-7426
Evtlyn Bullock............................ 752-4707
Ray Everette, REALTOR........................758-9549
Jennie Grumpier, BROKER...................756-0237
Blanche Forbes, REALTOR. GRI...........756-3438
Each Office Independently Owned And Operated
Home Federales Adjustable Rate Mortgage Can Help Put Your Welcome Mat Out.
Youll welcome these benefits: Smaller monthly payments than with fixed rate loan.
No negative amortization.
CALL OR COME SEE US FOR MORE INFORMATION
HOMC FDRAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOOATION
OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
Downtown Greenville 758-3421
Arlington Boulevard 756-2772
T
D-12 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday. October9.The Rear Estate Corner
cl^CUJlA HButs (cf^Ety
758-0655
A 1 ITtl I BIT OF COUNTRY in the city is iihat you'll find in this lute home in Ayden. A porch made for suingiiT. living room uith french doors to dining room, eat-in kitchen. 3 bedrooms I full bath, laundry area, fenced in back yard uilh storage and VA loan assumption with owner financing on eqiiiti. S36.900.
COZY CORNER RANCHER is perfect starter home for young couple or the new family! Features include living room with pipe for woodstove. eat-in kitchen with dining area and sliding glass doors to patio, laundry area, 3 bedrooms. I' j baths, fenced in back yard and carport with storage $47.000.
THt SECURITY OF A NEIGHBORHOOD but located in the rountrv Thischarming brick home features living and dining rooms, work kitchen, laundry room. 3 bedrooms. 1>2 baths, garage and sliding glass doors to patio $55.000
VA LOAN ASSUMPTION - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION No qualifying to assume this loan pay less than $7000 down and assume payments of $491.74 PITI. Home offers contemporary styling with sunken great room wrth fireplace and area. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths and fenced in back'yard. $56.500.
I MQl I CONTEMPORARY STYLING can be found in this trille immaculate home Located in popular Camelot and re.adc for immediate occupancy. Floor plan offers great room with woodstove and vaulted ceiling, dining room, large galley kitchen with laundry area. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, (master suite is cere largel and double garage. $67.900
CONVENIENCE. CHARM AND INDIVIDUALITY can be found in this spacious home in College Court. Unique flo"' plan offers living and dining rooms, den for mom and dad playroom for the kids, eat-in kitchen with laundry area and loads of cabinets. 3 bedrooms. 2' 2 baths and fenced n back yard $71,500
SHIRLEY MORRISON BROKER (on call) 758-5463
Ll.iAINE TROIANO - REALTOR 756-6346
MAVIS BUTTS REALTOR, GRI, CRS 752-7073
JANE BUTTS - BROKER 756-2851
..^*1.-' -' OPEN HOUSE \ SUNDAY 2:00-6:00
\\ li(>n \()u first untur Iivutops vou ihiilk vou .113' untcnnf' i gracious rounliN uslatu IniKnalivu design pnme location c( sititK .illy exciting c.in'tive li\ ing .iiul attordalile (jualih conslnu tion an' oiiK a te\\ ot the .iccolades whii h lune been used to descnhe lliis iunx ioncept in gracious lix ing Homes nestled in this l.iulitul en\ii3)nment an-enlianced h\ n.ilur.il l.indsi .iping cn'iiting a park-like atniosphen' Iieetops is designed tor people who \aluegood design and tine workmanship at .ittordahle piices
()uiet ( 111 (le-sfK's add to the lixcahilitv, |)n\.ic\ .ind secuiily.
I he tloor plans include both a oni' le\(>l and a two le\el design and can best lx> dfcsciibed .IS a \ ill.i or townhousf' Iben* an* hvo hedniom plans with Bvo batbs and Ihii'e bedniom plans with two and a halfbatlis l*n( t's stall at S.')(i,!l(IO V isit Iivetops todav and leani howyou can attord to Ih* pai1 ol this exciting communitx
HOST: OWEN NORVELLE
DIRECTIONS
Go South On Evans Street One Mile Past T.V. Station, Turn Left At First Cross Roads, Go One Block And Turn Right Into Treetops.
Built B\ ( li;i|>iii A VcMii ialr ::iiHi S. Mt'iniii'j.il Di L'lfi-u:;!
i
I
Xlai'kcTi'd Me: Muiirt' & Saulfi' Xssruiatcs nil S. Keans SI,
BELVEDERE
BY OWNER
12 7/8% interest rate available for qualified buyer. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath, family room with fireplace, cedar siding, carport. Huge wooded lot with tremendous wood deck off back. Great neighborhood.
206 E. WOODSTOCK DRIVE 756-4618 (Home) 758-0055 (Business)
70
ACRE
Good yielding farm land with excellent road frontage. Over 12,300 pounds tobacco and 16,000 pounds peanuts. Six miles in good location. Call Carl for details.
Darden Realty
758-1983 Nighls And Weekends. 758-2230
TheBestKept
Real Estate Secret inGieenvilte.
('.Tmcmn-Bmuii.
Rc.il ost.itc jvnplc in nuny Nnrth ('arnlin.i tnwiis .ind cities know us.
\W\v served thctii tnr yc.iiN.
But in3t cnuugh [^Y'oplc iii (Irccuvillc kiiuw Cinx'Tun-BrnuTix'ct. \Mc utter the re.tl est.ite iiurket .is nuieh .is .my lender m ruti.
In m.m\' e.ises. more.
Size - Were .imong the l.irgest iiiuitg.ige KinkeiN m the eoimti-x' with .1 serviemg porttolio e.xeeeding'^billion. \Mc tin.ineed oxer '.XAA) honvs hist ye.ir-m.iiiy ot them here m North C'.irolm.i. Strength VVeVe Ix'cii m hnsiiiess siiiee 1946 .ind were .1 snbsidi.iiT ot' First Union Corporation, one of the Soiithe.ist s l.irgest hank ^ holding companies mth assets e.xeeedmg Sti billion. Service We qnalih' buyers with a eoniplete range ofeonxentioiial, FHA & loans tor detached and att.iehed housing. We process loans hxally and close quickly. And we alwax'S h.we nioncv axailablc.
Now yon know ns. \Miy nor tiy ns?
Contact-Tern Williams, Minager teresa Swindell. Froeessor Josxe Finison, Processor. 3106 S. Memorial -Creenx ille. N.C. 2".S35 !919i355-2(TS
Cameron-Brown
Mortgage Bankers
A First Union Cornpany
Duffus
Realty
Inc.
rSAEfSABER
756-5395
RELO.
WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION
201 Commerce Street
am.
NEW LISTING
TWIN OAKS
One of those very cute contemporaries with cedar siding Three bedrooms, two baths, living room with wood stove, dining room, thermopane windows, patio Possible loan assumption. S5,5.000.
ON CALL THIS WEEKEND
Catherine Creech REALTOR
During Non-Office Hours Please Call
756-6537
GOLFCOURSE
On the golf course in Ayden. This home is priced right and It's condition will impress you. Three bedrooms, two baths.
L :1.._.... U ;____I____
US conaiiion win impress you. inrec neorooms, iwo Odins. living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, kitchen with breakfast area, double garage, paiio. u'ood deck $59.900
FIXITIIF
REDUCtt) AND ASSUMPTION
HARDEE ACRES
VA OWNED
50LD
CLUB PINES
LAKE ELLSWORTH
CLUB PINES
LOAN ASSUMPTION
BROAD STREET
AYDEN
REDUCED IN COGHILL
EASTWOOD RANCH RED OAK
COUNTRY
BROOK VALLEY REDUCED
VAOWNED
COUNTRY FOX RUN
KILBY ISLAND COTTAGE VAOWNED
LYNNDALE
PARIS AVENUE fARMER S HOME ASSUMPTION
PLEASANT RIDGE HOW ABOUT ONLY 10'APR
BAYWOOD
CAMELOT
COUNTRY
vimiMini
SQLD
PAMLICO BEACH
CHERRY OAKS
LYNDALE
PRETTY RANCH
RED BANKS ROAD
TWIN OAKS
DELIGHTFUL CONTEMPORARY
COUNTRY SQUIRE EDWARDS STREET CHESTNUTSTRtTT
GRIFTON
. p., -.1.:
TWIN OAKS
BROOK GREEN
STRATFORD
REDUCED IN BELVEDERE
SOLD
BUILDING LOTS
PLANTATION HOME
POSSIBLt ASSUMPTION (.HEENBHIAH PARIS AVENUE
POSSIBLE ASSUMPTION
NEAR HOSPITAL EAST WRIGHT ROAD
BIG REDUCTION
FOUR ACRES RED OAK LOT PINEWOOD FOREST
dssumpi
HIWAY33EAST
HOME ON THE GOLF COURSE
- . vK
REDUCED $5000-CAMELOT
tAIRLANE
0-, Ihi pi, iii.nij I I'jm
AYDEN GRIFTON LOT
A.v a-: T". .1 ! s , ni,,.
WOODED CHERRY OAKS
CHERRY OAKS
CAMELOT
DUPLEX
VACATION COTTAGE
Is)
NEAR MEDICAL SCHOOL
Huisexroi-A'.ft's fh 'k.divA .fji- 'iiw; ME-D.ff .iifi raj roorr. ,!r;u.t!
TENNIS ANYONE?
ri-iiTie'-k ih IvvfLthing pc <1 Ivmv' -. Adiii'.nrrary atViut iw'-I, tp.i'jty-!r ,ft
,p,k- ra> Jinin9mom pnrUy Mni,. f'-.m .t > nus.i rt'-r, sunpijcjj .inuW' qjr.i'i .ai'J* y.liHli.
WESTHAVEN
Raif I'liFie'jf. 4 liner ni Thtyy VIroom-
'rtifi' 9 y!nq .ritiq f
mor, ..irp' n , 1 ;
' ' ' '"CONT^
h IM'sFdeti 111 im.frrum, x.P
TorKKRrnNTrMPnDADv
; pr,e Jmr.g
COMMERCIAL LOT
U-. D.refi A.t ,A J-...,: ..MJ! ,n
.tT.i.ie \ T "
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
A GI , ; (I " nirM , ,; I ; K e It'' .,,ea(,tjr. on 2'i4 B. p.Gv ^ itTie It ( .'odd.rg drej
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WESTHAVEN III
.ira: .ipptd ! ej fw -i.ifv .e f ilLefsi .tpt : r-rtipyi qr.ixs
A'V
FARM
'V/ 41 Ft jci.i *iih t.' f' .nr, - - ..i.in,: ,i:i: ar,; atv.ji 14 a.ii> ol . i I'ti jiVJ- j( r wc; li r of
lorr N.'dtLj.dTa
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
pidy^'ijv N,. elk nriefsi .tpt : r-rtipy-i qr.ixs (Dfr NedlLuitlTa
WE SELL GREENVILLE
Kay Davis,
756-6537
Sue Castellow, Broker And Insurance.......
756-3082
.756-6966
Charlene Nielsen, REALTOR, Rentals.......
.........752-6961
.756-3375
Anne DuHus, REALTOR, GRI....................
756-2666
758-9878
Jack Duffus, REALTOR, GRI, CRS............
756-5395
.355-2996
Shirley Tacker, Broker..............................
,r
-Cl
(
THE REAL ESTATE CORNER
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Sunday October 9.1983 Q.-| 3
GREAT FIRST HOME. Located at 2701 East Third Street near the Catholic School and convenient to the University. Approximately 1000 square feet of heated area with living room with fireplace, two bedrooms, one full bath, big kitchen-den area screened in porch. Separate garage for storage. Good investment for parents with college students. Located on a corner lot $37,500.
THE D,G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
Check our other fine listings under classified!
TAKE A LOOK
<4
Condominium living is the thing! Compare this beautiful one with others and you'll see the difference. Features attractive family room with ireplace and extra nice plush carpet. Completely '^['^'Shed kitchen including dishwasher. 2 bedrooms, 1 /2 baths. Best of all a very private, quiet, wooded location on cul-de-sac. $43,900.
OVERTON & POWERS
355-6500
cHfxmat Ln
752-3000
OPEN HOUSE TODAY
2:30-5:00 PM
Hostess; Mary Ward 756-1997
107 Chadwick Lane-Cambridge Off Hooker Road
Attractive Masonite Home in Immaculate Condition. Assume 9V2% FHA loan with payments of $428.60 PITI. 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Cozy Den, Cheerful kitchen. Formal areas. Well groomed and fenced in backyard. CARPORT. 50s Call For Details
752-3000 756-2904 756-1997 746-6656
w.g. blount & associates
REALTORS - DEVELOPERS 756-3000 lIBi
Cypress Creek Towplfonjes
MODELS OPEN EACH
, SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2-6
12^4% Fixed Rate Financing Available
Bob Barker.....975-3179
BUI Blount.....756-7911
Bettv Beacham . 756-3880 Stanley Peaden .756-1617WATERFRONT ACREAGE
Wooded 23 acre tract located east of Oriental. Property has 1500-l- of frontage on Neuse River and state maintained road access. Contact:CHUCK MOODY, Land Broker Trident Realty Services, Inc.
PEALTOP*
633-6484
2407 Grace Avenue P.O. Box 2365 New Bern, North Carolina 28560
FLI
633-3382HOMEPLACE IN FOUNTAIN FOR SALE BY OWNER
Eight spacious rooms, including sun room, iv? baths, 3 fireplaces including one in kitchen. Screened-in porch, garage storage area. ,,
CALL 749-1371, 749-4631 or 757-6360ESTABLISHED BUSINESS FOR SALE
General store includes fixtures, equipment, and complete inventory. Adjoining is nice 3 bedroom brick home. Good location for development potential. Approximately 8 miles from Greenville.FINANCING AVAILABLE
919-946-8021 DAYS 919-946-1401 NIGHTS Washington, N.C.
AT CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY Were Making Things Happen
a
Open Today 2-5
$53,900
1025 W. Wright Rd.
HURRY! On this three bedroom brick home in quick selling College Court Nice 1400 square feet features living room, dining room, bright kitchen with nook, and ceramic bath Lovely screened m porch for relaxing, woodstove for heat economy, and a shady fenced in back yard for the kids. All spruced up and ready to sell!
Hostess: Janet Bowser 756-8580
$89,900
305 Club Pines Drive
GET THE MOST OUT OF LIFE with a home designed for comfort and luxury! With 4 bedrooms and 2V? baths this Cape Cod home has room for the whole family Tremendous family room, dining room,, fully equipped kitchen and lots of built-ins corribme to make this charming home as livable as it is beautiful Come out and take a look!
Host; Eddie Pate 752-6560
NOW OFFERING-Outstanding home with over 4000 square feet of traditional elegance in immaculate condition. Many quality features enhance this gracious 4 bedroom home situated on 2,16 acre wooded lot, Showen by appointment only, #594,
143.500-SUPERIOR EXECUTIVE HOME-This home is only for those with champagne taste! Exquisite three story traditional in prestigious Bedford Formal areas, 4 bedrooms, huge family room with ad)oining solamum. finished room over garage and unfinished third story are just a few of the features. #552.
139.900-BUY YOUR BEST HOME now! This 4 bedroom showplace in Lynn-dale has to be seen to be appreciated! All formal areas, den with fireplace & walk-in wet bar for entertaining, large kitchen with dining area, and many extras #407.
109.900-PRESTIGIOUS GRAYLEIGH! Tliis 2400 foot 4 bedroom has been reduced |ust in time for summer fun. See the formal areas for entertaining and the spacious kitchen for that special lady m your life. Double garage and Savannah style porches. All for $109,900, #530,
97.00-FOR THE SELECT FEMALE. Out of the pages-of your better decorating magazines comes this two story home in Club Pines, Spacious greatroom with french doors leading to a deck. Designer kitchen featuring custom cabinets and desk for planning. Located on a shaded wooded lot. Call for more details, #256.
91.500-LOCATED IN A QUIET subdivision, this 3000 square foot house is iust waiting for the right buyer. Features 4/5 bedrooms. 2 full baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, recreation room, garage, and a large wooded corner lot. Call and let us show it to you. #586.
89.900-SUPERBLY LOCATED on one of the most desirable lots in Club Pines, Offers spacious living areas, modern kitchen with all conveniences. Very tastefully decorated a special home for special people. #500,
89.900-QUALITY CONSTRUCTION is everywhere in this attractive 2 story in Tucker Estates. Randolph Builders will be putting the finishing touches on this traditional design soon, so call now if you want to pick out carpet & colors. #592,
88.900-BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths in Brook Valley. Has all formal areas, family room with fireplace, fully equipped kitchen with breakfast nook. Put this on your list of must see-at this price you can't afford to miss it! #588.
85.900-OWNER SAYS SELL! Don't miss your chance on this beautiful home in Cherry Oaks Located only a stones throw from pool and tennis courts with acre corner lot It's just waiting for you and your family to move in and make it home. #360,
85.900-PRETTY-PERFECT A^ now under construction by( the floor plan, bedroom W' bedrooms Buy now and yi etc. #549,
84.900-4 BEDROOM, 2 bafb contemporary, 2300 square feet of sheer space Cathedral living room, dining room with skylights, master bedroom with private deck, and gourmet kitchen, and comfy den are |ust a few of the extras Call now #556,
81.500-REDUCED! Can you believe 2277 square feet in Club Pines, formal areas, 3 bedrooms, kitchen with lots of built-ins, extra room for that "special" person, beautifully landscaped yard-Seller will finance part of the equity! #524.
79.500-WHEELCHAIR READY! Thaf's right-lhis 2300 square foot home in Cherry Oaks was built to accomodate a wheelchair. Extra wide halls & doorways Large open living, dining & kitchen areas. Screen porch and a carport, #212.
79.500-RUSTIC CEDAR FARM HOUSE-This listing in Tucker Estates offers superior construction. Pewter light fixtures and period wall paper give the home a Williamsburg flair. Floor plan is a reproduction of the owner's Grandma's home and lends a touch of nostalgia Owners transferred and regret having to sell. Call now for your private showing. #441.
79.900-LETS BE PRACTICAL! Every day you wait to buy a home it is going to cost you more money. Invest now and reap the rewards This home may be perfect for that decision and is located in Club Pines close to shopping, churches, schools, and yet nestled in the trees on a quiet picturesque street. Lots of space for the growing family is offered by the four bedrooms floor plan with eat in kitchen, formal dining room, and_^ warm sunny family room with fireplace. #477
78.500-ONE OF A KIND! This listing just abounds in quality throughout. Beautiful parquet floors, exquisite custom built woodwork Large master bedrooms, 2/2 tile baths, formal dining, intercom, central vacuum, and fenced yard. Plus an expandable walk-in attic. Loan is assumable #563.
78.500-HOME FOR A HAPPY FAMILY. This magnificent Cape Cod style home has too many extras to list. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage, screened porch, and a well landscaped yard are just some of its qualities Call and let us show you this one, #600
nsburg design home builders. You'll love djng room, and three colors, wall papers.
77.900-OWNERS SAYS SELL!! Moving from Greenville and wants to buy another in Virginia. You will love the interior of tnis spacious 3 bedroom home-and that's not all-the location is ideal with swimming pool less than a block away. Make them an offer Now! #505.
76.900-COUNTRY INFORMALITY in tins 3 bedroom split level Spacious family room with fireplace, and large rec room, all modern kitchen to ac comodate the rhost entertaining oriented family Exterior features maintenance free siding and brick. #582
76.900-PRACTICALLY NEW! Only a year old with energy saving beat-pump, formal areas plus den. Located in a great neighborhood for walking, riding bikes, swimming, playing tennis. Call for showing. #423 74,800-COLONIAL ELEGANCE-Thls two story home has everything you could want. Four or five bedrooms, all formal areas, family room with fireplace and much more. Best of all it is located outside the city limits for plantation feeling! #520,
72.500-HORSE LOVERS-This new listing offers 5 6 acres of land (more or less) with 23 stalls, riding rings, pasture, bunk house, and much more Great trails and roads for riding...good investment #596
71.900-ThIS 1628 squj^foop^^Mwitte^^edrooms. 2 baths, formal area with chair rail, al^rA rSrlvitflfirMiace. crown molding, airy kitchen, plus a finisheQ|c^^^AICW^Py for more details for this Lake Ellsworth home^nol^^^
71.900-This 2714 square toot home offers 3 beOrooms upstairs with 2 baths and formal areas and den with fireplace. Downstairs can be used as a private area for that older kid that likes privacy and music, dr a guest rea with Its own pnvaje bath Take a look at this one #574
69.900-BELVEDERE-This two story home, nestled among the trees is the answer to your home buying needs It features a foyer, formal areas, plus a cozy den. Owners regret having to leave thrs 3 bedroom charmer #555
69.900-BEAUTIFUL Williamsburg style home under construction, with over 1600 square feet.sFeatures a great room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen with nook. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and lots of storage Many extras like a greenhouse window and large deck. See i! today #579
69.500-COME HOME TO SOMETHING SPECIAL! This one of a kind 1 story ranch has room galore. Send the kids upstairs to the playroom while you relax in the large greatroom with fireplace downstairs. Lots of attic storage behind the "Secret bookcase entrance ", Realy unique. #507
67.900 SUPER LOCATION & SUPER MORTGAGE on this new listing An immaculate 3 bedroom l/2 bath brick ranch with beautiful plush carpet, and hardwood floors, living room, dining area, large bright eat-in kitchen, heat pump, screened side porch, and much much more, PLUS FHA low rate assumable loan. #611
66.900-BELVEDERE-This 3 bedroom doll house is fresh on the market and must be seen today. The spacious yard is great to putter In before you go inside to relax on these pleasant summer evenings. You need to call right now #597.
65.900 UNBELIEVABLE BEAUTIFUL Cape Cod in tne University area Tnis charming and gracious home features 3 bedrooms. 1'2 baths, formal areas, lovely hardwood floors, screened porch, large deck, and a basement. You won't find anything nicer that this well'maintalned and beautifully decorated home. #613.
65.900-UNIVERSITY AREA-Thls 3 bedroom brick ranch offers formal living room with fireplace, den & screened in porch. The well landscaped yard gives the home a real look of class. #598.
65.900-USE YOUR IMAGINATION and turn this quality built 4 bedroom in the University Area into a palace' This 2337 square foot beauty features two sunrooms and a hot tub in the large back yard. Call the office for more details #558,
65.000-LOCATION COUNTS This charming brick ranch is located in Belvedere and features many extras such as: large corner lot. deck, heal pump, living room, dining room, family room, and much more. Call today! #605.
63.900-REDUCED! Owner say's sell. Lovely home in Camelot originally 65,800, now the price has been slashed to 63.900. Immaculate mside and out. this three bedroom with study which, would easily convert to a fourth bedroom, can be yours. Call and make an appointment to see it #593.
63.000-COUNTRY COMFORTS abound In this new offering just minutes from town In a quiet subdivision. It is nestled on a corne'r lot and features a sunny eat in kitchen with bay window..formal areas, cozy den and a spacious walk-in pantry Owner says sell, so help us out today, #541.
62.900-REDUCEDI!! This 3 bedroom brick rancn with formal areas, den with wood stove and enclosed garage, has a wooded lot and is beautifully landscaped. Chain link fence, and a detacned workshop or, garage. Owners most anxious to sell, so take a look and make an offer today #576,
62.900-RECIPE FOR HAPPINESS-Take one nice 3 bedroom home, add a den with fireplace and formal areas and you have the makings for years of sweetness for a family. Spacious yard with a split rail fe.'ce #499 62,700-CONVENIENT TO THE HOSPITAL This home has 1600 square teet, chair rail, wainscotting, beamed celling in greatroom. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, and low utilities with its heatpump. Excellent condition #447
65.500-CAN BE HAD for a redaced price. I'm a 3 bedroom ranch with low assumable loan, I offer all formal areas, den with wood stove, eat in kitchen, closed in detached garage is not included In square footage, could be a workshop. Chain link fence m back yard. & separage fenced double dog run. #576
59.900 MORE HOME FOR THE MONEY-is the only way to describe this immaculate older home with 2440 square feet. Heat pump, screened in porch and many other extras #608,
59.900-IF YOU WANT QUALITY then we have what you are looking for-an exceptional 3 bedroom home In beautiful Forest Acres, Yo can sit on the screened In porch and -view your acre plus private wooded property #311, Just reduced,
59.900-TEXAS sizes lot surrounds this nice new listing in Winterville School district Offers 3 bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace and cathedral ceiling, dining room, and a step saving kitchen Ouiet neighborhood and nice neighbors add to its other qualities Take a look #591
59.900-SUPER NEW LISTING-Beautiful 22 Story 3-4 bedroom with 1': baths. This well maintained home has a completely equipped kitchen, screened porch, and detached garage. Third floor is heated & cooled, could be used as a bedroom, playroom or office. Check it out' #608,
59.900-EASTWOOD-A convenient location, fhis 1571 square foot 3 bedroom brick ranch, with formal areas, den with fireplace, spacious eat-in kitchen, mam bath with lots of elbow room'\ carport and a very spacious attic. Call tor your appointment today #575
59.900-DAYS FRESH! Charming brick rancher, three bedrooms. 2 baths, beautiful groomed. Den with fireplace, half attic is floored and has plenty of storage. Located In beautiful Lake Ellsworth Make a point to see this one today! #504
59.900-CONTENTNEA CREEK-Don't miss your chance to see this lovely home. If away from the hustle and bustle of city hte is where you want to be, this is the home for you #511.
59.900-UNIVERSITY AREA-Handyman already put new roof, aluminum siding, wiring and plumbing. Rents for $525 per month 5/6 bedrooms. 3V2 baths, 2400 square feet in all. Great investment property #571
57.900-COMFORT IS WHAT COUNTS in this cozy 3bedroom 2 bath ranch In Williamslon. Home has all the things you want including great room with fireplace, large 3/4 acre lot, convenience to schools, shopping, hospital, and across from country club AND you can assume the loan! #606.
57,500-INTEREST IN-TOWN? Here is a very fine in-town home in excellent location on a heavily wooded lot. If you want privacy, but the convenience of being dost to schools, shopping, etc. .then this is the house for you. 1 story contemporary with large loft upstairs Call for pnore details. #506
57,000-SMACK DAB in the middle of one of Greenville s best areas. Belvedere, this 3 bedroom home has all your family will need Formal living room and a den with a fireplace, kitchen with a breakfast nook Double garage. #513
56,900-EASTWOOD-Located on a wooded lot this 3 bedroom brick ranch offers formal living room, den with fireplace, and lots of charm Let us show vou this new listing. #584.
56,000-ASSUME this VA loan at 11'; % with payments of $481.94 mo and savings on closing costs, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, with living room with fireplace, den with woodstove, and an energy saving heat pump Only 6 years old, call for your personal showing #599
55,900-SAVEI SAVE! SAVE! ON THIS FIXED dte dSSurro'-'j- .OUCo. Sa, cost Closing costs and initial mvestrre-^' O.-.nf' r.i nn to ht-u. y-wilh reasonable terms Spacious' .-.i*" n-.i-ng
bedrooms. 2 baths, conveniently locaien 'nt- ,-a'
55.500-WINTERVILLE-Looking 'or tne ner'e,- norr- n-srou-O Of-
On three acres of land Three beqrooms q-ea-oorr -'.er, i-opia.-e e has a space for that summer garoen Be-t, nu"- 5''-
nc :rees lUS: one ;ne S'orr ou. bn:.- n.nme e c:, A 'u'd- se' iisnng so call lOCa,
. O'
:iao
gd'Ce-I ana ui
55.000-FRUIT COMPOTE-From you' matu'e-oea' many delights to savor when you buy :nis c Located off Hwy 11 just minutes from G'<^enyi ting that you will be proud to call your ov.n A '
#604
54.900-ENJOY THIS FLOWER tilleo ya'C -Spacious family room, three bearoom.s cp" located in College Court #470
54.900-SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE CONDO. Has wan, exhas mucn as 2 large bedrooms with private baths Cra'teo I'epiace insert Keeps vou snug in the downstairs greatroom Louvered sr^ut'ers a' eve'v windo.v Really special, #436,
53.900-HURRY! This three bedroom home m quicr selling College Co.uh won't last long Nice 1400 square foot home eatures living room, dining room, bright kitchen with nook, and cerannic batn Lovely screened porch, woodstove, and a shady fenced yard #607
53.900-WHISPERING PINES CONTEMPORARY-Fo' me .srrall amily 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, plus a greatroom dining 'oom and kitchen with appliances. Woodstove in me fireplace to Keep you warm net jvnter Come out and take a look' #554
52.900-INVESTMENT PROPERTY-Assume this low interest FHA loan ana convert to rental property Offers garage, fireplace heatpump and 3 bedrooms. Located in good area for rental #547
51.900-KICK THE HABIT-The rental habit' Get into a home of your own This almost new home with assumable loan features 3 bedrooms i'.-baths, and an attached garage Why not check it out' #609
51,900 CHEER UP-This 3 bedroom r. bam home, only 1 year old has financing available that will brighten your day' Tn'is.cherry h-.,rre i large sunny lot is located on a dead end street, jus: a few rri'-.uies fro"' town Why not let us show you this new listing before it is too -ate *609
48.500-CHARMING & DELIGHTFUL! Expect to be envied Dy yOu' "lencs when you buy this like new bnck ranch in Ay'den Ha'dwood lao'-s nave just been refimshed New paint job mside and out Pius i' nas a-assumable FHA loan #516
48.500-SMART BUY for the smart shopper' This beauhfui 4 ped'oon brick ranch features microwave, hardwood floors, brick patio and many other extras Call today #517
47.000-MORE SQUARE FEET-for ,ou' n'one. -s one O' /"e 'cd'u'-'-- ' "
4 bedroom ranch with central air New pam: ana came: o- ns-j- d situated on 2 lots #695
45,900-STARTING OUT. Tnen let us snow ,ou ou' new hstmg m cuie' desirable neighborhood This 3 beoroon: 'anch ea'u'es i'. ba'"-s anc d large kitchen, dining area, carport, ana is on a lovely wooded i,: "av-- j peek, #590.
44,900-SELL THE CAR, you II be able to vxaiK eve^, p ace ''onn T bungalow in the University area Living room'is large eatu'nc with bookshelves on eacn side Large kitchen, sun po'cn an bedrooms. New Qas furnace and well maintained nome *444
43.900-ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES! Here s y Ou' cnance to ow- " bedroom home you've been wanting for under 550.000 -This oncK offers you very roomy kitchen, 1 bath, pius carpor; La'ge ,'O'nc-located only a few blocks from school *545
41,900-PRIVACY included when you checv :-u: miS immaculare a: wide featuring a deck woodstove, we; ba' a' : 2 u-i ba;p> s ne on a 1 acre wooded lot ana is just 5 mnut-'-s m-x-mw'- 6C
41.000-ALMOST NEW FmHA. home minutes one bath, heat pump with central ai' ana Leau'
39.900-NEW LISTING in Farmville Area, F,-a: fireplace, fnced back yard Ah mis a neighborhood, #603
. 2 Px-a'c-cms , woodea -c;
39,900-VALUE PACKED! Come see now t,r a :c d' 3 bedroom ranch A huge 4 car garage 26x30 A very affordable price, #502
37.900-THIS HOME needs an owner now Ca work Out the financing for you Them s a nome one may be for you #509
r'f -jf-tdlis rl"a .X
i.e'-yone ana
35,000-GREAT STARTER HOME. I you a't- looi- nc 'O' .Ou- I's: h, -n e ,, retirement home, this one IS for you 2 bed'ooms ' ta'ns 'omcinah-:', family room dining & kitchen, wim mce pa''"y Ceiimg an -nr 'pps-warm days Call and let us show you this com-'-, nome A,den *5o0
32.500-IDEAL STARTER or Investment Home Snu-" i with low VA assumable loan' It s neat as a c '' n pretty woodea lot and fenced m pd,> ,d'a ,Mn ce workshop Take a look at n 454
m burrqaiow . Qutsi-du IS _i dHO
28,000-RENTING YOUR MONEY AWAYI-,ou n ,
we got the place for you' Ana it c.:-mes wrn a ''2'',l you a place to spread timas out #564
Pi.ice na-, SHOP :o qiv
27,000- ASSUME THIS LQAN with payments o S287 PITi ano save cos mg costs! This older home otters 2400 square fee'' wi.:n ou' bed'ooms Immediate possession Take a look 577-
OntuiK
n
21
Bass Realty
2424 S. Charles
756-6666
Or
756-5868
BROKER ON CALL:
Tony Mallard
MIS,
t
D-14 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C. Sunday. October 9.1983
The Real Estate s ,
C
OPEN HOUSE
2-4 P.M.
PLANTATION HOME
Noj> ipporur.ti. ti' i)un ll'..n Miuthtni pi.iiai>11 ^:v a horia |p tiu ii.uaa. \'ar Sinipxin vvilh ajipiiixiniaia't I ' dirp' o! .,ui and a :iu- -la. '.ihif Behind tho>e heaulful culumr,' p a iaua lihrari. Aiu 'ipdi.e- in.;i:e !(KiiTi. dininy roDin tanak niiiii uirh tiri'p;ai\>. !ia;' Pf,'a i.:!]", aia; !ua baths, split lai. tenae A'^aiTMbla VA man
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COUNTRY-SR 1755
Of pantatiif h>itt. ,shv : -:>'P !. a;,d M'l- this'
' ! ' I:. is; ri.il;: i.n t: .'ii f. ' Vcn. pt> :k
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Ha.s, ( .o-,_,a~
103 GREENBRIAR DRIVE FAIRLANE SUBDIVISION
.4^1 >! I'
DUFFUS REALTY INC.
756-5395
BELVEDERE!
Impressive throughout Large family room with fireplace, kitchen with dining area, formal dmmg room. 3 bedrooms, 2 sparkling tile baths. All this on a quiet, tree lined street.
$65,900
Save a bundle with a 12% Fixed Rate Loan Assumption offered on this attractive Williamsburg. Plenty of living space plus a brand new deck to enjoy the wooded yard.
$62,900
Great buy m this popular neighborhood! Traditional ranch style home offers country kitchen. 3 bedrooms playroom & is surrounded by lots of trees Available immediately & owner is anxious to sell.
$55,500
ball & lane
752-0025 aHi
JEANNETTE COX AGENCY
REALTOR 756 1322
1516 Gre*nvrlle Blvt
IF YOU ARE VOVING TO GREENVILLE
Call 756 1372 or write P 0 Bo* 667, Greenville, N C tor your free copy of "Homes For Living" a monthly publication packed with pictures, details and prices of homes and available locally
IF YOU ARE MOVING TOA NEW CITY
Get your free copy of "Homes For Living", in the city you are going to Know the real estate market before you get there Your copy is m our office We can help you boy, sell or trade a home any place in the nation
Look What We Have To^Offer!
LISTINGS
f^ACE
183 Rosewc^ bedrooms, I/j
baths. Livin||(my^sl^Dastove insert. Deck. ' Carport. Listi^^rOKEr Faye Bowen.
WHISPERING PINES. SIMPSON
Absolutely beautiful lot with lots of trees 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. 1254 square feet. Sunken den with French doors. Dining room, $46,500, Listing broker Faye Bowen.
ELWOOD PINES
Nice area near Candlewick. Split-level home has 3 bedrooms, 2/2 baths. Formal living and dining rooms. Huge rec room with fireplace & wet bar. $54,500. Faye Bowen listing broker.
LAKE ELLSWORTH
Beautiful brick home with 3 bedrooms, 2 large baths. Big garage perfect for handyman or hobby lover-has lots of storage cabinets and work space. Formal living room, foyer, large den with fireplace. Kitchen has breakfast room. $62,500. Faye Bowen listing broker.
SINGLETREE SUBDIVISION
FHA 235 loan assumption. 3 bedrooms, IVz baths. Big deck looks out over a yard full of fruit trees, flowers. Decorated in earth tones using finest quality wall coverihcc 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
NEW HOMES
CHERRY OAKS
A real showplace with lots of extras. 3 bedrooms, all with walk-in closets. Master bedroom has private baih with dressing area. Large great room with fireplace. Foyer, dining room. Kitchen has breakfast area with sliding glass' door and separate utility room. $71,500.
CHERRY OAKS
Just started construction, buy now and choose your own paint, carpet, wall-coverings, etc. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Dining room, activity room, foyer.
ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION
Winterville area, community water. Must builo minimum 1300 square foot home. $7500.
MILLBROOK SUBDIVISION
Wooded lot is 120x170'. Located in Simpson area. Eastern Pines water system, $8000.
NORTH RIVER ESTATES
Several nice lots to sell or will build home for you according to your plans.
CAMELOT
Nice wooded lots in established subdivision $12,000.
LOTS TO BUILD
The
Evans
ComfNiny
SINGLETREE
1180 square feet of well-planned living area. 3 bedrooms, 1V; baths. Located on cul-de-sac on large lot. Will pay 4 pts. plus closing costs.
Will build your home on this large wooded lot on Hooker Rd.
Will build to suit you in Cherry Oaks, Camelot, Tucker Estates. Lot of plans to choose from. Some
752-2814
nicely wooded lots.
701 W. Fourteenth St. Greenville
Faye Bowen 756-5258
Winnie Evans 752-4224
ms:A Great Home Buy
Just Got Better!D.F.S.ANNOUNCES
(PER ANNUM RATE) FINANCING
on these BAYTREE houses
ft
30 Year Amortization With A 3 Year Adjustable Rate Mortgage
Seller will pay Closing Costs and Discount Points. Limited funds available. Don't miss this chance.
Now these homes with country charm & city convenience are more affordable than ever.
COME TO OUR OPEN HOUSE AT BAYTREE AND SEE FOR YOURSELF!
Sunday, October 9, 1-5 P.M.
EASY DIRECTIONS From 14th Street Extension, turn onto Red Banks Road. Turn left onto Baytree Drive. Follow signs to first house on left.
95% FINANCING AVAILABLE AT HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS I
For More Information, CALL 758-6410, Diversified Financial Services, Inc., Or Yonr REALTOR.
APR 11.76/0 based on 80% loan to value and first payment date 30 Home Federal Savings and Loan Association reserves the right to disccTn-
days after closing. Index based on 3 year Treasury Notes. Offer subject to tiriue this offer without notice,
chpnge wiHi market conditions.
-5 A.
m
The Real Estate
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C Sunday. October 9.1983 D-15Cerner
Estate Realty, Co.
752-5058
AYDEN - attractive two bedroom home in excellent condition; fireplace in living room, new central heat & air. Priced below FHA value - priced at $41,900.
THREE BEDROOM home with ^v^ baths, large family room with fireplace; an extra lot with a 30x38 building used now as a garage, A lot of property for $45,900.
HOOKER ROAD if you are choosey, you will love this three bedroom ranch home, very tastefully decorated; garage, deck, and fenced backyard. Call for other details priced reduced to $47,900.
COLLEGE COURT- owner is building and is ready to sell! Three bedrooms, ^V2 baths, a big-big kitchen, family room, detached two-car garage: roof, gutters, heat & air, only three years old. Priced reduced to $50,900. Lets make an offer!
LETS GO WEST - 14 miles to the good life. Three bedroom brick home with two baths, living room with fireplace insert, detached garage, swimming pool with fenced area. Exclusive listing - reduced to $65,000.
ANOTHER COUNTRY HOME only eight miles to peaceful and quiet living. Three bedroom brick ranch with two baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace insert, two-car garage, detached shop. Situated on 1.57 acres -$74,900.
e
Jarvis & Dorlis Mills 752-3G47
Billy Wilson 758-43476UNDER
CONSTRUCTON
Re-Discover Lake Ellsworth
With this beautiful Williamsburg style home. Great room, formal dining room, dynamic eat-in kitchen with greenhouse window, three bedrooms, two full baths and lots of storage space. Large lot, energy efficient (Built to exceed E-300 standards) and quality built. Swimming pool, tennis courts, and lake for fishing. All located within walking Distance.
Located At 3209 Morton Lane
*69,900
BOWSER
The Name Of Qualify Call Now For Details
756-7647
Jeannette
Agency, Inc.
Proudly Presents These P'lew Offerings:
SHHHhhh!!!
Weve got a secret and we're ready to share it - with you. A brand new home just listed and ready for you in Club Pines It is unique in many ways. Hardwood floors in foyer, formal living and dining rooms, kitchen and breakfast area. Large den and four bedrooms complete this charming two story deliaht $110,000.
SNEAK - A - PEAK
See It now!!! Buy it today and be happy forever. Large enough for an active family. Beautifully decorated, three bedrooms, 2 baths. Formal rooms, den with woodstove for the chilly days ahead. Garage and fenced in back yard in convenient Westhaven. Ranch style $73,900.
Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc.
756-1322
Anytime
MEMBCR -moneUg-ilarntB Itealtg
Homes To Fit Most Any Budget Office; 746-2166
Open Today From 1 to 5 PM
$29,900. In the country outside Ayden. Den, living room, 2 bedrooms, heat. Great for couple.
$35,000. Duplex in Ayden. Good location. Each unit has 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath.
$43,500. Brick ranch with lots of trees. Home has 3 bedrooms, heat, air, den, IV2 baths, VA loan.
$43,500. Large older home with 2400 foot living area. 3, 4 bedrooms, central heat, owner financing.
$56,500. Unique brick home in Grifton. Over 1900 feet living area. Ceramic tile kitchen, bath.
$65,500. Lovely 5 year old brick ranch in Ayden. 3 bedrooms, living room, den, workshop, heat, air.
$67,500. Country Club, Ayden. Formal areas, 4 bedrooms, heat, air, foyer, carpet, brick, big lot.
$25,000. Commercial Building, downtown Ayden. 12,800 square feet, 2 story. Needs work.
$4,000. Residential lot in Ayden on Edge Road. Trees, water, sewage, police, fire protection.
$10,000. Large lot, 130x180, in the Pines, Ayden. Curb, gutter, corner lot, great location.
$10,000. Acreage 4 miles east of Ayden. All wooded, good location. If you want seclusion look at this today.
$44,000. Acreage 4 miles east of Ayden. All cleared. 11 acres, over 400 foot road front.
On Call - Marcus McClanahan, REALTOR Non-OHice Hours 752-1026
Aldridge ^ Southerland Realtors
ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND MYRA DAY...........................756*3500
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
77,400-
45,000-
47.500-
49,900-
50,000-
55.000-
55.000-
59,500-
65,000-
150.000-
275.000-
Ouplex. University area. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side.
Only 3 blocks from university. Excellent investment on this duplex with rental income of $405 per month. Priced to sell.
106 Emma's Place. Duplex, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side. $400 per month income
House, duplex and commercial lot. Rent potential of $6,600 yearly.
Grimesland. Service station with 5 acres of land, T9.
DUPLEX. $6,000 per year income, close to ECU, good condition, excellent return. Cl 2:
Riverblutt Duplex. 1550 square teel total. 2 bedrooms each side, assumable financing, balance of $37,000.00 Age2j years.
Commercial building. Dickinson Avenue. 8640 square feet heated, large paved parking lot.
Nine Unit Apartments on corner of Paris Avenue and Halifax SI. near Dicksinson Ave. Excellent rental history.
Commercial Building. Over 35.000 sq. ft. with railroad siding on Dickinson Ave. Parking available.
76,900-
76,500-
73,900-
73,500
71,500
69,900-
69,500-
139.000
129,900
185,000Homes of this caliber are not available in the Greenville area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Route 9. the home has 3800 square teel, sits on 3 acres of land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential for 5. formal areas, huge family room with fireplace, recreation room, many extras.
LynndaleCedar farmhouse. 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer, stained hardwood floors. 2 fireplces. solar hot water heat, kitchen with Jenn-Aire. many extras.
Magnificent 3000 square toot 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, kitchenlsitting room and bath.
128.500New brick southern colonial two story. 4 spacious bedrooms, including master suite, formal areas with stained hardwood floors, family room with fireplace, large inviting kitchen.
119,900-This stalely home features all formal areas, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths and 2 halt baths, office and playroom! Dual heat pumps and a beautiful lot complete the picture. Definitely for the discriminating family.
98,000Farmville. Locajed in one of the finest areas, this home is a delight. Btf^i^OktiYnce Vo^W. formal areas, pecan paneled lamirNmm. Ivl lirellacls, 9 foot ceilings, and
69,000-
67,500-
67,500-
66,900-
66,900-
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78,000-1
Brook Valley. This 3 or 4 bedroom Williamsburg with great room, dining room, kitchen and three baths is ready lor immediate occupancy. Sit in the screened-in porch and watch the action of the 2nd tee in this new ottering.
Brook Valley. Attractive 2 story in this wonderful area. 4 bedrooms, 2'/2 baths, formal entry foyer, living room and dining room.
Brook Valley. Dramatic contemporary ranch! 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace, deck, playroom and beautiful fenced back yard.
Peace and quiet. Beautiful home on over an acre sized lot. 2100 square feet of heated area. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large family room with fireplace, formal areas, double garage. Low interest financing available.
Over 5,000 square teel within walking distance of the downtown area. Excellent house for Iraternity.
Pamlico River. Beautiful permanent home only 25 miles from Greenville! On the water with pier. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace. Deck circles home with screened porch, full basement-garage.
Cherry Oaks. 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.
Rustic contemporary situated on 1 acre wooded lot. Large great room with vaulted ceiling and tireplace, 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 office, decorated in Williamsburg decor.
Overlook Drive - Space! Over 3,000 square teel of heated area for less than $80,000! 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with tireplace, office for dad, workshop, wooded lot in this wonderful location. Better hurry onthjsone!
Country living with convenience. Abundant acreage with beautiful Williamsburg, located only 5 miles from Greenville. This 4 bedroom home couid be the one! Cail for details.
Cherry Oaks. 1800 square feel of luxury! Gracious entry foyer, stained hardwood floors, sunken great room with brick fireplace, kitchen equipped with Jenn-AIre rancge, 3 bedrooms, Vk baths, and garage tor storage! Contemporary design, very tunclional floor plan.
66.900-
66.900-
65.900-
65.900-65,500-
63,000-
62,900-
62,900-
62,500-
62,500-
59,900-
59,900-
59,500-
59,500-
59,000-
57,900-
Tucker Estates. Beautiful Williamsburg!3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, formal areas, huge kitchen with separate afing area, family room with fireplace. Et8.
Grifton Country Club. Well built custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial. Formal areas, large den.
Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken great room with old brick fireplace, slate foyer, super floor plan!
Grifton. Custom built, many extras. Slate foyer, sunken living room, 3 bedrooms, I'h baths, garage, screened porch plus brick patio.
Camelot. ^lar heat supports highlights this fine home. Formal living room, kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call us for more details.
Great Assumption! FHA Joan below market rate. Youll love the cathedral ceiling and beams, not to mention the romantic stone fireplace in the great room. Features formal dining room, 3 bedrooms with spacious walk-in closets in each.
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. Beautitul 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Kitchen with eating area and extra cabinet space, family room with tireplace, formal areas. Like new interior, fenced private backyard.
Westwood. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in mint condition. Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.
Westhaven. Just like new brick ranch in this wonderful area. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, super great room with tireplace. completely new kitchen with island and Jenn-Aire range, wooded lot. Better hurry!
Red Oak. Great room with vaulted ceiling is the highlight of this charming contemporary. Large corner lot, extra insulation, indirect lighting are just a tew extras. This is a must see!
Ragland Acres. Beautiful tioor plan includes formal areas, study, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport. Lovely decor, large rooms. Assumable 94. VA loan.
Red Oak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, traffic free circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace.
Camelot. Very attractive split level in this popular area. Family room with tireplace, formal areas, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Possible rent with option, also.
Lake Ellsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suite, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with fireplace, immaculate interior.
Four bedrooms in this affordable price range. Located in Lake Ellsworth, with pool membership available. Interior features formal areas, family room with tireplace and roomy kitchen with separate eating area. A real bargain. Country Living. Yet only a couple miles trom Greenville city limits, or the industrial park. This Southern Colonial has the charm of another time. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace, modern kitchen.
Riverhills. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on an extra deep wooded lot is in immaculate condition. With living room, dining room and separate tamily room with fireplace. It's a great find lor $62.900.
Riverhills. Split level with 3 bedrooms and 2'/i baths, living room, family room and kitchen with greenhouse window, all situated on a lovely wooded lot.
Westwood. Excellent all brick ranch on well landscaped lot. All formal areas, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull belhs, garage, covered patio. Owner will sell FHA, VA or conventional.
Forest Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2'/4 baths, formal areas, tamily room with fireplace and wood insert. Beautiful wooded lot! Contemporary close to schools and shopping. Decks and glass galore! Huge great room, step saving kitchen, two large bedrooms, 2 full baths, loft area and full basement. Grifton Country Club. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, kitchen with eating area, playroom, and super lot. Singletree. Almost new brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, tamily room with fireplace, fenced back yard with detached double garage. Assumable 9/i % financing.
Move right into this freshly painted 3 bedroom home in Red Oak! 8% FHA loan gives you the best payments in town. Orchard Hills. Darling 3 bedroom home on a private cul-de-sac, 3 bedrooms, including master with sliding doors to deck. Great room with fireplace, kitchen with many extras, mud room. Great price!
Red Oak. 4 bedroom ranch like this one is hard to find. Formal entry foyer and living room, tamily room, garage with automatic door opener. Now the best part, 9'/5% assumabla loan with low equity. Better hurry!.
FRESH ON THE MARKET
BETHELYoull love this 1 acre lot with large back yard in Bethel. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central heat and air conditioning, plus SVz % VA loan! $47,900.
GREENBRIARThis three bedroom, central heat and air is in 'move-in located . it s priced to sell at S45.900.
1 7 bath ranch with condition. Conveniently
GRIFTONBetween Greenville and Kinston, this custom built 1700 square foot brick home offers the best of town and country combined. All formal areas, including sunken living room, slate foyer, separate laundry room, 2V2 baths, double garage. Great screened porch and brick patio. $73,900.
BAYWOODFor the contemporary taste, enjoy the seclusion of Baywood in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with many special features such as sunken tub, Jenn-Aire range, Parquet oak floors in foyer and dining room. Double garage and large deck to enjoy at the end of the day. Your vacation home at home' $90,000
55,BOOBS,900-
55.900-55.500-
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54.900-
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49.500-
48.900-
47.900-
47.500-
47.500-
46,500-
45,900-
45,500-
45,000-
Hardee Acres. SVsVo assumption! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, screened back porck, carport and storage.
Ayden. Choice brick ranchjon large fenced, corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, large den with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. A lot for the money!
Hardee Acres. FHA 245 10 ! Yes, you can afford it. Cute as a button, 3 bedrooms. 1# baths, beautiful deck and pool. Don't miss it!.
Grifton Country Club area. Maintenance free 3 bedroom ranch. Formal areas, large back porch and double garage. Beautifully landscaped.
Grimesland. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, den with tireplace, formal living room, fenced back yard, double detached garage.
Elm Street. Super location, great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, 3 bedrooms, fenced yard. Cape Cod styling.
Orchard Hills. New cedar siding ranch with energy saving wood furnace as back up unit. Custom kitchen from Kitchen & Bath Designs, double sinks in both baths.
Ragland Acres. Large 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet cul-de-sac. Well landscaped lawn, double carport. Interior features 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, kitchen with eating area, den with fireplace. 086.
Charming all brick ranch in Pleasant Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen with many built-ins. Almost new!
Hardee Acres. Lovely 3 bedroom ranch inliis^e area. Great room, kitchen with many extras, brt@Kst area. Beaulitully decorated.
Grifton. Good assumable loan! Brick ranch teatkres formal areas, large family room with fireplace, 3 begrooms, 2 baths and large screened porch.
Singletree. 3 bedroom brick ranch, immaculate iiflerior. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, central air, tamily rooi^ with fireplace, fenced yard. Low equity on assumption.
Edwards Acres. 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet/circle. Almost new, with tamily room, and roomy kitchjln with separate breakfast area. Assumable financing available with affordable monthly payments.
University Area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, deck, living room, tireplace. Separate garage or workshop. $49,500.
Ayden. This three bedrooms, 2 bath ranch features a large country kitchen for entertaining your tamily and triends. Call about the 8 VA loan assumption available on this well kept home.
Eastwood area. 3 bedrooms, great room, kitchen with eating area, excellent condition, central air.
3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick home on an acre lot in Bethel. Excellent condition. Central heat and air, garage.
Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, bath, family room, kitchen with eating area. Only minutes trom Greenville.
University area. Nice quiet neighborhood. Three large bedrooms, tV: bath brick home. New heating system with to year warranty. Hardwood floors. Very nice!.
Sylvan Drive. Lovely 3 bedroom cottage nestled on beautilully wooded corner lot. Huge dogwoods, magnolias, pines are gorgeous! Hardwood floors, built in china cabinet are just a lew ot the extras.
Biltmore. Duplex less than block from campus. 2 bedrooms each side, recently remodeled. Rent 5500.00 a month.
Starter Home! Very nice 3 bedroom, ^'/} bath ranch. Includes refrigerator and fireplace woodstove insert. Fully carpeted, large back yard, just outside city limits Hardee Acres. A great opportunity.
Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home. Living room with fireplace, pine paneled den, garage and workshop. J33.
SHENANDOAH VILLAGE TOWNHOMES
2 bedroom, 1 baths with tamily room, kitchen with eating area, private patio, fuliy equipped kitchen. Low down payment and payments similar to rent! Call for details!
$78,000Cherry Oaks. 1800 square feet of luxury! Gracious entry foyer, stained hardwood floors, sunken great room with brick fireplace, kitchen equipped with Jenn-Aire rancge, 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, and garage for storage! Contemporary design, very functional floor plan.
44,500-
42,900-
42.500-
39.500-
35,000-
33,400-
27,900-
25,000-
Rock SpringsCute 2 or 3 bedroom ranch on quiet traffic free circle. Family room with fireplace, wooded shady lot. Better hurry!
Wildwood Villas. 2 bedroom. 1': bath townhouse close to the university. Full basement can be finished to give almost 1500 squarejeet of living area. Excellent condition with central air and fenced patio.
4 bedroom. 2 bath cottage style house in Meadowbrook area. Family room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, detached storage building and workshop.
University Area. 2 bedroom bungalow only a block trom campus! Recently remodeled with new carpet and wallpaper. Modern kitchen with new cabinets and counter tops. Really spaciaM ^
Reduced! Seller anxious. Make an otter on this exceptionally nice 2 or 3 bedroom home. Large kitchen with many cabinets, carport, nice lot. Just outside city limits.
Farmville. Cute 3 bedroom, one bath bungalow. Sunroom with tireplace. formal living and dining rooms, attached garage. Excellent loan assumption.
MacGregor Downs. Over 3 acre wooded building site in this tine area.
Country Living. 3 bedroom ranch in the Paclolus area. Attractive owner financing to qualified buyer Family room, kitchen with eating area, trees!
756-3500
Let Us Perform For You!
Dick Evans..................................
Jean Hopper................................
Sue Dunn ..............................
Nelda Hedges..............................
June Wyrick................................
Myra Day ...............................
...758-1119
.756-9142
...355-2588
...756-4973
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524-5004
Ray Spears .............. 758-4362
Allta Carroll.................................. 756-8278
Jeff Aldridge................... 355-6700
Mike Aldridge................ 756-7871
Don Southerland............... 756-5260
Ross Rhudy..............................................752-5149
i
il
0-16 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Sunday. October 9.1983
IN THE GENERAL COURT
OFJUSTICE
SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA county of PITT IN the matter of the ESTATE OF EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCK DECEASED
NOTICE TOCREDITORS Hflv nq quii Tifd as ExecutriK of the estate ot EDWIN BURTIS AYCOCk a'e ot P'tl County, North Carolina e,,s ,5, >0 notify all persons' ha-vinq ^lain-.s aqainst the estate of EDWIN BURTI AYCOCK to pres ent Jh.ei'n to the undersigned Exetrirrn or n, attorneys, on or Petore Mar^h ,'r -ygq or this notice All: be plead in bar ol their
ecove'v A, persons indebted to said es'.Pe please make immediate
payment this20dayof Sep.^,.,,^,,
JEAN HODGESAYCOCK 128 Longmeadow Road Greenville, NC 27834 Executrixof the Estate of Edwin Burtis Aycock, Deceased GAYLORD, SINGLETON, McNALLY Si STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 September 25; October 2, 9, 16, 1983
INVITATION FOR BIDS
The Roanoke Chowan Regional Housing Authority, Gaston, North Carolina, will receive sealed bids tor work entitled:
NC 19P118 012, 40 UNIT HOUS ING DEVELOPMENT SCOTLAND NECK. NORTH CAROLINA The work consists of the complete construction of 40 semi detatched low rent housing units and all th associated site developrnent. The type of housing unit distribution is as follows:
18 units two bedrooms 2 units two bedrooms handicap
codr~S,
20 units three bedrooms A single lump sum bid will be received for all work until 2 00 pm, local time, on the 4th day of November, 1983, in the Housing Authority's office at 205 Gaston Drive, Gaston, North Carolina 27832 (mailing address P.O. Box 1175, Roanoke Drive, Gaston, North Car olina 27870), at which time and place all bids will, be publicly opened and read aloud
Proposed form of Contract Doc uments including drawings and specifications, are on file at the office of the Architect, Samuel B. Ashford, Inc Raleigh North Caro iina the F W Dodge Corporation Plan Rooms Raleigh, Greensboro, and Charlotte Norrh Carolina the Associated General Contractors of America Plan Room Raleigh Greensboro, and Charlotte North Carolina and SCAN Atlanta Georgia, or may be obtained by those qualified apd who will make a bid upon rrjakmq a. deposit ot cash or certitred check ip the_amount ot $50 00 payable to, the' Roanoke * Chowan Regional Housing Authority The full deposit will be
20 day of September lo-> returned to those submitting a bona F -fide proposal on this project, pro
vided that drawings and specifica tions are returned to the Architect in good condition within 10 days after receiving bids. Partial sets of plans and or specifications will not be issued Bids shall be accompanied by a good faith deposit in an amount equal to 5 percent of the bid price, said deposit being in cash or a certified check drawn on a bank or trust company, authorized to do business in North Carolina or a bond insured by the Federal Depos it Insurance Corporation, or a U.S. money order payable to the Roanoke Chowan Regional Housing Authority, or a 5 percent Bid Bond in the form prescribed by N C.G.S 143-129, as amended, issued by any surty authorized to do business in North Carolina.
The successful bidders will be Fequired to furnish and pay tor satisfactory performance and payment bond or bonds.
Attention is called to the pro visions for equal employment op portunity, and that not less than the minimum salaries and wages as set forth in the specifications must be paid on this subject.
No oral interpretations will be made to the bidding documents. Written interpretations which will be available to all bidders can be obtained upon written applications to the office of the Architect The Roanoke Chowan Regional Housing Authority reserves the right to reject any or all bids or to waive any irregularities in the building.
No bids shall be withdrawn for a period of 45 days subsequent to the opening ot bids without the consent of the Roanoke Chowan Regional Housing Authority This 5th day of October, 1983 Roanoke Chowan Regional Housing Authority Gaston, North Carolina Joseph R Mason Executive Director Samuel B Ashford, Inc Architects i 15U Glenwood Avenue Raleigh, North ^arolin^7608
919 834 2567 October 9, 1983
PEANUTS
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Double Coupons Tuesday, October 11, only, on all food orders $10.00 or more. Manufacturers coupons will be redeemed for double the face value on purchase of the product as staled. Coupons over 50' will be redeemed for face value only. No cigarette, drink, free item coupons, or trial sizes eligible for double value..Limit 15 coupons per customer per day. Limit one coupon for any particular item. No rainchecks given during the special double coupon days. m
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^ O'*'" S' 3
..... ' " ' ' ''"^I'i '. i . ,r-Computer Wiz Joins Knight Rider
' By Peter Meade
There was an era on television when heroes seemed more interested in their horsey than women. Now the horse has been replaced by the car. Rebecca Holden is going to do something about that. She's the new regular on NBCs "Knight Rider, and by the looks of her. it wont be long before series star David Has-selhoff stops driving his computerized wonder-car alone.
Miss Holden portrays computer wizard April Curtis, whose job it is to program all the high-tech gizmos aboard Hasselhoff s car. KITT.
"The car is her pet project, thats her baby. says the former Breck model. 'You could call April a feminist, but theyve designed some knockout jump suits for her to wear
So much for the guys only looking at the car. Actually^ NBC is thrilled that so many people watched the series in its rookie season It was up against highly rated "Dallas," and yet held its own. The reward for the second season is a move to Siindax night at an earlier hour. This way the show IS surely to be seen by more of the young males, especially since it is now in an advantageous time slot with no serious competition from either network,
"I don't know where the character is going, says Miss Holden, "I just want to establish enduring characteristics.
Part of that may be endearing herself to Michael, Knight (played by Hasselhoff), but that wont happen until later in the season Her role was not included in the first five hour-long shows of this year. They had been written last year, so her character was added in.
The 25-year-old Texan is married to an oil millionaire, they have several residences and a bevy of high society friends. So Miss Holden was able to hold out for the best work offer, although she has had plenty of work offers, having turned down parts on Bare Essence, Yellow Rose and We Got it Made.
Knight Rider looked the most promising, says Miss Holden. It was renewed for 22 shows and- did well vs. Dallas and even better in the reruns. I cant imagine any other job where Id want to get up at 4 a.m. and go to work.
Sunday Daytime
5:00 Q) Kenny Foreman 5:15 (HBO) Video Jukebox 5:30 Q) Eagles Nest (ESPN)CFLFoothaU 5:50 (D World At Large 6:00 OJotu Wesley White OfflNews d) D. James Kennedy OJimLoudeimilk Johnny Quest 6D James Robison (SPN) Movie Yellow Rose Of Texas(1944)
(HBO) Movie Tell Me A Rid die (1980)
6:10 CD Week In Review 6:30 one Deaf Hear O Spiritual Awakening O Gospel Sing O Charles Young Revival 0 Focus 0News
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O Day Of Discovery 0 Kidsworld
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O Paul Brown O O O Oral Roberts O Christian Viewpoint 0 For Your Informathn 0 Jim Whittington (SPN) World Report (ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Kenny Rogera In Coueet t 9:00 O Kenneth C^land O Day Of Discovery O The Waltons (5) I Love Lucy O Heaven Bound O Jimmy Swaggart O 0 Sunday Morning 0 Robert SchuUer 0 Frederick K. Price 0 Dont Look Now (SPN) Bible Answers (ESPN) College Football 9:05 0 Leave It To Beaver 9:30 O The World Tomorrow (D Three Stooges Comedy Hour O Willie B. Lewis (SPN) Hyde Park (HBO) Movie My Favorite Year" (1982)
9:35 0 Andy Griffith 10:000 Lloyd Ogil vie O David Paul
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10:050 Best Of Good News 10:300 Larry Jones OO Jerry Falwell O Day Of Discovery S) Movie A Night At The Opera" (1935)
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0 Marilyn Hickey 10:35 0 Movie Tobruk (1967) 11.-06 O Jimmy Swaggart O First Presbyterian Church O Ernest Angley 0 First Bapt Church 0 Bob And Marty TUton 0 Great Performances (SPN) Oral Roberts (HBO) Sugar Rays All-Stars (NICK) KidsWrites (USA) Wrestling 11:300 Robert Schuller O The World Tomorrow O Carolina Coaches Show 0 This Week With David Brinkley
(SPN) Jimmy Swaggart (HBO) Fraggle Rock (NICK) The Tomorrow People 12:00 O D. James Kennedy O Tom Reed
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12:30 OEd Emory
O Duke Football Highlights OONFL83 O 0 NFL Today 0 College Football Highlights 0Stateline (SPN) Christian Children's Fund (ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week(R)
(NICK) Reggie Jacksons World OfSports 12:560 Movie Madame X (1966)
1:00 O Beyond The Horiaoa- U.S. / Japan Magaxine O Tarheel FootbaU Hlg|illghts O Southern Sportsman OOO0 NFL Football 0SarajevoM 0 Oinrch Triumphant 0F1ringLioe (a*N) Mmey, Money, Money (SHOW) Movie Ball Of Fire (1942)
(ESPN) Auto Racing , 1:300 Tom Reed O This Week With David Brinkley
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(HBO) Movie Tell Me A Riddle (1980)
(NICK) Going Great 2:000 Movie The Showdown (1950)
O This Week With David Brinkley
Movie The Sad Sack (1957) 0 Movie Jungle Book (1942)
0 Rex Humbard 0 Six Great Ideas (SPN) Real Estate Action Line (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty
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3:000 Movie
Greenville Cable TV
Phone 756-5677
Captain Kangaroo, starring Bob Keesban, begins its 29tb year on CBS airing on botb Saturday and Sunday mornings. There will be plenty of new segments and on-location visits to interest youngsters of all ages
(SUOOS reserve the ngfit to mfte list-minute changes)
UniNCMIIlIM
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insurancd^
Marine Mobile Home Owners and Comorehensiv Insurance For FARM BUREAU MEMBERS,
756-3165
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o
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ffi
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16
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'
17
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18
Nkklod9ii
.
19
WMthar
20
Showtime
24
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25
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26
Cabit Hoolth Network
27
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28
NYSE
29
Daytime Arts
Progrsm tchwluln IK|| m TV Sdowllnw m (umMiM by (he I_____
snd are ttib|t lo changa tthout notica Tha QraanvMa Dally Rallaclof, Raaarvad. Unllad MaMla Enlarphaaa. 3 Eaal Broadtray. Hopa
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O Movie The Last Of Sheila" (1973)
0 In Touch
Movie "The Gay Ranchero (1952) /
(SPN) Prestige Properties (SHOW)Hotwheels (HBO) Flashback: Fire At The Cocoanut Grove (USA) Co-Ed 3:300 Movie The Borrowers" (1973)
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4:00 O Wagon Train Movie With Six You Get Eggroll(1968)
01 Love Lucy O The Muppets O0 NFL FootbaU 0 Stan Rosenthal
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(SPN) World Report (ESPN) Saturday Night At Tht Fights (R)
(HBO) Sugar Rays AU-Stars (NICK) Special DeUvery (USA) Ovation 4:2900BasebaU\
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OStar Search e The Waltons O Six MiUion Dollar Man O Tarheel Portrait 0 D. James Kennedy 0 Great RaUway Journeys Of The World
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5:350 Undersea World Of Jacques Cousteau
Mary Kay Glamour Collection.
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Bizarre
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Movie "Strile lor Mastery'
Olivia Newton-John In Concert
A Portrait 01 Giselle
Tennis: All American Tournament
6:000 Movie Gullivers Travels (1939)
OOONews
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O Wild Kingdom ABCNewsn Q) Jerry Falwwl North Carolina People (SPN) Japan 120 (SHOW) Movie "Trail Of The Pink Panther "(1982)
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
6:30 00 ABCNewsn OONBCNews ^
Lome Greenes New Wilderness
Tony Browns Journal (HBO) Kenny Rogers In Concert (NICK) Mr. Wizards World 6:35 Nice People 7:00 O 0 Ripleys Believe It Or Not
OSoUdGold O O First Camera O 0 60 Minutes Q) Good News Doctor Who (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Livewire
(USA) Movie Strife for Mastery (No Date)
7:05 0 Wrestling 7:300 Flying House Camp Meeting, U S A.
(HBO) Fraggle Rock 7:59 O O Baseball 8:00 O The Everglades O O 0 Hardcastle & McCormick A dangerous prison inmate (Robert Desiderio) escapes from jail and seeks revenge against Judge Hardcastle. (1 hr.)
(53 Epidemic: America Fights Back A documentary look is taken at changing America and the problem of drug abuse. (1 hr.)
o o Knight Rider Michael springs an inmate (Gerald Gordon) from prison to help him locate a time bomb capable of mass destruction. (1 hr.)
O 0 Alice Vera ponders over the identity of the unknown admirer who is sending romantic gifts to her.
Nature "Forest In The Sea" The vast areas of kelp growing on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean provide a vital food
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(SHOW) Movie The World According To Garp" (1982) Robin Williams, Mary Beth Hurt. The son of an unmarried prep school nurse enjoys a life full of adventures, coincidences and bizarre characters. 'R' (2 hrs., 15 min.)
(ESPN) College Football Notre Dame vs. South Carolina (R) (3 hrs.)
(HBO) Movie "My Favorite Year (1982) Peter O'Toole. Jessica Harper A dipsomaniacal former matinee idol has difficulty coping with the pressures of a live TV performance during television's golden age PG (1 hr., 35 min.)
(NICK) The 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)
8:05 0 Americas Music Tracks 8:300 0 One Day At A Time
Mark (Boyd Gaines) gets ready to open his own dental practice, meaning changes for both him and Barbara.
Oral Roberts (NICK) The Third Eye "Under The Mountain" Mr. Jones' voice seems to drift through the fog from the weird Wilberforce house, and the twins steal through the dark night to his rescue. (Part 4)
9:00 O In Touch o O 0 Movie "The Making Of A Male Model (Premiere) Joan Collins, Jon-Erik Hexum. An agent turns a handsome young rancher ,into the fashion industry's most popular male model and embarks on an affair with him. n(2 hrs.)
(5) Star Search
O O Movie "Bustin' Loose" (1981) Richard Pryor, Cicely Tyson. An ex-convict drives eight handicapped children and their teacher to a new location in a rickety school bus. (2 hrs.) O 0 The Jeffersons Con man Jimmy Townsend (Garrett Morris) enlists special aid to recover $15,000 that was swindled from Tom. (Part 3) .
Jim Bakker
Masterpiece Theatre "Pictures Ruby, intent on starring in a film based on her life despite producer Ziggy Olman's ideas to the contrary, accompanies studio star Garfield Forbes-Lawson on a wild binge.
(Joined In Progress) (1 hr (NICK) A Portrait Of Giselle The history of "Giselle," the greatest of all acting / dancing roles for the ballerina, features interviews with and performance clips of the eight great Giselles" of this century. (3 hrs.)
(USA) Tennis "All American Tournament" Mens finals (from Hilton Head Island, S.C.). (4 hrs.)
9:050 Week In Review
9:30 O 0 Goodnight, Beantown Jenny changes some of her liberal ideas when Susan is invited on a date.
(HBO) Olivia Newton-John In Concert This concert taped in Ogden, Utah features Olivia Newton-John singing such hits as Physical, Heart Attack and Youre The One That I Waht(l hr., 30 min.)
10:000 Ben Haden (SNews
O 0 Trapper John, M.D.
Arnold Slocufti"(iSrfnon Scott) retires as hospital administrator, then suffers a seizure shortly thereafter. (1 hr.)
Robert Schuller The Good Neighbors (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys
10:050 News
10:30 O Rock Church Proclaims Window On Computers Dave Allen At Large (SHOW) Bizarre
10:35 0 Sports Page
11:00 O The King Is Coming 000000 News Movie Cinderella Liberty" (1973) James Caan, Marsha Mason. A sailor (alls in love with a Seattle prostitute he won for a night in a pool game. (2 hrs.)
O CBS News Gene Scott Twilight Zone (SPN) Movie "Reefer Madness' (1939) Dave O'Brien, Lillian Miles Deprcssion-era youths experience bizarre behavior, exaggerated side effects and eventually senseless tragedy while chain-smoking marijuana cigarettes. (1 hr.)
(SHOW) Movie "Prince Of The City" (1981) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach A New York cop is caught between federal pressure and loyalty to his fellow officers during an investigation of widespread police corruption R' (2 hrs., 45 min.)
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie "Blade Runner" (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.
Hauer. In a world of the future, a special police officer is assigned to track down and destroy four renegade androids. R'(l hr., 55 min.)
11:05 Jerry Falwell 11:15000 ABC News O Good News O Jack Van Impe 11:200 CBS News 11:300 Contact O Beach Music Awards Presentation of the first annual Beach Music Awards features performances by noted "60s artists such as James Brown, The Drifters, The Embers, Clifford Curry and Maurice Williams. (1 hr., 30 min.)
O Movie "Crooks And Coronets (1969) Telly Savalas, Edith Evans, Stately British mansions become the targets of a group of thieving gangsters. (2 hrs., 5 min.)
O Movie "Hard Country (1981) Jan-Michael Vincent, Kim Basinger. A young Texas woman tries to better her life, though her factory-worker fiance fears he will lose her if she succeeds. (R) (2 hrs.)
0 Movie "Return To Macon County (1975) Nick Nolle, Don Johnson. A race car driver and his mechanic run into some unexpected trouble while traveling through a Southern rural area. (2 hrs.)
Twilight Zone 11:35 0 Entertainment This Week Featured Kate Jacksons new TV series; on tour with Waylon Jennings in Florida; a special
Sunday. October 9. 1983 TV-3 report on how actors cope with unemployment between jobs (1 hr.)
11:45 O Jim Whittington O Duke Football Highlights 12:00 O Larry Jones Jim Bakker (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (ESPN) College Football Stanford vs. UCLA (3 hrs.)
12:05 Open Up '
12:15 O Charles Young Revival O Movie Yellow Sky" (1948) Gregory Peck, Anne Baxter. (1 hr., 45 min.)
12:30 O John Osteen 12:35 0 Face The Nation 12:45 O Jim Loudermilk 1:000 International Christian Aid
O Austin City Limits Encore David Susskind In Touch
(HBO) Movie The Exorcist (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair. (2 hrs., 2 min)
(USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
1:05 For Our Times 0 Movie "La Dolce Vita" (1961) Marcello Mastroianni, Anita Ekberg. (3 hrs., 40 min.) 1:30 O Jewish Voice Broadcast (USA) The New Serendipity Singers 2:000700 Qub O CBS News Nightwatch Jim Bakker (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Movie "Das Boot (1981)
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ffi PTL Club (French) (Tue)
Pattern For Living (Wed) God's News Behind The News (Thu, Fn)
(SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (Tue-Fri)
(SHOW! The Hasty Heart (Mon) Gallagher The Maddest! (Fri) (E5PN) SportsForum (R) (Wed) (USA) Movie (Tue) "Abroad With Two Yanks " (1944HWed| Outeast Of The Islands" ll9ft2)(Thu) "The Huggets Abroad" (1948)(Fri) "Ladies Who Do (1963)
5:10 (HBO) Olivia Newton-John In Concert (Mon)
5:15 World At Large (Mon)
5:20 World At Large (Tue) (HBO) Sugar Ray's All-Stars (Thu)
5:25 (HBO) Flashback: The Great Plague (Wed)
5 30 O Another Life O Jimmy Swaggart O News (Mon)
O Lie Detector (Mon-Thu)
Its Your Business (Mon) Catholic Mass (Tue) ffi PTL Club (Italian) (Tue) In Touch (Wed, Fri) Westbrook Hospital (Thu)
(SHOW) Movie (Thu) " Waltz Across Texas' (1982)
(ESPN) To Be Announced (Mon) Hacquetball (Tue) SportsWoman (K)(Wed)
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6:00 O Romper Room O O ABC News This Morning
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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) Movie (Fri) Marco Polo. Jr." (1973)
(ESPN) Business Times (HBO) Movie (Tue) "Hugo And Josefin' (1969)(Fri) "The Glacier Fox'(1978)
(HBO) The Incredible Book Escape (Thu)
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6:20 (SHOW) Movie (Tue) "Mystery At Castle House (1982) 6:300 Jimmy Swaggart CBS Early Morning News 0 Morning Stretch Ben Haden (Mon) Oral Roberts (Tue) The LaHayes (Wed) Stan Rosenthal (Thu) Bible Pathways (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) ' The Glacier Fox "(1978)
(HBO) Its Hard To Be A Penguin (Wed)
6:45 e Country Morning 7:00 O Movie (Mon) "Uncle Harry " ( 1945)(Tue) "Africa Screams" (1949KWed) "Cash On Delivery" (1956KThu) "Affair In Reno" '(igseKFri) "Flight To Mars" (1952)
o O Good Morning America
( 51 Bugs Bunny And Friends O O Today CBS Morning News Fun time Jim Bakker
(SHOW) Movie (Wed) "Gray Lady Down "(1978)
(ESPN) Business Times (R) (HBO) The Time Of Our Lives: The Most Amazing Sixty Years In History (Thu)
(NICK) Livewire (USA) Cartoons 7:3015 j Great Space Coaster (SHOW) Movie (Thu) "Mac-Arthiir" (1977KFri) "Five Days One-Summer" (1982)
(HBO) The Hoober-Bloob Highway (Tue) Fraggle Rock (Wed) Flashback: Fire At The r.(K-oanul Grove (Fri)
7:35 I Dream Of Jeannie 8:00151 Popeye And Friends O CBS Morning News Christian Forum (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Mark Twain Theatre (Mon) Phenomenon Of Benji (Tue)
(ESPN)SportsCenter (HBO) Video Jukebox (Mon) (HBO) Movie (Tue) "A Cry For Love " (1980KWed) " Paternity (1981)
(NICK) Mr. Wizards World (Mon, Wed, Fri) What Will They Think Of Next? (Tue, Thu)
(USA) Calliope 8:05 Bewitched 8:15 (ESPN) Inside Baseball (Tue) SportsForum (R) (Wed) Sportswoman (R) (Thu) SportsWeek (R)(Fri)
8:300 Movie (Mon) "The Tall Stranger (1957XTue) "Detour (1945KWed) "Sixteen Fathoms Deep" (1948XThu) "The Last Bandit" (1949)(Fri) "Track The Man Down "(1957) fiJ Tom And Jerry Paul Yonggi Cho (Mon) Jim Bakker (Tue) The Camerons (Wed) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Thu) Contact (Fri)
Educational Pro^amming (SHOW) Movie (Tue) " It Came From Hollywood" (1982)
(HBO) Movie (Mon. Fri) " It Came From Hollywood" (1982) (HBO) Olivia Newton-John In Concert (Thu)
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(NICK) Todays Special 8:35 I Love Lucy 8:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter (Tue-Fri)
9:000 The Waltons O O Hour Magazine d) I Love Lucy O Richard Simmons Donahue Jimmy Swaggart Sesame Street (R)n (SHOW)Aerobicise(W) (ESPN) Rodeo (R) (Mon) Auto Racing (Tue) PKA Full Contact Karate (R) (Wed) Motocross Racing CThu) Australian Rules Football (Fn)
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(CAL) Calliope 9:05 Movie (Mon) "The Lives Of Jenny Dolan (1975XTue) "'Escape From Zahrain" (1962XWed) "Born Yesterday (1950XThu) Ski Lift To Death" (1978XFri) "One Desire" (1955) 9:30 [5] Leave It To Beaver O AH In The Family Contact (Mon) Shiloh Christian Retreat (Tue) Frederick K. Price (Wed) Light And Lively (Thu) Heritage US.A. Update (Fri)
(SHOW) Aerobicise (Mon, Fri) (SHOW) Movie (Wed) Home From The Hill (1960)
(HBO) Sugar Rays All-Stars (Wed)
10:000 700 Qub O Donahue O Frog Hollow d Andy Griffith O O Diffrent Strokes (R)
O The New $25,000 Pyramid
Love Connection Harvester Hour (Mon) Sing Out America (Tue) Power Of Pentecost (Thu) Something Beautiful (Fri)
Educational FTogramming (Mon-Wed) Footsteps (Thu, Fri) (SPN) Video Disc Jockeys (SHOW) Movie (Mon) " Ransom (1956)(Tue) "Cry Terror! (1958)(Thu) "Dream Wife (1953XFri) "Andy Hardy Comes Home" (1958)
(ESPN) Horse Racing Weekly (R)(Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) "Harrys War" (1981XTue) Legend 01 The Wild" (1980XWed) Five Days One Summer' (1982XThu) A Cry For Love (1980XFri)
" My Favorite Year (1982) 10:300 Edge Of Night d Bewitched O O Sale Of The Century O Press Your Luck Lveme & Shirley & Company
Gods News Behind The News (Wed)
ffl High Feather (Wed) Educational Programming (Thu, Fri) (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Tue) Play Your Best Tennis (Wed) SportsForum (R) (Thu) Sportswoman (R) (Fri) 11:0000 Benson (R) d Medical Center O O Wheel Of Fortune O The Price Is Right Jim Bakker
Educational Programming (Wed)
(ESPN) Motorcycle Racing (Mon) PKA Karate (Tue) Sportswoman (R) (Wed) CFL Football (Thu) Auto Racing (Fri)
(USA) Designs For Living 11:05 The Catlins 11:300 Another Life O O Loving O Jim Bums O Dream House (ESPN) Gymnastics (Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Fri) Five Days One Summer (1982)
(USA) You; Magazine For Women
11:35 Texas
12:000 Movie (Mon) "This Is My Love (1954XTue) Eighteen And Anxious (1957XWed) "The Inside Story (1948)(Thu) "Inlrigue" (1947xFri) "Ils In The Bag "(1945)
ooooo News
d Panorama 0 Family Feud Lester Sumrall Teaching Educational Programming (SPN) Your Hour (SHOW) Movie (Mon) "Five Days One Summer (1982XTue) " The Toy (1982XFri) Jinxed! (1982)
(SHOW) Murder Among Friends (Wed) The Sound Of Murder (Thu)
(ESPN) College Football (Mon) (HBO) The Time Of Our Lives: The Most Amazing Sixty Years In History (Mon)
(HBO) Movie (Tue) " Dance Of The Dwarfs (1983XThu] "Taps (1981)
(HBO) Sitcom (Wed)
(USA) Movie (Mon) "Abroad With Ywo Yanks (1944XTue) " Taking Off (1971XWed) "Outcast Of The Islands (1952,XThu) "The Huggets Abroad (1948XFri) Ladies Who Do" (1963)
12:05 0 Petty Mason (Mon, Wed-Fri)
112:30 O 0 0 Ryans Hope O O Search For Tomorrow O The Young And The Restless
Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
Electric Company (R) (ESPN) College Football (Tue) Track And Field (Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Wed) Harrys War" (1981)
12:35 0 Perry Mason (Tue) Hazel (Fri)
1:00 O O 0 All My Children d Movie (Mon) "Bell, Book And Candle" (1959XTue) Desire Under The Elms" (1958XWed) "Without Love" (1945XThu)
" Waterloo Bridge (1940XFri) 'Inferno''(1953)
O o Days Of Our Lives Educational Programming (Mon, Wed-Fri) Short Story Showcase (Tue)
(SPN) Exercises (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri) Microwaves Are For Cooking (Wed)
(ESPN) PKA Full Contact Karate (R) (Fri)
1:05 0 Movie (Mon) "Flight tc Tangier " (1953XTue) Destry" (1955)(Wed)^ "The Life And Assassination Of The Kingfish" (1977XThu) "3:10 To Yuma (1957XFri) "Nero Wolfe (1970) 1:30 O As The World Turns Derins Coffee Shop (SPN) Good Life (Mon) American Baby (Tue) Personal Computer (Wed) Companion Dog Training (Thu) Telephone Auction (Fri)
(ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (R) (Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) Coin South"(1978)
(HBO) Flashback; The Great Plague (Tue) Flashback: Fire At The Cocoanut Grove (Fri)
1:45 Educational Programming (Tue)
2:00 B My Little Margie (Mon) Sewing Etc. (Tue) Make It Easy, Make It Microwave (Wed) Keeping Time (Thu) American. Baby (Fri)
O B One Life To Live G O Another World How Can I Live? (Mon) Good (Continued On Page 9)
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By Michele Marks
DEAR Mil HKLK: I thought Sle\en Ford played the part of Dannx Homalotti in The Young and the Restless. but Jay Bobbins article in this weeks Showtime says Danny iplayed b\ Mkhael Damian). What part does Steven Ford plav DOROTHY STANLEY. HIGH POINT, N.C.
TO DOROTHY IN HIGH POINT; Jay is absolutely correct -Michael Damian plays Danny - Steven appears as Andy Hichanls on VAR.'
DEAR MICHELE: Would'you please give me the name of the actor who plated Professor Haley in the picture "Roots ? He also plaved Floyd in the movie Beulah Land. W.W. M( FAKLAM). W ASHINGTON. N.C.
TO \VW M('F.ARLANl) IN WASHINGTON; Dorian llaicwoiid appeared as both Alex Haley s father in Roots; The Next Generation and as Floyd, the overseer, in "Beulah Land VoiTH be glad to hear that he's back on television in \Ti( "s new senes "Trauma (enter. "
DE AR Ml( HELE: I would like to know a little about Valerie Bertinelli and her address. CHRISTY BROOKS. OXFORD, \,(.
ro ( HRISTV IN OXFORD Valerie Bertinelli was born on April 23, 1%0, in Wilmington, Delaware. Together with her molhi'i , her older brother and two younger brothers, she moved 1(1 the West ( oast in 1971. when her father, a General Motors executive, was transferred to the Van Nuys, California, plant Ahout that lime, she developed a desire to be an actress, and enrolled in drama .schtMil to gel some professional training. In addition to her own hit series, this talented actress has started her own production company, and is searching for properties to tit her (urrent interests In her off-work hours, she enjoys placing ioolball. skiing, swimming, tennis, raequetball. and lislening to classical music. On April 11. 1981, Valerie married rock artist Eddie \"an Halen. They received a special thanks lioni Michael .Jackson lor their work on his Thriller" album \';in Halen played back up on Jaek.son s hit "Beat It' on this highly touted .IV Valerie will be returning to "One Day at a Time, and I have no doubt she II be involved in other projects throughout the season, although nothing has been officially announced Fans ol Valerie may write to her in c o the series. One Dav at a Time,' I'BS-TV, 7809 Beverly Blvd , Los Angeles. Ca . 9(HI3b
DEAR MK IIEEE: Would so please help me win a HM)dollar bet'. (I hope!I I say Jennifer Jones, who was in "Farewell to Amis," is dead m\ brother savs she is not. Who wins? H. SMITH, FAVETTEVLEE. N.( .
TO H SMITH IN FAYETTEVILLE; Sorry, lean t help you win Jennifer Jones is still living and was at a recent awards dinner honoring various film greats of yesteryear.
DEAR MICIIEEE; I am a very big fan of Search For Tomorrow on NBC. Could you teli me where to write com erning this show and the members of the cast? FEILICIA Y. ASHFORD, WIESON, N.C.
TO FEliciA IN WILSON; Your best bet is to write Search" in ( 0 NBC TV. 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N.Y., 10012.
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0 Father John Bertolucci 0 North Carolina People (SPN) Scuba World (ESPN) Inside BasebaU (HBO) Fraggle Rock ,(NICK) The Adventures Black Beauty (USA) Sports Look 7:35 0 Good News 8:000 High Chaparral O O 0 Thats Incredible! A return match for basketball-playing rats; a California pizzeria regularly visited by pregnant women; a million-dollar slot machine payoff. (1 hr.)
(D P.M. Magazine John Elway, the highest paid rookie quarterback in the NFL.
O O Boone The Sawyers' adoption of a young orphan named Banjo (Julie Ann Haddock) makes youngest family member Squirf jealous. (1 hr.) O0 Scarecrow And King 0 Camp Meeting, U S A.
0 The Oil Kingdoms Kings And Pirates A historical view is presented on the discovery of oil in the Persian Gulf and how the resulting wealth of that area influences trade between East and West, the pearling industry and the gold trade, n (1 hr.) (SPN) Photographed Eye (SHOW) Movie Five Days One Summer" (1982) Sean Connery, Betsy Brantley. An Alpine vacation for a mountaineering Scottish physician and the young
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woman traveling with him becomes the venue for personal revelation. PG(1 hr, 50 min.) (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments 1973 Dolphins / 1974 Steelers" (1 hr.)
(HBO) The Time Of Our Lives: The Most Amazing Sixty Years In History Time magazine's 60th anniversary is celebrated in this documentary examining the historical highlights of the past 60 years as reported by the weekly newsmagazine. (1 hr., 15 min.)
(NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain Now that they know about the aliens secret labyrinth, Rachel and Theo are in even greater danger. (Part 5) (USA) Movie Taking Off (1971) Buck Henry, Lynn Carlin. A fastidious middle-aged couple take a second look at their own values and morals when they set out to find their runaway teenage daughter. (2 hrs.)
8:050 Portrait Of America A profile of Texas is presented. (1 hr.)
8:30 (D Carol Burnett And Friends
(SPN) Post Time
(NICK) rhe Tomorrow People
"The Medusa Strain" Rabowski and Jedikiah have immobilized the world. (Part 2)
9:000 700 Club Featured: a New Zealand couple sent as missionaries to the U.S. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 NFL Football Pittsburgh Steelers at Cincinnati Bengals (3 hrs.)
Merv Griffin Guests; Ralph G. Martin, Robert Wuhl, Kin Shriner, Walt Disney animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston. (1 hr.)
O O Movie Adam (Premiere) Daniel J Travanti, Jobeth Williams A missing child's distraught mother and father take steps to ensure the passage of legislation to help other parents of children who vanished n (2 hrs.)
O0 AfterMASH 0 Jim Bakker
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coin Center Special - New York City Ballet: Balanchine Ballets" A special tribute to the late choreographer George Balanchine features such dancers as Suzanne Farrell, Peter Martins and Karin von Aroldingen dancing to Vienna Waltzes," Who Cares" and Mozartiana (2 hrs.)
(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (ESPN) Auto Racing "USAC Dirt Cars (from Rossburg, Ohio) (2 hrs.)
(NICK) At The Met: Flowers And (iardens Experts on art. flower arranging and gardening explore flowers in paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and explain about plants growing in the medieval gardens at the Cloisters, the Met's branch museum for the display of medieval art.
9:050 The Osmonds At Billy Bobs The Osmond Brothers host this country music special from Billy Bobs in Fort Worth, Texas with special guests T O. Sheppard, Louise Mandrell and Mel Tillis.(lhr.)
9:300 0 Country Music Association Awards Anne Murray and Willie Nelson host the 17th annual ceremony, saluting excellence in country (live from Nashville, Tenn,). (1 hr., 30 min.) (HBO) Movie 'The Bell Jar (1979) Marilyn Hassett, Julie Harris. Based on the autobiography by Sylvia Plath. A troubled young woman tries to overcome the overwhelming tensions and anxieties building up within her as she progresses from adolescence to adulthood. R (1 hr., 54 min.)
9:35 (NICK) Peggy Guggenheim: Confessions Of An Art Addict
Peggy Guggenheim rides a gondola through the canals of Venice recounting her experiences as an art patron and prolific collector of some of the worlds finest modern art. (1 hr., 5 min.)
10:00 News 0 Lester Sumrall Teaching (SHOW) Movie Cheech And Chongs Nice Dreams" (1981) Richard Cheech Marin, Thomas Chong. Two inveterate pot-heads appear to have found their true calling as they peddle ice cream on the streets of Los Angeles. R(l hr., 27 min.)
(USA) Waterskiing U.S. Clown Freestyle Championships (from Cypress Gardens. Fla ). (1 hr.)
10:05 0 News
10:30 Jerry Savelle
10:40 (NICK) Women In Jazz: Scatting This unique singing tradition is well represented in a documentary featuring the talents of Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington and other jazz greats.
11:000 Another Ufe Soap
OOO0News
0 Introduction To Life 0 Monty Pythons Circus
(SPN) Medicine Man (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) College Football Stanford vs. UCLA (2 hrs , 30 min.)
11:05 0 Woman Watch
11:15 (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (R)
(NICK) Great Poets, Great Writers Featured: T.S. Eliot's Portrait Of A Lady . "
11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Topic: tv writers producers. Guests: Hal
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Linden, actor writer on "Barney Miller"; Larry Gelbart, 'M*A*S*H' writer; Allan Burns, creator and co-producer of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show"
11:300 Star Time Thicke Of The Night O O The Bast Of Carson Guests: Michael Landon, Bo Derek. (R)(l hr.)
Q Hart To Hart A murder leads Jonathan and Jennifer to an ancient sarcophagus and an apparently living mummy. (R) (1 hr., 10 min.)
0 Entertainment Tonight Telly Savalas talks about his radio announcements that help fight crime.
0 The Blackwood Brothers 0 Doctor In The House (SPN) American Baby (SHOW) Movie The Sex Machine (1978) Agostina Belli. In 2037 A.D., scientists solve the energy problem by harnessing the power of the human libido. R'(l hr , 20 min.)
(HBO) Movie So Fine (1981) Ryan O'Neal, Jack Warden A stuffy college professor saves his father's floundering garment factory by inventing a new type of ladies jeans. R (1 hr., 31 n;in.)
11:35 0 The Catlins 12:00000 News 0 Charlies Angels 0 Jim Bakker
(SPN) Microwaves Are For Cooking
12:050 Movie "Strangers When We Meet" (1960) Kirk Douglas, Kim Novak. (2 hrs., 30 min.) 12:300. Jack Benny O 0 ABC News Nightiine O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: former advertising executive David Ogilvy, New York Yankees outfielder Dave Winfield. (1 hr.) (SPN) Companion Dog Training 12:40 O Columbo A clever football coach (Robert Culp) uses electronics to commit murder during a game. (R)(l hr, 20 min.) 1:0001 Married Joan O More Real People O0News Mission: Impossible 0Thicke OfThe Night Faithline (SPN) Travellers World (SHOW) Movie The Exorcist" (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair. (2 hrs,, 2 min.)
1:05 (HBO) Movie "Goin South (1978) Jack Nicholson, Mary Steenburgen. (1 hr, 41 min.) 1:300 Love That Bob O O News
O O NBC News Overnight (SPN) Movie "Glorifying The American Girl" (1929) Mary Eaton, Dan Healy (1 hr., 45 min.)
(USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates,
1:45 (ESPN) Inside Baseball World Series Preview" (R)
2:00 O Bachelor Father O News
O CBS News Nightwatch 0 Jim Bakker
(USA) College Football Clemson vs. Virginia (2 hrs., 30 min.)
2:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter
TV-5
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2:300 Life Of Riley O All In The Family ONews
(ESPN) College Football Notre Dame vs. South Carolina (R) (3 hrs.)
2:350 Movie The Reach comber (1955) Robert Newton, Glynis Johns. (1 hr, 45 min.)
3:00 O 700 Oub Featured: a New Zealand couple sent as missionaries to the U.S. (1 hr , 30 min.) News
0 Robert Schuller (HBO) Video Jukebox 3:05 (SHOW) Movie 'My Favorite Year" (1982) Peter O'Toole, Jessica Harper. (1 hr., 35 min.)
3:15 (SPN) Movie Evergreen" (1934) Jessie Matthews, Sonnie Haled hr, 45 min.)
3:30 News (HBO) Movie It Came From Hollywood " (1982) John Candy, Dan Aykroyd. (1 hr, 20 min.)
4:00 News 0 Today With Lester Sumrall 4:200 The Americans 4:30 O Ross Bagley All In The Family (USA) Sports Probe (R)
4:40 (SHOW) Murder Among Friends Sally Kellerman and Leslie Neilsen star in this comedy whodunit, set in a New York apartment on New Year's Eve, involving an actor, his wealthy wife and his ambitious agent. (1 hr, 45 min)
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(SPN) Name Of The Game Is Golf
(EJSPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Going Great (USA) Radio 1990 7:05 Carol Burnett And Friends 7:30 O Threes Company O P M Magazine 5 OM*A*S*H O Family Feud
O Tic Tar Dough 0 Alice Oral Roberts Folk V.ays
(SP.N'j Jim.Oi} Houston Outdoors (FISPN) Saturday Night At The
Fic'.ls (R)
(NiCK) The Adventures Of
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'...m-i':iy;i.-.c-d |jO H.i i:li'K; IbLi h lit'.' 'riaid (iHG'W) Movie ;;;>.e'" GfiMi! Br-t'p Midler, Ken Wahl .A sing cr talles an unlucky casino dealer niio helping her do away with her iihnoxious boyfriend. R (1 hr. 45 min i
(HBO) Movie 'A Cry For Love' (li'.Ku; Susan Blakely, Powers Boothe An amphetamine addict and an akot.jlic meet and try to save each ciher. <2 hrs)
(NICK) Against The Odds Einstein And Iuasso" These men Fa.k !he fin t steps toward revo-luti.'ni/'iig !!:<> way we look, at
ourselves and our world -Picasso by permanently changing western art, and Einstein by proposing the idea that time and spare were not the same everywhere in the universe.
(USA) Movie ' Outcast Of The Islands " (19521 Robert Morley, Ralph Ri( hardson Based on the novel by Joseph Conrad A man s moral fiber is destroyed when he byx'omes involved in a Malayan smuggling operation
2 hrs!
1)510 Movie '.m.ji'.'ij'-'yhj,r.' ,
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GiFCT) '/'noorrow -eopie Tlie Medusa Ctiaii) dohn .'lud Nteimoii bep'aii)!' -.letinis oi ,'e<li-, kiah s revenge. (Part 3)
9 000 700 Gub (iJ Merv Gnffin O O Remington Steele O Movie Night Partners" (Premiere) Yvette Mimieux, Diana Canova A divorcee and a female neighbor volunteer for duly on a newly created victim assistance unit to assist those targeted by criminals, (2 hrs.)
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Vietnam: A Television Histo-
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ry ' America's Mandarin (1954-1963)" America steps in to halt the spread of communism in Southeast Asia until President Ngo Dinh Diem's own generals turn against him. n(l hr.) (SPN)HeUoJeru8dem (NICK) Arts Playhouse: Joseph Papp Presents - Rehearsing Hamlet An inside look at Joseph Papps controversial production of Shakespeares Hamlet," with Diane Venora, an unknown actress, cast in the title role is featured. (1 hr.)
10:00 (D News O O I Love Men Lester Sumrall Teaching Ascent Of Man (SPN) Holland On SatelUte (SHOW) John Barbours World Barbours survey of fascinating people and events from across the U.S. is accompanied by the animations of Mad Magazines Sergio Aragonnes. (1 hr.)
(ESPN) Womens Billiards World Invitational 7-Ball Championship Vickie Frechen vs. Lori JonOgonowsky (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie "Blade Runner (1982) Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer. In a world of the future, a special police officer is assigned to track down and destroy four renegade androids, R(l hr., 55 min.)
(NICK) Arts Visits With David Mamet An interview with playwright David Mamet, author of the plays "Reunion and "Dark Pony is shown
(USA) Hot Spots ' Krokus (from Brooklvn, N Y.)(l hr.)
10:05 News
10:15 (NICK) Dark Pony And Reunion Dark Ponv
10:30 John Osteen
11:00 0 Another Life 15' Soap
O O O News TheLaHayes Montv Pvtbons Flying Jir^B
SPN) ndovie
ISHOW) :4ovie ' llicl I 'd I'aifious" ')!*'; baiKiice l.^e, geri .i;'.i.')L'e!ii)e I'lis.sei ''iiioiigr! out the ups and downs of Their 'especfi'' !' .iieiory career- -;rKl "omantic ivas, iv'o noi>.''n (iepend Ct (heir frienQshm .o. :iai)ilily. Fi(i i.i., ISioii.)
By Polly Vonetes
' Dallas'" J R is currently having his problems off and on the set, Aa-ording to the latest reports from Germany, Dynasty's" vindictive Alexis (JOAN COLLINS) is rapidly replacing J.R. ( LARR\' HAGIVlANi as the ' person you would most love to watch and hate,*' "Dallas," a long-time favorite of German TV audiences, is losing ground as Dynasty ' grows in popularity here and abroad. Much of the show's popularity is attributed to the glamorous clothes and the life style depicted by the characters. Producer AARON SPELLING says,People are starving for glamour. Theres a recession going on and they need to escape." (He must be right!)
DVAN CANNON is very excited about her starring role as Kate Blackwell in the CBS nine-hour mini-series "Master of the Game " She will be required to age 70 years during the filming, , which is not being filmed in sequence. There are mornings when she appears on the set as a 90-year-old woman and in the afternoon plays the role of a 20-year-old. Ninety different costume changes have been designed for her as well as an enormous number of wigs.
The CBS Saturday Night Movie, Trackdown. Finding the Goodbar Killer," produced by former New York City detective SONNY GROSSO, is the true story of detective JOHN GRAFTON, who investigated the brutal murder of a voung New York City schoolteacher. GEORGE SEGAL, makiiig his first appearance in a motion picture for television, stars as Detective Grafton SHELLEY HACK costars as the slain womans colleague and friend.
(ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
ll:05fflAU In The Family (NIGC) Great Poets, Great Writers Featured Tolstoy's "The Kreulzer Sonata'
11:1500 News (ESPN) College Football Stanford vs UCLA (Rm3 hrs) Ii:25;NICK) First Edition Guest daiirei'n Hewird ,utlor o' d.Ci' /'.iouia;ii|v
'i .aoyjt^ur 'imp hicke Df "he Wight '3 ' '.iMiigbt litsi J.innv Canon Guests. Bert Convy
.-ri;ii .(iarriilton ir l } !-Iapum, IM, ' \-,o .Joiocausl urvivors i.2come I.c Lar^ets ( ersisten! l.'^rzis. (R) ,') "r '0
Entertainment Tonight Gene Barry talks about his hit Broadway musical Life Anew Doctor In The House 11 35 The Catlins 11 450 O ABC News Night-line
12:00 Charlie's Angels 'im Rakker
HBO; Vol. Necessarily 'he News' 'omedy Ketches eoiriDiPe ji ' ;as,su; :iira and !iew.s ioot i't "If <ifbeal. .satiric 'akt -
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(5) P.M. Magazine A deer roundup in New Zealand using helicopters.
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ffi Camp Meeting, U.S.A. ffi Charlie Muffin British Agent Charlie Muffin attempts to persuade a KGB head to defect. (2
hrs.)
(SPN) American Baby Featured: the 3-year-old, vaccinations; Please Touch Museum.
(SHOW) Movie " Waltz Across Texas' (1982) Anne Archer, Terry Jaslrow A wildcatter and a pretty geologist become romantically involved after their professions bring them into conflict. i*G' (i tir . 40 iTiin.)
(HBO) Movie .finxed! (982) Bette Midler, Ken Wahl A singlar raiks an unlucky ^asino leal-er iiiio helping her do away with her obnoxious boyfriend R (1 or ib min.)
(NICK) rhe Third Eye Under ''he Mountain . ware ot ;he iaie waiting i:!:arth, the twins learn rom !\4r. Jones the strategy (iiey must employ if their planet is to be saved. (Part 6) (USA) PBA Bowling Touring Players Championship (from Limerick, Pa.) (2 hrs.)
8:050 Movie "Goodbye, Columbus" (1969) Richard Benjamin. Ali MacGraw. A young man vacationing with the family of a wealthy businessman has a secret love affair with the tycoons daughter. (2 hrs.)
8:30(1) Movie Grand Theft Auto" (1977) Ron Howard, Nancy Morgan. A young man and the daughter of a millionaire elope to Las Vegas in her father's Rolls-Royce with a collection of fortune hunters in hot pursuit. (1 hr., 30 min)
(SPN) Real Estate Action Line (ESPN) The World Sportsman "Fishing Skiing Parachuting" Guests: members of the 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team, (1 hr.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
"The Medusa Strain John and Carol are gravely injured by Rabowskis cannon. (Part 4) 9:000 700 Oub OO The Facts Of Life O 0 Movi? Sunset Limousine (Premiere) John Ritter, Susan Dey. Accused by his girlfriend of irresponsibilty, a would-be comedian becomes a limousine driver and unwittingly makes himself the target of hoodlums. (2 hrs.) ffi Jim Bakker (SPN) Japan 120 (NICK) Tosca Kiri Te Kanawa stars in Puccini's opera set against the fiery political strife of Rome in 1800 when the Bona-partists and the monarchists brought violence, intrigue and heightened passion into the lives of the masses. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
9:30 O O Family Ties (ESPN) PKA Full ConUct Karate (R)
10:00 News O O Candid Camera: Now And Then Allen Funt and Angie Dickinson introduce film clips from the classic TV series that show people caught in the act of being themselves. (R) (1 hr.) ffi Lester Snmrall Teaching Never Tnm Back The Life Of Fannie Lou Hamer The struggles of Fannie Lou Hamer, during the hot summer in the 1960s when the Mississippi civil rights movement was in full swing, are dramatized. (1 hr.) (SHOW) Movie Superchick (1973) Joyce Jillson, Tony Young. A shy airline hostess finds adventure when she assumes the aggressive persona of her alter ego. R (1 hr., 35 min.)
(HBO) Movie Amityville II: The Possession (1982) Burt Young, James Olson. A family experiences supernaturally influenced problems after moving into a Long Island house. R (1 hr., 45 min.)
(USA) (Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.
10:05 News 10:30 ffi John Ankerberg (USA) Pick The Pros 11:000 Another Life Soap
OOO0News
ffi Bible Pathways
ffi Monty Pythons Flying
Circus
(SPN) Prestige Properties (ESPN) SporteCenter (USA) AHred Hitchcock Presents
11:05 0 All In The Family 11:1508 News (ESPN) \uto Racing ASA Slock i'ars from Brooklyn, Mich; (fl)C hr,. .0lain.'
11:25 (Nick) First i^^tion uest: Dr !>ewis Thomas, author of "The Youngest Science ll:MO Star Time Thicke Of The Night O o Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. 'Juest: Charles iBrodin. (Tiir)
O Police Story A lookie cop (Gifton Oavis) goes undercover to investigate a >najor drug ring. (R)(l hr, 10 imn.)
0 Entertainment Tonight Anne Baxter is making a comeback in a new TV series, ffi Sound Of The Spirit ffi Doctor In The House 11:350 The Catlins 11:40 (SHOW) Movie The World According To Garp (1982) Robin Williams, Mary Beth Hurt The son of an unmarried prep school nurse enjoys a life full of adventures, coincidences
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
and bizarre characters "R" (2 hrs., 15 min.)
11:45 0 8 ABC News Night-line
11:50 (HBO) Sitcom This comedy program follows the follies of the Gooseberry clan after Dad (Alan Young) is fired by his boss, Mr. Slavedriver.
12:00 0 Charlies Angels ffi Jim Bakker (SPN) CraftsNniinp (USA) Radio 1990(H)
12:05 0 Movie The A^ssination Bureau (1969) Oliver Reed, Diana Rigg. (2 hrs, 15 min.) 12;2(HBO) Movie The Sender (1982) Kathryn Harrold, Zeljko Ivanek. (1 hr., 30 min.)
12.308 Jack Benny O O Late Night With David Lettennan Guest: columnist Art Buchwald. (1 hr.)
(SPN) Sewing With Nancy (USA) Sports Probe 12:400 Movie The SoliUry Man (1979) Earl Holliman, Carrie Snodgress. (1 hr., 20 min.) 12:45 OTk Tac Dough 8 Public Aflairs Thicke Of The Night (ESPN) SportsFonim (R)
1:00 OI Married Joan Mission; Impossible News ffiGen Scott (SPN) Personal Computer (USA) PBA Bowling Touring Players Championship (from Limerick, Pa.)(R)(2 hrs.)
1:15 O More Real People 8 News
(ESPN) Hydroplane Racing
Bu^weiser / C L E A R World ChamjMonship" (from Houston, Tex ), (R)(l hr)
1:300 Love That Bob-^^
O O NBC News Ovemi^t (SPN) Movie "Don Quixote (1933) Feodora Chaliapin, George Robey. (1 hr , 45 min.)
1:45 08 News 2:00 O Bachelor Father 8 News
O CBS News Nigbtwatcb ffi Jim Bakker
(SHOW) Movie True Confessions (1981) Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall. (1 hr., 50 min.) (HBO) Movie Venom " (1982) Nicol Williamson. Klaus Kinski (1 iir., .33 min.)
2:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:200 Movie "Elach Dawn I Die" (1939) ,lames Cagney, George Raft. (? Iirs.)
2:300 Ufe Of Riley 8 All Id The Family ONews
(ESPN) Horse Racing Weekly
(R)
3:00 O 700 Club Featured, author John Weldon discusses holistic healing. (.1 hr, 30 min.)
ONews
ffi Lowell Lundstrom (ESPN) PKA Full Contact Karate (R)
(USA) Waterskiing "U.S. Clown Freestyle Championships'"
Sunday, October 9. 1983 TV-7
(from Cypress Gardens. Fla (R)(lhr.)
3:15 (SPN) Movie Make A Wish (1937) Basil Rathbone, I^eon Errol. (1 hr., 45 min.)
3:30 ONews ffi Rez Humbard 3:35 (HBO) Movie Jinxed! (1982) Bette Midler, Ken Wahl. (1 hr., 45 min.)
3:50 (SHOW) Movie Superchick (1973) Joyce Jillson, Tony Young. (1 hr., 35 min.)
4:00 8 News ffi How Can I Uve?
(USA) Wrestling (R)
4:20 0 Movie Her Kind Of Man (1946) Dane Clark, Janis Paige. (1 hr., 30 min.)
4:300 Ross Bagley O All In The Family ffi The Blackwood Brothers (ESPN) Auto Racing ASA Stock Cars (from Brooklyn. Mich). (R)(lhr, 30 min.)
In Retrospect
Shirley Temple Black \mU reveal to the world, during the cable broadcast ot King Features liood Housekeeping A Better Way this month, that although she doe>n t expect a [xisl during the ( urrent administration she remembers that Bonald Heagan ,^ure wa,' a great ki"er They .ippeaied together m the 1948 movie I'li.it .ll,ig:in (iirl
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Thursday Evening
THURSDAY EVENING
7:00 7:30 i 8:00 i 8:30 9:00 9:30 I 10:00 10:30
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High Chaparral
700 Club
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3 s Company Trauma Center
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It's Not Easy 20 / 20
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Family
Got It MaOe Cheers
Hill Street Blues
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Got It Made Cheers
Hill Street Blues
.o>e'Sv\': ic'ac Magnum Pi
Simon i Simon
Knots Landing
.eersons A'ice
Magnum PI
Simon i Simon
Knots Landing
sCcmpar-. A'ice
Trauma Center
9To5
It's Not Easy 20/20
Good News Movie Marooned
A.*aen-'
Power
Camp Meeting. USA
Jim Bakker
L Sumrall ! Eagle's Nest
B.,5 Pepor
Old House Real Thing Journeys 01 The World
Jazz In America
SPN Pet.ne
Comp.,'er Traveller
Image
Holland On Saiellite
this Is New Zealand
s-:/. neSoo''dCMrde'
Gallagher The Maddest'
Movie Trail Of The Pink Panther"
Es=s iPor'sCene' pka Rji Contact Karate
Top Rank Boxing
Movie The World According To Garp "
The NFL
jo'd j-ea- Eac Beaut, AgamstOdds Tom People Performers Showcase
,SA Rad:'?93 ' N-^ -ocxe;, Washington Capitals at New York Rangers
I Golf Tips
6:00 O Treasure Hunt 00000(00 News 5 WKRP In Cincinnati B Inside Track ffi MacNeil Lehrer Newshour (SPN) Microwaves Are For Cooking
(SHOW) The Sound Of Murder (USA) Cartoons 6:05 0 Little House On The Prairie
6:30 O Tbe Rifleman O ABCNewsn ITaxi ^
O O NBC News ' O0CBSNews Q) Good News America (SPN) Financial Inquiry (ESPN) SportsWeek (HBO) The Time Of Our Lives: The Most Amazing Sixty Years In History
(NICK) What WiU They Think Of
Next?
7:000 Bonanza O WKRP In Cincinnati
O ABC News n (5) 0 Threes ^mpany
O O O The Jeffersons O Jokers Wild Q) Spiritual Awakening 0 Business Report (SPN) Pet Action Line (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Going Great (USA) Radio 1990 7:05 0 Carol Burnett Friends 7:30 O Threes Company O P-M. Magazine (130M*A*SH O Family Feud O Tic Tac Dough 00 Alice 0 Power Unlimited 0 Under Sail
(SPN) Personal Computer (ESPN) PKA Full ConUct Karate
(NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) NHL Hockey ^ 7:35 0 Good News 8:00 O High Chaparral O O 0 Trauma Center An elevator accident costs a teenage athlete his leg, and Nursing Supervisor Decker (Eileen Heckart) is attacked by the And same mugger three times, n (1 hr.)
(D P.M. Magazine A strippers convention in Las Vegas.
O O Gimme A Break Nell is enchanted by a man (James Watson Jr.) at her diet workshop, but she later spots him with a female friend.
O 0 Magnum, P.I.
0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
0 This Old House (SPN) Travellers World (SHOW) Gallagher: The Ma(]&-est' The unconventional comedian performs at the East Country Performing Arts Center in San Diego. Calif. (1 hr.)'
(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, 15min.)
(NICK) Against The Odds
Kenyatta And Villa" Jomo Kenyatta, born a Kibuyu tribesman in Kenya, and Pancho Villa. an outlaw, both took up their peoples struggle for freedom and became symbols of their nations
8:050 Movie "Marooned" (1969) Gregory Peck, Richard Crenna Three astronauts find themselves stranded in space when their missile malfunctions (2 hrs., 45 min.)
8:30(1) Carol Burnett And Friends
O O Mamas Family Vint worries about the security of his marriage when Naomi's newly rich ex-husband (Jerry Reed) returns
0 RealThing
(SPN) Sharper Image
(NICK) The Tomdrrow People
'The Vanishing Earth The Tomorrow People turn their attention to a series of disasters, unaware that Ginge has disappeared (Part 1)
9:00 B 700 Club Featured: a look inside Red China; a woman who survived multiple sclerosis (2 hrs.)
BB08ToS d) Merv Grif fn
O O We Got It Made David becomes confused when Claudia and Mickey's birthday cards to him are accidentally switched. O 0 Simon & Simon A blind woman (Cheryl McMannis) hires the Simons to investigate a murder that she alone witnessed. (1 hr.)
0 Jim Bakker
0 Great Railway Journeys Of The World
(SPN) Holland On Satellite (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)
(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Live from Dallas, Tex. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(NICK) Performers Showcase: Great Orchestras Of The World - The Cleveland Orchestra The
Cleveland Orchestra, one of the Big Five in American symphonic activity, was founded in 1918, and plays music by Gershwin, Mozart, Dvorak, Prokofiev and Berlioz, under the direction of conductor Lorin Maazel. (2 hrs., 10 min)
9:30 O 0 0 Its Not Easy Jack and Sharon act as if they are still husband and wife for the benefit of her visiting greatgrandmother.
O O Cheers Carla is temporarily replaced by her promiscuous sister Annette (both played by Rhea Perlman), for whom Cliff promptly falls 10:0000020/20 (5) News
O O Hill Street Blues (Season Premiere) Belker, LaRue and Washington investigate a disturbed man's violent actions at a gay bar, while a vagrant performs deeds while posing as The Cisco Kid. (1 hr.)
O 0 Knots Landing Chips trade-in of Diana's car alerts the police to their whereabouts. (Ihr.)
0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 0 Jazz In America "Dizzy Gillespie" Paquito dRivera, Ed
Sherry, Valerie Capers, Tom Campbell. Tom Macintosh, Michael Howell and Ray Brown join Dizzy Gillespie in a four-song session at Concerts by the Sea in Redondo Beach, CA. (1 hr.)
(SPN) This Is New Zealand 10:15 (HBO) Inside The NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Biioniconti host a review of the previous week's NFL highlights. (1 hr., 15 min.)
10:300 Eagles Nest (USA) Winning Golf Tips 10:50 0 News 11:00 O Another Life BOO OO 00 News (SSoap
0 Today In Bible Prophecy 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus (SPN) Movie (SHOW) Bizarre
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
11:10 (NICK) Great Paintings Featured: Piet Mondrians "Apple Tree In Blossom
11:300 Star Time O O 0 ABC News Nightline S) Thicke Of The Night O O Tonight Host Johnny Carson. Guests: Tim Conway, opera singer Martina Arroyo. (1 hr.)
O Trapper John, M.D. Gonzo ends up taking care of a variety of patients who have come to the hospital from a womens prison. (R)(l hr., 10 min.)
0 Entertainment Tonight Mike Farrell plays a Vietnam veteran in an upcoming TV movie,
0 Doctor In Tbe House (SHOW) Movie "The Exorcist" (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair The young daughter of a popular actress becomes possessed by a demonic spirit which commits evil acts through the occupation of her mind and body. 'R' (2 hrs., 2 min.)
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Olivia NewtoiKlohn In Concert This concert taped in Ogden, Utah features Olivia Newton-John singing such hits as "Physical, "Heart Attack and You're The One That I Want.(l hr, 30 min.)
11:35 (NICK) Nightcap Topic: new forms in the Broadway musical. Guests: top contemporary composers Marvin Hamlisch and Stephen Schwartz.
11:400 The Catlins 11:45 (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments "1973 Dolphins / 1974 Steelers"(R)(lhr.)
12:00 0 Charlies Angels 0 Jim Bakker (USA) Radio 1990 (R)
12:100 Movie "The Nanny (1965) Bette Davis, William Dix (2 hrs.)
12:300 Jack Benny O Tic Tac Dough B PubUc Affairs O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: drug store owner Leon Schwab, comedian George Wallace. (1 hr.)
0 Thicke Of The Night (USA) Pick The Pros (R)
12:40 O Movie The Gift Of Love
(1978) Mane Osmond, Timothy Bottoms. (1 hr, 20 min.)
12:45 (ESPN) Billiards Willie Mos-coni vs. Irving Crane (R) (l hr.) 12:50 (HBO) Movie Ghost Story (1981) Fred Astaire, John Houseman. (1 hr., 50 min.)
1:00 01 Married Joan 0 More Real People O0News (D Mission: Impossible 0 Jewish Voice Broadcast (SPN) Sharper Image (USA) NHL Hockey Washington Capitals at New York Rangers (R) (Subject to blackout) (3 hrs.) 1:300 Love That Bob BO News
O O NBC News Overnight 0 Good News
(SPN) Movie "He Walked By Night" (1948) Richard Basehart, Scott Brady. (1 hr , 45 min.) (SHOW) Loving Friends And Perfect'Couples 1:45 (ESPN) SportsWeek (R) 2:000 Bachelor Father OdjNews
O CBS News Nightwatcfa 0 Jim Bakker
(SHOW) Movie Prince Of The City " (1981) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach. (2 hrs,, 45 min.) 2:100 Movie Its Love Im After " (1937) Leslie Howard. Olivia de Havilland. (1 hr., 50 min.)
2:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:300 Life Of RUey O All In The Family ONews
(ESPN) Auto Racing USAC Championship Dirt Cars (from Rossburg, Ohio). (R) (2 hrs.)
2:45 (HBO) Movie The Bell Jar "
(1979) Marilyn Hassett, Julie Harris, (1 hr., 54 min.)
3:00 0 700 Gub Featured: a look inside Red China; a woman who survived multiple sclerosis, (1 hr., 30 min.)
ONews 3:15 (SPN) Movie Half Shot At Sunrise (1930) Bert Wheeler, Robert Woolsey. (1 hr., 45 min.)
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FRDAY EVENING
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Bonanza
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For Love And Honor
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Movie: "Rescue From Gilligan's Island "
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-f-
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I Jim Bakker
News
0 Bus Report ; Stateline
SPN : Books SHOW' Movie
i Investor
ESPN : SportsCenter i Football
HBO ' Inside The NFL
NICK Do That
USA Radio 1990
Black Beauty
Sports Probe
Wash Week iWallSt.Wk
Money Talks Country Kids
IL Sumrall I Ben Haden
VIct. At Sea , World War I Europe
Looking East
Scandinavian Weekly
Movie: "Some Kind Of Hero"
' Movie: "The Toy"
NFL Game Auto Racing DIRT Schaefer 200
Movie "Five Days One Summer"
Third Eye Tom People j Piano Competition
Movie: "Willie Dynamite"
Movie: "My Favorite Year"
First Edition
At The Met
Hot Spots
6:00 O Treasure Hunt OOOOO0News
i5) WKRP In Cincinnati QD Heritage U S A. Update 0 MacNeil / Lehrer Newsbour (SPN) Telephone Auction (SHOW) Movie Five Days One Summer" (1982)
(HBO) The Hoober-BIoob Highway
(USA) Cartoons 6:05 (D Little House On The Prairie
6:300 The Rifleman 0@ ABCNewsn 15] Taxi ^
OONBCNews O ffi CBS News Good News America (HBO) Sitcom (NICK) Mr. Wizard's World TOOOBonanza O WKRP In Cincinnati O ABC News n (5J 0 Threes ^mpany O O 0 The Jeffersons O Jokers WUd 0 Larry Allen 0 Business Report (SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books
(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Inside The NFL (NICK) You Cant Do That On Television (USA) Radio 1990 7:05 Carol Burnett And Friends 7:30 O Three's Company O P.M. Magazine I5jOM*A*S*H O Family Feud O Tic Tac Dough 0 Alice 0 The Camerons 0 Stateline: Legislative Report (SPN) Investors Action Line (ESPN) Inside Football (NICK) The Adventures Of
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Black Beauty (USA) Sports Probe 7:35 Good News 8:00 O High Chaparral O O World Series Game 3 (from AL champion's city) (3 hrs, 15min.)
(il P.M. Magazine A new type of jeans for woman featuring a back-to-front zipper that allows interchangeable legs O O Mr. Smith O 0 The Dukes Of Hazzard Camp Meeting, U S A.
Washington Week In Review (SPN) Money Talks (SHOW) Movie " Some Kind Of Hero" (1982) Richard Pryor, Margot Kidder. A war veteran turns to a life of crime after the government refuses to give him back pay he earned while being a prisoner of the North Vietnamese for six years. R (1 hr, 35 min)
(ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week
(HBO) Movie Five Days One Summer (1982) Sean Connery, Betsy Brantley An Alpine vacation for a mountaineering Scottish physician and the young woman traveling with him becomes the venue for personal revelation PG' (1 hr, 50 min.) (NICK) The Third E)ye "Under The Mountain" Mr. Jones and the twins strike out for Rangito-to Island, armed with their magic weapons. (Part 7)
(USA) Movie "Willie Dynamite" (1973) Roscoe Orman, Diana Sands. A black pimp sets out to unsettle the nerves of a prominent homosexual in New York City. (2 hrs.)
8:05 Movie Rescue From Gil-ligans Island" (1978) Bob Denver, Alan Hale Jr. Seven shipwrecked castaways encounter hilarious problems when they return to a much-changed civilization after spending years on an uncharted isle. (2 hrs, 15 min.)
8:30HealthBeat O O The Coneheads Animated. Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin and Laraine Newman re-create the voices of their Saturday Night Live" characters in a fantasy that brings them to Elarth on a special mission. WaUftreetWeek (SPN) Country Kids
ijmited Kdition
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(ESPN) Auto Racing "DIRT Schaefer 200" (from Syracuse, N Y.) (2 hrs , 30 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
The Vanishing Earth Worried about Ginges disappearance, Stephen begins a search. (Part 2)
9.00 Q 700 Hub Cl Merv Griffin o o Manimal Jonathan. Brooke and Ty attempt to prove that a Bengal tiger did not kilt a member of a magic troupe during a performance. (1 hr.)
O0 Dallas 0 Jim Bakker Victory At Sea (SPN) Looking Cast (NICK) Sixth Van Clibum International Piano Competition A comprehensive portrait of the 12 semi-finalists in this competition is presented, along with comments from contestants about their art and the rigors of competition in a field of musical endeavor that yields success only to a select few. (Part 2) (1 hr, 5 min.)
9:30 World War I 10:00(1) News O O Fw Love And Honor Grace is injured while helping a recruit whose parachute opened early, and Duke (Keenen Ivory Wayans) confronts his illiteracy. (1 hr.)
O 0 Falcon Crest Julia joins forces with Richard Channing to wrest control of Falcon Crest from Angela. (1 hr.)
Lester Sumrall Teaching Europe: The Mighty Continent
(SPN) Scandinavian Weekly (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.)
(HBO) Movie "My Favorite Year" (1982) Peter OToole, Jessica Harper. A dipsomaniacal former matinee idol has difficulty coping with the pressures of a live TV performance during televisions golden age. PG (1 hr., 35 min.)
(USA) Hot Spote Little Girls & Dream Syndicate (from Hollywood, Calif.) (1 hr.)
10:05 (NICK) First Edition Guest. Gail Godwin, author of A Mother And Two Daughters." 10:20 News 10:30 Ben Haden (NICK) At 1>e Met: Flowen And Gardens Experts on art. flower arranging and gardening explore flowers in paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and explain about plants growing in the medieval garden.s at
the Qoisters, the Mets branch museum for the display of medieval art.
11:000 Another Life Soap
OOO0News
Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(SPN) Scuba World . (ESPN)SportaCenter / -
(NICK) Oscar Kokoschka This documentary profiles the Aus-trian-bom painter, poet and playwright whose life began in 1886 at the start of the rich, self-indulgent "La Bell Epoque" and who lived through two world wars and industrial and social revolutions until his death in 1980.(1 hr.)
(USA) Night Flight Interview with Taco (4 hrs.)
11:15000 News (ESPN) Top Rank Boxing From Dallas, Tex. (R)(2 hrs.', 30 min.)
11:300 Star Time Thicke Of The Night O O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guest: critic Calvin Trillin. (1 hr.)
O Movie Sex And The Single Parent (1979) Susan Saint James, Mike Farrell. Parental responsibilities wreak havoc on two newly divorced people trying to re-enter the social scene. (R) (2 hrs., 15 min )
0 Ekitertainment Tonight Dick Cavett talks about his new book. 0 TbeCatlins Doctor In The House (SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoors
11:40 (HBO) Not Necessarily The News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric takeoff
11:450 O 0 ABC News Night-line
12:000 This Week In Country Music
Night Tracks (SPN) Life Of Riley (SHOW) US Fesval 83: Day 1 Highlights of the first day of a four-day music festival held on Memorial Day Weekend include performances by The Clash, Men at Work, A Flock of Seagulls, English Beat, Oingo Boin-go. Wall of Voodoo, INXS and DiVinyls (1 hr, 30 min.)
12:10 (HBO) Movie "The Exorcist (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair. (2 hrs., 2 min.)
12:300 Jack Benny O O Friday Night Videos Musical mini-features highlight tunes by Styx. Lionel Richie, KLss, Culture Club, The Motels and Spandau Ballet. (1 hr., 30 min)
Th Dally Reflector, Greanvllle, N.C. Sunday. October 9, 1983 TV-9
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Monday-Friday Daytime Cont.
(Continued From Page 4)
News (Tue) Westbrook HospiUl (Wed) Jerry Falwell (Thu) Jimmy Swaggart (Fri)
School Special (SPN) Crafts N Things (Tue) Sewing With Nancy (Wed) American Baby (Thu)
(SHOW) Aerobicise (Mon, Wed, Fri)
(SHOW) Movie (Tue) "It Came From Hollywood" (1982)
(HBO) Movie (Thu) "Goin South (1978)
(NICK) Todays Special (USA) Sonya 2:300 At Home With Beverly Nye (Mon) Family Chef (Tue) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Cleaning Up Your Act (Thu) Together Shirley And Pat Boone (Fri)
Insight (Fri)
O 0 Capitol
The Lesson (Mon) Oral Roberts (Tue) Pattern For Living (Wed)
What On Earth (Mon) EJqual Justice (Tue) Educational Programming (Wed) Case Studies (Thu, Fri)
(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (Mon) Japan 120 (Tue, Thu) Scandinavian Weekly (Wed) Holland On Satellite (Fri)
(SHOW) Murder Among Friends (Mon)
(SHOW) Movie (Wed) "Gray Lady Down" (1978KThu) "Trail Of The Pink Panther' (1982KFri) " Ball Of Fire" (1942) (ESPN) Rodeo (R) (Fri)
(HBO) Olivia Newton-John In Concert (Tue)
(HBO) Movie (Wed) "Tell Me A Riddle " (1980i(Fri) Dance Of The Dwarfs '(1983)
(NICK) Dustys Treehouse 3:00 0 700 Club O O 0 General Hospital I He-Kian / Masters Of The Universe O O Fantasy O 0 Guiding Light PTL Seminar To Be Announced (Mon, Wed, Fri) Staff Development (Tue, Thu)
(ESPN) CFL FootbaU (Mon)
Instructional Series (Wed)
(NICK) What Will They Think Of Next? (Mon, Wed, Fri) Kids Writes (Tue, Thu)
(USA) Alive And Well'
3:05 0 Funtime
3:15 (ESPN) Instructional Series (Wed)
3:30 The Flintstones Pre-General Eklucational Development (Mon) General Educational Development (Tue, Thu) Adult Basic Education (Wed, Fri)
(SPN) Hello Jerusalem (Wed)
This Is New Zealand (Fri) (SHOW) Phenomenon Of Benji (Tue)
(ESPN) College Football (Tue) LA '83 (Wed)
(HBO) Video Jukebox (Mon) (NICK) You Cant Do That On Television (Mon, Wed, Fri) Going Great (Tue, Thu)
3:35 The Flintstones 4:00 O Another Life O Whats Happening!'
O Woody Woodpecker And Friends
15j Tom And Jerry O Little House On The Prairie O Witney The Hobo O The Waltons 0 Eight Is Enough 0 Cartoons (Mon, Wed-Fri) Herself The Elf (Tue)
Today With Lester Sumrall (Mon) Kenneth Copeland (Tue) Time Of Deliverance (Wed) Calvary Temple Hour (Thu) Ford Philpot(Fri)
Sesame Street (R) n (SHOWj The Thunderbifds (Tue) (ESPN) Auto Racing (Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Mon, Fri) "The Glacier Fox' (1978)
(HBO) The Hoober-Bloob Highway (Tue) Sugar Ray's All-Stars (Wed) The Incredible Book Escape (Thu)
(NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty 4:05 The Ministers 4:30 O Bullseye O CHiPs Patrol O Good Times < 53 Pink Panther O The Brady Bunch 0BJ/Lobo
(Continued On Page 12)
Bright Ideas From S(iffel
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5;00OAU In The Family Q) Eagle's Nest 5:05 0 Night Tracks 5:300 News Today In Bible Prophecy 6:00 O The Blackwood Brothers O0News (5) Jimmy Swaggart O Little House On The Prairie 0 Captain Kangaroo 0 Telestory S) Zola Levitt
(SPN) Movie "Lei s Get Tough
(1942)
(ESPN) Rodeo (R)
6:30 B Jimmy Houston Outdoors OCartooos OUC Rascals 0 Great Space Coaster 0 Pirate Adventures (HBO) Flashback. The Great Plague 7:00 B Superbook 0 Post 5 Reports (D Vegetable Soup O0Cartoons O A Better Way O Captain Kangaroo 0 Kidsworld 0 Jim Bakker
0 General Educational Development
(SHOW) C.B. Heroes (NICK) Pinwheel (USA) Alive And WeU!
7:05 0 Between The Lines 7:15 O Rocky And Friends 7:30 B Flying House 6 O The Jetsons fs I Newsbag O Treefaouse Gub 0 Benji, Zai And The Alien Prince
General Educational Development
(HBO) Sugar Ray s All-Stars 7:35 0 Romper Room 8:00 B Contact 000Scooby Doo / Menudo s The Jetsons
O O The Flintstone Funnies O 0 The Biskitts 0 Mr Mustache And Company 0 Making It Count (SPN) Post Time (SHOW) Movie Ransom" (1956) (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (HBO) Movie Taps' (1981)
(USA) Scholastic Sports Acade-my
8:05 0 Starcade
8 30 B O 0 The Monchhichis / Little Rascals Richie Rich 5 Tom And Jerry O O The Shirt Tales O 0 Saturday Supercade Contact 0 Making It Count (SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoors (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) Woman Watch 8:35 0 Movie This Savage Land i]968i 8:45 (ESPN) Instructional Series
9:000 The Lesson L5 Incredible Hulk OS Smurfs n 0 Grek SqiuiC 0 Understanding Human Behavior
(SPN) Crafts'NlUngs (ESPN) Hydroplaiie Radng ' (USA)Co-Ed 9:300 Weekend Gardener 0 0 0 Pac-Man / RMk Cube/Menudo O 0 Dungeons And Dragons InsideTrack
0 Understanding Human Behavior
(SPN) Sewing With Nancy (USA) Winning Golf Tipa 10:000 Movie The Vanishmg American" (1955)
(D Six Million Dollar Man Q0The Dukes 0 Jinomy Swaggart 0 Business Of Management (a*N)Ck)untry Kids (SHOW) Movie Cry Terror' (1958)
(ESPN) NFL Game Of The Week(R)
(HBO) Inside The NFL (USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
10:300 00 Hie Littles 0 B Alvin And The Chipmunks
O 0 Charlie Brown And Snoopy
0 Business Of Management (SPN) Good Life (ESPN) Inside Football (R)
(USA) Sports Probe 10:350 Movie Tripoli" (1950) 11:000 0 0 Puppy / Scooby Doo / Schoolhouse Rock (5) Movie "Jungle Book (1942) OOMr.T
O Benji, Zai And The Alien Prince
0Soul Train 0 Jim Bakker 0 Money Puizle (ESPN) SportsWeek (R)
(HBO) Video Jukebox (NICK) Kids Writes (USA) Sports Look 11:30 O O Amaxing Spider-Man / Incredible Hulk O Bugs Bunny / Road Runner 0 Money Puzzle (SPN) The A Play (ESPN) Alpine Ski School (HBO) Movie Treasure Of The Four Crowns "(1982)
(NKJK) The Tomorrow Peopk (USA) Pick The Pros 12:00 0 The Westerners 0 Lome Greenes New Wilderness
0 0 ABC Weekend Specials O 0 NCAA Today 0 Jack Van Impe Computer Programme (SPN) Telephone Auction (SHOW) Movie "Mv Favorite Year" (1982)
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jevoAadLou Aagdes IZJieriMBiDHidnk C O00WorU Series OCutoons BThuBdarr OONCAAFootbaO 0Sigu Of The Times SDeiag ta Disdpiiiie (ESPN) Motacycie Radag (NICK) Staadby._Lights! Camera! Actx!
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12J50 Movie L^end Of The Lost(1957) l.-MO Mo^ Tliunder Over Arizona(1956)
(D Movie A Ma' Called Sledge (1971) OADIaTheFanui;
O Little Hoase On The Prairie 0 Father John Bertoiucci 0 lalenaatianal Editioo (SPN) Name Of The Game Is Gotf
(USA) Desi^ For Liviag l:MOSpectiwm6 0 Heritage U3A Update (SPN) Photographer's Eye (ESPN)^nrtsWeek (HBO) Movie Legend Of The Wild (1980)
(NICK) Guiag Great (USA) Scholastic Sports Academy
IMO Movie The Taking Of Pelham One. Two. Three" (1974) O The Immigrants 0 Joy Jmictian DoctorWho (SPN) Personal Compater (9K)W) Ifovie "Waltz Across Texas (1982)
(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing (NICK) The Adyentures Of Black Beauty
(USA) Movie Willie Dvnamite " (1973)
2:30OCaU Of The West DoctorWho
(SPN) Compamon Dog Training (NICK) Livewire 2:500 Movie The Black Whip " (1956)
3tWO Movie "Riding Wild" (1935)
(5) Movie Big Jake (1971)
0 Athletes In Actkn DoctorWho (SPN) Financial Inquiry 3 300 00 NCAA Football Zola Levitt 0 American Adventure (SPN) Scuba World (HBO) Movie Tell Me A Riddle" (1980)
(NICK) Special Delivery
4:00 0 Wyatt Earp O Movie The Dafv The Earth Stood SUIT (19511 O Hospitality House Q 0 Horse Racing 0 PTL Gub (Spanish) Quilting
(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (SHOW) The Sound Of Murder (NICK) Special Ddivery (USA) Adveittiires In Paradise
4:300 Wagon Train O Christian Childrens Fnd HighChapaml 0 Folk Ways
(NICK) Yoa Cant Do That On Television 5M(DSoal Train O Wrestling O To Be AnoooncedMaud gets the Point; CBS goes movie-crazy
By Peter Meade
Jolffi' Scteidcr will GRljr appear in two-thirds to three-fourths of this years Dukes of Hazzard" episodes. He will not be replaced by someone during his absences. Co-star and co-pilot Tom Wopat will have to drive the General Lee solo... Look for Priscilla Presley as part of this years goings-on on Dallas She'll be the one with Bobby Ewing . (Patrick Daffy) on her arm... Maad Adams, last seen in Octopussy will be Dennis Weavers love interest in the new CBS series Emerald Point, N.A.S. It was originally called Navy - which explains the locale and is being done by Esther and Richard Shapiro of Dynasty" fame, w
Maud Adams
Barney Rosenzweig, the producer of the defunct Cagney & Lacey," says it cost $670,000 to complete a one-hour program.. James Brolin isn't sad that his "Marcus Welby" days are over. He's not riding that motorcycle anymore as he did as Dr Steve Kiley. Peter McDermott. his character on ABC's Hotel." has moved up in the world. He owns four-wheeled transportation: a Porsche.. Morgan Brittany of Dallas is happy that her Friday night series will no longer be airing vs NBC's "Knight Rider Her husband. Jack Gill, does a lot of the stunt driving for David Hasselhoff Knight Rider" will move to Sundays for its second season.
CBS is starling the new sea-
0 Movie Dogpound Shuffle" (1974)
0 Heritage U.S.A Update 0 Woodwrigbts Shop (ESPN) Auto Radng (HBO) Yideo Jukebox (NICK) Against The Odds (USA) Co-Ed 5:360 Lowdl Lundstrom 0 This OM House (HBO) Sugar Rays All-Stars (NICK) Reggie Jacksons World OfSpoils (USA) Radio 1990 5:35 0 Motorweek Hlustrated
son with movies scheduled on Tuesday, Wednesday and Sat urday nights. But come December, says Steve Mills, the networks vice president, motion pictures for television and miniseries, one movie night will be axed and replaced by new series. One might possibly be Four Seasons," based on the 1981
movie starring and scripted by Alan Alda. However, the scries would not include the former "M'A^S'H " star. CBS also has a Universal comedy called Domestic Life" waiting in the bullpen. And if the situation ever gets desperate, they may unveil the long-awaited Mama Malone," which has been on the shelf -for more than a year. In case you don't remember Mama, the half-hour sitcom stars Lila Kaye as Brooklyns version of Julia Child
On Friday, Oct. 14, Mr. Smith dons his hospital garb to help out a team of brain surgeons on NBCs new comedy Mr. Smith.
(Stations reserve t)ie rigtit to malte last-minute ctianges /
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Sports This Week
SUNDAYS SPORTS 0CnER,lM3 10:000 Ttrhel Football Hi(hU(hts
O North Carolina State Coaches Show ODtcfcCnm list e Dike FMtball Highllfkts
O NFL tS Sunday Chronicles profiles San Diego Chargers quarterback Dan Fouts.
O NFL Today 1:00 O Soathem Sportanan O NFL Football Coverage of Buffalo at Miami, Denver at Houston or New York Jets at Geveiand (3 hrs.)
O NFL Football Washington Redskins at St. Louis Cardinais (3 hrs.)
4:00 O NFL Football Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Dallas Cowboys (3 hrs.)
4:0 BasebaU NL Playoff Game 5 - NL West Champion at NL East Champion (If necessary)
7:590 Baseball AL Playoff Game 5 Baltimore Orioles at Chicago White Sox (If necessary)
MONDAYS SPORTS OCTOBER 10,1983
9:00 O NFL Football Pittsburgh Steelers at Cincinnati Bengals . g(3hrs.)
TUESDAYS SPORTS 0CT(ER11,1983 8:000 World Series Game 1 (from AL champion's city) (3 hrs . 15 min )
WEDNESDAYS SPORTS OCTOBER 12,1983
8:000 World Series Game 2 (from AL champion's city) (3 hrs.lSmin)
FRIDAYS SPORTS
OCTOBER 14,1983
8:000 World Series Game 3 (from AL cbampion's city) (3 hrs, 15 mini
SATURDAYS SPORTS OCTOBER IS. 19U 12:000 NCAA Today (Suiting time subject to change )
12:300 World Series Game 4 (from the NL champion's city).
(Note: If LA Dodgers are NL champions, this game will be seen at 4:00 EDT, .and NCAA Football will be seen at 12 00 FF>T.)(3hrii.) , ,
O NCAA Football (Suiting time subject to change.) (3 hrs., 30 min.)
3:310 NCAA FootbaU (Note. If L A. Dodgers are NL champions, NCAA Football will be seen at 12:00 EOT, and Game 4 of the
World Series will be seen at 4:00 EDT). (3 hrs., 30 min.)
4:00 QD Horse Racing The Jockey Club Goid Cup race for , year-oid thoroughbreds and the Champagne SUkes for two-year-oid thoroughbreds (live from Belmont Park in Flmont N.Y.)(lhr.)
5480Wreling 11:300 Sports Saturday 11:450 Wrestling
Saturday Evening
Pittsburgh travels to Cincinnati
/mofNi
Phone Locally
758-0696
Two -former AFC powerhouses. the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Cincinnati Bengals, will meet in Riverfront Stadium on the banks of the Ohio River, on ABC's ' .Monday .Night Football." Oct. 10 (9 p.m.-conclusion). These two Central Division teams last played over a year ago, with the Steelers winning 26-20 in overtime.
Although Pittsburgh is in a better position this season than Cincinnati, neither, team is the dominant gridiron force it once was The Bengals got off to a miserable 3-0 start before finally squeaking by the equally hapless Tampa Bay Buccaneers for their first win
With defensive end Ross Browner having served his four-game suspension for drug-related charges, the Bengals' aerial corps are in better shape than in the early going However, even if Cini innati gets through the season. rebuilding will be tough, with two ot their top receivers, Cris Collinsworth anii Dan Ross, headeti for the USFL.
The Steelers. who were named the NFL's Team of the Decade for the 1970s, seem to be evolving into their former selves, but still lack consistency. Although the Steelers were world champions tour times in six years, there are only nine players left on the team who played m all four Super Bowls
One of them. Franco Harris, is firmly entrenched in the NFL record books for recently eclipsing O.J. Simpson as the NFL's second all-time leading rusher 'Harris is less than 1.000 yards away from surpassing career rushing leader Jim Brown i. The impact of Harris' record-breaking feat two weeks ago was somewhat diminished because Pit-
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tsburgh lost that game when the New England Patriots rallied m the final minutes to pull out a 28-23 upset.
The Penn State graduate is also in the record books for his outstanding postseason play, holding the NFL marks for rushing '1,523!, 100-yard games '5' and touchdowns '16' If the 33-year-old Harris can rush for 1.000 yards thi> season and Washington's 34-year-old John Riggms doesn't, he will become the second oldest player to accomplish that feat former Steeler John Henry Johnson was 35 when he gamed over I.0(>) yards in 1964 A 1,000-yard season would alsd break a tie Hjrris shares with Jim Brown for the most l.ijOO-yard seasons 7
Besides 12-year veteran Harris, the Pitbhurgh backi'ield features second-year running back Walter Abercrombie, who wa.> the Steeler> No 1 draft pick in 1982 Abercrombie is one of three Steeler backs from Baylor, with Frank Pollard and Greg Hawthorne
Lovely Weekend
Tern Vandenbosch Frannie Hughes. .As the World Turns recently spent a rorriantic weekend at the West Point Academy Ball as the date of her childhood sweetheart, senior cadet Elnc Besch Dressed in a gorgeous gown borrowed from her ATWT's' wardrobe. Tern felt a lot like a mixiern-day Cinderella at the formal dinner-dance
1 think all the military wives who were there must sit around watching soap opera?. ba:ause they all knew that 1 played Frannie They asked a million questions about what was going to happen in my story line and what star? are really like off-camera 1 lovod every minute of it' says Tern
The young actress admits, however, that she was a little nervous because she didn t know-much about West Point etiquette Yet. de?pite her ner-vousne?s about the so ial graces. Tern ku ked off the high-heeled ?hoes that were, killing her and ?pent the nighl dancing barefoot'
, Tern might riot win any points ' with Emily Post for a move like that, but soap viewer? sure love her
SAl
rURDAY
EVENING
1
7:0G
1 7;SS
8:00 I 8:30
9:00
9:30 ; 10:00 I 10:30
O
Alias Smitti And Jones '
Movie: -A Walk In The Son "
Sing Out Amenca
o
Hee Haw
TJ Hooker ^ LoveBoat
Fantasy Island
o
'ncws
[Saturday
T.J. Hooker
Cove Boat
Fantasy Island
3's Company
M-A-S*H
StarSearch
MervGnffin
News PageRve
o
Dance Fever
Am. Top Ten
! 1 I
; Drfl Strokes : Spoons
TheRousters
' TheYeiowRose '
o
Hee Haw
Difl Strokes {Spoons
TheRousters
The Yelow Rose
o
I Sold Gold
Cutter To Houston
Movie "Trackdown Fmdmg The Goodbw KMer
m
: News
; RcAdctions
HeeHaw
Movie Trackdown F-indmg The GoodbwKer
0
Wrestling
' T.J. Hooker
lujveBoat
^ Fantasy Island
0 'Wrestling
NCAA Footbal: Baylor vs Texas AAM
0
God's News
RockChurcti
J, Vi Impe
I
Jim Bakker
Kennetti Copeland
0
W4dAmenca
: Anrmais
Jacques Cousteau
Andre Wans
Montoya
SPN
Japan 120
TNs Is New Zealand Movie
SHOW
Faene Tale TTieatre
Paper Chase
Movie M-v Favorte vear
ESPN
NFLGwne
SponsCenter
. Saturday Nighi At The Rghts
HBO
Movie- Taps
Movre LoveCMd
On .xation
NICK
Speoal Delivery
Gotng Great ''hird Eye
VII rteratwaicraiiiDvs. CompetrtKy
USA
Dragnet
Dragnet
Ovation
A.^red - :ncoc* p-esers
8.^0 The Mooroa (DFame OOONews
Hie Blackwood Brotben Htanic In A Tvb: The GokJeo A^ Of Toy Boats (SPN)HoUaad On Satellite (SHOW) Dvan Dnru (HBO) Movie Taps" (1981)
(USA) Hot Spots 8:10 (D Wresing 8:30 00 NBC News OCBSNews 9) Breath Of Life S Sneak Previews (NICK) Mr. Wiiards World 7:00 O Alias Smith And Jones O O Hee Haw OfDNews 1j Three's Company O Dance Fever OSoUdGoU O Wrestling
Gods News Behind The News
S Wild America
(SITf) Japan 128
(SHOW) Faerie Tale Theatre
(ESPN) NFL Game Of The
Week(R)
(NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Dragnet 7:38 O Carolina Satorday M*A*S*H
O Americas Top Ten OReflectioa SRockChirch S Wild, Wild World Of Animals (GSPN)SportsCeater (USA) Dragnet 7:55 (S Red Man Football Report 8J80 Movie "A Walk In The Sun" (1946) Dana Andrews. Richard Conte Amencan inian-trymen staooed ui luly during World War II move steadily toward their objective. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 TJ. Hooker A Eurasian beauty (Patricia Thomson) clues Hooker into a gang of cruninals transporting illegal ^ weapons through Chinatown n (1 hr)
Li) Star Search
O 0 Diff rent Stroks Arnold's first day at junior high school finds him bemg endlessly compared to WUlis O Cntter To I O Hee Haw
Undersea World Of Jacqns CoMstean
(SHOW) Paper Chase Plague Of Locusts Hart is tom between ideals and prestige when two vastly different law firms each him a summer job (1 hr)
(HBO) Movie Love Child (19821 .Amy Madigan. Beau Bridges A pregnant inmate in a women's prison wags a battle to keep her child, who was fathered by a married guard R (1 hr. 35 min. I
(NICK) Going Great Rocket buffs get together for a rocketry meet host Chns Makepeace is interviewed for a magazine by and for kids; an 18-year-old soccer star who is joining the big league.
(USA) Ovation Outbreak of Love Spring Returning" (Part Ir. The Chihuahuan Dsert Tn-logy: Land of Lost Borders (Part 1), The Maharajas Imperialism by Conspiracy" (2 hrs i
8:05 0 NCAA Football Baylor vs TexasA4M(3hrs , 15 min.)
8:30 O O Silver Spoons (Season Premiere) Ricky and Derek bypass a scout convention to have a fling with two older girls
3). Jack Vanlmpe
(ESPN) Saturday Night At The
FightS(Live)i2 hrs . 30 min.) (NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mounuin'' .Now that they know about the aliens' secret labyrinth. Rachel and Theo are in even greater danger (Part 5)
9:M O O 0 Love Boat n 1 Merv Griffin O O The Roosten O 0 Movie Trackdown: Finding The Goodbar Killer" (Premiere) George Segal. Shelley-Hack. While probing the bruul murder of a young schoolteacher, a New York City detective is aided by one of the victim s former colleagues. (2 hrs)
0 JimBakker
0 Andre Watts With llie Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra
Andre Watts performs Beethovens Piano Concerto No. 5 ("The Emperor") with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra under the direction of John Nelson d hr, 30 min.)
(SPN) This Is New Zealand (SHOW) Movie My Favonte Year" (1982) Peter O'Toole, Jessica Harper. A dipsomaniacal former matinee idol has difficulty coping with the pressures of a live TV performance during television's golden age PG' (1 hr . 35 min.)
(NICK) VII International Tchaikovsky (Competition The
suspense, pain, excitement and joy of this Olympics Of Music" are captured in a penetrating look at one of the world's most prestigious musical competitions m .Moscow (1 hr , 45 min ) 19:00 O Sing Out America O O 0 Fantasy Island A housewife 'Katherine Helmond) attempts to demonstrate the dif-(Contlnued On Page 12)
n.000,000
Major Medical Hospital Plan At Extra Low Rates...
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Mane- a ca:c 'O'- ''ex
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TV-12 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Sunday. October 9. 1983
Saturday Evening Continued
(Continued From Page 11)
ficulty of her duties to her husband. and a prostitute (Melinda fuleai seeks a genuine relationship nd hr.) s News
O O The Yellow Rose Roy
investigates a murder of which Strongheart (Will Sampson) has been accused by Jeb Hollister (Chuck Connors) (l^hr ) ffi Kenneth Copeland (SPN) Movie
(HEO) On Location Kddie Murphy - Delirious ' This comedy superstar makes his uncensored television stand-up solo debut tx'fore an audience at Constitution Hall in Washington, DC (1 hr I
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents 10:30 5 Page Five ffi Carlos Montoya In Concert
The master of the classical guitar performs
10 45 (NICK) A Night At Asti's American .soprano Ashley Fut-nam hosts a visit to landmark New York Italian restaurant Asti s. where the patrons and the employees join to sing operatic favorites.
11 00 O Rock Church Proclaims OOOOOffi0News 5 Odd Couple
ffi In Touch Twilight Zone (SHOW) Bizarre (ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie Halloween III: Season Of The Witch" (1982) Tom Atkins, Stacey 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 father's gruesome murder R'(l hr, 35 mm.)
(USA) Night Flight ' Quarter-fla.sh ' (4 hrs )
'1115000 ABC News 11:20 A Finite World "China" A documentary which examines China's "one couple, one child" policy developed to stem the tide of the huge population explosion IS presented (Part 2) 11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Topic:
opera tiuests: coloratura soprano Roberta Peters of the Metropolitan Opera; Grace Bumbry, the first black to sing at the Bayreuth Festival in Europe; soprano Wilhemenia Fernandez, star of the French film "Diva." 11:30 O John Ankerberg O Solid Gold O Sports Saturday ffl Movie "Chino" (1973) Charles Bronson, Vincent Van Patten. A teenage boy befriends a half-breed and helps him to run his. New Mexican" horse ranch. (2 hrs.) o o Saturday Night Live Hosts: Rhea Perlman ("Cheers") and Danny DeVito Guest: Eddy Grant (1 hr . 30 mm.)
O Dance Fever Movie "The Eagle Has Landed" (1977) Michael Caine. Donald Sutherland A highly trained Nazi commando unit infiltrates England during World War II in order to kidnap Prime Minister Winston Churchill (2 hrs.)
Movie "Murder By Death" (1976) Peter Falk, Peter Sellers An eccentric millionaire invites five world-famous detectives to his mansion where he challenges them to solve a murder in which he's the victim. (2 hrs., 20min.)
Q) Lowell Lundstrom Twilight Zone (SHOW) Movie "Superchick (1973) Joyce Jillson, Tony Young A shy airline hostess finds adventure when she assumes the aggressive persona of her alter ego "R" (1 hr., 35^ mm)
(ESPN) CFL Football Montreal Concordes at Edmonton Eskimos (3 hrs.)
11:45 O Wrestling
11:50 Night Tracks
12:00 O Beyond The Horizon: U.S.
/ Japan Magazine O Star Search QD Jim Bakker (SPN) Looking Elast 12:05 Night Tracks 12:30 O Soul Train 12:45 0 Movie Rabbit, Run" (1970) James Caan, Anjanette Comer (1 hr, 55 min.)
(HBO) Movie "Jinxed'" (1982) Bette Midler, Ken Wahl (1 hr, 45 mm.)
1:00 O The American Trail O Music Magazine O Christopher Closeup O Soul Train PTL Gub (Spanish)
(SPN) Joe Burton Jazz 1:05 Night Tracks (SHOW) Movie "Exorcist II The Heretic" (1977) Richard Burton, Linda Blair. (1 hr.. 57 mm )
J 30 0700 Club
(Ti Movie Casino" (1979) Mike Connors, Gary Bilrghoff. (2 hrs.) O Americas Top Ten O News 1:50 Movie "The Manchu Elagle Murder Caper Mystery " (1973) Jackie Coogan, Gabriel Dell. (2 hrs.)
2.000 All In The Family Jim Bakker
(SPN) Movie "Algiers"" (1938) Charles Boyer, Hedy Lamarr (2
hrs.)
2:05 Night Tracks 2:30 O News (ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie "Prince Of The City" (1981) Treat Williams. Jerry Orbach (2 hrs , 45 min.) 2:40 O News
2:50 (SHOW) Movie Das Boot " (1981) Juergen Prochnow, Arthur Gruenemeyer. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
3:00 O Heritage Singers Rei Humbard (ESPN) Saturday Night At The Fights (R)
(USA) Night Flight "Quarter-flash"" (R)
3:05 Night Tracks 3:300 Hi, Doug if) Movie " Half A Sixpence " (1968) Tommy Steele, Julia Foster. (2 hrs, 30 min.) o All In The Family Phil Arms 4:00 O Westbrook Hospital oo News D. James Kennedy (SPN) Movie " Salome Where She Dances " (1945) Yvonne de Carlo, Rod Cameron. (2 hrs., 30
4:05 Night Tracks 4:30 0 Ross Bagley
Monday-Friday Daytime Cont
(Continued From Page 9)
Sign Of The Times (Wed)
Mow Can I Live" (Fri)
(SPN) Paul Ryan (SHOW) Movie (Mon) "Mysterv At ("astle Hou.se (1982KThu) Marco Polo. Jr"(1973)
(SHOW) The Thunderbirds (Tue) Sunshine's On The Way (Wed) Hot wheels (Fri)
(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing (Fri) (HBO) Movie (Tuei Hugo And Josefin''(1969)
(HBO) Fraggle Rock (Wed)
^ (NICK) The Third Eye (Mon,
Wed, Frii Against The Odds iTue, Thu)
4 35 The Brady Bunch ,
5 00 O Tic Tac Dough O Sanford And Son 5 Love Boat
O People's Court O Gomer Pyle O Andy Griffith Threes Company 100 Huntley Street ffi Mister Rogers (R)
(SPN) Life Of Riley (Mon) Telephone Auction (Tue. Thu) Insight (Wed) Looking East tFri)
(SHOW) The 'hiunderbuds (Tue) Robbers. Rooftops And Witches (Fri)
(ESPN) Sportswoman (Wed) (HBO) Its Hard To Be A Penguin (Wed) Olivia Newton-John In Concert (Thu)
(NICK)-The Tomorrow People (USA) Adventures In Paradise 5:05 Starcade 5:30 0 Lets Make A Deal O Sanford And Son O Andy Griffith News
O WKRP In Cincinnati
O M*A*SH
Peoples Court ffi Doctor Who
(SPN) Money, Money, Money (Mon) Investor's Action Line (Wed)
(SHOW) Animalympics (Wed) (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R)
(Wed)
(HBO) Movie (,Mon) "Harrys War"(1981)
(HBO) Fraggle Rock (Fri)
(NICK) Livewire 5:35 Beverly Hillbillies (SHOW) Movie (Tue) "The Pride Of The Yankees" (1942)
Willie Nelson will host the 17th annual Country Music Association Awards with Anne Murray. The ceremonies will be broadcast live on CBS from the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tenn.. on Monday, Oct. 10.
(Stations reserve Uie right to make last-minute changes)
MENS WEAR
AUSTIN REED^.
()t RK.I NI srRFU .5LONDON PRIDE: THE HAMPSTEAD TWEED . BY AUSTIN REED-
Its been said the British pride themselves on taking their leisure seriously. Consider the Hampstead Tweed Sport Coat. It combines classic lines with an elegant Shetland wool fabric in natural oyster tones. The effect is dashing, yet consummately correct. Just part of Austin Reeds Regent Street Collection. British styling, tailored in the U.S.A., for the American man.
At All Our Fine StoresMENS WEARDowntown Greenville Carolina East Mall Tarrytown Mall - Rocky Mount
z
M40 OFF
Microwave Oven with Whole-meal Cooking and 2-stage Memory!
Regular $499.99. Features 2-stage memory; set to cook, then roast. Or any other 2 functions. Delay start. Digital clock. Temperature probe, lets you cook by time or temperature. Automatic hold/warm. Hurry, sale ends October 22 at Sears!
Quartz precision electronic tuner accurately putts in signals.
color
AFC, color, tint, brightness, contrast.
Cobr TV witl^ Quartz Tunar
Regular $549.99.112 channels, cable ready. 1-buttbn color, adjusts color, tint, brightness, contrast and AFC. Big, 19-In. diagonal measure picture. Sale ends Oct. 29.
nSO OFF
P*r6n) Itvhom# viMrina, not for uMOt that might violato copyright laws.
SAVE MOO! Video Cassette Recorder
449
Reg. $549.99. VHS has 6-hr./10-day/1-program capability. Remote control with pause/still. Hurry, sale ends Oct. 11.
13101/65151
SAV^*20-40 on
Kenmdr Washer/Dryer
washer, reg. $339.99 dryer, reg $269.99
299 249
Washer has 2-cycles, 3 water temperatures, 2 water levels. Dryer is large capacity to handle big loads. Sale ends October 15.
*210.OFFI
Kenmore Laundry Pair Dual-Action^^ agitator Washer with 8-cycles
379
Reg. $499.99. Oual-Action agitator gets large, loads uniformly clean. 5 wash/rinse temperatures, 5 water levels. Sale ends October 29.
Fabric Master Dryer
279
Reg. $369.99. Features automatic termination. Heat shuts off at preset dryness selected. Has 2 temperatures. Sale ends October 22.
Installation charge on washers and dryers. Dryer cords are sold separately.
92731
SAVE MOO! I8.0cu:ift.
Kenmore Refrigerator
SAVE M80! 30-in. Kenmore Electric Range
499
399
99
Reg. $599.99. Features twin crispers and adjustable shelves. Sale ends October 15. Model with icemaker, reg. $699.99.......................599.99
Reg. $579.99. Continuous cleaning oven to help clean spatters at baking temperatures. Clock. Sale ends Oct. 29. Range cord is extra.
; *50OFFI Block/
; Whito Portoblo TV
79
r Reg. S129.99. 12-in. diag. C- meaa. picture. Take it - anywhere. Battery pack ex-. tra. Sate ends Oct. 28.
30OFFI StorM Cossotto Rocordor
13101/65151 Knmor .
Woshr or Dryor
22098
*80 OFF I 9.0 cu. ft. Freezsr
99
washer
dryer
*200 OFF I 22.0 *40 OFF!
cu. ft. S!d-by-Sicle. Canister Vac
299 229 299
999
l99
99
iM
Reg. $129.99. AM/FM/SW mini stereo. Play/record cassettes. AC/OC. Batteries extra. Thru October 29.
Washer has 3 wash/nnse temperatures Dryer has 2 timed cycles. Thru Oct. 29
^ Laifgo ItBmo ^h as appllancaalrB Iriventortecl Ih our diatributtoh cantar and arfit ba fiEJhadutad for dallva^ or pick-up, dallvery Is extra.
EMh of tlma advaftM itafna ia laf^ avaiiabia^^^^f^ aia^aa" advertised.
Reg. $379.99. Has shelves In door and lift.out basket. Great tor small spaces. Sale ends October 22.
Reg. $1199.99. 14.3 cu. ft. refrigerator, 7.7-cu. ft. freezer. Icemakec hook-up Is extra. Thru Oct. 29.
Reg. $139.99 Powerful suction for deep cleaning. With attachments. Thru Oct. 11
"Stam-typ" Carpet Cleaner
99
Sprays hot solution into carpet. Vac up liquid and dirt. Dries last. Thru Oct.
*100 OFF! LP Gas Grill
149
Reg. $249.99. Dual controls, side shelf. On wheels, rolls easily Comes unassembl-ed. Sale ends October 29.
Sdara PrtcinoPoHoy , Ifanitamla orapaoliliHirch|^jtiatiti 01^ though fiol iadticaA;i)| n
drica. A ^lal pur-, vaha.
k
10/9/83
YUUR
CHOICE
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Collectable autumn classics
I
at a tiny price: corduroy jeans, cardigans and pullovers for misses!
Leather upper casuals so comfortable we called them Super Soft"
Reg. $32.99
Women, step in Super Soft shoes! Timeless styling and comfort features like cushioned insoles and tricot linings. Man-made soles. Ladies sizes. Sale ends October 22.
V
I Timeless Comforf'^bro
, 799
Reg. $11.50 /
Lace cup bra has flat seams in natural or contour cups. D and DO cup sizes available at similar savings.
^ Blue Package Panties^^ Reg. $8 C99
^ -J Pkg
^ Package of 3
/panties of ace tate tricot with cotton-line crotch '$9 Extra-sizes 6.99
Shadow panel slips of An-trom* III nylon, Reg. $10 .6.99
$8 Half slip............5.99
Sale ends October 22
SAVE *20
Maxi-Taxi baby stroller
Reg. $69.99 49^^
Molded plastic shell, folds easily using one hand. Makes taking baby for a walk easy.
SAVE *10
One Step car seat
Reg. $59.99 49^^
Faces rear for infants and front for toddlers. Keep your baby safe when traveling.
SAVE *1
Infant separates
Sweatshirt of easy-care acrylic,
Reg. $6.99 ............5.99
Corduroy pants. Cotton and polyester pants in sizes S, M, L.
Reg. $3.99 ..............2.99
Turtlenecks. Perma-Prest tops In infant's sizes S, M, L.
Reg. $4.49 ..............3.49
A spectacular special purchase of misses sportswear brings you sensational values! There are back-pocketed cotton corduroy jeans, cardigan sweaters in crew-neck and v-neck styles; pullovers in crew-necks, scoop-necks and boat-necks. Solids, stripes and color blocks. All tops are easy-care acrylic. But hurry, quantities are limited.
In our Sportswear Department
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
50 Honnestead crib
brightens baby's room with
old world charm
SAVE *1
Infants' print sleep 'n play suit
Reg. $5.99 4^^
Easy-care assortment of infants sleep 'n play suits in sizes NB-3B.
Reg. $159.99
SAVE >10
Calico Mates print highchair
OQ99
Reg. $39.99 I
Make feeding-time a joy in our chrome-piated steel fiame highchair with adjustable tray.
Every baby' is a joy so why not make your babys room special with our Homestead crib. Double drop-side crib features a pine frame with carved detail on the footboard. Hardboard end panels. Non-toxic pine or mapie finish. Hurry and save $50.
$29.99 Patchwork print mattress 19.99 $9.99 Matching bumper pad 6.99
SAVE *50
Matching four-drawer chest
14999
Reg.
$199.99
Compiete your babys room decor with our matching Homestead chest.: Plastic laminated top makes this a durabie chest. Oak center drawer guides, dust paneis between drawers and metai puils.
Baby ^nop sale ends Saturday.
ENTIRE STOCK OF NEW 1983 FALL
outerwear for your whole family
25% OFF ENTIRE
STOCK of misses and juniors coats and jackets
25% OFF ENTIRE
STOCK of men's fall outerwear
25% OFF ENTIRE STOCK of children's fall outerwear
Zip, button, wrap or snap out the cold with red hot savings on outerwear! Everything from basic bundlings to fashion fare is not 25% off. Shown are just a few from our vgst selection of styles for men, women, boys and girls. Sale ends Saturday.
Styles shown are representative of Sears assortment. Not all styles, sizes or colors are available in all stores.
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
SAVE 50
Dynasty 26-in., 10-speed racer
Reg. $169.99 Enjoy exciting exercise outdoors in the fresh air on a new 26-in, 10-speed. Choose 26-in. models for men or women. Positron derailleur. Sale ends Wednesday.
$179.99 27-in. mens model..........129.99
Physical fitness equipment requires some assembly
*40 OFF
*30 OFF Atari 2600
video arcade game when you mail-in manufacturer's rebate
Sears Reg. Price $89.99 Less $30 manufacturers mail-in rebate..........
59
You and your family will enjoy playing the Atari 2600. Life like graphics just like at the arcade. Comes with Combat game cartridge. Offer ends Dec. 31.
20-in. wheel cycle
Closeout. Dual inde- Was $139.99
pendently adjustable handlebars. While Q099 quantities last. ^
Reg. Sep. Prices Total $189.98
SAVE *50
Weight bench, weight set
$109.99 700-lb. capacity weight bend
(user plus weights).............79.99
$79.99177-lb. weight set.........59.99
SAVE *20
4-lb. sleeping bag
Hollofil 808" polyes- Reg, $44.99 ter insulation. Nylon outer, acetate nylon tricot liner.
SAVE *5 on selected video arcade cartridges
Come in now and expand your video arcade library. Choose from Q-Bert, Enduro, Zaxxon and Decathlon cartridges and enjoy hours of arcade fun for you and your family. Sale ends Saturday.
FALL HARVEST OF VALUES
CUSTOM DECORATING SALE I
SAVE 30-50%
Buy any custom drapery fabric and get FREE LINING
SAVE 30% on a fabulous selection of drapery fabrics and receive FREE iining. Choose from antique satins, casements, prints, sheers and more.
SAVE 30-50% on custom aluminum horizon-tai biinds made by Levolor Lorentzen, Inc. or selected vertical blinds.
SAVE 30-50% on custom woven woods in Roman shade or roll-up styles.
SAVE 30% on custom shutters of pine and custom shades in many styles and colors. Labor and installation extra Call or visit Sears Custom Shop and let us call on your. We have a FREE 68-page booklet for you full of new Ideas to help you decorate one window, one room, or your whole house.
Not available in;
Ashland, Greenville, Rock Hill and Williamson
Sculptured nylon plush pile carpets from our Touch CoDcth.
43%-48%OFF!
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
899
sq.yd.
Distinctive sculptured pile plus soil-hiding multi-colors add up to a great carpet for almost any room. Treated with Scotchgard Brand Carpet Protector resists soil, stains. Thru October 22.
$21.99 Touch of Tenderness II.............. 11.99 sq. yd.
$27.99 Touch of Charm.....................14.99 sq. yd.
$34.99 Touch of Grandeur..................17.99 sq. yd.
Cushion and installation extra.
Carpet not sold in Concord, Danville, Goldsboro, Greenville, Rock Hill
Beautiful Sofa and Sofa Sleeper are now
<300 OFF!
Reg. $699.99 each
399*
Jr each
A. Reg. $699.99. Woodville 82-in. contemporary sofa with solid oak trim. Olefin and nylon cover.
$799.99 Woodvillepueen Sleeper .............. 549.88
B. Reg. $699.99. merick, traditional comfbrt as a sofa, spacious comfort as a queen size bed. Quilted print cover.
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
^350 OFF Castleview Sofa
C. Contemporary design, comfort- . rann
able seating. With Durable olefin
upholstery. Reg. $799.99. "
Furniture not sold in; Concord, Danville, Goldsboro, Greenville, High Point, Rock Hill, Rocky Mount.
76111 Gas Furnace
SAVE too
Reg. $379.99
27999
55.000 Blun cap icity
YOU SAVE M00-M50
on larger sizes in space saver, counterflow and horizontal models!
^200 OFF Sears Best 50,000 Btuh Gas Furnace
Reg. $1199.00. Space saver upflow furnace is 96% efficient. Has stainless steel and aluminum secondary heat exchange. Multi-speed blower, more. Thru Oct 29
Reg. $1299 gas mode i, hC 000 btuh, thru Oct. 29____$1099
Reg. $1399 gas modoi. 105.000 btuhthru Oct. 29 .. .$1199
*999
2331
SAVE *15 Thrif-T
' Setback thermostat
1
Reg. $54.99 39^^
i
1 Helps save energy for
1
heating, air conditioning.
u
. 1
V
9101
Sale ends Oct. 29.
SAVE *150 Kenmore
dishwasher
OQQ99
wy# coloru extra Reg. $549,99. Portable with water heat control. Thru October 25
7033
SAVE *200 Kenmore Dishwasher
299
99
Reg, $499.99. Built-ih with water heat control. Sale ends October 25.
SAVE *60
Insulating storm/screen doors
Reg. $229.99
Plastic foam-filled aluminum frame and double-wall kick panel. Baked enamel finish. 32 or 36-in, x 80-in.
Professional installation is available.
Professional installation is available
169
SAVE 4-*5
on Stock Windows
22" S 24"
Mill
finish
Mill finish regular $26.99. White finish regular $29.99. Sale ends Oct. 29.
82608
83978
YOU SAVE 15-40
$34.9914-speed blender 19.99
$99.99 food processor......59.99
$34.99 steam/spray iron 29.99
1983 Fall and General Catalog.
1 ^ ^ i "I' - '... ''I - T| /
SAVE MO .n Sxirs
Heatscreen 75
99
99
Reg. $159.99. Glass doors help reduce heat loss up chimney. Toe-touch action opens rigid mesh screen. Antique or black with antique-brass finish. Thru Oct. 22.
YOU SAVE <10 on 5-pc. tooiMt
29
Reg.. $39.99. In handsome antique brass and black finish. Sale ends Oct. 22.
9512
SAVE *20 Heat Exchanger
89
Reg. $109.99. Recirculates warm air into the room. Thru Oct. 22.
SAVE *5 Woodbafket
14
Reg. $19.99. Handsome antique brass finish. Thru Oct. 22.Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.
1/2 PRICE!
I
Craftsman 10-in. radial sow^outfit
nso io ^200 OFF
Craftsman bench power tool outfits
Reg. $499.99 to $549.99
349
Hurr>' in today and save during our National Hardware SALE. This 10-in. radial arm saw has 1 '/z HP motor that develops 2V2-HP. Easy-to-read upfront oontrols for convenience and fast set-ups. Foot-operated caster set. With sturdy steel leg set Sale ends October 29,
Bench power tools require some assembly.
'h PRICE
Craftsman power tools
Your Choice Reg. $99.99
A. Automatic scroll saw develops maximum 1/2-HP. 0-3400 spm no-load speeds.
B. 7Va-ln. circular saw with sawdust chute. Develops maximum 2 1/8-HP.
C. Pad Sander with dust bag has straight or orbital motion. Develops maximum 4000 spm.
D. 1/4-HP bench grinder develops 1/3-HP OxVa-in. wheels.
Sale ends Saturday
SAVE *7
Reg Sep. Prices Totai $614.97
A. 10-in. tabi sav; ouifii has 1-HP balhbearing motor that develops 2-HP. Exacti-cul indicator for continuous, accurate cuts. 10-tl. bination blade. Rr^r $549.99 thru October 22.
B. 12-ln. baiui saw has 1/2-HP motor. Curs curves and intricate cuts in wood up tc 6x12-i.-,. r.'ide. Includes steel leg sef and motor Rea $499.99 thru Ocxo.ar >2.
OVER 1/2 OFF
Craftsman 40-piece mechanic's tool set
Reg. Sep. Prices 0099
Total $8(3.23 Z #
Great for home and general auto repairs. Thru Oct. 29.
Our lowest price of the year for Easy Living latex
Matte flat or ceiling white Reg. $15.99
Sears Best one-coat paint is now on sale during our National Hardware Sale. Ggt washable, colorfast and spot-resistant coverage in just one-coat. Choose matte flat or ceiling white thru Saturday.
$17.99 Medium gloss, thru Saturday ___10.99 gal.
SAVE 7
Entire stock of Weatherbeatei^ exterior latex
Get durable, one-coat coverage from our popular VVeatherbeater exterior latex. Choose from a wide array of fashion colors.
AsK abuut Sears Credit Plans
For one-coat results, ail Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed.
3300S
SAVE ^150
1-HP UK 5&n,))pressor
"S..:- 349
Deli'.' 5,b SGFM/40 PSI. 15-f;, iiosfe, regulator, gacgi..^ ..i j more. Sale ends OCtOUisi C.Z..
SAVE 50 to 150
Craftsman chain saws
Craftsman 2-HP electric chain saw
99
iw with ca
199
iw with (
299
A. 14-in. Lo-Kick Friction Fighter guide bar.
Power sharp built-in chain sharpener.
Auto/manual oiler. Reg $149.99. Sale ends October 22.
Craftsman 16-in. gas. chain saw with case
B. 2.3-cu. in. saw 'i.v; 'lolid-state ignition, automatic oiler, Pi.iwi Sharp sharpener Reg. $299.99. thru Or.)',her 22. _ _ _
Craftsman 18-in. gas chain saw with case
C. 3.7 CID saw has solid-state ignition,
Built-in sharpener, auto/manual oiling. Reg. JOOTT $449.99 thru October 22.Shop the easy way * Sears Camera Specialog has hundreds of great values from new lens to carrying cases! _Ask for Q copy at our retail catalog order deskl
wheel alignment
with coupon described below 10
$19.99 without coupon We'll set caster/camber and toe to manufacturers specifications. Well also inspect front end. Includes torsion bar adjustment if needed.
tune-up
diagnosis
with coupon described below
^99
$19.99 without coupon Well set timing, adjust carburetor, do scope analysis and infrared emissions test when applicable. We then suggest only the parts and services you need.
4-wheel
balance
with coupon described below
29
$39.99 without coupon Auto service for most American-made cars, many imports. Not in Shelby or Williamson.
50%
OFF Catalog prices
on Dynaglass Belted 32, our best belted tire
A78-13WW
'83 catalog price
$59.99, plus $1.67 FET'
29
50% off our 1983 Fall General Catalog. Hurry, quantities are limited. Two fiber glass belts for long wear, 2 polyester plies add a smooth, comfortable ride. Save 50% at Sears thru October 29.
Limited warranty against tire wearout For the specified miles. Sears will replace the tire or give a refund charging only for the miles used
SAVE 25%
Steel'belted radials foreman cars
155R12BW ^ A
Regular $52.99 QQ7 4
plus$1.35FET* W#
Two steel belts for great steering response with import and domestic small cars. All sizes on sale thru Oct. 29.
SAVE 25%
Steel-belted radials for pick-ups and vans
LT215/75R15 a a# ft
Regular $124.99 plus $2.96 FET* #W
All-terrain, all-season, all-weather traction for great grip, on and off road. All sizes on sale thru Oct. 25.
on our Steel-belted SuperGuord radials
P155/80R-12WW Reg. $59.99 plus $1.37 FET*
41
99
Two steel belts resist impact and tread squirm for strength and long wear. Low rolling resistance helps save gasoline. Radial design adds quick, responsive handling. Thru October 29.
Regular $7.99 replacement shocks for smooth ride, good control for highway or in-town driving. Fits most American-made cars and many imports. Thru Oct. 29
Heavy-duty plus shock absorbers
Reg.
$11.99
Sturdy shocks for hard driving. Fits most cars. Thru October 29.
SleodyRidet RT shock absorbers
Reg.
' $22.99 |- ea.
Our best shocks for use with radials or standard tires. Shock installation extra.
SAVE *16
DMtanl Morine battery
SAVEonlOWSO SAVE *20
AUTO CENTER OPENS 8 AM
Monday thru Saturday
Sears most powerful car battery ... DieHard
Reg. $75.99, with trade
4999
Tr M INSTALLED
Sears Best car battery is also Americas best-selling replacement battery. Powerful 525 amps cold cranking power and 120 minutes reserve capacity.
Sale Ends October 29
All-weother oil
Reg. $1.09 84^ qt.
Stock up. For year-round use in all types driving. Thru Oct. 15.
SAVE *15
10-amp charger Timing tight
29 Reo s... 34
Reg. $49.99 Twice as fast as our 4-amp charger. Thru October 29.
Reg. $49.99 Craftsman. Inductive ... needs no adapters. Thru October 22,
SAVE *15
17-test analyzer
Reg. $69.99 54
Engine analyzer with inductive pick-up. Thru October 22.
SAVE *30
Speed control
Reg. $99.99 69
Helps maintain legal speed. For most cars. Thru October 22. Installation extra.
SAVE *50 AM/FM
with cassette player
Reg. $199.99 149
High power with Dolby noise-reduction system. Auto-reverse cassette. Thru October 29. Sound installation extra.
CAR CARE SAVINGS COUPON BOOK
SAVE $88 off regular labor prices of selected services when you use all the coupons
199
Yours for only It We install confidence
Aul.
cen
CAR
vCT
Vourt le <3nly
$19.99
til
Good At All Sears Auto Centers Nationwide
Front wheel alignment' front end parts. MacPherson struts or 4 shocks installed 4-wheel electronic balance Engine tune-up Oil filter change, lube (2 each) Brake service
Wheel bearing repack ?
Transmission fluid filter ;
change or cooling system (lush Starting-charging system check f *- Bonus coupon $5 off >
Bonus coupon $10 off
SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE
NC: Burlington, Charlotte, (Eastlond, Southpark), Concord, Durham, Fayetfeville, Gastonia. Goldsboro, Greensboro. Greenville, Hickory, High Point, Jacksonville, Roleigh,
Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Solem SC: Charleston (Citadel, Northwoods), Columbio, Florence, Myrtle Beach. Rock Hill VA: Danville, Lynchburg Roanoke KY; Ashland
WV: Barboursville, Beckley, Bluefield, Charleston
Satisfaction gwarantood or your monoy bock
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
Bruce hardwood floors
On
Selected
Items
Durine
OurFAU HARVEST SALE
26 Colors and Patterns Now On Sale! Sale Ends November 19, 1983
Beauty Beyond Compare
Breath takingly beautiful. Versatile and durable. Thats the natural beauty of Bruce hardwood floors. From soft and satiny to rich and rustic, Bruce floors are the natural choice for any decor. And those glowing good looks grow even more beautiful with each passing year. Quite simply, a Bmce hardwood floor is beyond compare.
Go ahead ... indulge your fantasies. Just imagine how beautiful your home will be with a Bruce hard-wood floor. With over 26 stunning patterns and colors on sale during our Fall Harvest Sale. Bmce offers the widest variety of fine hardwood flooring available today.
So go ahead and create the floor of your dreams. For . unmatched beauty' . . . . choose Bmce hardwood floors. Naturallv!
COXTR PHOTO: Shown on the front tovTr IS Village Plank, a style thats
R! ^ interiors. It brings
Old W ora charm to any room with its pwcd down look and 3', 5' and 7' random planb. Beveled ends and sides hmher accentuate its beauty. Also available in:
* ^^ich Mellow Brown in smooth or tcxturcd finish
Smooth warm Gunstock Blown
Aellow Brown texture dMtional Yet Refreshingly Contemporary..hoL with
this tune honored pattern. Beveled all around for more striking pattern contrast. Easy to install ... easy to LThr Andup 20./. . ,a
Also available in:
Dark, rich Hearth Brown
Warm Gunstock Brown in smooth or textured finish
Sleek, Daring And Exdring . . . Monterey plank adds that special finishing touch to any room. Install it anywhere for an exciting, accent. Years of charming elegance are yours now for a very special price. Save up to 20%.
Available in;
Warm Gunstock Brown smooth finish
spark Interest In Any Room . . . with Hemngblok parquet. Interwoven parquet blocks create a truly unique floor just about anywhere. And theres no limit to the patterns you can design ... single or double brick, flagstone, basketweave, geometries and herringbone panems to name a few. Choose either satiny smooth or textured finish and save up to 20% on this floor.
Also available in:
Warm Mellow Brown with rugged textured finish
Dark, tawny Hranh Brown
Warm Gunstock Brown textured
3'
Mellow Brown smooth
Welcome Home . . . to cozy villa Nova planks. Enjoy the easy-ping look of random width planks that reflect beauty and sophistication on any interior. Beveled ends and edges accent the smooth, clean lines and add interest to any room. Add it to your home now and save up to 20%.
Also available in:
Warm Mellow Brown textured finish
Harvest Brown smooth
Warm Gunstock Brown smooth .
P Q f
Smooth, Stylish, Sophisticated . . .
Cumberland III, by fart)ur most popular style today. Brighten your living room, den or any place you want to make truly special. Square edge styling captivates your attention with its understated intricacy.
Also available in:
l ight sandy Desert Brown
Sassy Chestnut Brown in a textured fnish
Dusky dark-toned Mellow Brown smooth and textured
Or you can do it yourself... For
your convenience, Cumberland III is also available with a self-stik backing. Its just as durable, just as beautiful . . . only the self-stik backing helps make installation quicker and e^ier. And, of course, right now is your time to save.
Cumberland III self-stik is not available in textured finish
s.
Wanii Up To The Rich Look . . . of Fireside plank. Perfect for your living room, dining room or den. Its linear effect makes this floor one of our most popular. Satiny smooth and strikingly beautiful. Save now on a floor with natural charm and delightful versatility. It can be yours today at fantastic savings! &ve up to 20%.
Available in:
Gunstock Brown onlyThe Bruce Finish . . . Baked In For Beauty That Lasts
Bruce hardwood flcx)ring is a sound investment that will appreciate and add value to your home over the years. And Bmce floors become even more beautiful with age. The key to this beauty and easy care is the special Bruce 13-step baked in finishing process, painstakingly finished with you in mind!
Heres How
Bmce planks and parquets are passed through a heated oven where an expensive mng oil filler and pigmented stains are baked into the wood. Heat opens the pores and allows the finish to penetrate deeply into the wood. Then, solid cakes of carnauba wax are melted and baked into the wood as it passes through another oven. The floors are then cooled to lock in the wax and stains.
Then the floors are buffed again to bring out the soft, satiny beauty of the exclusive Bmce finish. A finish far more durable than any surface application like shellac, varnish or polyurethane because the Bmce finish is baked in . . . not simply applied to the surface, And that means your floor care is simplified. AH you do is give your floors a regular onceover-lightly with a vacuum or stiff broom, wax when needed and restore the luster between waxings by simply buffing. Youll find the care of Bmce floors is no more difficult or time consuming than for any other floor product! But the beauty o Bmce lasts forever.
Discover A Whole New Room In Your Own Home
There's a room in your home \ou haven'r e\en discovered yet. But iTs there, just waiung for you to accentuate it. To bring out its beauty. To make it elegant and unique Now imagine for a moment just how beauriful that special rcx)m would look with a sleek plank or exquisite parquet from Bruce. You can almost sec it now . what a dramatic difference Bruce makes. Fresh, exciting Bruce hardwood floors breathe new life into any rcxifn in your home. Its almost like getting a whole new room. Let Bruce bring decorating magic into your home. The natural beauty will last a lifetime! And right nows the best time . . . take advantage of these Fall Harvest Sale prices todav!
Sale Ends November 19,1983LARRYS CARPETLAND
3010 E 10th St. Greenville, NC 27834 758-2300Bnice
hardwood floors
a Triangle Pacific Company
SHOP (HB EV'ERYMV LOW PRKES!
Save with East Fares every day low prices on bread, milk, grade Ae^s&carton cigarettes (All brands-kings & lOOs)FREE BAG OF POPCORN
IMcist present this coupon bcforc makii^ >our purchase. Coupon is not g(x k1 in combination with any other oflers. Customer must pay any sales taxdue on the purchase price and coupon has no cash value. Ofergotxl with this coupon only at Fast Fare stores thittugh October 23 1983 or wliile supplies last.FREE 12 OZ. CIJP FRESH BREWED COFFEE
Please present this coufxan beftare makii^ycaur puahase. C<aup<an is n<at good in ciambination with any tather o&rs. Custtamermust pay any sales tax due (an the purchase price and coupon has no cash value. Ofergotxl with this ctxjpon tanly at Fast Fare sttares through ()tl(aber 23 1983 <ar while supplies last.
BUY ONE 24 OZ. GUZZLER FOUIVEIIN SOFT DRINK, GET ONE FREE WITH THIS COUPON
Pt-psi, Mountain laewf l>l^psi*Thret other FlawMS of S<Xi Drink AraBable
J HtiuM.- pn-^cnl this < iwpon ht Sttv nuking vtr purvhasf (jxjpon is not (jkkI in omhination
'siiharniKlK-roHiTs (ostomiT muM pa) any sales tax ihir on the pun have pnte anda wpon hasnoi-Asliv-aliH- O&r giaxl with this coupon onh at fiisi KarestotesthnxighNiicemher S b>HSorwtijk siipplK-sla.si
. JURkJrtSs-'MMflBUY ONE 2 LITER COKE OR DIET COKE, GET ONE FREE
Pleasepresent thisctauptan before making jvxir purchase, Cxauptanismat gotad in ctambination with any (ather ofers. Custtamcr must pay any sales tax due (an the purchase price and ctauptan has nta cash value.( Ifcrgtaod with this ctauptan tanly at Fast Fare sttaies thnaugh November 5,1983 .. (ar while supplies last ..............................
/rBUY 2 lARGE BABY RUTH OR BUITERFINGERS, GET ONE FREE
Pleasepresent thiscoqaon before makingyvxirpurchase. (foqaonisnot go(xl in ctambination wi th tather tafcrs. Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase price and cxaupon has nta cash value. Oflfergotad with this txauptan only at I^ Fare stores through November 5 1983 tar while supplies last.
J
40<OFFANYIATS8OZ. SIZE CHIPS
PIcascpR^tthLSCuuponbeftwmakingwurpurchaseixxiponis good in combination with any otm-roflcrs Customer must paTam sales tax^ on thepurchaseprice and coupon has nocashsalue (^raxxl with this coupon only- at Fast Fare stores thnxigh Nowmber 5 198^
or while supplies last
"BUY ONE 99* SIZE ntOPHY NUT DRV ROASTED CASHEWS, GET ONE FREE
Pleasepresent thLscoupon heftia- making yrxir purchase Cxxipon is not gixxl in aimbtnation with any-other ofcrs. (Customer must pay am sales tax due on the purchase price and coupon has no t-ash \alue. ()fler axxl
with this coupon only-at Fist Fare stores thnxigh Nmember 5 198^
^^o^hilc^ayplicsh^_____ ^BUY ONE SCRIPTO NIGHTY MATCH UGHTER, GET ONE FREE
Pleasepresent thiscoupon heftiremakir^ysxir purchase, (xxipon is not gixxl in combination with any other oflfcm. Customer must pav imv sales I. tax due on the purchase pricT and axipon has no cash value ()fler gixxl 3 with this txxipon only at Fast Faa* stores thnxigh November S, 1983 or while supplies last.i. ;0* OFF NO NONSENSE SHEER P TO WAIST RANTVHOSE
! j Please present thiscixipon befiia- makir^ysxir purchase Cixipon is not L gixxl in combination with any other oflers. (:ustomer must pav any sales ''' tax due on the purchase price and cixipon has no cash value Oft-rgood with this ax^xin ixtly at Fast Faa- stoa-s thnxigh Nixember 5,1983 or while supplies last.
SUIVGIASSES BUY ANY ONE OFOIIR MREHOUSE SPECIAL > PllilASESIJNGlASSES(REG|jLAR$6-$10EAOl) I FOR OND $3 WITH THIS COUPON
, i Please present this axipon bekire making yvxir puaiiase (xxipixi is rxx pxxl .: in aimbination with any ixher oflers. (ustomer must pay anv sales lax due im
s* the puahase prke and cixipixi has no cash value ()jr gixxl with this ttxipon onh at Past lare stixes thnx^ Novemher S. I98i ix while supplies last H
---------1 30* OFF OUR EVERYDAY I0W PRICE i ON CARTON CIGARETTES
i i Please present thiscixipon before making ytxir purchase (xxipon is not gixxlincx)mbinationwithanyotherofk-rs. (;ustomermustpay any sales j tax due on the purchase price and cixipon has no cash value. ()fcr gixxj with this cixipon only at Fast Fare- stores thnxigh November S, 1983 or while supplies last.
------ I-................it BUY THREE MARCALI' BATHROOM TISSUE SINGLE ROLL,GET ONE FREE
'' Hiase- present this axipon betire making your purchase- Oxipon is mx gixxl , in ciimhinatHMi with any ixher offers, (ustonx-r must pay any sales tax due on the purc-hase price and axipon has no cash value ()ft.-r gixxl with this axipon
ixily at Past Paiesttxvs thnxigh Novemher S. 1wy or while supplies Iasi.
ii
tSSSSK30*OFFQT.EMPUIE30WT. I MOTOR on (REGULAR 9;*/QT.)
i I Pleasepresent thiscixipon bcftire makingyiHirpurehase (xxipon isnot I gixxl in combination with any other oflfers. Customerniust pay any sales el tax due on the purchase price and cixipon has no cash value. ()t-rgixxJ I ] with this c-oupon only at Fast Fire stores thnxigh November 5,1983 Uor while supplies last.
II I 1
iw*,=====^==!BUY ONE 2 UrER SHASIA SOFT DRINK AT99<, GET SECOND ONE TOR 0NIY;(K
Please present this cixipon beft >rc making yvxir purchase. Coupon Ls not good in combination with any other o&rs (Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase price and coupon has no cash value. C)ftrr gixxl with this cixipon onh at Fast Fare stores thnxigh November 5,1983 or while supplies last!BUY ONE $9* SUM JIM GOLD BEEFSnCK, GET ONE FREE
Please present thiscixipon before makingyxxir purchase. Qxipon Ls not gixxl in txinfoination with any other offers. Caistomer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase price and cxxipon has no cash value. ()ffi.*r gixxl with this txx^in only at Fast Fare stores thnxigh Nmember 3, 1983 or while supplies last$2 OFF GENERAL ELECTRIC 4-MCK BULBS
(60,75 A100 WATT SIZES) Plcuse present this cxxipon hefiire makii^ wxir purcha.sc. Cixipon is noi gxxl in omibination with any othtT ofcrs (ustomer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase price and cxxipon has no cash value Offer]?xxl with this cixipon only at Fasl Halt- stores thnxigh NixemfxT S. 198 V or while supplies last
^ -50* OFF 4-nVCK EVEREADY CD SIZE BATTERIES (REG. $2.30)
Plc-asepresent thiscixipon beliire makingyvxir purchase (xxipon isnot gixxl in combination with any other oflers. ('.ustomer must pay any salc-s tax due on the purchase price and cxxipon has no cush value ()fer gix xl with this coupon only at Fast Fare stores thnxigh Nmeniher S, 1983 or while supplies last
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A
THEDAILYREFLECrOR
GKBmUftKC
BY ERNEST f Mmifi
volkmanMSIHI
ItsMowyou.
Its long. Its slim. Its elegant.
20 CLASS A CIGAREHES
'V. , V*" -'''ii
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
mg. "tar*'. 13 mg. nicoiine av. pet cigarene by FTC method.
Glenn will miss launching of The Right StuH.
noMiiii_
''ASK" uniors
LOS ANGELES - Theres a major drug scandal brewing in Hollywood, and sources involved say that when it breaks, the resulting controversy will be one of the messiest in decades. Sources close to the case say investigators have turned up evidence that high-ranking Los Angeles Police Department officials have been directly involved in drug trafficking. Additionally, the investigators have learned that Cathy Smith, indicted by a grand jury on a charge of administering a fatal dose of heroin and cocaine to actor John Belushi obtained the drugs from the girlfriend of a high-ranking police official. The investigation first centered on the rampant availability of drugs in the entertainment industry some ^ stars, the investigators have found, demand cocaine and heroin supplies as a condition of working on a film and almost immediately encountered extensive police involvement in drug traf-ficking. .. .Bo Derek seems to be hot to trot. In her racy upcoming film, Bo-lero in which, husband John Derek predicts. she will shock audiences with her sexiness she rides a $50,000 Andalusian bullfighting horse.
Bo has become very attached to the ani-
mal. She says if her executive producers, Menahem Golan and Yoram Gobus, buy it for her, Ill ride in the Rose Bowl Parade. .. Steven Spielbergs E. T made record mon^ from merchandising despite a relatively late start, and Spielberg is playing it even smarter with his new movie. Gremlins. Although Gremlins, which stars Phoebe Cates, is still in production, Spielberg has already accepted a six-figure bid for novelization rights from Avon Books, and Montgomery Ward may set up special Gremlins toy dep^ments in its 350H)dd stores nationwide once the picture comes out next springJohnny Carsons longtime lawyer, Henry Bushldn, has been named in a civil suit charging that he used a West Hollywood bank to engage in a series of questionable * activities involving an alleged organized<rime figure. According to the suit, filed by two former directors of the bank, Bushkin, also a bank director, was involved in
Liz and Victor: ^e'll wed in red.
kickback and^ money-laundering schemes. A lawyer for Bushkin described the suit as a fairy story.
Robert Windeier and Emesi Volkman
NEW YORK - Getting married mw be old hat for Elizabeth Taylor, but at least shell be able to wear a new dress for her upcoming nuptials with Mexican lawyer Victor Luna Long before Taylor announced her latest engagement, she was overheard confiding to a friend that the next time she wed, shed be decked out in red.... Elhm J<rfin and Rod Stewart are making a concerted effort to perform jointly next year at Shea Stadium, part of a countrywide tour. But dont rush to get tickets yet. Details are still being ironed out.. . .Author Arlanna Stasslnopoulos (her latest novel is The Gods of Greece, Abrams) has had her fill of being interviewed over lunch or dinner at chic restaurants, because its difficult to converse and enjoy gourmet food at the same time. Its impossible to talk with a full mouth, she laments. Its a shame to order marvelous food and then waste it, so wherever 1 am, Le Cirque or The Russian Tea Room, 1 just order cottage cheese. Its easy to swallow and not very appetizing, so 1 can answer questions and leave my meal.
Anila Summer
WASHINGTON - Suitable aviation attire will be de rigueur for the Oct. 16 world premiere here of the movie The Right Stuff, since the screening will be followed by a gala dinner for 1,200 in U.S. Airs hangar at National Airport. But it appears that Senator J<dm Glenn (D-Ohio) will not be among the Mercury astronauts joining master
of ceremonies Walter Cron-klte on the dais. Sources say that Glenn will resist the urge to see himself portrayed in the movie at least while he is running for President because he doesnt want to have to answer questions about the movie throughout the campaign. This way hell be able to say, Well, I cant
Bo horsing around in her new film. answer that because 1 havent seen the movie. .. While the Reagan Administration has been taking the heat for having only a few women and blacks appointed to lop executive branch posts, it seems that the Senates hiring practices arent any less discriminatory. A recent survey of minority hiring in Senate offices by Cox Newspapers revealed that of the more than 870 employees earning over $30,000 a year on personal Senate staffs, only 27 were black. And in a comparison of the average annual salaries paid to men and women who worked as Senatorial press secretaries, men earned $40,500 compared to $33.150 earned by women.
Kathleen Mdxa and Jane Ottenberg
KiNNY Rooms
Are you sick to death of reading about all the money you earn? GL, Decatur, UL
When you are a successful entertainer, you're going to be written and talked about. With me, though, there's not too much to talk about. 1 dont run around on [my wife] Marianne, Im not into drugs and 1 dont get into fights. So that leaves the money. Im not guilty about my earnings. 1 came from a very poor family:
1 can't say Im not proud of whatever success Ive achieved. In the beginning, I enjoyed hearing about it, but now its old news.
MARY CROSBY
When you think about your father, Bing, what comes to mind most often? LM., Bangor, Me.
Daddy and 1 used to go for long walks in New York City. Wed just walk and window-shop. Wed stop and buy something, stroll hand in hand. That was the way hed express his emotions. He was shy about outward signs of affection. The love and affection were there, but without any visible signs. Thats why those handholding times were so precious to me.
Cover illustration by Alien Welkis.
1983 FAMILY WEEKLY. All rights reserved.
THE
SEARCH
NASA
RUSSIAN
MOLE
INFILTRATED THE C.I.A.?
BY ERNEST VOLKMAN
SASHA
From its Moscou: lair (left), the K.G.B. regularly detected a.A
spies
For many years, C.I.A. officials have been preoccupied with the possibility that a diabolically clever Soviet K.G.B. agent might have managed to burrow deep enough inside the C.I.A. to betray the best-laid espionage schemes of the ^ncy. Suspicions of a Soviet agent within the C.I.A., known as a mole, have been strengthened by the fact
4 Family Wekly October 9 i9S3
that during the past 30 years the Russians have been able to uncover and arrest every high-level sp\ developed inside the kiviet Union by the C.I.A.
Indeed, as more and more documents and information have come to light, the evidence of a mole,,.code named SASHA, is increasingly difficult to dismiss. Last fall. Dr. William Harris, an expert on intelligence operations, a consultant to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and someone
who has access to the utmost secret documents, told a conference concerned with the American intelligence apparatus that the C.I.A. assumed it was "partially penetrated" by the K.G.B.
If there definitely is a mole, his identity remains a secret but his trail is not hard to see. And it is part of a true-life spy story with intricacies that surpass even the fertile imaginations of such espionage fiction masters as John Le Carre and Robert Ludlum.
-C.I.A. fears of a mole were aroused more than two dcdes a^rin the spring of 1961, a delegation of senior Soviet Trade Ministry officials arrived in England, ostensibly to discuss trade relations. Among the contingent were two officers of the G.R.U.. the militarv arm of the K.G.B. One of these, CoL Oleg Penkovsky, was not only a high-ranking intelligence officer but also one of the U.S.S.R. S leading experts on strategic missiles. Only a few people knew that Penkovskv was also a British spy.
Disenchanted with the Communist system, in 1960 Penkovsky had approached a British intelligence agent in Moscow, offering information about Soviet military and intelligence agencies. Code-named ALEX by M16, Britains equivalent to the C.I.A., he provided not only inside information about Soviet intelligence operations but also detailed dope on Russian missiles. At first the C.I.A. was skeptical. Penkovsky did not ask for money, and he seemed bent on betraying his country for rather vague politick reasons. C.I.A. officials regarded him as a plant, intelligence jargon for a double agent used to funnel inaccurate, or misleading, intelligence.
But the doubts vanished quickly after C.I.A. agents met with Penkovsky in London that spring. He handed over 40 rolls of microfilm containing the names of several hundred G.R.U. agents around the world, including ones based in the U.S. He spelled out the innermost secrets of the U.S.S.R.s strategic missiles, including the priceless piece of news that the Russians were encountering severe technological problems. This came in handy more than a year later when President John F. Kennedy faced dowm the Russians during the Cuban missile crisis. Armed with the information that the Russian missiles were not up to snuff, Kennedy was able to call the Soviets bluff.
Qearly, ALEX was an intelligence gold mine. But there were two serious problems. First, he had to be protected: only a small group of people could be let in on the secret. The slightest whiff of evidence that the Russians had suffered an intelli^nce leak more severe than any in their history would guarantee Penkovskys death. The second problem was that with ALEX scheduled to return to his permanent station in Moscow, the C.I.A. and M16 needed a
foolproof system to maintain their source while keeping him free from the clutches of the K.G.B.
The two Western agencies hit upon what seemed to be a highly secure plan. Roderick Chisholm, an MI6 agent assigned to the British Embassy in Moscow, became ALEXs case officer. Chisholms wife, Janet, became, in effect, ALEXs courier. During daily strolls with her twp children, a genial Russian man would approach her, engage in innocuous pleasantries, stoop to pat the children or offer them a piece of candy. While that casual passerby, actually Colonel Penkovsky, performed this gracious little act, he would slip his latest batch of microfilm to Janet Chisholm.
A carefully worked-out series of "dead drops hiding places in tree hollows or under rocks supplemented this exchange of information. C.I.A. or M16 agents serviced the drops.
Popov was handled with the strictest security. Yet, within a few months he notied his C.I.A. contact that the K.G.B. had nailed him.
making certain no K.G.B. surv'eillance threatened ALEX.
Everything was highly compartmentalized, with only a few people aware of ALEX's true identity-. The arrangement seemed totally secure, and during the spring of 1962, Penkovsky fed the British and Americans a rich diet of Soviet secrets. But suddenly Penkovsky warned his contacts that the gaitie was over. The K.G.B. was watching him closely. In October he was arrested, along with his chief British contact, businessman Greville VV^nne (actually an MI6 agent). Penkovsky was shot by a firing squad a year later.
While the loss of ALEX deprived the C.I.A. of its greatest source, the more important question was how the K.G.B. had managed to detect his spying, "nie security precautions had been extreme, and M6 and C.I.A. agents were certain that there was never any K.G.B. surveillance when they picked up materials. All the evidence indicated that ALEX had not been compromised through any K.G.B. observations. It seemed equally clear that the Russians had been unaware of any major leakage in secrets, or that Penkovsky was the source, until quite late in the game.
How then did the Russians find out? With the C.I.A. holding most of the ALEX material, a horrible possibility surfaced. Was it conceivable that the K.G.B. knew about ALEX because someone within the agency told them?
Was it possible that someone high up only a few officials were in on the ALEX secret was a K.G.B. mole?
Awful as this suspicion was, there seemed no other rational explanation. C.I.A. counterintelligence experts pulled out the files and studied both the case of ALEX and one that preceded it. They were struck by some disturbing similiarities.
His name was Pyotr Popov and, like Penkovsky, he was a G.R.U. officer. In 1959 he tossed a letter offering his services to tbe C.I.A. inside the car of an American diplomat in Germany. As usual, the C.I.A. moved cautiously there was the strong possibility that Popov was a plant but Popov soon convinced the agency he was the genuine article. As the first source ever enlisted from behind the Iron Curtain by the C.I.A., Popov was handled with the strictest security arrangements. Yet, within only a few months he notified his C.I.A. contact that the K.G.B. had nailed him. At a rendezvous in a Moscow restaurant, he signaled his C.I.A. case officer, Russell Langelle. undercover as a diplomat to the United States Embassy, to accompany him to the mens room. Once there. Popov made frantic hand signals, indicating to Langelle that he was in the hands of the K.G.B. and wearing a recording device. Popov pointed to a pair of feet showing beneath the door of a stall and again the American understood. Popov was under constant surveillance; the feet with the pants draped unceremoniously around the ankles belonged to a K.G.B. agent on the watch. Without a word. Popov stripped off a large bandage from his hand. Underneath there was a great wound, covered by several long strips of paper. Popov handed the paper over to the American and reban-dag^ his gash.
Popov had deliberately slashed himself in order to hide the strips of paper under the bandage. On these bloody pieces of paper the Americans read his anguished account of how the K.G.B. had gotten onto him fairly early and were now torturing him to tell all he knew. Later the C.I.A. learned that Popov had been executed by being slowly fed into a live furnace while his G.R.U. colleagues were forced to watch.
There were many possible explanations of how Popov had been unmasked, but in the context of other events, inadvertent disclosure seemed less and less likely. Instead the episode seemed to fit in with a consistent pattern of failure of major Western espionage operations that strongly sug^ted the presence of a mole. In the mid-50s, the C.I.A. constructed a secret tunnel under the border between East and West Berlin and managed to tap into the main Soviet military communications network. Right after the tunnel began operating, the Russians suddenly l^an to lake great precautions with what they said over the telephone, giv
Countenntelligence chief Anglelon uas sure that a mole infested the C.I.A.
ing rise to the strong suspicion that they had known about the tunnel almost from its inception.
About the same time, a Royal Navy frogman involved in an MI6 intelligence operation swam underwater to take photographs of a pair of new Soviet warships accompanying Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev on a state visit to Britain. His headless body was found several weeks later when it washed iip on shore, ^ain there was evidence that the Russians knew of the frogmans mission before it began.
Even as Western intelligence agencies pondered their failures, a bizarre letter arrived late in 1959 at the United States Embassy in Berne, Switzerland. The writer, who signed himself SNIPER, claimed to be a high-level Communist intelligence agent. He offered to reveal the extent of K.G.B. operations in Western Europe. SNIPER detailed a number of espionage operations, and the information seemed solid enough when checked. Fears that this was a K.G.B. disinformation attempt relying on the sacrifice of a few low-level agents crumbled as SNIPER followed with 13 more letters, each of which contained an intelligence gem.
In one communication, SNIPER described a K.G.B. operative within NATO intelligence as a Swedish officer who had once served in the United States. Swedish counterintelligence investigated and uncovered conclusive evidence that Col. Stig Wennerstrom had been working for the K.G.B. for 14 years. SNIPER also identified a K.G.B. spy in the British Admiralty and a husband and wife team that operated a K.G.B. spy ring in England. The couple proved to be a mysterious pair who had disappeared from New York City about. the time Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were seized as Soviet spies Another prize was a veteran K.G.B. officer, Conon Moloody. He disguised himself as a British businessman using the name Gordon Lonsdale.
In December 1960, SNIPER suddenly shed his anonymity and showed up in West Berlin where he identified himself to the C.I.A. as Michael Golieniewski, a top officer in the Polish intelligence ser vice. Accompanied by his mistress, he was spirited out of Europe to the farm, a C.I.A. safe house in Virginia. Any doubts about Golieniewski faded after he revealed that he had stashed 300 photographs of secret documents
inside a hollow tree in Warsaw. Recovered by C.I.A. agents dispatched to Warsaw, the papers were copies of top-secret intelligence reports for Iron Curtain espionage agencies. From these it was learned that George Blake, a tmsted M16 officer who worked closely with the C.I.A. running agent operations from Berlin, had been a K.G.B. spy for nearly 10 years. The revelation shook the C.I.A. and M16, but even more ominous was SNlPERs suggestion that the K.G.B. seemed to know ahead of time the moves of its Western opponents.
Golieniewskis effectiveness was somewhat limited by his claim that he was the last surviving member of the Romanovs, the rulers of czarist Russia until 1917. He demanded that the C.I.A. back him in his attempt to reclaim the throne, but the agency managed to decline. Despite his off-the-wall behavior, it was clear that Golieniewski had provided top-grade material that gave clues to deep K.G.B. penetration of Western intelligence.
However, even more disturbing was the surfacing of a K.G.B. officer named Anatoly Golitsyn in 1961. Dubbed KAGO, he later showed up calmly in Helsinki, Finland, and requested asylum. To buttress his case, he produced a list of all K.G.B. operatives working out of the Soviet embassy in Helsinki. The C.I.A. quickly took him aboard.
KAGO immediately demonstrated how deeply the K.G.B. had penetrated Western intelligence. After he insisted that the French version of the C.I.A. and the French Government harbored a nest of agents, the C.I.A. tested him with a stack of top-secret NATO documents. Some were genuine but others had been forged deliberately. KAGO unerringly picked out the bona fides and informed the astounded C.I.A. agents that he routinely saw top-secret NATO papers while in the K.G.B.
It had been simple to identify the real reports as ones that he had already come across while in Moscow.
In Britain, KAGO revealed that a high-ranking British intelligence official who had defected to Moscow, Kim Philby, had been only one of a ring of five moles in the high echelons of British intelli^nce. Two of these, he said, still retained their positions. The information was what the M16 needed to finally move against Philby, who then managed to escape prosecution by fleeing to the Soviet Union. That raised further questions. Only a few people knew KAGO had provided the ultimate evidence, but who tipped Philby off that the Government was about to seize him?
KAGO then dropped a bombshell on the C.I.A. The K.G.B. had a high-level mole somewhere in the C.I.A., and his Soviet code name was SASHA. While KAGO did not know his identity, he thought that with careful sifting of clues \
Family Weekly October 9 hws 5
SASHA
he had ^collected while in the K.G.B. the mole might be tracked down. KAGO now passed into the hands of
the head of C.l.A. counterintelligence, James Jesus Angleton. Considered one of the worlds most talented experts in his craft, Angleton-suspected for years that there was high-level penetration of
the C.l.A. To him it was not a question of whether SASHA existed; the problem was finding him. The theory was not popular with others in the agency. They argued that security was too tight;
all employees must undergo a lie-detector test once a year, and no K.G.B. mole could dig his way into a top post.
Again personality problems with the defector hampered investigations. KAGO demanded the establishment of a special C.l.A. branch at a cost of $30 million to seek out K.G.B. moles. He also insisted upon a personal audience with the President, arguing that the task of rooting out the K.G.B. infiltrators was so serious, only such a high-level meeting would impress the U.S. Government. There was a paranoid streak within KAGO; he would talk only to Angleton and a few of his people: he refused to be interviewed by anyone who spoke Russian, on the grounds that the C.l.A.s Soviet unit was completely penetrated by the K.G.B. Still, revelations from KAGO continued to shake the Western intelligence community. He pointed out that although the British had arrested a high-level K.G.B. spy in the admiralty, the mans case officer had hurriedly left the country a few days earlier. Who had tipped him off? Only a top official could have been aware of the imminent arrest. KAGO identified a former Canadian ambassador to the Soviet Union as a spy. The diplomat killed himself when confronted with the charge.
Even as he began to unfold his tales, KAGO informed Angleton that he could expect the Soviets to make extraordinary efforts to discredit him through the ploy of phony defectors. Sure enough, early in 1962 a K.G.B. officer named Yuri Nosenko surfaced in Switzerland.
Nosenko asserted that several years earlier the K.G.B. had nailed Pyotr Popov not through a tip from a mole, but by dusting the shoes of Popovs C.l.A. case officer with a special powder that enabled K.G.B. agents to trail him. When the C.I.A. agent met with Popov, Nosenko claimed, the K.G.B. realized Popov was a traitor. Angleton doubted the tale. It did not account for the final meeting between the Russian and his C.l.A. contact during which Popov reported his capture by the K.G.B.
Angletons doubts on Nosenko deepened when he reported that the K.G.B. never had any interest in Lee Harvey Oswald, President Kennedys assassin, when the American renounced his U.S. citizenship in the late 50's and went to live in the Soviet Union. That sounded absurd; the Russians were aware Oswald had once worked at a secret U-2 spy-plane base in Japan, and it was inevitable that they would ask him what he knew.
The more Angleton and his staff thought about No|enkos alleged revelations, the more it appeared to them that it was all carefully crafted to deter a hunt for SASHA. When another apparent defector, a Soviet U.N. diplomat recruited by the F.B.l. and code-named FEDORA, supported Nosenkos account, Angleton decided
6 Family WttKiv ciaoBER 9.1983
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HABANO
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HABANO For HER
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I Or Charge VISA D MasterCard
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iGuarontee: I understand that if upon receipt I do not choose to wear the slacks I may return Ithem within 30 days for a full refund
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(946)
In 1956Soviet officials in Berlin gleefully showed off the CI.A.-sponsored tunnel designed to eavesdrop on Russian military dispatches.
SASHA
he was simply another K.G.B. plant.
It was all rather confusing. Some C.l.A. officials found Angletons explanations of the intricate machinations too byzantine and convoluted to follow. They wanted hard proof that SASHA existed. KAGO, supplied with C.l.A. files by Angleton, fingered Russian-born Igor Orlov, a former official in the agency's Soviet Russia (S.R.) division. Born Alexander Kopazy, he fitted details KAGO recalled frorh his K.G.B. days. SASHA's real name began with a 'K, and he was supposed to be involved in Soviet operations. Orlov matched these qualifications, and furthermore, most of his activities, which involved running agents in Germany, seemed to be disaster prone. Also, the F.B.l. had photographed Orlov visiting the Soviet embassy in Washington. What was his purpose there?
Ultimately, nothing could be proven. Orlov voluntarily submitted himself to a grueling, six-day interrogation during which he steadfastly denied being SASHA. Nosenko underwent a two-year period of isolation that included psychological pressures designed to break him, but he stuck to his stories. Suspicion focused on other members of the C.l.A.s S.R. division. Several officers had their careers shattered because of the suspicion that they either were SASHA or had aided him.
Some people asked whether KAGO himself might have been a K.G.B. plant assigned the job of creating as much distrust as possible, and thereby destroying the effectiveness of the C.l.A. On the other hand, Angleton never tired of noting that every Western intelligence service had been extensively infiltrated by the K.G.B. Was it not logical to assume that penetrating the C.l.A. had been a top priority of the K.G.B.?
The argument did not impress C.l.A. Director William Colby, who, increasingly angered about what he called Angleton s "arcane theories, fired the
agency s counterintelligence chief in 1974. Colby hoped the action would bring an erid to the turmoil created by the hunt for SASHA, whose existence Colby doubted. But it did not: Three years after the sacking of Angleton, the C.l .A. suffered another disaster with one of its own moles in Russia.
- His name was Anatoly N. Filatov, a Soviet Foreign Ministry liaison officer who had wide access to assorted Russian diplomatic and military secrets. First' recruited in 1976 while assigned to Algiers, Filatov continued to provide high-grade intelligence when he was posted in Moscow. Code-named TRIANON, he was snared by the K.G.B. after only a few weeks of working for the C.l.A. Again, like all the other cases of C.l.A. moles, there was a depressingly similar scenario: Despite what was believed to be airtight security and the greatest possible precaution, the K.G.B. managed to trap the mole within a remarkably short time.
Last spring, still another Russian working in Vloscow for the C.l.A. was snared by the K.G.B. He was an engineer and a low-level agent, but the fact that the K.G.B. got onto him rather easily again raises the question: Is it possible that SASHA is tipping off the Russians about C.l.A. moles almost as fast as the agencv can recruit them?
To Angleton and his supporters, the ariswer is yes. They argue that as long as the C.l.A. officially refuses to recognize the possibility of SASHAs existence, C.l.A. operations against the Soviet Union will be stymied.
Meanwhile, there remains the possibility that in Moscow, at this very moment, a senior K.G.B. officer is readying his defection. Perhaps, just perhaps, in his many years of service, involving many high-level moles, he handled the man called SASHA. And the story' he will tell will dwarf any spy story you've heard so far. RV
Ernest \()lkrnan. an iniesligaln e reparter. is currently a nting a book on i S intelligence operations. The Devil's Sabbath, to he published by William .Worroa next cear
FA.M1LY WEEKIV OCTOBER 9 1983 9DISPLAYS UP TO 500 PH01DS!
YH TAKES UP LESS SPACE THAN A TELEPHONE!
$95
ONLY
Photos slide in without gluing or mounting.
Display large photos up to SV: 5 size:
Flip pintos for fast, easy viewing.
Now you can locate any of 500 photos iust with a tlip of your fingers And this fabulous FOTD-FLIPS-TER organizer can actually occupy less space than a Single framed photo' Here's the most convenient way to store and display favorite photos of your children, loved ones. pets, friends, weddings and graduations with a FLIP OF YOUR FINGERS What a magnificent keep-sake gift for relatives, special friends, especially grandparents, when filled with a 'lifetime' of favorite snapshots of the new baby or family activities
Think of It! You can store a lifetime of memories m this crystal-dear photo organizer that holds up to 500 photos. For usi $4.95 we include 50 windows (enough tor 100 photosi but we'll sell you as many extra dual-wmdows as you want at Si 50 a set Each set holds 50 windows (enough for 100 photos) If you re not delighted with your FOTO-FLIPSTER simply return It within 14 days and your purchase pnce will be refunded (less postage and handling, of course). Order severalthey make wonderful gifts'
'983 Encore House inc hooens Lane, Glen Head NY 11545
MAIL NO RISK COUPON TODAY......................
AT ONLY $4.95 YOU GET AN INCREDIBLE BARGAIN!
ENCORE HOUSE, Dept. FPR-7 RohertsiJne. Glen Head. NY H545
Please RUSH me FOTO-FLlPSTERisi ordered beiow i understand that f i m not fuiiy sat'Stied ^iih my oroer may 'etu'"
it within 14 days tor a cornpiete refund of my purchase pnce Hess postage ana nanonng. of course'
( #001) 1 POTO-FUreTER including 50 two-sided windows tor .00 photos at only $4.95 plus S 30 postage & nanourg ~ (#002 ) 2 FOTO-FUPSTERS for on^ $8.95 plus S2 postage and handling YOU SAVE $1.95!
Z (#003) SAVE $3.901 Order 3 FOTO FUPSTIRS tor only $12.95 plus S2 50 postage & handling
Also, to save me extra postage & handling, include with my order How Many per set
Amount enclosed S_(N y residents please add saies taxi No C 0 D s piease
Name ^_ -
Address-----
City-
*110) 50-Winoowsetisi of 'e'msa: St 50
, State.
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Introductory Offer...
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Order 1 lb. Of The Worlds Most Expensive-Tasting Fruitcake At The Regular Price...And We'll Give You An ^tra Pound FOR ONLY 5(^!a
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1
6^ERSONAi;IMItll
JACKIE COLLINS
THIS POTBOILER author KEE^S ^hE HOME FIRES BURNING
Strikingly attractiie, self-confident and clad in a jungle-print blouse and black pants. Jackie Collins on a recent morning looked as if she had stepped out of the steamy pages of one of her own nocels. Indeed. Collins's racy tales about ruthless relationships between high-pow'ered women and men can be traced, if indirealy to her own life. For her eighth and latest bestselling sizzler. Hollv\^ood Wives (Simon and Schuster}. Tinseltown resident Collins stalked the subjects in her own backyard. Other nocels have been influenced by a childhood spent close to show business (her father was a theatrical agent: her older sister is DNTiastv- s Joan Collins) and a wild, rebellious youth. But her iwrk isn't strictly autobiographical. Collins. 39. who is happily married to businessman Oscar \ Lerman and the mother of three girls, told F\MlDr WEEKiys Mary Ellin Bruns that she. unlike some of her characters, believes in fidelity and true love.
Bruns: You once saidC What I am is a moralist Does HoUywood Wires have a moraT
Collins; I think the moral is that if you do wrong youre going to get punished. The bad ones get it in the end.
Q: Before you married, did you fall for any guys who were no
Sollins: Oh sure. 1 remember when 1 was about 17 I had this one boyfriend. He was just appalling, and the more appalling he was to me the more I adored him. He would call up and say, Lets go out tonight, half an hour before he wanted to go out. and of course I would rush out. He was the only man I painted my toenails for.
Q: Do you think the open marriage is a good idea?
Collins: 1 really dont 1 could never
live my life that way.
Q: Have you been a faithful wife?
Collins: 1 have, and Ive had a lot of opportunities not to be. The difficult thing is to be faithful. The easy thing is to play around. But Im very lucky because I can have these incredible affairs with my characters, and I can control the way the affair goes. I believe in true love, ve been married 17 years, and it works for me.
Q: One of the themes in the book b the precariousness of friendship in Hollywood. Have you found it hard to make friends there?
Collins; I have definitely seen the best-friend-sneaking-into-the-husbands-bed svndrome a lot. It hasnt happened to me. but Ive seen it happen to other people, so Im very^ wary. I have a lot of acquaintances, a lot of good acquaintances. but I wouldnt trust them as far as 1 could throw them. At the same time. 1 have my very, very good friends.
Q: You've said you were a rebellious teen-ager.
Collins; I was. yes. 1 used to never go to school. 1 had all these weird clothes; they were sort of funky. I would leave for school in the morning in my uniform. very proper, and 1 would have a bag with* a change of clothes in it. I would go straight to the ladies room in the subway station, chan^ and go to the movies all day. 1 was impossible.
Q: Has Joan been a character in any of your books?
Collins; Not so far. You have to write [honestly] about people warts and all and so it might not be the wisest thing to do.
Q: What advice would you give a teen-age girl about daticg?
Collins: To have self-respect. I think thats the most important thing any woman can have. If you respect yourself. you gain confidence, you gain respect from other people and you dont regret the things you do in life.
Q; What would you like to be remembered for as a writer?
Collins; Im proudest of writing about strong women, of creating a new kind of role model for the people who read escapist literature to identify with. V^hen they read me theyre going to read about strong women, women who are sarcastic, who are perhaps cvnical but who are al vulnerable and can be very loving. 1 would like to be remem-berkl for mv women. BVAMFHfUCAN EAGLE
DIAMONDBELT BUCKLE
Only
An individually numbered, Registered Limited Edition
Every American is proud of our nation. and proud of the great American Eagle, symbol of our countrys vigilance and strength. Now, master craftsmen have created in exclusive Eagle Belt Buckle every patriotic American will wear with honor and pride.
WUl Not Be Produced After Dec. 31.1983
Each buckle will be individually crafted m an exclusive limited edition electroplated with silver, writh 24-karat gold apphed to the surface of the eagle and rim. In addition, each buckle wall be set with a hand-cut and polished .25 pt. genuine diamond with 17 fiery facets! And. to protect the integrity of
this limited edition, the dies will be destroyed at the end of this year Registerod in Official Archives
Each buckle will be individually numbered and the name of each original owner will be permanently registered in the Officiad Archives of hitema-tional Mint. Each buckle will be delivered to you with a Certificate of Authenticity in a special Collector s Presentation Case Wear this authentic collector s buckle as a striking fashion accessory and unmistakable svmbol of your love for your countrv*. ITien. hand it on to become a treasured heirloom as well. Your satisfaction is assured by our unlimited money back guarantee.
CD EC I if you order I DCE! within 11 days!
Ariencar Eage Suver irgot Ccrtairs ',e grarscf 999 re suvearc sra-c-Ceco^atec Anr gerume 2-i-^a'at goc Beauti'u: arc 'asniorace core ete wir "6 ste'"irg silver craif
Regular Retail Value Si 2.95
AcTua S'ZeOrder Early Fbr Coveted Lower Serial Numbers
Since registry numbers are assigned to each order as It is received, we strongly urge that you order promptly to receive the lower numbers that are still available Limit five (5) buckles per request
For Credit Card Orders, Calf Toll Free; 1-800-345-8500.
FA.MO.Y WEEKLIt OCTOBER 9-1983 11
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One otooe .uS $'9 95 Wus S75 o4r I SAVE $6 40' Tec ouxes.ust $35 oa $2 00 oAr I SAVE $1510' Three oucwes lus $50 00 oostcaKj
SAVE $33 50'Lrw of *n(e Buooes ,u* $75 X icstoac f I AM OROEaiNG WITHIN i' DAYS ScND ME ONE ( FREE AMERICAN EAGLE SILVER INGOT WITH EACH BUCKLE ORDERED UMIT 5,
~ E'xaosec -s ny cret* -lorey oroer r me *ui amxri ; Hy $_'Pa 's 6*ses la*
Z charge it Z VISA Diners OuO Expires.
MasterCarc Amex
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Lets talk about YomMomr...and buflding a new home.
You can save 10 years of monthfy payments and as much as 858,000 on the financing of a $35,000 home. IVS A FACT!!!
Yes. lets talk facts about building your new home ... and lets talk facts about saving your money. LOTS of your money!!! To begin with, when you plan to build a new home and finance it. even a difference of only 1 o. 2o. or 3o in the financing rate can. over the term of the mortgage, mean the savings of many, many thousands of your hard-earned dollars This is where Jim Walter Homes can help you
For example, would you believe that you can save more than S58.000 when you finance a S35.000 home with Jim Walter? IT'S TRUE ... WE CAN PROVE IT!!! First, while other financing rates are as much as 11o, 12o. or 13o. Jim Walters annual percentage rate is still ONLY 70%. Secondly, your home can be paid for in only 20 rather than 30 long, long years. And third, when you compare 13o financing of a S35.000 30-year mortgage with Jim Walter s 20-year financing of this same amount, you II not only save more than S58.000. your monthly payment will be nearly S50.00 less, and you II make only 240. not 360 payments. That's only 20 years, not 30 years of mortgage payments (A glance at the chart in this ad will show you comparisons ) Furthermore, there are no "points" or closing cost ad-ons to increase what you will pay
Jim Walter financing can be arranged FAST,,. in a matter of days, rather than weeks and weeks Then, construction of your new home can begin almost immediately, almost anywhere that you own property. We II complete the outside and, if you like, stop right there so that you can finish the interior to suit yourself at tremendous savings. Or, we II finish the inside, up to 90% complete. Do as much or as little as you
FINANCING EXAMPLE
USINQ TYPICAL JIM WALTER CASH PRICE WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT!
(Other ftumcmg computations at9 AFTER down payment)
Amount
JbnWMerS
240
. Other
360
JhnVMler
lobe
Annual
MotMMy
Annuel
Monthly
Saves You
Financed
Percentage
Payments
Percentage
Paymorrte
120 Payments
(Example)
Rete
or
Rates
o(
Piue
S35,000
10% w
$337.70
11%
$333.32
$38A47J0
$35,000
10%
, $337.70
12%
.$36001
$46,555.60
$35.000
10%
$337.70
13%
$387.17
$58,333.20
\0 DOUTV P>\VMENT lo qualifietl on hits
like, but the more of the work you do for yourself.. the more sale-priced interior finishing material you can buy... the more money you II save. And, the more home you II have for your money.
Remember, it s your future and your money .. so let s talk! Let s talk about building your new home. Let s talk about saving your money! Let us give you all the facts. We II give you exact costs and what your monthly payment will be, before construction even begins. Then, together we can builcl on your property from your selection of more than 20 models. Call, send the coupon, or visit the display park nearest you today!
Choose from more than 20 models... Built on your property to almost any stage from the shell to 90% complete!
Jfm HOMES
N. CAROLINA
ASHEVILLE, N.C. 28810 AO. 0018242 U.8.Hy-18A2S8o<itli moM88r*S484
For your convenience our Display Parks are open on weekends.
TENNESSEE
27487 ROCKY
RO.Boims
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SotttliMS.SorvlceRd. S23HMUtorl
SaSHwySSINorSiwiM MoneSM-Itl
Hictrway SOI South
nmiesssetse
OKLAHOMA
BRISTOL.TENN. 37820! Rasoiiss I
I
rllONN* NZZ*w1Vf AfiCUOftMX WMI HIH
JACKS^TEm 38301
NASHVILLE, TENN. 372ofl SSSrCHntMiH^My 2SPPMttSle.Nloy0r.
pSBBBSBBBSSBBBSq
BFREE full-color CATALOG!
JIM WAITER HOMES Mo.l to neoreit oHite 0483
H I would like to Have more information and the cost H of building on my property, I understand there would be no obligotion to buy and that you would give me these facts free of charge
NAME _^____
ADDRESS _ ______
CITY ____
Telephone (or neighbors)____
If rural route pleose give directions .
STATE 2IP
I own properly in.
.County.
WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM THEIR FRIENDS HOWSUPERMOMS CAN COPE
By Jody Gaylin
With more and more women returning to work flow, a major consideration is how household and family responsibilities will be handled with Mom away a good part of the day. Although it is not always possible to eliminate the inevitable worries and guilt pangs overwhelming most women who become full-time workers ^ well as mothers, with some planning it should be possible for these women to rearrange things so life still runs smoothly.
"Most successful working mothers discover that they must simplify their lives," says Jeanne Bodin, co-author with Bonnie Mitelman of Mothers Who Work: Strategies for Coping (Ballan-tine). The first step is for the woman to forget about keeping the house as clean as she did before and to forget about trying out complicated recipes. Easy-to-prepare meals cooked in advance save a mother precious time.
While it would be pleasant to think that once Mom goes back to work. Dad and all the kids cheerfully pitch in to help ease the housework, unfortunately this load is still on her shoulders. According to Bodin and Mitelman, 95 percent of the working women they interviewed say they still manage the household; 90 percent are responsible for meal preparation; and 93 percent do the marketing and shopping.
Nonetheless, there are ways for working mothers to increase the help th^ get from their husbands and kids. Children as young as 4 can learn to make their beds and tidy up their rooms, says Stephanie Winston, author of Getting Organized: The Easy Way to Put Your Life in Order (Warner).
Family members are more likely to assist if given specific responsibilities. One mother has set aside a kitchen day" for each child. On his or her day the child is responsible for clearing the table, washing the dishes and sweeping the floor. Another woman suggests posting the dinner menu for that day-on the refrigerator door and making sure that the first person home starts cooking.
Women with older children coming home to an empty house might consider keeping the refrigerator stocked with nutritious snacks. One idea for making
Freelancer Jody Gaylm repons frequently on psychological topics
these afternoons as pleasant as possible is to investigate after-school programs in the neighborhood or set up some creative projects at home.
Because a working mother has less
time for her children, it is important for her to stay as involved as possible with their activities at school, says Bodin. One mother she interviewed has a calendar posted in the kitchen and
promises her children that she will attend any school function as long as they enter its date on the calendar two weeks in advance. That way she can arrange for time off from work. RV
Family Weekly oaoBER 2 1983 13
The Power Antenna you plug in!
Converts Electrical Wirinjg hidden inside your house walB into Giant Antenna to 500 Ft Long
A One Minute Test of a strange TV Antenna that gives thrilling reception
Are you frustrated with a worn-out antenna that gives you crummy TV reception' That's no reason tq throw out your old worthy TV set Make this 1 minute test of the 500-F Indoor Antenna. Plug It into any outlet See how this simjjle little invention puts new life into your TV. See how it pulls in your favorite local programs, so sharp and clear, you won't believe your eyes and ears! Used and proven in thousands of homes all over the U S. A, and Canada Now it can be yours at incredible low cost
INCREASES RECEPTION POWER-INSTANTLY!
The amazing 500-F is distinctly different from ordinary antennaseven the 550 rotating kind. When you plug 500-F into an electrical outlet, you harness the wires hidden in your house wallstransforming them into a giant 500 FOOT ANTENNA. Yet this never interferes with your electric current Costs nothing for electricity. Absolutely can't cause shocks
ENJOY SHARPER.
RICHER PICTURES!
Even older, functioning sets perform better with 500-F. Plug It into any outlet and see what a difference It makes! So don't throw away your reliable TV. Simply replace the old weak antenna with a brand new 500-F. The moment you plug it in, youll see the new, astounding difference'
INSTALLS IN ONE MINUTE!
No tools No ability Just connect and plug it in That's all there is to it' Operates instantly. A built-in NEUTRALIZES blocks out electric current, making shocks impossible No moving parts to wear out. Stays indoors, safe from ram. snow, windstorms No maintenance costs You never buy another It lasts a lifetime Buy one for each TV or FM stereo set Costs less than a carton of Cigarettes.
ENJOY 30 DAYS OF FUN WITHOUT RISK OR OBLIGATION!
Why let an old, rickety antenna spoil your TV pleasure this New Year? Send the incredible sale price of $4.75 plus postage and handling. When it arrives, get ready for a thrilling surprise' An experience you'll never forget, not just this year, but many more to come! Say goodbye to fade-outs streaks, and ghosts Say goodbye to that dangerous. corroded outside antenna Enjoy the remarkable antenna that works INDOORSsafe from ram, snow, and corrosion Enjoy 30 full days at our risk Then if not thrilled and totally satisfied return it for full refund of purchase price. Don t lose this bargain offer Order one for each TV m your apartment or house Rush coupon today for immediate delivery and get yourself our valuable TV Promptness Gift-one for each antenna you buy
ASTOR ELECTRONICS, Dept. 1230-C 2425 Colee Sta. Ft. Lauderdale. FL 33303
ENJOY THESE GREAT FEATURES WITH OUR 1983-1984 MOOEL!
No Rabbit Ears! No Shock Hazard Installs in 1 Minute
Latest Model Sale! Improved! No Tools Needed!
FREE
PROMPTNESS ____ GIFTS
Prompt replies are important to our business. Therefore, if you rush the coupon, we'll include a valuable gift in your package-one gift for every antenna orderedyours to keepeven if you request a refund To get gifts, simply send coupon as soon as possi-ble. Thank you for your co-operation!FINAL OFFER OF THE YEAR.ORDER NOW!I ASTOR ELECTRONICS, Dept. 1230-C 12425 Colee Sta. Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33303
I Husli 500-F Antennas as checked below on 30 day
I trial with satisfaction guaranteed or refund of lull purchase price I CHECK QUANTITY WANTED BELOW I Cl Antenna-Send $4,75 $1.25 posts handling I C2 AntennasSend$7.50-$I.50 post S handling ^3 AntennasSend $lt.00-$2 post S handling
Aod'ess
Tov'i
State
2 c .
C8N80IANS Scnc moi'r\ t-ii- converted to U S doiia's Sorry no pe'sonai ctieckb Cinaciari coiia' nuls accectcd add 25 'H' eunahije FLORIDIANS Ar.rt 5 ia
95', I'C
lever had it this fi^!IGHTThe taste that outshines menthol-and leaves you with a dean, fresh taste.BRIGKTlOOs D
BRIGHT
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
PLIGHT AS 'a FEATHER
By Marilyn Hansen
If trying to fit last-minute cooking into )^ur busy schedule leaves )^u wilting at ^e stove, try turning over a new leaf with make-ahead salads. You can toss them together at your leisure and then serve them when you need something light. The following appetizing comoinations are delicious and handsome enough to dress up your table for any occasion.
WIIP flTN VI
1^ cops wild rice 3 cup* water
Vt teaspoon aah, or to taste 2 cops cubed cooked chkken, turkey or duck
1 cup diafonally sliced celery M cup chopped parsley
Vi cup sUced pitted black olives W cop diagonally slked green onion, indndlng tops
2 tablespoons fresh or 2 teaspoons dried tarragon
V* cup chopped red fdmlento Lettuce leaves Tomato wedges V4 cup whole bUck oUves Vi cup toasted silvered ahnonds, pistachios or nine nuts Red Pepper Viiiaigrette, recipe follows
1. Wash wild rice in hot tap water. Hace rice, water and salt into saucepan; heat to boiling, cover and simmer 30 to 40 minutes, or until rice is tender and water is absorbed. Pour half of Red Pepper Vinaigrette over rice while hot; let cool.
2. In large bowl, combine rice, chicken, celery, parsley, black olives, onion, tarr^n and red pimiento. Add remaining vinaigrette and stir-lightly to mix. Cover bowl and chill.
3. To serve: Line a serving bowl with a bed of lettuce leaves. Stir salad, then spoon onto lettuce. Garnish with tomato wedges, whole black olives and a sprnkl of toasted
Mallis6loSsemngs
SiP WPW viMSKMnm
2 ubiespoons Di|oo-styie musurd
3 tubles|MMMis white-wine vioegsr 1 tesspooo salt, or to taste
teas|Moa freshly ground black
pepper
y teaqtcoa crushed bot red pepper flakes
V4 cup oUve or safllower oil
1. In small bowl, combine mustard, vinegar, salt, black and red pepper. Add oil gradually.
Fawly Weekly. OCTOBER 9 J983 1 5
We've cooked up a great deal for everyone who loves to saYe money!
More than off beautiful CORNING WARE cookware. The set consists of a 1' :-quart open o\al casserole and a 1' :-quUrt covered round casserole; kx>ks like expensive, fine porcelain. But theyre so practical and versatile. \ou can use them ever\ da\. Vbu'll save time, too. Line vour CORNING WARE cook ware w ith Heaw Dut\ Reynolds Wrap Qualitx
Frtnthl\S:tiisairadfmar, anj CORMNC WARE :s a registema traae T,ar.
.Aluminum Foil, and you can double-hatch your recipes. ItseasN, Just double the .one batch and freeze the other for another time. And \ou can trust the strength and tlexibiliu of Re> nolds Wrap to do the job right.
Just fill out this order form, or one from a speciall) marked 25 sq. ft. Reynolds Wrap carton. Mail w ith proof of purchase plus your check or monex order for S 1.3 . W.
rCoiT:niEClass Worns Cam.r-j! Nfv, Sor 14S31
Mail to:
CORNING WARE Offer
PO Bov Dept 257 Lubbock. T\ 74441
Please send.
-seiisiv>i CORNING WAKt
French W hue ' eiH>kware For each set ordered. IN encl(>sed S13 alone cciih pnsUisi ,u purchase' tri>m25sq n Revnolds Wrap'tyualiiv Aluininuiii Foil. |||n,
\rr.s.i au-.r.;-.- ..t-j s;i
!:.T;!hcKcv- ,J- Wr.r.a-!.- Hit*I
Name
Addres
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i* jr SATlSf*CTlON GUARANTEED' MAIL TOOAr'
I OLD VILLAGE SHOP, Dept.VM 4086. BIdg. *9, Hanover, PA 17333 I Surt, I'il try tht world't most comfortable tboci Pluu tend moi I
prs Men s Tan Leather (M242578B) Sue Width.
prs. Mert s Black Leather (M236802B) Sue _ Width .
prs Men s Brown Sueded (M242586B) Siie Width .
prs Men s Sana Sueded leather M23J36'8i Si;e I ^dS~.
prs. Women s Tan Leather (M203562B) Sue__Width.
prs Women's Black Leather (V203687B>Sue_Width
prs. Women's White Leather (M2236938) Sue_Width.
_ prs Women s Brown Sueded (M223784B) Sue Width _
for lust $14 88 pr. plus $2 90 per pr postage and handling
SAVE MORE! Order TWO pair for just $28 99 plus $S 00 postage and handling.
(Please add $2.00 for wide widihS'.
CNAKED American Ekpress viSA Master Charle
IT: Diners' Club
Oid
Village
Shop
Enclosed is $.
Acc't .
_ Date Ep .
PRINTWAME __________
Huiover, Pa. 17333
_ STATE
- ZIP ______
Our piiicr s to ClCfiS an otOtrrs oroirptir Credit card or^'i are processed "'I credit approsai De,a>s nuiitiec promptly Snipment juarlnlred iltnit &0 days
H H.I, Inc . 1983
THE WORLDS MOST COMFORTABLE SHOE!
SALE!
LAST TIME AT THIS PRICE!
Srrwofh
Collarbarvj
5 r.
Coemopedk
Arch
CrcprSok
Dont Paym-Don't NOW JUST
14.88
Genuine Leather
SMOOTH or SUEDED
NOW! BLISSFUL COMFORT MORNING TO NIGHT? The closest thing to going barefoot! Handsomelv-styled CosmoPedic shoes are the ultimate in comfort... and quality-crafted uiith features youd expect to find in a $50 or $25 shoe! Luxurious genuine leather uppers in deer-tanned smooth or sueded leather are incredibly soft, yet amazingly shape-holding. The unique CosmoPedic arch support assures comfort thru long hours of standing or walking. A stitched collar prevents annoying chafing around the ankles. And for that uialking-on-air feeling ... comfort insoles and crepe soles pamper your feet from heel to toe! In Tan or Black smooth leather. Brown or Sand sueded leather ... just $14.88.
MEN s SIZES
6?. 7. 71:-, 8, a-2. 9, 9-2. 10.
lU'i, 1! IP;, 12, aliO 13. WIDTHS: C. D, fits mfcd,um /.idth F. f E. FEE fits Wide Width.
WOMEN S SIZES
5, 5! ;, 6. 6>,'2. 7. 7r, 8. 8I-2. 9, 9' 2. 10. also n.
WIDTHS: B. C. D fits med um .v.dth E, EE. EEE fits wide w.dth.
Pre Holiday SALE!
SAVE SIO.OO 71 PC. $Q88
XI SET Only ^
Thousands Sold at $19.88
r
Magnificent Hand-Painted Wood-21 Olde Tyme CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS
Delightful Trim For: Christmas Tree Wreaths Window Display Gift Packages Great stocking stuHers, loo! The warmth ... the wonder... the joy of an old-fashioned Christmas. Bring back the "good old days ' with these fascinating, antique-style ornaments. Splendid for the tree and all round the house... or to give as gifts. Theyre crafted of wood, and each is carefully hand-painted ...
You seldom see workmanship like this any more! We'll send you a complete collection of 21 different ornamentscolorful Santas, snowmen, dolls, mice, angels, cuckoo clocks, and more. Each is about 3 inches
OnlyiQSS
iBiSTMAS DELI'.'EPi
iranteeo
high, finished with safe, non-toxic paint... So well made, you can save them and enjoy them for many Christmases to come.
Old VUiage Shop Hanover, PA 17333
Serving Satisfied Customers Since 1934
FULLY GuA9A,s:EE,D-lf not delighted, return within 14 days for tull relunO (except ship. & handl.). Our policy is to process all orders promptly. Credit card orders are processed upon credit approval. Delays notified promptly. Shipment guaranteed within 60 days.
IWAMMCum !
----- SATISFACTION GUARANTEED-MAIL TODAY! -------
OLD VILLAGE SHOP, Dept. VZ-8569. BIdg. #9, Hanover, PA 17333
Yes! Please rush my Old Fashioned Christmas Ornaments (Z961698) as indicated be
low, on Full MONEY BACK GUARANTEE.
G One Set (21 beautiful hand-painted ornaments) for only $9.88 plus $2.25 shipping & handling.
G SAVE! 2 Sets (42 ornaments) for just $18.00 plus $3.50 shipping & handling.
Enclosed is $_(PA res. add sales tax)
CHARGE IT: G American Express G VISA
PRINT NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
Diners Club
Acct. No--
Exp. Date-
MasterCard
STATE
ZIP -
S; H.H.I., Inc., 1983
n Check here and send $1.00 for year's subscription to our full-color catalogue of distinctive gifts (Z999995X).
j|
whisking as you pour, to make a smooth, thick dressins^ MtrtcsoikM/cwORHNUt PASn SALAD
Vi lb. fiuUll (corkscrew pAsta)
1 cup broccoli flowerels 1 cup dlAgouAlly sliced green beans 1 cup Juliennes red pepper Mrlps
1 cup Julienne-cut carrot ^ps
'A cup cbenin Mane, cbablls or soave Vi lb. sbrimp
2 tablespoons rice vinegar Vi teaspoon sugar
Vi teaspoon sab, or to taste Few twists freshly ground Mack P^PP^
oU
1 laiwe dove garik
2 taMespoons Oriental Vi cup vegetable oil 2 tablespoons JuUenne-cut ginger root
Oash hot red pepper flakes
1. Cook pasta in 2 quarts boiling water according to package directions until just barely tender. Rinse under cold running water; drain well.
2. Drop vegetables into 1 quart of boiling water until crisp^ender. Rinse under cold running water; drain well.
3. In medium-size saut^an, bring 2 cups water to boili^; add wine and shrimp and return to boiliru. Cook shrimp about 3 minutes, or until pink. Drain shrimp and cool. Peel shrimp and cut in half lengthwise along the vein; rinse and drain.
4. In blender container, place rice vinegar, sugar, salt, pepper and garlic. Process until garlic is pureed and salt and sugar are dissolved. With motor running, slowly drizzle in the oils.
5. In large bowl, combine pasta, vegetables and shrimp. Add dressing, gin^r and red pepper flakes; toss well. Cover and rehigerate for several hours so flavors can Wend. Afafies 4 to 6 servingsWliD MCI AND GRIIN IAN SALAD*
Vi cup wild rice IVi cupa water Vi teaapoon aalt, or to taate 1 lb. tender freata green beana, trimmed 1 3-lncb piece freah ginger root, pared, minced
3 taMeapoona aherry or wine vinegar 1 teaapoon Oriental aeaame oil
Vi teaapoon coarae aalt, or to taate V* teaapoon augar Vi cup olive or vegetable oil teaapoon freahly ground pepper Tbln lemon allcea, halved
4 taMeapoona toaated aeaame aeeda
1. Wash wild rice in hot tap water. Drain and place in saucepan with the water and salt. Bring to a boil, cover and cook on low heat for % to 40 minutes, or until rice ab-soibs water. Chill.
2. Cut beans on the diagonal, Vi inch thick. Drop into rapidly boiling water and cook until just atender, about 3 minutes. Drain and rinse with cold runnir^ water; spoon into bowl of ice water to chill. Drain beans after 10 minutes and mix with cooked wild rice.
3. Combine ginger root and vinegar in blender. Process until ginger is pureed. then drain liquid and discard pulp. In small bowl, put vin^ar, sesame oil, salt, sugar and pepper. Whisk in the olive oil until mixture is emulsified; add bean and rice mixture. Toss to coat with dressing. Serve immediately or cover and refrigerate.
4. Arrange salad in bowl. Make a scallop
border of lemon slices and top with toasted sesame seeds. Makes 6 servings
*Recipes from the collection of Beatrice Ojakangas, a food writer living in Duluth. Minn.MEXICAN PASTA SALAD
2 cupa dry ftiva or large lima beana V4 teaapoon aah, or to taate 1 lb. whole wheat or plain paata: fuallll, penne or wagon wbeela 4 jalapeno peppera, aeeded and minced
1 cup chopped onion
2 green bell peppera, aeeded and cut In amaUdke
2 large tomatoea, peeled, aeeded and chopped 2 garik doves, minced K cup olive or vMetabk oU Freshly ground black pepper 4 taMeapoona wHte-%vine or dder vinegar
2 taMeapoona chopped freah cilantro (Chinese paralejd, optional 2 taMeapoona chopped pa*uley 2 cupa coarsely shredded Monterey Jack cheese
1. In medium-size saucepan, cover fava beans in water with salt; heat and boil for 5 minutes, stirring frequently. Remove from heat and allow beans to soak in the hot water for 1 hour. Drain, then return beans to saucepan.
2. Fill pan of beans with cold water, heat to boiling, reduce heat, cover and simmer 45 to 60 minutes, or until tender. Drain.
3. Cook p^a according to package directions in boiling salted water until just tender. Rinse in cold water and drain well. l\im pasta into bowl; chill.
4. In la^ bowl, combine fava beans, jala-peno peppers, onion, bell peppers, tomatoes. garlic, oil, salt to taste and several twists pepper, vinegar, cilantro and parsley; chill.
5. Mix fava bean-vinaigrette mixture with chilled pasta and half of cheese, sprinkling remainingcheeseontop. Makes6to8servings
Recipe from chef Robert Posch of the New York Restaurant School. New York, N Y.LAYERED CRAB AND ARTICHOKE RICE SALAD
IV4 cupa converied while rice 3V4 cupa water 1V4 teaapoona aalt, or to taste 4 cupa shredded rooialne lettuce
1 can (14 oz.) artichoke hearts, drained and quartered
2 medlum-alze red or green peppers, cut into thin strips
6 oz. frozen crab meat thawed, or 1 can (6 oz.) crab meat, drained and rinsed
1 container (16 oz.) sour cream
3 taMespoons lemon Juke
1V4 taMespoons O(|on-styk mustard
2 cloves garlic, minced
!4 to V* teaspoon cayenne pepper
2 green onions with tops, thinly siked V4 cup chopped pecans
1. Cook rice with water and salt according to package directions; let cool to room temperature. Layer rice, romaine lettuce, artichoke hearts, peppers and crab meat in a 3-quart straight-sided glass bowl.
2. Combine sour cream, lemon juice, mustard, garlic and cayenne pepper; mix well. Spoon dressing over top of salad, carefully spreading to edges of bowl. Top with green onions and pecans. Cover and refrigerate overnight. Makes 6 servings
/l.s reported in neu s stories in the \eu York Times. Hiishinfton Post. ( hivofio Tribune. Miami Herald. Ecologist...................................ROACH PRUFE,#i~ in University Tests
In a report released by the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA and published by the ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF -AMERICA, eight commercial and test products that included a broad spectrum of insecticides were tested against a product called Roach PKi FE."The tests were conducted in heavily infested apartments and showed at the end of the 8 week test period that with a single application of Ro ach Pri fk in each apartment, the roach population was reduced by an average 99.5^. By comparison, with the worst results were two widely recognized insecticides currently used in aerosols and applied by exterminators. They showed a 0*^ (no) reduction at the end of the 8 week tests.
Commenting in a letter, the University researchers stated; Our experience under field conditions has shown that when properly applied, the Roach PkCFE formula provides a degree of cockroach control that is usually superior to all other registered commercial or consumer products."
Family Weekly October 9i983 1 7
Disease ('.arriers Odorless. Easv To Apply
Alan Brite, holder of 15 U.S. and foreign patents has just been awarded the first of 3 U.S. patents pending on Roach Pri fk Brite says; Because roaches simply do not recognize Roach Pri fe as an insecticide, they do not try to avoid it by scattering to other parts of your residence as they do with other insecticides. Plus the electnistati-cally charged powder sticks to their bodies. They then carry the pow der back into the walls spreading it among the other roaches. The result is you kill not only the roaches you see, but also those hiding and multiplying in the walls."
Ro.ach Pri fe is odorless, non-evaporating, non-staining and non-flammable. The powder is simply applied with a teaspoon under kitchen appliances and in other hidden areas. It can be used in homes, schools, hospitals, restaurants, plus new construction.
If Ro.ach Pri fe is not available at your local hardware store, the manufacturer will be glad to send it to you. To obtain a one pound container, just send a check or money order for $8.90, which includes postage. Add tax if you live in California. One pound covers up to a 9 room residence. Youll need an extra pound for a basement or garage. Send to Copper Brite, Inc., Dept. 12 at 5147 W. Jefferson Blvd., Los .Angeles, Ca. 90016. Copies of the University test are available by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to Copper Brite. Inc., Dept. A. '-'W''
Introducing
Taste that deliversN THE MONEY SAVING
r
k
k
'if
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
toDERN MEDICINE GOES TO THE DOGS -AND CATS
By Ted Blankenship
ot long ago. there was onlv one way for the kindly veterinarian to treat a dog suffering from a serious illness such as heart disease: He would have had the animal put to sleep." Other le.ss .serious maladies, like decaying teeth or sight-impairing cataracts, in most cases would not have betm dealt with at all.
But toda\ vets use the same advanced medical techniques that prolong and improve the quality of human lives to make the lives of our pets longer and more comfortable.
the number of pets Americans own has increased steadily in recent years. Today we live with about 48 million dogs. 44 million cats, 40 million birds and uncounted millions of pet snakes, fish, turtles and other small animals.
Bc*cause pet owners want their animal companions to stay healthy, the need for skilled animal doctors has grown, too. To meet this demand, the number of veterinarians in the United States has doubled in the past 20 years, rising from about 16,000 in 1962 to approximately 42,000 today In addition, more than 2,000 of these vets are board-trained specialists. In the last 15 years alone, more than 20 specialties have been developed, ranging from neurology and cardiolog> to pediatrics and animal psychology.
If,'for instance, your pupp\ was born with a defective heart valve, the problem can be repaired with open-heart surgery. If it has an irregular heartbeat, an animal surgeon can correct it by implanting an electronic pacemaker. And today veterinarians can remove tumors, or treat them with chemotherapy, immunotherapy and even, at a few veterinarv-teaching hospitals, with radiation.
In a few localities, pets can receive
Ted Blankenship is a freelance u rile> based in Wichiia. Kan
special 24-hour emergency medical care New York Citys Animal Medical Center, an eight-story complex with a staff of 70 veterinarians, sees as mancas 70,000 animals a year. Theres a similar facility kx:ated in Boston, and many vets acro.ss the country have an emergency phone line.
Veterinary specialists dont just treat pets that have life-threatening conditions. There are dental vets who will fix a dog's bite and vets specializing in dermatology who will clear up a cats skin problems. Great strides are being made, too. in the field of animal psychology, wliere animal behaviorists work to modify the bad habits of house pets.
Its a field that's growing, says animal behaviorist Dr. Bonnie Beaver, of Texas A&M University, partly because more animals are experiencing psychological problems toda\. We ve taken dogs and cats independent animals and shut them inside our apartments That s not what the,se animals have been selectively bred for, she explains.
Richard Polsky, Ph.D., an adult-animal behaviorist in California, treated actor Hal Linden's two English setters who suffered from "excessive barking and gave talent agent Nina Blanchard s cairn terrier and spaniel anti-jealousy training.
De.spite the move toward specialization in pet medicine, though, the American Veterinaiy Medical As.socia-tion reports that the majoritc- of the na-tions vets are general practitioners who. like their counterparts in human medicine, treat a^ wide variety of ailments. Now. though, when a G.P. vet isnt equipped to handle a particular disorder, he can refer the owner to the proper vet specialist.
What's the cost for all this pet health carel* While a typical trip to the G.P. vet for a cats yearly checkup will cost about $35. a visit to the animal behaviorist might run about $95. Luckilt-, in some states today you can also buy a pet insurance policy, which may cover many of these health services. FW
Family Weekly OCTOBER 9. 1983 1 9
MB\AO
CALENDAR
YOUR SPECIAL PHOTO ENLARGED 400%
IN FULL COLOR
only
$299
NEW FOR 1984
Now your favqnte photo can become a superb, lasting and beautiful wall calendarto hang all the year long where i1 will bring you pleasure every day Or. as a gilt to remind a special person of your thoughtfulness and love
A new scientific breakthrough makes it possible to enlarge, with absolute fidelity and clarity, any color photo and reproduce it in GIANT size You get all the tones, all the beauty, all the vibrant live colors so exactly that the giant photo seems actually better than the original'
Any snap-shot, negative, slide , transparency or Polaroidcolor or black-and-whitecan be used, and will be returned to you in perfect condition Even a tiny I wv r slide becomes a giant 8"10 pnnted on a fine quality linen-look calendar that is 14" h 22' overall And the calendar is a year-round aide, with plenty of room for notes, reminders, appointments, red-letter days, etc The pnce is super, too. Only $2 99' An incomparable value these days. Just send your favorite photo or slide (please pnnt your name and full address on back) We li oven mail calendars for you to any list of people you want to send us
BENNETT-GRAF, INC.,
12417 N.E. 13th Ave., N. Miami, FI. 33161
Use handy order coupon Prompt service and satisfaction guaranteed
j BENNETT-GRAF, iNcToepTfoic, I
I 12417 N.E. 13th Ave., N. Miami, FI. 33161
IPIes rush Giani Pholo Calendinsi eniargea Irom
pnolou I enclosed (When ordering calendars lo Be seni lo more
I man one person enclose lisl ol names and addresses on sepa rale sheen For each calendar l enclose paymeni ol $2 99 plus I 75i 10 help deiray postage and handling
j SEND TO (NAME)
I STREET_
CITY_
Total Payment enclosed $_
(Fla residents a<w safes tax)
IJTATE--ZIP_
Uniquely Personal
PHEIT0
PLATE
YOUR SPECIAL PHOTO ENLARGED 300% IN FULL COLOR
only
<398
FROM THIS
Now your favonte photo can become a superb mementoa gold-rimmed plate. 7 " in diameter wtth your ENLARGED photo sealed beneath the surface, to retain its beauty endlessly'
A colorful, decorative piece tor your homeas a wall hangingor standing on a table, desk shell or bureau Or send it as a lasting gift that family members, friends or some special person will cherish as a reminder ol your thoughtfulness and love A new, scientific break-through makes it possible to enlarge, with fidelity and clanty. any color photo and reproduce rt in GIANT size You get all the tones, all the beauty, and all the vibrant, live colors, SO exactly that customers tell us the enlarged pholo seems actually better than the original Any snapshot, transparency or negativecolor or black and whiteeven Polaroids. can be used and will be returned lo you in perfect condition Even a 3" > 4 snapshot, or a tiny D*' f, slide, becomes a huge enlargement, sealed into a decorative moulded white plate, rimmed with a goiden edge Ready to hang or stand lo add love and beauty to your home
Your Ptwto SaaW Under Ai^
For Permanent Flection'
At only $3 98. this is a lasting supervalue Use handy coupon to order We guarantee satisfaction and prompt service FREEI With each plate, we will send a beautiful aasel display stand. A lovtly way lo display platas, ptcturas. ate.
"NTrCRF~cT tepTa^R L
I 12417 N.E. 13lh Ave.. N. Mlml. FI. 33161
Please rush.
- Photo Pialis I enlarged
^ r_ ^
from me fmotcMs) enclosed (Pnni your name and address on back ol photo lor return lo you wiih piales ) If sending piales lo more than one person enclose iisi ol names and addresses on seoarate sheet
For each Plate. I enclose payment ot S3 98 plus 85c to help defray postage and handling cosis
I enclose lull payment ol H _
(Fla residents add sales tax)
I NAME
STREET
CITY
STATE
J!E_
iSalislaclion Guaranteed or Money Back) J
OLD VILLAGE SHOP. Dept. VM-4017. BWg. *9. Hanover, PA 17333
P ease rush _ prs of the Genuine Leather Ranchero Dress Boot for the lo<s pnce of just 118 88 plus $3;6Ci postage and handi.ng on same money Pack guarantee
SAVE MORE' Order t*o pairs for just J36 88 plus $6 90 postage and handling on same money-Pach guarantee, prs Cordovan Bron
iM246470BiSi.e Widths
prs Black. (M236356B) Sire Width_
(Please add $2 00 for wide width,:
PRINT NAME , ADDRESS _
CITY _ STATE
ZIP
CHARGE IT: _] American Evpress _ Diners Clud _ VISA _ MasterCard
Acc t No . Eip. Date.
Enclosed is $.
-Chech here and send 50c for a year's subscription to our full-color catalog of fine shoes (M289892X). Our policy is to process all orders promptly. Credit card orders are processed upon credit approval. Delays notified promptly Shipment guaranteed withm 60 days.
Z H.H.I. Inc., 1983
usim
nmPfSlE
Due to the soaring cost ol GENUINE LEATHER wo I cannot hold this pncr I much longer Order now'
Concealed Inner 2ii
The
(ganchero
Dress
BM
Smooth,
V Butter soft Leather
Handsome, Double stitch Detailing
Rich Cordovan Brown or Black
Genuine Leather
WhyPayS49.95 WhyPayS29.95
Handsome. Double-stitch Detailing
Cobbler Crafted American Made
Concealed Sturdy Inner Zipper
Smooth, Butter soft Leather * Long-weanng Composition
Sole and Heel
NOW JUST
$1888
SAVE! 2 prs. $36.88
Here s the town txiot of the range-ndmg Westerner rugged uncluttered, rro-nonsense No wonder the man of style has adopted it for his versatile way of life' The bold, square-toed detailing goes great with sports clothes and jeans and the sleek lean design gives a with it look to the business suit
This SMSon s Dress Bool
You II wear these boots every day. everywhere They re hard to beat for comfort The supple leather breathes and the high shaft cradles anules Side zipper lets you slip it on and off as easily as a loafer Man-made sole and heel really stand up to wear and tear Don t miss the chance to get this season s best boot buy'
Men's Sizes: 74 8 84 9 94 10. 104 11 12 Widths: C. D, fits rmed urn wicth E fits '.vide width
Colors: Cordovan Brown. Black
QLD VILLAGE SHOP
Hanover. PA 17333
TRY THEM AT OUR RISK!
Return Within 14 Days For Money Back (except post & hdig)
Fabulous Vslue!
Thousands of Sets Sold for S20.
C Mdete
20-Pt. Set.
Soft, Absorbent, Luxurious
A Complete Bath Ensemble for the Whole Family!
20-Piece Decorator Bath Set
Daisy-Dazzled Prints. Garden-Bright Solids!'
You Get All This-
JUST
fir
Complete 20 Piece Set
2 Print Bath Towels (22x42")
2 Solid Bath Towels (22x42")
2 Print Hand Towels (15x25")
2 Solid Hand Towels (15x25")
4 Print Fingertips (11x18")
4 Print Wash Cloths (12x12)
4 Solid Wash Cloths (12x12")
Wonderfully soft, soothing, absorbent ^just the kind of bath towels to wrap yourself in when you step out ol the tub. All top quality 100% cotton washable, durable, carefree.
Fabulous gift idea!
Z407452-20 Pc. Towel Set .I14.8S
Soft, thirsty, flower-garden fresh. Now your bathroom will look like sunny summertime every day of the year. Luxury Bath Set features crispy whites strewn with daisies .. plus (how beautiful!) color-coordinated solids. A truly elegant decorator ensemble20 lush, lovely pieces in all.
FULLY GUARANTEED!
If you don t love themSend them back! You must be completely pleased in every way with your Daisy- Delight ' 20 Pc. Bath Set. If not, simply return for prompt, full refund of purchase price (except postage and handling). Our policy is to process all orders promptly. Credit card orders are processed upon credit approval. Delays notified promptly. Shipment guaranteed within 60 days.
Old Village Shop Hanover, PA 17333
^ SATISFACTION GUARANTEEDORDER NOW! OLD VILLAGE SHOP, Dept. VZ-t566, BWg. *9. Hanover, PA 17333
Yes! Please rush "Daisy Delight" 20-Pc.
Decorator Bath Ensemblejs) (Z407452B) as ind cated below, on Full Money Back Guarantee. COLOR CHOICE:
Gol(L_Qfy^ H P|U* Qty. Pink Qty
PRINT NAME
_ One Bath Ensertible for only $14.88 plus $2.95 heavyweight postage and handhng.
_ SAVE! TWO Bath Sets40 pieces in allonly $28.(X) plus $5.00 heavyweight post. & hdlg.
ADDRESS,
CITY
Enclosed is $-
-(PA res. add sales tax)
CHARGE IT: _ American Express ~ Diners Club " VISA MasterCard
STATE
-ZIP .
Acct. No.
Exp. Date
_ Check here and send 50c tor subscription to our catalog of fine gifts and fashions (2389%5X).
.. H.H.I. Inc.. 1983
EE-EEEEEE SIZES 5-13 E!'s fticm (O' rnt'' Teed ii iT eceiient variet> styimp aTddt-aiiy Avaiiatxe
X'y IT'Ougf OU'
.'BEECATALOe Send <0' It'
HITCHCOCK SHOES. INC.
I)rpi 41K Hlnfiham MA 02043
MliRKET PLACE
i*
6^6 S? C<#.' C'n
MOWtY WAKmo OFPOHTOIirnEg
1700 PER MONTH EARNINGS pcss:r.e p.e pcnr.j .nrorr.e tax returns c heme -r -ax ut iict Wesr.ewyounrw Oui:k.-, .eurnen r>e'=:.i hee Ncsc^smar. FeaerjreaTux :D9Mer.-'jse C>ii:C3g:. bJoiO
RINGS, WATCHES, IEWaRY-600 pr.;,-Free Sa.es K.- Cc-c.ea Sp-.iuh- H:. .x
tittn Ave.-.ue New Ysrx NT tdZ.l
or iimatEiT to jiu.
LARGE PRINT NOVaS,Ca-=.egi DC C -.
P-.C Queer. Pac;i;: MC EDDeI
PARENTS,: HELP YOUR CHILDREN Surreea :r ::s6;5r.rr.er." sr.ee-s C .-. F Bex u44C R;rnrr.-r;a V,A Cr2>4
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lor the traveler who's I hooked to his home computer, heres good news: The computer seems destined to become a hotel-room fixture.
Travelhost Computer Network, based in Dallas, says that by the end of 1983, it will have installed terminals in 100,000 hotel rooms. "New hotels are signing up every day," says company spokesman Lee Suckow, including such well-known hotel chains as Sheraton, Hilton and Holiday Inn.
According to Suckow, the computers will provide services such as flight schedule and stock-market information, a directory of local restaurants, ordering flowers and other gifts, and theyll give you a good game of Donkey Kong.
HiINVESTMENT DRESSING
[ere's something new for the moneyed male I exec with a taste for only the very top drawer. Ferazano, a new' London company formed by the British textile firm Hield Brothers Ltd., has designed an $8,000 blazer that's made from a blend of cashmere, mink and beaver, complete with silk lining and solid-gold buttons. According
PtmMmiI and PuMlahar
Patrick M Lmskey
Vic* PrMidMtt and Ad DIraclor
Gerald Wroe
Vlea Praaidant and Ganl. Mgr.
Jonathan Thompson
Chairman Emarltua, Monor F-a"
Stealing something.
More than half of the shoppers Mills surveyed report feeling angry or uncomfortable because of a stores anti-theft campaign, and 25 percent say they are inclined to filch something just because the devices are there.
to Ferazano president Firas Chamsi-Pasha, this little number was created for those top executives who are in the discomfiting position of being able to buy expensive watches, jewelry, cars and planes, but can find no comparable reward in clothing." For those who arent quite that high on the corporate ladder, theres a version with cheaper buttons that goes for a mere $3,500.
I
iREAD AU ABOUT IT
Of course, the money came . in handy," Julius Dr. J" Erving tells his audience. But more important, it taught me the meaning of responsibility."
Is Dr. J talking about leading the Philadelphia 76ers to a world championship? No. He is giving an acceptance speech upon his induction this year into the Newsboys Hall of Fame.
Since 1953, the International Circulation Managers Association has inducted one former paperboy a year into its Newsboys Hall of Fame, based in Reston, Va. Inasmuch as International Carrier Day (Oct. 15) marks the end of National Newspaper Week, wed thought wed talk alx)ut
those newsboys who grew up to be headliners. One look at the Hall of Fame club will show you: Paperboys do become Presidents. Herbert Hoover and Dwight Eisenhower, as well as Senators John Glenn and Charles Percy, are among the politicians who first cornered history on their street posts as paperboys.
Other newsworthy newsboys include President Reagan, who hasnt made Hall of Fame history yet; Willie Mays, whose papers always landed on the porch; Walt Disney, who loved the Sunday-edition comics; and Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, who had separate routes.NOTHING TO SNIPPAT
ow many times have you turned down garlic bread, pesto on pasta and other favorite garlicladen dishes for fear of contracting a breath so bad youd even keep Dracula at bay? Well, thanks to another piece of good old Japanese ingenuity, you need never nix garlic again. It seems a Japanese rice grower has developed are you ready? odorless garlic. (For a whiff, saatch our sample.)
iblSWOAi.WAr
This vital invention has been licensed to the MitsubishiFiiinily \>ccklv
Surveillance mannequins: Just hr looks or are they looking at you?
Corporation for marketing purposes, and they claim its the real thing minus that distinctive, lingering aroma. In other words, you can mash it, chop it, boil it, and it will still taste like garlic. So far the Japanese are consuming all the unscented garlic the firm can supply, but Mitsubishi hopes it wont be too long before these new cloves make it to American shores.THE PINCH TEST
niformed guards in the aisles, closed-circuit cameras dangling overhead, plastic sensor tags attached to clothes these are surefire ways to discourage shoplifting, r^ht? Wrong.
In a series of studies. Dr. Michael Mills, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Southern California, found that when a store flaunts its security system, people are more likely to want to test it by
Nt VVVlOtS /AUA''Nl
u
Whats a store to do? Mills recommends trying to protect merchandise in a less obtrusive manner, with camouflaged cameras and plain-clothed guards, thus creating a better rapport between shopper and rtailer.BIRTHDAYS
(All Libra) Sunday Jackson Browne 35. Monday Helen Hayes 83; Ben Vereen 37; Tanya Tucker 25. Tbesday Jerome Robbins 65; Daryl Hall 34. Wednesday Dick Gregory 51; Luciano Pavarotti 48. Thursday Marie Osmond 24; Margaret Thatcher 58. Friday Roger Moore 56: Lillian Gish 87. Saturday Linda Lavin 46; Lee lacocca 59; Jean Peters 57; John Kenneth Galbraith 75.
Next week in Famiiy Weexdt, actor Sean Connery, the original 007, tells why he got back into Bond-age.
Executive Editot Kate White Managing Editoc Tim Mulligan Design DIractoi; Robert Aitemus, Senior Editor. Patnce Adcrott: Food Editor Marilyn Hansen; Aaaoc. Editor Mary Ellin Bruns Assistant Editor Eiien Kunes Copy Editor Diana Browne; Research. Karen Emmons; Photo Editor, Victoria Biair Art Director, flick Stark: Art Services Director, Richard vaidaii. Asst. Art Director Susan Pereira Art Associate, Barbara Jabion, Contributing Writers, Robert Coles. Norman Lobsenz, Anita Summer, Katharine Lowry (Texas). Kathleen Maxa and Jane Ottenberg (Washington), Robert Windeier (Los Angeles)
VP Mtg. & Dir. of Operations. Richard Milien Prod. Dir, Chnstme Garman. Planning, Michael Montemurro; Makeup Mgr, William Kenny; Typographer, Debra Rose V.P. Assoc. Ad Dir, Joe Frazer Jr Eastern Mgr.. Lewis G Green Dir, Client & Agency Relations, James 8 Powers: Assoc. Eastern Mgr. Richard K Carroll Southern Mgr, Kenneth J Sherry Detroit Mgr, Lawrence M Finn; Calit., Perkins. Soerimg von der Lieth and Jones. V.P.-Marketlng Dir, Stanley Rosenleid; Marketing Mgr, Kent D Aiessandro. Promotion Dir., Patricia Kyle Creative Dir., Roben Banker. Sis. Pro. Mgr, Dorothy Schoenteid. Merchandising Mgr, Donna Gentile. Spec. Events Mgr, Lydia Janow
Newspaper Relations: V.P, Lee Eiiis V.P. Newspaper Services. Roben j Christian Newspaper Rel. Mgrs., James G Baher. Robert H Marriott, Ron Seivaggio Joseph C Wise. Transportation Mgr., Jim McCann Distribution Mgr., Phyihs Piiiero. Consumer Svcs., Linda Mount: Admin. Asst., Barbara Shapiro; V.P.-Finance, Allan Rabmowitz: Controller, James T Enright Jr
22 Fa-mily Weekly oaoBER o. i-3
6 mg "tar," 0.6 mg nicotine av. per cigarene, by FTC method.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.Only 6 mg,yet rich enough to be called deluxe. Regular and Menthol.
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Ambassador International 1983
rMaHte; AMBASSADOR
711 West Broadway, Tempe, Arizona 85282
YES! Rush me the Patchwork Pockets Bag (No. 61176) for only $12.95 each 2 for $25 90 3
tor $38.85...plus shipping and handling j understand I may use my purchase for 30 days, then return if I am not 100% delighted The FREE Gitt is mine to keep, even it I return the Handbag
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Tan 124)
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CRISP COATDRESS
4718 Here s the top fashion. Multi-Size pattern gives 4 sizes on one tissue. Misses Sizes (6. 8, 10, 12). (14, 16, 18, 20). Order your regular size. 4718 Printed Pattern ... $2.50
CUTE TREE TRIMS!
756 Make 4V2 stuffed mice to hang on your Christmas tree. Use calico scraps, finish with beads, sequins. Pattern pieces for 3 mice $2.50
jfASHIONS fO SEW CATALOG
fdi: Wirter hds cvef lOO'/ryip^ rhoost' orifi pdtte^n free I'. S') 21984 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG "F'liix) with- IbO oes'g'ii, plu' 3 free patterns mside $1
Craft Books.. $2.00 each
ni29-QUICK n EASY TRANSFERS-
ISO dtsigns to embroider, pa'nt, machine stitch. Multi-stamps mci mi30-SWEATER FASHIONS-SIZES
^38 56-Get 9 smart fasttions ff>r
larger siies. ^ome tor men toe., r?f33-FASHION HOME QUILTING-
v,if lei ot 1 b Qui lied lash ions, home 111 Jackets, pothoiders, mortal 35 - DOLLS n' CLOTHES - b tc
3?' tall ?0 dolls to kn t, t rochet, sew Boy, g.rl do's Directions
for catalogs and books please add hOc each tor postage handling
PATTERNS S2.50 each
i : J blc 'or each ta ooslage ana r-.ar-j -g
Panero No 7373 4893 4718 7043 756
Size
AMOUNT ENCLOSED S
Send to: LETS SEW, READER MAIL c/o This Newspaper
Box 133, Old Chelsea Sta. NewYork.N.Y. 10113
S'oif StS HtrOuSt .r^a/WA$1M WAY BLOW
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FLASH GORDONby Dan Barry/ \ .
/ CMOice y
A
VOCTR
FAVORITE
comicsTHE DAILY REFLECTOR*
GREENVILLE, N.C.
KEWS
FEATURES SPORTS
PEANUTS
SUNDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1983by Charles SchulzANDV CAPP
by
BEETLE BAILEY
SOMEOUE MUST HAVE \ LOOK AT
turKep UP tMe /that Water
WATER PRESSURE / SHOOJ OUT
by Mort Walker
W-'^ <
M I
C K B Y
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O US E
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:paN ^rP!At*4W-^' ''
HOCUS-FOCUS
CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? There are at least six differ enees in drawing details between top and bottom panels. How quickly can you find them? Check answers with those below.by Hal Kaufman
1
2
3
5
1
s
T
o
R
M
2
T
3
0
R
5
M
'lull 1I I MHmi'. ' ' III
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# SPOT CHECK! Hidden here in rebus form is the present name of the island region where Columbus first sighted land in the New World: dWdEdSdTd. How quickly can you
puzzle it out? Hint: As a starter, read between the d's; then take note of letter arrangement.
I'. PUI IS JW "Pi'l i'"'W
# Round Number! My top and my bottom are round as a ball, but without my top I am nothing at all. I am a number. What number?
' u lu.'O", ui V p.tai ioi wP'3
# Tongue Toot! Translate the following into a tradable sentence: TOOTTOOTTOTOTOOTTOO. Tlien read sentence fast without tripping your tong'ue.
0U| lOOl 0| UllQlJl lOU 1
# Less Talk I Definitions: Heedless what a house becomes when the furnace goes out. Countless Countess's state when husband departs. Listless li usting to memory at the supermarketr
WORD SQUARE CHALLENGE
Five words correspon ding to the detmilions below complete the word square poser above. You are asked to insert the right words (Number l,
STORM, is already in place). Definitions:
1. Important weather watch subject.
2. Indian shelter.
3. Certain golf tournaments.
A. What tehants pay.
5. Condition of some students' rooms.
In a word square, of course, words read alike across and down.
'ssvv 1 Muba p TIME WARP! Columbus and his men cannot believe their MiHio [ udOdi I ujjuis I eyes. To discover why, add lines from dot t to 2, 3, etc.
LAND HOI Add colors neatly to this amusing seafaring scene; 1Red. 2Lt. blue. 3Yellow. 4Lt. brown. 5 Pink. 6Green. 7Dk. brown. 8Purple. 9Lt. gray. 10Black. 11 Dk. blue.
SPELLBINDER
SCORE 10 points for using all the
lottur^ in Ihn w/nrH hnlnuu *(\ loim
two complete words:
LITERATI
- .......
THEN score 2 points each for ail uunrd* nf <nur letters or more
found among the letters.
Try to score at least SO points.
I'lVdJ'l iui>j6l>uii'iqisod
i
' i ^ 1; ijc;'
Our Soru: by the time of the first frost life has returnep nearly
TO NORMAL AT KINS ARTHUR'S VAST ESTATES. THE CHRONICLES RELATE THAT IT IS NOT L0N6 BEFORE SOME SAXON MEN ANP BRITON WOMEN REMARK EACH OTHER'S CHARMS. THE CHRONICLES RELATE, TOO, THAT AMONC SOME BRITONS THERE IS SRUMBLINO ANP ILL WILL.
IW fe w
''PIP W TR/UMPH /N THE RjELP OMLY 70BEOYEPCOME
IN THE CRAPLE^"NYS ONE. KING ARTHUR, IT SEEMS, IS ALSO PISPLEASEP.
THE SUMMONS TO CAMELOT IS URGENT ANP TERSE. ARN PEPARTS AT ONCE, LEAVING CASTLE ORR IN MUNGO'S HANPS. FOR REASONS OF HIS OWN HE BRINGS YOUNG BAILIFF, NINIAN, ALONG. THE LAP HAS NEVER BEFORE LEFT HIS VILLAGE. HE IS PAZZLEP BY THE CITY OF MARVEL.
\
"I AA^ AWESTRUCK EACH time 1 see it, " AGREES ARN. 'VZ/5 /KE A PALACE OF THE GOPS:' INS/PE THEY ARE ANNOUNCEP TO AN ANGRY ZEUS. "J SENT YOU 70EXPEL THE SAXONS/' KING ARTHUR THUMPERS, ^dUTINSTE^P YOU SAY AAAKE YOURSELF AT HOME'. EXPLAIN, PARKER."
IN RERLY ARN HTJLS A QUAKING NINIAN TOWARP THE AUGUST PRESENCE. Hook AT HPA, MY LCaPP," he begins, "in all of ORR THERE ARE NOT A SCORE OTHYIEN HY/XT THIS BOY'S AGE ANP YOURS. WAR HAS TAKEN ITS toll, to PEFENP your estates ANPAIAKE THE/Y! pay I NEEP STRONG BACKS. THE SAXONS HAVE THEM. THERE WAS NO CHOICE. "
1983 King features Syndicate. Inc. World rights reserved.
10-'^
ANP WHEN ARN REVEALS THE CONPfTIONS HE LAlP POWM MOST AGREE THAT HE ACTEP WISELY. "PERHAPS/' CONCEPES THE KING, "PERHAPS."
NEXT WEEK: Tour
PONYTAILby Lee Holley
HOW WAS AL6E0KA / A LOT
BETTER!
:CT WAS A BIG
improvement
OVER LAST WEEK
Hey, THATS GREAT!
Y6,iN\ very PLEASEP/
you MUST HAVE )
got a really
600P GRAPE!
Who^ talking
ABOLiT GRAPES?
VEGOTA 9m WITH THE ClilESTGUY IN THE CLA5 [
mm
mm
I (MEED TATERS/ ONIONS, SALTAN' PEPPER, FLOUR, A SMOKED HAM IF VE GOT IT,
e^PBCiALLY WHBhl I HAP , . A eoLP PATE /I VVlTN THIR61V
uf\
SOHRY I M/4P To CAHCSLMY 30LP 6Am ropAY, THIRSTY/
I TOOK' CHIP ALO0 To -7 PLAY WITH Ale I ^
REDEYE
by Gordon Bess
/ We 00 TMiS WiTi-l 'N
-ALSO, PRlSWTEMIIsle PICTURES OM VOR SHIELDS WILL HELP
A SHOW OP PIERCEMESS IS OUR MOST POTENT WEAPON /
SO TOMORROW I WANT EVERVBOOy OUT WHERE THE ENEMY CAN SEE YOU I
-EXCEPT THAT SUV WAY IN THE SACK/
soiciP
5HC(JU7 I T5U-7& mTp
by Brant parkcr and Johnny hart
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TI/WE IPBBP/ IT 10 AUMO0T FLIE0 J THE HooN HOUlZy
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WHat'5 my \ Biceuei4T/ it
HOBOSCOPg 0AY0>"THE time FOR TOPAY/ 10 RieHT FOR A
WHAT I^IHP OF PAY 10 IT?
PEUFBCt! it'0 FAIP AHP 5HHY With UOW HAMPiTY
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TWO-PART DRESS
4893 A smart auo. Multi-Size pattern gives 3 sizes on one tissue.^Misses Sizes (8.10, 12). (14, 16, 18). Order your regular size pattern.
4893 Printed Pattrn ... $2.50
7373 The yoke has gathered effect accented by contrast color. Crochet cardigan of knitting worsted-weight yarn. Child's Sizes 4, 6, 8 . .. $2.50
FOR ALL SIZES!
7043 This jacket is lavishly decorated with diamond designs, has a band collar. Knit of synthetic worsted yarn. Sizes 32-46 included ... $2.50
CRISP COATDRESS
4718 Here s the top fashion. Multi-Size pattern gives 4 sizes on one tissue. Misses Sizes (6. 8. 10, 12), (14, 16, 18, 20). Order your regular size. 4718 Printed Pattern ... $2.50
756 Make AVz stuffed mice to hang on your Christmas tree. Use calico scraps, finish with beads, sequins. Pattern pieces for 3 mice $2.50
FASHIONS-TO-SEW CATALOG
FaU Winter has over 100 styles, choose one pattern free II 50 1984 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG Filled with 150 designs, plus 3 free patterns inside. $1.50
Craft Books.. $2.00 each
129-QUICK EASV TRANSFERS-
li>0 designs to embroider, paint, machine stitch. Multi-stamps inci.
130-SWEATER FASHIONS-SIZES
38-56-Get 9 smart fashions tor larger-sires, some fur men too,'
133-FASHION HOME QUILTING-
Variety ot 15 quilted fashions, home Items. Jackets, potholders, more
135 - DOLLS n' CLOTHES - S ' to
32" tall. 20 dolls to knit, crochet, ser. Boy, girl dolls. Directions,
For catalogs and books, please add 50 each lor postage, handling
PATTERNS $2.50 each
Add 50 lor each paiiem loi postage and hanpi-ng
Pattern No
7373
4893
4718
7043
756
Size
AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ _
Send to; LEFSSEW, READER MAIL c/o This Newspaper
Box 133, Old Chelsea Sta. New York, N.Y. 10113
l:
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IKTVeGOOPOPPWiOFftXiOUPRPUNP f wazEiwd?...
ahppiayw
APWiOWWEM
iVA^nWAYVOJCC'ipgbw' Off 5TIAM WW&J aou MAFEFLASH GORDON
by Dan Barry