Daily Reflector, October 31, 1983


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INSIDE TODAY

INSIDE TODAY

JACKSON TO RUN

Black leader Jesse Jackson says he will announce his candidacy Thursday for the Democratic nomination for president. Story on page 7.    *TRIAL COST $90,000

North Carolina taxpayers paid out more than $90,000 for the recent trial of Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green, who says he also will announce his costs. The story is on page 13.SPORTS TOOV<

SAMPSON DEBUTS

Rookie Ralph Sampson of the Houston made a sparkling debut in the Rockets' NBA season opener this weekend. (Page 10)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 242TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 31, 1983

28 PAGES - 4 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

Quake Toll

Exceeds 800

Left In Ruins

A store in Horasan. an eastern Turkish town, collapsed in ruins Sunday following a devatstating earthquake that swept the region. Turkish officials have placed the death toll at more

than kOO, with more than Laserphoto)

25,000 homeless or injured. (AP

Reconciliation Talks fiegr/nning

Lebanese Hold Private Session

By ROBERT H. REID "    '    "    '

Associated Press Writer GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - Leaders of Lebanons warring factions conferred privately today before the opening of the long-delayed national reconciliation conference aimed at ending the nations eight years of civil strife.

Syrian Foreign Minister Abdel-Halim Khaddam was reported meeting with opponents of Lebanese President Amin Gemayel in a private home near the lakeside resort of Montreux, east of Geneva.

Former Lebanese President Camille Chamoun and Pierre Gemayel, father of current President Amin Gemayel and leader of the Christian

'TTOBgB^fWfyr'huddrd'ii a'suite the*" Intercontinental Hotel, where the conference was to convene.

Armed police patrolled the hotel entrance and blocked access to the building with steel and concrete barricades. Mindful of the two truck bombs that killed more than 280 U.S. and French

peacekeeping troops in Lebanon OcL 23,

authorities banned all trucks except those with security clearance on two roads near the hotel.

The task of conference delegates is to try to end Lebanons internal conflicts, and the pressure on them has increased since the Beirut bombings. The four nations comprising the peacekeeping

force have hinted they might reassess their roles unless the reconciliation talks jield significant results.

One of the key participants is leftist Druse leader Walid Jumblatt, who over the weekend warned of a new civil war if Lebanon's Christians balk at making concessions to the Moslems at the conference.

Jumblatt said the outcome of the talks will hinge on the Christians' willingness to grant to the majority of the population the concessions necessary to lead to a modern Lebanon.

If they do no not wish to do so, there will be a neww'ar,hesaid.

ERZURUM, Turkey (.AP) A powerful earthquake that rolled through mountainous eastern Turkey killed at least 813 people and has left at least 25,000 homeless in freezing winter weather, officials said today.

Heavy rain that disrupted efforts to rescue victims turned to snow in mountain villages devastated by the Sunday quake.

The need for immediate shelter is a life-or-death matter, a Red Cross statement said. The affected area is on a high plateau and at this time of year some one who cq,nnot find shelter after nightfall may freeze to death before morning.

The TuTkish Red Crescent Society estimated it need^ 5,000 tents, 30,000 heavv^ blankets and 5,000 heavy sleeping bags.

The quake destroyed at least 50 villages and left people dead under collapsed buildings in the townships of Horasan, Narman, Pasinler and Sarikamis in the eastern provinces of Erzurum and Kars.

Housing Ministry officials said the worst-hit was Horasan and its surrounding villages with a death toll of 515. They said 221 people in Narman also were killed, At least 77 people were killed elsewhere.

People rushed out of their homes and many spent the night in the streets in the provincial capital of Erzurum as aftershocks rocked the city, the Anatolia news agency said. Schools closed.

Turkish President Kenan Evren and Premier Bulent Ulusu flew to the area. Leaders of political parties cut short their election cam

paigns elsewhere and traveled to Erzurum to visit the maimed and console relatives of the dead.

Officials in the capital city of Ankara said one planeload of Red Cross relief supplies had arrived from Switzerland and a second plane, with a 23-member

medical team, was expected later today,

Saudi Arabia donated $10 million for eartquake relief and Japan gave $21,000, officials said. They said the United States asked for a list of needed supplies to con-

< Please turn to page 8)

Court Allows

Airline Ruling On Pregnancy

WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court today left intact a ruling that allows Pan American World Airways to force its stewardesses to take unpaid leaves 5f absence when they become pregnant.

The court, without comment, turned down an appeal by female flight attendants who claim the policy constitutes illegal sex discrimination.

The issue in the case was complicated by the fact ihat the stewardesses worked originally for National Airlines, which was acquired by Pan American'in 1980

A federal judge in Florida ruled in 1977 that National Airlines violated Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act banning sex discrimination in employment by requiring stewardesses to take unpaid maternity leave as soon as they become pregnant.

He said maternity leave could be required after the 2()tfi week of pregnancy in the interest of oassenger safetv and perhaps as early as the 13th week if an airline ph vsician decided that pregnancy interfered with a sfewardess''ab:iit\ to do her job.

Similar pregnancy leave policies of other airlines were challenged in court around the same time. But the cases were not combined into one lawsuit.

Grenadian General Caught

.And in fact, a federal judge in California ruled that Pan .American's maternity leave policy, while identical to National's, did not violate federal law against sex discrimination. That judge ruled that a pregnant stewardess might not be able to perform tasks to protect the safety of passengers.

When Pan American acquired National, the .National stewardesses went back to federal court in Florida seeking an order to prevent Pan American from enforcing its pregnancy leave policy.

But the judge there rejected their plea in 1982, holding in effect that he could not overrule the decision of the federal judge in California.

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (AP) A man believed to be the Marxist general who seized control of Grenadas left-wing government in a bloody coup has been captured by American paratroopers, the U.S. military reported Sunday.

An announcement from the Pentagon said units of the 82nd Airborne Division seized an individual who claims he is Gen. Hudson Austin. It said the prisoner fits the description of Gen. Austin and was carrying identification to that effect.

Barbados state-run Caribbean Broadcasting Corp. had reported earlier that Austin was caught Sunday, but gave no details.

The reports came one day after U.S. Marines seized former

Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard, accused of provoking the coup that led to the U.S. invasion of (jrenada.

Austin organizaed the coup and named a Revolutionary Military Council following the slaying of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop on Oct. 19. Bishop had been under house arrest for a week in a power struggle with Coard, a hard-line Marxist.

The Pentagon also announced that the American death toll rose to 16, with 77 wounded and three missing. Four of the dead had previously been listed as missing since thousands of U.S. troops and a seven-nation Caribl^an force invaded

Grenada at dawn Oct. 25 and deposed the leftist military junta. Their stated aim was to restore order and protect civilians

Only scattered sniper fire was reported on the island Sunday.

U.S. military officials in Barbados said Air Force planes were transporting food and supplies into Grenada for tired and hungry residents of the tiny tropical island nation. American diplomats could not confirm this, but they said 500 displaced Grenadians may be eligible for emergency aid.

Election Signs Bring Protests

REFLKCTOH J]

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 1%7, 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.

SUGGESTS LEASH LAW FOR CATS, TOO Personally Im tired of the hue and cry from Greenville cat owners regarding traps, eh while the population of cats on the loose is growing at an alarming rate. They are free to roam where they darn well please and include m their wanderings severe scratching of paint on peoples autos. While all this is going on, dog owners have a leash law that tells them that their animals cannot go roaming all over the place. That is the most lopsided justice Ive ever seen. We dont need the proposed city ordinance regarding animal traps, we need to have the leash law apply to cats as well as dogs. J.H.

I-r THATS NIGHT FOR WITCHES AND GOBLINS - Its the night for trick-or-treaters and maybe a ghost or two. Pictured,

left to right in the dress for tonight are, Kathryn Hicks, 3:

Jayme Stokes, 4; Andrea Honea, 4, and Brandy Edwards, 5, The children were dressed for a Halloween party at a local nursery. (Reflector Photo by tommy Forrest)

East Carolina University and Greenville city officials said today that they have received complaints about political posters for candidates seeking office in the city election Nov. 8 being erected on the ECU campus Saturday.

Nadine Bowen, assistant to City Manager Gail Meeks, said a city ordinance makes it unlawful to post handbills or political campaign signs on or over any property or right of way owned or controlled by the city, with two exceptions.

She said temporary signs may be placed in the right of way of residential property when placed there by or with the premission of the owner or occupant. She said handbills may also be placed on city owned or controlled bulletin boards which are made available for public use as long as they are placed and maintained in accordance with rules and regulations adopted for the bulletim boards.

Mrs. Bowen noted that the ordinance provides that the city's director of public works is authorized to remove any posters or handbills when they are posted in violation of the ordinance

Jim .Mallory, associate dean tor orientation and ju

diciary at the university, said this morning that no one at the university gave anyone premission to erect the signs. I just think they put them up."

As a general rule, Mallory said, the university makes .-pace available for candidates to meet with students when requested, 'but does not approve anv flyers, posters or that type stuff.

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Drug-Alcohol Abuse Fight Is TV Plea

Bv PATRICIA McCOR.MACK I PI Health Editor

Nancy Reagan, in a television show to be broadcast next month, says parents can turn the tide in the battle against drug and alcohol abuse by their children, Parerit Power can make the difference, giving hope that the twin demons can be whipped and the epidemic quelled. Mrs. Reagan says in the two-part program, "The Chemical People," to be broadcast on public television Nov. 2 and 9.

Parent Power also is solicited in a new Ad Council Drug Abuse Prevention campaign conducted on behalf of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

"Get involved with drugs before your children do," says an Ad Council message to parents.

"Sooner or later, someone's going to offer to turn your children on. It could be their best friends. And chances are, you won'd be anywhere in sight.

"Obviously, the time to talk to your children about drugs IS before they have to make a decision on their own,"

For help with the drug talk, the Ad Council campaign invites parents to write for "Parents: What You Can Do About Drug Abuse. " iThe free pamphlet is available from "Get Involved," P.O. Box 1706. Rockville, Md. 20805).

A preview of "The Chemical People" for .Nov. 2 showed Mrs. Reagan, as host, speaking parent-to-parent. pleading with them to get involved. That broadcast and one the following week will launch a nationwide campaign to combat school-age drug and alcohol abuse More than 10,000 town meetings will convene immediately after each broadcast. Kids, parents, teachers, doctors, ministers, lawyers and people from all kinds of jobs will speak out about community drug problems. and plot plans of action.

Mrs. Reagan introduces the Nov. 2 show by citing what may be the major difficulty in combating the problem: "the wall of denial" created by parents, kids and communities.

"It's time for us to stop denying the extent of drug and alcohol abuse and bring It out of the court into the open." she said.

Lloyd Kaiser, general manager of WQED, Pittsburgh. Pa., producer of the show, said Mrs, Reagan worked very hard for two days in April while her parts of the show were filmed,

"We went over it many times." he said, "And she never lost patience.

"I must say I admire her decidation. We did it over and over until it was just right.

In the show's introduction, Mrs. Reagan says:

"I'm concerned about the widespread use of alcohol and drugs by our nation's young people This problem is far greater than we had reason to believe a few years ago.

"Today it's destroying dreams and tearing families apart. The numbers are terrifying. and behind the numbers are real children and real parents.

"I'm not an authority on drugs, but I do care about young people, and I don't think we can afford to lose a generation of our young people to chemicals"'

Mrs. Reagan says chemical abuse is everyone's problem.

"Its part of our lives and our childrens lives. We live in a chemical socity. A society where taking a drink or a pill to feel better, to relax, to enjoy life is common practice. Our children have acquired that habit, and now they need and deserve our help.

"If you don't think this chemical society affects you and your family. I'm afraid youre wrong. It does.

"Youre affected even if you don't have kids. Chemical abuse affects all of us"

Mrs. Reagan said she had gone around the country talking with experts and listening to families.

"Everywhere Ive gone I've tried to focus attention on the problem, a problem many of us would rather not think about, a problem wed . like to pretend isn't there," she said.

"I'm a parent, too, and I know how difficult it is to face a painful truth about your children.

"It's much easier to say. 'This isn't happening, not in my community, not in my family, not my child.'

"We build a wall of denial around the problem. But because we do care so much about our children, it's time for us to stop denying the extent of drug ,and alcohol abuse and bring it out into ^the open."

Mrs. Reagan says being a parent is one of life's great challenges for which there is no formal training.

"But there is no job with greater rewards than that of being a good parent.

"When my children were growing up in the turbulent 60s, I often wondered if I was doing everything possible to listen to their concerns and understand their problems. We all want to give our children the very best and protect them from harm.

"I know that few things in my life have frightened me as much as this drug epidemic. I'm scared to death for our children. Drug abuse doesn't solve problems; it makes problems It destroys lives"

For parents who want to get into the crusade against the drug and alcohol epidemic among school kids, the pamphlet "Parents: What You Can Do About Drug Abuse" offers these questions and answers.

Q. Can parents help prevent drug abuse

A. Yes, they can. In fact, parents are the best protection young people have against drug abuse,

Q, What is drug abuse prevention'i A. It means helping your children build a resistance to abusing drugs so that they never begin. It means stopping drug abuse before it starts.

Q. How do I help my children build that resistance to abusing drugs

A, You ve probably already started. You're raising your children with love, guidance and support, so you're well on the way to helping prevent drug abuse. Strong family support helps children develop the personal values and self-confidence they need to resist peer pressure to use drugs. It is important to realize, however, that despite your efforts peer pressure caii still have a strong influence on vour child.

(Please turn to Page 3)

CENTURY 21

Tipton & Associates 756-6810

Leonard Keith Moore celebrated first birthday on October 30,1983.

Mr. and Mrs. Lenny Moore of V Greenville are the parents. The grandparents are Mr. & Mrs,

W V. Newton, Jr. of Myrtle Beach. S.C and Mr. & Mrs. L. F, Moore of Loris. SC.; great-grandparents are Mrs. J A. Covington of Clio. S.C.. Mr & Mrs.

Lee Reeder of Jersey Sho're, Pa , and Mr, & Mrs. W. V Newton Sr

The answer to a knitters dream a sweater to knit with a synthetic yarn as soft as cashmere at a price and gauge close to sports- and worsted-weight yarns. If that isnt enough, this lovely pullover also is designed for machine washing and drying!

The enchanting tulip border yoke design is optional. It will be a breeze for those who enjoy pattern stitchery, but can be omitted if you prefer classic simplicity. Unabbreviated directions are written for sizes 10 through 18.

To obtain directions for making the Tulip Border Pullover, send your request for Leaflet No. KL-1030 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. K-1030 by sending a check or money order to Pat Trexler at the same address. Send $13.50 for size 10, $16.50 for sizes 12 or 14, $19.50 for sizes 16 or 18. Please specify your choice of mint green, chili red, shell pink, light gray, pale camel or winter white. To help you determine the size you need, the finished chest measurements in inches are given in parentheses, size 10 (34 1/2); size 12 (36), size 14 (39), size 16 (41), size 18 (42 1/2). The kit price includes the instruction leaflet, Delsoft synthetic cashmere cone yarn and the shipping charges.

All of the synthetic yarns and many of the blended yarns on the market today are not merely machine washable but machine washing is actually the preferred method of washing them. Many people are still a little uneasy about tossing a hand-knit article into the washer and dryer so let me give you some general guidelines.

These directions are specifically for the cashmere-like Delsoft yarn, but they apply equally to many other synthetics. If the yarn you are using has other washing instructions on the label, do follow those instructions, however.

Even before wearing, hand-knit garments usually have a more professional look and, in the case of a cashmere synthetic, more softness after washing.

Start with a clean washer filled to the low level with lukewarm water definitely not hot! Unless the garment is soiled, use no detergent for this first washing but add about a fourth of a cup of a good quality fabric softener.

If your machine has a delicate cycle, by all means use that setting. It is also a good idea to put a few other items in with the sweater to absorb some of the agitation. A couple of white or pastel pillowcases will do or a few pieces of machine-washable lingerie. Let the machine agitate the sweater so that the wator swishes through it for a few minutes and then spin it dry.

Reception Invitation

OVERSTOCKED

Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Coward invite friends and relatives to attend the 50th wedding anniversary celebration of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Romie Coward, Nov. 6 from 2-5 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson Jr., Route 2, VancebOTo.

SALE on WhMpOol Appliances

Electric

Families headed by young mothers are seven times more likely to be poor than others. Income of young teen mothers is half that of those who first gave birth in their 20s.

*258

KNIT SWEATER...is made with synthetic yarns and is suitable for machine washing and drying.

Some yarns prefer machine drying, but the synthetic cashmere does best if you lay it out on a towel-covered flat surface to dry.

The following instructions should be followed with extreme care with synthetic cashmere and not at all with other synthetics unless you are specifically instructed to do so or unless you test them on a sample swatch.

You can actually block a synthetic cashmere garment for a professional looking finish with the judicious use of steam. If you have access to a steamer, the hot steam will set the stitches and creases where you want them. While the fabric is hot, tapping it with the flat side of a yardstick will lay the stitches flat. Please note the use of the word "tap dont give it a beating!

If you use a steam iron, be very careful not to let the hot iron touch the knitted fabric. This is most important. Do not attempt to lift the garment off of the pressing surface until it is cool. While the fabric is hot you can stretch it, and once stretched it will never return to the original shape.

To wash by hand, do not rub. Just knead the article, much as you would knead dough, while it is under water. Too much rubbing or agitation can cause fuzz balls or pills.

(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 to participate in needlecraft activities. To

Enjajenient

Aniiouiued

Mr. and Mrs. L.M. Mizell of Simspon and Clarence Howell Jr. of Greenville announce the engagement of their daughter, Joy Lynn Howell, to Charles Keith Miller, son of William K. Miller of Greenville and Jeanette Miller of Bethel. A Dec. 10 wedding is planned.

Eastern

Electrolysis

1330AKM0NT DRIVE, SUITE 6 PHONE 75W034, GREENVILLE, NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST

Vote For

Edward Ed Carter

Greenville City Council November 8,1983

Carter Cares

Experienced Leadership

Establishment of a Ward System of Representation Better Representation for the poor, aged and disabled Improved Public Safety Cost-effective government

A plan for the orderly growth and development of Greenville Support for a responsive Greenville City Schools System *

Paid For By Friends Of Ed Carter

order, send $8.95 plus $1 for postage and handling to Pats Pointers Needlepoint Handbook, in care of this newspaper, 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairway, Kan. 66205. Please make checks payable to Universal Press Syndicate.)

it

Greenvilles Hnest bakery for63years.

815 Dickinson Ave.

A Variety Of Breads Baked Fresh Daily

French, Cheese. Raisin. German Rye. Whole Wheat & Butter Top.

752-5251

A Sticker Party!

Suntiay, November 6 2-5:00

Jefferson Florist

Sticker artwork on display Prizes

Sticker exchange for serious collectors (Please bring your sticker collections)

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752-6195

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CALLUS FOR AN EVE EXAMINATION WITH THE DOCTOR OF YOUR CHOICE





Couple Speaks Vows In Farmville On Sunday

FARMVILLE - Carol Lynn Allen and Jeffrey Lynn Heath, both of Farmville, were united in marriage Sunday at 4 p.m. The Rev. Dennis R. Ricks officiated at the double ring ceremony. Leigh Taylor served as acolyte.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Ray Allen of Farmville. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Edward Heath of Route 1, Farmville.

Mrs Bradford Lamm of Wilson was organist and Mrs. Jerry Bizzell of Wallace, cousin of the bride, sang The Wedding Song and the Wedding Prayer.

The bride, given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father, wore a formal gown of white satin over peau de soie designed with a Queen Anne neckline outlined in scalloped silk Venise lace beaded with p^rls. Beaded alencon lace enhanced the fitted bodice. The long fitted sleeves were fashioned of satin and finished in calla points overlaid in re-embroidered alencon lace. Matching lace encircled the modified waistline. The A-line skirt and attached chapel length train were accented with an edging of silk Venise lace. Appliques of alencon lace and seed pearls accented the skirt and train. She wore a chapel length veil with a full Juliet cap. Alencon lace and seed pearls cascaded from the cap. The bride carried a cascading bouquet of white silk roses, orchids' and stephanotis.

Melissa Dawn Lambert of Farmville was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Angela Kay Cash of Farmville, cousin of the bride. Mrs. Paul Edward Heath of Route 1, Farmville, sister-in-law of the bridegroom, Sarah Elizabeth Hunt of Farmville. George Lelia Sugg of Snow Hill, Cindy Lou Cunningham of Walstonburg and Laurie Jane Rogers of Raleigh.

They wore Williamsburg blue satin floor length gowns styled with fitted txSices, V-necklines fashioned with ruffled satin tiers at the shoulder, flared skirts with matching sashes. They carried colonial nosegays of light bronze and wine gerbera daisies interspersed with babys breath.

Honorary attendants were Donna Lynn Heath of Snow Hill. Mrs. Steven Ray Williamson of Walstonburg. Laura Ann Grantham of Charlotte and Adrienqe LaFar and Melissa Neisler. both of Raleigh. They wore formal gowns and carried a long-stemmed wine gerbera daisy.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included Paul Edward Heath of Farmville, brother of the bridegroom, Donnie Ray Allen of Raleigh, brother of the bride, Steven Earl Sowers of Fountain, William Thomas Folston of Stantonsburg, Steven Ray Williamson of Walstonburg and Martin Wayne Parker of Greenville, cousin of the bridegroom.

The mother of the bride wore a floor length gown of raspberry chiffon with long, sheer sleeves. The mother of the bridegroom chose a floor length gown of dusty rose

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MRS. JEFFREY LYNN HEATH

chiffon with long sleeves. Both wore cymbidium orchid corsages.

Grandmothers wore yellow chrysanthemum corsages.

Mrs. J. Thomas Hardy and Mrs. Vance B. Taylor of Farmville directed the wedding and Janet Murray of Snow Hill presided at the guest register.

After a wedding trip to Jamaica the couple will live near Farmville.

The bride is a graduate of Peach and Meredith Colleges and works at East Carolina University. The bridegroom is a graduate of Greene Central High School and is self-employed with Heath and Sons.

A reception was given by the brides parents in the church fellowship hall.

Drug-Alcohol

(Continued from Page 2)

Q. How can 1 tell if my child is abusing drugs or alcohol?

A. If you find alcohol, drugs or drug paraphernalia in your child's pos.session, there's a strong probability that your child is using drugs. Certain behavior can also warn you that your child may be involved with drugs:

-Abrupt change in mood or attitude.

-Sudden decline in attendance or performance at work or school.

-Sudden resistance to

Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Brock Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. F T. Carr.

Assisting in serving were Mrs. Manley Wooten, Mrs, Hilton Webb, Mrs. Jack Marshburn, Mrs. Alan Smith, Mrs. Edwin Webb, Mrs. Ralph Cash, Mrs. William Hardy and Lela Moseley, aunts of the bride, Paige Cash and Lisa Webb, cousins of the bride, Leigh Taylor and Michele Allen. Lou Evans and Lee Cash, cousins of the bride, distributed rice bags. Goodbyes were said to Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Allen and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Satterthwaite.

Following the rehearsal the parents of the bridegroom entertained at a dinner party at the Colonial Inn in Farmville.

discipline at home or school.

-Impaired relationship with family or friends. -Ignoring curfews.

- Unusual flare-ups of temper.

Halloween Safety Ensures No Tricks

By Abigail Van Buren

* 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR READERS: Its Halloween again and time to remind you that...

Somebodys child will be seriously injured or killed in a Halloween-related traffic accident.

Somebodys child will be badly maimed or fatally burned due to a flammable costume.

Somebodys child will become violently ill or die after eating poisoned candy or an apple containing a razor blade.

Somebodys child will be coaxed into an automo-bile or lured into a secluded area and sexually as-saulted,

To make sure that child isnt yours, here are some tips to ensure the safety of your children:

- Use flameproof costumes only. If costumes are made at home, treat the fabric with a flame-resistant solution.

- Because masks, floppy hats, wigs and veils often interfere with a childs vision, use makeup instead.

- Accessories such as swords, broomsticks, hatchets, wands, etc., should be made of cardboard rather than plastic, metal or wood. Sharp items are dangerous.

- Provide youngsters with flashlights to prevent falls on sidewalks or porch steps. (Positively no lighted candles should be carried!)

- Decorate your childs costume and trick-or-treat bag with reflective tape to make them highly visible to motorists.

- Remind children that they should never enter the home of a stranger or accept rides.

- Adults can help by keeping their yards well-lighted.

- Parents should check all treats before allowing children to eat them.

- Very young children should never be out after dark unless accompanied by an adult.

So, make it a safe Halloween, and come Thanksgiving, youll have more to be thankful for.

DEAR ABBY: A junior high school girl sought your advice after having told her gym teacher that she loved her and asked her to be her special friend. The teacher told her she felt uncomfortable being loved so much by a student, and she urged the girl to get over it.

You were right to advise the girl not to pursue a special friendship with this teacher.

Abby, as a representative for the National Education Association, I have seen my share of unsavory student/ teacher liaisons gone public, and I can only commend this teacher for seeing the danger in the situation.

Every day in every school, some student is falling in love with some teacher. Some of these gestures are reciprocated and, if made public, the teacher stands to lose a career or worse. School boards and the courts do not look kindly on teachers who violate the sacred trust of a student/teacher relationship.

Teaching is a more difficult job than most of the public realizes, and this letter illustrates just one of the occupational hazards. The gym teacher was correct and proper, even expressing her feeling of being uncomfortable with being loved. I applaud this teachers sound judgment

S.L., WICHITA, KAN.

DEAR ABBY: Please tell people to quit digging the morticians. After all, they are the last people in the world to let you down. 0-Lay!

FRANK BARNHILL IN HOUSTON

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

Monday. October3l. 1983    3

During the past decade, death rates from suicide at ages 15-19 rose by 60 percent among males in the general population and by more than 30 percent among females.

CARD OF THANKS

1 Would Like To Thank All My Friends For Their Prayers. Visits. Flowers. Cards & Food During My Recent Illness May God Bless You All.

I Love You,

Almeda Mercer

Bridge

Winners

Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Smiley were first place winners Wednesday morning in the duplicate bridge game played at Planters Bank. Their game percentage was .731 percent.

Others winning were Mrs. Effie Williams and Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts, second; tied for third were Mrs. Ralph Sullivan and Mrs. Van Jones with Mrs. David Fraade and Mrs. Paul Eck.

North-South winners Wednesday afternoon included: Mrs. Wiley Corbett and Mrs. Barry Powers, first with .618 percent; Mrs. J.H. Rhodes Jr. and Mrs. Roger Critcher Jr., second; Mrs. Beulah Eagles and Emma B. Warren, third; Mrs. J.M. Horton and Mrs. William Parvin, fourth.

East-West: Mrs. Effie Williams and Mrs. Harold Forbes, first with .590 percent; Mrs. W.R. Harris and Dave Proctor, second; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew de-Sherbinin, third; Mrs. C.F. Galloway and George Martin, fourth.

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Greenville City Council November 8th

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EditorialsAdaptation Will Occur

Exaggeration is a commonplace tool to get attention or underline a point, just as it is the basis for humor.

No humor was intended in the EPA warning of vast changes in the environment and catastrophic impact of the Greenhouse Effect.

(If you came in late, the Greenhouse Effect has been anticipated for years; and is linked to the release of vast quantities of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere which, it is believed, will trap heat, melting polar caps and raising the ocean levels to flood low-lying islands and coastal lands.)

The Environmental Protection Agencys report, projecting dire results in the 21st century, drew immediate attention and reaction. The study flatly stated the trend could not be reversed.

The EP.A study was followed by a National Academy of Sciences two-year exploration of the same subject which, while "more conservative, was in agreement with the overall picture. NAS experts opined the world had time to further study the phenomena and determine what to do about it. In that, they were less pessimistic than the EPAs scientists.

As the NAS study chairman said, we speak of probabilities." and our ability to adapt to them.

Both reports served their intended purposes: to peer into the future, to inform the worlds people of what lies in store, and to remind that there are resources of adaptability which have long been held to be the single greatest quality of humankind.

In short, it is anticipated there will .someday be changes in our weather and in the worlds geography; but it will be a slow process, perhaps barely perceptible to the generations who witness the changes, and people will adapt to those changes.Ham Finds New Role

Last week ham radio operators all over the nation were listening to the transmissions from a medical student in Grenada.

What they were hearing was highly important to a nation that suddenly found itself in a military operation, because reporters had been barred from the invasion of Granada by the Reagan administration.

Twenty-two-year-oid Mark Berettella reportedly performed well in giving information about the war to his fellow ham operators, who in turn relayed it to the nation.

Berettella's congressional representative from New Jersey says he will recommend the highest civilian award for him. It would be appropriate - and if Berettella should decide against a medical career he might want to consider a role as a war correspondent.

Rowland Evans and Robert NovakWeinberger Balked At Military Response

WASHINGTON During agonizing hours following Sundays Beirut massacre, the Pentagon deflected a long-anticipated move to seek Israels help out of the Lebanese quagmire, pushing hard instead for the earliest possible exodus of the Marines consistent with American credibility and honor.

For weeks, during slowly-escalating sniper fire against the undefendable Marines, high administration officials in the State Department and White House had eyed the U.S.-supplied military might of Israel as a last-ditch, surefire response to Islamic extremists. It was presumed at State and in the intelligence community that if a disaster happened, the Syrians could be behind it and Israel could handle Syria.

Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, backed to a man by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, objected. He feared that a turn toward Israel would plunge U.S. stock in the Arab world to dangerous lows, opening up the oil-rich Middle East to a new chapter of Soviet exploitation.

So well did Weinberger carry that argument into the West Wing basement when President Reagan summoned the National Security Council last Sunday that the Israeli option

is now a dead letter. It will remain so, unless the savage act against the Marines can be laid at the doorstep of Damascus. With or without help from Israel (help it might not wish to give), Weinberger set the U.S. firmly against any military response.

The Israeli card looked potent until the time came to play it, one policy insider said. The result of inducing an Israeli strike against Syrian forces in Lebanon would be psychic satisfaction he explained, but the closer U.S.-Israeli strategic partnership would drive the wedge deeper between Washington and moderate Arab states.

From the moment Sundays deliberations began, Weinberger suggested he was prepared to fight within the administration against a new U.S.-Israeli military partnership. As the first top official to comment on the massacre, following Reagan himself, Weinberger hinted pro-Iranian fundamentalists of the Shiite sect were to blame. He had no firm evidence, but his insinuations purposely left the way open for Reagan to pursue new understandings with Syria while the CIA and allied intelligence services search for who really did it.

With the instigators of last Aprils murderous assault on the U.S. Em

bassy in Beirut still undiscovered after months of probing, it is doubtful that the world soon will learn the identity of last Sundays terrorists. That makes revenge or sensible ' retaliation difficult. The president is not vengeful, a White House aide told us, because he knows we have not been able to locate or even identify the perpetrators.

That alleviates concerns of Weinberger and the Joint Chiefs that seeking reprisals with the help of Israels awesome military power would damage the U.S. throughout Islam, from North Africa to the Persian Gulf. Instead of retaliation, the Pentagon wants new ways to guarantee maximum security for the Marines for as brief a time as possible before withdrawing them.

Reagan, who faces devastating political problems at home arising from the Beirut disaster, cannot allow even veiled suggestions that the U.S. will turn tail and run. The president needs time and political changes in Lebanon to prepare removal of the Marines from Beiruts shooting gallery. He is being urged by a variety of advisers inside and outside the administration including Henry Kissinger to make a new push for the 1982 West Bank peace plan, using all his influence to

force both Israel and Jordan into line.

But no breakthrough on his long-becalmed peace plan is expected in time to facilitate a graceful withdrawal from Lebanon as soon as Reagan wants it and needs it Weinberger is clearly telling the president that he cannot wait that long to bring out the Marines.

Reagan refused to listen to the secretary of defense and the Joint Chiefs when they warned that he would be creating a disaster waiting to happen if he sent the Marines to Lebanon. Now that Weinberger has been proved tragically correct, the presidents ear, for the moment at least, may be more closely attuned to the Pentagon.

Grandiose hopes of a miraculous breakthrough on the West Bank or anywhere else in the Mideast seem as detached from the cold, new reality in this capital as an American-backed Israeli military thrust against Syria. Despite his statement on Monday that the Marines were staying, Ronald Reagan was getting ready to cut losses as soon as he can do it without running away, and that could be the beginning of wisdom.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises. Inc.

John Cunniff

Economic Currents

Art BuchwaldNavy Gets A Whirl At Changes

NEW York .APi - The world todav might be a sea ot troubles, but there are a tew currents here and there that suggest a good many .Americans are teeling rather serene about one aspect of life, their finances.

A'ou may have noted, for example, that the markets tor stocks and gold and silver and diamonds don't get hysterical any more, even if the world seems to be blowing up and threatening the value of more ephemeral things.

.And you probably have observed also that people are out there buying up goods as if tomorrow were a certainty. And that they they are borrowing against their futures too. which generally is believed to indicate confidence.

Why this state of financial affairs should exist isn't altogether clear on the surface, as nothing is that involve the human mind and emotions. But those current.-, do steer us to some plausibilities.

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

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Established 1882

Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning

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Elsewhere in North Carolina 84 35 Per Month Outside North Carolina 85.50 Per Month MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights o( publlcatiot s of special diapatchee hare are also reserved.

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Try this one: Financial confidence is up because the stock market is up.

This assumption seems to confuse cause and effect, and it might. But an argument nevertheless is offered in its defense. It is this: Since the stock market js up so is the net worth of the people who make up the stock market.

Researchers at Merrill Lynch Capital Markets provide some documentation. The value of equity holdings, they point out. exploded by $514 billion, or 50 percent, between mid-1982 and mid-1983.

If other securities are added in, this measure of household wealth grows to an astonishing $661 billion, $140 billion of it added in the April-May-June quarter of this year alone.

Comments ML: .Although stock holdings accounted for only 28 percent of all deposits and securities owned bv households in mid-1982. they contributed fully two-thirds of the gain in net worth over the subsquent year."

And what does this do to behavior"? Although difficult to quantifv. say the ML researchers, it almost goes without saying that a household that feels better off financially is going to act out that feeling in the marketplace.

The marketplace has indeed been booming, for cars especially and for houses until recently, and for some electronic items too. Installment credit has been up and savings down, and that doesnt happen if people arent confident.

In fact, the savings rate in the second quarter of the year dropped to a 33-year low of just 4 percent. In effect, people felt less of a need to save out of current income because of their increased wealth from the stock market.

This explanation does tend to leave you with the nagging question of which came first, the stock market ascent or the confidence that caused it. A bit of each perhaps, one factor reinforcing the other.

While that answer still might not satisfy, it does at any rate seem as plausible as other theories being offered for the bullish behavior of Americans in a world of friction and fighting.

Another theory is that people have become inured to crises and no longer react to them. And still another, that there is no escape in gold or silver or stocks or anything else.

Therefore, it goes, you might as well act happy.

The U.S. Navy is getting a real workout. Just the other day the captain of the aircraft carrier Snail Darter was carrying out exercises in the Indian Ocean when his communications officer came in with a radio message.

Washington has ordered us to proceed immediately to the coast of Nicaragua and stand by to interdict any ships bringing in arms to the Sandinista government. At the same time were to let through any boats bringing arms to Honduras, but were to stop and search vessels approaching El Salvador to make sure they are not supplying the rebels.

Left rudder right, steady as she goes.

Two weeks later. The communications officer wakes up the captain. Sir, urgent dispatch, top secret from NAV ATLANTIC. Disregard taking up station off Nicaragua and proceed immediately to Sea of Japan and stand by in South Korean waters to guard against sneak attack by North Korean planes. Patrol entire area on 24-hour basis.

The captain said, Tell them message received and make course for South Korea.

How do we get there, sir? The carriers too big for the Panama Canal. I guess we have to go around the tip of Argentina. We better refuel in Brazil.

Aye, aye, sir.

Three weeks later the navigation officer comes on the bridge. We should be off South Korea tomorrow night, sir.

Good.

Sir, message from White House Situation Room.

Read it.

Proceed maximum speed to San Diego, pick up 2,000 U.S. Marines and then sail to Beirut and stand off Med to give air cover to peacekeeping troops. Further orders forthcoming as you approach station.

Good grief, dont they know where we are?

Yessir. I told them our position, but they said this is priority one. Turn the damn thing around, helmsman, and lets see how we can get to Beirut from here.

Four weeks later.

We're going through the Strait of Gibraltar, sir.

Notify NAV Naples. Tell them we should be off Beirut in three days.Mike Feinsilber

Just got a rocket from NAV MED flagship, sir. Were to alter course and head direct for the Strait of Hormuz.

Do they say why?

Apparently the French have sold fighter planes and Exocet missiles to the Iraqis, and the Iranians are threatening to close the strait and cut off Mideast oil. Our mission is to make sure they dont do it.

"Do we have any up-to-date maps of the Strait?

Washington is sending them out by special massenger. They should be here in 24 hours.

Now hear this. This is the captain speaking. This ship is not going to Beirut. We are proceeding to Iran. The Iranians may try to close Strait of Hormuz. Unfortunately they are flying American planes we sold them when the shah was there. So make sure when you shoot down aircraft its one of their guys and not one of ours. Also dont shoot down any French planes unless they shoot at us. Good hunting, men.

A week later. Telephone call for you, captain, on scrambler.

Ted, this is Beetle at NAVOPS. There seems to be some sort of a dustup in the Philippines, and Mar-

^Rocks Laying Around'

WASHINGTON (AP) In the stump speech hes been delivering across the country, black leader Jesse Jackson has a metaphor about rocks just laying around. Every astute politician in America is aware of these rocks.

They are the untapped black vote.

For effect, Jackson calls the roll and compares the number of unregistered blacks with Ronald Reagans winning margin in key states.

Alabama, carried by Reagan with 17,000 votes, has 287,000 unregistered blacks, Arkansas, Reagans by 5,000, has 87,000, South Carolina, where Reagan won by a margin of 11,000, has 328,000 unregistered blacks. New York, carried by Reagan with 165,000 votes, has 915,000 unregistered blacks. ,

Jackson says these are rocks that some

David can hurl against some Goliath,

Whether or not all those blacks register to vote, the numbers are registering in peoples minds.

And the effects are making themselves felt even outsjde the political arena.

It may be a sign of the times that in 1983 a black man went into space, a black woman was crowned Miss America, a black leaderwill be memorialized with a national holiday and Jackson is weighing a bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.

It doesnt matter whether or not those events occurred out of the most cynical of reasons. What matters is that they are taking place.

Assume:

- That NASA selected astronaut Guion Bluford for an early trip on the shuttle

because it was aware of the public relations payload such a flight would carry.

- That, in selecting Vanessa Williams of Millwood, N.Y., the Miss America judges got a message when the states sent four pretty black women to Atlantic City.

- And that politicians in Congress voted for creating a legal holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. out of a respect for, or fear of, the power of the black vote and not because they thought so highly of Kings earthly achievements.

Even if all that were true in this most hard-bitten world, it still would b( evidence that at last black people begun to emerge from the shadows American life'.

cos could fall. We have to get a carrier there as fast as possible to show the flag. This order oomes straight from the top. Full power, Ted, and dont zigzag.

For Gods sake. Beetle. Tell them Im sailing as fast as I can.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Elisha DouglassStrength For Today

The great philospher and brilliant converstationalist, Samuel Johnson, once declared, Gratitude is a fruit of great cultivation; you do not find it among gross people. The English statesman, Benjamin Disraeli, also remarked that gratitude is the rarest of the virtues.

If we think back over our lives we find that sometimes the people for whom we have done the most have sometimes had no appreciation at all for our efforts. Gratitude is not only rare, it is a virtue which if manifested sincerely and enthusiastically will always warm some heart and produce a most favorable reaction. The person who takes everything for granted and fails to say thank you, either to God or to man, is an unloving and unloved creature.

Gratitude is the capacity on the part of a recipient to enter into the mind and heart of the giver. So be grateful. Your fellow men will love you if you are andsowilLGod. t





Twine To Be Radio Guest

City Manager Gail Meeks announced that the guests on the City Hall Notes radio program this week will be Bill Twine of the recreation and parks department and Nelson Staton of the police department.

Twine will discuss adventure programs sponsored by his department and Staton will talk about the police recruitment program. City Hall Notes is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6; 30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.Nobles Wins Scholarship

Elwood Nobles, Winterville town clerk, has been awarded a $150 scholarship to attend the 1983 certification session of the International Institute of Municipal Clerks at the Institute of Government on Chapel Hill.

The scholarship was presented by the North Carolina Association of Municipal Clerks. The certification institute is held over a three-year period and attendance includes 27 clerks from across North Carolina. Two scholarships were awarded.

Ayden Town Clerk Ralph Ford is also attending the institute.Solicitation Requests Approved

Police Capt. John Briley announced the approval of requ^ts by Chicod Elementary School to conduct a merchant solicitation Oct. 14-31 to obtain prizes to be used at the schools Halloween carnival, and by the Mental Health Association of Pitt County to conduct a merchant solicitation Tuesday through Dec. 16 to collect gifts for Pitt residents at Cherry Hospital and Caswell Center.Collision Investigated

Cars ^iven by Anna Marie Perkins of Winterville and Seher Mine Guzey of 200 Verdant St., collided about 7:06 p.m. Sunday at the intersection of 10th Street and College Hill Drive, police reported today.

Officers, who charged Ms. Guzey with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety, estimated damage at $800 to the Perkins car and $1,500 to the Guzey car.Firelighting Charges Filed

Linwood E. Coward Jr., 27 of Grimesland and Michael Ray Taylor, 26 of Greenville were charged with firelighting deer by wildlife enforcement officers following a 12-50 a.m incident Thursday.

Officer Kay Dunn said the two were taken into custody near Sheppards Mill Pond off secondary road 1555 near Stokes. Dunn said a spotlight and .30-06 caliber rifle were confiscated from the men.Candidates To Appear

A Pepsi Break featuring candidates for Greenvilles City Council and mayoral elections will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Willis Building, First and Reade streets in Greenville.

The topic is A Candidates Forum and the program is designed to acquaint the public with candidates. The forum is open to all Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce members and interested citizens.

For further information contact the chamber office at 752-4101.

New Squad Makes 5 Arrests

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

The Greenville police departments drug and vice squad began operations last Tuesday, and in less than a week have arrested five people for possession of marijuana and one for prositu-tion.

Chief Ted Holmes said the newly formed squad arrested Raymond Andrew Johnson, 18, of 204 Mumford Road on prostitution charges and Rodney Kendall, 18, of 1495 Fleming St. on charges of possession of marijuana in connection with a 10:30 p.m. incident on Arlingtom Boulevard Thursday night.

Friday night, according to Holmes, the narcotics and

Two Hurt In Wrecks Saturday

Two people were injured and an estimated $5,400 damage resulted from three traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Saturday.

Officers said an estimated $2,000 damage resulted to each of two cars involved in a 12 p.m. collision at the intersection of 11th and Charles streets.

Drivers of the vehicles were identified as Michael James Branson of 519 Longmeadow Rd. and Julia Preston Waller of Kinston. Police, who charged Branson with failing to stop for a stop sign, said Ms. Waller was injured in the collision.

Rebecca Wallace Leary of Washington, was injured when her car ran off Dickinson Avenue about 1,000 feet west of the Maxwell Street intersection about 2:21 p.m. and collided with a tree. Damage to the car was set at $800.

Investigators said Thomas Earl Clark of Winterville was charged with failing to reduce his speed enough to a void, an accident following investigation of a 1:22 p.m. mishap on Fifth Street, 100 feet north of the Nash Street intersection. Officers said the Clark car collided with a vehicle operated by Ethel Smith Mills of Route 2, Greenville, causing $400 damage to the Clark car and $200 damage to the Mills auto.

vice officers arrested Zelma Parker, 28, and Vincent Boris Hemby, 17, both of 202B Arthur St., on possession of marijuana charges following a 9 p.m. search of their Arthur Street home.

Saturday night, the officers arrested Bobby Gene Howard Jr., 17, of Route 1, Aurora, and Anthony Wayne

Haddock, 18 of Route 2, Aurora, on possession of marijuana charges following an 11:15 p.m. incident in a arking lot at the intersection of Third and Cotanche streets.

Holmes, who has headed the department since Oct. 3, announced Oct. 12 that a narcotics and vice enforcement squad would be formed

to concentrate on street level drug and vice problems.

Street level drug problems are of particular concern to the department, and I believe that local law enforcement agencies should take all reasonable action to insure that drug use is minimized, and vice laws are enforced. Holmes said at the time.

Officer Retires

Chief TedHolmes said today that Lt. Redding B. Elks has retired from the Greenville Police Department after 29 years service.

Elks, 53, a native of Beaufort County, attended Grimesland schools and joined the police department here a patrolman in May 1954.

Elks was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in 1966 and has been supervisor of a uniformed division shift since that time.

Holmes commended Elks for his contributions to the department over the years and his service to the citizens of Greenville.

REDDING B. ELKS

Youth Killed

A Route 3, Vanceboro, boy was killed Sunday when he rode his bicycle into the path of a car.

Trooper L.P. ohnson said Clifford Louis Toler III, 14, died immediately as he was hit on U.S. 17 4.7 miles south of Vanceboro at 11:30 a.m. The driver of the car which hit him was identified as Guy Hardy Whitford, 52, of New Bern. Trooper Johnson said no charges were being filed.

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for

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Elect a well qualified man of outstanding experience.

Former member Greenville City Council 4 years; Mayor Pro-tem 2 years

Paid For By Friends of Dr. M.W. AldridgeTeen Discussion Scheduled

Parents of teen-agers and other adults who are interested in teens and their families will meet at Ayden Middle School Library Tuesday at 7 p.m. for a Lets Talk session.

Lets Talk is sponsored by the Pitt County Action Coalition for Teens, a project to raise community awareness about teen concerns and to access community needs. The Lets Talk discussions are open to the public.Mullen To Be Chairman

Jim Mullen, an evaluation supervisor for the state Division of Vocational Rehabilitation, was recently elected chairman-elect of Chapter IV of the North Carolina Rehabilitation Association.

Mullen received his undergraduate and masters degrees from East Carolina University. The NCRA is a subsidiary of the national association, which works toward advancing the rehabilitation of persons with physical and mental disabilities.Two Purses Reported Stolen

Police are investigating the theft of two purses in Greenville Saturday night and Sunday morning.

Oficers said Erica Susan Foley of Massapequa, N.Y., reported that her pocketbook was taken from a room at 401 South Jarvis St. between 9:30 p.m. a.nd 11 p.m. Saturday while the residents of the home were away. The puree contained $18 in cash.

Police said Tamara Joann High of New Bern reported that her pocketbook, containing $3 in cash and a $40 check, was taken from a car parked in a lot at the intersection of Fourth and Cotanche streets early Sunday morning.

Mental

Health

Perspectives

View the chemical people broadcast and participate in a discussion of school age drug and alcohol abuse at Rose High School at 7:15 p.m. on November 2 and 9. Be a part of the nationwide community campaign against drug and alcohol abuse. Sponsored by Pitt County Mental Health Center, Greenville City Schools and the Action Coalition for Teens.

Pitt Cq Mental Health. Metjtal Retardation & Substance Abuse Center 752-71,t1

Four Students Hurt In Wreck

MANTEO, N.C. (AP) - A school bus wreck involving six cars gave four students minor injuries this morning, state Highway Patrol troopers reported.

The accident occurred at 8 a.m. on U.S. 64 near Manteo when one car not involved in the wreck stopped to let out a passenger, said trooper Michael Rivenbark.

The six cars behind it failed to decrease speed and hit each other in a chain reaction, he said.

Each one of the cars failed to stop to avoid an accident, Rivenbark said. The bus was the last one and he crunched up everybody.

RE-ELECT

GEORGE PUGH

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

Your Vote and Support on November 8th will be greatly appreciated

Paid For By Friends To Re-elect George Pugh

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A Hom6Stead ' ((>MPI.KTK HO.MKSTK.XD ... with a main two-sion house, year. Surviving cultivated flowers and wildflowers decorate Stands Forlorn    ^    already    the    large    yard    in    all    seasons    of    the    year.

victim to decav and storm, continue to deteriorate vear bv

BRIGHT COLORS ... adorn a tobacco barn    paper, tin rusted to a deep orange, and I

beginning to be enveloped by Virginia creeper,    smaller surface ares of white and green make

honeysuckle and trumpet vines. Black tar    this a colorful wayside sight.Eyesores, Or Weathered Beauties Conveying A Special Rural Charm?

To destroy or to enjoy as is? That is a question increasingly being asked - whether it is wiser to tidy up the rural landscape of eastern North Carolina or to accept as part of the ambience the increasing numbers of buildings abandoned each year, and which with the passage of time begin to deteriorate.

Advocates of beautification feel that a general clean-up campaign would significantly enhance the appearance of the countryside. Measures this contingent stump for would result in removal of structures in advanced stages of deterioration and action to paint, cleanup and repair salvaga-ble buildings.

On the other side of the issue are those who claim that one of the particular charms of the area and of the entire South is the appeal of weathered wood, the random beauty of landscapes fashioned by nature. Once a structure is abandoned, nature quickly reasserts itself, encompassing such places with vines, wild flowers, new tree growth.

Primary advocates of the let nature take its course stand are poets, artists and persons addicted to nostalgia for old places, old things that are part of their rural roots.

On one point, both factions agree. There exists a pressing need to identify, and where possible, save for posterity houses, barns or other structures with a historical significance. There's a surprisingly large number of such places in rural eastern North Carolina, many of them clearly in an endangered state.Text And Photos By Jerry Raynor

SI RHOI NDKI) BY .\ (OR.\ FlKl.l) ... \ sizeable packhouse. the upper door open to the sun. stands adjacent to a corn field. Although

weathered from not being painted, the structure is sturdy and has an undamaged tin roof.

.M.AI.VTAI.NEI) ... This roadside line of tobacco barns, condition, with tne grounds ; logs, the others constructed of plank, are kept in good vines and large plant growth.

rnur tbiuw ... of wild white fall asters block the entrance    is silhouetted against

to this abandoned small metal storage barn. A white butterfly    interior of tbe building.





Farm Scene

BySAMUZZELL Agricultural Extension Agent

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - Raul Alfonsin of the centrist Radical Civic Union won the presidential race in elections to replace Argentinas 7-year-old military regime, returns today showed. The victory ended the Peronist Partys four-decade domination of national politics.

With more than 80 percent of ballots counted, Alfonsin, a 56-year-old lawyer and former congressman, had 52.6 percent of the popular vote compared to Peronist candidate Italo Luders 39 percent.

Alfonsin captured 6,155,234 votes of a total of 11,701,347

Smoking Ban To Face Vote

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Smokers and non-smokers will cross paths at the voting booth Nov. 8, when voters decide whether to regulate the legal weed in workplaces, but things are more than a little cross already.

The controversial issue has some people fighting mad, while others think the situation just plain stinks.

If anybody complained about my smoking, Id have to punch them, warned Anne Brunetti, a legal secretary.

The anti-smoking ordinance was proposed by Board of Supervisors Presi-dent Wendy Nelder, approved by the board and signed by Mayor Dianne Feinstein.

But before it could take effect, the issue was forced onto the ballot by a petition championed by tobacco companies, smokers and advocates of free choice.

A yes vote on the measure would uphold the no-smoking ordinance, which provides a $500-a-day fine for violators and would force employers to ban smoking altogether if employees demanded it. A no vote would repeal it.

Correction

The outlines identifying the photographs of Jerry Venable and Bob Harkrader of Wachovia Bank & Trust Co. were switched in the business section of The Daily Reflector Sunday. Venable was incorrectly identified as Harkrader and vice versa.

in returns from 52,184 of the 67,561 polling stations. Luder, a former senator, received 4,565,991 on behalf of the labor-based Peronists.

Candidates of 10 other parties trailed far behind. Oscar Alende was third in the balloting with just 278,042 votes, or 2.4 percent.

The final count, with more than 14 million ballots cast, was not expected until later today.

A jubilant, banner-waving crowd of thousands of supporters cheered Alfonsin as he arrived early today at the Radical party headquarters. Alfonsin leads a left-of-center faction in the Radicals, a middle-class, fundamentally social democratic party.

In a speech from the party headquarters balcony, he called on Argentines to raise the flag of national unity, the flag of democratic coexistence and the flag of social justice.

Were setting out for a new Argentina that is going to struggle for human dignity, he also told supporters.

The six-year presidential term is scheduled to begin Jan. 30. But military president Gen. Reynaldo Bignone has acknowledged the date may be moved up.

The Daily Reflector. GreenviJ

Fall is the optimum time to take soil and nematode samples. During the fall the crops are out of the field, tem^ratures are moderate and comfortable and nematode populations have built up to near their high levels for the year.

These factors mean that the necessary soil samples can be taken more easily and nematode populations will be easier to detect and count. Soil sampling is an inexpensive way to find out important things about conditions of a field, garden, lawn or any other place where plants will be raised.

Soil sampling is a free service in North Carolina. The N.C. Department of Agriculture processes all soil samples for free at its agronomic division laboratory in Raleigh. Nematode samples cost only $1 but can save the average farmer in eastern North Carolina hundreds of dollars.

The soil sample report that the NCDA lab sends back will give relative levels of major plant nutrients, some micronutrients, soil chemical factors like pH, an acidity index and a soils ability to provide basic nutrients. This information allows specific fertilizer blends to be formulated for the farmer. Fertlizer and lime requirements come back to the grower on a weight per area basis. For crops that are likely to be planted in large areas, the results will be in tons per acre. For lawns, gardens and ornamentals, the results will be expressed in terms of pounds per 1,000 square feet.

Therefore, a sample of the upper six-eight inches of the soil can be analyzed and the necessary nutrients can be applied. The upper few inches of soil is the zone of maximum root growth and any improvements we try to make below this depth are difficult to do. There is no way to look at a soil and tell how much lime or fertilizer is necessary. Most of our soils in eastern North Carolina are acid in nature and largely infertile. It is only with the addition of lime and fertilizer that the beautiful land we have becomes profitably productive.

Soil sample information is available at any North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service office. In Pitt County many garden centers and agricultural chemical suppliers also have sample materials on hand. After taking the sample they can be packaged and mailed or deposited at the extension office.

In years past there has been an avalanche of soil samples arriving at the lab in Raleigh at the same time. With a large staff on hand, turn-around time id often weeks instead of months away.

What can soil samples? They can give you an idea of what fertilizer materials youll need prior to planting or after planting, what fertilizer analysis youll ne^, how much to distribute and tell you about your soils chemistry. By taking soil samples at least every two years, many of the difficulties in growing plants will be simplified.

Alfonsin Ends Peronists' Era

Monday^^ctober 31. 1983    7

Announei Cdndidacy On Thursday

DIRECTORY ART - Sara W. Hodgkins, secretary of the N. C. Department of Cultural Resources, receives the original art for this years Carolina Telephone directories from T.P. (Ted) Williamston, CT&T vice president for administration. The cover features illustrations pertaining to the work of

Americas 400th Anniversary Committee. The Elizabeth II is pictured on the front. Garv illustrator Pete Turner designed the cover of the directory, which will be distributed to more than 600,000 customers in 50 North Carolina counties.

ATLANTA (AP) - The Rev. Jesse Jackson, demanding a new covenant linking blacks to the Democratic Party, organized labor and big business, says he will seek to become the first black presidential candidate nominated by a major party.

The civil rights leader said he is running for the 1984 Democratic nomination because blacks have an investment in the Democratic Party, "and we want a return on our investment.

Sunday, in a speech at Morehouse College in Atlanta and in a taped television interview, Jackson said he would formally announce his candidacy on Thursday.

"We have a dual mission." he said. "One part is to remove the repressive Reagan regime. The other is to achieve parity.

"Our position has been that

we have been an unofficial candidate in the Democratic primaries." Jackson said. As of Thursday, he said. "I expect to become an official candidate."

.OUlS LARK

CITY

COUNCIL

Paid For By Louia Clark

CUFFS

'Mkc Lillirin' Hioc At ftS ^Seafood House and Oyster Bar

* wO bllllUII    ml    Ww    /    i    Wasiiinyton    Highway    (NC.    33    Ext.)    Greenville,    North    Carolina

AMERICUS, Ga. (AP) -Lillian Carter, the spry and forthright mother of former President Jimmy Carter whose full life spanned politics, the Peace Corps and the limelight of her sons White House years, is dead at the age of 85.

Mrs. Carter, affectionately known as Miss Lillian, died of cancer at 5:05 p.m. Sunday at Americus-Sumter County Hospital.

r-

LILLIAN CARTER The former president and his wife, Rosa ynn, were at Mrs. Carters bedside when she died, along with her other son, Billy, and her daughter, Gloria Carter Spann, said hospital administrator James Griffith.

Dr. Paul Broun said Mrs. Carter, who underwent a radical mastectomy in 1981, died of cancer after a period of declining health.

A graveside service was scheduled for 3 p.m Tuesday

SHOP-EZE

West End Shopping Center

Phone 756-0960

Tuesday Luncheon Special

HAMBURGER

STEAK

*2.39

Coffee..............10*    cup

Special Served with 2 Fresh Vegetables a Rolls.

Views On Dental

Health

Kenneth T. Perkins. D.D.S.PA    Kjt

SCUBA DIVERS BEWARE

What does scuba diving have to do with dentistry? If you are a scuba diver, be sure to mention this to your dentist. Ask how the treatment you are having could affect you as a scuba diver. It could save you a lot of unnecessary pain and problems. For example;

If a scuba diver is being treated for root canal therapy which is temporized partially with cotton and he goes diving, complications can result-and most probably will. In diving, the atmospheric pressure changes. In fact, the pressure increases tremen

dously with each foot you descend. When air is trapped within the cotton fibers in a root canal, the air will expand when the diver surfaces resulting in a whopper of a toothache.

Even a filling which may have an air pocket can cause the diver problems on descent. The pressure is decreased (relative to the outside pressure of the water) and the air pocket is compressed. This could cause pain. In any case, the diver is probably going to need a dentist in a hurry. This may be a problem, especially if you like to dive off remote islands.

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

at Lebanon Cemetery in Plains.

During her sons tenure in the White House, Mrs. Carter traveled the world, but was fond of returning home to Plains to get barefoot.

She once advised a congressional committee interested in the problems of hunger and population planning, Dont retire until you

have to. And if you do retire, find a hobby and just keep on living. Dont get in a rocking chair and rot out.

Complete Radiator Service

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

Washington Highway (N C. 33 Ext.) Greenville, North Carolina Phone 752 3172

Mon. thru Thurs. Night

$095 Slminp  C

IneOther

StateBira

fi

c

Everybody knows that North Carolinas state bird is the cardinal. Butifyou looked around eastern North Carolina, youdprobably find more Berdue broilers than red birds.

Over 500 fermers in this state now raise more than

1(X) million Perdue broilers every year. And these birds are processed at Perdues processii^ plant in Lewiston or Robersonville. These broilers get their start

in North (^arolina as well. Perdue breeder growers in this state ship their eggs to our hatcheries in Murfreesboro, Kenly and Hali&x. And their

feed? Its North C.an)lina-grown com and soy

beans purchased by Perdue and processed at feed mills located in Wilson and Cofield

North Carolina.

Facilities like these have helped make Perdue one of the nations largest broiler

producers, and the largest supplier of finesh ptxiltry to the northeast market!

And the demandforourproductscon

tinues! In feet, our broiler plant in

Robersonville is plannir^ to open a

second shift. As a result. Perdue

needs 145 more broiler houses to

support the expansion. If ycxid

like togrowwith us,get in touch today: Call coUeal-7;5-4151 or send in the coiqx)n below:

TheGrowii^ Company

Id like to talk chicken w ith Perdue.

I .Address.

V

State____

/.ip_

E33mi3\

I .Mail to; Berdue. PO. Box t28, Roberyimille. \( J-.S"

^    GRN65EE

1





g | ' :) illy Retiector. Greenville. N.C.

Monday, October 31,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Ild^S

RALKIGll. \.C. (AP \('I)A The trend on the North ('atvlina hog market toda> was mostly steady, i list a nee,' 2' cents higher. K:n,s;.';', 'm 2i, Glinton, Kfi/al'-ethtiiun, P'ayetteville. Iha'.r., PiiiK thll, fhadbourn. .\\de:r, Vvr.v i.t'vei. Laurin-hure and Benson 39.25, \V:Miii .9..50: Sahsburv 38.00, Rowiami lorik'i'

>\ e;eh:t>

Wils";; '

3;;,till. Spivey's ' 2,'i Sows: all iH' pounds up;

Wmiae. net' '

Favetteville .Vhiiaviile 34.00.    Alim

Spivey's Cor-    ^Xker

R'Uland 34.00,    ymBrands

Amer Can .Am Cyan AmFamilv Am Motor AmStand Amer T&T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing

-'.oted price 'ni,' week's

a return to normal routine in Grenada after the U,S. invasion last week.

The NYSEs composite index rose .21 to 94.49. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .36 at 212.81.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 29.35 million shares at noontime, against 33.34 million at the same point Friday.

NEW YORK lAP) -Midday stocks:

High Low Last

Obituary Column

:' N (' AP) ini' \tiilh Caro-

1' 'ill cents, rurk load lots .'. 'A Grade A j.'i'd birds. 93 . i.ids offered ii-mei! with a 1 average of 0 dock or market.IS . w -'upply IS i moderate ;r:s desirable ...'ei: .'laugh-: :r\ers in vl r.day was red to

G' lexas - V As the . (riiirir.er as: the .luvanced to-

:.e> ,i\erage of ....- Vi.'t' 4,67 to '-r'lme-

;tn H-7 lead e;.,.i:u New York :a rge.-listed

Borden Burlngt Ind CSX C p s CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Sova Champ Int Chrysfer CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DelU.Airl DouChem duPont Duke Pow Eastn-AirL East Kodak EaionCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt Fla Progress FordMot Fuqua s GTE Corp GtiDxnam (rfnlElect s Irtn Food (ien Mills (rfn Motors trtn Tire GenuParts (iaPacif (imidnch Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound . (iulf Oil " Hefculeslnc Honevwell tlospiCp s Ing Rand -IBM Inti Harv Int Paper IntRecfif s Int T&T

FIRST FIRST DOWN The first down in the ECl' homecoming game Saturday was made not by a player, but by this parchutist who delivered the game ball. Just prior to the kick-off, the game announcer directed fans'

attention to the sky where four colorful flying acrobats dropped out of a plane and then circled ihe siadium before landing in center field.

Only Memories Left After Homecoming

K mart

37"4

37",

37",

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Kai.srAlum Kane Mill

I9'z

17'4

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KanetxSvc Krogert'o lixikhed s

16S

36i,

16'z

35'z

16'z

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'nday the red a de-

4D-Z

41'4

41*4

Loews Corp

159'4

159*4

1594

Masomle

40'z

40

404

:rom the

McDrmInt n

23^

23,

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McKesson

41

40"4

41

Dusmess.

Mead Corp

35'<4

35",

,35" 4

MinnMM

85"4

85",

85",

' in that

Mobil

29^

29'z

29,

Monsanto

103,

102"4

103,

'rnational.

NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd

23:14

43

23'2 42",

23'2 43

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Nat Distill NorflkSou

25'i

63,

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OhnCp

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30>4

30",

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32,

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61,

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PepsiCo 1

35",

35',

35*4

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23"4

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Philip.Morr

69",

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33"4

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35

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55"4

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'.ilrrs also 1 -igns ot

The

Meeting

Place

RalstnPur Kepub.Air Republic Stl Revlon Reynldlnd Koi'kwl s KovCrown .stllegisCp .seoit Paper Sears Roen Shaklee s Sk.vline Cp Sony (Yirp Simlhern Co Sperry Cp .SiddilCal stdi blind SidOilDh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind I n Camp I n Carbide Iniroval I S Si'eel I'ncKal Wal.Mart s WestPlPep Wesigh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wngley Xerox Cp

26-\

4

25k

32

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24

32k

27k

39k

22k

17k

15

17>-. 42 k 35 49k Sflk

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15 71

64k

16

27-k 29 k 41k 46

48k

31k

48k

36

51k

45k

26k

3k

25k

31k

61k

29k

23k

32k

27k

38k

22k

16k

14k

17k

42k

:i4k

48k

49

18k

76k

35k

61

15

71

64-k

15-k

27 k'

29k

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48

48k

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51k

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26'-.

3k

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32

61'j

29'4

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32 k

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39

22-k

17'm

15

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35 49 49k 16k

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15

71

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27''

29'1

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48

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31k

48'4

36 51k 45'z

K.c-

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ICMIAA

iik:;-.'. lullmi'ti! l- 't I.mns Club ki t.iuruni

Club meets

'.vee! Adelines. 1' :neet.' at The ' I Turch kir.-nvliie Barber it .)a>eee Park

:,.i'l2e No Loval

: 111!. < if'iup ,1' - .1

I! I.'IIW ' -r'"'.'!!'.!!!!- Breakfast i'hree Steers Ki.viiiiis (jolden K ' CuMinic li.dl

Family Support Pr.ieiiee(enter Tar Biver (Tvilan ' iu'    .'    f-ir-i Presbyterian

i.reeriyille Choral -.oeaty ,-.-u'.r'ai ai Immanuel Ba;)!;-M, liuri't.

7 ill p rn . .A ernon Howard succes.' V, I'noui Stress study group at Mii.k-W.irrei.S!

7 in p n    '!uugn|.j\e parents

jppi;:' -C 'k'' :! M Paul's

Fpi.'C-p.i.

H > [, r, I ia I !-. I iak.s Home arid l.a:-;--:; |'i./b meet,' at club hu'lse

c i< j, n,    PiD Co Alcoholics

,\rion\itiOij- a' '.A Iddg . Farmville tiw

'S p    kaicotics Anony

' i' Pine\ (irovg Free

CMiriTi

Following are selected market quotations: Ashland prC

Burroughs ............

Carolina Power & Light Collins & Aikman

Conner ........

Duke......

Eaton..........

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest.......

Hatteras.........

Hilton ........

Jefferson Deere . .

Lowe's,,

McDonald's...............

McGraw

Piedmont ..........

Pizza Inn P&G

TRW. Inc

Cnited Tel  . ..

Dominion Resources Wachovia................

OVER THE (OL'.NTER

Aviation......

Branch Little .Mint Planters Bank

11 a m slock

 4tik

....... 48k

.    . ,24k

.......4'4

.....161-z

25k

......47k-

 26k

.    38k

34k

.......15k

..........55

...........37

36

.21*1.

69'4

.........36'j

28'z

...........14k

55k

..............76k

................24

234

.............444

. 16kl7 25-25'2

18kl9k

The Recreation and Parks Department has a variety of arts and crafts activities planned for the Fall. Call 752-4137 for more information.

VViltetJ chrysanthemums, tattered shreds of toilet paper limply hanging from tree branches around campus, a headache or two, and for some, memories, are all that remain of Homecoming 1983.

Toll...

I Continued from pagel I tribute to relief work.

U.S. Embassy officials said none of the U.S. military bases in Turkey was affected by the quake and that American soliders were standing by to assist in rescue operations if the Turkish government requested it,

Erzurum, headquarters for Turkeys Third Army guarding a 360-mile border with the Soviet Union, lies at an altitude of 6,500 feet, surrounded by snow-capped massive mountains.

Turkey's Aegean and Mediterranean coastal areas and the entire eastern region sit atop an earthquake-prone belt known as the Anatolian Fault.

Sunday's quake that hit at 7,12 a.m. measured 7,1 on the Richter scale of motion, the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo. said.

The Richter scale is a gauge of energy released by an earthquake as measured by the ground motion recorded on a seismograph.

MASONIC NOTICE

Grimesland Masonic Lodge No. 475 AF&AM will hold a stated communication Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Grimesland Masonic Lodge. Work will be done in the first degree. Supper will be served at 6:45 p.m. The meeting is open to all Master Masons.

Tune-Ups Brake Jobs GeneraFRepairs

Auto Specialty Co.

917 w, 5th SI

758-1131

In future years, those memories may be a little more special for some than others, especially for the 1983 homecoming queen and the Rocky Mount Senior High Marching Band.

Delores Worthington, homecoming court representative of Aycock Dorm, was named the 1983 queen in front of a record-breaking crowd at Ficklen Stadium. The RMSH marching Band beat out 19 other North Carolina bands at East Carolina Universitys Band Day competition.

The RiMSH band, described

as a group of versatile musicians by an ECU School of Music spokesman, played a wide array of songs from classical to pop to win first place honors. Theyre not a traditional march band at all, the spokesman said, in fact theyre considered one of the best bands in the country.

In addition to the band and queen contests. Pirate supporters vied for honors in float and dorm decorating contests. Those winners will be announced in the Tuesday edition of the Daily Reflector.

Grimes

ROBERSONVILLE - Mr. George David Grimes Jr., 66, died Sunday afternoon in Robersonville Township Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the First Christian Church, Robersonville, by the Rev. David Cox. Burial will be in the Robersonville Cemetery with Masonic rites.

Mr. Grimes was a member of the First Christian Church where he served as a deacon. He was also a Shriner, a member of Stonewall Masonic Lodge No 26, the Robersonville Rotary Club, and was a retired farmer.

Clark

Choice

Opposed

W^ASHINGTON (AP) -The Sierra Club, calling William P. Clarks overtures to environmentalists disappointing and cosmetic, said today it opposes his nomination to succeed James Watt as interior secretary.

"We have asked for reassurance that Watts policies will change under Judge Clark and received none. Based on the lack of any such commitment and on what we know of Judge Clarks environmental record, we must oppose his confirmation. said Sierra Club Pres-^ident Denny Shaffer.

The 350,00-member organization said the Senate should question Clark closely at his confirmation hearings, which begin Tuesday, on what it termed 17 anti-environmental decisions he participated in whiie he was on the California Supreme Court. Each decision was pro-development, the organization said.

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Sunday, as com.puted by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 57. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 57 percent of your hot water needs.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Minnie Rae Everett Grimes of the home; three daughters. Miss Elizabeth C. Grimes of Robersonville, Mrs. Amanda Rae Nobles of Stokes and Mrs. Charlotte G. Smith of Greenville; two sons, Samuel David Grimes of Gamer and George F. Grimes of Robersonville, and five grandchildren.

Family visitation will be at Biggs Funeral Home from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight.

Hinton

TARBORO - Mr. Raymond Maryland Hinton died Sunday in Edgecombe General Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Lucy Hinton of Rocky Mount.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Himby-Willoughby Funeral Home in Tarboro.

Lane

ROCKY MOUNT - Mrs. Luella Lane died Saturday in Edgecombe General Hospital in Tarboro. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro.

Mathews ROCKY MOUNT - Mrs. Millie D. Mathews, formerly of Macclesfield, died Saturday in Nash General Hospital in Rocky Mount. She was the mother of Mrs. Mary Johnson of Bethel.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro.

Mozingo FARMVILLE - Mr, Albert Mozingo, 87, of Route 1, Farmville, died Sunday in the University Nursing Center. His funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Dewey Allen. Interment will be in the Ayden Cemetery, Ayden.

Mr. Mozingo was a World War I veteran and a member of the Missionary Baptist Church. Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Mary Smith Mozingo of the home; six

 

0^ REGISTERS SMOandup! ' i

!

CentwyOata^stBms    ,

NfeoflMiffiin^f slin(irtii(afltew ^

daughters, Mrs. Mary Ellen Mewborn of Farmville, Mrs. Vera Maness and Mrs. Peggy Hawkins, both of Greenville, Mrs. Doris James of Charleston, S.C., Mrs. Shirley Ann Moore and Mrs. Helen Jean Bunn, both of Snow Hill; four sons, James Albert Mozingo of Ocala, Fla., Guy Swanson Mozingo of Richmond, Va., Lee Wallace Mozingo of Trenton and Robert Louis Mozingo of Greenville; a sister, Mrs. Alice Coker of Farmville; a brother, Willie T. Mozingo of Stantonsburg; 27 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren.

Prayer Mr. Ceasar Prayer of 314 Conley St., Greenville, died Sunday in Guardian Care Nursing Home, Ahoskie. He was the husband of Mrs. Carrie Nobles Prayer of Greenville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

Toler

Clifford Louis Toler III, 14, of the Willis Neck community of Craven County died Sunday. His funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro by the Rev. Walter Sutton. Burial will be in the Willis Cemetery at Willis Neck.

Clifford was born and reared in the Willis Neck community and had attended Farm Life Elementary School and West Craven Junior High School, where he was a ninth grade student.

Surviving are his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Louis Toler Jr.; a sister. Wendy Louise Toler of the home; his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford L. Toler of the Willis Neck community and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vandiford of Route 6, New Bern.

The fainily will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home in Vanceboro tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. At other times they will be at the home on Route 3, Vanceboro.

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^ THE DAILY REFLECTORMONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 31, 1983

Pride Motivates Jets By 49ers, 27-13

Rv DwAOfi     A.    I.    _____ 1.    .    .    1    V    1

By The Associated Press Pride was the motivator and the San Francisco 49ers were the victims.

Playing a virtually mistake-free game, the struggling New York Jets knocked off the high-powered 49ers 27-13 in one of three major National Football League upsets that caught division leaders Sunday. In the others, the St. Louis Cardinals outscored the Minnesota Vikings 41-31 and the Seattle Seahawks whipped the Los Angeles Raiders 34-21.

Our motivation was embarrassment and the fact that we are much better than a 3 and 5 football team, said New York defensive lineman Marty Lyons. We put pressure on the quarterback and our defensive backs did a great job covering their receivers.

Lyons thoughts of embarrassment was a reference to last weeks 27-21 loss to Atlanta after the Jets had built a 21-0 lead in the third quarter.

Meanwhile, comeback efforts by Pittsburgh and Cleveland continued the frustrations of the leagues two winless teams, as the Steelers, beat Tampa Bay 17-12 and the Browns tripped Houston 25-19 in overtime.

In other NFL action, Dallas hammered the New York Giants 38-20; Atlanta tripped New England 24-13; Baltimore edged Philadelphia 22-21; Detroit walloped Chicago 38-17; Buffalo outlasted New Orleans 27-21; Miami tripped the the Los Angeles Rams 30-14; Cincinnati crushed Green Bay 34-14 and Denver edged Kansas City 27-24.

In the Monday night game, Washington visits San Diego.

Richard Todd hit 20 of 28 passes for 201 yards to lead the offense and the Jets defense shut down the San Francisco running game to key their triumph over the National Conference West Division leaders.

Cornerback Jerry Holmes ran back an interception 43 yards for a touchdown in the final minute to seal the victory for the Jets, now 4-5 after snapping a three-game losing streak.

Cardinals 41, Vikings 31 Neil Lomax fired two touchdown passes to Roy Green and one to Pat Tilley, and Ottis Anderson ran for 136 yards and a touchdown, leading St. Louis upset of Minnesota, the NFCs Central Division leaders.

The Cardinals, 3-5-1. the NFLs most error-prone team, stayed away from fumbles and interceptions until the final period. St. Louis Neil ODonoghue, who missed three field-goal tries in a a 20-20 tie with the New York Giants the previous game, made good on attempts of 52 and 47 yards.

The key to our success was our balance, said Cardinals Coach Jim Hanifan. We wanted to knock them off

the ball, and 1 think we accomplished it.

. Seahawks 34. Raiders 21

Linebacker Shelton Robinson ignited slow-starting Seattle with a 12-yard fumble return for a touchdown and the underdog Seahawks went on to beat Los Angeles for their second victory over the American Conference West leaders in three weeks.

Robinson made his big play with 9:18 remaining in the second quarter and the Seahawks trailing 7-0. Linebacker Keith Butler shook the ball loose from running back Marcus Allen of the Raiders, Robinson scooped it up and lumbered into the end zone.

_ The play was a blitz," said Robinson. The ball squirted out Marcus went running for it and it squirted from him. 1 don't remember what happened after that. 1 picked it up and there was the goal line. It wasn t that far .Ail hig plays seem to affect a team

Labonte Changes Opinion About N,C. Speedway

Steelers 17, Buccaneers 12 Frank Pollard ran 2 yards for a touchdown with 31 seconds left as the Steelers overcame seven turnovers and an NFL record 42 carries by Tampa Bays James Wilder to beat the 0-9 Buccaneers.

All week long, we said we didnt want to be the first team to lose to them, that we couldnt make mistakes, said Pittsburgh quarterback Cliff Stoudt. "Then, we went out and made them.

Wilder gained 126 yards with his performance, wiping out the previous record of 41 attempts set bv the Steelers Franco Harris in a 1976 game against Cincinnati.

Browns 25. Oilers 19

Boyce Green sprinted 20 vards for a touchdown on the first play following an interception in overtime as the Browns sent the Oilers to their 16th straight defeat. The loss was the second straight

in overtime for Houston, 0-9 this season. On his game-winning run up the middle. Green eluded several Houston tacklers and kicked his way into the end zone.

1 just ran into the hole and was kind of stalemated. Green said. I just hit it inside and when I saw the goal line. I just kept going.

The contest was the 14th overtime game of the 1983 season, the most overtime games played in one season since 1974. the year the NFL adopted the the single 15-minute period for regular-season games.

Cowboys 38. Giants 20 Danny White threw for 304 yards and a career-high five touchdown passes, including two to wide receiver Tony Hill, and the Dallas defense forced six' turnovers as the Cowboys improved upon the

I Please turn to page III

ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) - Terry Labonte says before Sunday, he wouldnt have counted the North Carolina Motor Speedway at Rockingham as one of his favorite tracks.

But his victory in the Warner Hodgdon American 500 race changed his opinion.

Weve had a hard year, but things finally paid off for us here, said the 26-year-old driver from Trinity. I feel really good about the race here today.

It was Labonies first top place finish this season and his first since the Southern 500 in Darlington. S.C. in 1980. He drove his -Chevrolet around the one-mile track at a average speed of 119.324 mph and picked up $25,505 in prize money.

Tim Richmond, who battled Labonte to the finish line for first place, came in second in a Pontiac. Ricky Rudd came in third in a Chevrolet, and pole sitter Neil Bonnett. also in a Chevrolet, finished fourth.

Darrell Waltrip finished fifth in a Chevrolet and picked up 40 points to pull him within 27 points of Winston Cup points leader Bobby Allison, who claimed the 16th sjwt. Allison now has 4,349 points and Waltrip has pulled to within 4,322 with only two races left in the season.

Labonte and Richmond started to jockey for position in lap 399 when Richmond roared around leader Labonte. The two cars sped around the track side by side for two laps until Labonte regained the lead at lap 403.

But Labontes lead was short-lived. Richmond passed Labonte on the back stretch three laps later.

Labonte regained the lead for the final time with 22 laps to go, finishing .68 seconds ahead o Richmond.

The first half of the race was marred by accidents which knocked several top drivers out of the competition. Fifty-two of the first 214 laps were run under caution. In all,

65 laps were run under 10 caution flags.

Cale Yarborough and Waltrip tangled in the second turn of the 11th lap, causing

Yarborough to hit the wall, skid back across the track and burst into flames. The Tim-monsville, S.C., driver was taken to Richmond County Hospital and was later released with a bruised shoulder.

Waltrips Chevrolet sustained sheet-metal damage, but remained in the race.

Kyle Petty, whose Pontiac hit the wall while avoiding the Yarborough wreck, retired his car with massive body damage. Harry Gants Pontiac also was damaged in the accident and went to the pits for repairs.

Several drivers were involved in four crashes in the fourth turn including Winston Cup points leader Allison. He hit the wall on lap 112, cutting oil and fuel lines when he blew a tire. After extensive repairs, he came back onto the track 40 laps down and nursed his limping Buick around the speedway to collect as many points as possible.

Richard Petty dropped out of the race when his Pontiac blew a tire and hit the wall in lap 155.

Under new NASCAR rules, officials tore down and checked five cars from the top 10 finishers after the race The new rules went into effect earlier this month after Richard Petty was fined $35.000 - the largest fine in NASCAR history - for two violations in his Miller 500 victory at the Charlotte Motor Speedway. Pettys car was found to have four left side tires and a larger engine than allowed.

Under, the new regulations, drivers and car owners will be suspended from racing for a minimum of 12 weeks or three races if an engine is found to exceed the 358 cubic inch displacement permitted by NASCAR.

On To Victory

Cleveland rookie running back Boyce Green (30) slips by Houston linebacker Robert Brazile (52) to cruise to the end zone on a 20-yard run to give the Browns a 25-19 win over the Oilers in overtime

McCumber Joins Double Winners

A Pla (API _    .    \

Sports Calendar

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

Today's Sports Volleyball East Carolina at Duke (7:30 p.m.)

Soccer

Greenville Christian at Charlotte Northside(2p.tn.l

Tuesday's .Sports Soiccer Rose at Sanderson

Volleyball East Carolina at UNC Charlotte (6:30p.m.)

PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) -Mark McCumber became golfs eighth two-time winner this season in the Pensacola Open, but the fond hopes of three players were denied in the season-closing event on the PGA Tour.

Im proud of the way I won, McCumber said after he solved a multiple-man scramble Sunday with a closing six-under-par 65 on the 7,093-yard Perdido Bay Country Club course.

He should have been. He came out of the pack with birdies on four of the last five holes, including the last three, to join Fuzzy Zoeller, Hal Sutton, Gil Morgan, Lanny Wadkins, Cal Peete, Seve Ballesteros and Jim Colbert as the games double winners this season.

For the first time in tour history, there was not a three-time winner. (Two team events remain on the schedule. But they do not count on the official statistics.)

McCumber won his second of the year, and third of his career, with a 266 total, 18 under par. The victory was worth $45,000 from the total purse of $250,000 and boosted his seasonss earnings to a career-high $268,294.

I have mixed emotions, he said. "Im glad it (the season) is over. Itsbeen a long year.

"But Im 35 under (par) for my last eight rounds. Ive finished second and first. In a way, I wish there were a few more tournaments."

But the book was closed on the 1983 season. And it closed with Fuzzy Zoeller, Calvin Peete and Lyn Lott on the outside looking in.

Disappointed? No. said Zoeller, who took his aching back into the final event of the season as the only man with a chance to overtake Player of the Year Hal Sutton - who did not play in Pensacola - as the

season's leading money-winner.

Zoeller needed a finish of fourth or better to make It. He won $1.908 m a tie for 25th on a score of 71-280. and finished the year at $417,597, Sutton, the PGA champion, won the Arnold Palmer Trophy as the vear's leading moev-winner at $426,668,

Peete. the defending champion at Pensacola, came in needing a total score of 269 to go past Ray Floyd in scoring average, which determines the Vardon Trophy. He

missed. Just Barely. Peete required a score of 65 in the last round to win it. He shot 67. Floyd won the Vardon with a 70.61 average. Peete. after 6,144 strokes for the season, had a 70.62 average.

Lott, finishing his 10th year on the tour, came into the last round needing a finish of third or better to be among the games top 125 money-winners, the determining facor for an exemption for next years tour. He was the third-round leader. But he couldnt hold it.

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Referees Union Head Ponders Negotiations

NEW YORK (AP) - The head of the National Basketball Association referees union says he will decide today on whether to resume stalled contract negotiations with the league on Tuesday,

"The site, the terms and the format of the meeting are very important to me, Richie Phillips said from his home in Philadelphia.

NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien has called a Tuesday meeting between the league's Labor Relations Committee and the league's negotiators "so evervone knows in which direction we're going, said Alex Sachare, the NBA s director of information.

Sachare said Phillips and his negotiating team have been invited to resume negotiations after the NBA people meet.

But Phillips said that under the schedule arranged for negotiations, the next session should be in Philadelphia, not New York where he was told the meeting would be held. The union chief said he would discuss the session's plans with a member of the labor relations committee todav before making his decision.

Weve gone through five months of negotiations without anything substantive being discussed. Nothing substantive will happen until Larry O'Brien, David Stern (the league's executive vice president i and the club owners sit down with me and negotiate."

There have been no contract talks since Thursday A , Friday meeting, scheduled to be held just hours before the league opened its regular season with substitute referees, never was held.

The labor relations committee is made up of club owners, while the negotiators for the league are vice president Scotty Stirling, general counsel Russ Granik and Gary Bettman, his assistant.

O'Brien, who played a major role in negotiations with the players union, has not participated in talks with the referees.

The substitute- officials, used by the league in exhibition games since the contract with the referees expired on Sept. l, have been the source of criticism from players.

I think they forgot some of the rules." Kareem .Adbul-Jabbar said after his Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Utah Jazz Saturday night. In that contest, officials called 68 personal fouls and five technicals, awarding 99 free throws.

Playing out there was tonight was like ending up in London and driving on the wrong side of the road. said Abdul-Jabbar.

Stirling, writing in Sunday's New York Times, described the substitutes as "hard-working competent officials who were "thoroughly schooled m the rules,

Riggins Back Tonight

Sunday. Green got the call on the Browns first play after safety Mike Whitwell intercepted Oiler quarterback Gifford Nielsons pass. (AP Laserphoto)

SAN DIEGO i.AP) - Running back John Riggins returns to the Washington Redskins' high-flying offense tonight against the battered San Diego Chargers, a team on the brink of disaster.

Coach Joe Gibbs said Riggins, out last week with a back injury, will replace Joe Washington as the starter in Washington's one-back offensive formation.

The Redskins, defending Super Bowl champions, need a victory to stay on the heels of the Dallas Cowboys, leaders of the NFC Eastern Division with an 8-1 record.

Washington. 6-2. is rated a three-point favorite over the Chargers, who are 3-5 and likelv to be without All-Pro

quarterback Dan Fouts for the second week in a row.

Fouts has a strained muscle in his right shoulder and a club spokesman said it is "99 percent certain" he won't play,

With Fouts out, four-year pro Ed Luther would make only the second start of his career. Last week, he was unable to produce a touchdown in a 14-6 loss at Denver.

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Woody

Peele

One wag in the press box, following East Carolinas 21-9 Homecoming victory over East Tennessee State, suggested moving Ficklen Stadium to Grifton, or Bethel, or Washington somewhere out of Greenville.

Then, he explained, the Pirates might think its a road game and play to their abilities rather than the usual performance they seem to show in Ficklen Stadium.

Its disappointing for them to play below par in front of their home fans especially when they have a crowd like they had Saturday. One has to wonder after that performance how many will return for the final home game against William & Mary.

For the first 20 minutes, the fans had to be very pleased, however, as the Pirates playing somewhat conservatively barrelled out to a 21-0 lead. But thats probably where the mistake was made.

Coach Ed Emory, trying to be fair to all the players, began subbing, and momentum was lost - never to be regained. He admitted later that this was probably the crucial point in the game: he should have left the first stringers in longer.

A couple of more series probably would have produced 14 more points and could have put the Pirates into a comfortable 35-0 lead. Then, with the time remaining in the half, the subs could have come in to finish up play. Then, with the regulars back in for the first one or two series of the second half, they could have made it an even more comfortable margin before letting the subs get their needed experience by finishing out the third and playing through the fourth period.

That would have thoroughly crushed the East Tennessee spirit and allowed ECU to have won a victory that they could have been proud of. And one that would have been impressive to any bowl scout who sees the score.

One thing is certain: East Carolina cannot play in its final three games as it did on Saturday after those first 20 minutes. Anything less than an all-out effort against Miami. William & Mary and Southern Mississippi will lead to disaster.

Miami is probably the toughest opponent the Pirates have faced this fall. They lost early to Florida by a lopsided score, but the Hurricanes

have come on strong since then and handled West ^ Virginia with relative ease last Saturday. They have a good chance of being the third Top Ten team the Pirates have faced this year (at the time of the game), and have one of the nations best passing games.

William & Mary, despite a lack-luster record, has another fine passing attack, and there are still those who should remember William & Marys last visit to Greenville. That loss handed the Pirates an embarrassing losing season one they had to live with for a year since it was the final game of the season.

Then, Southern Mississippi is again no slouch. The Hattiesburg team will be tough and playing them on the road will be no easy task.

Victories in all three games could assure the Pirates of a bowl bid, but any hopes of post-season play they have would have to see them beat the last two opponents.

Anything less and it would be all over.

It would have been interesting to see what would have happened had North Carolina recovered the on-side kick in the final seconds of the game at Maryland Saturday evening.

After the Tar Heels came up short on their two-point conversion try which eventually cost them the game, the Maryland fans mobbed the field, tearing down the goal posts at the UNC end of the field.

That cost Maryland a 15-yard penalty and could have cost it the ball game. It put Carolina in a excellent field position, kicking off from the Maryland 45 and with an on-side kick, they would have gained possession around the 35 with time left to complete one or two sideline passes for excellent field goal position.

But with no goal posts, it would have been interesting to see the action of the officials had Carolina gotten the ball. They would have had to turn around and go the other way with a stiff wind in their faces. Jt was a situation where the fans definitely could have decided the outcome by their unwelcome actions.

Even so, the recovery of the on-side kick was controversial. It appeared in replays of the kick that a Maryland player touched the ball prior to its traveling 10 yards, thus making it a free ball. Following a tussle for the ball, one official signaled it Carolinas ball, but another awarded it back to Maryland.

Our best guess as to why is that once the Maryland player controlled the ball, it was the Terps. since he was on the ground. He then lost it after he was hit by Carolina defenders.

It will be talked about by Carolina fans for some time, we are sure.

ACC Scenario Familiar

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer The story was familiar: North Carolina and Maryland locked in a do-or-die Atlantic Coast Conference battle royale. And, just as last years story, the Tar Heels came up losers.

Six bowl scouts and a regional television audience watched I3th-ranked Maryland pull away to a 28-17 edge over the third-ranked Tar Heels, then hang on for a 28-27 victory which was not decided until officials judged an onside kick to be the possession of the Terrapins.

In the rest of the ACC, Duke ended its seven-game losing streak with a 32-26 victory over Georgia Tech that wasnt assured until a pass interception. Clemson stopped Wake Forest 24-17 when a Gary Schofield pass to Dan Dougherty was stopped seven yards short of a first down.

At night. South Carolina stopped North Carolina State 31-17 on a Thomas Dendy touchdown sprint and Hinton Tayloes pass interception return.

Maryland appeared to be in control at Boomer Esiasons 24-yard scoring pass to Sean Sullivan, which capped an 18-point third quarter. North Carolina refused to go quietly, rallying on a Brooks Barwick 22-yard field goal and Tyrone Anthonys l-yard dive, which culminated a 90-yard drive.

First, there was the issue of the two-point conversion pass. Scott Stankavage rolled right and tried to hit Anthony at the l-yard line.

I was rushed, Stankavage said. But I really didnt make the throw. I didnt see whether the pass was complete or not, but I heard the crowd yelling and then I knew.

Second came the issue of the onside kick. Rob Rogers hit a squibber that was slow to trjavel the required 10 yards. Video-tape replays showed Rogers apparently fell on the ball after a Maryland player tried to pounce on it. The officials declared it to be Tar Heels ball inside the 40. After consultation, however, the decision was reversed.

After looking at the film, I believe we did get the foot

ball, North Carolina coach Dick Crum said. The guys who made the call that gave them the football were not in position to make the call.

Esiason, who tossed two second-half touchdown passes, said the victory was more than just a chance to claim the ACC lead.

The one thing that I will remember is being carried off the field and people wishing me good luck, Esiason said. Its something that will stick with me forever.

The Terrapins rose to 4-0 in the conference and the Tar Heels dropped to 3-1. Both teams are 7-1.

Duke trailed 26-14 when it drove 80 yards and cut the gap to 26-21 on Mike Graysons l-yard dive. Strong safety Darrell Brunson then picked off a John Dewberry pass to set up Julius Granthams touchdown and a 27-26 lead. Ken Harper added a 19-yard field goal midway through the fourth quarter and Harry Ward tripped quarterback

free kick to Georgia Tech at the Blue Devil 42, but substitute quarterback Darrell Gast threw an interception to Brunson.

Bennett completed 27 of 33 wsses for an .818 percentage, breaking the school record of .750 set by Leo Hart in 1969. It was the victory, however, that made him happier.

Hooray for my team, he said.

Schofield found Dougherty wide open on a fourth-and-two pass play from the Clemson 17. But the pass was never thrown because the Demon Deacons were detected for illegal procedure. With fourth-and-seven, Schofield tried again and got the ball to Dougherty, this time for no gain.

He was pretty open and safety Tim Childers told me about it, Clemson linebacker Henry Walls said. I was watching him and broke on the ball.

N.C. State quarterback Tim Esposito was intercepted five times and penalized nine

Kniahts' Coach Unsure eam's Potential

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ByRICKSCOPPE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C.-Northern Durham is unbeaten and has given up just 25 points in nine prep football games, but head coach Ken Browning says hes still unsure just how good the Knights are.

We have some doubts, Browning said. But I would rather not tell you what they are."

Browning could have any lingering doubts erased - or confirmed - when the second-ranked Knights face

fourth-ranked Roxboro Person, 9-0, for the Big Six Conference title Friday.

This is what you work for, Browning said. But, he added, he would not have predicted that his squad would be without a defeat with one game left in the regular season.

You always set goals, and we set some high ones, Browning said. But to say we expected to be 9-0 ... well, I would not say we did. But it was one of those things we hoped for.

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John Dewberry in his end zone times for 98 yards. They had forpafety.    tied the score at 17 before

Chuck Herring fumbled the Dendys 47-yard dash and Tayloes 30-yard return for a score.

Thursday night, Virginia returns to action against Georgia Tech. Next weekend, Clemson meets the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, where the Tigers havent lost since 1971. N.C. State meets Appalachian State in Raleigh. Duke goes to Wake Forest and Maryland is at Auburn.

Sampson Displays Smart Play In Debut

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Now, only Person, which whipped Northern Durham 45-28 last season, stands between the Knights and an undefeated season.

We got embarrassed last year. I think sometimes in the past we have not geared up with the same intensity for the game as Roxboro. I think (the loss) made our kids aware of how they approach the game, Browning said.

The Knights enter the game with a defense that has not had a point scored on it in the last three games and has five shutouts in all.

(Please turn to page 11)

James A. Maiming Bethel, N.C. 825-5631

HOUSTON i.AP) - Ralph Sampson in his professional basketball debut showed himself to be smart as well as talented.

.As a result, the much-anticipated confrontation between the Houston Rockets' 7-foot-4 rookie against cement-tough veteran Artis Gilmore of the San Antonio Spurs wasn't a confrontation at all when Sampson's team had the ball.

Instead, Sampson conceded Gilmore his strength and :l(j-pound weight advantage and retreated outside While the 7-2. 260-pound Gilmore staved anchored near the basket. Sampson had a grand time flipping jumpers with the

grace ot a guard and swooping downcourt on fastbreaks, now and then topping one off with a crashjngdunk.

Sampson's statistics in Houston's 106-100 victory over the Spurs Saturday weren't awe-inspiring - 18points, 12 rebounds, four blocked shots-and 9-of-21 shooting - but the grace and skill with which he moved his very tall body around the court certainlv were

While Gilmore is among the top tour most effective centers in the league, away from the basket he is out of his element. Sampson seemingly could be comfortable playing point guard.

The unquestioned hero was Golden State Warriors castoff

Lewis Lloyd, who excelled with 28 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists, but the contest will forever be remembered as Sampson's Debut.

Sampson served warning to other .National Basketball Association centers that he has the skills to do anything necessary to counteract their strengths.

Rockets Coach Bill Fitch compared him to a street fighter who will adjust his style to frustrate an opponent.

"You don't always fight the same way." said Fitch, who made his debut as Houston coach after four years in Boston. "I want him going inside, but I'm sure some teams won't like seeing Ralph

Hurricanes May Prove Biggest Test For Huskers

By The Associated Press There may be a Hurricane warning in .Nebraska's quest for college football's national championship.

The No. l-ranked Cor-nhuskers haven't had to weather many storms en route to their 9-0 record and the long-range forecast is for clear sailing past Iowa State and Kansas.

That would bring them to the regular-season finale against No. 14 Oklahoma on Nov, 26, with the Big Eight championship on the line, as usual. And if they get past the Sooners. they may have to face hometown heroes in the Orange Bowl.

The Miami Hurricanes are high on the list to be the visiting team on their own field and provide the opposition for the Big Eight champion on Jan. 2. The seventh-ranked Hurricanes knocked No. 12 West Virginia out of the major bowl picture Saturday with a 20-3 triumph, their eighth in a row,

This team is on the threshold of greatness." Coach Howard Schnellenberger said after Miami held West Virginia to only two yards in 29 rushing attempts, The next two weeks i East Carolina and Florida State) will be the real tests, but we are delighted to be in the position that we are.

The Orange Bowl's policy is to invite the highest available team in the Associated Press poll. Miami figures to jump past third-ranked North Carolina and No. 5 Florida, both losers over the weekend

Runnerup Texas seems headed for the Cotton Bowl, while fourth-ranked Auburn and No. 6 Georgia meet on .Nov. 12. Barring a misstep, the Hurricanes should move past the loser of that game, with the winner likely Sugar Bowl-bound.

"We know we've won eight straight," said Miami linebacker Jay Brophy, We can win two more straight. We know what we can do when, we put our mind to It "

While Miami's defense was throttling the Mountaineers, freshman Bernie Kosar threw touchdown passes of 19 vards

to Glenn Dennison and 5 to Keith Griffin and Jeff Davis kicked two 36-yard field goals.

"Boy, Miami is good." raved West Virginia Coach Don Nehlen. "Their defense ate us alive. You can't win if you can't run. We knew Miami had a good defense, but they didn't allow us anything."

Provided Nebraska doesnt stumble, the visiting berth in the Orange Bowl had figured to be contested among North Carolina, Miami and West Virginia. But Carolinas 28-26 loss to No. 13 Maryland may have cost the Tar Hels their chance.

taking those little shots out there."

"That was the way the game flowed. Sampson said, explaining why only six of his points came on close-in shots. "Gilmore's so strong that its tough to go inside with him. I'll take the ball inside when the opportunity comes."

The lesson came quickly that some centers like Gilmore, Moses Malone and Bob Lanier may be too strong for Sampson to handle.

In an exhibition game just nine days before S^aturdays regular-season opener, Gilmore scored 12 points in a mere 10 minutes, skillfully pump-faking his young opponent off his feet and then dumping the ball through the net.

On defense, of course, Sampson had to stay with Gilmore, who hit 62 percent of his field goal attempts last season to lead the NBA. But the veteran was just 6-of-14 and scored 16 points on Saturday.

"I knew Gilmore would go down low," Sampson said. I just tried to keep my feet and use my height. Hes got a

great pump fake.

"All the things Artis was able to do to Ralph in the exhibition game, he couldnt do today," Spurs Coach Mo McHone said. He learned quickly and adjusted in just a weeks time.

It was when the Rockets had the ball that Sampson tried to stay away from Gilmore and use his quickness.

We told Ralph we didnt want him to get into a pushing match with Artis, teammate Elvin Hayes said.

"The foul-line jump shots were open on the fastbreak, Sampson said. I had to take them,"

But in the first two minutes of the game, Sampson didnt look capable of taking his game outside. He missed his first three shots and five of his first six, some of them missing the mark badly.

I was worried about his poise at the start, "Fitch said. 1 was concerned that he would go 48 minutes throwing up bricks like he did the first two times. But he didnt do that. He took a couple of outside shots he shouldnt have taken, but most of them

were designed for him to shoot out there.

He played all of the first and third periods, scoring eight and 10 points, respectively. Sampson combined for only eight minutes and no points in the second and fourth quarters, when Lloyd took over in the final 2:20, scoring six points in a row to put the Rockets ahead to stay.

The victory was a far cry from a year ago, when the Rockets traded Malone to Philadelphia, mortgaging a season that ultimately resulted in a 14-68 record. The first triumph did not come until Houston already had lost 10 games.

Is ta    

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SCOREBOARD

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C._Monday.    October    31,1983

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

NFL Standings

By The .Associated Press American I'anierence Kasl

,    H I. T Pci. PF PA

Buffalo    6    3    n    667    173    182

^>*."11    6    3    U    667    199    147

Ballimore    5    4    0    556    166    197

Nett England    4    5    0    444    199    189

N.Y.JetS    4    5    0    444    194    185

Central

Piltsburgh    7    2    0    778    227    165

Cleveland    5    4    0    556    181    206

Cincinnali    3    6    0    .:m    170    181

Houston    0    9    0    boo    152    247

West

Denver    6    3    0    667    153    147

L A_feiders    6    3    0    . 667    242    204

Seattle    5    4    0    556 219    206

Kansas City    4    5    0    444 182    160

San Diego    3    5    0    375 197    225

National (onference Fast

Dallas    8    1    0    889 291    195

Washineton    6    2    0    7.50 267    187

Philadelphia    4    5    0    444 138    167

Dnn'S    3    5    1    .389 198    269

N V Giants    2    6    1    278 166    214

Central

Minnesota    6    3    0    667    215    225

Detroil    4    5    0    , 444 202    188

Green Bay    4    5    0    444    240    267

Chicago    3    6    0    333    170    198

Tampa Bay    0    9    0    .000    141    227

c    "est

San Francisco    6    3    0    667    261    184

L A Rams    5    4    0    556    201    200

New (Irleans    5    4    O    556    203    203

Atlanta    4    5    0    444    1%    179

Nundav's Games Detroit 38. Chicago 17 St Louis 41. Minnesota 31 Atlanta 24,.New England 13 Buffalo 27, .NewOrleans 21 Pittsburgh 17. Tampa Bay 12 Baltimore 22, Philadelphia 21 Dallas 38. New York Giants 20 C leveland 25, Houston 19, OT Miami 30. Los Angeles Rams 14 Seattle34, Los Angeles Raiders 21 Denver 27, Kansas City 24 .New York Jets 27. San Francisco 13 Cincinnati 34. Green Bay 14 Monday's Game Washington at Sari Diego. i n >

Sunday, .Nov. 6 Atlanta at .New Orleans Cincinnati at Houston Tampa B^ at .Minnesota Dallas at Philadelphia Cleveland vs Green Bay at Milwaukee Los Angeles Raiders at Kansas Citv San Diego at Pittsburgh Buffalo at New England .Miami at San Francisco Denver at Seattle

Philadelphia    2    0    1 000

Boston    1    1    300

NettJersey    i    i    ,,500

Washington    0    2    (WO

Central Division Milwaukee    1    0    1 (100

Chicago    1    0    1.000

Atlanta    1    |    500

Detroit    1    1    500

Cleveland    0    2    000

Indiana    0    2    000

WESTERN CONFERE.VCE Midttesl Division Houston    1    0    1000

Dallas    1    1    .500

Denver    1    1    5(h)

San Antonio    1    1    500

Kansas Citv    0    2    000

Utah    0    2    .000

Pacific Division Golden State    2    0    1 000

Los Angeles    2    0    1 000

Portland    1    i    .500

San Diego    1    1    .500

Rattle    I    1    .500

Phoenix    0    1    ixio

.Saturday's Games Houston 106, San Antonio 100 New York 100. Washington 97 Philadelphia 124. Indiana 112, OT .Atlanta tl7. Detroit 115 Boston 108, Cleveland 89 Chicago 104. New Jersey 97 Dallas 120, Phoenix 103 LosAngelesl20.ltahll5 .San Diego 141. Denver 128 Golden State 97, Portland 95 Sunday's Games Seattle 121, Kansas Citv lie San Antonio 123. Dallas 101 .Monday's Games No games scheduled

Tuesday 's Games Cleveland at New Jersey, 1 ni Chicagoat Philadelphia', in) Milwaukee at Detroit, ini Houston at Indiana, mi Washington at Atlanta, 1 n i Portland at .San Antonio 1 n 1 Golden Stateat Kansas City, mi DallasatDenver.ini Seattle at Phoenix, mi

NHL Standings

By The Associated Press Hales (onference Patrick Division W I. T Pts

Chicagoat lavs Angeles Rams Baltimore at .New York Jets St Louis at Washington

Monday. Nov, 7 New York Giants at Detroit, mi

NBA Standings

By The AssiK'iated Press E.A.STERN ( ONFERENCE Atlantic Division ,        H I. Pet. GB

NewAork    7    0 I IKlo -

Philadelphia NA Rangers NY Isles Washington Pittsburgh .New Jersey

Boston

Quebec

Buflaio

Hartford

Montreal

3    1

9    4

6 6

U    12

U    10

3    9    0    6

1    to    0    2

\danis Division 7    3    1    15

7    5    1    15

6    -4    2    14

4    5    19

0

Chicago Toronto St Louis Detroit Minne.sota

Edmonton

Calgarv

Vancouver

Campbell ( onference Norris Div ision

16 14 12 10

GF (iA

55    36

55    43

.50    49

35    37

28    46

49    30

69    48

47    44

36    41

48    47

,52    40

61    .58

39    39

37    40

62    52

41    45

Winnipeg    3    7    2    8    40    62

Los Angeles    2    5    4    8    44    4'

Saturday's Games .N Y Islanders 5, New Jersey 3 Detroit 4. Quebec 3, OT Edmonton 3, Montreal 1 Los Angeles 5, Toronto 5, tie 3    Philaddphia 3. Pittsburgh I

2    Boston 3. St Louis 2

2    Washington 6. Minnesota I

2    Sunday's    Games

Buffalo 5. Montreal 4 N Y Islanders 6. Philadelphia 2 Edmonton 5, ,N.Y. Rangers 4. OT t    Pittsburgh 5, .New Jersey 3

I    Calgary 4. Vancouver 3, OT

i    Chicago 6. Hartford 1

;    Washington 7, Winnipeg 3

   .Monday's Games *

No games scheduled ' Tuesday's Games Hartford at .Montreal, in)

Los Angeles at Quebec. 1 n 1 Vancouver at NT Islanders, (ni DetroitatSt Louis, ml

AP Top Twenty

By The .Associated Press How the Top twenty teams in the Associated Press college football poll fared this week.

1 Nebraska (9AHli beat Kansas St., 51-25.

2 Texas (7-tHli beat Texas Tech, 20-3.

3. North Carolina (7-1-0) lost to .Maryland, 28-26

4. Auburn (7-t-Oi beat Florida. 28-21

5 Florida (6-III lost to Auburn, 28-21

6 Georgia (7-0-1) beat Temple, 31-14.

7 .Miami, Fla (8I-O1 beat West Virginia. 20-3.

8 Michigan (6-2-0) lost to Illinois, 16-6

9 Illinois (7-1-01 beat Michigan, 16-6.

10 .So. .Methodist (6-1-0) beat Texas A&M. 10-7

11 Washington (6-2-0) lost to UCLA,

27-24

12 West Virginia (6-2-0) lost to Miami, Fla. 20-3

13. Maryland (7-1-0) beat North Carolina. 28-26.

14 Oklahoma 16-2-O1 beat Kansas. 45-14

15 Brigham Young (7-1-0) beat Utah St., 38-34

16 Ohio State (6-2-0) beat Wisconsin, 45-27

17 Iowa (6-2-0) beat Indiana, 49-3

18 , Alabama 15-2-0 i beat Mississippi St, 35-18

^I9_ Boston College (6-1-0) beat Penn St.,

(tie) Notre Dame (6-2-0) beat Navy,

28-12

College Football

By The Associated Press EAST

Boston College 27, Penn St 17 Slippery Rock 24, Shippensburg St. 23 Tennessee 7, Rutgers 0 SOUTH Alabama 3,5 Mississippi St 18 Auburn 28, Florida 21 Cincinnati 13, Kentucky 13, tie Clemson 24. Wake Forest 17 Duke 32. Georgia Tech 26 Georgia 31, Temple 14 Maryland 28. N Carolina 26

Memphis St. 24, Vanderbilt 7 Miami, Fla. 20, W. Virginia 3 Mississippi 27, ISV 24 Mississippi Val 54, Prairie View 12 S Carolina 31, N Carolina St 17 S. Mississippi 31, SW Louisiana 3 Virginia Tech 59, William & Mary 21 MIDWE.ST Bowling Green 15, Cent. Michigan 14 Illinois 16, Michigan 6 Iowa 49, Indiana^

Michigan St. 34, Minnesota 10 Missouri 41, Iowa St. 18 Missouri-Rolla 35. Evangel 6 Nebraska 51, Kansas St. 25 N. Illinois 17, Miami, Ohio 0 ,NotreDame28, Navy 12 Ohio St. 45, Wisconsin 27 Purdue 48, Northwestern 17 S. Illinois 41, New Mexico St 3 Toledo 37, Kent St 34 W. Michigan 16, Ohio U. 14 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 35, RiceO Baylor 24, TulaneI8 Houston 28, Texas Christian 21 Oklahoma 45, Kansas 14 Southern Meth, 10, Texas A&M 7 Texas 20, Texas Tech 3 Tulsa 30, Wichita St 19 FAR WEST Air Force 41, Army 20 Brigham Young 38, Utah St. 34 Colorado St 25, .New Mexico 24 E Washington 20, Long Beach St 17 Florida St. 2^ Arizona St 26 Idaho St 43, Fullerton St 10 Oklahoma St. 40, Colorado 14 OregonSt.31,SUnfordl8 Southern Cal 19. California 9 UCLA 27, Washington 24 Washington St 24, Oregon 7

Golf Scores

PENSACOLA, Fla.    l.AP) - Final

scores and monev-winnings Sunday in the t'2S0.000 Pensacola Open Golf Tournament on the 7.093-vard, par-71 Perdido Bay Country Club course: Mark Mc-( umber. 143,000 68-68-65-65-266 Mark Lye, $22,000    63-70-72-65-270

Lon Hirikle, $22,000    67-68-67-68- 270

Calvin Peete. $12.000    68-68-68-67 -271

.Mark Hayes, $9.500    70-66-67-69-272

Lyn Lott, $9,500    7(^65-65-72-272

Gary Hallberg, $7,531    70-70-7063-^273

Jim Simons, $7,531    706966-68-273

Jon (:haffee. $7,531    706666-71-273

Dan Pohl, $7,531    66-7166-70- 273

Doug Tewell, $6,250    706665-73-274

Roger .Maltbie. $5,250    71-726 8 64-275

Andy Bean, $5.250    66-766865-275

Allen Miller, $5,250    726865-70-275

John Cook, $4,250    71-70-7065- 276

Frank Conner, $4,250    75686865-276

Pat McGowan. $4,250    73-706766-276

Jim Colbert, $3,625    726869-68-277

Mike Sullivan, $3,625    716669-71-277

Wally Armstrong, $2,912    71-726 8 67 -278

Mark O'Meara, $2,912    73696868-278

Scott Hoch, $2,912    69-716969-278

Sammy Rachels, $2,912    70-7167-70-278

.Mark Calcavecchi, $2,400    7169-7564-279

Dave Barr, $1,908    68-72-7169- 280

Ron Streck, $1,908    72-716869-280

, Larry Rinker, $1,908    6869-73-70- 280

UnceTen Brock, $1,908    726969-70-280

Donnie Hammond. $1,908    68-70-71-71-280

Fuzzy Zoeller. $1.908 ,    68-71-70-71-280

Tim Simpson, $1,387    73-706969-281

Bob Murphv, $1.387    70-70-71-70281

AKJeibewr, $1,387 Richard Zokol. $1.387 Grier Jones, $1,387 Gibby Gilbert. $1,387 David Ogrin. $1,387 Tom Jerikins. $1,387 Payne Stewart, $975 Ronnie Black, $975 Rod Nuckolls, $975 Dan Forsman. $975 Clarence Rose, $975 Ed Dougherty, $975 David Edwards, $975 Bob Eastwood. $708 Chip Beck, $708 Steve Liebler, $708 Tony Cerda, $708 Joey Rassett. $608 Gavin Levenson $608 .Mike Nicolette. $608 Larry Mize, $608 Jeff Sluman, $575 Charles Coodv, $575 Lee Elder, $5?5 Bob Boyd, $560 Wren Lum.$560 Jim Booros, $560 Pat Lindsey,$545 EdFiori,$545 Curt Bvrum. $.545 Mike iMcCullough, $532 Jeff Sanders. $532 Vance Heafner, $522 Tom Jones, $522 Brad Brvant, $512 Bill Sander. $512 BobTwav, $505 Hubert Green. $500 John .McComish, $495

68-72-71-70-281

70-7368-70-281

69-70-70-72-281 756668-72-281 68-7467-72-281

72-7069-70-281

73-70-7267-282

66-75-71-70- 282

70-71-71-70- 282

71-72-7069- 282

7468-7169-282

71-70-71-70-282 71-7265-74-282

73-70-7268- 283

72-71-72 68- 283 756869-71-283

70-7269-72-283 6969-74-72-284 7268-73-71-284

68-71-70-75- 284 716969-75-284

67-75-7469- 285 7166-77-71-285

71-71-70-73- 285

72-70-7569- 286

7469-72-71-286 70-70-72-74- 286

69-73-73-72-287

69-72-71-75- 287 7369-70-75-287

72-71-71-74- 288

7368-71-76- 288

7369-73-74-289

73-70-70-76- 289 72-71-74-73-290

70-71-70-79-290 7(1-72-78-73- 293

71-71-72-80-294 , 73-70-76-80- 299

Transactions

Bv The Associated Press FOOTBALL National Football League . .NEW YORK GIANTS-Activated Harry (arson, linebacker Waived Danny Pittman, wide receiver Added Charles Cook, defensive end, to the active roster

Prep Top 20

_. By The Associated Press RALEIGH, N.C, Here is how top high school football teams in the North Carolina, according to classification, fared this past week:

4-A

^L^Fay Byrd (96) beat Richmond Co

2. N Durham (96) beat Durham 376

3 Gbo Page (8 11 beat HP Central 416

4 Rox Person (96) beat Chapel Hill 14-13

5 Char .Myers Park (96) beat W Mecklenburg 0-7

Jacksonville (8-1) beat Wilm Laney

7 Smithfield-Selma (8-1) lost to Broughton 22-17

8 Wilson Fike (7-2) lost to N Nash 13-10 OT

^8 Fay Reid Ross (8-1) beat W Robeson ^^10 Wilson Hunt (8-1) beat Green Rose 3-A

33132Kannapolis (8-1) lost to S Rowan

2^ S. Durham (96) beat Central Harnett 62*0

3. Ashe Reynolds (96) beat Robeson 55-7

4 Thomasville (96) beat Asheboro296

5 Clinton (96) beat Pender 176

6 (tiei Crest (96) beat N Gaston236 W Henderson (961 beat .Mitchell 58-(i

8 (tie) E. Randolph (8-1) beat E Alamance 20-8        .

SW Edgecombe (8-11 beat N Pitt 416 10 E Surry (96) beatStarmount 15-14 2-A and l-.A 1 ^ndleman (96) beat Denton 426 2. Sylva-Webster 196) beat .Murphy 34-7

3 Fuqua-Varina (96) beat Clavton 21-20

4 W Montgomery (96) beat Union Pines 276

^5.^Franklinton (96) beat S. Granville 23i2^^ Foard (7-1-D beat Cherryville

7. Albemarle (7-3) lost toS. Stanly 14-13

8 Wallace-Rose Hill (8-i) beat E Duplin 186

9 Robbin^ville (7-2) beat Hayesville

216

25.i4    S    Lenoir

~ Race Results

ROCKINGHAM. N.U. (APi - The finish of Sunday's Warner W Hodedon American ,)0 N AS( AR (.rand Nalional stock car race with upe of car. laps completed and winner's average speed

Uhevrolel, -ft2 laps,

Ii9 324mph I Tun Richmond. Pontiac. 492 I Ricky Rudd. Chevrolet, 491 4 NeilBonnett Chevrolet. 490 0 Darrell Waltrip. Chevrolet, 489

6 Ron Bouchard. Buick 486

7 pave Marcis. Oldsmobile. 486 o L^nni? Pond. Buick. 476 ?J|tnmy Means, Chevrolet 475 luTommv Gale. Ford 471

j U K finch, Chevrolet. 470 S,\ V/>'Kton. Dodge 459 13 Rick Baldwin, (hrvsler. 457 IL J D McDuffie, Pontiac. 4o5 DPontiac. 443 16 Bobby Allison, Buick. 437 pale Earnhardt, Ford. 436

18 Dick Brooks. Ford. 414

19 Ronnie Thomas, Pontiac 414

Uhevrolei. 397

31 Billtlliott l'ord, ,387 22 Dick.Mav. Ford, 381 a HarryGant, Buick. 35o 24 Kyle Petty, Pontiac. .144 " rry Bowman, Ford 3.'i3 ^ Richard Pelty, Pontiac, 208 ^ MorganShepKerd. Buick. 205 ^UakeSppd, Chevrolet. 184 29 Buddy Baker, Ford, 1.55 ^ JoeRuttman, Pontiac, 139

31 Mike Potter. Pontiac. 139

32 Trevor Boys, Chevrolet, 54

33. Geoff Bodine. Pontiac 45

34. BlackieWangerin.Ford,39

35. John .McFadden. Buick 11 36 Cale Yarborough. Chevrolet, 11

N.C. Scoreboard

Bv The Associated Press

Men's (ollege Soccer Duke 1. Virginia 0

Women's ( allege Field Hotkev

Old Dominion 1, N (^arolina 0 Deep .South Tournament .-Appalachian St 2, Duke 1 OT; ffigh Point Club 4. Wake Forest 2 Davidson 4. Catawba 1 T(-)bacco Road Club 3. Carolinas Club 0 L< T 2, Dav idson(i

.Appalachian SI 2. Tobacco Hoad Club 0 Duke 2, Carolinas ClubO Duke Club 4, Durham Club ECT2. .South I niversilv 1 pukeCluL.i, High Point Club 2 Wake Forest 2. Durham Club 1 .South I niversity 2. Catawba 0

The City has an informational brochure on City services. If vou would like a copy, call Nadine Bowen in the Citv .Manager's Office, 7.52-4137,

'Iceman' Improves Stats

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - George Gervin was determined to have a better game than the one he had in the San Antonio Spurs season-opening loss in Houston.

Gervin poured in 35 points Sunday night as San Antonio rebounded to whip the Dallas Mavericks 123-101 in the second game of the National Basketball Association season for both teams.

Gervin had 19 points in the Spurs 106-100 loss to Houston Saturday.

I was determined to have a big game, he said after the win Sunday night. T was sort of depressed about my game against Houston yesterday. Gervin, 16 of 23 from the field, led a fourth-quarter surge by scoring eight straight points after the Mavericks cut the San Antonio lead to 12 points, 99-87, with 7:15 left to play.

The win was the first for rookie Spurs Coach Mo McHone and forward Gene Banks, who added 22 points and scored his 2,000th career point in the second quarter on a layup.

I didnt know about it, he

said. Im pretty excited. Ill be looking for 3,000 now. Im pleased. Im glad the Creator allowed me to see this.

In the only other NBA game Sunday, rookie guard Jon Sundvold and Gus Williams combined to score 26 points in the final period to power the Seattle SuperSonics to a 121-116 victory over the Kansas City Kings.

Williams, who finished with 31 points and 10 assists, scored 14 points in the fourth quarter while Sundvold added 12 of his 18 in the final period.

Seattles victory overshadowed a career-high 40 points by Kansas City forward Eddie Johnson.

Rookie forward Dale Ellis led Dallas with 16 points, 10 of them in the fourth quarter.

The defense is a lot tougher in the pros, Ellis said. "It is also much more of a physical game. I was very flattered that Dallas drafted me, considering they have (Mark) Aguirre and (Jay) Vincent,

Aguirre scored 13 points in the first half, but was held scoreless in the second. Vincent scored nine.

Dallas, 1-1, only trailed by

five points, 39-34, in the second quarter before Edmonson and Banks led a San Antonio rally that put the Spurs in front 68-51 at intermission.

Gervin hit a layup with six minutes left in the third quarter to give San Antonio an 81-59 margin. Dallas cut the lead to 91-75 at the end of the quarter.

The game was over in the first four minutes, said Dallas Coach Dick Moptta. The Spurs played very well tonight. Everything they did worked for them. San Antonios size presents a lot of problems for us.

Spur center Artis Gilmore scored 10 points, blocked five shots and led all rebounders with 10.

Keith Edmonson came off the bench to score 20 points for San Antonio. Johnny Moore had 16 points.

Pat Cummings also scored 13 points for the Mavericks and Kurt Nimphius added 12.

Rental Tool Co.

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Phone 7586311

RE-ELECT

STUART SHINN

CITY COUNCIL Thank You For Voting On Tuesday, November 8th

Paid For By Committee To Re-Elect Stuart Shinn

Hurricanes...

j

Close Call

Indianas Clark Kellogg closely guards Philadelphia forward Bobby Jones during NBA action in Indi

anapolis. Indiana lost to the 76ers 124-112 in overtime before 17,096, the largest home crowd to Pacer history. (APLaserphoto)

(Continued from page 10)

North Carolina fell behind 10-0, led 17-10 at halftime, then surrendered two touchdowns on Boomer Esiason passes of 14 yards to Rich Badanjek and 24 to Sean Sullivan and a field goal in the third period and trailed 28-17.

The final quarter produced a Carolina field goal and a 1-yard touchdown run by Tyrone Anthony with 22 seconds left. But the Tar Heels had to try a two-point conversion and Maryland linebacker J.D. Gross pressured Scott Stankavage into a hurried pass.

We saw something (in films) that we thought we

NFL Teams Post Upsets.

(Continued from page 9)

NFLs best record at 8-1 with their victory over the Giants.

Drew Pearson, who caught one of those scoring strikes, said he felt his quarterback had a so-so day, for Danny White.

Danny hit the plays he had to hit, but overall I think hed tell you he didnt have one of his best days, said Pearson, Falcons 24, Patriots 13 Rookie linebacker John Rade returned a fumble 16 yards for a touchdown as Atlantas defense forced four critical fumbles in the Falcons victory over New England.

I never even had an interception, Rade said of the score that, came after rookie Mike Pitts stripped the ball away from New England

quarterback Steve Grogan during a nine-yard sack.I was fired up, and I was lucky. I just happened to be there when the ball was ripped out. Colts 22, Eagles 21 Raul Allegres fifth field goal of the game, a 30-yarder with 2:07 left, carried Baltimore over Philadelphia. The Eagles had taken a 21-19 lead on an eight-play, 44-yard drive capped by quarterback Ron Jaworskis &-yard scoring pass to wide receiver Harold Carmichael,

Lions 38, Bears 17 Eric Hippie passed for 216

yards and one touchdown and Leonard Thompson scored on a 40-yard reverse to lead Detroit over Chicago.

Bills 27, Saints 21 Joe Ferguson threw four touchdown passes, including two to Mike Mosley, and Buffalo survived a late New Orleans rally to beat the Saints. Ferguson ended the game with 13 completions in 25 attempts for 173 yards, while Saints starting quarterback Ken Stabler left the game at the end of the first quarter after taking a shot in

the ribs. "

Bengals 34, Packers 14 Fullback Pete Johnson rushed for 112 yards and two touchdowns in his first start of the season, and quarterback Turk Schonert threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score as Cincinnati crushed Green Bay.

Get Ready For Fall Wood Cutting!

ST/HL 028 Wood Boss W/20 Bar

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HENDRIX-BARNHILiroSr/

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could take advantage of. said Coach Bobby Ross, whose Terrapins took a one-game lead in the Atlantic Coast Conference. I told the team Friday night if the right situation came up, we wanted to go for broke. We saw the opportunity and jumped out at it.

North Carolina committed three turnovers and Coach Dick Crum said the Tar Heels were our own worst enemies at times. There were plenty of momentum changes in the game. Give Maryland credit for regaining their momentum after they lost it.

The one postseason game that doesnt have to send out scouts is the Rose Bowl and ninth-ranked Illinois and unranked UCLA took giant steps on the road to Pasadena.

The mini opened ,a one-game Big Ten lead over No. 8 Michigan by defeating the Wolverines 16-6 as Jack Trudeau completed 21 of 31 passes for 271 and two touchdowns. UCLAs Rick Neuheisel did even better, connecting on "25 of 27 -including his lasUJ - for 287 yards and a'^^O^rd TD to Mike Sherrard in a 27-24 triumph over No. 11 Washington.

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TV's 'Sadat' Glorifies Slain Egyptian Lader

ByFREDROTHENBERG \P Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The man who brought sanity and humanity to an ancient battle line in the Middle East was not always a statesman and a peacemaker.

As depicted in an emotionally moving but historically suspect and sometimes superficial television movie, Anwar Sadat first exhibited political consciousness as a bomb-thrower and a revolutionary.

"Sadat," the two-part, four-hour glorification of the assassinated Egyptian president, stars Louis Gossett Jr., who captures Sadats inner dignity and his physical appearance, although his performance, at times, comes across as bland.

The miniseries. filmed entirely in Mexico with hordes of extras, ,will be broadcast tonight and next Monday on -the Operation Prime Time network.

Thirty years before he broke ranks with other Arab nations to help close some of the wounds between Israel and Egypt, Sadat was part of the assassination team that killed an

Egyptian deemed to be too friendly with the ruling British authorities. Although he spent time in prison on the murder charge. Sadat was acquitted for political reasons.

Sadats treatment here is so glowing that even his involvement in the assassination is treated sympathetically. Later, when hes courting his second wife, Jihan, he says that his earlier activism occurred before he grew up, which is the closest thing to a wart uncovered by "Sadat.

Some items ignored or swept under the rug were his imprisonment in 1944 for helping two German spies in World War II. the first marriage he outgrew, his early alliance with the Soviet Union and the failure of many of his domestic policies.

To woo audiences from ABC. CBS and NBC, Operation Prime Time feels its films must profile bigger-than-life figures who are then enlarged by the full-blown Hollywood treatment. The last OPT biography, the Emmy award-winning "Golda," starring Ingrid Bergman, chronicled the life of Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir.

Golda did a better job reconstructing the personal life behind the public figure. Sadats private life is fleshed out only superficially. No mention is made of his seven children from the two marriages, and Jihan, played by Madolyn Smith, does little here but boost his morale.

Because it leans in so many directions to show that Sadat was a special man every second of his life, Sadat loses some of the impact it might have had when it chronicles the really courageous acts of the leader who took the first steps toward peace by visiting Egypts hated enemy, Israel.

Still, Sadat is a very watchable film, offering behind-the-scenes history and glimpses into a man who grew gracefully into greatness.

The miniseries begins several months after Sadat's assassination, showing one of his legacies: the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Sinai, following the agreement Sadat worked out at Camp David with President Carter and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin.

An Israeli and an Egyptian soldier embrace, and the Israeli

says: "Without Anwar Sadat, not only might I have died here, so might my sons. Its a powerful beginning.

The story then traces Sadats career in the Egyptian resistance movement against the British and his rise through Egypts military ranks. At one time, he was considered President Gamal Abdel Nassers "yes-man.

When Nasser dies, Sadat assumes the presidency, confiding to his wife that he feels ill-equipped to be a national leader. Her advice: Be your own man.

He starts rising to the occasion when he stands up to the Soviets. After their advisers begin acting too independently, he boots them out of the country. He also launches troops across the Suez Canal, igniting the Yom Kippur War against Israel in 1973.

In one battle, Sadats brother, a pilot, is killed. Sadat cries over his casket and vows to stop the killing. This is great pathos, but one wonders about Sadats sensitivity if death had no impact until it landed on his doorstep.

Theater Offers Extra ^Spirits'

KENNER, La. \AP) -You can expect the usual horde of capering, costumed ghosts and ghouls in horrifying scenes of the macabre at the Kenner Community Theater's "spookhouse" on Halloween night But you might get more than you bargained for, says Joseph Tallufo, the theater's director,

Talluto sajd there have been a lot of unexplained happenings at the theater during his lo-year tenure there

"Whether there are ghosts

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SHOWS 3:00-7:00-9:00

there or not is something that's up to those 'Believe It or .Not' people," he said. "But there have been things that happened here for which there is no logical explanation."

Lights have gone off and on by themselves on a perfectly ciearday.

Footsteps paced outside his office, even though he was alone and the building was locked.

Only a few months ago he heard men and women talking on the stairs leading to his office. But he checked the building and found no one.

"I know these stories sound strange, but Im not a person with a wild imagination," Talluto said.

"At least four different people who claim to be aware of psychic phenomena have come in here and said they believe there are spirits here," Talluto said, "None of them were aware of what the others said, either,

The self-styled psychics told Talluto the 70-year-old theater has seven ghostly inhabitants, including a fur trader named Zack.

At least two of the spirits are women, but no more is known about them. Talluto said.

This area was once the site of a lot of fur trapping, so that could be why a fur trapper's ghost would be here." Talluto said "Maybe he was killed on this site.

"The others m^ght be the ghosts of peo^k w'ho performed here in the past. This building was originally a burlesque house in the 1920s,"

The theater was later a movie house and a gymnasium before the city converted it to a community theater 10 years ago, he said.

No one but Tallufo and the psychics have witnessed the strange happenings, and few cast members are aware of the incidents, he said

Talluto said he spends many evenings alone at the theater and is not afraid.

WEDDING PARTY Actor Larry Hagman. second from left, joins his wife Maj, left, and mother, actress Mary .Martin, right, at his daughter Heidi Kristina ;s wedding to Santa Fe

Tenor Finds New Singing Forum

.ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - More than 7,500 people crowded into a heated tent to hear Italian tenor

Luciano Pavarotti give his first performance for a casinocrowd.

Its new work for me, Pavarotti said before the concert Saturday night. Ive

always had a pioneer mind, ever since I was born. Music had alwys been good to me, and I like doing hew things for the world of opera.., This is a new frontier.

Accompanied by the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra under conductor Emerson Buckley, the tenor sang arias by Verdi and Puccini, among others.

Dylan Switches

For complete TV programming infor-    #    (

For complete TV programming infor mation. consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Reflector.__

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

MONDAY

7 00 JOKH-S Wild

7 30 Tic Tiic

8 00 Scrtcvcro.v I 00 Altor AAriSh

9 30 Now her I

10 00 EmcraTd P

11 00 News 9 1 i 30 Movie

? CO Niqhtwcitrh

TUESDAY

1.00 Niqhlw.itch

5 00 Jim BflkKer

6 00 Corohna d 00 .Mornmq

'8 25 Newsbrrdk

9 25 Newsbreak

10 00 Pyramid

10 30 Press Yuur

11 00 Pnce IS Riqhl

12 00 News 9 I? 30 Younq 4

1 30 As the World

2 30 Capitol

3 00 Guidinq LI 9 00 Waltons

5 00 A Gnflith

5 30 MASH

6 00 News 9

6 30 CBS News

7 00 Jokers Wild

7 30 Tic Tac Douqh

8 00 Mississippi

9 00 Movie !l 00 News 9 11 30 Movie

.2 00 Niqntwdlch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

LOS ANGELES (AP)

Bob Dylan, who startled fans three years ago when he became an agressive born-again Christian, says hes stopped proselytizing because even Jesus only preached for three years.

"I dont particulary regret telling people how to get their souls saved, the 42-year old musician, who was reared as a Jew. said in an interview published in Sundays Los Angeles Times,

"But maybe the time for

- SiTHo say that has just come and gone. Now its time for me to do something else ... Jesus himself only preached for three years.

Although Dylan reportedly has spent much time recently at Chabad Lubavitch. a Hasidic Jewish center in Brooklyn, N.Y., and was seen wearing a yarmulke and prayer shawl at his son Jesses bar mitzvah in Jerusalem, he did not say if he had returned to practicing Judaism.

264 PLAYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE 6 Miles West Of Greenville On U.S. 264(FarmvilleHwy.)

NOW

SHOWING

AT YOUR ADULT ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

v(_o\(! SSM\S(')|

SEKA iT, Americas Hottest

Mickey Mouse 85 And Strong

artist Brian Blount Saturday. Heidi Kristina is 23, her husband is 33. Hagman stars in televisions Dallas." (.AP Laserphoto)

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -Mickey Mouse turns 55 this month - but dont look for his retirement soon.

The mouse that never ages is still going strong, and Disneyland is capitalizing on his perennial popularity with a monthlong birthday celebration that began Saturday.

The amusement park is bringing back some of the originial Mouseketeers for special shows, offering kids birthday meals with party hats and their favorite cartoon characters, and even throwing in free Mousercize headbands to anyone under age 11.

The latter is a spinoff of the Disney Channel's exercise and disco-music program, led by none other than Mickey himself.

Among the original

Mouseketeers appearing in shows at Disneyland are Cubby OBrien, Darlene Gillespie, Sherry Alberoni, Lonnie Burr, Tommy Cole and Don Grady, park spokesman Bob Roth said.

Mickeys official birth date is Nov, 18, 1928, when he debuted in the film Steamboat Willie, but Disneyland is starting the celebration early.

ADULTS $100 TIL 5:30

' BUCCANEER MO VIES'

1-3-5-7-9 ^

HERE AND NOW -R.

1:00-3:05-5:10

7:15-9:20

BRAINSTORM

RATED PG

1:10-3:10 5:10-7:10-9:10

THE FINAL TERROR -R.

MONDAY

7 00 Jeffersons

7 30 Family Feud

8 00 Boone

9 00 Movie II 00 News

11 30 Tonight

12 30 Letterman

1 30 Overnight

2 30 News TUESDAY

5 30 Lie Detector

6 00 Almanac

7 00 Today 7 25 News

7 30 Today

8 25 News 8 30 Today

11 00 Wheel of

11 30 Dream House

12 00 News

12 30 Search For

1 00 DaysOtOur

2 00 Another WId

3 00 Fantasy

4 00 Whitney the

4 30 Brady Bunch

5 00 Gomer Pyle

5 30 WKRP

6 00 News

6 30 NBC News

7 00 Jefferson

7 30 Family Feud

8 00 A Team

9 00 Rem Steele

1 0 00 Bay City n 00 News

99' BUFFET!

SPECIAL HALLOWEEN BUFFET FROM 4:30 P.M. UNTIL 8:30 P.M.

Monday, October 31 for Kids Under 12

JWl

favorite stars home this week.

Get an inside look at their private lives.

I James Brolin |

h,G<h^ JVfoming America





Green Trial Cost $90,000

RAIirT/lU    /*n\    1______..    .......    f

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The indictment and prosecution of Lt. Gov. Jimmy , Green, which resulted in his acquittal on bribery charges, cost taxpayers more than $90,000, according to preliminary estimates from court officials.

The charges against Green arose from Colcor, the FBIs 21-month investigation into political corruption in southeastern North Carolina. The cost of Colcor which led to indictments against 40 )eople - was $135,000, said Robert Pence, the FBI agent in charge of North Carolina operations.

Green said he would have a statement this week about how much the trial cost him personally. The people of North Carolina deserve to

know, he said after his acquittal.

L. Sneed High, a Fayetteville lawyer and a former legislative colleague of Green, set up a Jimmy Green Defense Fund in August. High declined to say how much money was raised or how much was needed.

On Friday, a Wake County Superior Court jury found Green innocent of charges that he took a $2,000 bribe and agreed to take bribes of $10,000 a month from an FBI agent posing as a businessman with underworld connections.

Months before he was indicted, Green said, I would think that the people of l^rth Carolina woud be tireq>oL^ the taxpayers money bing**^ spent in this manner.

B>uuii{ey Teitfu 9kc.

%siMf Wt jqwoMf

Mrs. Rae Brantley 1106 Treemont Rd., Wilson. N.C. 27893 Phone: 291-9882 Collect

TOURS:

Nov. 10-13........-..........Florida    Including

St. Augustine, Disney World & Epcot

Dec. 16 .........Candlelight Christinas

Tour Of Chinqua-Penn, Reidsville. N.C.

Also A Shopping Trip At Four Seasons Mall, Greensboro, N.C. $22 Per Person

FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES; Confusion can be the con* dition you encounter early in the day unless you make sure you have every detail of any course of action well thought out and have organized your day.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Dont permit some outside matter of little importance to take you away from vital duties you have to perform.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You want to revise some creative plan, but be sure it is wise that you do so before making radical changes.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Listening carefully to what kin are saying will save you confusion and arguments later. Give in to compromises.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Reading missives carefully is important today, especially any contracts. Pay attention to fine print.

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) Important you use care in the handling of money, also in any matters of charity and stay within your budget.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Be practical and stop all that daydreaming and get busy accomplishing. Youve been neglecting too many tasks at hand.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Schedule your work well and get it done in your precise and clever fashion and bo enthused about it.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Before you go out to buy something, make sure you really want it, otherwise you could later regret having spent the money.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Doc. 21) Make sure you are precise in handling your job, otherwise you could get into trouble of some kind.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You get ideas about how best to advance, but test them for practicality and workability first, before you invest any money.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Study those puzzling statements well and make any corrections that are needed. Someone is deliberately misleading you.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Listen carefully to what a partner says and dont try to put words into his or her mouth, otherwise trouble ensues.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be one of those charming young persons who will bo very imaginative during early childhood so impress upon him, or her the importance of being more practical and down-to-earth, and gaining the respect of others.

Vessels Join Hunt For Ship

PEKING (AP) - Two Vietnamese vessels joined American and Chinese aircraft and ships hunting for the crew of an American oil drilling ship feared lost in a typhoon, the official Xinhua news agency said today.

U.S. and Chinese officials requested the Vietnamese government assist in the hunt for the 81 missing crewmen of the 5,926-ton Glomar Java Sea, missing since last Wednesday,

Xinhua said.

The drilling ship had been prospecting for oil south of Chinas Hainan island in the South China Sea, opposite the coast of Vietnam, when Typhoon Lex hit.

MOOSE LODGE

ROAST BEEF DINNER NOV. 9,1983 SERVED 7:00-8:15 P.M.

BIG BAND MUSIC BY: THE ESQUIRES FROM RALEIGH

MEMBERS & INVITED GUESTS DRESS: COATS & TIES DONATION: $20.00 Per Couple DANCING: 8:45-12:45 RESERVATIONS LIMITEDTICKETS CALL: 756-4375

J.B.s Island Seafood

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PEANUTS

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C._Monday.    October    31.1983    13

EACH HALLOWEEN I 5IT IN THIS PUMPKIN PATCH LUAITIN6 FOR THE GREAT PUMPKlN"TOAPPEAR...

THIS VEAR I KNOW HE'S GOING TO come!

WHAT WAS THAT? i MEARP A NOISE' 15 IT? ITlSi!

irSDzreswKeNY'aj Ai%cpH,,.vVrteM you AMD men yiv OFF.

oavie

wTri AM euecrmc a eee stuck I WHeeu? Jimtkeaxle.

Delivery And Service Included

Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville Boulevard (Next to Kmart)

Hours: Monday Thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

Friday 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. Closed Wednesdays

Phone 355-2101

RENT TO OWN PLAN!

BLONDIE

I'M SELLING

PRESCRIPTION

EYEGLASSES

BEETLE BAILEY

PHANTOM

^BUT YpONTNEEDIT.

PETRA tell the OLD MAN wE TOOK    the    TIOERCARRV

the \ REX OFF, THAT'LL

FRANK & ERNEST

IT; T||V\F to KjeiNG ^^UNoo/Kl OuT Of p rm    5M0OT    ^

Him with a \ tranquilizer

PApr.,    ^    ^

-A

'MAUfj: lO-J;

FUNKY WINKERBEAN.

I    SHOULD    ORDER

50METHING7 U6HT/

OH,CD/VIEOM,AMN!60E'P CELEBI?AT)N& goUR NEW3DB... LET'S LIVE IT UP AND ORDER A LARGE PIZZA i

OK/L^,B(JTr/V10N ADlET,SO OUST cor IT INTO ROUR PIECES

plase:.'

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me,..TriaP2MiM9

^i/RuRyivce^iTc... , ^eiAt wiTf,.

mmc pfioscAM,..

what TO ANr DRW





)4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C _ Monday. October 31 1983

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES

Personis

In Memoriam

Cord O* Thanks Sp(H al Notices Tr.ivei S. lours Ai'tomotive uh.ld care Dav Nursery Health Care

F niployment

F O' sale instr 1 S tion ^ os* And F ound ^ oans And Vortqaqes [A,,s ness services

v'pper'nn <>

P'i o*'-ss cin,e K.,-a i sta'e

002

003

005

007

00

010

040

filed in the above entitled action on the 27th day ot October 1983 The nature ot the relief sought is as tolloias

A ludqement of absolute divorce You are required to make defense to siich pleadings not later than December 10 1983 and upon failure to do so the party seeking service against you aiII apply to the Court for the relief sought This the 27th day ot October 1983 OWENS. ROUSE & NELSON By

James A Nelson Jr Attorney for Plamfift P O Bos 302 105 West Third Street Greenville North Carolina 27834

Telephone 1919) 758 4276 October 31 November 7 U. 1983

apt"

WANTED

RENT LEASE

^ O'"'

Hpn

v.c For en*

. 'rs or Ren* F or\ ease , t , r R e n *

mp.se Renais H. n-f-s F or Rent

- p.t ( F'cr Rem

V. -per'v c or Rent . Rer*

FILENO 83 k 4b6

FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT I    OFJUSTICE

i .-SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE the CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN RE ESTATE OF MARGARET S MORRISON Deceased Late ol the County ot Pitt

NOTICE TO DEBTORS

ANDCREDITORS The undersigned having qualified as Executor ot the state ot Margaret S Mornson this is to ,not ly all persons having , 'aims aqainst the Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 'th day ot Apn- i8-J or this Notice will be pleaded n bar oi their recovery All pe rsons indebted to the Estate a ill piease make immediate pay'sient to the un I dersigned

This I2th day ot October :9H3 William G Morrison E xecutor tor the Etale ot I    Marqatet.S Morrison

tot Lakevcood Drive j    GrcmiiviMf NC 27834

1 Laurences Grana'-n I Attorney tor the Estate*

[ Suite 2 Oakmont Professional ' Offices

I Greenville NC 2783-:

I October '7 24 3 November 7 1983

] Parcel 42E13I5 located in the South Evans Community Development I Proiect B 81 DN 37 0057, I Greenville, North Carolina, de scribed as follows,

I Disposal Parcel 42E(3)5 i BEGINNING at an existing iron I pipe located at the point of in tersection ot the southern right of way line of 12th Street and the western right of way line of Washington Street from this point j runs then along the western right of I way line ot Washington Street S 20 I deq 05 min 10 sec W 100 00 feet to I an iron pipe set in the western right I ot way line ot Washington Street,

I the ESTABLISHED BEGINNING ! POINT

' FROM THIS ESTABLISHED I BEGINNING POINT runs then 1 along the western right of way line ot Washington Street S 20 deg 05 mm 10 sec W 65 02 feet to an existing iron pipe in the western right of way line ot Washington Street runs then N 70 deg 00 min H sec W 133 33 feet to an iron pipe set runs then N 20 deg 00 min 00 sec E 65 40 feet to an iron pipe set runs then S 70 deg 00 min. 00 sec W 133 42 feet to an iron pipe set in the western right ot way line of Washington street, the ESTABLISHED BEGINNING POINT Containing 8689 square feet ot land

Linsey R Griffin, the propped redeveloper has tiled with the City of Greenville a Redeveloper's Statement tor Public Disclosure in the form prescribed by the Secre lary of the Department ol Housing and Urban Development pursuant to Section 105(e) of the Housing Act ot 1949 as amended

The said Redoveloper s State ment is available tor public exami nation al the Office of the Com munity Development ol the City ot Greenville during its regular hours, said oil ice being located at 201 West Fifth Street Greenville North Car olina. and ds regular office hours being from 8 00 AM to 5 00PM, Monday through F riday -each week Community Development Otfice ol the City ot Greenville October 24, 31 1983

018

Ford

FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON

1979 Fully loaded, new tires Excellent condition. Low mileage $3800 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights

051

Help Wanted

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for

1975 FORD GRANADA. Automatic transmission, air condition Phone 758 4024 after 5 p.m

1982 FORD ESCORT, with air, like new Assume payments Call 756 9886after6p m

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS WAGON. 1980. New set of

radial tires, air condition. AM FM stereo 756 1345 between 8 4

1 978 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme Excellent condition 758 0778 days; nights 756 8604

SALE

g ' -cpuns .\Oon Loai

f qi.ipment

g.- r .rrcl S.iles

gv. pi^vn*

> a Goods

M .    eieou5

V :     Homes loi    Sale

/'t Home Insurance

V ,    .    a lns*rjments    .

t , '    t    iig Goods

i"i-r. ai Property .-la';'--! n,v "'S 'or Sale ir10' Sate H ,-s tor Sale ' , ,1 .'ment Property , .)' ) 1 or sale . t Sa e R| . ,- * Proper'y tor Sale

FILE NO 83 E 488

I    FILMNO

IN the GENERAL COURT I    OFJUSTICE-

I SUPE RIOR COURT DIVISION I    BEFORE the CLERK

1 north CAROLINA I PITT COUNTY

! IN RE ESTATE OF JOHN I CALVIN YEAGER-Deceased Late I ot the Coun'y ot Pdt

NOTICE TODEBTORS 1    ANDCREDITORS

I , undersiqried has nq qi alilii'd I as txC'.etri of the Estate gt John Calvin Yeager this is to not'ty ah persons having claims against the Estate to present them to the undersigned on or hetpre the 7tti day ot April '984 Orth.sNotiir .Mil be pleaded m bar ot ihoir recovery All persons indebted to the Estate .Mil please make .mmediate- pay ment to the undersigned This 12th day of October .!9b.i E'l/abethG Yeager E xec t'tr of the E state ol ,

John Calv n Yeaqer ' 13 WilKshire Dr've Greenville NC 2^834 Laurence^ Graham Attorney tor the Estate Su'le 2. Oakmont Prgii Offices

Greenville NC 27834 October 2v 31 Npv

,'Onai

983

IN THE GENERAL COURI

. OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COUR T DiviSlON north CAROLINA CON r y Of PITT IN the- matter Of T H ESTATE Of, Alvin davi 7J1c-ARTHUR DECE ase D NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having q..

thi

ol

Alvin d a v i

tylcARTHLjR North Ca'Ohna 'h s , 'o ngt >, persons h.i. nq i la i'", ,iga,st estate u I ALVIN D A V-

Ms ARTHUf^

fo tfi

f'f'i to ffi

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torney O'-

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Vh L

A L V 1 N [T

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P 0 Box

46'

ForrYl. '

-- NC

. E LdO'

ui tfu- E ..ftf

Aivin D,h

. 1^ iMc Art>i;,,r

NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND

AND

STATEMENTOF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE I NOT ILE is hereby given that the I C ity ot Greenville is considering the I proposal to enter into a contract for I the disposal ot the following de scribed real property, including the house and any other improvements thereon to Lisha N Harvey ot Greenville North Carolina on or before November JO 1983, said real property being Disposal Parcel H 4, located m the Southside Redevel op men I Pro|Oct N.C R 134, Greenville North Carolina

Disposal Parcel H 4 BEGINN ING at a point located 30 leet N 86 deq 21 min E'oI an iron stake at ' the intersection ot the eastern right : ot .say I ne ot Garland Street and ' the southern right ot way line of j Howell Street from the Beginning I Point runs then along the southern 1 I iqht ol way line ol Howell Street N

86 deq 21 min E 14 min 30 sec E ,38 37 teel to an iron stake set

contmues, along tne southern right of .say ol Howell Street N 87 deq 14 : min' 30 sec E 21 36 feet to an iron 1 '.taki*    set    runs    thcn    S    02    deg    45

, mm 30 sec E 145 tect to an iron stake    set    runs    then    S    87    deq    14

'Tim 30 sec W    60 feel    to    an iron

stake    set    runs    then    N    02    deq    45

'-nin 30 sec W 144 40 feet to an iron

stake found m the southern right of .say line ol Howell Street, the point ol lieqinmnq

Said tract ol land being more partiLularly described according to

a survey plat dated December 14

981 . prepared by Rivers and Assoviates describ'.'d as Disposal Parcel H4 Southside Proiect N C R 134 Property address 609

Howell Street Greenville North ("arouiia

I isha N Harvey the proposed piii(has..'r has filed with the City ot G'een. iie a Redeveloper s State meet lor Public Disclosure m the form prescribed by the Secretary ot the De Urban

023

Pontiac

1982 PONTIAC 6000 LE 4 door. 22.600 miles, excellent condition, $1,000 and assume loan or will take older car at same value Can be seen Monday Friday 9 to 5 al Prepshirt No phone calls please

024

Foreign

DATSUN 280ZX    2        2,    1979    Blue,

59.000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package Excellent condition $7700 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights.

SUBARU, 1981 GL Stationwagon. white Automatic, air condition, cruise $3,975 Phone 355 2445

1968 DATSUN convertible Need a lot of work $650. Call Jack Edwards at 752 2277

1973 DATSUN 240Z. Blue and white interior. 62,000 miles, air, 4 speed, wire basket wheels, near immacu late condition $4200 negotiable 1 946 1555 after 6 p m

1974 DATSUN 160Z. Original owner New paint, 4 speed, air Excellent condition $3495 1 641 3848 before 5 and 1 823 7557after 5p m

1 974 TOYOTA Corolla sta tionwaoon, rebuilt engine, $300 firm Call 795 3631 after6 30p m

1975

6513

TOYOTA Corolla $800    355

1978 PORSCHE 924. Excellent con dition Actual mileage $10,200 Days 1 946 6007, after 5, 758 4313

1979 TOYOTA Corolla Deluxe 4 speed, air. good condition $3300 756 0942

1982 HONDA PRELUDE. 5 speed AM FM stereo cassette air, cruise control 758 4207

If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it this fall in these

columns Call 752 6166

032

Boats For Sate

GREAT CATCH, 12 Sears Alumi num boat, 25 speed electric motor 2 paddles, only $375 752 2334 or 758 3124

SAILBOAT SNIPE. $1100 or trade for fishing boat Call 752 781 1 anytime

1978 17' MFG with 115 Johnson and galvanized trailer Best otter! 752 4577.

034

Campers For Sale

experienced sales representative to

ill t                

call on professional clientele Rocky Mount area Attractive com mission, bonus, base pay structure The highly motivated individual should call Jamie at Heritage Personnel Service 355 2020

EXERCISE instructors. Full and part time positions Apply in person at The Spa, Southpark Shopping Center

EXPERIENCED SALES PERSON

for fine jewelry store. Rotating nights and weekends Must be neat in appearance and be willing to work Apply in person only to Greenville Jewelers, Pitt Plaza

FEE PAID Representative tor nutritional sales Successful can didate will possess a college degree, solid sales background and have a professional appearance Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020

FLOORING BUSINESS looking for self starting individual with busi ness background Musi be able to manage people, minimum invest ment high profit 355 2354 from 9 5

FULL TIME retail management position available Apply in person at H L Hodges Company

GRADY WHITE BOATS has an

immediate opening for a part time truck driver Experienced only need apply By appointment call 752 2111, extension 251 between 9 am 4pm

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.

HEATING AND AIR Conditioning Service Personnel wanted At least 1 year of experience required Call 756 4624 or apply In person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors

HELP needed Consisting of heavy lifting Hours 9 to 2 Apply in person at Taco Bell.

HIGHLY MOTIVATED and ag

gressive salespeople needed Imme diately for the Pitt, Greene, Lenoir. Wilson, and Wayne county area Excellent commission in the sale of energy management products $50,000 potential tor right persons Call I 443 4875

051

Help Wanted

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

WNCT AM and FM radio is looking

for an energetic self starter to ith

represent both facilities in eastern North Carolina Benefits package, expenses, commission and base salary will be given to the right person Call 1 800 682 8116 to set up an interview. WNCT Radio is an Equal Opportunity Employer

SALES REPRESENTATIVE In

dustrial cleaning supplies tor established area in Greenville and surrounding counties Excellent position for retiree either full or part time Above average earnings with incentive bonus and paiid hospitalization Send brief resume to B G Hudgins, PO Box 6028, Norfolk, Va 23508

SALESPERSONS Local weekly publication needs full or part time salespersons Some media sales preferred, but not necessary Call 757 0474 for interview

SASLOW'S JEWELERS' is accept mg applications for full and part time sales people No phone inqui ries Apply in person at Saslow's, Pitt Plaza

SECRETARY FOR CPA firm Good typist and appearance, pleasing personality Send resume to PO Drawer 628. Greenville, NC 27834

SECRETARY. Must have neat handwriting, able to carry out assignments, CRT experience pre ferred Must have good secretarial skills, and pleasant telephone per sonality. Send resume and salary requirements to E M Rollins, PO Box 8026, Greenville, NC 27834 EOE

TECHNICAL ASSISTANT for

communications engineering firm Entry level Duties will Include computer aided graphics and drat ting and use ot topographic maps Good mathematical ability and Ink related dratting skills are re quired Must be highly motivated Associates degree or better Send resume, references and single page sample ot or ginal graphics work (no blueprints) to L Roslnus, PO Box 8026, Greenville, NC 27834 EOE

TELLER part time, experience Contact Rosa Mills

required Planters National Bank, 752 7173

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

MANAGER TRAINEE to work in Washington, NC High school edu cation Some collection work at nights Apply in person at 109 Market Street, Washington NC

MECHANIC NEEDED. Must have tools Excellent company benefits Apply to Robert Starling or Bill Brown, Brown 8. Wood, Inc, 1205 Dickinson Avenue

NEW BERN CRAVEN County Schools has a vacancy in an emo tionally handicapped class N C certification required Contact the Assistant Superintendent for Personnel P O Box 969, New Bern, NC 28560 or call 919 638 2133 to receive an application form

JAYCO POP UPS Seahawk and Cobra truck covers Camptown RV's, Ayden, NC 746 3530

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops 250 units in stock O'BrianIs, Raleigh, N C 834 2774

1973 POPUP CAMPER sleeps 8, very good condition $900 753 2420 after 3pm

23' 1981 Rockwood motor home, excellent condition, fully loaded with extras Days 752 7373. mghls 752 1076

036

Cycles For Sale

NO LAYOFFS NO CUTBACKS

Need 8 people $250 week and up Start Immediately Call Mr Con nelly758 5140

PLUG BUILDER needed immedi ately Must be familiar with con strucfion ot wooden plugs tor tiberqiass molds Must have pre cision wood working ability. Ap pointmenf only' Contact Personnel Department at 752 21 1 1. extension 251

POLICE OFFICER, part time, NC certified Contact Chief of Police, Fountain Ponce Department

,    .    1-I c    81    YAMAHA    650    Special,    asking

'ri Ta of Housing and    includes    2    Belstar    helmets

, P.',''','    A,.    i    Cycle    fully    equipped.    5,500    miles    8

Cycle fully equipped.

Id 5 call 756 6424, after 5 30 cal 756 9325

Si-ction lOiiii* ol the Housing Act of !9.;y as amended

The said Redovyloper s Stale________

ment ,s a.,1 iable for public exami r983 450 KNIGHTHAWK Honda for na'ion al the oHue ot me Com I sale $2,000 Excellent condition munitv Owelofi'ment ot the City of; Phone 757 1253 Gieei'viile during its regular hours

D.'ii'.isi : GA-rLORD .VCNAL L ^ I

.rgoi,F 'ON ,7-Ri'. f L AND

P O Dr 0*. 'Ob*'

.,i 0 oilne bemq locali.*d al 201 West F 't'-. S'ree! G'eenv ile North Car Olma and its r,.guiar otfiCO hours b*inq tro'-h fl 00 AM to 5 00 PM. Monda/ "irouqh F riday each week Community Development OHice

ot the City Ot Greenville Oitober3! Novernber 7 1983

039

Trucks For Sale

MAZDA DIESEL, 1982. longbed 5 speed radials, near 40 miles per gallon cassette air Perfect $5995 Call 756 9710 alter 5

PRIOR AIR FORCE If you have been honorably dis charged within the last 5 years, and are qualified with a minimum AFSC Skill Level of 5, the Air Force is looking tor youl Openings available for Munitions, Inte grated Electronics, Intellegence, Aircraft Maintenance also, selected Electronics Weather op portunifies from Other services Call today! MSqt Ben Grady or TSqt Bruce Barry 115 Redbanks Suite B, Greenville, N.C 27834 (919) 756 2194.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

REGAPdiNG 'Hf po'-'hlAI F v'LDsitJGOF,

AGNF*- r VI' L    SV    t-lO(.)L

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

north C AROLINA

PIT!county

T'i't .jndcr-.ignpd ha v mq qua 111 icd

1974 K 5 BLAZER 4 wheel drive, 69.000 miles, $2500 negotiable Call 756 3431 after 7

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1975 CHEVROLET truck, automatic transmission Good condition $)695 753 5862 tor more information

ua'^oot" AdanU''lato'0l'Pitl ^-pORD SUPER CAB. Air con in'/ North Carolina 'us I', to notity all piTso'is. firms I corpor.itions having claims nils' s.iid E slat >11' undi

PROFESSIONAL FIRM has post tion open tor secre tar'y receptionist Excellent typing, tiling phone skills, and general office experience required Short hand a dotinile plus Ability to work well with the public is a must For more information call 746 6134 be tween 8 and 5

dition, AM FM, camper top $2500 firm Call niqhts I 524 4925 or days 746 2402

to present them | lygj TOYOTA, 4x4 long bed, air ud on or before the | condition. AM FM stereo, white

20h '.lav ol Ap'il l9H4or ih'S notice ' bn piiaded in bar ol their

-eiOyery

All persons indebted to said Estale .Mil pie.ise make immediate payment fo the undC'rsiqned

fhis the I3*n day ot Odobi'r 1983 Mr Joseph Adams Rt 5 Box 240 G'reenyille N C 27834 Admuiistralor ot the E slate Laura M Adams ROPf'.l While A'tor ne / at Law P O Bo> 951 Greeny.ile N C 27834 V'9 7shJ!2'l Oc lotier I ,'.t J1 Nove

letter tires, 5 speed Excellent condition $6800 negotiable Call I 291 4164 alter 4pm

1983 S15 GMC truck: Air. power steering, AM FM Best otter! 752

4577

040

Child Care

1963

I MATURE WOMAN to care for ] infant in- parents' home in ' Pineridge Also includes light I housekeeping Experience and ref I erence required Call 758 0809' be , tween 11am and 3 p m Monday through Friday

002

PERSONALS

FRIENDS OF Bi

to help rui'l(;(t him

r unr il

Hadden ask you to the (City

WOULD LIKE SOMEONE to come in home to babysit infant Refer enees required Pay negotiable Starling November I 756 9656

046

PETS

Reflector Classified PfiOfle752-f66

'981

007

SPECIALNOTICES

DIXON DUFI u IS DOiJB BY

Ph.lUp R DiXOn S< hool Board Atior-.u / G'-e.-n/ lie.C i*. .('100 NCNB Bu 'Cl ".g P O Dr,1 ..(' A.s .

Gr(-e-, viMi- Nf    'rs

Ti'lephoni 9'v ''.f*, ftzii.,'

'j '7    .    N,-,/.'lut,

; AKC REGISTERED COLLIES, 3

: months old, beautiful markings. I ideal tor breeding or pets, $100 , 5125 Greenville9l9 756 1788

NOW OPEN M 8 W Country Crafts :    --------

,11-id GiHv mile from Pdt County | , f rurqrounds on Ramhorn Road Gr. un/'i... NC All k mds ot cratt j COCKER    SPANIELS 2 males^

it.-'fis for home and spec lal gifts tor I 758 6633    after    3    30 p    m

your Christmas

for sale 1 female, males Phone 758 1580

PROJECT Manager Draftperson for communications engineering firm Short term position, possibly leading to permanent employment Duties will include computer aided engineering and graphics and some original graphics Must be a highly motivated quick learner with good

WANTED Estimators Delailers Drafters familiar with commercial projects Additional on the job training will be supplied in the

hardware and door related products industry Send resume to Edwards

Inc . PO Box 775, Greenville, At tention Manager

WANTED general ottice worker Typing and pleasant telephone voice essential Send resume to General Office, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

WANTED housekeeper needed for family, I day a week Prefer Fridays, but will consider another day Call 355 6107

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs Counter tops, plumbing and carpentry State License. 746 2657 or 752 1920.

BOOKKEEPING SERVICES full time in my home, 18 years expert ence Call 524 4337

BRICK OR BLOCK work repairs or additions 11 years experience. Call 825 6591 after 7p m

CARPENTRY REPAIR, remodel ing, room additions Free estimates. 758 3693 or 757 3919.

EXPERIENCED LPN desires full or part time day work. Reasonable! Call 355 2520.

GET YOUR FALL painting done and carpenter repair or remodel ing. Call after 5 pm. 758 5226

061

Antiques

NINA'S ANTIQUES announces new hours beginning Sunday. October 30. Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 16 Farn .......

Farmville Highway, 264

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale.J P Stancil, 752 6331

FIREWOOD FOR SALE. $35 a

truckload, $80 a cord Phone 753 5961

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready to go Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5 p.m.

SEASONED OAK firewood, $90 cord; seasoned mixed firewood. $80 cord Free delivery and stacked Ready to go 756 8358 after 5

SEASONED OAK, Hickory Beech, $45 a '2 cord. Delivered and stacked Call 757 1637 SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 or 758 5590,

WOOD FOR SALE. Mixed, $35 Oak, $40 and $45 Call 752 6286 anytime

WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodstoves, chimney pipe and ac cessories Squire Stoves Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques, Winterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007

065 Farm Equipment

FARM MACHINERY AUCTION

Sale, Tuesday, November 1st at 10 a m 150-tractors, 300 implements We buy and sell used equipment daily Wayne Implement Auction Corp, PO Box 233, Highway 117 South, Goldsboro. NC 27533 0233 NC 188 Phone 734 4234.

FIRE WOOD CUTTING supplies chains to fit most saws available Prices start at $9 99. Bar oil $3 49 per gallon 2 cycle engine oil $1 49 per pint. 3 point hitch wood splitter $199.95 less hydraulics, road model 16 Ion 5 horsepower $923 95 un assembled Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION al guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69 Waterbeds, $149 Factory Mat tress 8 Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626

HERE'S ALL YOU have fo do Call the classified department with your ad tor a still good item and you'll make some extra cash! Call 752 6166

BROYHILL SOLID wood dining room suit, china and hutch, table and 6 chairs Will finance! 757 0451, ask for Mr Carraway

WHITE DOULBLE Dresser with mirror Also matching 5 drawer chest. Good condition $125    756

7685

072

Livestock

ENTIRE STABLE for lease 7 stalls

tnd tack room 20 acres pasture utomatic water tank. $250 per month Call 756 9315 or 756 5097

HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237

074

Miscellaneous

ALL INVENTORY from Little Fireside Shop Glass fireplace doors, gas logs, all equipment at big savings just when you need It For more information call 756 1507.

NURSES AID with experience in lifting, moving, feeding and bathing patients, also taking temperatures and other vital signs would love to sit with someone in your home, 756 4600

ANTIQUE POT BELLIED stove Excellent condition Call 757 1240 after 5 pm

are YOU Holding A MORTGAGE ON PROPERTY YOU SOLD?

SELL IT FOR CASH ANYWHERE IN USA 1ST OR 2ND FINANCIAL INVESTMENT GROUP INC CALL COLLECT 1-704 274 0863

074

Miscellaneous

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON & BUYING TVs, Stereos.cameras, typewriters, gold 8 silver, anything else ot value Southern Pawn Shop. 752 2464._

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 pm, Jim Hudson

LOWREY GENIE 88 Orgat

Excellent condition Craftsman Band Saw, 12" Phone 746 3938

MAYTAG WASHER and dryer $350 or best otter Call 756 6336.

MOVING! 1981 Sears 17 cubic loot frost tree refrigerator, $300 New Sears 20" cut 4 horsepower lawn mower with mulching kit, $150 Assorted drapes Call 752 1329^_

NATURAL GAS FURNACE, 100,000 BTU, Horizontal air flow Make reasonable otter. 758 7952_

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

RENT TO OWN!! New 19" Sharp color TV. Payments, $22 42, per month Furniture World I I/Stereo City, 757 0451, ask tor Mike

REPOSSESSIONS:    Vacuums    and

shampooers. Call dealer, 756 6 711.

SEARS HEAT SCREEN 75, antique

ula

brass slated bitold doors, regular $159.99, will sell tor $75 746 4510

SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69 88

SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quali ty printer 5 months old Used 1 month In mint condition $550 752 3980 from 9 a m. to5 30p m

STIHLCHAINSAWS

Clark 8 Co , Greenville, 756 2557

TROY-BILT 1980 filler, 4 horse power, horse with accessories. 746 6774

OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows it's important to please you. And we receive hundreds of testimonials every year

USED BARGAINS furnaces, heat ers, furniture, appliances, fools, household items, windows, doors, plumbing and electric supplies at Our Antique Barn 8 Swap Shop, W L Dunn 8 Sons. Pinetops, NC, 1 827 445!

WASHER, heavy duty, very good condition, $125 746 2072

WOODSTOVE Fisher Grandpapa Bear $400 lirm. Call 758 2050

10X12 PIECE OF CARPET, $35

752 1096

17 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator, good condition, $125 or best offer 752 1480

2 ALADIN Kerosun healers for sale by owner 2 sets china, Noritake, oak dresser 756 8785

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

NEW 70 X 14 Parkway home I'j bath with garden tub, completely carpeted. Name brand appliances, total electric, storm windows

Minimum down payment with payments under $205 00 Colonial Mobile Homes, 107 W Greenville Boulevard, Greenville, N C 355 2302

NO DOWN PAYMENT, 1980 14x52, and assume loan. 758 5720

NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

PAINTING INTERIOR and exteri or. Any type of carpenter repair Call 746 2097 after 3 30 p m

PAINTING Interior and exterior Free estimates. References, work guaranteed 13 years experience 756 6873 after 6pm

PAINTING. 10 years experience. Free estimates 752 9915.

PAINTING inside or outside 15 years experience. Free estimates All work guaranteed 758 7815

ATARI 5200 with 5 game cartridges $165 Like new Phone 756 2403

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale 4 models Delivery setup 919 763 9734

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, I bath, cathedral ceiling Carpeted, appliances, tofal electnc Minimum down payment with payments ot less than $140 per month

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191

NO MONEY DOWN!

No Gimmicks Not Restricted To Veterans

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand topsoil and stone Also driveway work .

We have double wides as low as $265 a month and single wides as low as $155 a month i

CASH NOW

PAINTING: Tired of paying con tractors high prices Experienced

enced

painters All work guaranteed 752 0902

QUALITY PAINTING Year round! Call Ralph Birchard, Jr , 6 p m. to 11 p.m at 757 3702

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old cloirks, 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

WALLPAPERING AND Painting 10 years experience Local refer enees 758 7748

18 YEAR old desires fulltime babysitting job 758 3715.

miithematical ability Drafting skills and associate dpqri't* or better. | IS preferred Send resume, refer | enees and salary requirements to L ! Rosinus, PO Bo* 8076, Greenville, ' NC 27834 EOE '    I

060

FOR SALE

SACHS-DOLMAR CHAIN SAWS

Clark 8 Co , Greenville, 756 2557

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and refinishing at Tar Road Antiques, I mile south of Sunshine Garden Center 756 9123

COUCH, $75. Day or night 756 2899

061

Antiques

RECEPTIONIST NEEDED

immediately Must possess good typing skills Equal Opportunity Employer For interview, please call Jamie at Heritage Personnel Service 355 2020

RESUMES WRITTEN to get results plus |0b search programs Call tor brochure or appointment Cushman Writing Associates, 1 637 2889

SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area A go getter altitude, energy, creativity Earnings based I on performance Benefits and In centives Promotions from within Call 756 6711

Searching tor the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day_

THE GREATER ANTIQUE SHOW

and Sale sponsored by The Woman's Club of Raleigh. W Kerr Scott Building, state fairgrounds, November 8 and 9, 11 a m til 9 p m November 10    11 a m til 6 p m

Free lectures Wednesday and Thursday at 10 a m Food and beverages served during show hours

FULLFIGURE?

CALL 756-4833 TRADEWINDS FAMILY HOUSING

705 West Greenville Blvd

NO MONEY DOWN. VA 100% financing New 1984 Single, wide, 2 bedroom, one bath, carpeted, name brand appliances, total electric, withpayments under $151 00 permonth Colonial Mobile Homes, 107W Greenville Boulevard . Greenville, N C 355 2302

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Transition Wardrobes has pre viously owned large size clothing at reasonable prices Most blouses, skirts and pants, $6 50 $12 00; coats from $15 00, dresses from $8.00 Call 355 2508 after 2 PM

GE STOVE, cabinet style, green, excellent condition, $150 or best otter Call 746 2789 anytime

GE USED refrigerator. Frost free. White $300. 756 6037 after 6

HIDE A BED SOFA, Good condi tion $100 Call 758 7742

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

JOHNSENS ANTIQUES & LAMP SHOP

SELECTION OF SMALL ANTIQUES

LAMPS-GLASS SHADES 4 CHIMNEYS

HANDMADE FABRIC SHADES

OLD LAMPS REPAIRED AND REWIRED

NEW LOCATION

758-4839

315E. 11THST. GREENVILLE

shopp

'98!

rl/ ,v th US and place pi*( ;ai order', T'l.'e gift ipp-'iq Hours 9 to S Tuesday u Salurd'i/ Sunday 2 to 5 l0.iS

REGISTERED Lhasa Apso 6 month old female All shots Loves children Great temperment! 756 9223 or 756 3613

o'V

PUBLIC NOTICES

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID '

per

S'.'-i >';    ,1    '.    .*.    ' O'- I'Ceived

by    p rr'* l -g Lj<-pfir'rr.fni Ol

Pitt t    */*    or    ,j    Hosp    tal until

andpu*. ' /'iper,.,/j TIME ; /. p rr-DATE N'w'-rrtier

LOCA- on Oorc,,/,.. r,. Poom 2. ICU

at Pitt r ,r / f/.err,oriai Hospital, Greenvii ' Nor*' f.irgir'a Oft the purr hase'ji'te *0' o.*, rg Sc"'tiha'''7n Catof r,|

Specifiatior*- arid bid proposal forms are on tee 'tie off'ce of fhe Purchasing Department P tt Counfy Memorid; Hosp'fai and may be obtained upon r/.g,j<.st between the ho'urs o* i* i(- a 'T and 5 (X) p rri Monday thro ,qt, Er q,, y Pitt County Memor ,1 Hospital reseryes the right to r> t any all proposals

Jack W Richardson President October 21 il 1983

file NO 83 CVD 1385 IN THE general COnR'

Of JUSTICE

distpkt court division

NORTHCAROLINA

COUNTYOFPITT

notice OF SERVICE OF

PROCFS'BY PUBLIC AT IQN TO P0NZEL.LA EDWARD'i GOODEN    ,    ^

TAt,' NOTICE that a pleading seeku'-t relief aqainsi you has been

NOTICE OFSALEOFLANDAND

STATEMt N' Of P'J!*,i !C DlSCL(.J.,URf NOTICE-'* tieret/y g. ,1 I-, 'I,,!' tr-i City ol Green',iile is '0'*. diai-'g 'ht' proposal to enter m'o a tor-lr.ii t 'or the disposal ot prO;i-'* and ,1'lfl ttie Vad'.'/e'Op'Tient 'her.-ul '0 Gi'ni'r,!' Hea'ing InrorpO'a.' on ol Green/:lie Nort'i f ,iro n,, dn 01 betor., Nuyf-ntier Ij '9iti ,a 't',,nd being D-SpO'S.'l Parr, :..f    , ,

oca'ed m the , so.ill F -,in C o'ti rnunit, Dnyeiopigenl Proin-t 8' DN U057 Grnen/.l'e Nortn r iroun.l dn'icrit,ed r, toho.*. , Disposal Pari .', ,i 2 E ii.l BEGINNING 'il an ''i.tinq .ron pi.pn 'OCriled at 'he inlerset lipn n' *he '.Outhern right n' .*. 1, im. of 12ln Street anri ttm ..e'.lern right'ot .-.ay imeol Washington Street 'un*. 'hen aiOf-iq the .vestem ngtit ot /,,iy one Ol Wastiinglon S'reet s 2(i derj 05 rrii'n 10 set W 100 00 h-'-* lu 'in ron pipe se' runs then N 70 (leg (j mm 00 S'.'f W 72 42 h-et to ,m aon pipe set run", then N 20 rieg 00 mm

00 sec E '00 0() leet to an iron pipe set runs,then along ihe, southern right ot Alt/ line ol 12111 Street S 70 deq 00 mm 00 set ' As 03 leet to an existing iron p'pt' ri the y,eslern right gi Aay line ol Wiishmglon Street ttie pom' of begmting Containing 6H72 s .guan leet gl land

General He,|i.ng Im orporation the proposed rede yl-ioper has liU'Cl With 'he City ol Greenyille a Rede yeloper's Slalement lor Public DiSfiosur'i in the lot m prest r iljed by thy Secret,iry ol till Dep'irlmeni

01 Housing ,tnrl (jrt/nn Dn/''lopmei I pursuant to -.ct 1,on O'e'e ol Ihe Housing A to! '9t9'i*, ,irnend<-d

The said Retli'yeigper s 'bile ment a, ,tyaiial)le lor pubhi e/,imi nation ,it tt,,. Offi'e ol Ihe Com muniiy Dejeiopment ot lim City ol fjreen/.iie during as rcqularthours said oft re t,emq lot ,pii,t| 201 Witst Eiftti Siree' Cjreeny.lle Norlti Citr Olm-a 'irifl its regul'ir oHite tiour*. being Iruni 8 Oo / 7A to s 00 P M .Mond'iy tt,rough f ruPyy ti week 7 ommunily Deyeloprrmnl ilae

'Jt Itie C ity ol Gi Cjf t,ut,er 24 :i' IV81

Oil

Autos For Sale

SHIH TZU PUPPIES AKC, Champion bloodline $150 Call 752 7039

SELL YOUR CAR the National

A 1, tot 1 nder s Way' Authorized De.iier in ppi County H,istinqs F ord Cm' /-.H ij1

051

Help Wanted

013

Buick

BUICK LESABRE LIMITED7 ,14) h' : Door LO'ided One owner Real N.i D-.ke Buitk Pont ,|C 753 3140

BUICK REGAL LIMITED' 2 door' '9hi Loadi'd Demo Last One IJi.te Bui'r Pont .ir 753 3M0

REGAL '982, gray gray 1 I.intlau C'lll 753 2506 anytirhr

1966 RIVERIA N' a pamt

uphol

bf,ikes, and more Runs

trjbd $2200 C'lll 756 0)27

,1971 BUICK F let Ira Limited "FTiily |-qui[)pt-fl Motor good running con diiion Hotly bur Needs tires $275 )r be>,l ottir /S'2 1096 after 5pm

1976 BUICK LeS'abre ExccdLent tonditibn $1/00    75J    5862 for more

inlortnaliun

1978 WHITE REVIERA with landau top F ull poAi'r ,9.600 at tu,il miles $4500 7',6 6409 bi.'t At't'fl 6 9 pm

198) BUICK REGAL Limited t ully lo.idi'd 67.000 miles Good tontl tiOM 757 04.10

014

Cddilldc

CADILLAC

CDUPE DEVILL,

I9HI E /ri'lli

nt 1 ontlilion $9500 Call

75/ 04'.l or /'

iZ 2 (66

015

Chevrolet

I 1960 IMPALA 4 door, body rough, high ni.lnatpi but runs $300 1 neqolirtbiii f ,ui 758 82/7

!1973 MONTE CARLO Landau Loaded Sh'irp Call 825 2831 or ; 758 '*,39 'isk lor John

itiprnir

-.n.y^e

1977 MALIBU, qoftd condition $1750 lirtTi C'll! 7',A 7516

I I 978

I autoit

V 6,

NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND AND

'.TATEMFNTfjE PUBLIC DI'.C 1 OSURE NCjTIC E i'i tii reby given lhal the 7 ly ot CjreenyiMi* u, c onsidering Ihe Uopo',,)i to entiT into a contract tor till- di'iposai of proiec t land 'incj tlie 'd'lyisoprrienl Itiereot to L insey P C.riflin of fjreenyille. North Caro ima on or tu'fore Novemtier 14 1983 said land being Oisposril

1979

riotyr I tion 155 60Si

MALIBU 4 door, iiilit air Phone 752 3436

CHEVROLET CAPRICE

t'lpe fjood condi

017

Dodge

1981 DODGE COLT, 25,000 rniles, air. 4 spt.ifd Loaded with extras Sporty I'conorny car for $4700

355 2'860

ACCOUNTING MANAGER. Post tion available with local AM FM radio station Accounting degree required Responsibilities include payroll, accounts receivable, gen eral ledger, financial statement, budgeting, special proiects. account .inalysis and supervision Send re sume complete with salary history m ronfidence to WNCT Radio, P O Bo* 7167, Greenville, N C 27834 WNCT Radio is an Equal Opportu nity Employer

SALES CLERK. Local Industry has immediate clerical position in the sales department Must be a versatile person who enjoys a challenge Prefer someone with 3 to 5 years offi.ce experience Accuracy with figures a must type 60 wpm., and computer experience helpful. Call 752 21 ) 1, extension 251 for appointment between 9am and 4 p m

ASSISTANT MANAGER position open with local established retail store for person with proven retail sales ability Liberal company benefits Send brief resume with salary history to Assistant Manag er, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835 All reftlies held in strictest confidence

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

Growing eastern North Carolina dtfilership has opening m import sales Benefits include paid hospi talizdton, life insurance, dental and demonstrator program Send sum mary of qualifications and photo graph (optional) to Automotive Sales,' P O Bo* 1967, Greenville, N C 27835

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON

Call for interview 756 1877 or send resume to Grant/Buick Inc , PO Bo* 2097. Greentille. N C 27834 Attn JackMewborn

CONSTRUCTION FOREMAN

and or Superintendent for work in Eastern NC Salary negotiable based on knowledge and experi ence Send resume to Construction, PO Bo* 1967, Greenville, NC

DTfr~S^TT WANTED Experience required X ray

certification Call 756 5911

earn EXTRA MONEY lor

Christmas Sell Avon!!! Call 758 3159

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales repre sentalive Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress for age Business or sales background helpful In requesting personal in lerview please submit resume stating personal history, education and business experience Write PO Box 406, Greenville NC 27835

SALES MANAGEMENT Associate. Rapidly growing eastern NC finan cial and marketing consulting lirm seeks an enterprising associate fo develop, recruit, tram, and direct other associates in the sales of financial and marketing services. Our services include Mergers Acquisitions, Divestures, Business and Commercial Real Estate Bro

IF

keraqe, Comprehensive _ Planning Fl

and Financial Funding To qualify should have solid sales experience and possess a NC Real Estate License For confidential interview call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020

SALESPEOPLE WILL YOU EARN $25,000 THIS YEAR OR MORE?

AGE NOT IMPORTANT DESIRE IS

Today's executives were hired in their 20's, 30's, 40', 50's

ARE YOU:

AGE 21 OR OVER

AGGRESSIVE

AMBITION

IN GOOD HEALTH

HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE OR BETTER

A SUCCESSFUL SALES PERSON

IF YOU QUALIFY YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED:

IMMEDIATE HIGH INCOME TWO WEEK EXPENSE PAID TRAINING

GUARANTEED INCOME TO START

UNLIMITED ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES

ACT TODAY

To insure tomorrow!

Equal Opportunity Company M* F

L

Call Monday Thru Friday 9 AM to 5 PM EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION

756 2686

il

ou can 7E. iiaLnecl!

you (lauE a cLiiu fox la/fi/ f you wou[d [i^E a laHaxy (v^lUe you ixain! Uf you wou[J. [i^E a[[ fxinyE ijEnEfiU! f you ivouid [ifiE a fiaid uacation! ddf you can ta^E iujiExuiiion ! f you don t mind ujoi^!

We would like to talk to you!

Please apply to Frank Calfee between the hours of 10 AM-12 Noon on Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday.

LINCOLN

EAST - SI CAROLINA

West End Circle    Greenville,    N.C.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

756-4267

J





075 Atobile Homes For Sale

Now Open In Farmville!

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

HOME OF THE NO DOWN PAYMENT

featuring

REDMAN Quality Homes

Highway 264,    Farmville,    NC

CALL 753-2033

1(W Houses For Sale

USED 12x45, 3 bedrooms. At a steal! Call 756 4822.

10x55 TRAILER. Good condition Semi furnished, 2 bedrooms $2200 Call 746 2638 after 5 p m.

1981 CONNER. 14x68, low equity and take over payments. Call 756 6424 from 8 fo 5, 756 9325 after 5:30

1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068.

1984 70 X 14 2 bedroom, 2 tull baths completely carpeted, cathedral ceiling, ceiling fan, stereo, doorbell, dish washer, wet bar, storm win dows, total electric, name brand appliances. No money down VA 100% financing. Colonial Mobile Homes, 107 W. Greenville Boulevard., Greenville, N C 355 2302.

belvedere Owner anxious will consider lease wifh option and credit part of rent towards purchase for qualified buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with rec room S55,500. Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Lee Ball, 752 1646.

BRICK VENEER RANCH. Less than 3 years old. 2 large bedrooms, spacious den, neat kitchen. Assume FmHA 1014% loan to qualified buyer. 6 miles from Greenville. $41,500. Call Davis Really 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756-1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

BROOK VALLEY

For sale by owner 4 bedroom, 2' j bath brick home on golf course. Double garage with all tormal areas. Contact days 758 1121; nights and weekends 756 9032.

BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lof size negotiable. By appointment, R. H. McLawhorn, 756 2750 or 975 2688

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.    ^

077 Musical Instruments

COMPLETELY RESTORED an

tique piano. Must sell $50 ''r .i. ffer. 757 3624 after 5 p m

PIANO a ORGAN DISTRIBUTORS

presents new Kimball piano, bench delivery tuning, and tree private lessons. Only $1489, just $49.90 a month! Limited time otter 329 Arlington Boulevard, 355 6002

BY OWNER 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, den with fireplace and other nice features. Must see to appreci ate. Winterville School District, 832 East Main Street, Winterville, NC. $56,500. Appointments please 756 7777. 9 a.m. 2 p.m. or 9 11:30 p.m. No realtors

CEDAR LOG HOMES. Echo Realty Inc., Grifton, 524 4148.

109 Houses For Sale

OWNER MUST SELLI Quality can M detected in this custom built home. Corner wooded lot. Brick veneer home with double car garage. Spacious and gracious great room, fireplace, dining room, 2 baths. Low $60's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

^NER MUST SELL! Country living can be yours! Home setting on IV2 acres. Over 1,800 square feet. 4 bedrooms, family room, garage. $50's. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144

OWNERS ARE MOVING from USA and must sell. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, fireplace, fenced backyard and patio. 11'/s% assumable mortgage. 107 Azalea Drive. 756 8281 or 752 4844.

PRICE REDUCED! Eastwood. $13,500 assumes 11'/J% loan with payments of $545 PITI. 3 bedroom, 2 bafh brick ranch that features living room, dining area, den with ^ ipTace, large deck $61,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 6810, nights Harold Hewitt 756 2570.

COUNTRY FARM HOUSE. Pale yellow vinyl siding. Central heat, 3 bedrooms Needs love and tender care. High $20's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144. COUNTRY HOME Reedy Branch area 4 bedrooms, 2'2 baths Ap proximately 2,900 square feet of living area, plus 783 square feet garage. 3.79 acres of land. Reduced $86,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.

UPRIGHT PIANO. Excellent con dition $400 Phone 758 0389

078 Sporting Goods

20 GAUGE SHOTGUN Call 756 7838 a!ter3p m

080 INSTRUCTION

PIANO LESSONS! Experienced, qualitied teacher now accepting students Farmville 753 2614 atter 6pm

082    LOST AND FOUND

FOUND CALICO Kitten vicinity of 14th Street and Greenville Boulevard Phone 752 0436

LOST - in Simpson area. Female, Pommeranian/Sheltie mixed, small, brown dog with long wavy hair, bushy tail Reward! 758 2298

LOST: RED and cream colored female Siberian Husky blue eyes, wearing chain collar. Last seen in Lakewood Pines Reward Ottered! Call 355 2642atter 5:30p m

DOLL HOUSE Country. Good neighborhood. About 1 year old like new. Seller transferred. Taste fully decorated, 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, large kitchen, large lot. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

ELMHURST Roomy Dutch Colonial offers 4 bedrooms, formal areas, lovely family room, garage with Studio/workshop area. Located on a quiet street and it's only $64,900 Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane, 752 8819.

REDUCEDI REDUCED! Bethel, good neighborhood. Brick, 3 bedroom, I'-j bath, all formal areas, kitchen with eating bar, den, fireplace with insert, office, garage Call owner, 752 2804

REDUCED ALMOST $8,000. Owner musf sell! Assmue FHA loan. Payment less than $450 a month. Almost 1,600 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, formal areas, carport, fenced in backyard, no cify taxes. $57,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144

093 OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business tor sale Complete farm supply Established 21 years Owner deceased, tamily has other interests Call 758 0702

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J Harris 8, Co , Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, NC 757 0001, nights 753 4015

095 PROFESSIONAL

BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME with a sprayed ceiling Plaster, painting, tile, and sheetrock repair 757 0678 or 756 2689

FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, 2,856 square teet. Approximately 6 miles from hospital, 2.3 acres. Living room, sunken great room, tamily room, 4 bedrooms, 2' 2 baths, cacport, patio 1,120 square foot workshop Assumable 8% first mortgage Call 756 7111.

GOOD LOOKING Star*er Home 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, being painted inside and out, large kitchen and utility, carport. 6 miles from Greenville. $41,500 Call Davis Real ty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

HOME REDUCED to $53,900 Brick Veneer ranch. Excellent neighborhood, good school district, 3 bedfooms, I'z baths, central heat and air, woodstove. Beautiful wooded lot no city taxes. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

HOUUSE FOR SALE by ov7ner in Ayden, NC. Good loan assumption low equity 746 3040

SMALL STARTER HOME in the

country. Owner must sell! Pay ments under $400 a month. Large lot, deck, central heat and woodstove. No reasonable offer refused. Low $30's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656. 756 4144,

TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per

centage rate loan. Attractive 3 bedroom, 1'2 bath brick ranch with carport Located on woodsy lot near university. Living room/dining room, eat in kitchen, custom storm windows and doors, new turnace, (no air conditioning). Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square feet heated area. Take over approx imately $33,500 tor 25 years re maining with principal and interest payment of $280.82 month. (This loan would cost you $388 month at todays rate of 13%) Pay equity ot $16,400 or owner may consider some financing for part of equity. Very low closing cost and no discount points to buyer. Lease/purchase also possible. Immediate possession Priced at $49,900 Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532 evenings. No agents

117 Resort Property For Sale

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washingfon. NC. Quief, esfablished neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT. Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets Call 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Selt Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933

WAREHOUSE STORAGE and sales space. Excellent location. Up to 55,000 square feet. Adjacent office available. Price negotiable. 752 4295/756 7417.

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE DECEMBER 1. One

bedroom apartment. Convenient to campus. 503 East 2nd Street. Phone 757 0105.

AZALEA GARDENS

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

All energy efticient designed Queen size beds and studio couches

f Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground tioor with porches.

Frost free refrigerators.

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

Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams _756 7815

BRAND NEW tastetully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms. 1>2 baths, washer/dryer hook ups, efficient No pets. $325 per month 756 8904 or 752 2040.

WESTHAVEN - Traditional Williamsburg features loads o! liv ing, dining and storage areas plus a 2 car garage. Spotless throughout and located on a beautitui corner lot Compare at $89,900 and then call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane, 752 8819 to see this one!

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'z baths Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club

WILLIAMSBURG - Cherry Oaks Big yard, economy etticient, 3 bedrooms, 22 baths Assume 1st and 2nd mortgages with $10,000 cash or refinance and owner will carry 2nd. Phone 756 8073.

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carol! na's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and tireplaces. Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.

GET YOUR FALL PAINTING done and carpenter repair or remodel ing Call 758 5226

100 REAL ESTATE

102 Commercial Property

EXCELLENT BUSINESS

Opportunity can be yours in this commercial building Large lot, plus 2 extra lots Still building with 3,750 square teet Excellent location tor business Call tor details! $85,000 Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144

FOR SALE by owner 2 buildings and land. Location: 1500 and 1502 North Greene 752 2481 or 758 1437 Shown by appointment only

FOR SALE:    5,000 square foot

commercial building in the downtown area Currently leases tor $1400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

IMMACULATE - 1 story masonite home Fenced in backyard. Carport, conveniently located to shopping and schools. Assume 9' 3% loan Payment $428 60 PITI. About 1,378 square teet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, formal areas Reduced to $58,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000,    756    2904,

nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144

NEW CONSTRUCTION Price re duced on this Traditional that teatures 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with tireplace, dining area, and over 1,500 square tet on large lot. $62,500 Lots o! extras Better hurry on this one! Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.

NEW LISTING. Attention in vestors! Neat home, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, tront porch, conveniently located shopping and schools. $18,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

NEW LISTING. Brick Veneer Ranch, 3 bedrooms, tamily room, kitchen, 1 car garage. Assume 10^4% FmHA to qualitied buyer. Payment could be less than $200 a month $38,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

NEW LISTING. Commercial lots. 2 prime commercial lots on Highway 11, Over )'2 acres. $55,000. Can sell separately lor $2,750 Call lor de tails Davis Really 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary af 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144

SALE - Highway 264 By pass Commercial property Approxi mately 3 acres near Union Carbide Richard D Lyltle, Broker, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC, 757 3107

SALE Shopping Center or motel site. Approximately 14 acres North Memorial Drive Richard D Lyttle, Broker, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC, 75 7 3107

SALE OR LEASE North Memorial Drive, modern 17,000 square tool building, acreage available Rich ard D. Lyttle, Broker, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC, 757 3107.

107 Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT tobacco poundage and tarm land in Pitt County. 756 4634

NEW LISTING Country Get away trom it all! Quiet, peaceful, acre lot. Rustic Chalet, below market value, 3 storys, 3 baths Potential for many uses $38,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000,    756 2904, nights

Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144

2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop 16x36 plus shed and shelter 1677 square feet ot living area Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.

3 BEDROOM BRICK Allen Drive. Ayden. No down payment it quali tied for Farmers Home Ad ministration. 746 6555.

Ill    1 nvestment Property

$35,000 3 bedroom house with upstairs apartment. Total rent $420 per month. Good investment pro perty. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 756 6810.

$45,000 - Duplex. Stantonsburg Road area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, each side. Possible owner financing Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810.

115

Lots For Sale

T-j ACRE LOT - 95' road frontage Near Belvoir Elementary School. 752 6245after 6 p.m.

*4 ACRE LOT - Country. Perked. Could be used for trailer or home $6,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

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

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

Dial direct phones 25 channel color tv

Maid Service

Furnished All Utilities Weekly/Monthly Rates

756 5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6869

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

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

Call 752-3519

COUNTRY ACREAGE for sale by owner. Located approximately 3 miles from Carolina Easf Mall 2 acre minimum. Highly restricted Community water. Starting at $8,000 per acre. Write Acreage, PO Box 1885, Greenville, NC,

NEWLISTINGS

PINERIDGE IN THE COUNTRY and not far

trom the medical complex. Living room, dining area, three bedrooms, one bath, carport Wooded lot. $42,500

EASTWOOD A RANCH HOME on Nichols Drive Greatroom with fireplace and woodstove, dining area, three bedrooms, Pz baths, carport, central air, $49,500.

DUFFUSREALTY INC.

756-5395

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WANTED TO RENT corn or bean land in Pactolus. Stokes area 752 5213 nights.

109 Houses For Sale

ASSUME 8'j% LOAN. (Payment $219.34 PITI) plus equity Some

Cossible owner financing. 3 large edrooms, Pz baths, large family room, dining room, lots of storage,

eorches, 1 car gargae. $31,500. Call lavis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, nights Mary at 756 1997 or Grace 746 6656, 756 4144.

belvedere Immaculate ranch home features spacious greatroom, kitchen with dining area plus formal dining room 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport. Landscaped wooded yard. $65,900. 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 $62,900. Call Ball and Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane, 752 8819.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

/hZ f)l 16

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price Special Price S259.00    $17900

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 Evans St.    752-2175

TONVfifiOmLAION

&TfiEE$CIIUICE

Full Time Fully Insured Professionals 756-6735 or 752-7774

price reduced TO $12,000. 3.2 wooded acre lof 8 miles East of Greenville. 752 1915.

THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lof. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500 Call Moseley Marcus Really at 746 2166 for full details

117 Resort Property For Sale

LOCATED ON WATER Only 18 miles from Greenville. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace for winter com fort. 355-6002 days, 1-946 7824 nights and weekends.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SHENANDOAH Mosby Circle New duplex, townhouses and flats. Available November 1    $300    per

month, $300 deposit. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615

STADIUM APARTMENTS. One

bedroom furnished apartment ad ioining ECU Central heat and air conditioning, excellent location 904 E. I4th St Call 752 5700or 756 4671

2 BEDROOM, liz bath, new cedar siding townhouse condominium, close to ECU. Dishwasher, refrig erator, carpet, tireplace, scenic deck, central heat and air Must see to appreciate 752 1863 or 752 1046 after6pm

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE

2500 SQ, FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

(919) 752-7889

SPECIALIZING IN TELEPHONE AND SERVICE WORK

A( IRRFV I

HARRISON ELECTRIC

INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL

RESPOND TO EMERGENCY  ^WITHIN 4 HOURS

24 HOUR SERVICE GREENVILLE. NC 27834

HERE IT IS!!

76X14ONLY

514,995

Plus Tax

25 YEARS IN THE BUSINESS

3 BEDROOMS 2 FULL BATHS

Over 20 Families In The Last 3 Months Have Taken Advantage Of This Offer. We Hope Your Family Can Also Receive One of These Homes!

INCLUDES:

Deluxe Furniture

Cathedral Ceiling

Storm Windows

Refrigerator

Total Electric

100 Mile Free Delivery

AZALEA

MOBILE HOMES OF N.C.

Greenville- 756-7815 Tarboro 823-7161

Williamston 792-7533 Chocowinity 946-5639

121 Apartments For Rent

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex. Shenandoah $290. 756 5389

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living wifh nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, tireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insula tion.    ^

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Ott Arlington Bl vd

756 5067

---- '' ' ~

121 Apartments For Rent

127 Houses For Rent

135 Office Space For Rent

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

FOR HfcNF: 2 bedroom house in i 5,000 SQUARE FEET office hiniri 7^%. Appliances furnished Call , mg on 264 Bypass Pleniy'of park ^ ^ , inq Call 758 2300davs

LUXURY BRICK townhouse, end unit, near Nichols, outside and attic storage New. Available November 1 $3)0 756 9006 after 6pm

The Happy Place To Live 6\BLETV

Office hours lOa.m to 5p m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

STUDIO APARTMENT tor rent near campus, $175 plus deposit 756 0942

FOR RENT: 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, ranch style in the country Near hospital $450 per month plus depos it Will sell! 758 6321

HOUSE COUNTRY Approximate" ly 8 miles from city, past hospital References required 1523 3562

NOTRICK.... IT'SATREAT!!!

To have payments lower than rent in your own condominium or townhome. Let Moore 8. Sauter Associates tell you how Call Iris Cannon at 746 2639 or 758 6050, Owen Norvell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, Wil Reid at 756 0446 or 758 6050 or Jane Warren at 758 7029 or 758 6050

MOORE & SAUTER

no South Evans 758-6050

TAR RIVER ESTATES

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

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

NEAR UNIVERSITY . 3bedroorrr I'z baths, living room dining room, eat in kitchen, carport Fresh pamt and wallpaper Hardwood floors Approximately 1350 square feet new turnace no air conditioning Married couple or small famil/ only No pets Immediate possession $375, per month Call Owner Agent Louise Hodge 804 794 1532 No agents

j 142 Roommafe Wanfed

I FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to ! share one half expenses Branches I Estates Trailer Court, Call 8    5

,752 7712. nights 756 8558. ask for ' Donna

MATURE MALE Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom home : With 2 others 752 1579 after 6

144

Wanfed To Buy

WANT TO BUY pme and hardwood

timber Pamlico Timber Company Inc 756 8615

2 BEDROOM house. 707 Montague Ayden Married couple preferred No pets 756 1509

146

Wanted To Lease

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT

carpeted, central air and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup

Bryton Hills $275 758 3311    !

200 PINE STREET. 3 bedrooms fenced yard $315 Phone 758 2025

4 BEDROOM RAN'crO^r~2000 square feet with workshop m Grifton Available immediately for $425 per month Call Realty World Clark Branch. 756 6336 or Tim Smith, 752 981 1

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

WANT TO LAS or rent tarm

land around Farmville Phone 753 2488

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WANT A REALLY TTlCE. cle^ i apartment in a quiet neighborhood ' Why not call 756 7314 or atter 5 i 756 4980 to hear about this almost i new 2 bedroom, I'z bath unit Rent, ' $325 per month. Deposit required No pets    1

NOW RENTING

Village East Apartments

TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

I'z baths, washer dryer hookup $295 per month Call

756 7755 or 758 3124

williamsburg~manor 2

bedroom townhouse. Hooker Road New Available December 1 $335 756 9006 atter 6pm

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE,

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

CEDAR LANE Apartments I , bedroom apartment tor rent $170 i Call 756 3611 or 756 3936    '

TWO BEDROOMS,^ fully turnished and carpeted, washer d^^yer central air and heat No pets no children 7S6 2927 any time

2 BEDROOMS with~T(r~'sTTo No pets, no children 758 0745

135 Office Space For Rent

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams 756 785 1,200 SQARE'F^T'V"(3fTices on E^ans Street Price neqo-tabie 752 4295 756 7417

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RAYFORD

PRINTING, INC.

115 W 9lh Street Greenville, N.C.

Is now owned and operated by P Bill" Brixon for experience quality and fast service For all of your printing needs

CALL 752-7712

Business forms, envelopes, letterheads. flyers, brochures, booklets, programs, posters, labels, we can do it

125 Condominiums For Rent

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis ' posal included We also have Cable ' TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza i and University Also some I furnished apartments available

756 4151

I NEW 2 BEDROOM townhouse,

I convenient to hospital and mall Couples preferred No pets Lease , and deposit $310 per month 756 i 4746    !

127.

Houses For Rent

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes lor rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

AYDEN. 3 bedrooms, living room dining room, kitchen, bath, carport, : utility and storage space Excellent ' condition Central heat and air, heat pump Very conveniently located Call 746 3562

AYDFtTcOUNtWcTuX R^^ i

style home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4'; baths Over 3000 square teet Available immediately ! $600 per month Call Lorelle at , 756 6336    I

THINGS you never use SeM them tor cash with a Classified Ad

RIDGE PLACE. Townhouse apartment, 2 bedrooms, 1'.- baths, kitchen appliances, washer dryer hookups, heat pump, air condi tioned, $280 a month 355 2060

RIVER BLUFF offers I bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments Six month leases For more information call 758 4015 or come by the River Bluff office at 121 River Bluff Road

j CHRMNG LARGE 2 bedrooms, 2 I baths, study. 4 oak fireplaces, fenced yard, washer dryer Ayden $360 756 8160

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS 4 AWNINGS

C.L, Lupton. Co.

752 6,116

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company has a,Systems 34 (96K) computer available for immediate time sharing. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer is available for immediate remote hook-up using telephone communications. Programs ready, for general business use include general ledger, accounts receivable, inventory/billing, accounts payable and payroll.

Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215

CARDING & SPINNING SUPERVISOR

Polylok Corporation, located in Tarboro. N. C.. is seeking individual with 3 years plus experience in carding and spinning supervision. The job is on second shift and applicants should be familiar with SACO-LOWELL cards, spinning, winding and twisting machines.

An excellent program of salary and fringe benefits is provided. All interested please apply.

POLYLOK CORPORATION

Attn. Industrial Relations Director 3006 Anaconda Road Tarboro. NC 27886 Or Call 919-823-6126 EOEM'F

WANT TO SAVE MONET?

Shop At

Jamies Furniture & Appliance

OUR LOW OVERHEAD EXPENSE BRINGS YOU MORE REASONABLE PRICES

1    U/pot OCA tr\ Przxn I ouaI

756-6027

3 Miles West 264 to Frog Level Turn Lell. 1/4 Mile On Lett

Make It In Time For The Holidays!

I

NEW MACHINE, ease of sewing, less hand work, handling fabrics that wouldn't sew on the old machines, but such a dream with your new SINGER.

OLD MACHINE, it works better when properly serviced by professionals af Singer.

ALL MAKES ALL MODELS ALL WORK GUARANTEED

GREENVILLE SEWING CENTER

Pitt Plaza

Your Authorized Singer Dealer Greenville

, 756-0747

r

1

ELECTRONICS INSTRUCTOR

Electronics Technology Program

Pitt Community College in Greenville. N.C. is currently seeking an Electronics Instructor for our Electronics Technology Program. Qualified applicants should possess a BS degree in electronics or electrical engineering. An A.A.S. degree in electronics and 3 to 5 years of industrial electronics expereince will be considered. Salary based on College's Salary Formula. Position available November 28. Applications accepted through November 11.

L

Contact Personnel Office PITT COMMUNITY COLLEGE Greenville, N.C.

756-3130. ext. 289

AA/EOEmployer

J

AUTO CARE YOU CAN TRUST

COUPON

Wont Stop ^54

SS

Your Choice

Front or Rear Brakes Service Expires 11-7-83

COUPON

Oil, Lube & Filter

Up to 5 Quarts Of    ^    1    ^088

Quaker State Super Blend Oil

Expires 11-7-83

COUPON

Winterize Now

88

Flush and drain system, inspect belts and hoses. Up to 2 gallons of antifreeze.

Expires 11-7-83

We Accept Any Goodyear Credit Card

Use The Silver Card nationwide at Goodyear Auto Service Centers and participating Goodyear dealers and franchises

Enjoy credit convenience and security whenever you travel.

Just Say Charge m

VIM hUthtCAtC

OmWCmurtD ?

West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri.

Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

Also Stores In Tarboro And Rocky Mount

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

o\

X

<<v

C0<

LOTS FOR SALE

5 Acre lof. 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 758-1603

HOMES FOR SALE

221 Country Club Drive

L'" -    .-.I'n s'ate

''    ';y::'r"5 .cejjii'u:

! .;".i:v3 ,a-c ' a'-je /''ace

.-.I''-    -3 .'I'-a idtbea-ai

.inc >' .-.iv 'replace, u''    r-.-.:'- O' 0hce 2

: r,j3f; a. 'srjioor Se-

ad";    ;;ai'/.dV 10

261 By-pass West

-'."q room large kilchen A-:th --dbng area den 2 bedrooms. I'.batns. sceened porch, utility room qa'age Lot 25 x 210 550 OO'J

1024 Fleming St.

: r-:--:-';    , ng-c"" r tchen

- L-a" A :-:$$ -;,T. Sadie 5.-.:"-'Sen S15 00G Land For Sale ; " : .-'1.: " e'.d Estates

- ^''zec :o sell

LOT FOR SALE

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

LOT FOR SALE 111 E 11th Street 75x85. Price $8000 00

NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE

TURNAGE

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY

Get More With Les Home 756-1179

752-2715 or

752-3459

30 Years REALTOR* Experience

IB

Lexington Square Townhomes

Sear The Greenville Athletic Club

10.15%

Fixed Rate 30 Year Financing For Qualified Buyer

Model Open Daily 1-5 P.M.

Phase II, Unit 31

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Offered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.





Ctossword By Eugene Sheffer Fleet

Shrinks

ACROSS

1 Cobras 5 Matterhorn 8 S.A countr> 12 Kitchen utensils

14 Shanf

15 H\ lenic

16 Bring to pitch

17 Sailor

18 C>ffice iuirkois

20 Snmll door

23 Front of theloc .

24 NanKiii..

naiin\

25 F't iLi >UL-

LCstaiO

28 Tht

29 Aniii'l:. -3(1 Aiiacr.o;,

42 Scouring powder

47 a hand I help)

48 like a burnt roast

49 (ioals

50 U'O the Durocheri

51 Trade

W)W\

1 Ninny

2 Fiils or Baden

3 Peter-"

4 A-in time..."

5 Winglike

6 Gibbon

7 Mediums

8 Puissant

9 Asian river

10 Files CMn-panion

11 War god 13 Nevada

neighbor 19 Whats My -

I quiz show)

AR

Barne book) 20 Possesses Avg. solution time: 24min.

mu

|||Qsib s mm

10-31

Answer to Saturdays puzzle.

21 Role for Freeman , Gosden

22 Bath powder

23 Spirits

25 Etiquette of state funcbons

26 French verb

27 Rake

29 Racetrack shill

31 Soak

33 Acts like a miser

34 Prevailing tendencies

36 Equipment

37 Pallid

38 Bakers need

39 Ministerio

40 Ooze

43 Caesars 56

44 Farm breeder

45 Alfonsos queen

46 Sturdy fabric

IRVTTOQUIP    1().3I

B y T W V E Z N E W Y Y R B N i KIA ; ZY B NZOK QBYRDN. :it'Kjoip - FEATL'RE OF CRACK POIJTI- .'J q SPE.AKER OF THE HOUSE.

' r>pti(quipclue:WequalsU. sjnple substitution cipher m which each : ari' ther If you think that X equals 0, it t.he puzzle .Suigle letters, short words, ..H^v.'trophe can give you clues to locating i< (I niphshed by trial and error.

-- . ; Svn<jcca*e Inc

VJ

OREN BRIDGE

'J..SS GtOREN . V- :;HARjr

. s.    .    7    '    a

Ik- K)

(M.l 1/

.(fi

73 4>12

U .-nt Pans

8.>r;h U-

93 487

Ni.rin

1. I. KJ72

'''.nth    -

'!riing' Cii .luc

I', 'incc '-liiility pr'icfi-d -p.uirs.

,1

hiililing

h.iM' n.ii 'A(-

,.( [

Q.4-As South, vulnerable,

\ou hold:

J9.542 AK K95 *1043

What is your opening bid?

A. You do not have onel Even counting distributional values, your hand is worth onlv 12 points, and >oiir five < ard suit is not rebiddable. It \ou opc-n one spade, you will tie in trouble on any auction f.xce pt where partner ri sporuis one no trump or raises spades. The final dr.iwback is that your high I'ards .tre in your short suits, where their offensive effec liveness IS limited. Pass.

t.5-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:

J94    10952    QJ4 AK?

The bidding has proceeded: West North East South I    Dble 3    ?

What action do you take?

A. Fast s preempt has com plicated the auction. Since you surely have all heart fit here, we would not fault you greatly if you chose to bid four hearts. However, we feel that contract will be tenuous at best because of our w eak trump holding and

balanced hand. (Jur choice is to double.

4i.6-As South, vulnerable, vou hold;

K9S2 AK765 KJSS

The bidding has proceeded: North East South 1 2    ?

What do you bid now ?

A.-Vou are certainly m slam territory - even a grand slam cannot be ruled out. The ifuestion is how best to in

estigate the possibilities. Both an immediate cue bid and a jump in partner's suit will convey the strength of vour hand, but the bidding could get too high before you have decided where to play the hand. For instance, if you jump to three spades and Wist preempts with five diamonds, what next? Our own choice would be a quiet bid of two hearts.

CLARK

CITY

COUNCIL

Paid For By Louia Clark

W.ASHINGTO.N (AP) -The U.S.* Merchant .Marine has shrunk by half in the last two decades, and will continue to decline unless current maritime policies are revised or changed, according toa government report The 540 ships flying under the U.S. flag also re getting old, said an Office of Technology .Assessment report released today, .More than 110 ships are at least 30 years old.

"Analysis indicates that the United States has no overall, coordinated and effective maritime policy that responds to the major trends and realities ... in the increasingly competitive and complex arena of world seaborne trade." the report said, adding:

"If there are no policy changes, most U.S. maritime industry segments will continue to decline in size and influence."

Some ot the flaws cited were overlapping jurisdictions among federal agencies, ineffective use of subsidies. and lack of a stated mission One of the results has been the loss ot shipbuilding to toreign countries, the study said.

No recommendations were made, but the report listed several options, including international negotiations to promote competitive trade practices and loan guarantees to spur productivity and investment

FOCUS

Muiti-talfiHi-(l Magician

|i' ig':! I' -till aiPiivci-ar'. ifa- (ji ath nf Hari'v ll'i.ai,,:. aii iirca>i,i' 'ii.arKci; b\ gatlicnng'nf kvcIi'io a':i!    ';,igic:.a!i'    iwcr>'a'lc. llnii.iii'' 'cn^alioial

t 'i'.iH'' irii'i'airii M'\iai cln-c cal-. He unce acccptiii :i i;a!.r'igc 'ec-caiic fi'oi. a g:at',l can ef ncci'. .\n alert .i"..'.a:: net c:ng a aOig Teiaj. brnKc intu t lie can ami " .I;,: 11" ail',: "\erciciie ii;. the alcniioi. whicii had -eepei:    11'    ihlM    lgil    111' |mre'.

DO^Ol KNOW W nat wa- IIniidini''real name?

FRIDAY S ANSWEREmma Lazarus wrote the verse inscribed on the base of the Statue of Liberty.

Inai.-lcr- Im 'e

Newspaper Folds

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Today's folding of the Memphis Press-Scimitar -the victim of slumping circulation after 102 years -leaves dozens of journalists without jobs and Tennessees largest city with only one

daily newspaper.

Jiist 10 years ago. the afternoon newspaper's circulation stood at 127.000. but it had dropped to 80,000 recently. The owner. Scripps-Howard Newspapers. has said it will con

centrate its efforts on improving the morning Commercial Appeal.

The announcement Sept. 20 of the Press-Scimitar's impending death by .Milton Britten, editor of the newspaper since 1975. set off a job search that will continue for many reporters, photographers and editors after today's final edition appears.

RE-ELECT

DON C. CARSON III

BETHEL TOWN COMMISSIONER

NOVEMBERS, 1983

Paid For By Don Carson

VOTE

FOR

FRANCIS H. MEBANE

Biographical Sketch

After You Know Who Francis H. Mebane Is

Place Of Birth beaufort County, N.C.

Education B.S., A & T College 1942 M.A., New York University 1953 Additional Study;

A & T College N.C. State University George Washington University Professional Organizations And Memberships North Carolina Association of ducators Fmployment Experiences Secondary School Teacher:

Aurora. N.C. (2 years)

Farmville. N.C. (15 years)

H.B. Sugg School Principal Farmville. N.C. (9 years)

Community College Administrator Washington, N.C. (14 years)

Civic Work Eastern Carolina Vocationai Center Past Member, Board of Directors Past Chairperson. Nominating Committee Sheppard Memorial Library Past Member Board of Directors Bachelor Benedict Club NAACP. Pitt County Branch SCLC Pitt County Branch Church Affiliation And Work Member, Philippi Church of Christ Member. Deacon Board Past President of General    

Sunday School Convention Disciples of Christ Marital Status

Married to the former Beulah Whitfield-a retired teacher. They are the parents of one daughter, Grace

Now You Know Who ^

Francis H. Mebane Is

Vote Francis H. Mebane Greenville City Council On November 8,1983

lntro(ducing

c 1983 R J Reynolds Tobacco Co

more cigarettes

to the carton

Lowjar

Ftegular

Introductory OFF

a carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

JGHTS 10 mg "tar". 0 8 mg nicotine, FILTER 15 mg "tar", 11 mg nicotine, av per cigarette by FTC method

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

$15qofF

carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

Not available in all areas

TERMS OF COUPON OFFER CONSUMER Cannon' Coupon good only when oiand slyieis: specilied Durchased it cannot Oe nans leifed 01 pichanged toi other rouoons Any other use constitutes fraud You must pay applicable sales lanes Participation m this promotion is at ihe discretion oi ihe retailer limit ONf COUPON P[HC0NSUMfRANDI0SM0KERS21 YEARS Of AGE OR OlOtR RETAILER R J Reynolds foDacco Company will pay lace nalue of coupon plus 7C handling and actual postage incurred provided you accepted Ihe coupon Irom a consumer as pailial payment on specified biand styleiS' Any other use consiiiutes baud and could Dung prosecution undei U S mail fraud siaiuiBs It is non assignable and may not be reproduced Adequate piool ol purchase must be \ submitted on request Shipments considered is a whole, no partiel piymenls conliscaiion rights reserved Coupon must be submitted by retailer who redeemed it or a clearinghouse holding a valid RJR contract mo other assignees agents Coupons must he received at address below no Dior than sii monihs Irom oijMrelion dilo onntod hereon Cash value 1 20 ol 1C AH piomotinnai costs paid by manutacturei Good only m U S A Ship Coupons To Coupon Redemption Center P 0 Bo> 3000 Winston Salem, NC 27 f02

TT7MT

COUPON EXPIRATION DATE: DECEMBER 31,1983


Title
Daily Reflector, October 31, 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.) - 30620
Date
October 31, 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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