Daily Reflector, November 7, 1983


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Tobacco Festival Scholarship Pageant Set F

This years Southern , Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival Scholarship Pageant will be held Friday at 8 p.m. at Ayden-Grifton High School.

Eleven young women from throughout the flue-cured tobacco belt are competing.

Elizabeth A. Blowers is a nursing graduate of Florida State Univesity, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F.L. Blowers Jr. of Sarasota, Fla. She is continuing her education in the Duke Medical Center Intensive Care Unit. She was named Student Nurse of the Year at Florida State and first runner-up in the state competition. She will present a jazz dance routine.

Pamela Renee Casey is a freshman at East Carolina University, the daughter of Gilbert T. Casey of Smithfield. A business administration major and a former member of the National Honor Society, she will tap dance as her talent performance.

Pamela Joyner Homer is the daughter of William Homer of Bailey and Mrs. Hazel Horner of Raleigh. She is a senior at UNC-Wilmington majoring in psychology. She will sing during this pageant.

Kelly Leigh Kepley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Van D. Kepley of Albemarle, is a senior at UNC-Greensboro majoring in psychology. She has been a member of the UNC-G Homecoming Court, Miss Stanly County Fire Queen 1980, Miss Stanley County 1981 and a finalist in the 1982 Miss North Carolina Pageant. She will sing during the talent presentation.

Jenese Linnette Lester, daughter of Ms. Brenda S. Lester of Jacksonville, is a freshman at Coastal Carolina Community College and plans to transfer to UNC-Wilmington. Recipient of numerous awards in gymnastics competitions, she was the first runner-up and Miss Congeniality in the 1984 Miss Onslow County Pageant. She will present a gymnastic routine during this pageant.

Menieca Lajo Mathis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Corbett Mathis of Jennings, Fla. is a senior at Hamilton County High School. Qualifying to graduate in the tc^

10 percent of her class, she is the former Miss Hamilton County High, 1981, and was a finalist in the Miss Florida National Teenager 1982 contest. She was crowned Hamilton Countys Miss Queen of Hearts 1983 and Miss Dixie Photogenic 1983. She will present a clogging routine during this pageant.

Alisa Diane Petty of Waycross, Ga. is a sophomore at Valdosta State College, where she is majoring in speech communication. The daughter of Ms. Faye Petty, she has won more than 500 trophies for model-i ng and baton twirling and is tl le current solo twirler with the Valdosta State College Bliuer Marching Band. She is Lhe 1983 Miss Georgia Gold Leai^ and the 1982 ^uthern Peach beauty and talent winnt^r. She will present a bcUon- twirling-dance routine duiing this pageant.

T^eri J^Rue Temple is the daug'htei' of Mr. and Mrs. W.K. Temple of Florence, S.C., i senior at Converse College phmning for further study in fiishion merchan-disiog. She is the former Florence Jurt'ior Miss 1980,

Miss Florence 1983 and the current 1983 South Carolina Tobacco Qu^n. She will tap dance during the talent competition here.

Felicia Grace Warren of Fayetteville is an East Carolina University senior music

education major. The daughter of Msi. Gloria W. Butler of Fayetteville, she was a high school track star. She is an East Carolina University

calendar girl and was third-runner-up and Miss Congiiality in the 1983 Miss Fayetteville Pageant. She will play a flute solo during the talent competition.

Beth Webster is a sophomore at East Carolina University majoring in dance. The daughter of Mr. aiKi Mrs. B.S. Webster of Greensboro, she is an honor

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roll student and head feature twirler with the ECU Marching Pirates. She is the former Majorette Princess of America 1980, Miss Majorette of 1981, Entertainer of the Year 1982, second runner-up in the Greenstxiro Junior Miss competition 1960, Miss Greensbwo Teen 1981, first runner-up in the Miss North Carolina Rhododendron Festival and first runner-up in the South Carolina Dance Masters Pageant. She will tap dance during this pageant.

Stephanie Parker Wheeler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Wheeler of Fayetteville, is a freshman at UNC-Wilmington majoring in computer science and mathematics. An honor high school graduate, she was Miss Cumberland County Teenager in 1982, Miss (^pe Fear Fair Queen 1982, and fourth runner-up in the 1983 Miss Fayetteville pageant. She will perform a ballet dance during this pageant.

Bridal

Policy

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.

Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. AH information should be typed or written neatly.

Gary Deans of WCTI-TV, New Bern, will be the master of ceremonies.

CHRISTMAS CARDS REFLECT TRENDS

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Christmas cards often reflect significant trends and lifestyle changes on the American scene, says an official of a greeting card cominy.

This year, it is the move to the Sun Belt, says David LeMoine, Hallmark product manager of packaged seasonal cards. Our research has shown that 40 percent of all the people who moved last vear moved to this area of the country. And these people want to show their environment to their family and friends back in the North and East.

Illustrations on the current Westem-theme cards include wild horses, cactus flowers, Mexican pottery and weavings and mountains and cabins, LeMoine says. One card shows a prairie dog family leaving food for Santa.

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Tht Daily Reflftctof, Gfeenville, N C

Monday. Novembar 7 1983 ^ g

Some Prefer Living In Grenada

ST. GEORGES, Grenada (AP) - Gazing from his living nxHn at a panoramic view of lush tropical greenery and gentle seas, Don Atkinson explained why he refused to abandon his paradise after the U.S. invasion of this Caribbean island.

"We go back with this island a long time, said Atkinson, a 64-year-old retired igineer who moved here from New England with wife Barbara in 1971. We started vacationing here in 1958. We were locking for an island to buy some land on fw retirement, and we visited all the others first.

As soon as we got here, we knew this was the one. Besides the beautiful scenery, the people here are just

fantastic.

The Atkinsons were among about 50 of the nearly 1,000 Americans on Grenada who declined to be evacuated after the Oct. 25 invasion, which was sparked by a bloody military takeover.

Atkinson called President Reagans claim that Americans were being threatened by Grenadas leftist army junta as phony as a three-dollar bill.

Thats not to say that some of the students werent cwicemed. But I dont know of any American who was threatened, he said.

However, most of the students at the St. Georges University Medical School were evacuated, and many said they welcomed the invasion.

SHOOT!!...Ashley Garris, center, gets encouragement from Louis Bryant, left, and Darryl Daniels at the recent two-day Special Olympics Run, Shoot and Dribble competition. Ashley is a student at Sam Bundy School and

Bryant and Daniels were student helpers from D.H. Cooley. The competition was sponsored by Greenville Parks and Recreation and Pitt County Community Schoois. (Barry Gaskins Photo)

Mother Identifies Boy Who Claims Amnesia

FREEHOLD, N.J. (AP) -Thanks to a photograph in a newspaper, a mother has been reunited with her missing 17-year-old son, three days after he told police he was suffering from amnesia and could not remember much more than his middle name.

The reunion took place Sunday at Jersey Shore Medical Center, where the teen-ager, Frank Manassen, was treated for injuries apparently sustained in a fall from a bicycle. He told authorities he had ridden here from Newark, hospital ^spokeswoman Boobe Nicoletti said.

The youth arrived in this borough Wednesday and told

Solice that he remembered is age, that his middle name was John and that he had flown to Newark International Airport from his home in Los Angeles, although he did not know when, Detective Kenneth Mount said before Manasseri was identified.

Manasseri said he bought a bicycle in northern New Jersey for $5 and bruiSed his back in a fall from the bike. Mount said.

After the youth sought help at a church and an antipoverty agency, state social service workers and police were notified, Mount said.

See Major Rise In Use Of Coal

. NEW YORK (AP) - Coal use is expected to increase to a greater extent than the use of oil or natural gas over the next 10 years to generate electricity in the United States, according to Energy UserNews.

The energy-oriented journal says coal is generally a less expensive fuel than oil

'The projected changes in fossil fuel requirements for the next 10 years show coal use expanding 35.6 percent by 1992, to 862.2 millioD tons from 635.6 million tons this year. Total oil consumption is projected to drop by 13.4 percent over the 10 year period to 212.6 million barrels from 1963's 245.5 million barrels.

Natural gas use is expected to decrease by 22.3 percoit over the 10 year period.

Anniversary Set

York Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church will hold anni-vers^ and appreciation services in honor of its pastor, the Rev. Luther Brown Sr. Brown has been a minister for 27 years and pastor of York Memorial for 10 years. Services will run Wednesday through Saturday, begming at 7 p.m. ni^itly. ^

Officers circulated a photograph of the youth ancl his mother, Marie Castronvozo of Jackson Township, about 20 miles from Freehold, told officials that she saw her sons picture in a Sunday edition of The As^ Park Press, Ms. Nicoletti said.

We really dont kno\^ at this point whether hes a true amnesia victim or not. Its hard to tell, said Doris Holder, the medical centers nursing supervisor. She suggested it was possible

Niiiiiii tniks 0 Cmtacts

SEATTLE (AP) - An author who has seen advance copies of a forthcoming book by Richard Nixon says the former president urges the current administration to increase its contact with the Soviet Union for the sake of world peace.

Robert Scheer, the writer who conducted the 1976 Playboy interview with former president Jimmy Carter in which Carter said he had looked at women with lust, spoke Sunday at the Target Seattle-Soviet Realities meeting, a series of seminars on the nuclear arms race.

Scheer is also author of the book With Enough Shovels, which is sharply critical of Reagans defense policies.

Scheer said Nixons book, The Real Peace, says that in spite of the tensions of U.S.-Soviet relations, talks and communication between the superpowers are more essential than ever.

Nixon makes the point that you have to have a leader in the Soviet Union or United States who takes the initiative and says, Lopk, if we ke^ going this way, were going to destroy the world, he said.

that the youth was a runaway.

Hospital officials declined to comment on the reunion or other details of the case, except to say that Manasseri is listed in stable condition at the hospital with a cervical injury.

Mrs. Castronvozo reported her son missing on Thursday. Freehold police Sgt. Walter Semblewskisaid.

When the youth arrived in Freehold, he went to St. Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church looking for a place to stay and a priest paid for a room at a local hotel, police said.

On Thursday, .Manasseri went to a borough office of Monmouth County Check-Mate Inc., an anti-poverty agency, where he told a social worker about his situation and the state Division of Youth and Family Services and police were notified. Mount said.

The teen-ager was taken to Freehold Area Hospital, but was then transferred to the Jersey Shore Medical Center for treatment, police said.

PALESTINIAN FIGHTER - A loyalist soldier of Yasser Arafat pictured in the Baddawi Camp Saturday, is a member of the PLO fighting Syrian-backed forces. He is carrying on his shoulder an RPG-B7, a rocket propelled grenade launcher, and in his hand a K47 automatic rifle, both Russian-made. (AP Laserphoto)

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The only time I felt safe was when ... they told me that its Americans, dmt wary, theyre here to save us, said Roxanna Marin (rf Fresh Meadows, N.Y., after her return to the United States.

Atkinson said the only frightening momeht for the couple came on Oct. 26, when U.S. forces rescued American medical students from the Grand Anse Beach campus.

The Atkinsons huddled in their bathroom for three hours as the battle raged on the beach below their hilltop home.

But weve never felt any desire to leave. There have been a lot of changes on this island, but theres never been any impact on the foreigners, Ainson said.

Edyth Leonard, who moved here from Chicago eight years ago and works as a travel agent, said she also visited other islands before settling on what she calls Shangri-La.

Ive never regretted it for 30 seconds, including in the last two weeks, she said.

Phil Kilmer, 29, from Valparaiso, Ind., was one of five medical students who stayed. He said the war was over by the time the U.S. tro(^ made their way over the several miles of hilly terrain to Lance-aux-Epines, where the remaining students and several faculty members lived.

While most of the other students left, Kilmer said he preferred to stay and guard against looting. Most other stwlents' homes had been looted, he said.

He said he sat on his veranda,, sipped cocktails and watched the fighting during the first days of the invasion.

I could see the tracers at night, Kilmer said. "Id see the flash of the cannons and the house would shake. was afraid it was going to slide down the hill.

He said he didnt know of any student being injured, but said an errant American rocket blew up a student residence a few hours after it was vacated.

Kilmers major concern, he said, is the fate of the

American medical school. He was in his fourth semester

Two young American schoolteachers in the northwestern fishing village of Gouyave said they had been hoping for a dramatic rescue - although they never felt threatened.

Every time an army helicopter would fly low, wed say theyre coming for us, said Katie Caruthers, 27, of Morristown, N.J.

I kind of resented that at first. Apparently nobody knew about us," said Kelly Watson, 25, of Fort Collins, Colo

The women, who came here three years ago as part of a Mennonifb-sponsored service group, said they werent worried, though There was virtually no combat in the northwest

We were in a different situation than the students at the medical school, Miss Caruthers said. We had been here and we were known in the community. People would look out for us.

The most chilling night for them was when the army slaying of Prime Minister Maurice Bislwp on Oct. 19 was announced over the state-owned Radio Free Grenada Bishop had the complete support of the people. Miss Watson said. I felt they wouldn't do anything to Americans, but I feared for the Grenadians I thought it was going to be like Stalm or something.

Both teachers said they want 'to spend at least one more year in Grenada We really like the people here There are many Grenadians living in the United States, and the people have strong ties to America They really like Americans, Miss Caruthers said

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fFarmers Can Be Violent Over Foreclosure Move

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C

Monday, Novembef 7,1983

ByJOELRUTCHICK

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - James Jenkins, 46, got so angry about a bank foreclosing on his farm and giving him a bad credit rating, authorities say, that he shot and killed two bankers.

The tragedy points up a growing problem of farmers losing their farms in foreclosures or mving them up voluntarily because of debts a growing problem these days, and worse than at any time since the Depression and Dust Bowl days of the30s.

The Buffalo Ridge State Bank of Ruthton, Minn., foreclosed on Jenkins' 10-acre farm near '^ler in 1980 and officials said the bank gave him a poor credit rating when he tried to buy cattle for another farm this year.

Authorities said Jenkins and his son, Steven, 18, lured two bankers from the Buffalo Ridge bank to the Tyler farm Sept. 29 and shot them to death. The two men then fled to Texas, where Jenkins killed himself and the son surrendered.

Lenders and farmers say the strain on debt-ridden farmers is likely to lead to some protest and possibly violence.

Orson Swindle, director of the Georgia Farmers Home

Farm Scene

By ROGER COBB Agricultural Extension Agent

By LEROY JAMES County Extension Chairman

It is more critical for you to do an expert job of harvesting a reduced soybean crop than for a normal crop. It's also more difficult to do a good job on a low yielding crop because the plants are usually shorter an^ the pods are usually set close to the ground. Weeds may also be worse because of the reduced competition from the crop itself.

Most soybean harvesting losses come from the header. When you are cutting a short, droughty crop, header losses would be even greater.

When the soybeans are short, it is necessary that you keep your stubble height to a minimum. In a field where the typical plant is only 12 to 16 inches tall, and loaded close to the ground, a six inch stubble height can leave 25 to 30 percent of the crop in the field.

The following points can help you put more soybeans into the tank in drought stressed soybeans:

Reduce Your Ground Speed - The natural tendency is to go faster in small beans that may be cutting only 15 to 20 bushels per acre, especially if they are not too weedy. But, the cutter bar on your combine just will not move fast enou^ to cut the plants smoothly if you go faster than three to three and one-half miles per hour. Faster speeds will cause the blade to push the plants forward before they are cut, stripping soybeans and increasing your losses.

Set Your Reel Correctly -On most combines, the* center of the reel should be set approximately, 12 inches

ahead of the blade. This will allow the reel to get control of the plants iust before they are cut and greatly push , them back into the throat of ' the combine.

Control Plant - The reel should run only deeply enough to control the plant. On standing soybeans, run the reel only four to six inches deep from the top of the plant. If soybeans are lodged, the reel should be run low enough to pick up the down plants, ana raise them before they are cut.

Carefully Adjust Your Reel Speed - In standing soy-, beans, the reel tip speed shaould be about 25 percent faster than your combine ground speed. If the reel tip speed is the same as the combine ^ound speed, there is no relative motion between the reel tip and the plant. So the 25 percent faster speed of the reel tip causes the reel to gently push the plant back into the machine after it is cut.

Harvesting In Severe Weeds - If you have a severe weed problem, it is very difficult to do a good job of harvesting. Weeds that are green when beans are ready to harvest add a tremendous threshing and separation load to a combine. If weeds are out of control and your beans are ready to harvest before frost, vou might consider using a desiccant.

In fields infested with weeds, the natural tendancy of most operations is to open up the concave settings and/or speed up the threshing cy inder to get the weeds tkough the machine. But making these adjustments would be wrong.

Administration, said, I hope to God people dont go around shooting each other, especially me.

Many farmers are not going to walk off and be good sports, said Merle Hansen, a Newman Grove, Neb., farmer and chairman of the North American Farm Alliance. There may be some violence, he said.    ^

Farm mortgage foreclosures are on the increase, and even more farms are being lost nationwide through voluntary liquidation, agreeing to give up farms to meet d^bts.

That (foreclosure) is real y a devastating experience, said Anne Ranten, Minnesotas assistant commissioMr of agriculture. They usually follow the best advice and voluntarily close down.

Records from a number of states and lending agencies sIkw low commodity prices and high interest rates, often combined with poor weather, have triggered a surge in foreclosures and farm bankruptcies.

A report issued in March by Gov. Rudy Perpichs Commission on the Farm Crisis shows farm foreclosure rates in Minnesota were two to five times as high in 1982 as in the mid-1970s.

In Iowa to the south, newspapers advertised at least 488 farms for public auction in February. At least 95 farms were auctioned off on one day - Feb. 26 - said Carol Hodne, Midwest coordinator for the Farmers Association.

It is very clearly a crisis, Hodne said. A lot of them are liquidations that are encouraged and pressured by the lenders.

A pending lawsuit has prevented the FmHA (federal Farmers Home Administration) from foreclosing on about 700 farms in hard-hit Georgia, where'a whopping 5,500 of 9,200 FmHA borrowers are delinquent in loan payments.

Several years of drought, low commodity prices, inflation and the liberal farm credit policies of former President Jimmy Carters administration have contributed to the plight of FmHA borrowers in Georgia, Swindle said.

In 1976, he said, the FmHA held only 2 percent of the states short-term farm credit. Today the figure is 55 percent, and many of the fanners overextended themselves.

In Texas, FmHA officials scotched reports the agency planned to foreclose on 120 farms in drought-stricken Gaines Cbunty in Uie cotton-growing southwestern comer of the state.

The federal payment-in-kind program - designed to idle farm acreage and reduce crop surpluses depressing farm commodities - is one of the factors that has put Texas FmHA borrowers in better shape than at this time last year, said John Barnes, assistant state director of the agency in Texas.

He predicted, however, that as many as 5 percent of Texas 15,700 FmHA borrowers will not farm or ranch next year.

FmHA officials would like to stay with those borrowers, but Barnes noted sometimes a fellow is better fitted for something else.

Texas Commissioner of Agriculture Jim Hightower believes farmers and ranchers are angrier now at a precarious loan situation, caused primarily by what he called a disastrous national farm policy and drought.

Five years ^o at least we could afford to drive tractors to Washington, Hightower said. Now it has gotten worse.

Bankruptcies and delinquency rates are higher among the nations 270,000 FmHA borrowers. But farmers who get other types of financing have more difficulty keeping afloat now.

Of people who obtained loans from 425 privately-held Production Credit Associations nationwide, 2.7 percent were behind in payments in June 1982. The number of PCA delinquencies soared to 6.3 percent in March, before leveling off at 3.7 percent in June, said Kim Bowersox, director of congressional and public affairs for the Farm Credit Administration.

The number of foreclosures reported by PCA cooperatives declined over this time, however. The Minnesota Legislature, for instance, passed a foreclosure relief bill which went into effect earlier this year. It delays farm foreclosure sales up to one year, while the farmer tries to pay the delinquent amount. Ilie law allows farmers who contend they cannot pay because of the national economy to petition district courts, which decide how much time to delay the foreclosure. The statute expires next July.

Minnesota also is th site of a pending class-action lawsuit filed against the FmHA.

The farmers contend in the lawsuit the FmHA should not take farm income, liquidate equipment or foreclose on borrowers farms until initiating a loan deferral and moratorium program passed by (ingress in 1978.

The lawsuit is similar to about a dozen suits in other states seeking a more lenient policy on FmHA loan repayments. The outcome of the suits could determine how FmHA treats farm debts.

Whitewater Rafters Clash Over Use Of River By TVA Diversion

By JEFF WOODS OCOEE, Tenn. (UPI) -The Tennessee Valley Authority has taken the (koee River one of the nations most popular Whitewater streams - and turned it back into a stretch of dry rocks.

Nature lovers and small town businessmen have formed an unusual coalition locked in a bitter battle against the nations largest electric utility.

The rapids have been diverted into a wooden chute that snakes along a ridge above the rivers natural bed for nearly five miles to a 70-year-old hydroelectric plant.

TVA unwittingly created a Whitewater craze by lettinc the river flow into its natural channel in 1976 while it revamped the power plant. When the work was completed, TVA took back the river but found it choked with rafters and swarming with businesses catering to tourists.

Were pushing every jnic button we can, said Javid Brown, a former federal bureaucrat who leads the fight against TVA. I got into the Ocoee baddle as a labor of love. There are very few rivers like the Ocoee. Save the Ocoee T-shirts and bumper stickers abound and some of Tennessees most, powerful politicians

I

1

have sided against TVA.

Rafters, canoeists and kayakers by the hundreds of thousands swooshed down the Ocoee in the seven years that TVA let the river to run wild. The 93,400 whitewater enthusiasts who rode the river in 1982 pumped $3 million into the economy of tiny Polk County.

'The agencys revival of the plant has brought fears of an economic disaster to many of the 14,000 people in rural Polk County.

The popularity of the river spawned 15 raft outfitting businesses and river guiding services at dozens of roadside groceries.

Most people in this area have to go outside the county to find work, said John Thomason, who added a guide service to his grocery store six years ago. You take away the rafting from this area and its dead.^

Marc Hunt and Bill Chipley scraped together $2,600 to start the first raft outfittiiq business with three use< rafts in 1976. Hiey guided 300 people down the river the first year.

Sunburst Wilderness Adventures now boasts 17 rafts, two buses and 25 employees. Some 10,000 people paid Sunburst $20 each for a ride down the river this year.

TVA officials privately admit they underestimated,

the rivers popularity when they decided to start renovating the hydroplants two generators and rebuild the flume line as a replica of the original. The flume lines foundation was shoddier than first believed and the projects cost has jumped from $20 million to at least $34 million.

The hydroplant will produce enough electricity to power only 9,000 of the nearly 3 million homes in TVAs

seven-state region but officials insist the project is worth it.

Theres no doubt that TVA is going to look like the bad guy no matter how this turns out, said Gary Stansell, TVAs southeastern district manager.

But TVA is required to provide the lowest cost power possible. You cant get any cheaper power than water power. Its inflation-proof.

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6 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Monday, November 7,1983

NCR Is Proposing Evacuation Change

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Evacuation of anyone living within two miles of a nuclear power plant would be virtually automatic during an emergency under a pro

posal being considered by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, officials say.

The draft proposal prepared by NRC staff members has yet to be presented to

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Experiment Draws Viewers

SEATTLE (AP) - A 3.5 million experiment to harness an underground coal fire to produce gas has drawn observers from Thailand, Brazil, France, Belgium and Canada as well as from two U.S. oil companies and several states, an official says.

The coal gas resulting from a controlled fire in a coal seam 200 feet below ground could be burned in power plants, converted to chemicals or upgraded to the equivalent of natural gas, said Roger Paul, chief geologist for Washington Irrigation & Development Co.

Two fires have been ignited so far, and the quality of the gas piped to the surface has been better than expected, Paul said.

VOTE

JANICE B.

BUCK

* MAYOR

CITY OF GREENVILLE

* Aware

* Concerned

* Capable

* Experienced

* Knowledgeable

* 17 Years

Business'Management|

* 10 Years

Community Service

Look at her RECORD of COMMUNITY SERVICE ^ and WORKING EXPERIENCE with THE ISSUES ^

EDUCATION

* 2 Years City Council Representative to the Greenville Board of Education

* Working toward Quality Education for all studentsnow and in the future

Working to Open a Teaching Center for Nature and Science Study Working with ECU to help students gain computer experience through a microcomputers loan program

* Supporter of the ECU Foundation

* Life Member, ECU PIRATES CLUB

* Member, ECU Chancellor*s Society

Family members in City School System _

JOBS-INDUSTRY-BUSINESS

* Member, Chamber of Commerce INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT Committee

Continuing Research on Small Business Development through the NFIB and SBA

* President, Owner and Manager of a Small Business (worked in all areas since established in 1952)

* Member, Board of Directors, First American Savings and Loan

* Working toward a sound, growing economyboth

QUALITY OF LIFE

* 2 Years City Council Representative to the Greenville Recreation & Parks Commission

* Working toward better leisure time alternatives for all citizens

* Supporter of Boys Choir and Boys Club

* Guardian Member, East Carolina Council of the Boy Scouts of America

* Supporter of the Arts and ECU Summer Theatre Director of Greenvilles Bicentennial Celebration

* Redevelopment Commission Award for 5 Year Service

* Working for a Stronger Economy that supports improving the Quality of Life for all citizens

Voted Citizen of the Year in 1974 for Community Service

* 2 Years service on Chamber of Commerce Governmental Affairs LOCAL CONCERNS Committee '

* Member, Memorial Baptist Church Building Committee

FOR QUALITY OF LIFE, EDUCATION, JOBS AND GOVERNMENT ELECT EXHEKIENCE LEADERSHIP VOTE Janice B. BUCK MAYOR on November 8th

Paid for by the committee to elect Janice Buck.

the division of risk analysis.

Current NRC regulations call for Emergency Planning Zones reaching out in a radius of about 10 miles from power plants. Bernero, who sponsored the proposal, said current regulations tend to make people think of evacuation as an all or nothing response.

This woiildnt remove the ilanning at all, he said rom the NRCs Bethesda, Md., headquarters. All were doing is sharpening the regulations. The difference in the planning is in the frst two miles youre talking about a much different sense of urgency. ... I hope it

increases the safety.

An NRC panel is currently holding hearings on Duke Power Co.s effort to license the Catawba Nuclear Plant in Ywk County, S.C. The Carolina Environmental Study Group has contended

that the plants Emergency Planning Zone should be extended to include Charlotte, whose southwestern limits lie about 10 miles from the plant.

Jesse Riley, former president of the group, said he

oi^ioses reducing the size of the planning zone but that he

could support an attempt to setpriMityrespiMises.

RE-ELECT

STUART SHINN

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

Paid For By CommlttM To Rloc1 Stuart Shinn

Nov. 8th

AHon Warren City Council

He Cares

About>Tht Needs Of QrMnvillo

About The Underprivileged & Elderly

Aboot The Needs Of City Employees

He Will Represent You

Paid for by Irlanda of Alton Warren

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Sports the DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 7, 1983Tampa Bay Celebrates First1983 Win

By The Associated Press The Tampa Bay Buccaneers finally could celebrate a victory, but there were no celebrations for Houston, Denver, Minnesota and the Los Angeles Haiders - the latter despite pwting another National Football League victory.

T think our rallying cry of late has been, Whatever it takes, said quarterback Jack Thompson after Tampa Bay captured its first game of the season after nine losses by downing Minnesota 17-12, James Wilder had the right stuff. It wasnt artistic, but the bottom line is we won."

Wilder banged out 219 yards in 31 carries, including a 75-yard touchdown sprint that put the Bucs ahead to stay in the third quarter. The TD run was the longest ever by a Buccaneer and the 219 yards broke the teams single-game rushing record.

Its something to celebrate about, said Wilder. It feels great when you want to win and you never get tired

In other games Sunday, it was Dallas 27, Philadelphia 20; Pittsburgh 26, San Diego 3; New Orleans 27, Atlanta 10; Cincinnati 55, Houston 14; Green Bay 35, Cleveland 21; Los Angeles Raiders 28, Kansas City 20; New England 21, Buffalo 7; Miami M, San Francisco 17; Seattle 27, Denver 19; Los Angeles Rams 21, Chicago 14; Baltimore 17, New York Jets 14, and Washington 45, St. Louis 7.

Tonight, the New York Giants will be at Detroit,

Wilders performance came a week after he carried the ball a league-record 42 times against Pittsburgh.

Hes a genetic mutant," Thompson affectionately said of the 6-foot-3, 225-pound Tampa Bay running back. When you have a body like James Wilder, you

never get tired

Wilders broke the Ricky Bells single-game team rushing mark of 167 ya^. The 219 yards also was the second-most rushed against the Vikings. Chicagos Walter Payton had 275 yards in 1977.

Three teams lost their quarterback, while Houston running back Earl Campbell threatened to leave the Oilers after being benched in the second period.

Steve DeBerg suffered a separated left shoulder and will be lost to Denver for virtually the remainder of the season. The Raiders Marc Wilson will be sidelined for at least six weeks because of a broken left shoulder, while Minnesotas Steve Dils was hospitalized overnight for observation after becoming disoriented after taking some heavy hits.

Bengals 55, Oilers 14 Pete Johnson slammed into the end

zone tor three touchdowns and Ken Anderson came off the injury list to direct 34 first-half points to lead Cincinnati to victory and extend Houston losing streak to 17 straight games - 10 this season.

Johnson scored on runs of five, one and one yards, and Anderson hit Chris Collinsworth with a 14-yard touchdown pass. Rookie Stanley Wilson added a 1-yard TD run, Reggie Williams returned a fumble 59 yards for a score and Larry Kinnedrew went three yards for a score.

Houston running back Earl Campbell was upset after being taken out of the game in the second period after gaining 42 yards on 16 carries.

I think now the only thing they (Oilers) can do is put me off this team," said Campbell. The Houston Oilers treated me bad today. They treated me

like a dog today.

Somethings going to have to happen this week because of the way I had to sit down. Even if the game was out of control, I can do more in the game than on the sidelines,

Rams 21, Bears 14

Rookie Eric Dickerson ran for 127 yards and scored twice to power the Los Angeles Rams over Chicago.

Dickerson ran his 1983 rushing total to 1,223 yards and scored his 16th and 17th touchdowns of the season, both tops in the NFL.

The Rams victory overshadowed the achievements of Chicago running back Walter Payton. He carried 14 times for 62 yards to become the fourth man in league history to top 11,000 yards in career rushing. With 11,020 yards, he trails only Jim Brown, Franco Harris and O.J.

Simpson.

Payton also caught four passes for 32 yards to move ahead of Simpson and behind only Brown on the all-time combined yardage list with 14,440

Cowboys 27, Eagles 20

Quarterback Danny White completed 21 of 24 passes, including two for touchdowns, as Dallas stopped Philadelphia.

The Cowboys trailed 10-0 in the second period when they put t(^ether a 39-yard field goal by Rafael Septien and a touchdown pass from White to Timmy -Newsome within a 3:09 span to tie tl score.

Tony Dorsett, who had minus-5 yards rushing through the first 22 periods, had a 29-yard TD sprint and White teamed up with Tony Hill on an 18-yard TD pass.

Allison, Bonneft: Resulf Surprising

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - It was not the finish that Bobby Allison nor Neil Bonnett had envisioned just minutes earlier.

Allison, who is tracking down the first Winston Cup season championship of his illustrious 22-year Grand National stock car career, had all but wrapped up a victory Sunday in the Atlanta Journal 500 at Atlanta International Raceway.

The 46-year-old Allison - who had things pretty much his own way after Cale Yarboroughs engine blew while he was leading on lap 259 - was cruising along a solid three seconds ahead of second-place Bonnett when chaos erupted with just nine laps remaining in the 328-lap event.

I didnt even see the accident," said Allison, referring to a fourth-turn collision between Mike Potter and Jimmy Means ttet brought out the sixth and final caution flag of the day.

Allison, with Bonnett hard on his heels, drove his Buick around the 1.522-mile banked oval under the yellow flag, then dived for pit road to get a tire change and some gas for the final sprint.

I apparently ran.over some junk (from the accident) in the (fourth) comer, cut down the right-front tire, and I hit the inside pit wall, Allison explained stoicly. It bent the toe-in (suspension) and I had all I could do just to keep it on the racetrack."

Buddy Baker, who had made up a lost lap by passing Allison with about 40 laps remaining, took a calculated risk and stayed on the track.

His Ford Thunderbird was just ahead of Bonnetts Warner Hodgdon-sponsored Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS when the green flag fell with four laps remaining.

But Bonnetts RahMoc Team car had fresh tires and he was able to pass Baker easily on lap 326, going on to beat him across the finish line by ,41-lOOths of a second. Meanwhile, Allison limped to the finish in third place, far behind the first two cars but still far ahead of his closest Winston Cup rival Darrell Waltrip.

Waltrip, the two-time defending Grand National champion, was plagued by tire problems and an ill-handling car throughout the race. He wound up ninth, five laps off the pace.

That cost him 37 points, giving Allison a 64-point edge going into the season finale on Nov. 20 at Riverside, Calif.

I sincerely hate to see him (Allison) have that kind of luck," said the 34-year-old Bonnett, is a protege and friend of his fellow Hueytown, Ala., resident. I was really prepared to finish second.

If youd been riding with me the last 30 laps, you wouldnt have believed I was running for second, though. I didnt run an easy lap from the last caution, with about 100 laps to go or so, to the end. But Bobby was just outrunning me.

Waltrip, shrugging off his disappointment, said, We had a couple of tires go bad early, lost a lot of time and just did not run good. After that, all we could do was finish and hope for the best,

'Theres no give-up in this team, he added. Well be at Riverside and well go after them. Theyll have to win it.

Allison now needs only to finish 13th or better in the California race to win the title - worth more than $250,000 -no matter what Waltrip does.

The graying driver, who each of the past two seasons has seen Waltrip come from far behind to deprive him of the title, wasnt talking about strategy for the finale.

P

Running For The Record

Chicago running back Walter Payton (34) takes off top the 11,000 yard mark in career rushing. The

on one of 14 carries during fourth quarter action in cn^hlem on the left shoulder of the Bears

Sundays game against the Los Angeles Rams, as uniforms is in memory of owner George Papa Bears quarterback Jim McMahon (9) looks on.Bear Halas, who died last week. (AP Payton became the fourth man in NFL history tc Laserphoto)

San Antonio Finds Bench Strength

By The Associated Press The San Antonio Spurs, with one of the most celebrated starting lineups in pro basketball, may be finding some bench strength to go with the stars.

Spurs substitutes scored 34 points, grabbed 23 rebounds and handed out 13 assists Sunday night as San Antonio took a 132-115 National Basketball Association victory over the Seattle SuperSonics.

Leading the way was Spurs backup center Mark McNamara, who relieved Artis Gilmore and had eight points and five rebDunds in 23 minutes. McNamara was acquired from the Philadelphia 76ers on Friday.

McNamara is real aggressive and he can rebound, which has been one of our weaknesses, Spurs Coach Mo McHone said. He is really

Sports Calendar

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

Tuesdays Sports Volleyball North Carolina at East Carolina (7 p.m.)

going to help this team.

I think its grat to be here, McNamara said. They really have such great players, it doesnt put a lot of pressure on me. It felt great to get a nice welcome from the fans. It really helped my confidence.

In the only other NBA games Sunday, Milwaukee beat Atlanta 97-84 and Portland bombed Phoenix 122-96.

Despite the strong contribution from the bench, the Spurs still need the bulk of their offensive punch ^om the starters. On Sunday, they got 32 points from George Gervin, 24 from Mike Mitchell and 22 from Gilmore, while Johnny Moore had 18 assists.

In addition to McNamara, Keith Edmonson came off the bench for the Spurs and scored 12 points. Another San Antonio substitute, Edgar Jones, totaled eight points and

KEEL

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

nine rebounds, including eight in the fourth quarter.

Seattle guard Gus Williams led the Sonics with 26 points and 10 assists. Center Jack Sikma finished with 11 points and four rebounds.

The Spurs were in control of the game from the opening moments, taking a 25-15 lead with five minutes left in the first quarter.

San Antonio led 36-32 at the end of the period, stretched the lead to 73-61 at halftime and was up 105-92 at the end of the third period.

We didnt get the job done tonight, Sikma said. There was a great deal of pushing and shoving going on out there. They (the referees) called some fouls on me early.

and the Spurs were putting good pressure on us defensively.

Spurs forward Gene Banks and Sonics forward Danny Vranes were ejected from the game with six minutes left in Uie third quarter following a fight that cleared both tenches.

Gene grabbed my jersey and t pushed him away, Vranes said. Then we got face-to-face, and said some things we shouldnt have said.

We just bumped heads, Banks said. The game got heated up and we just got upset at each other. Hes an intense player, especially with his size.

Blazers 122, Suns 96 At Portland, the Trail Blazers registered their biggest victory margin ever against Phoenix as Jim Pax-son scored 20 points and Clyde Drexler 18.

The Blazers broke open a close game with a 12-2 streak at the end of the second period for a 57^ halftime lead. The Suns never got closer than that in the second half.

Rookie Rod Foster led the Suns with 16 points, all in the fourth period.

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/ieussy Nettles Avoid Baseball's Re-Entry Draft With Contracts

NEW YORK (AP) - The most popular pick could have been Jerry Reuss, the Los Angeles Dodgers left-handed pitcher. Even Graig Nettles, the New York Yankees Gold Glove third baseman, could have drawn some interest.

But they chose to stay with their clubs, leaving 46 other players to test baseballs free-agent market in todays re-entry draft.

Reuss re-signed with the Dodgers on Wednesday, Nettles with the Yankees the next day. one hour before the midnight deadline Thursday. That left 20 pitchers, 13 outfielders, 12 infielders and one catcher to go through the re-entry draft This years draft included five Type A players, all pitchers. and two T^ B players. Teams losing these players will get additional compensation, beyond the usual amateur draft choices.

'The T>T)e A players included two Detroit Tigers pitchers, starter Milt Wilcox and reliever Doug Bair. The other three were Kent Tekulve of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Dennis Lamp of the Chicago White Sox and Tom Underwood of the Oakland As.

The Type Bs were infielder Manny Trillo of Montreal and outfielder Ruppert Jones of San Diego.

Compensation for the loss of a Type A players is an amateur draft choice and a professional player from a special pool created for the purpose. The pool is comprised of unprotected members of each major league teams 40-man roster. Compensation for Type B players is two amateur draft'choices. Unrated players are compensated for by one amateur draft choice.

The Seattle Mariners, by virtue of their 60-102 record in 1983, were accorded the first draft choice, but it diit really matter. Any club may

chose any number of players it wants, and each club continues to draft until it has passed in consecutive rounds. 'The draft ends when each club has passed in two straight rounds.

This years draft promised to depart from some longstanding traditions.

The free-agent hungry California Angels were among five teams that asked to be excluded from T>T)e A drafting. meaning they have promised to stay away from what baseball has classified as the top free agents and wiU not have to contribute to the talent pool for Type A compensation. In addition, the Angels have said they will break with another tradition and reserve the right to try to re-sign first baseman Rod Carew, a seven-time batting champion who hit .339 this year.

The other Type A excluded clubs were Boston, Los Angeles, Minnesota and Seattle. By promising not to draft any T^pe A players, the clubs are not required to participate in the Type A compensation pool.

And New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, another normally busy free-agent grabber, has said he would draft only those players the Yankees stood to lose -pitchers Rich Gossage and Dale Murray, outfielder Oscar Gamble and infielder Bert Campaneris - while trying to rebuild the team through trades and the farm system.

The Yankees by re-signing Nettles were able lift their captain and All-Star third barman out of the re-entry draft.

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Bucks 97, Hawks 84

Sidney Moncrief scored 27 points and Marques Johnson had 12 of his 14 in the fint period at Milwaukee won at home against Atlanta.

Five points by rookie center Randy Breuer helped the Bucks build a 10-point lead early in the fourth quarter, and the Hawks could get no closer than eight the re^t of the way.

Mike Glenn led Atlanta wth 16 points.

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fAoose Hunts, Nuclear Freeze Part Of Vote Scene

KTCHINiiS KK(0\ KKKI) - ('lement l)e Jonghe, Printseller", an t'tching believed to have been done bv Kembrandl is one of five etchings recovered by the FBI from a coin locker at (irand Central terminal in New York. The five works are valued at more than

$340,(MNK The FBI said two of the art works, "Presentation in the Temple in the Dark !VIanner and Clement de Jonghe, Printseller" are thought to have been stolen from the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa on Oct. 14. (AP Laserphoto)

By SCOTT KRAFT Associated Press Writer The annual moose hunt could be banned in Maine, non-smokers in San Francisco offices could be guaranteed smoke-free work space, and Cambridge, Mass., could turn itself into a nuclear freeze zone in voting Tuesday on state and local ballot issues.

In other voting, New York state will decide on a $1.25 billion transportation bond issue, and St. Louis considers a $63.5 million school bond issue as a way to finance court-ordered desegregation.

There are 54 measures on ballots in 11 states and the District of Columbia, including initiatives, referendums and constitutional questions, according to the Free Congress Foundation in Washington, which tracks referendums. There were 237 ballot questions in 42 states and the district in 1982.

Californias Proposition 13 in 1977 tri^ered dozens of tax-cut initiatives, but this Election Day there is only one. Ohio voters have an opportunity to reduce their tahes and make it tougher for tax increases to pass the state Legislature.

State Issue 3 in Ohio would repeal a 90 percent state income tax hike and all other tax laws enacted since Gov. Richard Celeste took office in January. State Issue 2 would require a three-fifths majority, instead of a simple majority, to pass future tax increases.

A zoning change in Rancho Mirage, Calif., has given

Black Voter S/gn-Up Is Not Yet Attaining Goal

Unreliable, So Can't Charge

ByMYRYANNKRllYNK

Associated Press W riter

R.UEIGH, N.C. (,AP) -Black voter registration in North Carolina grew by 36.652 during the past year but that's still far short of the goal of 200,000 new black voters by the 1984 elections.

That goal was set by Democratic presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, who visited North Carolina in May as part of a national effort to register 2 million more black voters.

Increased registration of minorities also has been supported by the National Association for the .Advancement of Colored People, the Democratic Party and Gov. Jim Hunt and his administration.

Hunt set out in April 1982 to register the 1.7 million North Carolinians who are eligible to vote but not registered and he put particular emphasis on reaching minorities.

Since then, the General Assembly has passed laws "allowing'voter registration in public libraries and driver's license examining offices.

Statistics show that 36.652 black votebs were added to registration rolls between Oct. 10, 1982, and Oct. 10, 1983. an 8.1 percent increase.

For the same peruxl, 22,9.54

white voters were added, a 1 percent increase.

According to the 1980 census, 63.7 percent of the

whites eligib

e to vote in

North Carolina are registered while only 49.2 percent of the eligible minorities are registered.

Elections Board Chairman Bob Spearman said he thinks there still is a good chance to reach the 200,000 goal.

"There probably will be very substantial additional increases in registration of both blacks and whites in 1984 .. which is of course an election year, Spearman said, "From what everyone can see it will be a hotly contested election year."

He said the increase in minority registration was "very substantial" although the increase in registration was smaller than the increase from October 1981 to October 1982, just before congressional elections.

"There was an increase earlier than has been the case previously, said state elections director Alex Brock.

Brock said it is often difficult to get people to register until election year.

SMkesman Brent Hackney said Hunt does not think the latest increases are enough.

"We want more people registered and more people voting, Hackney said. He is pleased there has been a significant increase in voter registration but to say its enough would be overstating the case.    '

LAKE WORTH. Fla. (AP) - Police and prosecutors agree that an elderly sufferer of Alzheimers disease was raped, but say they cant press charges because the ailment makes her an unreliable witness. And her husband says laws should be changed to protect people like his wife.

Rape charges against an ex-convict were dropped Sept. 26 on grounds that the 72-year-old victim would not be able to give coherent testimony because of the nerve disorder, which destroys brain cells.

Shes a victim of Alzheimers disease, and theres nothing in the law to protect these people, said her husband, a 75-year-old semi-retired lawyer. It should be the same as raping a child.

Stork Outfaced

GRAND

85-Mph Dash

.ANCHORAGE uAP) -Respite an 85 mph dash and some fancy driving. David Oines just wasn't fast enough to beat the stork.

His wife. Deena. gave birth to the couple's third child. Tamera. in the cramped front seat of their compact car somewhere near Mul-doon Road on the outskirts of the city early Saturday The couple had been briefed in emergency birthing prix-diires because they live in the .Matanuska-Susitna Valley, far from the hospital in Anchorage.

Mrs. Oines said after the baby was born she wrapped the infant in her rabbit coat, so "she was Ixirn in luxury " She said her husband calmly continued to aim the car toward the hospital and. driving with one hand, cradled the babys head with the other.

"Maybe 1 should buy him flowers, Mrs Oines.

At the hospital. Tamera. at 7 pounds, on^half ounce was pronounced in fine condition.

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voters the chance to side with a famous crooner or a former president, both residents.

The issue is whether to change local zoning laws to block construction of a luxury development on a mountain plateau. Frank Sinatra opposes the project; former President Gerald Ford, an investor in the project, is one of its chief backers.

A celebrity has also entered the fray over moose hunting in Maine. Bullwinkle, the cartoon character, is appearing on TV advertisements for an organization calling itself SMOOSA, Save Maines Only Official State Animal.

If moose hunting is banned in Maine, it would be the first time the hunting of a game animal has been outlawed through the ballot box, according to David F. Allen, executive director of the

pro-hunting Sportsmens Alliance of Maine.

The alliance claims the six-day hunt, held each September, is a form of wildlife management. A thousand of the 25,000 moose in the state can be killed in any given season.

But SMOOSA says the moose is too tame and unintelligent to be hunted for sport. You dont just go and blow away somebody who trusts you, said spokesman John N. Cole.

In San Francisco, voters will decide whether to keep a city ordinance that requires non-smoking areas in workplaces if non-smokers request them. Another issue there would redraft the citys master plan to place tough environmental restrictions on future construction.

A few of the ballot topics this Election Day are familiar - drinking water

flouridation, school bond issues and transporation bond issues.

Springfield, Agawam and Chicopee in Massachusetts are deciding whether to flouridate their water supplies.

St. Louis bond issue would generate money to improve city schools as part of a federal desegregation order.

The transporation bond ' issue in New York state is supported by the governor as a "Rebuild New York measure, but the state chapter of the American Automobile Association is among opponents who argue that the bonds will place a heavy burden on the states economy. If passed, the money would go for rebuild-ing roads,.bridges, waterways, rail lines and airports.

Some of the ballot issues have political overtones.

If voters decide to create a nuclear freeze zone in Cambridge, $100 million in missile design contracts would have to be halted, The main target is the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, which employs about 1,800 people.

Final results probably wont be available for days because the town, home to Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, counts ballots by hand.

San Francisco and Seattle will vote on measures protesting U.S. involvement in

Central America, and Philadelphians will conside." a "Jote with Peace initiative that asks the federal government to put jobs ahead of defense spenoing. Fifty cities have passed similar referendums.

-In Dover, N.H., voters will decide whether a private security firm should take over administration ofthe towns fire department.

-The District of Columbia will decide whether to preserve the Rhodes Tavern, at age 183 the oldest commercial structure still standing in the district. Rhodes Tavern, located near the White House, sits on property slated to become part of a retail and office complex that is already 60 percent complete.

-Voters in unincorporated

areas of Los Angeles County to roll

will decide whether back rents to Janua

ry 1981 levels. Opponents of rent

control, mostly homeowners and landlords, have collected more than $1 million in their campaign to defeat the measure.

-Ohio will decide whether to raise the legal drinking age for beer to 21 from 19. The age for hard liquor is already 21.

KEEL

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

P*ld For ly Kool For City Council

Vote For

Edward Ed Carter

Greenville City Council November 8,1983

Carter Cares

I

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RALLY UNDER RAIN People from several anti-war groups gather at a rally in Tokyo on a rainy Sunday to protest agaiitst a four-day state visit to Japan by President Reagan starting on November 9. The banner reads "Block Reagans visit to Japan. (AP Laserphoto)

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

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The Dily Betlectof. Greenville. N C    Monday,    Novembef    7.1963

Woody

Peeie

There have been things said about moral victories. Coming close to the great teams and losing is fine, some might say, when you havent had that opportunity before.

Well, those platitudes just dont hold water when it comes to East Carolinas Pirates. Three times this year they have come close to upsetting a team ranked in the Top Ten. And three times theyve come away with what can only be counted as a moral victory

Thats something Coach Ed Emory just cant stand. Morale victories dont bring you anything but heartache.

So it was Saturday afternoon at the Orange Bowl in Miami. For 58 minutes, East Carolina outplayed the fifth-ranked Hurricanes, leading all the way. But the fates appearently had just decreed that it was not to be. Miamis Bernie Kosar completed a long pass in the final two minutes to put the Hurricanes into scoring position, and they finally pushed through the determined Pirate defense to score a go-ahead touchdown. That touchdown drive came just after the Pirates had driven most of the field to reach as deep as the two yard line only to come away empty.

Jeff Heath missed a 21-yard field goal at the end of that drive and that could well have been the key to the game. It would have given the Pirates a 10-6 lead and could have totally destroyed the Hurricanes. In retrospect, it might have been advisable for the Pirates to have taken a deliberate delay of game penalty here to give Heath a better shot at the kick. A short boot like that from a wicked angle at the hashmarks is tough for any kicker. Five more yards could have opened up that angle a little more for him.

Nobody can call this team a bunch of quitters, though. In all three trips to Florida - the only place theyve been beaten this year theyve had a chance right up to the final play.

And it was the final play that did it again. East Carolina drove to the 31 only to be pushed back by two penalties to the 41. From there Kevin Ingram fired up what the Pirates call their victory play. All of the receivers gather on one side of the field and race out from there, hoping to confuse the defense and get someone open.

It worked - almost. Stefon Adams got open at the goal line and Ingram got the ball to him. But as fate would have it, Norwood Vann didnt see the whole picture and went over to also try and make the catch. His bump into Adams caused the ball to drop and it was all over.

Now, the Pirates have to come back and play against two pretty good teams in William & Mary and Southern Mississippi. Beating them wont be an easy task. But the Pirates still have something to play for.

While their chances at a bowl bid were somewhat shattered with the loss, they have not completely vanished. There is still an outside chance depending on what happens the rest of the season. One thing they can wint to with pride is their victory over Missouri which appears bigger every week. The Tigers appear headed for a bowl game themselves as the Number Two team in the Big Eight. If they are good enough to go, certainly the Pirates are too.

It all depends on their showing in the final two contests.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) ~ Marvelous Marvin Hagler has arrived at a station befitting his ability.

"This is the fight Ive been waiting for said the undisputed middleweight champion, who has fought in the shadow of Sugar Ray Leonard. Larry Holmes. Thomas Hearns and a few others!

This is what a championship fight is all about. This is what a fighter wants ... to get the proper exposure, to get the proper attention.

And to get the big money. Hagler is getting the spotlight and the huge purse - he will probably earn between $8 million and $10 million - for his scheduled 15-round title defense against Roberto Duran Thursday night at Caesars Palace.

Hagler is enjoying his role on center stage, and seems not upset that big story of the match is Durans rebirth as a fighter and his bid to become the first man to win four championships.

Duran, disgraced when he quit in the eighth round against Sugar Ray Leonard Nov. 25,1980, became a triple champion when he stopped Davey Moore in the eighth round for the World Boxing Association junior middleweight title last June 16. He also was lightweight and welterweight champion.

But Hagler has not let the attenion or his 3'2-l favoritism over the 32-year-old Duran in nan-to-man betting turn his head from the job at hand.

Hagler trains one way for all fights - hard.

"You know Duran is ready for this fight." said Hagler. I believe Im in better shape tlian when I won the title.

"If youre going to beat me, youre going to beat me at my best.

Hagler will be making the eighth defense of the title he won wheh he stopped Alan Minter of England after three rounds Sept. 27.1980.

He also apparently will be fighting Duran without the political hassle that accompanied his last fight - a fourth-round knockout of Wilford Scypion May 27 at F^vidence.R.I. *

The WBC, which was to run the fight, at first balked at Haglers insistence that the bout be scheduled for 15 rounds rather than the WBCs 12-round limit. Than after agreeing to 15 rounds, the WBC refused to sanction the fight after the Rhode Island commission allowed the fledgling United States Boxing Associationlnternational to appoint the fight officials.

The WBA went along with the WBC, but neither group withdrew title rec(^nition from Hagler and the Scypion bout

is considered a title defense by most people.

he expected ar

Promoter Bob Arum said he expected an agreement to be finalized today in which the WBC will join the WBA in sanctioning the Hagler-Duran fight and also agree that should Hagler win. his next fight would be a WBA mandatory title defense against the winner of the Frank "The Animal Fletcfaer-Juan Domingo Roldan fight Thursday night.

East Carolina Turning Heads

Bowl Pictures Taking Shape

By DAVE GOLDBERG AP Sports Writer

In Miami, fans threw oranges - as in Orange Bowl - on the field to celebrate the home teams win. In South Bend, representatives from seven bowls watched Pitt l>eat Notre Dame. Even Kentucky was talking bowl and it wasnt the Basketball Bowl.

Its that time of year again.

With October having turned into November, bowls are foremost in the dreams of coaches with four losses or less. Bowl bids dont go oiit for another two weeks, after the games of Nov. 19, but now is the time to shine before the bowl scouts.

One bid may have been clinched at the Orange Bowl, where freshman quarterback Bemie Kosar dove over from the 1-yard-line with 1:04 left to give Miami a 12-7 win over that least-known of major college powers. East Carolina. Kosar heaved the ball into the stands and the fans heaved oranges back.

The fifth-ranked Hurricanes are 9-1 with only Florida State left and will probably stay home New Years night, to meet (most likely)

Un;)-ranked Nebraska. While the Orange Bowl committee might prefer an out-of-town team to bring thousands of spend^ to town, it has said it will select the top-ranked team available.

Assuming No. 2 Texas stays on Uq) of the vill h<

Southwest Conference, it will host the Cotton Bowl. Nos. 3 and 4, Auburn and Georgia, meet Satiurday - the winner becomes Sugar Bowl host; the loser drops below Miami.

Thus, Miami can figure on staying home.

As for the Rose Bowl, Illinois needs only to beat Indiana to clinch the Big lOs Rose Bowl spot, probably against UCLA, which leads the Pac-10.

There are a host of other bowl-eligibles to fill the ever-growing lineup of postseason attractions.

There are the traditional bowl teams - Ohio State, Michigan, Maryland, North Carolina, Pitt, Penn State, Notre Dame, Washington, Alabama, Oklahoma, Missouri, Florida, Arizona State plus the Aubum-Georgia loser.

There are some new or resurgent powers -

Bngham Young, Boston Couege, Southern Methodist, West Virginia, Iowa, Baylw.

And there are the likes of East Carolina and Kentucky, which beat Vanderbilt 17-8 Saturday night to run its record to 6-2-1. A fixture in postseason basketball tournaments, the Wildcats were 0-10-1 last year and have made only one bowl appearance (Peach Bowl, 1977) since the late Bear Bryant left in 1952.

But factors other than records enter into bowl selection.

Teams tike Notre Dame, Penn State, Michigan, Ohio State, Southern Cal and Pitt are big names from major television markets, which make them more attractive to networks that pay the bowls bills. So they can afford an extra loss or two.

Pitt for example, lost early to Maryland and West Virginia. But the Panthers could still end up in or Cotton or Sugar Bowls, providing they win their final two games against Army and Penn State.

I told the team after two losses that if we keep on winning, the polls and bowls will recognize us, says Coach Foge Fazio.

And so will television, which tends to m^er Northeast,

Midwest anciWest Coast.

teams from porous areas like the Nc

"We have to be cognizant of the national TV ratings, says Tom Starr, executive director of the Sun Bowl who was at West Point Saturday watching Doug Flutie cavort for 8-1 Boston College. "Boston College would help us, being from the East. We would love to have a team from the East.

Coversely, that works against the East Carolinas of the world.

The Pirates, who have lost to Miami, Florida and Florida State by a total margin of 13 points and have a win on the road against Missouri, drew only 39,225 to the Orange Bowl Saturday.

"If the names on their helmets had been Penn State or Texas, there would have been 70,000 fans here screaming their hearts out, said Miami Coach Howard Schnellenberger. "East Carolina is that good.

Good on the field. But bowl scouts watch the turnstiles and the ratings as much as the results.

Connors, Lloyd Win Doubles

Victory Smiles

Jimmy Connors and Chris Evert Lloyd take a breather to enjoy their three-set victory over Andrea Jaeger and Roscoe Tanner to earn $100,000

first prize money in the World Mixed Doubles Championship Sunday night in the Astroarena. (AP Laserphoto)

HOUSTON (AP) - The jokes early in the week turned to cheers in the end for Chris Evert Lloyd and Jimmy Connors, who were together again on the tennis court for the first time in nine years.

"At the beginning of the week, the players were joking about the fact that Jimmy and I were playing together because we are not established doubles players, Lloyd said.

But Lloyd and Connors confounded the odds and, after struggling in some early round matches, rolled to a smooth straight sets, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4 victory Sunday over Andrea Jaeger and Roscoe Tanner in the finals of the $400,000 World Mixed Doubles Championships at Astroarena

"People think that all y need in doubles is a serve and volley, Evert Lloyd said. "But return of serve is so important and Jimmy and I are the best returners in the game so that helped a lot.

Connors and Lloyd will share the $100,000 first prize with $50,000 going to Tanner and Jaeger.

Connors mixed clowning with masterful tennis and served for the match in the 10th game of the third set. Lloyd-(3onnors won it at the third match point when Tanners forehand sailed long.

Connors and Lloyd each hit volley errors at the first two match points.

To be able to try hard and deep down want to win but still having a good time is great, Connors said. "Everybody wanted to win but everytiody was smiling.

Although Connors took time out for antics with the crowd he said it didnt bother h tennis.

I only concentrate during the points anyway, he said. "For me to concentrate for the entire match would be

les I

wrong.

Uoyd-Connors broke Jaeger iathe third game of the match m take control of the first set.

The second set started with Tanner, Connors and Jaeger losing their serves in order.

But Lloyd, who did not lose her serve throughout the match, held in the fourth game and Jaeger was broken again in the seventh game.

A dream finals pitting Uoyd-Connors against Evert

Lloyds husband, John Lloyd and Wendy Turnbull, the

HeelSf Terps Disappoint Bowls

top-seeded team, was lost in the second round when Jaeger-Tanner upset the No. 1

Tanner, who has one of the strongest serves on the mens tour, said he didnt use power against Lloyd or Connors.

A flat serve isnt the way to serve to Chris, Tanner said. "I can give her a spin that causes her trouble. You dont give Jimmy a flat serve, either. It just comes back at you a little faster.

Hagler Pleased By Fight Promotion

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer Bowl scouts who were depending on No. 7 Maryland and No. 10 North Carolina teams to participate in their post-season football extravaganzas were left scratching their heads after Saturdays action.

The Terrapins watched Tommie Agee rush for 219 yards and two touchdowns as Auburn took a 35-23 victory, possibly putting Maryland in the also-ran category for the Orange Bowl. Bob Paullings three field goals and Mike Eppleys. touchdown pass

propelled Clemson to a 16-3 triumph, effectively taking the Tar Heels out of the major bowl chase.

Duke rallied for a 31-21 victory over Wake Forest, while North Carolina State raced to a 33-7 victory over Appalachian State in a nonconference tilt. Last Thursday, Georgia Tech took its second ACC victory with a 31-21 triumph over Virginia.

Boomer Esiasons three touchdown passes and record 355 yards went for naught when Auburns Bo Jackson scored from 5 yards out to give the Tigers a 21-17 lead in

the fourth quarter. Agee added his 44-yard dash for the clincher, and Auburn defensive tackle Donnie Hum--phrey pounced on an Esiason fumble with nine seconds left for another score to raise Auburns record to 8-1 and enhance its chances for a Sugar Bowl spot.

Maryland dropped to 7-2 and faces Clemson next week in Death Valley. That game does not count in the ACC standings because of Clemsons probation, but dont say that too loudly around Tiger town.

If we beat Maryland next week, somebodys going to be

Detroit Lions Counting On Rookies Against Giants

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -Detroit Coach Monte Clark is coimting on six rookies to help the Lions in tonight's National Football League game with the New York Giants.

The Lions, 4-5, have won three of their last four games and Clark gives much of the credit for that turnaround to fullback James Jones, the tea ms No. 1 draft choice from Florida, and center Steve Mott out of Alabama.

"Jones has stepped right in, Clark said. His vision is really unbelievable. Hes even better than we thought, and we thought he was pretty good whe:n we drafted him.

Jo'nes, who has started every game, has rushed for 382 yai^ and six touchdowns on 107 carries. He also has caught 29 passes f(M- an additional 314 yards.

Mott took over at center three weeks ago after beating out vtsteran Amos Fowler.

It shows the value of a quality program like Alabamas, Clark said. "Steve really is aggressive.

Other rookies who see a great deal of playing time on offense are tackle Rick Strenger, the No. 2 draft pick out of Michigan, and wide receiver Jeff Chadwick, a free agent walkon from tiny Grand Valley State who has become the Lions favorite target in clutch third-down situations.

On defense, Clark has turned increasingly to end Mike Cofer and middle linebacker August Curley.

Those two guys were relatively low draft choices, but they can really play, Clark said. Its a real tribute to our

scouts.

The Giants, 2-6-1, making their third appearance this season on Monday night, will be trying hard to protect quarterback Scott Brunner -Uie only experienced signal-caller they have left after injuries knocked out Phil Simms and Jeff Rutledge.

Brunner will employ the services of two fine running backs - former Michigan star Butch Woolfolk, who has rushed for 422 yards on 104 carries, and Rob Carpenter, who has lugged the tell 154 times for 560 yards.

the ACC champ, but they wont have beaten us, Clemson safety Tim Childers. "Today, it feels like we just won the conference championship.

Clemson might have gotten the best pep talk this season from North Carolina football coach Dick Crum, who was quoted in a Philadelphia newspaper as saying the Tigers bought their 1981 national championship. Those words stuck in Clemsons collective craw and the Tigers responded with a victory.

Coaching doesnt win games like this, Clemson coach Danny Ford said. You get the players ready, you challenge them. Then its one-on-one. We thought we could handle them defensively and we did, even with their good offensive line. I thought wed shut them out.

North Carolina, which travels to Virginia on Saturday, avoided the shutout with Brooks Barwicks 27-yard ' field goal in the third period. The Tar Heels, 7-2, have not been held scoreless since a 1976 Peach Bowl loss to Kentucky, 21-0, and they have not gone without a touchdown since a 7-6 loss to Pittsburgh last season.

Saturdays anticipated air war between Dukes Ben Bennett and Wake Forests Gary Schofield didnt occur. Blue Devil Mike Grayson stole the headlines, gaining 152 yards on 39 carries and two second-half touchdowns. Duke is 2-7 and 2-2, while the Demon Deacons dropped to 4-6, ensuring their 11th losing season in the last 12. Wake Forest is 1-4 in the ACC and heads for Georgia Tech on Saturday.

We played with a lot of determination in the second half, Grayson said. Our blockers were able to pick off their defensive people as they tried to slide along the tine of scrimmage.

In the battle of the quarterbacks, Bennett hit 22 of 32 passes for for 189 yards, two interceptions and a 15-yard touchdown pass to Gary Frederick. Schofield was 14 of 26 for 174 yards and one touchdown, a 21-yard strike to David Richmond.

In other weekend tournaments, Pam Shriver had a hand in three victories as the United States defeated Great Britain 6-1 in the Wightman Cup.

Shriver beat Sue Barker and Jo Durie in singles and teamed with Martina Navratilova for a doubles triumph over Durie and Annabel Croft.

The only British victory in the three-day tournament that ended Saturday was by Virginia Wade and Barker in doubles.

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OTHER ISSUES

A maze of decisions other than election to offices await the voters on state and local ballots across the nation tomorrow. (Page 18)

INSIDE TODAYPAGEANT

Eleven young women from throughout the flue-cured tobacco belt compete Friday in fields of talent and beauty for a Tobacco Festival scholarship, (Page 2)

SPORTS TODAY

RE-ENTRY TIME

Relief aces Rich Goose Gossage and Kent Tekulve head the list of 46 free agents available in baseballs re-entry draft. (Page 13)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 248

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 7, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

NO SHOW Soviet officials are shown atop Unin s lomb in Red Square Monday during military parade marking the 66th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. President Yuri Andropov was reported too ill to attend. Defense Minister Marshal Dmitri F. Ustinov, center, led the parade. He is

flanaed by Konstantin U. Chernenko, left, and Premier Nikolai A. Tikhonov, right. Other Politburo members and a number of military officers stood with the Defense Minister. (AP Laserphoto)

Andropov Absence Stirs

4V

Illness Speculation

By ANDREW ROSENTHAL

Associated Press Writer

MOSCOW (AP) - President Yuri V. Andropov was too ill today to attend a major military parade marking the 66th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution that brought the Communist Party to power.

It was believed to be the first time a Soviet leader has failed to attend the annual celebration in Red Square.

It also was the second major event of the holiday weekend marked by the 69-year-old Andropovs conspicuous absence, further

fueling speculation that he is seriously ill.

A government spokesman said he missed a speech Saturday night at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses because of a cold. He has not been seen in public in 111 days.

Andropovs predecessor, Leonid 1. Brezhnev, last year climbed the stairs to the reviewing stand atop Lenins tomb and stood an hour in freezing weather to view the parade. He died three days later of a heart attack.

This year. Red Square was bathed in sun and the tem

perature was an unseasonably high 46 degrees as tanks, armored personnel carriers and missiles mounted on trucks rumbled over the cobblestones.

Dftpite his absence, evidence fhat Andropov remained firmly in power was plentiful. A 9-foot-tall portrait of Andri^v was displayed in the first float that followed the military hardware.

It was trailed by much smaller pictures of his 10 fellow Politburo members, many of whom watched the high-precision drill from the

reviewing stand about 20 feet above the red granite and marble mausoleum at the base of the red brick Kremlin wall.

Less than two hours after the parade crossed the cobblestone plaza, a man set himself afire about 20 yards from Lenins tomb where Politburo members stood.

Witnesses said the man appeared to be alive when KGB agents took him away about 3 minutes after he lighted the fire. They said the man could not be heard saying anything, and the reason for burning himself was not clear.

Kings And Emirs Arriving For Persian Gulf Summit Session

By ALYMAHMOUD Associated Press Writer DOHA, Qatar (AP) -Leaders of Persian Gulf nations arrived today for a three-day summit meeting, with the country virtually sealed off after police said they foiled an attempt to blow up the hotel where the kings and sheiks are staying.

The main seaport was closed to most traffic, as was the airport where Sheik Isa bin Hamad al Thani spent most of the day greeting King Fahd of< Saudi Arabia,

Sultan Qaboos of Oman and sheiks Zayed bin Sultan of the United Arab Emirates, Jaber al-Ahmed of Kuwait and Isa bin Salman of Bahrain as they arrived in separate jets.

The airport road was heavily guarded. Abandoned houses were bulldozed into the ground along the route to the pyramid-shaped Sheraton Hotel, which was patrolled by anti-terrorist squads with attack dogs flown in from France.

Schools near the hotel were

\{ K l LKC lOH

closed, andMocal residents were instructed to stay away from their windows and balconies.

Information Minister Isa al-Kawari said Sunday that security forces had uncovered a recent plot to blow up the hotel. He said, I wouldnt call it a conspiracy, it was a criminal attempt by a single person which was smashed.

Al-Kawari refused to provide details, but sources who insisted on anonymity said the bombing plot was uncovered two months ago and about 30 conspirators were arrested. The sources said it was led by a pro-Libyan prayer leader from a local mosque.

The leaders, who make up the Gulf Cooperation Council, plan to discuss a proposed joint defense of the oil-rich

Voting Day Tuesday In Pitt Communities

By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer

Greenville voters will elect a new mayor TTiesday and choose sbc City Council members from an 11-candidate field that includes five present members of the local governing board.

With Mayor Percy Cox opting not to seek a new term, the race to fill his seat involves current Mayor I*i-o-tem Janice Buck and first time candidate A.B. Whitley Jr., a retired Greenville businessman. Mrs. Buck was su<:i;essful in her initial attempt two years ago to gain a seat on Um council.

'The decision by Mrs. Buck to vacate her :()uncil chair in order to run for mayor creates an open boa rd seat, while incumbents Judy Greene, George Pugh, Loids Clark, Stuart Shinn and Wilham Hadden hope to gain new two-year tenures.

Opposing the incumbents tomorrow will tx; M.W. (Henry)

Aldridge, Edward (Edi Carter, Sallie C. Keel, Mildred (Millie) McGrath, Francis H. Mebane and Alton Warren. Mrs. McGrath and Aldridge are former members of the council.

The local race will be non-partisan and decided by a simple plurality with the top six council candidates and the mayoral aspirant receiving the most votes elected. There will be no run-offs

In addition to Greenville, municipal elections will be conducted tomorrow in Ayden, Bethel, Falkland, Fountain, Grifton, Grimesland, the Village of Simpson, and Winterville. Farmville voters went to the polls on Oct. 11 to select their new governing officials.

The polls will open Tuesday at 6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m. Absentee ballots will only be allowed in the Greenville elections.

Shells Of PLO Mutineers Said Taking Many Lives

region amid threats by Iran to block the Hormuz strait, the gulfs only route to the open sea.

Iran has said it will block the strait if Iraq, which has been at war with Iran for three years, attacks Iranian oil installations in the gulf.

Arab diplomatic sources today said the U.S. destroyers La Salle and Lawrence had docked at Dubai in the United Arab Emirates on a courtesy visit. The two ships carry 46 officers and see Marines, with Rear Adm. John Addams, U.S. Middle East forces commander, aboard the La Salle.

The sources said the shipss visit was seen as a demonstration of U.S. support for the Gulf councils resolve to keep the Hormuz strait open.

ByFAROUKNASSAR

Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -PLO mutineers, in north Lebanon bombarded Yasser Arafats last stronghold with up to 50 shells a minute today, and the state radio said the barrage forced the guerrilla chief to retreat into Tripoli.

Lebanese police said more than 1,000 people have been killed and 3,000 wounded since the rebels began their attack Thursday, many of them Palestinian refugees in squalid camps outside Tripoli and residents in the port city.

In Syiia, the Soviet-backed government put its armed forces on alert and declared a general military mobilization. Sources in Damascus said Syria feared a U.S. attack in retaliation for thf terrorist bombing of Marine;} in Beirut, though America-n officials have not specifical l y blamed the Syrians.

In Beirut, Lebanese army experts defused a hiigie amount of expilosives ii;i a stolen French jeep par lied near Irans Embassy, apabently meant to blow the building up, police said, "fhey said they had no clue as to who was responsible.

A pro-Iranian extnamist group claimed respoas ibility for the suicide t.vuck-bombing last Frida j' that killed 60 people at an Israeli military post in scmthern Lebanon and similar attacks at the U.S. Marine and French bases in Bnirut on "Oct. 23 which killed 230 U.S. servicemen and 5i; French soldiers.

Beirut radio stations said Syrian-backed mu'tineers of Col. Saeed Mousa, w ho broke away from Arafat: s Palestine Liberation Orga nization,

raineci heavy artillei7 fire today on the Palestinian refugee camp of Baddawi, outside thie northern port city of Tripiali, apparently preparing for a final assault.

Outgunned loyalists of Arafat, the PLO chairman, abiindoned the Nahr el-Bared camp Sunday to make a last st.and around his head-qinirters in Baddawi. Today. s)iite-run Beirut radio said /ii afat abandoned his Bad-(lawi command post at niidmoming and retreated to a PLO political office in the

old quarter of Tripoli. The report could not be independently confirmed.

Burning oil tanks at a refinery near Baddawi spewed thick black smoke for a fifth straight day over Lebanons second largest city. Police said thousand of Tripolis 500,000 inhabitants have fled to safer areas.

The rebels say they want to oust Arafat because he has abandoned the struggle with Israel. Arafats men say S\Ta is backing the assault because it wants to control

the PLO,

Christian and Moslem religious leaders in Tripoli have appealed for a ceasefire and the International Red Cross is seeking medical supplis for hospitals overwhelmed by the wounded.

Arafat's control over the PLO began to collapse 13 months ago, when Israeli invaders forced him and his fighters to evacuate Beirut. Syrian-backed guerrillas openly split from Arafats leadership in May.

Congress Returns To A Spending Battlefield

ByTOMR.AUM Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress, its attention for die past two weeks riveted to hostilities in Lebanon and Grenada, returns this week to the spending battlefield and renewed skirmishes over major money bills.

The Senate was to resume work today on the largest military spending measure in the nations history, one that would earmark $252.5 billion for the Pentagon for the fiscal year that began Oct.l.

But before the Senate can finish the bill, it is expected to deal with several major amendments including one by Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., to eliminate $2.1 billion for construction of the first 21 MX nuclear ballistic missiles.

The Democrat-controlled House turned back a

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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.

FULLILOVE SCHOOL APPEAL The Agnes Fullilove Community School has asked Hotline to appeal for individuals and/or businesses to adopt its student population and provide material and financial assistance for the development of girls and boys athletic programs. Items needed include basketball uniforms, weight training equipment, exercise mats, lockers, and basketball goals. Anyone who can help is asked to contact Tony Gray or Carlton Floyd at 758-0817 or Carolyn Ferebee at 752-4192.

Supreme Court Sidesteps Issue

By RICHARD CARELLI Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court, sidestepping a growing debate over the ri^ts of severely handicap^ infants, today refused to stuay the case of a Bloomington, Ind., baby boy who died after his parents decided against life-saving surgery.

The justices, without comment, left intact Indiana court rulings that the boys death had caused the controversy surrounding his parents decision to become moot, or legally ^ irrelevant.

Just last week, the Reagan administration filed affederal lawsuit in a case of a severely handicapped New York baby girl whose parents have chosen to forgo corrective surgery. *

In the case acted on today, a boy referr^ to m codrt records only as Infant Doe was bom in Bloomington on April 9,1982 with a surgically correctable condition that prevented him from eating or drinking.

I Mm with Do

He was also I retardation.

with Downs syndrome, a form of mental

Infant Does parents decided against the surgery that would allow him to eat, stating if was best for him, their two children at home and the family as a whole. The child died a

short time later.

In seeking Supreme Court review, former Monroe County, Ind., deputy prosecutor Lawrence Brodeur, Infant Does appointed guardian, argued that the state courts abdicated their responsibility in not protecting the babys rights.

Does a newbora handicapped infant have rights of his own or-do his parents have a right of privacy that transcends his rights ana allows them to determine whether he will live or die?Brodeiar asked in the appeal. .    ,

In the few York case. Justice Department lawyers are ' seeking to force the state University Hospital in Stony Brook ,to release the'health records of a month-old child knovm only as Baby .Jane Doe. ' -

The infant was born Oct. 11 at St. Charles Hospital in Port' Jefferscin, N.Y., with spina bifida, a failure of the spitial cord to close properly. She a)so has an abnormally^small h(;ad and excess fluidon the brain. .    

Doct,ors have.said that without surgefy. Baby Jane i s likely to die within two yearsNWilh surgery she could surv ive into her 20s but would! bedridden and mentally retarded.    

^ After consulting with neurosurgeons, social workers and clergy men, the fcwmys parents decided against the surg;ery.

challenge to the MX money by a nine-vote margin last week before approving its version of the legislation.

An attempt may also be made in the Republican-led Senate to restore money to the bill to allow the Pentagon to begin producing a new generation of nerve gas weapons. Sponsors are hopeful that the Senate can vote final passage of the bill by late Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Congress faces a midnight Thursday deadline for providing funds to keep much of the government operating. The process may be complicated if House Democratic leaders follow through with their plans to try to add to the emergency'bill nearly $1 billion for various aid-to-education programs, a move that could provoke a presidential veto.

'The spending bill - due up in the House bn Tuesday and in the Senate on Wednesday

- is needed because many federal agencies have not yet received money from Congress and an earlier measure, giving them temporary funds since Oct. 1, is about to expire.

At the same time. Senate leaders were expected to press their search for fi ,|X)mpromise that would ave rt another possible fiscal cri sis

- the need to raise the national debt limit above its current $1.389 trillion.

The House has Filready approved an increas e in the ^debt limit - tne gov-'.ernments bovrowing authority - but the Senate refused to follow suit earlier last week.

- 'The debt limit was reached last Tuesday without major impact on federal operations. But Trea'sury "Department officials r^ay ie real bninch will coiTie ff Cojigress has not

acted by Nov. 15 at the latest.

The House today was scheduled to consider a ma -jor dairy bill, one that would would trim government support prices for milk a.nd begin a 15-month progran.i of paying dairy farmers nrR to produce. The Senate already has passed a nearly ide ntical biU.

Meat producers oppose the bill, claiming that it's incentives would idle u.p to 30 percent of dairy bier'ds, resulting in large mjinbers of dairy cows beir.ig slaughtered, flooding thie market with meat anrj depressing their prices.

The Senateilso is expected to take actic,n this week on legislation b j renew the Civil Rights 'Commission, (Fleasf turntoPagel2)

WEATHER

Mostly    loitiuht

inti 'Tiii'srias. (n lu-'-fonl haiiLo rain. Low in the his v>iih in low to

nid-tiiK,

Looking Ahead

Fiirtly cloudy VVedncs-iav anti Thursday with hancc of showers in west rhursday. ('hance of rain itatewide on Friday. Highs in liUs during period, and lows each night in the 40s.

inside Reading

Page 9 Death squads Page 12Obituaries Page 16Area items





SCOREBOARD

TANKIFNANARA

NFL Standings

ByTktAiMdalcdPrcH

Ai

Miami Baltimore Buffalo NawEogland

merkaaCaaftrcace Eaat

W L TPet. W

NY

PttUburgh

Cleveland

Cincinnati

Houtton

L.A.Raiden Denver Seattle Kaneaiaty San Diego

Dallai

Wi

St Louis N Y Gianu

3

4

4

5

4    6

Central I 2 0 i S 4 (

0 10 West 7 3 6 4 6    4

4    6

3 7

Natlanal Csafereace East

1 2

6 i 4

PA

.700 219 164 600 183 211 600 180 203 S00 220 196 400 308 102

800 2S3 168 900 202 241 400 225 196 000 166 301

700 270 224 600 172 174 600 246 225 400 302 188 300 224 278

Tampa Bay at Cleveland Miaim at New England Buffalo at New YmtMa Pittsburgh at Baltimore New Orleans at San Pranciaco Dallas at San Diego, ^

Denver at Los Ang^ Raiden Wastngton at New York Gianu Monday, No*. 14 Loe Angeles Rams at AUanU, (n)

NBA Standings

By The Asseelalod Press EASTERN CONFERENCE AtlaaticDlvisiao

W L Pet, GB

KanaasCity atCbicagD, (n)

Porllaod at Houston, (ni Lot Angelsf at Denver, (ni Phoenii at Seattle, (n)

AtlanU at Golden Mte, <n)

NHL Standings

By The Associated Press Wales Csafereace ,    Patrick Divlslsa

W L T PU GF GA 10 5 1 21 70 53

Minnesou Green Bay Detroit Chicago Tampa Bay

L A Rams New Orleans San Francisca AtUnU

Central

4

5

4 5

3    7 1 9

West 6 4 6 4 6 4

4    6

Suftdav't (iamci

New Orleans 27, AtlanU 10

900 318 215 800 339 218 400 158 194 350 206 314 .278 166 214

600 227 242 900 275 288 444 202 188 300 184 219 100 158 239

600 222 214 600 230 213 600 278 204 400 206 206

Cincinnati 55, Houston 14 Tampa Bay 17, MinnesoU 12 DaiUs 27, Philadelphu 20 Green Bay 35, CleveUnd 21 Los Angeles Raiders 28. Kansas City 20

Boston    t    1

Philadelphu    4    1

NewJersey    3    2

NewYork    2    J

Washington    1    4

Central Divlslsa AtUnU    I    I

Milwaukee    3    2

Detroit    2    3

liMtins    2    3

CleveUnd    2    4

Chicago    1    3    -r

Western ttiNFERENCE MUwestDivUUn DaiUs    4    2

Denver    3    2

UUh    2    2

Houston    2    3

KanaasCity    2    3

SanAntonio    2    4

Pacific Uivlsisa PortUnd    4    2

GoWenSUU    3

SanDiego    3

LosAngeles    2

.800 800 600 I .400    2

200    3

NYRa^ NY Ules WaahUgtoa PitUburgh NewJersey

9    4

9    6

7    8    0    14

4 10    I    9

2    20    62    90

0    18    66    53

46    54

40 59

Seattle

Phoemx    1    3

Satarday's Games

Indiana 99, CleveUnd 87

.600 -.600 -400    1

400    1

333    l/5

290    11^

667 -600

.500 I 400 lit 400 l>/j 333    2

.    .667    -

2 .600 600 V, 500 I

BmUxi

Quebec

Buffalo

Hartford

Montreal

2    12    0    4    41    67

Adams DivUUa

10    3    1    21    75    42

9    6    2    20    90    80

6    6    3    15    51    58

6    7    1    13    47    56

6    8    0    12    61    62

CamjUeO Csafereace

3    3    500    1

250    2

Miami *!&nFrancUco 17

Seattle27. Denver 19    Denver    1^    San    Diego    121

Boston 120, Washiiuton 117 PhiUdelphU 119,1^ Jersey 112 Dallas 167, La

0, SanFrancUcol7 Seattle 27. Denver 19 Los Angeles Rams 21. Chicago 14 Baltimore 17. New York JeU 14 WashiiMton46.St Louis7 Msndsy'sGame New York GUnU at Detroit, (ni Hnaday, Nev. 13 Cincinnati at KaiwasOty Detroit at Houston PhiUdelphU at Chicago Green Bay si Minnesoia SeatUeatSt LouU

Utah 134, San Antonio 118 Golden 102, New York 100 Bnnday't Games San Antonio 132, Seattle 115 Milwaukee 97,AtUnU 84 PortUnd 122, IhoenU 96

Msnday's Games

scheduied

No games 1--

Tnesday's Games

Milwaukee at New York, (nt San Diego at Washington. < n)

NsrrU DIvlsisa Chicago    8    7    0    16    64    63

Detroit    6    5    2    14    51    52

St Lotus    7    7    0    14    S3    57

Toronto    6    7    2    14    71    79

Minnesota    5    7    1    II    57    70

SmythcDlvUlaa Edmonton    12    2    I    25    88    63

Calgary    6    6    2    14    49    51

Vancouver    6    8    1    13    69    89

Winnipeg    4    9    2    10    56    78

LoaAsceles    3    8    4    10    58    69

gatnrday'sGames N Y UUnden4, BuffaloO N Y Raimers4.Quebec4,tU Hartfordirios Angeles 1 Vancouver 3, Detroit 2 Edmonton 7, PitUburgh 3 Boston 10, Montreal 4 Calgary 5, Toronto 3 St LoiustPhiUMphUO Minnesou 10, Chicago 5

gnaday'sGames Boston 7. Los Angeles 3 Washington 3, Detroit 2 Quebec?, Buffalo 1 .New Jersey 6, Chicago 3 PhiUdelphU 4, Hartford 2 Edmonton 8, WinnipM 5

Moaday's Games No games scheduled

Tnesday s Games Minnesou at Hartford, (ni Edmonton at Quebec, <n)

N Y Rangers at New Jers^,(ni PhiUdel^ at N Y UUnders. (ni

Calgary at PitUburgh, (ni

College Top Twenty

By The Aaseclalcd Press

How the Top Twenty teams m the AsaocUtad Presa college football poll farad tUa week:

1. Nebraska (imMi) beat Iowa St . 72-29

2. Texas (84M)i beat Houston, 9-3

3. Auburn (l-l-Ol bent MaryUnd. 35-23.

4 GeorgU(84)-li beat Florida, lOd

5. MUmi, FU (9-1-01 beat tuH Carolina, ll-l

6 Ulinou (kl-0) beat Minnesou, 50-23

7 MaryUnd (7-2-Oi lost to Auburn, 35-23

8 So Methodist ( 7-1-01 beat Rice. 2M

9 Florida (6-2-11 lost to Georgu, 104

10 North Carolina (7-2-Oi lost to Clemson, 16-3

11 Oklahoma (6-34 lost (0 Missouri. 104

12 Brigham Young I8-I-0I beat Texaa-EI Aso. 31-9

13. Michigan (7-2-0i beat Purdue, 4M0.

14. Ohio Sute (7-2-01 beat Inthana, 56-17.

15. Iowa (7-2-Oi beat Wiacowin. 34-14

16 Boston Collie (7-1-0) beat Army, 34-14

17 West Virguua (7 2-0) beat TempU, 27-9

Notre Dame (6-3-0) lost to Pit-1,2116

19 AUbama (6-24) beat LSU. 32-26.

20 Washington (7-24) brat Arizona, 23-22

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

7^ GCEiCr lOCMJ Kip WaMAV/efOiGPrfMAKeS F3CA VUeCK

-

tW KIPPIKJG

18

College Scores

By The AssocUted Press EAST

Boston College 34, Army 14 Boston U 17 Connecticut 7 Penn St 38, Brown 21

Syracuse 14. Navy 7 W VirginU27,Tem^i SOLTH

AUbama 32, LSU 26 Auburn 35. MaryUnd 23 (Temsonl6.N Carolina 3 Duke 31. Wake Forest 21 Florida St ^ S (Urolina 30 GcorgU 10, Florida 9 Kentucky 17. Vanderbilt 8 MUmi, Fla 12, E Carolina 9 Virginia Tech 28, TuUne 10 MIDWEST Bowling Green 45, BaU St . 30

Cent Michigan 30. N lllinou 14 Cincmnati 16, Rutgers 7 Colorado 34. Kansas 23 Iowa 34, Wisconsin 14 KentSt 37. E Michigan 13 Michigan 42. Purdue 10 Michigan St 9 Northwestern 3 Missouri 10, GkUhoma 0 Nebraska 72, Iowa St 29 Ohio U. 17, Mumi, Ohio 14 Ohio St. 56, Indiana 17 PitUburgh 21, Notre Dame 16 Toledo 20. W Michigan 16 SOUTHWEST Baylor 24, Arkansas 21 Bngham Voura 31. Texas-El Paso 9 KansasSt 21,(%labomaSt 20 Southern .Meth 20, Rice 6 S Arkansas 31. Harding 0 Texas ^Houston 3

Texas Christian 10, Texas Tech 10. tie FAR WE.ST Air Force 45. Hawaii 10 Califorma 26, Arizona St 24 ColoradoSt 41, N Colorado20 .Nev -Las Vegas 20. Fresno St 7 New Mexico 17, Wyoming 10 New Mexico St 62, WichUa St 28 Southern Col 30. SUnford 7 UaA24Jregonl3 UUh 47, FuHertonSt 20 UUh St . 22. San Jose St 15 Washington 23. Anzona 22

Washington St 27. Oregon St 9

Transactions

By The AssocUted Press BASEBALL NaUsnal Leagne

.NEW YORK METS-Named Mel Stot tJemyre pitching coach

Football

United SUtet FestbaU Lesne

NEW JERSEY GENERALS-Signed Gary Barbaro, safety, to a three year contract

COLLEGE

ST BONAVE.NTURE-Announced that Mike SheeUy, guard, has been sus prded indefinitely from the basketball team

Race Results

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - ResaK of Sanday's AUaaU Jsoraal 5M Grand Natioaal stock tar race, wttk type of car, laps completed and srUaer't average

*T*Ne!l'Si^t, Chevrolet Monto Carlo SS, 328.137 641

2 BuddyBaker Ford Thundertnrd 328

3 Bobby Aiiison. Buick Regal, 328

4 Terry Labonto, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS , 7

5 Richard Petty, Pontiac Grand Pnx,

6 Bill EUioa, Ford niunderhrd, 3

7 Morgan Shepherd, Buick Regal, 324

8 Dean Combs. Oldsmobile Cutlass. 324

9 Darrell Waltnp, Chevrolet .Monto CarloSS.323

10 Jody Ridley, Chevrcdet .Monte C^rlo

55.323

11 Trevor Boys, Chevrolet .Monto Carlo

55.323

12 Lake Speed. Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS.321

13 Dave Marcis, Oldsmobile Cutlass, 321

14 Buddy Amngton. Chrysler Imperi al.320

15 Bob Senneker. Pontiac Grand FTix. 319

16 Sterling Marlin, Chevrolet .Monte Carlo SS, 319

17 Ken Ragan Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS.319

16 Jimmy Means, Chevrolet Monto Carlo SS. 311

19 Toro Gale. Ford Thunderbird. 310

20 ^le Petty, Pontiac Grand Pnx. 308

21 ETK LTrtoh, 1

SS.303

, Chevrolet Monto Carlo

22 Mike Potter, Pontiac Grand Pnx,

280

23 Cale Yarborough. (he\role( .Moole Carlo SS. 258

24 Delma Cowart, Buick Regal. 233

25 Benny Parsons Chevrolet Monto Carlo SS, 154

26 Ricky Rudd. Chevrolet .Monto Carlo SS.148

27 Rick Baldwin. Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 142

28 Phil Parsons. Chevrolet Monto Carlo SS. 122

29 Tim Richmond Pontiac LeMans. 120

30 Joe Ruitman. Pontiac Grand Pnx.

97

31 Dick Brooks. FordThunderbird. 84

32 J D McDuffie. Pontiac Grand Pnx,

66

33 Dale Earnhardt Ford Thunderbird.

34 Elddie BieUchwale Buck Regal. 46

35 Ron Bouchard,3tock Reral. &

36 Donnie Allison. Pkntiac Grand Pnx.

21

37 Harry Gant. Buick Regal. 21

38 Greg Sacks. (Tievrolet Monte Carlo

SS.3

39 Joe Booher. Buick RegalJ

40 BUckie Wangerin. Ford Thun derbud.OBowls Distracting To College Football

By The Asgocialed Press

The pressure is beginning to mount as the nation's college football teams seek all-important bowl bids.

True, the bowl talk was a distraction," Boston College quarterback Doug Flutie said after throwing four touchdown lasses in the 16th-ranked Sagles uninspired 34-14 victory over Army. We werent talking about Army; we were talking about what bowl wed goto."

The bowl pairings wont be known officially until Nov. 19, but each slip along the way can mean a change of holiday plans. So you can understand why Bernie Kosar, the freshman Quarterback for fifth-ranked Miami of Florida, heaved the ball into the stands after his 1-yard touchdown run with 1:04 remaining gave the Hurricanes a 12-7 triumph over East Carolina and a school record ninth consecutive victory.

The Hurricanes are in the running for an Orange Bowl bid and the crowd at the Orange Bowl - its also Miamis home field - hurled hundreds of oranges cmto the playing surface to celebrate Kosars touchdown, which ca^ a nine-play, 80-yard dnve that included a 52-yard strike from Kosar to Ed Brown to the 13-yard line.

Just a little emotion,

Kosar said. I guess that was my freshman mistake for the day,"

The days biggest losers were seventh-ranked Maryland, No. 9 Florida, lOth-rated North Carolina and No. 18 Notre Dame, who probably saw any hopes of a major bowl bid fall by the wayside. Maryland lost to third-ranked Auburn 35-23, Florida was edged by No. 4 Georgia 10-9 - Auburn visits Georgia for a Southeastern Conference shootout next Saturday - North Carolina fell to Clemson 16-3 and Notre Dame was knocked off by Pitt 21-16.

But there was some solace for those who will be spending the holidays at home, like 7-1-1 Clemson, which is on probation. Every game is a bowl game for us, nose guard William Perry said after the Tigers downed North Carolina thanks to three Bob Paulling field goals and Mike Eppleys 6-yard touchdown pass to K.D. Dunn.

And some coaches, like Pitts Foge Fazio, dont worry about a bowl bid because there's nothing they can do about it.

Im not on the bowl committees and I have no idea (where were going), Fazio said after Joe McCalls two touchdown runs and John Congemis 44-yard scoring pass to Bill Wallace paced the

Panthers over Notre Dame. I told the team after our two losses that if we keep winning, the polls and bowls will recog^ the team,

Said Notre Dames Gerry Faust: Were still in it (the bowl picture). We have two tough games remaining (Penn State and Air Force), but if we finish 8-3 well be in good shape. '

Meanwhile, No. l-ranked Nebraska buried Iowa State 72-29 as Mike Rozier rushed for 212 yards and four touchdowns and set three school scoring records, while Turner Gill fired TD passes of 27 and 20 yards to Irving Fryar and 18 to Scott Kimball and tallied on a 3-yard run. Rozier set Nebraska marks of 24 touchdowns in a season and 47 TDs and 282 career points.

Runnerup Texas did it with defense. The Longhorns managed only 98 yards of offense, but three field goals by freshman Jeff Ward and an unyielding defense were enough to turn back Houston 9-3.

' Rounding out the Associated Press T(^ Ten, sixth-ranked Illinois moved a step closer to the Rose Bowl by trouncing Minnesota 50-23 and No. 8 Southern Methodist a pair of last-period touchdowns to hold off Rice 20^.

In the Second Ten, Missouri handed No. 11 Oklahoma its

first Big Eight shutout since 1965 by a 1^0 score and also dropped the Sooners out of a share of the conference lead with Nebraska, No. 12 Brigham Young trimmed Texas-El Paso 31-9, No. 13 Michigan swamped Purdue 42-10, No. 14 Ohio State crushed Indiana 56-17, No. 15 Iowa whipped Wisconsin 34-14, No. 17 West Virginia beat Temple 27-9, No. 19 Alabama outlasted LSU 32-26 and No. 20 Washington shaded Arizona 23-22.

Nebraska yielded more points to Iowa State than any other opponent, but the Cor-nhuskers poured across five touchdowns in each half, with Rozier, who carried 26 times, scoring from 5,21, 59 and 17 yards out.

Mike is a great, great football player, said Coach Tom Osborne. I just hope the fans enjoy watching the gu>.

Texas, the nations No. 1 defensive team, surrendered more yards than Houston -209-98 - but maintained its one-game Southwest Conference lead over SMU when Ward booted field goals from 20, 51 and 47 yards while the Cougars Mike Oendenen was l-for-3, missing from 39 and 29.

It was a great defensive game on the part of both teams, said Texas Coach Fred Akers. We just kicked

better than they did. This was our game of thie week; it was their game of the year. Each game seems to get bigger and tougher. We seem to bring out the best in everybody.

Marylands Boomer Esiason passed for a school record 355 yards - plus three touchdowns - against Auburn, but the Tigers got 219 rushing yards from fullback Tommie Agee, including scoring jaunts of 61 and 44 yards. The latter came after Bo Jacksons 5-yard run in the final period put Auburn in front for good 21-17. Auburns Lionel James rushed for 115 yards and Jackson had 105, giving the Tigers a trio of 100-yard runners.

After being held to % total yards for almost three periods, Georgia drove 99 yards for the winning score against Florida. The drive started with 5:44 left in the

Simon Passes On Baseball

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Correspondent

WASHINGTON - If the baseball people had really wanted Bill Simon for commissioner, they could have gotten him. They still could get him, and the cost would be relatively painless.

I am not interested in the job -1 have my hands full with the Olympics right now, said the former secretary of the treasury in the nations capital over the weekend.

TTie only terms under which I would consider the post is to serve without pay and be complete boss. I wouldnt relish sitting there as somebodys paid orderly.

I told this to Edward Bennett Williams (owner of the world champion Baltimore Orioles) when he talked to me about the job several months ago. Sure, I would be interested if those conditions were met. But theres no chance of that.

I am quite content and challenged by my present role as president of the U. S. Olympic Committee.

Simons four-year term expires in March, 1985, after next years Winter and Summer Games.* Baseballs architects might not want to wait that long but, judging by their pr^lems in finding a suitable successor to outgoing Bowie Kuhn, it could be to their best interests to do so.

Few men, if any, possess the administrative experience, fund-raising expertise and clout where it counts as does this lean, b^pectacled Wall Street executive who served two presidents.

He has been a powerful force in the Olympic movement, restoring the U. S. Olympic Committee to financial stability before assuming his post as head of the (H^nization.

Aggressive, forthright yet sensitive to grass roots problems, he bias worked to eliminate hypocisy and sham amateurism from the Games and wrestld with the autocratic, self-perpetuating International Olympic Committee on starchy, outmoded rules and regulations.

In Washington over the weekend to participate in the Womens Sports Foundations New Agenda conference, he dtew an overwhelming salute from the some 500 delegates from 11 countries.

We must reelect Bill Simon for another four years, trumpeted D(mna de Verona, former Olympic swimming gold medidist and president of the foundation, which she telped form.

Simon has helped erase the adversary relationship that existed between the USOC hierarchy and the athletes

Committee. It is a staid, self-perpetuating body seemingly more concerned with its own power and than with the broad interests of the athletes and Games themselves.

I attended one meeting two days and never once heard the word athlete mentioned. I feel I represent the athlete. I always have considered myself a team player.

Now 55 years old and independently wealthy, Simon, besides his Olympic and Treasury posts, has served as director of the Federal Energy Office and chairman of the Debt Management Committee of New York City plus trusteeships with several colleges.

The baseball commissioner should be commissioner of the entire game, not just a tool of the owners, he said. That includes players and umpires.

That is the reason it would be best if he were not hired by the owners but would serve without pay. He must be sensitive to the interests of everyone, particularly the players, and enjoy their respect.

I think its ridiculous to have two leagues playing different rules and alternating them (the designated fitter, for example) in the All-Star Games and World Series.

The commissioner should be in charge of the umpires and be artiter of every major conflict rather than leaving them to tte individual leagues.

He should be tough on drugs, should deal even-handedly with owners and players alike. He has to be the boss. 1 doubt that baseball wants that.

Traditionally, the USOC

isses into new hands ite iron-willed Avery

every Olympiad (four years), but Brundage served as IOC president for 20 years.

I feel I have helped start the Olympic movement in this country in a new direction, Simcm said. We have attained financial security. We have made participatory partners of our fig corporations and have given athletes a greator voice and, with it, expanded opportunities.

We have kiUed bureaucracy in our own association. There is still a lot to be done with the International Olympic

Thanks Greenville And Pitt County

The Optimist Club of Greenville thanks the many businesses and Individuals for their donations which enabled The Optimist Club to sponsor The International Circus of Stars, held at Rose High School last Thursday evening.

This was another way to help us to help the youth of our area.

Many, many thanks to each and every one of you.

The Optimist Club

Of Greenville Inc.

third period and ended in Barry Youngs 1-yard plunge with 13:18 remaining in the game. It was the Bulldogs 23rd consecutive SEC triumph.

Jack Trudeaus three touchdown passes led Illinois over Minnesota as the Illini, who lead Michigan by one game in the Big Ten, continued the quest for their first Rose Bowl trip in 20 years. Meanwhile, in the Pac-10, Kevin Nelson rushed for 131 yards and scored all three UCLA touchdowns on runs of 4, 12 and 35 yards as the unranked Bruins defeated Oregon 24-13. The Bruins are 5-0-1 in league play to 4-1 for Washington.

SMU freshman Jeff Atkins scored on runs of 1 yard and 22 yards and dashed 56 yards to set up another score as the Mustangs survived four interceptions by the usually

Wolfpack Conducts Second Scrimmage

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Looking for the right combination to open his title defense, North Carolina State basketball coach Jim Valvano held his second public intrasquad gameSun(fiy.

The good news is weve got a lot of depth, Valvano said. 'The bad news is that the level of our projected starters is not close to the five we had last year.

In Sundays action, sophomore Ernie Myers scored 22 points to pace the Red team to a 92-82 victory over the White squad. Junior center Cozell McQueen added 14 points for the winners, while Lorenzo Charles and 5-foot< freshman Anthony Spud Webb contributed 13 points apiece.

Freshman Terry Shackleford led the White team with 14 points.

In a previous scrimmage, Myers scored 29 points as the Red team to(* a 107-89 victo-T-

Weve got some good young talent, Valvano added.

We should get better as we go along. We did some good things out there tonight, but we still need an awful lot of work.

Valvano said if the Wolfpack had to start the season this week, he would have McQueen at center, Charles and Bennie Bolton at forwards and Myers and Webb at the guards.

N.C. State meets Houston on Nov. 19 in the Tip-Off Classic at Springfield, Mass. The Wolfpack downed Houston 54-52 to take the NCAA title last April.

unerring Lance Mcllhenny and wore down Rice. Atkins rushed for 218 yards and Reggie Dupard added 172, breaking tl^ school tandem mark of 347 set by Eric Dickerson and Craig James.

Marlon Adler threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Andy Hill and Missouri held Oklahoma, the nations fourth best rushing team, to 84 yards on the ground. Missouri and Oklahoma are tied for second place in the Big Eight, one game behind Nebraska.

Steve Young, who completed his first 13 passes and finished 30 for 43, threw for 359 yards and three touchdowns and scored one himself to lead BYUoverUTEP.

Michigans Steve Smith discarded a cumbersome shoulder brace before the game with Purdue and promptly threw a school record four touchdown passes. Smith was 11 of 13 for 159 yards and ran the ball 12 times for 126 more, including a 29-yard gallop that started the scoring.

Ohio States Keith Byars rushed for 169 yards and four touchdowns as the Buckeyes rushed Indiana and Iowa's Chuck Long passed for four TDs against Wisconsin.

Jeff Hostetler threw a pair of first-half scoring passes to pace West Virginia over Temple and snap the Mountaineers two-game losing streak. Walter Lewis threw two 4-yard sconng passes and Alabamas withstood a 344-yard aerial attack by LSUs Jeff Wickersham to down the Tigers.

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Dog-Jogging Could Be Risky To Pet's Health

Thg Daily Reflector, Greenvlle, N C._Monday,    Novembef    7,1983    |'|

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Bimind* confmion from your thini(if>g by boirtg moro aware of the true facta and figuTM In any eituation and then you wiU be able to pro* caed with your own work and activitiea.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Forgot about that complicated new idea you get and go to a powerful Individual ibr the support you need and get it.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Concentrate on buaineee affairs that have had you confused and you can handle them intelligently at this time.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) An associate could be trying to trick you, but rise above that and intelligently carry through and get fine results.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) You have so much work to do, you hardly know where to start, so start at the most import and work your way down.

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) You have come to a stalemate with some talent you are trying to perfect but stick with it and you soon get good results.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Know what is vital to your welfare and then you can handle matters efficiently and property. Evaluate situations carefully.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Study your goato early so that you do not get confused in going after tttem. You have a tendency to see too many sides of a situation.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You have to be positive about the^goals you want to attain and then you can talk over good ideas with your friends.

SAQIHARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study what it is you want out of life and then you can go after your aims in a more positive way.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Forget that anxiety that is frustrating and find ways to improve your heatth and appearance, as well as your home.

AQUARIUS (Jan 21 to Feb. 19) Your wishes should be practical so they can truly be attained. A loved one has been neglected and needs some attention from you.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar 20) Dont argue with an outsider in the morning and then you can go after your finest aims and gam them with relative ease.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODA Y ... he or she will be one of those delightful young people who can easily gain big success upon reaching maturity because of the willingness to study and fine talents in this chart, so be sure to send to college.

"The Stars impel; they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to youl 1963, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

By JAMESE. WALTERS Associated Press Writer

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -may ke^ pec^les bodies from'going to the dogs, but some veterinarians say owners who take their poo(^ running could be risking canine collapse.

Do^ with pulled muscles or inflamed muscles are very common, said Dr. Rick Wells of Tempe Veterinary Hospital Ltd. A lot of pecle go jogging and expect their dog to keep up, and it doesn't work,

Dogs have to work into condition, just like humans, he said. You just cant take Rover out of the back yard, where he hasnt run more than a few yards for a year, and expect him to go a couple miles.

Another problem, said Wells, is that streets and sidewalks can get extremely hot in the summer, burning a dogs footpads.

Then, too, dogs overheat much .. easier tlan humans, so while you may feel OK, your dog may be about to have a heat str(Ae, he said.

Dr. Rick Sampson of In-gleside Animal Clinic said that while he doesnt see a high percentage of d<^ with jogging-relatd injuries, the number has increased noticeably and those he does see have major problems.

I think the owners believe the dog will recover naturally, and when that doesnt happen they bring them in, he said.

Dr. Kenneth Jeffrey of Mesa Veterinary Hospital said, We are seeing more

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Domingo Pesqueira, who bought the 100-person town in 1977, lives in nearby Altar and wants to sell Sasabe because of his extensive ranching interests in Arizona and Mexico, said Conrad Mendez, the town's manager and Pesqueiras brother-in-law.

The total price, payable over 10 years, is $3.5 million. That includes 450 acres, the towns businesses and 24 homes.

Claudia Hartman of First American Realty and Development Comp, in Tucson, the listing agent, said that included in the package are a bar, two liquor licenses, a bakery, hardware store, general store, service station. auto-parts store, post office building and the towns water wells.

Not included are the elementary school, the U.S. Customs building and the mission church featured in the 1963 movie for which

ORDER PAY CUTS LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -The governing National Party has ordered all officials to take pay cuts ranging from 7.5 j^rcent to 15 percent to help revive the country's depressed oil-dependent economy, the state radio said Sunday.

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dogs for emergency treatment for injuries than we did, say, five 10 years ago. In just about every case the dog was out with a jogging owner.

Jeffrey said most of the injuries he sees are of a twisted-l^ type, from a dog stepping into a hole.

Then, too, th^re are accidents such as a dog running without a leash being hit by a car (M* getting into unfamiliar territo^ and tangling with a cactus, he said, We also see snake bites fairly often, where the owner and dog are running in the desert and the dog gets off the beaten path.

All three vets recommended that a d(^ be kept on a leash while jogging and that the owner pay close attention to whether the pet might be in trouble or need a drink of water.

Their feet and legs need to be watched carefully, said Sampson. Dogs are susceptible to joint stress and abrasions of the feet, particularly when running on pavement. The owner must remember that while he has shoes, the dog doesnt.

Wells said he recently treated a dog with a badly cut foot from stepping on broken glass. He said dogs also tend to get weed seeds stuck between their toes when running alongside area canals, starting an infection

that frequently requires surgery.

Dr. Doi^ Hauser of Sun City Animal Hospital ^id fotu in the suburban#e-tirement ccmimunity of 50,000 arent much for jogging, so he doesnt see many jogging-related injuries among

The big problem here, he said, is d(^ getting injured when they fall off g(^ carts, which are utilized a great deal here.

Re-Elect

Judy W. Greene

Greenville City Council

November 8th

Your continued support and vote are appreciated.

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Monday, November?. 1983

Paul OConnorMotive Questionable

Despite a plethora of welfare programs (including school lunch funds), the House of Representatives recently voted to add another $100 million-plus to the federal child nutrition spending to bring back children of the working poor into the school lunch program Billions of dollars are allocated annually to families at or below the poverty level, including large sums for the school lunch program which critics have contended is so abused that it would be better to throw it open to all children. Under the subsidized lunch program, a family of four making less than $19,305 but more than $12,871 a year would be eligible for the reduced-price meal.

It was a generous gesture whose motive is questionable.

It has been our observation that no advocate of a welfare program has ever acknowledged sums were adequate to meet their needs. Could it be that House members who approved this additional outlay were actually saying look what we want to do for you?

Solving DU I Is A Job For Society

RALEIGH - SiiK% the legislative introductioD of the Sale Roads Act, the number of drunken drivers on Nwth Carolina roads has been dicing. According to Highway Patrol statistics, 3,000 fewer drunken drivi^ arrests were made during the first eight months of 1983 than during the same months of 1962. When the law finally went into effect on Oct. 1, local police departments reported unusually small numbers of dnmken driving arrests.

A Chapel Hill highway safety researcher is encouraged by these early indications of the new laws effects. But befwe hes ready to pop open the champagne and celebrate, he wants to see if North Carolinians are willing to make the basic social changes needed to really reduce drunken driving.

John Lacey, program manager for alcohol studies at UNCs Highway Safety Research Center, warns that drunken driving laws have been toughened before.

England did so in 1967. France did so in the late 1970s. In both countries, drunken driving dropped immediately. Before long, however, the improvements eroded and the in^lem was soon as bad as ever.

We can h<^ the laws will have an effect (m reducing druaken driving and crashes, Lacey says, and that well be able to show that dnmken drivers are more likely to be arrested, and once arrested, that they will be dealt with swiftly. This scare em sober strate^ will work so long as the tougher drunkra driving law remains a matter of public conversation, he says. It depends on continued media publicity.

Lacey feels that tougher laws are just a quick fix which dont get at the more deeply root^l pn4)lems. As in Europe, theyU woi* in Nwth Carolina only so long as they are reinforced by the publicity their novelty creates. Solving the problem of drunken driving - or at least reducing it significantly - is a job for society in geiwral. The government

cant do it all with tougher laws.

Ihe challenge now is to maintain the effect of the new law, he says. We must keep up the visibility of the problmn and make it so it is no longer socially accepted behaviour to drive while drinking.

In the past, the government has failed in its efforts to maintain high visibility of the drunken driving problem. Public service announcement - TV shown at three oclock in the morning dont do the trick, he says. But citizens groups like Mothers Against drunken Driving (MADD) have shown unflagging interest in the area and tend to generate interest in others. It may be that they will succeed in generating continuing interest, he says.

Lacey says North Carolinians must also make a personal commitment to change the way they perceive drunken* drivers. Rather than feeling sorry for that guy who just got caught, we should show some concern that he was in that

situatioo in the first place, he says.

There are elements of the Safe Roads

Act which go to the heart of the drunken oblem, he says. The dram shop ^visum, for exampm, is designed to

discouraM the service of alcohol to those alrea^ mimken and to those underaged. Thus it seeks not to punish but to preveit drunken driving, he sa^.

Community programs that seek to prevent drunken driving are being established. Some provide emergency rides fw those who cant drive home. Others seek to discourage the young from drinking.

Im not a nay-sayer about the Safe Roads Act, Lacey says. Im just saying we need to capitalize on it and move forward. The laws been changed, hes saying, but unless society makes a major commitment to fight drunken driving, the new law is likely to make only a temporary fference in the casualty lists.

Visit The Polls

Tomorrow citizens in Greenville and many area municipalities will be going to the polls to choose mayors, councilmen, commissioners or aldermen.

The winners in tomorrows elections will be determining how tax funds are to be spent in the months ahead. They will decide whether tax rates will be increased, and to a large extent they will determine the directions their communities will take in the years ahead.

It is an important day for every voter in that the people who are elected will chart our futures. All registered voters should make it a point to visit the polls and to make their choices carefully.

John Cunniff

Perilous Times

NEW YORK (AP) - These are perilous times as well as times of opportunity for some of the big names in American industry.

Names such as Eastern and Greyhound and Texas Instruments and International Harvester and Grumman and Gulf, to name a few, in industries such as airlines, buslines, computers, heavy manufacturing and oil.

All are involved in predicaments of one sort or another, and in almost every case their problems arise from change and their approach to it. This is a period of rapid, turbulent change that is rare in American industry.

To begin with, the times themselves have changed, with new lifestyles creating a demand for new products and new products forcing changes in consumer and producer behavior.

What happened in the area of personal finance is probably the best example of the phenomenon, with bankers, insurers and brokers all competing for the same consumer dollar by offering very much the same products.

No more than 15 years ago each of these industries was distinctly different, but as individuals became more financially sophisticated, and as electronics-allowed each industry to develop new products to serve them, the lines blurred.

Gradually, the industries intermingled. Now, old-line insurers sell stocks, brokerage houses offer insurance, and bankers peddle mutual funds.

What has emerged is a new financial services industry, but in the process scores of brokerage houses, the least heavily capitalized of the three old industries, have had their names disappear into mergers.

The new industry could never have taken place without the emergence of the electronic computer industry, but now this industry too is feeling the pains of adaptation.

Well-known computer makers, just a few years ago sitting atop a mountain of expectations, are in trouble. Texas Instruments, a giant, has apparently backed out of the personal computer market altogether. Those who study theThe Daily Reflector

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industry expect more to follow, voluntarily or otherwise.

Old industries are changing. Steelmakers have been forced outside their old boundaries by foreign competi-tion and new technology, and diversification is seen by some of them as the only way to survive.

American Can is now in life insurance, as is American Brands. Grumman, an aerospace manufacturer, tried building buses and met disaster. Xerox spent three years trying to be a retailer of office products but is now retreating.

Deregulation is adding to the confusion, primarily by inviting competition, as some of the targe airlines have learned. Eastern Airlines has been forced to seek wage concessions from workers. Continental Airlines sought to lower payrolls by firing workers. Greyhound, which operates bus routes, has done likewise.

Imports - made easier by the dollars high valuation - have created havoc and forced wage concessions in many companies and several industries, most notably automobiles. Chrysler, the third-largest U.S. automaker, still might not have overcome the financial problems that almost led it to bankruptcy.

In such a climate, a climate of change, the perils do not always come from Qie obvious directions.

A company whose shares are depressed, for example, might find itself pursued by an unwelcome suitor seeking not just to take it over but perhaps bust it up as well. Gulf Oil, a giant, is now fighting that battle.

In fact, the entire oil industry, made up of multibillion dollar giants, seems to be under pressure to reorganize its assets.

Says Business Week: As investors grow impatient with lagging returns, those companies slow at the task of improving performance risk having it done for them - through takeover attempts, breakup of assets or even liquidation.

Days of opportunity. Times of peril.

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Immigration Reform Is Bypassed

WASHINGTON - It wont make the official casualty lists, but among the wounded in last weeks explosion of news was the pending bill for reform of our immigration laws. Until the news from Lebanon and Grenada swept everything out of sight, an effort had been planned to revive the ailing legislation.

Who wants to talk immigration now? That was the forlorn question raised by a Senate aide who has worked hard for the bill.

Nothing now is likely for this year, said a top committee staff member in the House. Its off until Februa^.

All this is a pity, because the long-suffering Simpson-Mazzoli bill represents the best possible legislation that can be achieved in this field. It is not perfect bill we rarely see perfect bills on Capitol Hill but it is the product of years of patient labor by devoted members in both houses. Because of the opposition of Sp^ker Thomas P. ONeill, the bill new lies in a coma. ONeill has vowed not to let the measure reach the floor of the House in this first session of the 98^h Congress, and in the House the speakers word is close to law.

Unless ONeill somehow can be mollified (which was the White

House hope), it will be the spring of next year before any realistic hope can be raised for agreement between the Senate and the House. That prospect evokes the application of Pickles Law, named for the Texas congressman whose wisdom teaches us that if anything politically dangerous is to be done, it must be done in an odd-numbered year.

The bill does cairy political risks. The Hispanic vote in 1984 will be critical in Texas, California and Florida, where nearly 100 electoral votes will be at stake. ONeill feared or professed to fear that if Congress passed an immigration bill, the president would veto the measure and thus curry favor from Hispanics who oppose it. Because significant

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

Jesus declared that all authority had been committed to him.

Think of what this means. We are told in the Bible that our lives can become one with Christ. Our life and his life may merge, if we are willing to pay the price of having it that way. And when our life merges with his, then the authority and power which were put in his hands comes into our hearts and within the circle of our lives.

Harry F. Rosenthal

Now this does not mean that we are necessarily elevated to a position of trust. Neither does it mean that we are able to dominate others and have our own wilful way. It just means that the same type of power which fills the life of Christ comes into our lives and gives them a new and higher significance.

This vast reservoir is placed at our disposal for use under the providence of God. What a glorious opportunity.

differences remain between the House and Senate versions, the White House understandably has been unwilling to pledge the presidents signature in advance. There the matter stands or rather, slumps.

The whole business is keenly resettable. Hundreds of thousands of immigrants slip into the U.S. illegally every year. Five years ago a select commission on immigration estimated the number of illegals alr^dy in residence at 3.5 million to 6 million persons; the number surely is much larger now. Immigration totally the legals plus the illegals now accounts for 30 percent to 50 percent of our annual poj^ation growth.

Under the Senate bill, the illegals alr^idy in residence would be divided into two categories. Those who have resided in the United States con-tinuouoly since 1977 would qualify at once for permanent resident status. Those who have been here since 1980 would qualify for a three-year temporary status, after which permanent status could be sought. Under the House bill, all those who had taken up residence prior to Jan. 1, 1982, would become immune to prosecution.

Former Presidents Could Be Source For Advice

WASHINGTON (AP) - Why doesnt the United States make better use of its presidents once theyve left office? Right now weve got three of them sitting in mothballs, their minds still sharp, human libraries of the kind of knowledge that only can come from having been there.

The cheapshot answer, with variations on the theme, is that they had plenty of time in the White House to make a mess of things. Still, we paid for their on-the-job training and were still paying them well, so why not - as Jimmy Carter might say - get the best advice?

Harry Truman, who lived 20 years after he left the White House, had strong ideas about what ought to be done with retired public officials.

A man who has had the experience of a president, or a vice president, or a speaker of the House gets a chance to become much more familiar with our government than anyone else, he said. "We must/not shelve or thrust into obscurity men with such unique experience.

But shelfdom is what the United States bestows on its former chief executives.

%

Richard Nixon was discredited and brought down by his flaws, but he also achieved detente with the Soviet Union and opened the door to China. He writes and talks extensively about foreign affairs. It was once rumored he would be appointed ambassador to China and why not?

Gerald Ford, who calmed a nation rent by Watergate, knows from 25 years in the House all there is to know about how administrations can work their will with (Congress. It was knowledge that could have benefitted his successors.

Carter, the president who sat on Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat until they reached their Camp David agreements, now sits in Geor^a carving chairs while blood flows with renewed vigor in the Middle East. Special envoys come and go, using the Camp David accords as ^ir benchmark, but nime of them is Carter.

All three former presidents testified recently before the Kissinger commission on central America. It was the first time there was a formal bid for their advice.

Former presidents do, of course, have many forums to make their views known. Nixon has written four books since leaving Washington. Ford is on the lucrative convention circuit and hes lectured to more than 130 college audiences since leaving Washington. A news conference called by any of the three is bound to be well attended.

Truman worried about wasting presidential talent. I was not thiiing in terms of what the nation could do for said. They honors greater than they could expect. What I was thinking about was what further benefits the nation and the people might get from these men who have acouired an enormous amount of knowledge and insight into the operations and aims of government.

Truman always was one to let deeds speak and he wasnt blinded by his strong partisanship. He chose Herbert Hoover, a Republican, to head the American effort to feed the hungry around the postwar world and called on him again to

streamline ana reorganize the gov- su emment.

Only three other presidents held government jobs after leaving office. John (uincy Adms became a congressman; Andr^ Johnson, a senator; and William Howard Taft was appointed chief justice of the United States - a job, he later confided, was the best he ever had.

'ew presidents treat their predecessors as Truman did Hoover. Reagan called on all three living former |)residents only once - to attend the l uneral of Anwar Sadat as his representative.

outgoing presidents, he have already enjoyed ho

Truman thought a non-voting seat in the Senate might be a good use for former chief executives; that way, he reasoned, they could take part in debate. In 1981 the Senate decided that former presidents shall be entitled to address the Senate - a step in that direction.

Former presidents receive regular updates from top men in the current administration. The briefings are a matter of courtesy, but they have their practical side. A former president wlro has been taken into confidence about a controversial decision might be much less inclined to criticize it tlun one whose knowledge comes only from a newspaper. It tends to turn him into an ally when the incumbent goes looking for

No sitting president, of course, would be willing to be upstaged by a former president. When Ford set a kind of deputy president role as the price for being the Republican vice-presidential candidate in 1980, Reagan decided the cost was too high and turned to George Bush.

Some observers say the problem with ai^inting a former chief executive as, say, a special envoy m head of a special commission, is that he wouldnt want to report to a secretary of state.

But that ignores a trait common to every ex-presictent of the United States. Hiey all want to be useful to their country, and having been in the highest office doesnt prevent them from wanting mnre. Its an offer the country shouldnt refuse.





Soppnters Hope Stave Off Attacks

By The Associated Press

The federal tobacco program could be spared attacks by anti-smoking forces if the U.S. House a|:^oves proposed dairy legislation this week, says Rep. Charles Rose.D-N.C.

A vote is scheduled for Wedn^y on the dairy bill, part of a ^ckage containing proposed changes in the tobacco program. Supporters hope approval of the dairy bill would permit sending the package directly to a joint conference committee to work out differences with a similar Senate version.

That way, anti-smoking lawmakers couldnt try to dismantle the tobacco program on the House floor, supporters say.

The outlook is pretty good for the plan to work, said Rose.

The tobacco measur would continue a freeze in price support levels for 1984 and possibly 1985. It would eliminate the current system of leasing and transferring allotments off the farm.

Supporters have been trying to steer the tobacco revisions through Congress for four months. They say if the bill makes it to a conference committee, the House and Senate probably would quickly approve whatever compromise is reached.

The legislation must pass by December, when Agriculture Secretary John Block must set the national quot^ and price support levels and make other decisions about the 1984 tobacco crop.

The bills biggest problem has been getting through a maze of politics involving other commodities.

It was stymied for weeks in the Senate before Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, separated it from wheat legislation that was the target of a filibuster. It finally passed Oct. 7.

Rose, chairman of the House Subcommittee on Tobacco and Peanuts, had hoped to send the House version to conference immediately, but the plan was rejected Oct. 18 on the House floor.

If the dairy legislation is scrapped or changed enough to threaten a prolonged fi^t with the Senate, Rose said as a last resort hed offer a stripped-down tobacco bill including continuation of the price-support freeze.

Hold Youths ForMutder

ATLANTIC BEACH, N.C. (AP) - Two Garner teenagers face court appearances Monday after being charged in connection with what Atlantic Beach police have called one of the most brutal murders in the history of the Carteret County town.

Following a 16-month probe, Atlantic Beach police said they arrested Teri7 Lee Moore and Lee Dwight Johnson, both 19, in connection with the slaying of Angela Willis Ballard, 23, of Morehead City. Police said a tip from a Wake County teenager led investigators to the arrests.

Atlantic Beach police chief Capt. J.R. Rose announced the arrests Sunday, he said Moore has been charged with murder and Johnson with being an accessory after the fact of murder. Moore is being held without bond in the Carteret County jail and Johnson was being held Sunday in lieu of $50,000 bond. Both are scheduled for first appearances in court Monday in Carteret County District Court.

The nude body of Ms. Ballard was found on the morning of July 9, 1982, by two bo^ who were playing in 'a sand dune in a vacant lot between the Oceanana Resort Motel and the Dunes Club. Police said Ms. Ballard had been beaten, strangled, and sand was found in her moudi and throat.

CUSSIFIED ADS will go to work for you to find cash buyers f(H- your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752-6166.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

Monday. Novembef 7 1983 5

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OFF

Reg. S34 to $38

Entire stock of ladies' Auditions at super savings! Choose from assorted styles of pumps with different heel heights. Urethane uppers. In navy, wine and black.

Entire Stock of Smurf Items Now at a Big Reduction!

25%

Reg. $2 to $20

OFF

Choose from plush stuffed toys, suitcases, small ribbon tops and super Smurf boxed toys. Now is the time to buy for Christmas and really save!

Save on Candle Rings by Lenox^^!

Rings of silk flowers,    A    f Q

many uses. Rag. 4.25 to $13    I    lOOFF

Wooden Floor Lamps With Table!

Assorted styles. Natural    ^

wood finish. Reg. $100 to $200    |    / OOFF

Sale! All Silk Flowers and Greenery

Many varieties of flowers and

greenery. Assorted colors........................ /2    OFF

Large Selection of Assorted Baskets

Many sizes and shapes to    O C 0/

choose from. Shop early............0/0    OFF

Entire Stock of Danecraff^ Jewelry!

Earrings, chains and charms    A    lO

in silver and gold tones Reg. 7.50 to $60    I    / OOFF

Ladies Leather Belts by Dame

Gold tone buckles. Black,    Q    OO

grey, navy, wine, taupe. Reg. $20............. .    O        ^

Sale! Ladies Pantyhose by Dim

All sheer and control top styles    Q C 0/

Assorted colors. Reg. 2.75 to 4.50    oJO    /Q OFF

All Ladies Sperry Top Siders

Deck shoes, waterproof    O    C    0/    

shoes, casuals. Reg. $22 to $54........ ...    /Q    OFF

Ladies Jogging Shoes by Converse

Lady Roadstar style. Oxford    0    C    0/

in white/white, blue/navy. Reg. $22....... fcO    /O    OFF

Girls BugOff Knee HI Socks

Solids with cable stitching.    QQC    H

Navy, white, red. Reg. 1.25 tot.85 to I I O

Girls 7 to 14 Assorted Sportswear

Corduroy pants, knit tops. Solids,    O C 0/

stripes. Reg. $8 to $27.........  /O    OFF

Group of Toddlers Fall Dresses!

Lace collars, print skirts. Red, navy,    HO    A    A

pink, kelly. Reg. 22.00...................^ I

Misses Lady Thomson' Slacks and Skirts

Assorted styles in kelly, navy, khaki,    O C    0/

grey and more. Reg. $35 to $58..........LO    /O    OFF

Ladies Famous Maker Corduroy Sportswear

Skirts, pants, blazers, shirts    A    lO

and cotton sweaters Reg. $35 to $95.........., I / OOFF

Ladies 100% Acrylic Sweaters

Long sleeves, crew, boat necks. Q QQ H O QO Solids,prints. Reg.$14to$18 Wawwto I

Misses Sportswear Reduced!

Shorts, skirts, shirts, knit shirts    O C 0/

and blazers. Wine and green. $28 to $52    /O    OFF

Ladies Pants by LEVIs *9 OFF!

100% Polyester stretch gabardine. Large ^ Q QQ sizes. Navy, wine, more. Reg. $29............ I    wevw

Ladies

Corduroy

Skirts

Reg. $18

Dirndl style skirts in camel, navy, olive, wine, and brown corduroy. Sizes 6 to 18.

Ladies Activewear \ Now Reduced!

Misses Sportswear by Personal Now Reduced!

25%

OFF

Entire stock of blazers, pants, shirts and skirts. 100% Polyester. In navy, black, grey, mulberry. Sizes 4 to 12 petite; 8 to 20 misses.

A Savings of *9 on Misses Bend Over Pants by LEVIs

Regular $28

100% Polyester stretch gabardine pants styled with fly front and tab. In navy, black, wine, grey and many more. Sizes 6 to 20 short and average.

Highlander Brass Lamps by Lamplighter Farms!

*55

Easy care finish never needs polishing. Double wick offers brighter light. Complete with hurricane glass glove top. Made in England.

Large Selection of Gorham Giftware

25%

OFF

Regular 7.95 to $50

Made of full lead crystal In West Germany. Includes King Edward pattern. Shop now for Christmas gifts.

Boys Jackets With Zip-Off Sleeves! Save!

20%

OFF

Regular $24 to $28

100% Acrylic jackets with collar, zip-off sleeves and elastic waist. Solids and 2-tones in navy/light blue, burgundy and grey. Sizes 4 to

Save *8 on Babys Folding Umbrella Strollers!

34.99

Regular 43.0Q

One step folding. Padded back with swivel wheels. Hurry in now and save during this sale!Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m.Phone 756-BE-L-K (756-2355)





22 The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.__Monday,    November    7,1983

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personals............

In Memoriam........

Card Of Thanks.......

Special Notices.......

Travel & Tours.......

Automotive..........

Child Care............

Day Nursery

Health Care..........

Employment.........

For Sale..............

Instruction...........

Lost And Found-------

Loans And Mortgages Business Services Opportunity

Professional..........

Real Estate

Appraisals...........

Rentals..............

002

,003

.005

.007

009

.010

.040

. 041 .043 ...050 ...OO . OflO .082 . 085 . 091 , 093 .095 ...100 ...101 .,.120

WANTED

Help Wanted.......

Work Wanted.......

Wanted ............

Roommate Wanted Wanted To Buy Wanted To Lease . Wanted To Rent

.051

.059

.140

.142

.144

.148

.148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent.....

Business Rentals.........

Campers For Rent........

Condominiums for Rent..

Farms For Lease.........

Houses For Rent..........

Lots For Rent............

Merchandise Rentals.....

Mobile Homes For Rent.,, Office Space For Rent Resort Property For Rent, Rooms For Rent..........

.121

,122

.,124

.125

,107

.127

.129

..131

.133

.135

.137

.138

SALE

Autos for Sale...........

Bicycles for Sale........

Boats for Sale..........

Campers for Sale.......

Cycles for Sale.........

Trucks for Sale.........

Pets....................

Antiques...............

Auctions...............

Building Supplies.......

Fuel, Wood, Coal.......

Farm Equipment.......

Garage Yard Sales.....

Heavy Equipment......

Household Goods.......

Insurance ..............

Livestock..............

Miscellaneous..........

Mobile Homes for Sale. Mobile Home Insurance Musical Instruments ...

Sporting Goods.........

Commercial Property

Oil 029 ...030 032 ...,034 ...036 .039 .. .046 . . 061 ...062 ...063 ...064 ...065 ...067 ...068 .... 069 ...071 ...072 ...074 . 075 ...076 ... 077 ...078 ... 102

Condominiums for Sale 104

Farms for Sale..........

Houses for Sale..........

Investment Property ....

Land For Sale...........

Lots For Sale............

Resort Property for Sale,

.106

.109

,.111

.113

.115

.11

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

The public will take notice that the Board of Aldernten of the Town of Winterville will hold two (2) public hearings at the regular scheduled meeting November 14, 1963 at 7:00 p m. in the Board Room ot the Municipal Building.

First on the agenda:

To rezone from R-4 to Gerierai Business lots 17, 8, 9, 10, Block E, lots #8, 9, 10, 11, Block F, Map 208, formerly known as the W.A. Smith property requested by W E. Briley. Second on the agenda To add Number 21 to Section 13-18 Industrial District A, Permitted Uses to Include TV, radio, and microwave towers and related of flee buildings.

El wood Nobles Town Clerk

October 28, November 7, 1983

THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days., 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days 40* per line per day

ClassiftGd Display

2,90 Per Col . Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Clasalflad UnMa Dadllns

Monday........Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday..Tuesday 3p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday......Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

... Friday noon ..Friday 4 p.m. . Monday 4 p.m. . Tuesday 4 pm. Friday,.. Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

Monday ., Tuesday . Wednesday Thursday

ERRORS

Errors must be reported Immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Sealed proposals, so marked, will be received in the office of the Support Services Manager, Greenville Utilities Commission, Greenville Utilities Building, 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 2:00 P M. (EST), on November 29, 1983, and immediate ly thereafter publicly opened and read for the furnishing of: Sewer Pipeline Television Inspection Unit

Instructions for submitting bids fc

and complete specifications for the equipment or materials to be pro vided will be available in the office of the Superintendent, Water & Sewer Department, Greenville Utilities Building. 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville. North Carolina,

during regular office hours Greenville Utilities Commission

reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION November 7, 1983

FILE N0.83CVD1385

INTHE general COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION north CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCES BY PUBLICATION TO PONZELLA EDWARDS GOODEN TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in fhe above entitled action on the 27th day of October, 1983 The nature of the relief sought Is as follows:

A judgement ot absolute divorce You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than December 10. 1983, and upon failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 27th day of October, 1983 OWENS, ROUSE a, NELSON By

James A. Nelson, Jr Attorney for Plaintiff P O Box 302 105 West Third Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834

Telephone: (919 ) 758 4276 October 31; November 7, 14, 1983

FILE NO.: 83 E 486 FILM NO : INTHEGENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE: ESTATE OF MARGARET MORRISON. Deceased, Late of the County of Pitt .

NOTICE TO DEBTORS ANDCREDITORS The undersigned, having qualified i Executor of the Estate of Margaret S. Morrison, this is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day of April, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the Estate will please make mmediate payment to the un derslgned.

This 12th day ot October, 1983. William G. Morrison Executor tor the Estate ot Margaret S. Morrison 101 Lakewood Drive Greenville, NC 27834 Laurence S. Graham Attorney for the Estate Suite 2, Oakmont Professional Offices

Greenville, NC 27834

October 17, 24, 31, November 7, 1983

FILE NO : 83 E 488

FILM NO INTHEGENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE:    ESTATE    OF    JOHN

CALVIN YEAGER, Deceased, Late of the County ot Pitt

NOTICE TO DEBTORS ANDCREDITORS The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix of fhe Estate of John Calvin Yeager, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day ot April, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded In bar ot their recovery All persons Indebted to the Estate will please make immediate pay ment to the undersigned This 12th day of October, 1983. Elizabeth G. Yeager Executrix of the Estate of John Calvin Yeager 113Wilkshire Drive Greenville, NC 27834 Laurence S. Graham Attorney for the Estate Suite 2, Oakmont Professional Offices.

Greenville, NC 27834

October 17, 24, 31, November 7, 1983

INTHEGENERALCOURT

OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK FILE NO 83 SP 379 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF THE DEED OF TRUST OF ROSELLA OLIVER, WILLIE ASTER HORNE AND WIFE. PEGGY B HORNE, TO MICHAEL P PEAVEY, TRUST EE. RECORDED IN BOOK W 50, PAGE 452, PITT COUNTY REGIS TRY

NOTICE OF SALE

Under and by virtue ot the power ot sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed by Rosella Oliver, Willie Aster Horne and wile. Peggy B Horne, dated -May 20. 1982. and recorded in Book W 50. page 452, Pitt County Registry, and because ot default in the payment of the Indebtedness thereby secured, and pursuant to the demand of the holder ot said Deed ot Trust and imdebtedness thereby secured, the undersigned Trustee will otter tor sale at public auction on the 16th day ot November, 1983, at 12 00 oclock, noon, on the steps ot the Pitt County Courthouse, In Greenville, North Carolina, the tol lowing described real property in eluding any and all Improvements thereon

THAT certain tract or parcel of land located in the Township ot Farmvllle, County of Pitt, State ot North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows LYING and being on the north side of U S Highway *264 (Farmvllle Bypass), and BEGIN NING at a point on the northern

right of way line of said Highway and being. 17 teet. S 63 44 E ot the

center line ot Bee Branch and being the southwest corner ol the lot ot Powells. Inc , occupied by Vanna Wholesale Builders Supply and runs thence along the Powells Inc line N 7 44 W 235 8 feet, more or less, to a stake on the southern right ol way line of the Norfolk Southern Railroad, said point being 11 feet from the center of Bee Branch, thence along the southern right ot way ot Norfolk Southern Railroad, N 89 W to the northern right ot way line of U S Highway 264 thence m a easterly direction along the northern right ot way line of said Highway, 75 teet from the center ot said Highway, m a southeasterly direction 550 feet more or less, to the POINT OF BEGINNING, con faining one (I) acre, more or less The highest bidder at the sale will be required to make a cash deposit of Ten percent (10%) of the amount

ot Ten per of his bid The sale will be held open (or ten days for upset bids as provided by law.

This the 27th day ot October. 193 MICHAEL P PEAVEY. TRUSTEE

Michael P Peavey, P A Attorney for Law Post entice Box 513 WIsoIVn C 27893 Telephone (919)2918020 November 7. u i983

PUBLIC NOTICES

nSTTH

Having qualified as Executor's of ate of W.R. Tyson late of Pitt

the esta'    _____

County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor's on or before May 7, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.

This 3rd day of November 1983 Vernon Tyson 224 Churchill Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834 Ralph L. Tyson 1409 Greenville Blvd.

Greenville, North Carolina 27834

E xecutor's of the estate of W R Tyson, deceased November 7.14, 21, 28, 1983

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO

REGARDING THE POSSIBLE CLOSINGOF AGNES FULLILOVE SCHOOL A public hearing will be held on Monday, November 7, 1983 at 7:30 m. at Agnes Fullilove School on

01S

ChtvroiRt

1976 CHEVETTf. Good condition $1500. Call 756-8645.

1979 HVfctit tl~ door, air, cruise, tape. Good condl tion. 355-6053.

1981 MALIBU CLASSIC. AM/i^M stereo, new tires. Phone 746-2578 or 756 1863 after 6 p-m.

017

Oodgt

1981 OODOE OLt, 25,000 miles, air, 4 speed. Loaded with extras. Sporty economy car for $4700. 35S2860.

018

Ford

1972 MAVERICK. Needs work. Will negotiate price. 756-3078.

fhe corner of Chestnut Street and Manhattan Avenue in the City of Greenville. Pitt County, North Car olina, regarding the possible closing of Agnes Fullilove School. To be^ considered by the Greenville City

Board of Education in making a etner

decision, in its discretion, whetl to close Agnes Fullilove School shall be the welfare of the students to be affected by the possible closing of said school, and. among other factors, geographic conditions, an ticipated increases or decreases in school enrollment from such clos ing, the Inconvenience or hardship that might result to the pupils to be affected by such closing, the cost of providing additional school facili ties in the event of such closing, and the importance of Agnes Fullilove School to the people of the com munity in which Agnes Fullilove School is located ana their Interest and support of Agnes Fullilove School. At this hearing, any and all members of the public will be attorded a reasonable opportunity to express their views.

This the 29th day ot September, 1983

DIXON, DUFFUS8, DOUB BY

Phillip R. Dixon School Board Attorney Greenville City Schools NCNB Building P O Drawer 1785 Greenville, NC 27835-1785 Telephone: (919) 758 62(X) October 10. 17, 24, 31; November 7, 1983

NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND AND

STATFMENTOF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE NOTICE Is hereby given that the City ol Greenville is considering the

proposal to enter Into a contract for the disposal of

the following de scribed real property. Including the house and any other improvements thereon, to Lisha N. Harvey, of Greenville. North Carolina, on or before November 30, 1983, said real property being Disposal Parcel H-4, located in the Southside Redevelopment Project, N.C.R-134. Greenville, North Carolina.

Disposal Parcel H 4 BEGINN ING at a point located 30 feet N 86 deg. 21 mln. E of an iron stake qt the intersection of the eastern right of way line of Garland Street and the southern right of way line of Howell Street; from the Beginning Point runs then along the southern right of way line of Howell Street N 86 deg. 21 mln. E 14 mln. 30 sec. E 38.37 feet to an iron stake set; continues along the southern right of way of Howell Street N 87 deg. 14 mln. 30 sec. E 21.36 feet to an iron stake set; runs then S 02 deg. 45 mln. 30 sec. E 145 feet to an iron stake set; runs then S 87 deg 14 min. 30 sec. W 60 feet to an iron stake set; runs then N 02 deg. 45 min. 30 sec. W 144.40 teet to an Iron slake found In the southern right of way line of Howell Street, the point of beginning.

Said tract of land being more particularly described according to a survey plat dated December 14, 1981, prepared by Rivers and Associates described as Disposal Parcel H-4, Southside Project N C R 134 Property address 609 Howell Street, Greenville, North Carolina.

Lisha N. Harvey, the proposed purchaser, has filed with the City Of Greenville, a Redeveloper's State ment tor Public Disclosure In the form prescribed by the Secretary of the Development of Housing and Urban Development pursuant to Section 105(e) of the Housing Act of 1949 as amended.

The said Redeveloper's State ment is available for public exami nation at the office of the Com munity Development ot the City of Greenville during its regular hours, said office being located at 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville. North Carolina, and Its regular office hours being Irom 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday each week Community Development Office

ot the City of Greenville October 31; November 7, 1983

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Laura Moore Adams, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina This is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 20th day of April, 1984, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery

All persons indebted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 13th day of October, 1983 Mr Joseph Adams Rt 5, Box 240 Greenville, N C. 27834 Administrator ot the Estate. Laura M Adams Robert L. White Attorney at Law P O Box 951 Greenville, N C. 27834 (9)9) 758 2123

October 17, 24, 31; November 7, 1983

VI

002

PERSONALS

A 29 YEAR OLD graduate student of a leading luniversity seeks a black female friend ot 20-30 years Student is also ot African origin and has a nonimpeding visual impair ment It looking for a true long term friendship, write A True Friend, Box 1436. Cambridge, MA. 02238 You will be contacted.

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

I, ANN H. WELCH will no longer be responsible tor any debts con tracted by anyone other than myselt

Oil

Autos For Sale

BE ONE OF THE PEOPLE with Clout! Buy Clout discount cars. Phone Allen Hardy, 752 6902

SELL YOUR CAR the National Aulotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114

013

Buick

BUICK ELCTRA LIMITED. 2

door 82 One owner 18,000 miles. Like New Call Duke Buick Pontiac 753 3140

LESABRE

BUICK LESABRE LIMITED. (4)

81 4 Door One owner Duke Buick Pontiac 753 3140

1971 BUICK Electra Limited Fully equipped Motor good runniisg con dilion Body tair Needs tires $275 or best offer 752 1096 alter 5 p m

1978 RIVIERA. White with landau lop. Full power 59.600 actual miles $4500 756 6409 between 6 9 pm

1979 ELECTRA LIMITED. 64,000

miles. $5.600. 355 2996 after 7 p m.

014

Cadillac

CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE.

1981 Excellent condition. $9500 Call 757 0451 or 752 2366

1974 CADILLAC SeVille. good con dition Best offer 757 1857.

1979 CADILLAC SEDAN OaVille

Good mileage Good condition. $6995 757 0440

1974 TORINO, 2 door super sport Engine and transmission in good condition. $450, as Is. Call after 3 p.m., 758 6870

1975 FORD GRANADA. Automatic transmission, air condition. Phone 758 4024after5p.m.

1978 GRANADA, 6 cylinder, automatic, air, excellent condition. 756 6365.

1982 FORD ESCORT, with air, like new Assume payments. Cali 756 9886 after 6 pm.

020

AAarcury

1972 MERCURY MONTEREY,

automatic, air, power steering and brakes, good transportation. $400 negotiable 752 7370.

1982 MERCURY LN-7, 1 owner, every option possible    Including

sunroof and louvers. Excellent condition. $4,800 Phone 1-825 0286 after 5 p.m. weekdays.

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS WAGON. 1980. New set of

radial tires, air condition, AM-FM stereo. 756 1345 between 8-4.

1970 OLDSMOBILE Delta 88. $500 Phone 756 6810 or 753 4302.

1974 CUTLASS. $550. 756 7725.

022

Plymouth

1973 PLYMOUTH FURY III, very good condition. $700. Call 757 3168.

1977 GRAN FURY brougham, 4 door, automatic, air, seii or trade. 757 3278.

023

Pontiac

1976 PONTIAC ASTRE wagon. AM FM 8 track, air. $1500. Call 757 3607

1980 TRANSAM, excellent shape.

T-tqp, answer, low mileage. $600.

Call 746;

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-Frlday 9 to 5 at Prepshlrt. No phone calls please.

024

Foreign

COLLECTORS ITEM

I960 VW BUG with rag top sun roof. Excellent running condition. $750 or best offer. Call Edie after 5 pm. 758 3693.

DATSUN 280ZX - 2-1-2, 1979 Blue. 59,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition $7500. Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights.

1973 BLACK ?fCZ DATSUN. $2.700. Phone 756 6643

1974 DATSUN 260Z. Olglnal owner New paint. 4 speed, air. Excellent condition. $3495. 1 641 3848 before 5 andl 823 7557 after 5p.m

1975 TOYOTA Corolla. $800 355 6513.

1979 MAZDA RX7. 54.000 miles, 5 speed. Moon roof, air, AM/FM. Excellent condition. $7,495 Call days 752 8334, nights 752 6239

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA, 5 speed, power steering, air. 59,000 miles, AM/FM, 4 door $3995. 756 2684.

1980 TOYOTA TERCEL Littback. Excellent condition. $3,675. Phone days757 6297, after 5p m , 752 4736.

1981 TOYOTA TERCEL, 4 door, automatic, air condition, AM FM, silver on black 48,000 miles, excellent condition $4,850 758 1809 or nights and weekends, 752-6712.

1982 HONDA PRELUDE. Low

mileage. Like new. Must sell. 752-4840.

1983 TOYOTA Supra, 7,000 miles, 3 months old, loaded. Air, cruise control, sunroof, tilt steering, in termediate wipers, stereo equalizer, 6 years/60,000 mile war ranty 752 4465 or 752 1463 after 5 p.m., ask (or Mike

032

Boats For Sale

16' CATAMARAN with trailer Excellent condition. $1500. 758 3449 after 5

1975 O'OAY 20'. Sleeps 4, 3 sails, 10 horsepower electric start Chrysler stove and sink $5,000. 752 0318.

1979 EVINRUOE outboard 35 horsepower short shift, $450 Call 753 2119

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C. 834 2774

036

Cycles For Sale

1973 SUZUKI. iOO Call 756 4901

1979 HONDA XL100 Good condi tion. Low mileage. Call 756-4901.

1979 175CC Yamaha Enduro. On/off road. 752-0876 between 8:30-5.

1981 YAMAHA 650 Special, asking $1,950, includes 2 Belstar helmets Cycle fully equipped, 5,500 miles. 8 to 5 call 756 6424. after 5:30 call 756 9325.

1983 HONDA CB 750. 13,000 miles. New rear tire. Must sell 752 0402.

1983 YAMAHA, new RX50 A great Christmas aitt. Retail $850, loan value $650. Best offer. 752 1930 ask (or Larry.

039

Trucks For Sale

FORD RANCHERO. 1968. Excellent condition. $3,000 355 2277.

1970 DODGE PICKUP, step side, looks good and runs good. $850. Call 746 3788

1971 FORD RANGER ton Pickup 429 motor, automatic. Good condi tion $995 Phone 756 0108

1973 CHEVROLET VAN. 6 cylinder automatic. Good condition. $1300 negotiable. Phorte 752-1705.

1973 CHEVROLET CIO pickup. $900 or best offer 756 0831 aHer 5 p m

1975 CHEVROLET TRUCK.

Automatic transmission. Good condition $1695. Phone 7S3 5862

1978 GMC TRUCK. 6,500 V 8, 4'i ton, 20' box, ttew paint job. low mileage Excellent condition. $7.500 Call 758 9091.

1979 FORD Explorer truck with camper cover, 26,000 miles, $4800. Call 752 0135 after 4 p.m

1982 TOYOTA. 4x4 long bed, air condition. AM/FM stereo, white letter tires, 5 speed. Excellent condition $6800 negotiable Call 1 291 4164 aHer 4 p.m.

040

Child Care

BABYSITTER NEEDED (or 4

nights in 2 weeks. Infant 6 weeks at my home if possible. 757-0023.

NC LICENSED child care facility In

private home has occning for age 6 Good experience

weeks to 2 years and references. Limited enroll ment. Call 757 0287.

PART TIME Monday Friday babysitter needed to take care of 19 month old girl. Club Pines. 756 4456

046

PETS

COCK-A-POO. 4 month old white n^le Good with children $150 Phone 756 1592

FREE PUPPY Approximately 8 vreeks old Mixed mostly lab 758 5884aHer4p m

FULL BLOODED Irish SeHer pup pies. 9 weeks old Females. $50; Males. $60. I 825 0286 aHer 5 p.m weekdays

GOOD BEAGLES (or sale. Call

758 1921

WANTED A GOOD yard for a loveable part cocker, part terrier 1 year old dog Hes blackish gray with a little white under his chin. Real cute! Please call Norma 752 1568

OSl

HlpWnted

ADMINISTRATIVi ASSISTANT. Prestigious office has opening for above average individual who possesses extensive financial plan ning background. For further Information, call Gloria or Jamie, Heritage Personnel Service 355-J020.

advertising jilLti. Seeking

ambitious salesman or women fo earn the kind of money they deserve. Growing company needs

deserve. Growing company need additional help. Must have exper once in sales. Base plus salary

Excellent benefits. Call Judy, 355-2020, Hertloge Personnel Service.

assistant oi1kiToh F

Nurses. Join the team of geriatric advocates. Assistant Director of Nurses needed at University Nursing Center. Must ben an RN with 2

^ears experience to apply. For

nformation call Lydia X AAorgan. DON, 758 7100.

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

Growing eastern Norfh Carolina dealership has opening In Import sales. Benefits include paid hospi tallzaton, life insurance, dental and

demonstrator program. Send sum mary of qualifications and photograph (optional) to: Automotive Sales. P.O. Box 1967, Greenville,

N.C 27835.

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON.

Call for Interview 756-1877 or send resume to Grant Buick Inc., P.O. Box 2097, Greenville, N.C. 27834. AHn: JackMewborn.

CLERK/TYPIST for trucking

company. Requires good typing' lity to operate calculator

Ability to operate calcu Pleasant telephone techniques and it will Involve public contact. Call for appointment 355 2227

OSl

HtipWantBd

RHs. LPNi, NAs Dally pay. Call Medical StaHIng Sarvc; 1523 4473.

kuVl ORIVA needed Immediately. Full lime position.

Hfting required. Knowledge of Greenville and surrounding areas. Excellent driving record a must. Company beneflH. Rapid advan cemant, AAonday Safurday, 9 a.m. 6

p.m. Cloeed Wadneidays. Apply In person. No phono calls please. Colortyme, Greenville Square

ITe IaLE. $I6K plus. Would you like to join a winning team? Fortune 500 company needs ag gresslve Individual with lots of energy who has the desire to earn commission based on top level performance. Established territory. Previous sales experience a must. Super benefits. Call Judy for In tervlew, 355 2020, Hertlage Personnel Service.

ELECTROLUX. F^restige

manufacturer of home cleaning

SALir

|>roducts requires 3 representatives

this area. A go geHer attitude, energy, creativity. Earnings based on performance. Benefits and In cenflves. Promotions from within Call 756-6711.

SALES 4ANA0ER. Salary plus overrides for person experienced In sales with management back ground. Call Judy, 355 2020, Hertlage Personnel Service

SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER for

Group Home. Two years experience required. Excellent benefits Salary competitive. Send resume to M

COATING APPLICATORS needed

Experience with coating, roofing.

painting, and spraying, equipment helpful. Good growth potential. Call

Mr. Anderson at 757-3355.

COLLECTION MANAGER

Apply at Great Southern Finance In person. 115 S. Lee St.,Ayden.

COST ENGINEER. Knowledge of

apparel a must, Includin breakdown and time study. Ca Jamie or Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020.

EARN EXTRA MONEY for

Christmas Sell Avon!!! Call 758 3159

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY lor

someone having fast food manage ment experience and $20,000 capital Investment to become partner In existing small business. If you are tired of working for the other man and want the advantages of being your own boss this may be for you. Call 756-6641 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, Monday through Friday for in tervlew.

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY. Must have experlerKe In financial or mortgage related field as well as strong organizational background. Salary $12,000 $15.000 depending on experience with full benefits and

profit sharing. Immediate opening. Send resume fo PO Box 4153,

Greenville, NC 27834

HELP WANTED RN'S AD'S

welcomed Opportunity to practice nursing and be appreciated Our Community Hosplfal In Scotland Neck needs 2 RNs. Call Joy Waters, DON, or W.G. Slade, Administrator at 1-826 4144

HERITAGE PERSONNEL SERVICE

ACCOUNTANT Local prestigious firmsharp professional needed

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY. For mature Individualnot afraid of responsibilityExcellent company and benefits    

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE. Solid future potential with national companyRelocation necessary

MEDIA SALES REP Established territoryBase pay plus commission.

RECEPTIONIST Front desk for the outgoing individual. Electric typewriter with memory experience needed EOE.

SALES. Experienced rep needed Neat professional appearance for relocation to Raleigh area. Excellent starting salary.

hand, typing

Y. Entry required.

For Further Information Call Gloria or Jamie

355-2020

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER

Major small appliance manufactur er in eastern North Carolina has

need for an Industrial Engineer with classicia engineering back

f(round standards, methods, ayouts and costs. Excellent oppor tunity for the successful candidate. Please send resume with salary history to:    (

Mark W. Eakes Employee Relations Manager Hamilton Beach P O Box 1158 Washington, N.C. 27889 M/F/H/V

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

MAINTENANCE person needed Call 756 8345

MANAGEMENT PERSON to

manage local photography club for international film corporation Part time to $984 month Call today (714) 821 8900.

MANAGER TRAINEE. Entry level position available for person with prior experience In tinancial field. Excellent benefits Call Judy, .355-2020, Heritage Personal

MATURE PERSON to babysit 3

school age children. Will require some nights and weekends. Send resume to : Babysitter. P O Box 1967. Greenville, NC

NEEDED GOOD DOBRO Player (or well established recording Blue Grass Group. Must be sober, dependable, willing, and able to play. Serious inquiries only. Contact I-825 5211

NOW HI (TING

Offshore Oil Drilling Overseas and Domestic Will train, $35,000 $50,000

tius possible. Call Petroleum ervices at 312 920-9364. extension 1074. Also open evenings.

OPERATOR. Proficient in setup operation and instruction of Brown and Sharp ultramatic screw machines. Minimum 5 years expe rience. Contact AIDE, PO Box 17243, Raleigh. NC 27619. 919 876 7020

PART TIME TELLER. Experience

required. Contact Rosa Mills, Planters National Bank

PITT COUNTY SCHOOLS is ac

cepting applications for a certified high School math teacher. Must be qualified to teach calculus. Contact 752 6106. extension 238.

POLICE OFFICER, part time. NC certified. Contact Chief of Police. Fountain Police Department

POLICEMAN WANTED. Must be certified. Send resume to Town of Grimesland. PO Box 147. Grimesland. NC 27837

PRIOR AIRFORCE If you have been honorably dis charged within the last S years, and are qualified with a minimum AFSC Skill Level of 5, the Air Force is looking for you! Openings available for - Munitions. Integrated Electronics. Intellegence, Aircraft Maintenance also, selected Electronics/Weather op portunities from other services. Call today! MSgt Ben Grady or

TSgt Bruce Barry, 115 Redbanks Suite B. Greenville. N.C. 27834

(919) 756-2194.

QUINN WHOLESALE Company Inc., a grocery distributor In Warsaw. NC has an immediate opening for a programmer , analyst to work on a 1100/61. Must be strong In COBOL, RPG II, OSl 100 and other 1100 soHware tools. Mapper experience a plus. An Interest In becoming a part ol the manage ment team is necessary. Com petltive salary and benetlts. Call at 919 293 7821, extension 200 for an appointment

REAL ESTATE BROKElt Management Opportunity tor high calibvr individual. Send resmelo PO Box 3745, Greenville, NC.

RESUMES WRITTEN to get results plus job search programs Call for brochure or appointment. Cushman Writing Associates. 1 637 2889

BH^t^Route 1, Box 887, GrIHon,

SECRETARY, Cashier, Switch board Operator General office work, pleasant personality. Call 756 3228, Toyota East, tor ap polntment

SELL THE COMPLETE

line...health, life, and soon home owners Insurance, as well as mutual funds. A five minute phone call Is all It takes to see If you can qualify for this exciting and profitable career. Call Lee Weaver at I 527 4155 for tull details.

The Mutual of Omaha Companies Equal Opportunity Companies M/F

SERVICE MANAGER

Excellent Career Opportunity with growing company Excellent com pany benefits and starling salary Prefer previous Ford experience. Reply In writing to: Service AAan ager P O Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834

SUPERVISOR.TtoK up Must have

experience In consumer and automobile finance management. Excellent fringe benefits Including car and expenses. Call Judy (or details, 355 2020, Hertlage Personnel Service.

THE VILLAGE OF SIMPSON Is accepting applications (or the posi tion of Community Development Block Grant Project Assistant, to aid In CO ordlnating its Community Development Block Grant program d call

Interested persons shout village office at 919 757 1430 be

11 the

tween 10 a.m. until 12 p.m. and 1

j) m until 5 p m., Monday Friday

or an appointment. Previous expe rience in community related or human resource programs desired

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licensed and fully insured Trim ming, cutting and removal, slump removal by grinding Free estimates. J.P Stancil, 752 6331

ATH AND KitCHEN repairs

Counter lops, plumbing and carpentry State License 746 2657 or 752 1920

BRICK OR BLOCK work repairs or additions. 11 years experience. Call 825 6591 after 7 p m

CARPENtRY REPAIR, remodel

ing. room additions Free estimates 758 3693 or 757 3919

DAIL'S LANDSCAPING Backhoe and Concrete Service. Phor>e day or night, 1 522 4295.

GET YOUR FALL painting done and carpenter repair or remodel ing Call after 5p m 758 5226

KELLY'S CUSTODIAL SERVICE.

Call I 946 0609

PAINTING

Interior and exterior. Free estimates. References, work guaranteed 13 years experience 756 6873 after 6 p.m.

PAINTING. 10 years experience Free estimates 752 9915

PAINTING inside or outside 15 years experience Free estimates. All work guaranteed 758 7815

WALLPAPERING AND Fainting 10 years experience Local refer enees 758 7748

WOULD LIKE to do housecleaning work. Call 757 0510.

080

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

jaLE'S A SCOTT'S ANTIQUES

1310 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville. NC Phone 758 3276 (Dpen 9 to 5, Monday through Friday Large selection of furniture and gifts!

NINA'S ANTIQUES announces new hours beginning Sunday. October 30. Open Friday. Saturday, Sunday. 16 Farmville Highway, 264.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P. Stancil, 752 6331

ALL HARDWOOD, $75 cord. $40 pickup load Delivered and stacked 823 5407

FIREWOOD by the cord, by the load. Lowest prices In Greenvlllel Call 757 1772after 6p m

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready

to go Call 752-6420 or 752 8847 aHer 5p.m

SEASONED OAK, $45 a i cord. Seasoned Beech or HIcorky, $50 a cord. Delivered and stacked. Call

757 1637

SEASONED OAK firewood, $90 cord; seasoned mixed firewood, $80 cord Free delivery and stacked. Ready to go 756 8358 aHer 5.

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

LINCOLN WELOERSIdeal ARC AC 250 with accessory set, $438 49; Ideal ARC AC DC 250 with accesso ry set. $679 95, AC 225 S $149.95, AC DC 225/125 $299 95. Welding rods and accessories in stock Agri Supply. Greenville, NC 752 3999.

TOBACCO PLANTS. Speedling grown greenhouse tobacco plants. More uniformity, less topping and suckering Less labor at transplan ting. Contact Kenny Dews 756-7116 for more Information

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices Bedding sets, $69 Waterbeds, $149 Factory Mat tress 8, Waterbeds next to PIH Plaza 355 2626

BROYHILL SOLID wood dining room suit, china and hutch, table and 6 chairs. Will finance! 757-0451, ask for AAr Carraway.

NEW SO#A, $250 Chair. $150.

Mattress set, $80 All new. 756-2671 or 758 1543.

SOFA, end table and cbest ~oi

drawers. Call 756-9273aHer 5 p.m.

072

Livestock

NOT ONLY CAN you sail good used Items ytokty In claselfledr^ you

can classi

ns quiCRiy in ciaseitiod, out alto get your askingprke. T alfledad today. Caff ^166

HORSEBACK RIDING. Stables. 752 5237

Jarman

FEANUT HAY $1 00 bale, picked up in the field Will deliver, on-5407

074

Miscellaneous

BABY CRIB, good condition. $35 New queen size bed. $200 Prices flr^. Call aHer 6 p.m.. 758 M04

BRUNSWICK SLATE FOL Tables

Inventory clearance sale. 4 models Delivery setup. 919-763-9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013.

for small loads of sand, topsoil and

stone. Alto driveway work

CAROLINA OAK wood/coal stove

Heats well Oecorativel Excellent condition Call 757 1240 aHer 5 p.m.

074

Miscellaneous

A LARGE SIEGLER oil heater.

Good thapel $100 or best offer. Phone 752-5583

ANTIQUE SOLID OAK Dresser

hat beveled edge mirror with

carvings. Very good condition. $260 Phone752 36lf

"sur

YOU HOLDING-

A40RTGAGE ON PROPERTY YOU SOLD?

SELL IT FOR CASH ANYWHERE IN USA. 1ST OR 2ND. FINANCIAL INVESTMENT GROUP INC CALL COLLECT 1-704-274-0863.

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, volllns, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques...anything of vallue.

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

SAChS-DOlMAR CHAIN SAWS

Clark A Co., Grenville, 756 2557

complete Furniture

STRIPPING and reflnlshing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756-9123

DP GYM PACK 1000 with extra weights, $225. Call 355 6098 after 5 p.m

EARLY AMERICAN living room suit for tale, $125. 758 1801

EARLY AMERICAN oak hutch. Best offer 758 3971

ELECTRIC RANGE, dorm refrIg erator, gat range, electric wall oven. $70each. Phone 752-0463.

ENGLANDER double mattress and box springs with sheets, $115 Dou ble dresser with 8 drawers, $50 Call 355 6098after 5p m

EXERCISE BIKE, Vitamaster,

good condition $50 Call 756 4905 after 6.

FOR SALE, BasslneH, $20; baby swing, $20, baby carryall, $15; bottle Miarmer. $4; baby walker, $8. All in excellent condition. Call 758 3953.

FOR SALE Sofa and chair.

bookshelf, braided rugs (several sizes). Ideal for college students or apartments 355 2085

FOR SALE: EXIDY Sorcerer 32K Computer System with North Star Disk System. Call 746 2710.

FULL FIGURE?

Transition Wardrobes has pre viously owned large size clothing at reasonable prices. Most blouses, skirts and pants, $6.50 $12.00; coats from $15.(W; dresses from $8 00. Call 355 2508 after 2 PM.

HOTPOINT electric self-cleaning double oven stove. Excellent condL tion $175. 758 3971.

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON A BUYING TV's, Stereos,cameras, typewriters, gold A silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 752-2464

JC PENNEY fiberglass backboard.

goal, steel mounting pole and basketball $100 Call 355 6098 atter

5pm

KARASTAN ORIENTAL design

area rug (all sale. Save up to 30%. Larry's Carpetland. 3010 East lOth Street

LARGE LOADS of sand and top

soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available 756 4742 after 6 pm, Jim Hudson.

MAYTAG WASHER and dryer $350 or best oHer Call 756 6336

CLEARANCE SALE on

Snapper

Mowers Goodyear Tire Cenfer, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

ONE MONOGRAM and Duotherm space heaters, $25 each Call 919 752 6967

RENT TO OWNII New 19 " Sharp color TV. Payments, $22.42 per month. Furniture World I I/Stereo City, 757 0451. ask for Mike

SEARS I HORSEPOWER air

compressor, like new, used only 6 weeks $299 756 9227

SERVICE SPECIAL: $19.95 plus parts on any make vacuum cleaner. 1 year warranty on any we service 756 8352. Kirby Company

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shamjpooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SHARP, SONY A GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center. West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue Prices start at $69 88

SMITH CORONA TP-l letter quail ty printer. 5 months old. Used 1 month In mint condition. $550 752 3980trom9a m to5 30p.m

SOFA A LOVE SEAT. $300 Call 355 6967

STEREOS AND TVS Close out prices on all systems in stock! Marantz, Sony, Sansul Furniture World/Stereo City. Phone 757 0451 2808 East 10th Street In Store Finance

074

MiKtllanaous

USED GOOD CLOTHES: blOU8a drestet, skirts, coats, slias 12-18 some 18s. 10 miles from Greofivlllg 752 6974 days or nights

WALLPAFERSI SOU.OO parslngb roll Odd lots and dlscontlnuoi papers. Name brands, values up ti $20 a single roll All sales final Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East lOtl Street.

WASHER Heavy duty. Very goo condition. $150. Phone 746 2073.

WOitV, "Yimberllne Itoo. model, hoot 2,000 square feet. Utoi 2 seasons. 795 4372.

Vk66btT6Ye - Fisher <5r;;d^ Bear. $400 firm. Call 758-2058.

YAMAHA PIAN, solid walnut./^; sets china, Norltake; oak t^esaar 756 8785 or 756 0611

17" fcCA COLOR tv with remoN control, Itas quartz lock tuning cable ready too! $350. Sony diroc drive turntable. $100. Reallstli STA 100 stereo receiver. $150. JVC KB D35 metal cassette deck wItt Dolby and music scan, $190. : Realistic optlmus 10 speakers, bott for $150 Call Ron at 758-9659 oi 756|J4^

07S Mobilt Homgs For Salt

COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES SIna 1958 your one stop housing center We finance home, land, well, sapth system, foundation and driveway No down payment to quallflac buyers 107 West GreenvllU Boulevard Call Mike for youi personal appointment 355-2302.

COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES iina

1958 your one stop housing center 1984 model, 2 bedrooms, tota t electric, fully furnished. Save Payments under $144 per month 107 West Greenville Boulevard. Cal Sue at 355 2302 for your persona appointment

MOVING, must sell. 1979 Brigidlar 2 bedroom, central heat and air partially furnished Branchei Mobile Home Estates 758 4491 ot 355 6683after 5p m

NO MONEY DOWN

VA100% Financing

New 1984 SInglewide. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral celtlng Carpeted, appliances, total electric Minimum down payment with payments ol less than $140 per month

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard

_7560191_

Now Open In Farmville!

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

HOME OF THE NO DOWN PAYMENT

featuring

R E OMAN Qua lity Homes

Highway 264.    Farmvllle,

CALL 753-2033

NC

USED 12x65, 3 bedrooms steal! Call 756 4822

At a

10x55 TRAILER. Good condition: Semi furnished, 2 bedrooms $2200. Call 746 2638 after 5 pm.

13" X 65' MOBILE home (skirted ) on wooded lot located at Shady Knolls Estates Partially turnished. Included range/retolgerator, washer/dryer, sofa. Asking price: $5.900 Call 758 7489 after noons/evenings.

12x65 BRIGADEER. 2 bedrooms.

fully electric, partially furnished. Cali 758 4491 or 355 6683 after 5p.m.

1971 NATIONAL. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Excellent condition. Must sell! Call 752 6778

1973 CONNER. 45x12, I bedroom, air conditioner, washer Ideal tor student $2500 Phone 752 7246

1974. 12x60 mobile home. Fully furnished. 752-9199 between 10 and 11 a m and after 7 p.m., 1 638 1233 after 5p m

1981 CONNER. 14x68. low equity and take over payments. Call 756-6424 from 8 to 5; 756 9325 after 5 X

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 70x14. 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, completely carpeted, cathedral ceiling, ceiling tan, stereo, doorbell, dishwasher, wet bar, storm win dows, total electric, name brand appliances No money down VA 10()% financing. Colonial Mobile Homes. 107 West Greenville BouleVjSrd, 355 2X2    _

076 Mobik Homt Insuranct

(MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance

the best coverage (or less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754    I

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

STIHL CHAIN SAWS

Clark & Co , Greenville, 756 2557

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE

2 SOOOfHydrsullc Car Lift Jacks $2000 OMth 2 24'X38 Gas Pump Canoplas and Lights    siSOOaach

754)972 or 756-2017 May Ba Soan At Comer Evans St. A QraanvUla Boulevard.

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price $259.00

Special Price

$17900

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 Evans St.

752-2175

VALUABLE WOODSLAND FOR SALE

89 acres prime woodtlend In Pactolus Township, approximetely 2 miles North of city llrnht of Greenville, near Burroughs Wellcome Company and Greenville industrial area. Coneiets of 3 trete: 42 acres, 15 acres and 32 acres.

CALL W. I. WOOTEN, JR., AHORNEY 758-2111

SALES

AND

SALES MANAGEMENT

Set! to Business MerXet

We are a 44-year-old national corporation expanding in the Greenville area We desire a professional sales person to deal with small medium businesses in the area We now have more than 1500 client companies in the North Carolina area that have been developed during the past 15 years.

WE OFFER YOU:

No travel, no nights, no weekends Daytime only

Potential income $20-30,000 first year advance commission

Little or no competition Well-established product Conference trip A career

If you are experienced in selling or dealing witn businesses or possess a strong desire to make good mon^, are aggressive but not high pressure, have the desire and ability for a sales management career and have good character...CALL.

JOHN FLOWE 919-527-4155 (Kinston) Tues., Nov. 8,9 am-1 pm

or send resume to; JOHN FLOWE P.O. Box 12606 Raleigh, NC 27605





OLD FRIENDS Pioneer television puppets, the round-headed Kukla, center, and the single-toothed dragon Oliie, left, get together with their old friend Fran Allison in New York at

Support Group Is Organized For Ex-Wives Of Movieland Stars

By VERNON SCOTT L'PI Hollvwood Reporter HOLLWOOD (UPI) - A group of ex-wives of celebrities have formed L.A.D.I.E.S. - Life After Divorces is Eventually Sane - to establish new lives after their movie-TV star husbands dump them.

They are women marooned with shattered egos, kids to rear alone, empty social calendars and non-person status in a society that once catered to them.

Many are victims of their spouses desires for younger women.

So what sets them apart jilted wives the world

over'?

The fact that their husbands are famous, rich and powerful men, which sometimes makes the spurned wives figures of public ridicule, pity, contempt or all of the above.

TV Log

For comptol* TV progrtmmlng information, consult your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Rafloctor._

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

Most L.A.D.I.E.S. members maintain anonymity. A few are visible and outspoken.

Some of the founding members are Jackie Joseph, actress and former wife of actor Ken Berry; Marilyn Funt, ex of TVs Allen Funt; Patti (Mrs. Jerry) Lewis; Kay St. Germain, ex-wife of Jack Carson; Marion Segal, ex of George Segal, and Lynn (Mrs. Michael) Landon.

Others are Sondra Blake, former wife of Robert Blake; Billy Jean Campbell. ex-Mrs.

and

Patti

Mrs.

Glen Campbel MacLeod, formerly Gavin MacLeod.

The group was pulled together about a year ago after Marilyn Funt appeared on a cable TV show publicizing her book, Are You Anybody?,' the question commonly asked of celebrity wives by insensitive

GOREN BRIDGE

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IT CHARLES GOBER AMD OMAR SHARIF

OigB3 Tribune Company Syndlcata, Inc

Q.I.-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:

4AJ83 <;?Q109542 0AQ6 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1 Pass 1 ^ Pass 1

What do you bid now?

A.-A guiding principle of our bidding philosophy is that, with four-card support for partners suit, you should agree the trump suit immediately. Therefore, we are inclined to rule out "clever" bids like two diamonds or a jump shift to three diamonds (a distinct overbid). In sup port of spades your hand revalues to 18 points, and three spades describes it nicely.

Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

KJ8 ^K7 OKJ83 A1087

The bidding has proceeded: North    East    South    West

1 ^    Pass    2 NT    Pass

4 NT    Pass    ?

What action do you take?

A.-First of all, if you think that North is asking for aces, may we suggest you invest in one of the many excellent bidding texts on the market today. North has made a quantitative raise in no trump, asking you to bid a slam if you have a maximum two no trump response. Since that is exactly* what you have, you should be happy to advance to six no trump.

ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ

Q.3-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

A843 <79 OKQ10872 93

Partner opens the bidding with one no trump. What do you respond?

A.-The trouble with a jump to three diamonds is that, if partner rebids three no trump, you wont know what to do. To avoid the possibility of missing your 4 4 spade fit, start with a Btayman two clubs. No matter what partner does, you can follow up with three diamonds. That is forcing, and should allow you to get to your best spot.

Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you hold; >

Q87 <795 0AQ8 AJlOfiS

The bidding has proceeded: North East    South    West

1 4 Pass    2 4    Pass

2 <7 Pass    ?

What do you bid now?

A.-We would not fault you greatly if you jumped to three spades to show your good three-card support for partners first-bid major suit. However, you cant be sure that you should play in spades rather than no trump, and you cannot yet rule out the possibility of slam. The way to investigate while leaving open all possibilities is to make a temporizing bid of three diamonds.

Q.5Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:

QJ1097652 0 6 QJ107

What is your opening bid?

A.-You have a hand rich in offense, but with no defensive value whatsoever. You can expect to make eight tricks in your own hand, and by the Rule of Two and Three that qualjfies for an opening bid of four spades. Why not make the bid that describes your hand so accurately?

Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

84 7Q9S4 0AQ108 952 The bidding has proceeded: North    EmI    South West

1 7    Pass    2 7    Pass

2 NT    Pass    ?

What action do you take?

A.-You have to decide whether you should go on to game    with    your    holding.

Since you have a maximum raise, the answer is yes, but not at no trump. You have at least a combined eight-card holding in hearts, and you have a ruffing value in spades. Jump to four hearts.

peasants.

The question is ironic. If a womans identity depends on her status as the wife of a celebrity, she must find herself asking the same question once she becomes his ex-wife.

When a wife is dropped by a star its almost as if she died in some respects. She no longer- is seen at smart )arties, in fashionable )outiques or at industry banquets.

When other women are divorced by Iheir husbands, they can begin new lives without constant outside reminders of their marriages," said Jackie Joseph, one of the most outspoken of the L.A.D.I.E.S.

"If you were married to a star you try to change your life, but you turn on TV and see a re-run of your husband. You pick up a newspaper or a magazine and there he is with a girlfriend.

People who knew you as a couple, acquaintances or strangers, ask about your ex-husband even if they know youre divorced. They still like to make contact with someone who was once close to a celebrity.

American Products Forced To Adapt To Foreign TV Codes

the Museum of Broadcasting. Puppeteer Burr Tillstrom is holding seminars, there, displaying his puppetry, and showing tapes of some of the early programs. (AP Laserphoto)

ByFREDROTHENBERG APTelevitk Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - One sunshiny and savory Kelloggs (}(Hmflakes television commercial in the United States and Britain was reduced to an empty cereal bowl after other Eurq)ean countries attached assorted restrictions.

It was one example of how American advertising agencies selling abroad often must tailor their pitches to accommodate local customs and regulations.

A demonstration tape, compiled by the J. Walter Thompson ad agency, showed how, one by one, ingredients in its nutritionally effervescent cor-

DIAMONDFIND MOSCOW (AP) - Miners in the Yakutia Republic of eastern Siberia have found a 95-carat diamond of rare beauty, the official news agency Tass said Sunday.

When the average divorced woman hears her husband has remarried, thats the end of it. But we read quotes or hear him say on a talk show how he has at last found happiness. Or worse, how he is looking forward to being a good father with his new wife when you are rearing his other cWldren.

Jackie sai(l some ex-wives had to live with drunkenness, drug addicts or wife-beaters. Some husbands filed for bankruptcy after depositing their fortunes in Swiss banks.

Almost always the wife has to gear down her life, move from a mansion in Bel Air to a modest home in reduced circumstances.

You have to adjust to the loss of perks, Jackie said. You marry a struggling unknown and with success you get extras like limousines to the airport, free flights to New York to stay in elegant hotels. Free shrimp wherever you go is a nice little luxury .

You miss those things because they were fun and special. Like your house, however, they arent your marriage.

You also find you miss the parties, seeing the pictures of your family in publications. You miss visiting the wonderful homes of other celebrities and the admiration of the public.

Reading about your ex-husband with a pretty girl at exciting parties is something the average divorcee doesnt have to contend with.

The purpose of our group is to help each other over the rou^ spots. Were all supportive. We laugh a lot and there are tears, too.

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CITY

COUNCIL

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-France doesnt allow childroi to endiH-se products, so Uw kid wearing Kelloggs on h T-shirt would be out.

-In Austria, his brothers and sisters would have to leave because that nation forWda the use of children fw commercials. Advertisers in the Alps ^et around this by using midgets, provided theyre over 16 years of age.

-West Germany is sensitive about competitive claims, no matter how valid. There, the reference to "onlv Kelloggs makes "the best flakes would have to be pulled.

-In Belgium, the company can mention added vitamins, only if they had once been removed. So extra vitamins would have to be deleted. Hollands regulations on nutrients are more onerous, and the advertiser would have to knock out the reference to all vitamins and minerals there.

Whats left? Two adults twiddling their thumbs in the breakfast nook.

The fact that you have the technical capacity to transmit a message to everybody at once, said J. Walters Denis Lanigan, "does not mean that everybody will find that message equally persuasive, or interesting, or relevant, or, as a matter of fact, 1^1.

Lanigan is vice chairman and cMef operating officer for the worlds latest ad i^ency. With satelBte delivery and the U.S. commercial culture gaininj: greater international exposure, the message to Buy American has become garbled a bit when selling European.

Many broadcasting systems are state-controlled, ajxl these countries place more regulations on advertising than exist in the United States. In Holland, for example, candy commercials require the inclusion of a symbolic toothbrush on-screen, while Britain outlaws TV commercials for undertakers and bedding shops.

However, in the area of alcohol, cigarettes and nudity in commercials, the United States is more puritanical, Lanigan said.

Bare breasts are allowed in West Germany and Japan, and many countries permit on-air guling and puffing.

Federal law prohibits cigarette ads on American TV (pipe sm(dung is OK), and it doesnt allow scenes showing alcoholic cimsump-ti(m, althou^ the bottles can be displayed. Athletes selling alcoholic beverages cant be active players, which explains why those Lite Beer ads feature only former athletes.

Lanigan said the regulations in C!anada are similar to those in the United States, but Canadian drinkers can see their favorite labels, not their favorite bottles.

Meanwhile, Portugal allows ads for booze after 9:30 p.m. and Greece permits them in the first weri[ of the Greek Orthodox holy period, but not the

Personal taste also affects how American commercials have to be altered abroad. The campaigns least adaptable country to country are food products, said Lanigan. Theres great regional variations in eating

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But the induitry that prides itself on creating needs you never knew existed can find a way. In the United States, only white eg^ go into Kraft mayonnaise adi. In Eun^, the Kraft jars nestle only against brown eggs on TV.

European housewives universally prefer brown eggs and will pay a premium to get them, said Lanigan.

In many cases, inroducts can be sold the same way worldwide. Since 1925, Lux soap has been pitched beautiful women, m HoUai the current commercial features Jacqueline Bisset, in Sweden native Maud Adams is used, and in Thailand, its Brigitte Bardot.

Evidently, fantasy and wish-fulfillment are universal everywhere.

So a>arently is the erence for one cola over another., Lanigan said the blind taste test, the Pepsi Qiallenge, had identical results in the ei^t foreign countries sampled. Pepsi won each time.

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Concert Planned For Thursday

Small Business Workshop Set

Pitt Communty College will sponsor a How to Get Started in Your Own Small Business workshop.

Hie workshop will be from 6:30 to 10 p.m. Nov. 14 at the Willis building, Firet and Reade Streets.

Workshop panel leaders will be attorney Phil Dixon; businessconsultant C.l Harris; CPA Mike Joyner; banker Ray Rogers and insuranceman Rob Powell.

Pre-registration by phone is required by Nov. 9 at noon. There will be a charge for the workshop.

For further information call PCC Continuing Education Divisionat756-3130,Ext.253.

Quilters Guild Plans Events

The Greenville Quilters Guild, in conjunction with the Pitt County Tobacco Festival, will hold a quilt show Saturday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. and Nov. 13 from 1-5 p.m. at the Pitt County Fairgrounds Village of Yesteryear.

On Nov. 14 and 15, quilting seminars will be held at the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department Community Building, the Willis Building, and the Pitt County offices auditorium. There will be speakers from North Carolina, Iowa, Maryland and New York present.

Both events are co-sponsored by the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department, the Pitt County Agricultural

Town of Aydon, North Careiini Regular Municipal Election

November 8, 1983

INSTRUCTIONS

1. To vote for a candidate make a cross (X) mark in tti square to the left of the name.

2. If you tear, deface or wrongly mark this ballot, ratur it and get another.

FOR MAYOR

You May Vote For One (1) ROSS PERSINGER

BOBBY-J. WORTHINGTON

FOR COMMISSIONER 1st WARD

You May Vote For One (1)

O AARON HINES, JR.

^ EDNA BEDDARD JONES Q CARL L, SPEIGHT

FOR COMMISSIONER 2nd WARD

You May Vote tor One (1)

H WILLARD R. HALL

ROBERT G. HARRIS

FOR COMMISSIONER 3rd WARD

Yoit May Vote For One (1)

D JAMES A. BUTLER SUSAN W. MOODY

FOR COMMISSIONER 4th WARD

You May Vote For One (1)

Z1 M.C.(BEAR)BALDREE,JR.

FOR COMMISSIONER 5th WARD

You May Vote For One (I)

U J. J. BROWN

/

Municipal Elections November 8,1983

Steven H. Nobles, Chairman Municipal Board of Elections Town of Ayden, North Carolir

Is Your "    

Delivery Okay?

We take particular pride in the efficiency of our carriers who deliver the Doily Reflector to your home.

If the doily delivery of your Doily Reflector is less than satisfactory, please tell us about it. Coll our Circulation Department and we will do our best to work out the

problem.

752-3952

Between 8:30 A.M. and 6:30 P.M. Weekdays and 8 til 9 A.M. on SundaysIn The Area

The East Carolina University Saxaphone Quartet concert scheduled for tonight at 7:30 p.m. has been postponed to Thursday at 9 p.m. The program will be held in the ECU School of Music A.J. Fletcher Recital HaU and is free and open to the public.

Extension Service, Pitt Community College and the East Carolina University ^onal Development Institute.

For more infrarmation call Grace Karnes at 756-6874.

Survey Includes Area Households

The U.S. Bureau of the Census will cmduct its regular survey on employment and unemployment in this area during the week of Nov., 14-19, according to Joseph S. Harris, director of the bureaus Charlotte regional office.

Households in this area are part of the sample of 72,000 across the country selected to represent a cross section of all U.S. households.    .    /

The monthly survey is conducted for the U.S. Department of Labor and provides a continuous record of activity in the labor force.

The September survey indicated that of the 112.4 million men and women in the civilian labor force, 101.9 million were employed. The nations unemployment rate was 9.3 percent, down from the 9.5 percent reported in August.

Information supplied by individuals participating in the survey remains confidential by law and results are used only to compile statistical totals.

12,800 to the Hall car.

Police said cars driven by Katherine Lynn Byerly of 202 N. Elm St. and Arthur Scott Jr. of 301 Church St., collided about 6:26 p.m. on Greenville Boulevard, SO feet east of the Memorial Drive intersection, causing ^ damage to the Byerly car and $350 damage to the Scott auto.    ^

reported to the j^ieriffs Department that a man with a gun entered the store and demanded mimey. He left on foot, the clerk repented. Investigation is underway, the sheriff indicated.

ASPO Meeting Set For Jarvis

Pitt Democrats To Hear Yeargin

The Pitt County Democratic Executive Committee is sponsoring a dutch breakfast Nov. 16 at 7:30 a.m. at the Three Steers Restaurant.

The meeting will feature Billy Yeargin in a discussion of issues facing the states agricultural economy.

People wishing to attend the meeting should contact Katheryn Lewis, Pitt Democratic chairman, by Nov. 14.

Hydrant Pranks Concern GUC

A spokesman for the Greenville Utilities Commission today said someone over the weekend opened 12 fire hydrants in Uw veastm part of the city, and over the past several days, removed seven manhole coveres from streets.

John Ferrin, GUCs assistant director, said such actions can be costly and lead to heavy damage.

Ferrin said by taking manhole covers off, cars can run into the holes, causing heavy damage to vehicles.

He also said that in addition to the loss of water, open hydrants can cause severe erosion to yards and even to streets.

Ferrin asked that persons finding manhole covers missing or hydrants call the utilities commission and report it. He also asked that if anyone sees another person removing a manhole cover or turning on a hydrant report it to the po department.

A meeting in the ASPO Parents Speakers Series will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in Jarvis United Methodist Church parlor.

The topic will be The Selectiim ctf Toys and Boote Geared to the Developmental St

Interested persons are invii

;es of Infants and Children.

Agent Spoke At SNA Session

ice

Tim Nelson, an agent of the State Bureau $ Investigation, was the guest speaker at the second meeting of the year of tte Student Nurse Association held recently.

Nelson spoke on drug use and abuse within the medical profession.

The association is an affiliate of the National Student Nurse Association and includes 45 members. The next meeting will be held Nov. 14 and will be presented by Paulette Taylor, R.N., who will discuss dealing with test anxiety throu^ self hypnosis and relaxation.

Two Injured In Saturday Mishap

Cars driven by John Melvin Hobbs of Bethel and Annee Whitfield of Route 1, Winterville, collided about 8:20 p.m. Saturday at the intersection of Third and Cotanche Streets.

Police, who charged Hobbs with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety, set damage at $3,200 to the Hobbs car and $2,800 to the Whitfield auto.

Ms. Whitfield and a passenger in her car were reported injured in the collision.

School Sponsoring Book Fair

Wellcome Middle School is sponsoring a student boiric fair today through Thursday from 8:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the media center. Students will be able to browse and purchase books.

The book fair display will include new txx^ from major mblishers in all price ranges. It will include classics, fiction, )iographies, adventure stories, science, nature, crafts, mystery and reference books.

The book fair committee is working with Educational Reading Service, a professional bode fair company, to furnish an individual selection of books for the fair.

Proceeds will go to the schools media center.

Concert Planned For Thursday

Motorcyclist Hurt In Accident

"One person was reported injured and an estimated $5,150 damage resulted from three traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Sunday.

Officers said Steven Lee Potter of 318 East 10th St. was injured when the motorcycle he was riding fell over on him as he attempted to stop for traffic about 1:39 a.m. on Cotanche Street, 15 feet south of the Ninth Street intersection.

No damage resulted to the motorcycle, police said.

Cars driven by Timmie Ray Pittman of Route 1, Winterville, and Fred Garland Hall of 704 E. First St., collided about 8:10 p.m. on Evans Street, just South of the Reade Street intersection. '

Damage was estimated at $1,200 to the Pittman car and

The East Carolina University Saxaphone Quartet concert scheduled for tonight at 7:30 p.m. has been postponed to Thursday at 9 p.m. The program will be held in the ECU School of Music A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall and is free and open to the public.

Utilities Board To Meet Tuesday

The Board of Commissioners of the Greenville Utilities CommissiiMi will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the utilities building at the intersection of Fifth and Washington Streets.

Investigating Armed Robbery

The Quik Stop on the Stantonsburg Road east of Greenville was robbed Saturday about 10:45 p.m. of an undisclosed amount of money, according to Pitt Sheriff Ralph Tyson.

The store clerk, who was alone in the store at the time.

DUCHESS AUTHOR TO SPEAK - Suzanne Marie Adele Beauclerk, the Duchess of St. Albans, will be the guest speaker at a meeting of the Greenville Branch of the English Speaking Unin at the New Bern Golf and Country Club Saturday. She is the author of Magic of a Mystic: Stories of Padre Pio, recently published by Clarkson N. Potter, Inc., and of several other books. Reservations to attend the meeting are due no later than Wednesday by contacting Mrs. Margaret Nassef, 222 New St., Apt. 1, New Bern, N.C., 28560. (Photo by JilUan Hulton)

TOBACCO FESTIVAL KICK-OFF...The Sixth Annual Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival began Saturday with the annual cheerleading contest held at Carolina East Mall. The following squads were winners: junior varsity: first, J.H. Rose; second, D.H. Conley, third, E.B. Aycock; varsity, first,

Northern Nash; second, J.H. Rose; third, D.H. Conley. Upcoming festival events include the annual pipe smoking contest and the Tobacco Festival Scholarship Pageant Friday along with an antique car show and pig cook-off Saturday. (Reflector Photo By Tommy Forrest)

CLARK

CITY

COUNCIL

Paid For By Louis Clark

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C

Engagement Announced

JOSEPHINE ALMANZA SALAS.Js the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie C. Salas of Killeen, Tex., who announce her engagement to Denis Aloysius Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgare Lee Cox of Greenville. The wedding will take place late this month.

North Carolina Bride Had Family Wedding

By Abigail Van Buren

laea by Umv*fMl Prm SyrxliebW

DEAR ABBY: Thi U in response to the 58-year-old feminist who is enraged by the phrase, Who gives this woman in marriage?

I always wanted my father to walk me down the aisle, but I never particularly cared for the tradition of being "given away. Although I did not express my feelings about this, after my father walked me down the aisle, and the minister asked, Who gives this woman in marriage, my father said, With her mothers and my best wishes, she happily gives herself.

By the way, I had a real family wedding: My grandfather was the minister, and my grandmother was my matron of honor!

USANNE IN N.C.

DEAR LISANNE: Beautiful!

DEAR ABBY: Last week I read in your column a letter from a young woman who discovered that her mother had been having an affair with her husband. Believe it or not, I was happy to read it because I realized that I was not alone! My mother and husband had an ongoing affair for 16 years before I found out. It had been going on right under my nose and I never suspected a thing.

Its bwn a year now, and Im still struggling with the anger, bitterness and feelings of betrayal. Im seeing a counselor who is helping me deal with this. Until I read that letter in your column, I thought I was the only person in the world in such a bizarre situation.

Abby, you do such a great service by allowing people to tell their stories. So many times we feel were so alone that no one could possibly know what were going through and how we feel.

Now Im sure Im going to make it. Thanks for being there.

CUMBING BACK UP IN COLORADO SPRINGS

DEAR CLIMBING: Dont thank me; thats what Im here for. Please write again and let me know how youre doing. I care.

For Abbys updated, revised and expanded booklet, How to Be Popular for people of all ages send $2, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Ground spices are seldom at their btst after a year. Red pepper, chili papper, ]>aprika and bell pepper lakes lose quality in six months.

KEEL

FOR

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Paid For By Kaal For CHy Council

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Heres a clever set of Christinas (^kies -little 2 l/2'incn square ornaments to needlepoint in your spare moments. Or put the children to work on them they will love being a part of the holidav prq>arations and this will keep them quietly occupied while you are busy at other things.

If you happen to have scraps of 7-mesh plastic canvas and odds and ends of yam on hand and what needlepointer doesnt have drawers or boxes full of leftovers these can be free decorations!

To obtain directions for making the Christmas (Juickies, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-1106 with $1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler (The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.

Or you may order Kit No. N-1106 by sending a check or money order for 811.50 to Pat Trexler at the same address. The kit price includes shipping charges, instruction leaflet and sufficient materials for making up to 24 ornaments.

Dear Pat: Having enjoyed your needlework column for many years, I would now like to share an idea with your other readers. I have a frame for working my needlepoint but found it a little too big to hold. So I took an old TV tray table the kind with a snap-off tray and used the legs to hold my frame. I just tied the needlepoint frame onto it.

Also, in finishing off loose ends of yam, as I finish with a strand, 1 bring my needle up a few holes down from the last stitches made. As I work with the next strand, the old strand is covered as I stitch over it. Mrs. J.S., (Jermantown, Pa.

Another reader shares these directions for making a tiny knit toboggan that makes an adorable tree ornament.

Dear Pat: On a size 6 needle, cast on 20 stitches with white yam. Knit 8 rows in garter stitch. Change to red yarn and knit 8 more rows in garter stitch. On the 17th row, knit 2, knit 2 together, repeating these steps across the row. Continue to work even on the remaining stitches for the next 2 rows.

On the 20th row, knit 1, knit 2 together, repeating across the row as before. Knit 1 more row on the remaining stitches. Break off the yam, leaving a 12-inch tail and thread this back through the stitches. Pull tight and sew down the side until you reach the white cuff. Use white yarn to sew the seam in this section.

Make a small pompon

[

M fl

.NEED TO KNOW ROCHESTER, N Y. (AP) - Its a big jump from high school to college, and many college freshmen are likely to say 1 wish Id known that befw I came.

With this in mind, some University of Rochester freshmen were asked what they wished theyd known before coming to Rochester.

The biggest response, even among top students, was how to study or howto organize my time. Others cited lack of experience with large lecture classes, with

reading for a college course, and with note-taking.

One student advised high school students to take a college course at night or during the summer before entering college "to prepare you for being in a group of your intellectual equals.

Eastern

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and attach it to the top of

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I did a project this year of knitting one ornament each day, using directions

for vanous items 1 found in your column over the years, plus the above toboggans. I shared these with friends and with children in classes with my grandchildren. Since 1 am employed full time, it

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor COME FOR DESSERT Ice Cream Cake & Coffee ICE CREAM CAKE A luscious dessert recipe contributed by my friend Roslyn BeiUy.

2 thin 8-inch sponge cake layers 1 quart chocolate ice cream, softened 1 quart coffee ice cream, softened

?ound chocolate-coated

Hitter crunch, crushed into large crumbs 6Kxmce milk chocolate bar 1 cup heavy cream In the bottom of an 8-inch spring form pan, place a sponge cake layer. Spread with half the chocolate ice cream, then half the coffee ice cream; sprinkle with half the butter crunch crumbs. Repeat layers. Cover tightly with foil; store in freezer. Several hours before serving, melt chocolate; cool. Whip cream until stiff; fold in chocolate. Remove cake from freezer; with a small metal spatula, loosen edges; carefully remove side band. Place on serving platter and frost with chocolate-flavored whipped cream. Return to freezer without wrapping; just before serving, let stand briefly at room temperature. Cut with carving knife, dipped in hot water before each cut. Makes 12 servings.

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Old-time Pancakes Coffee

OLD-TIME PANCAKES The delightfully tender kind recently requested by a reader.

1 cup fork-stirred unbleached all-purpose flour

4 teaspoon baking powder 4 teaspoon baking soda h teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar

1 large egg

14 cups buttermilk

2 tablespoons butter, melted On wax paper stir together the

flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and sugar. In a deep medium-size bowl beat egg until thickened and lemon color; add buttermilk and butter and beat to blend. Add flour mixture; stir only until it is moistened. Drop

was sometimes quite a hassle, but I found it most rewarding. Dorothy T. Kinston, N.C.

(Pats Pointers: The Needlepoint Handbook by Pat Trexler has organized needlework instructions for easy crafting by beginners and veterans alike with a host of patterns to please every needlework enthusiast. To order this 200-page book, send $8.95 plus $l 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,)

With Your Own Personal Colort

Marcy Byrd

CWIMM COK 4 mmtntrn AnMnl iMut, For M Smvm

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1. Color analysis for wardrobe, cosmetics,

2. Personal fabric color packet for purse.

3. Personal beauty book.

hair color.

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Full Color Analysis4S,M Cosmetic Analysis Only-$1,M

By Appointment 756-4913 225 York Rd.; Greenville, N.C.

Gift Certificates Available

batter, by scant 4 cupfuls, onto a

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4

Give Her Junior Activewear Coordinates for Christmas

A. For juniors on the go all year long, a linen and cotton multi-striped sweater. S, M, L. $26. B. Red or royal polyester/cotton jersey knit top. S, M, L. Elastic waist pants with drawstring and back snap pocket. Redor royal polyester/cotton twill. S, M, L. Shirt, $24; Panti, $25. C. Give her these colorful coordinates. Royal, red or kelly polyester/cotton pullover. S, M, L. Royal, red or kelly polyester/cotton twill slacks. S, M, L. Multi-striped on white linen/cotton sweater. S, M, L. Shirt, $23; Slacks, $24; Sweater, $28.

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. - Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





24 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Monday, November 7,1983Black Doctor's Private Hbspital PartOfThe Past

By Karen Richardson The Tarboro Daily Southerner

TARBORO, N.C. (AP) -The beds are sheetless now and the once-sterile operating room is dusty. The times that forced Dr. Milton D. Quigless to build a hospital for black patients have passed and his hospital is closed.

Now a can of lard on the kitchen counter, plastic flowers on bedside tables and a pile of surgical instruments in the delivery room are the only physical reminders of the days when Quigless Clinic was a 25-bed hospital building with doctors, nurses and patients.

But there are the memories of Dr. Quigless, 78, of the days when black ptients died in their homes because there werent enough hos{M-tal beds for people of their color.

5th grade and stayed out for four years because he liked fishing better. When he went back, be attended a land grant college in Akorn, Miss., where adults could finish high school. Then he studied pre-med in Chicago.

Quigless went to Meharry Medical Collie in Nashville, Tenn., and interned in St. Louis.

Quigless planned to teach at Meharry for a year and save enough money to open an office. He had been to North Carolina once while playing trombone in a band.

and liked what he saw.

He visited a former classmate in Rocky Mount, who suggested that Tarboro would be a good place to open an office.

It sounds like tar and feathers to me," Quigless said he responded.

But Quigless visited the town. A black pharmacist persuaded him to open a practi^ immediately.

That was in 1936. There were 6,000 black residents, a pharmacist and no doctor, Quigless said. It looked good to me." he said.

He resigned his Nashville position and returned to Tarboro with $7 in his ppket, his possessions stuffed into a war^be trunk.

Homeless for a few weeks, a woman took him in as a boarder. He borrowed some money to open a practice in an old fish market where Quigless Clinic now stands.

The next 10 years were spent trying to get hospital privileges and treating patients as best he could in their homes. He tried to get some admitted to local hospitals.

His own hospital had an operating room. X-ray room, delivery room, womens ward, pediatric ward, nursery, kitchen, private rooms, and living quarters for the nurses. Much of the. equipment was military siuplus.

He started with four registered nurses, three aides, a cook and an orderly. A black doctor from Raleigh assisted with surgery.

Quigless hospital was open 15 years before white patients began coming, he said. When it closed I was

^ on black and wnites,hesaid.

Quigless practiced at the county hospital after he closed his facility. I couldnt have been treated better, he said.

But those early struggles to get those privileges are still fresh in his mind. Hes

describing them in a book hes wrina about his life.

I found a lot of good

KEiL

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

Pild For Ir KmI For CHy Council

people in Tarboro, he said. But I found a lot of judice,too.

LOUIS

CLARK

CITY

COUNCIL

Pld For By Loulo Clark

Introducing

DR. MILTON QUIGLESS

When I built this place it was badly needed, Quigless said in a recent interview. He borrowed money to build the hospital in 1947, after 10 years of frustration at watching black patients die at home because beds in the local hospital were always full.

Those 10 years also were frustrating for Quigless personally. Again and again he was denied privileges at the county hospital bwause of his color.

Segregation was strictly enforced." Quigless said. I had to do the best I could in the country. In the country. For ten years, ... I stood it for as long as I could."

In 1947 Quigless used $10,000 he had saved and borrowed $30,000 to build his two-story hospital.

"From the day I started it was filled up," he said.

The hospital was open until 10 years ago. when Quigless could no longer keep up with the changing rules and regulations of the Medical Care Commission.

"They told me I had to do this and do that, he said. "Gradually they choked me off.

Now, he practices on the bottom floor of the old Quigless Clinic. He works only four days a week because Of his age, he said, though he feels fine.

The good Lord takes care of fools and babies, he said.

Quigless, who grew up in Mississippi, said he knew at' age 8 or 9 that he wanted to be a doctor. I followed the local doctor around and peeked in his backdoor.

Quigless quit school in the

Taste that delivers

IN THE MONEY SAVING

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Closed-Circuit

Opportunities

WASHINGTON (AP) -Americans looking for business opportunities in overseas markets will get'an assist soon from the joint efforts of the federal government and a number of private firms and non-profit organizations.

A nationwide, closed-circuit TV videoconference will be held in 50 cities in 30 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, to provide information on federal programs available to help U.S. firms in investing, exporting, marketing or contracting overseas.

The videoconference, which originates from here Nov. 16. is designed to explain exactly how American companies' can And and use the various services and programs of the government to compete effectively in overseas markets. During the program, business executives will have the opportunity not only to hear but to ask questions of hi^-rankii^ government officials in charge of the various federal agencies dealing with overseas trade, exporting and investment.

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i





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.    Monday,    November    7,1983

Stock And Market Reports

By The Associated Press Hogs RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDAl - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today, was steady to mostly 50 cents lower. Kinston 38, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 38.25., Wilson 38, Salisbury 36.50, Rowland 38, Spiveys Comer 38. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 32, Fayetteville 32, Whiteville unreported, Wallace 32, Spiveys Comer unreported, Rowland 32, Durham 31.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 49.75 cents, based on full tmck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 22 to 3 pound birds. 93 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weighted average of 50.76 cents f.o.b. dodt or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate, instances light for a moderate to mostly good demand. Weights desirable to heavy. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was 1,370,000, compared to 1,616,000 last Monday. /

NEW YORK (AP)-Stock prices were mixed today amid lingering interest-rate uncertainties.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off more than 2 points in the early going, was up .21 at 1,218.50 by noontime.

Losers held a 4-3 lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Over the last four weeks, the Dow Jones industrial average has dropped almost 54 points.

Chrysler rose Vk to 27^ in

.MONDAY 7:30 p.m. Sweet Adelines, Eastern Chapters meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg.

8:00 p.m. Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose

TUESDAY 7:00 a m. Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m. - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m. Down East Chapter of Painting and Decorating Contractors of America meet at Three Steers

7:00    p.m.    -    Family    Support

Group at Family Practice Center 7:30 p.m Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immaneul Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Toughlove rarents support group    at St.    Pauls

Episcopal Church 7:30    p.m.        Vernon    Howard

Success Without Stress study group at HON. Warren St.

7:30    p.m.    -    United    Ostomy

Association, Greenville Chapter meets at conference room 124, Gaskins-Leslie Center, Pitt Memorial Hospital 8:00 p.m. - Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. Big Book Group of AA has closed meeting at St. James United Methodist Church 8:00 p.m. - Withla Council.Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club

8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy

8:00 p.m. - Exceptional Children s Advisory Committee meets at Greenville City Schools Administrative Office

KEEL

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

Paid For By KnI For City Council

active trading. Workers at a Chrysler plant in Twinsburg, (^0, vo^ to end a strike that had halted car production at the company.

The NYSEs composite in^ drow)ed .17 to 93.60. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down .22 at 213.19.

Volume on the Big Board came to 29.28 million shares at noontime, against 36.03 million at the same point Friday.

NEW YORK (AP) -J

AMR Carp AbbtiUte AlUi Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBranda Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer TAT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boiae Cased Bordoi Burbwt Ind CSXu) s CaraPwLt Celaneae Cent Soya Champ lot Chrysler CocaCoU Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl DowChon duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Eamark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt

FordMi

Fuqua

GTEC

Corp

ct s

Gen Food Gen Mills G Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNorNek Greyhound Guif OU Herculeslnc Honeywell HoaptCp s log Rand BM

Intl Harv Int Paper IntRecuf s Int TAT Kmart KaiarAlum Kane MUI KanebSvc KrogerCo LoShed s Loews Corp Masonite McOrmlot n McKesson Mead Corp

MinnMM

MobU

Monsanto

NCNBCp

NabiscoBrd

Nat DutUl

NorflkSou

OlinCp

OwenJU

Penney JC

Pepsi(^

PhMps Dod

PhilipMorr

Phill^Pet

Ptdaroid

ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

RCA

RalstnPur RepubAir Re^UcSU Revlon Re^dlnd Rockwl s StR^gisCp Scott Paper SearsRo) Shaklee s Skyline Cp Sony Corp Souttiem Co

StdOUInd StdOUOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix 8 Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

Midday stocks: High    Low    Last

   34    34^4

494*    49    49

I6V4    I8V4

414*    41    41

14    14    14

554*    5544    554.

454*    45>*    454

514    514    514*

214*    214,    214

74*    74    74

344*    344,    344,

614*    614    614

304    3044    3044

234    234    234

394    39    39

39    384    39

554    554    554

354    354    354

244    244    244

244    244    244

774    77    77

144    14^4    144

234    234    234

274    264    27

534    53    534

234    234    234

284    284    284

314    31    314

50    494    494

384    384    384

334    334    334

51    504    504

254    254    254

54    54    54

674    67    674

484    484    484

814    81    81

384    38

214    21

414    404    41

224    214    22

634    634    634

264    254    254

47    46^4    464

554*    554    554

514    514    514

514    51    51

524    524    524

764    764    764

35^4    354*    354

434    434    434

234    23    234

30^4    304    3(P4

324    324    324

45    45    45

514    514    51'4

214    214    214

44    434    434

38    374    38

1224    1224    1224

384    384    384

454    454    454

1224 122    1224

124    124    124

484    484    484

214    21    214

414    414    414

364    354    364

194    194    194

194    194    194

164    16    16

344    34    344

394    394

166 166 166 424    424    424

234    234    234

414    41    414

364    364    364

84    834    834

29V4    294    294

1064 1054 106 234    234    234

44    434    431,

254    254    254

65    644    644

284    284    284

334    324    324

584    58    584

364    364    364

234    234    234

674    66^4    66I4

344    344    344

344    344    344

554    55    554

594    59    59

34I4    344    344

254    254    254

34    34    34

254    254    254

324    32    324

584    584    584

294    284    294

334    334    334

284    284    284

39    384    39

214    214

164    16    164

144    144    144

164    164    16^4

414    424

38

214

22

43

35

OPEN CONSULTATION -Former President Jimmy Carter and former President Gerald Ford follow a question during a press conference on Sunday in Atlanta during a

consultation on the Middle East. The consultation is the inaugural project of the Carter Center at Emory Univ. and will run through Nov. 9. (AP Laserphoto)

Strong Aftershock Hits Central Idaho

354    35

484    484    484

494    49    49

I8V4    184    18>.

774    774    774

354    354    354

604    604    604

14V    144    144

75    74    744

634    63    63

154    154    154

264    264    264

29I4    294    29^.

454    444    441.

404    39^4    39,

474    474    474

324    324    324

30^4    304    30<2

354    344    354

514    514    514

464    464    464

Following are selected 11 a.m. stock market quotations:

Ashland prC......................................394

Burroughs.........................................474

Carolina Power A Light. ...............244

CoUinaAAiknaan................................384

Conner...................................... 164

Duke.................................................254

Eaton................................................484

Eckerds................................ 274

Exxon...............................................384

Fiddcreat...........................................36

Hatteraa...........................................154

HUtoo...............................................544

Jefferson......................... 36

Deere................................................374

Lowes..............................................224

McDonalds.......................................694

McGraw............................................374

Piedmont.............................................3i

Pizia Inn...........................................144

PAG........................... 554

TRW, Inc..........................................774

United Tel.........................................234

Dominion Resources..........................234

Wachovia..........................................444

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation........................................16-164

Branch.......................................25'4-254

UttleMint........................................4-4

Planters Bank............................184-194

The Community Appearance Commission of the City of Greenville meets the first Thursday of every other month at the Public Works Facility at 12:00 noon.

CHALLIS, Idaho (AP) -The strongest aftershock in a week has hit this central Idaho town, the site of a major earthquake that killed two schoolchildren and caused millions of dollars worth of damage 10 days ago.

The aftershock, termed small to moderate, registered 4.5 on the Richter scale and occurred at 2:04 p.m.

Investigating Gunshot Death

The Pitt County Sheriffs Department is investigating a gunshot death which occurred Saturday evening in the St. Johns community near Grifton, Sheriff Ralph Tyson reported.

Tyson said Alton Barfield, 34, of 807 East Avenue, Ayden, was reportedly killed by a gunshot wound to the chest some time before 8:25 ).m. He said no arrests have leen made.

Possession Count

Robert Allen Bland, 33, of Richmond, Va., was charged with possession of marijuana following a 2:51 a.m. incident on Charles Boulevard Sunday.

Officer D.R. Best said Bland was charged when investigators found marijuana in the Bland car after the vehicle was stopped for a traffic check.

Man Arrested

Greenville police arrested Christopher John Flynn, 17, of 442 W, Third St. on shoplifting charges Sunday following a 12:45 p.m. incident at the Fuel Dock at the intersection of Fifth Street and Memorial Drive.

Officers said Flynn allegedly took a bar of candy from the firm.

Sunday, said Dr. Robert Smith of the University of Utah Seismology Center in Salt Lake City.

Its epicenter was the same as that of the Oct. 28 quake, which measured 6.9 on the Richter scale.

The area has been hit by

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Sunday, computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 67. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 67 percent of your hot water nee^.

waves of aftershocks since the major tremor, and aftershock of magnitude 5.5 and 5.1 were measured the day after the quake. Smith said.

Custer County sheriffs dispatcher Sylvia Markley said there were no reports of damage or injury from Sundays aftershock.

I guess people are getting used to it, she said. I. definitely could feel it, but it didnt shake anything off the shelves or make anything sway.

The Richter scale is a measure of ground motion as recorded on seismographs; every increase of one number means a tenfold increase in magnitude. An earthquake of 4 on the Richter scale can cause moderate damage in the local area; a 7 reading is a major earthquake, capable of widespread heavy damage.

(Continued from Pagel)

embroiled in controversy since President Reagan fired three of its six members last month.

Authority for the panel technically expired Sept. 30. A move led by Sens. Arlen Specter, R-Pi., and Joseph Biden, D-Del., to restructure the commission as a con-gressionally appointed body has already gained 54 Senate sponsors.

Also pending action in the Senate is a House-passed measure that would require American forces to be withdrawn from Grenada by Dec. 24 unless Congress allows them to stay longer. But the Senates Republican leadership is expected to sit on the bill and postpone a vote, in light of the administrations reported plans to begin withdrawing troops within the next few days.

In other congressional action:

-The House on Wednesday is expected to take up legislation designed to help hold down local telephone rates

by prhobibiting the Federal Communications Commission from imposing a $2 month access charge on consumers. The FCC wants to impose such a fee to replace subsidies for local telephone service that are now collected through longdistance rates.

-The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee is expected to vote to recommend the confirmation of William P. Clark as interior secretary, filling the vacancy created with the resignation of James G. Watt. The full Senate is expected to follow suit.

-Senate action may come on a $11.8 billion measure providing funds for the Treasury Department, the Postal Service and various other agencies, legislation that could touch off another fight on abortions. The House-passed measure bars the use of federal health employee benefits to pay for abortions.

Obituary Column

Congress Returns..,

Barfield

Mr. AltiHi Barfield of 807 East Avenue, Ayden, died Saturday. He was the husband of Mrs. Nancy Lee Jackson Barfield of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home.

Beaman

FARMVILLE - Mr. Claude Kitchen Beaman, 74, of Wilson, died Sunday in University Nursing Center, Greenville,

Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Church Street Chapel of Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Joseph Lehmann. Interment will follow in the Walstonburg Cemetery in Walstonburg.

Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Lee Holloman of Walstonburg, Mrs. Annie Laura Wooten of Farmville, and Mrs. Minnie Jordan of Wilson; and one brother, Charles Beaman of Wilson.

The family will receive friends at Farmville Funeral Home tonight from 7-9.

Corbett

Mrs. Genevieve J, Corbett, 51, of 1327 N Avenue, Newcastle, Ind., died today at her home. The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the N Avenue Church of God. Burial will be in South Mound Cemetery.

Mrs. Corbett lived in Greenville briefly.

Surviving are her husband, the Rev. Loyd Corbett; a daughter, Anna Corbett of Waynesville, Ohio; her father, David Jones of Hemingway, S.C.; two sisters, Joan Lipscomb of Marlboro Heights, Md. and Rachael Freeman of Arlington, Va.; a brother, Larry Jones of Landover, Md.

Family visitation will be from 3-9 p.m. Tuesday at Main and Frame Funeral Home, 2011 E. Broad St., Newcastle, Ind. Memorial contributions may be made to the Genevieve Corbett Scholarship Fund of Lee College.

Bazaar Planned

FARMVILLE - The First Christian Church of Farmville will have a bazaar and barbecue chicken lunch Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

A bake shop, garden shop, and country store will be among the attractions. Proceeds will be used to build a ramp at the church.

Ushers Meeting

City Union Ushers will have its meeting tonight at 7:30 at Phillippi Christian Church.

Holland

FOUNTAIN-Mr. William James CiHirtney Holland, 36, of Fountain, died Saturday.

Private services were conducted today at 3 p.m. from the Jefferson Family Cemetery near Fountain by the Rev. William N. (}ordon.

Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony D, Holland of Fountain; and a sister, Lillian Kate Holland of Vancouver, Canada.

In lieu of flowers, memori-als may be made to Farmville Presbyterian Church or Fountain Presbyterian Church.

Phillips

Mr. Wilbert Phillips died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Acolia Nobles Phillips . Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott and Company 'Funeral Home.

Stepp

Mr. Heber Stepp, 76, retired painting contractor, died Sunday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was a resident of Route 2, Greenville.

The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Cedric Pierce. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

He was a native and e-l(xw resident of Greenville and Pitt Clounty and was a painting contractor until his retirement in 1971. He was a member of Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ruby Adams Stepp; a daughter, Mrs. Cathy S. Corbett of Winterville; his mother, Mrs. Nannie Stepps of Greenville; four sisters, Mrs. Pattie Giliken of Grand Prairie, Texas, Mrs. Kathleen Williams and Mrs. Lillian Mayers, both of Modesta, Ca. and Mrs. Ann Melvin of Greenville; and one granddaughter..

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

Tune-Ups - Jobs Genefiil Rep,ms

Auto Specialty Co.

9)7 W 517, SI

758-1131

Card of Thanks

The family of the late Julia Council would like to thank God for friends like each of you, having been so kind and thoughtful in your prayers, your visits and every act of kindness shown during the illness and passing of their loved one.

May God forever bless and keep each of you.

The Council and Yarrell Families

LOUIS

CLARK

CITY

Paid For By Loult Clark

County of Pitt City of Graanville

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO NAME A STREET

The Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Greenville will hold a public hearing to consider naming a right-of-way as shown in Map Book 4, Page 75; Map Book 20, Page 150, Map Book 21, Page 115; Map Book 23, Page 15; and Map Book 29, Page 43. The unnamed right-of-way has been dedicated, but the street has never been constructed. The public hearing has been scheduled for Tuesday, November 15,1983 at 6:00 p.m. in the Council Chambers of tf\e Municipal Building located at the corner of Fifth and Washington Streets to consider naming the above-mentioned right-of-way Dexter Street.

During this public hearing any suggestions or objections will be duly considered by the Commission.

November 7, 14,1983

Planning Office

CLIFFS 0 Seafood House and Oyster Bar'

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

 Mon. thru Thurs. Night

Poprn 5 95

Shrimp  L

-Takeouts Welcome-

{

We May Save You $200 A Year On Your Auto Liability Insurance If You Have A DWI Or Equivalent In Insurance Points.

Call Day Or Night;

Edwail Stokes lesiiraiice Agency

405 Now Circle Drive Ayden, N.C. 746-3301

4Nll

PITT COMMUNITY SINGERS

7:30 pm Tuesday, November 8 and 15 at Pitt Community College Whichard Building ROOM 105

Recreational Singing for the FUN of it!

Everyone is invited.

.FACULTY Pitt/Greenville STUDENTS> RESIDENTS VISITORS

An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer

Attention Greenville Citizens:

County of Pitt City of Greenville

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Technical Electronics and Maintenance Inc. whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under section 32-62 (f) of the City Code in order to operate an electronic maintenance service at 1401 South Charles Street. The property Is zoned Neighborhood Commercial.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, November 17,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Byilding.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Curtis David Bullock whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under section 32-32(J) of the City Code in order to locate a mobile home at 115 West Jackson Avenue. The property is zoned RA-20.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, November 17,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

November 7,1983 November 14,1983

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Coin & Ring Man of Key Sales Company whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special .use permit under section 32-53C(a) of the City Code in order to add a pawn service to the existing business at 400 Evans Street Mali

The time, date, and place of the public'hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, November 17,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Phillip K. Flowers d/b/a Economy Storage Warehouse whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under section 32-65(0) of the City Code in order to provide residential quarters for a resident manager in a mini storage facility at 201 Farmer Street. The property is zoned Highway Commercial.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, November 17,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment upon a request by Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under section 32-50(3) of the City Code In order to have a fraternity house at 510 East Tenth Street.

The time, pate, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, November 17,1083, In the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

Lois D. Worthington City Clerk





Aver Dumps Threaten Pure Water

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) - A report warning that toxic chemical sites might be polluting North Carolina groundwater is the most non-professional thing Ive ever seen put out," a state official says.

The report, prepared by Donald Huisingh of N.C. State University and Janet R. Hatley of Louisburg College, says about 2,000 toxic clmical sites are so close to the states water supplies that they are or may be contaminating our groundwater

Funded by the state and based on information provided by state agencies, the report uses nine maps, three appendices and three tables to support its contention.

The researchers plotted the locations of 260 North Carolina towns whose 477,000 residents are dependent on underground reservoirs. They then showed how near the towns are to what they called known or possible sources of pollution including landfills, chemical spill sites, waste lagoons, pesticide container dumps and abandoned hazardous waste sites.

But O.W. Strickland, director of the state Division of Health Services solid and hazardous waste branch, said the report was the most non-professional thing Ive ever seen put out

He said maps in the document have a small scale that could give laymen a distorted impression of the dis-tance between public groundwater sources and existing sanitary landfills.

To my knowledge, only . one public water supply well (in Brunswick County) is anywhere near a landfill, Strickland said. "That well was put in after the landfill. And Im not saying that is too near.

Huisingh responded: We arent saying any of them are presently contaminating municipal water supplies.' Were saying: Here are problem areas, or potential problem areas.

The report listed previously identified potential hazardous waste problems, including:

- 70 sites identified this year by regional hydrologists, including places where groundwater )ollution is said likely )ecause of spills, buried chemicals or other reasons.

- 657 pits, ponds and lagoons that cntain agricultural, industrial, mining and municipal wastes.

- 124 applications to bury )esticides in conventional andfills evaluated - and in most cases permitted - by the state between June 1974 and May 1977. Such burials are now prohibited.

- About 150 sanitary landfills now operating with state approval.

- 627 abandoned hazardous waste sites listed in government surveys that the report calls very imprecise.

- More than 350 open dumps for pesticide containers, as recorded in, a 1981-82 state survey.

Complexities In Any Forecast

ROCHESTER. N.Y. (API - The computer revolution will have enormous impact on our way of life, but it is impossible to predict or control what those changes will be because society is too complex, says a University of Rochester professor.

rhe best thing to do is accept and adapt to whatever comes, says William H. Riker, a professor of political science.

That includes facing more unemployment in some fields as cheaper imports are favored and some workers are replaced by machines, he notes.

Still, new jobs will be created, he says, "and we probably will have less unemployment than we did 100 years ago in a farm society that was based on seasonal labor.

LEFTIST DEFEAT PARIS (AP) - Opposition forces defeated canaidates of the Socialist-Communist alliance in two municipal elections in Paris suburbs, continuing a string of local defeats for the left.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville N C

Monday. November 7.1983    7

Carolina east mall k^greenville

TUESDAY

ONLY!

election

dayi

sate

Entire Stock of Boys Suits and Sport Coats Up to a Big *24 off!

Mens and Boys LEVIS Jeans for Fun Casual Wear

20%

Values up to $120

12.99

Off

Citation Crystal Clear Libbey Stemware

4.88

Reg. 6.09 to 6.39

Sparkling glass crystal stemware that reflects good taste. Lovely parfaits, pilsners, wine and champagne glasses, goblets, graceful bowls and much more. Rimmed edges prevents chipping. Terrific buys for you!

Entire stock of all boys suits and sport coats by Gant, Andhurst and more on sale! Wool and polyester/wool 3-pc. and 2-pc. suits, plus sport coats. Blue, green, gray, tan and more. Sizes 8 to 20. Shop early!

Low-priced Levis jeans for him! Boot cut or straight leg. Denim and corduroy. Sizes 8 to 20, 27 to 42.

iU'f--

/ /7

SJJ! f\

Large Group of Boys Andhurst Oxford Dress Shirts at *3 Off!

v->

O

Av

%

Regular 13.00 ..

9.88

Large variety of long sleeve dress shirts from Andhurst of polyester/cotton. Solids or stripes. Button-down collar. Blue, yellow, ecru, green, red ana lavender. Sizes 8 to 20. Shop early!

Save *5 on Mens Arrow Long Sleeve Oxford Shirts!

Regular

21.00..

15.99

Button-down collar, long sleeve polyester/cotton oxford cloth shirts by Mrrow. White, blue and ecru. Sizes 14V2 t 17V2 neck, sleeve length, 32 to 35.

Mens London Fog^ Nylon Jackets at a Big *12 Savings!

29.99

Regular $42

Water resistant zip front rain jackets of 100% nylon. Elastic waistband, full zipper front, 2 front pockets. Yellow, sand, navy and beige. Sizes 36 to 46.

/

Club Aluminum Cookware Up to a Terrific Red-Hot *31 Savings Just For You!

50%

Regular $29 to $63

Off

Durable Club cast aluminum with DuPont approved SilverStone non-stick surface for the serious good cook. Almond exterior color. Variety of saucepans and fry pans.

Save *4 on Hokey Carpet Cleaner!

Hokey 24S'model. Non-electric.    00

One year warranty. Beg. 29.95...................w w

Mangum Glass Stemware on Sale!

Three styles. 6 glasses with    QQ

one monogram. Regular 12.99;....................Ueww

Kamenstein 5-pc. Cookware Set

"Vienna" 5-pc. serverware set.    OO 00

Casseroles, more. Reg. $125........ .......... U w w 9

All of Pfaltzgraff Dinnerware

Entire stock! Four styles of    \/e%

stoneware. Reg. 2.50 to $160.......   /3    Off

Mens Multi-Purpose Oxford Shoes

"SkidGrip by Converse-^ White    M    C    00

oxfords. Sizes 7-12. Reg. $19................... I

Mens Bass Weejuns 26 Off!

Leather upper and sole. Tan,    QO 00

black, cordovan. Sizes 7V2-13. Reg. $66..........O w 9 w

Sale! Mens Haggar Plaid Slacks

100% polyester. Red, green    A/e\

tartan. Sizes 32-40. Reg. $30........................ /2    Off

Mens Jogging Suits at M5 Off!

Solids with stripe. Burgundy,    QO Qfl

blue, navy. S-XL. Reg. $55.....................w9aOO

Mens Jockey Briefs, T-Shirts

100% combed cotton. White.    00    0/.

S-XL Regular 9.75 to 13.75...................L\3    /O    OH

Boys Knit Shirts by Andhurst

Polyester/cotton. Stripes. Sizes    O    Qfi

8 to 20. Regular 11.00............................ OeOO

Save *35 on Mens Handsome Haggar Sport Coats!

59.99

Regular $95

Polyester/ wool sport coats in tic weaves or herringbone. Fall fashion colors. Flap pockets, center vent. Sizes 38 to 46, reg., long.

Save Up to *20 on Maleck Wood Pantryware! Lovely Wood Giftware!

R9. $18 to $60.

25%

Off

Choose from wooden gifts with ceramic medallion that coordinate with Pfaltzgraff insignia. Includes bread boxes, towel holders, napkin caddy, canister set and recipe boxes of pine wood. Wonderful gifts!

Entire Stock of Quality Pyrex and Corningware Bakeware Up to *19 Off!

25%

Off

Regular 3.99 to 79.99

Microwave oven safe, dishwasher safe items. Corningware comes with a full 10-year warranty. Choose from a variety of patterns, colors and sizes in bakeware, casseroles and serverware.

'Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756-BE-L-K (756-2355)





077 Musical Imtrumtnti

iZXj ^ft AlI. opy of ibon

Ma*trton. 7M 344*af1*r

eSM^LtrtLY RESTORtO an tlgua plano. Muat Mil (SOO or maka offtr 757-3624 attarSp

FOR SALE-

SpInat-ConMta Plana Bargain VVantad Retponilble parly lo take ovar low nnonthly (Mymantt on plnat plano. Can be Man locally *rlfa Cradif Managar: PO Bo* 914,

Nawail, NC 28IM._

POR SAL! Three Ooarfar Violn Excellent condition |17$ Phone 753 5732 or 753 334

PIANO a OOAN blSTRIBUTORS Super Sale! Kimball piano. Sl.lU yamaha Organ, 2 keyboard and pedal*. *999 Free letion, bench, and dellveryl 329 Arlington Boulevard, 355 002

012 LOST AND FOUND

LOST AAACCLET with red and white tone*, S300 reward. Call 75 H17.

LOSY: long haired Calico cat, black, orange and white, in vicinity of Ah Street and 4th Street 758 30(2

LOST: Tan/black German Shep herd Ayden area. Anjweri to Joe Reward offered 75 3475 before 2 p m

LOST; 1 year old female Siberian Husky in Griffon, Thursday around n a.m. Black and white with brown

eyes, wearing blue collar with Greenville address, rabies tag Reward offered If you have seen or heard anything about her please call collect 524 544, Gary or Tracy Very much loved by family

093 OPPORTUNITY

business for sale. Grocery

and Mrvlce station All stock and equipment Asking S20.000 negotia ble Call anytime 1 747 3918, except Wednesdays 1 747 8590

fertilizer ANirit'AROWARE business for sale Complete farm supply Established 21 years Owner deceased, family has other interests Call 758 0702

GREENVILLE AREA businesses for sale Wholesale Nursery serv ing ten routes Beautiful Needle point Shop Two Fast Food Restau rants TV Sales and Service Card and Git,t Shop S.andwich Shop and others Snowden Associates. Brokers. 401 W First Street 752 3575

list or. buy your business with C J Harris A Co , Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, NC 757 0001. nights 753 4015

109 Houws For Salt

COUNTRY HOME Ra5y Branch araa. 4 badroomt, 2'/ bath*. Ap proximataly 2,900 tquara iMt of living araa, plu* 7(3 squara laat garaga. 3 79 acra* of land. Raducad S(,m Bill William* Raal E*tata, 752 2I5

EASTERN STREET - 3 badrooms. i bath, tireplaca Good *tartar home. Mint condition, *42,500 Spalght Re alty 7S6 3220, night* 758 7741

FR PRIVACY - at an affordabla prical Large 2 story brick home, 2.85 square fMt Approximately mile* from hospital 2.3 acres. Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 badrooms, 2W baths, carport, patio 1,120 square foot workshop Assumable 8% first mortgage Call 756 7111.

FOR SALE by owner, 12Si FHA assumption. Lake Glanwood (15,000 equity, current payment $512 PITI. $70.000 Ervin Gray, 1 524 4148.

HOMeplACE in fountain by

owner. 8 spacious rooms. P'Y baths, 3 fireplaces, screened porch, garage and storage area. 20 minute* from PCMH $35,000 749 1371,749 43l or 757 630

HOUSE FOR SALE by owner In Ayden, NC. Good loan assumption low equity. 74 3040

MOVE OUT OF your home to Lynndale The owner would possibly buy your present home *t that you could move into his. If interested. Call Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc 756 1322

NEW CONSTRUCTION Price re

duced on this Traditional that features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, don with fireplace, dining area, and over 1,500 square feet on large lot $62.500 Lots of extras Better hurry on this one! Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302

OWNERS ARE MOVING from USA and must sell 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den. fireplace, fenced backyard and patio 11'2% assumable mortgage 107 Aialea Drive. 756 8281 or 752 4844

PERFECT IN every way is this 3 bedroom home with great room for only $65.500 Call Jeannette Cox Agency. Inc 756 1322

PRICE REOUCEOI Eastwood

$13,500 assumes 11'-a% loan with

Cayments of $545 PITI 3 bedroom, 2 ath brick ranch that feature*

living room, dining area, den with fireplace, large deck $61,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates

756 6810, nights Al Baldwin, 756 7836

REDUCED! University area Formal areas, glassed side and back porches 2 or 3 bedrooms, plus attic could be converted into apartment $55,000 Calt Jeanette Cox Agency, Inc 756 1 322

09S PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville HOME NURSING C^rTAaTabie Experienced RNs, LPNs, and | Aictes RN Supervision 24 hours a | day Call Medical Staffing Services I 523 4473    I

)00 REAL ESTATE I

WATER ACCESS lO miles from: Aurora 'j acre i^ith 1974 I2x70| mobile home storage building and' private boat dock included Prime i area lor fishing and hunting $16.500 Call 1 322 4428 days. I 322 I 4795 evenings    '

102 Commercial Property

FOR SALE 5,000 square loot commercial building in Ihe downtown area Currently leases lor $1400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tmton A Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302 4500 FOOT o7Ti~bui1di'ng'~ar3205 Sooth Memorial Drive. Greenville" NC Excellent location Expansion room Remodel to retail, $195.000 Call Carlton Taylor at 756 5991

104 Condominiums For Sale

TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per

centage rate loan Attractive 3 bedroom. Pa bath brick ranch with carport Located on woodsy lot near university Living room/dining room, eat in kitchen, custom storm windows and doors, new furnace, (r>o air conditioning) Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square feet heated area Take over approx imalely $33,500 for 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 of $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 evening* No agents

wTlLIAMSBURG Cherry Oak* Big yard, economy efficient, 3 bedrooms, 2' a baths Assume 1st and 2nd mortgages with $10.000 cash or refinance and owner will carry 2nd Phone 756 8073

2509 JEFFERSON 3 bedroom*. 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop 16x36 plu* shed and shelter 1677 square feet of living area Bill Williams Real Estate. 752 2615

QUAIL RIDGE

condominium with three bedrooms and 2'a baths Great room with fireplace dinmg room deck Excellent loan assumption $63.500 Duffus Realty, Inc , 756 5 395

3 BEDROOMS, Pa baths, carport Nice yard Assumable FmHA loan Woodstove Low $40 s 756 5516 after

5 30p m

6 ROOM HOUSE to be moved Fair

condition Close to Greenville Call 756 0461,

IM Farms For Sale

111 Investment Property

ATTENTION INVESTORS:    1488

square foot condominium, currently leased for $450 a month $54.500 Call for details days 756 6810, after 5 and weekends 756 7273

101 ACRE FARM 36 acres woodsland, 65 acres cleared 13,824' pourtds of 1983 tobacco allotment 5850 pounds 1983 peanut allotment | plu* corn allotment SR 1538^ in Pitt j Co Contact Aldridge A Southerland Realty 756 3500

107

Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT tobacco; pourtdage and farm land in Pitt: County 756 4634

109

Houses For Sale

INVESTMENT PROPERTY Griffon, N C

7 brick rental houses from 900 square feet, 2 bedroom*. 1 bath to 1400 square feet, 2 baths with garages These houses are being sold to settle an estate They are in excellent condition with $15.000 per year rental income Some reason able owner financing available

W.G. Blourrt & Associates

756 3000

Evenings975 3179

A STEAL for the family that wants to be outside the city on almost an acre of land 4 bedrooms, formal areas, den and Florida room Nice ly landscaped and plenty ot trees It's only $89.000 So much lor so little Call Jeannette Cox Agency Inc 756 1322

By owner. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road 1900 square feet 3 bedrooms 2 baths, fireplace, lot Size negotiable By appointment, R H McLawhorn, 756 2750 or 975 2688

$35.000 - 3 bedroom house with upstairs apartment Total rent $420 per month Good investment pro perty Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates. 756 6810

115

Lots For Sale

APPROXIAAATELY 's ACRE in

country Located near D H Conley $5 500 Phone 758 7709

BY OWNER CUSTOM built two story contemporary 3 bedrooms. 2'7 baths, cedar siding, Jenn Aire range, central vacuum, many other extras Nice country location, 10 minutes from hospital $65,000 753 2723    I

COUNTRY ACREAGE lor sale by owner Located approximately 3 miles from Carolina East Mall 2 acre mxnimum Highly restricted. Community water Starting at $8,000 per acre Write Acreage. PO Box 1885. Greenville. NC

QUEEN ANNES ROAD in

Lynndale Call after 6 p m , 355

2221

BY OWNER House and lot injsTOKES 3 ACRES. Good for Fountain 2,000 square feet concrete I mobile homes tor houses Owner block house I'z baths, wood heater I (ipancing $11,900 Speight Realty

House is liveable, but needs repair | jyJO, nights 758 7741 inside Sacrifice at $12.000 or pay ' equity and assume loan at prevail ing interest rate with only 6 years left on loan Call t 749 4411 anytime

CEDAR LOG HOMES. Echo Realty Inc., Griffon. 524 4148

CLUB PINES. 4 bedrooms, 2'j baths, den, formal dining and liv ing $92 500 Call Jeannette Cox Agency. Inc 756 1 322

CONDO FOR SALE. 2 bedroomv almost new, plenty of extras, $42,700 Call Jeannette Cox Agency. Inc 756 1322

THE PINES in Ayden I x 180 corner lot Excellent location Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood $10.500

Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details.

117 Resort Property For Sale

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded

water front lot on the Pamlico River 1 mile from Washington. NC Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days. 7520310 nights

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Johnsens Antiques

315 E. 11th Street

JlntiquG i^6u/eC/iy Safie 20%

40%

Discounts

Sale Starts Thursday, November 10th

GrtcnvUle, N.C.

75M839

120

RENTALS

LtJ F rfNt AIso 7^"3

bedroom mobile homes. Socurity deposits required, no pet*. Cell 758 4413 between 8 end 5

NED tfoRAofer Vlft h^e'^nv

size to mMt your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933.

WAREHOUSE STORAGE end Mie* space. Excellent location. Up to 55,000 square feet Adjacent office available Price negotiable. 752 4295/756 7417

121 Apartmtnts For R>nt

AZALEA GARDENS

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

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches

Washers and dryer* optional

Free water and sewer and yard

maintenance

All apartment* on ground floor with porches

Frost free refrigerator*

Located in Azalea Garden* near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only. Couple* or singles. No pets

Contact J.T or Tommy William* 756 7815

BRAND NEW 2 bedroom townhouM at William month. Call

al Williamsburg Manor, *335 per Call 355 6522

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated fownhouM near hospital and mall. 2 bedrooms, 1'q baths, washer/dryer hook ups, efficient No pet* $325 per month 756 8904 or 752 2040

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom fownhouses with I'7 bath*. Also I bedroom apartments Carpef, dishwashers, npactor*. patio, tree cable TV, sher dryer hook ups, laundry .wm, sauna, tennis court, club houMand POOL. 752 1557

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouM apartments, featuring Cable TV. modern appfi anees, central heal and air condi fioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Easfbrook Drive

752 5100

ErFiClNCVAPAftTMTTS

Dial direct phones >25 channel color tv

Maid Service ' Furnished

All Utilities

> Weekly/Monthly Rales 756 5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

121 Apirtmtnf* For Rtif

NW WILLIAMSBURG f*Bnor Townhome. 2 bedrooms, extra tiorege. 756 9006 after 6pm NEW 2 BEOAoOM Duplex Im mediate occupancy. Phone 756 2121 or 750 0100

NOW renting Village East Apartments

TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES. 7>/i baths, washer dryer hookup 1295 per month Cell

756-7755 Of 758-3124

OAKMNtSOUARE

APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouM apart ment* 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, di* pOMi included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza end University. Also some furnished apartments available

756 4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815_

RIDGE PLACE. Townhouse apartment, 2 bedrooms, I'7 baths, kitchen appliazKes, washer/dryer hookups, heal pump, air condi tioned. $280 a month 355 2060

121 ARBrtmcnts For Roni

WORK NEAR THE HOSPITAL?

And tired of driving across town? You can live in your own townhome at conveniently located BROOKHILL with payments lower than rent! 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

1 BEDROOM apartment; appli ance* furnished. Tenth Street, *100 per month Call after 6 pm, I 524 5042

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES near

hospital Call 355 2628 days, 756 3217 niqnts

125 Condominiums For Rent

RIVER BLUFF offers l bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom fownhouse apartments Six month leases For more information call 758 4015 or come by the River Bluff office at 121 River Bluff Road

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

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

Call us 24 hours a day at

754-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It Ail "A Community Complex "

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 4 Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT.

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

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

WANT A REALLY NICE, clean apartment m a quiet neighborhood? Why not call 756 7314 or after 5 756 4980 to hear about this almost new 2 bedroom, I' j bath unit Rent, $325 per month Deposit required No pets

. KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping, center and schools Located |u*t ott lOth Street

Call 752 3519

WEDGEWCX)DARMS

2 bedroom, I'j bath fownhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court Immediate occupancy

756-

NEW 2 BEDROOM townhouse, convenient to hospital and mall Couples preferred No pets Lease and deposit $310 per month 756 4746

127 Houses For Rent

AYDEN COUNTRY CLUB. Ranch style home with 3 bedrooms, game room With bar, 4i'j baths Over 3000 square feet Available immediately $600 per month. Call Lorelle at 756 6336

BRICK VENEER RANCH tor rent Carport Excellent neighborhood 3 bedrooms, family room, fireplace, kitchen with stove and refrigerator, furnished, central heat and air Call Lyle Davis at Davis Realty 752 3000 or nights 756 2904

BROOK VALLEY. $600 per month, only couples or family Call Jean netteCox Agency, Inc 756 1322

DECK, POOL, STUDY, 3 bedroom, fenced yard, woodstove, washer, dryer In Ayden $315 756 8160

FOR RENT: 2 bedroom house in Ayden Appliances furnished Call 746 3674

FOR RENT: 2 story 3 bedroom home, recently redecorated with wall to wall carpet, central heat and blinds, new kitchen, I mile from Farmville, near schools Call day* 753 310T9 nights 753 4785

FOR RENT: I story 3 bedroom home, central heat, wall to wall carpet, blinds. 1 mile (rom Farmville and schools, new kitchen and recently painted Call days 753 3101, nights 753 4785

HARDEE ACRES 3 bedroom brick, 2 baths, living, dining, and den with insert Outside storage and garden spot $370 per month Mr Byrd 758 0198 or 757 6961

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, woodstove, carpet, refrigerator and stove Nice home with good location $385 Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741

4 BEDROOM RANCH Over 2000 square leet with workshop in Griffon Available immediately for $425 per month Call Realty World, Clark Branch, 756 6336 or Tim Smith, 752 9811

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Have pets to sell? Reach more peo pie with an economical Classified ad Call 752 6166

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex Shenandoah $290 756 5389

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique m apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, lireplacei, heat (^mps (heating costs SO per, cent less than comparable units), dishwasher washer dryer hook ups. cable TV.rvall to wall carpet. ttWrmopane windows, extra insula tion

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Ott Arlirtgton Blvd 75 5067

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

127 Housm For Rent

FOR LEASE

2500 SO. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER :

Local contp6ny has a System* 34 (9K) computer avaitaWe lor im-madiala lima sharing. 1 CRT display sUtion and 1 5224 Primar if avaUabia lor immadiata ramota hook-up using talaphona communications. Programs rMdy for ganarsi businSss um includa ganvrsi ladgar, account* racaivabt*. invamory/billing. tc-coums payabla tnd payroil. Contact; President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC Of 758-1215

BOOKKEEPER

QualifiCBtions: Knowledge of journal entry, posting to ledger, payroll, accounts racaivable, accounts payable and familiarity with computerized bookkeeping system. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume or brief work history to:

FICKLING INSURANCE ASSOCIATES.

P.O. Box 1626 Greenville, NC 27835

DISTRICT

MANAGER

WANTED

Lvga North Carolina oil (Obbar nasds D. M. C-Stora. sad sarrica gas station axparianca naeaaaary. Excaltam salary. Full company banatit packags. Ex-pansa* snd company car furmsh-ad. Sand raauma to:

District Manager P.O. Box 1967 , Greenville, N.C. 27835

Pitt Community College invites you to "How to Get Started in Your Own Small Business workshop Monday, November 14, .1983 from 6:30 pm to 10:00 pm at the Willis BIdg.

You must preregister by

noon Wednesday, Nov. 9 by calling 756-3130, Ext. 238.

INSURANCE

PROFESSIONALS

Secure A Solid Future With BB&T!

Bring your talents and experience to BRANCH BANKING & TRUST COMPANY Due to current growth and expansion, we seek the following insurance professionals at our Wilson, North Carolina branch office:

SALES REPRESENTATIVE Qualified candidate must have 3-5 years sales experience in fire and casualty. Successful completion of commercial and personal lines study courses is desirable This individual will be responsible for developing general line insurance sales through our Wilson branph office. A 4-year degree is prferred, but not required.

INSURANCE SALES/MANAGEMENT

Excellent sales and management opportunity in general insurance agency that is owned and operated by BB&T m Wilson Qualified candidate must possess a 4-year business-related degree. Successful completion of fire and casualty insurance courses is required along with 5 years setting experience Management experience would be helpful.

BB&T offers salaries commensurate with experience. and excellent benefits package and truly outstanding growth potential. To learn how your future can be a solid one, please submit resume, m confidence, to:

Hutiun R880urc$ Departnwnt

House - COUNTRY. Approxirnqt*

ly 8 mile* from city, pa*t t>o*pitl Reference* required. 1 523 3562

HOUSE IN TOWN and house in country Call 746 3284 or 524 3)80

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedroom. I'/z bath*, living room/dloing room, eat in kitchen, carport. Fre*h paml and wallpaper Herdwood floor* Approximately 1350 square feet, new turnace/no air conditioning. AAarried couple or small tamily only No pet*. Immediate possession $375 per month. Call Owner Agent, LouiM Hodge, 804 794 1532 No agents

NEEDED. Several mature people to share large centrally located houM Call 757 6299 afternoon*

2 BEDROOM house, 707 Montague. Ayden AAarried couple preferred -No pets 756 1509

3 BEDROOM, I'/i bath, heat pump, garage, couple or family only. No pet* $350 month Lease and *ecuri ty 355 2996 after 7 p m    _

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

129

Lots For Rent

MOBILE HOME LOT. Belvoir Road Near city Private lot with city water $65 Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

TWO BEDROOM, electric heat on nice private lot, 5 miles out Stu dents or married couple only. Call 756 3491

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

OFFICE POSITION OPEN

Lady needed to assist in office. 40 hour, 5 day week with Thursdays off. Must work on Saturdays. Good telephone voice and typing skills necessary.

Apply in person to:

Billy Laughinghouse

BOSTIC SUGG FURNITURE CO.

401W. 10th Street    Hreenville, N.C.

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

0 111

z

0 u

lU

< 5 111 <

. M)

U1 lU

X

H

Hwsinsiii

221 Country Club Drive

Two Story brick home with slate root, copper gutters, beautiful landscaped /ard. large entrance hall big living room with fireplace, dmmg room, large kitchen with eating area, cathedral type ceiling m den with fireplace, utility room bedroom or office. 2 car garage all on first floor Second floor has i bedrooms and 2 baths, disappearing stairway to attic Must see to appreciate

264 By-pM West Living room, large kitchen with eating area, den, 2 bedrooms, i'/^6aths, screened porch, utility room, garage Lot 125 x 210 $50.000

1024 Fleming St.

3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath Across from Sadie Saulter School $15.000 Land For Sele 14 acres behind imperial Estates on Bethel Highway about 4 miles north of Greenville Pnced to sell $14,000.

LOT FOR SALE

82'xl' lot on comer of I3tti and Oceene Sfrewtji $7500

LOT FOR SALE

111 E. Iltti Street 75x86. Prtce $8000 00

NEED HOUSES AND

FARMS TO SALE

TURNAIIE

KAL ESTATE NB MSttANCEAfiEKT

Get More With Lee Home7!iB-ii79

752-2715

or

B 752-3459

30 Years

RM.TOR* Expetierwe

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

142 Roommate Wanted

3 BEDROOMS with air, $140 No

pats, no chlldran 758 0745

FEMALE ROOMMA'ff TTe^el immediately Nice apartment Share half rent, utilities and phone Close to campus Respond now Call 757 6233 bet'ween 8am and noon. Monday Friday

3 BEDROOM Iraitar. $150 nsonth, (lOOdaposit Colonial Trailer Park 758 0779

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer, air No pets. No children Phone 758 4857

HOUSEMATE WANTED to share

comtorlable 3 bedroom home m country Call Kri* at 752 7166 extension 279 days, 758 169nights

135 Office Space For Rent

! ROOMMATE VVANTED to share 2

bedroom trailer $125 a month 756 4246 after 6 p m

OFFICE/RETAIL SPACE. 600 squre teef. new renovation Downtown Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741

THE ROOMMATE EXCHANGE A

professional service to help you find the ideal roommate Call 752 5377

OFFICE SPACE for rent Up to 2,500 (eel At 3205 South Memorial Drive and 2,800 at East lOth Street

144 Wanted To Buy

Call Carlton Taylor. 756 5991

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy William*. 756 7815

1 WANTED EXERCISE Bike in excellent condition Call 752 3241 evenings

1,200 SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on Evans Street Price negoitable 752 4295/756 7417

WOULD LIKE to buy wood that's been logged, laying down trees and tree tops Call 758 2840 or 756 9193

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass Plenty of park ing Call 758 7300 day*

YOUNG FAMILY still loomng for either 1 to 3 acres to build house or house already on lot Wmterville : School Districf Call 758 0 1 57 days, 1 746 2574 nights

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buT^ ! they turn to the Classified Ads , Place your Ad today for quick results

138 Rooms For Rent

LARGE ROOM for rent $30 per week Bath light cooking Phone 758 4904

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SERVICE MANAGER

Excellent Career Opportunity with growing company. Excellent company benefits and starting salary. Prefer previous Ford Experience.

Reply in writing to:

P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27834

FOR SALE

Grace Free-Will Baptist Church 400 Watauga Ave., Greenville, NC

OPEN HOUSE

Ministers, Trustees, Deacons, Stewards snd Members aft invited to join with other Christians to walk through and look at the complete facility. Refreshments and music is being planned.

Thursday, Nov. 10,12:00 Noon

Built 1963. sanctuary saat* 700/1000. Christian Education building wrth tan class rooms, assambly rooms, nursary, built 1953. AduH Christian Educftion building with classrooms, of-fica spaca. kitchan and gym. built 1971. Paved parking (65 spacas). 1.5 acra* of land and com-plala church assantial* $750,000.00

To Buy Sell or Rent Contact

D.D.GARRE AGENCY

752-4476

752-7756    752-1764

SPECIAL OFFERING

HERE'S A LCXj home with over 1114 square feet of living space that's )ust nght for the first investment Singis and couples love the value of the Homestead fi log home which features 1 bedrooms. I'T baths and a full front porch on over ^4 of an acre Pnced to sell in the mid S40's

REALTY VI/ORLD.

CLARK-BRANCH,

REALTORS

756-6336

North Carolina Housing Money AVAiLABLE NOW!

1. Low Interest Rate To Qualified Buyer.

2. Now Is The Time To Build Or Buy A New Home.

3. This May Be Just The Break Youre Waiting For.

WE OFFER YOU A WID SELECTION OF LOTS IN VARIOUS LOCATIONS. HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION FOR VOUR CONSIDERATION AND A SELECTION OF PLANS FOR YOU TO CHOOSE FROM.

Call 752-2814

Or

Fays Boswn 756-5258

The Evans  Company

Of Gfeenvila InG

701 W. 14th street





Christian Unify Goal Is Underlined By John Paul

By JOHN WINN MILLER Associated Press Writer

VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope John Paul IPs historic overtures to Protestants, his praise for Martin Luther and his plans to join a Lutheran Church service, reflect a' driving passion of his papacy - the search for Christian unity.

On the very day he was installed as pope five years ago, John Paul set that tone by holding a special meeting with 42 representatives of Protestant and Eastern Orthodox churches at the Vatican.

Calling Christian disunity a scandal, he launched a worldwide ecumenical mission that has taken him from the heart of Eastern Orthodoxy at Istanbul to the bastion of Anglicanism at Canterbury Cathedral in England and to the spiritual heirs of Martin Luther in West Germany.

On Saturday, two more bold initiatives were announced.

First, John Paul praised Martin Luthers profound religiousness and called for a re-evaluation of the man who shattered the unified Catholic Church by launching the Protestant Reformation 462 years ago.

Then Lutheran officials announced that the 63-year-old pontiff accepted their invitation to preach next month at a Lutheran Church in Rome - the first time a Roman pontiff has ever preached at a Protestant church in his own diocese.

The comments on Luther, the warmest ever by a pope, and the historic visit were characterized in Vatican circles as the boldest steps yet for Christian unity.

However, some Vatican analysts said all of John Pauls moves to date have been largely symbolic and that the pontiff has yet to make a significant concession on substantive issues, such as papal supremacy and infallibility.

But most a^eed that John Pauls initiative would give new impetus to the unification process begun by the Second Vatican Council, 1962-65, and by Pope Paul VI.

The Council led to the formation of dozens of joint commissions between the Roman Catholic Church and other Christian churches in an effort to eliminate factors that led to division.

Paul VI took the initiative to heal the rift between the worlds 790 million Roman Catholics and 125 million Eastern Orthodox Christians.

A conflict over the authority of the pope resulted in a schism in 1054 when Pope Leo IX and Patriarch Michael Cerularius of Constantinople excommunicated each other.

Rapprochement began when Paul VI kissed the feet of Patriarch Athenagoras in a historic meeting in Jerusalem in 1964, and they lifted the excommunication orders the following year.

In 1979, John Paul traveled to Istanbul for talks on reunification. A year later he announced the beginning of a dialogue with Orthodox Christians aimed at agreement on celebrating Mass together.

Differences on papal primacy and divorce still divide the two churches, but an agreement on celebrating Mass together would virtually seal their unity because

Mass is the most important, rite in both churches.

Great strides have also been made to heal the rift between Roman Catholics and the church founded by Luther. The German priest was excommunicated in 1521 for attacking widespread views that salvation could be earned by good works, such as paying for Masses and indulgences to avert penalties in purgatory.

His theory that salvation came only through faith in Gods mercy became a basic doctrine of the Protestant faiths, formed after his excommunication.

In September a U.S. team of Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians delivered a historic declaration of convergence on basic doctrines.

The report, the result of five years of work, said much of the real fi^it between Luther and the Roman Catholic Church was over the power and income of much of the ecclesiastical establishment.

Another commission is set to discuss the Virgin Mary and the saints - who Pro

testants think are given too much weight. The two churches also still differ over purgatory and the papacy.

In addition, for flie first time ever, Roman Catholics will join Lutherans on Nov. 10 in celebrating the anniversary of Luthers, birth 500 years ago.

Since the Second Vatican Council, the Roman Catholic Church and Anglicans also have been moving closer together.

A report last year by an international commission of the two churches found a wide measure of agreement on doctrine. But its members agreed that unity is far off.

SIM'S Udlk

Rnsmm

Bonded & Insured im OKRINSON AIK.

(Across From Pepsi Plant)

COMPLETE FRIENDLY SERVICE 757-0075

(24 Hrs.)

Vote And Re-Elect

Elsie M. Porter

Simpson Village Council November 8,1983 Your Vote Will Be Appreciated

Paid For By Elsie Porter

ORIENTAL RUGS

9x 12

WOOL 9 X 12 $199.00

(SIZE APPROXIMATE)

JH^^FURNITURE DEPOT

521 WMt 10th St.

Beside The Railroad Depot 752-3223

Mental

Health

Perspectives

Loss of a Parent bv Barbara Vosk, Ph. D. Coordinator/Children Services

When children are faced with the loss of a parent, either through death, divorce or separation, it is common for them to express a wide range of emotions. Anger, depression and withdrawal from others are typical reactions. Some children do not appear to be experiencing anything unusual, but this does not mean that they have not been affected by what has happened around them.

Children need to be able to talk about what has happened to them. Parents who are experiencing their own emotions following a loss may find it dif

ficult to discuss their children's reactions to it. Listening to your children, answering their questions, allowing them to ventilate their anger or sadness are all healthy ways in which you can help your children through this difficult time.

If there are marked changes in your child's behavior, if long-standing problems get much worse, or if their strong emotional reactions last more than six weeks, professional help may be indicated to help all family members return to their optimal level of functioning.

Pitt Co. Mental Health. Mental Retardation & Substance Abuse Center 752-7151.

CONTACT LENSES

Bausch & Lomb

S

Contacts

*59

PAIR

Price iKlmles Lenses & Care Kit

COUPON

00

i^l5" Off Any! Complete Pair ! Of Eyeglasses

I I I

I Must pmcnt coupon with ordor for discount. Not I food with other odvcrtlscdspccUU.    I

* tauiuiui- J

flhe # OPTICAL

C cin

\ii I V I- I \.im

I III ^ III! I )ii

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PALACE

PhoiK'

756-4201

703 Greenville Blvd. (Across From Pitt Plaia, Next To ERA Realty)

Gary M. Harris. Licensed Optician Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Fri.

There are key areas essential in our efforts to build a greater

Greenville.

ti

Input from people can help to find the best solutions.

KEY AREAS FOR PROGRESS

)

INDUSTRIAL EXPANSION

QUALITY SCHOOLS

RELATIONS WITH ECU

GROWTH AND ANNEXATION

PUBLIC HOUSING

RECREATION

TOBACCO

CENTRAL CITY

~ Create jobs, broaden tax base, preserve quality of life.

Satisfactory merger or coterminous boundaries.

A partnership in all areas.

No tax increasesbroaden the tax basebut not annex Industrial Park.

Monitor adequacy and encourage private enterprise to increase housing supply.

Encourage development of North River Park and Town Common.

Support Greenville as regional market.

Revitalize business and residential-low interest loansgrants for historical restoration.

PITT-GREENVILLE AIRPORT -Work with Airport Authority and

County to expand passenger service.

RAILROAD OVERPASSES

Long range plan to alleviate traffic congestion.

VOTE

A.B. Whitley

MAYOR

Quality Growth

99

Paid for by A.B. Whitley Campaign; Louis Singleton, Campaign Manager; Reid Hooper, Treasurer.





StuartSHINN

4'- '

Dear Concerned Citizen:

I am seeking re-election to the Greenville City Council on Nov. 18th. I know you are all aware of the many changes that have taken place in city government and management in the past two (2) years. City government is running smoothly and on a sound fiscal basis. A few of the programs I am proud of as a business man follow:

^A joint anrrexation/facility extension agreement between the city and its utility commission ' '    kjoassur-e'ijrowth.'

"^jCstabfisbnaent .of a* capital reserve fund for municipal facility expansion and improvement.

t^C-reafipn pf'an inner, city and-neighborhood revitalization program.

,    ^H'e,art Tjf the City"    .    , ' .    -    a

'    An-prganizatioPal ^study'arid restructuring of the Greenville    Police    Department.to assure .

V    quality protection and safety for business and families.

I' >    t^ The advisory committee on coitiprphensivc^'planning was    supported    and expanded in    part-

ner-ship with community organizations. '

.

As a resident of Greenville for 29 years and dfte who livens in an older residential area. I am especially concerned about the preservation of our neighborhoods. During my first term^on the council, I supported many ordinances which positively affected the quality of Ijfe in city housing,, older neighborhoods and downtcjwn business.

'    ^    "-t    .

- /-.^For the first'time-since 1967, Greenville^zning'ordinances were updated in order to

*    ' preserve"and, protect older neighborhoods..'        

new Noise Ordiance-^^^as developed and implemented because too man^ families were'

*1/

   being subjected tg senselessbnner city noise.-V.

Conversion standa/ds were changed to encourage the preservation of older neighborhoods.

> A housing rehabilitation. program*was in-itiated in South Evans and Riverdale which enables    . - ' property Owners to-receivb financial assistance for Housing rehabilitation.

' Tf^re is still friuch to be don. E>:citing g[Ovvth Is on the horizon. This growth must be planned and orderly and not overlook the special ngeds of our^isting nighborhoods. When re-elected I will continue to be an advcjcate c)f progress yvhile'providing safety, protection and responsible government for us all.

'    ^        ..    Thank you for voting on Nov. 8th.

i-        Stuart    Shinn





irge Punishing 'Death Squads'

By CHRIS ANGELO AsMciated Press Writer SAN SALVADOR, El Salvadw (AP) - U.S. embassy officials say they are pressing the Salvadoran government to clamp down on right-wing ternHist grcHips who have been killing and threatening prominent Salvadorans and acting more openly in the last two months.

Yes, thergs embassy rar^ure, said a U.S. official who insisted on anonymity. He declined to say how the pressure was beii^ applied, but said it involved specific cases and occurred in regular contacts between embassy officials and Salvadoran leaders.

Defense Minister Gen. Carlos Eugenio Vides Casanova on Friday deliv-the strongest criticism yet of the groups by a current government or mili-

tary official.

He said the armed forces will combat with special

energy terrorism from both t the extreme left or the I extreme ri^t, regardless of who is backing them.

r Human rights groups blame rightist death squads J for the vast majority of the

47,000 deaths in political vio-l lence during the civil war in t this Massachusetts-sized ; country of 4.6 million people.

Widespread reports link

;Like Cliaiige th Mullicare

- RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A *new federal plan for reim-bursing hospitals for treat-. ment of Medicare patients a appears likely to benefit hos- pitis and patients in North

* Carolina, according lo hospi-tal officials.

r The plan is expected to ; provide larger reim-

* Dursement to most hospitals

* in the state. Also, those T higher payments could be I passed to non-Medicare pa-I tients in the form of lower

* charges, hospital ad-

* ministratorssaid.

* The new system has a f good chance of reducing

^iraling costs," said Charles R. Beale, director of ' finance for Raleighs Rex ^ Hospital. If Medicare *" begins to carry more of its load, Rexs policy will be just , not to raise prices as often.

Under Medicare, the fed-I eral government pays hospi-

* tals to treat the elderly and ! certain categories of the dis-.. abled. The new payment I system, which began last

- month in most local hospi-taLs, will be phased in over

Z four years. It is designed to ^ give hospitals incentives to

- keep costs down.

r Hospital officials predicted

* that North Carolina would ^ benefit from the new system -because hospitals would be ^ lumped together with those

in states where costs are : higher.

r PROTEST MARCH ' SALONICA, Greece (AP) L - An estimated 30,000 people

marched in this northern - Greek city to protest the

planned deployment of U.S. I cruise and Pershing 2 : missiles in Western Europe.

the death squads to officers in the nation's security forces and to other prominent figures, although no one has publicly acknowledged involvement with the squads and iKHie of their leaders has been prosecuted.

Several names are repeatedly mentioned by jpolit-ical observers, who spoke on condition tey not be identified. Two ^ovincial military commanders and three officers have been implicated in the the 1981 Killings of two American land reform advisers. The intelligence chiefs of two security forces and an official involved in security for the Constituent Assembly also have been linked to the squads.

Two death squads that have claimed responsibility for recent bombings, kidnappings and murders call themselves the Secret Anti-Communist Army and the Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez Anti-Communist Brigade.

But a university political analyst said the squads may be phantom organizations that frequently change their names and personnel.

Vides Casanova, speaking at a graduation ceremony for officers, said continued rightist terrorism could jeopardize U.S. military aid to the Salvadoran government. In 1983 El Salvador received $85 million in weapons and training to continue its 4-year-old war against leftist guerrillas.

Military leaders, he said, fully repudiate the unhealthy existence of these groups, whose barbarism scandalizes the civilized peoples of the world and blocks the legitimate aid we need so much.

The U.S. embassy official said neither aid nor ideology were factors in the American interest in eliminating the squads.

Whether they say theyre anticommunist or not is not the point, he said. What this country needs is less murder, less torture, less night-riding and it doesnt matter what the ideology of the people is.

Death squad activity began in the late 1970s and has continued over the course of the war, human rights groups say. After a period of silence,the squads resurfaced recent to gain publicity.

Early in September they kidnapped several labor leaders. At the time, the Constituent Assembly was debating land reform, an issue which affects the countrys wealthy minority, labor unions were resurging and the government was

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beginning contacts with leftists.

Among recent actions by the groups was a threat to take arastic sanctions against the two hi^t officials of the Salvadoran Roman Catholic Church unless they stopped giving Sunday homilies critical d the squads.

The latest squad victims include eight professors killed in a six-week period. Four radio stations and an afternoon newspaper were warned they would be judged if they published advertisements by labor groups, the Christian Democratic Party or any Communist group.

Family Room Sale........

6 Plec*

*399

RE-ELECT

GEORGE PUGH

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

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

Paid For By Friands To R-lact George Pugh

Tis Beginning To Be The Time Of Year... When Saving Money is More Important Than Ever

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individual Mutual atoras resarve the right to limit quaniltla on lall Htma In this ad. Clrcumatances might prevent all etorwe

AYDEN

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Hoiiowells Drug Store No. 1 911 Dickinson Avenue 752-7105

BETHEL

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GREENVILLE

Hoiioweiis Drug Store No. 2 6th & Memorial Drive , 758-4104

HoiloweJIs Drug Store No. 3 Parkview Commons Across From Doctors Park 757-1076





\

The Daily Reflector. Gfeeovilie. N C

Mon^y Novemjber 7 1963    21

Ctommword

^^ugetu Sheffer

DOWN lTheShoe

ACR068    47 Finnish port

ISurpass    ttStately    l-C5^,Con-

IPmi^Heart, tree    nectic^

for one    tt Rich man,    i French

ff Conifer    poor man-.,    painter

12 Hockey great M The sun has 3Skiin8truc> UStage    leftthe-    tor

whisper    SSSmoothcon-    4--of-fact

14 Greek peak    sonants    (literal)

SI Kimono sash S7Sunbathers

IS Hunter ITFfflty llShoshonean Indian U Statue sites 21 Pay attention

24 Oklahoma Indian

25 Aardvarks tidbit

21 Umps cousin 21 Grid gains or losses SlRandwn attempt 33 Droop 3S Govt agent 31 Carnes 38 Small child 40-Baba 41 Corrodes 43Milkcurdler 45 Of the mail service

5 Ancient ascetics goal    I    Obscure

58 Chopin opus 7Herseys 51 Nocturnal bell town creature    8 Mercy

Avg. solution time: 28 min.

QS3 sisiis mm asg [sdigiii mm mm

iDfi^

umm mm isQn mu mm

r^9(iinaiis@SQ||g QQSS mm mm nascs [1DSI3 990 mm mmm isis

n-7

Answer to Saturdays puzzle.

of the- (1988 film)

18 Vain 11 Millandand Bolger If Dull routine 21 Paint layer

21 Final

22 Division word

23 Jefferson, for one

27 Wcters nemesis

28 Roys partner 30 Fit of pique 32 Thrash

34 Put the caraway 37 Steadfast 39 Vitiate 42 Weather word

44 And not

45 Hide

41 Olive genus

50 African antelope

51 Gangland group

52 Lawyers org.

53 Type of wit

FOCUS

A Womans Place

On this date in 1916, Jeannette Rankin became the first woman elected to the United States House of Representatives. A Republican, she served as representative from Montana. She was the only member of the House to vote against entering World War II. The first female member of the U.S. Senate was appointed in 1922. Currently, there are 21 women in the House and two in the Senate.

DO YOU KNOW - Which state has the most women in Congress?

FRIDAYS ANSWER Grenada is in the group of islands called the West Indies.

117.8.3    Knowli-dK*-Industries Int liIM.i

Panels To Hide Slum Damage

NEW YORK (AP) Painted panels that will disguise the burned-out buildings of the South Bronx slum arent meant to trick anyone, officials say. They just want to make the area more attractive.

City planners will spend $300,000 in federal money to install hundreds of the panels - showing shades, window

panes and even house plants - in the gaping windows of abandoned tenements and other buildings.

KEEL

FOR

CITY COUNCIL

HU For By Kot( For City Council

CRYPTOQUIP    11*7

GJWCX LUXLRFG HMKQGXHT WMT

WGZHT,ULFKT Q XWZH FR WCJG?

Saturdays Cryptoquip - IN HUGH HIGHWAY SNARLS IS Lnri BOY BLUE BLOWING HIS HORN?

Todays Cryptoquip clue: W equals A.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipha- m which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

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Bonien't Open Air Market. Aytlen

Attracted

Grasshoppers

HOUSTON (AP) -Exterminators will have to tackle a massive Invasion of egg-laying grasshoppers that were drawn to Houstons skyscrapers by the heat and light the buildings emit, officials say.

Hundreds of thousands of the insects coated windows of several downtown buildings over the weekend.

It was like there was a shade over the windows," said Tanie Trapolin, a store manager.

Usually grasshoppers swarm in sparsely populated areas to lay their e^s and ' die, said entomologist Phillip J. Hamman.

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.|g The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Monday. November 7,1983

Many Still Doubt Report On JFK Assassination

By MIKE COCHRAN Associated Press Writer DALLAS (AP) - Chances

KEEL

FOR

CITY COUNCJL

Paid For By Kaal For City Council

are youve never heard of the Black Dog Man, the Umbrella Man, the Mafia Con Man, the Tall Tramp or the man called Frenchy.

Youve also probably never read The Continuing Inquiry or Coverups! or Echoes of Conspiracy.

These are names and newsletters known chiefly to

McGrath

For

City

Council

Please Vote

Nev. 8,1983

Paid For By Millie McGrath

FhWE A PROBLEM?^

NEED HELP?

Come By The REAL Crisis intervention Center. 312 E. 10th St.; Or Caii 758-HELP, For Free Con-fidentiai Counseiing In Areas Such As:

Suicide Prevention Sexual Assault Depression Family School

Sexuality Domestic Violence Loneliness Addiction General Information

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pursuant to North Carolina GS-160A-267, The Pitt County Board of Education has authorized the Transportation Director to dispose of the following vehicles by Private Negotiation and sale:

CAR NUMBER

YEAR AND MAKE

1

2

5

6 11 14 17 20 SO 60 61 62

1978 Plymouth Volarle 1978 Plymouth Volarle 1978 Plymouth Volarle 1978 Plymouth Volarle 1974 Plymouth Valiant 1970 Chevrolet BelAir 1970 Chevrolet BelAIr 1968 Chevrolet BelAir 1969 Chevrolet Station Wagon 1978 Plymouth Station Wagon 1974 Ambassador 1969 Chevrolet Chevelle

All vehicles may be inspected from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, at the County School Bus Garage on the US 264 Bypass. Any one interested In purchasing one of these vehicles should contact Rodney Bullock, at the School Bus Garage. The authorized selling agent is to use advice and pricing norms from local car dealers In order to obtain a fair and equitable price. No sale may be finalized until ten days after this notice is published and any or all sales will be final when the negotiated price is paid in full. All vehicles are to be sold in their present condition with no stated or Implied warranty or promise of performance. Any and all bids may be rejected by The Pitt County Board of Education. Telephone Number 756-1424.

those who think there is a sinister, and still secret, story behind the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

To these ipeople, Kennedys (teath 20 years ago was part of a conspiracv and an ill-defmed but chilling cover-up that cmitiniMS today.

llieir common target is the Warren Commission and its conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting on his own, fired three ^ts into the presidential motorcade.

Their common complaint is that crucial evidence was destroyed and distorted or overlooked and ignored. Important witnesses, they insisd, gere discredited ot dismissed while others vanished or died mysteriously.

But they disa^ about whose plot it was, and why, and why the government would embrace or perpetuate a cover-up.

They all believe, however, that the 24-year-old Oswald was nothing more than a patsy.

The critics - an international collection of authors, historical researchers and assassinologists - raise provocative questions but provide precious few answers.

After 20 years, I cant say who did it, said Mary Ferrell, a Dallas legal secretary, but I can definitely say that Lee Harvey Oswald did not act alone.

If there is one thing upon which all the critics agree it is that Mary Ferrell is among the foremost Kennedy researchers.

They say Paul Hoch, a professor at the University of California-Berkeley, is 'among the most respected, Penn Jones of Texas the guttiest and Bud Fensterwald of Washington, D.C., the most valuable for his efforts in getting documents declassified.

There are conspiracy theorists who write a lot: Mark Lane (Rush to Judgemnt), Sylvia Meagher (Accessories After the Fact), Harold Weisberg (Whitewash), Anthony Summers (Conspiracy), David Lifton (Best Evidence) and Seth Kantor (Who Was Jack Ruby?).

But Mary Ferrell remains in a class of her own, an ultimate authority, a researcher to whom other researchers turn.

Now in her 60s, she is a forthright woman who likes good brandy and bad jokes and reads everything, good or bad, that mi^it shed light on the case.

She has cfunpiled what all the researchei^ say is the most extensive Kennedy library in existence and has cross-indexed everything imaginable, including thousands of pages of FBI and CIA documents.

Before I die, I hope some-(me comes alimg to take this up, she said, apologizing fw the boxes of documents scattered about her living room.

Mrs. Ferrell is currently poring over 200,000 pages of material recently declassified by various agencies. The government routinely declassifies documents, and most of the assassination theory critics are on mailing lists to get the latest matoial from FBI, CIA and Secret Service files.

The critics dont consider the trail too cold to follow. It

is only in the last 10 years, *' s. Fe

Mrs. Ferrell noted, that we learned our government took part in the assassination attempts on Castro ... that our government, the CIA, was playing footsie with the Mafia and that the Mafia had a vested interest in getting Castro out of Cuba.

The Cuban connection is a prominent theory.

Although Cuban President Fidel Castro accused the CIA, under Kennedy, of multiple attempts on his life, he has denied complicity in the assassination.

Most critics point to a purported alliance of dissident intelligence personnel, mobsters and CIA-trained Cuban exiles.

There is a strange alliance between the CIA and the mob and the Cuban exiles -who watched their friends and relatives slaughtered at the Bay of Pigs, said Gary Shaw, 45, an architect in Clebinme and author of a book called Coverup.

They had the motive, the means and the opportunity... and you can trace them right straight to Dallas, Texas.

Shaw, a history buff, said that until he read the Warren Commission Report in 1964, he believed Oswald to be the lone assassin and Jack Ruby the lone avenger.

But the more I got into it, the more it stunk, Shaw said. The evidence is overwhelming that Oswald did not act alone. I think the evidence indicates that Oswald did not fire a shot. I think in a court of law he would have been exonerated completely. He was exactly what he said he was, a patsy.

Shaw contends that the governments handling of the case proves there was a conspiracy.

The Friends of Bill Hadden Ask You To Help

RE-ELECT

REV. W.J. BILL HADDEN JR.

ECU Chaplain to

CITY COUNCIL

November 8,1983

-r

To The Citizens Of Greenville:

Do plan to schedule time to VOTE on Tuesday, November 8th. As Americans the privilege is our most sacred trust. Whomever your candidates may be, give them this expression of trust. Accountable government is YOUR responsibility.

BillHadden

Paid For By The Friends Of Biil Hadden

They manipulated evi-B, faJ

dexxx, falsified evidence and destroyed^ evidence, be asserted, citing the disappearance at Oswalds min-tary records, a note written by Oswald warning the FBI to stop harassing his wife, Marina, and the laboratoi7 slides of Kennedys brain tissue. Youve got to ask yourself,why?

Some people think organized crime was behind the assassination, partly because of Attorney General Robert Kennedys crime-busting crusade, partly due to impatience with Castro, who had run mob-backed gambling interests out of Havana.

Robert Blakey, formerly chief counsel to the House Select Committee on Assassinations, now at the Notre Dame law school, emerged from the two-year congressional investigation ctmvinced Oswald had acted on orders from organized crime.

We were worried about whether Cuba did it. We were worried about whether the CIA did it. We were wcwried about whether the FBI did it, he said in an interview in 1979. And the mob must have been thinking to themselves, Good. ... Theres only one theory that makes sense out of it, and thats that the mob did it. There has also been speculation that the body buried in Fort Worths Rose Hill Memorial Park was not Oswalds. In 1981, the grave was dug up at th insistence and expense of British author Michael Eddowes, who for years had claimed thet body was that of a Russian imposter. Pathologists confirmed the body was Oswalds.

One of Shaws specialties is tracking down and reinterviewing witnesses, but the person he most wants to question is in prison for the sniper slaying of federal Judge John Wood in San Antonio.

Charles V. Harrelson -an associate of Jack Ruby and Santos Trafficante, t^ Mafia chieftain in Florida involved in the Castro assassination attempts -

takenh-bysUiKierAbraham shot. Gary' Mack, n had

SSf'lwiSH'*'"*'    nlyapasininlelest'inthe

murder, Shaw said.    moment    the    president    was    slaying

Law (tfficers who captured Harrelson in Van Hotd, Texas, in Sei^mber 1980 quoted

him as saying that he had not only }dM the judge but had

also killed Kennedy. The authorities also said Harrelson seemed affected by dnigs at the time and made his claims after a six-hour standoff.

In a subsequent interview on Dallas television, Harrelson backed off his confession. At the same time I said I had killed the judge, I said I had killed Kennedy, which might give you an idea as to the state of my mind at the time, he said. It was an effort to elongate my life.

Nevertheless, Shaw and Jack White, a 56-year-old Fort Worth miphics expert and Kennedy researcher, believe Harrelson was one of three tramps photo-gra[^ in police custody Nov. 22,1963.

The critics refer to the three - never officially identified - as Frenchy, the Old Man and the Tall Tramp, the one they believe to Harrelson.

If I was going to pursue (me story, one aspect that has not been explored, that would be the one, Shaw said.

Until 1975, when ABC televised the movie footage

Views On Dental

Health

Kenneth T. Perfclne, D.D.S.PA

WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO NOVOCAINE?

The vast majority of dental treatments are done with local anesthetic. Its safe and easy to use, and the patient is comfortable and conscious. The whole system is not affected, only a specific area; there are no side effects, such as grogginess, and the loss of sensation in the localized area does not last for a long time after the work is done.

The anesthetic is injected at or near the point where the dentist is going to be working. The nerves in the area are anesthetizedthere is a loss of sensation only in a localized area. The patient can respond to in

structions, is conscious of the work being done, but doesnt feel it Most people associate local anesthesia with Novocaine (the scientific name is Procaine), which was, in fact, a staple for many years. Nowadays, however, Novocaine is seldom used. Weve come a long way in dental anesthesia. Procaine has been replaced by safer and more effective local anesthetics. The most commonly used today is Lidocaine (commercially, often called Xylocaine), which is stronger than Procaine and thus can achieve the same effect with a lesser dosage.

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

GracnvUlc 752-5126    '    Vuiccboro 244-1179

RELECT

DON C. CARSON

BETHEL TOWN COMMISSIONER

NOVEMBER 8,1983

Paid For By Don Carson

Howtobuygroiro

nealtnoovaage.

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

Here are some of the issues youll want to consider.

Are the rate and cost containment strategies effective?

^ The cost of cover- )oesy(mrcarrKr have cosi.<o,iuatimentagreemeTas with area f^vtndersPWli da And iJtati (inly age is related directly to one of the simiegies that enabled m losante our subscriben more than Suamllm last year. thecostofhealthservices.

I Will the plan be affordable?

Can you assume variable levels of risk?

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

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

For exan^)le, does the carrier

have cost-containment agreements with area hospitals and physicians?

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

Will the service be rapid,accurate and trustworthy?

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

Can the carrier offer options that reduce both the incidence and severity of illness? Membership, for example, inahealth maintenance organizatioa^

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

To vriiat extent is the carrier achieving the dream of paperless processing? Can claims be filed by computer?

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

To prevent problems for you down the rood, will your carrier

make the plans provisions perfectly dear to them?    ^

Take advantage ofus.

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

The subject is complex, however, so please take advantage of our 50 years of experience. Just call your nearest service office, or write to: Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, Room 558,Post Office Box 2291, Durham, North Carolina 27702.

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Because the better you understand health coverage, the more youll prefer ours.

BlueCro68 Blue Shield

'Die better you understand health (MMoage the more youfll prefer ours.

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Title
Daily Reflector, November 7, 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.) - 30627
Date
November 07, 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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