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SPORTS TODAYHAGLERWINS
Marvelous Marvin Hagler won a close decision over Roberto Duran last night to retain his middleweight title. Page 14.
INSIDE TODAYSECURITY?
Effectiveness of governmental internal security procedures is open to question after misadventure of the secreffiles that wound up in prison. (Page 8)
COMING SUNDAY
1983 Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival activities are underway, beginning with the selection of a Queen. Mary Schulken will have a look at the lucky winner.
-A preview of Spring 84 fashions.
Part II of the 1983 ECAC-South Basketball Conference series
The ECU Pirates football team plays their last home galne of the season Saturday against William and Mary. Get a play-by-play account of the game in Sundays DAILY REFLECTOR.THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 252
TRUTH IN preference TO FICTION
GREENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 11, 1983
24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
City Council Seeks Help For Tax Base
BvTOMBAI.VKS Refieclor Staff Writer The City Council took a step Thursday night that it hopes will lead to ultimate increases in the local tax base and foster economic development within the city.
The board voted unanimously to enter into a three-year funding contract with Evergreen of Greenville Inc.. a locally formed non-profit organization that will function as a community economic development corporation.
Under the contract, which may be terminated by either party at the end of each calendar period, the city will provide $20,000 per year for three years to support the services performed by Evergreen.
Under terms of the contract, Evergreen "will use its best efforts" to increase the local tax base and foster economic development "by attempting to attract new development to areas within the corporate limits, encouraging or assisting redevelopment of existing areas within the city, encouraging expansion of existing business and industry inside the city, and assisting other organizations promoting the economic development of the city "
The corporation evolved from action taken in 198(1 when the council directed the city staff to formulate a comprehensive plan to serve as a guideline for local development .A comprehensive plan committee, chaired by council memtiers Louis Clark and Dick McKee, was formed and the group, after research and drafting, submitted a comprehensive plan document to the city The formation of an ad hoc committee to review, amend and implement the goals and objectives of the plan followed.
McKee, who co-chairs the ad hoc committee with Clark, told the board Thursday night that the group indentified five
priority items to be addressed. They include: revitalization of "Heart of the City" areas; encourging business and industrial growth and development; long-term traffic control problems and access to the downtown area; the community ^hool system, and e^tive land use. The corporation will be involved <or potential investors here
through a19IH|pimte loan pool, with local financial institutions participating, the former councilman said.
McKee said the committee visited other cities and invited their economic development personnel to visit here. The need became apparent for the development of a corporation here and Evergreen was formed, he said.
Evergreen, he said, "is asking the city for a partnership.
.Mayor Percy Cox said the council felt it should to do all it could to increase the tax base, rather than the tax rate. He said the city hopes to recover its investment in Evergreen in the near future through the ultimate improvement of the tax base.
Councilwoman Judy Greene said she would like to see a cancellation clause included in the contract in the event future councils are not satisfied with the financial arrang-ment. Cox said the city would evaluate the program at the end of each year before funds are obligated.
Mayor-elect Janice Buck said she was concerned that such a clause might hinder the stability of the program. She said she would "have togive it some thought."
Cox said if something were to happen where the city felt it was not getting its moneys worth, the city should have an out. McKee said he agreed with that, noting that a legal contract is necessary in order for the city to contribute
(Please turn to Page 17)
Food For Tripoli
RELIEF FOR LEB.A.NON Palestinians line up Thursday in the .Northern Lebanese port city of Tripoli as relief workers provide foodstuffs staples of sugar, rice, canned meat and flour. Relief workers were able to operate Thursday during a
lull in the shelling between Syrian-backed rebel PLO forces and pro-.Arafat fprces. Food supplies were running low in the city as fighting moved into its second week. i AP Laserphoto i
County Commissioners Weigh Survey Of Telephone System
f ^
Bickering Continues Hold Up Emergency Funding Bill
By STU ARTSAV AGE Reflector Staff Writer
Pitt County Com-missioners. at a workshop meeting Thursday, discussed with a private consultant and representatives of Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co the possibility of conducting a comprehensive study of the countys telephone system
Larry Edwards of Raleigh, a private communications consultant, told cam-missioners that the county should be able to "save $1.0()0 a month on toll service" by implementing recommendations he would probably make if given the consulting job.
Edwards said the county now pays about 67 cents per minute for intra-state calls when direct distance dialing is used, and 24 cents a
minute for WATTS lines. He suggested that if the county joined the state government communications network, long distance calls could be made for 12 cents a minute.
Edwards said phase one >i of his study, which would involve collection of data and making recommendations on system design, would take af)out 20 days This, he said would cost S6,(H)0. Phase two, compliling plans and specifications for bids, and phase three, monitoring installation and making a final acceptance inspection, would cost $:i(Ki per day. he said.
Dick Elye, district commercial and marketing manager for CT&T, told' the board that Carolina Telephone would submit a proposal to the county at a later date..
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to The Daily Reflector, Box 1%7, Greenville, N.C. 27834. ^
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish oniy those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
CANCER SUPPORT GROUP Anyone who has cancer or who has a close family member or friends who has it is invited to participate in Positive Image, a local support group for those experiencing cancer.
The group is being conducted by Gene Eakes and Rita Finnen, faculty members of East Carolina University School of Nursing. Among its purposes are group support, exploration of new ways to solve problems, and the teaching of ways to reduce tension and anxiety, including the use of relaxation techniques and guided visual imagery. Meetings are held Monday evenings at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church. Those interested may contact either Gene Eakes at 757-6061 (work-leave message) or 756-6065 (home) or Rita Finnen (757-6061 (work-leave message) or 758-8097 (home).
He also told commissioners that (TT&T has agreed to sell phone wires installed in the county office buildings A Wing to the county for $1,753, a discount of about $2.200 from the $3.900 price quoted several weeks ago.
Commissioners took no action on purchasing the wiring or hiring a consultant Thursday.
Board members also discussed the need for a day treatment facility for "Willie M. children and reviewed proposals for providing detoxification treatment for alcoholics with Mental Health Center Director Steve Creech and other Mental Health Department workers.
In other business, commissioners adopted a policy regarding the use of county facilities by the general public.
In part, the policy said organized community groups are encouraged and permitted to use" county
Certified
The Pitt County Board of Elections, meeting Thursday, certified Tuesday's mayoral and City Council election results, officially declaring Janice Buck as winner of the mayor's race and Edward Carter, Judy Greene, Stuart Shinn. Dr. .M. W. Aldridge, Louis Clark and William Hadden as duly elected to the council.
The board's canvass verified the results as published Wednesday by The Daily Reflector.
The winning totals, as certified, included: Buck, 2.993; Carter. 3,234; Greene, 2,935; Shinn. 2,892; Aldridge, 2,851; Clark, 2,698, and Hadden, 2,686.
The new mayor and council members will be sworn in during ceremonies Dec. 8 at city haii.
According to voter turnout totals furnished by the citys nine precints, Tuesdays activities saw 6,070 people, or 40 percent of the local registration of 15,168, visit the polls.
the
are
facilities "so long as programs presented ... compatible and consistent with the rules and regulations concerning their use." and with local, state and federal laws.
The policy also says any "unusual expenses" involved in the use of county facilities will have to be charged against the organization" using the facility.
Assistant County Manager Don Davenport reported that from Feb. 1 through Oct. 31 medical expenses at the countv jail have amounted to $11,488.
Davenport said the medically related costs include: $8,782 for doctor, hospital and drug charges, $222 in car expenses for transporting prisoners from the jail to a medical facility, and $2,484 for personnel time in taking prisoners to and from medical facilities.
By MARGARET SCHERF Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Much of the federal government was technically without cash or credit today as Congress tried to patch together a compromise on emergency funding legislation held up by bickering over $1 billion in education and social spending sought by House Democrats.
Despite the delay in con-gressional action, a widespread disruption of government operations was postponed by the Veterans Day holiday.
The Senate slogged nearly four hours past a midnight Thursday deadline before adopting its version of the stopgap money bill by a voicevote.
The lapse in appropriations was the second blow to government financial operations in less than two weeks. The Senate refused on Oct. 31 to grant an increase in the
national debt limit - the governments borrowing authority - amid grumbling about budget deficits in the $200 billion range.
Negotiators from the House and Senate were scheduled to gather today to hammer out a compromise version of the stopgap bill. Both chambers then would have to ratify the work of the conferees.
While the compromise might be acceptable to Congress. Republicans said President Reagan was sure to veto the measure if the social spending additions remained in it.
That warning was echoed by White House spokesman Larry Speakes. who was travelling with the president in Tokyo. "The administration is still pushing for a clean bill." he said. "The bill is a likely candidate for a veto" if the conferees accept the social spending provisions, he said.
Report U.S. Jets Again Draw Fire Near Beirut
ByFAROUKNASS.AR Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -U.S. jets flew low over Beirut in reconnaissance runs this morning, a day after a similar mission drew groundfire from Syrian-held territory. Two radio stations said Syrian gunners fired at the planes t^ay.
In northern Lebanon, meanwhile, Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yasser Arafats besieged loyalists were reported trading sporadic artillery fire with Syrian-backed rebels around the port city of Tripoli.
Arafat re ected an appeal from Tripo is most prominent policitian to leave the city, Lebanese state radio reported. A radio station of the rightist Christian Phalangists said rebel leaders ordered Arafat to surrender or leave Tripoli by Sunday or face an all-out attack.
Beirut residents saw U.S. F-14 Tomcat interceptors
swoop over the capital and surrounding hills at 6:30 a.m., then veer westward and fly back toward the sea.
Tw() Phalangist radio stations, the Voice of Lebanon and Voice of Free Lebanon, said Syrian gunners fired at the F-14S from mountaintops in central Lebanon. The claim could not be ver if ied.
Spokesmen for the U.S. Marine contingent of the multinational peacekeeping force in Beirut declined to comment on new flights or the reported shooting at the Tomcats, which are based on the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Syria said Thursday its air defenses drove off four U.S. jets tiat flew over Syrian ^itions in central Lebanon. But U.S. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger played down the claim, saying in Washington he had no evidence it was Syrian gunners who did the firing.
A White House spokesman said Navy jets doing "routine reconnaissance
Thursday were fired at from the ground but did not identify the attacker. None of the reports mentioned any hits.
Syria, the closest ally of the Soviet Union in the Middle East, has an estimated 50.000 troops in Lebanon. It has refused to pull out its forces until Israel withdraws from southern Lebanon.
Reporters in Tripoli said PLO rebels and loyalists had sporadic artillery and rocket duels this morning. State radio said the mutineers were pounding the Palestinian refugee camp of Bad-dawi, where there is a small garrison of Arafat loyalists. Arafats forces fired rockets in return.
On Thursday. PLO mutineers bombarded residential neighborhoods in Tripoli as pressure mounted on Arafat to leave Lebanons second-largest city.
The PLO fighting, which began Nov, 3, has killed at last J.OOO people, many of them in two Palestinian refugee camps.
The House voted 224-189 to pass its version of the measure Thursday afternoon. then sent it to the Republican-controlled Senate, which immediately stripped out the additional social spending with a 53-36 vote.
The, Senate then added more than a dozen items dealing with such subjects as a recreational development on a river in Tennessee and a traffic study in the Northeast.
Federal agencies not directly related to health, safety and national defense must cease all functions when their appropriations lapse, under a Justice Department ruling made during the Carter administration. The stopgap bill replaces an existing measure that expired at midnight Thursday.
Republicans accused Democrats of staging a pre-election-year political confrontation with the president while Democrats charged Republicans and Reagan with trying to balance the budget on the backs of schoolchildren, the poor, the elderly and the handicapped.
"All the other issues are a ^ waste of time if we spin our wheels on a measure that is guaranteed a presidential veto.' Sen. Mark Hatfield. R-Ore.. told colleagues as they began work on the measure to keep money flowing to numerous federal
departments while regular appropriations bills are enacted.
"I think we ought to give him the opportunity to veto it. said Sen. Howard Metzenbaum. D-Ohio. "The president ought to understand that closing some tax loopholes... is part of his responsibility, too. rather than cutting spending for the deaf
WEATHER
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Looking Ahead
and cool Sund.tv. Uii'nini: parllv clnud> .Mdiid.iv uith a thaiKC o ran; !u*sda\. Highs will Ilf 111 ra's ^uiidaj. warming in 10 Ciis Moiida\ and iufsda\ Lows Hill bf in .'(Is to niid-:.ii' on tho coast .s u n (i a \ ill 0 r n 1 n a . iiiodf'raimo to the iOs lufsda\ inornin-.;.
Inside Reading
Fagf 11 The ihuiahes PageObituaries Page 2t\rea items
Festival Events
The sixth annual Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival is under way with the following events scheduled for today. Saturday and Sunday;
Friday: Tobacco Week-End Extravaganza begins today at 7 p.m. with the annual pipe-smoking contest at Carolina East Mall. Also today at 8 p.m. at .Ayden-Grifton High School 11 young ladies will compete in the Tobacco Festival Scholarship Pageant.
Saturday: The Antique Car Show will be held at Bob Barbour, intersection of highways 264 and 11. from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. A pig cook-off and sale is scheduled from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Pitt County Fairgrounds along with entertainment. Soap opera star Jerry verDorn. who plays "Ross Marler," will be on hand from 1:30-3:30 p.m. at the fairgrounds. In addition, hot air balloon rides will be given at Pitt Plaza. A beach music warehouse dance will be held at 9 p.m. at the Greenleaf featuring Main Attraction.
Sunday: A Quilt Fest will be held from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. by the Greenville Quilters Guild in the old Winterville train station. Village of Yesteryear, Pitt County fairgrounds. A tour of the Village of Yesteryear will be given also.
Motivational Speaker Says Positive Thinking Can Help Children Learn
OLD AND NEW QUILTS...WI1 be displayed at this years Tobacco Festival Quilt Fest 83 Saturday and Sunday at the Village of Yesteryear. Arrang
ing quilts are Grace Karnes, Mozelle Exum and Vivian Purvis, left to right.
Tobacco Festivals Quilt Fest Show And Seminars Begin On Saturday
A Quilt Fest will be held starting Saturday as part of this years Southern Flue Cured Tobocco Festival. A showing of old and new quilts will be held at the Village of Yesteryear at the Pitt County Fair Grounds.
The hours will be 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday.
The Quilt Fest 83 Seminar will start Monday morning. It is being sponsored by the Greenville Quilters Guild, Pitt Community College, Greenville Recreation Department and Pitt County Agricultural Extension Service.
Eight nationally known quilting instructors will be here with ideas for handling piecing problems, Christmas ideas, quilted clothing and new designs.
There will also be a seminar showing the differences in quilting designs in antique quilts from various regions in North Carolina. Participants in the class may bring old quilts (two-three per person) to be examined as to fabric, techniques and date of construction.
Persons interested in attending may select a teacher from each time slot and then attend the class of their choice. There is a $20 registration fee payable at the first session.
The sessions will be held at three locations: Willis Building, Reede Circle and First Street; Agricultural Extension Office, Pitt County Office Building and' Community Building, Fourth and Greene Streets.
Classes scheduled, teachers and building follows: Monday, 9:30-11:30 a.m.. Transforming Tradition, Carla Hassell and
I I
"Grewvttle's FInsl Bakery For 63 Years."
815 Dickinson Avo.
Fruitcakes For The Holidays
752-5251
Quilted Clothing, Nancy Garver, both at Agricultural Extension Bldg.; Christmas Ideas, Juanita Metcalf, Community Bldg.; and Quilting in Hoops, Yvonne Amico, Willis Bldg.
Monday afternoon from l;30-3:30: Fabrics N Quilts, Eleanor Young and Read A Quilt, Laurel Horton, both at Agriculture Extension Bldg.; Log Cabin, Jane Hall and Christmas Ideas, Juanita Metcalf, both at Community Bldg.
Night classes are 7-9 oclock: Transforming , Traditions, Carla Hassel and Fabric N Quilts, Eleanor Young, both at Agricultural Extension.
Tuesday morning from 9:30-11:30: Fabric N Quilts. Eleanor Young and Transforming Traditions, Carla Hassel, both at Agricultural Extension: Chinese Designs, Kathy Kunst, Community Bldg. and Read A Quilt, Laurel Horton, Willis Bldg.
The afternoon session, from 1:30-3:30, will feature Log Cabin, Jane Hall and Chinese Designs, Kathy Kunst, both at Community Bldg.; Quilted Clothing, Nancy Garver and Quilting In Hoops, Yvonne Amico, both at Agricultural Extension.
Teresa Lucas Is Speaker
The Welcome Wagon Club of Greenville held its luncheon meeting Wednesday at the Brook Valley Country Club. Teresa Lucas, from Down to Earth, presented the program.
She showed samples of herbal teas and appetizers that could be used for holiday gift giving and entertaining.
The next luncheon will be Dec. 14 and the Boys Choir of Greenville will entertain. The special activities group is planning a trip to Tryon Palace to see the Christmas decorations Dec. 16. For further information call Barbara Hall at 756^53.
Newcomers interested in Welcome Wagon should contact one of th hostesses, Mae McKee, Jackie Heath or Mary Warren Mann.
The next board meeting will be Nov. 30 at the home of Corol Lahn.
VFW Auxiliary To Make Lap Robes For Christmas
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will make lap robes for the Veterans Administration Hospital in Fayetteville as a Christmas project.
Margie T^son, chairman of the Cancer Aid and Research program, reported that $142 was realized from cake sales and donations of $50 for the fund had been received for the month. The auxiliary . authorized $35 in memory of Mrs. Maggie Stroud, mother of charter member, Margaret Brown.
Dorothy Armistead, president, noted that the auxiliary had reached 100 percent in membership. Carrie West and Armistead gave a report on the N.C. Council Meeting in Raleigh. Also attending the council session were Rosa Lee Boyd, Raye Brewer and Sue Buck. The Second District meeting was held in Mount Olive on Oct. 130. Delegates were Bet Hayes, Rosa Lee Phillips, Alice Moseley, Marjorie Angstadt, Mary Effie Swindell, Armistead and West.
Bonnie Waldrop reported that six schools were participating in the Voice of Democracy. Finals will be held in November when the winner will be selected.
The hospital committee has made visits to four veterans in the local nursing homes and members who are ill were remembered with visits. Concessions during the month totaled $220.00 for .the general fund.
Hostesses for the evening were Mary Lucy Taylor, Helen Liles, Margaret Pierce, Nellie Fleming and Bonnie Waldrop.
^ON KOEHLER BAITLE CREEK, Mich. (PI) - Can* the power of positive thinking help children learn?
Motivational speaker Art Fettig says yes, and is working on a line of books to help instill a positive attitude in both students and teachers.
The problem with education is attitude, he says. Everywie is pointing the finger at everyone else as responsible for the sins of the nations public school systems.
In an attempt to help resolve the problem, Fettig has authored The Three Robots and Remembering to help children - as well as teachers and parents - learn that education is more than a constant stream of facts and information.
The Three Robots is a simple book about a happy robot, a sad robot and a rcM who just cant make up his mind. Throu^ the course of the book the nappy robot Pos gradually instills her positive characteristics into the other two robots, Semi-Pos and Neg.
In Remembering, a little boy gho thinks his memory is broken is ta^t the trick of associating the things he needs to recall with memory hooks so he doesnt forget them.-.
Two new robot books and a teachers activity booklet will soon be published.
We need to be teaching kids they can control their feelings,^ Fettig said; that they can be happy instead of sad, that they can overcome handicaps and can achieve things if they put their mind to it.
One of the books that most affected my life is the Little Engine that Could, Fettig said. To me that is the best book ever written on motivation... Before I wrote
Monthly Activities Reported To Members
Brenda Gray Gives Talk
Brenda Gray, executive director of Mental Health Association, was guest speaker at the recent meeting of Gamma Delta Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority. She told the group of the program being offered by mental health.
Frances Cassick, president, conducted the meeting and plans were made to hold yard sales Nov. 2 and Nov. 12 with proceeds to go to St. Judes Hospital and other philanthropic projects.
Members will participate in the Lung Associations annual trim a tree project and will make a contribution to Operation Santa Claus.
Patty Tale was hostess and Mary Helen Roundtree was a guest.
Reports of activities during the past month highlight the Monday meetipg of the Greenville Service League held Monday.
Mrs. Fredric Robbins, 1984 Charity Ball chairman, announced a meeting of the committee chairmen at the, home of Mrs. C.W. Harvey Jr. The ball date is Feb. 17.
Gift Shop chairman Mrs. William McConnell reported that two new drink machines had been placed at the hospital by the league. Mrs. Ke ly Barnhill reported on the two^lay Bloodmobile visit at Mendenhall Student Center - 43 league members volunteered 135 hours and 378 units were collected. At Empire Brushes, 66 units were collected with 10 members giving 40 hours. The Bl^-mobile will be at Fletcher Dormitary at East Carolina University Nov. 30.
Mrs. Horton Rountree received a memorial for the Laughinghouse Iluspital Fund and answered a call for assistance. Mrs. Norwood Whitehurst furnished two layettes.
Mrs. C.W. Harvey Jr., hos-)ital activities, reported Hal-oween favors were placed in the pediatric department. She also placed an arrangement at the nursing station in the Rehabilitation Unit. Volunteers were enlisted to help with Thanksgiving favors.
Jo Betts Barrett had six calls for convalescent
equipment and had four items returned to the Lending Chest. She asked for donations for Christmas baskets which will be distributed Dec. 20. Mrs.J.W.H. Roberts requested unwrapped gifts for Operation Santa Claus.
Mary Wesley Harvey said Nov. 24-25 are holidays for the hospital workers and the second term there would start Jan. 16.
Mrs. Frank Layne, president, said she and Mrs. Rountree accepted the Governors Volunteer Award for the league in Williamston last month.
Family Reunion Held Sunday.
The family of the late Sarah and Walter David Williams held its annual reunion in the Ayden Community Building Sunday.
Name tags made by Cassie Nobles were presented to each member. Elder App Mewborn, pastor of the late Sarah and Walter Williams, and his wife were honored guests.
Senior family members receiving gifts were Verna Jackson, Lila Rue Williams and Annie Williams.
Approximately 80 people attended.
Sna \
N. MEMORIAL DRIVE 752-5656 / GREENVILLE, N.C.
Sunday, Nov. 13,1983 2:00-5:00 PM
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Grifton, N.C.
Grand Sale Day Sunday, November 13 1:00-5:00 P.M.
Were Selling Out To The Bare Walls Rock Bottom Discounts Store Wide Take Advantage - Just In Time For Christmas
the robot book I went lo the library and read stacks and stacks of childrens books, to try to find something like the LitUe Engine that Could. Most of them didnt say anything... nothing about goal setting. Id see children checking out stacks and stacks ol these bo(As and reading them zip, zip, zip and theyre not getting anjdhing out of them.
Fettig says he also wrote the bocte with parents and teachers in mind, in hopes they might absorb the simple message of trying to think positive rather than negative.
Parents should model for their children, he says. Kids dont do what you tell them they should do, they do what they see you do. Althou^ Fettigs books have not met with critical acclaim, he has found some enthusiastic readers.
One is Lenore Schutt, who uses the book in her fourth-grade class in the Ada Christian School District.
I use it in the banning of the year. It sets the atmosphere for the classroom quite well, she says. What youre looking for is a positive attitude rather than a nmtive attitude... The kids pick that up and start using a positive approach to learning.
Ms. Schutts experience is echoed by Chick Moorman, a Kalamazoo educator who co-authored a bocrfc this year on how to improve the classroom environment by attacking the new three Rs - resistance, reluctance and resentment.
Whats more important at any given moment, what you
know or what you feel? asks Moorman. You can know everything but what good is it if you dont know what youre going to do with it?
We d^t spend a lot of time as educatin^s teaching attitudes. We spend more time teaching facts and knowledge... without relatinj how we can be in charge o our lives, our attitudes.
Its easy to see why some teachers wouldnt like Arts book because our whole society... is raised to believe that other pecle are in charge of
Fresh eggs can lie kept in the refrigerator in the carton with the large end up for five weeks.
their emotions, that s(Mne-thing external causes tlwir emotions.
So Art comes along and teaches kids that thev are in charge of their attitudes, that they are in charge pf their emotions. Many teachers (kmt believe that.
But there are also mapy teachers aiKl librarians out there using Arts book. This is the best thing Ive seen in terms of teaching attitudes to children.
CENTURV 21
Tipton & Assoi iiitos 756-6810
ftCADRI^S iXCHANOC, LTD.
(FoHMrly Evans Naw A Uaad Books)
Trade ANY paper back book in reasonable and fairly new condition
321 Evans Street Mall
752-3333
NEED WHEELS? Call Rent A Wreck!
Rant yastarday'acars at yastarday'a pricea and aaval
120 FIcklan St. QreenvHte 752-CARS Of 752-2277
Put an apple wedge in brown sugar to keep it from becoming hard or to restore it to softness.
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 announce-nient 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.
When you were forty-eight you were great!
Now that youre a forty-niner youll be even finer!
Happy Birthday, Walter
We Love You!!
HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH
Independent - Soul Winninq
Meeting At Carolina Country Day School Looking For A Church That Cares About You ... Personally?
Come And Grow With Us.
Ministering To The Whole Family
756-3624
Sunday School......10:00 AM I
Worahip Service.....11:00 AM |
Sunday Evening......6:00 PM
Wed. Prayer Service. . . 7:30 PM i
David j. LcBUnc. Paator (Nuraery Provided)
Open House
The Sewing Basket & Catechna Woodcraft
Sunday, Nov. 13 2-5 P.M.
Local Handmade Crafts & Free Gifts
401 W. Queen St.
Grifton 524-4867
\
PUBUC NO'nCE
Due to the recent announcement made by the Texas Instruments Computer Company, the 99 /4A home computer and its software advertised by Roses will be in very short supply. Due to circumstances beyond our control we were unable to stop this advertisement in time nor maintain an ample supply. Therefore, rain checks will not be available. In addition, Texae Instrument has cancelled all rebate offers as well as their free computer course. The computer will be sold at a lower retail of *59.00 on a first come basis or while quantities last.
Roses appreciates your patronage and apoioglzaa for any inconvenience this may cause.
The Daily Rtflectof. Greenville, N C
way better and io the future I ahould forget the Ma.
Did I make a Ma^take?
MS-UNDERSTOOD
DEAR MS-UNDERSTOOD: You made no **Ma-take. Yoor father-in-law ma'd the point.
Businesii Session Held Tuesday
Friday, November 11 1983 3
Every teen-ager shonld know the truth about druga, aez and how to be happy. For Abby'a book-let, aend $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to: Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Engagement Announced
KAREN SUE BUTLER...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rupert B. Butler of Route 1, Clinton, who announce her engagement to Karl Francis .Thurber, son of Barbara A. Thurber and Dr. Robert E. Thurber of Greenville. The wedding is planned for Dec. 3.
QINNER FOR FOUR Pislachio Chicken Wiki Rice 4 Green Peas SahdkRolls IceCream 4 Coffee ' PISTACHIO CHICKEN 21arge(12tol4ounces ; Bach) chicken breasts
.(halved, boned and
.skinned)
! Shelled pistachios : 1 tablespoon minced parsley ^I teaspoon crushed dry ' oregano ^teaspoonsalt ^teaspoon pepper V<^pound stick very cold and ; -firm butter
Jwup fine di7 bread crumbs Place each breast between 2 ^ts (rf plastic wrap or wax kper. With a ineat mallet or the tat side of a cleaver, flatten each until it is very thin. Stir together 2 tablespoons coarsely chopped pistachios, the parsley, oregm, salt and pepper. Cut half the stick of butter into four equal logs" and roll in pistachio mixture. Place logs in center of chicken breasts; fold over short, then long ends and secure with wooden picks or skewers so butter is enclosed. Stir together V4 cup finely chopped pistachios and the crumbs. Melt dhe remaining half-stick butter; coat chicken with it and roll in the )tachi(Krumb mixture. Place io ji shallow baking dish and driizle with any remaining melted butter. Bake in a preheated 400-degree oven until tender - 20 minutes. Remove picks before serving. Makes 4 servings.
Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWVSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
FIREPUCE SUPPER Deviled Eggs Salmon Salad Sandwiches Lemon Tarts 4 Beverage DEVILED EGGS Good to serve for a finger-food meal.
6 large eggs, hard-cooked >'4 cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon prepared Dijon-style mustard 4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce is teaspoon salt l-16th teaspoon pepper Halve eggs lengthwise. Remove yolks and mash until very smooth with the mayonnaise, mustard, Worcestershire, salt and pepper. Spoon yolk mixture back into egg white cavities. Serve at once or cover and chill. Makes 4 servings - 3 deviled egg halves per portion.
LUNCH FARE Tomato Plus Soup 4 Rolls Fruit 4 Cookies TOMATO PLUS SOUP Tasters may have fun guessing what the "plus is. h cup leftover cut-up baked skinned eggplant 11-ounce can condensed tomato bisque soup 1*^ cups water Salt and pepper to taste In a food processor with the metal blade process together the eggplant and undiluted soup until eggplant is pureed. Turn into a 14iuart saucepan; gradually whisk in the water. Heat, stirring often, until simmering. Stir in salt and pepper. Serve hot. Makes 3 cups.
Thanksgiving Sale
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Unpleated dress pants
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18
Leave Sons Name The Way It Is
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by UmvarMl Prtm SyndicM*
DEAR ABBY: Our son ia almost 6 years old. We wanted to name him for his father, but we did not want to name him John Doe Jr., which would have been his legal name, so we named him John Doe II. We have since learned that a child named II is not named for his fatherhe is named for someone else in the family (perhaps an uncle or grandfather) who had the same name.
I am now concerned, and want to know if it is serious enough to change our sons name to John Doe Jr.
My husband and I both like his name the way it is and we really dont want to change it, even though we realize it doesnt follow tradition. Please let us know if it is acceptable to leave his name the way it ia, or if we should change it to Junior.
WITHHOLDING MY NAME
DEAR WITHHOLDING: Since you prefer your sons name the way it is, leave it that way.
DEAR ABBY: Something is going on in my neighborhood that has me on edge. A divorced woman with a 10-year-old daughter has her boyfnend living with them. The three of them are together, laughing, playing games and so on. This woman thinks she is a great mother because she hM a happy child. The fact that this mother is living in adultery and committing fornication right l^fore her daughters eyes does not seem to bother her.
Now I saw something indecent take place between that 10-year-old and her mothers boyfriend. I called twp priests and a minister. One priest said, Dont say a word, the other priest said, Tell the mother, and the minister said, Write the mother a letter.
I went over there and spoke to the mother, and all she said was, Oh, they are very close. They love each other! This woman sometimes leaves her daughter in the house alone with her boyfriend. If she isnt cm unfit mother, I dont know what unfit is.
What should I do?
A CONCERNED NEIGHBOR
DEAR CONCERNED: You did not disclose what you saw that you perceived as indecent. I appreciate your good intentions, but every community has some kind of child-protection agency, so if you saw something indecent going on, go to the authorities and make an official.complaint. But be prepared to back up your suspicions with some hard facts. A person is still presumed innocent until proven guilty.
DEAR ABBY: R^ently I was given a baby shower that was attended mainly by my mother-in-laws friends. I promptly wrote my thank-you notes for each gift, and in 80 doing I addressed each woman as Ms. (Most were married, a few widowed and several were unmarried.)
A few days later, my mother-in-law called to say that one of her friends was offended by being addressed as Ms. Then my father-in-law got on the phone and told me I was never to address any of their firiends or relatives as Ms.
I tried to explain that I meant no offensethat this was a new trend so that all women, regardless of their marital status, would feel equal, but he insisted he liked the old
Births
Hazelton Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Howard Hazelton, 203 Revenwood Drive, a son, Jeffrey Clark, on Nov, 2, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Davis
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Lee Davis, Plymouth, a son, Aubrey Lee, on Nov. 2, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Thompson Born to Dr. and Mrs. Stevan Hayden Thompson, Johannesburg, South Africa, a son, Kenneth Steven, on Nov. 7,1983, in Johannesburg General Hospital. Mrs. Thompson is the former Madge Gay Dews of Win-terviJle.
StancUl Family Reunion
November 13,1983 At
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The island of St. Kitts was Britains first Caribbean colony. It was settled in 1623 and called the mother isle of the West Indies. Its Brimstone Hill, with a colossal stone fortress, was often referred to as the Gibraltar of the West Indies, according to National Geographic.
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The first November meeting of Eta Delta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi was held Tuesday evening at the home of Patti Weisenberger.
President Georgia Potter conducted the business meeting which included final profit statements of last months annual casino night.
' The progressive dinner for members and their husbands will be held later this month
and helping a needy family with donations of food during the holiday season was planned.
Bonnie .Vlacten presented program on Important Dates in .November
Janice Hopkins was a guest.
Eastern
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Born to Mr and Mrs. Steven Chad Asby, Henderson, a daughter, Jennifer Carol, on Nov. 8, 1983. in Maria Parham Hospital in Henderson. Mrs. Asby is the former Cindy Craft of Ayden.
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4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Friday, November 11,1983
EditorialsAn Inspiration Is Gone
Sometimes, in moments of gloom and doom, all of us wonder whether life is really worth it. At such times, we might think of Lillian Carter, the octogenarian mother of former President Jimmy Carter who blossomed into one of the nations prized citizens during her sons four years in the White House.
President Jimmy lost some of his glitter when he was beaten by Ronald Reagan. That wasnt the case with Miss Lillian who, until death claimed her a few days ago, kept up the pace that had sent her forth in the shadows of her lifetime to join the Peace Corps.
Obituaries frequently referred to her interest in retirees problems, a problem to which she applied much of her time in the later years.
Her philosophy perhaps was best described in testimony she gave to a congressional committee studying the problems of hunger and population planning: Dont retire until you have to. And if you do retire, find a hobby and just keep on living. Dont get in a rocking chair and rot out.
She certainly never found the rocking chair that would hold her for long. May we all find inspiration in her interest in the life going on around her.
Jamas Kilpatrick
Grenada Shows Net Gain For U.S.
WASHINGTON - Now that the shooting has subsided in Grenada, it may be possible to draw up a 3reliminary statement of profit and OSS on this astonishing investment. On balance, I find a clear net gain.
But the gain is not large, and the assessment is indeed preliminary. We will know more in December, when it may be possible to weigh the impact of the presidents action upon the balance of nuclear forces in Europe. We will know still more a year hence, assuming the president runs for re-election, when the residual effects may be detectable at the (Mils.
This much is pure profit: The invasion has exposed to the world and most especially to the nations of Central America and South America -the magnitude of the Soviet Unions plans for expanding its communist empire through its Cuban auxiliary. The capture of immense stores of military supplies was a stroke more of luck than of design, but those photographs of the Cuban arsenal spoke volumes. Only the most naive observers will continue to cling to the
pretty notion that Grenadas new airport was intended solely for the pleasure of tourists.
We got there just in time, the president said, and I see no reason to challenge that appraisal. Had the six Caribbean nations delayed much longer in their appeal for help, the murderous thugs who had seizc^ power would have consolidated their grip upon the island. Grenada is strategically important to the control of sea lanes carrying Venezuelan oil. With the Soviets in effective control of Cuba to the north and Grenada to the south, the whole Caribbean would be in jeopardy. That danger has now been reduced.
Symbolically, the presidents action* has value The pattern of Soviet proNOcation is to probe here and here, and here - pushing until resistance is felt. The Cuban crisis in Kennedy 's day was such a probe. The Soviets probed in Angola, in Ethiopia, in South Yemen. Through their Syrian surrogates they are probing in Lebanon. An aphorism is attributed to Edmund Burke: The only thing necessary for the triumph of
evil is that good men do nothing. In Grenada. Reagan acted decisively. He shunned the furled umbrella and ch(e assault instead. He sent a message. For a time, at least, the message will be felt.
There is another side to the balance sheet. The Washington Post's correspondent in Bonn put it in a paragraph: "West German officials spoke of a propaganda windfall for Moscow. They gloomily predicted that Soviet involvement in Poland and Afghanistan would now be vindicated. world outrage against Soviet destruction of a Korean jetliner would be deflected, and nervous talk about Reagans finger on the nuclear trigger would be revived
The presidents action in dispatching 6,000 troops to Grenada surely will evoke all the old Central American outcries jingoism, gunboat diplomacy, Yankee imperialism! We have in fact intervened drastically in the internal affairs of a sovereign nation, and we have lost some moral ground in the process. Unless our troops can be swiftly removed, we risk a long period in
which an army of occupation must be maintained. Macbeth was right: If it were done when tis done, then twere well it were done quickly. The task of restoring constitutional government in Grenada must be turned over to others within weeks, not months.
The conventional wisdom teaches us that Reagans little war will hurt him politically with women voters, but should improve his standing with men. Could be. The election is a year away, and a hundred issues and incidents beyond Grenada will affect the outcome. Our casualties have been blessedly few in this affair, and the military success has been substantial.
For my own part, I like what the president did. There is a time for the uses of diplomacy; there is a place for the forms of law; but if experience teaches us anything, experience should teach us that there also is a time and place for the force of arms. October in Grenada brought time and place together
Copyright 1983 Universal Press Synidcate
0 .
Disavowing A Vow
Sometimes things are embarrassing for the United States Army.
A British newspaper reported that some U.S. military police officers had taken an oath of allegiance to Queen Elizabeth II of England because they were told they had to do so to have proper authority in Granada.
The Army first denied the report and then later reported that it actually did happen. Swearing allegiance to a foreign power violates our laws and nobody seems certain exactly how this will all be worked out.
It has been awhile since anybody in these former colonies
swore allegiance to the British crown and certainly the American soldiers did not understand the seriousness of the situation. Surely there must be some ceremony of dis-allegiance which can be applied here to solve the entire problem. We are certain the United States military policemen do not want to spend the rest of their lives as British subjects.
John Cunniff
Historical Irony
NEW YORK (AP) - Few are the speeches by corporate chiefs these days that fail to herald the return of the entrepreneur as the salvation of the American economy.
What a supreme historical irony, observes Professor Eugene Jennings, who has spent his adult life analyzing and describing the corporation and the people who populate it.
Most people who built enterprises were driven from the corporate world, he points out. The very world, he reflects, that now calls entrepreneurs the single most important element for revitalizing the economy.
Most entrepreneurs, Jennings observes, already are outside the world of big corporations, forced there by an inability to live in an atmosphere unsuited to their dreams, and goaded into creating one more suited to their needs.
To get them back - or to find and develop them from within - requires changes in the values of most companies, he says. Changes that few companies are likely to find themselves sufficiently skilled to handle.
In Jennings view, only a few companies, among them some of the largest.
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Paul O'Connor
Rumors Add Spice To Politics
can handle the entrepreneur. Enterprises such as International Business Machines, Bell Laboratories and Hewlett-Packard, to name some of the most prominent.
In such concerns, he says, the spirit grew up with the enterprise and was astutely nourished along the way. Others companies, he said, squelched the spirit years ago, and now are faced with changing their basic values.
Such a task, he believes, will be an unsettling and painful experience. To have nourished ie spirit is one thing, but to have let the flame go out and then try to relight it is much more difficult.
The professor, who teaches business administration at the Michigan State University graduate school of business and advises corporate chairmen and boards, maintains that some companies don't even understand the word. ,
It means, he says, a person who seizes an idea and acts upon it as though he or she owned it. It is a person who has these dispositions:
1. Innovation, or a unique and unusual way of doing something; or creativity, meaning the ability to discover ideas.
2. Initiative. A high capacity to be a self-starter, to require little prompting or supervision.
3. Willingness to risk rejection or outright failure.
4. Persistence, as though possessed. Not easily intimidated.
5. Readiness to handle consequences.
The opposite of the entrepreneur,
Jennings observes, is the executive who. by history and definition, is one willing to execute decisions of others within prescribed policies, limited resources and narrow guidelines.
The two types seldom feel comfortable with each other. The entrepreneur makes executives insecure, he says. "And executives make entrepreneurs feel frustrated.
The professor believes that the biggest blow to'the breeding and keeping of entrepreneurs is the prevalence of the fear of failure. Entrepreneurs are willing to risk failure. "Typically, executives are not."
Each has a scorecard with a different bottom line, he says.
And executives might also find it difficult to take risks, he suwests. More chiefs have been fired in the past five years than in any 10 years since 1948, when Jennings began his pioneer tracking of mobility patterns.
To bring back entrepreneurs in exa'utive-oriented. fear-of-failure concerns will thus take years, the professor believes. And, he adds, the timing may notbeintheiriivor.
I I
RALEIGH - This is an election year, so expect to find some juicy political rumors making the rounds, It happens every year. Some desperate supporters of one candidate figure they have to attack the integrity of their opponent. Instead of finding the facts, they make things up.
My favorite campaign rumor concerns a legislator from Raleigh who was being challenged in a general election. A week before the voting, his opponent pulled me aside and said he was concerned. The legislator, hed heard, was drinking heavily, had been beating his wife and children, and had been thrown out of the house. The rumor, of course, was totally baseless. Everybody in Ralei^ knows this particular legislators wife could whipWm in any fight.
The political rumors are already flying this year. One gubernatorial candidate was approached by a supporter concerned that the candidate had a retarded child locked in the closet at home. Another candidate heard that hes im-preganated some woman who was walking around the State Fair telling everyone about their love affair.
One long-time politicaj observer explains that there are four basic ways to assassinate someones character, The rumors most often used, she said, are that the candidate is sexually promiscuous or a drunk. Another one thats coming into vogue is that the candidate is a hom(exua!. Finally, theres the old one that hes insane,
Other rumors arent quite as ugly. But
theyre spread for the same reason - to undermine a candidatercampaign.
One which is circulating this year concerns Frances Knox, wife of Charlotte Mayor Eddie Knox. According to this rumor, Mrs. Knox is the daughter of Republican Sen. Jesse Helms. If it were true, it could be damaging to Knoxs bid for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination.
It is not true. Helms daughter Jane, however, is married to a cousin of Eddie Knox.
One female legislator who has been labeled a drunk by the rumor mill says that at first I was so upset that people would say such ugly things about me. But, after a while I got used to it and I dont let it bother me anymore.
Some political shenanigans can be a lot less harmful and much more amusing. Take the lobbyist who decided to have some fun with Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance. Jordans running for insurance commissioner and he set up a table for distributing free apples in the lobby of the Grove Park Inn when Democrats held their Vance-Aycock dinner last month.
The lobbyist sneaked up to the table and tacked up a sign where Jordan cwildnt see it. Red apples 10 cents, green apples 15 cents, the si^ read. 'Then the lobbyist moved aside and watched peoples reactions.
Immediately, the number of people taking apples declined drastically, the lobbyists reports, and people in the lobby
began talking about how tacky it was for John to be selling apples.
From the Power of the Press Department. Inform, the weekly newsletter for employees of the state Department of Education, reported in a mid-October issue that on Oct. 23 employees should turn their clocks back an hour because daylight savings time was ending. A week later, the newsletter apologized for being a week early. The mistake meant that scads of staffers " showed up an hour early for work on Oct. 24.Public Forum
To the editor:
I noted with interest the Nov. 4 Public Forum letter from Charles W. Moore regarding the lack of full-time classical music broadcasting and programs from National Public Radio in the Greenville area.
Many other Greenville area residents have felt this lack for a long time. There is hope, however. WUNC-FM (Chapel Hill) has taken the necessary steps to place a relay transmitter on the public TV tower in Farmville. When this sister station" goes on the air, it will provide all of Pitt County and portions of adjacent counties with a strong, steady signal from WUNC-FM.
WUNC-FM is an affiliate of National Public Radio and carries NPRs award-winning public affairs-news program. All Things Considered. During their 19-hour broadcast day, WUNC-FM offers a musical format that is predominantly classical, with some jazz and bluegrass.
This project needs the support of local citizens who desire this radio alternative. A petition to deny a license for the proposed station has been filed with the Federal Communications Commission by a television station in Wilmington. Letters to U.S. Rep. Walter B. Jones are essential in order that he may demonstrate strong public support to the FCC. He has been extremely helpful thus far, but the battle has only begun.
James L. Rees
116 S. Harding St.
Greenville
Letters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves the right to cut longer letters.
Elisha Douglass
Strength For Today
In the beginning was the Word.
The Gospel of John opens with this majestic sentence. But sometimes people read this declaration with only a hazy conception of what it means. Word in this context means something quite different than it does in everyday modern parlance.
Word is the creative power of God. Therefore, what the
Evangelist John meant when he began his G(pel with the statement above was simply that before there was anything else in the created universe there was the power of God. And he put this power to work by the utterance of words. The Word, therefore, is Gods power in creative action.
The Word became incarnate in a human body, namely the body which Jesus Christ possessed.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Mrs. King Gets Her Demands At Signing
WASHINGTON - The White House was forced to accept a long list of Coretta Scott Kings demands, including the presence of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, before she would agree to attend the ceremony at which President Reagan signed the Martin Luther King holiday bill.
That set off another battle on the Reagan staff between conservatives who contended the black vote is lost whether or not Mrs. King attended, and pragmatists who argued Republicans have to start somewhere wooing the black vote. But even the pragmatists were shaken by the toughness of the widow King in tailoring the ceremony to her specifications.
What most rankled Wniie House conservatives wae Jacksons presence. On the next day, he announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination with a withering attack on Reagan.
Cuba-watchers consider Fidel Castros restrictions preventing a big
crowd in Havana from welcoming back the first wounded troof from Grenada as a clear signal of internal weakness.
The low-keyed reception, rather than a heros welcome, may reflect Castros concern over criticism spontaneously erupting from a big crowd. Intelligence reports indicate rising disaffection inside Cuba over Castros international military adventures in Africa and elsewhere.
A footnote: Latin American experts rate the Grenadian affair as Castros worst setback since the Che Guevara fiasco in Bolivia in the 1960s. But they are hoping for the speedy return home of all American troops to prevent propagandistic comparisons with the Mviet invasion of Afghanistan.
If any doubt remained about Ronald Reagans opposition to a tax increase, it "as removed at last weeks White House session with the Republic congressional leadership when the president engaged in a
table-thumping, slightly profane demonstration of his wishes.
Damn it, said Reagan, "Im not going to have a tax increase. Im not going to stop the recovery." Just to punctuate, he pounded the Cabinet table in emphasis.
Emphatic though it was, it did not blunt the tax-raising efforts of Sen. Robert Dole, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. Dole sat through the presidents declaration without argument but then returned to Capitol Hill to press a Senate GOP drive for a massive tax boost.
Without seeking Vice President George Bushs approval or even notifying him of it, his top New Hampshire operative has been quietly putting in place a skeleton Bush-for-President organization in that key primary state in the event that President Reagan does not run.
Former governor Hugh Gregg, who ran Bushs New Hampshire campaif^n in 1960. has been discreetly
seeking out commitments for an unexpected contested primary. With probable backing from Gov. Jdin Sununu. Bush would be heavily favored there.
A footnote: Former governor Meldrim Thomson tells friends he is not inclined to make the token right-wing challenge of Reagan in the New Hampshire primary that conservative leaders have been urging. Conservative opposition to the president in New Hampshire, as elsewhere, generally has collapsed since the Grenada operation.
The Republican National Committee has privately committed an extra $50,000 in llth-nour televisimi-radip^ spots for the Mississippi governors race that the Democratic candidate. Attorney General William Allain, was running away with until charges of homosexual conduct were levied against him.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
Fine Amway $20 Million In Canadian Fraud Case
TORONTO (AP) -Amwav Corp., which runs one of the world's largest door-to-door sales operations, was fined $20 million after pleading guilty to defrauding Canada of $23 million in custom duties.
Amway, a $1.2 billion corporation, uses an army of distribtors to sell household products in 25 countries and territories
The guilty plea was a deathbed confession of guilt as we were getting closer to trial, said Chief Justice Gregory Evans of Ontario Supreme Court after ordering the fine on Thursday.
Canadian prosecutors charged that Amway deliberately undervalued, by 70 percent, products brought into Canada from 1965 to 1980.
Evans ordered Amway Canada, the companys Canadian subsidiary, to ^y $4 million, with the remaining $16 million to be paid by the parent corporation.
Otto Stolz, an Amway vice president and legal counsel, stressed that the $20 million was a fine and not repayment of money the Canadian government alleged Amway owed in customs charges.
The judge said he decided how high to put the fine after considering the money made in the scheme. He said he wanted the fine to be a deterrent.
Evans said the founders of U.S. Amway - Jay Van Andel, board chairman, and Richard DeVos, president -
were not very responsible corporate citizens in Canada."
We allowed ourselves to enter into a scheme that was illegal," DeVos and Van AiKKl said in a statement issued by their attorney, David Humphrey. It is with deep regret" that the two men upon sober and mature reflection, concede that it was wrong ...," the statement said.
Ontario prosecutor Paul Lindsay termed the fine ordered by the judge on Thursday the largest one ever in a Canadian fraud case.
Jack Wilkie, a spokesman at company headquarters in Ada, Mich., said Amway would propose that charges against four executives be dropped in return for payment of a large fine and a statement that describes company errors in harsh terms."
Criminal charges named four top executives of the U.S. company: Van Andel, DeVos, James Halliday, a vice president, and C. Dale Discher, treasurer.
Lindsay said an application would be made to withdraw three similar fraud charges made in provincial court in Ottawa against the executives.
Amway - short for American Way - is the second-largest distributor of household products in the United States. Avon is the largest.
Van Andel and Devos began the company in 1959
Speaking of Your Health...
LotirLUaMt.N.llt
Avoiding Croup in Chiidren
We have three young children in our famOy. In the winter and sometimes in the spring, one of the children gets an attack of croup. It really is scary. How can this be avoided in an active household? Mrs. LP.,Mass.
Dear Mrs. P.:
Cro^ is an inflammation or infection of the lining of the throat, the larynx (the windpipe), and the lungs.
This condition occurs mostly in very young children. ^ the child grows older, the swelling of the lining of the windpipe does not interferd with breathing as much as it does in the very young.
Many doctors recognize that this condition occurs not only in the winter but often in the early spring becau^ there may be an allergic faCtw involved.
A virus or streptococcus infection can produce a thidcen-ing of the mucous membrane lining of the larynx and the lungs and thus interfere with the nminal passage of air into the lungs. Before the diphtheria vaccine was discovered, croup was devastating and caused profound danger to life.
. Croup is one of the most distressing conditions for the young child, for the parents and for the physician. The child who is unable to breathe easly becwnes petrified. Fortunately the duration and severity of attacks of croup have been diminished with the advent of antibiotics and cortisone. These markedly reduced the complications of severe croup.
Steam inhalation is the best immediate treatment to administer until nxire active medical treatment can be instituted. The barking cough of croup can be controlled with steam and medication. A bathrown filled with steam will soothe the child who is kept cradled in the parents arms.
It is difficult to say how these attacks can be avmded. How does one really protect oneself against a cold or grippe or an upper respiratory infection?
Good nutrition, avoidance of contact with other chiklren who are sick, supfriemental vitamins, avoidance of fatigue and exposure to inclement weather may all help to reduce the onset of infections and croup.
For those who are known to be lghly allergic, anti-allergy ndedidne may also reduce Uie frequoicy of these attada.
* * *
My daughter has impacted wWto teeth. They dout bMher her. Is It always ecessary to take them out? Mn.M.YJ).,Va.
Their personal fortunes have been estimated at more than $500 milliim each.
Wilkie said Amway lawyers urged Van Andel and DeVos not to settle in the criminal matter, but the two approved the proposal to put this issue benina them.
Amway issued a press re
lease saying the company mack errmv only because it received and acted upon bad advice from both inside the company and from outside consultants," the Detroit Free Press reported.
About three years ago. Revenue Canada, the nations tax agency, sued the two corporations for as much as $147.5 million in penalties, fines and taxes.
Officials said settlement of the criminal case will not affect the ongoing civil suit, the Free Press reported..
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Dear Mrs. D.:
There was a time many years ago when impacted teeth were consi<kred a health hazard and were routinely removed.
Today such surgery is performed only when they affect the normal bite or occlusion of theteeth.
When impacted teeth are a source of infection or when th^ press on nerves and cause pain, then, too, surgical removal is considered.
The remarkable advances in dentistry have contributed many techniques for an exact
An additional consultation with another dental surgeon is the way to verify or avoid the need for removal of impacted teeth.
Chaqieil In Pot Traffic
NEW BERN, N.C. (AP) -A former Pamlico County sheriffs chief deputy and magistrate has been charged with conspiring to smuggle more than 10,000 pounds of marijuana into Pamlico County in 1982.
Larry Ponds, 32, who lived in Oriental and was a magistrate at the time of his alleged involvement in smuggling, was arrested late Wednesday ,in Burlington, where he lived.
He was charged with conspiracy to traffic in more than 10,000 pounds of marijuana and trafficking in*^ marijuana. Twelve other people were arrested and face similar charges, and nine others were indicted, but not yet arrested.
The 22 sealed indictments were delivered Monday by a Craven County grand jury, and state and federal agents began rounding up the suspects Wednesday morning. Although nine people have not been arrested, District Attorney W. David McFa-dyen said authorities know where most of the remaining are.
Drug agents seized several firearms from one of the suspected smugglers Wednesday, McFadyen said. Two Uzi submachine guns, an AR-15 assault rifle similar to the military's M-16 and a 9-mm handgun were found at the suspects Hobucken home, he said.
Twelve of the 13 suspects were being held in Craven County Jail on Thursday, each under $50,000 cash bond.
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Friday. November 11.19B3
Identify Oldest Playing Cards
ByULAILWTZKY .Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - An antiques dealers meticulous sleuthing into the origins of a pack of hand-painted playing cards he bought in 1978 has paid off - an auction house says theyve been identified as dating from the 13th century, the worlds oldest known complete deck.
The research may pay off further if predictions come true that the 52 beautifully illustrated cards, purchased for $2,800, will sell at auction next month for $75,000.
The explanation for their relatively Jow price five years ago is that they were mistakenly offered at a Paris auction as an incomplete set
FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12,1BS3
ITS IN THE CARDS - These court cards, the King, Queen and Knave, are part of a complete set of 32 cards, hand-painted in the 15th
\
century that have been identified as the worlds oldest complete deck, to be sold at auction In London Dec. 6. (.AP Laserphoto)
from the Carroll Rtghter Institute
Launching Replica Ship Soon; Won't Go Far
ByJOHNFLESHER .Associated Press Writer RALEIGH. N.C. (.AP) -The replica of a 16th-century ship that sailed frorri England to North Carolina will be launched on schedule later this month, but barring action by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers it wont go far.
The federal government has refused to dredge a channel through which the Elizabeth II could sail in
order to cruise up and down the .North Carolina coast as part of the states 400th anniversary celebration.
The replica draws 8 feet of water, while the channel through Shallowbag Bay seldom gets deeper than *6 feet. The U.S. Army Corps* of Engineers was asked to dredge the channel but William Gianelli, assistant secretary of the Army, last month said no.
State officials said the
Temporary Head Of Nursing Staff
Marilyn K. Rhodes has been named senior nursing administrator at Pitt County .Memorial Hospital.
In this capacity, .Ms, Rhodes will head the nursing staff of the 566-bed facility on an interim basis untilthe hospital recruits a new vice president for nursing services.
Ms. Rhodes said she plans no major changes in the delivery of nursing services. She will, however, use the interim period to reassess department needs and talk with staff members and others about the future of nursing at PCMH. She said she plans to concentrate on reassuring and supporting the nursing staff.
We have to continue to move forward. she said.
The former vice president for nursing services. Betty Trought, was relieved of her duties in September,
Most recently in charge of nursing surgical services at Pitt. Ms. Rhodes came here five months ago from Tulsa. Okla.. where she served as
Cite Religious Repression
GENEVA. Switzerland (AP) - The Lutheran World Federation reports large-scale religious repression bv the military Marxist-oriented government in Ethiopia.
The report particularly details harassment of the growing 550,000-member Ethiopian Evangelical Church .Mekane Yesus, a Lutheran body, including imprisonments of many pastors and lay leaders and mounting restrictions on it.
The report adds that the military regimes measures also have included an "all-out effort to close the Baptist. Mennonite and Pentecostal churches in the country.
"Actions have also been taken that limit the work of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church ... (and) the Roman Catholic Church has lost its institutions in Asmara."
I\THEBL(K)l)?
ANN ARBOR. Mich. (.AP) - Dr. Douglas Robbins, a Univ. of Michigan researcher. says he has developed a simple blood test that can predict suicidal depression in teen-agers.
assistant administrator of City of Faith Hospital. Before that, she was vice president of nursing at Miami Baptist Hospital in Florida and before that headed her own health care consulting firm. She has gained experience as a staff nurse and a charge nurse in various hospital units including intensive care, surgery and the emergency department.
MARILYN K. RHODES
project was considered primarily for local recreation and thus didnt escape the Reagan administrations budget cuts.
What {^ple dont always consider is that tourism is one of this states top two or three industries. said John Neville, executive director of the states 400th Anniversarv Committee. "Down alwig the coast, it is the biggest industry.
U.S. Rep. Walter Jones. D-N.C., has asked the White House to intenene. But thus far theres no indication that the CorjB will be overruled, said Virginia Herman, spokeswoman for the Corps Wilmington office.
Right now. were sitting tight, said Ms. Herman, At this time, dredging isnt being considered by any level (of command). Congress has the matter under consideration and if they make a decision, future events could change.
Regardless of how the dredging issue turns out. the Elizabeth II will be launched with great fanfare from the Manteo waterfront Nov. 22, said Glenn Mays of the N.C. Division of Travel and Tourism.
Carolyn Hunt, wife of Gov. Jim Hunt, will christen the ship. Hunt will speak, and four British officials including Col. J.N. Blashford-Snell of the Ministry of Defense.
Once the ship is launched, a few finishing touches including the rigging will be added. Then it will be moored at Manteo harbor beside a visitors center. WTien the 400th anniversary celebration gets into full swing next year tourists will be able to board the vessel.
The celebration officially begins next April in England to coincide with the launching of the first Plymouth-to-America voyage. 'The first landing at Roanoke Island was July 13,1584, and thats when the North Carolina festivities will start.
GENERAL TENDENCIES; Today's influwtcM can b harsh and frustrating unlass you maka a special point to
refuse to try to force issues and observe what is gong on
about you. Patience is a must.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Some friend you can usually rely on is in trouble with a financier, so go elsewhere for data or backing your need.
TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Dont enter into an argument between a partner and a bigwig otherwise you could be the proverbial goat.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Listen to the advice of a new contact concerning your )ob and then persevere in your own plodding, sure way MOON CHILDREN (June 22 lo Jul. 21) Use good sense and dont overspend for amusement Seek out amusements which are both fwi and practical.
LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) A family tie and a partner are at odds, so keep them apart and avoid trouble at home and at business.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) You have work to do so dont run off on any tangents, otherwise you could get into trouble. Try to concentrate more.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Look for some recreation that will relieve financial tensions you are under, and later you can handle these much better.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Dont try to force kin to do things as you wish now. but await a better time when ^ they are more flexible.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) A private worry could deter you from making headway in the outside world, if you permit.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Be more corKerned with a good pal than with monetary affairs today, and later you stiH have time for practical matters.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Avoid a higher-up in civic affairs and be sure lo meet every rule and regulation that applies lo you.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar, 20) Go to advisors who are very talented instead of listening to what new contacts have to say who do not understand your position.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .. he or she will be one of those clever children who will require a good education since there may be problematical matters occurring during the lifetime and he. or she. will then be well equipped to handle them.
of "unique" tarot cards, probably from the 16th century.
Unconvinced, the Amsterdam. Netherlands, dealer who bought them set out to prove they were older, launching the Sherlock Holmes-style detective work that positively dated them to 1465-80.
The dealer, who has requested anonymity, has now consigned the cards to Sotheby Parke Bebned. which will offer them for sale at its London galleries on Dec, 6. They were first pre-viewed Thursday at Sothebys New York galleries. where they were to be on view until Sunday
The set consists of the same number of cards as modern-day decks, but unlike todays cards, they are larger and oval-shaped. Instead of spades, clubs, hearts and diamonds, their symbols are of the hunting field: four suits of hunting horns, dog collars, game nooses and ropes. Each suit has three court cards, depicting a medieval king, queen and knave.
By the mid-16th century, these symbols were already replaced by the signs found in today's decks Christopher de Hamel. Sothebys expert on medieval manuscripts who followed up the dealers sleuthing, has concluded the deck is "un
doubtedly the earliest complete set of illuminated playing cards He says his research also proves that they were made in Flanders, probably in Lille, now part of northeastern France.
The clues that led lo de Hamels conclusion included an analysis of the paper, painting technique and color and a study of the type of costumes worn by the cards court figures.
The style of painting on the cards is consistent with that used in 15th-century manuscripts, and the Flemish connection was made through two watermarks visible on the paper. One. noticed by the Amsterdam dealer, is a Gothic letter "p" surmounted by a qualrefoil. a common niark found in eastern French and Flemish manuscripts in 1464-80 The other, uncovered by de Hamel, is of a shield inscribed with the Gothic letters "iado," and found in southern Flanders and the .Netherlands about 1466-79.
Also corroborating the date are the hair styles and costumes worn by the medieval figures on the cards. 'Hiey conform "with the height of court fashion around 1465 to 1485. notes de Hamel, "including short jackets and hair just above the ears, typical of the 1470s ..and the pointed shoes which were going out of fashion by 1480
But lest all this proof not suffice for some skeptics, the buyer of the cards went tp the Central Laboratory for Objects of Art and Science in Amsterdam, where the paint pigments were tested The mineral content of the paints proved identical to that of paints used in the 15th century.
Prospective buyers of the medieval cards will, no doubt, also want to know what game the deck was used for.
That answer, however, is not as forthcoming as that of the cards history. Although the French game LAlouette, (The Lark) is frequently} mentioned in 15th-century! chronicles, the rules of the, game are unknown today. ' Still, says Elizabeth treip.i assistant to de Hamel, "You! can play bridge with them.} You can play anything with} them, in fact
She said the cards most' probably were used by a! royal court hunting party, during the "elaborate picnics, they had during the hunt
For fun. she added. Sothebys planned a bridge game using the cards on thej night before the auction
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Dramatic Step Is Considered
WASHINGTON (AP) - A dramatic ecumenical step is being recommended to the United Methodist Church that it permit some delegates from other denominations to have a voice and vote in its top governing body.
This is idealistic ecumenical legislation. says the Rev. Robert W Huston, general secretary of the churchs unity commission, which decided at a meeting here to recommend the move to the church governing gen-^eral conference next year.
He said such action would be both a symbol of the oneness of the church of which the United Methodist Church is a part and a sign to others of our ecumenical seriousness.
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$100,000 Reward Offered In Capitol Biombing
(AP) Aa *Ua wAAeM KlAetf Mi MeulAatte am^ rv*_ ^
I^Da..yReflector.Greeny,lle^ C Friday Nov.m., ii y
Expected His LifVsentence
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate is offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of those who bombed the U.S. Cwitol earlier this we^.
The Monday night explosion near-the Senate chamber caused an estimated $250,000 damage, not including restoration of five paintings, the office of the Capitol Architect said Thursday.
During consideration of an unrelated bill Thursday night. Sen. John Melcher, D-Mont., offered in amendment to make $100,000 available for substantial
information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible for the explosion.
The recipient of the money would be designated by the attorney general.
Deputy Architect Elliott Carroll said the $250,000 damage estimate is lower than some initial reports because most of the woric is being performed by Capitol employees rather than private construction firms TTie blast ripped a large crater in a wall 30 feet from the Senate chamber, caused severe damage to a Republican lounge and meeting
room, blew out windows and knocked heavy doors to the office of Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd off their hinges.
No one was inii^ in the bombing and officials said there was no major structural damage to the building. The Senate chamber was unharmed.
Five 19th century paintings were damaged in the blast, a portrait of Daniel Webster most seriously. Senate curator James R. Ketchum had no restoration cost for the paintings, but said all will be back in place by January
Discussing the bombing with reporters Thursday, FBI Director William H. Webster said the blast was produced by three or four pounds of dynamite rigged to a dual firing" mechanism using two watches.
He said that 10 or 11 other bombings along the East and West C^ts since 1961 had similar mechanisms He declined to specify those bombings because that would seem to connect them and I dont want to do that"
I want to avoid speculating, Theres already been a lot of speculation. Webster said.
He said the Armed Resistance Unit, which claimed responsibility for the Capitol explosion, was the same name used by those who placed a bomb outside the Army War College at Ft. Mc.Nair here last spring T^re were no injuries in either of those explosions
I wish we had more information about the makeup of that organization," Webster said. But we have no specific subjects of this investigation into the Ca|Mtol bombing and we dont know who did the Ft, McNair bombing.
Webster also declined to say that the Capitol Hill or other domestic bombings resulted from foreign backing of groups operating in this country
He said there have been 29 bombing incidents in the nation so far in 1983. and in 14 of those cases explosives actually were detonated. He said this compares with 51 incidents during all of 1982
Thus far this year, the domestic bombings have caused six deaths and two injuries compared to seven deaths and 26 injuries last year, Webster said.
DE.NTO.N. Texas <AP, -Henr> Lee Lucas, the drifter who claims to have killed about 165 people, says he expected the life sentence he received for killing his teen-age common-law wife and is hoping for the death penalty in his next trial A Denton County court jury sentenced Lucas. 47. on Thursday for the August 1982 murder of Frieda Powell, a IVyear-old Florida runawa> District .AUorney Jerry Cobb told jurors their mission was removing this animal from society"
Lucas was earlier sentenced to 75 years for another Texas killing. He
said he has asked tor the death penalty and says Tm going to get it" when he next goes on trial Jan 16 m Gerjrgetown. Texas for the murder of an unidentified woman whose bod\ was tound m 1979
NEEDS ITS OW.V PEKI.N'G APi China needs its own "socialist" light music for people to hum on construction sites and in the fields, but must combat "decadent" popular music from abroad, says Vice Culture .Minister Zhou Weizhi
Veterans Da
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Doubts Raised On Internal Security Effectiveness
By R. GREGOR YNOKES Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Even as State Department security officials continued to search a nearby prison for top-secret documents delivered there by mistake, officials sought answers to key questions about the effectiveness of the governments internal security
procedures.
Among the questions:
-How is it possible that a filing cabinet safe containing some of departments most secret documents could not bemissed from the time it was taken from the State Department on Aug. 1 until it was discovered by officials at the Lorton Reformatory on Oct. 25 - a period of
nearly 12 weeks?
-How is it possible that a safe full of secret documents can be left unattended in such a way as to be in
advertently
government
)icked up by urniture mov
ers? The unlocked safe was removed from a walk-in vault in an office of the Bureau of Intelligence and Research.
-How is it possible that no complete catalogue of the safes contents exists, the result being that officials may never be sure they have retrieved all of them?
-Why did State Department security officials wait for two weeks - from Oct. 25 to Nov. 8 - after the first documents were found at the prison before telling Secre
tary of State George P. Shultz, who was finally informed during a flight from Washington with President Reagan to Tokyo on Tuesday?
-Why did security officials not vigorously investigate a report from a local law enforcement officer on Nov. 4 that documents had been in the hands of prison inmates for at least three weeks before that date?
State Department officials continued to stress Thursday that the security breach was a horrendous mistake, as Alan Romberg, a State Department spokesman put it to reporters. He said there
was nothing to any other explanation.
Officials said they had no ready explanation for the many unanswered questions, including the most incredible, which was that the safe was never missed until it was found at nearby Lorton Reformatory, a prison for about 2,800 inmates.
These are the kind of questions nobody has answers to, said one official late Thursday. Our investigation hopefully will reveal the answers.
The official, who insisted on anonymity, said the safe-cabinet was in a
f
Finder Charged For Trying Sell Ring
CAPTURED WEAPON - Vice President George Bush looks at an anti-aircraft gun while touring a display of arms captured in the U.S. invasion of Grenada at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland. Bush termed it "an awesome display of
Chinese and Soviet weaponry. Some of the weapons taken hy U.S. Army and Marine troops on Grenada will go on display today at a hanger at Andrews AFB outside Washington. (AP Laserphoto)
UFO-Believer Is Convinced A Vast Coverup By Government
By BRUCE SCHREINER
Associated Press Writer
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Lawrence Fawcett says he was a skeptic about UFOs until the afternoon he saw one the size of a Boeing 747 tap a power substation in Manchester, Conn., and blow out the towns electricity.
He says UFOs would make more such appearances but for the hostility of the human race.
Larry W. Bryant, a member of an organization
of UFO enthusiasts, says the federal government is in possession of disc-shaped objects and small-statured ugly beings or humanoids. And J. Alien Hynek, head of another UFO group, says he quit an Air Force team studying the UFO phenomenon when it first became a rage after World War II because the backlog of unexplained cases grew.
Today the three join other UFO enthusiasts for the start of a three-day conference
FOCUS
entitled A Cosmic Watergate? It is intended to expose a government coverup exceeding the Watergate era.
Fawcett, assistant director of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy, said Thursday the government no longer need fear that disclosure of alien life would trigger a panic like the one sparked by Orson Welles 1938 War of the Worlds radio broadcast, which simulated a battle against a Martian invasi(Hi.
Weve come a long way, Fawcett said. With E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, people are ready to accept that were not the only beings in the universe.
I'just wonder how much longer we have to suffer from being deceived by our own government, said Bryant, director of the Washington office of CAUS.
Bryant says the Air Force has captured some visitors from outer space, and in July he asked a federal court in Washington to order the extraterrestrials be produced.
Bryant said the constitutional rights of visitors to this planet should be considered and produced an affidavit from a colleague who said he had interviewed military personnel who have seen the captives.
That case was thrown out after federal attorney Royce Lamberth and two Air Force lawyers successfully argued that U.S. District Court Judge Oliver Gasch had no I juris(liction in the case.
Bryant says the Freedom of Information Act is helping UFO researchers unearth pieces of the puzzle, but he wants military or government officials to step forward with the information.
All we need is one foot in the door, he said. When we finally get the information depends on how the public supports this pursuit.
Hynek, head of the Center for UFO Studies, says researchers have had to fi^t a publicity war with military officials who ridicule the effort by painting UFO believers as fanatics.
CHESAPEAKE, Va. (AP) - A ring is found on a beach. The finder tries to sell it to the owner. Does that make it the case of the purloined ring?
Prosecutors here think so. Theyve charged Janice West with petty larceny for trying to sell the ring she found to Carol Lamb, whose name was inscribed in the ring.
But the legal grounds for the charge are obsure enough that lawyers are researching century-old cases they havent studied since law school. A district court judge on Wednesday postponed a hearing until Nov. 23 to give lawyers time to study the question.
Mrs. West, 32, found the high school ring with a metal detector Sept. 17. She decided it was worth about $60, telephoned the owner an<l offered to return it - for $60.
Ms. Lamb, 20, arranged to meet with Mrs. West in a shopping center parking lot. A detective went instead, posing as Ms. Lambs mother, and recorded the conversation. Other detectives arrested Mrs. West as she walked away.
The issue of whether Mrs. West committed a crime has precedents dating to the mid-1800s, said Commonwealths Attorney Robert E.Kowalsky Jr.
The legal dilemma goes back to some of the earliest cases you study in law school, Kowalsky said.
Defense attorney Larry Wise told the judge that Mrs. Wests finding of the ring couldnt have been any more innocent and that she did the right thing by calling Ms. Lamb.
But Assistant Commonwealths Attorney Kenneth Taft said Mrs. West took control of the ring by refus-
LAW OF SUPPLY BOSTON (AP) - Doctors use expensive intensive care units more efficiently when hospitals are forced to reduce the number of beds available for patients, study concludes.
Veterans Remembered
Today Veterans Day is a salute to the more than two and one half million Americans killed or wounded during wartime. The greatest single loss of life occurred during World War II, when more than 400,000 Americans died. Today is sometimes called Armistice Day. The Armistice between Allied and Central powers was signed at 11 a.m. on this date in 1918 the elventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.
DO YOU KNOW Which country sustained the most casualties in World War II?
THURSDAYS ANSWER - Luther tacked his famous 95 Theses to a church door.
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ing to give it up until she was paid. He cited an 1855 casein which a judge ruled that it was larceny if someone kept found property, knowing or reasonably believing that the owner can be found,
Taft said the attorneys have to rely on common law - interpretation of decisions in the previous cases, because there is no statutory definition of larceny in Virginia.
Because of the unusual legal questions raised. General District Judge Russell Townsend postponed the hearing to give lawyers time to prepare detailed briefs.
Its an issue I doubt Ive thought seriously about since law school, Townsend said.
walk-in vault, which is locked up all the time and only authorized personnel are allowed in there without an escort. The safe itself wasnt locked, another unexplained breach of security.
Officials say it was inadvertently taken to the prison along with other unused furniture to be refurbished by prison inmates.
Since it was found, officials < have searched two cellblocks used by the regular prison population, four maximum security cellblocks and the prison library, in pursuit of documents they couldnt even be sure were still missing.
It is feared that the documents were widely distributed among prison inmates. Those known to have handled them apparently included an inmate with access to a copying machine.
A source close to the federal probe said late Thursday night that investigators are getting a numter of varied stories from prison inmates that documents had been found much earlier than the last few weeks.
The source, who spoke only on condition he not be identified, said those stories are being treated with great skepticism but there is some thought that this may not be the first time this kind of thing has happened
The Washington Post is reporting in todays editions that an inmate who on Wednesday returned a document dated 1959 told the FBI he found it a year ago in the prisons law library.
While there was a tendency to regard with amusement
the spectacle of government agents conducting a cell-by-cell search for secret documents, it was an extremely serious breach of security.
Officials did not sec to, hide that if the documents fell into Soviet hands they could cause untold harm to the nations security apparatus. The documents included all, or nearly all, of the daily intelligence briefings prepared for Secretary Shultz or from January through March of this year.
While officials refused to discuss the details of the documents, it is known that the intelligence briefings include information from U.S. embassies abroad and the.. Central Intelligence Agency." ,.
Furthermore, the in-. formation probably included discussions of American pol-' icy and actions in Lebanon,
El Salvador, Nicaragua and the U.S.-Soviet arms negotiations in Geneva, to name just a few..
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The Daly Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
Friday, November 11.1983 9
El Salvador Rebels Out Front'
By CHRIS ANGELO Associated Preti Writer SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Two months into a new offensive, leftist guerrillas are showing they currently have the up-r hand in this countrys our-year-old civil war, military and political observers say.
The guerrillas, made up of five groups fighting as the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN), have not held on to any new
territory since they began the offensive Sept. 3, a hi^y placed military observer said. But they are easily seizing towns in a wider area, have shown they can operate in different regions simultaneously and are fighting harder, he said.
There was a tremendous propaganda effort (by the army) during the period from May until the end of August that coincided with a lack of activity by the
BAD BIRD This great horned owl was exiled to another part of Rutland County (in Vermont) after he was caught killing chickens on a Rutland Town farm. Tom Gallipo, who caught the owl eating his chickens, said it
ik ^
killed two but caused the deaths of another 100 birds who suffocated each other trying to flee from the owl. The owl was released the next day about ten miles away. (AP Laserphoto)
Little Support For Impeaching
Newsprint Price Hike By Canadian Producer
By The Associated Press
A leading Canadian newsprint producer, MacMillan Bloedel Ltd., says it will raise newsprint prices for its American customers by 6.7 percent beginning .\iarchl.
An industry analyst in British Columbia said Thursday that he expected other western Canadian producers
Rate Cases Are Settled
^RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -State Insurance Com-raissioner John Ingram and the insurance industry settled several rate cases iursday, which will mean lower premiums in some types of auto insurance.
Ingram, in announcing the agreement, contended that (rasumers would save $58 rjillion -a year on their automobile insurance. But Paul Mize, general manager of the North Carolina Rate Bureau, said that, as part of the agreement. Ingram has (^opp^ his opposition to two rate increases in 1982 that aiso total more than $50 lillion in annual premiums.
:The companies had put those rate increases into effect Jan. 1 and challenged Ingrams denial in court.
Ingram said the total rate for drivers with no accidents or tickets will be unchanged for the coverages they are required to buy under state law - bodily injury, property damage and uninsured motorist. For the optional physical damage coverages, the companies revenues will be reduced by $4 million and for medical payments the revenue will increase by $3 million.
'Ingram said rates for drivers in the Reinsurance Facility will remain the same.
Marines Depart For Honduras
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) - About 1,300 Marines and Navy men left Camp Lejeune on Thursday for Honduras and,a joint mili-iary exercise with the Honduran army, officials said.
I The 28th Marine Amphibi-'ous Unit left Morehead City in five amphibious ships and should arrive in Honduras Nov. 15 for the exercises, called Ahras Para II, said 'Camp Lejeune spokesman Gunnery Sgt. Terry Pruitt.
I Pruitt said the Marines, commanded by *Col. R.W. Wistin, are scheduled to re-Wn sometime in December.
J *Us just a joint military exercise thats been planned Tor months,he said.
{..The Marines ground ^mbat element was the 1st battalion, 6th Marines, ^mmanded by Lt. Co. T.D. jSlouffer, said Pruitt.
1 (The aviation combat ele-ksent was the Marine Mediqun Helicopter Squadron 264, fcommanded by Lt. Col. W.A. Beebe. Logistical support was being provided by the 'MAU Service Support Group 28, commanded by Lt. Co R.A. List.
to match the increase
.MacMillan Bloedel announced Wednesday that it was raising its newsprint price to $500 a ton from $468.50 for U.S. customers. Most eastern Canadian newsprint producers implemented the same increase earlier this year.
Eric Laurilzen. a MacMillan Bloedel executive. said Thursday that the increase restores the price to the October 1982 level and returns prices to a level that more realistically reflects production costs."
MacMillan Bloedel, which ranked third among the Canadian producers in newsprint capacity at the end of 1982. said it would retain the 5 percent discount that it made available starting in July to those U.S. customers who purchase 100 percent of their contracted tonnage. With the discount, the price would rise to $475 a metric ton from $445
The company also announced it was raising its price for Canadian customers by 4.9 percent to .540 Canadian dollars from 515. A Canadian dollar is worth about 80 U.S. cents.
Jaak Puusepp. forest products industry analyst for the investment firm of Pemberton Houston Willoghby Inc. in Vancouver. British Columbia, said that MacMillan Bloedel seemed to have concluded that "the market is tightening up pretty dramatically."
He said he estimated western Canadian newsprint producers will be operating at 79 percent capacity next year, up from alwut 71 percent currently, and he predicted they will get above 90 percent capacity by 1986.
Eastern Canadian pro
ducers, he said, are currently operating at 87 percent capacity and should be over 90 percent next year.
"Once you get to 90 percent. you tend to get price increases through, he said.
He said he had been skeptical earlier this year that the eastern Canadian producers would be able to make the $500 price stick. He said several companies had to offer discounts from that new price initially, but that the new price level appeared to have become generally accepted by September.
The eastern producers had tried several times previously to implement the $500-a-ton price, but a market glut forced the price backdown.
Puusepp said western producers stuck with their base price of $468.50. however, in an effort to undercut Scandinavian producers who were venturing into their markets. He said they appeared to have accomplished that task and now believe they can increase their prices.
By ED McCullough
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sponsors of a resolution to impeach President * Reagan for sending troops to Grenada are pressing ahead, though no support has been shown by the House leadership or many other members of Congress.
Members of the House Judiciary Committee, which handles such resolutions, had nothing public to say about the matter Thursday. Hamilton Fish Jr. of New York, the ranking Republican on the committee, said through his press secretary that he was studying the issue.
We have pretty much no comment, said Pete Roussel, deputy White House press secretary, "The president's position is well known.
The resolution was introduced by Rep. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y., and supported by Reps. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., Parren Mitchell. D-Md., Henry Gonzalez and Mickey Leland. both D-Texas, and Julian Dixon and Mervyn Dymally, both D-Calif.
They say Reagan violated Congress constitutional authority to declare war by unilaterally sending troops to Grenada on Oct. 25.
Weiss said he did not seek support by House leaders before drafting the resolu-
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tion, and got little feedback from colleagues after introducing it on the House floor.
Conyers, a 10-term veteran and member of the Judiciary Committee, stressed that the resolution was not a political gesture, and that a hearing on its merits would be actively sought.
"It is not a frivolous matter or something we have done impetuously," he said.
Even if the resolution gets bogged down in committee, several purposes short of impeachment might be served, Weiss and Mitchell said.
People will be focusing on the issue much more seriously than they had been," Weiss said. To a great extent. I expect what Congress does will depend on the discussion that results from this resolution
FBILN, said a Salvadwan univmity political scientist who has followed political developments in El Salvador for nearly 10 years.
The propaganda stressed that the FMLN was defeated, that the army had increased its offensive and technical capability and was moving on the kill, he said, What you are witnessing now is thatitwasprqjaganda."
Both sources spoke on condition they not be identified.
The military observer said the FMLN appears to be coordinating attacks from the Guazapa area, 15 miles north of San Salvador, to the northeastern province of Morazan, a long-time rebel stronghold.
He said the FMLN has been successful "primarily because the military lost the initiative" and "the subversives had to challenge militarily the national plan."
He referred to the Vietnam-style pacification and reconstruction program that began in San Vicente province and is to be extended east to take in ail of Usulutan province. Government troops drove rebels from San Vicente in June, but they have returned to some areas.
Government troops, the military observer said, are using more big sweeps and fewer small patrols and night missions, tactics recommended for guerrilla warfare by U.S. military advisers.
Theyre tired, in some cases," he said. "They havent been rotated through a refitting process, which is beginning now. Their equipment wears out and it has to be replaced.
He said low morale was a problem in some places and there was concern about
continuing U.S. military aid.
U.S. military officials, who asked not tq be identified, have complained recently that the Salvadoran military leadership is ineffective and plagued by hazy lines of authority, a defeatist attitude and pervasive laziness^
In recent rebel takeovers of two towns, some government troops at the defending garrisons fled in civilian clothing, a local commander and the Salvadoran military observer said. Reinforcements were ambushed or said they met resistance and in both cases arrived a day late, after the guerrillas had left.
The military observer said he first saw the guerrilla strategy as an attempted nationwide challenge to the national plan, but he's reconsidering that theory.
"This is a little bit stiffer challenge than just a kicking-up-dust operatiwi all over the countryside." he said.
He said the FMLN has good communications, can. coordinate attacks and is able to maneuver around the army relatively well.
Hes capable of fielding a fighting force with everybody armed now," he said, referring to the rebels. "I think that he has demonstrated beyond a shadow of a doubt that he has a substantial amount of ammunition.
The guerrillas claim to have recoverd far more military equipment than the military admits, but the military obserx'er acknowledged that the rebels "got more from us than we got from them."
They are hitting company-sized convoys, recovering enormous amounts of weapons," the university political observer said.
"They are capable of drawing the army to wherever they want. The number of towns and size of the towns they are taking indicates they are getting experience with new weaponry
Between Sept. 3 and mid-October, the FMLN carried out 62 attacks on municipalities, hitting some towns two or three times, the militaiy observer said. But he said they did not appear closer to their goal of establishing a provincial capital.
' In addition to northern -Morazan. rebels hold the eastern portion of (Tialatenango to the north of San Salvador and can quickly take towns in northern Cabanas and San Miguel provinces, the Guazapa area and the east-central province of Usulutan. where they are entrenched south of the coastal highway.
The Salvadoran military estimates the FMLN has
6.000 to 8,000 combatants. The political observer said it believed they may have at least 10,000 fighters, with
30.000 active supporters helping in other ways.
An estimated 47.000 people have been killed since the war began October 15. 1979. They include at least 39,000 civilians, according to the independent Salvadoran Human Rights Comm-mission; at least 6,000 government troops, according military sources, and at least
2.000 guerrillas, according to rebel sources outside El Salvador.
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10 The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.
Friday. November 11.1W3
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WHEN KINGS WERE NOT OBEDIENT!
WE KINS5 IN WE BIBLE OFT-TIMES WENT ASAINST WE ADVICE OF T POOPMETS W0U6H WE BOYAL LINE WAS WELL EDUCATED WIS DID NOT EXCLUDE WEM FROM MAWNS WE MISTAKES OF WE COMMON MAN. UNFORTUNATELY WHEN WIS HAPPENED, NOT ONLY WEY BUT AN ENTIRE NATION WOULD BE AFFECTED. SOMETIMES WE EFFECTS OF WEIR DISOSEQENCE WOULD SE MANIFEST TOR YEARS AND YEARS. SUCH A CASE IS WAT OF KINS JOHOIAKIM WHEN HE OD NOT LISTEN TO WE WISDOM OF JEREMIAH WE PROPHET. (IIKINSS 24) WS RESULTED IN JERUSALEM BEINS BESIEGED BY NEBUCHADNEZZAR'S ARMIES AND CAUSING WE POPUUTION TO BE PLUNGED INTO A PERIOD OF
starvation.
. AND, IN90E WE 6ATES, WE PEOPLE HUDDLE FEARFUaV..
SAVE WIS FOR YOUR SUNOW SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK
Sponsors Of This Page Along With Ministers Of All Faiths, Urge You To Attend Your House Of Worship This Week. To Believe In God And To Trust In His Guidance For Your Life.
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COZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC.
" 814 Dickinson Ave 752-3194 Banks Cozart & Employees
GREENVILLE MARINE & SPORTS CENTER
Greenville Blvd NE 758-5938 Joe Vernelson. Owner
Compliments Of RIVERS & ASSOCIATES ENGINEERS
PAIR ELECTRONICS. INC.
Electronics Suppliers 756 22.91 107 Trade St Greenville N C
GRANT BUICK. INC.
756 1877 Greenville Blvd Bill Grant & Employees
ANNES TEMPORARIES. INC.
758-6610 120 Reade St Greenville
JIMMYS PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE
All Types Minor Repair Work Wrecker Service Corner I4iti & 264 Bypass J F Baker owner 752 2995
OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS. INC.
211 S Jarvis 752 5025 All Ennployees
SMITHS HEARING AID SERVICE
Authorized Beitone Hearing Aid Dealer l7l6W5lhSi Et 758-4334
Compliments ol YAMAHA OF PIH COUNTY
752-0876 1506 N Greene St Greenville N C
EARLS CONVENIENCE MART
Route 1 7560278 Earl Faulkner & Employees
TURNAGE REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE AGENCY
See John Finch For All Your Insurance Needs Corner 3rd & Cotanche 752-3459 or 752 2715
WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE
We Put It On The Plate 500 W Greenville Blvd 756-0040 2903 E lOlh St 758-2712
FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC.
Jim Whittington Oakmont Professional Plaza Greenville N C 756-0000
TOMS RESTAURANT
The Very Best In Home Cooking 756-1012 Maxwell St West End Area
AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE
1007 Chestnut St 758 7000
Compliments Of KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CO.
114 E lOlh St 752 5206
Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.
518 E Gieenviile Blvd 756 4145
ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS
766 3500 226 Commerce St Greenville
HARGETTS DRUG STORE
2500 S Charles Ext 756 3344
PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE
2105 Dickinson Ave 756 2444 Ricky Jackson & Employees
EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS
758-3568 1514 N Greene St A Complete Restaurant & Office Coffee Service
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC
2201 Dickinson Ave 756 4267
PLAZA GULF SERVICE
756-7616 701 E Greenville Blvd Ryder Truck Rentals 756-8045 Wrecker Service Day 756-7616 Night 756-6479
HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO.
Residential & Commercial Building 400 N 10th St 752 1553
Compliments Of FRED WEBB. INC.
BILL ASKEW MOTORS
Buy-SellTrade S Memorial Dr 756 9102
BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS
218 Arlington Blvd 10*h St Greenville 756-6001 752-4156 *
PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO.
758-2113 Greenville
JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES. INC.
The Finest In Manufactured Homes 316 W Greenville Blvd 756 4687 Johnny L Jackson & Employees
WHITTINGTON, INC.
Charles St Greenville N C Ray Whittington 756-8537
A CLEANER WORLD GARMENT CARE CENTER
622 Greenville Blvd 7565544 Pickup Station West End Circle 756 8995
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222 E 5th St 757 3558 Kate Phillips. Interior Designer Associate member ASID
DAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO.
2102 Dickinson Ave 756 1345 Bobby Tripp & Employees
CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE
1405 Dickinson Ave 752 3776 Jerry Creech. Owner
Compliments Of PITT MOTOR PARTS. INC.
758-4171 911 S Washington St
GREENVILLE HEATING &
AIR CONDITIONING 0.. INC.
308 Spruce 758 4939 Cecil Clark & Employees ,
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752 6125 Corner of 5th & Greene , Greenville N C
JA-LYN SPORT SHOP
Hwy 33, Chicod Creek Bridge 752 2676 G.rimesland James & Lynda Faulkner
INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.
W M Scales, Jr General Agent Waighly Scales. Rep Clarke Stokes Rep 756-3738
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301 Ridgeway 758 5278
HOLIDAY SHELL
Steam Cleaning Service All Types Auto S Truck Repair 24 Hour Wrecker Service 724 S Memorial Dr 752 0334
PARKERS BARBECUE RESTAURANT
756 2388 S Memorial Dr Doug Parker & Employees
Compliments Oi PHELPS CHEVROLET
West End Circle 756-2150
EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
2739 E lOmSt PO Box 3785 752 4323 Greenville
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HARRIS SUPERMARKETS. INC.
Where Shopping Is A Pleasure #1 Memorial Dr 756 0110 2 2612 E 10th St Ext- 757 1880 4 Bethel 5 N Greene 752 41 to 6 Ayden #7 Tarboro
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703 W Greenville Blvd 756 9874
WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY
756-0317 123 S Railroad Winierville
LOVEJOY AGENCY
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N Memorial Dr Ext 752 5656 Management & Staff
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ART DELLANO HOMES. INC.
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FAITH CAN CLAIM ALL OF GODS PROMISES'
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Area Church News
riR8Tm'RCH(>K(HRIt(T SR17271 Lake Glenwaod Road i Mr Melvin Rawlf lOa.m Sun - BtUeSchocri AII a m - Worihip Service ^7 p m - Evenin* Worship k Vouth Service
7;30p m Wed - Prayer Meeting and Youth Meeting
FIRST PKNTKtOSTAL HOLINESSdllKrM Corner of Brinkley Hoad and Plaza Drive Frank Gentry
9:45 a m Sun - Sunday School. Supi Dickie Rook II a m. - Worship Service 5:00 p m - Choir Practice 7 flop m. - Praiaeand Worship 7 30p m Mon Woman's Auxiliary 7:30p m Tue - Girl s Auxiliary 7:30 pm Wed - Bible Stlidy/Youlh Service
7pm Thurs - Nursing Hume. Chocowinily
9 30 a m Pri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZg
7:00 pm Fri - University Nursing Home
10 00 a m Sal - Junior Bible guiz drill. Gnmesland
t imSKKSTIlVE MI.SSIO.NAKV B.APTISTdllRtH Staionsburg and Allen Hoad Reverend Arlee Grilfin. Jr
9 15a m Sun Church School
11 00 a m - Worship
6:30 pm - Bapiisl Training Union 7:30pm Thur Adult BiTileStudy and Prayer Meeting 6 30 p m Vouthsiunes Bible Study and Fellowship
10 00 a m Sun - Learning Enrichment Program
HARVEST BAPTIST t HI KCH - PO Box 8046 Greenville NC
Meeting at Carolina Country Day School David 7 UBIanc 756 3624
10 00 a m Sun - Sunday School all ages 1100 am Sun - Worship Service
laird's Table and Babv Dedication
6 00 p m - Evening Service on Chris iian Character
7 30p m Wed - PraverService
6 15 a m Men's Prayer Breaklast at
7 0<? *p m Thur - Soul Winning Evangelism , _
9 31) a m Sat - Soul Winning
Evangelism
FIRST! HRI.STIAN ( III R( H
520 East Greenville Boulevard 756 3138.756-0775 Will R Wallace. Minister Lanell Boyett. DirKtor o( Religious
Education
9 45 am Sun Church School
11 00a m WorshiD
4 00pm JuniorCnoir. Vouth Choir
5 00 pm Primarv Choir. Chi Kho JVFCYF
10 45am Mon-Cirles.!. 4 5.7,8.9
11 45 p m - CWF Luncheon & Crt'neral Meeting
7 30pm (irlce3
9 0UamTue Church .Stall Meeting to 90 a m Tue Newsletter Informa
lion Due in office
10 30 a m - Bible Study
to 30 a m Wed IRK' Ministers Meeting
7 30 p m Wed Chancel Choir Re
hearsal
FBI K.SMI ARE ( HRI.STI \N ( ESTER
Hwv 11 Wintervillc .Max Flynn
9 30a m Sun Sunday School
10 30 a m - Sunday Morning Worship Service
7 00 p m Sundav Evening Worship Serv ice. Special Music bv the Langleys 7 00 p m Sun .Sunday Eveing Worship .Service
7 30pm Tue Bible Institute Wednesdav through Friday Home Cell GroupsCalfoflice ia6 500:) lor fixations
VKTHIR(HRISTI\N(IUR( II Bell Arthur Ben James. Minister Phone 753 2043
9 45 a m Sun - Bible School. .Supt Mike Mills Ham - Morning Worship 6pm Evening Worship 7 30p m Tue - Visitation 7 30 p m Wed - Bible Study and Praver
g 'OOpm Wed Board .Meeting
7 30p m Thur Choir Practice
6 00am Fri Breakfast Tom si
7 OOp m - Chi Rho I Rock A Thon i
MORMN(<(<l.<IRV AINt-STOLK F AITH H()I.INF>S( HI R( II .306 Pennsylvania Ave Yet .Sharing Building Eldr^ Irene Gtpps 4th Sun of Each .Month 7:00 pm Thur Worship and Pre aching
7 00 pm 4th .Sun - Worship and Preaching
PINEV (.ROVE FREE Wll.l. BAPTISTdll R( H
Hwy 264 West
Allan Sterbin. Pa.sior Phone 756 7430 lOam Sun Sunday School Ham - .Morning Worship
6 30p m - Praver Service
7 00pm Evening Worship 00 pm Choir Practice
Narcotics Anonymous
8 OOp
8 00 p m Tue Meeting 7 30 pm Wed Bible .Study
PEOPLES B \PTIST TEMPLE 2001 W Greenville Blvd The Rev J M Bragg. Pa.stor 7 0 a m Sun - laivmen's Praver Breakfast Three .Steers Rest i 10 a m Sunday School
Ham- .Morning Worship
5 30pm Choir practice
6 30 p m - Ev ening Worh.sip
7 00 pm Wed Sunday .School, Teachers Meeting
7 30 p m Wed Hour of Power
8 45 p m - Choir Practice
7 00 pm Thur Church Visitation Radio Program "Tdgether Again' WBZy 7 15pm Monday through Friday 7 00 p m Nov 19 - Teens Donkev Basketball Game in Family Life Center
FIR.STPRESBVTERI \N ( HI R( H
1400 S Elm St
Richard R Gammon and Gerald .M Anders. Pastors Brett WaLson. Director of Music E Robert Irwin. Organist
9 00 a m Sun - Koinonia Class 9 00a m - Worship
9 45 a m - (hurch School Ham-Worship
5 00pm - YouthChorus
6 00pm - New Member Dinner Vouth Fellowships .}
7 OOp m Deacons loodam Moo - Circles 1.2.3 12 oopm -Circlefl
2 1)0pm - Circles
7 00p m - Bov .Scouts. Girl Scouts
8 OOp m. - Sierra Club. Circlet 9a m Tues. - Park A Tot
10 00 am - Circles 6.7
12 00 p m - News Deadline 7 00pm - Church Relations
7 30 pm - Outreach Committee. T R CIvitan
8 00pm - Circles
7 00a m Wed - Men of the church 12 30 pm - Kate Lew IS Lunch 2pm Wed - Address Angels
4 p m. - Rainbow thmr 4:45pm - Choristers
7:00 pm - Church Relations. Girl Scouts 7 30pm -GalleryChoir I 00p m Thur - Parkinson sGroup
5 00pm - BulletinDeadline
6 30p m -GirlScouLs
7 30p m - (Kereaters Anony mous lOam Fn - Pandora's Box
7 30 p m - Parents w ithoot Partners 10 a m Sat - Pandora's Box
THE ( HI R( H OF GOD OF PROPHEt V 1206 Mumford Road James C Brown 10a m Sun -SundaySchool Ham - Morning Worship
6 30p m - Young PeopleSery ice
7 00 pm Evangelistic Serv ice 7 30pm Wed -PrayerMeeting
SELMA CHAPEL FREE WH,I.BAmST(mR(H 1701S Green St
The Rev Clifton Gardner. Pastor 7:30p.m Fn - Conference Meeting 3:00 pm Sal - C.G Spintual (hoir 9:45am Sun. - Sunday School Ha m. - WorshipService 4 00 pm - The (kapel (horns will cclefarale their Anniversary 7:00 pm Moo. - Junior Chorus rehearsal
7:30 pro Tue - (Rpel Chorus re-hearul
7 30p m Wed - Prayer Meeting H OO a m and 3 00 p.m NOv 20 -Pastors anraversarv will be celebrated 4:00 p.m Sov 2 - The Goapel Chorus will meet with Ms Evelyn Hopkins. 1913 NorcoHctfcle 4:00 pm Nov 17 - Camation Isher Board wiUmeH
t'\IT.ARIA.Vl'.\IVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP PO Box 4175
Dr Sindney Barnwell. PrcsideM. Phone: 752-077or7M-7l5l Nov 13 Sun - Formal opening at New Meetu^HouM M: 3a m. Stm. - Social tune ILtt pm Sim - Service with Ed
Stephens at Richinond. President at the Thomas Jefferson district 12 00. pm Sun - Covered-dish Luncheon
OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH I800S Elm Si R Graham Nahoue
9:00 a m Sun - Holy (Communion
10 tlOa m Sun - Sunday School
11 :00a m - Worship Service
12 15pm -ChurchCouncil
3 30 p m. - Meel at the church to go to Durham for Jubilee Service at Duke Chapel
7:00 p.m Mon - LCW Salad Supper Pauline Mattheis 1403 Evergreen lU UO a m Tuif. - LCW .Midlred Hackers 2008 Sherwood Dr 7:00pm Wed - Childrens'sChoir 7:30p m Wed - Adull Choir
SY( A.MUHK HILL BAPTINH CHUR( H 226 West Eighth Street Rev HW Parker. Jr . Pastor 9 30am &in - Sunday Church School H 00a m - Our Worship Experience
5 00 p m Sun - Rose Bud Ushers Anniversary
6 30 p m Wed - Youth Prayer Service (Twrch Parlor
7-30 pm - Adult Prayer Service. Fellowship Hall 101)0 a m Thur - Arts A Crafu Fellowship Class. Church Parlor 6:00 p m Thur - Boy and Girl Scouts Meel. Youth Center 7:30 pm - Sycamore Hill at Cornerstone Baptist Church for Iheir fall Revival
KAiSTJAMFhdllKdl UNITED METHdDIST 2U0 F^il Sixlh Forest Hill Circle Greenville North Carolina 27834 1919)752-61541 M Dewey Tyson, Minister Ralph A Brown. Associate Minister Sle^nW Vaughn. Diaconal .Minister
7 3(1 a m Sun - Methodist Men's Breakfast and meeting
9 40 a ra Sun Church School
10 30a m -Chancel Choir
11 00 a m - Worship of (kid. Sermon YOUGOWHOME Mr Tyson
9 00 a m 12 00 p m Mon Fn Week dav School
U 00 a m .Mon Greenville District Pastors .Meeting at St James 7:30 p m -Bible Study taught by .Steve Vaughn with [Juris Marlowe. 1707 Beaumont Dr
4 30 pm Tue - Merry Music Makers. Chapel Choir
7 00 pm Wed - Vouth Bible Study 7 15 pm Wed - .St James Ringers
7 30pm Boy Seoul Troop 3W
8 Uup m - Chancel Choir
6 i) p m Thur COMMITMENT DINNER in Ihe Fellowship Hall 6 30p m Thur - Evangelism Explosion 7 30pm 9 30pm - Girl Scout leaders intheJr High room
HI. K KJAt K FREE WILL BAPTI.STCHURtH
Houle 3. Box 325, Greenville, N C 27834 Dr Cedric D Pierce. Jr
10 OOa m .Sun - Sunday School
11 ooa m Morning Worship
7 00 p m Evening Worship Baptismal Service 7 00 pm Mon - Brownies Junior Girl Scouts 4 Cadets 7 30pm - Adult choir Practice
7 30 pm Wed - Family Circle
8 00pm Youlh Choir Practice
IRHIKKK MKAIOKIAL dIRISTI AN CHI R( H
111 Greenville Blvd
The Rev Ralph Messick. Phone 756-2275 Su-sie Pair. Cnoir director Dr Riwemary Fischer. Organist
10 am .Sunday school Ham Worship Service BiXjpmWed Senior Choir Practice
KEDOAKdiKLSTLAN
CHlRdl
264 By Pass W est Dr Maurice Ankrom. Pastor Sal Nov 12 - CWF to Burlington
9 45 a m .Sun - .Sunday Church School Ham Morning Worship Nursery
provided
5 00 p m - New Beginning choir rehearsal
6 00 p m - Youth Meetings for all ages
7 00 p m Chancel Choir
7 00 am .Mon - Men's Primer Breakfast at Tom s to 00 am- Wilma James Group meets with Rena Manning
2 :w p m Rubelle Goins Group meest w ith Virginia Green
7 30 p m Penny Cox Group meets with Grace Pate 7 30 p m Tue Sandra Stocks Group meets w ith Carol (iordon Wed Nov 16 The Red Oak Fellowship Club meets
FIR.ST FREE WILL BAPTIST! HI R( H
2600 S Charles S(
Harrv Grubbs. Paslor
9 45 m Sun .Sunday School
11 a m. - Morning Worship
7 00pm - Evenina Worship
7 00 p m Wed - Women's Auxiliary & Lav men's League
8 15pm Char Kehearsal
E\ ANt.EI.ISTK T (BERNAt LE (HIR(H
102 Laughinghouse Dr S J Williams
10 a m Sun Sundav School. Sup Linwood Uwsan
11 a m Worship Service. Junior Church. Debra Whaley
7pm Sun - Celebralion of Praise 7 30 p m W ed - Praying and Shanng 7 30 p m Wed - Youth Service 7pm .Sat - Intercessory Prayer
(.LORIA DEI LI THER \V CHI Kt H
The Women s Club, 2:106 Green .Springs Park Road Phone 752-0301 The Rev Ronald Fletcher 7 ooa m Sun - .Morning Worship. Holy Communion
10 15 am Sun Sunday School all Ages
HtlLI.YWINID PRESKVTERI AN tHlRCH
Hwv 43 South
Minister Rev C Weslev Jennings
5 S Supt Elsie Evans . Music Director Vivian Mills
I Irganist Leida McGow an Youlh Leaders Debbie and Steve .Asl mger
To 00 a m .Sun - Sunday School
11 00 am Sun - Worship Service 2J0p m Deacon Training session 7 30pm Mon -Circlesmeet
10 00 am Tue - Morning circle 7 30 p m - Circle Meeting
7 OOp m Wed - Bible Study
8 00 p m - Char Practice
1 OOpm Tue - Quilt and Fellowship
(I IKMONT BAPTI.STt HI R( H I too Red Banks Road E Gordon Conklin. Paslor Greg Rogers Minister of Education Treva Fidler. Minister of Music
9 45 am Sun - Library Open until 10 a m . Sundav School
10 45am -LibrarvOpen until Ham Ham- Morning W orship
6 30 p m - Annual Pledge Night Supper
6 00 p m - Chapel Choir Rehearsal 9 15a m .Mon - Staff Devotional 7:0Opm Tue -Church-wideVisitation
8 00 p m Wed - Mid-week Meditation and Feflow ship Hour
7 30 pm fhur - Chancel Char Re hearsal
(OREVSIHAPELFREE
WlLLBAPTISTtHURtH
Route l.Winterville J B Taylor Paslor
4 OOpm Sat - Pastor Aid Meeting
9 30am Sun - .Sunday School
3 00 p m Sun - Corey s Chapel Church family will render service at New De liverance Church in Gnfton. N C . to close out iheir youlh usher anniversary
7 00 p m - J B Taylor Traveling Char will travel to Holly HiU F W B Church for their Deacons k Mothers Anniversary 7 30 p m Thur - Corey's Church Family will render service at Bell's Chapel Holiness Church
IMM AM EL BAPTIST CHI RCH
HOIS Elm .St Hugh Burlington. Pastor Lynwood Walters. MImster of Ekhication and Youlh 9 30a m Sun - Library Opens 9:45a m -Sunday School I0'45a m - Libran Open Ham - Morning Service 4:30pm - Puppets
5 30p.m Sun -YouthSupper 6:15 pm.-Vespers
6:30 p m - Church Training 7:30pm - BusinessConference 9 45am Mon - Dr Sallie Pence Bible Study w Eleanor Ross Mon-Wed N C Baptist State Convention m Greensboro
'7:3(>-l 15 am Tue - Fellowship breakfast for Senior Highs in feltowship hall
5:fp.m - Spark 'BSU
5:30 p m Tue. - Baptist Student Unitm
Joy Night Service Set
St. Rest Holy Church of 202 Hammond St., Winterville, will observe Joy Night Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The Annointed Ones of Ayden will be in charge (rf the service.
Revival Starts Monday
St. Rest Holy Church o Winterville will bdd its annual revival Monday through Friday at 7:30 p.m. nightly. The evangelist for the week will be Bishop Jesse Williams of Goldsboro. Various area choirs will render music.
Homecoming Trip Planned
The congregation of Philippi Church of Christ will travel to St. Peters Church of Christ in Kinston Sunday at 3 p.m. for homecoming services. A bus will leave the church immediately following morning worship services.
Tents To Observe Thanksgiving
United Order of Tents Nos. 464 and 468 will celebrate their annual thanksgiving service Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Philippi Church of Christ located on Farmville Boilevard. The minister will be Eldress Millie A. William ami members of St. Timothy Free Will Baptist Church will be present. All tent members will wear white.
Appreciation Day Scheduled
Pastors Appreciation Day will be held Sunday at 3 p.m. at White Oak Baptist Church, Grimesland, in recognition of the Rev. James J . Styron.
The Rev. E.M. McNair, pastor of Spring Garden Baptist Church of Washington, N.C., will be the guest speaker. His choir will accompany him.
Cornerstone Plans Revival
Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church will hold its annual fall revival Monday through Friday with services beginning at 7:30 each evening. Bishop Ralph Love of Greensboro, pastor of Holy Trinity Church of Greenville, will be the guest evangelist.
Area churches will be in charge of services each evening with Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church in charge Monday; Selvia Oiapel FWB Church, Tuesday; York Memorial AME Zion Church, Wednesday; Sycamore Hill Baptist Church, Thursday, and Holy Trinity Holy Church, Friday.
Center To Hold Dinner
The Bishop Payton Child Learning Center will hold a Chicken Benefit Dinner Nov. 18 from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The menu will include fried chicken, collard greens, potato salad and com bread. For further information call 752-9329 or 757-1197.
Bazaar Scheduled Saturday
The First Pentecostal Holiness Church will hold its fall and Christmas bazaar Saturday from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the church on Brinkley Road at Plaza Drive. Baked goods, craft items, country store items and refreshments will be sold.
Choir Marking Anniversary
The Young Adult Choir of St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church of Farmville will observe its first anniversary Sunday at 4 p.m. The Dildys Chapel Choir will be the escorts and the anniversary is open to all area choirs. Registration begins at 3:30 p.m.
Gospel Sing Scheduled
A gospel sing sponsored by the Waynesborough Chapter of the American Business Womens Association in Goldsboro will be held Nov. 18 at Eastern Wayne Senior High School gym at 7:30 p.m. Proceeds will be used for scholarships for older women.
Bazaar Planned In Ayden
A bazaar will be held at the Ayden Christian Church Nov. 19 from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the fellowship hall. Hot dogs will be available.
Missionary To Conduct Service
Missionary Darlene Norris Wilks, accompanied by The Greene Singers, will conduct services Sunday at 11 a.m. at Holy Mission Holy Church.
Quency Gardner, pastor of My Father's House in Bethel, will be the guest speaker of services Sunday at 7:30 p.m. On Monday, the church's pastor and choir will render music at Burning Bush in Vancebor&at 7:30 p.m.
Quarterly Meeting Set
Haddock Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will observe its qua.ierly meeting Saturday and Sunday. Holy Communion will be "held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with the Union Grove church family in charge.
Sunday School services will be held at 9:45 a.m. followed at 11 a.m. by Morning Worship services. Bishop Stephen Jones.
'00 pm - DISaPLEYOUTH with Donna WHt 10 00 a m Wed - BiMe Study with Jaae Hulsey
5 15 pm Wed - Grade* 1-3, H. Children's choirs Library Open 5 45 pm Wed - Fellowship supper line
opens
6;30pm -GA'iandRA's
t;k:00 p.m. Wed. - Preschool music
ana storytime tor 3s. preschool chars lor 4sand5s; vouth choir
6 45 p m - Foreign Mission Study The Imperative Impulse by Hugh Burlington
7 40 p m - .Adult Choir Practice
7 30pm Thur - B.SU' Paiise'Worship 7:30 p m - MASTERLIFE with Susan Melzler
7 00 pm - M.ASTERLIFE with Doris Henderson Helen McClanahan
CHRISTI AN SCIENCE CHI RCH Fourth and Meade Streets Ham Sun - Sunday School. Sundav Service
7 45 pm Wed - Wednesday Evening Meeting
2-4 p m Wed - Reading Room, 400 S Meade St
ARLINGTON STREE:T BAPTIST (HURtH
1006 W Arlington Blvd The Rev Harold Greene
9 45 a m Sun - Sunday School H a m ^ Morning Worship
H 00 am - Mission Fnends 7 30p m - Worship Service 7 30 pm Mon - BY and Bible Study group .Meeting Helen .Mills 7 30 p m Tue - YMW Home of Nita Hedreen
7 30pm Wed -Prayer Serv ice
8 30p m Wed - Char
I NIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST too Crestline Blvd Rick Townsend. Phone 756-6545
10 a m Sun - Sunday School
Ham - Morning Worship. Junior Church 6 flOa m - Char Rehearsal 7:00 pm- Evening Worship and Youth .Meeting 6 45 p m Wed - Bible Study
BROWN StHAPEL APOSTOI.U FAITH
CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST Route 4, Greenville. North Carolina Bishop R A GiswouW, Pastor 8 00 p m Thur - Bible Studies (.Sister Ida Ruth Suton, Teacher I 8 OOp m Fri - Prayer Meeting 8 00 pm 3rd Mon - Paslor Aide .Meeting (Deacon J. Sheppard. Presideni i 3 00pm 4thSat - BusinessMeeting 8:00p m 4thSat -1 Hour Prayer 10:30 am 4th Sun - Sunday School I Deacon John Sharpe. Supennlendant i 11:30 am 4th Sun - Pastoral Day (BishopR A Gnswouldi 8 00 pm 4th Sun - Pastoral Day iBishopR A GnswouW
PHILIPPI IHl R( H OF CHRIST ICIO Farmville Blvd The Rev Randv Royal U H OOa m Sat.'-SemorChotf Rehearsal ^ 9 45 a m Sun Sunday School Sis Mary JooesSupt Ham - Morning Worship Rev Rmal 3:00 pm - Church go to SI Peters Klniton
1:00 pm Tue - Willing Worken Prayer Band 1: w p.m. Wed - Joy Hour at duirch :00pm Wed -BiweSludy 1:00 pm Thur - Willing Workers Prayer Band
GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By-Pass and Emerson Road Bnan Whelchel. (Ymmunily Evangelist Cart Etchlnsoo. CanuMs EvangeliS 8 a m - Sun - Amazing Grace" TV
Bible .Study Channel 12
10 a m - Bible Studv. Classes For All Ages
11 00-am - .Morning Worship The Value of Memorv
6 OOp m - Eveninfiworship
7 00 p m Wed Bible Study Class for aliases
For Information and or Transportation Please call 752-5991 or 752-6376 Home Bible Studies also available
ST. PAUL SEPLS( t)P\l.( Hl RCH 401 East Fourth Street
The Rev Lawrence P Houston Jr Rector
The Twenty-Fifth Sundav of Pentecost 7 30 a m Siin Holv Eucharist 9 00 a m - Holy Baptism 9 00 a m - Children's Chapel ages 3-5. Chapel
9 00 a m - Children's Char Rehearsal. Char Room
10 00a m - Christian Education H 00 a m - Morning Prayer
4 00 p m Stewardship Meeting. Pansh Hall
6 00 p m - Jr EYC Elizabeth Hume s 124 Antler Road
7 30p m -Al-anon. Friendly Hall
7 30 p m Mon Jr Choir Rehearsal. Chapel
7 30 p m Vestrv .Meeting, Fnendlv Hall
5 30 pm Tue - Holy Eucharist Canlerburv
7 :)0 pni Greenville Parent Support Group, Fnendlv Hall
7 ta m Wed - Holy Eucharist 10 00a m - Holy Eucharist
3 30 p m - Holv Eucharist, Greenville Villa
7:30 pm Wed - Char Rehearsal.
Chapel
10:00 a m Thur - Town & Countn Senior Citizens Meeting. Pansh Hall
4 OOp m Sal - Holy Matrimonv
8 00 pm Sal - AA flpm Group Discussion, Fnendly Hall
ST PETER SCATHOLK CHURt H 2700 Eiast Fourth Rev Michael G Clav Phone 757 3259 5:%p.m Sat - Mass 8:00a m Sun - .Mass I0'30a m: Mass
GREENVILLE BIBLE CHURCH Rolaiy dub i Rotan' and Jonston
Dino Schlmeier. Paslor Teacher 10:00 am Sun - Worship Senice and Children s Classes H 30a m - Congregational .Meeting 6:15 am Mon - Men's Breakfast I Three Steers I 12:00 p m Tue Women s BiWe Study Luncheon' Cramer home t 7:00 pm Wed. Growth Group (Schulmeierhomei 10:00 a m Thur - Women's Bible I James Home
WINTERVILLE P H. ( HURCH Winterville, NC Kader Rawls Paslor le ooa ro Sun - Sunday school HOOam -Morrang warship Service
5 00 p m - Choir Practice 5:00pm -bfeiiners 6:00pm - EvemngWorship
7 30 p m Wed - Midweek Prayer Service
choir and ushers of Haddocks Chapel and Sweet Hqpe Church will be in charge of the service.
At 2 p.m. Sunday, dinner will be served followed at 3 p.m. by a service with the Rev. Tyrone Tumage, choir and ushers of Little Creek Church in charge.
Thanksgiving Service Scheduled
The annual Thanksgiving services of the United Order of Tents will be held at Philippi Church of Christ Sunday at 3 p.m. Members of Tents 464 and 458 will assemble at the church at 2:45 p.m.
Bishop To Conduct Crusade
Bishop Walter Joyner will conduct a crusade service at St Matthew Free Will Baptist Church on Norris Street Sunday at 11:30 p.m. He will be accompanied by the Crusade Team and Bishop Jonathan Powell of Bridgeport, Conn.
Eldress To Speak Sunday
Eldress Mill Ann Johnson will render a service at St. John Baptist Church in Stipes at 7 p.m. Sunday. Her choir will provide music.
Recognition Program Set
Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church will hold a recognition program Saturday at 7:30 p.m and its pastor's annivesary Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Presidents, vice presidents and outstanding members will be honored Saturday. On Sunday the Rev. W.J. Best will preach.
Church Anniversary Marked
The 10th anniversary of St, John Missionary Baptist Church
Preaching Sees Changing Style
school or a new gymnasium.' It was for financial support.
In Judaism, it's the prayer and liturgies of the synagogue that are central, but the dominance of Protestantism began to reshape that; at least in Reform Judaism, the rabbi became a minister." he said.
Today s sermons basically either are the liberal and socially active preaching associated with mainline churches or the fundamentalist and evangelical formr.
"They are two different theories of communicating." Wentz said, "It effects not only the content of the preaching but the way the sermon is constructed."
In the mainline churches today, he said, "preaching many times has become influenced by new knowledge and the fundamentalist feel that is jeopardizing the core of the faith '
The fpnadamentalist style of preaching is more of the attack* approach, he said: "They tend, for example, to begin their sermons quite frequently by taking pot shots at liberal clergy. They tend quite frequently to make their entire case by-pointing out the errors of somebody else."
And today's sermons average 10 to 20 minutes in length and use a different type of illustration system than do those of other centuries. he said--Many are in the form of .stories with 'cutesy characters" meeting an apparent need to be entertaining today, he said: "The sermons now seem to give people what they want instead of giving "them what they ought to be saying. Most people go and listen to something which they hope will inspire them a "little bit -titillate their feelings and emotions."
A lot of the sermons from the colonial period were heavily discursive. Some of the sermons are like reading a philosophy lecture they were so tightly reasoned, he said.
He also said many churches today have even lost the meaning of the word sermon: "You start talking about the difference betMeen a lecture and a sermon and they don't know what you're talking about because" they think they are the same.
"A sermon is a persuasive form of communication. It is not to provide information Its intent is persuasion or to involve people in an experience." he said. 'A lecture's purpose is to provide information."
Bv KIM .SL E LIAFERKKS The .Scottsdale Dailv Progress
TEMPE." Ariz lAPi -Preaching has changed with the changing limes in this nation, an Arizona State University religion historian says'.
Richard Wentz, professor of religious studies, says the emphasis in the Colonial period was on the sovereignty of God. the idea that man has no control over destiny, that "we are in God's "hands."
"When you get to the 19th century, things change." Wentz says. "It was a very optimistic nation. It was a new nation. It didn't like notions about the sovereignty of God. It emphasized the possibilities of human perfection. It was more humanitarian God is waiting for us to respond. There was much emphasis on taking the initiative."
Before the 20th century, it wasn't unusual for a sermon to last two hours - and p^ple didn't seem to mind. Wentz added.
About the only literature people had in tho^ days was religious, he added, saying that as a result, the people knew the Bible.
"If someone got up on the julpit and started to preach lierarchy. they would have known it.' he said. "You can get up in a pulpit today and teach hierarchy and many people wouldn't know the difference."
Wentz said the New England clergy in particular had a strong influence in the shaping of America in, that they conveyed important propaganda that stirred people for the American Revolution.
And it was the Protestants who made the sermon an important part of American religion, the professor said. He said the sermon traditionally has been the most dominant part of the Protestant service whereas other religions focus on ritual.
The Protestant sermon also has been an important vehicle for shaping religion in America even outside of Protestantism, he added.
Wentz said that American Catholicism has been influenced by Protestantism because Protestantism is the primary influence in American culture. For Protestants, the sermon is central. For Catholics, the Mass is central. They reserved sermons for special days or oft times if they had It," it was We need more money to build a parochial
You are cordially welcomed to
IK e OAK CHHSIU* C8IICH
(Disciples of Christ)
264 Bypass West
DR. MAURICE E. ANKROM, MINISTER
9:45 a.m. Bible School Classes (or all ages 11:00 a.m. Service of Worship
Reach up as far as you can snd Qod wtti reach down the reet of the way"
Nursery School Monday through Friday 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
will be observed Sunday at 3 p.m. The Rev Jimmy Dixon and the St, Paul Missionary Baptist Church of Oak City will present the service. Dinner wi I be served at 2 p.m
Church Women To Meet
Dorothy W, Johnson will present the "Histon of United Methodist Women of Jarvis Memorial Unite<i Methodist Church Monday at 10 a.m. in the church chapel.
The history has been prepared by Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Wyatt Brown, Mrs. Daniel B. Gregory and Mrs James Knott Proctor Jr
Also during the meeting, special mission recognition pins will be awarded to those who have rendered outstanding service to the UMW during the past year. President Mrs, Edgar S. Douglas Jr. said. A coffee will follow in the church parlor A nursery will be provided
Compromise On Civil Rights Board Pushed
By TOM SEPPY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON fAPi -Liberal Senators predict prompt passage of compromise legislation to reauthorize the beleaguered US Commission on Civil Rights, with Congress getting to name four of the eight panel members.
Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr.. D-Del.. one of the chief negotiators among the senators who hashed out the agreement early today, said: "This IS solid." There is no question about it on the House side,"
After the Senate passes the measure, it must go to the House for action and then to the White House for the president's signature,
"All the central players were part of the negotiations." said Biden, "I see no trouble."
There are still a few obstacles to overcome, but Biden and Sen, Arlen Specter. R-Pa another negotiator, did not believe they would block passage.
Proponents got a 79-5 approval on a procedural vote early today to place the compromise before the Senate with Sens. John East. R-N.C,, Jesse Helms. R-N.C.. Jake Garn. R-Utah, Alan K. Simpson, R-Wyo., and Steven D. Symms. R-l"daho. against.
When the measure comes up in the Senate next week, probably on Monday, Sen. Roger "W. Jepsen. R-Iowa, will attempt to attach an anti-abortion amendment to it because. Specter said, "he believes that the right to life is the most basic of civil rights." There is also the possibility that East might attempt to filibuster the bill to death since the Senate hopes to go on recess next Friday.
"I really don't believe we re going to spend a lot of time on this next week." said Biden. "Jepsen will in-troduce his amendment and we will vote on it."
Specter said, "If there is a filibuster, it is a filibuster that will have to be broken. " The compromise was worked out after day-long negotiations and at least six overseas telephone calls to Tokyo to confer with aides to President Reagan. It would reauthorize the commission at $12.18 million a year, for six years with the president naming four members and the House Speaker and the Senate pro tempore two each. The nominees do not need to be confirmed by the Senate.
The bi-partisan commission would contain four Republicans and four Democrats who would serve staggered six-year terms The president will appoint the chairman, vice chairman and staff director with the concurrence of the majority of the commission members.
Biden said one of the last "sticking points" in the negotiations was the liberal
senators' insistence that the commission members be removed for cause only. The White House opposed the restriction.
However, he said, the "entire compromise almost broke down" because the liberal senators also insisted that a majority of the commission concur in the president's appointment of the staff director.
Biden said Senate Republican Leader Howard H. Baker Jr.. R-Tenn.. and Sen. Bob Dole. R-Kan,. who represented the conservatives in the negotiations, talked with White House Counselor Edwin Meese III in Tokyo on that issue.
The negotiators also agreed on some of the people who will serve on the commission
Biden said Reagans choices must include present vice chairman Mary Louise Smith. He also assumes the president will name two of the three nominees the Senate has failed to confirm, John Bunzel and Morris Abram, and the commission's current chairman. Clarence M. Pendleton Jr.
The Delaware Democrat said the Congressional nominees will include two fired by Reagan two weeks ago, Mary Frances Berry and Blaridina Cardenas Ramirez, and Jill Ruckelshaus. who presently is on the commission. He said two persons have been recommended for the final opening - George Hailey, a Washington attorney who is the brother of .Alex Hailey, author of "Roots." and Mrs. Lorraine Gutierrez, who owns a small business in Albuquerque. N.M.
Senate liberals and the civil rights community have been feuding with Senate consenatives and the White House over reauthorization of the commission since last May when President Reagan norfiinated Bunzel. Abram and Robert Deslro to replace three sitting members -Berry . Ramirez and Rabbi Murray Saltzman. The Senate judiciary Committee refused to approve their nominations.
Claim Turn To Supernatural
MONTREAL '.AP) - A Christian education conference here was told that young people are abandoning "their revolutionary ideas of the past two decades and turning to "supernatu-ralism."
"Cult and the occult have become an experience for the young people," said Jack Hannah of Canada's Scripture Press "Supernatu-ralism has replaced naturalism."
1
CZiti cSunday j
9 45A M
I1AM
_ SUNDAY bCHOOL
t T Vinson Minislet
l WORSHIP
if
1510 Greenvilk Blvd S E
[mouaL \^ajiU Cfiuxck
j GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH |
J A Soulherri BapIisi Church #
Stock And Market Reports
NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices were mostly higher in light trading today, extend-,ing the markets rally of the past two sessions.
' The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up almost 21 points Wednesday-and Thursday, climbed another 6.30 to 1,242.17 after two hours of trading today.
Gainers led losers nearly 7 to 5 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
American Express led the active list, down Px at 3Ps. An article in Fortune magazine said the company has gone through remarkable contortions to make its reported earnings look good."
The NYSE's composite index rose .37 to 95.12. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .M to 217.24.
Big Board volume totaled 27.11 million shares at noon EST. compared with 43.75 million at that hour in the previous session.
NEW YORK '.API -Middav slocks:
High Low Last 3i 35 35'k
49 4911
16', 16'4
43':
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55' 55:1
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16'4 44'
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34" 63'. 31
23', 41'4 39',
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63',
31
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39',
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24
78
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24'.
28'.
.55',
22'.
28'
34".
63',
31
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41
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78
15",
24",
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55",
22,
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50 5 50
Greyhound
23",
23",
23'j
Gulf Oil
46'4
45
45",
Hercules Inc
38*4
38
38
Honeywell HosptCp s
128'4
40>4
127>,
40
127",
40',
Ing Rand
49'4
49
IBM
125",
125'.
125",
Inti Harv
I2"4
12",
12"4
Int Paper
50'4
49,
50
IntRectif
21';
21';
21';
Int T4T
42
41 "4
41,
K mart
37,
37"4
37,
KaisrAlum
19';
19';
19';
Kane Mill
19",
19",
19",
KanebSvc
164
16<4
164
KroeerCo Locxhed s
36,
40,
36"4
39,
36,
40';
Masonite
45"4
45',
45"4
McDrmInt n
24
24
24
.McKesson
40
40
40
Mead Corp
36
36
36
MinnMM
87
86"4
86"4
Mobil
29';
29",
29",
Monsanto
106
105'4
IDS'4
NC.NB Cp
23';
23';
23';
.NabiscoBrd
44'4
44',
44',
Nat Distill
25';
25'4
25'4
NorHkSou
65*4
65,
65'4
OlinCp
28';
28';
28';
Owenslll
34",
34",
34",
Penney JC
61,
61",
61'4
PepsiCo
37,
37",
37,
Phelps Dod
24
23,
23,
PhilipMorr
69',
68",
69
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33';
33",
33';
Polaroid
35"4
35",
35",
ProctGamb s
56",
55,
56'4
Uuaker Oat
58",
58'4
58'4
RCA
34'4
34',
34'4
RalstnPur
25
24"4
24"4
RepubAir
3,
3",
3,
Republic StI
25,
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Revlon
33,
33",
33"4
Revnldind
58,
58"4
58"4
Rockwl s
31",
31'4
31'4
RqyCrown
25
25
25
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33",
33",
33",
Scott Paper
29',
29
29
SealdPwr s
28",
28",
28",
SearsRoeb
40\
40",
40';
Shaklee s
20',
19";
19,
Skyline Cp
16",
16
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Sony Corp
14";
14",
14"4
Southern Co
16"4
16",
16"4
Sperry Cp sldOilCal
44
34
43';
33";
43';
33"4
StdOillnd
47",
47';
47';
StdOilOh
48
47"4
47,
Stevens JP
20
19^
19",
TRW Inc
T7'4
77
77'4
Texaco Inc
36',
35",
36',
TexEastn
59,
59,
59,
CMC Ind
15
15
15
Un Camp
75
75
75
Un Carbide
65
64";
64"4
Uniroyal
15';
15,
15';
US Steel
27',
27
27
Unocal
29,
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29";
Wachov Cp
45';
45'4
45'4
WalMart s
41';
41*4
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WestPtPep
49",
49
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48
48
48
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34.
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34'4
WinnDix s
30'4
30
30
Woolworth
36',
35,
36
Wrigley
51",
51",
51",
Xerox Cp
46';
46'4
46",
Following are selected II
am
slock
39
32',
51',
25':.
5", 68", 51". 83' . :!8>, 22 41', 22 66 44>, 26", 46",
38",
32',
51',
25",
5",
68",
51",
83',
38",
22
41",
22
65",
44'
56
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26", 26", 46'-, 46",
57
49",
53,
35", 35",
M"4
49', 49".
53", 53",
75';
43",
24".
30
31'
44"
51
35",
43',
24",
30
31',
44",
51
market quotations:
Ashland pK"..............
Burroughs
Carolina Power &-Light
Conner.......................
Duke
Eaton.................
Eckerds
Exxon.........................
Fieldcrest............
Halteras...................
Hilton.....................
Jefferson......................
Deere Lowe s McDonald s
McGraw.............
Collins & Aikman
Piedmont...................
Pizza Inn P4G
TRW. Inc
Cnited Tel..................
Dominion Resources,
Wachovia....................
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation.....................
Branch.........................
Little Mint....................
Planters Bank.............
40",
47',
23',
16',
25".
52',
. 28', 38",
36';
16',
57
12',
36,
23
72",
r
37,
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14',
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77',
24
. 23',
45',
16',16'; 25-25';
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18';19
Trying Predict Shore Erosion
GLOUCESTER POINT, Va. (AP) - Scientists here are devising a system for predicting where and at what rate shorelines will erode -an ability that could save seaside property owners millions of dollars.'
The seven-year study by the Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences has led to a predictive model that's still being refined.
Basically were looking at the ability to predict whether a beach will erode. Knowing this will be a key factor in telling a builder where to invest his money." said L. Donald Wright, project head.
The model is based on 1.550 daily observations begun seven years ago of scores of beaches in Australia and the United States.
By monitoring what happened daily, the scientists were able to categoriz( beaches into one of six classifications, from those where sand actuallv accumulates to those 'which undergo severe erosion.
The scientists are able to analyze a beach's sand grain size, wave size and bottom configuration, and predict which category the beach will fall into.
In addition to making long-term predictions, the model can be used for day-to-day predictions. That would be of great use to swimmers because it would help predict dangerous rip currents.
Wright said the model has
FRID.XY
3:00 p.m. - Woman s Club meeting at the clubhouse 7:30 p. m - Ked Men meet 8:00 p.m - .Narcotics Anonymous meets at .Mendenhall Student Center, room 238
SATlRD.AY 1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge game at Planters Bank
Obituary Column
PHOTO ENTRY - This little fellow has his hand full as he pats his friend on the back. Mike Hollist from England entered this photo which he calls My Friend the Elephant" in
the Interpress Photo world exhibition in the National Museum in Damascus. Syria, in October. (AP Laserphoto)
Battle
TARBORO - Funeral services for Mr. Charlie Battle will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in Mount Zion Primitive Baptist Church in Princeville by Elder Richard Earl Joyner. Burial will be in East Lawn Memorial Gardens in Tarboro.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs, Lucille Battle of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Shirley Ruffin of Bethel and Mrs. Lucy Wiggins of Oak City; a son, Thurman Lee Battle of Suffolk, Va.; a foster son, James Joyner of Everette; 16 grandchildren; 17 great-grandchildren; five sisters, Mrs. Rosa Pope of Suffolk, Va., Mrs. Josephine Hopkins of Speed, Mrs. Esther Harris and Mrs. Nora Joyner, both of Rocky Mount, and Mrs. Rascha Barnes of Pinetops; six brothers, Robert Battle of Pinetops, James Battle of Tarboro, Bennie Battle of New Jersey, Billy Human of Ohio, Nathan Pitt of Speed and Syvalious Pitt of Suffolk, Va.
The family will receive friends at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary Chapel in Tarboro Friday from 7 to 8 p.m.
Carlton FARMVILLE - Funeral services for Mrs. Esther
of the Transit "I think percent
a success rate of 68 percent.
Sixty-eight percent is pretty good, but with any study you want a much higher success rate than that," he said. For this reason, well be undergoing more research and refinements to increase its accuracy.
The major factor that must be understood to increase the models accuracy is the behavior of waves, the scientists here said.
Predicting wave behavior is something like predicting the weather, said Nun^ane Shi, a member of Wrights team. The closer we come to an understanding of the phenomenon, the better our model will become.
Navy Cadets See Crackdown
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Three midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy have failed Breathalyzer tests since Commodore Leon Edney began ordering the tests for students returning from weekend leave.
Edney said this week the tests, conducted at the academy gates, are not meant to hassle midshipmen" but to discourage them from driving after drinking alcohol. The practice began after a Sept.
18 accident in which one midshipman died and three were critically hurt.
MASONIC NOTICE Mount Hermon Masonic Lodge will hold a regular communication Monday at 7:30 p.m. This will be the last meeting before dedication of the new Masonic lodge.
SUPPORTGROUP A widow and widower support group will meet Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Newman Center, 953 E. 10th St., to discuss problems and alternatives of and for people who have lost their partners. The meeting will be open to the public.
Ignore Bus Co. Threat
By The Associated Press
Greyhound bus drivers in North Carolina, entering their second week on strike, say they will ignore letters from the company threatening to fire them unless they return to work by Monday.
I think were planning on burning those letters in front of the (Raleigh) station at noon Monday," said Stanley Bass of Angier, a leader of L 0 c a 1 14 9 3 Amalgamated Workers Union, well get 100 participation.
Fred Ingram, president of Charlotte-based Local 1493; said after meeting with striking members in Charleston, W.Va., that we are not going back.
We cant go back under what theyve offered, said Ingram. Theres not a man here thats going back."
Ingram accused Greyhound of failing to negotiate with the ATU.
Bass, a Greyhound driver, said workers dont believe the company can operate without them.
They say they are going to hire all new people, but I dont think they are, he said. I dont think they can run the company. Greyhound has not hired anybody yet.
Fred H. Mock, director of the Raleigh district for Greyhound, said the company had taken a lot of initial applications but had not hired any new workers yet.
He said he expects to hear from some of the strikers before the deadline arrives.
New Consumer Credit Growth Seen Slowing
By The Associated Press
Consumers continue to take on more installment debt than they pay off, but they arent building up debt as rapidly as earlier this year, the government reports.
The Federal Reserve Board reported Thursday that consumers took on $2.38 billion more debt than they settled in September, even though car loans slowed from August.
The overall increase in outstanding credit was considerably less than in the previous two months - including the record $4.84 billion of last July - but still well above the monthly gains of less than $1 billion during most of the recent recession.
Thats a pretty healthy increase, said Sandra Shaber, director of consumer economics for Chase Econometrics, a forecasting firm in BalaCynwyd, Pa.
The moderation in growth of consumer credit fits a pattern of generally less substantial gains in other parts of the economy in recent months. Retail sales, for example, continued to grow in October, but at a slower pace than in some earlier months.
The Commerce Department said strong sales of cars and furniture pushed overall retail sales up 1.1 percent last month, a smaller gain than Septembers 1.3 percent rise. Sales in October were 10.2 percent above the October 1982 level.
Indict Company On Bid-Rigging Count
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -A federal grand jury indicted a Richfield construction company and one of its employees Thursday on charges of rigging bids on two sewer line projects.
Attorney General William French Smith said the one-count felony indictment was returned in U.S.- District Court in Asheville against Rand Construction Co. Inc. of Richfield and Ray Martin Blackwelder.
The grand jury charged that the defendants conspired with other firms and individuals who were neither named nor indicted to rig bids on two sewer line projects.
The projects were let for bids by the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Utility Department on Nov, 21, 1978, and were awarded Dec. 4, 1978. The contract for one project was for $1.6 million and the other for $1.4 million.
The charges carry a maximum penalty upon convic
tion of a $1 million fine for a corporation and three years in prison and $1(X),000 fine for an individual.
Asst. Attorney General William F. Baxter, head of the antitrust division, said the charges resulted from a grand jury investigation into alleged bid rigging on North Carolina utility construction projects. Baxter said that investigation is continuing.
Green Fails To Appear In Pitt
Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green, scheduled for a campaign stop at the Pitt-Greenville Aii^rt Thursday afternoon, never arrived.
A spokesman for his office in Raleigh attributed his failure to appear to the weather.
Meanwhile, the government said in a separate report that a drop in energy prices helped keep inflation at the wholesale level to a 0.3 percent increase in October.
Through the month, wholesale prices rose at an annual rate of just 0.6 percent, compared with a 3.7 percent gain for all of 1982. With only two months to go, private analysts are betting this years overall increase will come in between 1 percent and 1.5 percent. That would be the lowest figure since the 0.5 percent of 1964.
Overshadowing the new report was a strong 1.1 percent increase in food prices, the sharpest advance since a similar gain in April.
Fresh fruit prices soared 18.5 percent in October and vegetable prices rose 5.3 percent, ref ecting the harsh weather of last spring and summer, analysts said.
The October figures included a 2.4 percent increase in beef and veal prices, a 0.1 percent drop in energy prices and a 0.8 percent rise in new car prices.
In other economic news:
-In Toronto, Amway Corp.. which uses an army of part-time distributors to sell household items door to door, was fined some $20 million after pleading guilty to criminal charges of defrauding Canada of about $23 million.
Chief Justice Gregory Evans of Ontario Supreme Court on Thursday ordered Amway Canada, the companys Canadian subsidiary, to ^y $4 million, with the remainder to be paid by the parent corporation.
The charges, involving customs duties, alleged Amway cheated on its invoices between 1965 and 1980 and hid the true value of the Amway products brought into Canada by 70 percent.
-The U.S. corn harvest has dwindled to an 18-year low of 4.12 billion bushels, less than half of last years
Nobel Laureate Directs Seminar
Nobel laureate George E. Palade, a pioneer in cell biology, is visiting the East Carolina University School of Medicine.
Dr. Palade, a physician who shared the 1974 Nobel Prize for medicine and physiology, is directing a seminar on Biosynthesis of Murine Glycophorins this afternoon in Room 2E92 of the Brody Building.
Palade, best known for the discoveries concerning the structural and functional organization of the cell, is professor emeritus and former chairman of the Section of Cell Biology at the Yale University School of Medicine.
record yield, the Agriculture Department said. The new production estimate, based on Nov. 1 field surveys, reflected a 3 percent decline in October. A month ago. the forecast was 4.26 billion bushels.
-About 402,000 jobless Americans sought unemployment payments for the first time in the week ended Oct. 29. down 7,000 from the week before. The Labor Department reported the number of people receiving benefits also dropped substantially.
-Assets of the latest week, according to the Investment Company Institute. The increase lifted the funds' assets to $166.85 billion in the week ended Wednesday, the Washington-based mutual fund trade group said Thursday. It was the largest one-week increase since the week ended Nov. 3.1982.
Big Reward Is Offered
CHARLOHE - Robert L. Pence, special agent in charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in North Carolina, has announced that the Wells Fargo Armored Service Corp. is offering $500,000 - the largest reward in the nations history - . for information leading to the arrest, convic" tion and recovery of money taken by Victor M. Gerena in an armed robbery of the Wells Fargo Terminal in West Hartford, Conn., on Sept. 12.
Pence said that at the time of the robbery, Gerena was a Wells Fargo employee.
Gerena, Pence said, subdued two fellow security employees at gunpoint, bound them, injected them with an unknown substance to further disable them, and escaped with over $7 million in U.S. currency. He took a 12-guage shotgun and two revolvers.
Saying the $500,(XK) reward is the largest offered in U.S. history for a single crime. Pence said it provides for up to $100,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Gerena and any accomplices, and up to $400,000 for the return of the money taken.
Gerena, 25 is Puerto Rican, 5 feet 6 inches tall, weighs 160 pounds and has brown hair and green eyes.
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Joyner. Carlton of 112 Taylors Turn will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in Union Grove Free W11 Baptist Church near Farmville by the Rev. J.H. Hill. Burial will be in Sunset Memrial Park.
Mrs. Carlton died in Pitt County Memorial Hospital Thursday. She was a Pitt;? County native who had lived in Farmville most of her life. She was a member of Moyes Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.
Surviving are two sons, Linwood Carlton and Billy Carlton, both of Farmville; five daughters, Mrs. Bertha Gay, Miss Lula Carlton, Mrs. Velma Williams, Mrs. Eva Tyson and Mrs. Margie Baptist, all of Farmville; 36 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
The family will receive friends at Joyners Mortuary Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m. They will assemble at 112 Taylors Turn at 1 p.m. Sunday for the funeral procession.
Chapman
LANSING, Mich. - Mrs. Lula Chapman, formerly of Winterville, N.C., died at St. Lawrence Hospital in Lansing Saturday. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Good Hope Free Will Baptist Church in Winterville by Bishop W.H. Mitchell. Burial will follow in the Winterville Cemetery.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Annie R. Boseman of Lansing; one sister, Mrs. Clyde Bryant of Winterville, and one grandchild.
The family will meet friends today from 7-8 p.m. at Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville.
Ebron
Funeral service for Ms. Lula M. Johnson Ebron, 46, of Aurora, Colo., will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Saint Marys Missionary Baptist Church by Bishop Curtis Mooring. Burial will follow in the Johnson Family Plot.
Ms. Ebron was born in Pitt County and theii moved to Connecticut at an early age. She later made her home in Colorada.
Surviving are three sons, Curtis Ebron and Andre Ebron, both of Bridgeport, Conn.. and Larry Ebron of Denver; her father, Benjamin Johnson, and stepmother, Mrs. Mary Lou Johnson, both of Bridgeport; two brothers. Curtis Johnson and George Johnson, both of Bridgeport, and eight grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 8-9 p.m. in the Phillips Brothers Mortuary Chapel. At other times the family will be at the home of Mrs. Catherine Peterson, 305 Darden Drive, Greenville.
Jovncr
BOCA RAT'ON, Fla. - Mr. Carl McDonald Joyner, formerly of Greenville. N.C., died Wednesday in Boca Raton. A memorial service will be held in Boca Raton at 4:30 p.m. Saturday.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Eleanor Burgess Joyner of Boca Raton; two daughters, Mrs. Richard Hagman of Denver, Colo., and Mrs. James Radcliff of Georgetown. Texas; a son. Scott Joyner of Chicago, and a sister, Mrs. -Edward Graham Flanagan of Greenville.
Koon
Mrs. Azilee Rikard Koon,
77, of 309 Queen St., Grifton, died Friday in Pitt Memorial Hospital. A memorial service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the First Christian Church of Grifton by the Rev. Neil Grimes. A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in Union Lutheran Church Cemetery at Irmo, S.C.
Mrs. Koon, a native of South Carolina, moved to Grifton from Clarkton in 1950. She was a member of the First Christian Church of Grifton.
Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Graham Richardson of New Bern, Mrs. Calvin Cameron of Kinston and Mrs. Robert Evans of Greenville; two sons, J.C. Koon Jr. and Donald Koon, both of Grifton; three brothers, Vasco Rikard of
GUbert, S.C., Verley Rikard and Ray Rikard, both of Lexington, S.C.; two sisters, Mrs. Ruby Drafts of Lexington, S.C., and Mrs. Lila Drafts of Columbia, S.C., and nine grandchildren.
The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home, Greenville, from 7:30-9p.m. today and at other times will be at the home of g son, Donald Koon, 918 W. Dawson Road, Grifton. The body will be taken to Caughman-Harman Funeral Home in Lexington, S.C., where the family will receive friends Saturday.
The family suggests that persons desiring to make memorial contributions consider the First Christian Church in Grifton.
.Moye
Mrs. Mrytle Nobles Moye, 84, of Greenville died Friday. Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Wilkerson Funeral Home.
Nicholson
GRIMESLAND - Mrs. Emma Allen Nicholson, a resident of Calvert Street, died in Pitt County Memorial Hospital in Greenville Monday morning following a brief illness. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at White Oak Missionary Baptist Church here, where she was a lifelong member and a member of the choir, by her pastor, the Rev, James J Styron. Burial will be in the church cemetery.
Surviving are her husband. Willie L. Nicholson of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Brenda Edwards Hill of Grimesland and Mrs. Carrie Edwards Matos of Brooklyn, N.Y.. and six grandchildren.
The family will receive friends at the chapel of Randolph Funeral Home in Washington today from :30-8:30p.m.
Tripp
ORMONDSVILLE - Mrs. Nannie Davis Tripp, 72, died Thursday. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 11 a.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel, Ayden, by the Rev, Jack Mayo and the Rev. Willis Wilson. Burial will be in the Ayden Cemetery.
Mrs. Tripp was a native of Greene (Jounty and a member of the Ormondsville Free Will Baptist Church where she was a Sunday School teacher and was active in the Ladies Auxiliary.
Surviving are her husband. Jesse L. Tripp of the home; two sons, the Rev. Roger Tripp of Hickory and Toby Tripp of Ayden; one brother, S.C. (Tom) Davis of Ayden; two sisters, Mrs. Edna D. Bowen and Mrs. Louise Stephens, both of Ayden. and five grandchildren.
Family visitation will be at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m: tonight.
Ward
WILSON - Mr. Fred Ward of 1614 Atlantic St., Wilson, died at his home Thursday morning. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hamilton Funeral Home here.
He was the brother of John Ward Jr. of Greenville and Ms. Eloise Ward of Washington, D.C.
Parker
FARMVILLE - Rev. Charlie E. Parkers obituary in Thursdays paper should have read as follows: wife, Mrs. Lena Moye Parker, sons, Mr. Charlie Moye, Jr. and Mr. Clarence Key Parker. Visitation hour will be tonight 7 to 8 p.m. at Joyners Mortuary.
Paid Obituary
Card of Thanks
The family of Willie James White wishes to express sincere thanks and deep appreciation to the many friends and relatives who contributed to our comfort at the time of our bereavement.
The WMte Family
Open House until 9:00 Tonight
114 E. 5lh Sirmt
Sports XHE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 11, 1983Pirates Face Indians' Passing Attack
ByWOODVPEELE Reflector Sports Editor William ti Mary has won but four times in the 15-game series with East Carolina University, but those wins usually prove to be a thorn in the side of the Pirates.
Back in 1977, the Indians gained a 21-17 win over the Pirates in the Oyster Bowl, and it cost the Pirates a bid to the Peach Bowl that season. Two years ago, in Ficklen Stadium, the Tribe again came away with a victory, 31-21, as they passed their way by the Pirates. That cost the Bucs their firstUnder Pressure
Duke quarterback Ben Bennett (14) gets pressure from North Carolina State defensive lineman Raymond Phiiiips (90) during second quarter action in Thursday nights ACC game played at Wallace Wade Stadium. The Blue Devils rallied to down the Wolfpack 27-26. (AP Laserphoto)
Bennett Helps Friend, Duke To 27-26 Win Over NCSU
By TOM FOREM.XNJr.
,AP Sports Writer
DURHAM - All Ben Bennett was trying to do was help a friend who was feeling down, and what he wound up doing was. winning a football game for suddenly resurgent Duke.
Bennetts 7-yard scoring toss to Mark Militello with 26 seconds left to play gave the Blue Devils their third straight victory, a thrilling 27-26 Atlantic Coast Conference triumph over North Carolina State.
Militello had missed a third-down pass in the end zone on the winning drive when he slipped on the wet turf. Bennett was not about to give up on him. however.
"Mark felt bad because he had fallen down the play before, Bennett said. "So j knew that no matter where 1 put the ball, he was going to come down with it.
Duke had trailed by 26-7 midway through the third quarter and appeared ready to fold in the first night game in the history of 54-year-old Wallace Wade Stadium.
Bennett, now within striking distance of several national records, engineered a drive at the end of the third period that culminated in Mike Graysons 3-yard touchdown run. Early in the fourth period, Bennett passed 5 yards to Chuck Herring and, with Ken Harpers extra point, pulled Duke to within 26-21.
The Blue Devils took over on their own 33 and promptly got 17 yards on Bennetts pass to Militello. Another Bennett pass, this one to Gary Frederick, picked up 25 yards. Grayson hauled in a pass and reached the 19, and another pass to Militello got the Blue Devils to the Wolfpack 4.
Grayson was thrown for a
Sports Calendar
Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice
Today 's Sports Voilrybali East Carolina at Wake Forest Quad Tournament
Football Jamesvilleat Bladenboro Farmville Central at Havelock Warren County at Williamston Saturdays Sports Basketball South Carolina at Steelwheels Football
William & Mary at East Carolina (1:30 p.m.)
Vollrvball East Carolina at Wake Forest Quad Tournament
three-yard loss, and two passes fell incomplete before the game-winner landed in Militello's hands to raise Duke's record to 3-7,3-2 in the ACC. It marked the third straight week that Duke stared defeat in the face and refused to blink.
"This was a script nobody could write," Duke coach Steve Sloan said. "This was the toughest of our comebacks because of States personnel."
N.C. State s personnel consisted primarily of tailback Joe McIntosh, who rushed for 146 yards on 27 carries, making him the first l.O-yard runner m the ACC this year as well as a 3,(KM)-yard runner for his Wolfpack career. For their efforts, however, the Wolfpack is 3-7 and 1-4.
"This is one of the most heartbreaking situations Ive
been in in a long time, Reed said. "The kick tried, they played hard. They played a gopd football team. Give Duke credit.
Bennett, who has spent the season in pursuit of NCAA passing records, has edged one step closer to the top of the quarterback fraternity. He
completed 32 of 48 passes for 442 yards and three scoring passes. He surpassed John Elways mark for career completions, raising his total to 793.
The yardage raises his career total to 9,291, leaving Bennett 246 yards shy of Jim (Please turn to page 14)
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winning season under Ed Emory.
In each of the other two losses, in 1968 and 1971, the losses were enough to ensure a losing season for the Pirates.
Now, Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium, the two meet again and the Indians have a chance to be spoiler again
The Pirates have already insured a winning season with a 6-3 record coming into the contest, but their hopes for a bowl game ride on the outcome of this and next weeks game with Southern Mississippi.
First things first: the Pirates must beat William & Mary to have a chance. A loss, and it matters not how they do against Southern Miss.
And the Indians do best what the Pirates, for the past few years, have been weakest at on defense - pass.
"Weve improved on 'our pass defense, defensive coordinator Tom Throckmorton said. "Were doing a much better job now.
However, the Indians may prove to be the smartest team the Pirates have faced. And they are experienced. According to Emory, there are 21 seniors on the team, and the Tribe has experience at every position. Every piKition they have has at least three lettermen there, Emory said.
And the Indians have been no slouch this year. While they bring in a 5-4 mark, they are ranked high among Division I-AA schools. Currently [ssing for 254.1 yards a game, they are eighth in their division in the NCAA. They are 12th in total offense with an average of 387.4, and 20th in.scoring with an average of 25.6 points per contest.
Those are figures that cannot be scoffed at. Last week, they humbled Marshall and former ECU coach Sonny Randle, rolling to a 48-24 victory.
And a "second-stringer is leading the way. Dave Murphy opened the year as Stan Yagiellos back-up. But the first-stringer was injured in the fourth game of the year, and Murphy has been at the helm ever since then. In those six games, hes hit on 137 of 208 passes for 1,556 yards and 12 touchdowns. Hes only been picked off five times in that string.
On the year, he stands at 1* with 12 TDs and seven intercei
'That serves to place him 22nd in total offense.
Mike Sutton, the starting wide receiver, has been the chief target of the throwers, grabbing 60 passes for 864 yards and five touchdowns. He stands seventh in the division in receiving. But Murphy has a host of others to throw to. Dave Scanlon, the tailback, has 35 grabs for 251 yards and three scores. Tight end Glenn Bodnar has 34 for 336 yards and five touchdowns. Jeff Sanders, the split end, has caught 34 for 387 yards, while Bobby Wright. the fullback, has 21 for 172 yards. Both Sanders and Wright have two touchdowns each.
Not that passing is everything for the Indians. "Thev have
a rushing attack'for the first time. Emory pointed out "So this may be the best game in Ficklen .Stadium in several years I certainly think theyre the best team we ve played here this year. >
Leading the rushing attack is Scanlon with 129 carries for 566 yards and six touchdowns. Wright has rushed 92 times for 344 yards and one score.
Overall. Scanlon is the leading scorer wtih .54 points on nine touchdowns. Place kicker Brian .Morris had hit on 13 of 15 PATs and five of nine field goals.
Since losing to William & Mary in Ficklen in 1981. the Pirates have run off seven straight home field wins But now the Indians are back on the warpath Whether the Pirates can stop them - or outscore them - is the question Two ECU players will be shooting for records this weekend Pirate quarterback Kevin Ingram needs to average but 147 5 yards a contest for the last two games to break the season total offense record of 1,714 yards Kicker Jeff Heath is just two field goals short of the career record of 26. but hasn't had a scoring boot in three games.
East Carolina closes out the regular season next Saturday night at .Southern Mississippi
attempts for 1,658 yards . passing efficiency and
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. 1
14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.
Fnday, November 11.1963
only
Woody
Peele
The 1983 football season is rushing to a close, and there is still no clear-cut favorite to win in this years pickin contest. With this week and next left on the regular season, along with the bowl games, we dont have much chance left to juggle the standings, but it can be done.
This past week, we struggled into the lead with a 9-3 week with a 79-38 record. Vickie Spivey, who had led all season long, dropped into second at 78-39. Tom Baines has pulled evi with the guests for third at 77-40, while Joe Jenkins is fifth at 75-42, and Jimmy DuPree is at the rear with a 73-44 record.
Our guests of last week, Booger and Waighty Scales turned in only a 6-6 week, which still leaves WNCT-TVs Slim Short in the lead among the guests with a 9-2 record.
This week our guest is Jimmy Bond, owner/operator of Bonds Sporting Goods, and a former athlete at Rose High School.
Our high school picks of last week left us with a 60-20 record on the season as we went 5-3.
With the regular season over, we have only the playoffs remaining and three of our area teams are involved: Farmville Central, Jamesville and Williamston.
Williamston plays host to Warren County. The visitors bring in a 7-2-1 record, having lost to 4-A Vance County and to Roanoke River champ Northampton West. They tied Northampton in an earlier non-conference meeting. The two met
one common opponent, Ahoskie. Warren downed the Cougars, 42-14, while Williamston, several weeks earlier in the year, took a 20-13 win.
It promises to be quite a contest, but were going to go with Warren to win this one, 21-18.
Jamesvilles biggest problem may be Uk fact that it has to travel down to the southern edge of the state to face Bladenboro in the first round of the 1-A playoffs. The Bullets rolled along at the end of the year, and if the trip doesnt take a lot out of them, it should be a good game. We do look for the Bullets to win, 28-24.
Our panel has been enlisted to go for the Farmville Central-Havelock matchup in the Divison II 3-A playoffs. The Jaguars finished strong, going 7-3 on the year. Havelock, unbeaten until the final game, lost a 3-0 squeeker for the title to White Oak, leaving the Rams 8-1-1, the tie coming in the opener against 4-A New Bern.
The panel gives Havelock a 5-1 edge, and we look for the Rams to win, say 21-14.
East Carolina plays host to William & Mary in its final home game Saturday, and the Pirates will be looking for their eighth straight home field win. The Indians are a problem for the Pirates, however, and they seem to win at the most inappropriate times for ECU.
The panel, however, givs the nod to the Pirates by a 6-0 margin and we feel it will be in th^ neighborhood of 38-30.
Our other concensus picks: Clemson over Maryland; North Carolina over Virginia; Auburn over Georgia; Alabama over Southern Mississippi; Penn State over Notre Dame; Georgia Tech and Wake Forest, a toss-up; Arkansas over Texas A&M; Memphis State over Cincinnati; Florida State over Miami; and Washington over Southern Cal.
The full poll:
Pwle
Havelock over Farmville Clemson over Maryland Carolina over Virginia Georgia over Auburn Alabama over So. Miss Penn St. over N. Dame ECU over William & Mary Wake over Georgia Tech Texas A&M over Arkansas Memphis St. over Cincy FSU over Miami Washington over USC
Spivey
Farmville
Maryland
N. Carolina
Auburn
Alabama
N. Dame
E. Carolina
Ga.Tech
Arkansas
Memphis St.
Miami
Washington
DuPree
Havelock Clemson Virginia Auburn Alabama Penn State E. Carolina Wake Forest Texas A&M Memphis St. Florida St. Washington
Baines Havelock Clemson N. Carolina Georgia Alabama Penn State E. Carolina Ga. Tech Arkansas Memphis St. Florida St. Washington
Jenkins Havelock Clemson N. Carolina Auburn Alabama Penn State E. Carolina Ga.Tech Arkansas Memphis St. Florida St. Southern Cal
Bond
Havelock Clemson N. Carolina Auburn Alabama Penn State E. Carolina Wake Forest Arkansas Memphis St, Miami Southern Cal
Hagler's Strong Finish Keeps Title In Close Bout With Duran
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -After 13 gruelling rounds, Marvelous Marvin Hagler returned to his comer, feeling pretty good about the way he was handling Roberto Durans bid to take away his world middleweight championship.
He thought he had been controlling the fight, charging a high price in punishment everytime Duran sought to get inside his eight-inch reach advantage. The title belts Hagler treasures so, seemed safe to him.
"1 couldnt see him beating me, the champion said.
It was then that Hagler got some bad news from his handlers. Goody and Pat Petronelli.
My manager and trainer told me, Weve got to win
Duke Wins..,
I Continued from page 13)
McMahons record. Bennett has to try to break that mark against No. 19 North Carolina next week, but he thinks when it becomes necessary, he will call on Militelio.
When the chips are down, Bennett said, go to Superman.
V. Carolina .Si.. Ihikr...............
.7 li 7 O-M .0 T 7 li-27
NCSL' J Greene3 run iC'oferkick) N('SL'-F(;Cofer32
NCSL' Wall 8 pass from Esposito I kick failed)
DUKE Mililello 27 pa.ss from Bennett I Harper kick i NCSU-EGCofer38 NCSL - Esposito 4 run i Gofer kick) ULKE - Grayson 3 run i Harper kick) DLKE Herring 5 pass from Bennett I Harper kick I DLT(E Militello 7 pass from Bennett ipas.sfailedi
A-19.100
First downs Rushesyards Passing yards Return vards Passes'
Punts
Fumbles lost Penafties yards Time of possession
NCSU
23
51-226
2t7
19 29-0 7-40 3-1 5-40 3;t:32
DUKE
26
33-73
442
22
32-48-1
6-43
l-l
2-28
26:28
INDIVIIIl AI.I.EADKR.S
RU.SHING- N Carolina St. McIntosh 27-146. M Miller 7-27 Duke, Grayson tB-68. Grantham 7-40.
PASSING-N Carolina St. Esposito 19-294-267 Duke, Bennett 32-48-t-442
RECEIVING- N Carolina St. McIntosh 4-51. Wall 3 50. Duke. Militelio 9-138. Russell 7-92
these last two rounds big, he said.
It was if they had peeked at the scorecards of judges Guy Jutras of Canada, Yusaku Yoshida of Japan and Ove Oveson of Denmark because, after 13 rounds Thursday night, they had Haglers crown tipping perilously toward Durans corner.
Jutras had the fight even, but Yoshida and Oveson each had Duran ahead by one point.
So, like a craftsman, Hagler went out and tended to business in the final two rounds, winning them on the cards of all three officials to capture a workmanlike but too-close-for-comfort unanimous decision.
Jutras scored it 144-142, Yoshida 146-145 and Oveson
144-143. The Associated Press card had Hagler in front,
145-142.
Durans dream of a history-making fourth championship was shattered by those vital final six minutes and when it was over, Hagler paid tribute to the man he had defeated.
Im very proud of myself to beat a man with three world titles, he said. Hes a very gutsy warrior. I give him a lot of credit, but give me a lot of credit, too. This mans a legend.
And for a while, it seemed Duran would add to that legend on a cool November night in the 15,000-seat arena constructed on the tennis courts at Caesars Palace.
Duran started smartly, carrying the fight to the champion in the early rounds. He taunted Hagler and stood toe-to-toe With him, seemingly perfectly happy to slug it out. At one point, Duran almost looked as if he was daring Hagler to hit him. And the champion willingly obliged.
In the fifth round, Duran said, he got into trouble. I hit him on the head and felt pain in my right hand, the Panamanian said.
After the fight, when pro
moter Bob Arum tried to grasp the hand, Duran winced in pain and offered his left instead.
If he was hurting during the fight, though, Duran didnt show it. There would be no No mas, no quitting on this night. He went after Hagler and that fourth world title with all he had, trying the same weapons he had u^ to lift the lightweight crown from Ken Buchanan in 1972, the welterweight title from Sugar Ray Leonard in 1980 and the junior middleweight title from Davey Moore last June.
Over the course of his career, which started in 1967, Duran has evolved from the street brawler who beat Buchanan to the ring technician who outsmarted Moore.
But Hagler was having none of Durans tricks.
I tried not to fall in the traps Davey Moore fell in, Hagler said. I can see why (Moore lost). He was very clever.
Clever and tenacious and determined. Hagler had said all week that he was a man with a mission, but his own mission was no less important to Duran. A fourth world championship spanning boxing divisions ranging from 135 pounds to 160 pounds would be a truly remarkable and unique accomplishment. And Duran, weighing 156*2 pounds, one pound less than Hagler, went after it with a vengeance. He closed the champions left eye and inflicted his share of damage.
no
Duran Erases Quitter Stigma; Is Proudf Gracious In Loss -
I didnt expect to come out looking pretty, anyway, Hagler joked. I started loosening up very late. I realized I had to get my combinations off faster. I had to give up my plans for a knockout and go for the win. But the bottom line was that Hagler is a true middleweight and Duran was reaching up to that division. I felt near the end the (extra) weight was a factor on him, Hagler said.
When the fight ended, Durans handlers reacted as if their man had won, lifting the challenger off the canvas in joy. But Duran had no complaints with the decision.
In the 12th round, 1 had Hagler in bad condition, he said, but 1 was too tired to finish the job. I am not disappointed. Marvin Hagler was better. Thats it.
Still, the thought of winning that fourth title burns inside Durans mind. There will be retirement for the 32-
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Marvelous Marvin Hagler finally got his big payday, and Robalo Duran went out a p*acious and proud kser no ooger bearing the stigma of a quitta.
Duran buried further the shame of his famed no mas walkaway to Sugar Ray Leonard, but he couldnt summon enough reserve in the final rounds to take Haglers undisputed middelweight title.
If I could go better the last two or three rounds, maybe the fight would have been a better decision, Duran said Thursday after dicing a narrow but unanimous 15-round decision to Hagler. I was just too tired.
Duran was ahead on the scorecards of two ringside judges and even on the third after 13 rounds. But Hagler took the final two rounds and Duran had no quarrel with the decision.
Marvin Hagler was better and thats it, the Panamanian veteran said. I am not disappointed.
For Hagler the fight was especially sweet, the realization of his big iyday dream cancelling any disappointment about his inability to dominate the bout.
The peanuts all paid off tonight, he said, referring to the dozens of fi^ts for which he had received little money. I knew one day Id be there ... I kept the faith. I guess tonight was the big money, eh?
Hagler was guaranteed $5 - million for the fight and could make $8 million with his percentage of the gross.
He retained his crown for the eighth time since taking it from Alan Minter in Sept. 1980. But for the first time, the defense went the distance.
I shook him in the first round, but I had to give up my plans for the knockout and go for the win, Hagler said. I am glad I was able to adapt a change in midstream.
Hagler said he thought he had the fight well in hand in the later rounds despite a rally by Duran that began in the 11th round and continued through the 13th.
His corner didnt agree.
Bennett Nears Top
year-old. He will continue to fight and he would like another chance at Hagler. But that may not happen, according to Arum.
Im not particularly interested,, in a rematch at this time, he said. I would have to be convinced the result could be different, and Im not convinced.
So, for the moment, Duran will drop back to the junior middleweight division, and Hagler will prepare for his next defense of the middleweight crown against Argentinas Juan Roldan,
DURHAM (AP) - Ben Bennetts performance in Thursday nights 27-26 victory over North Carolina State helped him move closer to the top of the NCAAs all-time passing yardage list.
He hit 32 of 48 passes fob 442 yards and three touchdowns. His completions gave him 793, passing John Elways record of 774.
His touchdown passes raise his scoring responsibility total to 55, breaking the Atlantic Coast Conference mark of 52 set by North Carolina States' Ted Brown. He is now the ACCs single-season completions record-holder with 273, breaking the mark of 241 set by Wake Forests Gary Schofield last season.
Bennetts yardage moved him into third place on the career list with 9,291, almost 100 yards ahead of Purdues Mark Herrmann. He is 58 yards behind Elway and needs 246 yards against 19th-ranked North Carolina to surpass the mark set by Jim McMahon of Brigham Young.
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however, and told the champion be had to win the final two rounife convincingly to pull out the bout.
My manager and trainer told me weve got to wiirthese (rounds) big," he said. I couldnt see him beating me. Told the ringside scoring had him behind going into the final two rounds, Hagler re-)lied, I told you I was scared leing here in Las Vegas. -The champion said he could feel Duran tiring in the final two rounds while he remained fresh.
I couldnt believe the condition I was in, he said. My only concern was in the 12th when my eye started swelling up.
It was in the 12th round that Duran did his best work of the fight, landing one right hand after another to the left side of Haglers face.
But moving up into his fourth weight classification a(q)arently to(A a little too much out of the challenger.
In the 12th round I had Hagler in bad condition, said Duran. But I was a little tired to finish it.
Duran said he will retain his World Boxing Association junior middlweight crown and
continue with a boxing career that be^n at the age of 15 and seemed over with his November 1900 loss to Leoiard.
I never said 1 was gong to retire after this fight, said the 32-year-old boxer, who now has five losses to go with his 76 nntfessional wins.
Hagler praised Duran as a eleva fighter who neva let him dictate the style of the fight. But he also said he, too.
sbodid be [Hxipaly credited.,
Im very |xoud of myself to beata man with three world tittes,)he said. "I give him a lot (d credit, but youve got to give me a lot of credit too. Th^ mans a legend."
The bottom line, accoding to the champion, is the two championship belts be wiU take back to Brockton, Mass.i with him..
GRACE ISTHE PLACE
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ECU Men Scrimmage
The East Carolina University mens basketball team will hold a public scrimmage Saturday at 11 a.m. in Minges Coliseum.
Second-year head coach Charlie Harrison, whose first ECU team finished 16-13, un-viels the 1983-84 Pirate squad which features junior forward Barry Wright and guards Bruce Peartree and Herb Gilchrist.
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Friday. November 11.1983 15Tampa Bay Looks For Its Second Win
By The Associated Preii With their first victoi^ in hand - finally - the Tampa Bay Buccaneers travel to Cleveland on Sunday with hope, not fear, in their hearts.
Thanks to the rushina of James Wilder, a converted fullback now playing tailback, the Bucs moved into the win column last Sunday by upsetting Minnesota 17-12. In the Browns, theyll face one of the National Football Leagues most inconsistent teams - Cleveland is 5-5 but has struggled recently and fell 35-21 to Green Bay last Sunday.
Were playing against a hot team thats got the hottest runner in the league in James Wilder, said Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano. "Hes run for 345 yards in two games (including 219 on 31 carries against the Vikings, the most for IB NFL running back since 1977). Hes as imposing a runner, I think, as Earl Campbell was in his heyday in Houston
Bucs Coach John McKay expressed no fear of the Browns -or any other team.
; They are just another team, he said. One Sunday
TANKDFNANARA
theyre real good, and one Sunday theyre not playing good. I think thats true of anybody. We playe"
Pittsburgh Steelers the week before last and
the field quaking.
Those Steelers, riding a six-game winning streak, travel to Baltimore Sunday, where the Colts are expecting their first sellout crowd in two seasons. While the 8-2 Steelers hold a three-game lead over Cleveland in the AFC Central Division, Baltimore is 6-4 and only a game behind firsti)lace Miami in theEast.
Elsewhere, the NFLs only winless team, the Oilers, hosts Detroit, while its Cincinnati at Kansas City, Philadelphia at Chicago, Green Bay at Minnesota, Seattle at St. Louis, Miami at New England, Buffalo at the New York Jete, New Orleans at l^n Francisco, Dallas at San Diego, Denver at the Los Angeles Raiders, and Washington at the New York Giants.
On Monday night, the Los Angeles Rams visit Atlanta.
Campbell has been saying he wants to be traded from Houston after being benched last Sunday against Cincinnati.
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
^ 5065, TWO W0R6T
teamsiiotuemplpiaV
CftCMCm46KM0v/.27l
CiAv v&. Mousroj.^
SAVCgSMAe,
SCOREBOARD
Rec Soccer
> Gridn 4-C
Cosmos 0 0 0 1-1
izlecs ...........0 0 0 0-0
Scoring: C - Mark Honicutt
Chiefs 1 2 0 0-3
Tornadoes 1 0 1 0-2
Scoring; C - Jason Bizzaro. Clif Tairell, Scott Thomas, T - Benny Adler 2.
Diplomats
Rowdies
0 1 1 0-2 .1 0 0 0-1 Scoring: R - Ashley Branch. D Camilla Brown
Scoring: K -JT White,
Grades 7-S Aztees 0 3 0 1-4
Stnlfiers..................o o o o-o
Scoring: A - Dallas McPherson
2. David Lee. Jim West
Bowling
* Tuesday Bowlettes '* W L
WB Take It 27 13
Nine Lives...................27 13
Plgz* Gulf...................25 15
Misfjts.........................24 16
Union Carbide Ms 20 20
Sahttoaggers 16 24
Underdogs 16 24
Righ game and series, Joyce Cates 213,572
Men's City Uague United Machine Works.26 14 HusUers 24 16
Sidewinders...............23 17
Earl's Pearls 22 18
DanOilCo..................21 19
Hot Does......................19 21
Chain Reaction 184 214
Team *9......................18 22
Comedy of Errors 174 224
Tarheel 11...................12 28
High game, Trent Rackley 254, high series, Linwood Wetherington,
NBA Standings
. By The Assoclilrd Prni
KASTERNtDNFERE.VtE
Boston New. Jersey lelpnia
AtUnlie Dlvisioa
W I. Pet.
1
4 2 4 2
1 4
2 5
857
67
667
429
286
Milwi
AtUn
Philadelp New York Washington
Central Division ijwaukee 5 2 '!
anu 3 3 501
Detroit 3 3 50i
Chicdgo 2 3 40
Indiana 2 5 28i
Cleveland 2 6 25(
W ESTERN rONEERENCE MMwest Divisin Dallas 4 3
Denver 3 3
UUh 3 3
San Antonio 3 4
Houston 2 5
Kansas City 2
ity
Ptrlfic Division 6 2
4 2
5 3 4 3
3 4
2 4
Portland Los Angeles Seallle
Golden State San Diego Phoenix
Thursday's (ames New York 99. Indiana 91 Utah 118, Houston 109 Portland 115. Cleveland 110 Phoenix 104, Golden sute 99 Friday's Games Detroit at Boston, ini Milwaukee at New Jersey, < n i San Diego at New York, fn)
571
500
500
429
286
286
750
667
625
571
429
333
KansasCity at Philadelphia, (n) Chicagoat Washington. (ni San Antonio at Dallas, in) Phoenix at Los Angeles, i n) Ailanu at Seattle, in)
Saturday's Games KansasCity at Detroit, in)
New Jersey at Indiana, in) Denver at San Antonio, (n)
Boston at Chicago, in)
Dallas at Houston, in)
Portland at UUh. in)
Cleveland at Golden Sute, in) Sundays Games San Diego at Philadelphia, i n) Seattle at Milwaukee, in)
Golden sute at Phoenix, in) Atlanta at Portland, in)
UUh at Loa Angeles, in)
' NHL Standings
By The Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick Division
NY Rangers PhiUdelphia NY Isles Washington Pittsburgh New Jersey
Botton
w
L
T
PU
GF
G.\
n
4
2
24
71
54
10
6
I
21
71
57
10
fi
0
20
70
54
7
9
0
14
50
61
4
10
2
10
44
63
2
14
0
4
43
74
Adams Divisin
10
4
1
21
76
45
9
7
2
20
94
67
7
6
3
17
54
59
7
7
1
IS
53
60
7
8
0
14
64
62
rfalo Hartford Montreal
Campbell Conference Norris Division
Chicago Toronto St Louis Detroit MinncsoU
S
Edmonton Calgary Vancouver Loa Angeica Winnipeg
Thursdays Game LoiAngeln6,St.Louis2 Friday's Games TorontoatBuffafo,(n) ^
N Y Iilanderaat Pittsburgh, in) Winnipeg at Vancouver. i n) Saturday's Games
Edmonton at Detroit, in)
8
8 0
16
64
66
7
7 2
16
73
80
7
8 1
15
60
68
6
6 2
14
54
57
6
8 1
13
66
79
yUit Dlvteloa
29
102
71
14
2 I
6
7 3
IS
56
59
6
9 1
13
71
76
4
1 5
13
69
76
5
9 2
12
63
80
Chicagoat Hartford. >n)
Boston at yuebec jn)
N Y Rangersat Washington, in) PhiUdelpnia at Toronto. i n)
St Louisal Minnesota. In) Montreal al Loa Angeles. < n i Sunday's (ames Washington al Hottun. i n > Calgary al Buffalo. < n i Detroilal N Y Rangers. ni Edmonton al Chicago. i n i Philadelphia al Winnipeg > n i Montreal at Vancouver, i n >
NFL Standings
Miami Baltimore Buffalo New England NY Je&
Pittsburgh
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Houston
L A Haiders Denver Seattle Kansas City San Oiego
Dallas Washington PhilacMphia St Louis N Y GianU
By Thr Associated Press Amrrkia ('ooferencr East
W L T Pci PE
7 3
6 4
6 4
5 5
4 6 0 (rnlril
8 2 0
5 5
4 6
U 10
West
7 3
6 4
6 4
4 6
3 7
Nalioaal Confer enrr East
9 I 2
0
0
PA
700 219 164 600 183 211 600 180 2U3 500 220 196 400 208 202
800 253 168 500 202 241 400 225 195 000 166 301
700 270 224 600 172 174 600 246 225 400 202 188 300 224 278
8 2 0
4 6 0
3 6 I
2 7 1
(enlral
900 318 215 800 339 218 400 158 194 350 205 314 250 175 229
Minnesota 6 4 0 600 227 242
Detroit 5 5 0 500 217 197
Greed Bay 5 5 O 500 275 288
Chicago 3 7 0 300 184 219
Tampa Bay I 9 0 100 158 239
West
L A Hams 6 4 0 60 222 214
.New Orleans 6 4 0 600 230 213
.San Francisco 6 4 U 600 278 204
AUanU 4 6 0 400 206 206
Mondav'sGimr Detroit 15. New York Giants 9 Sunday. Nov. 13 Cincinnati at Kansas City,
Detroit al Houston |
Philadelphia at Chicago Green Bay al MinnesoU Seattle at SI Louis Tampa Bay al Cleveland Miami al New England Buffalo al New York JeU Pittsburgh at Baltimore New Orleans at San Francisco Dallas al San Diego Denver at Los Angeles Raiders Washington at New York Giants Monday. Nov. it Los Angeles Rams al Atlanta, mi
Transactions
B\ The Associated Press BASEBALL National l.eagur CINCINNATI REDS-Released Rich Gale, pitcher Assigned Keefe Cato and Mike Dowless, pilchers. Ron Little, outfielder, and Jen Jones first baseman, to the minor leagues Promoted Curt Heidenrelch. Mike Smith and John
Franco, pitchers, Wade Rowdon, in fielder, and Paul O'Neill, outfielder, to the 4(Mnan roaler MONTREAL EXPOS Named Felipe Alou first base coach NEW YORK Mhrrs Added John Gib^ bons. catcher. Terry Blocker. Len Dykstra and Herm W'lnningham, out-fielders, Rich Pickell. pitcher, and Kevin Mitchell, third baseman, lo iheir 40-man roster Outrighted Mark Bradley and Rusty Tillman, outfielders, Ronn Reynolds, catcher, and Clint Hurdle, third baseman, lo Tidewater of the International l^eague
BA.S1ETBALL National Bisketball Associalioa (OLDEN STATE WAKRKJRS-Signed Russell Cross, forward LOS ANGELES LAKERS-Placed Mark Undsberger and Clay Johnson, forwards, on waivers WASHINGTON BLLLETS-Senl Michael Brill guard forward, to the club's Ivouisville. affiliate in the Con tinental Basketball Association E(M)TRAI.I.
Canadian Football l.rague SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRIDEKS-Signed Reuben Berry, head coach, to a two-year contract
National Football Uague LOS ANGELES RAIDEfB-Sent a first-round draft choice in 1984 and a second-round choice in 1985 to the New England PalrioU m exchange for a seventh-round pick in 1985 to complete an earlier deal involving Mike Haynes, comerback NEW YORK GIA.NTS-Added Larrv Heater, running back, and Al Steinfeld, center, lo their active roster Placed Billy Campfield. running back, on waivers Ihiled States Football (.eague ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Signed Gerry Sullivan, center, lo a multi-year contract
NEW JERSEY GESERALS-Signed .Marshall Harris, defensive end NEW ORLEANS BREAKERS-Named Paul Manasseh director of public rela
"WASHINGTON FEDERALS-Signed Ray Waddy and Tim Baylor, defensive backs, Randy Burke, wide receiver, and Donnie Green, irffensive tackle HtKKEY
Natioaal Hockev l.eagur HARTFORD WHALEHS-Traded Mike Veisor. goahe. to the Winnipeg Jets for Ed Slaniowski. goalie
College Football
Bv The .Vssocialed Press SOUTH
Duke 27. N Carolina St 26_
Prep Playoffs
Bv The .Vssocialed Press
DIVISION I 4-A
Wilson Hum (9-0 al Fayetteville Reid Roes 19-1)
Fayetteville Sanford (7-3) at Cary i7-3i Wilson Fike i8-2i at Fayetteville Byrd (KHli
Smithfield-Selma (9-1) at Jacksonville
(9-1)
Koxboro Person dlHii at Charlotte
Myers Park (KHii E Ml
Page (9^11 ,N Durha
t-3)
eckJenburg (9-H at Greensboro m (9-11 at High Poini Andrews
N Forsyth (7-3) at McDowell >6-3-1)
1-A
Tarboro (7-3i at Northampton West
(8-1-1)
White (Jak (9-11 at SW Edgecombe' 9-1) Clinton (104)1 at S Durham 104)1 W (7uiUnd(8-2>atE Randolph (9-11 Tbomasville (10-0) al Concortf (9-1) Alexander Central (104)) at E Suirv ll(M))
Ltncolnton (7-2-1) at Crest (104))
W. Henderson 00-0) al Asheville Reynolds (104)i
2-A
Fuquay-Vanna (9-1 )al .Manteo (9-1) James Kenan (9-1) at Franklmlon
(104))
Wallace Rose Hill (9-1) at E Carteret
(9-1)
S Robeson (7-2-11 at Hallsboro (6-2-2) SW Guilford (8-2) at W Montgomerv
004)1
Charlotte Catholic (8-2) at Randleman
(94))
Sylva-Webster OO-Oi at FT Foard
Sylva
i-l-l)
Newlon-Conover (5-5) at NW Ashe
(94)-l)
1-A
Princeton (7-31 at Creswell (>7-2) Jamesville(8-2i at Bladenboro(6-4i Robbmsville (9-2) at Trvon (7-3)
Ros man (8-1-11 al Andrews (6-4)
DIVISIUN II 4-.A
Richmond Co '6-3-1) at Wilmington New Hanover (8-2)
Gastonia Huss (7-3) al Winston-Salem Parkland 16-4 (
3-A
Warren Co. at W'llliamston (8-21 Farmville Central (7-3) al Havelock (8-1-1)
Oxford Webb 18-21 at E Bladen (7-2-11 E Alamance (7-31 at SE Guilford (8-2)
S Rowan > 8-21 at Davie County (6-41 Ml. Airv (6-4) at Hibnten (601 Shelby (9-9) at N Iredell (5-5) Waynesville Tuscola (7-3 at Hendersonville (8-2
2-A
(Yuntuck (7-31 at Richlands (7-31 Whileville (6-3-11 at Fairmont (6-4) Jordan Matthews (7-3) al Marshville Forest Hills (5-5)
N W ilkes (7-3) at Franklin (6-4)
Get Ready For Fall Wood Cutting!
STM.' 028 Wood Boss W/20 Bar
plus bonus
kj package WVW
MEMORIAL DRIVE PHONE 752-4122
HENDRiXBARNHILL
Bartoiils Canadian leads the league!
Growing fast cause it tastes so great.
D U I\I K E L I IV D E X
NATIONAL FOOTSALL LEAGUE Current ranking;
IMPORTI
'R
I. Washington . Z.OallM.......
3. NUbI.......
4. L.A. Raiders. TIE PIttaburgh. .
6. San Franclaco.
7. Scanic......
8. Cinclnatti....
9.NewOrleant..
10. Atlanta.....
II. KanagaCity.. TIE N Y. Jeu .... IS. Green Bay... 14. New England.
.126.7 .123.1 .122.3 .120.6 . 120.6 .119.9 .119.2 .115.6 .115.3 115.2 .115.1 .115.1 .115.0 .114.7
15. LA. Ramt .
16. Denver.......
TIE Detroit.....
18. Buffalo.....
19. San Diego...
20. PhiUdelphia.
21. Mlnneaota...
22. Tampa Bay. ..
23. Baltimore ..
24. N.Y. GUnU..
25. Cleveland...
26. St. Loula....
27. Chicago.....
28.Houato n.....
This wcek'a ackedule:
HIGHER RATER DIFF. LOWER RATER
Son., Nov. 13 WaaUngton 126.7 (17) N.Y. GUnU109.7
Detroit 114.2 (11) Houaton* 102.8
ScattU 119.2 (11) St. LouU'108.6
DalUt 123.1 (10) San DItgo'113.2
Ptttaburgh 120.6 (10) Balttmore* 110.8
NUbI 122.3 (8) New England 114.7
LA. Ratdera120.6 (6) Denver 114.2
PhlUdclphU 112.7 (5) Chicago'107.7
San Franctaco'119.9 (5) New Orleana 115.3
Gratn Bay 115.0 (3) MlaneaoU'112.2
Tampa Bay 111.4 (3) Cleveland'108.8
Onciaatlt 115.6 (I) KanaaiQty* 115.1
N.Y. Jeu'115.1 (1) Buffalo 113.9
Mr., Nov. 14
AtUnta'115.2 (1) LA. Ramt 114.3
* home taam
1982 Barton s Canadian Blended Whisky. 80 proof Barton Distillers Impcrt Co., New York, N.Y
If Houston, which has changed starting quarterbacks from Gifford Neilsen to Oliver Ldick, loses to the Lions, it will be the Oilers 18th defeat in a row, tying a club record.
Two key West Division battles feature New Orleans at San Francisco in the NFC and Denver at,the Raiders in the AFC.
The Saints, off to their best start ever at 64 and deadlocked with the 49ers and Rams for the top spot in the sector, shoot for a seventh victory for only the third time in their 17 seasons. In 1978, they went 7-9, then followed with an 8-8 the next season.
I believe when its all over, this will be considered one of the strongest divisions in the league, said New Orleans
Grandson Is Halas' Heir
Coach Bum Phillips Everybody in the division has a shot at winning, that's for sure," said 49ers Coach BHl Walsh, who wouldn't even count out 4-6 Atlanta.
The Broncos and Raiders have similar situations at quarterback. .No, 1 draft choice John Elway ia^tjack as the starter - he was benched earlier this season after a slow start - because Steve DeBerg injured his shoulder. Denver is tied with the Seahawks at 6-4. one game in back of Los Angeles. The Raiders go back to Jim Plunkett calling signals after the man who replaced him last mon^. .Marc Wilson, also went down with a shoulder problem In another game for a division lead, this in the .NFC Central, the 5-5 Packers are at the 64 Vikings, who will be without injured star runner Ted Brown, but Steve Dils is ready after being rocked by some hard hits last Sundav and spending the night in the hospital for observation
CHICAGO (AP) - The 39-year-old grandson of the late Chicago Bears owner George Halas will succeed him as president of the National Football League team, according to a published report.
Michal McCaskey, the oldest son of Edward and Virginia Halas McCaskey, is to have sole authority over General Manager Jerry Vainisi and Coach Mike Ditka, the Chicago Tribune reported today.
McCaskey is co-owner with his wife, Nancy, of a management consulting business in Watertown, Mass. The Tribune said he was expected to be named as the teams president today during a news conference at the Bears training camp in Lake Forest, III.
Virginia McCaskey, Halas only living child, is secretary of the teams board of directors, and her husband is a vice president. Halas, the last surviving founder of the NFL, died Oct. 31 at the age of 88.
The position of president was held by George Mugs
Farmville Wins, 40-0
SNOW HILL - Gary Moore scored two touchdowns and passed for another in leading Farmville Middle School to a 40-0 win over Snow Hill yesterday.
Moore scored on an eight-yard run, and passed to Terry Nobles for a 38-yard touchdown. Moore also scored on a 70-yard interception return.
Ronald Williams also scored two TDs, on runs onf six and 28 yards. Kelvin Corbitt scored the other touchdown on a nine yard run.
Farmville is now 6-0 and closes out the season next Thursday against Ayden.
Halas Jr., Halas only son, from 1964 until his death in 1979. It was Mugs who hired Vainisis predecessor, Jim Finks, in 1974.
When Mugs died, Halas assumed the title of president rather than give it to Finks or to bis son-in-law, Ed McCaskey.
Tobacco Belt Conference
Coof. Ovfrall
W L Final Suadingt
W
L
T
Creswell
7 0
7
2
0
JamesviUe
6 1
8.
2
0.
Belhaven
5 2
5
5
0
Bath
4 3
6
4
0
Mattmauskeel
3 4
4
5
1
Chocowinity
2 5
2
7
1
Aurora
1 6
1
9
0
Columbia
0 7
0
10
0
Conference champion Second playoff berth
Last Week's Results ChocimmitY 21. Aurora 2 JamesvUle4.Coiamliia
Belhavrn 14. MatUBUSkeetk Creswell 14, Bath 8
This Week's Schedule Pnnceton at Creswell (First Round. Sute 1-A Playoffs)
Jamesville at Bladenboro (First Round, Sute 1-A Playoffs)
DELCO POWER FOR LESS
P s 1C iec-e codr me are- m* 'ouQ^e- * y iTn' Danery Sc my 'w -etxace you- *: care-, vfyt f a.^ a Oetcc f-eOor' I Bane-. A,a.iai.e - -le *0 50 ana 6C ifm to irieei you< ance anc oca*' n*os The o(cc D Bare-, n me hqr.-iec-
oowet Mure* mat never neeo ae- Sc come and Uve Oh me tXce Freeoor-1 Bane-, o* yOur cnoee
AC-Oeico. The Smart Parts.
msi
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B & G GUNS OF AYDEN
SALE!
KEROUN
PORTABLE HEATERS
NEW LOW PRICES NOW IN EFFECT Now is the time
Model
Sunstream.. Director Radiant 10 Radiant 36 Radiant 8 Omni 105.. Omni 85... Omni 15.. Moonlighter
1982 suggested HOW List Price
. 289.95 274.95 .229.95 .232.95 .183.95 .264.95 .239.95 .152.95 . 169.95
218.95*
195.95*
132.95*
149.95*
119.95*
160.95*
137.95*
91.95*
119.95*
These are our reg. sale prices. Stop by & get a better deal than this.
Kero-Sun Portable Heaters are availabla in 9 safety tasted and U.L listed models that ere rated from 7,600 to 19.500 BTUs an hour. All modela laature 99.9 S fual-etflclancy, odorless and smokeless operation, Battery Powered Ignition, automatic ufety shutoff, end they do not require a chimney.
NOWISTMTIMITO
IUYTNIKIie4UN
mTAIUNUTIIYOU
WANf^JUMIAVIl
Prices good ttiBled Ume only, wMIe quenlHle* lut.
B & e Guns of Ayden
Authorized Kerosun Sales & Service
The Biggest Gun Shop in North Carolina is going to have the Biggest Gun Sale in North Carolina.
Stock Reduction Sale
All Long Guns At Or Below Wholesale Plus Extra Specials Like:
Sale Save
Ruger Red Label 20 ga...........595.00 203.00
Ruger Stainless mini 14..........285.00 90.00
Ruger Blue mini 14..............254.60 81.00
Ruger Ranch mini 14.............275.50 67.00
Ruger folding mini 14...........311.22 118.28
Ruger 10/22 22 auto rifle..........102.22 32.28
Ruger Mark II 22 auto pistol.......137.68 30.32
Sale
Remington 1100 special field 398.96
Remington 700 Classic 22-250 261.60
Remington 700 A.D.L. 222 245.45
Remington 700 A.D.L. 6mm 245.45
Remington 700 B.D.L. 8mm Mag 299.71
Remington 700 B.D.L. 25-06 299.73
Remington 700 B.D.L. 6mm 299.73
Remington Model 7 6mm 325.25
Remington Model 7 243mm. 325.00
Save
125.99
143.35
134.50
134.50 164.24
147.22
147.22
124.95
124.95
Browning Light Auto 5
Browning Cilori.............
Browning Bar ..........
Browning Challenger 22 pistol
Colt AR-15 Adjustable stock 488.20 Save 126.30
461.95 98.00 660.00 115.00 412.45 87.50 208.51 31.44
Sale Save
Winchester 94 ^ 65.00 54.95
Winchester Pump 12 ga mag 150.00 14.95
Smith & Wesson 686 357 mag 275.00 55.00
Smith & Wesson 66 357 mag 275.00 45.00
Wallherpp super (German) 325.00 170.00
Mauser H.S.C. 380 250.00 65.00
High Standard Citation 22 Auto 275.00 87.50
Thompson Center Hawkin
Black Powder Rifles 179.95
Tasco 3x9 variable scopes 40mm............. 75.00
Remington 12 ga shells 3Vfi-1 % 5.50
Winchester 12 ga or 20 ga AA shells 5.00
90.05
45.95
4.10
2.85
$40.00 factory rebate on Smith & Wesson shotguns
All sales final First Come-First Served
OVER 125 USED GUNS & COLLECTOR ITEMS
Open 10:00 AM-7.00 PM Mon.-Fri.; 11:00 AM-6 PM Sat. 3 PM-6PM Sunday
107 East 3rd St., Ayden, N.C.
I
1
Chiefs' Miniseries Is A Gem
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Chiefs," CBS three-part, six-hour mystery-tirama, is a gem of a suspense yarn that bucks miniseries convention because its not based on a trashy novel or an epic best-seller.
It comes from a little-known book of the same name by Stuart Woods. But CBS had the foresight to recognize that, even without the name value of a "Thorn Birds or a Winds of War." Chiefs" could be sizzling television.
The miniseries begins Sunday night following the highly rated 60 Minutes." when viewers should be eager for two more hours of hard-hitting drama. Chiefs" continues Tuesday and Wednesday in the networks regular movie-night slots.
Each episode covers a different period in the history of Delano. Ga., a small, sleepy fictitious town with a big, dark secret: young boys, generally hitchhikers passing through, have been disappearing over the years. .As the era shifds from 1924 to 1945 to 1962. the link is three generations of police chiefs, played by Wayne Rogers, Brad Davis and Billy Dee Williams, who each uncover evidence of these grisly murders and become obsessed with solving them.
In an unusual twist to the murder-mystery genre, the audience knows the identity of the killer late in the first installment. But that won't' diminsh anticipation in the rest of series, which ends with two hours of dont-miss - and cant-miss - television.
Give credit to director Jerry London, who previously orchestrated Shogun and last TV seasons top network thriller. The Scarlet and the Black.. The production was filmed
Guests On 'Hospitality House'
Author-historian David Stick of Kitty Hawk will be featured on Kay Curries Hospitality House" over WITN-TV at 4 p.m. Saturday.
Stick will discuss his latest book on the Roanoke Island area and Ms. Currie will show filmed scenes of the island and the Outer Banks. Actor Andy Griffith is featured in the film.
Claiborne Young, author of the recently published Cruising Guide to Coastal Carolina, also will be a guest. The book is the first complete guide for cruising in North Carolina.
TV Log
For cofflpMt TV programming Information, conault your waokly TV SHOWTIME from Sundaya Daily Raflactor.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
8:30 Supercade 9:30 Dungeons & 10:00 Dukes 10:30 C Brown 11:00 BenjI 11:30 Bugs 12:00 Football 4:00 Sports 7:00 Solid Gold 8 :00 Cutter to 9:00 Movie 11:00 Update 11:30 Dance Fever 12:00 Star Search 1:00 Soul Train
FRIDAY
7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 F. Crest 11:00 News 9 11:30 Movie 2:00 NIghtwatch
SATURDAY
6:30 Rascals 7:00 Kangaroo 8:00 Bisketts
WITN-TV-Ch. 7
FRIDAY
7:00 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Mr. Smith 8:30 Jennifer 9:00 Manimai 10:00 For Love 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Videos 2:00 Overnight 2:30 News
SATURDAY
7:00 Better Way 7:30 Treehouse 8:00 Flintstones 8:30 Shirt Tales 9:00 Smurfs
10:30 Alvin 11:00 Mr. T.
11:30 Spiderman 12:30 Thundarr 1:00 Little House 2:00 Movie 7 4:00 H. House 4:30 Christian C. 5:00 Wrestling 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Hee Haw 8:00 DIff Strokes 8:30 Spoons 9:00 Rousters 10:00 Yellow Rose 11:00 News 11:30 Night Live 1:00 Closeup 1:30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
FRIDAY
7:00 3's Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 Webster 9:00 Speciai 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nighfline 12:30 Thickeof
SATURDAY
6:00 Telestory 6:30 Great Space 7:00 Cartoon 8:00 Scooby
8:30 Monchichis 9:30 Pac Man
10 30 Littles
11 00 Puppy 12.00 Special
12 30 Bandstand -1:30 Matinee 3:30 Footbail 7:00 Wrestling 8:00 T J Hooker 9:00 L. Boat 10:00 F Island 11:00 Action News 11:15 ABC Weekend 11:30 Cinema
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
FRIDAY
7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Washington 8:30 Wall St.
9:00 Victory at 9:30 World War I 10:00 Nature 11:00 Dr. Who 11:30 Monty Python 12:00 Signff
SATURDAY
7:00 Educational 7:30 Educational
8 00 Making It 8:30 Bradshaw
9 00 H. Behavior 9:30 H. Behavior 10:00 Business 10:30 Business
I,
11:00 Purrle 11:30 Puzzle 12:00 Computer 12:30 Discipline 1:00 Wall Street 1:30 Edition 2;00 Or. Who 3:30 Adventure 4:00 Quilting 4:30 Almanac 5:00 Workshop 5:30 Old House 6:00 Newton's 6:30 Previews 7:00 America 7:30 Animals 8:00 Cousteau 9:00 Country 11:00 TwilightZ 11;30 Twilight Z 12:00 Sign Oft
on location in Chester and Columbia. S.C.
As backdrop to the sex-murder plot, Chiefs" paints a powerful portrait of racial prejudice in the South, turning up the tension in the same way In the Heat of the Night was physically charged by its setting.
In 1924, Delano is big enough to warrant a full-time police chief. At least thats the folksy wisdom provided in an Our Town-type narration by Hugh Holmes, the towns banker and leading citizen. Charlton Heston, aging slowly over the 40 years, gives Holmes a dialect reminiscent of Jed Clam-petts from The Beverly Hillbillies.
The chiefs job is given to Will Henry Lee (Wayne Rogers), despite the objections of Foxy Funderburke (Keith Carradine), one of Delanos most enigmatic citizens.
Also opposing the appointment is Skeeter Willis (Paul Sorvino). the county sheriff who questions Will Henrys toughness. To illustrate this. Skeeter busts Will Henry in the gut and lectures him about the
Plays Role Of Dignity
TOLEDO. Ohio (AP) -Werner Klemperer, the bumbling Col. Klink in television's "Hogans Heroes. has a more dignified role these days - as a guest narrator for symphony orchestras.
"I made no switch in my career at all," says the 63-year-old Klemperer, appearing this weekend with the Toledo Symphony. He said it's just another form of acting.
KLEMPERER
Klemperer, who played the commandant of a prison camp in Nazi Germany that was virtually run by the prisoners, also has appeared as narrator with the Boston Symphony, the Chicago Symphony and the New York Philharmonic. And he performed in a speaking role last year with New Yorks Metropolitan Opera.
The musical phase' is merely a new dimension." said Klemperer, whose father, Otto, was a famous conductor and whose mother was an opera ^ singer. "To narrate with an orchestra is standing on a platform on a stage and youre performing it."
WAGE INCRE.ASES GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)
- Burlington Industries has announced wage increases for about 37,000 production workers, effective Dec. 18.
blackjack: Dont threaten anybody with it. Use it."
This personifies the county justice svstem. which is beholden to whites, Ku Klux Klansmen and Skeeters cronies. Sorvino, one of Americas most versatile actors, sfides easily into this hissablerole.
Davis is absolutely terrifying as Sonny Butts, the sadistic, racist police chief in the second part. The son of a bigoted bully. Sonny, wearing high black boots and a perpetual sneer, brings to mind a Nazi stormtrooper.
In this good vs. evil parable, the sunshiny side is presented by the third police chief, a black man played by Williams, and Stephen Collins, who portrays Will Henrys son, the politician Billy Lee.
One theme in Chiefs is the lack of free will from generation to generation. The genes fit too tightly, which points up a major flaw in the miniseries. Pure is 100 percent pure and rotten is rotten through and through.
In one intercutting scene. Sonny is walking on the wild
side, (^ling the women and freaks at a carnival, while Billy and his sweet wife, played by the special Victoria Tennant from Winds of War, are judging a pie contest.
But were talking three nights of compelling entertainment here, and CBS, which has concentrated on its succtSsful series and been slow entering the miniseries racket - except for the mediocre Blue and the Gray last season - deserves shiny badges for Chiefs.
Jack Lemmon Is Paired With A Childhood Pal
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Jack Lemmon, married 20 years to actress Felicia Farr, picks up the threads of an old, old romance next month with his leading lady in a new Broadway-bound play.
The lady in question is actress Estelle Parsons, his boyhood passion when they were 13-year-old vacationers at New Hampshires Lake Winnipesaukee.
Lemmon, perhaps the most versatile of all American actors, will star with Estelle in A Sense of Humor in Los Angeles and San Francisco, for two months each, beginning in December before heading for Broadway.
As youngsters. Jack and Estelle swam in the lake, skylarked at cook-outs and dreamed of one day becoming actors, maybe even starring in movies and on Broadway.
Lemmon was in a mellow, reminiscent mood the other evening recalling those innocent 1930s days.
Estelles family cottage and our little shack were a couple of doors apart in the village of Wolfeboro, which advertised itself as the oldest summer resort in America, Lemmon said with a wistful grin.
I had a terrific crush on Stelle when 1 was 13, but I never had the courage to kiss her. We enjoyed those long summer days and nights until we were about 18. We both knew from the beginning we were going to be actors.
The year we were 17 or 18 we worked together in summer stock with the Marblehead Players outside of Boston, playing small roles, pulling the curtain, nailing the sets together and handling props.
She was a wonderful girl and 1 knew shed be a good actress.
i After that summer Jack and Estelle rarely saw one another. They kept in touch throu^ friends and met at occasional social functions. They never worked together, although I both worked on Broadway and in Hollywood.
Then last year writer Ernest Thompson contacted Jack about a play. Lemmon is impressed by the coincidence that Thompson wrote On Golden Pond, part of which was filmed on Lake Winnipesaukee.
Thompson wanted Jack to star as a frustrated supermarket manager, a tragic man whose intelligence and ambition far exc^ his station in life. He is further traumatized by a failing marriage and a tragedy involving his daughter.
The role, not unlike Jacks award-winning performance in Tribute, is highly dramatic but interlaced with humor,
A year before Thompson approached Jack he was tinkering with the script and asked a group of actors to read the parts. One of them was Estelle.
When Ernest asked me about doing the play, he told me Stelle was his choice to play my wife, Lemmon recalled. I was absolutely delighted. I told him we were puppies together and that I always wanted to work with her
A Sense of Humor will be Lemmons eighth Broadway play. Hes starred in some 45 movies and in a trio of TV specials, including the highly acclaimed The Entertainer.
In his 30-year career Jack has earned eight Oscar nominations, winning twice. Hes won an Emmy and was nominated for a Tony.
At 58, when most men find their career dreams glimmering, Jack is at the height of his remarkable powers, a triple-threat man in films, theater and television. He has never been less than a star since coming to Hollywood.
it is a remarkable career, Lemmon said agreeably. Ive become a good actor. I admit it and Im proud of it. Its taken a lot of work and dedication and, believe me, its worth it.
Jack attributes his professional longevity to his fluid shifting from comedy to drama and music. Even in his comedies he finds moments of drama and he laces his dramatic roles with humor.
Thank God I find myself at the zenith of my career at this age, he said. Its important that I still have the desire and feel physically up to continue working hard.
Ive only missed one day of work since Ive been in thie movies, and that was because of a cold. Ive been fortunate.
During his run in A Sense of Humor, his latest movie, Mass Appeal, in which he plays a Roman Catholic priest, will be released.
Jack glides easily from screen to stage to TV and back again.
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Reagan Recalls 'Rules Of War'
AIM)PT A-S(H(>0I. breakfast ... Pitt Counlv Community Sdiools honored its participants in the Adopt-A-School program today with a breakfast at Wellcome .Middle School. In the program, businesses, individuals and organizations of a c(^munity designate a school to support and contribute time through volunteers or funds. Adopters received certificates of appreciation and were shown a slide presentation on the
City Council
(Continued from Pagel) monetary support He said the funds cannot be a gift.
It was pointed out that the city does not expect the program to pay for itself in the initial period of operations. Evergreen will furnish the city an annual audit, according to the contract.
In other business, following a public hearing, the council voted to send a request by Shenandoah Development Co. Inc., to rezone .39 acres at the intersection of Alice Drive and Tobacco Road from R-9 (residential) to R-6 (higher density residential), back to the planning commission for further consideration.
After interest was expressed by the council in maintaining at least a one-lot depth of R-9 zoning along Alice Drive, Jim Walker, a spokesman for the developer, asked the council if the zoning line could be drawn leaving over 13,000 square feet of R-9 along the street but giving the developer about 4,000 square feet of K-6 property. Walker said the R-6 zoning is nefded in order to include it in the overall development plan for a group housing project.
Other actions that followed public hearings included approval of requests by:
- Bill Clark to zone 45.1 acres on Secondary Road 1204 containing West Hills subdivision to R-6;
- Philip Carroll to zone the Carolina Opry House property to highway commercial;
- Bhauanbhai Patel to rezone the Greenville .Motel property at 2309 S Memorial Drive from R-6 to downtown commercial fringe; and
- Ralph C. Tucker to rezone 9.920 acres south of the U.S. 264 Bypass from highway commercial and shopping center to office and institutional.
In other business, the council voted to:
-- Annex a portion of Whichport development, consisting of 48 acres locat^ adjacent to Landmark Street;
Continue until a Dec. 1 special meeting consideration of anamendment to the thoroughfare plan;
-r Approve a request by Tay-Gray Enterprises Inc. for a limousine franchise;
^ Adopt an ordinance, with Stuart Shinn voting no, regulating and licensing transient and itinerant merchants and vendors;
- Approve an amendment to the Zoning Ordinance, deleting a section on parking area location criteria and providing that parking for ail construction would have to be
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Community .Schools program. Above, left to right, at the breakfast, were, Donald Robinson of the .North Pitt Advisory Council: Clay Stroud of Clay Stroud Printing; Keith Knox of the Winterville Ruritan Club; Tom IJanifer of the Knights of Columbus and George Cox of Pitt-tireene Electric Membership Cooperative. (Reflector Staff Photo)
placed on the site; and
- Adopt an ordinance amending the boundary description for extension of the extraterritorial jurisdiction and adopting a map delineating the jurisdiction.
The council voted to schedule public hearings for the Dec. 1 meeting on proposed annexations of phase one of Kensington Park, the Greenville Rest Home property, and section three, phase one of Tucker Estates.
The board also:
- Approved a request by Greenville city schools to extend the existing loading-unloading zone on the south side of Fleming Street, about 60 feet; >
- Approved the sale of a disposal parcels in Southside to Lisha N. Harvey for $22,500, and two in the South Evans area to General Heating Inc. ($4.300) and Linsey R. Griffin ($5,500):
- Adopted a resolution supporting the reenactment of general revenue sharing;
- Continued until December consideration of an amendment to the City Code to make animal traps available for loan to the public (Clark voted against continuing the matter); and
- Adopted a standard resolution approving participation by the N.C. Housing Finance Agency in the financing of a 50-unit addition to Wedgewood Arms apartments in Greenville.
Netherlands Mail Suspended
The City of Greenville has a Citizen Concern System to help citizens with their questions, needs and concerns. If you need assistance, call Nadine Bown. Coordinator for the Citizen Concern Svstem, at 752-4137. ,
W.ASHI.NGTON (AP) - A strike by Dutch government workers has forced the U.S. Postal Service to suspend all U.S. mail delivery to the .Netherlands, postal officials say.
Letters that have already been dropped in mail boxes will be held lintil .Nov. 18 and will be returned to senders if the strike has not been settled. Jeanne O'Neill, a Postal Service spokeswoman said Thursday.
The City Council, the administrative staff, and all city employees are here to ser\e your needs. If you have a concern,'call Nadine Bowen, Citizen Concern Coordinator, 752-4137.
The .Netherlands Postal Administration requested the suspension in a telex message to U.S. postal authorities. Ms. O'Nei 1 said. Dutch government workers are striking against 3.5 percent pay cut.
TOKYO (AP) - President Reagan said twiight. "If we talk war, such talk should be in the context of a war that can be won or lost rather than a nuclear conflict. "Once upon a time, we had rules of warfare," the president said War is an ugly thing, but we had rules in which we made sure that soldiers fought soldiers, but they did not victimize civilians." he said. "That was civilized " The subject came up in an interview with Reagan conducted by NHK Television of Japan at the Akasaka Palace, the government guest quarters where the president and Mrs. Reagan are staying during their visit here.
The president said in the interview that Dwight D Eisenhower, while president, wrote in a letter that with nuclear weapons "we could no longer see a war that would end in victory or defeat as we had always known it. But the weapons were such that it would end in the destruction of humankind."
Reagan continued: "Today, weve lost something of civilization in that the very weapons we're talking about are designed to destroy civilians by the millions." "And let us, at least, get
Orders CIA To Provide Access
WASHINGTON (AP) -The CIA has been ordered to give an historical researcher access to censored material about the disappearance of an opponent of the Trujillo regime in the Dominican Republican.
U.S. District Judge Harold Greene said Thursday that the CIA had not given adequate reasons for withholding the material from researcher Alan L. Fitzgibbon. The historian is researching the disappearance of Jesus de Galindez in 1956.
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back to where we once were^
- that if we talk war at all.* we talk it in a way in which there could be victory or defeat and in which civilians have some measure of protection.
The president made the comments after vowing to keep the United States at the arms negotiating table.
"We won't walk away from It." he said. "We re going to stay there trying, not as we have in the past, to set some limits or ceilings on how many more missiles would be built,"
The United States wants to reduce the number of nuclear weapons. Reagan said, but once moving in that direction with the Soviet Union, "we should then continue down that road to their total elimination.'
The president warned that in negotiations with the Soviet Union, "it is not good for
- us. as some in the past have - to think! Well, they're just like us, and surely we can appear to their kindliness or their better nature.'"
He said the Soviets were "verv materialistic...verv
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Reagan said, as he.has in ' ^the past, th^ the .Soj-iet ""Union has a choice: to work for arms reductions or. failing that, "face the fact that we are going to turn our industrial might to building
Friday. November 11.1983 17
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18. The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Friday, November 11.1983
Religion In The South Promulgated On Television
i
ii
ByANNESAKER Vnited Press International
Churches are taking the gospel into millions of Southern homes by cable and commercial television and more and more of todays ministers are as familiar with the "Nielson book" as the "Good Book.
The primary goal of religious television programming. the clergy say. is to revive the spiritual interest of people who stopped attending traditional Sunday services.
Religious broadcasters are also trying to expand their audiences with spiritually oriented news, cultural, sports and community affairs programming and according to "televangelists and Nielsen ratings, the efforts are succeeding.
One of the nation's largest television ministries is the Christian Broadcasting Network of Virginia Beach. Va., a massive complex adjacent to CBN University founded by the Rev. M.G. "Pat Robertson.
From its three satellite uplinks. CBN transmits 24-hour spiritual programming, including "The 700 Club and a talk show Robertson hosts that mixes timely topics with prayer and praise.
"Television can be the most intimate thing. Robertson says. When we ask the studio audience to join hands and pray together. I always feel that the television audiepce is joining hands and praying together as well. I cant touch them physically, but that's the oniy drawback.
CBN. with its advanced technology and huge facilities, also produces a Christian soap opera. "Another Life. and other programs
that lean heavily on the Bible.
But Robertson says he considers himself and the CBN staff "broadcasters who just happen to be Christian -not Christians who are in broadcasting.
"700 Club executive producer Michael Little says CBN is reaching 22 million homes via cable. The network also buys another $20 million worth of time on 150 broadcast outlets - including stations in Atlanta, Miami, Charlotte, N.C. and Birmingham, Ala., to air Robertsons talk show.
Nielsen ratings indicate 8 million cable subscribers are watching The 700 Club. Little said, "but I think the next book (Nielsen ratings) will show us with a sizeable increase.
"We are competing with the major networks. Little says. "They have the biggest pieces of the audience pies, and we want their slices.
Lee Humphreys, a University of Tennessee religious studies professor, says television can be used mostly effectively "if youve got a message thats short and to the point.
"Its very hard to present a more sophisticated or subtly nuanced message. You dont get much depth on TV, whether its news or religion. he said. Its just highlights or headlines.
Most religious broadcasters arent as ambitious as CBN, primarily because they lack CBNs costly and sophisticated broadcast facilities. But more and more Southern churches are televising Sunday services. Bible studies and religious talk shows.
- In Knoxville. Tenn., St. Johns Episcopal Church
operates a local cable channel from a basement studio that offers viewers nine hours daily of locally produced programming.
- The First Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., runs a television studio with 22 production crew members who work Sundays to broadcast services.
- In Macon. Ga., the Methodist-sponsored Good News company produces and markets religious programs for churches and organizations. It also runs an 18-hour-a-day Macon cable operation with call-in shows, church services and nationally syndicated programs.
- The PTL Network in Charlotte, N.C., has its own satellite uplink that beams all-Christian news, drama and magazine-type programming to about 850 cable
systems.
- The Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority. currently broadcasts his Old-Time Gospel Hour to 400 stations from his church in Lynchburg, Va., and is now seeking his own satellite channel.
Other churches broadcast on a smaller scale.
Most Roman Catholic dioceses in the South get air time for Christmas and Easter masses, and the First Baptist Church in Winston-Salem, N.C., has a two-hour Sunday time slot on a cable channel for syndicated material.
Carl Evans, associate professor of religion at the
University of South Carolina<-b^re-
says television may placing tent revivals.
But television, he said, has its limitations.
"There is the conviction
'Lofty Pay' To Police Chaplain
that the TV set is a poor substitute for a caring pastor and congregation, Evans says. But as long as we have lonely people, shut-ins, curious people, the televangelists probably will have a following.
I don't mean to suggest there arent any steady viewers who do not receive spiritual benefit from TV evangelists, but those who do are comparatively few in relation to the established churches, he said.
Some churches are training ministers to communicate effectively with the . camera and others are using jthe camera to train pre-' achers to communicate more effectively with their congregations.
At CBN University, for example, students take classes in on-air performance. although its not necessarily electronic preaching. Robertson says many CBN graduates work at the television studios on Another Life and other programs.
The Rev. John Carlton at the Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Winston-Salem, N.C., says videotaping helps students
programmers have learned that a steady diet of preachers doesnt satisfy audiences accustomed to action.
So churches are moving into more secular programming rooted in Christian tenets and are being rewarded with larger audiences.
Little says CBNs cable programming is ranked third in audience shares behind the ESPN all-sports network and Ted Turners WTBS Super Station.
The Good News network reaches about 275,000 homes in Georgia through 10 cable systems. Wood say. Methodist churches in Waynesboro, Fitzgerald, Albany, Atlanta, Augusta, Warner Robins and Macon also are feeding into local stations, he says, increasing the audience for religious broadcasting.
Brad Lacey, the communications director of the PTL Television Network, didnt have specific audience estimates, but said PTLs potential audience is about 10
million households.
Jacksonvilles First Baptist Church claims a city-wide audience of 87,000 for its Christmasspecial and videotapes of the churchs Sunday services and other programs are distributed to Floridas prison system.
Peggy' Gilbertson of St. Johns Episcopal Churchs cable Channel 20 in Knoxville doesnt have audience estimates,* but she believes the most-watched program is live coverage of Knoxville City Council meetings.
We scoop the TV stations and the next days newspapers, she says.
While religious programming probably wont replace church and Sunday school, religious scholars say it has had a major impact.
I think the old-time camp meetings have largely given way to television, said the University of South Carolinas Evans. The people who flocked to tent meetings are now sitting at home, watching an evangelist on > TV.
Those people, if not settled down in a congregation, are probably the ones more attracted to the TV evangelists. Theyre seeking some way to orient their lives religiously. i
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Farmville Christian Church minister Lee^ Parker has been named chaplain of the Farmville Police Department. making official a service hes rendered the Farmville community for several years.
Police Chief Ron Cooper asked Farmville commissioners Tuesday night for Parkers appointment, and the request was granted. Hes being paid the lofty salary of $1 per year.
"Whenever my officers and 1 have needed the special expertise of one who is trained in grief counseling, pastoral care, and human relations in the providing of police services. I have called on Lee. Cooper said. He.
night and needed a place to lay his head. These opportunities would have been missed were it not for a police officers being caring and vigilant.
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Parker said he is pleased with the chaplaincys being
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work. he said. Its been inspiring for me to see just how police departments have the opportunity to be of help in just about every human situation imaginable.
Good officers like those here in Farmville are sensitive to human needs ^d can render assistance at critical times that no one else can know about. Ive been called by the police to help when a home was breaking up and a family member needed a place to go, when a child needed to be informed as gently as possible of a parents death, when a transient had hung around an all-night convenience store for a few hours on a cold
Parker also acknowledged the Farmville Christian Church which he said has encouraged him in his work with the police department. "The members see this as an extension of their ministry to the community. he said. Parker, a Washington. N.C., native, has been a Christian minister since he was ordained in 1978 and, before that, was a youth minister. He attended Atlantic Christian College and is a graduate of Duke Divinity School. He and his wife. Jane Highsmith Parker, director of the Farmville Child Development Center, have three daughters - Sarah, Molly and Rebekah.
if()rmances. And, Carlton 'says, more and more seminaries are adding classes in electronic communication.
In a lot of our churches theyre making use of radio an(i television, and they (ministers) need more training in that area, Carlton said.
The mass media opened up a whole new field. says the Rev. Robert Wilson of Dukes Divinity Scljool.
"The electronic church preachers like Oral Roberts and Rex Humbard and the whole gang who do their thing in effect have a mass audience, Wilson says.
"But 1 dont think the average church is going to judge their pastor by what type of show business techniques he uses on Sunday morning.
Don Wood, manager of the "Good News network in Macon, says there is a woeful lack of training preachers for on-air work.
"There has been some attention given in this area, but most pastors are not prepared to handle this. Wood says. "We 'are starting to take a look at the role of the pastor and the church in the electronic media, and I think you will see more and more emphasis in this area.
As religious broadcasting has expanded, spiritual
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Lawn Care Not Parf-Time Job
Phillip likes our lawn the way it is. Our five or six blades of malnourished grass need mowing only when certain of our weeds send up spikes too high for the most observant to ignore. This ,means that every six to eight weeks in the summer he will haul out his lawnmower and 'sii^ paeans to piiKstraw.
I I, on the odier hand, am captivated by the smooth green expanses of our neighbors yards. The way .that some people have managed to make Kentucky .Fescue 31 thrive in our impenetrable red clay is truly miraculous. So. naturally, when fall planting time roiled around, I was ready to )erform a miracle, too. ?hillip suggested sodding doormats. 1 objected.
But weve reseeded once before," he reminded me. For a $60 investment we didn't get too much
We doubled our yield Somehow I can't get that excited about four additional blades of grass, two of which died during the drought this siknmer."
t f'Well do better this year. Well use more seed and fertilizer, 1 said confidently. "I hate to tell you how
much I paid for this, he said when I e finally acquiesced.
Doit."
OK. I wont mention that you could have had a vca-tion instead.
Two nights in a pup tent on the Appalachian Trail is not my i(^ of a vacation. Now lets get to work.
Looking for all the world like an organ grinder, he started off around the yard cranking his spreader. Because the venture had been my bright idea, I was left with the rake to work the fescue into what we euphemistically call soil. 1 gave up when he did.
But youre not finished, he said. Youve never even moved out from under the gym set
"Well, youre not finished either. You have two bags of S0Cd I6I
I followed the instructions"
"But the instructions were written for people who have some grass already.
We finally compromised. He let me quit raking, and I let him leave the seeds on his side of the garage. A week later 1 was be^nning to recover, and we had just
.enough grass to whet my appetite.
Im going to go out and work some more seed into those bare patches, I announced on Saturday after-no(m.
Phillip huddled behind his newspaper. "Im not helping.
Im not asking you to help. This will be a cinch
Three hours later, 1 stumbled back into the den.
Did you finish?
No, theres so much bare
Aground out there that it ought to be X-rated. All 1 got done was the front yard (mi one side of the driveway . Which side? The 10-foot-wide strip or the rest of the lot?
Take a guess, I sighed as I flopped wearily onto the couch. A cloud of grass seed arose from the cuffs of my rolled-up jeans and settled into the rug.
Phillip looked gloomily at the patch. Here it will probably germinate.
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Advance Boiven* Open Air Market. Ayden At Door
WGHB Radio. FarmvUle
Cannot Accept Child Is Dead
;L0NG beach, Calif. (AP)
Although the parents of a brain-dead 7-week-old girl say they want to leave her in Gods hands, a doctor says the courts may be asked to let the hospital disconnect Itfe-support equipment.
. It is a possibility that Memorial Medical Center will seek a court order to (hsconnect the equipment from Starla Roberts, Dr. Carlos Maggi, associate ihrector of -the hospitals pediatric intensive care unit, said Thursday.
, However, Maggi told an afternoon press conference tj^t he would continue to work with the parents to t them to accept that their 'daughter is dead.
The child is brain-dead, and her heart would probably stop minutes after being disconnected from the ventilator that has kept her breathing for a week, Maggi said.
The girls mother. Ginger - Roberts, 20, said she is not ready to give up hope for her daughter, who turned 7-, weeks-old on Monday.
"We still believe that God .has done the work and we *just have to wait on him, . Mrs. Roberts said.
She said she was tired
physically, but mentally, my mind is moving at 50 million miles an hour.
Magai has repeatedly said the l^y was apparently a victim of sudden infant death syndrome, also known as crib death.
. At some point well have ' to stop thinking of the ; parents and start thinking of ., the child, he said.
* Although the parents were scheduled to meet with hos-
pital officials Thursday, they did not show up.
We knew what (the
SABOT.AGEPLAN JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - A secret agent who lived for six months in a commune with a young white couple accused of treason has testified they planned to sabotage Johannesburgs gas works.
doctors) were saying, and did not agree with them, Mrs. Roberts said, explaining why she and her husband Adrian, 31, a bus driver, decided not to attend.
"We feel its up to God to take her life, not the doctors, Roberts has said. We dont feel its the doctors'or the judges decision.
His wife said of the doctors, Why cant they accept our faith as Christians? ... Why cant they accept someone who is stronger than all of us?
The baby was without oxygen format least 30 minutes before she was found in her bed Oct.'3, said Maggi.
Starla had respiratory problems since she was born Sept. 19, Mrs. Roberts said.
Sunday
11KX>a.m.
WPTF-28
9dK)a.m.
WCTI-12
11:30 a.m. Monday WWAY-3 2KK)p.m. 8.-00 a.m. PTL WRAL-5 lUasday 10dX)p.m. 3KX>a.m. PTL PTL
Archie Nobles & Sons
315 Stantonsburg Road
(Across from Doctors Park)
758-4600
OPEN Mon.-Fri. 11 am-10 pm Sat. 5 pm-11 pm CLOSED Sun. Thru Nov.
Steaks Salad Bar
Take-out service
Daily Specials Sandwiches
Banquet facilities
WE ARE NOW SERVING FRESH SEAFOOD AS WELL AS STEAKS!
Shrimp Dinner Special...............
Trout Dinner Special.................
$289
$289
E^ERY VETERANS m,l 60 OVER TO BILL MAULPIN'5 mouse TO Ck/AFF A FEW ROOT BEERS
TELL BILL I Always LIKEP THE cartoon where THE CAPTAIN SAYS, "BEAUTIFUL VIEW! IS THERE ONE FOR THE ENLISTED MEN?"
('ll tell MIA^
( I MAVE TO MURRV... HE'S PROBABLY ABOUT SIX ROOT BEERS AHEAP OF
/)
BC
AM I TO OHOSRSTAHO r WOM A UMD5UDE AS sewAee commissioner?
IT iVASNT eXACTLYA LANDfiLlOE, ....irWA9 MORSUKEA
NE\/EI?MIND!
NUBBIN
BLONDIE
BOSS, MAV I BORROW $20?
BUMSTEAO, I NEVER ASKED MV BOSS FOR A LOAN
IF I NEE00A LOAN S-^ I'O ALWAYS ASK MV FATMER
BEETLE BAILEY
VOU MAVEM'T TAKEN
any launpry in for
A LONG T/ME, BEETLE
Served With Cole Slaw, French Fries And Hushpuppies
Mixed Beverages Now Available!
Happy Hours: Mon., Wed., & Fri. 3 P.M.-7 P.M.
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, V... - ThAvE H-|(
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20 The Dally Reflector, GreenvlHe. N.C.
Friday, November 11,1983
Cro8mford By Eugene Sxffer
ACROSS IReddish yellow 6 Auto
41 Swiss peak
43 Household animal
44 Finished
9 Famous isle 45 Chair parts
12Doa 47Qrcustents
growning 49 Makes do
chore S3 Platos
13 French chum H MGIsmail 53 Spotted
DOWN
lEast.in
Berlin
2 Greek letter
3 Auto style
17 Nairobi native 19 Michelangelo statue 21 Fruit drink
4 At any time 22 Comic actor
address
15 Worn out
16 Hairdo feature, perhaps
18 Curtains
20 The Emerald Isle
21 Perform
23 Knights title
24 Petty pests
25 Entrance
27Tr>
29 Pro
31 China items
35 Painter Rembrandt
37 Starburst
38 Name meaning the king
cube 54 Wear away 55-Jose
56 Finish
57 Was too fond
5-a beet
6 Supplies the food
7 Andys partner
8Shred
9 Craze
10 Away from starboard
11 Memos
Avg. solution time; 27 min.
m
ii-ii
Wally
24 Sal, for one
26 Act the journalist
28 Trance
30 Actor Fernando
32 Best position
33 Night before
34 Posed
36 Slipped up
38 Ear parts
39 Juans wife
40 One of Lears daughters
42 Walked nervously
45 Whirl
46 Matadors foe
48 Poem type
50 Dutch commune
Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 51 But; Latin
22
38
44
47
52
55
39
35
40
26
23
30
27
36
53
156
45
28
24
42
49
54
20
37
46
32 33
34
50 51
CRYPTOQUIP
1-11
DSM JWFMVZLDMV NILD UIEELWFMV
LDM L CJNELVRWM CLWFZRUS.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip - THE ZEALOUS PIONEER PUT ON HIS BEST TRAIL BLAZER.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: E equals M.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution ci|^r in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrof can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and errw.
0 IfU Kinq Ftalurts Syndicate, Inc
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
@1903 Tribuna Company Syndicate, Inc
UPPERCUT WOULD EARN THIRD-ROUND KO
Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH
A 108 ':2 1063 OK65
Q1084 WEST EAST
Q9 ^J7
^AKJ742 985
OQ10873 Void
SOUTH
4K65432
9Q9 0 A2 K72
The bidding: South West 1 ^ 3 4 4 ^ P88
0 J94 AJ9653
North East 3 Pass Pass Pass
opening lead: King of 9.
Heres another hand from i ' 'lice's runaway victory in tli.' 983 European Champion ship.s. This hand occurred in the match against Italy.
When Belladonna Garozzo held the North-South cards, they allowed the French East West pair to play in three diamonds, which was made with an overtrick when the defenders allowed de clarer to sluff a spade on the ace of clubs. For France. Henri Szvarc became de clarer at four spades after the auction shown. (No. Wests jump to three clubs is not a misprint - it showed a red two-suiter.)
The defenders started with three rounds of hearts. Declarer ruffed the third heart as East sluffed a club.
After drawing trumps in two rounds, the ace-king of diamonds were cashed, and declarer eliminated diamonds with a ruff. Now declarer led a club to the queen. East won the ace, but he was end played. A dia mond return would allow declarer to ruff in dummy while sluffing the losing club from his hand, and a club return would be into declarers combined K 10 tenace - the finesse was marked by the fact that West showed out on the first club lead. France gained 13 Inter national Match Points on the hand.
Our eagle-eyed readers will have spotted that, as the cards lie, the contract should have been defeated. East should ruff the third heart with the seven of trumps. That forces declarer to overruff with the king, and the defenders now have a certain trump trick. (Note that it will not do to ruff with the jack of trumps. Declarer can then overruff and finesse the ten of trumps for his contract.)
Lawyer Held In Psychiatric Unit
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. i.APi - .Attorney Mary P. Evans, charged with helping her convict-ciient escape from prison, is being hospitalized in a psychiatric unit but wants details withheld, a spokesman says.
The 26-year-old lawyer was in satisfactory condition Thursday, said George Matthews, a spokesman for Park West Hospital. He would not disclose the reason for or expected length of her stay.
Ms. Evans faces trial in .March for allegedly helping convicted murderer William Timothy Kirk, 36. escape .M a r c h 3 1 from a psychologist s office where she had taken him for tests FBI agents arrested, them Aug. 17 in Davtona Beach. Fla.
MARIJUANA HAUL
DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -Police seized a half-ton of marijuana valued atr $2 million at Dublin airport Thursdav. authorities sak.
RECEIVES TRUDEAU
VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope John Paul II on Thursday received Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Canada in a private audience.
/
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
MISCELLANEOUS
PUBLIC NOTICES
Personals.......
In Memoriam ... Card Of Thanks. Special Notices .. Travel & Tours ..
Automotive.....
Child Care.......
Day Nursery .. ..
Health Care.....
Employment.. . For Sale.........
.002
.003
,005
.007
.009
.010
.040
.041
.043
.050
.060
Instruction.................080
Lost And Found ......
Loans And Mortgages Business Services .
Opportunity..........
Professional..........
Real Estate..........
Appraisals...........
Rentals..............
.,082
.085
.091
.093
.095
.100
101
120
WANTED
Help Wanted...............051
Work Wanted...............059
Wanted ....................140
Roommate Wanted.........142
Wanted To Buy.......... 144
Wanted To Lease...........146
Wanted To Rent............148
RENT/LEASE
Apartments For Rent.......121
Business Rentals...........122
Campers For Rent..........124
Condominiums for Rent.....125
Farms For Lease...........107
Houses For Rent............127
Lots For Rent..............129
Merchandise Rentals.......131
Mobile Homes For Rent.....133
Office Space For Rent......135
Resort Property For Rent.., 137 Rooms For Rent '......138
SALE
Autos for Sale... Bicycles tor Sale Boats tor Sale .. Campers tor Sale.
.011 029
.... 030 .032
.... 034
Cycles for Sale.............036
Trucks for Sale.............039
Pets.............. 046
Antiques...................061
Auctions...................062
Building Supplies...........063
Fuel, Wood, Coal .. ........064
Farm Equipment...........065
Garage Yard Sales.........067
Heavy Equipment ......068
Household Goods ........069
Insurance..................071
Livestock..................072
Miscellaneous..............074
Mobile Homes tor Sale......075
Mobile Home Insurance .... 076
Musical Instruments.......077
Sporting Goods.............078
Commercial Property......102
Condominiums for Sale.....104
Farms tor Sale.............106
Houses for Sale.............109
Investment Property 111
Land For Sale..............113
Lots For Sale...............115
Resort Property for Sale ... ir
am
Reflector Classified
PUBUC
NOTICES
FILE NO. 83 SP 384
FILM NO.
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORETHECLERK STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF THE DEED OF TRUST OF CLARENCE VAN JONES AND WIFE, JEAN C JONES, GRANTORS, TO J H HARRELL, TRUSTEE BY DALLAS c CLARK, JR AS SUB STITUTE TRUSTEE AS RE CORDED IN BOOK NO H 45, PAGE 58 IN THE OFFICE OF THE REGISTER OF DEEDS OF PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA AND IN VOLUME 881, PAGE 79 IN THE OFFICE OF THE REGISTER OF DEEDS OF CRAVEN COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue ol the power and authority contained in that certain Deed ol Trust executed and delivered by Clarence Van Jones and wile, Jean C Jones dated October 18, 1975 and appearing of record in the Office it the Register of Deeds ol Pitt County, North Carolina in Book H 45, page 58 and also recorded In the Office of the Register of Deeds of Craven County, North Carolina, in Volume No. 881, page 79, and because of default in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out or perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and pursuant to the demand ol the owner and holder of the Indebtedness secured by said Deed ol Trust, and further pursuant to the Order of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, North Caro lina, entered in the foreclosure proceeding under date of the lOth day ot October. 1983. the un dersigned, Dallas C Clark Jr , Substitute Trustee will otter tor sale at public auction on the 29 day ol November, 1983 at 12 00 o'clock noon on the steps ot the Pitt County Courthouse. Greenville, North Caro lina, the following described real property (including any improve ments thereon )
Tract *1 That certain tract of land in Swilt Creek Township, Pitt County. N.C . containing 45 6 acres, more or less, owned by Helen Laughinghouse Jones, adjolnging lands of Charlotte Garris. North. Keith Bronson, East; Kilpatrick. West, and Bruce Garris, South For a more complete and accu rate description, reference is made to deed recorded in Book N 28. at page 214 in the Pitt County Public RMistry
Tract 3 Lying and being in the Town of Ayden and BEGINNING AT a stake on the west side of Lee Street, George W Prescott's northeast corner; running thence with the Prescott line in a westerly direction about 175 feet to the Will
L
B Tripp line; thence with the Tripp line In a northerly direction In a line parallel with Lee Street 83 feet more or less, to S W. Edwards' line, thence with the Edwards line in an easterly direction about 175 feet to an iron stake on Lee Street; thence with Lee Street in a southerly direction 83 feet, more or less, to the BEGINNING Being the same property described in deed corded in Book H 24, at Page 503 of the Pitt County Public Reglsfr except that part sold to Will I Tripp and wife Tract 14: That certain lot < parcel of land situate, lying and being in Greenville Township. Pitt County, North Carolina, on the south sloe of U.S. Highway #264 (known as the by pass) and begin ning at a point in Ine northeast line ol Oscar Tucker Lot #5 (Henry Tucker Division) at a stake which is SO feet from the center of U S Highway #264 and runs thence with the south side of said Highway right of way. South 83 dea East 123 feet to a stake, W E. Basnight's northwest corner; thence with the Basnlght line, South 5 deg. 15 min West, 200 feet to a stake, Basnight's southwest corner; thence North 83 deg West 123 feet to a stake, i corner, thence North 5 deg. 15 min East, 200 feet to the point of the beginning, containing .58 (58 100) of an acre, more or less, and being the western half portion ot that certain tract of land conveyed to Ralph C. Tucker, et al by George W, Tyndall, et al by deed dated January 25, 1950 and recorded in Book X 28, at page 495 ot the Pitt County Registry and further being the Identical pr<^rty conveyed to E M. Gibbs by that certain deed dated October 5, i960 from Ralph C. Tucker, et ux which appears in Book Z 31, at page 585 of the Pitt County Registry and further being all of Lot #1 as shown on Map entitled "Property of Ralph C. Tucker" which appears in Map Book 9, page 25, ot the Pitt County RMisfry.
The addresses for the property above described is respectively:
Tract 1: Swift Creek Township, Pitt County, North Carolina Tract #3: 411 Lee Street, and 413 W. 5th Street, Ayden, North Caro lina.
Tract #4: 1425 Greenville Blvd., Greenville. North Carolina.
The sale will be made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, re strictions and easements of public record, and assessments, if any.
All of said tracts of land shall be offered for sale separately.
The record owners of the above described real property as reflected in the records in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County not more than ten (10) days prior to the posting of this Notice: Clarence Van Jones and wife, Jean C. Jones.
Pursuant to to the provisions of G.S. 45 21.10(b), and the terms of the Deed of Trust, any successful bidder will be required to deposit with the Substitute Trustee imme diately upon conclusion ot the sale a cash deposit of 10% of the bid up to and including $1,000 00 plus 5% of any excess over $1,000.00. Any successful bidder will be required to tender the full balance of the purchase price so bid in cash or by certified check at the time the Substitute Trustee tenders to him a deed for the property or attempts to tender such deed, and should such successful bidder fail to pay the full balance ot the purchase price so bid at that time, such bidder shall remain liable on his bid as provided by the provisions ot G.S 45 21.30(d) and (e).
This sale will be held open for a period ot fen (10) days from and after the filing ot the report ot sate tor upset or raised bids as is
required by law.
his the 24 day ot October, 1983. DALLASC CLARK,JR SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE November 4, ll, 18, 25, 1983
FILE NO: 83 J
FILM NO INTHEGENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE JUVENILE COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IN RE: PAUL DAN McCASKILL, A MINORCHILD
SERVICE OF PROCESS
BY PUBLICATION TO ROBERT LYNN McCASKILL, father of the minor child Paul Dan McCaskill TAKE NOTICE that a Petition seeking to terminate your parental rights tor Paul Dan McCaskill, a minor child, has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature ol the relief being sought is as follows: Termination of Your Parental
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE INTHEGENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORETHECLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
The undersigned, having this dey qualified as Administrator ot the Estate ot CADDIE WARREN WHITEHURST, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms, and cor poratlons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned or his attorneys on or before the 28 day ot April, 184, or this notice will be pleaded tn bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the un dersigned.
This 25 day ot October, 1983.
H. Dean Whitehurst,
Admiristrator
Estate ot Caddie Warren
Whitehurst
Route 2, Box 204
Robersonville, North Carolina
27871
EverettA Cheatham Attorneys at Law P.O Box 609 Bethel, NC 27812 Tel. 825 5591
October28, Novembers, 11,18, 1983
Rights
Yo
'ou are required to make defense to such pleading not later than December 8, 1983, and upon your failure to Jo so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court for the relief sought
You are hereby notified that as the parent ot the above named minor child, you are entitled to appointed counsel if you are in digent, provided you request counsel at or before the time of the hearing oh termination of your parental rights You are further notified that you are entitled to attend any hearing affecting your parental rights.
This the 20 day of October, 1983 WILLIAMSON, HERRIN, STOKES
8. HEFFELFINGER BY
ANNHEFFELFINGER
BARNHILL
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF 210S WASHINGTON STREET P O BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 October 28 November 4, H, 18, 1983
FILENO: 83 J64
Film NO INTHEGENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE JUVENILE COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IN RE: MELISSA LOUISE REID, AMINOR CHILD
SERVICE OF PROCESS
BY PUBLICATION TO: DONALD VERNON REID,
father ot the minor child Melissa Louise Reid TAKE NOTICE that a Petition seeking to terminate your parental rights tor Melissa Louise Reid, a minor child, has been filed in the above entitled action The nature ot the relief being sought is as follows: Termination ot Your Parental Rights
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than December 15, 1983 and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought
You are hereby notified that as the parent of the above named minor child, you are entitled to appointed counsel it you are in digent, provided you request counsel at or before the time of the hearing on termination of your parental rights You are further nolified that you are entitled to attend any hearing affecting your parental rights This the 1 day of November, 1983. WILLIAMSON, HERRIN, STOKES&HEFFELFINGR BY
ANNHEFFELFINGER BARNHILL ATTORNEY for PETITIONER
2I0S WASHINGTON STREET P O BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 November 4, n, 18,25, 1983
LEGAL NOTICE
The Certificate of Need Section, Division of Facility Services, North Carolina Department of Human Resources announced on October 28, 1983 the approval of Project ID 0 1851 83 tor Phoenix Health Care, Inc, Greenville, N.C., to incur a capital expenditure for the establishment o< a home health agency in Greenville, N.C.
Review ot the project was con ducted pursuant to Chapter 131, Article 18. as amended, of the General Statutes of North Carolina Prior to approval, the project wa$ reviewed by the Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency, Inc., and found to not conform to the applicable plans, standards, and criteria
After reviewing the findings of the recommending Health Systems Agency, the Certificate of Need Section determined that the project IS in confirmity with all the applicable plans, standards, and Criteria considered during the course of the project's review. Any qualified person aggrieved by this Certificate of Need decision is offered the opportunity fo appeal this decision within thirty days ot the approval date For additional intormation, piease contact the Certificate ot Need Section. Division of Facility Services. De parfment ot Human Resources. PO Box 12200. Raleigh. North Carolina. 27505.
November 11,1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as ExecuVix ot the estate ot James Thomas Brown late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of sale deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before May 4, 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 1st day of November, 1983. Virginia D. Brown 1117 Ragsdale Road Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutrix ot the estate ot James Thomas Brown, deceased November 4,11, 18, 25,1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix ot the estate ot Lula Taylor Biggs late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate ot said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before May 4, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.
Thisindday of November, 1983.
" Patricia Ann Biggs 800 River Hills Dr.
Greenville, N.C.
Elizabeth Ann Harris 1725 E . Cedar Lane Greenville, N.C. 27834 Executrix ot the estate ot Lula Taylor Biggs, deceased. November 4, 11, 18,25, 1983
NOTICE OF SALE OF LANDS BY COMMISSIONERS
NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Pursuant to and by virtue of the authority ot the Order 'ot The Honorable Eleanor H, Farr, Assistant Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, entered October 18, 1983, In that proceeding entitled "George Saad. et als, vs. Elizabeth Vashti Wilson, et al", being Pitt County Clerk ot Superior Court File No. 83 SP 355, the undersigned will, on Friday, November 18, 1983, at 12:(X) O'clock Noon, at the Pitt County Courthouse door In Greenville, North Carolina, otter Ihe real pro-)erty hereinafter described to the highest bidder tor sale tor cash, but
subject to payment of any and all itstanding ad val(
BEGINNING at a stake located
225.9 feet west of the southwest ntersectlon of Douglas Avenue and Vance Street, and located on the southern property line ot Douglas Avenue, and running from said stake South 13 West a distance of
93.9 feet parellel to Vance Street to stake on the southern boun^ry
line ot the Cherry Hill Subdivision, a corner; running thence from said stake and with the southern boundary line of the Cherry HIM Sub division, North .77 22 West a dis tance ot 40.2 feet to a stake, a corner; running thence North 13 23 East a distance of 94.8 feet to a stake located in the southern pro perty line of Douglas Avenue, a corner; running thence along and with the southern property line ot Douglas Avenue, South 75 54 East a distance ot 40.2 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING, and being the same lot or parcel of land described in that deed from E.H. Tatf, Jr et al to James E. Wilson and Mary Suggs Wilson, said deed being dated January II, 1945, and now duly of record in Book G 24 at Page 358 in the Office ot the Register of Deeds of Pitt County.
The highest bidder will be re quired fo deposit fen per cent (10%) ot his bid as evidence ot good faith pending confirmation ot the sale by Ihe Court.
This the 18fh day ot October. 1983. David A. Leech, Commissioner DeLyle M. Evans,
Commissioner October 21, 28; November 4, 11, 1983
Treating Furnace
NOTICE OF SALE
TAKE NOTICE that in ac cordance with Section 115-125 of the General Statutues of North Caro lina, the Pitt County Board ol Education having decided that the personal property described herein is surplus and un necessary tor school purpose, will sell to the highest bidder, for CASH, based on sealed bids submitted to the Pitt County Schools Office, 1717 West 5th Street. Greenville, N.C by 12:(X) pm on WEDNESDAY, NOV EMBER 30, 1983 the following
described personal property -1 Forge, Heat Treating I Combination 1 Machine Lathe, 15" Cincinati, 48" centers 1 Machine Lathe, 12" Monarch, 30" centers 1 Universal Turret Lathe. Jones and Lawson 3 1 Bandsaw Blade Welder 1 AC DC Welder, Linde, type C300
The above described properly will be sold lor CASH as separate items and the sale will remain open tor ten (10) days to permit the making of an upset bid.
The Pitt County Board of Educa tion reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
Hems may be seen at Farmville Central High School. Hwy. 254A, Farmville, N.C. For information visit the school or call Mr. Carl Toot, 752 5106
November 3, 11, 20, 28, 1983
Oil
Autos For Salt
j^E ONE OF THE PEOPLE with Clout I Buy Clout discount cart Phone Allen Hardy, 7S2 5902
INSURANCE POINTS
OUR RATES MAY SAVE YOU Cell us before you bu MID ATLANTIC INSURANC INC. 756 7723.
SLL YOUR CAR the National Autoflndtrt Way! Authorized Dealer In PIft County. Hastings Ford. Call 7580114,
013
Buick
BUtCK ELCTBA LiMltEO. J dw. 82. One owner. 18,000 miles Like New Call Duke BuIck Pontiac 753 3140.
SCK LESABRi LIMITED. (4)
81. 4 Door. One owner. Duke Buick Pontiac, 753 3140.
I buick park AVENUE
Loaded. $1250. Phone 758 7140.
IJJ* buick, clean, good family car, S3800. Call 746 3729affer 7p.m.
1978 RIVIRA. Wblti with landau top. Full powtr. 59,600 actual miles S4500. 756 6409 between 6 9 pm
1980 BUICK REGAL Limited V 8, Sunroof, loaded with other extras $6800. Cell 753 2527 aHer6.
IH2 BUICK CENTURY. Excelle/il condition. AAostly highway miles $5,895. 756 9006 after 6 p.m
014
Cadillac
CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE,
1981. Excellent condition $9500 Call 757 0451 or 752 2366.
1979 CADILLAC SEDAN OeVille
Good mileage. Good condition 14995. 757 0440
015
Ctwvrolet
FOR SALE: 1973 Monte Carlo Landau, loaded, sharp Call 825 2831 or 758 1539, ask tor John
1972 CAMARO RALLY SPORT. 1900. Phone 758 3319,
1973 CHEVROLET IMPAL
Custom Coupe 2 door. One owner, automatic, power steering and brakes, air. Like new! 61,000 actual miles. $1550. 756 2595 days, 756 9130 nights. .
1973 CHEVY IMPALA. V 8, Power steering and brakes, new tires. Runs good. Call 756 4858 after 6 p.m 1971 CHEVROLET IMPALA, white with blue interior Looks good, runs great. $1,09$, 752 5tl7or 7rt 1054
1975 MALIBU CLASSIC. Good run ning condition $700 Call 752 7301.
1974 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE.
Excellent condition Take up pay ments of $114 per month. Total cost, $1600. Down payment. $228. Call 755 7056
1978 CHEVROLET MONZA. Silver, black Interior. Automatic, air, power steering, AM/FM cassette stereo. Excellent condition Low mileage. $2900 755 1980
1978 CHEVROLET MALIBU
door. Automatic, power steering air, 1 owner Good condition. $25() or best otter Phone 756 0732
1981 MALIBU CLASSIC. AM/FM stereo, new tires Phone 746 2578 or 7561863 after 5 pm
016
Chrysler
CHRYSLER 1979 New Yorker, I owner, fully loaded, excellent con dition. 61,000 miles 752 5265
017
Dodge
974 OOOOE CORONET, 318 engine, $600 1968 Pop Up camper Excellent condition S500 355 2430
1981 DOOGE COLT. 25.000 miles, air, 4 speed Loaded with extras Sporty economy car for $4700 355 2860
024
Foreign
1974 AUDI tOOLS. good condition Call 756 7807 after 6 p m weekdays, anytime weekends.
1974 Austin marina parts car Best otter. Call after 5 pm. 758 9478.
1976 TOYOTA COROLLA. 4 speed, air, stereo $995 Gritton, I 524 5414 after 4pm
1976 VLVO 245 OL wagon, power steering and brakes, air, root rack and 4 new Michelin radlals Extra clean $4300 752 2657
1977 OATSUN B210. Air. manual transmission, radial tires $1800 Phone 756 9452 days. 755 1351 nights
1978 HONDA ACCORD, red. 2 door, 50,000 miles. 1 owner. New tires. AM/FM radio.Book value $3200 but price negotiable 355 2741.
1979 AUDI 5000, charcoal gray. air. cruise, electric sun cassette Call 756 7807
.aX
FM
1979 TOYOTA COROLLA. 5 speed, power steering, air, 59,000 miles, AM/FM, 4door Best otter 755 2584
1979 TOYOTA orolla Deluxe ' 4 speed, air, good condition $2900 756 0942
1980 MAZDA RX7. Anniversary Edition with all options New radi als. Alpine cassette Like new Must sell! Call 755 0238 after 12 Noon
1980 TOYOTA statlonwagon 5 speed. AM/FM, air conditioned, luggage rack, white, high mileage, well maintained $3850 Call alter 5. 758 7808
1980 TOYOTA TERCEL 2 door liftback. Air. automatic, radio $4200 Phone 752 0405
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 DATSUN NISSAN SENTRA 4
door wagon Like new! $5,500 Phone 1 794 4838 early or late
1982 HONDA PRELUDE Low
mileage. Like new Must sell 752 4840
IH2 HONDA PRELUDE. 5 speed. AM/FM stereo cassette, air, cruise control. 758 4207
Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified.
032
Boats For Sale
BOAT FOR SALE 17' Aristocraft with trailer and accessories. 75 horsepower Johnson motor Good condition. Call 758 3807
FOR SALE 19' O'Oay Sailboat Sleeps tour 5 horsepower Johnson Motor Cox Trailer Excellent condition $4,950 W H Tatt, 752 5161 days; 752 21 19 nights
GRAMPIAN 23' sailboat. 5 horse power outboard, lull sails, excellent condition Excellent first sailboat. Call 919 858 1951 alter 5 30 or 483 8828 and ask lor Russell
1982 15'>' Pieces bass boat. 50 horsepower Mercury, power trim, trolling motor, depth finder, galva nized trailer 755 7381.
034
Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman lops 250 units in stock O'Brianfs, Raleigh. N C 834 2774
WHITE CAMPER
longbed Datsun or Call 795 4350 after 7
SHELL tor Toyota, $150
036
Cycles For Sale
1973 HONDA 350. Low mileage Excellent condition Quick sale. $290 752 4440 after 5pm
go
tion, full helmet $495 Call 755 0841
018
Ford
1931 DELUXE FORD Roadster Excellent condition $12,500 755
2754 after 4 p.m
1964 FORD. Rons good. $350 firm. Phone 752 1355
1969 ENGLISH FORD Cortina, less than 2.000 miles on a rebuilt motor. Call 752 5424 after 5 p.m
tORINO. Needs
1972
int lOb
-------- s pai
Runs good $700. Call 355 2061 after 5p,m.
1973 FORD GRAND TORINO
wagon. Excellent transportation $450. Call 752 5117 or 758 1054
1974 FORD ELITE Runs like a sewing machine. $850. Call 752 5117 or 758 1054
PINTO
new pz $1100 Call 752 769)atterp m
SlationwMor tires, new paint, AM/FM stereo.
1975 HONDA 360. Good condition $475 negotiable Call 757 3014 after 5 pm
1980 YAMAHA 400 Special. $1.000 Phone 758 7160.
1981 YAMAHA 650 Special, asking $1,950, includes 2 Beislar helmets Cycle fully equipped. 5,500 miles 8 to 5 call 756 6424. after 5 30 call 756 9325
1982 HONDA 450 NIghthawk Musi Sell Price negotiable. 752 8456
038
Trucks For Sale
FORD RANCHERO, 1968 Excellent condition $3,000 355 2277
1958 2V] TON DUMP truck brakes $1800 Phone 757 1429
1970 DODGE PICKUP, step side, looks good and runs gooa $850 745 378
1971 CHEVY VAN. Excellent con dition. $1500 Call 355 5513
1973 CHEVROLET CIO pickup $900 or best otter 756 0831 after 5 p m
1974 TORINO, 2 door hardtop. $400. Call anytime, 758 5870
1975 FORD GRANADA. Automatic transmission, air condition Phone 758 4024 after 5 p m
197$ FORD GRAND TORINO, 4
door, red with black Interior $500 Call 752 S117or 758 1054
197* FORD ELITE, 55,000 miles Very good condition $1995 firm Call 752 5759 weekdays 9 to 5. Saturday 8 to 5
1975 MUSTANG, good gas mileage, good condition $1595. 757 3134
1977 LORO LTD. Air, automatic, 50,000 miles. Real good condition Call 756 2935
1978 FAIRMONT VENTURA.
Automatic, air, AM/FM, new radial tires, interior good. 1 front tender and hood minor damage Book value, $2500, asking $1500. 753 3279
1982 FORD ESCORT, with air. like new. Assume payments Call 755 9885 after 6 p.m.
020
AAercury
1972 MERCURY MONTEREY,
automatic, air, power steering and brakes, good transportation. $400 negotiable. 752 7370.
1974 MERCURY COMET - 2 door. Good condition. 5 cylinder, automatic, power steering, air. $1450. 756 2595 days, 756 9130 nights
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as Ad minisfrafor CTA ot the Estate ot RUFUS ALBERT MAYO, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate fo present them fo the undersigned, whose mailing address is Post Office Box 7143. Greenville, North Carolina. 27835 743. on or before the 28th day ot April. 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 25th day ot October, 1983. Michael A. Colombo Colombo & Kitchin Post Office Box 7143 Greenville. N.C 2783$ 7143 October 28. November 4. II, 18. 1983
.bV
b'>
1982 MERCURY LN-7, I owner, every option possible including sunroof and louvers. Excellent condition. $4,800 Phone 1 825 0286 afer 5 p.m. weekdays.
021
Oldsmobile
FOR SALE by owner 1978 Cutlass Supreme Oldsmobile Air, power steering and power brakes, AM/FM radio, vinyl top. Most sell. Call 755 0835
1974 CUTLASS $550 756 7725.
197S CUTLASS SUPREME, blue $1500. Phone 756 9964.
023
Pontiac
CONVERTIBLE, 1971 Pontiac LeMans Sport. Black with white
1974 MAZDA TRUCK, alt around grealcondilion Call 752 7761
1975 CHEVROLET TRUCK,
Automatic transmission Good condition. $1595 Phone 753 5852
197* 4 TON Chevrolet 4x4, 4 speed, air condition, power steering. AM'FM cassette Phone 1 825 5 291 after 5 p m
051
HalpWantad
AOORESSIVi tALi and ion siructlon Firm It looking tor an aggrtMlvt outside salts rtpre stntalive Travol 7 county araa, top commission paid. Company bonatlts Unlimitad earnings, depending on ydur eblllty! For con-tidenlial Interview write to Sales Management, PO Box 469, GraenvTlle, NC
assistant DIRECTOR OF Nurses Join the teem ot geriatric advocates Assistant Director of Nurses needed at University Nurs Ing Center. Must ben an RN with 2 years experience to apply. For Information call Lydia J Morgan, DON, 758 7100
AUtOMOTlvr AL$Pt(ON. " Call tor Interview 7$a 1177 or send resume to Grant Buick Inc., P.O Box 2097, Greenville, N C 27834 Attn: JackMewborn.
AVAILABLE POSITION EDGECOMBE COUNTY SCHOOL SYSTEM
Director ot Vocational Education MA/ED and teaching experience In vocational education end NQ certification raqulred Contact Personnel Department, Ta'rboro, NC tor applications 919 823 6153
BRICK LAYERS nteded SI per
hour Report to Ayden School. 753 2095. United Mason, Inc
BRODY'S has openings tor full time mature salespersons tor ready to wear department and one tor gift and accessory area Good company benefits Apply at Brody's Pitt Plaza2to5p.m
:0LLECTI0N MANAGER
Apply al Great Southern Finance in person. 115 S Lee St , Ayden
EARN EXTRA MONEY tor
Christmas Sell Avon!!I Call 758 3159
ELECTRONICS/COMPUTERIZED
Systems Engineer or Consultant Electronic System trouble shooting experience required Electrical/lnstrumenlation main tenace background desired Salary commensurate with experience Send resume to Electronics, PO Box 138. Greenville. NC 27834
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for
someone having fast food management experience and $20,(XX) capital Investment to become partner Ip existinq small business It you are tired of working tor the other man and want the advantages ot being our own boss this may be for you. iail 756 5541 from 9 a m to 12 noon, Monday through Friday tor in lervlew
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Large corporation has oulstandii) sales opening for a sales reprF senfalive Individual must be locl resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress tor age Business or sales background helpful In requesting personal in terview please submit resume stating personal history, education, and business experience Write PO Box 405, Greenville, NC 27835
FULL TIME MANAGEMENT
sosition available Apply al H. L Hodges, Inc
HELP WANTED RN'S AOs
welcomed Opportunity to practice ' nursing and be appreciated Our Community Hospital in Scotland Neck needs 2 RNs Call Joy Waters. DON, or W.G Slade. Administrator at I 825 4144
KIRBY COMPANY needs 4
salespeople Commission and bonus plan Must have car Call Richard 755 8352
LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time 7 fo 3 and 3 to II shifts are available Apply in person or call Oak Manor, Inc . Snow Hill. I 747 2858
MAINTENANCE
Call 755 8345
person needed
NON INVALID lady wants a lull time companion and housekeeper Light housekeeping and cooking Private room Call 752 5272 lor nterview
NOWHIR)NG-
Offshore Oil Drilling Overseas and Domestic Will train. $35.(XX) S50.000 lus possible Call Petroleum ervlces at 312 920 9364, extension 1074 Also open evenings
NURSES NEEDED. Extra money Part time RN night nurse Full time LPN evenings 795 3126 Ask tor Director of Nurses
PART TIME TELLER. Experience required Contact Rosa Mills. Planters National Bank
PROFESSIONAL FIRM has posi tion open lor experiened bookkeep er For appointment call. 745 6134 between 8 and 5 p m
197* CHEVROLET
Excellent condition $3500 Phone 757 1429
SILVERADO.
All original.
197* FORD TON Pickup Explor er Excellent condition Nice $2500 negotiable Call 758 0904 after 6 p.m
197* FORD, F150 super cab, air conditioned. AM/FM, camper top 1980 C30 Chevy Van. air conoi lioned. AM/FM, bathroom, 25.000 miles. 746 2402 days, 524 4925 nights and weekends
1979 FORD Explorer truck with camper cover, 25,000 miles, $4800 Call 752 0135after 4p m
1980 CHEVY LUV long bed. air condition. FM, pass through window, excellent condition $3,895 or payments of $122 per month Call 756 0841
1980 OATSN pickup, longbed. ^4 ton, Sterophonic radio and air conditioner, liner for bed. Special, will go quick 752 6440.
OUINN WHOLESALE Company Inc , a grocery distributor in Warsaw, NC has an immediate opening tor a programmer/analyst to work on a 1100.51 Must be strong in COBOL, RPG II, OSIIOO and other noo software tools Mapper experience a plus An Interest in becoming a part ot the manage men! team is necessary Com petltive salary and benefits Call at 919 293 7821, extension 200 tor an appointment,
RECEPTIONIST NEEDED at
Greenville Opticians, Doctor's Park Building l Call 752 4018 ask for Billy or Richard or come by and set up time for interview
REGISTEITeO NURSE to serve as Director of Nursing in 75 bed Intermediate Care facilily Irtl mediate opening Call ad ministratoral (919) 747 2868
RESUMES WRITTEN to get results
Clus job search programs Call tor rochure or appointment Cushman Writing Associates. 1 537 2889
RNs, LPNs, NAs
Medical Staffing 4473
Dally pay Call Services, I 523
I9II ton Datsun pickup. 4 speed, radio and heater, good condition. Make me an otter. 752 6440
1981 CHEVROLET SILVERADO.
V 8, loaded,! stereo, full power, low mileage Likenew! 752 3619
1981 JEEP WAGONEER LTD.
Loaded, teal green, 62,000 miles. Excellent condition No rust Must see! Must sell! $9,995. Phone 758 0558 after I 30 p.m
1982 CHEVROLET SILVERADO
truck, loaded with extras plus deluxe camper fop Only 9000 miles. Call 756 1050.
1982 TOYOTA. 4x4 long bed. air condition, AM/FM stereo, white letter tires, 5 speed Excellent condition. $5800 negotiable Call 1 291 4154atter4p.m.
040
Child Care
BABYSITTING SERVICE -
Evenings and weekends. Children,
002
PERSONALS
WONDERING HOW you're ooinq to get your kids through Colleger I have a plan that might help! Not insurance or investments Phone 752 SM7 between 5 and 8 p.m.
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
FREEI Stop In and register at Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall tor free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary
NEED A CART Rent dependable used cars at low rates. Phone RENT A WRECK, 252-2227
inierior. MuiomaTic. Air, power Steering and brakes, AM/FM Needs fop, other wise excellent condition. Serious calls only no trades Phone 756 1980
EXPERIENCED, dependable person to sit with infant in our home References required Call 756 0081
1976 PONTIAC ASTRE wagon AM FM 8 track, air $1500 Call 757 3607
MOTHER DESIRES to give loving care to your child in her home in Cambridge subdivision Call 755 6396 between 5 p. m. and 8 p m
1979 FIREBIRD ESPRIT, One
owner Excellent condition $5300. Call 756-1888 from 9-5 weekdays.
WILL BABYSIT in my home, first or second shift CajI 355 6896
1980 TRANSAM. Excellent shape. T top, all power, low mileage. S6700. 746 3788
044 PETS
AKC REGISTERED Boxer. 5 months old. female, $100 Call 758 3276 or 758 0041
1981 T-TOP TRANSAM. Lots ot extras Low mileage Call 746 3370 after 6 p.m.
AKC REGISTERED LHASA Apso puppy, 6 months old female Great temperment, loves children. $100 756 3613or 756 9223
1982 PONTIAC 6000 LE. 4 door, 22,600 miles, excellent condition, S500 and assume loan or will take older car at same value Can be seen Monday-Friday 9 to S at Prepshirt. No phone calls please.
BOXER BULL PUPPIES. 6 weeks old, $10. Call 758 3319
024 Foreign
FEMALE POINTER, 18 months old. Call 745 3612
OATSUN 280ZX - 2 + 2. 1979 Blue. 59,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition S7500 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights.
FOR SALE: AKC Pekingese. Poodles, Pomeranians, Dachshunds. Cocker Spaniels. Rat Ter riors Call 758 2581
FULL BLOODED Irish Setter pup Dies. 9 weeks old. Females, $50. Males, $50 1 825 0286 after 5 p m. weekdays.
VOLVO, 1983 DL 4 door, 6.500 miles, AM/FM cassette, tan, extended warranty. 758 5940 after 6
IM9 VOLKSWAGEN. Good shape, clean. S1200 Phone 758 2888
051 Help Wanted
i47I VOLKSWAGEN Convertible white with white fop New engine, new top. radlals. Alpine cassette, service records. 752 5704 anytime.
WAITRESS Counter person. Ap proximately 20 hours per week. Apply in person 3 p.m.-4 p.m., Monday Friday Carolina GrilL 9th and Dickinson.
1971 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle Good condition. $900 755 0942
$856 PER MONTH and up in sales. Must have car, no overnight travel, maximum training available. For confidential interview, call Personnel. 756 8352.
1973 AUDI FX. New radlals, paint, AM/FM cassette,, Phone 758 7026 after 6 p.m.
ROOM AT THE TOP
Due to promotions in the local area. 3 openings exist now for young minded persons in the local brancfv of a large organization. It selected you will be given two weeks of classroom training locally at our expense We provide complete company benefits, major medical, dental plan, profit sharing, and optional pension plan second to none Guaranteed commissioned Income to start All promolions are based on merit not seniority
To be accepted you need a pleasant personality, be ambitious, and eager to get ahead, have grade 12 or better, and be free to start work immediately
We are particularly interested in those with leadership ability who are looking for a genuine career opportunity Phone now to arrange an appointment tor a personal interview. Call between 10 AM and 6 PM Monday through Friday
757-0686
ROUTE DRIVER needed immedi afely Full lime position Heavy lifting required Knowledge of Greenville and surrounding areas Excellent driving record a must Company benefits Rapid advan cement Monday Saturday, 9 a m 5 pm Closed Wednesdays Apply in erson No phone calls olease olortyme. Greenville guare Shoppi tg Center
SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area A go getter attitude, energy, creativity Earnings based on performance Benefits and in centives Promotions from within. Call 756 6711
SERVICE MANAGER
Excellent Career Opportunity with growing company Excellent com
panv benefits and starting salary Prefer previous Ford experience Reply in writing to Service Man
r P O Box 1967, Greenville. N C 27834
SHIPPING SUPERVISOR (Assis tant). An atslstant shipping, ra celving warehouse supervisor is needed by a local firm handling building materiali This is an entry level job for a qualified mature person The job require* ability, motovation. high energy level and decivenest. In eddltion to salary, hospitalization. Hie inturence. paid holiday and vacation are offered II interested please contact Mr Green, Garris Evans Lumber Company between 3 30 4:30 pm Monday Friday. 701 West Ufh Street, Greenville or send resume fo PO Box 2S4S, Groenville, NC 27836 2548
I
0S1
HtlpWantad
WORK AVAILABLE
Wf NAVE NEED for iiMritncad iKWfckMptr, word procMoort, to nior tyottt and data antry opara tort. Work whan you want, stay homo whan you want Not a taa agancy. Call lor appoinlmani, praata MANPOWER TEMPO RARY SERVICES, 757 3300,
WANTED LICENSED cot matologitl, baautlclan and barbar tor Unltax Salon Call 750 0769
05f
WorkWantgd
ALL TYPS TREE SERVICE, Licantad and lully Intured Trim mlng. cutting and rtmoval, slump removal by grinding. Free ettimatet J P Stancil, 752 6331
CARPENTRY REPAIR, remodel ing, room additions Free eslTmalet 75 3693or 757 39)9
DAIL'S LANDSCAPING Backhoe and Concrete Service Phone day or night, 1 523 4395
KILLY'S CUSTODIAL SERVICE. C6II I 946 0609 -
need a sitter? ecu college
student seeking babysitting jobs for spending money Available alter noons and evenings Call 752 8370
PAINTING Interior and exterior Free estimates References, work guaranteed 13 years experience 756 6873 alter 6 p m
PAINTING. 10 years experience Free estimates 752 9915
0A7 GaragtYard Salt
PITT COUNTY PLEA MARKET
t* mile off North Greene on Pactolut Highway Good used furniture and antiques Buy and -elll Dally 10 to 5 Closed Sunday
SATURDAY, November 8 13. Children's clothes, household goods and more 1 mile from Sunshine Garden Center towards WInterville. 3rd house on left
SATURDAY, 8 12 firescreen, 8 drawer baby chest, Bobby AAac car seat, adult clothes, children's clothes site 0 6, coals, shoes, house hold Items 2 families, 303 Leon Drive, Lake Clanwood
ST. GABRIEL'S PARRISH Hali; noi Ward Street Saturday. Nov amber 12 9 until 12 School desks (oak), display case (oak) many more treasures I!
SUPER SIZE yard sale 9 a m to 1
p m 20 bicycles, 10 speed, 5 speed, 3 speed, single speed, all sizes available Books, hand appliances
pots and pans Gigantic clothes inventory tor all peoples large and small Bolt cloth, patterns, large selection of color lace and elastic and much, much more 629 Dickinson Ave and Reade Circle
YARD SALE. Saturday, November 12 2904 Rose Street 4 families 8 30
until.
PAINTING inside or outside 15 years experience Free estimates All work guaranteed 758 7815
RAKING LEAVES, any size yard Reasonable price 753 5583
WALLPAPERING AND Painting 10 years experience Local refer enees 758 7748
WILL DO HOUSEWORK 3 30 until. Monday Friday. 752 9564 after 7 p.m
WOULD LUCE to do housecleaning work Call 757 0510
YARD WORK raking leaves, cleaning gutters Afternoons and weekends Call 752 9168
OAO
FOR SALE
0A1
Antiques
jaLE'S A SCOTT'S ANTIQUES.
1310 Dickinson Avenue. Greenville. NC Phone 758 3276 (;>pen 9 to 5, Monday through Friday Large selection of furniture and gifts!
0A2
Auctions
COMPLETE MODERN MACHINE
Shop In Red ^rlngs. NC will be sold at ABSOLUTE AUCTION Thurs day. Nov 17
Brldgeports. lathes, radial drill, OKK vertical mill, compressor, tool bins, accessories, grinders, drills and cutters For complete list call Col H B Smith, Auctioneer. 919 483 1043 anytime
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P Stancil. 752 6331
all HARDWOOD. 575 cord. 140 pickup load Delivered and stacked 823 5407
FIREWOOD 520 UP Tree removal, pruning, etc Full size pickup unsplit pine *20 Split pine 530 Split mixed maple, gum, etc, 535 Split oak 545 Free tree estimates near Greenville Brown's 756 6735. 756 4164, 752 7774
OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready to go Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5 p.m
OAK FIREWOOD for sale, by the cord or truck load Delivereo and stacked where you want it Non profit organization Call 756 3540
SEASONED OAK, 545 a 'v cord Seasoned Beech or Hicorky, 550 a ' z cord Delivered and stacked Call 757 1637
SEASONED OAK tirevvood, 590 cor, seasoned mixed firewood, 580 cofd Free delivery and stacked Ready to go 756 8358 after 5
SEASONED OAK firewood 590 cord, 545 hall cord Call after 5. 752-5858
TRAILER FOR SALE. Ideal tor hauling wood. 5350 Call 795 4360 after 7
WOOD FOR SALE 575 a cord of mixed hardwood, delivered Call 355 2877
WOOD FOR SALE. Mixed. 535 Seasoned Oak 545 Gall 752 6286 anytime
WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodstoves, chimney pipe and ac cessories Squire Stoves Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques, WInterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007
065 Farm Equipment
INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER
diesel tractor, 65 HP, low hours, good clean condition 1 Powell Maximizer bulk barn, 150 rack, gas operated, good condition Roanoke primer, 1 row, good condition 3 Roanoke tobacco trucks 12' King disc, pull type with drag Call 746-3060 anytime
LINCOLN WELDERS Ideal ARC AC 250 with accessory set, 5438 49, Ideal ARC AC DC 350 with acCesso ry set, 5679 95 AC 225 S 5149 95, AC DC 225/125 5299 95 Welding rods and accessories in stock Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999
$8 FERGUSON High Clearance Excellent condition 52500. Phone 757 1429
066
FURNITURE
BEDDING&WATERBEDS
LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices Bedding sets, 169 Waterbeds. 5U9 Factory Mat tress & Waterbeds next to Pitt PI6za 355 3626
BEDROOM SUITE . young girl's Stanley set includes day bed with trundle, dresser and mirror. 1250. Call 355 6419.
BROYHILL SOLID wood dining room suit, china and hutch, table and 6 chairs. Will finance! 757 0451, ask for Mr Carraway
MUST SELLI Sofa, chair, and rocker Great shape! 1125. Phone 758 0946_
067 Garage-Yard Sale
ACROSS FROM EACH Other! 202 and 203 Joseph Street (oft Cher ryvvood Drive). Record player, stroller, children's toys, HO Train and board. Teen, girl, and large men's clothes (formis) Saturday, Buntll 11 No early sales!!
AIRPORT ROAD FLEA MARKET.
Open daily) Monday Thursday 9 to 5; Friday 9 to 6, Saturday 7 to 6. Setups outside 13.50 per day
ALEXANDER 1963 Big Huggums, 145 Many others! Special Sale Saturday only All prices on dolls reduced. Great buys! 4 story furnsihed doll house, occupied Japan, and collectable items Mrporf Road Flea Market.
BROOK VALLEY. Saturday Sev eral families. Toys, furniture, baby Items, and clothes. 109 King George Road, 8-12.
BROOK VALLEY, Saturday 204 Churchill Drive. Sleds, games, boys and mens clohtes, household goods
FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP yard sale Many items at reasonable prices Saturday, November 12, 1983 at 105 St Andrews Drive, Greenville, 8 30a m Rain or shine
GREAT BIG Yard Salel Antiques, clothes, furniture, and lots, lots more! Low prices Corner of 6th and Elm Street If rain next weekend. No earlier than 8 a.m. please
LAST YARD SALE of the season at 212 Singletree Drive, 10 to 3. New and used children's, ladies' and men's clothes, Avon products and miscellaneous No early birds Cancelled if rain
MOVING, MUST SELL. Single beds, dressers, lamps, kitchen fable and household items Saturday, 222 Commerce Street. 756 7776
d#kN EVERY SATROAY w, Forbes B Clark Warehouse Market. 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. I from Moose Lodge. 7564090.
SATURDAY, November 12, 8 12. 203 Crestline Boulevard.
SATURDAY. November 12, 8 1, 706 Rexle Court. Weathington Heights Subdivision, WInterville. AAaHress anq box spring, record player, pictures, baby carriage, little girl clelhing, wmen's apparel, coats, and men's suits.
YARD SALE. Saturday, November 12. 9 until 1 43 North SR 1202 B's Barbecue, next paved road to left. 4th house on right Baby items, household items, miscellaneous
YARD SALE SATRDAY Nov 12, 1982 from 7 to 12, 503 Lancelot Drive inCameiot Two families
YARD SALE, Saturday. Highway 3 north, 3 miles Beside Lennie's Store Household items, couch and chair, toys, guns, dishwasher, lawnmower, and odds and ends
YARD SALE, 2905 Rose Street, November 12, 7 until.
YARD SALE, Saturday, rain or shine Port Terminal Road
YARD SALE, Saturday. Children's clothes, toys, TV set, baby furniture, household items 209 Leon Drive 8 a m , No early birds please!
YARD SALE, Saturday 3116 South Evans Street Extension Several Families 8 unfil 1,
YARD SALE, Saturday, 7am until 1810 Sulgrave Road, two family yard sale Couch, chairs, clothing and lots of miscellaneous Items
YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 am, 3 families Vanity^ 10 speed, camping tents, table, bar, and other house hold furniture No early birds 305 South Jarvis Street
YARD SALE, Saturday. 8 to 12 205 King Arthur Road, (famelot Sub division Maternity clothes
rday, 8 to I I, Camelot
Sub
sweaters, men's suits, men's shirts! sota, electric heater, LP gas tank (25 pounds), portable gas air com pressor, toaster oven, cross stitch fabric, soft sculptured dolls 355 2834
YARD SALE, Saturday. 8 until Bed, dresser, table, heater, desk, moped, gocart. wardrobe, glassware and lots more Highway 33, 14 miles east of Greenville
YARD SALE, Saturday ill Hardee Street, Cherry Oaks 8 until 13 Clothes, toys, 2 youth beds, bikes, and miscellaneous
YARD SALE, Saturday 7 30 until 12 30 2 families Corner of
Belvedere and Placid Way across form Kentucky Fried Chicken
YARD SALE. Saturday 410 Kirkland Drive, Brentwood Beside Krogers 8am until
YARD SALE. Larry's Carpetland. 3010 East 10th Street Wallpaper, carpet and vinyl remnants, lots of miscellaneous 9 to 12
YARD SALE. Shady Knoll Entrance Several families Children and adult clothes Lawn mower and miscellaneous items 8 until
3 FAMILY SALE. Handmade Christmas ornaments, bear skin rug, original art work, clothes, miscellaneous. 8 a m 13 noon November 12, 210 Avalon Lane
3005 SHERWOOD DRIVE. 8 until 12 Sears Chest freezer, 5200 Dorm refrigerator. 530 2 living room
chairs, chest of drawers. Tv stands, end tables, bookcase, big bathroom mirror, hanging pot rack, winter clothes, all sizes Very good condition, aluminum Christmas tree and decorations, many more miscellaneous items 756 2015
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237
PEANUT HAY 51 00 bale, picked up in the field Will deliver 823 5407
7 YEAR OLD 'z Arabian Mare Experienced rider 5550 Phone 746 4055
074
Miscellaneous
ALL REFRIGERATORS, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale Rebuilt, like new Call B J Mills. 746 3446 at Black Jack
BEIGE AND BROWN sofa and chair Excellent condition Phone 756 9964
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale 4 models Delivery setup 919 763 9734.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway work
CASH NOW
FOR
Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents. cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins. dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques .anything of vallue
COIN & RING MAN
On The Corner
CEMENT STEPS for sale Call 757 1285 after 4 p.m
CHAIN SAWS professionally sharpened, 12 00 each 757 3636
CHEST FREEZER. 9 cubic toot Kenmore Call 756 9660after 4 pm.
CHRISTMAS TOYS, trucks, cars and airplanes. 757 1572 after 5.
COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and retinishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756 9)23.
DALI CUSTOM Mini blinds, 40% off I week delivery. Throughout November only. Call 756 3341 to place your order.
DRAPES AND RODS, cream and brass, two 58 W x 63 H and sliding door lined. 355 2444.
FOR SALE Living room furniture, fireplace screen, bulletin board, garden plow. 756-0834 after 6 p.m
FOR SALE Sofa and chair, bookshelf, braided rugs (several sizes). Ideal for college students or apartments. 355 2085.
FOR SALE: LIGHT UP arrow sign Complete with letters and all. im 756 2595 days, 756 9130 nights.
FRENCH PROVINCIAL sofa and
chair, 1)25 Call 756 3139.
GAS SPACE HEATER, 40,000 BTU, Warm Morning vented with fan and automatic thermostat. Excellent condition. List, 1395; asking, 1295. 757 3753.
GE USED refrigerator White 1250 756 6037 aHer 6.
INSTANTCASH
LOANS ON A BUYING TV's, Stereos.cameras, typewriters, gold 8r silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 753 2464.
KARASTAN ORIENTAL desibn area rug tall sale Save up to 30% Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street
KENMORE ELECTRIC RANGE,
harvest gold, 4 years old. 756 6663
KEROSUN HEATE, and 12 gauge shotgun Phone 758 7279.
LARGE LOADS of sand and top
soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available 756 4743 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.
LOWREY GENIE ORGAN for sale.
Financing available! For more in formation, call Atlantic Credit 756 5185.
AAAKE MONEY
CAN'T WEAR THOSE clothes? Let Transition Wardrobes sell your Fall/Winter clothes In sizes 14 S3. Come see our new selection. Call 355 2508 after 1.
MAYTAG I^ASHE* and dryer. 1350 or best otter Call 756 6336
074
MiSCBliBIWOUS
MOVINGI Matching Hulon sota'ihd chair, 1100 pair. Table, 115 Lawnboy mower, 150. End tables, 110 pair. (VCR/TU) stand with glass doors, top. 1150. 756 3709
MOVING MUST SELL Seigler oil
heater, 485 . 30" gas stove ISO. 30'
continuous cleaning oven with hood 1175 Refrigerator 1300 5,000 BTU air conditioner 160 756 4788 after 5
NASHUA FREE Standing woodstove with chimney, 1600. In tellevlsion Video games with 4 cartridges, 1140 Black and while 9" porfable TV, 140 Fender Well tool box, standard size, 135. Phone 746 2644 between 4 and 9 p m
CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue
NOISE ALONE DOES not protect your home. Call us for professional advice on burglary, tire and emergency protection for home or business needs Free on location analyses Robinson A Brittain, Inc., 355 6387
PORTABLE YARD BUILDINGS.
Great for workshop, storage, etc Any size, any color 4 contemporary models to choose from Can be seen on 264 By pass Lntore Carolina East Mall entrance or call 756 1502 any time and leave message.
PORTABLE COMMERCIAL
f>ressure washer 1,500 PS I. stain ess steel cart, tast coupling hook up 11,000 756 2595 days, 756 9130 nights
PORTABLE washing machine and dryer, white Westinghouse, 1225. Call 756 8553 after 5p m
PUERTO RICAN and Hyman white sweet potatoes 18 00 bushel. Call 825 6821
PUNCHED AND CUT paper shades for candlestick lamps Variety of colors and designs 17.00 each Call 756 5681 or 756 7251
RB3 WOOOHEATER. by Har
rington Manufacturing Company, 1550 Call 795 4360 after 7.
RED VELVET Sectional (3) pieces Good condtiion 1300 Phone 355 6865 after 5 p m
RENT TO OWNIl New 19 " Sharp
color TV Payments, 122 42 per month Furniture World I I/Stereo City, 757 0451, ask for Mike
SERVICE SPECIAL: 119 95 plus parts on any make vacuum cleaner. 1 year warranty on any we service 756 8352, Kirby Company.
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Renf njpooe Tool company
SHARP, SONY A GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue Pricqs start at 16988
SILK SUIT, size 36 waist, 150 3 nylon wool suits. 36 waist, like new. 125 each 752 8887
SINGLE SIZE WATER BED and
mattress. Super Waveless with heater has headboard I year old Excellent condition 1300 752 2957 atter 3pm
SLALOM AND TRICK SKIS - and
ski vest Phone 756 6678
STEREOS AND TVS Close out prices on all systems in stock! Marantz, Sony. Sansui Furniture World'Stereo City Phone 757 0451 2808 East loth Street In Store Finance
TIRE, new Goodyear power cushion, bias ply polyester, D78 UB, 135 or best otter Call 756 7610 after 6pm
USED GOOD CLOTHES blouses, dresses, skirts, coats, sizes 12 16. some 18s 10 miles trom Greenville 752 6974 days or nights
UTILITY POLES. 130 each 756
6728
UTILITY TRAILERS for sale. 4x8's. 5x8's and 5x)0's Call i 946 1120
WALLPAPER II 50 13 00 per single roll Odd lots and discontinued papers Name brands, values up to 120 a single roll All sales final Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street
WASHER - Heavy duty Very good condition 1150 Phone 746 2072
WOOD FURNACE, Hot water and heat Washer/dryer and refrigera tor. antique chest Call 756 7768
WOODSTOVE - Fisher Grandpapa Bear 1400 firm Call 758 2058
10 INCH BAND SAW, table model, used 5 hours, 1150 8 inch table saw, belt driven, 150 Call 756 5959
19" SONY remote color tv, 1300 firm Call 752 9254
30" APACHE woodstove insert, used I' 1 seasons 1600 or best otter Call after 5p m 756 6939 g
'i ii
4X34 ABOVE GROUND swii pool, all accessories, 1 year old, sand filter, 1750 756 6728
8x40 TRACTOR TRAILER truck body Excellent for storage 11,000 each Call 757 0451.
REFRIGERATOR 16 cubic foot Hotpoint. avacado. Good condition 1)25 Exercise bike. New condition, 49 miles on it 150 Call 756 8011
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
COLONIALMOBILE HOMES
Since 1958 your one stop housing center. 1984 model 2 bedrooms, total electri', fully furnished, lave. Payments under 1144.00 per month. 107 W Greenville Boulevard. Greenville. Call Sue at 355 2302 for your personal appointment
FREE STANDING PONDAROSA
wood stove 753 4)06 or after 6, 747 8487
MOBILE HOME 10x50 Ideal tor add on. Needs work. Has wheels and axles and ready to move, 1800. Call 752 5l17or 758 1054
NEW 70x14 PARKWAY HOME
I'z bath with garden tub. com pletely carpeted, name brand ap pliances. total electric, storm windows. Minimum down payment with payments under 1205.00.
Colonial Mobile Homes
107 W Greenville Boulevard, Greenville. Call Mike for your personal appointment.
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than 1140 per month.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 7560191
THOMAS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC.
1318 N. MEAftORIAL DRIVE Across From Pitt County Airport 14 X 70 A FRAME fireplace with blower, dishwasher, paddle fan. mirror wardrobe. 115,995
24 X 52 DOUBLE WIDE 120.995 All Homes Close To Cost
752-6068
USED 12x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths! Ata steal. Call 756 4822.
ir X 65' MOBILE home (skirted ) on wooded lot located at Shady Knolls Estates. Partially furnisheo. Included: range/refrigerator,
washer/dryer, sofa. Asking price: 15.900. Call 758 7489 after noons/evenlngs.
1971 NATIONAL. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Excellent condition. Must sell! Call 752-6778.
1973 WICKi'i honit, 12x60, 2 bedroom, stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer, dishwasher, air, carpet Excellent condition. 15700, Cali 752 3619.
1974, 12x60 mobile home. Folly furnished. 752-9199 between 10 and 11 a m and after 7 p.m.; 1 638 1233 after 5 p.m
198,1 Conner. ux68, iow equity and take over payments. Call 756-6424 from 8 to 5, 756 9325 after 5:30.
1981 14x56. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 porches. No equity, assume loan of 1170 monthly, m-1165.
1983 14' WIDE HOMti. Payments as low as 1148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sates, North Memorial Drive across trom airport. Phone 752-6068.
25 YEAR FINANCING
No down payment with land. We can include brick underpenning, well and septic tank Into ume loan.
"The Better Homes People"
Colonial Mobile Homes 355-2302, Greenville, N.C.
07* Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754
077 Musical Instruments
completely AESTOREO an tique piano. Must sell. 1500 or make offer 757 3624 at ter 5 p. m
FENDER ASSMAN 100 amp Head Marshall Bass cabinet four 12" speakers. Call 756 7580
FOR SALE
Sotnet'Cansale Piano Bargain Wanted Responsible party to take over low monthly payments on spinet piano. Can be seen locally Write Credit Manager: PO Box 914 Newell, NC 28126.
KAY GUITAR AND CASE
Raymond Johnson, 752 0622 trom 9 to6p.m.
LES PAUL guitar, 1450 Music AAan 212 amplifier, 1350 Call 746 3393 LOWfREY GENIE ORGAN. Perfect unused condition Ready for Christmas. 1950 756 9129
PEAVEY P.A. SYSTEM 1 XR 800 stereo mixing board, 2 SP 2 Peavey cabinets loaded with 15" black widow speakers, 3 Peavey monitors loaded with 12" speakers 758 8538
PIANO A ORGAN DISTRIBUTORS
- Super Sale! Kimball piano, 11.188 Yamaha Organ, 2 keyboard and pedals, 1999 Free lesson, bench, and delivery! 329 Arlington Boulevard, 355 6002.
012 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: SOLID WHITE long haired cat, may be wearing a blue collar Missing since October 29 Any information, call 746 4551. Reward!
CLASSIFIED AOS will go to work for you to find cash buyers tor your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752 61M.
MISSING: BLONDE COCKER
Spaniel Last seen on Ash Street. Answers to the name of Henry 1 eye ditterent than the other Phozie 752 2523
125 REWARD. Lost Dog: Solid bizKk with white feet, little white in chest and nose, Stevens Terrier, weighs about 30 35 pounds Answers tonameot Black Jack. 746 3541.
0T3 OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS FOR SALE. Grocery and service station. All stock and equipment Asking 130,000 negotia ble Call anytime 1 747 3918, except Wednesdays 1 747 8590
GREENVILLE AREA businesses tor sale Wholesale Nursery serv ing ten routes Beautiful Needlepoint Shop Two Fast Food Restau rants TV Sales and Service...Card and ,Gift Shop . Sandwich Shop and others. Snowden Associates. Brokers, 40) 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, N C. 757 0001, nights 753 4015
ROUTE BUSINESS...no selling in volved as we secure all locations Just collect the profits Replace sold stock Very>ea6t to maintain High profit potential 17760 Minimum investmeirt Call Mr Davis 317 547 6463 ^
095 PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and tireplaces Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville
HOME NUPSING CARE Available! Experienced RNs, LPNs, and Aides RN Supervision 24 hours a day Call Medical Staffing Services, 1 523 4473
100 REAL ESTATE
WATER ACCESS 10 miles from Aurora 'j acre with 1974 12x70 mobile home storage building and private boat dock included Prime area tor fishing and hunting. 116.500 Call 1 322 4428 days. 1 322 4795 evenings
102 Commercial Property
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
RESTAURANT BUILDING Commercial building and seven rental units available for sale and located on Mumford Road Gross rents of 11400 per month Priced at 1134,000 Steady income potential
THIS COMMERCIAL BUILDING in Grimesland may be just what you need to start that business you've been thinking about Good location and priced to sell at 127,000 Call today for your personal appoint ment
LOT ON 264 By pass across from Heilig Meyers Furniture Corner lot with 120 feet road frontage 175.000
COMMERCIAL LOT off of Memo rial Drive 1 acre Across from Parkers Barbeque 125.(XX).
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Ray Holloman ON CALL 753 5147
Teresa Hewitt..............756 1188
John Jackson....................756 4360
Tim Smith.........................752 9811
Marie Davis.....................756 5402
Harold Hewitt................756 1188
Richard Allen 756 4553
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910. ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
FOR SALE: 5.000 square foot commercial building in the downtown area Currently leases for 11400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756 68)0. nights Rod Tugwell 753 4303
FOR SALE: Prime 14-r acres on North Memorial Drive. Richard D. Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107
FOR SALE: North Memorial Drive 17,000 square toot building with 4 acres approximately Richard D Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107.
FOR SALE: Highway 264 Bypass, motel or business site Richard D Lyttle. Broker, 757 3107.
FOR SALE: Commercial lots beside Rivergate Shopping Center Richard D Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107
4500 FOOT office buiiding at 3205 South Memorial Drive, Greenville, NC. Excellent location. Expansion room Remodel to retail, 1195,000 Call Carlton Taylor at 756 5991
10*
Farms For Sale
FARMS FOR SALE
FALKLAND AREA - Approxi mately 49 acres 31'--2 cleared, 8259 pounds of tobacco allotment. Good location. SOLD.
OLD RIVER ROAD Not far trom new Water Treatment Plant, 80 acres, approximately 55 cleared. 17.592 pounds of tobacco. 9625 pounds peanuts. 1)50.000.
OLD CREEK ROAD Approxi mately 80 acres of cleared land. Calf lor more information.
GRIMESLAND AREA - Located on SR 1760 Approximately 100 acres of land. 70 cleared. 14,234 pounds of tobacco allotment 1175,000
RAM HORN ROAD - Close to Greenville, good potential. 27.1 acres of land. 3369 pounds of tobacco allotment Good financing available 192.500
D.G. Nichols Agency
752 4012
181 ACRE FARM 36 acres
woodsland, 65 acres cleared. 13.824 pounds of 1983 tobacco allotment, 5850 pounds 1983 peanut allotment plus corn allotment. SR 1538 in Pift Co. Contact Aldrii^ A Southerland Realty 756-3500
111 ACRES IN city limits. 1650 an acre. 2500 pounds tobacco allot ment 28 acres of opened land, 19.000 timber appraisal 135.000 fl nancing PCA for 7 years. Call 756174Or 758 7333.
107
Farms For Laase
WANTED TO RENT tobacco and farm land in Pitt
poundage _
County 756 4634
109
Houses For Sale
ALWAYS WANTED a house on the hill? See fhls 3 bedroom. 2 bath home Huge family room with fireplace 150's CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
ARE YOU looking for a Farmers Home loan assumption? See this 3 bedroom home on approximately 'z acre lot 140,500 CET4TURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
AYDEN
MUST SELL- Spacious home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace (includes Fisher wood stove), living room, large eat in kitchen, utility room, 2 car garage with storage room, large wooded lot Ask for more details 2000 sq ft living area 169,000
IDEAL FOR SMALL family Large den with fireplace, living room, 2 bedrooms, bath, eat in kitchen, util Ity room, large carport, central air heat Beautiful location 138,000
OLDER HOME. 4 bedrooms, kitch en. living room, bath on large lot 118.000
LOTS, WESTWOOD Subdivision, water taps and septic tank permits Large wooded lots, 2 miles weal of Ayden Owner will finance
Ayden Loan & Insurance
COMPANY. INC
746 3761 746 6474
BAYWOOD. Tri level contemporary nestled in the woods Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge greatroom with fireplace and beamed cathedral ceilings Loft area, garage. 2 decks 190,000 Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 355 2 588
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick nome m the country 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace Heat pump Located on over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adjoining acres) Possibly Federal Land Bank financ ing Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3 500, nights 756 5716
BEGINNERSI It's for you! Corner lot. detached double garage, and 2 bedrooms. Immaculate condition Mid 130's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
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 974 2688
BY OWNER CUSTOM built two story contemporary. 3 bedrooms, 2'i baths, cedar siding, Jenn Aire range, central vacuum, many other extras Nice country location, 10 minutes from hospital. 165,000 753 2723
BY OWNER - House and lot in Fountain. 2,000 square feet concrete block house t'z baths, wood heater House is liveable, but needs repair inside Sacrifice at 112.000 or pay equity and assume loan at prevail ing interest rate with only 6 years left on loan Call 1 749 4411 anytime.
BY OWNER, GREENVILLE loca tion. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, double garage, huge den, immaculate Immediate occupancy 166.900 Call 746 2778 No Brokers please
CENTURY21 BASS REALTY 756-6666 or 756-5868
BROKER ON CALL Eddie Pate 752 6560
DARE TO COMPARE VALUE in
this newly listed home Over 1550 square feet of planned family or iented areas, with hardwood floors There is a delightful kitchen, 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, and formal living and dining areas There is more screened in breezeway, office space, and garage connected It's a steal for 147,900 634
UNIVERSITY AREA Stately Williamsburg style home with hardwood floors, marble fireplace, modern kitchen MVith breaktast room, 3 bedrooms plus a nursery, 2 baths 2iOO square feel in all You really have to see tliis beautiful home' 180,000 623
REDUCED Lovely home in Camelot, and owner says SELL Immaculate inside and out, this 3 bedroom with study which would easily convert to a fourth bedroom, can be yours Originally 165,800, it has been reduced to 163,900 593
CLUB PINES Two story Williamsburg featuring greatroom with french doors leading to deck, desinger kitchen with custom cabinets and desk, and a lovely shaded wooded lot Owner will rent tor 6 months, or lease or option 197,000 *256
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WOULD LIKE TO
BUY WOOD
Cut out tree tops and lying down wood. Call:
758-2840-756-9193
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.l . Lupton Co.
RJVERSIDE IRON WORKS, INC.
Dial 633-3121 N#w Bwn, N.C. Ctrllfitd Wtldtrt, prtcision Machinltlt, cuNoin tabrlcatori of StMl Aluminum, SlainNtt A-R Plat*. All types Machn* Worfc-Lattwi, End Millers. Boring Mili, Iron Wortiert, Shears, Break, Roils. All Types machine shop repairr Tanks, boat thaflt, steel elep* built to your tpeciflcationt. Specializing in heavy equipment. Concrete mixer repairt, * Qerbage Truck peckers.
IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER
Local company hat a System* 34 (94K) computer svailabte for immediate lime sharing. 1 CRT disptay etation and 1 5224 Printer it availabt* for immediate remote hook-up using telephon* com-municationt. Program* ready tor general butinaat ut* include general ledger, accounts racehaUe, inventory/billing, ac-counta psysbl* and payroll. Contact: Pratidtnt P.O. Box 8068 Qroonirille. NC or 758-1215
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
The Daily Retlector, Gfoonvtlie. N.C_Friday. Novpznber 11.1963 21
109 Houses For Sale
BY OWNER Club Pine Make offer! 4 bedroom Cedar Ranch. 2 bath, targe great room with fireplace Lots of extras' 509 Crestline Boulevard, 756 7575
109
Houses For Sale
BY OWNER. New Luting Bnck ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck, fenced yard, garage/workshop Call 756 6935 No realtors please
LARGE LOt has room for this 3 bedroom, 2 bath modular home plus extra parking place for trailer with electrical hook up 142,000 CEN TURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
LARGE OLDER HOME 3 or 4
bedrooms, 3 fireplaces, carport and garage Family anxious to selli Make offer Owner financing possible Call 746 4676
LIKE NEW CONDITIONI
Sedgefield Greatroom, formal dining. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths 165,500 Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc 756 1322
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
ISO's
GET A GOOD BUY in Windy Ridge with this three bedroom townhouse with loads of extras Jenn Aire grill, washer and dryer, built in bookcase, house fan. extra wallpaper plus front and rear parking available Offered at
153.000
LOVELY RANCH located m Ayden features greatroom with firepiace, eat in kitchen with bar and adjoin mg area that can be used as a den or dinmg room Three bedrooms, two baths Cove.red patio and tish pond in fenced in backyard New storage house, double car garage. 153,900
OWNERS ARE ANXIOUS to return to their homeplace and have chosen to sell their new 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch which is only IS minutes south of Greenville Over :i-4 of an acre, circular driveway, additional detached garage used as a workshop Priced to sell at
155.000
LOOKING FOR A good duplex investment, try Tobacco Road m Shenandoah lor 158,000 12' 3% fixed rate loan available Gross rents of 1580 monthly Only 2 years old, excellent opportunity
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Ray Holloman ON CALL 753 5147
Teresa Hewitt.............. 756 1188
John Jackson .............756 4360
Tim Smith.........................752 9811
Marie Davis................... 756 5402
Harold Hewitt....................756 1188
Richard Allen.......... 756 4553
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
FOR SALE by owner. 12% FmA assumption, LakeGlenwood 115,000 equity, current payment 1512 PITI 170,OOO Ervin Gray I 524 4148
FOR THE large' FAMILY!
Lynhdale Formal rooms, library, playroom. 4 bedrooms, 3% baths 1147,800 Jeannette Cox Agency Inc 756 1322
F0R~THE SMAlLI^mTlV thiV2 bedroom home extra nice De ; tached double garaae Large i country lot S29.000 CENTURY 21 I B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 7S6 7426
CHERRY OAKS. Hossible loan assumption on th.s 3 bedroom. 2 bath Cape Cod on corner lot Home has formal areas. >n addition to greatroom ilh woodstove etftcient Kitchen, double garage, and derKs S84.900 No reasonable otter ret osed Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500or 355 2588
CLARK BRANCH SELLS' THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
120 s 140 s
AURORA Live or vacation m this 2 bedroom mobile home wh.ch features a 12' x 30' lamily room a screened in front and back porches, less than a block from the water Priced to sell at 127 000
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bedroom, I'v bath townhouse lor the same monthly payment as rent This unit was recently re carpeted Call today Low 130's
A LOVELY VIEW ol Crystal Beach Only 15 minutes from Washington Scenic beauty large waterfront lot has bath house with separate cook mg area Perfect for the sailboat enthusiast Large deck overlooking the water 134.500 with assumable 12% loan
FmHA ASSUMPTION in Deerfield This three bedroom brick ranch is only 3 years old. vacant and ready for you to en|Oy low monthly payments Offered at 14ljOOO Low equity Call today
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS 756 6336
Ray Holloman. ON CALL 753 5147 Teresa Hewitt 756 1188
John Jackson 756 4360
Tim Smith 752 9811
Marie Davis 756 5402
Harold Hewitt 756 1188
Richard Allen 756 4553
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910. ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
1(
Houus For Sale
MUMFORD ROAD Excellent beginner home with 3 bedrooms. I bath large kitchen dinirrg com bmalioo and lormal living room, extra large lot 139,900 Call Sue Dunn at Aiondge & Southerland. 756 3500 or 355 2588 N EAR SHOPPING CENTER 3 bedrooms. I', baths, bvmg room with fireplace dmmg room, and storage buiidmg Low 150's CEN TURY 2! B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
EW~:OTTRUCTION Price re
duced on this Traditional that lealures 3 bedrooms 2 ballTs den with fireplace dmmg area, and over 1.500 Square feet on large lot 162.500 Lots ol extras Better hurry on this one' Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302
w CONSTRUCTION Club Pines Corner lot, formal rooms, den 4 bedrooms 2 . baths and I deck 1110,000 Jeannette Cox ; Agency. Inc 756 1322
I NEW CONSTRUCTION Pick your I colors now 3 bedrooms, heal pump.
I deck, and utility Possibility of
10 5% APR financing 140's CEN 1 TuRY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 : 2121 or 756 7426
OWNERS ANXIOUS to sell 3 bedroom brick ranch Approximate ly t,200 square feet Beautiful wooded lot 140,(XX) CENTURY 21 ;B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7426
I OWNERS ARE MOVING from USA ' and must sell 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, I living room, dmmg room den, , l-repiate. fenced backyard and I pd'io : v% assumable mortgage ! 07 Azalea Drive 756 8281 or 752
' 4844
PrCTUBE PERFECT Club Pines I 4 bedrooms 2 , baths, formal 'rooms, den and rr.odern kitchen ; 192 500 Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc i 756 322
PSSIBLE VA LOAN assumption on th.s 4 bedroom, 2 bath ranch Family roorr, with fireplace, fenced m back yard Large lot m country 149,900 CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
Shopping for~*'"new car? The most I complete listmgs m town are found I m the Classified ads every day
I ' -
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
COLONIAL HEIGHTS - 3 bedroom brick ranch, carpet, hardwood floors, fireplace, pool, deck, totally private Reduced by owner, 159,400 Call 758 1355
CONTEMPORARY HOME situated on private lot and adjacent to lake 3 bedrooms, living area accented by cathedral ceiling Cozy, comtorta ble and affordable 149,900 Red Carpet, Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727
CASTERN STREET 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, fireplace Good starter home Mint condition 142,500 Speight Re alty 756 3220, nights 758 7741
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE
2500 SO. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
CECO STEEL BUILDINGS
By
Riverside Iron Works, Inc. Phone 633-3121 New Bern. N.C.
Since 1920
NO DOWN PAYMENT
?2 Olds Cutiass Diesel i30i
S20C month
79 RX-7 Mazda (2-l| S190 month
79 Ford T-Bird (24i 51-55 month
77 Ford Grenada (I8i 5100 month
78 Malibu '18l 51 30 month
77 Monte Carlo ttSi 5115 month
76 Chevelte i12i 595 month
74 F-6Q0 Ford Trucxil2-5200 month
<Ni\h approved credit Based upon an jpen-end lease Residual values may vary according to mileage !100
jecurily deposit rrquned
MID-EASTERN LEASING CO.
#14PittPla2B 756-4254
TRAFFIC
SUPERVISOR
Excellent opporlunity for an indivi(3ual with 3 or more years of traffic experience. Will be responsible for management of private carriage equipment and drivers and shipment of freight in most cost effective manner. Candidate must be knowledgeable of ICC regulations and documentation of government order shipments. Interested applicants should send resume to:
EATON, INC.
Industrial Truck Division ROUTE 11, BOX 287 GREENVILLE, NC 27834
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
SPECIAL!
$
DOWN
PAYMENT
(Cash or Trade)
Can Put You In A New 1984 Mercury Lynx
47 \311*
#/ MWY. I itPG
Only
158
90
per month
Selling price $6434.00 plus tax. Amount financed $5934.00, 48 Monthly payments, 12.9% Annual Percentage Rate, total of payments $7627.20, finance charges $1693.20, with approved credit.
HURRY!! Only 6 to choose from
EAST CAROLINA
UNCOtN-NERCURY-GMC WcM Ead CIrcl* GtMMltte. N.C.
GMC
TRUCKS
756-4247
22 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
Friday. November 11,1983
109
Houses For Sale
EXECUTIVE HOME in Lynndale 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas.
family room with firrolace. Large wooded lot $109,500 CENTURY 21
B Forbes Agency, 756 7426
756 2121 or
FARMERS HOME ASSUMPTION
Pay only closing costs and move in 2 homes in Ayden, I in Grimesland, and I in Bethel Call Hignite Realtors tor more details, 757 1969
FMHA 9% loan assumable Owner relocating Corner lot 3 bedrooms, l'2 bath, carport, fenced in backyard. Shamrock Terrace Sub division $44,900 Call 355 2472 from 9 to 5, after 5, 756 0652 FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, 2,856 square feet Approximately 6 miles from hospital 23 acres Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 bedrooms, 2'j baths, carport, patio 1,120 square foot workshop Assumable 8% first mortgage Call 756 7111.
109
Houses For Sale
REOUCEDI University area Formal areas, 2 or 3 bedrooms, >rivate back yard
glassed porch, private back yard $55,000 Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc 756 1322
REDUCED AND READY for quick sale, 3 bedroom, 1 bath home with formal areas and sunroom with fireplace, assumable loan, 15 minutes from hospital. $28,000. Call
Sue Dunn at Aldri^^e &
Southerland, 756 3500 or 355 :
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SOUTHERN CHARM and comfort surrounds you in this stately Williamsburg home This new custom built home features all formal areas with hardwood floors,
family room with fireplace, prox
. ,
imately 2700 square feet. Quality workmanship throughout. Many
extras The wooded setting in Greenville's newest and finest area provides just the right atmosphere for this elegant home Call June
Wyrick, Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 5716
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AUCTION
CARS & TRUCKS Saturday, Nov. 12,1983 10:00 A.M.
Location: 2900 E. 10th Street, Greenville. N.C.
1978 Dodge Aspen 1976 Ford Pinto
1974 Olds Cutlass
1975 Plymouth Fury 1973 Chevrolet Vega GT
1972 Ford Gran Torino
1973 Pontiac LeMans 1971 Chevrolet Pickup
1971 Plymouth Satellite
1973 Chevrolet Impala
1970 Plymouth Duster
1971 Pontiac Wagon
1972 Chevrolet Nova
1974 Olds Delta 88 1971 Chevelle Wagon
1973 Chevrolet Impala
Sale Conducted by
COUNrKY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. f. O. Box I.MS Wd^liiiujton, North ( .imlin.i Bhoru' 'I4ti 1,01), Sldtf liifiisc No.
DOUC CURKINS Greenville, N. C. 758-1875
RALPH RESPESS Washington^
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT OUALITY USED CARS
1983 Chevrolet Camaro
White with brown cloth interior, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, T-tops, 17,000 miles.
1983 Buick Regal
2 door, white with burgundy velour interior. Loaded.
1983 Olds Cutlass Cruiser Wagon
Diesel. Beige with woodgrain, loaded with equipment, 11,000 miles.
1983 Olds Cutlass Calais
2 door, loaded with equipment.
1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon
Loaded. Silver with woodgrain, gray cloth interior, 3,200 miles.
1982 Chevrolet Malibu Wagon
Beige with beige vinyl interior, till wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo.
1982 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon
White with burgundy velour interior. 3 seats, luggage rack.
1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera
4 door. Dark green with light green cloth interior.
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon
Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM/FM stereo.
1981 Ford Thunderblrd
Red with white interior, one owner, loaded.
1981 Pontiac LeMans Wagon
White with woodgrain siding. Beige vinyl interior.
1981 0|ds98 Regency
2 door. Beige with green velour interior, landau roof, loaded.
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Light green with light green vinyl interior, bucket seats and console, loaded.
1980 Toyota Truck
Short bed. Red with black interior.
1980 Clds Cutlass LS
4 door. Light brown, light brown vinyl interior, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, one owner.
1980 Clds Cutlass Supreme
Beige with brown vinyl interior, automatic, air condition, tilt whee I, cruise control, low mileage.
1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.
1980 Buick Regal
fviih
2 door, light blue with landau roof, blue vinyl interior, bucket seats, automatic, air, AM/FM radio.
1979 Clds Delta 88 Royale
4 door, dark blue with light blue velour interior.
1979 Ford Thunderblrd
Blue with white landau roof, white vinyl interior, T-tops loaded, nice car. ^ '
1979 Honda Civic
2 door, white with black interior, low mileage.
1978 Chevrolet Malibu
4 door blue blue cloth interior, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, 56,000 miles.
1978 Datsun Truck
Short bed. Red with black interior, AM/FM radio, sliding glass I window, sport wheels, very nice. a a a
1978 Clds Delta 88
4 door. Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.
1978 Chevrolet Malibu
I nJrfitin''AM CMAutomatic, air
j condition, AM-FM radio, 56,000 miles, one owner.
1977 Honda Civic Wagon
Blue with black interior. Nice car.
GM EXECUTIVE CARS
SAVINGS UP TO $2000.00 1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham
4 door. White with light gray velour ini miles.
1983 Olds Omega
4 door. Maroon with maroon velour interior. Loaded 3 785 miles.
interior. Loaded. 3,121
HOLT OLDS-DATSim
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
OMQUAUTY
SIRVICEMRTS
MMtAl MOTOn OOWOIAnON
100 H0US98 For Sale
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$40'S
COUNTRY PLACE Select your plan now and take advantage of wooded lots, secluded privacy custom features and 10.15% NCHFA funds Quality not often found in an 1 too square fool home Priced in the mid $40's and extra energy effi cient
VERY NICE brick ranch located just minutes from Greenville Features living room. 3 bedrooms.
g
baths, fully equipped kitchen with separate dinette area. Extra room ideal for a family room Fenced in back yard. 10.15% financ ing available with owner with 5% down Hurry, only guaranteed loan left at 1st Federal Pr $45.300
riced to sell at
IMAGINE! A house in the city with so much room priced under $50,000 You'll love the fenced and tree shaded backyard and the family room with big brick fireplace. Extra room with beauty shop could be a place to work at home or extra bedroom Come out and see it today I
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS 756 6336
ON CALL
Ray Holloman Teresa Hewitt John Jackson.
Tim Smith......
Marie Davis. . Harold Hewitt. Richard Allen
753 5147 756 1188 756 4360 752 9811 756 5402 756 1188 .756 4553
Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43 An Equal Housing Opportunity
i
m
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR SALE
2 6000Hydriulic Car Lift Jacks $2000 each 2 24X38 Qas Pump Canoplas and Lights IlSOOtach
756^)972 or 756-2017 May Ba Saan At Coriwr Evana St. 4 Graanvilla Boulavard.
109
Housts For Salt
ENJOY THE PlltOE in puHIng your family In a horn# of your own. Locatad on a wall landscaped lot in lake Glenwood. ThI* home has the extra features that would get you excited about ownership. The kitch en offers beautiful cabinetry. 3 spacious bedrooms with dressing area off master Equipped for
formal living plus a fanuii^room designed for those
, relaxed family
times Call today tor your private
showing. $69.900 Red Carpet, Steve Evans. 355 2727
ESTATE REALTY CO.
752-50M
PRICE REDUCED AGAIN on this three bedroom home in College Court, Hi baths, country kitchen, root, gutters, heat/air only three years old Owner has built another home and is anxious to sell reduced to only $49,900
COUNTRY HOMES - one located 14 miles and has three bedrooms, two
baths, living room w'ith firieplace insert, detached - . p
J garage, swimming The ofh
pool $65.000 The other country home is located eight miles with three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas, two car garage, detached shop and situated on 1,57 acre lot $74,900.
NEW LISTING attractive three bedroom home in Westwood, living room with fireplace, kitchen/dining combination, family room, walk in utili^ two baths, carport only
AYDEN - attractive two bedroom home in excellent condition; fireplace in living room, new central heat/air Priced below FHA value priced at $41,900
AYDEN - practically new Farmers Home house with two bedrooms, central heat/air, deck $41,000.
Billy Wilson 758 4476
Jarvis or Dorlis Mills 752 3647
GIVE YOURSELF the chance to experience real living with this
living WIMi M1I9
nome^ located In prestiaious m
wv.wix.M III ^icaiiuiUUSk
Belvedere. Wood siding to enhance the rustic beauty of this home nestled on wooded lot 3 bedrooms, living room, dining area $68,900 Red Carpet. Steve Evans 8. Associates, 355 2727
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
East Carolina Auction & Realty Co.
S|)>ciali/inq In
PUBLIC AUCTION AND PKIVATh SAL OF FARM LAND AND FARM FQUIPMFNT
Let us help you get the lop dollar for anything you wish to conirerl lo cash Located 2 miles North of Gnllon N C Hanrahan XRd N C 11 Bypass
CONTACT MILTON GARRIS
NC Broker 34924 746-3883 Day 524-5664 Nile
109
Houses For Solo
GREAT OUYI Westhavws Formal areM, family room, 3 badrooms. baths, garaga $73,900. Jaannattc >ncy, Irv
Cox Agency, Inc. 756 1322.
GREAT LOCATION - Pinewood Forast Formal rooms, dan. bedrooms, 2 baths and garage $69,900 Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc 756 1322
3 EEOROOM HOUSE chtral heat
and air, wall to wall carpet Must be moved to owner's loti No down payment. 12% interest. For more information call 758 3171
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$40'S
FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot In Oakgrove. Offered at $41.500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end street Income should be under $21.000. Call today
TWIN OAKS. Great investment. No closing or points 1200 square foot ranch leased at $425 per month Assume 12% FHA loan of $36,000 Offered at $48.900. Call today Exceptional buy for the area.
INVESTORS Consider this
practically new duplex near the hospital. Assume 13% fixed rate
loan with payments of $367.00 total Leased at $325 per month Reason able equity required. Ottered at 0. each
$40.500. each side
WEATHINGTON HEIGHTS bedroom ranch with fenced back yard and assumable loan if you quality Flexible terms to suit your financial needs. Call total tor your personal showing. Offered in mid
.....T;
$40's with nearly 1250 square feet
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHylNC.
REALTORS
756-6336
ON CALL.. 753 5147
Ray Holloman Teresa Hewitt. John Jackson .
Tim Smith......
Marie Davts. .. Harold Hewitt. Richard Allen
.756 1188 .756 4360 752-9811 . 756 5402 .756 11 756 4553
Toll Free: 1 800 525 89)0, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
HOUSE FOR SALE by owner Ayden, NC. Good loan assumption low equity. 746 3040.
LAKE ELLSWORTH LOVELY BRICK HOME with bedrooms, 2 large baths. Big garage perfect for handyman or hobby lover has lots of cabinets and work space Formal livin room, foyer, large den wit fireplace. $62,500
WHISPERING PINES ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL lot in
Simpson with lots of trees 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Sunken den with French doors. Separate dining room. 1254 sq. ft $46,500
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
PSMPEREO AND
POLISHED USED
CARS
TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS
1984 Chevrolet Custom Van Raised roof, dual air, sharp! Sharp Conversion. 1983 Buick Electra Limited - 2 door, 1300 miles. Brand new in every way. Charcoal with sand gray roof.
1983 Mazda Pickup - Very nice, new tires, low mileage, silver with blue trim. 1983 Chevrolet Customized Van - Raised roof, all the options, silver with dark blue velour interior.
1983 Buick Electra Limited - 4 door, 11,000 miles, dealer demo. Loaded with equipment, light brown metallic with dark brown vinyl roof.
1983 Mazda RX7 Sparkling Black, 5 speed. Aluminum wheels, air. Very Sharp! 1983 Buick Regal dark brown, loaded with options. Executive Lease Car New Car!
1983 CMC Custom Van 16,000 miles, raised roof. Like New! Blue with blue pillowed interior.
1983 Mazda Sundowner Pickup - Low mileage, AM-FM stereo, chrome wheels, tool box, sliding rear window, bright red.
1982 Buick Regal Limited - Charcoal Firemist, Loaded, with equipment, new tires. Sharp!
1982 Chevrolet Chevette - 4 door, air, 4 speed, AM-FM stereo, local car. White with maroon interior, 30,000 miles.
1982 Pontiac J-2000 - 4 door, 12,000 miles, AM-FM stereo, air condition, automatic, immaculate. Jadestone.
1982 Chevrolet Malibu Classic - 4 door, dove gray, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise, power door locks, AM-FM stereo, low mileage, very, very clean.
1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme - 4 door, maroon with maroon cloth interior, low mileage, AM-FM stereo, sport wheels, very nice.
1982 Mazda RX7 GLS Package - Black, wire wheel covers, air, cruise, power windows, leather trim.
1982 Cutlass Ciera LS 4 door, dark blue with beige top. Clean Car!
1982 Datsun 280 ZX Dark brown and Copper two tone, loaded with all equipment, including T-Tops!
1982 Chevrolet Custom Van Like New In Every Way! Local van with every option. Beige.
1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans Safari Wagon - Woodgrain paneling, cruise, wire wheels, maroon, 33,000 miles.
1981 Buick Park Avenue - 4 door, local trade, only 31,000 miles. Every option, Jadestone.
1981 Chevrolet Chevette - 4 door. Air, 4 speed, AM-FM, burnt orange with camel interior.
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - Dark blue with matching interior, cruise, rally wheels, stereo, local trade-in. 32,000 miles.
1981 Mazda 626 Luxury * 2 door, air, 5 speed, green metallic, 40,000 miles. 1981 Datsun Pickup -13,000 miles, new in every way. Solid white.
1981 Buick LeSabre Limited Diesel - All the options, white with blue top. Very Nice Local Car!
1981 Buick Electra Park Avenue White with Jadestone roof and interior. Loaded! New Tires! Very Sharp!
1981 Buick Century Estate Wagon Beige with woodgrain trim. Loaded with Options! 35,000 miles. This car is Like New!
1981 Cutlass Supreme 2 door, dark blue, wire wheel covers, AM/FM stereo, Nice Car! 41,000 miles.
1981 Buick Skylark 4 door, Beige, cruise control, power door locks, AM/FM stereo, wire wheel covers, 37,000 miles.
1980 Subaru Wagon 20,000 miles, AM-FM stereo, air condition. The nicest one around.
1979 Buick LeSabre Limited - 4 door. Loaded with all options, new tires, white with blue interior, 40,000 miles, extra nice.
1979 Plymouth Volare Custom - 4 door, only 40,000 miles. A real nice family car! Brown with tan vinyl roof.
1979 Buick Electra Limited - 4 door. Loaded with equipment, local car. Very, Very Nice!
1979 Pontiac Trans Am - 53,000 miles, Like New, New Tires, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, Red, Sharp!
1979 Cutlass Supreme 2 door, Sky blue with landau roof. Cruise control, AM/FM stereo. Road Wheels. $4995.00.
109
Housss For Sals
f,*' Riouceoi Eastwood
$13,500 astumts 11'/J% loan with P'TI 3 badroom, 2
!h brick ranch that leaturas
living roomi dining araa. dan with firaplace, large deck. $61,000 Coll CENTURY 21 Tipton 4 As^lite.
756 6810, nights Al Baldwin, 756 7836
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY
7M-W or 756-5868
BROKERONCALL: EddiePate 752 6560
SPECIALS!!! EXECUTIVE LEASE AND DEMOS!!
1983 Buick Regal Limited 4 door. Loaded, only 12,000 miles. New In Every Way! Light Brown.
GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.
* 603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.
THIS CHARMING BRICK RANCH
Is located In Belvedere and features many extras, such as a large corner lot, deck, heat pump, living room, dining room, lamlly room, and so much more. Priced al just $65,000 it is a good buy In this area. #605
MAINTENANCE FREE siding and ^7lck exterior is just one of the
vriv inc
many features of this split level home Sapcious family room with fireplace, large rec room 3 bedrooms, and an all modern kitch en are just a few of the other features This is a lovely home, and must be seen! $76,900. *582.
IMA RANCH STYLE home with 3 bedrooms, formal areas, den with woodstove, eat in kitchen, detached garage which could be a workshop and a chain link fence In backyard And I can be had for a reduced price of $59,900 Why not take a look at me? *576
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours with this charming ranch just 20 minutes from Greenvlle Featuring 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, on over an acre This nice home is vacant and looking for a new owner Call today for directions. $45,000 *617.
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HO/VIES A WEEK SOMETI/VIESFOUR
$40'S
PACTOLUS HIGHWAY 3 bedroom, 1'2 bath home on large country lot Current conventional appraisal $42,900 Owner will sell for $40.500
On the Pactolus Highway about To
miles from Greenvil THIS BRICK RANCH in Ayden is
ready for an owner Has 1 ISO square
........ ....... ci<
. w.. w.,0,3 I I w auuari;
feet, central heat and air, enclosed garage and the owner has been
transferred and is ready to negoti ate. Has assumable FmHA
assumption at 8% $41,500
Reduced to
LOVELY TOWNHOUSE in Windy Ridge available now Very taste fully decorated, features living room with fireplace, bay window, arid dining area The well equipped kitchen, including refrigerator opens onto a well landscaped patio with parking in rear. Halt bath downstairs Upstairs, 2 bedrooms, I bath Excellent condition and just steps from the pool and tennis courts. Priced to sell at $45,200
109 Housaa For Sala
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$40's8i$50s
HERE'S A LOG home with over 1114 square feet of living space that's lust right for the ilrst
vestment Singles and couplas love of the Homestead II log
the value home which Icatures 3 bedrooms' I' j baths and a full front porch on over ol an acre Priced to sell in themld$40's
CAMELOT lor under $50'000 It's true, this new home Is under construction with nearly 1200 square feet offered at $49,900 in eluding points for 12'i% fixed loan You select your decor and move In January. Call today
CUSTOM BUILT 2051 square toot 2 story brick home with Florida room 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, basement and oiside storage building. $51,500 New^oot. good condition
LOVELY RANCH located in Ayden
features great room with fireplace, eat-in kitchen with bar and adjoin ing area that can be used as a den or dining room. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths Lovely wallpaper
throughout Very nice landscaping with covered patio and fish pone Fenced in back yard New storage
house, double car garage A must see priced in the low $50's
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC,
REALTORS
man
Ray Holloman ON CALL 753,5147
Teresa Hewitt.................756 1188
John Jackson..................756 4360
Tim Smith.....................752 9811
Marie Davis.......................756 5402
Harold Hewitt.............756 1188
Richard Allen....................756 4553
Toll Free 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
JUST IN TIME! You can be settled in this roomy 3 bedroom home in Winterville school district by fall
Great low Interest loan assumption al 9'a%. Modern built in kitchen
WINDY RIDGE Best buy at $48,700 This 3 bedroom townhome is ready tor immediate occupancy with over 1450 square feet Fully
appllanced with heat pump, near tennis courts and pool Call today
It's clean and ready tor you!
REALTY WORLD
CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
and attractive great room with brick fireplace Mid $50's Call today for showing.
109
Houmi For Sala
TAKi OVER 9% ANNUAL p^ etntaga rata loan Attractlva 3 badroom. 1'i bath brick ranch with carport Located on woodty Igi near univarslty Living room/dlning room, aat in kitchan. custom storm windows and doors, naw lurnaca (no air conditioning). Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square teat healed area Taka over aoorox Imalaly $33.500 for 25 years re malning with principal and interest
paymanl of $280.82 month (This loan would cost you $388 month at todays rata of I3%) Pay equity ol
SI6.4IX) or owner may consldar some financing for part of aquity Very sir- ' -- "
. ty
low closing cost and no discount points to buyer Laasa/purchesa also possible Immediate possession Priced at $49,900 Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge. 804 794 1532 evenings No agents.
UNIVERSITY ARAI 3 bedroomsT
2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen with breakfast area Good
investment property Mid $40's CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
WAITING FOR YOU Is this beautiful 4 bedroom. 2' Abalh home. Living room, family room, fireplace, and outside storage Low $70's CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
WE HAVE 3 HOMES - Conveniently located, near ECU that may qualify tor the new NC Housing money If
you quality, the down payment is minimal And payments are com parable to rent Call our office for
more details. Aldridge 4 Southerland Realtors, 756 3500
WILLIAMSBURG - Cherry Oaks Big yard, economy efficient, 3 bedrooms, 7'i balhS Assume 1st and 2nd mortgages with $10.000 cash or refinance and owner will carry 2nd Phone 756 8073
111 Investment Proparty
ATTENTION INVESTORS: 1488
square foot condominium, currently leased for $450 a month $54.500 Call tor details days 756 6810. after 5 and weekends 756 7273.
INVESTORSH See these 3 mobile homes, and house in the country for only $32.000 CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426
PRIME 10 acre tract loned Rr6 with water and sewer Richard 0 Lyttle, Broker, 757 3107
UNIT APARTMENT, positive cash flow, solid rental history, convenient to ECU and downtown, brick, $16,000 gross Excellent re turn at $135.000 Call for more details, 756 7473or 756 7285
quail RIDGE. Only one two bedroom flat available Complete in November Convenient to town oft 14th Street Shaded patio Let us pay your closing costs Select your own carpet and wallpaper All appliances included. Ottered at $55.500 Call today
CAMELOT Just started You can select your own decor This 3 bedroom brick ranch otters nearly
1300 square feel, large kitchen.
3l.
real room with fireplace, patio ffered in the mid $50's Fixed rate financing available at 12',3%
756 6336
Ray Holloman. ON CALL .753 5147
Teresa Hewitt................mbs
John Jackson 756 4360
Tim Smith...............752 9811
Marie Davis............ 756 5402
Harold Hewitt 756 1188
Richard Allen...................7S6 4553
Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
WINTERVILLE School District This almost new home has every thing a first time buyer would need 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room
with fireplace and a quiet, safe of f
location at the end Priced at $57,500
the street
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.
REALTORS 756 6336
Ray Holloman ON CALL 753 5147
Teresa Hewitt................ 756 1188
John Jackson....................756 4360
Tim Smith.......................752 9811
Marie Davis.....................756 5402
Harold Hewitt 756 1188
Richard Allen.............756 4553
Toll Free I 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr 756-6221
2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop 16x36 plus shed and shelter 1677 square feel of living area Bill Williams Real Estate. 752 2615
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AHENTION MUSIC LOVERS Friday and Saturday Only
Tha Tool Man at Airport Flaa Markat is running a SPECIAL ON
AUTO STEREOS, SPEAKERS, EQUALIZERS AND HOUSE TYPE RADIOS
Wa also hava all kinds of Toya. Usa our Layaway Plan Fraa! Just Ramambar - If you don't buy from ua, wa both losa.
113
Land For Sale
10 ACRE FARM south ot Ayden in the St. John's Community Road trontage on SR 110 and SR 1753 51 acres cleared. 7 acres wooded Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house Call tor full details Moseley Marcus Realty 746 2166
115
Lots For Sale
COUNTRY ACREAGE for sale by
owner Located approximately 3 miles from Carolina East Mall 2 acre minimum Highly restricted Community water Starting at $8,000 per acre Write Acreage. PO Box 1885, Greenville, NC
FOR SALE
Maqnilicient lot Brook Valley. 140' lacing Fairway 756 3990
HUNTINGRIOGE For country
living with city convenience Large ider.....
residential lots, community water, restricted, FHA and VA approved Only minutes from hospital com plex on Highway 43 Millie Lllley, Owner Broker 752 4139
NEAR O H. CONLEY, 1 or acre whichever preferred 758 7709
NO CROWOING your neighbors and no more lot rent on these exceptionally large mobile home lots Oft River Road in Greenville On Greenville city wafer Owner willing to finance lot and septic tank Winnie Evans, 752 4224 The E vans Co . 752 2814
QUEEN ANNES ROAO in
Lynndale Call after 6 pm, 355 2221
STOKES 3 ACRES. Good tor mobile homes tor houses Owner financing $11,900 Speight Realty 756 3220. nights 758 7741
117 Resort Property For Sale
LOCATEO ON WATER, only 18 miles from Greenville 3 bedroomms, 2 baths, fireplace tor winter comfort 355 6002 work, nights or Sunday. 946 7824
RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River 1 mile from Washington. NC Quiet, established neighborhood Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Security deposits required, no pets 758 4413 between 8 and 5
urity
Call
NEEO STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need Call
Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
^GUARANTEED USED CARS
1982 Volkswagen Rat>-bit - Diesel. 4 door, air conditioning, AM/FM. leather seats
1982 Oldtmobil* Cutlass Suprtma - 4 door, automatic, powar staarlng, powar brakat, starao
1 982 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme - 2 door automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning. stereo console
1981 Chavrolat Citation - 4 door, 4 spaad, air conditioning, powar staaring, powar brakas, consolatta
1981 Buick LaSabra Limitad- 4 door, automatic ovardrlva, air conditioning, powar staaring, powar brakas, starao, cruita control, tilt whaal
1981 Pontiac Bonneville Diesel 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, stereo, cruise control, lilt wheel
1981 Toyota Startat - 2 door, S spaad, air con-dHionlng, AM/FM, Full Instrumantatlon
1981 Ford Escort Sa-lion Wagon - 4 speed, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, slereo cloth seals
1980 Buick Regal - 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, stereo tape, V-6 economy.
1979 Chavrolat Monta Carlo - 2 door, automatic, powar staaring, powar brakas, air conditioning, starao taps, crulaa control, tilt whaal
1979 Volkswagen Rabbit - 2 door, 5 speed. Air Conditioning, AM/FM
1978 Buick Limitad - 2 door, automatic, air conditioning, powar staaring, braksa, windows, saats, door locks, starao taps,
cruita control, tilt whaal.
1978 Ford Thundarbird - automatic, air conditioning, powar staaring, powar brakas, starao, crulaa control, tilt whaal, cloth taats
1978 Mercury Marquis - 2 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning. stereo tape, cruise control, fill wheel
1977 Chavrolat Nova Concourt - 4 door, automatic, air conditioning, power staaring, powar brakat, AM/FM
1973 Volkswagen Beetle - 4 speed, Yellow. Radio
1973 Volkswagan Basti - 4 spaad, Oranga, Radio
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!
1978 Datsun B210 2 door, AM/FM, Less than 50,000 miles.
99.99
P#r
month
No Reasonable Offer Refused
On The Spot Financing
1500.00 down paymant, aalling prica ol 12378.47, llnanca chargat of S43S.32, 24 Monthly paymants, 20% APR, toUl of paymantt 12399.76, with approved credit.
loe Peciieles Volkswagen, Inc.
Greenville Blvd.
Serving Greenville To The Coast For 19 Years
I
i
I
RENTALS
WAKIHOUSf STORAOi no Mtet iAc Ecllnt locAtion. Up to SS.OOO K)UAr fM. Adicn4 office vallobfo Prico nogotlablo m 4JW/75 7417.
121 Apartmtntt For Rent
ALMOSt NEW TOWNHOUSE - 2 bodroom*. )>/ botha. ConvtnlonI locolion Call 7M 7314 days. 7M 49i0 niohti
aFARTmNT near ecu i
badroom. No patt ti7S par month. Phooa7$JM40
APARtMENT POR RENT naar
cotlaoa Raaaonabla, unfurniahad. Available Immediately 757 0419
.AZALEA GARDENS
Greenvllle't neweat and moat uniquely furnlahed one bedroom aoartmenla
All energy etllclenl designed
Queen aUe beds and studio couches
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance
All apartments on ground floor with porches
Frost free refrigerators
Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pels
Contact J.T or Tommy Williams 7M 7116
121 ApartmRiiti For Ront
LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplas Shenandoah. 1390.7M-53H.
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 par cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopana windows, extra Insula lion
CMfice Open 9 5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 15 Sunday
AAerry Lana Off Arlington Blvd.
756 5067
BRAND NEW 3 bedroom townhouse at Williamsburg AAanor, >336 per month. Call 355 4632
BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse near hospital and mall 2 bedrooms, IW baths, washer/dryer hook ups. etllclenl No pets $316 per month 766 1904 or 762 2040
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'} baths Also 1 bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers compactors, patio, free cable TV washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and P(X)L. 762 1667
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, leaturing Cable TV. modern appli anees, central heal and air condi tioning. clean laundry tacilities. throe swimming pools
. Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752 5100
Dial direct phones 25 channel color tv
Maid Service
Furnished
All Utilities
Weekly/Monthly Rates
764 5565
HERITAGE INN MOTEL
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. carpeted, dish washer, cable TV. laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 764 4149
KINGS ROW - APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden aparlmenis Carpeted, range, re frigeralor, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just oil tOth Street
Call 752 3519
3 BEDROOMS, retrigeralor. slove. dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups No pets 752 0180 before 5 p m , 754 2764 alter 5 p m
rSDROOM TOWNHOUSES near hospital Call 355 2421 days, 764 3217 nights
NEW WILLIAMSBURG Manor
Townhome. 2 bedrooms, extra storage 764 9004 after 4pm
NICE QUIET DUPLEX, 2 bedroom', carpet, appliances, wood heater. 754 2471 or I'm 1543
NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURGMANOR
eRAMO NEW LUXURY APAKTMENTS
Features
3 large bedrooms
1 '9 baths
Thermopane windows E 300 Energy efficient
Heat Pumps ^aclous floor plan
Beautiful Individual Williamsburg interior
Patios with privacy fence
Washer/dryer hookups
Kitchen appliances
Custom built cabinets
CALL 7567647
121 Apprtnwtttt For Root 127 Houtot For Root
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 badroomt, washar dryer hook ups, cable TV. pool, clui house, playground, Naar ECU
niq nctteLrmi, m.o
AYDEN COUNTRY CLUB. Ranch styla home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4>/> baths Ovar 3000 squara laet Available immedielely 1400 per month. Call Loralle at 75*^4334
(3ur Raputation Says II All "A Community Complax.
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm A Willow
752-4225
fWlN OAKi. T wo bedroom townhouse 1300/month, lease and depoiit rtquirad Call Ball A Lane, 763 0026
two BEbhOOM APARTMENT, carpetad, central air and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup Bry^Hills 1275.751 3311 ^
two BrCfiRbOM CflTlEX apartmenjl^vailablc after first week of December No pets Call 764 1121 after 4pm
WEDGEWOODARMS
3 bedroom, I'/i bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court Immediateoccimancy.
oiate occupa
756-0987
OAKMONTSQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available
756 4151
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent Contact J. T or Tommy Williams. 764 7116
RIVER BLUFF offers 1 bedroom garden apartments and 3 bedroom townhouse apartments Six month leases For more Information call 761 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 to6pm AAonday through Friday
Call us 34 hours a day at
756-4800
STUDENT HOUSING. Pirate's Landing Available second semester ott Reade Circle Private rooms, cooking facilities $160 per month For information call Clark Branch Management, 754 4334
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Quiet location Larger than average Almost new! 1300 per month Available December I Call 764 4167
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S'ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
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 rant I Call Iris Cannon at 744 2439 or 761 4060, Owen Nor veil at 764 1498 or 768 4060, Wil Reid at 764 0444 or 768 4060 or Jane Warren at 751 7029 or 758 4050
MOORE &SAUTER
110 South Evans 758-6050
BiLVDEll- t'HREE brooms, rac room, living room with tlraplaca, large kitchen 1400/month. Lease and daposit re quired Ball A Lane, 762 0026
127
Houm For Ront
NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedroom. I-i baths, living room/dining room, eaf In kitchan. carport Fresh paint and wallpaper Hardwood floors
Approximafaly 1360 square feet new furnace/no air conditioning Marriad couple or small family
only No pets Immediale possession 1376 per month Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 04 794 1532 fo agents .
133 AAobile Homts For Ront
CLEAN 12 WIDE. 3 bedrooms, Balvoir Highway at city limits 1166 plusdepotit 764 0222 Of 764 1466
TRAILER, 12x44. 3 bedrooms. \<i baths Off 244 Bypass/Old Creek Road, behind Agrl Supply
BRICK VENEER RANCH for rent Carport Excallent naighborhood 3 bedrooms, family room, fireplace, kifchen with stove and refrigerator, furnlshad, cantral haat and air Call Lyle Oavis at Davis Realty 762 3000 or nights 764 2904
BROOK VALLEY. 1400 par month, only couples or family Call Jean natteCox Agency, Inc 764 1372
OLONIAL HEIGHTS, 3 bedroom brick, S360 Lease and deposit 754 5772 after 1 p. m
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
home, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths, study, sunroom Married couple or pro fessional Shown by appointment Grier Rental Agency, 1100 Charles Boulevard, 762 S700.
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom house in Ayden. Appliances furnished. Call 744 3474
FOUR - FIVE BEDROOMS 1660 r nsonth. Call Hignite Realtors, 57 1949
HOUSE - COUNTRY. Approximate ly 1 miles from city, past hospital References required 1 523 3542
HOUSE IN TOWN and house In country Call 744 3284 or 624 3180
I BEDROOM apartment, appli anees furnished. Tenth Street, 1100 per month Call after 4 p m . 1 624 6042
125 Condominiums For Rent
NEW 3 BEDROOM townhouse. convenient to hospital and mall. Couples preferred No pets Lease and deposit $310 per month 754 4744
127
Houses For Rent
3 BEDROOM Country Home tor rent Phone 744 4448
PICK UP A little extra money by selling used Items In the classified section of this newspaper Call 752 4144
3 BEDROOMS, I bath, woodsfove. carpet, refrigerato# and stove Nice home with gdod location 1316 Speight Realty 764 3220, nights 768 7741
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
LYNNDALE - THREE bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, garage 1500/month Lease and deposit re quired Ball & Lane, 752 0025
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath ranch style in country near hospital. 1460 per month plus deposit. Will sell! (fall 768 4321
3 BEDROOMS, 2 full baths, fireplace, cathedral ceilings, Jenn Air range, dishwasher, energy efficient, located on small lake in Griffon Country Club Rent imme diately 1340 per month. 764 0841.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE
Call 744 2712
in Ayden
3 BEDROOM, 1' z bath, heat pump, garage, couple or family only No pets 1350 month Lease and securi ty 355 2994 after 7 p.m
DONT THROW IT away! Sell it tor cash with a fast actlon Classified Ad!
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Ooen End Auto leasing
No Down Paymont - Lower Motv thiy payments - Any make or model, New or Used/Auto Rentals daily, Weekly, Monthly Low Rates
Mid-Eastern
Brokers
#14 Pitt Plaza 756-4254
NEW HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 1240 square feet, 1650 per nuxYth Call 752 1232 or 754 5097
QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD 3
bedrooms, fireplace, fenced in backyard, garage, pels allowed 1425 per month Call 758 3478
133 Mobi le Homes For Rent
3 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer, air No pets. No children Phone 768 4867
2 BEDROOM mobile home, nice neighborhood, shady, cool in summer No pets Call 744 3734
3 BEDROOM TRAILER. 806 Vance Street No pels No children 5 minutes from downtown. Britts Realty. I 664 9492
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
12X48, 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, 1145 No pets, no children 768 0746
2 BEDROOM trailer 1150 month, 1100 deposit Colonial Trailer Park 7T
135 Office Space For Rent
OFFICE/RETAIL SPACE. 400 squre feet, new renovation Downtown Speight Realty 754 3220, nights 758 7741
OFFICE SPACE for rent Up to 2,500 feet At 3205 South Memorial Drive and 2.800 at East lOth Street Call Carlton Taylor. 764 6991
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J.T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815
l,2M SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on Evans Street Price negoitable 752 4295/754 7417
6,880 SQUARE FEET office build" ing on 264 Bypass Plenty ol park Ing Call 766 2300 days
CLASSIFIEDDISPLAY
BOOKKEEPER
OualificBtions: Knowledge of Journal entry, posting to ledger, payroll, accounts receivabiB, 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
.way, wOveniuef 11, iv6d ''4
13t Rooms For Rent
2 ROOMS, bathroom with shower Raaionable rates. 764 9476
142 Roommste Wanted
FEMALE ROOMMATE to share 2 bedroom apartment 1137 per month, plul '} utilities Call 764 1642 after 5
HOUSEMATE WANTED to share comfortable 3 bedroom home in country. Call Kris at 762 7144 extension 279 days, 768 1449 nights
OIET responsible roommate needed to share mobile home 1126a month 754 4724
SHARE HOUSE 1155 monthly Phooe 757 6401, extension 24 days, 756 7324 nights
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
144
Wanted To Buy
WANT TO BUY pine and herd.wood
timber Pamlico Timber Company, Inc 754 84'5
WANT TO eUY a trampoline in good condition Call 754 0549 after 5 P m
WANTED EXERCISE Bike in excellent condition Call 752 3241 evenings
WOULD LIKE to buy wood that's been logged, laying down trees and tree tops Call 758 240 or 754 9193
YOUNG FAMILY still looking for either I to 3 acres to build house or house already on lot Winterville School District Call 758 0157 days. 744 2574 nights
Want to sell livestock? Run a Llassitied ad tor quick response
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
COST/BUDGETING
SUPERVISOR
An excellent opportunity exists for an individual with a minimum of 4 years experience as a cost accounting supervisor in industry This individual will have responsibility for plant cost of sales, material variance and standard cost systems Forecasting and budgeting experience a plus. Previous supervisory experience required as individual will supervise 5 or more employees.
This position offers an excellent salary and benefit plan Salary range: $25,000 to $35,000 per year Interested applicants can send resume to:
COST/BUDGET SUPERVISOR P.O. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, NC 27835
An Equal Opportunity Employor MIF
THE REAL ESTATE CORNER
SERVICE MANAGER
Excellent Career Opportunity with growing company. Excellent company benefits and starting salary. Prefer previous Ford Experience.
VALUABLE WOODSLAND FOR SALE
89 acres prime woodsland in Pactolus Townehip, approximately 2 milai North of city limits of Graanvilla, naar Burroughs WaHcoina Company and Graanvilla industrial area. Conaiats of 3 tracts: 42 acres, 15 acres and 32 acres.
CALL W. I. WOOTEN, JR., AHORNEY 758-2111
LOT FOR SALE
In new riverfront community in Washington. >A acre, 300 feat from water. Very nice! $13,500.
758-5940 After 6 p.m.
OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY
Kay Davis BROKER
During NON-Office Hours Please Call 756-6966
DUFFUS REALTY, INC.
JEANNETTE COX AGENCY, INC.
REALTOR 756*1322 Anytime
1516 Greenville Blvd.
ON CALL THIS WEEKEND Valerie Dragoon
Office Open Saturday 9:00-12:00 Sunday 2:00 - 5:00
During Non-Offke Hours Pleaae Call 756-7171
YES, WE WILL HAVE N.C. HOUSING MONEY
The buyer who qualifies can take advantage of this generous program which provides low interest rate loans for new construction. If you have been renting, now is the time to check your qualifications for this program and let us build your new home in Edwards Acres, Country Squire, Greenwood Forest, Cherry Oaks or other locations.
DUFFUS REALTY INC.
756-5395
Are You Dog Tired Of Wanting A House?
LOOK AT ONE OF GREENVILLES MORE CONVENIENTLY LOCATED SUBDIVISIONS
Take a look at whats available in a new home today. You'll see pretty much the same thing everywhere you go. But, things are different at Greenwood Forest.
It begins with the spacious half acre wooded lots. There's room to breathe here-to enjoy life. At Greenwood Forest you get the "feel" of country living with the convenience of being near the city.
The homes are different here. too. You choose the plan that suits you, 3 or 4 bedrooms-from the basic architecture to.the smallest detail.
There's more at Greenwood Forest ...much more.
Come and see for yourself.
Starting at 45,250
Rates ars Falling, Payments Surorisingty Affordable
Office 355-2474
iftii
Residential Comnwrical
GREENWOOD FOREST miles Irom HospiUl on the rignt - Stantonsburg RoaO
WATCH FOR OPEN HOUSE
NEW LISTING
II
GOBBLE UP A GREAT DEAL
DURING NOVEMBER
COME ALIVE, COME DRIVE MAJOR SAVINGS AT YOUR PARTICIPATING DATSUN DEALERS.
HOLT
OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
SPACIOUS TRH.VEL IN A GREAT LOCATION. Located on a pretty wooded corner lot in convenient College Court Subdivision. Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area with formal living and dining room, nice kitchen with island, three or four bedrooms, convertible family room with fireplace, two full baths, unique floor plan. Priced at $69,500. Call for an appointment to see this lovely home, located at 1204 E. Wright Road.
THE D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
Katherine Vinson Listing Broker 752-5778
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 WIDE SELECTION OF LOTS IN VARIOUS LOCATIONS, HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION FOR YOUR CONSID"RATION AND A SELECTION OF PLANS FOR YOU TO CHOO. i FROM.
Call 752-2814
Or
Winnie Evans 752-4224
Faya Bowen 758-5256
^vans
jCompany
Of Gfeenvie. Inc 701 w. 14th street
In The Area
Flye To Speak To Retirees
The American Association of Retired Persons will meet Tuesday at The Memorial Baptist Church at 2:30 p.m. Richard Flye. district commercial and marketing manager of Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co., will be the guest speaker.
Car's Tire^tripped
The theft of four tires and wheels from a car belonging to the Society of Sisters of Christian Charity was reported to Greenville police about 7 a.m. Thursday. Officer J.C. Mulford said the tires and wheels, valued at $700, were taken from a car parked at 1100 Ward St.
Doub Heads Martin Campaign
Greenville attorney Randy D. Doub has been named Pitt County chairman of the Jim Martin for Governor Committee.
Doubs appointment was announced by Jack Hawke of Raleigh, campaign manager of the statewide Martin organization.
We are delighted to have someone with Randy Doub's experience and capabilities on Jim Martin's team." Hawke said.
Doub is a partner in the law form of Dixon, Duffus and Doub. He received his bachelor's degree at East Carolina University where he majored in political science and was selected ECUs Outstanding Male Senior" by Phi Sigma Pi National Honor Fraternity. He received his doctorate of jurisprudence at the University of pivnv n r^niiR North Carolina-Chapel Hill. ^
Doub serves on the North Carolina Republican Partys state executive committee and is eastern regional chairman for the GOP building fund.
He is a director of the Greenville Jaycees, president-elect of the Pitt County Pirate Club and a member of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce. ,
Ruritans Elect Gray President
Winterville Ruritan Club has approved officers for 1984 and has set the installation date for the December meeting.
Approved for offices were: president, Bruce Gray; vice president, Ervin Spain; secretary, Keith Knox; treasurer, Paul Hunsucker; sergeant-at-arms, Doug Jackson and director. J.H.Weathington.
The club voted to contribute $500 to the Winterville Recreation Commission for a concession stand at the new ballpark
The club is now selling Christmas fruitcakes. The fruitcakes weigh three pounds and cost $6.50 each. They are available from Ruritan Club members and at the Winterville Town Hall.
McLeod Earns Certification
Dr. Michael McLeod of East Carolina University has been awarded certification in data'processing from the Institute for Certification of Computer Professionals. He is associate professor in the ECU School of Business.
Traffic Panel To Meet
The Traffic Commission will meet Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. The meeting will be in the third floor conference room of the community building on Greene Street.
Support Group Plans Sale
The Family Support Group will hold a yard sale Saturday beginning at 8:30 a.m. at 105 St. Andrews Drive. Proceeds will be used to fund the activities of the self-help group for people experiencing family stress.
Scout Meeting Rescheduled
The Pitt District Scout and Cub Scout Leaders Roundtable for November has been rescheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Red Oak Christian Church on U.S. 264 west.
The Scout theme this month is gift of life. The Cubs theme is giving gifts."
Cypress Group To Meet
The Cypress Group will hold its next meeting at the First Presbyterian Church Monday at 8 p.m. Group member Benjie Brown will introduce a film on the conservation efforts of Ducks Unlimited on behalf of the nations waterfowl.
Brown is a resident of .Ahoskie and is now serving as sponsor chairman of. the Roanoke-Chowan chapter of Ducks Unlimited.
Appreciation Week Set
Nov. 13-19 has been declared Youth Appreciation Week by Optimist International, the Optimist Club of Greenville and by Mayor Percy Cox.
Charles Ross, chairman of the activities for the Greenville club, said the Optimists will promote daily themes through Nov. 19 in recognition of the accomplishments and achievements of area youth.
The themes include: Sunday. Youth in Religion Day;
FALL FIN Chad Branson, 5, is framed by leaves while playing at the Donna Lee Loflin School in Asheboro. N.C. Chad was one of several kindergarten students who jumped into a large pile of leaves to play. (AP Laserphoto)
Monday, Youth in Business Day; Tuesday, Youth in Education Day; Wednesday, Youth in Community Service Day; Thursday, Youth in Government Day; Friday, Youth in the Family Day; and Saturday, Youth in Recreation Day.
Ross said that several high school youth will meet with Cox on Thursday in the council chambers at city hall to learn about city government and conduct a "mock council meeting.
Solicitation Request Approved
Police Capt. John Briley has announced approval of a request by the Greenville Optimist Club to conduct a Christmas Tree sale Nov. 25 through Dec. 21 to raise funds for youth work in Pitt County and other club-sponsored projects.
Bethel Road To Be Closed
Whitfield Road (SR 1433) in Bethel will be closed Monday while crews from Seaboard System railroad replace the rails and raise the track elevation at a crossing on the road. R.G. Shirley Jr., division highway engineer in Greenville, said the work at the crossing is expected to take about three days.
Traffic will be detoured over Railroad Street (SR 1434), U.S. 64 and Manning Road (SR 1432).
County Maintenance Supervisor Harold Ross said every effort will be made to minimize any inconvenience to the traveling public while the repairs are being made to the crossing.
Work On Center Scheduled
Wiley Teal, chief of detention for the Department of Human Resources Division of Youth Services, says construction of a juvenile detention center in Greenville should begin right after the first of the year."
"We still have to accept bids and award the contracts for construction. Teal said, but "were looking at a July 1 completion date.
The Division of Juvenile services has $250,000 in construction money to build the center which will include eight beds to house delinquent juveniles awaiting trial or those needing secure custody.
According to Teal, the centers staff will include 13 people, and "hiring should begin around the first or middle of May, so employees will have time to complete a 180-hour training program before the center opens.
The detention center will be built on property now owned by the Department of Corrections off the Belvoir Highway.
Pair Charged With Assault
Jessie James Cherry and Willie James Stern, both of 617 McKinley Ave., were arrested Thursday on assault charges following an 8 p.m. incident at the McKinley Avenue
residence. Officer R.L. Gorham said Cherry and Stern were charged following a fight between the two men.
African Play To Be Performed
The International Friendship Association will sponsor a drama entitled "For Better Not For Worse at Philippi Church of Christ Friday at 8 p.m. The production will be performed by touring actors from Africa and was written by an African playwright.
Winterville Board To Meet
The Winterville Town Board bf Aldermen will hold its monthly meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall.
The agenda includes a public hearing on rezoning the W.E. Briley property from R-6 to general business No. 2. This would permit use of television, radio and microwave towers and office buildings.
Other agenda items include consideration of appointing a member to the Mid-East Commission, Christmas lights for the town, a petition for improvements to Cooper Street between Cross Street and the dead-end, a request from A.G. Cox School to sell cookies Nov, 18-29 and review of bids for a new truck.
Bus Station Broken Into
Greenville police arrested Tony Lee Alford of Washington, D.C., on breaking and entering charges following an incident at the Union Bus Station on West Fifth Street Thursday night.
Officer R.L. Gorham said Alford was arrested after police saw him break into the bus station.
Special Month Proclaimed
Mayor Percy R. Cox has proclaimed the month of November to be Epilepsy Month in Greenville. In observance of Epilepsy Month, the Coastal Plains chapter of the Epilepsy Association of North Carolina is conducting a public education campaign to bring the facts about epilepsy to the attention of the community.
Dentist Named To Board Post
Dr. Richard F. Murphy of Kenilworth in Greenville was elected vice president of the American Board of Dental Public Health at its recent meeting in Anaheim. Calif.
He is employed by the N.C. Division of Health Services as a regional dental supervisor and supervises public health dental programs in 33 eastern North Carolina counties.
Rings Stolen From Home
Cpl. C.B. Landreth said Greenville police are continuing their investigation into the theft, of three rings from a residence at 24 West Hills Townhomes. Landreth said Marv
Katherine Thomas reported the theft of two diamond rings and a silver ring from her home about 12:15 p.m. Thiu^y.
Construction Trailer Entered
A calculator and postage meter were reported stolen Thursday from a trailer belonging to Daviibon & Jones Construction Co. at 3100 Landmark Drive.
Officer D R. Wyrick said a window in a door to the trailer was removed to gain entrance. Along with the calculator and postage meter, valued at $500, an estimated $100 in postage was also taken, Wyrick said.
Pitt NAACP To Meet
The Pitt County NAACP will meet in Ayden Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Zion Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.
Community Club To Meet
The Hillsdale Community Club will meet at Parkers Restaurant in Greenville Sunday at 7 p.m. A banquet supper will beheld. President Rosa Weaver said.
Tools Taken From Car
Local police are investigating the theft of $127 worth of hand tools from a car early today.
Officer B.A. Riggs, who said the theft was reported at 1:55 a.m., said the tools were taken from a car owned by Scott Eugene Sheppard of Oakwood Acres, parked in the Ormond Wholesale Co. parking lot on Dickinson Avenue,
Perspectives Lecture Set Monday
"The History of Blood Transfusion will be discussed at the next Perspectives lecture series Monday from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. in the upstairs conference room in the Pitt County Memorial Hospital cafeteria.
Carolina Hannaway, editor and lecturer at the Johns Hopkins Institute of the History of Medicine, will be the guest speaker.
Trio Attends Conference
Greenville residents Louise Downing, Gail Wallace and Terry Shank recently attended the Governors Conference on Women and the Economy in Raleigh.
Nearly 900 citizens from throughout the state attended the conference to shape recommendations affecting women and their relationship to the states economy. Four major areas were discussed - business development, education, employment and financial security. A report on final-recommendations will be published early next year.
A new Office for Womens Economic Development, which Gov. Jim Hunt announced during the conference, will help implement the recommendations.
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