Daily Reflector, October 17, 1983


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FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1983

The Daily Reflector. GreenviHe. N C

from the Cirroli RIghter Institute

GENERAL TENDENCIES; A day to consider the best ways and nneans by which you will be able to taKe your imaginative and idealistic ideas and plans and put them into some form of successful detailed action.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Plan time for ridding yourself of small details that should be handled before you can make progress in new outlets, or regular ones.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Ideal day to get your ambitions clear in your mind so that you can later go after them in a very efficient manner.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Be analytical of your career and know how best to improve it and you can take big strides forward today and tonight

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Be sure you know all the facts, factors and figures of any new ar-rangementt ybu. ar? endeavoring to make.

(uH ^^9 21) Study your many responsibilities and find ways to c5ut<lown on them so that you do not overwork. Handle the most important.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Situations arise that will show you how best you can please those you are allied with, and remove tensions.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Be mroe concerned with getting everything around you in more harmonious condition and put aside weighty matters for a while.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) More preparation is needed before you can make those new ideas work successfully, so get busy on such now.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Do whatever it is that kin expect of you early and come to a better accord with them. Be tactful today.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Get all that correspondence handled about which you have been procrastinating and do it wisely.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Get at the business of collections and then pay your most pressng bills so that you can keep out of hot water.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Concentrate on self now and know what you truly want out of life and plan just how to attain your aims.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TOD'iY"'.. He or she will be one of those delightful young persons who will early concentrate on how to realize his, or her fondest wishes and will formulate a very de)ailed plan for so doing. Provide fine spiritual guidance and a good education.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel What you make of your life is largely up to you!

' 1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc

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FOCUS

A New Holiday?

This week Congress plans to send a hill to the President which would make Martin Luther Kings birthday a federal holiday. Contrary to popular belief, the United States has no mandatory "national" holidays. Each state has the authority to decide which holidays it will observe. P'or example, several Southern States celebrate the birthdays of Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee, while only about 30 states celebrate Lincolns birthday.

DO YOU KNOW How many federal holidays has Congress declared so far?

FRIDAYS ANSWER The current national debt Is $1,354,037,000,000.

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Coarse fish live in murky waters, are mostly tiny and mostly inedible. Last years coarse fishing championship was won with a catch of 13 roach and one bream that totaled only one pound and 10 ounces.

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SCOREBOARD

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Monday, October 17.1983 H

TANK M^NAMAllA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

World Series

By Thi Aisociated Pm

(BalUmore win Serie 4-1) GAMEl

Phjiadeiphia...............ooo 001    010 2    5    o

Baltimore..................100    000    000    1    5    i

Denny, Holland (8) and Diaz; M^mor, Stewart (9). T.Martinez (9 and Dempsey, Nirian (9). W-Denny. 1-0. L-McGrkor, 0-1 HRs- Philadelphia, Morgan (1), Maddox (1). Baltimore Dwyer (11.

GAMEZ

^iladelphia...............ooo 100    000 1    3    0

Baltimore.  oOO 030    lOx 4    9    1

Hudson, He^ndez (5), Andersen (6), Re^ (8) and Diaz, Virgil (8); Boddicker and Dempsey. W-Boddicker, i-O L Hudson, 0-1. HR-Baltimore, Lowenstein (1).

GAMES

BaUimore ...............OOO    001    200-3    6    1

Phi adelphia.............011 000    000-2    8    2

Flanagan, Palmer (5), Stewart (7), T. Martinez (9) and Dempsey; Carlton, Holland (7) and Diaz, W-Palmer, 1-0 ,0-1 HRs-Ballimore, Ford (1). Philadelphia, Matthews (1), Morgan

GAME 4

Baltirjore................JOO    202    109-5    10    1

Philadelphia.............ooo 120    001-4    10    0

Davis, Stewart (6), T.Martinez (8) and I^mpsey Nolan (6), Denny. Hernandez (6), Reed (6), Andersen (8) and Diaz. WDavis 1-0. LDenny 1-1.

GAMES

^llinjore..................oil 210 000 5 5 0

Phila^lphia...............000 000 000 0 5 1

McGregor and Dempsey; Hudson, Bystrom (5), Hernandez (6), Reed (9) and Diaz. W-McGregor, 1-1. L-Hudson, 0-2. HRs-Ballimore, Murray 2 (2), Dempsey (1),

NFL Standings

By The Associated Press

AmericaBC'aarereiice Eui

W L TPct. PF

0    1.000    215

0    .833    182

0    .529    111

0    .286    126

286 137

Buffalo    5    2    0    .714    146

Baltimore    4    3    0    .571    137

Miami 4    3.    0    .571    148

New England    3    4    0    .429    155

N.Y.Jeb    3    4    0    .429    146

Central

520    .714    183

4    3    0    .571    135

1    6    0    .143    108

0    7    0    000    123

WmI

520    .714    181

4    3    0    .571    112

4    3    0    .571    164

3    4    0    .429    145

3    4    0    .429    191

National Conference

East 7    0

5    I

4    3

2    5

2    5 Central

5    2    0    .714    164

3    3    0    .500    161

3    4    0    .429    147

2    5    0    286    146

0    7    0    .000    108

West

5    2    0    .714    203

5    2    0    .714    152

4    3    0    .571    158

2    5    0    .286    145

Sunday's Games Miami 32, New York Jets 14 Minnesota 34, Houston 14 San Francisco 32, New Orleans 13 St. Louis 34, Tampa Bay 27 New England 37, ^n Diego 21 Detroit 31, Chicago 17 Pittsbun 44, Cleveland 17 Buffalo 30, Baltimore 7 Denver 24, Cincinnati 17 Seattle 38, Los Angeles Raiders 36 Kansas City 38, New York Giants 17 Los Angeles Rams 27, Atlanta 21 Dallas^, Philadelphia 7

Monday's Games Washington at Green Bay, (n) Sunday, Oct, 23 Kansas City at Houston Minnesota at Green Bay

Pittsburgh

Ctevelaad

Cincinnati

Houston

LA.Raiders Denver Seattle Kansas City San Diego

Dallas Washington Philaddphia NY. Giants St. Louis

Minnesota Green Bay Detroit Chicago Tampa Bay

San Francisco LA. Rams New Orleans Atlanta

PA

130

155

126

165

145

132

159

146 208

132

117

158

123

211

Atlanta at New York Jets Chicago at Philadelphia New England at Buffalo Geveland at Cincinnati Detroit at Washington Miami at Baltimore PittslHirgh at Seattle San Diego at Denver San Francisco at Los Angeles Rams New Orleans at Tampa Bay Los Angeles Raiders at Dallas, (n) Monday, Oct, 24 New York Giants at St. Louis, (n)

NHL Standings

By The Associated Pms Wales Conference Patrick DivUion

W L T PU GF GA

NYRa

NY Isles New Jersey Pittsbui^ Washington

Adams Division

12    31    18

10    31    13

8    27    27

2    14    22

2    16    28

0    IS    29

iton    4    1    _

Hartford    2    2    15

Buffalo    2    3    1    5

Montreal    2    3    0    4

Campbell Conference Norris Division 5 1 0 4 2 0 3 2 0

St. Louis

To Minnesota Detroit

9 37    30

25    13

18 20 21 26 20 25

10    28    19

8    25    25

7    32    28

5    27    27

2    19    29

Smythe Division Edmonton    6    0    0    12    34    20

Vancouver    2    4    0    4    27    28

Winnipeg    1    3    2    4    21    24

Calgary    13    1    3    IS    20

LosAngeles    0    4    2.    2    16    26

Saturdays Games Boston 5, Buffalo 3 Philadelphia 5. NY. Islanders 1 Hartforoe, Pittsbui^ 4 Toronto 10, Chicago 8 Montreal 5, Vancouver 4 Edmonton 4, Calgary 3 St. Louis 6, NY. Rangers 5 Minnesota 2, Winnip^l Detroit 3, Los Angeles 3, tie

Sundays Games NY. Islanders 3, Buffalo 2 Quebec 4, Washington 2 N.Y. Rangers 5, Ailadelphia 4 Toronto 1, New Jersey 1 Chicago 4, Minnesota 3 Edmonton 5, Calgary 1

g Mondays Games No games scheduled

Tuesdays Games Boston at Quebec, (n)

Buffalo at Pittsburgh, (n)

Calgary atN.Y. Islanders, (n)

APTop Twenty

By The Associated Press

How the Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press college football poll fared;

1. Nebraska (7-00) beat Missouri, 34-13.

2. Texas (OOO) beat Arkansas, 31-3.

3. North Carolina (7-04)) beat North Carolina St., 42-14.

4. West Virginia (6-04)) beat Virginia Tech, 13-0.

5. Auburn (5-1-0) beat Georgia Tech,

31-13.

6. Ohio State (4-24)) lost to Illinois, 17-13.

7. Florida (54)-l) did not play.

8. Georgia (54)-l) l^t Vanderbilt, 2013.

9. Arizona (5-1-1) lost to Oregon, 19-10.

10 Miami, Fla. (6-1-0) beat Mississippi

St., 31-7.

11. Alabama (4-2-0) lost to Tennessee. 41-34.

12. So. Methodist (54)4)) did not play.

13. Michigan (5-14)) beat Northwestern, 354).

14 Iowa (5-1-0) beat Purdue, 31-14.

15 Oklahoma (4-2-0) beat Oklahoma St., 21-20.

16 Maryland (5-1-0) beat Wake Forest, 36-33.

17. Washington (5-1-0) beat Stanford,

32-15.

18. Arizona State (44)-l) beat Southern Cal, 34-14

19. Illinois (5-1-0) beat Ohio State, 17-13.

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College Scores

By The Associated Press EAST Brown 14, Cornell 3 Clarion St. 24, Slippery Rock 6 Columbia 21, Yale 18 Dartmouth 28. Harvard 12 Navy 37, Princeton 29 Notre Dame 42, ArmyO Penn 28. Lafayette 2 Penn St. 17, Syracuse 6 Rutgers 29, Colgate 26 W. Virginia 13, Virginia Tech 0 SOCTH Auburn 31, Georgia Tech 13 Clemson38, Duke 31 Florida St 43. Cincinnati 17 Georgia 20, Vanderbilt 13 Kentucky21,LSU13 Maryland 36, Wake Forest 33 Miami, Fla 31, Mississippi St 7 N. Carolina 42, N. Carolina St. 14 Pittsburgh 55. Louisville 10 Tennessee 41. Alabama 34

Tulane 17, SW Louisiana 15 Virginia 38.VMI10

MIDWEST BallS.t.l^KentSl.l3 Bowling Green 23, W Michigan 20 Cent Michigan 14. Ohio U 9 Illinois 17, Ohio Si 13 Indiana24, Michigan.St 12 Iowa31, Purdue 14 Iowa St 22, Colorado 10 Kansas 31, Kansas St 3 Michigan 35. Northwestern 0 .Nebraska 34, Missouri 13 N Illinois 34, E Michigan 15 Toledo 10. Miami, Ohio9 Wisconsin 56, Minnesota 17 WEST

Baylor 13. Texas A&M 13. tie Mississippi 20, Texas Christian 7 Oklahoma 21. Oklahoma St 20 Texas 31. Arkansas 3 Texas Tech 14. Rice 3 Tulsa 39, Illinois St 25 Air F orce 37, Texas-EI Paso 25 Arizona St 34, Southern Cal 14 Brigham Young 66. New .Mexico 21 Calif

forma 45, Oregon St :)9

ColoradoSt 17, San Diego St. 15 Hawaii 23. .Nev Las Vegas 0 New Mexico St 42, Drake 23 Oregon 19, Arizona 10 LClA 24, Washington St 14 Utah 69, Wyoming 14 Utah|t lO,.BoiseSt 7 Washington 32, Stanford 15

Golf Results

PALM BE.ACH GARDENS. Fla. ( APi Results of Sunday's final singles in the Ryder Cup Matches on the 7,137 yard, par 72 PGA National Golf Club course:

Seve Ballesteros, Europe, and Fuzzy Zoeller, United States, tied Nick Faldo, Europe, def Jay Haas. United States. 2 and 1.

Ben Crenshaw, United States, def. Sandy Lyle Europe. 3 and 1 Bernhard Langer. Europe, def Gil Morgan, United States, 2 up Bob Gilder, United States, def Gordon Brand. Europe. 2 up

Cal Peete, Unifed Slates, def Waites. Europe, 1 up.

Brian

ope, 1

Paul Way, Europe, def Curtis Strange, United Slates, 2 and 1.

Craig Stadler. United States, def. Ian Woosnam. Europe. 3 and 2.

Ken Brown. Europe, def. Ray Floyd, United States, 4 and 3 Sam Torrance. Europe, and Tom Kite, United States, tied Jose-Maria Caizares. Europe, and Lanny Wadkins. United SUtes. tied

Tom Watson. United States, del. Bernard Gallacher. Europe, 2 and 1,

United Slates wins Matches 14 1-2 to 13

1-2

N.C.Scoreboard

Womens College Volleyball

Duke def Georgia Tech 15-9,15-12,156 Mens College Soccer N.Carolina-Wilmington 3, N Carolina-Charlotte 1

Sooners Rally After Week Of Adversity

By The Associated Press

For six full days and more than 50 minutes of one football game, last week wasnt a very good one for Coach Barry Switzer and the Oklahoma Sooners.

First, they dropped from eighth place to 15th in the Associated Press poll as a result of a lopsided loss to Texas. Then, star tailback Marcus Dupree disappeared and eventua ly turned up back home in Mississippi, apparently having decided to drop out of Oklahoma.

Finally, the Sooners were in danger of losing their third game in six tries, trailing 20-3 with just over nine minutes left against Oklahoma State, which had extended top-rated Nebraska a week earlier before losing a 14-10 squeaker.

But late Saturday afternoon things suddenly began looking up for Switzer & Co. First, Danny Bradley flipped a screen pass that Derrick Shepard turned into a 73-yard touchdown play and Tim Lashars extra point made it 20-10.

With 2:50 left, Spencer

Tillmans 5-yard run and a 2-point conversion pass from Bradley to Earl Johnson pulled the Sooners within 20-18.Oklahoma tried an on-side kick and recovered the ball at midfield. The Sooners reached the OSU 28 and Lashar, who had hit only one of three field goal atempts this season, nailed a 46-yarder with 1:15 remaining, lifting Oklahoma to a dramatic 21-20 victory.

Our team believes in winning, Switzer said. It was just our time to get some good things happening for us. This is as good a win as Ive had in a long time. I havent had many like this.

Switzer said the Oklahoma players had trouble concentrating earlier in the week because of all the media attention surrounding Duprees departure. And, indeed, the Sooners lost all six of their fumbles and threw an interception. But they also got 105 rushing yards from Johnson and a 147-yard pass-ing performance from Bradley.

I dont even want to think

about it, Switzer said, rufer-ring to Iaffaire Dupree. If he doesnt want to be here, its fine with me. I just wish him well.

While Oklahoma was rallying, three members of the Top Twenty lost over the weekenc. Illinois, the No. 19 team, remained in a first-place tie with Michigan in the Big Ten by defeating sixth-ranked Ohio State 17-13, No. 9 Arizona was upset by Oregon 19-10 and Tennessee outlasted No. 11 Alabama 41-34 on Johnnie Jones 66-yard run with three minutes left.

Elsewhere, No. 1 Nebraska whipped Missouri 34-13, runner-up Texas thumped Arkansas 31-3, third-ranked North Carolina downed North Carolina State 42-14, No. 4 West Virginia turned back Virginia Tech 13-0 and fifth-ranked Auburn overpowered Georgia Tech 31-13.

Rounding out the Top Ten, eighth-ranked Georgia held off Vanderbilt 20-13 and No. 10 Miami, Fla. trounced Mississippi State 31-7. Seventh-ranked Florida was not scheduled.

In the Second Ten, it was No. 13 Michigan 35, Northwestern 0; No. 14 Iowa 31, Purdue 14; No. 16 Maryland 36, Wake Forest 33; No. 17 Washington 32, Stanford 15; No. 18 Arizona State 34, Southern California 14 and No. 20 Brigham Young 66, New Mexico 21. Twelfth-ranked Southern Methodist was idle.

While Oklahoma recovered in the nick of time. Southern Cal, another of the nations traditional powers, continued to slide, liie Trojans were held to 130 yards rushing and 146 passing by Arizona State, which got 346 passing yards from Todd Hons and a 253-yard performance (119 on 23 carries, 134 on five receptions) by tailback Darryl Clack, who scored on a 3-yard run and and teamed up with Hons on an 80-yard touchdown pass.

Obviously, we were defeated by a better football team, said Ted Tollner, uses first-year head coach, whose record dropped to 2-3-1 after the Trojans worst home setback since 1976. I, dont know how much better, but

Orioles Take Series Title.

(Continued from page 9) Lowenstein, who was 5-for-13 in the Series but never was allowed to see a left-handed pitcher.

It takes maturity and it is a psychological adjustment as well as a mechanical one. Remember Tito Landrum? He hit the home run that clinched the American League pennant. He never came to the plate in the World Series.

The Orioles playoff victory, like the one that clinched the

division title and the one that nailed down the world championship, all came on the road. The Orioles, in fact, assembled baseballs best record away from home, another measure of the teams maturity.

Of course, not all the parts were interchangeable. The switch-hitting Murray bats fourth and plays first base against all pitchers, slumps notwithstanding.

Murray was struggling, with

Green Bay 'D' Full Of Holes

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -The Green Bay Packer defense has been breached so often by National Football League opponents that a state legislator, during a speech on the floor of the Legislature, cited it while dramatizing the horrors of loopholes in the law.

The statistically worst defense in the NFL plays host tonight at Lambeau Field to one of the leagues finest offenses, that of the Washington Redskins who have won 21 of their last 23

games.

This is the best that our league has to offer, Packer Coach Bart Starr said in analyzing the Redskins, adding: Well be ready to play despite the injuries that have sidelined many of his starters.

Typical of the substitutes he has to use is nose tackle Charles Johnson, a 1980 starter who was cut and replaced by Terry Jones. An injury put Jones aside in the first defensive play of the current season, and Johnson was re-acquired.

just two singles in the first four Series games. But he made up for that with a pair of huge home runs, helping Baltimore to a 4-0 lead in Game Five. The second one smashed into the right field scoreboard, hitting just above his own name on a list of American League runs batted in leaders which was being displayed at the time.

Murrays slump-snapping homers were in sharp contrast to the problems that Philadelphia slugger Mike Schmidt went through. Schmidt managed just one broken bat single in 20 at-bats and was a major contributor to the Phillies .195 Series batting average, lowest for any team since Baltimore batted .146 against the New YorkMetsin 1969.

By the end of Game Five, Philadelphia fans were booing Schmidt, who led the majors with 40 home runs this season.

If I was a fan in the stands from Philadelphia, I would boo me, too, he said.

Dempsey, the Orioles master mechanic behind the plate, also homered and ripped his fourth double of the Series to nail down the MVP award. He thoroughly enjoyed his unexpected offensive

explosion.

I havent been swinging the bat like that since spring training three years ago, he said. I dont think anybody expects me to hit a home run.

Thats fair, since hes only had 42 in 11 major league seasons.

The loss was a tough one for some of Philadelphias senior citizens.

Rose, benched in a controversial lineup switch in Game Three, roared back with two hits in the fourth game and two more in Game Five, trying mightily to lift his team. He simply couldnt.

Its been fun at times, said Rose, whose future with this club, at age 42, is clouded. Frustrating at times, depressing at times, but it was OK for us because only two of 26 teams get to the World Series. We were one of them. We just lost.

To a better army.

today they were quite a bit better. They played a dominating first half (the Sun Devils led 27-0 at the intermission). We were never in the game. You can draw your own conclusions why.

Nebraska trailed Missouri 7-0 and 10-6 before overtaking the Tigers with two touchdowns in the second period and two more in the fourth.

Mark Schellens 20-yard run gave the Cornhuskers the lead, Mike Rozier carried 24 times for 159 yards and scored on runs of 60 and 9 yards and Irving Fryar caught TD passes of 38 and 4 yards from Turner Gill.

Asked if he thought Nebraska was the nations No.

1 team, Missouri Coach Warren Powers said, They sure look like it right now.

But Powers will get quite an argument from Arkansas Lou Holtz, whose Razorbacks held Texas to a 7-3 halftime advantage, only to have the Longhorns pull away in the second half. Texas used three long-distance scoring plays -passes of 54 and 43 yards from Rob Moerschell to Brent Duhon and a 54-yard run by Mike Luck.

We couldnt generate much of a running game against them, but then no one else has, either, Holtz said. Texas is not the second best team in the country. They are the best team in the country,

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North Carolina State held North Carolina to a 14-14 halftime standoff. But the Tar Heels poured across four touchdowns in the second half, two coming on Scott Stankavage passes of 19 yards to Mark Smith and 25 to Earl Winfield.

West Virginias offense sputtered, but the Mountaineers held Virginia Tech to 221 yards overall in what Coach Don Nehlen called his defenses best game of the year. West Virginia scored on quarterback Jeff Hostetlers 1-yard run and a pair of field goals by Paul Woodside.

Randy Campbell ran 2 yards for one touchdown and passed 47 to Chris Woods for another as Auburn rallied from a 13-7 deficit early in the third quarter to beat Georgia Tech.

Illinois last two victories over Ohio State have been by 17-13 scores, but the one before this occurred back in 1%7. The mini drove 83 yards late in the game, with Thomas Rooks scoring the winning touchdown on a 21-yard run with 1:06 remaining after Jack Trudeau hit Scott Golden with passes of 24 and 22 yards and scrambled for 16 more.

When you have a pressure game, youll have errors, Coach Mike White said after

the mini survived three lost fumbles and two interceptions. But in the end. we found a way to win, and thats what pleases me most. That, to me, shows how much progress weve made.

Illinois has not been in the Rose Bowl since Jan. 1,1964.

Keith Montgomery scored on runs of 2 and 30 yards in the first half to pace Georgia past Vanderbilt. Doug Judges 91-yard kickoff return and three interceptions helped Oregon upset Arizona. Freshman Bernie Kosar passed for two TDs to lead Miami over Mississippi State.

Tennessee scored four long-range touchdowns in beating Alabama for the second year in a row. Alan Cockrell teamed with Lenny Taylor and Clyde Duncan on 80-*yard plays, while Duncan also grabbed a 57-yarder.

Quarterback Steve Smith and tailback Rick Rogers each ran for two touchdowns to lead Michigan past Northwestern, which failed to score for the

fourth time in six games.

Robert Smiths 55-yard punt return and Owen Gills two short scoring runs helped Iowa turn back Purdue.

Boomer Esiason passed for three touchdowns, including a 30-yarder to Sean Sullivan with 1:15 remaining, as Maryland defeated Wake Forest.

Sterling Hinds rushed for 188 yards and two touchdowns in Washingtons triumph over winless Stanford.

And Steve Young threw four touchdown passes, while wide receiver Kirk Pendleton set a Western Athletic Conference record with four TD receptions - three from Young, one from halfback Eddie Stinnett - as BYU rolled up 270 yards on the ground and 507 through the air for a WAC record total of 777.

If they arent the best offensive football team in the nation, I dont know who is, said New Mexico Coach Joe Lee Dunn. They mi^t be better than Nebraska.

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MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 17, 1983Role Players Lead Orioles To Crown

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - They are a team of role players, a baseball club assembled like an army that comes at you in waves, row after row of fresh troops.

And the Baltimore Orioles are the world champions today because they have mastered platoon baseball, a game that depends on moving players like chess pieces tpsuit situations.

This is not a team of greats, but its a great team.

The general in charge of this battalion of spare parts is Joe Altobelli, a soft-spoken man whose club met the enemy at Philadelphia and wiped them out in five games.

Now, he said, I can go home and see my grand-kids.

The last time Baltimore was in a World Series was 1979, when the manager was Earl Weaver, a fiery Napoleon type. The Birds led that Series 3-1 - just like they did against Philadelphia. But they let Pittsburgh off the hook that year, losing in seven games, only the fifth time in history a team has blown that kind of edge. This time, with Gen. Altobelli calling the shots and 15 troops from that team still in Baltimores army, the story had a different ending.

"Hes the smartest guy I know, observed Eddie Murray, who battled his way out of a 2-for-16 Series slump with a pair of mammoth home runs and a single

in Sundays 5-0 wrapup victory. He put the right nine out there every day.

Not the same nine, but the right nine. The difference between Weaver and Altobelli is mainly in style. One was a screamer and the other is not.

They were both outstanding managers, said Rick Dempsey, the Series Most Valuable Player, who had Baltimores other two hits Sunday a double and homer -and batted .385 for the Series with five hits, all for extra bases. When Joe came in, there was no yelling and screaming.

Gen. Altobelli preferred a low-key approach.

Obviously, its quieter in the dugout, said Scott McGregor, whose five-hit

shutout finished the Phillies and helped soothe the memories of 79, when he was the seventh-game loser. 1 think Joe is just as good a manager as Earl, and maybe it proved we didnt have to be fussed at all the time. But Earl couldn't have done it any other way .

McGregors shutout gave Baltimore a 1.60 earned run average for the five-game Series, the best in 40 years.

The closest Philadelphia came to a run Sunday was in the eighth inning when Joe Morgan tripled and Pete Rose followed with a long fly to left field. Morgan tagged up but tripped leaving the base, falling to the ground and scrambling back. It was symbolic of the stumbling Phillie offense throughout the Series.

Baltimore lost the opener but swept the next four games, becoming the fourth team to accomplish that. The Orioles were the victims the last time it happened, in 1%9 when the New York Mets won the world championship.

Without the designated hitter in this Series, Baltimore lost the use of Ken Singleton, one of its important offensive parts. It hardly disturbed Altobelli, who set a Series record by sending four consecutive pinch hitters to the plate in Saturday's fourth game and made nine lineup changes in one inning.

"I thought that was tremendous, said McGregor. Watching him, you got the feeling he was bored by the DH.

Not bored, perhaps. But he certainly

knew how to survive without it, using Baltimores interchangeable parts.

We did quite a few things like this during the course of the season, the general said. It was just magnified here. This club won 94 games last year. I just wanted to keep us going in the same direction.

His approach was to use all-his players. The left field job, for example, was shared by lefty-swinging John Lowens-tein and righty Gary Roenicke. The result was a combined 34 home runs and 124 runs batted in, numbers neither was likely to approach playing fulltime.

The major hurdle is the acceptance on the part of the players, said (Please turn to page 11)

Baltimore Hurlers Gain Attention

PHILADELPHIA (AP) After 171 games and a 1.11 postseason earned run average, Baltimore pitching coach Ray Miller thinks the Orioles staff may finally get the recognition it deserves.

I couldnt have sat down before the start of the season and planned a better ending than the one we had, Miller said after Scott McGregor pitched a five-hitter and blanked the Philadelphia Phillies 5-0 Sunday to clinch the World Series for the Orioles.

The Baltimore staff allowed just 10 earned runs in nine post season games - two in the American League playoffs to the Chicago White Sox and eight to the Phillies.

It was a fitting windup for a staff that was in danger of collapsing during the season.

A 11 heard before the playoffs was how good the Chicago pitchers were, and before the Series all about Steve Carlton and John Denny, Miller said. But this was the 105th game we won this year.

And we did it with two Cy Young winners down and with Dennis Martinez having an off year.

Jim Palmer, a threeAime Cy Young Award winner, was on the disabled list twice during the season and Mike Flanagan, the 1979 winner, once. Dennis Martinez slumped to a 7-16 record, and reliever Tippy Martinez was sidelined with an emergency appendectomy.

But rookie Mike Boddicker, given a chance when Palmer and Flanagan went down, won 16 games and second-year starter Storm Davis won 13. In addition, Alan Ramirez and Bill Swaggerty were called from the minors to make significant contributions in starting roles.

Catcher Rick Dempsey, who was named the Most Valuable Player in the Series, said he was worried about the pitching as late as the final week of the regular season.

After clinching the division in Milwaukee, Dempsey said, our pitchers went into a lull. They had no ve ocity, no breaking balls and I was beginning to become concerned.

But Dempsey added, We seemed to come alive against the White Sox and in the World Series, everything came together.

The only two games lost in postseason play, the opener of the playoffs and the opener of the Series, were by 2-1 scores with McGregor on the mound.

Thats the way it was late in the season for Scotty. said Miller. He was knocked out a few times, but I cant remember when he pitched a bad game. Then he pitched a couple of good games in the postseason without winning. If anybody needed some runs, it was Scotty. I dont think wed scored him any runs since Sept. 15.

The victory brought the Orioles the traditional telephone call from President Reagan. Manager Joe Altobelli reminded the president that they had met at the White House last May when Reagan proclaimed National Amateur Baseball Month, and thank^ him for calling on such a big day for us.

We really appreciated it, Altobelli told the president. After we met, I would never miss a Ronald Reagan movie on television.

Reagan noted that Orioles first baseman Eddie Murray, who roared out of a Series slump with two home runs, wore No. 33 - the same number the president wor as a football player.

I just knew it was going to be his day, Reagan said.

)Mtobelli said the Orioles had a fine scouting report on the Phillies from scout John Stokoe, and our pitchers did a super job.

I dont know how it could have been any better, added General Manager Hank Peters. The starters were great and so was the bullpen.

I knew we had good pitchers, said Ken Singleton. They ususlly carry us, but when they were hurt early, I began to wonder. But I was glad I was on this side, not facing them.

Sammy Stewart, a long reliever who didnt allow a run in 9 13 innings, said: They say good pitching can beat good hitting. We proved that good pitching can beat good pitching.

Sports Calendar

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

Today's Sports Soccer

East Carolina at USC-SpartanburgOp.tn.)

Rec Soccer Grades 1-3 Strikers vs. Rowdies (3:45 p.m.) Chiefs vs. Azt^ (4:45 p.m.) Cosmos vs. D$Biats (S;45 p.m.)

k Grades 7-9 Aztecs vs. Cosmos (6:45 p.m.)

Golf

East Carolina at Campbell Invitational

Tennis Washington at Tarboro Rocky Mount at Rose Roanoke at Edenton

Tuesdays Sports Soccer

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Home Run Power

Eddie Murray follows through on his solo homer in came off Phillies starter Charles Hudson. Phils the second inning of Sundays World Series Finale catcher Bo Diaz and umpire Steve Palermo are at Philadelphias Veterans Stadium. The home run also pictured. (.\P Laserphoto)

Wahoos After Respcfct

Roseat Kinston (4p.m.) Greenville Christian at Falls Road (4 p.m.)

Rec Soccer Grades 4-6 Strikers vs. Rowdies (3:45 p.m.) Chiefsvs. Aztecs (4:45p.m.) Cosmos vs. Diplomats (5:45 p.m.)

Grades 7-9 Strikers vs. Rowdies (6:45 p.m.) Diplojnals vs. Cosmos (7:45 p. m.)

Girls League Strtikersvs. Rowdies (3:45 p.m.)

Tennis Rose at Kinston (3:30 p.m.) Greenville Jrs at Chapel Hill (3:30p.m.)

Farmville Central at Greene Central

Golf

East Carolina at Campbell Invitational

Volleyball

William & Mary at East Carolina

(7p.m.)

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) - Coach terry Holland says Virginias basketball Cavaliers are interested in proving were going to be a major factor in the nation without Ralph Sampson this season.

Its very important to our players to prove were good without Ralph, Holland said as the Cavaliers opened practice Saturday. We still want to win every game we play. Our goals are the same. The only difference is well try to accomplish them without a 7-4 center.

This is Hollands 10th season at Virginia but the first in five years without Sampson, the three-time national player of the year. In Sampsons four years at Virginia, the Cavaliers were 24-10,29-4,30-4 and29-5.

Former walk-on Kenton Edelin, a 6-foot-7 senior who averaged 2.1 points and 4,9 rebounds last year while playing about 15 minutes per game, is the likely successor to Sampson at center.

I have to 'be a more well-rounded player to make the contribution we really

need, said Edelin. I have to be more offensive-minded, go to the glass hard and play tough defense inside.

Edelin said hes not worried about trying to fill Sampsons shoes.

Theres only one Ralph Sampson, he said. I dont think people expect me to play like Ralph. Whats important is that we play well as a team.

Hollands major problem is replacing the rebounding strength of Sampson and forward Craig Robinson, who also graduated last spring. Between them, they accounted for about 45 percent of Virginias rebounds last season.

Obviously, we have a large gap in the middle, said Holland. Whats not so obvious to most people is the absence of Craig Robinson.

He added that rebounding will be a critical area for us, something we will concentrate on during preseason practice. There are two aspects to rebounding - size and position. We have to concentrate on what we call superior rebounding position.

The Cavaliers lost only Sampson and Robinson from their top 10 players of a year ago, and freshman Tom Sheehey, a forward from Rochester, N.Y.. is a promis-

SENSE OF HISTORY

BOSTON (AP) - Red Auerbach picked a historical date to announce his retirement from the job of coaching the Boston Celtics. Auerbach made the announcement April 18. 1966, the 191st anniversary of Paul Rivere's famous ride.

Auerbach was the win-ningest coach in the history of the National Basketball Association, posting 938 victories in his 20 seasons as skipper. He had 99 additional victories in playoff games and also was the winning coach in seven All-Star contests.

ing newcomer.

Our strength is balance and depth, said Holland. We don't have a lot of individual stars, but we're an experienced basketball team. I think we'll draw on that experience.

The Cavaliers open the season Nov. 26 against Lafayette in the United Virginia Bank-Cavalier Invitational.

Returning starters include guards Rick Carlisle and Othell Wilson and forward Tim Mullen. Also back are third guard Ricky Stokes and Jim Miller, the Cavaliers first subsittute forward last season.

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Feeling Not The Same After Losing Finale

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Mike Schmidt had been there before, in the hometeam locker room at Veterans Stadium after the final game of the World Series. The first time, he said, felt much better.

That was in 1980. Philadelphia had just beaten Kansas City, and Schmidt, the Phillies slugging third baseman, had been named Most Valuable Player.

But 1983 was far different. Schmidt went l-for-20 and the Phillies lost the Series to Baltimore in five games, dropping the clincher to the Orioles 5-0 on Sunday.

It sure wasn't as much fun as 1980. Schmidt said. I wasnt in the flow and I couldnt find it against pitching that put the ball where I didnt expect it.

Schmidts lone hit was a broken-bat single in Saturday's fourth game, and he was booed lustily by the fans.

I've been booed all year. I'm used to it, said Schmidt. 1 guess if I was sitting in the stands and was from Philadelphia, Id have booed me.

Paul Owens, who took over as Philadelphia manager at midseason with the team in first place, said the Phillies were just not getting the key hits.

Baltimore came up with the key hits when they needed them, he said. I was proud of our pitching. We could have been blown out, but our relievers came through.

But, Owens lamented, Sundays starter. Charles Hudson, made two basic mistakes. And the Orioles Eddie Murray turned both into home runs.

The first one was a 2-2 fastball that was up, and the other a hanging pitch, Owens said.

Owens also said that Baltimore pitchers did a good job in keeping Schmidt, the major leagues leading home run hitter with 40, off the bases.

Anytime you keep Mike Schmidt quiet the pressure is on us throughout the lineup, the manager said. I think the Orioles keyed on him.

Schmidt said he never seemed able to get comfortable at the plate.

Every time I tried to make an adjustment it seemed the Orioles pitchers knew where to throw the ball, he said. It seemed they knew my thinking.

Im human and when I didnt do well in the first game or two I started to press. I apologize for my performance, not my effort.

Second baseman Joe Morgan, one of the few bright spots for the Phillies, said the key was the depth of the Orioles pitching.

They just kept running one guy at you after another, said Morgan. It is especially hard not having seen any of their pitchers before ... and when their starters came out, the bullpen came in and shut the door. They just never gave us the pitch to help start a big inning.

The Orioles team earned run average in postseason play was 1.11 Morgan said that because the Orioles pitching was so good, the Phillies had to resort to the home run swing.

You put a Jot of pressure on yourself when you go up there thinking long ball all the time, he said.

Pete Rose, the Phillies 42-year-old first baseman, said Baltimore played about the way he expected, but that he and his teammates simply didnt play up to par offensively We had the guy who led the majors in home runs and got one hit, said Rose. That usually happens to someone in the World Series, but we certainly cant blame Mike, because none of us hit.

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loN.C. Republicans Gear Up To Prove Vote Strength

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH. N.C ( AP) -While the 1984 races for governor and U.S. Senate'are attracting attention. Republicans are gearing up to prove that Democratic con gressional victories in 1982 cant be repeated.

Democrats recaptured seats in the 6th and llth districts in 1982 as public debate focused on President Reagan's economic policies State Democrat ic Chairman David Price said the strategy for 1984 will be to at least maintain the Democrats nine-to-two advantage in the congressional delegation.

He said the party could move ahead by taking the 9th District seat which incumbent Jim Martin is leaving to run for governor That seat has been occupied by a Republican for 3 years although Democrats outnumber Republicans in registration almost 3-to-l.

State GOP chairman Dave Flaherty said hes en couraged about Republican chances in 1984 because the economy and support for Reagan seem to be picking up.

"We tend to lose congressional seats in a bad national environment, a bad economic situation." Flaherty said. "In a good economic environment we tend to pick them up"

Some of the races shaping upare:

- Democratic Rep. Walter Jones of Farmville may face his first serious primary challenge in the 1st District from state Rep. John Gillam, D-Bertie.

Gillam. a member of a prominent Eastern North Carolina family, is serving his second term in the House.

Jones, who has been in the House since 1966, has been expected to hold on to his seat and pass it to his son. newly appointed state Rep. Walter Jones Jr., D-Pitt.

- Freshman Democratic Rep. Tim Valentine in the 2nd District also could face a primary challenge from state Rep, Kenneth Spaulding, D-Durham, Spaulding has set up a committee to explore the race and raise money, Spaulding, like a great number of district residents, is black,

- Republicans are urging Gerald Hurst, a retired military colonel, to challenge Democratic Rep Charlie Whitley, who has represented the 3rd District in Congress since 1977.

- In the 4th District. Rep.

Ike Andrews could face a

Charge Pair

With Kitting

NEW BERN. N.C. (.AP) -A man and his wife were arrested Saturday and charged with killing the womans former husband in 1978, police said.

Alice Sparrow Gallagher of Jacksonville and Samuel S Lancaster. 34. of New Bern were charged with first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the Oct. 1. 1978. shooting death of Marine Staff Sgt. Thomas Patrick Gallagher.

Sheriffs reports at the time said the 27-year-old Cherry Point Marine was found nude in the bedroom of the Gallaghers' New Bern home by Mrs, Gallagher and their two daughters. He had been hit over the head with a cast-iron skillet and .38-caliber gunshot wounds had blasted his head and chest.

The case has been under investigation ever since, said Capt. Mike Warren

"Theres not a whole lot of new evidence, butjhere is some," Warren said "We felt that we needed to go ahead and bring the case to court."

The murder weapon was never recovered, he said.

After the slaying, the house was sold Fifty-nine days after the killing. Mrs. Gallagher married Lancaster in Dillon, S.C.

Mrs Gallagher received a $158.000 settlement for life insurance on her husband, officials said. One policy for $100,000 had been purchased two months before her husband's death.

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads.

Democratic primary challenge from Howard Lee. one of the states best known black politicians. Meanwhile some Republicans are urging Bill Cobey to. try once again to unseat Andrews.

Andrews defeated Coby in 1982 after a media blitz and in spite of Andrews drunken driving arrest. This time Cobey also is considering running for governor.

Lee was out of town and could not be reached for comment about ^is candidacy but Democrats say

the former Chapel Hill mayor and secretary of Natural .Resources arid Community Development has been putting out feelers.

Andrews, apparently anticipating tough race, is handling his campaign differently this year. He already is organizing the district and raising money.

"I could be, 1 believe, a better candidate having gone through that tough a race in 1982." Andrews said,

- Republican Bill Hiatt says he may replace Anne

Bagnal as challenger to Rep. Stephen Neal, eight-year incumbent in the 5th District. Mrs Bagnal mounted a large debt after her second unsuccessful attempt to defeat NeaTin 1982.

Hiatt served two terms in the state House. He also is considering running for lieutenant governor.

- Two Republicans are lining up to challenge Britt in the 6th District - state Rep. Howard Coble of Guilford County and former state Sen. Walter Cockerham of

Guilford County. Cockerham already has announced his candidacy and Coble says hell probably make a de-cison late this month.

Coble said he is encouraged about the race because area residents "tend to vote more conservative than Britt."

- No one has stepped forth yet to challenge Democratic Rep. Charlie Rose in the 7th District. Earlier this year Rose, a 10-year veteran in Congress, considered running for governor but decided

against entering the crowded field,

Republican Harris Blake rs expected To challenge Rep Bill Hefner in the 8th District again next year. Hefner has been in Congress since 1975.

In the 9th District, Martins decision to run for governor has left both parties looking for qualified candidates.

State Sen. Ben Tison. D-Mecklenburg. is likely to enter the race next month, Tison, an NCNB National

Bank vice president, is serving his first term in the state Senate after five terms in fheflbuSe.

Other Democrats con sidering the race are Susan Green, a county commissioner, and attorney David Martin.

Republican Alex McMillan is the only announced candidate. McMillan, former president and board chairman of Harris-Teeter Super Markets Inc.. has been a strong Martin supporter.

Charlotte native Carl Horn

HI. an attorney in the civil rights division of the U.S. Justice Department, also is considering the race.

- No one has moved to challenge Republican Rep. Jim Broyhill in the lth District. Broyhill has been virtually unbeatable since he took office in 1963.

- Many Republicans are expecting Hendon to try to regain his seat in the llth District. Hendon could not be reached for comment but GOP sources said they had no doubt he would run.

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East Carolinas continuing progress on the football field will get its sternest test of the season this coming Saturday afternoon in Gainesville, Fla., when the Pirates take on the nationally-ranked University of Florida.

This past Saturday, however, the defense carried the Pirates to their fifth straight victory of the year, a 24-11 win over Temple University that was not as close as the score might show. The Pirates muffed a number of scoring opportunities: Jeff Heath missed half-a-dozen field goal tries something unheard of for the usually accurate kicker.

Temples touchdown didnt come until the final minute of play and by then, it made no matter whatsoever.

Kevin Walker intercepted three passes against Temples Dan Riordan, tying a school record, and the Pirates picked off four in all their best defensive day against the pass this year.

Last week at his press conference, Coach Ed Emory said that he and his staff believed in their defensive plans, but perhaps they were looking at the defense through the wrong set of eyes.

Whether this was true or not, the adjustments made against Temple could not have come at a better time. Over the next few w'eeks, the Pirates will be playing some of the finest aerialists in the country and it will be up to the secondary to keep those quarterbacks from completing the pass and the front line to provide extra pressure on those same throwers.

It is interesting to note that there was only a sparse crowd of people at the game, played at night at Franklin Field instead of during the day at Veterans Stadium as originally planned.

We still believe it would have made better sense to have moved the game to Greenville. A far better crowd would have attended, we believe, and that would have made both teams better off.

We understand that Temple and East Carolina are w'orking on future agreements and that some of those dates will be in Greenville.

One has to wonder what the open date this past weekend will mean to Florida. Many coaches say they don't like open dates others say they like to schedule them in the midst of the season. Some say it depends on the kind of season you are having.

If this latter theory holds water, then Florida had its open date at the wrong time. Those coaches who say it depends, want them when things are going bad, when the team is losing and when injuries pile up. Those for whom everything is going right dont want an open date. They want to keep the edge by playing.

Florida is such a team. Theyve been rolling along with only a tie against Southern California tomar their record.

Certainly they cannot afford to overlook the Pirates even though they stand to be as much as a 20-point favorite for the game in some circles. The week off could have made them a little stagnant, too.

Certainly the Pirates will hope so.

The game may have been picked up for television, too, by the time this is read. Florida has not appeared on a broadcast this year, so they are ripe for it. And with the national attention the Pirates are getting now, it would seem a good time. This would therefore mean another fine paycheck for the Pirates to carry home to build the program nd erase the deficit that appeared over the last few years.

We might note here, too, that although it hasnt been publicized. East Carolina's program was in the black last year for the first time in five or six seasons.

With Sports Illustrated doing a feature on the Pirates this week, the possibility of a television date, Saturdays game takes on added flavor. It really give East Carolina a chance to show its stuff to those who are in charge of the bowls.

Then it will be up to the fans to show their backing by filling Ficklen for the following Saturdays Homecoming game.

McEnroe Suspended With $1,500 Fine

By The .Associated Press

Martina Navratilova just keeps rolling along, while the John McEnroe Express will be temporarily derailed.

Navratilova, the Wimbledon and U.S. Open winner, defeated Pam Shriver 6-3, 6-2 Sunday to run away with the championship of the $150,000 Florida Federal tennis tournaiiient at Tarpon Springs, Fla. She also teamed with Shriver to win the doubles title, defeating Bonnie Gadusek and Wendy White 6-0, 6-1.

Meanwhile. McEnroe beat Frances Henri Leconte 6-1, 6-4. 7-3 to capture the Australian Indoor championship at Sydney lur the fourth straight year, but he was fined $1,5(K) and suspended 42 days for verbally abusing an official during Sunday's final.

Navratilova, who lost only four points on her service in the second set, now has won 36 straight singles matches since she lost to Kathy Horvath at the French Open last spring.

i

Steelers' Defense Shines In Victory

* team Btjwl

Touchdown Bound

East Carolina safety Clint Harris turns up field to return an interception for a touchdown in Saturdays

24-11 victory over Temple. The interception was one of four by the Pirate secondary. (AP Laserphoto)

By The Associated Press Its no longer the Steel Curtain, and Mike Mer-riweather, Dwayne Woodruff and Greg Best dont roll off the longue like Mean Joe Greene. But the Pittsburgh Steeler defense is beginning to conjure up memories of the teait) that won four Super 1 during the 1970s The Steelers ran their record to 5-2 Sunday by routing the Cleveland Browns 44-17 with the defense forcing seven turnovers and scoring two touchdowns to continue to fill the offensive gap left by an injury to Terry Bradshaw. The two scores followed three by the defense in last Monday nights 24-14 victory over Cincinnati.

We always had one foot in the grave and one on a banana peel, muttered Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano, who watched quarterback Brian Sipe throw the ball to Pittsburgh on his first three possessions.

I dont know what it is, but I want to keep it going, said Steeler Coach Chuck Noll.

Sunday was a day for defensive offense all over the NFL.

There were nine touchdowns scored by the defense in 13 games, seven by interceptions and two by fumbles. Several other turnovers set up important touchdowns.

Bowl Scouts Watch Heels

By TOM FOREM.ANJr.

AP Sports Writer

There were scouts from the Orange and Sugar bowls wa,tching third-ranked and undefeated North Carolina hang a 42-14 loss on North Carolina State Saturday. That didn't interest Scott Stankavageatall.

Stankavage threw two second-half touchdown passes and ran for a third, while tailback Ethan Horton rushed for 111 yards on 15 carries and two mpre scores as the Tar Heels took their seventh straight victory and third Atlantic Coast Conference triumph.

In other ACC action, 16th-ranked Maryland rallied for a 36-33 victory over Wake Forest, while .No. 5 Auburn erupted in the second half for a 31-13 triumph over Georgia Tech. Clemson survived a fourth-quarter barrage by Duke quarterback Ben Bennett for a 38-31 victory, while Virginia broke a two-game losing streak with a 38-10 whipping of winless VMI.

As a team, were four games from the ACC championship." said Stankavage, the nations third most efficient passer. The one that stands in our way is in three weeks at Maryland. Third in the country and bowl games are nice. But what reallv

matters is that ACC championship. Well worry about the ranking on Jan. 3.

Stankavage threw a 19-yard scoring pass to Mark Smith to start the second half, then parlayed a 20-yard punt into a five-play drive and Eddie Colsons 6-yard scoring run with three minutes later.

I dont think they are that much better than we are, Wolfpack linebacker Vaughan Johnson said. But they are very consistent and very well coached. On the whole, their consistency was a big thing.

N.C. State dropped to 2-4 and 1-3.

Clemson had reached a 38-24 lead when Bennett hit Mike Grayson on a 14-yard scoring play with 3:08 left. The Tigers failed to move the ensuing kickoff and Duke had one more chance.

From the Clemson 37. Duke marched to the 9. After two incompletions and faced with a fourth-and-five. Bennetts pass for Grayson was tipped by 6-foot-5 lineman James Robinson, ending any chance Duke had to avoid its sixth straight loss.

Im glad to see Bennett's a senior, Clemson coach Danny Ford said, an obvious reference to all the trouble the quarterback has caused his secondary in three years. Im not sure if this isnt the

happiest day of my life seeing hes a senior.

Auburn left Grant Field trailing 10-7 at halftime, and mustered a 14-13 edge at the end of three quarters. Then, Bo Jackson scored on a 7-yard run and Randy Campbell passed 47 yards to Chris Woods to put the game out of reach. The Tigers are 5-1, while the Ramblin Wreck fell to 1-5.

Next week, Georgia Tech must face Tennessee, knocked off No. 11 Alabama 41-34.

For the second straight week, Maryland played a less-than-artistic football game, but when Sean Sullivan caught Boomer Esiasons 30-yard scoring {ss with 1:15 left, the Terrapins were 5-1, 2-0 in the ACC.

We played hari-kiri,Maryland coach Bobby Ross said. We did everything possible in the terms of penalties, fumbles and mistakes. We came back and it was a real significant game. Perhaps it was better to win this way than any other.

Wake Forest put a scare right back into the Terrapins when they reached the Maryland 30, but a Gary Schofield pass was picked off by Clarence Baldwin with seven seconds left.

Schofield finished with 25 of 46 passes for 365 yards and

three touchdowns - not enough to keep Wake Forest from falling to 3-4, 0-3 in the conference and its 12th straight ACC loss.

We can do much better, said Schofield, who in his last three games against Maryland has hit 108 of 173 passes for 1,232 yards but has no wins to show. We had a real good shot. We had a lot of opportunities, but we didnt get it done.

Virginia saw its brief slide into a two-game losing streak end as Howard Petty scored twice and Wayne Schuchts tossed two touchdown passes as the Cavaliers climbed to 5-2. However, coach George Welsh may have lost tailback Antonio Rice, who suffered a broken right arm.

I hate to lose somebody like that, Welsh said. Its another quality athlete gone.

Next week, N.C. State is at Clemson, Maryland stays south to meet Duke and Wake Forest goes to Virginia. North Carolina has the weekend off.

Seattle forced eight Raider turnovers and beat Los Angeles 38-36 despite Seahawk quarterback Jim Zorn being four for 13 for two net yards. The Miami Dolphins intercepted six passes en route to a 32-14 victory over the New York Jets.

Dwight Hicks 62-yard interception return for a touchdown capped a 16-point third period spurt to give the San Francisco 49ers a 32-13 triumph over New Orleans in a game in which Ray Wersching kicked six field goals.    ;

Minnesota forced-ei:. fumbles to beat HouSth 34-14. Rick Sanford raced 26 yards with a fumble to set up the go-ahead touchdown in New Englands 37-21 victory over San Diego and Durwood Ro-quemores 46-yard interception return was the go-ahead score as Kansas City beat the New York Giants 38-17.

Dallas, meanwhile, continued as the leagues only unbeaten team, rolling to a 37-7 rout over Philadelphia, to run its record to 7-0.

Elsewhere, it was St. Louis 34, Tampa Bay 27; Detroit 31, Chicago 17; Buffalo 30, Baltimore 7; Denver 24, Cincinnati 17, and the Los Angeles Rams 27, Atlanta 21.

Washington plays at Green Bay tonight.

In Pittsburgh, Mer-riweathers interception return made the score 17-0 after only six minutes and the rout was on as Cleveland lost for the 14th time in as many visits to Three Rivers Stadium.

Cliff Stoudt completed 14 of 18 passes for 194 yards for Pittsburgh, but it was still the defense that won the day.

Everyone is playing more aggressively, Woodruff, who had two interceptions, said of the Steeler defense. Were not waiting for things to happen, were making them happen.

In Seattle, the Seahawks, 4-3, forced five turnovers from Jim Plunkett and eight overall and Paul Johns returned a punt 75 yards for a touchdown

to hand the Raiders their second loss in seven games. Linebacker Shelton Robinson picked up a Plunkett fumble and returned it 9 yards for a score.

Dallas victory over 4-3 Philadelphia gave the Cowboys the best start in their history and was a breeze following narrow escapes against Tampa Bay and New Orleans. "It was our best game this year, said Coach Tom Landry, who watched Danny Whitei throw for 266 yards and twd'touchdowns in the rout.

In Baltimore, Joe Ferguson threw three touchdown passes and the Bills exploded for 24 points in 17 first-half minutes to take over first place in the AFC East from the Cinderella Colts. Joe Danelo added three fieldgoals.

Houston and Tampa Bay remained winless.

Houston, playing under new Coach Chuck Studley, lost its 14th straight over two years. Neil Elshire, making his first start in three years in the NFL, had three sacks, recovered a fumble and forced a fumble by Oiler quarterback Gifford Nielsen that nose tackle Charlie Johnson of 5-2 Minnesota picked off and ran 50 yards for a touchdown.

Tampa Bay lost to 2-5 St. Louis as Neil Lomax passed for 166 yards and three touchdowns. The Bucs, however, got another of those defensive touchdowns when Hugh Green returned an interception 33 yards.

Rookie quarterback Dan Marino threw three touchdown passes for Miami, 4-3, and burned the 3-4 Jets with a defensive score when Doug Betters deflected a Richard Todd pass to Kim Bokamper, who ran it in from 24 yards out.

Vince Ferragamos 2-yard touchdown pass to Mike Guman with 17 seconds left ran the Rams record to 5-2 and left the Falcons at 2-5. The Rams were helped by a 16-yard pass interference call against Atlantas Ken Johnson that put the ball at the 2.

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Navratilova, who won $28,000 for the singles victory, beat Shriver by beating her at the net.

I cant attack her backhand anymore, Shriver said. I used to chip it to her backhand and come in but she hits it so hard now. Its a heavy-duty shot now. Navratilova, who turned 27 Tuesday, said the court helped, too.

The court is slow and its easy to hit the top spin, she said. I never felt threatened by her coming into the net. My backhand is getting better. The $1,500 fine put McEnroe $800 over the limit of $7,500 per year set by the Mens International Professional Tennis Council. The 42-day suspension could be cut to 21 days if he does not play in any exhibition matches during the penalty period.

McEnroe said if he had known his remarks to let-cord judge Barry Hill would result in his second career suspension, I would have really let him have it.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) - Vida Blue, a Cy Young Award winner, pleaded guilty today to a charge of possessing cocaine in a federal drug probe that also produced guilty pleas from three of his former teammates on the Kansas City Royals.

Blue, 34, pleaded guilty to a federal misdemeanor -possessing three grams of cocaine on Feb. 4 - and acknowledged that he had been under treatment for drug addiction.

Have you recently been under the care of a doctor or psychiatrist or been hospitalized or treated for drug addiction? U.S. Magistrate J. Milton Sullivant asked before Blue entered his plea.

Yes, I have, Blue replied.

The former pitcher for the Royals, San Francisco Giants and Oakland As pleaded guilty to the charge a short time before a federal grand jury went into session today. U.S. Attorney Jim Marquez said last week he expects the grand jury to return many indictments in the governments drug investigation.

The charge against Blue carries the same maximum penalty as the charges of attempting to possess cocaine that were filed against three other players - one year in prison and a $5,000 fine.

Blue, who pitched for the world champion Oakland As in the early to mid-1970s, was

released by the Royals on Aug. 5 after his record fell to 0-5. Only two pitchers - Steve Carlton of Philadelphia and Jim Palmer of Baltimore -recorded more than Blues 158 victories between 1972 and 1982. He won the American League Cy Young Award and Most Valuable Player award in 1971.

Four days after Blue was released by the Royals, Marquez disclosed that a number of Royals had been questioned

in a continuing cocaine probe. He did not identify the players but inadvertently named Blue as a former player who had been questioned.

Three other players - 1982 American League batting champion Willie Wilson, first baseman Willie Aikens and outfielder Jerry Martin -pleaded guilty to charges of attempting to possess cocaine. The charge carries a maximum sentence of one year in prison and a $5,000 fine.

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INSIDE TODAY

INSIDE TODAYG.O.P. HOPES HIGH

N.C. Republicans gearing up for congressional races, encouraged by the state of thr economy and indications of rising Tar Heel support for Reagan. (Page 16)CITES PUBLICITY

Defense lawyer says finding jury for Tylenol extortion trial made difficult by extensive publicity that perhaps biased potential jurors (Page 6)

WORLD CHAMPS

Eddie Murray cracked two homers and MVP Rick Dempsey added a solo shot to push Baltimore to a 5-0 win over the Phillies to end the World Series Sunday. (Page 9)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 230

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 17, 1983

16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

Trial Of Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green Beqins

By MARY ANNE RHYNE    Former    state    Ippislainr    .JnppH    Hiah    nf    Pavotfmriiio    coin     .    .    ..    .....

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A smiling Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green entered a Wake County Superior Court courtroom today for his trial on bribery and conspiracy charges.

Jury selection was the first order of business in the trial, which is expected to last two to four weeks. Jury selection could occupy much of this week.

Green was not seen in the main hall outside the courtroom and apparently entered through a back route.

Meanwhile, aides say Green has received an undisclosed amount of money for his defense, although no funds were solicited, an aide says.

Former state legislator Sneed High of Fayetteville said contributors are, friends of Green, people who are a little bit incensed about the procedural aspects of the trial. He said he did not know most of the people who have contributed.

Green is the first North Carolina lieutenant governor to stand trial on criminal charges since the post was established in 1868. Only two governors have been charged with crimes since that office was created in the 16th century.

The 62-year-old Green was indicted June 20 for allegedly accepting a $2,000 bribe, consenting to receive a $2,000 bribe conspiring with Howard F. Watts of Clarkton to receive a bribe and twice consenting to receive bribes of $10,000 a

month. He has pleaded innocent to all charges.

Watts is scheduled to make a separate appearance in court today to arraigned. He is serving a 13-vear prison sentence for his role in burning warehouses belonging to state Sen J J Monk Harrington. D-Bertie.

The charges against Green stem from the FBI's Colcor investigation into political corruption in southeastern .North Carolina. The probe generated indictments in three states Only one case involving state Sen. R.C. Soles, D-Columbus has failed to result in a guilty plea or guilty verdict

The Green trial also will be historic because it is the first North Carolina trial to be filmed by television cameras and

photographed by newspaper cameras.

Meanwhile, prosecutors have subpoenaed one television and three newspaper journalists to testify about news accounts involving Green, The reporters are figting the subpoenaes, saying the First and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution allow them to avoid testifying unless there is some compelling need for their account.

Green was expected to run for governor in 1984 but has had to put his plans on hold pending resolution of the case. He argues that January would be soon enough to launch a gubernatorial campaign for someone who has run for statewide office so many times before.

ECU STUDENT VOLUNTEERS . .. Manning telephones during the universitys 1983 national telefund campaign, ECU students raised $61,750 in pledges from alumni in all

Student Volunteers Aid ECU Funds Campaign

ECU News Bureau Student volunteers telephoning East Carolina University alumni as far away as Hawaii and Ca^ornia have succeeded in raist $^750 in pledges to the uravefsitys annual fund raising during the 1983 ECU Alumni national telefund campaign.

Led by the universitys volunteer student service organization, the ECU ambassadors, more than 225 students placed approximately 16,000 calls to widely-scattered alumni during the month from Sep. 12 through Oct. 15.

Manning banks of tele-phones in the Taylor/Slaughter Alumni Center, the students worked in teams of 24 volunteers per night on alternate evenings and reached this years national telefund goal of $50,000 at the end of the third week.

The success of our national telefund is a reflection of the confidence of our

alumni in the quality of this university and the hard work

Bureaucracy

'Burgeoning'

WASHINGTON (AP) -The bureaucracy is burgeoning. ThCsUnited States now hosts 8041 governments. an increase of 2,428 in the last five years, the Census Bureau reports.

With 6,468. Illinois had the most local governments in the nation. The state with the fewest is Hawaii, with 19.

Nearly all of the nationwide increase occurred in special districts, such as those set up to provide sewer or water service or to protect wetlands Little change was shown in the number of general purpose governments across the nation, the Census Bureau said Sunday.

of a large number of dedicated and enthusiastic .student volunteers, said James L. Lanier, Jr., vice chancellor for Institutional Advancement.

Lenoir said the ECU am^ bassadors were organized and directed in the effort by Howard Lipman, a political science major from Wilmington. Lipman worked each night of the campaign, helped secure sufficient volunteers and acted as field general for all of the teams, Lanier said.

The ambassadors were helped by other student or-ganizations such as fraternities and honor societies.

In addition to soliciting financial support, the telefund also serves to enable the alumni office to check on the addresses and whereabouts of the universitys more than 50,(X)O alumni, said Cindy Kittrell, alumni field director.

RKFLECTOR

OTUd

7.52-1336

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

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

YARD SALE DONATIONS ASKED Agnes Fullilove Community School has asked Hotline to appeal for donations for a yard and bake sale to be held to benefit the girls and boys basketball teams of the school.

The sale will be held Oct. 22. Items may be brought to the school, 1600 Chestnut St., or requests for pickup may be made by calling the school, 758-0817.

Crimestoppers

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

McForlane Choice Opposed

Rift On Nat'l Security Adviser

Rv IA\1I.Xr.ppeTC-v?\vr

American Again Wins Nobel Economics Prize

parts of the nation. The students were directed by Howard Lipman (standing), Wilmingtonv (ECU News Bureau Photo)    ^

By WILLIAM C. MANN Associated Press Writer STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Gerard Debreu of the University of California at Berkeley won the 1983 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics today, the sixth consecutive year Americans have received the prize.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said the 62-year-old professor was honored for his work on mathematical models that prove the theory of supply and demand, the basis of capitalist economy.

Americans have won the prize outright since 1978, except for the 1979 prize, which was shared by Briton Sir Arthur Lewis and American Theodore W. Schultz of the University of Chicago.

I am very pleased, Debreu said in an interview from his home in Oakland.

Calif. "It is,, as a scientist, the highest recognition he or she can receive. 1 am also pleased because it is the recognition of the work I have been doing, namely the application of serious mathemadicc to economic theory."

Debreu, in explaining his work, said: "An economic system is composed of a very large number of agents, consumers and producers who make their decisions independent of each other. My goal is to explain how those agents make those decisions, how their decisions are compatible with each other and how they form an equilibrium for the economic system. To do that in a rigorous way. one has to build a mathematical theory, which has been the work of many of my colleagues and myself.

GERARD DEBREU

Professor Assar Lindback. chairman of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (Please turn to Page8)

Playing It Safe

BACK TO THE BARN - The Space Shuttle Columbia began its six-hour trip to the Vehicle Assembly Building this morning where it will be de-mated from its booster rockets,^'ASA

decided to postpone the launch of STS-9 at least one month from its scheduled October 28 liftoff because of suspected defects in a solid rocket booster lining. (AP Laserphoto)

By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan, bucking a strong lobbying campaign by conservative supporters, has decided to bring his special Middle East envoy, Robert C. McFarlane, back to the White House full time as the chief national security adviser. White House officials say.

McFarlane would move into the post of assistant to the president for national security affairs, which will be vacated when William P. Clark becomes secretary of the interior.

The officials, who spoke on the condition that they not be' identified by name, said Reagan notified the top members of his national security and foreign policy team of his decision over the weekend.

White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan had not made a final, final decision about the post.

He also declined to comment on reports that U.N. Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, who had been one of the candidates for the job. had been angered by the decision.

When he returned from a weekend at Camp David, Md. on Sunday. Reagan replied "nope to questions about whether he had spoken with McFarlane about the job.

The officials said they could see no snags developing. although Reagan has yet to actually offer the job to McFarlane. who is also Clark's deputy.

"All that remains is the president making it formal, said one official.

Conservatives allies of Reagan, both in and out of government, had conducted what W'hite House officials said was a strenuous campaign on behalf of Mrs. Kirkpatrick. One White House official said Mrs. Kirkpatrick was in line for a new foreign policy job in Washington, although the details were not set.

There was also concern that McFarlane, a 45-year-old former Marine lieutenant colonel who has served Republican administrations since 1973. would not have the same access to Reagan as Clark. The current national security assistant has known Reagan for 16 years and is one of his closest

R.C. McFARLANE

advisers in Washington. Clark is leaving the White House to replace James G. Watt, who resigned on Oct. 9.

The conservatives question whether hell be a forceful enough advocate for conservative positions, one White House official said Saturday.

However, another White House source said on Sunday: The foreign policy advisers were told it would be McFarlane and that hed have the same role in the White House as Clark had.

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inside Reading

lag<' Area items Page S Ohiiiiaries Page 1'.- (t'Brien rites

Planning-Zoning Commission Meets Tuesday

A busy 14-item agenda, including several zoning matters, is scheduled for consideration Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. by the Greenville Planning & Zoning Commission.

The board will consider requests by: Ralph C. Tucker to rezone 36.59 acres across from Pitt Community College From RA-20 (residential-agricultural) to

highway commercial; Bill Clark to zone 45.1 acres on the west side of State Road 1204 one half mile south of N.C. 43 to R-6 (residential); Phillip Carroll to zone the Carolina Opry House pro-)erty, involving 8.3 acres, to lighway commercial;

Bhauanbhai Patel to rezone the Greenville Motel )r()perty at 2309 S. Memorial )rive, containing 1.34 acres;

from R-6 to downtown commercial fringe; Ralph Tucker to rezone 9.920 acres south of Greenville Boulevard, and east of Oakdale subdivision from highway commercial and shopping center to office and institutional; Shenandoah Development Co. Inc. to rezone .39 acres in the southeast corner of the intersection of Alice Drive and Tobacco Road from R-9 to

R-6;

Kensington Development Corp. to annex 22.485 acres, -located contiguous to the city limits on the west side of ,^.C. 43 just south of Oak-nicint Professional Plaza; Greenville Rest Home of Stonesthrow subdivision to a^'nex 2.951 acres, located contiguous to the city limits north of and adjacent to N.C. 43 just west of Moyewood;

section three, pnase one ol Tucker Estates subdivision to annex 8.8 acres on the east and west sides of Tucker Drive;

Rivers & Associates to reclassify certain streets in Heritage Village subdivision from minor streets to marginal access streets; the City Council for the board to examine future sites for dormitory facilities; and by Residence Quarters In

vestors to amend the zoning ordinance to allow a land use intensity option as a special use in the downtown commercial fringe classification.

Board members will discuss amending the off-street parking requirements regarding non-conforming structures, which include area location requirements, and also set a date for the boards annual meeting.





Editorials

Paul O'ConnorHelp Is Needed

Most people are unaware of the size of the heartbreak and the figures seem unbelievable to those who are aware of such things but about 150,000 children are reported missing annually in this country.

The agency Child Find, organized in 1981, estimates roughly 50,000 of the missing children cases are never solved.

Some of the missing undoubtedly fled their homes to avoid a tormented life; others may have been victims of parental abuse (of which there is more than one wants to think about); an unknown number may be presumed secreted away from their home by a parent who also left the scene. One never knows how many are involved in such circumstances.

Inevitably there are a considerable number stolen by strangers with motives outside the realm of normalcy and in whose hands a childs life hangs by a tenuous thread of uncertainty. In any given year, we recall, there are instances of an infant being taken from a hospital, or a babysitter taking a child for her own. These things happen in every state. Most such cases are solved.

So the plague of missing childen is not new and it would be a good guess it has been one of those facts of life that began when the world was young.

It makes it doubly wondrous that society has not devised remedial measures for coping with one of its older curses. At least two necessary means are today available: identification, and almost instant transmission of information regarding a missing child to any and all parts of the country.

Still absent is a systematized search procedure and mobilization of individuals or organizations. A lot of legwork is required.

The public knows too well the dreaded fact that an unknown number of the missing children are tormented and ultimately slain. It makes "the heartbreak of afflicted parents almost unendurable.Bouncing Back

The nations textile industry is often in the doldrums, but it has a way of springing back as the national economy improves.

That seems to be the case now. North Carolina textile employment rose to its highest level in 15 months. South Carolina textile emplolyment was at a 10 month high.

For many years the domestic textile industry has fought a fierce battle with'foreign textile imports. Though careful management, however, the American textile industry seems to survive and, at times, even thrive.Sentencing Act Declared Successful

RALEIGH - For a time, it looked like the Fair Sentencing Act would never go into effect. Passed by the 1979 General Assembly, the acts effective date was postponed first during the 1980 short session and then again in the 1981 long session. Before Gov. Jim Hunts lobbyists finally salvaged a July 1,1981, effective date for the act, talk persisted in the Legislative Building about scrapping the law together.

If ever there was an issue over which reasonable men disagreed, it was this one. Both camps - supporters and opponents - had members from both ends of the political spectrum. There were genuine concerns that the act would jam the court dockets, flood the prisons, open the prison gates and divest judges of their authority.

Well, theres good news. A Governors Crime Commision study performed by the Institute of Government indicates

that the act has been a rousing success. Steve Clarke, author of the study, told the commission this month that none of the dreaded bugaboos developed during the first year that the act was in effect and that Fair Sentencing has, in fact, made sentencing more just.

The act supplies only to felonies. It establishes a wide range of sentences which can be meted out for any particular offense but then states a presumptive standard sentencing for each. For example, felonious larceny can get you anywhere from zero to 10 years but the standard sentence is three years. If the judge wants to give you any more or less than three years, he must report, on the record, his reasons for doing so.

Hunt hoped that the law would reduce the variation in prison terms for similar crimes and make sentences more predictable. Clarke says the act is working in both regards.

Sentence variation was sustantially reduced, Clarke says. The range of sentence length for the most common active prison sentences was compressed by 43 percent. That means that somebody who steals a stereo in Anson County is likely to get about as much time as someone who does the same thing in Yadkin County.

Sentences are also more predictable, Clarke found. In most cases, the median sentence - the point where half the sentences are shorter and half are longer - was the presumptive sentence. That means judges really are using the presumptive sentence. Therefore, district attorneys, defense lawyers and defendents have a better idea, before they go before the judge, how much time the defendent is going to get. This has led to a reduction, rather than a feared increase, in the number of distasteful plea bargains where the district attorney

and the defendant agree on a sentence before they go to the judge.

In a development which Garke described as rather encouraging, the variations in sentences meted out to white and black defendants shrank considerably, Before the Fair Sentencing Act, blacks averaged 7.8 months longer per felony sentence than similarly charged whites. Now, according to Clarkes study, the difference (has) virtually disappeared.

While the act apparently accomplished its goals, it did not generate the problems which were foreseen. The backlog on court dockets did not get worse because, while the number of plea bargains to a specific sentence dropped, the iiWnber of plea bargains jiv.gawral ipM andJthe number of ;ury trials dfoppea. ^e prison population did not rse, it dropped. Sentence lengths dropped but defendants found themselves spending a greater percentage of their sentence behind bars.

John Cunniff^Moderation

NEW YORK lAP) - .As it always has been and maybe always will be, moderation is one of the most elusive pursuits of man, an observation that can be demonstrated any day in the markets of business and finance.

Have you ever seen an expansion that didn't get out of hand, or a stock market advance that didnt outrace the realities, or a bureaucracy that didnt grow faster than its task, or a housing recovery that didnt go busf?

It is in that last-named category that the outrageous swings of fortune are perhaps most manifest, with no less than seven distinct up-down cycles having occurred since World War II, as measured by housing starts.

Boom-bust was never more consistent or obvious anywhere in the business world. The changes from high to low in the seven housing cycles have ranged from 35 percent in 1958-1960 to nearly 64 percent in 1973-1975.

And now the industrys fears are rising again, as Harry Pryde, head of the .National Association of Home Builders, indicated the other day when he said that a pistol was being held to the temple of the industry.

The pistol, as anyone who has followed housing activities knows, is the federal deficit, which housing people sav is keeping interest rates so high that most Americans cannot afford to buy a new house

High interest rates are the other end of

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the housing seesaw. When rates fall, housing sales rise. When rates rise, housing is reduced to kindling, builders go bankrupt and real estate agents seek jobs in retail stores.

The NAHB estimates that in 1982, when home mortgage rates were even higher than they todays 13.5 percent, more than one million construction workers were unemployed, accounting for one in 10 of the nations jobless.

No wonder just about everyone in the industry pines for the days gone by, for the two decades following World War II, when mortgage rates were in the single numbers and didnt fluctuate as they do today.

At 13.5 percent interest, less than 15 percent of American families qualify for a 30-year, $60,000 fixed-rate mortgage, based on the assumption that an owners expenses shouldnt exceed one-fourth of total income.

Even when you make the assumption that it is safe to allow one-third of income to go into housing expenses - including mortgage, taxes, insurance, heat, utilities and repairs - only 27 percent or thereabouts can qualify.

Compare that situation with the one that would prevail if interest rates were back at 8 percent. At Jhat lower rate, nearly 30 percent of families could afford to buy. based on one-fourth of income' going for housing costs. And if one-third of income was allowed for housing, 47 percent would qualify.

It is for reasons such as these that the various housing organizations - in construction, financing and selling - are making such a to-do about the federal deficit. The deficit, they say, is keeping rates too high and too volatile.

An extreme federal deficit, they contend, means extreme interest rates, and volatile ones too. And, as a consequence, a see-saw for an industry that longs for stability but never sems to get it.

I went to the Monetary Health Fitness Club the other day to see the different currencies work out.

Most of the currencies were flabby and breathing hard. The only one that seemed in great shape was the American dollar. Its muscles were bulging and it was shadow boxing in the ring.

Secretary of the Treasury Don Regan, the dollars manager said, We have a real slugger now. In the late 70s the dollar was the weakest fighter in the world. Everyone was killing us. But now we have the world champion.

Thats grat. Who is that getting

>r fHo    nrilH    it"*"

Evans Witt

When Is A Vote Not A Vote?

WASHINGTON (AP) - John Glenn is crying foul because Walter Mndale has raised a subject Glenn deems unfit for a presidential campaign.

What has Glenn on edge?

Mndale wants to discuss Glenns voting record - specifically his 1981 votes in the Senate on President Reagans tax and spending cuts.

Not only did the Ohio Democrat object to Mondales attacks, he said last week that Mndale may be helping President Reagan win re-election.

Lets not go back and hack away at each other and just give the president a free ride into office, he told the National Press Club.

I was very sorry that some of our specific votes were brought up for specific comment or ridicule or criticism, he said. It has become a campaign technique, not to look to the future,..(but) to go back and pick specific votes out of peoples past and try and castigate them.

Glenn may be right that Democrats beating up on each other in the primaries could make it easier for Reagan to win re-election next year - if, of course, the incumbent does run. Primary fights always have that potential.

But on the question of his own Senate votes, Glenn is simply ignoring reality.

If a politicians recorded votes on issues of central importance to the nation are not proper topics for argument in a campaign, what are?

If the voters cant look to a politicians past actions for a guide - admittedly a hazy one - to his future decisions, where can they look?

Surely those votes are far more important indicators of the candidates views, beliefs and abilities than speeches, promises, campaign staff, polls or straw votes.

Glenn may be a bit upset at Mondales attacks for another reason. Glenn has a recent voting record that can be examined with political microscopes and Mndale does not. Mndale hasnt had to cast many recorded votes since 1977, when he became Jimmy Carters vice president.

But Glenn was in the Senate when Reagans key bills came up. He does have recorded votes, lots of them in the past three years on Reaganomics and Reagans policies.

One of Glenns beefs with Mndale revolves around whether Glenn actually supports Reaganomics. Heres what the candidates have said:

Mr. Glenn cast a key vote for Reaganomics... Its remarkable that Mr. Glenn would base his campaign on

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

There are all sorts of fears some are good, some not so good, and some bad. The fear that one would have of poisonous snakes, of a friend with a lying tongue, or a reckless driver, are all real fears.

Fear is an emotion conferred upon us by nature to make us aware of the things that would harm us. Without these fears much of mankind might by now have perished.

There is a fear, also, which might better be termed suspicion, and is best represented.

Art Buchwald

perhaps by the statement we so often here, These people have it in for me.

But the worst type of fear is morbid fear, often stemming from unfortunate childhood experiences. This is the brooding type of fear which causes one to lie awake at night thinking about things which willl probably never happen - incurable diseases, accident and disaster to loved ones.

We should train our emotions as we train our minds, and learn to reject as inconsequential such morbid fears.

The Dollar Grows Healthier

The French franc. It hasnt won a fight since Mitterrand became president.

The bell rang and the two currencies started at each other. The dollar jabbed to the face and when the French franc took a wild swing, the dollar ducked and hit the franc in the stomach, then the head, then a mean right squarely on the jaw. The franc was groggy and almost fell to the canvas.

The French Minister of Finance ran over to Regan and said, Stop the fight. Youre killing my boy.

Regan said, Let them continue for a little while longer. Us good prac-

fii'P fnr thpm

A few minutes later the franc was being counted out, and the dollar was hardly perspiring.

The next one to step in the ring was the British pound. Its manager Margaret Thatcher, was rubbing its gloves and giving it instructions. But the British pound could hardly stand on its legs and after playing with it for a round, the dollar knocked it out of the ring.

Mrs. Thatcher said to Regan, Your president is going to hear about this.

The next contender was the West German mark, who had held the currency championship for years. It was

o rnol nriiHrrp mot/ih

Regan said, The dollar will kill this guy. It took a terrible beating from him during the Seventies and it wants revenge.

The West German head of the Central Bank came over and said, If you beat us too badly were not going to buy any goodsfrom America. Regan told him, I have no control over the dollar. The only reason its so strong is that your own people are betting on my boy instead of yours. 'The bell rang, the dollar moved in quickly and hit the mark right in the solar plexus. Then it started working on the marks face. The marks right eye be^n to bleed and the Swiss

rofprpp ctnnnpH IHo finHi

supporting Reaganomics, Mndale charged.

Hiat just is not true and he knows it is not true, Glenn replied.

Senate records show that Glenn - and the other three Democratic senators seeking the presidency - voted against the administrations overall budget outline in the first major vote of 1981. But when it came to voting on the actual tax cut and $39 billion package of spending cuts, Glenn voted yes. Not that his vote made any difference - one passed 89-11 and the other 80-15.

My vote back in 1981 on the final passage of that Reagan proposal was not a vote for Reaganomics as such, the Ohio Democrat said, adding he was voting for a change from the policies of the Carter-Mondale years.

In 1982, Glenn voted against the administration proposals.

Thus, in the common meanings of the words, Glenn supported Reaganomics in the ways that count in 1981. He says he doesnt now.

On the other hand. Mndale is not quite right in saying Glenns campaign' is based on support for Reaganomics. The 1981 votes are valuable targets for Mndale, but Glenns position is not the same now.

In this flurry of thrust and counterthrust, Mndale and Glenn are drawing more clearly the lines that mark the differences between their views.

Such added clarity might make politicians nervous and it might help Reagan win re-election. But clear issue differences might help Mndale or Glenn win 13 months hence.

. .XtWsr^Wiist Germam^lteBker said, Yoij^ink you woiv iHit npw that we re weak we^re golflg to flood the

IT V tinK    ^    _    _r_    i-ii    .

U.S. with German g' underprice anything The last fight w dollar and the Japa time the yen had ev than the West Gt ' also lost a match The Japanese said,7;*Yoii ha\

But vik ane not

will make im

that will sell. in the At one tronger But it

inance lose face. I. Our exports money we lost

on the fight.'

Regan went over and shook hands with the dollaf*. Gooij^how, he told





2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Monday, October 17.1983

Stox-Baker Wedding Vows Said

The wedding ceremony of Norma Sue Baker and Stephen Allen Stox took place Sunday at 3 p.m. The Rev. David Hill performed the double ring ceremony in the Sweet Gum Grove Free Will Baptist Church near Stokes.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Lee Baker of Route 1, Stokes. The bridegroom is the son of of Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Stox i)fRoute2,Ayden.

Joyce Bullock of Belvoir, sister of the bride, was honor attendant and bridesmaids included Sharon Bell of Stokes, Pam Carter of Ayden. cousin of the bridegroom, Lesa Jones of Greenville and Rita Best of Stokes, niece of the bride. The junior bridesmaid was Melanie Cotthingham of Stokes and the flower girl was Kristy Bullock of Belvoir. Both are nieces of the bride.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included Jeff Stokes of Greenville. Randy McGowan. Bobby Stox. brother of the bridegroom, and Wayne Stox. all of Ayden and^ichael Baker of Stokes, nephew of the bride

A program of wedding music was presented by Gail Crisp of Stokes, organist, and Johnny Baker of Kinston, soloist.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of white bridal satin styled with an empire waistline. The gown was trimmed in chantillv lace

and appliques of nylon and pearls. The sheer sleeves had ruffled cuffs and the waistline was accented with a satin ribbon belt. The gown had a chapel length train. She wore a waltz length veil edged in silk Venise lace attached to a caplet overlaid with lace and pearls. She carried a bouquet of silk pink roses with white streamers.

Each of the attendants wore a wine colored dress of acetate taffeta and sheer polyester with a ruffled neckline with a back bustle effect. She carried a white mum with pink ribbons. The bridesmaids carried pink mums withwhite,ribbon.

The flower girl wore a white sheer gown with an overlay styled with ruffled sleeves and accented with a pink satin sash. She carried a basket filled with rose petals.

After a wedding trip the couple will live near Ayden.

The bride graduated from North Pitt High School and works at Pitt Memorial Hospital. The bridegroom graduated from D.H. Conley High School and works at Empire Brush.

A reception was held after the ceremony and was given by Violet Phillips, aunt of the bride.

The three tiered wedding cake was served by Arlene Baker and Donna Burrus poured punch. Melanie Robinson presided at the guest register and Ron Best passed out scrolls. Rice bags were distributed by Melanie Cottingham.

Kids Tips Lead To Good Payoff

By Abigail Van Buren

* 19S3 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR READERS: It all began when I published 10 Tips on How to Be a Good Wife, followed by 10 Tips on How to Be a Good Husband." Then a reader signed Old-Timer suggested that I invite the younger generation to submit its 10 Tips on How to Be a Good Kid.    '

1 did, and the response was heartening. (Many elementary school teachers made it a class assignment.)

This list, from a 16-year-old Dallas girl, is one of the best:

1. Show appreciation. Most parents give more than they can afford.

2. Take responsibility for your own actions. If you want to be treated like an adult, act like one.

3. Remember, parents are human; they get tired, have their bad days and make mistakes, too, so forgive them like they forgive you.

4. Dont lie and sneak around, then expect your parents to trust you.

5. Do your homework and chores without having to be reminded.

6. If you have a change in plans or know youre going to be late, call and let your parents know.

7. Say Please, Thank you and Excuse me at home, and you will do so automatically everywhere else.

8. Be willing to work for what you want.

9. Take pride in the way you look.

10. Let your parents know that you love and appreciate them. Tomorrow may be too late.

10 TIPS ON HOW TO BE A GOOD KID FROM AN 8-YEAR-OLD

1. Help with chores.

2. Say, Yes, maam and Yes, sir.

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GREENVILLE, N.C 27034 752-0600

MRS. STEPHEN ALLEN STOX

The refreshment table was covered with a white lace cloth accented with pink ribbons and decorated with pink and white flowers.

A rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom at the church community building. A bridesmaids luncheon was held at the Three Steers

Friday and was given by Violet Phillips and Mrs. Earl Jones. A dinner was given for the groomsmen by the bridegroom and was held at the home of Randy McGowan.

Several showers were given for the couple prior to the wedding.

3. Do what your parents say.

4. If you hurt someone, or hurt their feelings, say you are sorry.

5. Be nice to guests.

6. Dont say bad words.

7. Use good manners everywhere.

8. Be nice to your brother or sister if you have one.

9. Say your prayers every night.

10. Love everybody, especially your parents.

JEFF PURINTON, PALATKA, FLA.

A COLLECTION FROM OTHER LISTS SUBMITTED

1. Dont swear, drink or smoke. It makes parents wonder where they went wrong.

2. Dont ask your parents if they had lovers before they were married. Its none of your business, and you probably wont get a straight answer anyway.

3. Dont complain when youre served spaghetti three times in a row. It beats going to bed hungry.

4. Always be totally honest in what you say or do, even if it means getting busted.

5. When youre wrong, admit it, and take the consequences.

6. Pick up after yourself. Your mother is not your maid.

7. If your parents marriage breaks up, dont act like theyve ruined your life. They may have improved it.

8. Take good care of the body your parents (and. God) gave you.

9. Do your best in school. Your future depends on it.

10. Include your parents in your prayers. You are always in theirs.

* *

Every teen-ager should know the truth about drugs, sex and how to be happy. For Abbys bookr let, send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents)^ self-addressed envelope to: Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Adoption

Announced

Buck

Mike and Suzanne Buck announce the adoption of a daughter, Katherine Suzanne, on Oct. 14,1983.

Eastern

Electrolysis

133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITES PHONE 75W034, GREENVILLE, NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL

CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST

Views On Dental

Health

Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.PA

TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE

There is a legal phrase: "Time is of the essence, which means there is no fooling around with dates in a contract. If your youngster accidentally gets a tooth knocked out and youd like 4o give the dentist half a chance to successfully replant it- "time is also of the essence.

Take the typical case where a child gets his front tooth knocked out at a hockey game. He skates over and hands it to his parents and finishes the game. Later on-probably the next day-theyll go see a dentist. Too late, my

friends. No chance for saving that tooth.

The proper reaction would be to take Johnnie-skates and all-immediately to the dentist. This is an emergency. A tooth replaced within'30 minutes has a 90% chance of being saved, but in two hours the success rate drops considerably.

To improve the chances of a successful replantation of a knocked-out tooth, rinse it in tap water (dont scrub it), replace it in its socket and have the patient hold it in place with his tongue on the way to the dentist.

Prepared as a public service to promote better dental health From the offices of Kenneth T Perkins, D.D S P.A Evans St , Phone: 752-5126

Greenville 752-5126    Vanceboro 244 1179

In the past dozen years or so, the (Tiinese stir-fry technique has greatly influenced American cooks.

This comment is occasioned by the following recipe for Black-eye Peas and Stir-fry Vegetables, to which we were recently introduced.

Up to now, dry black-eye peas were most often used in a traditional way - cooked with rice and pork to make a delicious Southern dish that goes far back in American culinary history. In recent years the peas have been given wider use - in fritters and croquettes; as stuffing for tortilas; in casseroles; and in salads.

But now an enterprising cook has added them to a stir-fry dish of onion, sweet red or green peppers, zucchini and fresh tomato wedges. The combination makes a good vegetarian main dish or a side dish to accompany poultry, fish or meat.

Cooking Is Fun

By CECILY BROttXSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

BLACK-EIEPE*\S& STIR-FRY \TGET.ABLES

2 tablespoons full-flavored olive oil

>4 cup parsley leaves, finely chopped

1 clove garlic, finely choppd

1 medium (4 ounces) onion, thinly sliced (1 loosely packed scant cup)

1 medium (4 ounces) sweet red or green |pper. seeded and thinly sliced (1 loosely packed scant cup)

Two 7-inch long zucchini (each 4 ounces), t.hinly sliced (12 to 2 loosely packed cups)

1 large (8 ounces) red-ripe tomato, cored and cut into 16 wedges >4 teaspoon crushed dry thyme

16-ounce can cooked diY' black-eye peas, drained (1 and 2-3rds cups), see Note

Salt and pepper to taste In a 10-inch skillet over moderate heat, heat the oil. Add the parsley, garlic, onion, red pepper and zucchini. Cook, stirring often, only until the zucchini is crisp-tender - a matter of minutes.

Stir in tomatoes and thyme and heat, stirring often.

Fold in the black-eye peas and the salt and pepper; heat, stirring carefully once or Jwice, so

as not to break up the peas. Serve at once.

Makes 6 servings.

Note; You may want to cook a hatch of dry black-eye peas and use 1 and 2-3rd cups of them for this stir-fry dish - they should be ten^but not mushy. One cup of the^ black-eye peas will yieW 2 to 234 cups of cooked peas. The leftover peas not used in this dish will taste good added to rice and such cooked vegetables as spinach or collard greens.

Josephs

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lent SidsfM l0Mi Josephs < Ucal, fist Senbt for (iMMirr-I hMiMl KM Tfpewrhers.

I 355-2723

fBiEITYOKlF

For You Do-It-Yourselfer''' "'e i! 8ven Your Wooden Frames Together For rou wiiile You Wait! 606 Arlington Blvd. 756-7454 Open Tonite Til 9 PM

Birth

Bail

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Macon M. Dail Jr., Ill Lakeview Drive, a daughter, Caroline Elaine, on Oct. 15, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Showman Phineas T. Barnum was born in 1810.

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Serving Pitt County For Over 50 Years





wm.

1M Farms For Sale

OPMSITE ORIENTAL ~

at Buoy , waterfront farm and house, pier, 73 acres'vIt miles Beaufort. $123,000. 736-3M.

40 ACRE FARM, 20 cleared. On Paved Road 1433. 1 mile West of Bethel. Call 754-8279affer Sp.m.

107

Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT loOacco poundage and Tarm land In Pitt County. 75 4434.

109

Houses For Sale

NEW LISTINOI Brick Venew'Ubme with carport. 6 miles from Greenville. Owner being transferred. Neat neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, 11^ baths. Assume FmHA 10%% loan. Only S4l,M0. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, 754-2904, nights AAary at 754-1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754 4144.

NEW

LISTINO Country, large lot.

isfef

109 Houses For Sale

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 Oavis Realty 752 3000, 754-2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754 4144.

ALMOST LIKE NEWI Assume loan. Cedar siding, wooded lot. Quiet and peaceful neighborhood in the country. About 1,540 square feet tastefully decorated 3 large bedrooms, country kitchen, heat pump, beautiful family room and dining area, deck. Low $40's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754-4144.

BEAUTIFUL AND COZY brick house - conveniently located in Colonial Heights within easy walking distance of ( shopping center, stores, bus stop; 3 years old but it looks brand new due to recent paint and beautiful carpets throughout, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room, kitchen/dinIng room; heat pump; large yard. For additional information, contact Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348.

BELVEDERE'. Club Pines, 1900 square feet. Owner financing available. 752-4523 appointments

BELVEDERE- Immaculate ranch home features spacious great room, kitchen with dining area plus formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport. Landscaped, wooded yard. $45,900 Owner transferred. Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane, 752 8819.

BELVEDERE- 12% Fixed Rate FHA assumption makes ownership easy Williamsburg design with 3 bedrooms, office, living room with fireplace, brand new rear deck. $42,900. Call Bail and Lane, 752-0025 or Richard Lane, 752-8819.

BELVEDERE- Owner anxious will consider lease with option and credit part of rent towards purchase for qualified buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with rec room $55,500. Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Ball, 752 8819.

BETHEL. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with private yard. $50,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, 754 1322.

BUILT AMONG the Pines Brick veneer ranch. Quiet and peaceful neighborhood. No city taxes. Good school district. About 1,375 square feet, 3 bedrooms, l'/j baths, central heat and woodstove. Call for details Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754-1997 or Grace 744 4454, 754 4144.

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, 754 2750 or 975 2488.

BY OWNER - CUSTOM built two story contemporary. 3 bedrooms, i'/i baths, cedar siding, Jenn-Aire range, central vacuum, many other extras. Nice country location; 10 minutes from hospital $45,000 753 2723.

COLLEGE COURT - owner is building and is ready to sell! Three bedrooms, 1'/2 baths, a country kitchen, family room, detached

Brick Veneer del! house. Tasfefulfy decorated In earth tones, 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths. Ideal for ^ung family. Assume 10%% loan.

mily _________ ___________

ly $41,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, 754-2904, nights AAary at 754-1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754-4144

NEW LISTINGS

EDWARDS ACRES Possible FHA 235 loan assumption. About one year old with three grooms, I'/i baths, living room, dining area. Insulated garage and fenced rear yard. $52,300.

FARMVILLE A possible FHA loan assumption with possibility of some owner financing of part of the equity. Three bedrooms, two baths, living room with fireplace, dining room, family room. Nice wooded lot. $55,900.

BAYWOOD Without a doubt a great place to live and this cedar siding contemporary on a one acre lot makes it all perfect. Three bedrooms, 2Vi baths, foyer, great room with stone fireplace, dining room, Jenn-AIre range, thermopane windows. $135,000.

DUFFUSREALTY INC.

756-5395

two-car garage; heat and air. Only 3 years old. Price reduced to $50,900 let's make an offer! Call Estate Realty Co., 752 5058, nights 758 4474 or 752 3447.

ELMHURST Roomy Dutch Col onial offers 4 bedrooms, formal areas, lovely family room, garage with studio/workshop area. Located on a quiet street and it's only $44,900. Call Ball and Lane .752 0025 or Richard Lane, 752 8819

ENJOY PRIVACY and nature In this country home located on iVj acre lot surrounded by quiet trees. 4 bedrooms,' family room, garage. Low $50's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 4454, 754 4144.

EXCELLENT OLDER Brick Veneer home Spacious, 3 large bedrooms. I'/i 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 Oavis Re alty 752 3000. 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 6454, 754 4144.

FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, 2,854 square feet. Approximately 4 miles from hospital. 2.3 acres. Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, carport, patio. 1,120 square foot workshop. Assumable 8% first mortgage. Call 754 7111

FOR SALE BY OWNER. FHA

Assumption, $15,000, equity and assume loan. Current payment $512 PIT I. Lake Glenwood, $70,000. Ervin Gray 1 524 4148 of 1 524 5042.

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, 754 2904, nights AAary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 4654, 754 4144.

LYNNDALE. 5 bedrooms and

3racious formal areas. $145.000. eannette Cox Agency, 756 1322.

MOVING, MUST SELL! By owner 11'/}% 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. Low $20's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 4656, 754 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. $42,500. Lots of extras. Better hurry on this one! Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 754 4810, nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

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, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754-1997 or Grace 746 4454, 754 4144.

WHY STORE THINGS you ne^r use? Sell them for cash with a Classified Ad.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LMdIng Eatlarn NC consumer nd automobile financial Institution has an

1Jif

Opening

For

MANAOEMENT

TRAINEE

Usual company benefits and company car furnished for work. Salary commensurate with education or experience. If interested please send resume to;

Regional Acceptance Corp.

3004 South Memorial Drive Qreenvllle.NC 27634 No Phone Calls Please!

NEWLY LISTED. 3 bedrooms, 3Mi acres on river. $150,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, 754-1322.

NO CREDIT CHECK - $3,000 will get you in this 3 bedroom home. Neat starter home. Ideal for young couple. Central heat, woodstove. Assume this loan - less than $400 per month. Reduced $4,500. Only $33,000. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 744 6454, 754 4144.

NO REASONABLE OFFER

refused! Owner most sell Reduced $7,300. Almost 1,600 square feet. About 3'/S miles from Greenville. Assume 9'/?% loan, payment less than $450 per month. Cozy den with fireplace, kitchen with all extras, ood size bedrooms, formal areas, all for further details. Only $57,500. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 6456, 754 4144.

NON QUALIFIED ASSUMPTION.

$4,000 down payment. Assume 11'/i% mortgage with some sec ondary financing with the owner. ? years old. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, single car garage, GE heat pump, wood deck, on corner lot. Red Carpet - Steve Evans & Associates

355 2727

OWNER MUST SELLI Brick Veneer home with double ' qar garage. Corner wooded lot. Custom built. Beautiful great room with fireplace, cheerful kitchen and dining area. Excellent neighborhood and good school district. $40's. Call Davis Realty 752-3(X)0, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754-1997 or Grace 744 4456, 754-4144.

PINEWOOD FOREST. 3 bedrooms, all formal areas and large garage. $49,900. Jeannette Cox As 754 1322

Agency,

PRICE REDUCEOI University area. 2 story home featuring over 1,800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, baths, carport. $57,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756-4810, nights Al Baldwin 754 7834.

PRICE REDUCEOI Eastwood. $13,500 assumes 11'/<2% loan with payments of $545 PITI. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch that features living room, dining area, den with fireplace, large deck. $41,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton Associates 754 6810, nights Harold Hewitt 754-2570.

PRICE REOUCTIONI Charming 3 bedroom Williamsburg In University area. 8',^% assumable loan for qualified buyer $52,500. Call Jeff Aldridge. Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500, nights 355-4700.

REDUCED $3,500. Brick Veneer Ranch established neighborhood. No city taxes. Excellent school district. Almost 1,400 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 1'/i baths, central heat and air, woodstove. Low $SO's. Call for details Davis Realty 752-3000, 754 2904, nights Mary at 754-1997 or Grace 744 6454, 754 4144.

REDUCED! REDUCED! Bethel, good neighborhood. Brick, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, all formal areas, kitchen with eating bar, den, fireplace with Insert, office, garage. Callowner, 752 2804.

SEDGEFIELD. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Newly listed. $45,500. Jeannette Cox Agency, 754-1322.

SHENANDOAH. 2 bedroom townhouse with extras. $42,700. Jeannette Cox Agency, 754-1322.

TUCKER ESTATES. 3 bedrooms, gourmet kitchen and garage. $89.900. Jeannette Cox Agency,

756 1322.

WESTHAVEN - TRADITIONAL

Wjlliamsburg features loads of living, dining and storage areas plus a two car garage. Spotless throughout and located on a beautiful corner lot. Compare at $89,900 and then call Ball 8i Lane, 752-0025 or Richard Lane, 752-8819 to see this one!

WILLIAMSBURG - Cherry Oaks. Big yard, economy efticieht, 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths. Assume 1st and 2nd mortgages with $10,000 cash or refinance and owner will carry 2nd. Phone 754 8073.

WINTERVILLE. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and formal areas. $42,500. Jeannette Cox Agency, 754-1322.

2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop-14x34 plus shed and shelter. 1477 square feet of living area. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2415.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^'ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

Ill InvBstment Proptrty

*35.800 - 3 bedroom houM with upstairs apartment. Total rent $420 per month. .Good Investment pro-pwty. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 754-4810.

$45,000 - Duplex. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, each sloe. Possible owner financing. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates, 754-4810.

113

Land For Salt

43 ACRES with timber. $31,500. Vanceboro. Call 433-7250 weekdays between 7-5.

115

Lots For Salt

LYNNDALE LOT on (Wn Annas Road. Call 355-2221 after 4 p.m.

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 744-2144 for full details.

WOODED LOT IN country for sale more than 1% acres (1S0'x470'x100'x4l2'); located only minutes from Greenville on paved highway 1753 between Black Jack and Chlcod; already approved for septic tank; has community water (Mstern Pines). For additional information, contact Real Estate Brokers, 752-4348.

117 Resort Property For Sale

RESORT PROPERTY for sale or trade. 4 apartment complex. 3 bedrooms, 1'/5 baths, central heat and air. 415 Ocean Drive, Club Colony, Atlantic Beach. Asking $225,000. Will trade for property in Greenville area. Call 752-2344 or 757-0451.

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758-0702days, 752-0310 nights.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT. Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 7S-44-    -

1-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have an rage nec hgton Self Storage, Oper day Friday 9-5. Call 754-9933.

_.iy

size to meet your storage need. Call

. .. . -

en Mon-

121 Apartments For Rent

ALMOST NEW Townhouse Oc cupled only 3 months. 2 bedrooms, y'/2 baths, major appliances with washer/dryer hook ups. Professional neighborhood and conve nient location. Deposit required. Available November 1. Call 754-7447 9 to 5 weekdays, 754-1634 5 to 9 weeknlghts.

ANOTHER RENT INCREASE???

Now you can have monthly pay ments lower than rent that will not increase! Five locations with 2 and 3 bedroom units. Call Iris Cannon at 744 2439 or 758-4050, Owen Norvell at 754 1498 or 758 6050, WII Reid at 754 0444 or 758 4050 or Jane Warren at 758 7029 or 758-6050.

MOORE & SAUTER

110 South Evans 758-6050

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 754-7815

Beautifully decorated 1 bedroom, 1 bath townhouse apartment with a cathedral ceiling and loft bedroom. Energy efficient. $240. 752-8949.

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, I'/i baths, washer/dryer hook ups, efficient. No pets. $325 per montn. 754-8904 or 752-2040.

IF THERE'S something you want to rent, buy, trade or,sell, check the classified columns. Call 752-4144 to place your ad.

Jell your osei^television the

Classified way. Call 752-4144.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Shoe Repair

SHOE

113 W. 4th St. Downtown Greonvillt

758-0L04

Open: Mon.-Frl. 6 a.m. til 6 p.m. Saturdays a.m. til 3 p.m.

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price $259.00

60"x30" baautilul walnut finish. Idaal tor home or ollice.

Special Price

$17900

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 Evans St.    752-2175

WANTED

PART TIMi HUP FOR

TELEPHONE SOLICITAnON

Sun.-Thurs.j6-10pm HOURLY WAGES PLUS BONUS

APPOINTMENT 7S7-n00

RENTAL CARS

Daily, Weekly Or Monthly Contact:

HOLT OLDSMOBILE

756-3115

I ne uaiiy Hetlector, ureenviiie, N.C.

121 Apartments For Rent

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1W baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compectors, patio, free cable TV, washer-dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752-1557

DUPLEX NEAR ECU 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $240 ner rpgnth. No pets. 752-2040.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air condl tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

Dial direct phones 25 channel color tv AAeid Service

Furnished

All Utilities

Weekly/Monthly Rates

756-5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse in woods. Washer/dryer hook ups. $310. 754-4295 after 6 p.m

FOR RENT: New 2 bedroom duplex apartment, carpeting, heat pump, appliances furnished. Deposit required. $325 month. 758-7540 or 754-7537.

apart

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and P(X)L. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 754-4869

IN WINTERVILLE. 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $210 month. 754-5007.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LOVE TREES?

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 hookups, 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

Need part time worlc from now until the hoTdays? You'll find a position in Classified.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, dis pqsal included. We also have Cable TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent

Luxury brick townhouse, end unit, near Nichols, outside and attic storage. New. Available November 1.754-9006 after 4 p.m.

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex in Falrlane Farms. $310 per month. 754 2121 or 758-0180.

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Wtfflams, 7S4714.

SHENANDOAH. Mosby Circle. New duplex, townhuuses and dais. Available November 1. $300 per month; $300 deposit. BUI Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Ca 11 us 24 hours a day at

75-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook-ups, cable TV, pool, cii house, playground. Near ECU

hook-ups, cable TV,

ub

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms. I'/, baths, quiet, professional neighborhood in convenient loca tion, I year old. No pets. Deposit required. $330 per month. 754-7314 days; 754 4980 nights.

TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace, Shenandoah Village $350 CallLorelleat 754 6336.

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT.

carpeted, central air and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup Bryton Hills. $275. 758 3311.

WILSON ACRE APARTMENTS.

1806 East 1st Street. New 2 and 3 bedrooms, washer/dryer hook ups, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis, pool, sauna, self cleaning oven, frost-free refrigerator. 3 blocks from ECU Call 752 0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportunity

1 BEDROOM near campus. Hot water furnished. No pets $215 per month. Phone Stuart Buchanan, 754 3923

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES near hospital Call 355 2628 days, 754 3217 nights.

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE.

Carpeted, modern appliances, central air and heat. $295. 108 Cedar Court. Call 758 3311,

2 BEDROOM townhouse, 1'(2 bath on Stantonsburg Road, 4 miles West of hospital. Available November 1. Call 754 5780 weekdays; 752 0181 nights.

2 BEROOM TOWNHOUSE. 1^2

bath, washer/dryer hookups, $300. Available November 1. 355-2899 after 6.

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 S(iuare feet. Only $3.60 per square fool. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348.

SELL YOUR OLD car in classified and you'll have extra money tor a new one. Call 752-6164.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR

SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

(919) 752-7889

SPECIALIZING IN TELEPHONE AND SERVICE WORK

AUBREY L.

HARRISON ELECTRIC

INDUSTRIAL - COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL

RESPOND TO EMERGENCY WITHIN 4 HOURS

24 HOUR SERVICE GREENVILLE, NC 27834

*24,000 First Year

If you are a professional or would like to become one, Carolina Model Homes (one of the oldest and most successful home builders in North Carolina) may have a position for you.

1. High commission plus bonus plus incentives contest.

2. Paid health and life insurance.

3. Complete company benefit program.

For confidential interview call Jill at 758-3171 between 9 and 11 A.M. and 2 to 4 P.M.

OCTOBER FEST SERVICE SPECIALS

COUPON

Wont Stop *54

88

Your Choice

Front or Rear Brakes Service Expires'10-24-83

COUPON

Oil, Lube & Filter    ja    aaaa

Up to 5 Quarts Of Quaker State Super Blend Oil

Expires 10-24-83

COUPON

Lifetime Computer Wheel Balance 50

PerWhMl

Then Free Rotating And Balancing Every 5000 miles Expires 10-24-83

We Accept Any Goodyear Credit Card

Uu Tht Silwr Cird nitionwida It OoodyNr Auto Satvic* Ctiritrt ind pirticl|ting Qaadywr dollars ind Innchlws

Enjay cradit caminiinca and Mcurity wlwnawr yau trivil.

West End Shopping Center    729    Dickinson    Avenue

Phone 798-9371    Phone 752-4417

Open 8:004:00 Mon.-Frl.    Open    8:00-6:00    Mon.-Frl.

Set. 1:00 to 5:00    Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

AIM Storas In Ttrboro And Rocky Mount

127 Houses For Rent

AYDEN. 3/4 large badrooms, 2 baths. Rent with option to boy. $355. 754S140.

AYDEN COUNTRY CLUB. Ranch

style home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4'^ baths. Ovar 3000 square feet. Available Immediately. $400 ^r month. Call Lorelle at

CHARMING LARGE 2 bedrooms, 2

baths^, study-, 4 - oak fireplaces, fenced yard, washer/dryer. Ayden, $360. 7S4 8140

HOMES FOR RENT In Griffon. Call 1 524 4147 days, 1 524 4007 nights.

HOUSE - COUNTRY. Approximate-ly 8 miles from city, past hospital. References required. 1 523-3542.

NEARLY NEW hou^ for rent. 3 bedrooms, dishwasher, fully carpeted, large yard, near Pitt Community College. $350 a month. 752-3993 evenings

3 BEDROOM HOUSE for rent. Nice yard. Cal 1752-3311.

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath ranch style in country near hospital. $450 per month plus deposit. Will sell! (fall 758 6321.

Monoay, October 17.1983 1 5

127

Houses For Rent

4 BEDROOM RANCH. Over 2006 square feet with workshop in Griffon. Available immediately for $425 per month. Call Realty World, Clark Branch, 754 6334 or Tim Smith, 752-9811.

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

You've dacldad to sail your resort property tWe- fall? You ears act-fhe job done quickly using Classified

2 BEDROOMS with air. S14. No pets, no children. 758-0745.

2 BEDROOMS - furnished. No children, no pets. Call 758-6479

2 BEDROOM mobile home in Col onial Trailer Park, $150 per month. 757-1111.

2 BEDROOM, furnished, air condi tioned, underpinned, porch, 1 child only, AAeadowbrook area. 756 3377.

Want to sell livestock? Run a

Classified ad for quick response

135 Office Space For Rent

$,000 square feet office build

ing on 244 Bypass. Plenty of park Ing. Call 758-2300days.

135 Office Space For Rent

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams, 754 7815.

138

Rooms For Rent

LARGE ROOM for rent, $30 per week, kitchen and bath. Call 758 7904 anytime.

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share Va expenses. Blrchwood Sands Mobile Homes. 752-3040 after 4p.m.

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 4 bedroom house, $135 month. Professional female preferred Call

355 2057 alter 3:30.

144 Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 754 8415.

146 Wanted To Lease

WANT TO LEASE or rent farm land around Farmville. Phone 753 2488

V

a

UJ

"5

d)

oc

0

i\e Corner

WANTED TO RENT FARM FOR 1984

In

Belvoir Vicinity

Roy Parker 752-0758

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.

SATISFIED WITH YOUR RENTAL INCOME?

Why not maximize your profits. Turn your property over to the professionals at Mid-Eastern Realty, where you are never just a number. Call today to be in our beautiful, new 1984 brochure. By the way, we feel that 7% is still fair to both owner and agent.

MID-EASTERN REALTY

P.O. Box 1326

(919)756-4254 #14 Pin PLAZA

Greenville N.C. 27834

70

ACRES

Good yielding farm land with excellent road frontage. Over 12,300 pounds tobacco and 16,000 pounds peanuts. Six miles out from' Greenville in good location. Call Carl for details.

Darden Realty

758-1983 Wights And Weekends, 758-2230

WANT TO LEARN MORE

ABOUT CEDARDALE LOG HOMES?

HOKS FOR SALE

221 Country Club Drive

Two story brick home with slate roof, copper gutters, beautiful landscaped yard, large entrance hall, big living room with fireplace, dining room, large Kitchen with eating area, cathedral type ceiling in den with fireplace, utility room, bedroom or office, 2 car garage all on first floor. Second floor has 4 bedrooms and 2 baths, disappearing stairway to attic. Must see to appreciate.

264 By-passWest Living room, large kitchen with eating area, den, 2 bedrooms, 1%baths, screened porch, utility room, garage. Lot 125 x 210. 850,000.

1024 Fleming St.

3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath. Across from Sadie Saulter School. $15,000.

Land For Sale 14 acres behind Imperial Estates on Bethel Highway about 4 miles north of Greenville. Priced to sell. $14,000.

LOT FOR SALE

82'x130 lot on corner of 13th and Green Streets. $7500.

Ill E. 11th Street. 75x85. Price $6000.00.

NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE

TURNARE

REAL ESTATE MU INSURANCE AGENCY

Get More With Les Home 756-1179

752-2715

or

752-3459

30 Years ALTOR* Experience

Cedardale Representatives Will Be Conducting A Seminar On Cedardale Log Homes:

DATE: October 20,1983 TIME: 7:00 P.M.

PLACE: Parkers Barbeque, Memorial Drive, Greenville, N.C.

COST: $4.75 Per Person - All You Can Eat

For Reservations Call: 756-6857

FOR SALE

SEVERAL NICE LOTS & TRACTS OF LAND

12.000. Dwelling, 1706 S. Pitt SI. Cement BIk. In need of repair.

6.000. Lot 75X105 Vance St., Greenville, N.C.

7.000. Lot 64x118 Memorial Drive & 3rd St.

10.000. Lot 100x132,621 Albemarle Ave., Greenville, some owner Finance.

20.000. Four Lots, Ayden.

45.000. 3 Bed/R Dwelling, 1.5 Bath, Cent. Air, 1,429 square feet, 303 King St. Ayden.

70.000. 5 Bed/Rm. Dwelling, 3 bath. Brick, 3,175 square feet, 1.5 acres, shade & fruit trees, Rt. 5 Box 129, Greenville On Hwy 33, Between SR 1764 & 1841.

90.000.4.B/R Dwelling, 1.5 bath, Rt. 3 Box 154 E 5, Randum Wood Sub. Greenville, N.C. Between SR 1764 & 1841, East of Simpson, Cent. Heat, 2 Car Garage, 2200 Square feet. Wooded, 2 Acres, seller will pay some closing cost & points.

99.000.33.acres of land 7 cleared 26 wooded. 4 miles N. of Greenville abutted SR 1415 & Crosses Hwy. 11/13, Reduced from 148,500.

750.000. A Complete Church facility, 400 Wataugh, Ave., Greenville, N.C. Sanctuary seats 700/1000, Youth & Adult Christian Ed. Buildings, Kitchen,' pots, pans, dishes, Gymnasium.

To Buy Sell or Rent Contact

D.8IAIIRETTMIEIICV

752-4476

752-7756    752-1764

INTRODUCING

HOLLY RIDGE

COUNTRY LIVING- FIRST CLASS

HOLLY RIDGE is now offering 2V2 and 5 acre tracts teafiiring gently rolling woods and cleared land. HOLLY RIDGE is located 5 miles east of Greenville on NC 33 and reaching the the Tar River.

OWNER FINANCING

PAVED STREETS AND UNDERGROUND UTILITIES

MEMBER, HOLLY RIDGE OWNERS^SOC.

SOME TRACTS MAY BE SUBDIVIDED

RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS

IB

DARDEN REALTY

758-1983

Nights-Weekends

758-2230

I





5 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Monday, October 17.1983

Picking Jury in Tylenol Trial

CHICAGO (AP) -Publicity about the horrible details of seven deaths from cyanide^spiked Tylenol will make it hard to find unbiased jurors for James Lewiss attempted extortion trial starting today, his lawyer says.

Lewis, 37, IS accused in a federal indictment of writing a letter demanding $1 million

from Johnson & Johnson, parent company of the firm that makes the pain reliever, to.stop.the.kiIling.l Police arrested him in a New York City library in December 1982, about two months after seven Chicago-area people died after taking cyanide-tainted capsules of Extra-Strength Tylenol.

Eastern District Courts Rating Up

REGIO.NAL VICA WORKSHOP...Rep Waller Jones Jr. (left) and Sen. Vernon White (right) attended opening ceremonies for the Region I Vocational and Industrial Clubs of America Leadership Workshop held recently

at Farmville Central High School. Above, the two discuss the VICA emblem with Lewis Oakley, parlimentarian for the regional chapter. (Barry Gaskins Photo)

By MIRIA.M LEWIS Assistant Agricultural Extension Agent Economic conditions, as thev are. make cattlemen

Tim Die In N.C. Trc

B\ The Associated Press

Three people have been killed this weekend on North Carolina highways, bringing the olticial 1983 death toll to 9.34, the state Highway Patrol reported today John Lee Dowdle, 18. of Barnardsville, died at 7:30 p m. .Saturday when the car in which he was riding crossed the center line of S.H. 2173 18 miles north of Asheville and hit another car head-on. Troopers said Dowdle was pinned in the vehicle At the same time Saturday in .Mitchell County. David Sherrill .McKinney. 28, ol Spruce Pine, died when he drove his car at high speed over a hill on I'.S 19 and hit a turning car.

Victor Hex Mabe, 36. of High Point was killed at 10:30 p m. Friday when the car he was driving at high speed left a rural Guiltord County road 2.7 miles north ot his hometown, overturned 'three times and threw him from It.

In an accident not reported by the Highway Patrol, Virginia D, Edwards, the wife of former state legislator Dan K. Edwards, died Friday night after she was struck by a pickup truck m Durham.

Durham police said .Mrs. Edwards, 65, of Durham, was struck after she stepped off a concrete median in front of a shopping mall. She died at Durham County General Hospital.

The highway death toll was 1,007 this time last vear

wonder whether it will pay to winter cattle. Short, dry pastures and low feeder calf prices have forced many cow-calf producers into selling calves. High feed cost and weak consumer demand for beef had depressing effects on the profitability ot finishing cattle.

Stocker operators with feed resources to feed calves should evaluate a stocker enterprise as, a means ol marketing supplies of home-grown feed. Cow-calf producers should consider wintering their calves, especially lighter calves

Farmers who had large spring hay crops, harvested corn or silage, or had the opportunity to stockpile fescue should seriously consider wintering calves Well-designed feeding systems, based on home forages, can produce the weight needed to sell as Stockers this spring.

For further information on wintering calves, including suggested rations, contact Miriam Lewis at 7.52-2934

Chapter Meeting Set

Pitt County Chapter No. 1530 of the National .Association ot Retired Federal Employees will meet .Wednesday at noon at .the Three Steers Restaurant.

All Civil Service retirees, their spouses and present employees with five or more years of service and .50 years or older are invited. For further information, contact Eugene Sutton. 7.56-7158

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Sunday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 81. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 81 percent of your hot water needs.

Sireening Is Planned

Free screening for scoliosis, lateral curvature of the spine, will be offered to all city and county public schools sixth graders within the next few weeks.

Requests for parents' permission are being sent home by students now. Private schools may request screening by public health nurses by calling Ms. Beth Murphy. PHN, 752-4141.

"Last year." Dr. Robert Ehinger, county health director said, public health nurses screeneil more than l.oou children. Forty-nine were referred for further examination. Of these. 18 showed sufficient evidence of scoliosis to require treatment."

He explained that scoliosis tends to run in families and affects more girls than boys. It may appear gradually, he said, often showing up during a child's growth spurt, and may be mistaken for poor posture It seldom causes pain in a child, but uncontrolled, it can cause pain in later years and adversely affect function of heart and lungs. Correction usually involves bracing and/or surgery. Exercise and physical therapy alone are not sufficient, he said.

Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.

By The Associated Press North Carolinas Eastern District court system, ranked 75th in the nation in efficiency five years ago, has moved to first place, according to the U.S. Administrative Office of the Courts.

The district had the highest number of cases disposed of per judgeship of any of the % national court districts for the period ending June 30.

District Chief Judge Earl Britt, recently named to the post, gave much of the credit

Big Prizes li

Moiplt

PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) - There will be more at stake than Park Place and Reading Railroad at the 1983 World Monopoly Championship - the winner will go on a $10,000 shopping tour.

Twenty contestants from around the world are gathering for the Championship round Tuesday night, when Cesare Bernabei of Rome will defend his title.

One of the competitors is 14-year-old James Mallett, who beat his father to win the British championship.

"It's time Britain had a win," the teen-ager said. My father's a very gracious loser."

Bernabei, 30, says he last played Monopoly a month ago. bankrupting his 10-year-old niece. You have to keep your image in front of those kids," he said, so you have to win, or they will lose their respect for you.

Parker Brothers, makers of the game, is dishing out $250,000 in real money to sponsor the tournament -and that doesn't include air fare for competitors who live in far-away places like Japan, Peru, Australia and the Netherlands.

First prize is a $10,000 shopping spree on glitzy Worth Avenue.

tUANS NU) & USCD BOOKS

(traders Exchange, Ltd.

20% CREDIT

for Vour Paptibidi tool

-U)e Buy or Trade Comie Books and Select Titles of Magazines

ASK ABOUT OUR READER^S CLUB

Euans Mall    752-3333

Open Mon.-Sat. 0:30-5:30

ADUANCED SUNG AT

Hy to Colorado with Piedmont Airlines, and ski at Vail, 3reckenridge, Clopper Mountain, Steamboat Springs, Aspen or Winter Park. Prices start at only $215 per weeK."

Colorado Ski Packages

to outgoing judge Franklin T. Dupree Jr.

Hes an incessant worker, Britt said. You come in here any Saturday morning and youll find him in his office. He gives the government 110 percent.

Britt said Dupree helped fill two vacant judgeships since 1979, bringing the total of full-time judges to three, while adding two court magistrate positions.

Dupree also placed more emphasis on being prepared to bring cases to a speedy trial which encourages out-of-court settlements, Britt said.

Clerk of Court J. Rich Leonard said he works with ^ the judges to keep cases running smoothly. He said if a deadline is not met for filing briefs or a trial date is not prom ply set, someone hears about It.

Cases that do go off track are called to the attention of the appropriate person. Leonard said.

Having a , more efficient court system apparently has brought in more cases. A total of 1,211 cases were filed in the year ending June 30. 1978, and 2,347 cases were filed in the year that ended last June.

BORDER INCIDENTS

BANGKOK. Thailand (AP) - Vietnam said Sunday that China started more than 130 border incidents along its border with Vietnam, killing or wounding 40 civilians from July to September.

No one has been charged in the deaths. But Lewiss arrest was the most widely publicized of. three, made during the investigation.

Lewis name also made headlines in July, when he was sentenced to 10 years in prison for mail fraud in an unrelated case m Kansas City, Mo.

Defense lawyer Michael Monico said he would seek today to delay the Chicago trial because of the governments request Friday for more handwriting samples. He predicted jury selection would be difficult because of Lewis notoriety.

The concern is (that) because of all the pre-trial publicity during the (Tylenol) investigation and

all of the attention focused on Mr. Lewis ... people just have a genera! recollection of his involvement in the case, Monico said.

Since no other person has been as strongly implicated in the case ... the fear is people will associate Mr. Lewis with the investigation and all of the horrible details associated with it, according to Monico.

Illinois then-attorney general, Tyrone Fahner, last fall called Lewis a prime suspect in the killings after Johnson & Johnson received the letter. Authorities allege Lewis signed the name Robert Richardson, one of several suspected aliases, on another letter last November to the Chicago Tribune stating that he and his wife were innocent in the deaths.

Lewis has never been eliminated (as a suspect) because we cannot account for a variety of his actions," said Thomas Schump, head of the Tylenol investigation task force.

Of 10 to 15 suspects, Schump said, "we were able to eliminate most of them, primarily because of their cooperation. Because Lewis has refused to talk to us or even talk to us through his

attorney, there still appears to be a number of unknowns (about him)."

In th^ Kansas City case, Lewi's was coiivi(ited in a scheme to obtain credit cards by using client information from his tax preparation business in 1981.

Police have described him as a chameleon who lived in several states, has used at least 20 aliases and held many jobs, including computer specialist, tax accountant, importer of Indian tapestries, and salesman of jewelry, pharmaceutical machinery and real estate.

In a pending case, Lewis is charged in Kansas City with giving false information to the Internal Revenue Service to obtain a tax refund.

Authorities in Kansas City also say Lewis was indicted, but never charged, in the 1977 murder of an elderly man there. The case was dismissed after a judge ruled that seizure of property from his apartment was illegal.

Complete Radiator Service

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

JAMES W. LEWIS

SHOP-EZE

West End Shopping Center

Phone 756-0960

Tuesday Luncheon Special

Country Style Steak

$239

Coffee..............10*    cup

Speciel Served with a Fresh Vegetables & Rolls.

MAKE MONEY PREPARING INCOME TAXES

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*7fTur no.ITP14CS10. rkiiic'i7nights lodging. JtnihL' oca{lhiik\ ml uLty lift nckei iK'rtJcrson at SuiainhocU Sfmngs.

lie/ agent or Pitxlrn/mt^ tour desk in Murth (Mrolimt toll-free at i-8oo-6/2-oigi.

For details, call sour tnneJ

Hwtobuy group AeaMicoverage.

Since the cost of health coverage has been rising much faster than other business costs, business people have to become much more skillful at evaluating competitive health-benefit proposals.

Here are some of the issues youll want to consider.

Are the rate and cost containment strategies effective?

The cost of coverage is related directly to the cost of health services.

Therefore, does the carrier have effective ways to contain both your groups need for health care and the price of that care?

For example, does the carrier have cost-containment agreements with area hospitals and physicians?

Can the carrier offer your employees built-in incentives to use medical services efficiently?

Does your earner have cost-cotaammem agreemetus mth area prerviders? We do. And ihationly one of the strategies that enabled us to save our suhscnhers more than $125 million last year.

Is your carrier achieving the dream of paperless claims processing? We are.

Can the carrier offer options that reduce both the incidepoe and severity of illness? Mepjbership, fQrexan^le,inahealdioiaintenance orgstniaatibn? ,

Will the plan be affordable? Can you assume variaHe levels of risk?

Can payments be ge^ to your cashflows? Are a variety of financing arrangements available?

Will the semce be rapid,accurate and trustworthy?

What is the carriers reputation for prompt, accurate payment? For adequate disclosure of claims paid or denied?

To what extent is the carrier ^ achieving the dream of painless processing? Can claims be filed by computer?

Will your employees appreciate the coverage as a true benefit, the way having our benefit plan is appreciated, or will they take it for granted?

To prevent proHems for you down the road, will your carrier

make the plans provisions perfectly clear to them?

Take advantage of us.

All of these questions should enter any evaluation of alternative group-health plans.

The Subject is complex^ however, so please take advantage of our 50 years of experience? Just call your nearest service offite,or write to: Blue Cross and Bl\ie Shield of North Carolina, Room 558,Post Office Box 2291, Durham, hforth Carolina 27702.

Why do we want you to,become a better-informe^'customer?

Because the better you mi-derstand health coverage, the n(l|pije youll prefer ours.    -

Blue Cross Blue Shield

dltim\CiiOkf

The better you undostand health iroverage the more rouH prder ours.





9 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.

Monday, October 17,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NO)A) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was 25 to 75 cents lower. Kinston 40.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 40.00, WU^n 40.00, Salisbury 38.00, Rowland 40.00, Spiveys Corner 40.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 37.00, Fayetteville 36.00, Whiteville 38.00, Wallace 38.00, Spiveys Corner 36.00, Rowland 37.00, Durham 37.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, .C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 48.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2>2 to 3 pound birds. 71 lercent of the loads offered lave been confirmed with a final weighted average of 49.82 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is generally moderate for a good demand. Weights mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was 1,772,000, compared to 1,461,000 last Monday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market declined slightly today in a sluggish response to some better-than-expected news on the money supply.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials slipped 1.12 to

MONDAY 6:30 p.m. - Rotary Club meets

6:30 p.m. - Host Lions Club meets at Tom's Restaurant

6:30 p.m. - Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. - Sweet Adelines, Eastern Chapter meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Woodmen of the World. Simpson Lodge meets at community bldg.

7:30 p.m. - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at JayceeBldg.

8:00 p.m. - Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose TUESDAY 7:00 a.m. - Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m. - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets ast Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m. - Greenville Claims Association meets at Three Steers 7:00 p.m. - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:00 p.m. - I CAN COPE at Gaskins-Leslie Center, room 124 7:00 p.m. - Post No. 39 of American Legion meets at Post Home 7:30 p.m. - Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:30 p.m. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at 110 \. Warren St.

7:30 p.m. - Toughlove parents support group at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m. - Narcotics Anonymous meets at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg.,Farmville hwy.

1,262.40 by noontime.

Losers held a narrow lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Late Friday the Federal Reserve reported a $1.1 billion drop in the basic measure of the money supply for the week ended Oct. 5.

The figure contrasted with advance estimates calling for an increase of $1 billion or more. Analysts said it provided some fresh support for hopes that the Federal Reserve might encourage interest rates to decline.

That optimism was apparently offset, however, by concern over prospects for the international banking system. On Friday the Philippines announced a 90-day moratorium on principal payments for some of its foreign debt.

American Express led the active list, down l-^s at 36's following the companys report that its third quarter earnings came to 88 cents a share, against 85 cents in the comparable period a year ago.

The NYSE's composite index lost .03 to 97.97. At the .American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down .64 at 227.40.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 30.59 million shares at noontime, against 34.25 million at the same point Friday.

NEW YORK lAPi -Midday stocks

Lou Last

.-4.MR Corp

28\

28';

28'

.AbbtLabs

.52'4

52

.52'.

.'\llis C'halm

Ifi"

16'.

16".

Alcoa

44\

44' .

44 ,

Am Baker

14k

, I4'4

14',

AmBrands

55';

55';

Amer fan

43'.

43',

43-;

Am Cyan

56 "i

.56';

.56...

Am Motors

8';

8' I

8'.

AmStand

35.

35'.

35

Amer T&T

65

M'4

W'j

Beal Food

30

29.

30

Beth Steel

24".

24',

24' 1

Boeing

40',

39.

40

Borse Cased

421'.

42';

42':

Borden

.59-'4

59".

.59',

Burlngl Ind CSX ((irp

37".

:17'.

:t7".

74

73",

74

CSX Cp wi

24 !

24

24 ",

CaroPwLl

23'.

23'

23".

Celanese

78';

78'.

78' .

Cent Sova

16

16

16

Ch.imp Inl Chrysler

24'.

2:!.

. 24 .

.11' 1

,11

IF ,

Cix'al'ola

:>4'.

'U'.

54 .

C.olg Palm

24 .

24'.

24 1

Comw Kdis

27'

27

'*7'.

ConAgra

'2 '

Conti Group DeldaAirl

47

l.il"

,l,|.

.1,1'.

DowChem

,16 ,

.16'.

dul'ont

:i2',.

51

.51..

Duke Po

24',

'24".

24'.

FastnAirl.

6

6

Fast Kodak

72

71''

71 1

EalonCp

47

4)..,,

4).'.

Ksmark s

84'.

84'.

84 .

Exxon

.19

38',

Firestone

21';

21".

21' .

FlaPottLi

39.\

.19'..

39'.

Fla Progress

21".

21

21

Ford .Mol

68' .

68.

68.

Fuqua s GTE Corp

29' .

28';

28',

45'.

44",

4.5

GnDvnam

,56'.

55.

55.

GenltlecI s

.5:1'..

,53',

.5.1',

Gen Frvxl

49',

49',

49',

Gen Mills

,5(C.

50".

,'.i 1

tien Motors

78

77';

77.

(ien Tire

36',

36''

:i6'"

GenuParls

4,5'.

4.V,

4.5' ,

GaPacif

26',

26

Goodrich

;12'4

32';

:I2 f

Goodyear

31

31' .

.11' .

Grace Co

46.

46.

46.-

t;tNor Nek

53 >4

.53'.

.53',

Greyhound

2:1

.23'.

' '23 ;

Herculeslnc

,18'.

38

38'.

Honeywell HospfCp s

lac'.

45';

128

44'.

,128'.

44

Ing Rand IBM

53'4 131".

.53', 130' .

.53', l.!0 ,

Inll Harv

12

11

11 -I

Inl Paper

52

Inl Rectif

44.

44",

44.

Inl T&T

43 .

42':

42",

K mart

;i6.

:i6".

36.

KaisrAlum

19'.

19

19 ,

KanebSvc

17'.

17

17'.

KrogerCo Lockhed s

36'4

36',

36' .

43",

43' .

43".

Loews Corp

158'..

158'.

ir>8'..

McDrmlnl n

24",

24';

24 ' ,

McKesson

38

37'

:i7.,

.Mead Corp

35'4

34'j

.14

MinnMM

85".

85'.

85'.

Mobil

31'4

31

31' 1

.Monsanto

114';

li;i"4

113',

N'CN'B Cp NabiscoBrd

25';

23',

41

40',

4(1'!

.Nat Distill

28

27".,

28

NorflkSou

69'.

68",

69'.

OlinCp

32".

32',

:12'.

wnslll

32'

:12".

;12".

Penney JC PepsiCo

60''.

60".

60'..

35

:4"4

35

Phelps Dod

23"4

23".

23'.

Philip.Morr

70'4

70

70'.

PhillpsPet

33"4

33.".

:!3',

Polaroid

34''.

34',

:14,

ProctGamb s

59

58'z

,58.-

Quaker (lat RCA

56",

56".

.56",

33.

33'".

33",

RalstnPur

27

26.

FT

RepubAir

"4'.

4

"4'.

Republic Stl

27

27

27

Revlon

33'.

32",

32.

Reynldlnd

61".

.61

61

Kockwl s

30.

30",

:io".

RoyCrown

StRegisCp

25".

25",

25"'.

29';

29'4

29".

Scott Pa^r SearsRoeT)

29".

29'.

29".

:9'4.

:J9

39'.

Shaklee s

25 "4

25'.

Skyline Cp

IS'-.

IH'".

18".

Sony Corp

15''.

15".

15".

Souihern Co

16.

16"4

16",

Sperry Cp SidDiICal

45'4

45

45

37".

37".

:)7';

StdOilInd

si'.

50".

51

.StdOilOh

54

53-\

53.

Stevens JP

17'4

17

17',

TRW Inc

76';

76

76",

Texaco Inc

36'",

36';

36';

TexEastn

62

6L'>.

62

CMC Ind

18'4

18

18

L'n Camp

71';

71".

71''

Un Carbide '

65.

65".

65",

I'niroval

17".

17,

17

L'S Steel

29".

29',

29",

I'nocal

30'4

30'.

30'

Wachov Cp

45

45.

45

WalMart s

43

42';

42';

WestPtPep Westgh El

51';

51';.

51',

50

49"4

49",

Weyerhsr

35'4

34",

35

WinnDix

52';

52".

52".

Nobel Prize....

(Continued from Pagel)

committee that chooses winners of the economics prize, said Debreu dealt in basic research on equilibrium in a market economy.

Debreu devised new mathematical methods that are more advanced and yet more simple than pievious ones,Lindback said.

He said Debreus mathematical models led to the findings of both James Tobin of Yale University and George Stigler of the University of Chicago, winners of the 1981 and 1982 economics prizes.

"In the beginning we did not realize the importance of Dr. Debreus work. Lindback said. Now we realize its true value.

Born in Calais. France, on July 4, 1921. Debreu became an American citizen in 1975. the same year he became a professor of mathematics at Berkeley. He had taught economics at the California institution since 1%2.

The academy's one-paragraph citation said Debreu won "for having incorporated new analytical methods into economic theory and for his rigorous reformulation of the theory of general equilibrium. "Gerard Debreus major achievement is his work in proving the existence of equilibrium-creating prices, the academy, said in an explanatory statement.

It said "his first fundamental contribution was in the early 1950s. working with Harvard University Professor Kenneth Arrow, co-winner of the 1972 Nobel economics prize.

Debreu and Arrow "designed a mathematical m^el of a market economy where different producers planned their output of goods and services and thus also their demand for factors of production in such a way that their profit was maximized. Debreu subsequently has developed and extended the original theories, the academy said.

In addition to a diploma and medal, Debreu earns 1.5 million Swedish kronor -about $190,(X)0 - from the Riksbank, Swedens central bank, which finances the economics prize.

The presentation will be in Stockholm on Dec. 10, the anniversary of the death of Swedish dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel, in the same ceremony at which the winners of the Nobel science prizes collect their awards from the Nobel Foundation.

Twelve Americans have won or shared the economics prize, established by the Riksbank in 1968 to mark the bank's 300th anniversary, Debreu is the second .American honored so far in the Nobel series this year. The medicine prize was awarded last week to genetics researcher Barbara McGlintock of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York.

WwilvMirih    ,18'.

Wnnle\    41)    48\    48'.

Xerox Cp    48',    47^    48

Eullowinf! are beleeted 11 am stoek market quotations

.Ashland prC    41'.

Burrough.s    ,44

Carolina I'ower Si Light    8;i

Collins & .Aikman    , 4:1

Conner    17'>.

Duke    .    24'.

Eaton    4ti"4

Eekerd's.............. .........26',i

Exxon...... .    88".

Fielderest ........82'j

Halteras ...... 15.';

Hilton .................. 58

Jefferson ..........................8fi"4

Deere .......................39'1

Lowe's..............................24".,

.McDonald's..............................66".

.McGraw' .     37s

Piedmont.................... 29

Pizza Inn .............................I4s

P&G .................................58".,

TRW. Inc...................................76".

I'niied Tel ................ .23' 1

Dominion Resources    22';

Wachovia................ .    45.

OVERTHE COUNTER

Aviation ................... 18-17'4

Branch............... 26"r'27'i

Little Mint............. .

Planters Bank............ 19'    ..20

Tune-Ups - Brake Jobs General Repairs

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

^ CUFFS Seafood House and Oyster Sar|

Washington Highway (N.C. 33 Ext.) Greenville, North Carolina Phone 75J 3172

Obituaries

i.- L'ivpciff,

- A ' "r X I

\W    .3    I    I    V    -

wwmmrm:, '

l^iitiS 11 i A Wit ^

. s.- 4R-W.-    jm

LEARNING TO BUILD - Students in a construction techniques class in East Carolina Universitys department of Industrial Technology put their knowledge and skills to practical use in construction of a new campus

- Tt- i1 ^

bus shelter. The shelters will afford protection from ram, wind and wintry cold at strategic campus bus stop locations. (ECU News Bureau Photo bv Leslie Todd)

Tnick Rams

SMBiis

WINSTON-SALEM. N.C. (AP) - About two dozen students received minor injuries today when a speeding tractor-trailer truck rammed the rear of a school bus, officials said.

The truck driver. Gregory Chandler, 25, of Rural Retreat. Va.. was charged with reckless driving and was being held in the Forsyth County Jail under $1,000 bond, said Winston-Salem police Lt. J.G. Hippert.

The wreck occurred about 7:30 a.m. on U.S. 52 near the Clemmonsville Road exit when the truck, traveling more than 60 mph, hit the bus and knocked it about 300 feet down the highway. Hippert said. About 34 students were on the bus.

Nine students were brought to Forsyth Memorial Hospital in Winston-Salem, most of them with minor neck and head injuries, said hospital spokesman Bob Tannehill.

Fourteen other students were being examined at North Carolina Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. Hos-, pital spokesman Roger Rollman said the students,-aged 11 through 15. were in satisfactory condition with minor injuries.

The bus was on its way to Diggs Elementary School and Anderson Junior High School. The bus driver, Richard Culler Jr.. 17. was not injured.

ASKS DELAY Howard Phillips, chairman of The Conservative Caucus, a non-partisan grass roots lobbying organization with nationwide membership, called on the U.S. Senate to delay action on the proposed Martin Luther national holiday, pending a release of FBI surveillance records and tapes concerning the civil rights leader.

M ASONIC NOTICE

Pitt Lodge No. 234 will hold a regular meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday.

Soviet Vessels Trapped By Ice

MOSCOW (AP)-Huge ice floes have crushed and sunk one Soviet freighter and are threatening alwut 45 other vessels trapped in rapidly freezing northern seas.

The official news agency Tass said five of 50 trapped ships were freed Sunday, but winds hampered further rescue operations in the Northern Sea Route skirting northeast Siberia near the Bering Strait.

News of the ships predicament first was reported last week in the government newspaper Izvestia. It said grinding ice already had sunk the freighter Nina Sagaidak, but rescuers from sister ships saved its crew and cargo.

Tass said winds out of the north and northeast were building up the pack ice and tightening its grip on the ships.

It was not clear whether human error was responsible for the crisis. Merchant marine directors may have erred by dispatching the ships from Pevek too late in the season or by failing to take into account an unusually cold summer. Western maritime references say the Northern Sea Route remains ice-free only from mid-July

PRACTICE SET

All persons interested in joining the District No. 3 Union Usher Board are asked to meet for practice with the District No. 3 Union Choir Saturday at 4 p.m.

The practice will be held at Zion Chapel Free Will Baptist Church inAyden.

Card Of Thanks

The family of the late Mrs. Sarah Woolard wish to thank each and everyone tor your kind deeds shown during her sickness and our hours of bereavement. May God richly bless each of you.

The Woolard Family

Mental

Health

Perspectives

Marriage and Family Therapy by Robert Spence, Marriage & Family Therapist

Renewed attention is focused on marital relationships today. People are now viewing responsibility and marriage more positively.

Most major psychological studies place marriage and family relationships at the forefront of psychological, emotional, and physical well being A long term study done at Harvard found that individuals achieving great success in professional fields attributed iheir success to the quality of their family life. Other studies relate the loss of mental and emotional health'to divorce Studies, likejhese leave no doubt that marital relationships are the most important relationships in adult lives

Divorce rates, the large number of single parent households, and spouse and child abuse rates all

show that many marriages still fail.

Many couples never learn how to have close, intimate relationships. However with proper treatment and early intervention most . couples can learn the skills needed to resolve their marital problems.

Pitt County Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse center offers confidential consultation and treatment of marital problems by certified marriage and family therapists Couples can get consultation for problems such as communication, problem solving, child discipline, poor sexual relations, and other family matters. If your family needs help don't wait until its too late For more information call Robert Spence at 752-7151,

Pitt Co Mental Health. Mental Retardation & Substance Abuso Center 752-7151

to the end of September.

The ships set out from the port of Pevek during the summer months for the annual voyage to resupply remote Siberian outposts, taking advantage of the few months when the route is relatively ice-free. But the Soviet press says cold weather and shifting winds left the route clogged with ice this summer.

It is highly unusual for the Soviet press to report such a crisis. Foreign observers in Moscow speculated the government preferred to disclose it before Western news agencies found out independently.

Anderson

Mr. Curtis F. (Tink) Anderson, 61, died Saturday.

His funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro by the Rev. Sam Weatherington. Burial will be in Celestial Memorial Gardens.

A Vanceboro native, Mr. Anderson had been a resident of Greenville for the past three years. He had been employed in construction work until his retirement 11 years ago.

Surviving him are his wife. Mrs. Mamie Boyd Anderson of the home; a son, Thad Franklin Anderson of Vanceboro; three daughters, Mrs. Joy Wright of Vanceboro and Mrs. Sherryl

Brooks and Mrs. Marie Sloan, both of Jacksonville: three brothers, Fred, Luther (Pat) and James D. (Jim) Anderson, all of Vanceboro; a sister, Mrs. Ruby Heflin of Fredericksburg. Va.; and seven grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home in Vanceboro tonight from 7 to 9oclock.

Beaman

SNOW HILL - Funeral services for Mrs. Molly K. Beaman, 66, who died Sunday, will be conducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Free Union Church. Burial will be in the Snow Hill Cemetery.

Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Emily Gail Clark of New Bern ancl Mrs, Becky Creech of Snow Hill; a sister, Mrs. Edith Kilpatrick Gray of Kinston; a brother, John Lyman Kilpatrick of Emerald Isle; and two grandchildren.

The family will be at Edwards Funeral Home today from 7-9 p.m.

Boddie

TARBORO - Mrs. Gloria Boddie died Sunday in Jacobi Hospital in Bronx, N.Y. She was the wife of Samuel Boddie of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Hemby-WilloughbyinTarboro.

Herring

SNOW HILL - Funeral services for Mrs. Blanche Taylor Herring, 83, who died Sunday, will be held Tuesday at, 11 a.m. at Edwards Funeral Home, Burial will be

in the Snow Hill Cemetery.

Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Delores Tallman of Jacksonville, Mrs. Doris Wood of Spring Hope, Mrs. Joyce House of Greenville, and Mrs. Faye Carawan of Goldsboro; two sons, Kendrick Taylor of Farmville and Jimmy Herring of Snow Hill; 13 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home today from 7-9 p.m.

Joyner

Mr. Harvey D, Joyner, 68, died Sunday in Lenoir County Hospital, Kinston.

His funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Riverside Christian Church by the Rev. E.G. Purcell Jr. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

A native of Pitt County, Mr. Joyner served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He was a resident of the Riverside community and a member of the Riverside Christian Church which he served as treasurer and Sunday School superintendent. He also belonged to the Wayne County Chapter No. 45 of the Disabled American Veterans.

Surviving him are three sisters, Mrs. Marie Dennis of Ayden and Mrs. Gladys Pittman and Mrs. Janie Turner of Kinston.

The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home, Greenville, tonight from 7 to 9 oclock. At other times they will be at the home of Mrs. Marie Dennis, 204 E. College Street, Ayden.

Pelligrini

Mr. Joe Pelligrini, 63, died Friday in East Chester, N.Y. Funeral services will be held at the Westchester Funeral Home in East Chester, N.Y. Tuesday. Burial will be in Tuckahoe, N.Y.

Mr. Pelligrini was employed by Burroughs Wellcome and lived in Greenville for 10 years before retiring to New York. He was a member of St. Peters Catholic Church.

Survivors include his wife, Ann Pelligrini; a daughter, Sally Pinto of Tuckahoe, N.Y.; and four grandchildren.

The family may be reached at 35 New St., East Chester, N.Y.

SHIPS TRAPPED -.Massive ice floes have crushed and sunk one Soviet freighter and threaten 45 other vessels trapped in the swiftly freezing East Siberian and Chukhi seas. (APLaserpholo)

Clean Your Gutters Before Cold Weather

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DIRECT FROM CHICAGO MEAT PACKER

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TRUCKLOAD

steaHSale

HOWS

10AM4PM

T-Bone Steak

Close trimmed, juicy, tendered.

s125

* ea. 8oz Portion^

LIMIT 2 BOXES

Sold Only by 4 Lb Box $ 9.97

$126

New York Style ^* Strip Steak

Ddicious lt(n twnt in ttndotd 10 sfilis pfi bo>

Sold Only by

41b Box Sie 80

2nd Box '/) Pricf SB 40

SPECIAL 1

fl T Bone Steaks 12 Pizza Patties 12 Ham Steakettes 30 Beet Patties

62 Servings only S34.80

SLICED

BACON

77f.

With purchase of. steaks or patties

LIMIT 1 lb.

SPECIAL #2

16 Boneless Rib Eye Steaks 6 Porterhouse Beet Steaks 10 N V Sirloin Strip Steaks 40 Beet Patties  1_Salami Imported

73 Servings only S44.80

Patties

23*

Sold only by    each

30 Patty Pack ^

6 lb. Box S6.90

Rib-Eye 92(: Steak I"

aoMtiff. itan landfitd Xf * 16 ilMks pet box    1

Sold only by 4 lb box 616.K 2nd Box' j Priea

FREEZEH SFtCIAL

16 Boneless Rib Eye Steaks 6 Porterhouse Beet Steaks 16 Chop Sirloin Beet Steaks 10 N Y Sirloin S^rip Steaks 49 Beet Patties '

_3^Salamis. Imported,    ;

100 Servings only|s8.S0

fUSOA'i

All meats inspected by U S Dept ot Agriculture

All our meals are specially selected, then closely' trimmed lor maximum eating pleasure, minimum waste and FREEZER PACKED        '

TRUCK Aetna Service Station

L 0 C AT E D    1601 Greenyille Blvd.

Corner of 26a Bypass & 14th Street A I    Greenville,    N.C.

hainuu'.him Hours 10 a M 6 P M No Checks All meals guaranteed

Tuesday t Wednesday 10/18    10/19/83

FOOD

SUMPS

SQQ

QUANTITIES IIMITFD TO AVAILABLE SUPPLIES' BUY NOW





ill

Radio Guests Announced

announced that the guests on the City Hall Notes radio program this week will be Brenda Saulter, secretary to the police chief, and Jesse Harris community relations officer.

Miss Saulter will discuss charitable solicitations and Harris will talk about the new fair housing law.

Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30

p.m. on WOOW Radio.

Education Group Will Meet

Association for Educational Personnel will ^ P    conference    room    of

the Pitt County Office Building with Julius Streeter as the speaker.

He will speak on How to Prepare Mail for the Most ' Efficient Use at the Post Office."

For fprther information call Connie Garris or Mrs. Debbie Tewefl at the Pitt County Office Building, 752-6106.

rPdsfor's Aid Club To Meet

The Pastors Aid Clul) of Mt. Calvary Free Will Baptist Church will meet today at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Clvdia Johnson, 201 Ford St.

United Way Chairman Announced

Dave Scearce is serving as chairman of the commercial division of the 1983 Pitt County United Way campaign organization officials have announced.

Scearce is general foreman of assembly with Eaton Corporation. He is a native of Shelbyville, Ken. and paduated from Georgetown College in Kentucky with a bachelors degree in economics and communication arts.

Scearce was active in the 1982 United Way campaign. He is chairman of the state concerns committee of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and is an honorary lifetime member^ He is also active in local theatre arts activities.

Food Distribution Clarified

An article in Sundays paper regarding food distribution by the county extension service should have stated that food will be given Tuesday to those persons 60 years and older who are in the 130 percent poverty level, and disabled families.

Computer Workshop Held

The ECU Department of Library Science recently conducted a workshop on small computer utilization in the Willis Building.

The workshop was conducted by Dr. Veronica Pantelidis, associate professor in the deprtment. About 30 participants were offered a basic introduction to the small computer, examined software, and had hands-on experience with various types of computers. The workshop was the first in a series of Saturday morning workshops sponsored by the department and the ECU Division of Continuing Education. For more information on the program, contact Emily S Boyce, chairman of the Department of Library Science.

Larceny Charges Are Made

Greenville police have arrested David John Bedenbaugh, 21 of Quail Hollow Trailer Park on larceny charges in connection with the theft of $153.25 worth of goods from the Heritage Inn at 2710 South Memorial Drive last Wednesday.

Officer Wanda G. Hart said the items, including bed spreads, sheets, towels and other property, were recovered when Bedenbaugh was taken into custody on Friday.

Commission Will Meet

The Public Transportation Commission will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the public works facility on Beatty Street.

Two Wrecks Are Reported

An estimated $1,900 damage resulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Saturday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted from a 3:30 p.m. collision at the intersection of Roundtree Drive and Cox Street, involving cars driven by Michael Wayne Harris of 124 Howard Circle and Emory Garlin Bell of Route 8, Greenville.

Police, who charged Bell with having improper brakes, estimated damage at $200 to the Harris car and $800 to the Bell auto.

A car driven by Danny Lee Lawrence of Rocky Mount, and a truck driven by Jake Wesley Dawson of Route 2, Greenville, collided about 9:25 p.m. on Fifth Street, 200 feet west of the Memorial Drive intersection, causing $750 damage to the Lawrence car and $150 damage to the truck.

Juveniles Apprehended

Four juveniles, ranging in age from 8 to 12, broke into Wainwrights Amoco Station at 1201 West 14th St. about 4:47 p.m. Sunday and took $2 in change, according to Officer C.M. Credle.

Credle said a man chased the youths from the building after they gained entrance through a door.

The case was turned over to the police departments , juvenile officer, Credle said.

House Break-In Reported

Greenville police are investigating the theft of $850 worth of goods from a house at 411 East Third St. early Sunday.

Officer D.R. Wyrick said Henry Lee Gums reported about 3 a.m. that someone had entered his unlocked home and taken three speakers, a turntable, a television and a lamp.In The Area

The Daily Reflector. Greepville, N.C.

Monday. October 17,1983    5

Golf Cart Thieves Hunted

Greenville police would like to find the people who dro\je two golf carts from Keels Warehouse to the intersection of Fifth Street and Moye Boulevard late Saturday night or early Sunday morning.

Officer H.D. ffines found the two vehicles abandoned about 12:30 a.m. Sunday. Further investigation revealed that someone had pried open a side door to ie warehouse, at 1715 Dickinson Ave., and driven the carts away.

The vehicles were valued at $500 each, Hines said.

Dive Club Will Meet

The Rum Runner Ocean Atlantic Dive Club will meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn.

The program for the meeting will be a discussion of the possibility of securing a Liberty ship for a new artificial reef in the Cape Lookout area.

Reservations for the meeting may be made by calling 756-9339 or 758-1444.

Fire Damages Restaurant

Officials are continuing their investigation of a fire that caused extensive damage to Famous Pizzas at 321 East Tenth St. early Sunday.

Officer B.A. Riggs said he was stopped by a passing motorist about 2:51 a.m. and told that the Famous Pizza building was on fire.

Riggs said he notified the police dispatcher to call fire units and he drove directly to the business and found fire coming from a vent in the roof.

Greenville fire-rescue units stayed on the scene until after 4 a.m. combating the blaze.

Riggs said restaurant employees left the building about 2 a.m. He said the building was checked by police about 2:30 a.m. and everything was apparently all right at that time.

Capt. A.G. Whitaker said the blaze apparently started in a storeroom. He said agents of the State Bureau of Investigation are assisting local fire and police officials in trying to determine the cause of the fire.

OCTOBER

HARVEST

SALE!

KGR05UN

PORTABLE HEATERS

Kefo-Sun* Portable Heaters are available in 9 safely tested and U.L listed models mat are rated from 7,600 to 19.500 BTUs an hour. All models feature 99.9% fuel-efficiency, odorless and smokeless operation, battery-powered ignition, automatic safety stiutott, and they do not require a chimney

ENTIRE STOCK OF KERO-SUN HEATERS NOW ON SALE!

Prices good limited time only, while quantities last.

Omni 105*

Qualliy ComptHtIv Met Strvfcw

911 Dickinson Ave. Parkview Commons 6th St. & Memorial Dr.

.-j

fo    (>t/r

Or-folriP.'t 20. 21. 22 ('(prinij o; j0-b:20; rf'tiflniJ 0:20-9: Onfii.tfinij 0:20 (o 2:20

K|f Slnip

Farmville Furniture Company

RS\'P In Pkhson Ootohkh 120. iil, 22

New Plymouth Champ Free

WF-RE GIVING AWAY A NEW PLYMOUTH CHAMP TO CELEBRATE OUR 78th ANNIVERSARY

PLUS 10 OTHER FINE PRIZES.....

DRAWING ON SATURDAY, DECEMBER 24,1983 everyone has a chance to win this car.

Farmville Furniture Company

122-126 S. Wain St.    Farmville.    N.    C.

Candidate Seeks Post

Sylvene Spickerman of Greenville is a candidate for chairman of the Commission on Education of the North Carolina Nurses Association.

The election in which Spickerman is competing will be held during the associations annual convention in Raleigh Sunday through Wednesday of next week.

Halloween Hour To Be Held

A Halloween Howl-Puppet Show-Scary Story*^ Hour will be held m the childrens room of Shepperd Memorial Library on Oct. 20 from 4-5 p.m.

Free tickets may be picked up at the library or reserved by calling 752-4177. The program is for children in grades Kindergarten-4.

Church Makes Move

Morning Glory Apostolic Faith Holiness Church has moved to 306 Pennsylvania Church, formerly the location of House of Heart To Give Church.

The Morning Glory revival scheduled for this week has been canceled. Services will be held each fourth Sunday and every Thursday night at 7:30 p. m.

Charges Brought In Incident

Tommie Glen Carter, 20 of 1613 Hopkins Drive was arrested by Greenville police Thursday on burglary and attempted rape charges in connection with a Sept. 15 incident on Howell Street.

Capt. A.G. Whitaker said Carter allegedly entered a dwelling in whmh three people were sleeping and attempted to assault one of the residents of the house.

WILL SINCERELY APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT AND VOTE

FOR MAYOR

A.B. WHITLEY, JR.

QUALITY GROWTH"

Paid lor by A B Whitley Campaign, Reid Hooper, Treasurer

White-Westinghouse

Uncover

the

Vlues!

citomn

pedab!

FREE! *40 Value St. Marys Blanket With Any White-Westinghouse Appliance Purchase!

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE MODEL LA400E

WASHER

Large capacity, three water level selections and three water temperature selections.

*359

\

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE MODEL DE-400E

DRYER

Two temperature selections. Regular, air fluff, porcelain enamel basket, automatic cool down, upfront lint collector.

$28095

FREE! *40 Value St. Marys Blanket With Any White-Westinghouse Appliance Purchase!

WtHtaWntmghoiiM

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE MODEL SU333

DISIIWASHEII

Undercounter model! Holds a family size load of dishes and pans.

$29995

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE MODEL KF430 ELECTRIC

RANGE

Porcelain enameled, easy clean oven. Clock/minute timer, two 8, I two 6" high speed surface units

$37995

White Westinghoust

FREE! *40 Value St. Marys Blanket With Any White-Westinghouse Appliance Purchase!

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE MODEL LT600 FRONT LOAD

WASHER

Four water temperature selection, water level control, bleach and fabric softener dispenser. Three rinses - spray plus two deep rinses, three water saver selections. Three water temperature selections. See it now.

White Westinghouse

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE MODEL RT170

nGEMIIIII

17.0 cubic foot capacity. 4.6 cubic foot freezer section, glass shelves.

FREE! *40 Value St. Marys Blanket With Any White-Westinghouse Appliance Purchase!

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE

CHEST

FREEZER

MODEL FC053 5 cubic foot size.

5

30-60-90 Day Payment Plan $1,000 Instant Credit Service After The Sale LIMITED TIME OFFER!

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE

UPRIGHT

FREEZER

MODEL FU134 13 cubic foot

'ileWeMinqtOviSe

I hi: Aoki:y avi:h

I

^GREENVILLE TV & APPLIANCE

200 GREENVILLE BLVD MALCOcM C WILLIAMS JR VICE PRES





14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Monday. October 1 /. latiJ

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personals-

In Memoriam

Card Of Thanks

Special Notices

Travel 4 Tours

Automotive

Child Care

Day Nursery

Health Care

Employment

For Sale

Instruction

Lost And Found

Loans And Mortgages

Business Services

Opportunity

Protessional

Real Estate

Appraisals

Rental;

002.

003

005

007

009

010

040

041 043 050 040 080 082 085 091 093 095

too

tot

120

PUBLIC NOTICES

WANTED

Help Wanted Work Wanted Wanted

Roommate Warited Wanted To Buy Wanted To Lease Wanted To Rent

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent Business Rentals Campers For Rent Condominiums tor Rent Farms For Lease ' Houses For Rent Lots For Rent Merchandise Rentals Mobile Homes For Rent Oltice Space For Rent Resort Property For Rent . Rooms For Rent

DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY LUTRELL SKINNER MEZA VS

JUAN JOSE MEZA

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF

PROCESS BY PUBLICATION T JUAN JOSE-MEZA TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled in the above entitled action The nature ot the relief being sought is as follows:

Absolute divorce based on one year's separation You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than November 23, 1983 and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought This the 6 day of October, 1893 WILLIAMSON HERRIN, STOKES 8. HEFFELFINGER BY

R CHERRY STOKES ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF 210S WASHINGTON STREET P O BOX 522 GREENVILLE NC 27834 TEL (919) 752 3104 October 10. 17. 24. 1983

\N

002

PERSONALS

SUBURBAN GREENVILLE House available over Christmas an4 New Year Holiday period Mid De cember thru first week ot January to responsible person(s) who are willing to care for house and pets References will be requested Write Suburban Greenville House, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834.

007

SPECIAL NOTICES

SALE

IN THE GENERAL COURT

OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ALVIN DAVIS McARTHUR, DECEASED

NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the estate ot ALVIN DAVIS McARTHUR, late of Pitt County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims aqainst the estate of ALVIN DAVIS McARTHUR to present them to the undersigned Executor, or his at torney, on or before April II 1984. or this notice will be plead m bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make im mediate payment

This 4th day ot October. 1983 ALVIN DAVISMcARTHUR JR

P O Box 46 Farmville. NC 27828 Executor of the Estate ot Alvin Davis McArthur-Deceased GAYLORD, SINGLETON, MCNALLY 8. STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law P O Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 October 10. 17, 24, 31 1983

CREDIT PROBLEMS? No Credit? Slow credit? No problem with Furniture Finance We specialize in furniture, TV and stereo financing Pick up the phone and call M'ike at 757 0438 or Robert at 757 0451 for further details

I, FLOYD E. STOCKS, will no longer be responsible tor any debts contracted by anyone other than myself

I. RALPH LEE SWAIN JR., will no longer be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself

NOW OPEN M 8. W Country Crafts and Gifts, 'z mile from Pitt County Fairgrounds, on Ramhorn Road, Greenville, NC All kinds ot craft items tor home and special gifts for friends Start your Christmas shopping early with us and place your special orders Free gift wrapping Hours 9 to 5 Tuesday thru Saturday, Sunday 2 to 5. 758 4045

Oil

Autos For Sale

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer m Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114

013

Buick

BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED. 2

door 1982 Low mileage. One owner Duke Buick Pontiac 753

31.10

1924 buick ELECTRA 225 4,000 miles on motor, 40 channel CB and PA system $800 757 0705 after 4 30 p m weekdays

Autos lor Sale Bicycles tor Sale Boats tor Sale Campers tor Sale Cycles lor Sale Trucks tor Sale Pets Antiques Auc tions

Building Supplies Fuel Wood Coal Farm Equipment Garage Yard Sales Heavy Equipment Household Goods Insurance L 'vestock Miscellaneous Mobile Homes tor Sale Mobile Home Insurance Musical Instruments Sporting Goods Commercial Property Condominiums tor Sale Farms tor Sale Houses tor Sale Investment Property L and F or Sale Lots For Sale Rc'iOrt Property tor Sale

Oil 029 030

032

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

REGARDING THE POSSIBLE CLOSINGOF AGNES FULLILOVE SCHCXJL A public hearing will be held on 034 I Monday November 7 1983 at 7 30 p m at Agnes Fullilove. School on the corner of Chestnut Street and Manhattan Avenue in the City ot Greenville. Pitt County North Car olma regarding the possible closing ot Agnes Fullilove School To be considered by the Greenville City Board ot Education in making a decision in its discretion, whether to close Agnes Fullilove School shall be the welfare of the students to be affected by the possible closing ot said school and among other factors geographic conditions an ticipated increases or decreases

1974 BUICK REGAL, red with white interior, 2 door, good condition, priced to sell Call after 6 p m , I 758 51 15 i 19^

039

Trucks For Sale

19W DATSUN TRUCK, Little Hustle Deluxe. 5 speed, low mileage. A-1 condition! Call 758-7705 after 6p.m

040

Child Care

WOULD LIKE SOMEONE to come in home to babysit infant. Refer enees required. Pay negotiable Starting November 1. 756 9656.

044

PETS

AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER

Spaniels, 7 weeks old, $125. Call 752 5493.

AKC MALE POMERANIAN puppy 756 8695.

Have pets to sell? Reach more peo pie With an economical Classified ad. Call 752 6166.

ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniels, AKC Registered. 8 weeks old. Phone 752 5493

GERMAN SHEPHERD

AKC registered, 3 mon females, $50. 758 6252

pupp fhs I

OBEDIENCE TRAINED

Doberman, female, Itj years, spade Nice pet, good watch dog. Sacrifice, $275. Call 758 3466.

SETTER PUPPIES, Registered. Out of proven hard hunted gun dogs. 21,2 months old. 746 6239 or 746 6880.

051

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLER. Grady White Boats has an immediate opening Experi ence required in carpet installation and power tool usage. Must be able to work with heavy fiberglass parts. It interested, apply in person at the Personnel Office, Monday through Friday, 8a.m to4p,m.

AUTO SALESPERSON

If you are an aggressive individual and have the ability to deal with the public, this could be an excellent opportunity. Top earnings and bonuses for the right person. Expe rience helpful but not required. See Joe Welch, Sales Manager at Joe Pecheles Volkswagen, Greenville Blvd

062

063

064

065

067

068 069

071

072

074

075

076

077

078

ELECTRA LIMITED. Fully equipped 63,800 mileage $6,000 355 2996 after 7p m

01 s

Chevrolet

1975 IMPALA stationwagon, blue, power steering, power brakes, new tires and battery 756 2955 days; 753 2459 after 5 30 p m

1976 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2 - 2, 5

speed good mechanical condition $.1500 758 2300 days

977~CAP.RICE CLASSIC. Loaded

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

Growing eastern North Carolina dealership has opening in import sales Benefits include paid hospi talizaton, life insurance, dental and demonstrator program. Send sum mary of qualifications and photo

fraph (optional) to:    Automotive

ales, PO Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27835

051

Help Wanted

MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY

for the right person. Earn while you learn. Company seeks dynamic, self motivated individual tor entry level position in retail. Excellent starting salary and benefits. It you are looking for a future, not just a job, call Judy. 355-2020, Heritage Personnel Service.

MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have tools. Excellent company benefits. Apply to Robert Starling or Bill Brown, Brown 8, Wood. Inc. 1205 Dickinson Avenue

NEED 2 PART TIME Security Guards. Must be able to work 8 a m

to 5 p.m. Apply in_person at Holiday Inn Greenville

Tuesday, October 18 from 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wrenn Security Company.

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. Part time person to set up sales ap pointments by phone Salary plus commission Phone 355 2323,

PART TIME help needed. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10 until 2, Apply in person Leather & Wood. Carolina East Mall. No phone calls please.

PART TIME secretary. Light office work and posting ot inventory Approximately 20 hours per week. 752 1728 from 8 to 5.

PART TIME help wanted, floor maintenance Hours 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. 919 674 2144

PARTS MANAGER needed tor growing GM dealership. Must have parts management experience. We offer excellent company benefits Call Bill Brown at 752 7111 tor appointment.

PERMANENT PART TIME, must be able to work any hours between 10 AM and 9 P,M Monday through Saturday. Salary up to $4 50 per hour Apply in person Monday. Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, G N C, Carolina East Mall.

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN II

Immediate opening available for individual experienced tn assisting pharmacists with dispensing of drugs. Experience in a hospital or retail pharmacy required. Gradu ate of a Pharmacy Technician Program preferred Excellent pay and benefit package For con sideration, send resume or apply at Employment Office, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, PO Box 6028, Greenville, NC 27834, . 757 4556. EOE

BATCHELORS, let me take care of your household chores, do your shopping, etc Call collect 946 0609.

clean Reduced from $4250 to $3250 Call Henry, 752 4332

1978 CHEVETTE SCOOTER. Good I condition Best offer! Can be seen school enrollment from such clos I et Great Southern Finance, 115

mg. the inconvenience or hardship that might result to the pupils to be affected by such closing the cost ot providing additional school facih ties m the event ot such closing, and the importance ot Agnes Fqllilove School to the people ot the corn munity m which Agnes Fullilove School IS located and their interest

I South Lee Street Ayden 746 2163

1978 CHEVROLET Caprice Classic Landau all power, cruise control, $38(X) 752 1729

1979 CHEVROLET CAPRICE, r

door air cruise tape Good condi tion 355 6053

bcnooi IS locaiea ana ineir interest rooi ni nc'fSMC>'A       

and support Of Agnes Fullilove I

YOUR AD COULD BE WORKING

FOR

YOU IN THIS

SPACE

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

School At    this    hearing any and    all

members    of    the public will    be

afforded a reasonable opportunity to express their views

This the 29th day ot September. 1983

DIXON DUFFUS8 DOUB I'    BY

Phillip R Dixon I    School Board Attorney

I    Greenville C ity Schools

I    NCNB Building

P O Dravver 1785 Greenville NC 27835 1785 I Telephone    ,919)758 6200

I    October 10    17    24 31 November    7,

' 1983

$4 000 756 6260 before 5 30 pm

018

Ford

FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON.

1979 Fully loaded, new tires. Excellent condition Low mileage. $4200 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights

1970 MAVERICK Excellent condi tipn brand, new Keystone, ai-r stiocks, 6 cylinder Excellent gas mileage Can be seen behind Buck's Auto Sales on Dickinson Avenue

NOTICE OF SALE

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OFFICE OF

THE CITY OF GREENVILLE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS NOTICE IS hereby given that the

1 9 7 7 ltd station Wagon, excellent work car Perfect with most options Sacrifice $1150. Call 756 7417

BRODY'S is looking tor a conscien tious, mature person for a full time position at our cashier's desk Must enjoy people, be able to do all types of transactions with speed and accuracy Apply to Mrs. Kinley Brody's, Pitt Plaza, Monday through Thursday 2 to 5.

CASHIERS NEEDED. For full and part time positions, ^ply in person to The Dodge Store, South Memori al Drive

COMMERCIAL SALES. Person needed for Eastern NC. Excellent career opportunity tor aggressive and energetic individual, above average commission, real estate license required, no relocation. Call Judy tor interview, 355 2020, Heritage Personnel Service.

CONSTRUCTION FOREMAN

and or Superintendent tor work in Eastern NC. Salary negotiable based on knowledge and experi ence Send resume to Construction, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC.

CONVENIENCE STORECLERK

needed Work 2nd shift and weekends Must be 19 years old. neat, and willing to take polygraph Applications taken between 2 p m and 4 p m only. Apply at Blount Petroleum Corporation, 615 West l4th Street, Greenville

PROGRAMMER

Full Time And Temporary

Immediate opening tor pro tessionally qualified programmers Cobol IBM Main Frames BOS USE operating systems.

1 to 2 years experience and AAS degree minimum requirement. Sal ary plus fringe benefit package Send resume to Long Mtg N C. Inc., PO Box 1139, Tarboro, NC 27886 EOEMF

REGISTEREDNURSES

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for per

manenf full time Registered Nurses experienced in ICU PCU. New 4 bed ICU and 9 bed PCU. 3 day work week o't 12 hour shifts. Shift dit terential. Competitive salary. Good benefits. EOE Contact Judy Peele, Chowan Hospital, Edenton, NC. 919 482 8451, Ext. 202.

059

Work Wanted

EXPERIENCED LPN desires full or pert time day-work. Reasonable Call 355 2520.

LADY WANTS to do housework Phone 749 4351 or 749 4451.

PAINTING - Interior and exterior Free estimates. References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience 756 6873 after 6 p m.

PAINTING. Inside and out. Rea sonable prices. 15 years experience Free estimates. Call 758-7815.

PAtCH PLASTERING No job too

large or small. Free estimates! Call 758 4563

WOULD LIKE to babysit in

around Fairlanb Subdivision. Call 756 6583 after 5 p.m., ask for Missy

WOULD LIKE TO sit with elderly lady (daily). I have nursing train ing. Call 752 6257

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P Stancil, 752 6331.

COMPLETE LINE of woodstoves, chimney pipe and accessories at Tar Road Antiques, Winterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007,

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready to go. Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5 p.m

SEASONED OAK Firewood. $45 truck load, $90 a cord. Call 752 5858 after 5

SEASONED MIXED Firewood All hard wood $80 a cord Delivered and stacked. Call 756 8358 anytime

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Cal

us before you buy! 752 1359 o 758 5590.

oirr]Bi^DESM8^i^^gecu1ouf

for 7/6" square 1" round axle $6.69

each. 20" 9 gauge cutout tor 1" l'" square axle $8 25 each. 22" 6 gauge cutout for I'i" I'x" square axle $13 12 each. 22" 3 gauge cutout for l'8"l'x" square axle $1682 Cutout, smooth and cone blades in sizes from 14" to 32" available Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999

MARLISS 14' No til. List $12,800; sell price $9850. Herring Interna fional, 756 5800

SPECIAL PRICE SALE:    King

harrows, heavy duty, all cut out 28x20 10' 2' cut, $1495, 24x20 9' 2' cut, $1095; 20x20 7'2' cut, $895 5' rotary cutters with stump jumper, $595 Pittsburgh 4 bottom plows, trip shanks, $1150 Warren Brothers Equipment, 244 1545, Vanceboro

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran feed lowest prices Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds,- $149. Factory Mat tress & Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626

BROYHILL SOLID wood dining room suit, china and hutch, table and 6 chairs. Will finance! 757 0451, ask tor Mr. Carra way.

EARN EXTRA MONEY for

Christmas Sell Avon!!! Call 758

3159.

021

Oldsmobile

-    .    ,    I    quality,    .fuel    economical    cars

Community Development Office ot can be found at low prices in the City of Greenville will until Classifi "

023

024

PUBLIC

NOTICES

FILE NO. 83 E 486

FILM NO INTHE GENERALCOURT OFJUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITY COUNTY

IN RE ESTATE OF MARGARET S MORRISON, Deceased, Late of the County of Pitt

NOTICE TO DEBTORS ANDCREDITORS The undersigned, having qualified as Executor gf the Estate of Margaret S. Morrison, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day of April, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to the Estate will please make immediate payment to the un dersigned

This 12th day ot October, 1983 William G Morrison E xecutor for the Estate of Margaret S Morrison

101 Lakewood Drive Greenville, NC 27834 Laurence S' Graham Attorney for the Estate Suite 2, Oakmont Professional Offices

Greenville. NC 27834

October 17, 24, 31, November 7, 1983

FILE NO.: 83 E 488 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTV

IN RE ESTATE OF JOHN CALVIN YEAGER, Deceased, Late ot the County ot Pitt

NOTICE TO DEBTORS

ANDCREDITORS The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of John Calvin Yeager, this'is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day of April, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded m bar of their recovery All persons indebted to the Estate will please make immediate pay meni to the undersigned This 12th day Ot October, 1983 Elizabeth G Yeager Executrix of the Estate of John Calvin Yeager 113 Wilkshire Drive Greenville. NC 27834 Laurence S Graham Attorney tor the Estate Suite 2 Oakmont Professionaf Offices

Greenville, NC 27834

October 17, 24, 31. November 7. 1983

n 00 AM E S T on the 27th day of I October, 1983, receive sealed bids at i City Hall 201 West Fifth Street Greenville, North Carolina for the I purchase on the followinq described real property (including the house ; and any other improvements the^-c ,on) located in the Southsidi' Rode , velopment Proiect Area known as ; Proiect NCR 134. Greenville Pitt I County , North Carolina I Disposal Parcel H .1 BEGINN,

I ING at a point located 30 teet N 86 I 62afte

; deq 21 min E ot an iron stake at _

the intersection of the eastern nqht I of way line ot Garland Street and the southern right ot way line ot Howell Street from this Reqinnmq Point runs then along the southern 1 right ot way line of How>-ll street N i 86 deg 2l mm . E 38 37 teet to an ' iron stake set continues along the I southern nqht ot way ot Howell ; Street 87 deg 14 mm 30 sec E I 21 36 feet to an iron stake set runs i then S 0? deq 45 min 30 sec E U5 feet to an iron stake set runs then S : 87 deq 14 min 30 sec W 60 teet to an iron stake set runs then N 02 deg 45 min 30 sec W 144 40 feet to an iron stake found in the southern right of way of Hovzell Street, the point ot beginning

Said tract of land being more particularly described according to a survey plat dated December 14.

1981. prepared by Rivers and , Associates described as Disposal I Parcel H 4, Southside Proiect ; N C R 134

I Property address 609 Howell I Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834

The above described land is I subiect to the land use regulations and controls as contained in the redevelopment Plan tor said proiecf I and the covenants as contamecl in the declaration on file al City Hall.

; 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville,

North Carolina

Bidder may be any person, firm or corporation who agrees to ton form in all respects with the provisions ot bidding documents, including Redeveloper's Statement for Public Disclosure, and Re developer's Statement for Ouaiifi cations and Financial Responsibili ty. copies ot which may be obtained upon request at City Hall. 201 West Fifth Street Greenville. North Car olina Potential homeowners are encouraged to hid A reasonable amount of time will be allowed to arrange financing Any further in formation or copies ot the proposed disposal agreement may be ob tamed at City Hall In general the property is being sold as follows Disposal Parcel H 4-, R 6, Resi dential Bids' shall be accompanied by cash, cashier's check or certified check payable to the Community Development Office ot the City of I Greenville in an amount equal to five percent (5%) ot the bid price Bids shall be opened at ll 00 AM.

E S T on the 27th day of October,

1983, at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina The City reserves the right to waiver any .irregularities in bidding and the nqht to reieci any or all bids submitted The City also re serves the right to transfer this property by a nonwarranty deed All sales or transfers of land shall be subiect to the approval of the City (Jouncil of the City of Greenville Contact the Office of the Community Development of the City of Greenville for furthe tails

Community Development

Office

of the City of Greenville October 10. -17. 1993

ENTRY LEVEL SUPERVISOR

title. Local company has an opening tor an Entry Level Supervisor Industrial background helpful, but not necessary. Send resume to Supervisor, PO Box 1 96 7, Greenville, NC 27834

1 9 78 OLMUBILE Cutlass Supreme Excellent condition 758 0778 days niqhfs 756 8604

1 980 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Brougham Diesel, 30 miles per gallon plus AM FM stereo cassette power windows, power seats power door locks, cruise, tilt vvheel rear window defroster Im maculate condition No down payment assume payments 758

Pontiac

ASSUME PAYMENTS 1982 Pon tiac J 2 000    4    cylinder,    power

steerinq and brakes, automatic, air, stereo 26 500 miles Phone 758 2910

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

Employer Farmville Housing Authority, 172 Anderson Avenue, Farmyille General maintenance employee needed 185 low rent apartments, 40 hours, good benefits

XCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales repre sentafive Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition, and show progress for age Business or sales background helptui In requesting personal in terview, please submit resume slating personal history, education, and business experience Write PO Box 406, Greenville. NC 27835

REGISTERED OCCUPATIONAL

Therapist Position now available at Howell's Child Care Center, Inc. for an energetic individual with a BSOT.. Duties require assistance in the development of occupational therapy service delivery, and to prepare, implement, monitor and document the provision ot OT treatments. Howell's is located in beautiful River Bend Plantation, New Bern, N,C.. Excellent benefits and salary package It interested, please send resume to Mr. James Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center, Inc., P O. Box 607, La Grange, N C. 28551 or call 778 3067. Equal Opportunity Employer/M F

RESTAURANT MANAGEMENT

personnel tor the Greenville and New Bern area Starting salaries, $12,000 to $20,000 Send complete resumes to Management Personnel, P O Box 687, Greenville, NC 27834

SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of 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

FOR SALE: CHIPPENDALE sofa. Mahogany Queen Anne Tea table. Good condition Work 9 to 5, 758 5547 or 1 792 7457 after 6.

072

Livestock

ENTIRE STABLE tor lease 7 stalls and tack room. 20 acres pasture Automatic water tank. $250 per month. Call 756 9315or 756 5097.

If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it fnis fall in these

columns. Call 752 6166 FOR SALE: Yearling'bulls. Angus

and Angus Simental Hertford crosses A C Turnage, 753 4728

HORSEBACK RIDING.

Stables, 752 5237.

PEANUT HAY for sale 9225 after 7 p m

074

Miscellaneous

1977 GRAN PRIX. Yellow 2 door owner Fully loaded Good cond tion $2500 756 0284

Foreign

DATSUN 2B0ZX 2 - 2, 1979 Blue, 59 000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim-package Excellent condition $7700 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549

n.qhts

MAZDA RX7 1980 Anniversary edi tion loaded new paint, new radials. Excellent condition $7,900 756 0238

VOLKSWAGEN VAN. 1976 Air condition, excellent condition. $3350 Call.756 5544 days. 355 2498 nights

1975 t'Y'T"

756 7/84

Good condition

Its still the garage sale season and people are really buying this year! Get yours together soon and adver tise it with a Classified Ad. Call 752 6166.

EXPERIENCED PLUMBER and

experienced Sheet Metal Man needed for employment Call 1 524 4131

GIRLS-GUYS CAN'T APPLY FOR AIRLINES?

Are you single, bored, or out ot work?

1976 300 D MERCEDES Silver, power root power windows Locally serviced at Mercedes Dealership $8 995 Call 355 2347 or 355 6422

1977 MG MIDGET, 35.000 miles, Mini condition, AM FM cassette, British racing qreen $2900 firm 756 1447 after 6

1980 DATSUN 210 Wagon 5 forward speeds, air $3500 Call 756 3936

1982 CORVETTE Collector's EdI tion Blue, glass T top. all options, 15 000 miles Priced to sell at $1,000 below NADA Retail Book Value Call 355 2347 or 355 6422

1982 MAZDA GLC, 4 door sedan, excellent condition Asking $5895 Call alter 6 p m , 752 5008

;032

Boats For Sale

HONDA 7'2 HP Outboard motor with long shaft $450. Call 964 4778 niqhts

10' JOHN BOAT with motor and gas tank $350 Call 758 7639 or 758 7547

19' M F G CAPRICE, 1977 200 Johnson, tilt and trim, tandum

FILE NO 83 CVD 1318 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT ^ OFJUSTICE

galvanized trailer, CB, depth find er top and side curtains, all in excellent condition $6500 758 2300 days

034 Campers For Sale

JAYCO POP UPS Seahavvk and Cobra truck covers Camptown RV's, Ayden, NC 746 3530

de

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTV The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator ot the Estate of Laura Moore Adams late ot Pitt County, North Carolina This IS to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present.them to the undersigned on or before the 20th day of April, 1984, or this notice will be pleaded m bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned This the !3th day ot October, 1983 Mr Josepti Adams Rt 5, Box 240 ,

Greenville, N C 27834 Administrator of the Estate, Laura M Adams Robert L White Attorney at Law P O Box 951 Greenville, N C 27834 (9191 758 2123

October 17, 24, 31, November 7, 1983

TRAVEL TRAILER, Merriway, sleeps 6 excellent conclition Call 752 2378 anytime

TRUCK cdCTRS~Ar sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops 250 units in stock (j'Briants, Raleiqh. N C 834 2774

1970

SMOKEY

coiilained, air, e Call 746 2632

18', fully self tcellent condition

1974 24' COACHMAN. Air, awning, sleeps 6 Call 758 5277 after 4 30

036

Cycles For Sale

1980 YAMAHA 650 Maxim, 8,000 miles, mint (ondition New Con tinental tires, zruise control, black First $1500 355 7200, ask for Matt

1981 HONDA 500 CUSTOM with drive shaft and extras Call 756

1259

039

Trucks For Sale

1972 FORD VAN. 6 cylinder straight drive Good work van $895. (fall

756 0108

1974 CHRYSLER 2 door, good condition $400 or tjesl offer 752 1705

1975 CHEVY TRUCK. Autbmatic transmission Good condition $1/00 Call 753 5862

Visit Florida in winter free with adventurous full time work No lay offs $1,000 Bonus annually. Transportation and lodging furnished No experience neces sary See Dwight Brewer, Wed nesday, October 19 only, from 11 A M to 4 PM. at Holiday Inn (Expense paid training program) No phone calls, please Immediate openings and depart now

GOVERNMENTJOBS

Federal, State, Civil Service. Many positions available. Call 1 714 750 8868 for details

GROWING COMPANY needs person experienced in accounting Financial field desired. Growth opportunity Salary plus fringes plus profit sharing Resume to Coastal Leasing Corp., PO Box 647, Greenville, NC 27835.

HELP WANTED immediately at B 8. W Supermarket in Bethel Applications Monday Friday9tol.

HOUSEKEEPING Supervisor For long term health care facility 12 years experience in a supervisory capacity preferred Minimum high school education required. Contact Don Edmondson, Employment Se curity Commission.

INSURANCE Marketing Company looking for opportunity minded in dividual to represent our company in this area We otter top quality products, top commissions, advance system as well as draw Field and classroom training, un limited growth potential Cail Ex ecutive (Corporation, 919 291 8249 for a personal interview, an explana tion of a fantastic opportunity or write Box 2647, Wilson, NC 27893

INVENTORY CONTROL CLERK,

Light typing and filing involved Submit resumes to P O Box 1037, Greenville, NC 27835

IS IT TIME FOR A Career Change

Let me look for you The boss wi never know Call Judy for in ferview, 355 2020, Heritage Personnel Service

LEGAL SECRETARY. Send sumes to PO Box 1545, Greenville

re

LICENSED HAIR DRESSER

wanted Apply after 4 at George's Coiffeurs, Pitt Plaza

LOCAL COMPANY seeking a re sponsible individual for a secretarl al position, 5 days weekly. No shorthand required Send resume fo PO Box 722

LOCAL FINANCE company needs outside collector Must have a valid drivers license, be bondable and have thorough knowledge of Pitt and Green Counties Send resume to Mr C H Phillips, PO Box 7381, Greenville, NC 27834

LPNS AND RNS rieeded for Nurs ing facility in Washington. Good pay and benefits. Contact 1 946 V570 tor further information. EOE

LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available Apply in person or call Oak Manor, Inc , Snow Hill, 1 747 2868

1978 TOYOTA S5. AM FM cassette, air Good tor hunting! $1,000 Phone 758 3079

MAINTENANCE PERSON needed for apartment complex. Must be knowledgeable in all areas of gen oral maintenance. Send statement of qualifications fo Maintenance, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

SALES CLERK. Challenging posi tion with growing industry Individ ual must have proficient office skills, is versatile, and enjoys a challenge Types 60 65 wpm Ap pointment only Contact Grady White Boats, Personnel Depart menf, 752 2111, extension 251

SALES POSITIONS

With A Present And A Future

3POSITIONS EXCEPTlONALOPPORTUNITY

Average $1500 $2500 per month. To qualify: .Must have car Good edu cational and character background Bondable Free to travel in im mediate area Must be aggressive, alert, highly sociable, ambitious and responsible

If you are selected, YOUR FUTURE IS SECURE! You will be given a complete sales training program expenses paid Excellent company benefits including com prehensive insuran'ce program and unusual profit sharing program

ALEXANDERS, Effanbees, others Highway 96 t'z miles North Zebulon, located at Bobbitt's Bakery Wednesday Saturday 9 6. 1 269 8140or 1 365 5335

ATARI VIDEO GAME with 5 cartridges, less than 1 year old. $125 756 2031,

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale. 4 models. Delivery setup 919 763 9734.

BRYANT 100,000 BTU central heat unit Call I 825 2121.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work

074

Miscellaneous

WANT TO BUY; Good used dining room table with side board, 6 to 8 chairs. Also small bookcase. 746-4793,

WELL AND SEPTIC tanks at reasonable rates. Call 1 946-4666.

WOOOSTOVE, $100 756 7784

17S HARLEY DAVIDSON, 1978, $350..Gas heater. 5000 BTU. vented, $150. Call 746 3588

24' ROUND POOL

752 2372 after 5 p m

for sale Call

S PIECE FULL SIZE bedroom suit,

mattress, springs, and sheets, $50 Stereo, AM/FM 8 track with

speakers, $35. 15 cubic foot upright GE Freezer, $100. Large yellow rocker, $15. Pair of lamps, $8. 756 7741 after 5.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

IF YOU WANT A HOME CALL 756-0132 NOW!

MUST SELLI 1978 Oakwood. 14x58, 2 bedrooms, total electric, Weathertron heat pump and air, many extras Make offer! Call 756 0943, leave message

GIVE US A call sooi. We'd like to help you place a classllied ad In this newspaper today Call 752 6166

NO MONEY DOIAIN VA100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, appliances, total electric Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191

NO MONEY DOWN!

No Gimmicks Not Restricted To Veterans

We have double wides as low as $265 a month and single wides as low as $155 a month

CALL 756-4833 TRADEWINDS FAMILY HOUSING

705 West Greenville Blvd.

NO MONEY DOWN. VA financing Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes, 756 0333.

Now Open In Farmville!

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques anything of vallue

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

CLYDE PEARSON sofa, excellent condition, $200 Pair of lamps, $50. Walnut dining room hutch by Henerdon, $1500. 756 8662 after 5.

Our representatives are given every opportunity tor advancement to key management positions THIS PHONE CALL CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE Call for an ap pointment NOW!

Chuck Carroll 919-758-3401

Monday & Tuesday 10am 5p.m

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Eastern NC territory. Motor carrier sales. Sales experience helpful Send resume to Representative, PO Box 288, Farmville, NC 27828

SOCIAL WORKER. Howell's Child Care Center, Inc is seeking a highly motivated individual with either a BSW or BST in social work and 2 years experience preferred in an ICF/MR facility. If interested, please send resume to Mr James Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center, Inc., PO Box 607, La Grange, N C 28551 or call 778 3067. EqualOpportunity Employer/M F

SPEECH PATHOLOGIST. Position available for professional with master's in speech language pa thology to provide diagnostic and theraputic services to children in a private residential facility for the mentally handicapped. N C. license required. If interested, please send resume to Mr. James Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center, Inc , P O Box 607, LaGrange, N.C 28551 or call 778 3067. Equal Opportunity Employer/M F.

USED CAR SALESMAN wanted. Salary and commission, paid vaca tion, car furnished. Prefer sales experience but not necessary. Must be neat and aggressive. Send re sume to P O Box 1, Chocowinlty, NC 27817    '

WANTED. PERMANENT WORK,

small condo management, living accomodations furnished Fee negotiable Write P O Box 2242, New Bern, NC 28560. (Some book keeping experience desired.)

WANTED: LPN to work in clinical setting 8 to 5, Monday through Friday Must be licensed LPN in state of NC. Contact Greene County Health Care, PO Box 657, Snow Hill, 1 747 8162 EOE

WE CURRENTLY HAVE an open ing for an experienced Real Estate Broker For more information or an appointment, call Rod Tugwell at Century 21 Tipton & Associates. 756 6810

Shopping (or a new car? The most complete listings in town are found in the Classified ads every day.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancil, 752 6331,

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs. Counter tops, plumbing and carpentry. State License. 746 2657 or 752 1920.

EXPERIENCED NURSE'S AIDE

wishes to fake care of an elderly person in your home From 7am until 3 or 4 p.m. Phone 756 4600 ^ytime.

COUNTRY SIDE Antiques 8. Crafts, Route 3, Eastern Pines Road 1727. Open Monday through Saturday, from 10 to 5, and Sundays from 1 to 5.

CRAFT

$500. Cal

heater fireplace insert, 756 6474,

ELECTRONIC CASH REGISTERS.

New and used, Cafio DTS. $224 and up. Century Data Systems, Greenville, 756 2215.

FOR SALE: 2 windows with storm windows, storm door. Call 756 2540.

FULL SIZE bookcase bed, $20. drawer chest, $15, 756 7741 after 5

FURNITURE STRIPPING and re

finishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine (iarden Center. 756 9123

HARVEST GOLD refrigerator, automatic icemaker, 3 months old, $500 or best offer, 3 cushion sofa, brand new, $100 or best offer. Call 752 7469after 7:30p.m,

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON & BUYING TV's, Stereos,cameras, typewriters, gold & silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2464.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.

MARKEL 220V 4,000 with electric heater. Never used. Call 752 6143.

METAL DETECTORS. Complete line of White's Treasure Hunting Equipment. Call for free catalog. Baker's Sports Equipment, 756 8840.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

OLIVETTI

typewriter,

5579

EDITOR 3-C electric 7 years old, $50. 752

PEANUT HAY. Picked up In the field $1 00 per bale. Call 823 5407.

PANASONIC color TV, 2 years old, $150firm or best offer, 757-1373.

PITNEY BOWLES MAILING

machine, used, model 5830. $895 new, asking $395 Call 964 4778 nights.

POOL TABLE, Slate top. $525. Phone 756 7779.

RENT TO OWNII New 19 " Sharp color TV. Payments, $22.42 per month. Furniture World 11/Stereo City, 757 0451, ask for Mike

REPOSSESSIONS: Vacuums and shampooers Call dealer, 756 6711.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool (-ompany.

SHARP, SONY a GE closeout sale now af Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88

SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quail fy printer 5 months old. Used 1 month. In mini condition. $550. 752-3980 from 9a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

STUMP GRINDER and related equipment. Vermeer Model 630A. Good condition. Call 752 3400 or 752 4060

USED REFRIGERATORS $75 up.

Also heating, air conditioning, electrical and plumbing service. Call 752 9333

VINYL SOFA BED. very good condition, 2 years old, $200 or Tzest oiler. Call before5:30p.m. 746 3187^L

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

HOME OF THE NO DOWN PAYMENT

featuring

REDMAN Quality Homes

Highway 264,    Farmville,    NC

CALL 753-2033

SMH LISTING SERVICE will list your mobile home, advertise it, sell it, and finance the transaction all at a LOW COST to you See George King, SMH Listing Service, Hiway 11 Ayden, 746 2078.

USED 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. 60x12, fully carpeted, new furniture. Low down payment and payments under $145 per month. Call 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.

USED 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. 60x12, dishwasher, new furniture. Low down payment and payments under $150 per month. Call 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenvijle.

USED 48x12, U bedroom, new furniture. Small down payment and payments less than $121 per month Call 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville

13.7$%

homes

0333

FINANCING on selected Call Conner Homes, 756

14x70 OAKWOOD. 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths Assume loan at $1,000 equity 758 5883

1971 RITZCRAFT, 12x65,    2

bedrooms, 2 full baths, air condi tion, excellent condition Call 752 6869 or Davis Realty af 752 3000

1976 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 $14,500. Will sacrifice now for $11,500. Call 752 2366 or 757 0451.

1980 14x52. $300 down, take up payments. 758 5720

1981    14x70    COMMODORE.    3

bedrooms, I'z baths, total electric Already set and blocked in Evans Mobile Home Park Call 758 6805

1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.9) At Greenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068.

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

LOWREY ORGAN. 2 keyboard, brand new. Upright piano, Wurlitzer Best offer Call 756 1614.

MARTIN TENOR SAX, case, stand 758 1355after9:30p.m Best offer!

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOTICE!

We are now selling Burglar Alarm Systems. We offer 100% financing with approved credit. For more information, call Lloyd or Nancy Lancaster al 752-2778.

Dnital

ftetrptionkt

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 1967, Greenville, N.C., 27834.

FOR LEASE

2500 SQ. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company hat a Syitomt 34 (96K) computer available lor Im-mtdlate time (haring. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer Is available (or Immediate remote hook-up using telephone communications. Programs ready for general business uss include general ledger, accounts rocflivable, inventorylbllling, accounts payablo and payroll.

Contact; President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215

077 Musical Instruments

PIANO A ORGAN DISTRIBUTORS

presents new Kimball piana bench delivery

private lessons Only $1489, just $49.90 a month! Limited 329 Arlington Boulevard. 355-6002.

PIANO TUNING W. M. HUDSON

20 years experience. 752 4682

SUNN BETTA Guitar amp_ KX) watts 1125 .CallJ58:76.39 or 758 7547.

082 lost AND FOUND

HERE'S ALL YOU have to do. Call the classified department with your ad tor a still good item and you make some extra cash! tan 7526166.    _

LOST:    GOLD    BRACELET    iri

downtown area. Reward. Can 758 9000.    _

085 Loans And Moiftgages

ARE YOU HLUfNC

A MORTGAGE ON PROPERTY YOU SOLD?

SELL IT FOR CASH. ANYWHERE IN USA 1ST OR 2ND. FINANCIAL INVEbTMENT GROUP INC. CALL COLLECT 1 704 274 0863

$5,000 CASH LOAN

No credit or em^Hoyment needed. 24

hour service.

1-702-369-9236

091 Business Services

WALL PAPERING and Painting. 10 years experience Local references. 758 7748

093

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESSES FOR SALE: TV

Sales & Service...Card & Gift Shop Needlepoint Shop ..Bedroom Shop Nash County Convenient Store. Fast Food Restaurant and others SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES 401 W First Street 752 3575

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Complete farm supply Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758 0702

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 757 0001, nights 753 4015

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.

ROUTE BUSINESS... no selling involved as we secure all locations. Just collect the profits. Replace sold stock. Very easy to maintain High profit potential. $7760 Minimum Investment Call Mr Davis 317 547 6463.

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.

100

REAL ESTATE

10 MILES FROM AURORA - '-2

acre lot with a 1974 12x70 mobile home. Access to water and private boat dock included $18,000 Call 1 322 4428 days or 1 322 4795 nights

102 Commercial Property

FOR SALE by owner 2 buildings and land Location: 1500 and 1502 North Greene, 752 2481 or 758 1437. Shown by appointmentonly

FOR SALE:    5,000 square foot

commercial building in the downtown area. Currently leases for $1400 per month. Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

5,000 SOAURE FOOT building Excellent location tor retail business. Central air and heat 757 0451, ask for Mr Carraway

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 Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BUILDING FOR RENT

1321 WEST FOURTH ST. WASHINGTON, NC

3800 Sq. Ft.

CALL 946-6989 OR 946-5492

JARMAN

AUTO SALES

1982 Toyota Clica Loaded. $8700

GT.

1982 Chevrolet Chevetle, 4

door, automatic transmission, air condition. $4895

1982 Chevrolet Chevette, 4

door, automatic transmission, air condition. $4895

1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup, 4

speed transmission, air condition. $6950

1981 Buick Regal-$7150

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - $6650

1981 Honda Civic 1500 DX -$4350

4981 Chevrolet Camaro $6650

1960 Chevrolet Caprice Classic, 4 door. $5650

1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo -$5950

1978 Datsun B-210 - $2795

1978 Chevrolet Malibu Clastic Wagon - $3750

1977 Chevrolet Custom Deluxe Pickup, Automatic transmission. $3650

1977 Olds Omega $2550

12 Months, 12,000 Milas Warranty Available

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mF

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

Monday, October 17,1983    3

Pats

Pointers

By Pat Trexler

Engagement Announced

ELAINE DEW HODGES...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Baker of Bethel, who announce her engagement to Frank Charles Harrington Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Charles Harrington Sr. of Route 3, Greenville. The wedding will take place Nov. 4.

Learn how easy pattern stitchery can be as you create these lovely frost flower ornaments for your Christmas tree or for little Im-thinking-of-you gifts tucked into your Christmas cards. Use them for coasters, too. They are worked on little squares of red or green plastic canvas with no background filling needed.

Just stitch a few fancy stitches on each of two squares of canvas, whip the two together and make a little loop for hanging. They are unbelievably quick and easy to do and, best of all, so easy on the budget!

To obtain stitch charts and full instructions for making the Frost Flower Ornaments, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-1147 with $1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler (The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.

Or you may order Kit No. N-1147 by sending a check or money order for $11 to Pat Trexler at the

same address. The kit price includes the instruc-tion leaflet, enough materials to make 24 or naments and the shipping charges.

The ornament design shown today appeared in this column three years ago and is also one of the 34 patterns featured in my new book, Pats Pointers: A Needlepoint Handbook. I am offering the design again as it was one of the most popular of all the designs I have shown over the years. Delighted comments pour^ in from all corners of this country, and frost flowers adorned many a tree.

Many readers wrote to tell me that they first made one of each of the 12 designs included on the leaflet and then were inspired to design their own originals by trying other pattern stitches on the colored canvas. Nothing )leases me more than to lear that I have been able to stimulate creativity in others!

Those of you who already are familiar with a number of decorative

pattern stitches will probably not even need the instruction leaflet. Just buy some of the canvas in Christmas colors and let your imagination run wild.

For the ornaments, I recommend red, green or royal blue canvas stitched in snowy white yarn. You could, however, create delightful trinket boxes using pastel canvas and a rainbow of colored yarns. Oblong rectangles, approximately 3 inches by 6 inches, would make great eyeglass cases and smaller squares with a little tab are perfect for key rings.

Pick a design motif that appeals to you and scatter several repeats over a larger rectangle to create an original tote bag, telephone book cover or a variety of other gift items.

No lining is needed for the ornaments, but you may prefer to line some of the larger items mentioned. If you do, L suggest that you work a row of border stitches around all outside edges.

Then, cut a piece of lining fabric 1 inch wider and

FROST FLOWER...ornaments are perfect for a Christmas tree, gifts or coasters. They are worked on colored

canvas so no background filling is needed.

Home Fragrance Products Become Fashionable

By BARBARA MAYER AP Newsfeatures

Ancient civilizations burned incense to sweeten the air and concocted aromatic mixtures to perfume the body. The Romans added scent to their public baths.

Later, American colonists placed potpourri, pomander balls and sachets in drawers and closets. In the mid-1950s, the introduction of aerosol air fresheners modernized the methodology. So, scenting the environment is not a new idea.

, Indications are, however, that home fragrance products are about to become more important - and more fashionable - than ever before. Those who make and market products such as potpourri, scented candles and pillows, perfumed soaps, sachets and related items say sales are approaching all-time highs.

Furthermore, a number of new products are about to come on the scene that are expected to increase interest in scent as an important adjunct in home decor.

The Flower Children of the 1960s, may have started the interest in natural floral and herbal scents, says Annette Greene, executive director of the Fragrance Foundation.

The economy which forced people to look tojheir home and improve the quality of life there, the consequent growth of home entertaining, and even the development of home videocassette players also played a part, according to Barbara Carver. Ms. Carver is vice president of Charles of The Ritz which has developed what some people regard as one of the most interesting new home fragrance products.

This produce is the Aroma Disk. It consists of a small, electric heater which plays flat disks that have encapsulated such aromas as a crackling fire, buttered popcorn, the smell of a Christmas tree, roses or an ocean breeze. As the heater gets warmer the aroma is diffused into the room, says Ms. Carver.

The heater will sell for about $20, while individual disks good for up to 30 uses will be $1.50. More heavily-impregnated disks will sell for about $4 and provide up to 150 uses. So far,

40 aromas have been developed, and the company is working toward deve opment of about 100 actual and fantasy aromas.

The new technology allows for total user control without any distortion of scent, according to Ms. Carver. Any fragrance can be reproduced and it takes only two to three minutes for the aroma to permeate the room, after which the heater shuts off. It also takes only a few minutes to replace the old scent with a new one.

As a result, it is possible to match scent to music, a television program or a film, and to change the scent as the action on a screen or recording changes.

The disk is being distributed as a home fragrance product through cosmetic departments in department and other stores. In addition, the company has licensed Remington Shaver Co. to sell it to housewares and hardware outlets. Among retailers slater to iar-rpatoduct as of . were Neiman Marcus, Macys, Bloomingdales, Sears, J.C.

Penney, and Montgomery Ward.

Testing indicates a broad market for such a product, including teen-agers, adult males who normally avoid scented products as feminine, and women who are now the largest purchasers of home fragrance products.

While the disk may the most unusual new home fragrance product, it is not the only one. Recently, Johnson Wax Co. introduced a toilet tissue dispenser with tiny fragrance beads inside its plastic exterior. Each time the dispenser turns, a

potpourri, sachet, scented Christmas and other ornaments is available, than used to be, according to Ms. Greene of the Fragrance Foundation.

"Actually the public was more advanced than manufacturers in its acceptance of and demand for fragrance products, she said, noting it was only when people turned to alternative sources such mail order outlets and

as

natural and health food stores for these products that manufacturers began to see

the potential.

Today, however, lack of supply is hardly the problem. Ann Pelagrino, the owner of Scentsitivity, a New York shop specializing in home fragrance products, says consumers have become more tuned into the delights of home fragrance, so there are more available products.

People base their choice mainly on the aroma and the packaging. But color plays a role too. Many decorators come in here with a swatch of fabric and ask us to match it exactly in soap, she said.

1 inch longer than the piece of canvas. Turn under and press in a one-half inch hem all around, mitering the corners. Place the wrong side of the lining fabric to the wrong side of the canvas and whip the lining in place, working through the needlepointed edge stitches.

If. in experimenting, any of you find that you have created an exciting design, send me a photograph and I will consider purchasing design rights from you so that it can be shared with other readers in leaflet and kit form.

Happy stitching!

(Pats Pointers: The Needlepoint Handbook" by Pat Trexler guides the needleworker from the beginner-basics through more detailed instructions and projects. This 200-page book also includes sections on counted cross-stitch and aids for the handicapped who wish toparticipate in needlecraft activities. To order, send $8.95 plus $1 postage and handling to Pat's Pointers Needle

point Handbook, in care of this newspaper, 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairway,

Kan. 66205. Please make checks payable to Universal Press Syndicate.)

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Other relatively qew products which dis^se scent into the environment include small perfume rings that fit around a lamp and give off fragrance as the lamp heats up, fragrance lamps which work like oil lamps, with a wick, as well as herbal }iIlows which give off a lerbal fragrance that is supposed to soothe away a headache.

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CtOBaword By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS ID.C. title 4Milkfish 7 Game of chance 11 Ill-humored person

13 Actor Young 57 Santa ,

14 Swan genus California

15 Verdi opera IS Platos H

17 Companion

44 Praise

45 Jogs along 5S Exchange

premium 53 Polish 55 Birds crop 5S Treaty org.

of curry 18 Attain 20 Pack 22 Josh 24 African antelopes 28 Manager

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DOWN

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Reason

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var.

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30 Dash

31 Lamour, to friends

Courtroom Drama Snaps And Crackles

Avg. solution time: 23 min.

9 Fabled bird 35 Swiss canton

10 Paydirt    38Yes,inthe

12 Nostalgic    Psalms

reverie    40 Actor Carney

'E

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'EN ANTMTEN$ES S.0 R ETsMsTp!EDr

10-17

Answer to Saturday's puzzle.

42 Part of R.F.D.

45 Sand hill

47 Soviet city

48 Poi source

49 Mop

50 Carpenter, for one

51 Anagram for rag

52 Ending for Brooklyn or Jersey

54 Comic book sound

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- Country music singer Dick Curless. whose hits include 'Hard Time Travelin' Man, was in stable condition after being rushed to the hospital for treatment of an abdominal problem,

A spokeswoman at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Pittsburgh on Sunday declined to disclose the exact nature^of his illness.

The 51-year-old Curless. whose other hits include "Drag Em Off the Interstate and Sock It to 'Em and A Tombstone Every Mile." was taken to Wheeling Hospital on Friday night, and from there to Pittsburgh.

Curless had been was scheduled to appear at a ceremony dedicating a bronze star in his honor on a sidewalk outside Wheeling radio station WWVA on Sat-urday, said station spokeswoman Debby Wieser.

Comedian Red Skelton was born in 1913.

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ByFREDROTHENBERG ,\P Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - A Case of Libel, starring Edward Asner and Daniel J. Travanti, is a courtroom drama that snaps and crackles from opening statement to jury verdict, while also making points about an important issue.

Based on attorney Louis Nizers autobiographical account of Quentin Reynolds libel suit against conservative columnist Westbrook Pegler, "A Case of Libel. debuting on cable TVs Showtime tonight, demonstrates that freedom of the press doesnt give license to vindictively setting fire to another persons reputation.

The play, written by Henry Denker, was seen on Broadway in 1963. and then

on ABC in 1968, with Van Heflin in the Nizer role. Asner, whose character here is named Robert Sloane, does supreme justice to the part in tonights re-make.

Thie former star of Lou Grant, known for his affiliation with many liberal causes, said in an interview that he wasnt appropriate for the Pegler role, "although I w(^d take right-wing roles if (theyre) n^t for me.

In tonights play, which will have seven more showings in October and November, Sloane reluctantly accepts the case, realizing his career has become financially solvent but morally bankrupt. Am I dying of success? he asks.

Yet he knows he and his client will be dragged

GOREN BRIDGE

through the mud. The Pegler character, named Boyd Bendix here, believes his might makes divine right, and hell use his prose to spray malice at anyone who disagrees with him.

Bendix is sued by the Reynolds character, Dennis Corcoran (Gordon Pinsent), who has become Bendix public punching bag. In addition, Corcoran, a heroic World War II correspondent, cant find free-lance work because Pegler and his paper's owners are blacklisting him.

Corcorans mistake was favorably reviewing a book that criticized Bendix, unleashing a string of diatribes from the columnist accusing Corcoran of being immoral, cowardly and a communist.

Daniel J. Travanti is delectably despicable as the snide, smug, self-righteous Bendix who stands ramrod-straight both in print and, literally, in the witness box.

attacking anybody he believes has communist leanings.

Bef(e stardom discovered Travanti. in the role of the compassionate Capt. Frank Furillo on Hill Street Blues, he made his, firing playing one-shot psychqjaths in various series He sinks his fangs into Bendix. a 180-degree turn from Travanti's recent role as the father of a missing boy in "Adam.

The courtroom sparring betwera Sloane and Bendix is heavyweight stuff all the way. Because witnesses who could prove Bendix vendetta have been silenced by fear, Sloane can't prove financial damage to his clients career.

To prove punitive damages, he must show that Bendix acted with malice. How he gets the wary Bendix to cooperate is a terrific twist, made even more re-

not

the

markable because its Hollywood fiction, but real stuff from Nizer.

Nizer said in an interview that A Case of Libel currently is playing in Brussels, the Netherlands and France, where his role is played by President Francois Mitterrands son-in-law.

Says Brigitte In Bad Period

O'Brien Funeral Set On Tuesday

BY CHARLES QOREM AMD OMAR 8HAB1F

ei9B3 Trtbun* Company Syndtcata. Inc

ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ

10-17

UPZXK EJFKXV RCSJBU OZBS OCU

Q.l Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

A9852 <;?Q1063 OA72 46 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South 1 4 Dhle Pass ?

What do you bid now?

A.-Opposite a partner who could make a takeout double, you have a very fine hand -the equivalent of an opening bid. You have a guaranteed eight-card fit in at least one major, but it is not incumbent on you to guess which one. Cue bid two clubs to ask partner to choose the suit, then raise that major to game. Of course, if partner responds in diamonds, you can then show your spades.

The bidding has proceeded: North East    South    West

1 4 Pass    1 4    Pass

2 4 Pass    ?

What action do you take?

A.-Bury the book on point count. You have a hand with two aces, one of which is in partners suit. Now that partner has announced a fit for your six-card suit, anything less than four spades is a gross underbid.

TV Log

For compMt TV programming information, consult your waokly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Rafloctor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

Saturdays Cryptoquip - POKEY HOSPITAL HELPER IS GOOD AT KEEPING THINGS ORDERLY.

Todays Cryptoquip clue; 0 equals W.

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.vSolution is accomplished by trial and error.

Ci.rtajKinp Feiturn Syndicate Int    '

Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

4AQJ98 783 0AKQ4Q104

The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1 4 Pass 2 4 Pass

7

What do you bid now?

A.-You have a very strong hand which has been improv ed by a fit in partner's suit. A jump bid to show your strength is appealing, but you can't leap to three spades on a five-card suit, nor four clubs wRh only three-card support. We suggest you temporize by bidding two diamonds - a new suit by opener after a two-over-one response is forcing. Partners rebid should leave you perfectly placed to decide on the final contract.

Q.5-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

494 ^63 OQ8762 4AKQ10

The'bidding has proceeded: North    East    South    West

1 4    Pass    2 0    Pass

4 0    Pass    ?

What do you bid now?

A.-You have the values for an opening bid facing a part ner who has opened and then jumped in support of your suit. In other words, you are in slam territory. Despite your weak trump suit, you should be happy to investigate slam. Cue-bid five clubs. If partner simply returns to five diamonds, you can then bow out of the auction gracefully.

_^DAY 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:X Tic Tac 8:00 Scarecrow 9:00 After AAash 9:30 Newhart 10:00 Emerald P. 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch

TUESDAY 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:25 Newsbreak 9:25 Newsbreak 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Press Your

11:00 Price Is Right 12:00 News 9 12:30 Young 8i 1:X As the World 2:X Capitol 3:00 Guiding Lt. " 4:00 Waltons ' 5:00 A, Griffith 5:M MASH 6:00 News 9 6:X CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:X Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Mississippi 9:00 AAovie 11:00 News 9 11:X Movie 2:00 Nightwatch

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WCTI-TV-Ch.12

Q.3-Neither vulneral^ as South you hold:

4AQ104 OK97 4A85 The bidding has proceeded: North East    South    West

Pass Pass    1 4    Pass

2 ^ Pass    ?

What action do you take? A.-If you are looking for game with your balanced 13 points opposite a partner who passed originally, you qualify for an Optimist of the Year" award. You are in a playable spot and there is no guarantee that you have any better contract. Pass. This might be your last opportunity for a plus score.

Q.6-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

'4Q83 ^ 95 0AQ6 4AJ762

The bidding has proceeded: North East    South    West

14 Pass    2 4    Pass

2 ^ Pass    ?

What do you bid now?

A.-You have the values for game and an almost sure eight-card fit in spades. Nevertheless, we would suggest a jump to three no trump. The spade suit should provide a source of tricks and your minor-suit tenaces could be more valuable at no trump with the lead coming up to your hand.

MONDAY    12:X Family Feud

7:W 3'sCom,-)any l! X Ryan's Hope

7:X Alice 8:X Incredible 9:W Football 12: Action New-12:X Nightllne 1:M Thickeot

TUESDAY 6.x News 6:X Stretch

I X My Children 2:X One Life 3:X Gen. Hospital 4:X Carnival 4:X BJ-LOBO 5:X People's 6.x Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:X .'s Company 7:X Alice

LOS A.NGELES (AP) -Actor Pat OBrien, who once joked that if he played one more Irish priest they will have to ordain me," will be honored Tuesday with a funeral Mass at his neighborhood church.

Msgr. Lawrence O'Leary offered to give the evening eulogy at St. Martin of Tours Roman Catholic Church in Brentwood because "they were friends for years." OBrien's publicist, Jewel Smith, said Sunday.

A private burial is set for Wednesday at Holy Cross Cemetery in suburban Inglewood.

O'Brien's death from a fatal heart attack Saturday at age 83 saddened dozens of longtime friends, including Bob Hope. James Cagney and Ronald Reagan, who appeared opposite O'Brien as Notre Dame football player George Gipp in the 1941 film Knute Rockne. All American."

In that movie, after anguished scenes between the dying Gipp and Rockne, the coach exhorts his Fighting Irish to win one for the Gipper." Notre Dame gave both men honorary degrees in 1981.

We will always consider him a part of the Notre Dame family, university president Theodore M. Hesburgh said.

OBrien and Reagan remained steadfast friends, and a White House statement described President and Mrs. Reagan as deeply saddened.

Reagan had telephoned after O'Brien underwent

prostate surgery at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica last Wednesday, prompting the actor to joke, Now everybody knows Im in the hospital."

The light-hearted quip was OBriens style. His many portrayals of Irish Catholic priests brought the wisecrack, "One more and they will have to ordain me.

In Angels With Dirty Faces" (1938) he convinced his co-star, the hoodlum played by Cagney, to scream en route to the electric chair so neighborhood children would be dissuaded from a fife of crime.

OBrien launched his screen career as reporter Hildy Johnson in The Front Page (1931) and worked steadily through the 1930s and 1940s. He capped a 110-movie career as a priest in "Ragtime (1981), which co-starred Cagney.

Marge Zimmerman, who looks after Cagney and his wife, said she could not tell Cagney immediately of OBriens death.

"I had to take him to the doctor, who said he was feeling fine, Ms. Zimmerman said. Then we went for a long ride in the car and I told him that Pat had died. James took it well.

Cagney told her, I have lost my dearest friend, she said.

Bob Hoj said he chatted with OBrien recently about an upcoming tour.

NEW YORK (AP) -Actress' Brigitte Bardot has resumed her normal activities in St. Trdpz after fighting a bout of depression, the latest issue of People magazine reports.

Lately she has not been in good shape, her sister, Mi-janou Bardot, a former actress, told the magazine. I sense that she is disturbed, tormented and unhappy. I know that she was going through a bad period -that of age and an unhappy love.

Miss Bardot, billed as a sex kitten in the mid 1950s and 60s, recently broke off a relationship with Allain Bougrain-duBourgh, 33, a French TV producer. Several newspapers reported she was extremely depressed over the failure of the relationship.

Her agent, Olga Orstig, said the actress hadnt been feeling to well and had checked into a clinic.

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   '    The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C._Monday, October 17.198:

elms Prepares One Final Effort On King Holiday

lRRY MARGASAK At the samp timp Holme    k____ _u____j *l-_      "

|FhAVE A PROBLEM?^ I NEED HELP?

Monday, October 17.1983    7

bnel

By LARRY MARGASAK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -he Senate is set to pass a bational holiday, honoring Nobel laureate Martin Luther King Jr., but not before conservative Re-ublican Jesse Helms makes final attempt to block the bill.

While Helms is planning to attle the proposed holiday pn the Senate Hoor and in a 1 courtroom, leaders of oth parties say when the is called Wednesday, pproval will be Overwhelming.

KingfrAvidow, Coretta, who vaited 15 years for the mo-nent, plans to attend the enate session. Similar bills ave been introduced each Irear since the civil rights eader was assassinated on a lemphis, Tenn., hotel alcony April 4, 1968, but bntil this year, the votes vere missing.

The legislation, which breezed through the House 8-90 on Aug. 2, would set he holiday observance for he third Monday in January lo honor Kings Jan. 15 birthday. The holiday would iegininl986.

White House spokesmen laid President Reagan, who Ince opposed another paid Itoliday for federal workers, BOW is committed to signing the first bill honoring the ) achievements of a black American with a national holiday.

Congress returns today from a week-long Columbus Day recess.

Helms filibustered against the bill two weeks ago, but dropped the stalling tactics and agreed to a schedule proposed by Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn.

The North Carolina senator will try Tuesday to send the bill to the Judiciary Committee. If that move fails as expected, Helms and others are likely to introduce amendments that sponsors will oppose.

The proposals could include replacing the King holiday with a civil rights" day. making Lincolns birthday a national holiday or celebrating Kings birthday on a Sunday.

Raises Doubts On Registration

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)

, - Up to 100 residents of two Greensboro public housing complexes may have illegally registered to vote last year, according to a statement filed by the president of the housing council.

N.J. Johnson, who is not a voter registrar, said he registered about too people last September and October at the request of Herman Gist, who was elected to the state House of Representatives in November.

Since receiving the statement, state Elections Director Alex K. Brock has asked the State Bureau of Investigation to interview residents of the Smith Homes and Hampton complexes who were registered during the Democratic Party drive.

STORMS IN FRANCE RENNES, France (AP) -Weekend storms and 65 mph winds in northwest France toppled trees, triggered flash floods and left at least two people dead, police said Sunday.

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At the same time. Helms lawyers have a date in U.S. District Court on Tuesday, where theyll try to convince a judge to unseal tapes and transcripts that came from the FBIs electronic surveillance of King.

Helms said on the Senate floor that King advocated action-oriented Marxism" and associated with communists. The documents were sealed by U.S. District Judge John Lewis Smith in 1977 for 50 years, but Helms contended he and other senators need the information to cast an informed vote.

In the House this week. President Reagans Central America policies face another test with a vote on efforts to cut off all covert aid to anti-communist rebels in Nicaragua.

The vote will measure whether attitudes toward U.S. support for opponents of the Sandinista government in

Nicaragua have changed since Korean Air Lines Flight 007 was shot down by the Soviet Union last month.

Sources said House leaders deliberately held off votes on the funds cutoff until the initial furor over the Korean plane had abated.

In a bitter, emotional battle, reminiscent of the Vietnam War years, the House voted 228-195 on July 27 to cease about $19 million in secret CIA support for an estimated 11,000 contras seeking overthrow of the Nicaraguan government.

But that proposal - attached to an intelligence authorization measure for the end of fiscal year 1983 -went nowhere in the Republican-controlled Senate, which may begin work on the cutoff move late this week, but more likely early next week.

Wheat-state interests also will be active in the Senate

CROWDED FIELD Balloonists carefully negotiate their way through the crowd of canopies at the Statesville (N.C.) Airport Sunday as the 10th Annual National Balloon Rally was held. The event, which took up the weekend, attracted several hundred spectators and about 30 hot air balloons from around the southeast. (AP Lasrphoto)

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this week, trying to break a logjam over a plan to curtail grain price supports for the 1984 and 1985 crops.

Sen Robert J. Dole? R-Kan., has tried three different times to get a vote on his plan to curb scheduled increases in the so-called target price but has been blocked each time by Sen. JohnMelcher, D-Mont.

Although Agriculture Secretary John Block originally called for complete repeal of those increases. Dole has offered a compromise that provides half the scheduled increase for next years crop and sweetens the overall federal program for wheat farmers.

On Tuesday, the House is

expected to resume floor action on a bill to reapprove U.S. export controls, which are largely aimed at preventing leakage of advanced computers and other sensitive technology to Soviet bloc countries.

And a House-Senate conference will renew attempts to compromise *on a supplemental unemployment compensation bill, which provides benefits for Americans who used up their regular jobless checks.

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Title
Daily Reflector, October 17, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30606
Date
October 17, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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