Daily Reflector, November 28, 1983


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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.CFoundafion Studies Cycles To Predict The Future

Monday, November 28,1983 7

ByMARYMacVEAN AuociatedPreM Writer

PITTSBURGH (AP) -Every 18.2 years, the number of marriages in the United States hits a high. Stock prices, flood stages of Nile River and the levels of immigration fluctuate on the same 18i-year cycle.

Hie 5.8-vear cycle includes business failures, the occurrence of sunspots, abundance of grouse, cotton mces and the price of railroad stocks.

Toe belief that cyclic forces influence our loving, warring, spending and living is the idea behind the Foundation for the Study of Cycles, where a staff of eight metho^lly works to fulfill the ageH)ld dream of pre-dkting the future.

Understanding cyclic forces ranks with the discovery that the earth is not

the center of the universe," wrote the late Edward R. Dewey, who established the foundation and died in 1978.

For if wars and depressions are not caused by generals, businessmen or politicians ... but are the results of - or at least triggered by - natural physical forces in our environment, we are on the threshold of a completely different and extraordinary way of life for all mankind," he wrote.

With an annual budget of $200,000, the foundation publishes a magazine, collects and catalogs data, encourages research and conducts research of its own. In its 42 years, it has documented more than 500 chartable cycles in 35 areas of study, said Dr. John Bums, executive director of the foundation.

Farm Scene

BySAMUZZELL Agricultural Extension Agent

llie computer is sure to affect your life more and more as time goes on. All of us now are in the process of adjusting to the potential benefits of the computer in our daily lives. There is a great deal of decisionmaking capability within reach at present.

The Pitt County Agricultural Extension Office has a microcomputer available that can benefit the farmer and homeowner alike. There are programs that are capable of being run by the computer that enable the farmer to evaluate the profitability of many different field crops, horticulture crops and livestock operations as well as programs in home economics.

In order to properly use the , computer for any of the available programs, contact the extension office for an appointment. Prior to using the computer a farmer must know the costs that he has incurred or will incur in producing the crop or crops that he or she would like to examine.

The computer can be a valuable tool in making decisions concerning lease arrangements, equipment purchases, feed requirements and many other important considerations of farm management. A few minutes at the computer can provide information that compares various price levels or various expectations that will affect a farmer's profit or loss at a seasmisend.

One of the disks available is the crops disk. On it are seven programs, listed and briefly described as follows:

CROPBUD: prepares NCSU enterprise budget sheets for field crops

FMAUP: calculates feed requirements for cattle herds and available forage production.

CROPS: produces a crop by crop anaylsis, divided if applicable, between landlord and tenant. Shows nine results based on the users best and worst expectations fur yields and prices.

CROPRENT: calculates breakeven land rental rates and residuals under a wide range of prices, yields and cash rents.

SOYBEAN; soybean varieties information access program.

GRMOIS: wet to dry grain conversion.

VISICALC: various crop budget and other visicalc files.

M Pitt County farmers are now arranging loans for next years crops, the computer can help the farmer examine alternatives that may be present. There is a great deal of capability we can take advantage of.

To arrange for an appointment to use the computer contact the Pitt County Extension Office at 752-2934. Farm management and planning for profit are great concerns of the 1980s. There is no doubt the computer can help in generating information essential in wise decision-making.

Found Marijuana In Seized Airplane

RAEFORD, N.C. (AP) -Authorities are still searching for the occupants of an airplane that was transporting an estimated $714,000 w(^ of marijuana from Florida to North Carolina.

Federal authorities seized the airplane and the marijuana Saturday, but the (danes occupants fled the rural airport at Raeford after apparently detecting the aenal surveillance by U.S. Customs Service investigate^, according to officiate with the State Bureau of Investigation and the Hoke County Sheriffs Department.

There were no arrests by late Sunday, despite officers attempts to track the fleeing suspects with dogs, a spokesman said.

The plane was tailed by U.S. Customs Service officials from Jacksonville, Fla., for more than six hours before it landed in Hoke County.

The passenger seats of the twin-engine craft, a red and

white 1960 model Piper Aztec valued at $100,000, had been removed for strorage space, and the plane was equipped with five extra fuel tanks, SBI agent Jerry Webster said. Twenty-six compressed 12- to 15-inch bales of marijuana, weighing 982 pounds, were stored in the baggage and passenger areas.

Webster said customs officials became suspicious when they sighted the plane flying wiUiout lights south of Florida.

Anything flying that course at that altitude is automatically suspect because there is so much air traffic, let alone flying without lights, "hesaid.

URGE ELECTIONS SAN PAULO, Brazil (AP) - An estimated 10,000 Brazilians staged a peaceful demonstration Sunday to urge the military-backed government to hold direct presidential elections.

The foundation is convinced that not only can cycles be found in nearly every aspect of life, but that they ateo are interrelated and dont significantly change over time.

Among the cycles the foundation lists are that the numbers of lynx and rabbit peak over the same 9.6-year period. The same graph plots the occurrence of international battles, barometric pressure and heart disease.

Were interested in establishing the nature of cycles and how they behave and eventually fining the cause, Bums said in an interview in the foundations offices in Pittsburghs East Liberty neighborhood.

"Certainly, when one considers that all humans have these biological clocks and cycles, then you can get into the area of the treatment of diseases, the timing of development from infancy to death," he said.

But unlike the evangelical Dewey, Bums is reluctant to muse on the eventual implications of grand design theories.

We are enthusiastic and we are relentless, Bums said; But we try not to be blind in our recognition of everything alleged as being true

Gertrude Shirk, editor of Cycles magazine and vice president of the foundation, said cycle searchers plot countless pieces of informa-tion on graphs and scrupulously document their findings.

We work strictly empirically. We might look for a particular cycle, she said. That doesnt mean its going to be there.

To find a cycle, she explained, one looks for a long string of data. For example, the price of wheat

Parade Has Garlic Aura

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The Doo Dah Parade - an alternative to Pasadena's famous Tournament of Roses Parade - gave 40,000 spectators some irreverent fun - and a huge whiff of garlic.

The garlic came from the Battlestar Garlictica, which brought up the rear of the Sunday extravaganza which included a Texas Chainsaw Massacre Drill Team accompanied by kazoos which tossed bloody bones into the air like batons.

Then there were the Unknown Shoppers performing precision drills with 30 shopping carts.

Al^ among the 125 entries in what has become one of Southernn Californias most-loved spoofs since its founding in 1978: the Synchronized Brief Case Marching Band, a Lady Godiva mounted on a snow-white steed leading a group of nudists, and a group from the Sequoyah School of Pasadena pulling a crudely made tank and hoisting placards that read I Love War."

The 52-member Citizens for the Right to Bare Arms carried mannequin arms, with their children tagging along as the small arms group.

The aromatic Battlestar Garlictica, a model of a space vehicle built in the shape of a giant garlic bulb, had a cast of 20, some wearing gas masks and others armed with room deodorant.

WANT AN END MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) - An estimated 200,000 people rallied in a downtown Montevideo ^rk to call for an end to military rule - one of the largest political protests ever held in Uruguay.

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has been recorded since 1200, cotton prices in the United States since 1731 and stock prices since 1789.

Comprehension of business cycles that are decades long could enable governments and corporations to plan expenditures or warn an entrepreneur against opening a new venture when a tendency toward recession might be imminent, Burns said.

While economic cycles may be of most interest, )eople may be most affected )y cycles commonly called biologic clocks.

Whether or not people are interested in cycles, they cant escape the fact that they are ruled by cycles in their own biology such as menstrual cycles and sleep patterns. Burns said.

In biology they say one characteristic of living things is that they are made up of cells, said Burns, a zoologist who worked with Dewey before coming to the foundation full time three years ago. There has been quite a movement lately to add to the basic characteristics that they have circadian clocks or cycles.

Lawrence E. Scheving of the University of Arkansas College of Medicine has studied, with promising results, the cycles within cells to try to determine when radiation or chemotherapy would be most effective at killing cancerous cells without

harming healthy ones.

Cycles have been noticed since biblical times and studied sporadically for the past two centuries.

In'1929, Dewey discovered cycles when as an economist with the U.S. Commerce Department he was assigned to find the cause of the stock market crash.

When he learned cycles also existed in biology, he thought they must be interrelated in some way, Burn said. Dewey was the first one to really recognize it as an interdisciplinary problem.

But the foundation has its doubters, those who contend cycles are either coincidences or are statistical flukes of some kind, Burns said.

Is there an equally com-

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pelling alternative case? asked Stephen Feinberg, head of the statistics department at Carnegie-Mellon University. The answer for a lot of tb^ phenomena is yes, and the alternatives are often for some scientists more compelling than the study of cycles.

And Peter Machamer of the University of Pittsburghs Philosophy of Science Department said that to move from biological cycles to those in social sciences is just an unwarranted leapof faith.

Dewey believed that solv ing the mystery of cycles would enable humans to stop war and hunger, prepare for earthquakes and prevent epidemics.

Thats a pretty grandiose kind of thing, but its one that can be extrapolated from cycles. Burns said.

The interdisciplinary

study of cycles is ... in its infanc\'. he said, but the progress has been quite substantial

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Chamber To Sponsor Sominar

A semuar on Planwng and Forecaftiufi: Making It Big in a Small Business will be held Thursday from 2:3M;45 p.m. at the King and Queen North sponsored by the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce.

Tofcs will inclu the basics of strategic planning, fmcasti^ with a hand calculate and fmvcasting balance sheets andincome statements.

TTie c(*t of the seminar wUl be $45 per person for members of the lumber and |75 for non-members. For further mformation or to register call the chamber at 752-4101.

FSC Program Given Extension

Jim Hannan, manager of the Greenville Employment Secunty Commission Office, announced today that recent legislaUon has extended the Federal Supplemental Compensation (FSC) program for 18 months, and will therefore remain in effect until March 31,1965.

Hannan said this legislation will benefit unemployed claimants who esUblished an FSC claim on or after April 3, 1963, and those who will exhaust regular unemployment insurance benefits in the future.

He added that, as a result of the legislation, claimants who established a new FSC claim on or after Oct. 23,1983, in North Carolina may be eligible for up to 12 weeks of benefits, and claimants who established an FSC claim between the dates of April 3, 1963, and Oct. 23,1963, may be eligible for additional benefits.

Hannan said the weekly dollar amount is the same for regular and FSC benefits.

For more information contact the office at 3101 Bismarck St. from 8:30a.m. to5p.m. Monday through Friday.

Radio Show Guests Announced

3>unced that the guests on the ty HaU Notes radio program this week will be Maury York, director of the eastern office of the state Division of Archives and History, and Nadine Bowen, administrative assistant to the city manager.

York W1 discuss responsibilies of the division and Mrs. Bowen will talk about several new brochures and handbooks published by the citys public information office.

The program is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.

Jazz Ensembie Pians Concert

The Pitt County Chapter of the N.C. Central University Alumni Association along with the Greenville City Schools presents the N.C. Central University Jazz Ensemble in ^art at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Wahl-Coates Elementary

Tickets are priced at $2 for adults and $1 for students and can be purchased from any member of the NCCU Alumni Association or at the ctow. Proceeds will go to the NCCU Scholarship Fund.

Revivai Services At Friendship

FALKLAND - Revival services will be conducted tonight through Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Friendship Holiness Church

The guest speaker for the week will be Bishop Ernest Kelly of Midway, (ia. Ciwirs each night are as follows: tonight -New Hope of Parmele; Tuesday - Burning Bush Holiness of RobersonvUle; Wednesday - Holy Temple of Saintsville; Thursday - Brown Chaj! and Friendship: and Friday -Saints Rest Holiness of Winterville and a special group from RoancAe Rapids.

In The AreaBig British Gold Heist is 'New Wave'

ByEDBUNCHE Associated Press Writer LONDON (AP)-Scotland Yard, now grappling with the biggest robbery in British history, faces a swelling crime wave and a new t^ of armed Briti^ gangsters.

The six masked gunmen who stole three tons of gold

^ bars wcHih $37.5 million from a top security warehouse near London's Heathrow airport Saturday raised this years robbery losses nationwide to an uniM-ecedented $90 million.

Last vear, the bandits , haul in the cantal was more than $18 million.

I Adopt-A-Pet

The Adopt a Pets of the Week are a neutered male mixed great Dane, with shots, that needs fenced yard, Farmville, 749-2211, and a deaf female 7-month full-blooded Australian shepherd, white with black and gray markings, that needs fenced yard.

Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following:

Six adult cats and ttmee 6-month-old kittens - some black, some calico, some gray tabby. 758-1690.

A 2-year-old male mixed fice about 15 pounds, house-trained. 756-8644.

Two 14-week-old black and white hound puppies - one male, one female. Both have shots; a 6-month-old blond mixed-terrier, short-haired, with shots; a 4-month-old female Lab-huskey with shots. Humane Society . 756-1268.

A spayed female black, orange and white cat with shots; a neutered male black cat with shots; a spayed female black cat with shots; a spayed female tri-color cat; a 3-month-old male gray tabby kitten. Hiunane Society, 756-1268.

A 6-week-old female part-Chesapeake Bay retriever with first deworming completed. 756-2344.

A 4-year-old tan male mixed shepherd, good with children. Nelds country home. 752-8877,752-5646, or 825-0186.

Four 6-week-old kittens - two gray, two black; two Irish setters - one male, one female. Humane Society, 756-1268.

A female 2-year spayed miniature collie, black and white, that needs fenced yard, and a spayed female buff-colori housecat. 752-9922, Humane Society.

Three black female puppies Labrador retriever-shepherd 8 weeks old, all shots, v/wme - a tan female mixed-breed small dog; and a 7-month-old white cat- 756-3251, Humane Society.

Two rex rabbits - one black, one black and white - cages and feeders provided.355-2841.

Two 2-month-old beagles, one female, one male; a red retriever with all shots; and a white fice 2 months old. 756-7056.

A spayed female huskey. 758-0044.

A 2-year-old Benji dog; a 1-year-old spayed female tan part-chow; and a 1-year-old male part-Labrador retriever. 756-9427.

A I'-s-year-old spayed female part-German shepherd. 758-2511.

Found on East Fifth Street - a female Persian calico cat. 752-8242.

Lost on East Eleventh Street - a 6-month-old male black and white cat. 7584)293.

A female black and white 5-month-old house cat. 758-0274. Found on 903 South - a black and buff-colored German sheirfjerd with blue eyes. 7564)905.

Lost in Ayden - a female 4-month-old black kitten. 746-1303.

Lost on Cheshire Drive - a male black Labrador retriever. 756-5007.

To place an animal for free adoption through this column, (NJblished free of charge each Sunday, pall Elizabeth Savage, 756-1867; Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; Cathy Ketron, 746-2468 (Ayden); or Carol Tyer, 752-6166.

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OODLAN

IMAIIKITS

There were 1,772 armed robbmes in Lotxion alone last year, an averse of one every six hours, 'niats an increase of almost 3,000 percent in 20 years. In 1962, there were only 62 robberies in the Britisb capital.

Londons 22,000 Metropolitan Police, headquartered at Scotland Yard, have to combat twice as many armed robberies as the rest of England and Wales put together.

Were up against well-organized armed robbers who use military-style tactics, said (3iief Superintendent Keith Milner.

TTie men in frwit carry handguns with the shotguns behind - a version of in-fantry and artillery warfare.

Yard sources said the big robberies are probably carried out by no mwe than a half-dozen gangs.

'Three are well-established criminal families; the others are floating outfits headed by shadowy figures who put teams (d specialists together for specific robberies.

A veteran Yard detective, who asked not to be identified, said: Were facing a whole new breed of criminal now. Theyve become much more sophisticated and harder to detect because they dont appear to operate within the traditional framework of identifiable gangs.

niere was a time when the gangs almost went out of their way to avoid using shooters (guns). There were even cases where gang members searched each other before a job to make sure no one was carrying. Nowadays, these fellows wouldnt be seen dead without a gun.

The man leading the hunt fw Saturdays bullion thieves is Cmdr. Frank Whispering Jack Cater, head of the Yards Central Robbery Squad and a veteran de tective who smashed two of Londons big gangs in the 1960s.

He is also investigating

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Co. Fourteen raiders overpowered guards and got away with about 7 million pounds-$10.3 million.

The ^ng drove off with what detectives called a mountain of cash, all un-traceable bank notes weighing an estimated 6 tons.

Cater told reporters he was keeping an open mind about whether the same gang was behind Saturdays bulliwi robbery. But the two raids bear several striking similarities.

Both appeared to be inside jobs. Both involved transporting heavy hauls.

In both, the raiders doused guards with gasoline and threatened to set them afire if they did not open vaults. Both raids were against maximum-security facilities and penetrated sophisticated alarm systems.

Cater believes the Security Express theft took at least three months planning, cost about $45,000, and used as ,many as eight vehicles and 24 specialists at various stages.

Tie demolition and renovation of Londons East End, the traditional haunt of the citys easily identifiable }angs, each with its own turf, ilurred the lines in the underworld.

Organized crime headed for the suburbs, one Yard detective said. The men behind some of the big jobs are probably outwardly respectable businessmen who form teams of experts for specific robberies.

So far, the Yards famed sleuths and other detective squads have not arrested anyone fw any of the recent major robberies or an in

creasing number of big-time frauds.

The gangs security is tight. Lloyds of London posted a $^,000 reward for the recov7 of the Security Express loot, but detectives said that has not loosened any underworld tongues yet.

However, a stri^ of undercover operations by armed detectives of the Yards robbery squads has yielded some successes. Last

year the detectives arrested more than 200 gangsters about to bold up banks, payroll trucks and post offices.

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_'    Monday,    Novombar    28.1983 - Thursday, Dacambar 1,1983

*Ust day to ragiatar Thursday, Dacambar 1,1983 from 9:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.: Last avaning to ragiatar Thursday, Dacambar 1, 1983, 6:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.

Lata raglstratlon faa of iS.OO baginning Wadnaaday, Novambar 30,1983.

Clataat in prograsa

Tuition: 14.25 par cradH hour-$51.00 Maximum Tuition Tuition for Non-Aasidant of N.C. approximataiy 5 timaa Raaidant

Pitt Community College Permits An Individual To 'Enroll in Selected Short Courses

'Enroll in a combination of regular quarter length courses and selected short courses 'Enroll in a program that can result in a reduced course load in the quarters that follow 'Enroll in a course to remove a deficiency that would prevent you from entering a lour year school

coat

Aethdty Faa $8.00

Studanta may ragiatar lor as many or aa law couraaa aa thay wish

Tschnical and VocaUonai Couraaa Curriculum couraaa approvad for V.A. banaftta Uboratory faa of 82.50 par lab hour for aach EOP cowraa r.a,i..,.i.i>.    f**ai<ai..

othar Information contact;

Admiaaion Counaalors PHt Community CoUoga P.O. Drawar 7007, Highway 11, South QraanvHia, N.C.

PHONE: 758-3130, EXT. 212

Evaning counaallng ia avaiiabia for both praaant and futura atudanta to aaaiat tham In couraa aaiaction and caraar planning on Monday and Thursday avanings from 5:00 P.M. - 8:30 P.M. For furthar information call PHt Community Collaga, 758-3130, Ext 212.REGISTRATION IS OPEN

Bagin your caraar by ragiatarlng in ona of tha following Curriculum Dograa, Diploma or Cartlficata Programs.

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Whitfield-Darden Vows Exchanged On Saturday

FAR^VILLE - Era-maquel Episcopal Church here was the scene of the Saturday evening wedding of Mary J^on Darden and Gerald Uton Whitfield Jr.

The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Williaip J, Hadden Jr. at A, program of wedding music was presented by Don Roebuck.

Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. John Cowan Darden of Farmville and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Logan Whitfield of Morehead City.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore her motbefs wedding gown which fashioned of ivory satin and alencon lace. The portrait neckline was outlined ifi scalloped alencon lace tS9ded with seed pearls. The >M1 skirt featured a chapel length train. Her fingertip veil of illusion was of alencon lace and seed pearls and attached to an aleiMQiace Juliet cap. She caiTibd^ colonial nose^y of butteijfly ivory roses, miniature pink carnations and baths breath.

The honor attendant was Mary Beth Joyner and bridamaids were Courtney Lancaster, Michelle Steppe, Diana Gordon, Harriet Joyner and Lisa Sat-terthwaite, all of Farmville and Maria Batista of Jamestown.

The brother of the bride-groor^arl Lee Whitfield, of MorefiSd City, was best man and ushers were John Cowan Darden Jr. of Raleigh, brother of the bride, JarnW'.Kelley and Rusty Mills oUlorehead City, Chris WatedCof Glouster, Roger Corbett of Newport and Michael Webb of Winston-' Salem.

The honor attendant wore

MRS. GERALD LOGAN WHITFIELD JR.

a formal gown of sapphire blue satin brocade styled with an open portrait neckline with an off-shoulder bodice. The short pouf sleeves were accented with fabric roses at the shoulder. She carried a colonial bouquet of bettertimes carnations, pink miniature carnations and baby's breath tied with matching ribbons.

The bridemaids dresses and flowers were identical.

A reception followed at the DAR Chapter House in

Farmville. Assisting were Dr. and Mrs. Albert W. Smith, Mrs. Arthur Forbes Joyner Jr., Mrs. Alvin Davis McArthur and Shirley Louise McArthur.

The couple will be living in Winston-Salem after a wedding trip to Florida.

lie bride yaduated from Farmville High School and St. Marys College in Raleigh. The bridegroom graduated from Carterett High School and works with CATV.

Couple Celebrates Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin D. Lanier of Grimesland celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Nov. 20. TTie couple was honored at a family luncheon and cake cuttii^."

The luncheon was held at the home of Dr. and Mrs. James M. Galloway. Assist

ing hosts and hostesses were the couples daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Billy W. Weathers and Mrs. Laniers brothers and sisters, Mr. and Mrs. James M. Galloway Sr., Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Bell, Mrs. J.A. Elks and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Galloway.

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Mrs. Lanier was presented a corsage of yellow daisies and babys breath by her daughter. She was wearing a dusty rose dress for the ocassion.

The refreshment table was covered with a white cloth and centered with an arrangement of yellow fall flowers.

(Joodbyes were said by Dr. and Mrs. Galloway and Mr. and Mrs. Weathers.

Holiday Dance Date Planned

The Greenville Cotillion Club will have its annual holiday dinner-dance Dec. 3 at the Greenville Country Club.

Dinner will be served at 7:30 p.m. and dancing will begin at 8:30. Music will be furnished by Jim Gregory andhisorch^tra.

Members of the executive board will served as h^ts and hostesses including: Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hartsell; Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Vainwright; Mr. and Mrs. Red Hawley; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Ward; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Whitehurst; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Laughinghouse; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Abee; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Hardee; Mr. and Mrs. Winton Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Durwood Harris; and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Leggett.

Members only wm be in attendance.

Debra Ann Strickland Weds Jimmy Allen Dail On Sunday

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

Monday, Novembef 28,1963

FARMVILLE - Debra Ann Strickland aa Jimmy Allen Dail were united in marriage Sunday afternoon at three oclock in a ceremony performed in the Friendship Free Will Baptist Church.

The Rev. Walter Reynolds and the Rev. Donald Fader cwiducted the ceremony. A pr(^am of organ music was presented by Susan Beaman. Lisa Buress and Carole Buress sang Wedding Song, Let It Be Me and Wedding Prayer.

The bride, dau^ter of Mr. and Mrs. William I. Strickland of Route 1, Farmville, was given in marriage by her father. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Doris P. Dail of Route 1, Snow Hill, and the late Jimmie Ray Dail. Kenneth Dail Sr. of Snow Hill was his best man.

Julie Morgan of Greenville was maid of honor and bridesmaids were Sandra Strickland of Farmville, sister-in-law of the bride, Ann Dail of Kinston, sister-

Births

Dunham Born to Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Lee Dunham, 203 Robin Hood Road, a daughter, Sara Katherine, on Nov. 20, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

McGowan Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dwight McGowan, Route 9, Greenville, a dau^ter, Gina Lynn, Nov. 25, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Mrs. McCiowan is the former Janice Blackley of Farmville.

in-law of the brid^oom, Janice Sutton of Vanceboro, cousin of the bride, Judy Mo^ of Bell Arthur and Karen Womble of Macclesfield, The hoowary attendants were Gloria Davis and Sandra Mozingo.

Heatho* Morgan of Snow Hill and Kristen Strickland of Farmville, niece of the bride, were child attendants, Steven Smith of Farmville escorted the bundle of joy.

Chad Davis of Walstonburg was ring bearer and ushers were Ricky Strickland of Farmville, brother of the bride, Jerry Dail, brother of the bridegroom, Donald Beaman, Kenneth Dail Jr. and Rex Thomas, ail of Snow HUl and Robert Earl HiU of Hookerton, cousin of the bridegroom.

The bride wore a gown of white satin and organza trimmed in sequins and pearled re-embroidered alencon lace. The fitted bodice of satin had a sweetheart neckline. Lace, pearls and sequins appliqued the bodice. The long fitted sleeves of organza were trimmed with beaded lace appliques. The organza skirt extended into a chapel train. Lace appliques accented the skirt, satin panel and bordered the gown. Her fingertip veil of illusi(m was attached to a Juliet cap trimmed with pearls ana sequins. She carried a silk cascade of tube roses, white and blue roses, miniature carnations and ivy.

Mothers of the bridal couple wore identical dresses of chiffon over taffeta in steele blue styled with a scoop neckline.

The honor attendant wore a formal gown of matte taffeta in a white and navy stripe fashioned with an open sweetheart neckline with

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short pouf sleeves creating an (rff-shoulder effect. TTie gathered skirt was enhanced at the waistline with a tie sash of solid navy taffeta, The bridesmaids were dressed identically in solid navy matte taffeta gowns. Each carried a bouquet of blue and white silk flowers.

The flower girl wore a gown of sheer organza over taffeta with an open neckline accented with a border of ruffled Chantilly lace on white satin ribbon. The full skirt featured a double ruffle hemline in a chantilly lace with a bustle back featuring tiers of ruffle lace.

A reception was held after the ceremony and was given by the parents of the bride. Cake was served by Grace Cobb and Faye Sutton. Punch was poured by Ann Dail. Assisting in serving were Betty Dail, Nannie Hart, Nina Sugg, Merline Morgan, Donna M. Morgan and Gertrude Beaman.

Goodbyes were said by Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Fulford. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Moye presided at the guest register and directing the wedding were Olive Gay and Edna Earl Baker.

The couple will live near Snow Hill after a wedding trip to Florida.

The bride ^aduated from Pitt immunity College and works at Ormond Wholesale. The bridegroom graduated from Greene (Antral High

MRS. JIMMY ALLEN DAIL

School and is engaged in farming.

A wedding breakfast was held at the Ramada Inn given by Doris Dail, Myma Strickland and Ann Dail. Doris Dail entertained at a rehearsal party held at the church Saturday.

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Crossword By Eugene Sheffer

FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1983

ACROSS 35 Indians DOWN Seance M Drawing ron 1 An alkali sounds 37 Safe    Pintorder

aPrefixfor 40 Dine    3 Word with

charge or 41 German river lodge 42 Betting 8 Small    events

children    47 ...a sight

12 Dumbo,    for-eyes

for one 48 Casey Jones,

14AuK>r    for one

Wiesel    49 Hebrew

15 Farm    measure

structure    50 Mayday!

13 Tramp 19 Require 20Comm(mvaliK 21 Actor Jade nameorpal 22 Major--

GOREN BRIDGE

BTOUUUIQOBni

AMDOKUIUIIP

eiW TflbiiM OoMpwy tyndlM

16 Tammany 51 Novice

foe

17 Recede

18 Improve 20 Peter, in

Pamplona

23 Graf(battleship)

24 lily plant

25 Skunk

28 Aries

29 Adjusted

30 Type of leaf or window

32 Most cats 34 Fictional Wolfe

(butler)

23 Bar drinks 25Goesbdore 26 Brother of 11 Down 27Poisource Madagascar 29 Pre-1917 9 Jai-    ruler

lOPartofDJ 31Hitherand-11 Adams son 33 Greedy money-

4 Globe SSmear

6 Officeholders

7 Spires

8 Animal of

Avg. sohitioDtime: 28miii.

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lender

34 Swimming

36 Garment !(* Indira

37 Tderable

38 Biblical country

39 Wax

40 Custard ingredients

43Yoko-

44 Baseballs Ron

45 Poets word 1-28 46 Initials for Answer to Saturdays puzzle, ahitshow

CRYPTOQUIP

FOCUS

Land Of Ice

On November 29,1929, Lt. Commander Richard E. Byrd and three other men became the first to lly over the South Pole. In his lifetime, Byrd headed four expeditions to Antarctica. The continent of Antarctica is buried under 7 million cu bic miles of ice. This ice would cover the entire United States with a layer 2 miles thick. It contains more fresh water than all the rest of the worlds fresh water combined. The coldest temperature ever recorded on earth, 127 degrees below zero, was at Vostok Station in Antarctica. DO YOU KNOW - Who led the first expedition to reach the South Pole?

FRIDAY'S ANSWER - OPEC stands for Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

ll-2M-8;j        KnowledKe    industries,    Inc    198;J

Mental

Health

Perspectives

Parents and Teenagers. Growing Together

By Audrey Viner, Psychologist Children's Services

Of all the stages of human development, the teene^ years seem to be the time in which both teenagers and parents experience the most frustration and conflict. If is not easy for either. Parents have already weathered the stormy adolescent period as teenagers themselves but have to experience it from a new perspective when their own children are teenagers Teenagers have the developmental job O gradually establishing some autonomy from their families so that they eventually can be on their own; parents have the job of preparing their children r ' hr -.^rKinsible adults and j jdn.iltv ..-ii.i j them go as they indiure .Ai ihcir children move

through these adolescent years, the parents feel the pressure of time; they realize that they have a short time left to raise their children so that they will not become irresponsible adults. This sets the stage for a tug of war between parents and teenagers, sometimes leading to rebellious behavior on the part of the teenager

There is no "right answer in handling this struggle but the parents, being more mature and flexible, are the ones most likely to come up with solutions Basic to the solution is the acceptance by the parents that they are probably not the favorite persons in their child's world during this time

Mental Retardation & Substance Abuse Center 752-7151    ,    #

GENERAL TENDENCIES; An unusually good day for whatever personal or business relationships you have with other persons. Everyone is in a cooperative and pleasant state of mind, willing to reach new agreements.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Your partners are more than willing to cooperate with your ideas and plans today, but try to understand theirs also.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You understand how to get fellow workers to cooperate with plans you have in a very harmonious manner.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Contacting good friends and planning a pleasant evening is wise wince you need recreation. Do necessary work first.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Study home conditions and improve them. Buy mechanisms that are helpful around the house.

LEO (Jul 22 to Aug. 21) Contact those persons who can help you to realize your fondest dreams and gain their cooperation. Make calls and visits to old friends.

VIRGO (Aug 22 to Sept. 22) Find the right way to add value, to property and other assets you may have. Listen to what an expert has to say about business.

LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) You are charming today and can get your affairs worked out admirably. Gain new allies for the days ahead.

SCORPIO (Oct 2310 Nov. 21) You can gain cherished wishes quite easily now if you schedule a plan wisely. Feel satisfied in the evening and take time to relax.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Search out those friends you want as allies in the future and state your aims. It is important to drive carefully today.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You can make a fine impression on bigwigs and should strive for a promotion by showing your true abiHfy.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Changes can occur today that will enure to your benefit, so be alert to them. Cultiave some new contacts.

PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar. 20) If you get into the silence for a while and let your hunches emerge, they can be very helpful to you and make your day bright.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will get along well with almost everyone. Slant the education along lines of work where much cooperation and combining of ideas is needed. Teach your progency to stand up for his beliefs. Make sure meals are plentiful and regular.

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

- 1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ Q.l-As South, vulnerable, Partner opens the bidding

you hold:

K1095 ^7 OJ652 DJSS The bidding has proceeded: North East Seath 1 Dble ?

What do you bid now?

A.-Offensively, you have quite a fair hand, but you do not have much to contribute in the way of defense should the opponents buy the hand. Jump to three spades. Over a takeout double, that action is preemptive. It might seem that you are too strong for this bid, but at this vulnerability, you should have a little something in reserve.

Q.2-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

95 <7AK93 0KQJ4

Safety Was On Their Minds

BELLPORT, N.Y. (AP) -Safety had been on neighbors minds before the Grucci fireworks .complex was rocked by a weekend explosion that left two people dead and up to 100 nearby houses damaged.

In August, an application to rezone the property for expansion was turned down as residents told of fireworks debris floating in the air and the sound of fireworks being tested day after day.

with four spades. What action do you take?

A.-First, bear in mind that partner has made a preemptive opening bid. If he had a solid spade suit and an outside ace, he would have opened one spade. Therefore, slam must be at best on a finesse - at worst, it has no piay at all. Pass, and take your profit.

Q.3As South, vulnerable, you hold:

QJ7 ^KQ8 0AQJ6 The bidding has proceeded: Seath West North East INT Pass Pus Pus Ptu 2 0 Pus ?

What action do you take?

A.-You have a nuximum no trump opening and a superb fit for partner's suit, but you must still pass! Remember, partner could not act over

your strong opening bid. He must have long diamonds and almost nothing in the way of high cards.

Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

AQJ652 7AK10 0 952 Q7 The bidding hu proceeded: Sooth West North Eoot

1 Paso 2 9 Pou ?

What do you bid now?

A.-We usually suggest that you rebid a good six-card major suit. Here, however, there are more important factors to consider. You have a good hand and fine support for partner's suit, so you should fix a playable suit as soon as possible to allow room for exploration should partner have slam aspirations. Raise to three hearts.

If you fail to raise hearts now, partner will never believe you have such excellent trump support.

Q.5-Neither vulnerable, as I South you hold:    I

KJ5 <7J3 0Q9652 Q106    I

The bidding has proceeded:    |

North East Sooth    |

1 7 Dble ?    I

What action do you take?    

A.-You have only modest values, but if you dont act now, you may find it difficult to enter the aueti< at a later stage. You have a balanced hand with stoppers in all suits, and one no trump describes your hand perfectly.

Q.6-As South, vulnerable.

you hold:

Q83 ^K87542 0 83 QJ7

The bidding hu proceeded: West North East Saath

19 Dble Pau ?

What action do you take?

A.-You most certainly cannot convert partners takeout double to penalties - your trump suit quality leaves a great deal to be desired. And don't consider one no trump - that response suggests fair values. Partner has uked you to bid your best suit, so respond one spade.

JesefMi's

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Saturdays Cryptoqulp - PLACE FOR AN AFFABLE EXEC OF A CARTON CORPORATION: A BOX OFFICE?

Todays Cryptoquip clue: A equals C.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

C1W3 Kinp Features Syndicele, Inc

School Bus Accidents In N.C. See A Decline

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By The Associated Press

School-bus accidents dropped by 5 percent during the 1982-83 school year, compared with an 11.3 percent increase the year before, state officials say.

There were 1,079 school-bus accidents last school year - and many crashes were not the bus drivers fault.

In 57 percent of the cases in which charges were filed, the other driver was charged, said Norfleet Gardner, director of the school transportation division in the state Department of Public Instruction. Bus drivers were charged in 43 percent of the cases.

Gardner said the accident rate is not too bad, considering that about 12,760 school buses transported more than 733,000 students 109 million miles last year.

In 1981-82, the last year for which statistics are available, the state had only 1.86 percent of the nations school-bus accidents, although it had 3.77 percent of the nations school bus fleet, Gardner said.

But the states number of bus-related fatalities has begun rising again, from two in 1980-81 to four in 1981-82 to five last year. One student was killed each year; the

other victims were passengers in other cars, he said.

Of last years accidents, 314 involved injuries, 81 serious ones. The student killed was a 6-year-old struck by a school bus while crossing the road before daylight, Gardner said.

There were 186 bus-related accidents through Sept. 30 this year, but none has been fatal.

North Carolina is one of 16 states that permit 16- and 17-year-olds to drive school buses, said David Soule, pupil transportation specialist with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

But North Carolina and South Carolina use more student drivers than other states. Although the number of student drivers in North Carolina has dropped in the last five years, only 35 percent of the drivers are adults, he said.

Since Jan. 1,1980, the state has required all (irivers to have six months driving experience before they drive a

TALKS IN LISBON

LISBON (AP) - South Africas foreign minister is in Lisbon today for the first high-level talks between his government and Portuguese officials since 1974.

school bus.

Earlier this year, a bill was introduced in the General Assembly to require student seat belts in all buses by 1986. Gardner said that next spring, the state may install seat belts in some buses to test them.

^ri    595

Shrimp  L

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Views On Dental

Health

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

DISLOCATION OF THE LOWER JAW

Mohammed Ali once lost a major fight when his lower jaw was dislocated by a smashing right hand punch. This can happen from a severe blow - but it can also happen in the most insidious ways. Many jaw dislocations occur after a wide yawn, or biting hard on a large piece of food. It cannot happen unless the jaws are open, except in the case of a blow to the jaw.

The lower jaw is attached to the base of the skull by two sliding-hinge joints, located in the front of each ear. When the jaw becomes dislocated, the ball slips outside the

socket, and it cannot slide back again. The symptoms are simple to diagnose; the patient simply cannot close his mouth.

The important thing here is not to panic. Go directly to the dentist who may be able to replace the dislocated jaw properly in a simple office visit.

It is rare that dislocation occurs in healthy mouths. Most cases have previous joint pain or clicking sounds, a poor bite, or a combination of these symptoms. Thats why its so important to correct these* dental symptoms before big problems occur.

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

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AVAILARLfe IMMEDIATELY 1 and 2 badroom apartment and a 3 bedroom houaa. 732 3311.

AZALEA GARDENS

Graanvllla's newet and most uniquely turnlhed one bedroom apartnsent.

All energy efficient detigned

Queen lze bed and itudio coucha*.

Waaheri and dryer optional

Free water and ewer and yard maintenance.

All apartment on ground floor with porche. <*

Froat tree refrigerator

Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown b^ app^tmwt only Couple or

Contact J.T. or Tommy William 7S6 7tlS

BRAND NW tattully decorated townhouae naar hopllal and mall 2 bedrooms, t'.^ bath, waher/dryer hook ups, efficient No pets. tJts per month 754 1904 or 752 2040

EASTBROOK AND village GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three badroom garden and townhoue apartment, reaturing Cable TV, modern appli-central heat and air condl tioning, clean laundry facllitie*, three twimmlng pool

Office 204 Eaetbrook Drive

752-5100

TKFICIENCY APARTMENTS

Dial direct phone

25 channel color tv AAald Service

Furnlhed AllUtllltie

Weekly Rate

754 5555

HERITAGE INN AAOTEL

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ment, carpeted, dlh waher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6849

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartment. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just oft lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

LANDMARK. I bedroom furnished apartment, 3 block from Unlversi ty. Heat, air and water furnished. No pets 758 3781 or 756 0889

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex. Shenandoah $290. 756 5389

BRIK TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedroom, end unit, storage, near Nichols 754-74M

Cherry Court

Spaclou 2 bedroom townhouses with IVi baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV. washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, cluo housaandPOOL.752 1557

iniES FOR SALE

221 Country Club Drivt

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

2S4By-fMtWest Living room, large kl,tchen with eating area, den, 2 bedrooms, IVibeths, screened porch, utility room, garage. Lot 125 x 210. $50,000.

1024 Fleming St.

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

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

LOT FOR SALI: trnaO' lot on comer of 13th and Qffene8tfeeti,$7800.

lQTFORSXle

111 E. Iltti street. 75x85. Price

laooo.oo.

NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE

TURNARE

KIIL ESTATE MB IMMCE AGENCY

QttMorWltt)L8

Ho(ne796>1179

752-2715 or

752-3459

30 Years Elperltnee

a

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs SO per cent lass than comparable units), dishwashar, washar dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to-wall carpet, tharmopana windows, extra Insula tion

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    1    5    Sunday

AAerry LanaOtf Arlington Blvd.

756 5067

NEAR HOSPITAL medical school. New duplex townhouses available (or Immediate occupancy $300 per month No pets 752 3152. ask tor John or Bryant

W ONE bedroom Convenient location Washer/dryer hookups $220 per month 754 7417

NICE QUIET DUPLEX, appli anees, carpel, electric heal, wood heater No pets 756 267tor 758 1543

2 BEDROOM, semi furnished Perfect tor singles. 3 blocks from campus. $150 monthly 752-1762

121 Apartmanti For Rant

121 Apirtnients For Rent

1 BIDROOM apertment, appii-ancee furnlehed, Tenfh Street, *100 per month. Call after p.m., 1S24 5042.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road Dih washer, refrigerator, range, dis poal included We alo have Cable TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available.

756 4151

2 IidROQMs, refrlgereW, tove,

dishwasher, waeher/dryer hook (W. No pet. 752 OISO before 5 p.m., 7M 2766 after 5 p.m.

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartment or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T.. or Tommy Wllliem, 756 7S1S.

ONE BEOROM APA*tMENf Weet 4th Street, si 10 per month. 7S706IS,

125 Condominiums For Rent

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The

Office hours lOa.m toSp.m. AAonday through Friday

Call U 24 hours a day at

756-4800

DECEMBER 3 DECEMBER 10. Beach condominium, $150 Fort AAacon Call 758 6487 after 7 p m

two TOWNHOUSES available in Quail Ridge. 12 month leases or less. One rents for $500 per month, other for $570 per month. 2 and 3 bedrooms, 2'/z baths. Near recre ational facilities. Call Clark Branch Management. 756 6336.

127 Houses For Rent

TAR RIVER ESTATES

AYDEN COUNTRY CLUB. Ranch style home with 3 bedrooms, game room with bar, 4'/i baths Over 3000 square leet Available immediately. $600 per month Call Lorelle at 756 6336

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

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"

1401 Willow Street Office Corner EjVn A Willow

752-4225

-..M.,. ----

BRICK VENEER RANCH for rent Carport. Excellent neighborhood 3 bedrooms, family room, fireplace, kitchen with stove and refrigerator, furnished, central heat and air. Call Lyle Davis at Oavis Realty 752 3000 or nights 756 2904

COLONIAL HEIGHTS, 3 bedroom brick, $350. Lease and deposit. 756 5772 after I p m EXECUTIVE HOME for rent. Short

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

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, t'/s bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court Immediate occupancy.

756-0987

WESTHILLS

TOWNHOMES

Located just miles from the hospital and medical school, these units are designed to house two or more II you have a roommate and would love to have that second full bath, give us a call. Energy effi dent, washer and dryer hook-ups and a storage room for all those extras you just can't part with. Call us for an appointment to rent these new two bedroom townhomes minutes from the hospital.

ProlMsional^ managed by

Remco East, Inc Weekdays Nights 8. Weekends

758 6061 758 5960

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

C l. Lupton Co.

Holly Hldye

COUNTRY LIVING - FIRST CLASS

Restrictions (Horses and Barn Permitted) ^ Paved Streets

Holly Ridge Property Owners Assoc.

^ Some Tracts May Be Subdivided

We are offering 2Vi to 5 acre tracts. One 5 acre tract on the Tar River. Partially wooded and cleared. Call Carl at Darden Realty for details.

758-1983    758-2230

NEW CONSTRUCTION

Belvedere 102 Darwin Court

Three bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot. Large greatroom with fireplace. Lots of extras. Call today!

OnMiyi

nil fcl.

TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

105 W.Graanvllle Blvd.

Greanville, N.C. 27834

756-6810

The time to build that Dream Home that you have been waiting to be able to afford will never be better than right now through the N. C. Housing Finance Agency.

10.35% FIXED RATE

30 Year

MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE

through

^ $llleenterpre(,3nc.

Call 756-0041

and find out if you can qualify. YouTi be glad you let BUI Lee and Scott Brown bui^ it for you.

term lease available for 3 bedroom home in,Camelot. Great room and 2 car garage Wintervllle School Dis trict. $400 per month Call John Jackson at 756 6336 HOUSE FOR RENT: TTaTdee Acres, 3 bedrooms. I'> baths, garage, fenced In backyard, heat pump. $350 a month Phone 753 3993 after Sp.m

HOUSE IN TOWN atd~hu~ TS country Call 746 3784 or 524 3180

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE

2500 S. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

127

Houses For Rent

LAKE GLENWOOD, 104 Bryant Circle, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, large lot 524 4148 or 524 5042, Echo Realty Inc

NEAR UNIVERilTY. 3 badroom, i'/i baths, living room/dining room, eat In kitchen, carport. Fresh paint and wallpaper Hardwood floors

Approximately 1350 square faat, new furnace/no air conditioning. AAarriad couple or small family

only No pets. Immediate possession. $375 per nrumih. Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532. No agents

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedrooms Nopals. 1 726 7615.

NEW HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $550 par month. Call 752 1232 or 756 5097.

2 BEDROOM BRICK house Furnished, large lot. carport, washer and dryer. $225 Highway 13 West, 9 miles $i00deposit 753 4151.

3 BEDROOM. l'/3 baths in Elmhurst. Available January 1st, $350 Smith Insurance Realty, 752 2754

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, living room, dining room In Wintervllle Call after 5p m 355 6023

34 BEDROOMS, 2 full baths, Sherwood Greens, $350 a month Lease and security deposit re quired. Phone 752 4139

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

12X60, 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, $165 No pets, no children 758 0745,

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer, air. No pets, No children Phone 758 4857

2 BEDROOMS, central air, 12x40 2 miles from Pitt Plaza on Highway 43 $185 plus deposit. 758 0174

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C Monday, Noverriber 28.1983 IS

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

NEAR FOUR LANE, 2 bedroom, totally elacfrlc, dryer, furnished, deposit, $145 month. 746 4775

13S DHice Space For Rent

OFFICE 5FACE AVAILABLE

Available In December. Off 264 By pass. 2100 square fetf of prime office space Well decorefed. 12 month lease or longer, private perkiM. $1200 per month.

Call Clark-Branch Management

756-6336

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J .T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.

UPSTAIRS office space evaliabla'at the Mattox Buildino, 315 West Second Street. Everything furnished. $100 per room per month. Call 758-3430.

1,200 SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on Evans Street. Price negoiteble. 752 4295/756-7417.

2,000 SQUARE FEET office or retell. Will divide Ayden New interior, heat and air $225 month 756 7196.

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park ing Call 758 2300days.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S'^ORfyl WINDOWS DOORS & AWNJNGS

C.L. Lupton, Co.

SCREW MACHINE TECHNICIAN

We have an immediate opening in this area for a Screw Mechanic Technician.

Qualifications for this position include graduation from a 2 year Technical School, and 7-10 years machining experience, to Include at least 5-4 years of Brown & Sharpe screw machine set-up.

This Is a ground floor opportunity. Salary commensurate with experience. Benefit package exceptional.

Send resumes to:

Screw Machine Technician

P.O. Box 1967 Grenvill, N.C. 27834

137 Resort Property For Rent I M2 Roommate Wanted

WINTERCREEN SKI RESORT 2

badroom fully equipped corf dominium. For more information, call 355 2341 after 6 30 p m

2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted

3 bedroom house $86.60 a piece plus utilities Call 355 6385

144

142 Roommate Wanted

Wanted To Buy

HOUSEMATES to share 3 bedroom home Near D. H Conley Call 754-4735 or 756 4164 for detarts

I GAS STOVE, good condition. Car I cover tor large car. Phone 758 7045

MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED 409

Holly Street, across from Campus 4 bedroom house, S8 7 50 plus utilities Begins December i 752 2503

MERCURY CAPRI with 1400 cubic inch engine 753 5732

ROOMMATE WANTED. 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Available end of November Rent $132 per month Call 7S2-S828 before 9 a m and after 10p.m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood I timber Pamlico Timber Company, I Inc 756 8615

WANTED TO BUY standing timber, large or small tracts 746 ! 6825 or 746 2041

' WOULD LIKE to buy wood that's ' been logged, laying down trees and ireetops Call 758 2840 or 756 9193

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SERVICE MANAGER

Excellent Career Opportunity with growing .company. Excellent company benefits and starting salary. Prefer previous Ford Experience.

Reply in writing to:

Service Manager P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27834

Installed Mobile Home Roofover FREE Estimates.... Call 756-6560

Made of tough aluminufn on the outside to stop leaks and reflect heat: and double-foil-clad polystyrene on the inside to insulate.

LOWES

2728 S. Memorial Drive

llie

Gift 3 Spotter

THE PROFESSIONAL WOODCUTTERBUYS STIHL MORE THAN AJmfOTHERCHAINSAW INTHCWORLO.

WHICH MEANS ALL THREEOrUSAREDOING THINGS RIGHT.

Clark & Co.

Of Greenville, Inc.

Gifts for Everyone

Uyswiy Nn> Fot ClHitlffli

WARRENS DOG & HUNTING SUPPLIES

NTt-E East 10th    till

QrMflm,N.C.

Gifts for the Home

SONY-QE-SHARP TELEVISIONS

Close Out S8l9 90 Days Same At Cash $1000 Instant Credit

Goodyear Tire Center

WtEnd    motcklnsoflAve.

7M3T1    7M-4417

ICPEuAL^ on.

:cA5ioiy5

All For

Gifts & Entertaining

Italian

Wines

OrMiwill* Squsr. Slwfipn CmMt

:15=;

For Special Christinas

GIFTS

COUNTRY CRAHS & ANTIQUES REPRODUaiON FURNITURE HANDCRAHED DOLL CRADLES CHILDREN'S TABLES & CHAIRS

HandmMle Bonnets, Aprons. Bibs, Dolls, Toys & Stuffed Animals.

Poor Man's Flea Market

Highway 264 East- 8 miles from Greenville

Open Wed.-Sun. 8 to 6 7S2-1400

Silt / / Suggeslions^p

Samsonite Attache Cases Sheaffer Pen i Pencil Sets Photo Albums Desk Assessories SCM Portable Typewriter* Sentry Safe*

Globes

Appointment Books

And Many Other Professional

Gilts

Otiice Equipment Co . Inc 569 S Evans Slrcet

752-2175

427 Arlington Blvd. lOpposlit Piit Plaza)

756-4224

IZOD CLOTHING

Entire Stock

20% to50% OH HDEIKIIlFtClllinnCllll

Upen 7 Days A Wtak    748-3389

Select A Craft ToNake..ToGive

from our full line of

STENCIL SUPPLIES

Stencil Decor and Stencil Magk Stencils. Stencil brushes, stencil paints and books to create beautiful wood ornaments, fabrics, boxes andplaques.

NEEDLEWORK SUPPUES DMCEmbrotderv Flo-25<

Hungates

ARTS CRAITS H0S8I1S

pm Plaza Greenville. N.C. Phone 7564)121

Gifts for the Home

WATERBEDS BEDDING SAVE UP TO 50%

FREE SHEETS OR FRAME with each $300 Purchase

ONE

STOP

SLEEP

SHOP

FACTQIYIIATTIIfl

iwATnini

355-2626

730Qrsmvilt.Boulward

(N.ztToPmPls2S

Gifts For Kids

Give unique, locally handmad

(A, from Y

PINEWOOD

200E.Gravili(BMl    756-7978

#

Gifts

for

Mom

DIAMOND PENDANTS ^70 up

Royd G. Robinson Jewelers

ladcpodeat Jeaelen Dovatn Nall

Gifts

I

CLOSEOUT ON ALL SKI EQUIPMENT |

^ Exceptionally large S ^ inventory to liquidate, jg

!

Golf Inventory To Be Reduced Drastically!

No returns, .xchangas or refunds.

GlDRDONFULP.PRO

756-0504 Located At Greenville Country Club Open 7 Days A Week

MADE OVERSEAS FOR

SCHWINN-APPROVia) (

WORLD*SPORT

LUGGED ^ T8I-FRAME

Make It A Special Christmas L Give Her SINGER

sGREENVILLE SEWING', .CENTER

756-0747

Stocking

Stuffing

Headquarters

114 E. FUth&l

$17995

e Schwinn-Approved Lugged Frame

10-speed derailleur gears

Weighs just 33 lbs.

A supremely handsome new Schwinn-Approved lightweight style bicycle with the finest workmanship down to the hand striping. 27-inch wheels and a truly thrifty price ASSEMBLY INaUDEO

SUnON

iOVICEIHni

1105 Dickinson Ave. 757-6171

Be sure to stop in and browse for beautifully handcrafted and truly unique Rift items

12 TAPERED CANDLES

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I

I

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ii

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THED,REFLECTOR Classified

MONDAY AfTERNOON, NOVEMBER 28, 1983

NCSU Tops Arkansas

Pack Wins Shootout

Another Title

North Carolina State Coach Jim Valvano is surromided by his players after they defeated Arkansas 65-60 to win the Great Alaskan Shootout

Sunday in Anchorage. Holding the trophy is center Cozell McQueen, a member of the Wolfpacks 1983 NCAA Championship team. (AP Laserphoto)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) As usual. North (Carolina State Coach Jim Valvano figures hes got the wcsrld by the tail ( a downhill drag.

I got to have my cake and eat it too, Valvano crowed after his defending NCAA champion Wolfpack downed 14th-ranked Arkansas 6560 Sunday to win the Great Alaska Shootout.

We never varied from what we wanted to to do. I never had to change my game strategy at all. To learn lessons while you win is the greatest tl^ in the world, Valvano said.

The victory was the 14th straight for N.C. State, dating back to last years stretch run to the NCAA title, making it the longest major college winning streak. Thirteen of those have been (hi the road.

Now 4-0 on the season, the Wolfpack got little respect from pollsters, who didnt consider N.C. State top 20 material in the preseason.

I imagine were probably going to be ranked someplace next we^, and thats gonna make it harder for us, Valvano said. I kinda liked it where we were.

A reporter, asl^ if- the Wolfpack can'repeat as national champion.

Are you kidding? Valvano replied. Sometimes its hard

Toronto Tops B. C. For Grey Cup

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) - It was Torontos run-and-shoot (rffense that got all the Grey Cup pre-^e notice. But it was the defense that gave the Argos their first Canadian Football League championship in 31 years.

We told them (the offense at halftime) we were going to hold B.C. and they could get points, said Toronto defensive back Carl Brazley. We didnt care how they got the points, just to get them.

And thats exactly what happened as the Arso defense held British Columbia scoreless in the sec(Mxl half while the Toronto offense scored just enough points to edge the Lions 18-17 in the CFLs version of the Super Bowl.

B.C. had a 17-7 halftime lead in the first Grey Cup played indoors at B.C. Place, Canadas only dmned stadium and the newest one in North America. Then Brazley, a much-traveled veteran, and

his defensive teammates, did exactly what they said they would do.

They took (wide receiver Mervyn) Fernandez away from us, Lions Coach Don Matthews said about the final two periods. Other than that, they didnt make any defensive adjustments.

But they shut down the leagues top-scoring team. And that was enough for veteran quarterback Joe Barnes to come off the bench and direct the Argos to nine second-half points, just enough to pull out the coveted victory.

All year weve been a second-half team, said Brazley, a former Western Kentucky star who was released by the Ottawa Rough Riders and failed in a tryout with the National Football Leagues Buffalo Bills before signing with Toronto. He wound up taking away the Lions big-play offense and

the games defensive player honors.

When they took Merv away from us (teep, we went to some other thine on offense that didnt work, Matthews said. Maybe we should have stayed with our basic game plan.

They had us backed up for most of the second half with

the play of their special teams, and field position is a big part of the game.

But it seemed to the 59,345 fans packed into B.C. Place and the millions who watched on television across North America that the Argos, even with their tightened defense, wouldnt be able to catch up.

With Barnes, who was voted

Lady Pirates Down Iona

the offensive player of the game, in to replace starter Condredge Holloway, the Argos marched deep into Lion territory three times in the third quarter. But each time, kicker Hank Ilesic missed field goal attempts and the Argos could come up with only two points - singles on two of the missed kicks when B.C. was unable to return the ball out (tf the end zone.

enou^ for us to get on the bus.

The Wolfpack was picked to fmish in the lower echelon of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and Valvano thinks rightfully so. He said there are at least four better ACC teams.

But Valvano said be liked the poise and courage ts team showed in the Shootout, although it labored past Alaska-Anchorage 68-60 and Santa Clara 78-75. He was able to play nine or 10 people a game, and there was a different star every night.

Friday it was freshman Russell Pierre with 17 points. Juniw Terry Gannon poured in 24 on Saturday. And although Gannon was the leading scorer again Sunday with 15, it was the play of Anthony Spud Webb that pleased Valvano most.

Spud finally took charge, and penetrated and did some of the things we wanted him to, do, Valvano said. After a dramatic nationally televised debut against Houston in which he scored 18 points, Webb had been disappointing in Alaska, averaging just 4.5 points and five assists in his first two appearances.

But the crowd-pleasing 5foot-6 guard came through with 13 points, 10 assists and three steals.

Valvano said his squad also got a fine game from Ernie Myers, who had been struggling in the tournament. His strong play off the bench late in the first half brought N-C. State back from 21-9 to trail 30-29 at intermission.    t

Pierre, Lorenzo Charles and Cozell McQueen took charge inside in the second half, and the Wolfpack used its delay game to sew it up.

Arkansas Coach Eddie Sutton couldnt point to any one thing for the Razorbacks second-half demise.

I just dont think we played as well as we're capable, but Jim probably thinks the same thing, Sutton said. TTieyre a g^ basketball team. They just played a good solid game.

Inconsistency hurt the Razorbacks, but Sutton said he expects that at this stage of the season. The Hogs steadiest performer was Joe Kleine, who averaged 20 points and 11 rebounds and was named the tournaments outstanding player.

Twentieth-ranked Oklahoma took third in the Shootout by pasting Santa Clara 91-77 Sunday. Coach Billy Tubbs said the Sooners had accomplished everything they set out to do.

You can win this thing and still not meet your goals, Tubbs said.

The most significant thing Oklahoma did was find someone to take some of the offensive load off All-American Wayman Tisdale. The someone was freshman guard Tim McCialister, who scored 69 points, including 31 Sunday. The 82 guard out of Gary, Ind., hit two free throws in the closing seconds Friday to beat Southern Cal.

Tubbs said its too soon to tell how good the Sooners might be. We have the physical ability, he said.

Despite the loss of most of

the starters from last years NIT team, Fwdham managed to take fourth with strmg performances by junior Jerry Hobbie and senior Dave Roberson, both named to the all-tournament team.

Alaska-Anchorage, a Division II school, probably was the biggest surprise. The Seawolves hung tough against N.C. State, beat New Mexico and lost by a single point to Fordham on Sunday .

Theyre Division II in name only, said Fordham Coach Tom Penders. Weve played Division I teams back East with less talent.

ARKA.SSAS IM)

Balentine 7-12 (M) U. Sutton 5-111-7 11, Kleine 6-12 66 IS. Norton 0-2 06 0. Robertson 613 1-2 13. CutU 2-3 06 4. Kitchen 0-1 06 0. Bedford 0-1 06 0. Totaii 265561760

NORTH CAROUNA ST. (65) Charles 66 06 S, Bolton 26 1-2 5. McQueen 2-3 06 4, Webb 66 56 U, Gannon 56 56 15. McClain 01 06 0, Myer* 611 2-2 12, Pieiw 65 02 S. Battle 06 06 0, Butts 06 06 0, Totals 364 13-17 65

Halftune-Arkansas 30, .North Carobna St 29 Fouled OutRobertson Rebounds-Arkansas 33 (Sutton 10) North Canfina St. 28 (diaries S) Assisis Arkansas 11 (Robertson 5). North Caro-Una St 16 (Webb 10) Toul Fouls Arkansas 1. North Carobna St 30. Technicals- None A-5,600

H^tpiocsi

What

IteU!

JamesA.Mahniflg Bethel, N.C. 82S^

A Heritage of Fine Print

SAADS SHOE REPAIR

QUALITY SHOE REPAIRING

113 Orando A*a., Phono 758-1228 Uon-Tr. M    Ad|OCOnt To

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4 color protew printing technical nuinuals y newsletteti Ijfochure progtams posters t>ooi<s graphic design advertising specialties

Miami In 'Must Win' Game With Cneinnatl

MIAMI (AP) - For Miami linebacker Earnie Rhone there are no ifs, ands or huts about tonights nationally televised matchup of the Dolphins and the Cincinnati Bengals.

The M Doli^, he said, are in a must-win situation against one of the hottest teams in the National Football League, a club thats won four of five games after struggling through a 1-6 start.

We have to have this game to stay a step or two up on the AFC East, to get the homefield advantage (for the playoffs) and to get some momentum going, said Rhone, Miamis defensive captain. Theres no other way to look at it.

Actually, the Dol|^ have built a great deal of momentum already. The de-

Sports Calendar

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

Twiay'i Sport!

BuketbaU Greenville Christian at Bethel Tournament

TneidayiSporU BuketbaU Jacksonville at Rose (4:30 p.m.) Ayden-Grifton at Roanoke (S p.m.)

Bear Grau at Williamiton (6:30

p.m.)

FarmviUe Central at Bortie Greenville Christian at Bethel Tournament BeddiRifleld at Greene Coitral Tarboro at North Pitt (5 p.m.) WaahineioatConl^ Chocoi^ity at Dixon    '

fendii^ AFC champions won five of their last six games to stay atop the Eastern Division standing and, in the process, rookie quarterback Dan Marino established himself as the AFCs passing efficiency leader.

Coach Don Shulas club also got some help Sunday when the Los Angeles Rams beat the Buffalo Bills, second in the division. If Miami wins tonight in the Orange Bowl, the team will own a two-game lead over the 7-6 Bills with three games left in the regular seascm.

The Bengals are on a roll themselves, though, and Shula acknowledged Coach Forrest Greggs team may have the most deceptive reccurd in the NFL.

This is the Cincinnati club that everybody thought they were going to be before they ran into all the problems, the Miami coach said. Were catching them at a time when they have everything back together.

Besides having the AFCs No. 1 defense, the Bengals have a potent offense that played the first month of the season without 272-pound fullback Pete J<4mson, who sat out a four-game suspension for involvement with

NEW ROCHELLE, N Y. -Trailing 37-33 midway through the second half, the East Carolina Lady Pirates out-scored Iona 182 down the stretch to record a 51-39 win Sunday in coU^iate womens basketball action.

ECU, which improved its record to 2-1, was led by Anita Anderson with 13 points. Anderson, a 810 forward from Raleigh, gave the Lady Pirates the spark they needed to pull away.

Lisa Squirewell had her second straight 11-rebound performance and has 31 through the first three games of the schedule.

Were very pleased with the way we came back after our loss Saturday to Saint Peters, ECU Coach Cathy Andruzzi said. We needed to bounce back strong ... and they did. We wanted at least a split on the road and because were such a young team, were very pleased to come out of the road trip 2-1.

ECU led 24-22 at the half, and the game remained close until the Pirate defense stiffened and shut down the Gaels inside game. Iona center Joan

OConnor was held to only six points in the Gaels <^ner by the stingy Lady Pirate defense.

Its good that were having different leaders each game, Andruzzi said. Theres such a team atmosphere this seaosn, and the chemistry is what we want.

The Lady Pirates next game is Thursday at Fayetteville State.

East Carolina (SI)

MP FG FT Rb F P

Bill McDonald

KARATE STUDENTS

k

Dominate State Championships.

Squirewell

26

68

16

11

1

1

9

Phillips

40

36

82

5

2

0

6

Hedges

28

610

86

6

3

0

8

Mabry

40

36

81

3

2

3

6

Bragg

36

3-10

80

0

2

6

6

Rodrguez

13

0-1

36

3

2

2

3

Nance

3

86

86

0

0

0

0

Anderson

14

5-7

36

6

1

0

13

Team

6

ToUb

2M

22-56

7-15

44

13

12

51

Iona 139)

Maggie

E.Otonnor

28

17

82

3-3

86

86

2

0

1

3

2

5

0

6

J.OConnor

29

2-9

2-2

11

4

1

6

Acker

36

812

80

2

1

0

12

Moiica

Padian

39

26

16

26

2-2

1-2

1

0

1

1

2

2

4

5

Corden

23

2-5

2-2

3

4

0

6

Cunningham

4

80

80

1

0

0

0

Ryan

1

86

86

0

0

0

0

Team

5

ToUb

2M I

1847

76

25

IS

12

39

EastCaroUna

27

51

loaa.............

t

17

_

39

Turnovers:

ECU

-28,

1-27.

Technical fouls:

none

I Our students are trained in many areas of the martial arts. Our courses involve self-defense in Karate, Judo, Ju-Jitsu-Boxing and Kick-Boxing.

Ask About Our Christmas Gift Special Call 752-5192

Vickie Kent

Womens Forms Karate Champion

\See me for all your family insurance needs.*'

Congratulations to Bill McDonalds students who won 23 trophies (more than any other school) in the N.C. State Championships.

Tournament Director

-11

Bill McDonald 752-6680

\

Since returniim, he has become the isth. leading rusher in the conforence and scored nine touchdowns to ease the burden on the rest of the Cincinnati offense.

Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there.

state Farm Insurance Companies* Home Offices Bloomington. Illinois

: i !.> Make Sure Its

Bill McDonald Karate School

752-5192

903 Dickinson Avenue (Upstairs Over Kens Furniture)





SCOREBOARD

^NFL Standings

Bv Tbr AiMdaM l*rMs AmrrktiiCMfrrriKr ' Kail ..    ^..1    W    I'    TPfl.    PP    PA

Mwini    8    4    0    57    K2    181

Bu iJo    7        0        245    288

taltimore    6    7    0    42    21    313

NwEltnd    8    7    0    482    240    258

N Y Jea    6    7    0    462    282    257

(rnlral

Plltaburgll        4    0    692    24    243

Cleveland    8    5    C    ,615 23    264

CilKlnnall'    5    7    0    417    278    225

Houaloa    l    12    0    077    227    38

Wel

L A Kaidm    lO    3    0    76    346    280

^n wr    7    6    0    538    237    254

Seattle'    7    6    0    538    352    346

KansaiCilv    5    8    0    385    2t    25

SanDiego    5    8    0    385    23    352

National Conterenrr Kant

l)allM    11    2    0    846    417    277

Waahiifton    1|    2    0    846    442    27

SI ^    5    7    1    423    299    391

Ph'l6^Ptaa    4        0    308    196    254

N Y^Guna    3    9    1    26    227    289

Central

l>MrWl    7    6    0    538    292    247

Minnesolj    7    6    0    538    281    302

^caM    6    7    0    2    241    238

GreeoBay    6    7    0    462    365    37

Tampa Bay    2    ii    o    154 191    310

Writ

L A Kama    8    5    0    615    31    286

New Orlean    7    6    O    538 275    287

San Franciaco 7.6 0    538    332    245

Atlanta '    6    7    0    462    294    :7

Tharvday't Garnet Delroil45, Pittsburgh 3 l3atl4tl3.St. LouisT?

Kundav'itiamrt NeworlWm 17, Minnesota 16 Chicagol3. San Francisco 3 New York Jet* 26. .New England 3

MldwettUvisiMl Dallas    10    4    .714    -

Denver    8    7    533    2'i

UUb    7        .438    4

Kansas City    6    8    421    4

San Antonio    6    10    375    5

Houstan    5    9    .357    5

PacWcDivWaa LosAngeles    II    4    .733    -

Portland    11    4    733    -

Golden sute    8    8    .500    ih

Seattle    8    8    500    ih

Phoenix    5    10    .333    6

SanDiego    5    II    .313    6't

Salardsys Games NewYork96,CleveUnd84 Atlanta US, Houston 109 Dallas 115. Golden sute 109 Kansas City 117, UUh 116 Milwaukee 109, Washington 92 Denver 107, Phoenix IM New Jersey 104, San Diego 102 Portland 122. Seattle 94

Sandays Games Indiana IOI,^NewYork9l Boston 114. Detroit 99 Cleveland 114, San Antonio 106 Los Angeles 109, Chicago 100 Monday 's Game Portland at Kansas City, I n

Tuesday's Games .San Antonio at New York, i n)

Milwaukee at Washington, (n)

Denver at AtlanU, (n)

Clevelandat Detroit, (nt Philadelphia at Indiana, (n)

Chicago at Houston, in)

Phoenix vs UUh, at Las Vegas, mi Los Angeles at Golden SUU. I n I .San Diego at Seattle, (ni

NHL Standings

By Hie Associated Press Wales ConlereKe Patrick DivishM

W    L    T    PU    GF    GA

NY Isles    16    8    0    32    107    83

NY Rangers    14    8    3    31    105

the Associated Preu coHege footbaB poll, fared this week.

I. Nebraska 112-00) beat Oklahonu, 28-21

2 Texas (11-00) beat Texas AAM,

45-U.

3. Auburn (9-1-0) did not play 4 lUinola (101-0) did not play

5. Miami, Fla.(101-0) did not I

6. So Mctiudist (101-0)

34-12.

7. GeorgU (01-1) beat Georgu Tech. 27 24

8. Michigan (9-2-0) did not pUv.

9. Brigham Young (101-0) did not pUy

10 Iowa (02-0) did not play

11 Florida (7-2-1) did not play

12 Clemion (9-1-1) did not play

13 Alabama (7-3-0) lost to Boston College. 2013

14 Ohio Sute (8-3-0) did not play

15. Boston College (9-2-6) beat AUbama, 1013.

16 Pitiaburgh (8-2-1) did not pUy

17 Marykuid) 8-34)1 did not play

16. Air Force (02-0) did not play

19. West VirginU (8-00) didWplay 20 East Carolina (034D did not play

SOUTH

Betfatine-Cookmo 31, Cent Florida 22 Georgia 27. Georgia Tech 24 Grambling St 24, Southern U. 10 N Alabama 16, Viraiiua Umoo 14 Tenneaaee 34. Vamkrbilt 24 MIDWEST AuguaUna Jll 2l,,^Wis LaCroaae 15 N DakoUSt 24,TowsonSt 17 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 16, Texas Tech 13 Cent St .Ohio 24. SW Texas St 16 Nebraska 28, Oklahoma 21 Southern Melh 34. Houstan 12 Texas 45. Texas A&M 13 FAR WEST Arizona 17. Arizona St IS Cal-Davis2S. Butler 6 SW Louisiana 25, San Joee St 21 Wyoming 31. Hawaii 13

North CaitSuu. 03, vt Florida SUU. 04,3pm

GATOR BOWL ItfkltnvBlf Fla

Iowa, 02, VI. Florida, 7-2-1,9pm Saturday. Dec. 11 BLUEBONNETBOWL

Mmiday. Jaa. 2

COTTON I

Hopkins.

TamWBar33 Holon24    NY Isles    16    8    0    32    107    83    "yoming    ji,    nawaii    u

WasfimgUnaE    NY Rangers 14 8 3    31    105    89       TZT-.-TT-

('levelan<4l,l^aliiniorca    P^biladerphia    3    8    2 ffl        80    BOW    ScHedU 6

,aeAnaeleslUms41. Buffalo 17    'a'*!*"    '    ?        79    85    uwwi    JV-MCUUIC

1 H-vcwin fI Daiiiiiiore a

i,oe Angeles Rams 41. Buffalo 17 1,08 Angeles Raiders 27. New York Giants 13 in San DiegdJl. Denver?

Seattle fp Kansas City 48, OT AtlanU 47 Green Bay 41, (IT .Monday's Game Cincmntial Miami, mi

Thursday, Dec. I Angiflbs Raider's at .San Diegp. i n i

'* Sunday. Dec. I Buffalo at Kansas City Chicago al Green Bay Mumf Houston New Orlyans al .New England Cincinnatfal PilUlMirgh AtlanU al Washington l/m Angeles turns at Philadelphia SI Louts al New York Giants Dallas albeallle Tampa Bay al San Francisco Cleveland al Denver .New York Jels al Baltimore

Monday. Dec. S Minnesota al Detrml, mi

NBA Standings

B\ 'The Associated Press EASTEHNtONFERENtE Vtlanlic Ditikion

W L Pci. GB Philadelphia    II    3    786    -

Hoilon    II    5    688    1

New York        6    600    2'i

New Jersey    8    6    571    3

Washinglon    6    9    400    5'j

( rnlral INt is ion Milwaukee    9    6    600

AtlanU    8    6    571    h

Detroit    7        438    2'j

Chicago    5    8    385    3

Cleveland    4    II    267    5

Induna    4    II    267    5

WF.STKRN (ONFERENCE

Piltsburgb    6    15    3    IS    73    96

NewJersey    2    20    0    4    57    112

Adams Divisioa Boston    14    6    2    30    107    70

Buffalo    13    8    3    29    92    65

(Ju^    12    II    3    27    123    96

Montreal    11    11    1    23    95    91

Hartford    9    10    2    20    76    82

Campbell Coaference Norris INvlsioo MmnesoU    It    9    3    25    107    110

Chicago    10    12    2    22    89    103

Detroit    10    10    2    22    84    86

ToronU    10    12    2    22    102    116

St Louis    9    12    2    20    86    99

Smylht Division Edmonton    19    4    2    40    154    102

Calgary    10    9    4    24    84    91

Vancouver    10    12    I    21    99    100

Loe Angeles    7    12    5    19    96    110

Winnipeg    6    14    3    15    91    115

Friday's Games

Buffalo 5, Chicago 2 Washington 3. .STY, Rangers I Detroit 5, Pittsburgh 2

Edmonton 2, MinnesoU 2. tie Satorday's Games

Boston 6, New Jersey 2 N Y Islanden 9, Chicago 3 (^bec 3, Buffalo 2 Washingtons, Montreal 2 Hartford 4, N Y Rangers 3, OT Philadelphia 5. Vancouver 4 Detroit 7^Pittsburgh 4 MinnesoU 7. Toronto6, OT .SI Louis8,FMmonton6 Calgary 4. Los Angeles I

SnndavN Games No games scheduled

Monday's Game VancouveralN V' Rangers, mi

College Football 1

By TW Associated Press Here's how the Top Twenty teams in

By The Associated Press

Pairings and EST times for NCAA Division l-A bowl games

Saturday. Dec. 19 INDEPENDENCE BOWI. Shreveport. La.

Air Force. 8-2, vs. Mississippi, 6-5,8:08 p.m.

Saturday. Dec. 17 CALIFORNIA BOWL Fresno. Calif.

.Northern Illinois, 9-2, vs Fullerton sute, 7-4,4pm

FLRIDA CITRUS BOWL Orlando. FU.

MaryUnd. 8-3, vs Tennessee. 7-3, 8 pm.

Thursday. Dec. 22 HALL OF FAME BOWL Birmingham, Ala.

West Virginia. 8^1 vs Kentucky. 6-4-1,8 p.m.

Friday. Dec. 23 HOLIDAY BOWL SanDiego

Brigham Young, 10-1, vs Missouri. 7-4, 9pm

Saturday, Dec. 24 SIN BOWL El Paso, Texas

Alabama, 7-2, vs Southern Methodist, 9-l,3p.m

Monday. Dec. 26 Ali)HA BOWL llonolulii

Penn SUte, 7-4-1. vs Washington, 8-3, 8 p m

Thursday, Dec. 29 I.IBER'n' BOWL Memphis, Tenn.

Notre Dame, 6-5. vs Boston (College. 8 2,8:30 pm

Friday. Dec. 3

PEACH BOWL Atlanta

9. UCU (2-0) beat Long Beach St, 65-59

10. Oregon St (OO) did not play

11 Louisiana St (1-0) beat New Orleans, 67-59

12 Michigan St (2-0) beat W Michigan. 81 K

13 Fresno St. (1-1) lout to Purdue, 56-55

14 Arkansas (2-1) beat Oklahoma, 84-78, losltoNCarolinaSt ,65^.

15 Boston (kiUege ((H)) did not play

16 Georgia (24)) beat W Kentucky, 85^

17 Kansas (O-l I lost to Houston, 91-76

18 DePaul (1-0) beat N Illinois. 73-58,

19 Indiana (O-II lost to Miami. Ohio,

63-57

20 Oklahoma (2-1) lost to Arkansas.

64-78, heal Sanu Clara, 91-77.

SUNDAYS RESULTS EAST

Holy Cross 59. Dartmouth 51 OneonUSt 70T'tica69 Seton Hall 95. Dowliiu 76 SOUTHWEST Stephen F Austin 58. Texas Lutheran

56

FAR WEST Georgetown 97, Hawaii-HiloSS TOURNAMENTS Cystic Fibrosis Tip4)ff Longwood66.St LeoS6 Flonda Inti 83. Valdosu St 81 Great AUska Shootout Champioship North Carolina St Arkansas 60 Third Place Oklahoma 91. Sanu Clara 77 Fifth PUce Fordham 69. Alaska Anchorage 68 Seventh Place .New Mexico 74, Southern Cal 60

Kocbeiler T1p-4)fl ^ (hamptoos^ Carnegie-Mellon St. Rochester 79 Third PUce Denison 70. MIT 52

.Stony Brook Invitational

Who's Really No. 1 ?

Qrid Controversy Begins

By The .Associated Press

College footballs regular season is just about over and its time/or the controversy to begin.

Itjjjll last at least until the major bowl games on Jan. 2 -and perhaps well into 1984. At stake is the national championship.

Coach Fred Akers of second-ranked Texas fired the first shot, Siilurday, shortly after the 11-0 Longhorns walloped Texas A&M 45-13 - the first time in a long time that we really howed we were a whole football team, he said and wound' up along with No. 1-ranked Nebraska as the only unbeatn-untied teams in the country.

We dont think theres anybody better than we are, said Akers, whose team has been No, 2 for 10 straight weeks. Nebraska has a good team, and there are some other good teams. But I'll tell you right now were not second to anybody.

The'Associated Press poll, which has determined the national champion since 1936, says otherwise. But Texas gained some support from Oklahoma tailback Spencer Tillm^. who rushed for 134 yards on 16 carries in a 28-21 loss to Ngfcraska and scored on runs of 39 and 18 yards.

I think Texas would beat Nebraska, Tillman said. We have a great defense, but Texas has an awesome defense. If Texas could score at all - and thats the variable - they can beat Nebraska. Texas defense hits so hard, so hard.

Nebraska has been No. 1 in every AP poll this season no team has ever topped the rankings from the preseason to the

postbowl poll - but the Comhuskers have had to deal with numerous questions about being the No. 1 in history, not jusf 1983. Coach Tom Osborne heard it again Saturday,

But all Osborne would say about his Comhuskers is that they are a good offensive team - maybe as good as Ive seen in college football.

Rest assui^ Osborne will have more to say on the subject before the Huskers Orange Bowl date with fifth-rankwl Miami.

Both 12-0 Nebrrska and Texas had to come from behind in their regular-season finales.

Nebraska, which trailed 14-7 and 21-14, was paced by record-breaking tailback Mike Roziers 205 rushing.yards, but needed touchdown runs of 1 yard by quarterback 'Turner Gill and 17 by fullback Mark Schellen late in the third period to defeat arch-rival Oklahoma.

Texas trailed Texas A&M 13-0 early in the second period, but the Longhorns were ahead 14-13 by halftime and poured it on with 31 points in the third period. Third-string quarterback Rick Mclvor came off the bench to rescue Texas with four touchdown passes, tying a school record.

The Lonjghoms will take their perfect record into the Cotton Bowl against seventh-ranked Georgia, 9-1-1, which trailed Georgia Tech 7-0 and 14-7, then snappd a 17-17 tie on John Lastingers 4-yard pass to Kevin Harris in the third period and nipped the Yellow Jackets 27-24.

Cardinals, Hoosiers Suffer At Charity Stripe; Heels Survive

By The Associated Press

Call it basic basketball - a trip to the free throw line. Just the basket, the ball and you.

That fundamental part of the game proved to be a nightmare to three top college teams, and while No. 1 North Carolina survived its foul shot misadventures. No. 6 Louisville and No. ^ Indiana could not

^The Tar Heels hit an atrocious 12 of 25 free throws but used some old, familiar tools - tough defense and the four-corner offense to down Missou 64-57. Indiana made just 15 of 28 fbtii shots against Miami of Ohio and paid the price, a 63-57 upset defeat.

"It wasnt pretty, not pretty at all, observed Matt Doherty, whose 15 points led North Carolina. Im sure Coach is disappointed in the way we played, but we got the job done.

Coach Dean Smith was certainly not ecstatic. But the bottom line is winning, and the victory was the 497th of his career. I did think we played well defensively, and we were aressive on the backboards, noted Smith, pointing out the positives.

There werent many of those for Indiana Coach Bobby Knight. The Hoosiers were stung for 26 points and 13 rebounds by Ron Harper and blew any chance to come back against Miami by making just four of 10 second half free throws.

1 wasnt pleased with anything, Knight said glumly.

At least. North Carolina and Indiana had free throws to miss. No. 6 Louisville, beaten 0^ by second-ranked Kentucky,

shot only five foul shots in the entire game at Lexington, the first one with just 7:54 left to play. Cardinal Coach Denny Crum was somewhat mystified, and a little sarcastic about that.

Thats got to be the best defensive job in the world, Crum said of Kentucky. I would liked to have shot a free tl^ow before 34 minutes. Thats awesome. Someday, I^l like to have a team that good.

Other coaches, however, had plenty to ^ be happy about in the first big weekend of the college season.

Defending national champion North Carolina State won the Great Alaska Shootout for the second time, 65-60 over No. 14 Aritansas. Terry Gannons 15 points paced a balanced Wolfpack attack, making N.C. State 4^ this season. It was their 13tii straight win, dating back to last years drive to the championship, and the longest winning streak in major college basketball.

Oklahoma won the third-place game in the Shootout on Sunday with a 91-77 verdict over Santa Clara.

Houston, ranked No. 3, ripped No. 17 Kansas 91-76, No. 4 Georgetown mauled Hawaii-Hilo 97-35, fifth-ranked Memphis State captured the Mid-South Classic with a 101-79 romp over North Texas State, No. 7 Iowa downed Illinois Wesleyan 86-60, No. 8 Maryland outclassed Johns Hof^ins 108-65, and No. 9 UCLA hung on for a 65-59 decision over Long Beach State.

Elsewhere, it was No. 11 Louisiana State 67, New Orleans 59; No. 12 Michigan State 81, Wratern Michigan 52 in the Spartan Cutla#Classic;

TANKIFNANAIU

The Daily Reflector, Gfeenville. NC. Monday. November    .j.!

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

Baylor. 7-3-1. vi DkJahonia Stole. 7-4-1, 6pm

II TUG 6^Aj^    imiCO

BOWL Dattai

Georgia.8-11.V Texai, 104), 1:30pm FIESTA BOWL Tempe. Aril.

(Jhio Stole, S3, VI Pittoiwrgh, S2-1, 1:30pm

KDSE BOWL Paiadeaa, Calif.

Illinou, 10-1,VI UCLA,6-4-l.5pm ORA.\GE BOWL Miami

Nebraika, 114), vi Mtomi iFla ), 10-1,1 pm

SUGAR BOWL NewOrleaai

Auburn.9-1, VI Mich^,9-2,8pm

College Basketball

By AnocialcS Preii Here'i bow Urn Top Tweaty teipu la the AtiorialcJ Preat caUege baafcctbaU poll fared aver the weekeM;

1 ,N Carolina (1-0) beat Miaaouri, 64^7

2 Kentucky (l-Oi beat Louiiviile, 66-44.

3 Houiton( 1-1) beat Kanaai, 91-76

4 Georgetown (2-0) beat Hawaii-Hilo,

97-35

5. Memphis SI (24)) beat N Texai St 101-7,

6. Louisville (0-1) loat to Kentucky, 65-M

7 Iowa (1-0) beat til Wesleyan, 8660

8 Maryland (1-0) beat Jonns '

I065

AWYOl^Wa OWOGG'fOURhAliOC? ^

Cbampioaili|p

E Coonecticul 62. Stony Brook 5 Third Place Cortland St 73, Wiilum Patterson 66 SATURDAY'S RESULTS EAST

Brown2, New Hampahire64 Bucknell 80, Princeton 58 Cincinnati 68. E Kentucky 65 Dartmouth 61. (4>onecticul Coll 67 Harvard 77, Merrimack 68 Hofstra 66, Franklin k Manhall 69 Kutztown Si 48. Lehigh 46 LongUland U 80, JohnJay66 PitSburgh 86. Weatmimler, Pa 56 Rutgers 70, Famleigh Dickinson 56 Syracuse 88. Colgate 49 Vermont 94, Plattoburgh St 77 SOUTH Alabama 70, Kider SO Ala -Birmii^m 73, Baptist, S.C 55 Davidson 73^offor 67 Duke 78 Vanderbilt 74 E Carolina 75, Camptell 66 Flonda St 96. Cent Honda 66 Jacksonville 70, Eckerd 46 Kentucky 65. Louisville 44 Louisiana St 67, New Orleans 69

Mississippi 58. David Lipscomb 56 MoreheadSt.71.Tenn vtel'an46 Navy 77, Yale 58

,NE Louisiana 73. SE Louisiana 55 North (torolina 64 Missouri 57 Oklahoma St 82, (>nlenary 74 S Mississippi 65, Tennessee St 61, OT South CarSma 71. NC. Asheville 60 Stetson 77, Florida 73 SW Louisiana 108. Biscayne65 Tennessee Tech 81. Clinch Valley 68 Tn -Chattanooga 89, Birmingham SouthemSS Virginia Tech 9, Md -Eastern Shore 71 Bowling Green 70. Findlay 55 Butler 79, DePauw 65 DePaul 73. NIUinois 58 E .Michi^n 66, Oveland St 60. OT Illinois St 66. Tenn -Martin 56 IndianaSt 93,ChadronSt 64 MIDWEST Iowa 86, Illinois W eslan 60 lowaSt 77,St Cloud 37 Kent St 77, Saginaw Vall^ 55 Miami. Ohio 61 Indiana 57 Michigan 55, Toledo 52 Minnesota 93, South Dakota St. 77 Murray St 80, Mo Kansas City 49 Nebraska 113. Augustana S D 69"

Notre Dame 75, Mans! 68 OhioSt 94. Akron78 Ohio U 75, Charleston 51 SI Louis 68. Christian Bros 60 WichiUSt 59,Lamar58 Wisconsin 100, Flonda A&M 56 Youngstown St 87 . Ferris St 60 SOlTHWFJiT Houston). Kansas 76 Pan American 77, Texas A&I 56 Rice 75. Concordia. Texas 70 Sam Houston 74, Southern L' 70 St Edward's 88. So Methodist 75

Texas83 Mo Southern 81, OT Texas Ait.M 80. Texas Lutheran 71 Texas Oinslian 75,^Texas Arlington 81 Texas-El Paso 91 Texas Southern 61 Tulsa 98. Coll ofl^>zarks74 FAR WE.ST Boise St 85. St .Martins 58 (infamia 79. Cal-San Diego 62 Cal-Santa Barbara 86. Bemidu St 66 Idaho 103, Pacific, Ore 50 LoyoUMarymount 73, Colorado St 71 MonUna 76, Pacific U 64 MonUna 76. Pacific, Calif 64 Montana St 113, Wis Supeor 60 .Nevada-Las Vegas 92. Nevada-Reno 71 NewMexicoSi 55 W .New Mexico 44 Portland 73. PomonaPIUer 49 Stanford 115, Hawaii Pacific 74 SanDiego87. Army57 L'CUt. Long Beach St 59 Utah St 90 Bngham Young 78 Washington 54, Texas Tech 45 TOURNAMENTS GREAT AU.ASKA SHOOTOUT Semiflaals Arkansas 84, Oklahoma 78 .North Carolina St 78. Sanu Clara 75 ('sototion Roud Alaika-Anchorage 79, New Mexico 72 Fordham 78, So California 67 IPTAV TOURNAMENT Ckamptoathip (3emson66. MarqkieUe61.0T Third Place Air Force 70, Wagner 58

LAPCHICKTOURNAMENT Champiaatkm St.John's.N Y 71 Caniiuis Third Place Siena 63. Rhode Island 54

MILLER-HORNET TIPOFF Champkmship Alabama St 103, Aubum-Montgomery

Third Place

Mississippi Valley 81, Prairie View 61 SPARTAN Cr TLASS CLASSIC Champieublp Michigan St 81. W .Michi^n 52 Third Place Cent Michigan 71. Fairfield 68, OT SUNMET CLASSIC Champkmship Purdue 56, Fresno St 55 Third Place Northeastern 94, N Dakota St 77 TRIBUNE CLASSIC (hampkmship Illinois 70. Lo^, 111 53 Third Place Utah 63. Kansas St. 53

C AVALIER INVITATIONAL Champieathip Virginia 87. George Mason 63 Third PUce Richmond 65, Lafayette 49

Bv The Associated Press BASEBALL American l-eagae

SEATTLE MARINERS .Named Ben Hines hitting instructor Named Vada Pinson minor league hitting instructor FOOTBALL Natkmal Football Uagur LOS ANGELES HAMS-Activated Mike Lansford kicker, after putting him on waivers Placed Gordon Jones wide receiver, on the injured reserve lisl United Stales Football League SAN A.NTOMO GU.NSLI.VGERS-Named Lary Kuharich offensive coordinator

HOCKEY National Horkev l,eague

DETROIT RED WI.VGS ifclled Joe Paterson, left wing, and Brad Smith, right wing, from Adirondack of the

N.C.Scoreboard

Bv The Associated Press (ollege Soccer Division III Semifinal

N (arolina-fjreensboro 1. Plymouth .St New Hampshire. 0 OT .Shootout i

wiius. irom /voirunuacx oi me American Hockey League Sent Jody Gage, right wir. to Adirondack NEW YORK LSLANDERS-Signed Roland Melanson. goallender, to a multi-year contract

Prep Playoffs

81

md 65, Lafayette 49 WENDY'S CLASSIC

Georgia 85. W Kentucky I Third Place

Transactions

By The Associated Press Here are the North Carolina high school football playoff y.-ores from Friday mghi DIVISION I t-A Semifinals Fay Byrd 35, Wilson Hunt 14 GboPage/ . N F<^ th3

Semifinah

Thomasville 15 Ashe Reynolds 12 E Randolph 34. SW Edgecombe 21

2-A Semifinals

E Carteret 14, Fuqua-Varina 71 OTi Randleman 29. Sylva-Webster 25

1-A Finals

' Robbmsville28,Creswell6 DIVISION 11

3-A

S. Rowan 21. Shelby 1(1 SE Guilford 21, WiDiamslon 7

Here is this week s high school football playoff schedule:

DIVISION I

4-A

Fay Byrd (12-0) at Wilson Hunt (111)

N Forsyth (9-31 al Gbo Page 111-1)

3-A

E Randolph ill-Oi at .SW Edgecombe (11-1)

Ashe Reynolds (12-0i at Thomasville

(12-0)

2-A

E Carteret (il l) at Fuquay-Varina (11-1)

Sylva Webster (l2-0i al Randleman (12-01

DIVISIOMIJ-A Williamston (10-2) al SE Guilford 110-21

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56. No. 13 Fresno State 55 in the Sun Met Classic; No. 16 Georgia 85, Western Kentucky 68 in the Wendys Classic; and No. 18 DePaul 73, Northern Illinois 58.

In other games, St. Johns (N.Y.) won its own Lapchick Tournament, defeating Canisius 71-45; host Clemson captured the IPTAY, defeating Marauette 66-61 in overtime; Illinois captured the Tribune Classic 70-53 over Loyola, 111., and Virginia beat George Mason 87-63 to win the United Virginia Bank-Cavalier Invitational.

Also, it was Notre Dame 75, Marist 68; Alabama 70, Rider 50; Duke 78, Vanderbilt 74; Michigan 55, Toledo 52; Ohio State 94, Akron 78; Utah 63, Kansas State 53; Wichita State 59, Lamar 58; and Washington 54, Texas Tech 45.

The long-awaited Kentucky-Louisville showdown turned out to be a showcase for the talented Wildcats. Strengthened by the return of 7-1 Sam Bowie, who has missed two years with a broken leg. Kentucky simply wore down Louisville. Jim Master had 19 points and Mel Turpin 16 for Coach Joe B. Halls team but Bowie with 10 rebounds, five blocked shxAs, five assists and three steals, was a major factor. He also shot eight free throws and hit seven of them.

I wish Id had Sam in March, noted HaU somewhat wistfully, reflecting on Louisvilles 80-68 thumping of the Wildcats which thrust the Cardinals into the Final Four last spring.

Miamis upset of Indiana was the (Mtiduct of preparation for the underdog Redskins.    j||

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Mony Americans Adopting Korean Chiidren

BySEHYONJOH AuociatedPms Writer NEW YORK (AP)-When Nancy Reagan brought two Korean children back to the UnitMi States last week for heart surgery, it spotlighted a threeoecade love affair between Ameficans and youngsters from that small Asian nation.

Since the Korean War, more than 10,000 Korean children have been ack^ by American parents, many of whom could not have children (rf their own.

They arent the first Korean kids helped by American surgeons. Dr. Harvey Oermont, a surgeon at St. Vincents Hospital in Worcester, Mass., has arranged f(w 16 South Korean children to undergo delicate surgery to repair heart ailments.

All but one got well after their operations and eight of them spent some time with us before returning home, said Ann Clermont, the surgeons wife. They were such wonderful kids, we came to miss them very much, and that was when we decided to adopt two Korean children -a brother and sister - four yearsago

Then they adopted four more, Clerrncmt said, because our Korean son and daughter grew up to be such

well-behaved and lovely childiw.

We got greedy, you see, Mrs. Clermont ad(W.

The Clermonts are one of

several thousand Aihmcan families who have adofAed Korean children this year after waiting a year or longer.

Phyllis Lowenstcin, directs of the Intmmational Adc^icm Agency in Boston, saia the total number of American families a(k^ing

Korean children this year could reach 3,000.

Mrs. Lowenstein said her agency, one the largest in the nation, is now processs-ing ^ to 400 families and is receiving an average of 10 applications a week. More than two-thirds of the families want to adopt Korean children.

The Kwean babies are considered to be most desirable as they are clean and well cared for, Mrs. Lowenstein said. And... the (South Korean) government is taking an active role in making babies available for adaption both at home and alHDad.

An official of another adoption agency, who asked to remain anonymous, said there are plenty of babies available in Korea for overseas adoption becai^ not enough Koreans are adopting (Hphans and abandoned babies.

They put a great em-ph^is on the bloodline, the official said, and some Korean parents go to

PEANUTS

extraordinary lengths to maintain it.

In order to obtain male babies, f<w instance, some wives let their husbands contract with young women to bear their husband smis. If the baby turns out to be a girl, both mother and child would be sent away. These unwanted female babies and children oftoi end up in

orphanages. Sout

nth Koreas so-called baby-export program began during the 1950-53 Korean War, when many children were orphaned, and expanded greatly in the early 1970s. According to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, only 845 Korean children were aik^ted in the United States in 1970, compared with 4,848 in 1976 and 2,686 in 1980.

There are five adoption agencies in Korea which are licensed by the K(^n government to place on^ns with foreign adq}tion agencies.

The Korean agencies operate with discretion,

because of criticism in that country of the foreiegn adoptions.

Toe Korean government had reportedly decided that it would reduced its baby exports by 20 percent in 1979 and further cut the number in 1980 before ending them by 1981. But adi^ions by United States and Western Europ-pean families continue.

The Korean Ministry (rf Health and Social Welfare has declined comment on all aspects of the countrys adoption policies.

But Tae-Wan Yu, director of the Korean Cultural Service in New Ymi, said the Seoul government is trying to encourage Koreans to adopt orphans while at the same time trying to reduce the number of babies fm-overseas adoption.

I havent heard that the Korean government planned to phase out the baby exp(^ pr^am, Mrs. Lowenstein said if it is true, it would be a bad news for nuny American couples.

Possible By Cmstitiitioi

NEW YORK (AP)-From the pulpit of an Episcopal cathedral, Gov. Mario Cuomo explained how he, a Roman Catholic, can represent people of any faith or no faith - by standing on the Constitution.

The governor, dressed in red robes, was delivering a sermon Sunday at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, opening a series of advent sermons.

(Quoting a letter asking how he could call himself a Christian and ban discrimination against homosexuals in state government, Cuomo said he was involved in a world that included people who dont believe a things I believe about God and conduct.

He added, The Constitution said that where matters of private morality are involved, actions that don't harm other people or deprive them of their rights, the state has no right to interfere.

He said it was not his role to l^islate my particular morality.

As for a Catholic preaching from an Episcopal pulpit, Cuomo quoted Benjamin Franklin on the difference between the two:

The Roman Church claims to be infallible while the Episcopal thinks of itself asnever in the wrong.

FAMILY PORTRAIT Dr. children and their six adopted Harvey Clermont and his wife Ann Korean children at their Shrewsbury, pose with two of their three natural Mass. home. (APLaserphoto)

PUBLIC NOTICES

-

Mavlno qualified n Executor's of the estofe of W.R. Tyson lote of PIM County, North Ceroline, this is to notify ell persons tievlng claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor's on or before May 7, IVM or this notice or seme will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make immediate payment This 3rd dM of November ISU Vernon Tyson 224 Churchill Drive Greenville, N.C. 2734 L. Tyson 1409 Greenville Blvd.

Greenville, North CaroUna 27*34

E xecutor's of the estate of W.R. Tyson, deceased November 7,14,2), 2t, 19*3

StcFoTBI

TAKE NOTICE that in ac cprdance with Section 115-13* of the General Statutues of North Carolina, the Pitt County Board of Education having decided that the personal property described herein I* surplus and un necessary for school purpose, will sell to the highest bidder, for CASH, based on sealed bids submitted to the PIN County Schools Office, 1717 West 5th Street, Greenville. N.C. by 12:00 p m on WEDNESDAY, NOV EMBER 30. 19*3 the following described personalproperty:

1 Forge, Heat Treating Furnace Combination 1 Machine Lathe, 15" Cinclnati, 4*" centers 1 Machine Lathe, 12" Monarch, 30" centers 1 Universal Turret Lathe, Jones \ and Lawson 13 1 Bandsaw Blade Welder 1 - AC DC Welder, Linde, type C-300

The above described property will be sold for CASH as separate items and the sale will remain open for ten (10) days to permit the making of an upset bid The PIM County Board of Educa tion reserves the right to reiect any and all bids.

Items may be seen at Farmville Central High School, Hwy. 2*4A, Farmville, N.C. For Information visit the school or call Mr. Carl Toot, 752-610*.

November 3.11,20,2*. 19*3

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust made by Peter M. Bishop and Ben A. Bishop to Ernest VT Turnbull and Eloise B. Briley. Trustee(s), dated the 5th day of June, 19*1, and recorded in Book B 50, Page 25, PiM County Registry. North Carolina, Default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of trust and the undersigned, H. TERRY HUTCHENS, having been substituted as Trustee In said deed of trust by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of PIM County, North Carolina and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, M>e undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, PiM County. North Carolina at Ten (10:00) o'clock, A.M. on Friday, the 9th day of December, 19*3 and will sell to Mte highest bidder for cash the follow ing real estate situate in Township of Arthur, PIM County, North Carolina. and being more particularly described as follows:

Lot 2, Block E of Stoneybrook Subdivision, Addition II, as shown on map of record in Map Book 26, page 113 and 113A of the PiM County Registry. Including the single family dwelling located thereon,- said property being located 202 Foxfire Road, Farmville, North Carolina.

This sale Is made sub|ect to all taxes and prior liens or encumbrances of record against the said property and any recorded releases.

A cash deposit of ten percent

(10%) of the purchase price will be required at the time of the sale.

This 1*th day of November, 19*3.

H. Terry Hutchens,

Susbtitute Trustee HUTCHENS 4 WAPLE AMorneys at Law TV 40 Building 230 Donaldson Street P.O. Box 650

FayeMeville, North Carolina 2*302 November28; Decembers, 1983

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

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Editorials

Seeing The Light?

Occasionally one feels compelled to say hooray when Congress exhibits a sampling of common sense. Such is the case with that 59-38 vote that tabled, effectively killing this year, legislation that would have granted huge tax credits for parents opting to send their children to private secondary schools.

Surprisingly, Sen. John East followed Sen. Jesse Helms and the Reagan administration line in voting for the proposal, C(Hitending it was for lower-income people who cannot send their children to private schools who would like a choice but do not have it today.

Hogwash. Private schools as a whole still are an outgrowth of the integration problems incurred in the 1950s and 1960s and carryover in todays public school systems where the white flight has eroded efforts to end segregation. Parents with money send their children to private schools and they dont want to support public schools. The less-affluent parents and the Senate bill would have applied to families with incomes up to $40,000, hardly a low-income family send their children to public schools and demand more help from their tax monies.

When government elects to spend that money elsewhere, say on publicly funded abortions rather than textbooks, schools suffer and more children are diverted to private schools.

We really dont know why the Senate tabled the tuition tax credit this year. It may simply have been a partisan political thing although 24 Republicans voted to table the measure. We hope its an indication that Congress and this nation finally are beginning to see the light, that public education is a historical mandate in this country and should not be given second or third billing to anything other than possibly national defense.

Fund the schools adequately, cut out the red tape embroiling them in costly administrative delays and let teachers do what they do best teach. Then parents just might not want to send their children to private schools.

Soon, A Time To Act

The Research Triangle Institute study, which recommended consolidation of the city and county school systems, was received some time back.

City School Superintendent Delma Blinson and Coimty School Superintendent Eddie West indicated to the county commissioners last week that the matter has not been dormant. Meetings are being held with various groups throughout the county to explain the findings of the study.

That is certainly a logical approach and one to be applauded.

Soon, however, there must come a time to act. The problems created by the separate school systems with rigid district lines are accumulating. They must be resolved with the best interest of our students and our taxpayers in mind.

Paul O'Connor

John Cunniff-r-

How And Where

NEW YORK (AP) Whatever may be the eventual fate of the Grace committees report on cutting government costs, it has laid to rest at least two questions that have always plagued cost-cutters;

How and where.

In view of 41 reports having been issued containing 2,287 recommendations that have the potential for cutting $365.3 billion in three years, how can the two questions be seriously posed any more?

They will be, of course, because it is almost a matter of theology now that there is no room to cut the budget, 75 percent of it being foreordained by legal commitments and much of the remainder being for defense or social needs.

But now, at least, there is ammunition to counter the contention that there is no room in the budget for cuts.

Consider these suggestions from the commission, formally called the Presidents Private Sector Survey on Cost Control:

-A $12 billion savings over a three-year period by improving the strategic rianning of research and development by Hinging R&D up to prvate-sector standards, which it lags by five to 10 years.

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

IM Colanclw StrMi, QrMmrilla, N.C. 77U4

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PubUalwd Monday Through Friday Aftarnoon and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD Chairman of tho Board

JOHN S. WHICHARD-OAVID J. WHICHARD PubUtlMra

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Pttt And AdloMng Countioa $4.00 Por Month Elaowhoro In North Carolina $4.35 Por Month Outaido North Carolina $5.50 Par Month MEMBER OF SSOCIATSOPtteSS Tho Aaaodatod Proaa la oxcluaivoly ontHlod to uao for pubUcalion all nowa dtapalchos crodHod to H or not othorwlao crodHod to thia papor and alao tho local nowa pubUahod horoin. All righia of puUlcallona of apodal dfapatchoa horo aro alao roaonrod.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Advortlaing raloa and doadNnoa avadabio uponroquoal.

Mombor AudK Butmu of Circuiation

-A three-year savings of more than $3.4 billion by having the Defense Department buy more supplies from dual sources rather than from just one company.

-A savings of at least $13.2 billion in three years through improved management of military inventories and by having the military use common parts and standards.

-A potential savings of $28.4 bilion in three years by transferring a variety of government operations to private contractors.

Nobody, incluiling J. Peter Grace, survey chairman and chairman also of W.R. Grace & Co., expects it will be easy to implement the recommendations, which are the work of 161 corporate chief executives and 1,300 volunteers.

For one thing, nearly 60 percent of the recommendations require action by Congress, which hasnt been a particularly enthusiastic supporter of cuts in the past. For another, some cuts wont win the approval of all taxpayers.

Labor, for example, might object to eliminating the Davis-Bacon Act, which requires contractors to pay workers on federal projects the local areass prevailing wage. The purpose was to discorage contractors from importing low-cost labor. The result, says the survey, is $1 billiwi a year of waste.

But, J. Peter Grace suggests, in so many recommendations there are bound to be cuts acceptable to the majority of people. In fact, he points out that some recommendations already have been implemented.

Among them:

-A new cash management plan that might save as much as $4.7 blUon on the fiscal 1985 budget.

-A reduction of 1,200 federal employees from the Department of Health and Human Services, with an estimated $172 million in savings over three years.

-A decision by the Deprtment of Education to get serious witn non-payers of student loans, with the initial focus on 41,000 current or retired federal employees who owe more than $65 miuion.

A small begining, but more cuts seem inevitable. The suggestions, Grace says, are ageless If not acted upwi immediately they dont lose value. Not must they be implemented in full: a bit at a time is still iMDgress.

TTie recommendations are now down on paper, and the final report is scheduled for next month.

Theres no way to cut the budget? Well, here are 2,287 ^ic qptions fw cutting, with details on bow and whore.

CARY - Several parent-teacher group in this Raleigh suburb got a big surprise when they started setting up their fall fundraising raffles this year. They found that theyd almost broken the law.

Hie General Assembly this year rewrote the states bingo laws and, in the process put a license reauirement on any group that wish to hold a raffle, too. Unfortunately, no one made much of an effort to tell the public about the raffle license law and the press - including this reporter - missed the story in its rush to report all the changes in the bingo laws.

When we first heard about (the license), we just panicked, said Roni Fourie, chairman of the Parent-Teachers Association (PTA) fall festival planned for a Cary elementary school. But the panic wasnt necessary. Her group was quickly able to eet the required license and the raffle ended up raising more than $2,000.

Raffles Almost Break The Law

other group havent been so lucky. Carol Maidon, presidrat of a junior hi^ prent-teachers organization (PTO) said in an interview that her group had to cancel a raffle planned for the spring. But she concedes that her group was lucky. At least they have time to plan another fundraiser. Other organizations which had planned fall raffles were forced to cancel them, Mrs. Maidon said, and didnt really have time to plan a substitute.

The licenses are free and can be obtained from any local office of the state Department of Revenue. For some group, like the PTA to which Mrs. Fourie belongs, the single pge license application can be a snap. For others, like Mrs. Maidons PTO, the application process could take montte.

The difference involves a groups tax exempt status. To get the license, a group must show that both the state and federal governments recognize it as a tax

exempt charity under specific provisions of the tax code. If the group does not have such a status, it can use the tax exemption that its parent group has.

Thus, PTAs can use the state and national PTA tax exemption. Mrs. Maidon says that as PTA's around the state have heard about the new law, theyve inundated the state PTA headquarters with requests fOT letters certifying their tax exempt status. But PTOs are indepndent and they dont have any national groups tax exemption to fall back upon. So they lose out. As Mrs. Maidon said, it would take months to get a^^tax exemption from the Internal Revenue Service.

One local groups was less concerned about applying for an application than in making sure it hadnt a ready broken the law. TTie Cary News reported that a Cary junior high PTO had already completed a raffle when officers learned of the new law. PTO officials immediately tried to contact the attorney generals office to

ISWmTK

SARTYOFiMtio*,

MOSeWLm

OF B.05IW

lAOPT-A-TW

I RUBaifiCITY.LeBANOM

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Mike Feinsllber

Registering The Poor For '84

WASHINGTON (AP) -A campaign has been started to register as many as five million poor people as voters when they go to government agencies to apply for benefits such as food stamps, unemployment compensation, health care and the like.

Most of the new registration would occur in the big industrial states that a presidential candidate usually has to carry to win.

But William Greener, communications director for the Republican National Committee, says President Reagan has nothing to fear from the campaign if it is as nonpartisan as its sponsors claim.

Greener said Reagan can win his share of votes from the pwr, who, he said, benefit just like everyone else from the

sharp decline in the inflation rate that has occurred during his presidency.

Other voter registration campaigns are planned for 1984, including an attema by the National CoalitiOT on Black Voter Participation to add 2 million to 10 million blacks now registered.

But what is unusual about the program to register recipients of government services is the attempt to enlist the government workers who handle benefit applications as part-tim^ voter registrars.

The poor would be signed up to vote at the time and place they go to get benefits. Just before election day, they would be encouraged by social service workers to vote.

If the idea catches on. President Reagans re-election prospects might suffer the consequences.

The poor are not only those least likely to vote but they may be inclined to vote against the Republican candidate, especially one who has cut the budgets of programs that benefit the poor.

Greener says the GOP believes in 100 percent citizen participation in elections and has no objection to registration drives.

But I think the taxpay- ers are going to take an awfully dim view of this if there is a belief that it is an attempt for partisan gain, he said. I dont have a view because Im not intimately familiar with it.

Sixteen organizations that represent social service workers or agencies - from Planned Parenthood to the American Public Health Association - have endorsed the plan and are represented on a

Louise Cook

Shoplifting Time

Tis the season of increased retail theft by shoplifters and sticky-fingered employes,, but the economic recovery may mean less stealing this year.

But the recession has had an impact, nonetheless. People in 1982 were hurt by the recession, Mrs. Shem said. People were trying to maintain their economic "As retailers begin a new holiday    status. To keep up with what theyd had,

shopping season, they must contend with    they had to go out and steal something.

Richard Hersh, president of the Na-

and

ail

a problem that drives up costs ultimately affects the prices will pay, said Errol M. Cook, head of the national retail group of the accounting and consulting firm of Arthur Young.

A survey by Young of 180 retail organizations with 36,000 outlets and sales of nearly $100 billion, shows pilferage and other shrinkage last year represented 2.2 percent of sales, up slightly from 1981. That means that $2.20 of every $100 you spend at a discount, department or specialty store disappears to theft, loss. etc. (Some surveys show losses ranging up to 7 percent, but they show a broader range of outlets, including things like supermarkets.)

Stephanie Shern, retail industries director of accounting and auditing for Arthur Young, said there are several reasons for the increase in theft at Christmas time. Between now and right after the holidays, there are more customers in the store, she said. And more customers make it harder to watch shoppers. Mrs. Shern said the last quarter of the year may account for up to 75 percent of sales and 50 percent of profits for a successful retailer.

Contrary to common belief, the Young survey said, most shoplifters are not unemployed; 62 percent of the men and

tional Mass Retailing IiBtitute, which commissioned the Young study, is hopeful. This years economic upturn coiild have a positive effect in somewhat lowering the pilferage rate, he said.

When Hersh talks about pilferage, he doesnt mean only shoplifters.

board of directors of a new group created to carry it out. They call the drive the Human Service Employees Registration, Voting and Education Campaign. Civil rights veteran Hulbert James is executive director.

So far, the organizers say they have raised $200,000 and plan to raise $200,000 more. They are sending paid orgiiiizers into the states to enlist social services workers as volunteer voter registrars.

The money collected came from human service workers themselves and in gifts ranging from $2,500 to $30,000 from 15 foundations, according to Richard Cloward, a professor at Columbia University's School of Social Work. He is one of the organizers.

The concept was tested in New York City last spring. Cloward said employees of 75 agencies enrolled 42,000 new voters at public health clinics, senior centers, settlement houses, family planning clinics, unemployment offices - and even in che^e lines - in an eight-week drive.

Cloward. James and Frances Fox Piven of the City University of New York came up with the idea.

The organizers ducked questions about whether they expected the newly registered poor to vote against Reagan if he seeks re-election. Instead, they stressed their view that the campaign will change the long-term character of politics by making poor people a powerful interest group that politicians will heed.

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

Be your own boss.

There is no advice which modern men and women welcome more cordially than this. To go ones own way, to live ones life independent of everything and everybody, is widely considered a most desirable state to be in.

But being ones own boss is not so easy as all that. Many people who boast the loudest about being their own boss are under

us, if we burn with envy or lose our tempers, if we hate somebody, we are not our own boss no matter what our external condition and circumstances may be.

The Lord rejoices in the free and untranimeled spirit of those who have cast off flie servitude of weakness and are willing to pay the cost of righteous living; but those who think that liberty is merely the living of ones life without regard to others are

unempioyeu; w perceni 01 me men ana    it

51 percent of the women ipprehended by servitude of some weakness, defying the MjU and purpose of retailers reporting to Young had jobs.    If passion or appetite still holds the Almighty.

see what could be done. The deputy attorney general most familiar with tte new law could not be reached for cimiment about that situation.

How did the new law just sneak up on the public? Don Shirley, assistant director of the Department of Revenues Divisitm of Licenses and Excise Taxes, says that (tepartment made an effort to get the word out.

Shirley says his department provided the Department of Jitttice with chptes the new law plus regulations com^ming the raffles and bingo games. These were to be distributed to local police. Since the old law said that those planning to hold a raffle had to inform local police, Shirley said this method should nave wOTked. When people came in to inform the police, they should have been told of the new licensing requirement. Individually contacting all 48,000 tax exempt charities in the state would have been impossiUe, he said.

James Kilpatrick

Freedom

SCRABBLE, Va. - The letter frwn an Indiana lawyer came on Saturday. On Sunday night came ABCs broadcast of The Day After, Now it is Thanksgiving, and it occurs to me that a theme for the holiday occasion is at hand.

The lawyer identified himself in this fashion: He has spent 40 years as a teacher, a law professor, a politician and a practicing attorney. For the past four years he has beoi engaged in a special research project, intended to examine the concept and understanding of freedmn in America. This was his melancholy conclusion:

I have discovered a lack of understanding, little respect for, and virtually no acceptance of the principles of freedom among many Americans.

In the gentlemans view, we have lost that fierce love of libe^y, in Edmund Burkes memorable phrase, which once characterisaed our people. I have been unable to find any program designed to restore the love of freedom among my fellow citizens.

' If that is indeed the sad stated affairs in our country, we may as weU resign ourselves to a day after unlike the devastation depicted in , Sunday nights film. This would be the day after our surrender to the Soviet Union, when our undefdided principles of freedom would be reduced to metaphorical rubble.

But I am not at all certain that the situation is as gloomy as my friend in Indiana has found it to be. On the contrary, it seems to me that smne eloquent testimony to our kwe of freedom can be found in thd films iHtHidcast and in the circumstances surrounding it.

Americans may not be able to define the cimc^t of freedom^ in sentences and paragraphs that would satisfy a law professor, but they have a sure g^p of free(k)m in particular applications. Think for a momoit; Here was a privately owned bitjad-casting network, transmitting this highly controversial film to privately owned stations. The netwoak was free to make its broadcast; the affiliates were free to carry it tt they chose. Nothing of this sort could have haii^ned in the totalitarian society of the Soviet Unimi.

During the we^ preceding the broadcast, various groups piMicly demonstrated. Most of them were pacifist croups, urging that atomic weapons be abolished, ^blic opinion polls suggest that an overwhdming majority of Ammcans oraose the pacifist line, but it was umversally understood that the advocates d ban-the-bomb were free to assemUe and to demonstrate to their hurts content.

In Kansas City a prayer vigil coincided with the films broadcast. The film itself contained a segment staged in a ruined church in the poiod following the atomic exchange. The American pe(^le could not write a scholarly treatise on the topic, but they know what freedom of nuigion is all about.

The Day After provided a covot stoi^ for Newsweek magazine. Hundreds of newspapers editorialized on the matter. Following the broadcast, ABC assigned reporter Ted Kcppel to interview Secretary of State Gem^e Shultz. Two former Cabinet members, an educator, a retired general, an astronomer and a distinguished conservative editor joined in the discmuiiOTi. Can anyone imagine such an interview and analysis in the Soviet Union?

Do Americans understand what is meant by their freedom? Of course they do. We are free to vote for our own elected officials. We are free to own and convey ixt>perty. We are free to travel. We are free to think, to speak, to write, to worehip, to demand and to get due (Hoeess of law. Tell me not in mmlniful numbers! The spirit of freedom may seem feeble now and then, but if lives , - and it thrives on such incid as "The Day After.

Ours is a fearful nation in a fearful world, but fear in itself is nothing to be ashamed of. Prqierly chamaisd, fear leads to prudence and prudioce leads to wise precautions, andthat is where we stand now..T arms control aside fc





.Tamower Killer Says Being. In Prison Makes No Sense

By EILEEN PUTMAN Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP)-In her third year bdiind bars fw killing Scarsdale Diet doctor Herman Tarnower, Jean Harris says she survives a prison life that makes no sense because she knows the diiforence between con-victk and guilt.

The brilliant, brittle W(ian who once discoursed to the daughters of the wealthy at an exclusive gmls school now expounds on the shortcomings of the prison systm.

Prison life is so stupid." she said in a recent ixtiad-cast interview at the Bedford IfiUs Correctional Facihty. Bmng here makes no sense. ... Eveiyone in hwe isn t a criminal f(%ver.

Although in prison possibly for life, the former headmistress remains as strong-willed as ever. ^ has been the subject of three books, a television movie and a Barbara Walters interview, and has waged a vigorous, now-desperate l^al battle to gain her freedmn. In recent months, she has become deeply involved in inmates' rights.

Being convicted and being guilty are two very different things, she said, 'i think thats why Ive survived in here.

Now 60, Mrs. Harris is serving a sentence of 15

Cto life for shooting iwer to death at his Purchase, N.Y., estate on March 10, 1980, in what prosecutors said was a jealous rage over another woman.

She contoided the shooting was an accident that occurred as she was trying to kill herself over her failed 14-year affair with Tamower and other posonal [oblems. However, the gun went off five times, and the jury convicted her (rf murder.

I have to live with the fact that there are always going to be a lot of people who think I drove tour hours, walked into His bedroom and pumped five bullets into him, Mrs. Harris said.

The former headmistress of the Madeira School in McLean, Va., commented to WPIX-TV and WMCA radio recently as a state appeals court was deciding whether to give her a new trial.

Previous ai^ls, all the way to the SujM'eme Court, have been exhausted.

I dont think about my future. Never, never, never, she said, shaking her head.

"If did. Id be a very despon-

PRISON LIFE...Jean Harris, left, convicted of killing Scarsdale Diet developer Herman Tamower, is in

terviewed by Barbara Walters at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in New York. (AP Laserphoto)

dent woman. The only thing that offers any future is to have a retrial and to have justice done.

The appeals court has agreed to hold a hearing on the issue (tf a new trial on grounds she was physically and mentally disturbed and could not assist in her trial defense.

And, during an interview on WMCA, one of her jurors called to say she felt something was wTMig with the original verdict and that Mrs. Harris deserved a new trial.

But Mrs. Harris is not idly waiting for the prison gates to open.

She is putting her teaching

experience to work, helping inmates with basic skills. She is on the committee that serves as a liaison between the inmates and administrators. She speaks out on prison reform and is compiling a book of letters between children and their incarcerated mothers. She reads and studies.

Some things have not changed. There are still signs of the woman whose penchant for Chanel-style suits, pearls and fur hats made her something of a fashion plate at her munter trial. Her hair is longer, for example, but she still adorns it prep school-style with barrettes and headbands.

And while she contributes

to prison life, it is evident that she still sees herself apart from it.

The people who come to Mison, a lot of them, are not lighly motivated selfstarters, she said. I see how limited the lives of th^ women are. They arent aware of flowers. I havent even heard one exclaim over a beautiful moon.

While she says she has learned what it is to Uve like an animal in a cage, Mrs. Harris still beUeves she copes better than the younger inmates. I have lived most of my life and I dont feel cheated the way some of these young women naturaUydo,shesaid.

IfaMst 6dkfy forSp^an.

815 DickliMon Ave.

Cakes, Pies, Cookies & -Pastries For The Holidays

752-5251

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Prss Food Editor

BRUNCH FARE Strawberry Grapefruit Bacon 4 Eggs 4 Toast Danish Pastry 4 Coffee

STRAWBERRY GRAPEFRUIT You can prepare the grapefruit the ni^t before serving and store it in the refrigerator.

2 large grapefruit lOounce package frozen halved strawberries in syrup

2 tablespoons domestic or imported kirsch (clear cherry brandy)

Halve grapefruit crosswise.

Heritage and Lenoir Streets

Kinston, N.C.

919-523-7002

Pre-Christmas

Warehouse Sale

Mens Beautifui Plaid Shirts Ladies Dresses

Large Selection Of Ladies Blouses Great Savings On Sweaters-

December 3.1983 Saturday 8:00 til 2:00

Nantuckets Retail Store In Greenville Will Also Have A Pre-Christmas Sale With Selected Merchandise Drastically Reduced:

Sale Starts Wed., Nov. 30th Thru Dec. 3.

Cut around dividing memtnunes and remove sections to a bowl or refrigerator container; add the juice squeezed from the grapefruit halves. Cover and refrigerate. Shortly before serving thaw the strawberries according to package directiofs and stir into the grapefruit with the kirsch. Serve in sherbet glasses or dessert bowls. Makes 3 cups -6 servings.

COMPANY LUNCH Tuna 4 Avocado Molds Hot Buttermilk Biscuits Cookies 4 Coffee

AVOCADO MOLDS They have mild flavor.

1 envelope unflavored gelatin

*/4 cup cold water ^4 cup boiling water

2 medium avocados

3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 small scallion, finely

chopped l-3rd cup mayonnaise Salt to taste

In a medium bowl sprinkle gelatin over cold water and let staml until gelatin softens -about 5 minutes. Add boiling water; stir to dissolve gelatin.

Halve, seed and peel avocados; mash enough to make V/2 cups; add to gelatin with lemon juice, scallion, mayonnaise and salt; stir until blended. (Sprinkle any leftover avocado with extra lemon juice and refrigerate to use as a garnish for the molds.) Chill molds to set. Unmold at serving time and serve on lettuce accompanied by French drying. Makes 6 servings.

Craft Show To Open Dec. 3

ROCKY MOUNT - The Planters Craftmens Guild will have its 14th annual craft show Dec. 3-4 at the National Guard Armory here. The hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday.

The show will include handmade country curtains, clocks, furniture, wreaths, Christmas ornaments, jewelry, pillows, dolls, woodwork, needlework and others. Baked Moravian and Greek

He Chooses Not To Play In Her Game

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by UniMfMl Ptm, Syndtcal,

DEAR ABBY: I need your advice. I did a very dumb thing. There is a newspaper reporter in towm I wanted to meet, so I seht him a cute card with no signature. About a week later I called him. He seemed intrigued and aaked me if I would have lunch with him. Instead of giving him my own name, I gave him the name of a girl I work with, and the phone number of the office.

He called the office and asked for June, the girl whose name I gave him, and, of course, she had no idea who he was. I squared it with her later, then I called him up to explain. He juat laughed it off, but didnt mention lunch.

Well, I railed him a few days later. He was nice enough, but he didnt ask to see me, so I said, Hey, what happened to lunch? He said, Oh, maybe sometime, which is a nice way of telling me to get lost, right? I want very much to meet him and get to know him. I sent him another card, but I havent heard from him.

Now what do I do? Hes 28 and Im 26.

SORRY

DEAR SORRY: You blew it when yon gave him the wrong name. Cool it. If he wanta to meet you, he has your numberin more ways than one.

DEAR ABBY: Eight years ago I wrote to you concerning a problem we were havipg with our son, who was then in the third grade. His teacher told us he was having difficulty keeping up with his class because he couldnt read. (She even hinted that he might be slightly retarded.) She said he was also a discipline problem and she couldnt promote him to the fourth grade.

I wrote to you in desperation, and you suggested I write to the Association for (Children with Learning Disabilities. I did, and I want you to know that the organization helped us enormously. Our problem child is now a high school senior who qualifies for college!

Abby, please acquaint others with this wonderful group. Had it not been for you, we never would have knovra about it.

GRATEFUL MOTHER

DEAR GRATEFUL: Thanks for the opportunity to remind parents again to take a closer look at their clumsy 3-year-old who cant ait still and is hard to handle, or the slow learner whos a troublemaker at school and disrupts the class.

That child could be brighter than average but afflicted with a learning disability that is treatable if detected early.

For information, write to: The Society for Children and Adults with Learning Disabilities, 4166 Library Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. 16234. Its non-profit, so please enclose a long, stamped, self-addresaed envelope.

DEAR ABBY: This is for the person who said he couldnt afford counseling. Abby, when my physician r^mmended counseling, I, too, said I couldnt afford it. Five years later, I had a nervous breakdown. I still couldnt afford counseling, but I went. And unlike any medical doctors I have found thus far, this therapist put her fees at the bottom of the list of priorities. I paid what I could when I could while my bill mounts up. After two years, I walked from her office a new person.

My life these past six years has been wonderful. Three months ago I made my last payment to her. I am not even aware of what the total bill was, and I dont care to know. Whatever it was, it isnt enough to pay for what she did for me.

Abby, dont let anyone stop you from recommending counseling. There is no way to describe the difference it has made in my life.

OLDER, WISER AND NOT BANKRUPT

DE^ ABBY: When J. answered my ad for a pon-smoking roommate, she admitted that she smoked but was trying to quit I told her that I would encourage her efforts to quit smokmg and I accepted her. Its been six months and J. is still smoking! She keeps promising to quit but shes still smoking.

I really dislike it because (1) I am a nurse and I know what smoke does to the lungs; (2) she smells bad; (3) even though she smokes only in her room, the rest of the apartment smells of smoke.

Since I advertised for a non-smoker, do I have the right to tell her she will have to move?

CLEAN LUNGS

DEAR CLEAN: You accel>ted J. as a roommate knowing that she smoked but was trying to quit. She thought she could, and you thought you could help her. You were both mistaken. Talk turkey. Tell J. if she isnt clean by Thanksgiving, she will have to find another roommate.

Bridge

Winners

Winnm in the Wednesday morning Team of Four Game played at Planters Bank were; Mrs. Stuart Page, Mrs. Sidney Skiim, Mrs. Effie Williams and Mrs. Charles MitcheU, first; BIrs. Bertha Jones, Mrs. Blanche KittreU, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Smiley, second.

North-South winners Wednesday afternoon included: Mrs. Sd Schechter and Mrs. Max Chused, first with .672 percent; Mrs. Barry Powers and Mrs. Wiley Corbett, second; Ed Yauck and Ray Neeland, third.

East-West; Tied for first were Mrs. Beulah Eagles and Mrs. Robert Barnhill with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew deShrtHin, with .562 percent; Mr. and Mrs. Gewge Martin, third.

Satuniay afternoon winners included; tied for first were Mrs. J.M. Horton and

Dave Proctor with Barbara Wright and Mildred JoUes, with .615 percent; Mr. and Mre. Wes% Webb, third; Sara Bradbury and Dr, Charles Duffy, fourth.

East-West; Mrs. Robert Barnhill and Mrs. Joyce Lamm, first with .560 percent; Ed Yauck and Mis. Robert Blenk, second; Emma Warren and Effie Williams, third; Ida Rowe and Edna Rowlette, fourth.

Charity club championships will be held Wednesday morning and afternoon.

ae IV of England was crowned in 1821, but bis wife, Caroline, was locked out of Westminster Abbey during the (XHonatkm.

CNTURV 21

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Mon. Wed. 10 to 8 Thur. ft Fri. 10 to 9 Sat. 10 to 6

items ^ also be available.

Participants in the show are from eastern North Carolina and one from Virginia Beach, Va.

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Tuesday Night Is Hallmark Night!

All merchandise from Hallmark

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WICKER HEADQUARTERS

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Woody

Peele

East Cantinas basketball Pirates opoied the season Saturday night on a bright note, downing Campbell University, 75-66, and but fw the fact that the Buc club is a young one it could have been much more decisive.

Elast Carolinas starting line features only one senior - point guard Tony Robinson, and one junior - forward Barry Wright. There is little in the way of experience beyond them.

The starting lineup on Saturday night featured three freshmen, center Roy Smith, forward Derrick Battle and guard William Grady. A couple of other freshmoi, Jack Tumbill and Keith Sledge saw playing time, along with sophomore Curt Vanderhorst.

As can be expected from such a young group of players, there were mistakes and lapses of concentration. At times, they appeared to be freelancing on (rffense, and that cost the Pirates some opportunities to soxe.

Defensively, however, they did an outstanding job, credited with ten steals and eight blocked shots. Several times, their quickness resulted in stealing passes out of a zone defense in front of the key-

All-in-all, the Pirates show a ^eat deal of promise of things to come. How quickly they can be molded into a consistant basketball team will tell how quickly they become a threat in the ECAC-South race. It may not come this year, but it definitely shows sigi^ of coming.

Harrison was especially pleased with the hustle of the team, regardless of the situation. As long as they continue to play hard, the coach said after the game, they w^ continue to improve.

Each of the freshmen seem to have good qualities that will come to the fore. Grady has the reputation of a defensive specialist, but also one who can drive to the basket if giving half a chance. Smith, whose arms seem to stretch to extra length, can be a terror around the gla^. Several times Saturday night, he came up with loose balls thatothers probably wouldnt have gotten.

Tumbill shows promise of being a fine front court player. Right now his shots are just off target, but he follows them well, and gets to the boards quite well. Battle appears to have the ability to take the ball inside or pop away from the outside, too.

Vanderhorst played what was one of his better games as a Pirate, while Sledge, playing only a sh(Hl time, looked good while he was out there.

Harrison talks about the needed strength of the players. This is different from stamina and conditioning. The front court people, especially, need to add bulk to their bodies and gain the ability to muscle the ball away from others. This will come with their maturity.

Charlie Harrison says he wants to build a program at East Carolina not just a team. If the likes of the freshman class are the hallmark of that building program, things seem to be off to a good start.

It will take time, however, and fans should have some patience. However, support is needed too, and this club is definitely worth watching.

With Alabamas loss to Boston College this past weekend, the chance of another 6-5 team in the bowl picture is increased. The Crimson Tide, currently 6-4, has one game left before the bowls, with Auburn, and unless theres an upset, Bama will go in with a fifth loss.

In a way, its fitting, since it was a 6-5 Alabama team some years ago that went to the Liberty Bowl with a 6-5 record and started the trend of names rather than ability.

Kriek Must Wait To Defend Aussie Title

Bv The Associated Press Johan Kriek won one tournament but will have to wait a little longer than planoed to begin defense of another of his titles.

Kriek captured the South African Opr Sunday by outlasting Colin Dowdeswell of Britain H H 1-6. 7-5, 6-3.

Now the South African-born Kriek will travel to Melbourne, where he has won the last two Australian Opens.

That $1 million tournament, the last Grand Siam event on the tennis calendar, will not begin today as scheduled.

Tournament director Colin Stubs said thunderstorms Sunday left the grass courts at the Kooyone Stadium saturated and the opting mat

ches would have to be rescheduled.

Qualifying matches for the tournament that were to have been played over the weekend were moved to synthetic courts around Melbmime to-day.Officials will inspect the courts at Kooyong later today to see how many will be fit for play Tuesday, Stubs said.

iWe were 16 mens singles matches scheduled for today, though all of the top players in the event had byes.

John McEnroe is the favorite to unseat Kriek, who beat American Steve Denton in 1961 and 1962. McEnroe also comes off a vict(My Sunday whn he downed top-seeded Iva Lendl of Czechoslovakia in ymatch in the Australian

capital of Canberra.

McEnroe won the only other major tourney played on grass this year, at Wimbledon.

Krieks victory in Johannesburg took three hours. Dowdeswell held a 3-1 advantage in the final set but Kriek won the next five games.

In Toulouse, France, Heinz Gunthardt of Switzerland beat Perus Pablo Arraya 64), 6-2 to win a $100,000 Grand Prix tournament. The top-seeded Gunthardt took advantage of 30 unforced errors by Arraya.

In womens play, Jo Durie of Britain won the $150,000 NSW Building Society Open in Sydney, Australia. Dune underwent 30 minutes of treatment for a pulled back muscle before downing Kathy Jordan 6-3, 7-5 in 75 minutes. Durie was seeded third and Jordan fourth.

1 had treatment on my back for the last three days and before the match, said Durie. Otherwise, I dont think I could have played. It has been extremely painful over the last two days, but it is getting better all the time.

Durie raced through the first set in 33 minutes and built a 5-1 lead in the second set before Jordan won the next four games and saved a match Mint. Then Durie took charge or the next two games.

Top quality, fuel-econi cars can be found at low in Classified.

Smith's Feelings Mixed Over UnC

Rost Ramptttts

Rose High Schools girls will open the 1983-84 basketball season Tuesday night against Jacksonville. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Lori Woolard, Cindy Humphrey, Vickie Parrott, Casey Drewery, Cheryl Clark,

Niansa Outlaw. Lisa TCevathan; second row. Dawn Lawning. Sheila Carmon, Doris Richardson. Pam Smith, Beteena Parker. Chris Holec, Tammy Newton and Pam Byrd. (Reflector Photo)

ByRICISCOPPE Awscialed Press Writer North Carolina head hcoach Dean Smith had mixed feelings after watching his No. 1-ranked Tar Heeb struggle pari Missoiri in their D63-84 seasoiH)pener.

I (fid think we piayed weO defemivriy. and we were ag-gresave on the backboards, ^th said after North Carolina defeated the 6447. I hope we can cootioue to be aggressive 00 defense.

North Carolina forced the 'figers into 24 hffoovers while committing just 13.

Smith was not as plei^ with his teams foul shooting. Ibe Tar Heels hit just 12 of 25 bee throws wMIe Missouri canned only 11 of 25.

Of course, Im disap-oted in our foul shooting. said.

Meanwhile, North Carolina

Redskins Lock Playoff Berth

By The Associated Press

The defending Sup Bowl champion Washington Redskins had just clinched an NFL playoff b^ and fullback John Riggins sought to be gracious about the vanquished.

Philadelphias not as bad a team as everybody gives them credit for, Riggins said. If anybody needs an affidavit that they came to play, I woiild be the first one to sign it.

Riggins scored two touchdowns, and Joe Tbeismann threw a pair of touchdown passes Sunday to give the Redskins a 28-24 victory over I^delphia in a game that caused Tbeismann to rue his choice of footwear.

By halftime, the score was 28-21, and the Washington quarterback was rraiinded of a 4847 loss to the Green Bay Pa(m seven weeks ago.

I thought it was going to be a Green Bay Packer shootout, Theismann said. I didnt bring my roUerskates, so I was glad it didnt go that way. We have three games left. If we lose one, we lose everything weve worked for.

Philadelphia could manage only a 52-yard Tony Franklin field goal in the second blf while holding Washington scoreless, and Tbeismann didnt need the wheels.

The Redskins, who have won seven straight, and the Dallas Cowlx^ both have 11-2 records and are the only two teams with a chance to win the NFC East. Dallas heat St. Louis 35-17 on Thanksgiving Day.

The teani that fails to win the division will get the NFC wild-card berth, so the only thing left at stake is the hcmie-field advantage, which the Re^kins used to beat Miami 27-17 in Super Bowl XVII. Dallas won the first meeting this year of the two teams, and they play again in two weeks.

Ri^ns gained 99 yards for 1,049 on the season. His two TDs gave him 21 for the season, breaking the NFL rec(xd of 19 he shared with Jim Taylor, (buck Muncie and Earl Campbell.

Tbe Los Angeles Raiders, meanwhile, trinuned their magk number to one for cfinchiog tbe American Conference West. With a 27-12 victory over the New York Giants, tbe 10-3 Raiders could have clinched if Seattle had lost to Kansas Gty.

But, in tbe third highest-scoring cune in NFL history, the Seahawks defeated tbe Chiefs 51-48 in overtiine and upi^ their record to 7-6, three gantes back of the Raiders with three games to i^y. Denver also was 7-6 after losing to San Diego, 31-7, but only the Seahawks by virtue of their two victories over the Raiders - stood to profit by a tie since head-tobead competition is the first division tie-breaker. Denver lost to tbe Raiders twice this season.

In the NFC West, the Los ^eles Rams broke a first-place tie with San Francisco by beating Buffalo 41-17 while the 49ers were beaten by Chicago 13-3.

Minnesota lost 17-16 to New Orleans and dropped into a first-place tie in the NFC Central with Dex>it, both teams at 7-6. Green Bay failed to take advantage of the Vikings loss, losing 47-41 in ovalime to Atlanta, and the Packers stood one game back at 6-7.

Oeveland, 8-5, moved within one game of Pittsburgh in the AFC Central with a 41-23 victory over Baltimore. The Steelers lost to Detroit, 45-3, on Thanksgiving Day.

In tbe other two games Sunday, the New York Jets defeated New En^nd 26-3, and Tampa Bay beat Houston 33-24. AFC East leader Miami plays host to Cincinnati in tbe Monday night game.

Raiders 27, Giants 12 Jim Plunkett threw two touchdown passes, and. Marcus Allen ran for a score in the Raiders triumph ovCT the Giants. Plunkett now has thrown 115 passes without an interception since taking over for Marc Wilson, who was injured on Nov. 6. Plunkett started the first seven games of the season but was benched aft^ a 38-36 loss to Seattle on Oct. 16.

The Raiders intercepted Giants quarterback Scott

Brunner three times and hek) tbe Giants to 58 yards on the ground. Chris Bahr kicked field goab of 47 and 38 yards for LA.

Seahawks SI. Chiefs 48 Norm Johnson sent the game into overtime with a 42-yard fiekl goal with two seconds left in regulatkm, then kicked another 42-yarder 1:46 into the extra period as Seattle rallie( to beat Kansas City. The game was the highest-scoring since Washington beat the Giants 72-41 on Nov . 27,1966.

Rookie running back Curt Warner scored three touchdowns for ^ttle and set a club record with 207 yards rushing.

Chargers 31. Broacos 7 Dan Fouts returned from a five-week layoff with 299 yards in the air, including two first-half touchdown passes to Kellen Winslow, as San Di^o ended Denvers hopes of a division title. The (^rges, 54, won for only the second time since Fouts injured his shoulder against New England on Oct. 16.

Fouts hit Winslow on a 9-yarder with 1:29 left in the first period to snap a 7-7 tie.

Rams 41, Bills 17 Vince Ferragamo threw three touchdown passes, Eric Dickerson rushed for 125 yards and the Los Angeles defense intercepted Buffalo quarterback Joe Ferguson five times.

Two of Ferragamos sciMing passes were to Preston Dennard. Dickerson also ran for a touchdown and now leads the NFL 1,531 yanb rushing.

Bearsl3,49ers3 Jim McMahon threw a 49-yard touchdown pass to Dennis McKinnon, and San Francisco failed to score a touchdown for the first time since 1981. The Bears defense held San Francisco to just 72 yards rushing. The 49ers only score was on a 24-yard field g(*al by RayWerschii^.

The Bears, who have won three straight, sacked quarterback Joe Montana five times.

State coach Jim Vahraoo was aU smiles after hb Wol^ downed l4tb-raoked Arkaiiaas

6640 Sunday n^ to cqXare theAkskaSioo^.

Hie Wfltfpack advanced to the finab with a 78-75 victory over Santa Satardiy nigbt.

In other games involviog Atlantic Coast Conference teams on Satnrday, ^rgima beat Geor^ Mason 87-63 to capture its seventh consecutive United Virginia Bank-([^valier Classic and Clemsoo defeated Marquette

6641 in overtime to win die IPTAY Invitationai title. Abo, eighth-ranked Maryland whipped Johns Hopkins 10146 and Duke downed Vanderhttt 78-74.

Senior forward Matt Doherty scixed 15 poinb to lead tbe Tar Heeb while freshman Kemw &nith rilded 14 points and (usbed out five assists.

It wasnt pretty, not pretty at aU, Doherty said after tbe Tar Heeb gave Smith hb 497tb victory as a coach. Im sure coach b dbappoiided in the way we pUyed. but we ^ thejohdone.

Smith was, however, pleased with the play of hb prize freshman guard.

He pbyed with a lot of pobc, said. Kenny hu come a long way."

North CaroOna led 33-27 at the half and never trailed in the second half, though Mbsouri closed within a p^ with 10:55 left but forward Sam Perkins canoed a free throw and guard Michael Jordan hit a jumper to push tbe lead to 43-39.

Tbe 'figers sliced the lead to two twice more, but a 10-2 run by tbe Tar Heeb sealed tbe

victory.

Jordan

Jordan scored 13 points - 7 in the final 10 minutes - and Perkins added 12 points and a game4iigh 13 rebounds. Blake Wortham, Makx^ Thomas and Prince Bridges eadi had 11 points for Mbsouri, while Greg Caveoer and Ron Jones added 10 points apiece.

Cavs, Pacers Win With Youth

By The Associated Press

The Cleveland (Cavaliers and Indiana Pacers, who share the worst record in the National Basketball Association, are capable of winning when their young players come through.

Steve Stipanovich, the second player chosen in the 1963 draft, lost hb center spot for the Pacers 10 daysL ago after scoring just 29 points in hb last six games as a starter. But on Sunday night, he scored eight of hb 12 points in the second half and contributed two straight baskets on jump shots down the stretch to help the Pacers regbter a 101-91 victory over the New York Knicks.

Meanwhile, the Cavaliers beat San Antonio 114-106 as rookies Paul Thompson of Tulane and Roy Hinson of Rutgers scored 26 points and 12 points, respectively.

Both Clevebnd and Indiana are now 4-11 for the season.

In the only other NBA games Sunday night, Boston whipped Detroit 114-99 and Los Angeles edged Chicago 103-100.

The 7-foot Stipanovich, who came to Indiana after the Pacers lost a coin toss for Virginias Ralph Sampson, grabbed 10 rebounds to go with hb 12 poinb for Indiana.

This was a very important game for him because he had just played two or three weak games and coring on strong today really has to help him, said Indiana Coach Jack McKinney. 1 havent been upset with him, but I was locking for more help than hes given us thus far.

He (Stipanovich) hurt us more than anybody on their team tonight,^ Kiucks Coach Hubie Brown said. He came through when they really needed him. He hit a couple of key sbob in the end. They played well and deserved to win and Stipanovich was the key.

The ro(ri(ie from Mbsouri was coming off a performance in which te scored only three points during 17 minutes against Golden State on Fri-ly-

iThb was a big game for

us, said Stipanovich. We havent been doing well. Im not satbfied with how Ive been going, but I wasnt really dbcouraged. I knew I just had to be patient and hai^ in there and eventually things will start to turn around.

Ray Williams, who had a game-high 36 poinb fcx New York, including 27 in the first half, helped the Knicks cut a 12-point deficit to 78-77 early in the fourth period.

But Stipanovich hit two consecutive" jump shob as Indbna scored six straight poinb. New Y(* never drew closer than five thereafter.

Clark Kellogg led Indiana with 25 poinb and 17 rebounds, while Herb Williams added^

New Yorks Bill Cartwright had 15 rebounds and contributed 11 poinb, pushing himself to a career total of 6,002 poinb in ms sixth pro season.

Cavaliers 114, Spurs 106 Thompson, who was averaging just six poinb per game befcxe Sunday, hit 10 of 17 shob from the field to spark Gevebnd over San Antomo at Richfield, Ohio.

"It gives me a boost to know I can do it, Thompson said.

Now its a matter of being consbtent. Theyre telling me to take certain shob and tonight I was hitting them. Theres still a whole lot I have to learn, but I have good teachers here.

World B. Free scored 15 of hb 21 poinb for the Cavaliers in the final period, and Free and Hii^ combined for 13 in, the final four minutes.

Hinsons Ihyup with 3:50 left put the Cavaliers ahead 100-93. Three baskeb by the Spurs Artis Gilmore and seven poinb by Mike Mitchell kept San Antonio close, but Geveland held the lead as Hinson added a pair of baskeb underneath ana Free hit a jump shot and five free throws.

George Gervin led the Spurs with 25 poinb, while Mitchell scored 23.

Celtics 114, Pbtons 99 At Boston, Kevin McHale scored 19 of hb 29 poinb in the fourth quarter to help the Celtics cool off a Detrint rally.

llie Pbtons trailed by as many as 21 poinb in the first . half and 6046 at halftime, but 10 poinb by Cliff Levingston in the third period helped them trim the margin to 80-74. McHales burst in the fourth

quarter kept Detroit at bay althou^ Isiah Thomas scored 11 of his team-high 25 poinb in the period.

Lakers 103, Bulls 100

Los Angeles won at home against Qiicago as Earvin Magic Johnson had 29 poinb, eight assbb and eight rebounds.

The Bulb led 93-92 before Johnsons basket and free throw put the Lakers ahead 95-93.

Giicago, which got 19 poinb

from Orlando Woolridge, managed two ties after that before Kareem Abdul-Jabbars 10-foot sky hook gave Los Angeles the lead for good at 101-99 with 2:37 remaining. It was the last field goal of the game.

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INSIDE TODAY

INSIDE I QUAYADOPTIONS

* Its truly a love affair! Many Americans are adopting Korean children, and South Koreas government is playing an active role in making it possible. (Page 13)STUDY CYCLES

Foundation is studying cycles as a means of predicting the future. Their idea: cyclic forces may be at work in the determining of our future trends. (Page 7)

SPORTS TODAY

WOLFPACK WINS

North Carolina State defeated 14th-ranked Arkansas to capture the championship of the Great Alaska Shootout. (Page 9)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 266

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 28, 1983

16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

Search Issue Ruling Planned By Justices

By RICHARD CARELLI AsMciatedPrets Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court today agreed to

dedde whether drugs seized from students in illegal searches rio^ials (Stand trial.

by pidilic schod

may be used as evidei^ when the

The court will hear arguments by New Jcr^ prosecutors that school searches by teachers or administrators are exempt frn the "exclusionary rule banning illegally seized evideitce from criminal trials.

The New Jersey Supreme Court said last Aug. 8 that the exclusionary rule, created by the nations highest court in 1914 to deter illegal police conduct, applies to searches in public schools by administratmrs and teachers.

"It is of little comfort to one charged in a law enforcement proceeding whether the public official who illegally obtained the evidence was a municipal inspector or school ad-ministratm* or law oifixrcement official, the ctate coert said.

The controversy arose when on March 7,1980 a 14-year-old ^1 was caught smoking in a restroom at Piscataway High

The ^1, i(tentied in court records only as T.L.O., was taken by a teacher to a vice principal's office because smoldng in non-designated areas, such as restrooms, was against school rules.

The ^1, questioned by assistant vice principal Tbeodore Choplick, denied that she had been smoking and said she never smoked. Choplick then took her to his office, opened her purse and saw a pack of cigarettes.

Choplick then noticed that next to the cigarettes was a package of rolling papers, the kind often used for marijuana cigarettes. He dug further and found other drug parapdiemalia as well as records indicting the 14-year-old was selling marijuana to fellow students.

Choplick thai notified the girls mother and called the police. Questioned at the pohce station, the girl admitted that she had been selling marijuana cigarettes for $1 each.

She later was trM as a juvenile, found to be delinquent and sentenced to one year probation, conditioned on her attending

search her purse, he acted unlawfully.

But Kimmelman said in the states appeal, It is unreasonable to reauest principals, teachers and others not involved in law enforcement to understand and be able to apply to myriad factual situations complex principles of law wluch give lawyers and judges pause.

The appeal added; The exclusiona^ rule should not be applied to a search of a student by a public school official. the New Jersey courts ruling only applies to public, and not private, schools because only public officials can violate someones constitutional rights.

The state court said school officials may search a student only when there are "reasonable grounds to do so.

It said that courts should determine whether reasonable grounds existed based, in part, on "the childs age, history and school record (and) the prevalence and seriousness of the problem in the school to which the search was directed.

The state court said Choplick, who only suspected that the oung girl was smoking in an unauthorized area, did not ve reasonable grounds to believe that the student was concealing in her purse evidence of criminal activity or evidence d activity that would seriously interfere with school discipline or order.

Stranded By Snowstorms

adrug-therapypro^m.

In other action today, the court:

-Agreed to review an appeals court ruling that allows :xmsumers to challenge the milk pricing system. The system, implemented by Congress, sets minimum milk prices to assure farmers (tf pipits, lliree consumers challenged a provision covering paymrats for powdered milk products, saying elimination of those payments could result in consumer savings of $186 million a year Farm groups say elimination of the rule would cost farmers $576 million.

-Left intact a Massachusetts towns ban on commercial video games. The justices refused to hear arguments that the ban, in Marshfield, Mass., violates the free speech rights of those who want to play the games.

-Said it would consider letting the Reagan adminstration curtail the travel (rf U.S. citizens to Cuba. The justices will review a federal appeals court ruling that the administrations attempt last year to limit visits by Americans to the island nation was illegal.

-Left intact a ruling that a young man thrown out of the U.S. Naval Acactemy for marijuana possession was dealt with fairfy. The court said a disciplina^ bearing board at the academy acted legally when it reassigned Robert 0. Wimmer to active duty after his arrest just six months before he was to graduate.

In the school drug case, the New Jersey Supreme Court, by a 5-2 vote, overturned the delinquency finding after ruling that the principal violated the girls 4th Amendment rights against unreasonable searches.

It inviAed the controvmial exclusionary rule in deciding that the items found in the girls purse never should have been used as evidence against her.

State Attorney General Irwin Kimmelman conceded that because Choplick did not have the girls valid consent to

REFLECTOR

OTLIH

By CYNTHIA GREEN

A8soc)?ted Press Writer

A blizzard building snowdrifts up to 9 feet high virtually shut down the middle of the nation today, stranding thousands of travelers and raising the death toll from two snowstorms in a week to 56.

Two-foot snows driven by 50-mph winds and the wind chill as low as 40 degrees below zero made travel

Fatality

An 18-year-old Ayden woman, a student at Lees-McRae College in Banner Elk, was killed Sunday about 9:50 p.m. in a one-car accident that occurred as she drove back to the college after Thanksgiving holidays at home.

N.C. Highway Patrol Ofncer Ben Chappell, who investigated, said Shannon Ray Johnson, daughter of Mrs. Robert N. Johnson of Ayden, died when her car hit a rock embankment on N.C. 105 1.9 miles south of Boone.

Chappell said a passenger in toe Johnson vehicle, identified as Jane Louise Thompson, 18, of Advance, was reported injured and taken to Watauga County Hospital.

across the region impossible thismomi^.

Authorities closed major highways across seven states, including Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa. Drifts were up to 9 feet high in southwestern Nebraska, 8 feet and western Kansas and about 4 feet near the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul.

With snow scattered from Oklahoma and Colorado to the Great Lakes this morning, the geadher service said. It cannot be emphasized enough that this is a dangerous winter storm. People shcMild be prepared for the worst when attempting any travel during the next 24 hours.

Temperatures were near zero across western South Dakota and Wyoming with lows of 8 below recorded at Alamosa and Gunnison, Colo.

Thousands of travelers,^ many returning from Thanksgiving visits, sought overnight lodging in motels, truck stops and emergency shelters, many forced to bed down on floors. Power lines were downed by ice, airports were closed and classes at schools and universities were canceled for today.

There just isnt anything going on out there because you plain cant move, said a

(Please turn to Page 8)

LIFTOFF Space Shuttle Columbia, with Spacelab One aboard, lifts off from Pad 39A this

morning at the Kennedy Space Center on a nine-day mission. (AP Laserpboto)

Shuttle Columbia Begins Its Lengthy Space Flight

By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace W riter

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Six astronauts, the largest space crew ever, rode the shuttle Columbia into orbit today for nine days of round-the-clock science experiments in the European Spacelab. The crew includes a West German, the first non-American launched in a U.S. spacecraft.

It was a race against time and the weather, and NASA won. completing a perfect countdown right on time at 11 a.m. EST as a storm front moved in from the west.

Its super up here, just beautiful, exulted Commander John Young as the ship soared 155 miles high at 17.400 mph.

Things dont change any; its really something, added Young, who at 53 is making a record sixth trip into space.

In the most extensive manned science flight yet undertaken, the astronauts will probe the Earth, sun. stars and their own bodies in the billion-dollar laboratory, built and donated by Europe. A vibdual bonanza" for scientists is how NASA spokesman Hu^ Harris described the mission.

The blazing liftoff was viewed by one of the smallest crowds , ever to witness a manned space launching. Sheriffs Department officials estimated only about 50,000 people were at viewing sites along highways and rivers, far below the 250,000 who assembled to watch the first night launch of a shuttle in August. As many as half-a-million have gathered for other liftoffs.

As the shuttle flashed to life, it punished the launch pedestal with a waterfall of fire and rose swiftly on 7 million pounds of thrust generated by its powerful engines. It darted straight up and then veered off to the northeast, disappearing in clouds a minute after liftoff.

At 2 minutes 6 seconds, the lOO-ton Columbia ejected its two 149-foot booster rockets, hurling them toward a parachute landing in the Atlantic where ships recover them for reuse.

The astronauts continued driving upward on the power of three main engines.

The weather front loaded with thunderstorms earlier had threatened to delay this ninth and longest shuttle mission, which was twice postponed because of technical problems. But the front slowed during the night over the Gulf of Mexico, and was over Central Florida as Columbia blazed into a

(Please turn to Page 8)

Trudeau Seeks Missile Talks

Hotline gets things done. Write and tell us about the p^lem or issue into which youd like for Hotline to lo(A. Enclose photostatic copies of any pertinent information. Our address is The Daily ^ectw, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Because of the large numbers received. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we deal with all <rf those for which we have staff time. Names must be given, but only initials will be published.

Editors note; Hotline has, on a trial basis, discontinued its telephone answering service. Please mail us your items. Thank you.

COSMETICS SOURCE?

I would like to know if there is any store in this area that sells Hazel Bishop cosmetics. I have used Uiis name brand fmr many years and had, until recently, one store I could depend on to carry it. C.B.

Hotline could find no store that carries this name brand either, but we will be glad to publish a feedback if we bear from a store that does carry this line or from someone who knows of a soui^ in a dearby town.

Gantt Says His Election Adds 'Credibility' To Black Votes

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Charlotte voters and mayor-elect Harvey Gantt may leave their mark on the 1984 general elections as well as on the states largest city, say some politicians.

Gantt, a black Democrat, defeated Ed Peacock, a white Republican, earlier this month. He will take office as Charlottes first black mayor Dec. 5, after capturing 41 percent of the vote in Charlottes majority white precincts.

The election coincides with black voter registration drives across the state by the Democratic Party and the Rev! Jesse Jackson, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for president. Both groups see the black vote as crucial in 1984.

The black vote also could be crucial in deciding an anticipated ti^t race between Republican Sen. Jesse Helms and Democratic Gov. Jim Hunt.

Gantt said his election has given black voters a sense of potency. He said it shows that blacks will turn out for candidates theyre very interested in, whether that interest is positive or negative.

If yw have a villain... someone people generally dislike ^tbey m come out wbethm* theres somebody they like ot not*

to vote for, he said, referring to the Hunt-Helms matchup.

If they have a reason they will vote. Jesse Helms could be that reason. agreed H.M."Mickey Michaux of Durham, who was unsuccessful in his 1982 bid to be the states first black congressman since Reconstruction and who is considering running for attorney general in 1984.

The election coincides with efforts to find black candidates to generate voting interest in the minority community as well as to better voice minority concerns.

I think a lot of people feel a sense of hope about the reaction the general public will have to black politicians, Gantt said in a telephone interview. If they can find issues that are not racially sensitive it bodes well for them.

"It (Gantts election) bodes well for the majority community, Michaux said, If they can look at the situation and determine who they can best be served by and not base their vote solely on race.

Michaux said hell probably decide next month whether to run for statewide office. He said the decision rests partly on whether he can repay his 1982 campaign debt.'

Gantt said blacks must continue to serve on local school boards and ck^ councils as they seek more seats in the General Assembly or run for statewide office.

' PEKLNG (AP) - Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau met with his Chinese counterpart, Zhao Ziyang, today and said he

was "very encouraged by the response to his plan for the five nuclear powers to convene a summit on nuclear proliferation.

Trudeau said the Chinese liked the idea, although they felt the more urgent problem was effective negotiations between the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union.

The Canadian leader, breaking away from the Commonwealth Nations Conference in India, is to see Chinas No. 1 leader, 79-year-old Deng Xiaoping, on Tuesday morning before flying back to New Delhi for the conclusion of the conference.

Trudeau's plan calls on leaders of the five major nuclear powers - the United States, the Soviet Union, China. Britain and France -to meet early next year to set global limits on nuclear weaponry.

He is also urging a new commitment to non

proliferation of nuclear weapons, progress on balancing conventional forces and a ban on anti-satellite weapons in space.

He said Zhao was sup-wrtive of the effort to solim-y the issue and to inject new political energy into the search for peace between East and West particularly.

Later in a toast at a banquet in Trudeaus boncH-at toe Great Hall of the People, Zhao stressed Chinas focus on the U.S.-Soviet rivalry as the root cause of the current world tension.

Crimestoppers

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

WEATHER

llnud\. m pcrtt-nt chance ol showerv, tem-peralure*- near .V tonmht. Clearing Tuesday, high in fi(K.

Looking Ahead

Partl> chiudv V\ednes-da\ through hridax with high^ in .)^ during the periwl xxith lows in upper :!()s and low 40s.

Inside Reading

Page .) Area items Page h Obituaries Page 16 Money-loser \





16 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.    Monday, November 28.1983

District Court Report

Judge H. Horton Rountree and Judge James E. Martin disposed of the following cases during the Oct. 31 to Nov. 4 term of district court in Pitt County.

Ronny Paul Ballard, Apex, speeding, fail to stop for blue light and siren. 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed; driving while impaired and stop light violation, six months jail suspended on probation one year, payment of $100 and costs. 72 hours jail, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Kenneth Hunter Gilgo, New Bern, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation two years, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee, pay $125 attorney fees and perform six hours of community service work at East Carolina University.

Kenneth Maynard Biggs Jr., Route 8, driving under the influence and driving while licensed revoked, six months jail suspended on probation two years, payment of $500 and costs, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed.

Lee A Boyd, Arbor Street, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $500 and costs, probation two years.

Paul Kieth Creech, Shady Knoll, assault, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Ronald Dean Eaton, Barnes Street, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Daniel Eugene Fulford, Van Dyke Street, trespass, six months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs.

Daniel James Gray, Simpson, driving while license revokea and driving under the influence (second offense), six months jail suspended on payment of $300 and costs, probation three years.

Nellie Hilliard Green, Win-terville, speeding, pay $25 and costs

John Charles Hax, East Sixth Street, speeding, five days jail suspended on payment of $10 and

costs.

Raymond Wallace Mackenzie HI, Queen Annes Road, speeding, pay costs.

Tammy Sue Massingill, Win-terville, speeding, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Bruce Eric Newton, Tyson Street, larceny, two years in the state Department of Correction suspended. on payment of $100 and costs, probation two years, pay $150 attorney fees; resisting arrest, voluntary dismissal.

Wanda Best O'Hara, Simpson, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, remit all fine and costs except $50 Anthony Brooks Outterbridge, Contentnea Street, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content by weight and fail to see safe move, four months jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs, surrender operators license and attend multiple offenders school.

Mitchell Carter Rabil, Route 3, speeding, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

William Raymond Smith, Route 5, driving while impaired, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol scnool and pay $50 fee, perform 24 hours of community service work and pay $50 fee.

Jasper Lee Sumerlin, Route 5, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, four months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Jimmie Charles Turner Jr., Ayden, driving under the influence (two counts), six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation two years, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Melvin Daniels. Forbes Street, trespass. 60 days jail suspended on payment of costs.

Jimmie Rogers Skinner, Allen Street, driving under the influence, four months jail suspended on payment of $240 and costs, surrender operator's license,

Anna J. Barnes. Lakeview Terrace, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.

James Dwaine Clemons, Courtney Place, possession of marijuana, voluntary dismissal.

Garland Harrington Dunstan Jr., Elizabeth City, operate left of center and driving while license expired, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

Kit Carson Forbes, Goldsboro, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Richard Gray, Farmville, assault on female, voluntary dismissal.

Robert Gray, Rawl Road, asauR,

30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Peggy Ann Johnson, Colerain, shoplifting, six months jail suspended on probation two years, payment of $100 and costs

payment of costs and check in each case.

Willie Randolph Holley, Edenton, stop sign violation. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and costs,

James Lee Canfield, Camp Le-jeune, stop light violation and fail to stop at scene of accident. 60 days jail suspended on payment of $65 and costs.

Tommie Lee Carter, Hopkins Drive, two counts of assault with intent to commit rape and one count of first degree burglary, no probable cause found.

Valencia Moore, Greenville, worthless check, 30 days in the state Department of Correction.

Toy Ray Anderson, Branches Estates, driving under the influence, four months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators icense, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Carlos Duane Sours, Greenville, driving while impaired, 30 days jail, released for time served, pay $100 and costs, remit.

James Thomas Baker Jr.. Chocowinity, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs,

Raymond Bruce Clark, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, driving while license revoked, six months jail suspended on payment of $400 and costs, surrender operators license John R, Anderson, Grifton, five counts of worthless checks, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check in each case.

Teresa Ann Barnes, Washington, _, 90 days jail.

[arvin Adams, Fourth Street, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

William David Anderson, Ayden, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs.

James Hollis Boone Jr., Virginia, driving while impaired, level four, 120 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation one year, attend alcohol school, pay $50 fee, perform 48 hours of community service work and surrender operators license.

Sandra G. Clark, Route 5, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check.

John Edward Forrest, Route 8, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100fee.

James Rudolph Freeman, Abee Road, driving under the influence, four months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender oprators license, attend multiple offenders' school.

Henry Lee Goff, Route 4, safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal.

Joy Elaine Moe, Blands Trailer Court, financial violation, 30 days jail suspended on payment of 0 and costs.

Jack Wilson Newsome, Goldsboro, trespass, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs and not go back to Rafters for one year.

William Earl Norfleet Jr., Raleigh Avenue, stop light violation, voluntary dismissal.

Kenneth Leon ONeal, East Carolina University, sppding, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Brenda Gray Pace, Stokes, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended, on payment of costs and $25 costs,

Alton L. Smith Jr., Washington, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Bryon Aristotle Strates, Raleigh, stop light violation, not guilty.

Nathaniel Thompson, East 12th Street, restriction code violation, five days jail suspended on payment of costs.

Larry Martin Ward, Virginia, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, alcohol school waived, pay $100 fee.

James Williams, Stokes, speeding and reckless driving, four months jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Robert Lee Clark, Grimesland, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check

Jean Flanagan Flanner, Beaumont Circle, no operators license, voluntary dismissal.

Frederick Graham, Farmville, assault, not guilty.

Ricky Huggins, Ayden, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.

Jeffrey Wayne Hardee, Wedgewood Drive, driving while license suspended, four months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, not drive until properly licensed, remit $100 of fine.

Cecil Wayne Matthews, Edgewood Trailer Park, expired registration, pay costs.

James Harvey Perry, Stokes, fail to yield right of way, not guilty.

Gwendolyn Denise Nichols, Grimesland, exceeding safe speed.

pay costs, remit. Mi(

ichael Kieth Stone, Kitty Hawk, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, four months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee. Jeannie Marchell Brower,

Grimesland,

property.

Rena Knight Jor^n, David LanO Greene Dorm, consume malt bev-reckless driving, 90 days jad sus- grage in public, prayer for judge-pended on payrnent of $100 and    continued    on payment of

costs, attend alcohol school and pay

^an R Carrico l^ura Rose Lancaster, Van- disposing of mortg ceboro, stop sign violation, volun- voluntary dismissaf

D , , .u Robert Lee Cherry, West Third I if b    Street, driving while license re-

less check (four counts), 30 days i.gj mv costs and snendsi* jail suspended on payment of costs h^'in^aV and payment of chwk in each case.    Louis    "Dozier, Douglas

Hubert E. Moye, Ayden, Avenue, driving in excess of It employment security law violation, pgrggni blood alcohol content b six months jail suspended on weight, 90 days jail suspended or

S?ry.lpaS!?

Howard E. Pritchard Sr

der oper

alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Johnny R. Moore, Edgewooc Trailer Park, three counts ol worthless checks, 30 days jai suspended on payment of $25 anc costs.

Greenville, 13 counts of employment security commission    vio

lations, six months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, $1,361 restitution and two years probation.

Roy Junior Ruffin, Ayden, stop jgj,,, Thomas Pietrzak, Juniper sign violation and driving while La^g consume malt beverage in impaired, voluntarydisrnissal. public, voluntary dismissal; resist

n    k        arrest, voluntary dismissal.

Wmterville, driving while license Diiiy i gg Rodcers Avden revoked, six m^fe jailsuspended spgg^ing 30 days jai^ suspended oii on payrnent of $200 and costs.    payg^

Joel Van Tyson, Farmville,    ex-    school and pay $100 fee.

ceeding safe speed, pay costs.    james    Earl    Stalls,    Bethel,    simple

Jeffrey A. Warren, Riverbluff, assault on female, six months jail suspended on payment of $100 and

possession of Schedule VI. voluntan dismissal.

Connie Earl Stancill, Route 4, no

costs, probation two years and $67 registration plate aiid financial

payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend multiple offenders school and spend 12 hours in jail.

Judy Elaine Brann, Azalea Street, three counts of worthless checks. 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $ and pay check in each case.

Virginia Dare Mills, Ayden, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Edward Earl Anderosn, Farmville, driving while license revoked, driving while imparied, one year jail suspended on probation two years, 14 days jail, payment of $300 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100, surrender operators license; exceeding 55 miles per hour to elude arrest, voluntary dismissal.

Willie Glenn Anderson, Route 1, assault on female, voluntary dismissal; communicating threats, voluntary dismissal.

Willie Blue, Farmville, assault, prosecution frivolous and malicious, prosecuting witness pay costs.

William Blount Butler, Ayden, driving while license expired, voluntary dismissal.

Jimmy Bynum, Farmville, assault with deadly weapon, voluntary dismissal.

Linda Strickland Eaton, Barnes Street, stop sign violation, voluntary dismissal.

Raymond Earl Ellis, Farmville, no operators license, no registration and driving under the influence, four months jail suspeixted on payment of $200 and costs, surrender operators license.

Linda L. Harris, Carriage House Apartments, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Edward Lewis Hudson, Farmville, driving while license revoked, six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation two years, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed.

Paul Earl Hunter, Sheppard Street, driving while license revoked, six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation two years, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed.

Randy Kieth Koonce, Kinston, careless and reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $130 and costs, attend and complete alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Edward Earl Lee, Farmville, speeding, five days jail suspended

payment ol $25 and costs, render operators license.

Johnny Wayne Mitchell, West Fifth Street, driving under the influence, four months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol scnool and pay $100 fee.

Leon Laffayette Moore, Memorial Drive, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgement continued on payment of costs.

Samuel Newell Pearce Jr., Grimesland, speeding, five days jail suspended on payment of 1S and costs.

Flossie Petway, Falkland, damage to personal pi^rty, not guilty.

Martin David Pratt, Greensboro, speeding, five days jail suspended on rayment of $25 and costs.

Michael Alexander Reid, Raleigh, speeding. Five days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Kimberly Lynn Rouse, Farmville, driving while license revoked, six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed.

Robbie Colville, Route 1, speeding, pay costs.

Jerry Wayne Strickland, Grimesland, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content by weight and driving while license revoked, six months jail suspended on payment of $300 and costs, -attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed.

Kenneth Howard Strickland, Farmville, nonsupport, six months jail suspended on payment of costs and $400 per month for child support.

Charlotte Taylor, Fountain, stop light violation, pay $5 and costs.

Mary Jo Higson, Farmville, worthless check (two counts), voluntary dismissal.

Tony Waller, Farmville, tres- pass, not guilty.

Martha Etta Boykin. Walston-burg, shoplifting, prayer for judgement continu on payment of costs.

Regina Maxine Carmon, Ayden, shoplifting, six months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, two years probation; possession of stolen goods, not guilty.

Victor Lawrence Collier, no address, larceny and damage to personal property, voluntary dismissal.

N.C. Said Spending AAore On Military Than it Gets Back

By The Associated Press The military is the states third-largest employer, but according to two reports Nwth Carolina spent'more in taxes to support the Pentagon than it received in return.

The reports, prepared by a Michigan research orMniza-tion, estimate that for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 the Defense Department spent $3.6 billion in North Carolina while the states taxpayers paid out $4.3 billion - a difference of about $693 million.

Rep. W.G. Hefner, D-N.C., chairman of the House sub-committe on military construction, said he was not surprised by the report.

Until recently, we just havent bad anybody up here that looked after us, Hefner said. But were going to alleviate that situation.

Most of the money goes to building weapon systems, which is where North ^Caro-

Daniel Edward Credle, Washington, aid and abet larceny, not guilty.

Lee Norris Daniels, Kennedy Circle, breaking and entering, 12 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, probation two years.

Clinton Harris Jr., Belvoir, possession of stolen property and larceny, 12 months jail suspended on payment of $400 and costs, probation two years.

Johnny (Jonzalez, Hobucken, safe movement violation, pay costs.

lina trails, Hefner said. He said hes pursuing military contracts for the state.

Hie reports were prepared by Employment Research ^sociates, a non-profit economic consulting company in Lansing, Mich. The reports said North Carolina and 27 other states were losers in tax dollars going to the Pentagon for military expenditures.

The majority of congressmen and senators put out press releases and announcements when their areas get a militai^ contract, the reports said. But they do not tell the whole story in these releases. For that would mean informing their constituents on how much money leaves their area to subsidize the Pentagon.

The organization found that much of the money is going to a handful of states with large military installations and large defense-oriented industries. California led with $9.25 billion more in military spending than in taxes paid California has twice the military personnel of North Caro-lina and well-founded electronics, aircraft and aerospace industries.

The U.S. Census Bureau says only Texas, Virginia and California have more soldiers. Marines, airmen and sailors stationed in their

borders than North Carolina. Only textiles and tourism are ahead of the military in providing state jobs.

The report compared taxes paid with military dollars spent in different metrc^li-tan areas in the state. Fayetteville was the big winner, receiving $1 billion more in spending that taxes paid.

The report also credited Burlington with a net gain of $89 millifxi and Wilmington with a net gain of $17.5 million.

The other metropolitan

areas in the state lost money. ^Raleigh paid $^.5 million mwe in taxes to the Pentagon than it received in' military spending. Charlotte had a net loss of $496 million.

Of the states which lost money, 15 were bigger net losers than North ^rolina, the reports said. The biggest loser was Illinois with a deficit of $9.7 billion in 1983, the reports said.

SAVE MONEY this winter ... shop and use the Classified Ads every day!

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I BOOK NIGHT

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restitution

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Introducing

1983 R.J BeynoWs Tobacco Co.

CENTURY

.^^morecigaretts

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Introductory^120FF

a carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

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4150OFF

a carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

TERMS OF COUPON OFFEN CONSUMER Cauiion' Coupon gooO only when brand siyle(9i spccilwd puicbasod It cannot be bans-leired w eicbanped for other coupons Any ottier use consiltules fraud You must pay apolfcaMe sates taxes Paiticipaiion in this pomotion Is at the disctetion ol the teiailei IIMIT ONE COUPON PER CONSUMER AND TO SMOKERS 21 YEAR8 OF AGE OR OLDER RETAILER; R J Reynolds Tobacco Company anil pay lace value of coupon plus ft handlina and actual postage incuned. wovided you accepted the coupon tiom a consumei as partial payment on specified Ixand stylets) Any oDtei use constitutes Iraud and could bilng prosecution undei U S mall Iraud statutes It is non-assignable and may not be leptoduced Adequate ptool ol purchase must be submitted on request SMpmeti coMMind at a wMit: ee parUaTpiyMMt; cmRkiOm rliMs rii^ Coupon must be submitted by letailei who ledeemed It oi a clearinghouse botdtng RJR contiact (no othei assignees/SMnls) CeMn mal be rictlvid it iMrttt tiUtt n iHir Mae SIX iroM iijNraHa* Me prhgid beroeeTish value 1 /20 o( 1C All promotional costs paid W WImw-& W zto    ^*****    Ceelif,    P    0.    BulOOa.

Not available in auareaa ^ COjlPON EXPIRATION DATE: DECEMBER 31,1983





Kenny Rogers'New Film Has A Bit Of Everything

ByTOMJORV Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - CBS diets off country-star Kenny R^ers as The Gambler, thinking, no doubt, that most people cant be bored by too much of a good thing.

In this case, the network could be right.

"The Gambler - The Adventure Continues is, indeed, excessive: too much talkin and too much ridin and too much nmnin from the law, played out in four hours over two nights, Monday and Tuesday.

But the show, like its immensely popular, and shorter, predecessor, contains enough good humor, enough shoot-em-up action, to make the whole thing fun to watch. Besides, how often is a movie based on a song, rather than a book?

Rogers played Brady Hawkes for the first time in The Gambler in the 197M0 season, and no other made-for-TV movie broadcast that year got a bigger audience.

Bruce Boxleitner is back in Gambler II as Hawkes comical sidekick, Billy Montana, and Linda Evans, as fit as can be, plays Kate Muldoon, a dancehall girl who doubles as a bounty hunter.

Heres what happens;

Hawkes is on his way to San Francisco, riding with the folks while Stowbridge (Harold Gould) luxuriates in the comfort of his own car. Thats ironic, because Hawkes has just beaten Stowbridge out of $10,000 in a game of cards.

All of a sudden, the train comes to a grinding, jarring

halt. Its Gurlie McCourt (Mitchell Ryan) and his gang of black-hats - Silvera, the Mexican bandito who rides with McCourt, wears a matching sombrero and they want the gold that Stowtmdge is su[^)osed to have in his baggage.

Hie jokes on McCourt. Stowbridge sent the gold by coach to Arizona in the opposite direction. But McCourt grabs Hawkes 12-year-old son, Jeremiah (Charlie Fields), and demands a letter from rStowbridge to the bank in Arizona, ordering the release

to McCourt of II million, cash.

Letter in hand, McCmirt takes off for Arizona, holing Jeremiah as hostage. Hawkes vows to rescue his son, and...

You can bet saving Jeremiah wont be easy.

In (Hie scene, Kate Muldoon comes along in a buckboard just in time to rescue Hawkes and his lartner from a rampaging lear. Later, the boys are ambushed by Silvera, and the outlaw is curious: How does it feel, he asks, to be surrounded by people who

would like to kill you? Not too good, Hawkes replies.

Don!t worry about Jeremiah. Colonel Greely, a Princeton grad who ndes with McCourt, is watching out for the kid. Colond

Greely? Princeton?

you study law,

ireely?!

When .

Greely (Camenm Mitchell) tells Jeremiah in a moment of reflection, you gotta pass what they call the bar. I was very loyal to the bar - the Red Lantern.

OK, so Gambler II is kind of corny. (It gets w(h^. Billy, to himself; Montana, you make a heckuva mountain man. Get it? Montana ... mountain?) But Its pure, clean entertainment. Plenty of people get shot, but its in

Microphone Collection Is A Part Of History

that old, Western-iDovie style: not much blood.

Besides, there may be no Gambler III.

If youre gonna beat me, nows the time to do it, Hawkes says. San Francisco is my last game. Whats that? Maybe a new career in law enforcement, or the like?

Nope. Farmin. In Oregon.

Playhouse Staging Comedy, 'Album'

BIO CHILL (R)

*  -j

2S4 PUYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE SMUMWMtOfOrMnvim. OnU.S.2M(FannvlUHwy.)

NOW'

SHOWING

AT YOUR ADULT ENTERTANMENT CENTER

At This Clinic The Women Beg For An Exam!!

i!u8T-

JOHN LESLIE MULTSONLY

Doors OpM

7SMM

UK>wti(no6:l)0

By JIUM. SCHULTZ

MILWAUKEE (UPD-The microphones in Bob Paquettes microphone museum participated in some (tf the majcH* historical events of the century, but always in a supporting role - always overshadowed by the figure standing behind them.

He has a small mike a CIA agent is said to have taken from the lectern at Hitlers hideaway at Berchtesgaden.

And theres one like President Franklin D. Roosevelt used to warm a war-chilled nation in his fireside chats.

The big black boxy one in the comer - thats a condenser microphone that traveled with Admiral Bvrd

TV Log

For cofflpM* TV prograimUng Inlww nullon, conwH your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sundoy't Dally Raflaclor._

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

AT REHEARSALS . . . Laura Leigh Quisenberry and Eric TUley were photographed during rehearsal for the ECU Playhouse production of the comedy Album, to be presented at McGinnis at 8:15 p.m. nightly Dec. 1-3, and 5-6. (Photo Courtesy Carlton Benz)

New

20"x3(r

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pmts

bv Kodak!

Made from 35 mmxodacolor film negatives or transparencies.

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Phona 756-9500 * Uaa Our Convanlant Driva-Thru Window

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PIZZA SPAGHETTI SOUP AND SAIAD BAR

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Monday4^riday 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m.

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6-8 P.M.

Adults *2.9fl Children Under 12-*1.89

Pizza lim

For pizza out it!s Pizza Inn?

I

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Phone

58-6266

Poodle pins and tassle socks, go-go boots and miniskirts, the Beatles and the Beach Boys, Bob Dylan and James Dean - all Irallel the emotional evolution of four teenagers in David Rimmers comedy Album to be presented by the East Carolina Playhouse Thursday, Friday and Saturday this week and Monday and Tuesday next week (Dec. 1-3,5-6).

All performances will begin at 8:15 p.m. in McGinnis Theater on the East Carolina University campus. Tickets may be purchased in advance at the box office. Fifth and Eastern Streets, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., reserved by calling 757-6390, or purchased at the door prior to performance.

Divided into eight scenes, which span their years at high school, the play chronicles the coming-of-age of two teenaged couples during the 1960s. The action ranges from summer camp, to dormitory bedrooms, to senior proms, with the popular music of the period - the Rolling Stones, Del Shannon and Johnny Rivers - as a counterpoint to an emotional anchor for the lives of the foursome.

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.__

MONDAY

7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 ScarKrow 9:00 AAovie 11:00 News 9 11:30 AAovIe 3:00 NIghtwatch

TUESDAY

3:00 NIghtwatch S:00 Jim Bakker 8:00 Carolina 8:00 AAornlng 8:3S Newsbreak 9:3S Newsbreak 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Press You'

11:00 Price Is Right 13:00 News 9 13: Young*

1: As the World 3 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Lt. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 A. Griffith 5: A8ASH 8:00 News 9 8 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7 . Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Miuissippl 9:00 Atovie 11:00 News 9 II: Atovie 3:00 NIghtwatch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

MONDAY    11:30    Dream    Housa

7:00 Jetfersons 13:00 News 7: Family Feud 13: Seerch For

8:00 Boone 9:00 Atovie 11:00 News 11: Tonight 13: Letterman 1: Overnight 3: News TUESDAY S:00 Overnight 8:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:3S News 7: Today 8:35 News 8. Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9: All in the

1:00 Days Of Our 3:00 Another WId 3:00 AAatch Geme 3: Hollywood S>. 4:00 Whitney the 4: Brady Bunch 5:00 (Somer Pyle 5. WKRP 8:00 News 8: NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7: Family Feud 8:00 A Team 9:M Rem. Steele 10:00 Bay City 11:00 News II: Tonight Show

7.JW mu III iriv

10:00 DItf. Strokes Letterman 10: Sale of the    J Overnight

11:00 Wheel of    3: News

WCTHV~Ch.12

AAONOAY    11:00 Benson

!J;SyFeud iS&lble    

9:00 Football 13:00 Action News 13: Nightline

: Nightline 00 Thicke of

TUESDAY ,

5:00 H. Field ' 5: J. Swaggart 8:00 Stretch 8: News

13: Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 3:00 One Lite 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4 BJ LOBO 5: People's 8:00 Action News 8; ABC News 7:00 3's Company 7: Alice 8:00 Just Our Luck

7:M Good Morning 8: Happy Days 8:55 Action News 9:00 3's Company 7:35 Action News 9: Oh, Madeline! 8:35 Action News 10:00 Hart tp Hart 9:00 Phil Donahue 11:00 Action News 10:00 Connection    II: Nightline

10: Laverne    13:ThTckeot

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

4:00 Sesame Street 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5: 3-3-1 8:W AAaking df a A M News Hour 9:00 Performanci T:00 Report 10: Song of 7: Almanac 11:00 Dr.    :00    Nova

11: AAonty Pytho :00 Vietnam

MONDAY

7:00 Report 7:M N.C. People

13:00 Sign TUESDAY 3:00 Staff

10:00 Railway 11:00 Or. Who l1:AAon

3:00 Man    

3 Educational

RAMADA INN

on one of his Antarctic Ations.

over (m the side is the kind that made the ladies swoon as it transmitted the silky tones of Bing Crosby to a nation huddled around their radios.

Paquette, 53, has been acquiring them since the 1950s and now has 700 - which he says the largest collection in the country and probably in thewcM'ld.

The Smithsonian Institution knows about Pa(iuette. Theyve borrowea his microphones and sent mike enthusiasts his way. Thats kind of a shock for a Milwaukee boy who started picking up the gadgets just for fun.

The Smithsonian refers a lot of p^ple to me and thats surprising, he said. The first time they referred someone to me it scared me. Its always been a hobby for me.

His interest started with radios. As a fifth grader, Paquette beat a path to the neighborhood library, reading every book avaUable on the talking machines.

Later he got a job with an electronics company and eventually started Select Sound Service, Inc., where he works today.

Paquettes museum is lined with shelves and shelves of micro|^nes of all shapes and sizes.





14 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Monday. November 28,1983

rir

Dodge

1 DODGE COLT, 25,000 mile, 4 i.peed. Loaded with extras

,;rfy economy car. Reduced

2IIA0.

.;S2 DODGE COLT.

. lolisble. 752 5121.

New. $5500

Ford

FORD GRANADA. Automatic I .'ismlssion, air condition. Phone 3 4024after 5p.m.

iy32 FORD ESCORT, with air, iike r ,v. Assume payments. Cail 756 tSHi atter6p.m.

9 30C 4-DOOR, loaded 1982 Escort automatic. $5,700. Phone

582.

HE RE'S ALL YOU have to do. Call t v classified department with your . J for a still good item and you'll -ike some extra cash! Call

6166.

05i

Oldsmobile

19^0 OLDS 9 Luxury Sedan. Air, '> I power C.ir in real good shape

: .90. Phone 752 4413.

IV I'OLDS REGENCY Silver with

1.1. vinyl top, loaded, clean. 71,000 les Good condition. Nice car

I .11 7.S8 P.162 after 6 p.m.

Plymouth

iMOUTH SATELLITE, 1973

>l- r Call anytime 757 3508.

V.^LIANT. Good condition

...ail .'56 1972.

Pontiac

1ONTIAC STATIONWAGON.

A7 I'M, nice inside. Excellent !!.n S650. Phone 752 4413.

i).'3 PONTIAC r>h. 7,8 1355.

Catalina. $1,950

NC T ONLY CAN you sell good used it ris quickly In classified, but you c.in also get your asking price. Try a I. i. ssifico ad today. Call 7S2'6I66.

i.i!

Foreign

BUY AND SELL Used Cars. Perheles Volkswagen. 756-1135. Greenville Blvd. Greenville,

; VOLVO, green, 2 door. Good tition. $1200. Stokes, 795 3839.

9 ^ DATSUN 2802. New paint, tires ciPd stereo. Excellent condition.

758 9820.

191 TOYOTA TERCEL - 5 speed Good condition. Phone 752 2641.

1981 DATSUN 200SX. Call 746 3187.

0S1

Help Wanted

Apply In person or call >r. Inc., Snow Hill, 1-747

LPNS NEOEO. Part time and full time. 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available Oak Manor 2868

MAINTENANCE AND GROUND

Keeper. Most be experienced in heat pumps, minor plumbing, and electrical problems. Pay com mensrate with experience. Send resume to PO Box 717, Griffon, NC 28530. EOE.

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE for

college graduates ready tor the challenge and reward of a retail management career. Competitive salary and comprehensive benefit package offered. To schedule interview and for further information please call Jamie at Heritage Personnel Service 355-2020.

MOBILE HOME Serviceperson Must be experienced in all phases of mobile home delivery, set up and service. We are the most pro gressive company in the business and we have been in business over 25 years. Salary commensurate with experience, hospitalization, paid vacation and 5 paid holidays per year. Call 919 355 2302, ask for Bill Jackson.

NEEDED; WOMAN for general

house cleaning, laundry, and Iron ing. One day a week. Must have own transportation. Please reply to Housekeeping, Route 8, Box 458K Greenville giving name, phon salary desired, and references If applicable.

OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR

Growing Greenville financial firm needs administrator/bookkeeper with accounting, budget, and gen eral office administration experi ence. College degree and computer experience a plus. To be considered tor an interview, please send cur rent resume to PO Box 1581, Greenville, NC,

ONE OF THE COUNTRY'S leading insurance companies is looking for an Individual in its Greenville office. The candidate must have an aptitude for selling. This is substantial earning opportunity.

Jevicky, 9

David Haynes or

a.m. 10:30 a.m. or send resume to United Insurance Company, 120 Reade Street, Greenville, NC, 752 3840. EOE

PART TIME PERSON. Well established firm requires mechanically inclined person to repair and service Its product line. Inventory control public contact 756 3861.

PART TIME HELP. No phone calls. Apply to A-1 Quality Cleaners, Rivergate Shopping Center Monday through Thursday.

1983 MAZDA 626 LUXURY Touring Sedan All possible options I Bes offer. Phone 355 2661 after 6 p.tr

032

Boats For Sale

riJCK HUNTER'S SPECIAL

'ko 17', 115 Johnson, lipped and ready to go! 3839 after 6 p.m.

:i4

Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sjxirtsman lops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N. C. 834 2774.

036

Cycles For Sale

1980 KAWASAKI 250 street bike, good condition. $650 or best offer 756 5856 after 5.

1982 YAMAHA IT175 dirt bike, used 700 miles, never raced. New $1700, 'ill sacrifice for $1200. Call after 6. 19 6451 or 753 4369.

19

Trucks For Sale

4 CHEVROLET truck, V 8 light drive, new tires. Good !Ck for hauling wood. $900. 746 017 or 355 2255 anytime.

1976 FORD RANGER, good condl fiun, $2500 negotiable. Call 758-0904

otter 6 p.m.

i9rlONG BED Toyota < loaded, excellent condition. $5500 ( all 746 3530 or 746-6146,

1982 MAZDA B-2000 Sundowner deluxe, long bed, 5 speed, white 1,1th- blue cloth interior, AM FM, ivy duty bumper, bed liner, tool , 21,000 miles. Perfect condition -k value, $5,250, sell for $4,950, 3343.

rORD RANGER. White. ! Call 746 6825.

PETS

REGISTERED GERMAN

nh-?rds $100 each. Deposit will i ntil Christmas. Call 756 0700

' 6 p.m.

K A POO,

92.

white male. Call

IVE US A call soon. We'd like to Ip you place a classified ad in this -/snaper today. Call 752-6166.

Help Wanted

FSUME EXPERTLY 'RTEN OPENS THE R TO A GOOD JOB

hman Writing Associates,

,9

   10    OIL    COMPANY    otters

omv, plus cash bonuses, a mature person in :-'ili' area. Regardless of exime, write G.G. Read, Ameri-I I jhricants Company, Box 426, yton, Ohio45401,

ATTENTION,!

vriedi.Tte part time openings in 1 field of telemarketing. Hours MdPday-Friday 5 to 9 p.m I 1 ' d,ry 9 1, Marketing experience ipftjl but not necessary. Opportu V for advancement to manage 'on. Full time pay for lurs Call for an ap-' intei v:( .V Monday, *"* I - ind 9 p m..

WVE SALESPERSON.

interview 756-1877 or send to Grant Buick Inc , P.O. .'097. Greenville, N.C. 27834. : JnckMewborn.

VON Can MAKE YOUR HRISTMASMERRIER!

I ,->n Avon Representative in your u ighborhood, earn money and win valuable gifts, too!

Call 752-7006

BALLOONING ANYONE? Try It, Yf u'll like It! Need crew members 10 help fly during the week. Call 7 2303 for details.

framing Contact Mid-South

RPENTER CREWS

finishing uction Company. Out on Road, just past Alcoholic Illation Center on right; ./43 North.

RN EXTRA MONEY for

istmas Sell Avon!!! Call 758-

..9.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY.

Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales representative. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress for age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal In tervlew, please submit resume stating personal history, education, and business experience. Write PO Box 406, Greenville, NC 27835.

PART-TIME Medical/Surgical Nursing instructor needed. B.S.N. and 2 years hospital experience required, M.S.N. preferred. Fulltime faculty appointment possible. Starting date January 4, 1984, Contact: Veronica Warrener, Director of Nursing, Beaufort County Community College, PO Box 1069, Washington, NC 27889, at 946-6194. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

PERSONNEL SUPERVISOR.

Experience with payroll systems, employee benefit schedules. Maintaining personnel records. Excellent benefits and salary. For interview call Jamie, Heritage Personnel Service, 355 2020,

REAL ESTATE BROKERS. We

currently have an opening for a licensed real estate broker. For more information or appointment call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 756 6810.

RESUMES WRITTEN to get results plus job search programs. Call for brochure or appointment. Cushman Writing Associates, 1 637 2889.

RETAIL MANAGER TRAINEE.

Career opportunity to move rapidly into management. Collie preferred, but not necessary, txcellent benefits. Call Judy, 355-2020, Heritage Personnel Service.

ROUTE SALES. $16K plus. Due to promotion fortune 500 company needs aggressive person for established territory. Must have sales experience and good driving record. Excellent benefits. Cafi Judy, 355-2020, Heritage Personnel Service.

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 incentives. Promotions from within. Call 756 6711,

059

Work Wanted

Would like to sit witi; ehkriy

lady. Phone 752-3479.

000

FOR SALE

001

Antiques

JO-LE'S a SCOTT'S ANTIQUES.

1310 Dickinson Avanue, Greenville, NC. Phone 758 3276. Open 9 to 5, Monday through Friday. Large selection of furniture and gifts!

003 Building Supplies

CECO STEEL BUILDINGS by Riv erside Iron Works, Inc. Phone 633 3121, New Bern, N.C. Since 1920.

004 Fuel, Wood, Coal

074

Miscellaneous

SOFA AMD RECLINER and 2 chairs. Very good condition. Call 757 0577.

SOFA AND CHAIR, gold valour, $150. Kitchen ranae hood with exhaust fan and light, $25. Oil heater with circulating fan, S40. Camper shell for longbed, louvered windows, top ventiliifor, running lights, $75. 744-4013.

STEREOS AND tv5 lose out

prices on all systems In stock! Maranfz, Sony, Sansul. Furniture World/Stereo City. Phone 757-0451. 2808 Eait 10th Street. In-Store Finance.

STOVE, 30" Kenmore. Like newl $225. Phone 758-2393.

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J. P. Stancll, 752 4331.

ALL HARDWOOD, $75 cord, $40 pickup load. 10 days only, I'/i cords $100. Delivered and stacked. 823-5407.

OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Ready

to go. Call 752 6420 or 752-8847 after 5p.m.

OAKWOOD For sale. Call 752-3379.

SEASONED OAK, $45 a ,<> cord. Seasoned Beech or HIcorky, $50 a cord Delivered and stacked. Call

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752-1359 or 758 5590.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD.

Delivered and stacked. Phone 7S8-6143.

SEASONED OAK firewood, $90 cord; seasoned mixed firewood, $80 cord. Free delivery and stacked. Ready to go. 756-8338 after 5.

WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodstoves, chimney pipe and ac cessories. Squire Stoves. Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques, Winterville. 756 9123, nights 756 1007.

USED LP GAS STOVE, coppartona. Price negotiable. Phone 752-2945 after 4 p.m.

WALLPAPER S1.SO-S3.00 per single roll. Odd lots and discontinu papers. Nanw brands, valas up to S20 a single roll. All salts final. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East lOth Street.

SSO OPF A SET of new Childcraft Books. Still In box. Call weekdays attar 4:30 p.m. 758 4329.

44 FEET FRIEDRICH product cases with compressors. Assorted produce dump tables in top condi lion. May be seen In operation. Overton Supermarkei Inc., 752-5025 or 758-7400.

1x12 WOOD FRAME building with 4' porch and masonite siding. Ideal for storage or kid's playhouse. $495. 744 4840.

075 AtobileHomts For Sale

065 Farm Equipment

CHRISTMAS GIFTS for the

sportsman from Agri back leather

candle power Big Max spot light $26.95. Chest waders $31.95. Many other gift ideas in stock. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC 752-3999

Wir    lui MIC

iman from Agri Supply. Lock folding hunting knife with er sheath $20.49. 300,000

064

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory Mat fress & Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza..355 2626.

NO MONEY DOWN! Instant Credit on new furniture, TVs and stereos Only at Furniture World, 2808 East lOth Street, 757-0451.

SOFA, matching ottoman, 2 chairs, vanity table, brass plant cart, love seat, round table. 756-6204.

6 PIECE solid wood den suit, lamps free. Take over payments only $33.63 per month. 757 0451

Furniture World, undersold!

We will not be

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman

Stables, 752 5237.

074

Miscellaneous

AUTOMOBILE utility trailer with hitch, $200. Vented gas heater, heats 1 or 3 rooms, $100. Sears 23,000 BTU window air conditioner, $200. 300 gallon oil drum with stand and 75 gallons #2 oil, $150. Call 757-0572 or 752 5671.

BALI CUSTOM Mini blinds, 40% off. I week delivery. Throughout November only. Call 756 3241 to place your order.

BE ONE OF THE PEOPLE with Clout! Buy Clout discount card Phone Allen Hardy, 752-6902.

SALESPERSON with mobile home sales experience willing to earn $25,000 to $30,000 year. Send resume to Mobile Home Salesperson, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

SECRETAR Y/RECEPTIONISTT

Hours 8 to 5. Apply in person, 313 East 10th Street.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale. 4 models Delivery setup. 919-763-9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work.

SELLTHE COMPLETE LINE...

Health, life, and soon homeowner's insurance, as well as mutual funds. A five minute phone call is all if takes to see if you can qualify tor this exciting and profitable career Call Lee Weaver in Kinston at L527 4155 tor full details or R.G. Craft in Wilmington at 1-763 4621.

The Mutual of Omaha Companies. Equal Opportunity Companies M/ F.

SERVICE MANAGER

Excellent Career Opportunity with growing company. Excellent com oany benefits and starting salary, refer previous Ford experience Reply In writing to: East Carolina Lincoln 2201 Dickinson Avenue Greenville, N.C. 75^ 4267.

WANTED: SEWING ROOM

Supervisor. Minimum 2 years experience. Ability to handle 50 opera tors, woven products line. Salary to compensate with ability. Send re plies to Sewing Supervisor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

MATURE PERSONS to servke our equipment and learn other work. May rpean doubling your previous income. Opportunity $10,000 up to start management opening. 756-3861.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cuffing and removal, stump removal by grinding. Free estimates. J.P. Stancil, 752-6331.

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs. Plumbing, carpentry, tie l^rd, tops. State License. 752 1920 or 746 2657.

BLOWN IN Insulation. 25 per square foot. R 11 3 " Thick, (fall Gary Jones at Lowe's, 756 6560.

CARPENTRY REPAIR, remodel , room additions. Free estimates. 758-3693 or 757 3919.

COMPLETE CLEANING Service. Experienced office and home cleaning. Phone 746 3374 after 5.

HANDYMAN SERVICE - You name It, I'll tlx It! I No job too imall. Reasonable rates! 758-7748.

rXPERIENCEO 3RD SHIFT

shier. 48 hours per week - 6 days. '0 per week. Apply In person at " Dodge Store, Sooth Memoi

Al ERIENCEO OR CERTIFIED

;al Assistant for growing b jctice. Excellent benefits. Send resume to Dental Assistant, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

HEAD NURSE Pheresis Unit. American Red Cross has toll time management position In pheresis unit In which specialized blood donor and patient treatment pro cedures are performed. Position requires graduate of accredited school of nursing with current NC licensure. Minimum 5 years recent nursing experience with demonstrated supervisory capabilities. Responsibilities include: oervislon and coordination of all lor, patient, and staff activity, tiiilnistrafive duties Include:

. uuling, reports, quality crnilrol, hours basically 8:30 a rn i .?r with some flexibility. Salai y .^unefits compatltiva. Appi xunerlcan Red Cross, PO Box Greenville, NC 37S34. EOE.

HOME AND BUSINESS REPAIRS.

We can do if all. Additions built. Specialist In mobile home repairs, sundecks, porches, electrical work, plumbing, etc. Professional sign work. Repairs to furniture. Wood work is our glory, superb quality. We do not gamble our reputation Reasonable tool Free estimates. Phone 752-7737 after 5 p.m.

HOME IMPROVEMENT and Re

modeling. 20 years experience. Robert Price 8, Son, 752 4862.

HUSECLEANING work done. Own transportation. References. Honest and dependable. 746-6619.

KELLY'S CUSTODIAL SERVICE. Call I 946 0609.

LOWE'S INSTALLATION. Metal Buildings, wood stoves, celling fans Installed. Call Gary Jones at Lowe's. 756-6560.

LOWE'S ROOFING

Installed

fiberglass shingles. $38.50 per square. FREE estimates Call Gary Jones at Lowe's. 756 6560.

HEATING AND AIR Canditioning Service Personnel wantMI. At least of axperiance required. Call 14 or apply In person at sr Machanical Contractors.

LOWE'S SEAMLESS GUTTER

only $1.79 par linear foot. Call Gary Jonas at Lowe's. 756 6560.

PAlHtlNG Inside or outside. 15 years experience. Free estimates.

All work guaranteed. 758-7815.

SfoRM DOORS

i'w c.iv.1'    SI-,-'

Joneyat Lowe s.

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 antiques...anything of vallue.

COIN&RING MAN

On The Corner

CITRUS FRUIT FOR CHRISTMAS.

4/5 bushel of Navel oranges or Red seedless grapefruit. Pick up date December 15 at Brookhaven SDA School. Call758 2459or 758 5717.

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and refinishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mite south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756 9123.

FACTORY OUTLET now open to the public. Buy direct and save. Rope hammocks, tote bags, athletic bags, cutting boards, and a variety of other great Christmas Items manufactured by Hatteras, 1104 Clark Street.

FOR SALE: REFRIGERATOR, 19

cubic foot, Gibson, 2 door, side-Ry-side, frost free, ice maker, Cop-pertone. $200firm. 758-6487.

GAS STOVE, $50. Frost free refrig erator, $175. Phone 756 4788.

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON a BUYING TV's, Siereos.cameras, typewriters, gold & silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 752-2464.

INSULATED TRUCK BODY with Thermo King cooling engine. Will sell separate or together. Call and make otter. 753-5732.

KIMBALL PIANO, 1 year old, new condition, $1,000. Wood insert heater, $250. Call 746 2384.

KING SIZE bookcase headboard, double dresser and mirror. Good condition, maple finish, solid wood not particle board $200. 758-2510.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson,

LARGE SQUIRE wood stove, $600. 825 1169.

MARUSHK PRINTS Great Christmas gifts. Phone 756-3161.

MOVING, MUST SELLI Refrigerator, dishwasher, oak table, dining table and chairs, garden equipment, and more. 746 6774.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

NO ROOM, MUST SELLI Kenwood KRS 400 Receiver with pair of Bose 501 Series M speakers, $450. New waterbed, complete with waveless mattress, bench seat, rails, $650. Call 756 3161.

ODYSSEY II Video Game System

with 9 cartrt price. $135. 756

Less than 7 after 5 p.m.

PITNEY-BOWES

Addresser Printer, Model #0736. Plate Embosser, Model #7950. AAetal plate cabinets, Model #7835. Any reasonable offer accepted. 758 6945 days; 823 4175 nights.

PORTABLE washing machine and dryer, white Westinghouse, $150. Call 756 8553after 5p.m.

PUERTO RICAN and Hyman white

rt;

$8.00 bushel. Call

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS,

shampooers, and uprights. Call Dealer, 756 6711.

SANTA CLAUS available for parties, etc. Call Santa at 756 2352 after 6 p.m.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

in'-.MIIwl

V ; dll

Only

Oary

StORM WINOdwi - Stock Size, single track mill finished. Installed only $19.99. Call Gary at Lowe's, 7566560.

WALLPAPERING AND Painting. 10 years exparlence. Local rafar ancas. 758 7748.

SHARP, SONY A GE closeout sale now at (Soodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at

549 88

' NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewlde, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, cathedral celling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

OAKWOOD, 1980, 14x60. Excallent condition, total electric, derplnned, large deck. Price negotiable. 1-793 3571 atterp.m.

USED 12x70, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths! At a steal. Call 756 4822.

full

12X45 Deerbrook, 2 bedroom, 1',i bath, furnished, central air, 752 6458.

1974 12x60 VOGUE. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, total electric, furnished storm windows. $6,900 758 4611.

19*0 14x70 Guerdeon, assume loan with low down payment. Call 756-8516 after 6 p.m.

1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068

076 AAobile Home insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.

077 Musical Instruments

COMPLETELY RESTORED an

fique piano. Must sell. $500 or make offer. 757 3624 after 5 p.m.

PIANO a ORGAN CHRISTMAS

Sale! Save 20% to 50% oft on all Major brands. Open Sundays! Piano 8, Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. Phone 355 6002.

093

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESSES FOR SALE in

Greenville area ... Sandwich Shop Speciality Furniture Store ... Card and Gift Shop ... Two Fast Food Restaurants ... Wholesale Nursery ... TV Sales and Service .. Needlepoint Shop ... Convenience Store ... Snowden Associates Brokers, 401 West First Street 752 3575.

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N.C. 757-0001, nights 753 4015.

,50<t (cent) GAS

TESTS HAVE SHOWN 100% 200% increase in gas mileage. Product now being manufactured for the very first time. Exclusive area distributorship available. $7,500 inventory deposit required. Call Jack Clancey, 402 957-0770.

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP. Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney - veep. 25 years experience working I chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmvllle.

RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, Inc. Dial 633-3121, Ne> Bern, N. C. Certified Weld , precision Machinists, custo fabricators of Steel Aluminum Stainless A-R Plate. All type Machine Work -Lathes, End Mi,.drs, Boring Mill, Irop Workers, Shears, Break, Rolls. All types machine shop repairs. Tanks, boat shafts, steel steps built to your specifications. Specializing in heavy equipment. Concrete mix er repairs, & Garbage truck packers.

100

REAL ESTATE

102 Commercial Property

COMMERCIAL LOTS for sale. 2

Mail. Will sell seperately.

Davis Realty 752-3000, 756-

each. -    -    '    

2904, nights Mary at 756-1997 or Grace 746-6656, 756 4144.

FOR SALE: 5,000 square foot commercial building in the downtown area. Currently leases for $1400 per month. Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton & Associates 756-6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

REDUCED $25,000 in this over 35,000 square feet in this masonary building with inside railroad loading and unloading. Ample steel storage racks, Included In the asking price. Located on Dickinson Avenue In Greenville with ample -larking space. Aldridge & outherland, 754 3500 or Dick Evans, Realtor 758-1119.

375 SQUARE FEET of retail store front on the mall. Available Imme diately. Rents for $234 per month. Call Clark Branch Management. 756 6336,

106

Farms For Sale

FARM FOR SALE: 36 acres woods land, 65 acres of cropland, 1983 tobacco allotment 13,824 pounds. 1983 peanuts allotment 5,850 pounds. Total 101 acres priced at $175,000. Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500 or Dick Evans, Realtor 758-1119.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company has a Systamt 34 (06K) computer avtllabla for bn-mediata lima aharing. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer la availaUa for immadlata remota hook-up using talaphona communications. Programs ready tor general buainaaa uaa include general ledger, accounts racelvabla, invantory/billing, accounts payabla and payroll.

Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Qreenville, NC  _ or    758-1215

SILK sun SI7P :r,

$50- 3

nylon wool soils, J6 waisl, uke new, $25

15each. 752-8887.

SMITH CORONA TP-I letter quail ty printer. 5 months old. Used I month. In .mint condition. $550. 752-3980 from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

f

A, 102", blue and white ttoral. good condition. $85. 756 4219,

SPECIAL Executive Desks

60's30" beautiful walnut finish. Ideal lor homa or ottics.

neq. Pric/'

$259.00

$^7900

TAFF OFFICE EQUIP^MENT

569 Evans St. 752-2175

106

Firms For Salt

tea ACRES sulteble tor term devalopmant. 4 milei out- of Graenvllle. 7S4-5#*1 or 752-331$.

107

Farms For Laase

WANTED TO RENT tobacco poundage and farm land In Pitt County. 7S-434.

109

Houses For Salo

ALMOit LIK NtWl 6rlck vanear ranch In the country, 2 larga bedrooms, spacious den and neat kitchen. Assume FmHA 1044% loan to quallflad buyer. $4i,soo. Oavis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights AAary at 754-1997 or Grace 744-MS4, 754-4144.

ATtiNtlON INVESTORSII Neat

home, convenient to schools. 3 bedrooms, 1 ba Davis Realty 752-3000,

Ing and $'$,500. 754-2904,

nights AAary at 754-1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754-4144.

BElVORe. New construction. 1500 square foot brick ranch that features large graatroom with fireplace. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, large wooded lot, patio. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Assoclalat, 7^4810, nights^Rod Tugwell 753-

BELVEDERE Immaculate ranch homa features spacious great room, kitchen with dining area plus formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport.'Landscaped wooded yard. $45,900. Owner transfarrad. Call Ball a Lana, 753 002S or Richard Lana 752-8819.

BELVEDERE - Owner anxious will consider lease with option and credit part of rant towards purchase for qualitlad buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with rac room. $55,500. Call Ball & Lana, 753-0025 or Lea Ball 753-1444._

BY OWNER. New log home near

109

Housts For Salt

FR FRIVAV : at an aldaba prical Large 3 story brkk homa, 3,854 sc^ra feat. Approximately 4 miles from hoapltal. 2.3 acres. Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 bedrooms, 3</i baths, carpoiT, patio. 1,130 squart toot workshop. Assumable 8% first mortgage. CaU 7S4-71H.

OY AWAY Pk It LLI $attie In this country home with over acres land. Over 1,800 square feat, 4 bedrooms, family room, garagt, large country kitchen. Mid SSO's. Davis Realty 753-3000, 754-3904, nights AAary at 754-1997 or Greca 74 4454, 7S4-4144.

HW Would you llka to have a

brand naw home? How does no down payment and 9.9% A.P.R sound? Build It yourself and save. l-l4$-3220collact.

NC HOUSING'money available at 10.35% fixed rata. Buy an existing home or wa can build one tor youl Romambor at Rad Carpal - wa will arrange a package that's suited to thaat your noods. Call Rad Carpet Stave Evans A Associates. 3S5-3n7.

WfW HTlN. Lakood li^lnas. S bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that taaturas all formal areas. Dan with fireplace, garage and over IKX) square teat. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A nights Rod

Associatos, 754-4410; Tugwell 753-4303.

cLawhorn,

Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square taat, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R. H. AAc 754-3750 or 975-3488._

BY wN#A. 3 bedroom, I'/i bath, living room, kitchen and dining combination. Fenced In backyard, carport, cornor lot. Approximately 1180 squart teat. Excellent location. Call 355 2441 trom 9 to 5:30; attar 4, 754-0452 or 355-2414.

BY UInER FHA assumption, $14,000 Equity, currant payment $512 par month. 524 4148 or 534-5043. Ervin Gray. 149,000.

CEDAR LOG HOME. Lake Glanwood, Lton Drive, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, wood Insert, heat pump, beautiful homo and lot. 534 4148 or 524 5042. Echo Realty Inc. $72,000.

CLIENT WANti to trade his housa In Kinston tor one In or near Greenville. Over 1,500 square feet, practically new roof, stove and heating plant, priced at $47,500. Call Dick Evans, Realtor AldrldM & Southerland Realty 754 3500, nights 756 1119.

COUNTRY FARM HOUSE Naeds

love and tender care. Vinyl siding, central heat, attractive kitchen, family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms. About 8 miles from Greenville. $30,000. Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights AAary at 754 1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754 4144.

COUNTRY HOME - 4 miles from Greenville. 3 bedrooms, IW baths, large kitchen and breakfast area, utility, carport, large lot. $41,500. OavIs Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights AAary at 754 1997 or Grace 744 4454, 754-4144.

NiW LISTIlii'6. Windy fildge, 3 bedroom, 3Vk bath townhouse. Super nice. Lots of extras. Living room and dining room, and over 1440 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton $1 Associates, 754-4810: nights Rod Tugwell 753-4303.

NtW LISTING - Country. 2 acres of land. About 5 2/10 milos from Greenville. Custom built brick veneer ranch. Large front porch, double car garage with door, huge deck, above ground swimming pool, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, baautltul great room, spacious and gracious (firoplaca, gun rock, bookshelves), tastefully and chaertully decoratad, large country kitchen and dining room combination. Only sas.OoiT Davis Realty 752-3000, 754-2904, nights AAary at 754 1997 or Grace 744^4454, 754-4144.

NEW LISTING - ^arm house In

country. Cream putt on one acre. About 4 miles from Greenville. 2 outside storage buildings, central heat and air, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, cozy den, living room and dining room combination, firoplaca. 847,500. Davis Realty 752 3000, 754-2904, nights Mary at 754 1997 or Grace 744-4454, 754-4144.

N E W L I S f ING - M i Immaculate country. Over Vi acre lot. Beautiful Custom Built brick venaer ranch, almost like new. About 2 years old. 3 bedrooms,

beautiful family room, beautiful country kitchen crown molding, chair rail wallpaper, celling fans, heat pump, patio, outside storage, neat and well groomed lawn. All of the extrasi Decorated beautifully and cheerfully I Only $55,000. Oavis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904, nights AAary at 754-1997 or Grace 744 M54, 754 4144.

COUNTRY HOME. Reedy Branch area. 4 bedroom, 2'/i bath. Approximately 2,900 square leet of living area, plus 783 square foot garage. 3.79 acres of land. Roducad $84,300. Bill Williams Real Estate, 753-2415.

It's still ttw

753-4144.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NEW LISTING Enjoy con dominium llvlngl Close to schools and shopping. Neat Immtaculate, beautifully decorated, cozy family room, cheerful kitchen area, 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, extra stor. Only $35,000. Davis Realty 752 at 754 754 4144.

OWNERS ARE AAOVING from USA and must sell. 3 bedrooms, 2 beths, living room, dining room, den, fireplace, fenced backyard and patio. IIVi% assumable mortgage. 107 Azalea Drive. 754-8281 or 753-

754-2904, nights AAary Grace 744-4454,  -----

Kaaa

1X00.

I 1997 or

PaVmBNTS art basod on your Income I Almost new three and two bedroom ranchesi Pay as little as $350 down. Call HIgnlte Realtors anytime 757-1949,_

BY oWnR. 3 bedrooms, IVi baths, fancod In backyard and sun deck. Great location. Lew$50's. 754-7774.

CLASSIFIED DISPUY

MultHLine Automobile Dealorship Has Openings For

1 DATA INPUT OPERATOR AND 1 OFFICE SUPERVISOR

Aulomotlvt bookkMpIng xpRrlRnct prtftrred. Submit rasuriM and salary raquiramanta to:

P.O. Box 1812 Granvilla,N.C. 27834

WORD PROCESSOR

Full time position. Hours: 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. 3 days per week and 11 A.M. to 8 P.M. 2 days per week. Must be able to type 55 to 60 net words per minute, have good written communication skills and possess ablll* ty to use a dictaphone.

If you are qualified, apply through Personnel, Main Office, corner of 4th & Qreene Streets, Monday and Tuesday, November 28 and 29.

Wachovia Bank & Trust Co.

Equal Opportunity Employor Thru Afflrmatlvo Action

STRiP-EASE

A Better Way To Take It Off Residential Commercial - industrial

The STRIP-EASE process is a completely new method for removing finishes from WOOD, METAL PLASTIC or GLASS. It has been developed and perfected over a number of years by a professional antique reflnlsher who was dissatisfied with the results of stripping processes on todays market. Stripease Is not like conventional dip processes which may damage wooden furniture. It employes a UNIQUE JET SPRAY ACTION which quickly removes finish from cracks, spindles, carvings and hard to get places to restore wood to Its original warm look.

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL Will Strip Any Chair For Only $7.00 Offr Good Thru Decsmbor 31 Call Or Stop In To Inquire About Other Low Prices

Stripfast Of tnienille

' 628 S. Pitt St. (Off Dickinson Ave)

Qreenvilla, N.C.    Phone    (919)    752-1009

SALESPERSON

Previous Experience Necessary Exceilent Benefits:

Hospitiaiization,

Retirenteht.

Paid Vacation,

Apply in Person to:

Bob Brown BROWN WOOD PONTIAC

Dickinson Avenut & 14th Street

lOf Hou$t$ For Sale

HOUSE FOR $L In Aydan. Loan aMumptlon-lowequity. 744-3040.

ftibUcib f"tSa,5M. Implara 1 tlory home. Fenced In yard, carporl. Attumt 9'/% loan, pay manta $438.40 PITI. 3 badrooma.

cozy dan with llraplaca, chaarful kitchan, formal araat, living room and dining room. Only $58,300.

Davit Realty 752 3000, 734-2904, nights AAary at 734-1997 or Grace 744-4434, 734-4144.

kkbuCib TO $33,900. 6nck vanear ranch. Wall aalabllchad nalghborhod, nawly palntad Inalda. 3 badrooma, l'/3 bath$, cantral haat and air, woodttova, baautltul woodad lot, Wlntarvllla School dli-trict. No city laxat. Davit Raalty 732 3000, 734 3904, nightt Mary at 734 1997 or Graca 744 4434, 734-4144.

109

Houtes For Sale

SPECIAL FINANCING As Low As 9'/)%

/cAVAILABLE FOR

NEW CONSTRUCTION HOMES, CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES Call Jqa Bowan

East Carolina Builders, Inc. 752-7194 Anytime

TAK OVER 9% ANNUAL par cantaga rata loan. Atlractlva 3 badroom, 1 </v bath brick ranch with carport. Locatad on woodsy tot naar univtrtify. Living room/dinIng room, eat In kitchan, custom storm windows and doort, naw furnaca, (no air conditioning). Hardwood floort, approximataly 1330 squara taat haatad araa. Taka ovor approximataly $33,300 for 23 yoara ra-malning with principal and Intaraat paymant of $380.82 month. (This loan would coat you $388 - month at todays rata of 13%). Pay aqulty of Sia.iW or ownar may contldar toma financing for part of aquitv. Vary low doting. cott and no altcount point! to buyar. Laata/purchata alto pottlbla. Immadlata pottattlon. Prlcod at 849,900. Call Ownar Agant, Loulta Hodga, 804-794-1533 avonlngt. Noaganlt.

invZI$TTY~5iiTffT?Tr^

block! trom ECU. NIca oldar homa. Complataly radacoratod intlda, 3 or 4 badroomt, living room with flroplaco, dining room, larga aat-ln kitchan. Garaga and attic ttoraga. AAatal tiding, windowt, and roof latt than 4 yaart old. Cantral haat and air. $30,300. Telephone 733-3488 or Wathlngton, 944 9471.

UNIVERSITY. On a corner lot with five badroomt and two batht, living room with fireplace, dining room. One block trom the camput. Buy to live In or at an invattmant. $47,000. Duttu! Raalty Inc. 734 3393.

2309 JEFFERSON. 3 badroomt, 3 batht, large landtcaped lot, workthop 14x34 plus, tnad and shelter, 1477 squara feat of living araa. Bill Wllllamt Real Estate, 7S2 24IS.

Sf" ,yor used talavitian the Clattlflad way. Call 752 4144.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

OUIET, PEACEFUL Spilt Laval country homa. Sttuatad on 13 acroe of land (8 wooded, 4 cleared). Enfoy the out doort I Blueberry buthat, apple, peach, and pear treat. Rich tartlla land tor gardening. 3 badroomt, 3 batht, country kitchon and braakfatl area, family room, mltiplo purpoto room, 1 car goroga. Davit Realty 75a-J904, nitt AAary at Grace 744-4434,734-4144.

klbUef b 13,8881 boll houtajn tU country. Attumo FmHA 10%% loon to quallfttd buyor. Almost Ilka now. TattafuMy decorated In earth tones, 3 badroomt, 1VZ baths, family room, largo country kitchon and brooktatt room combination, utility, outtlda irago. Dovli Roolty 733-3000, )-2m, nightt AAary of 7

733 3000, 734^1997 or

ttorag..

734-2W4, nightt AAary of 734 1997 i Groco 744-44M, 734-4144.

kkoctb ALAA6Y la^aa. Aid

$30't. 3 badroomt, 3 batht, don with firoplaca, kitchon with oil oxtrot, attic fan, haat pump, and electric baseboard haat. Attuma FHA loan plus aquHy. Payments 8444.77 PITI. Carport, tancod In boci^ard, Win tarvlllo School district. Davit Roal ty 753 3000, 754 3904, nightt AAary at 734 1997 or Grace 744-4454,734 4144.

113

Land For Sal*

HLLY AlbGE. Country living (It1 class). 2Vy to 3 ocro tracts. Call Carl for dotollt. Gordon Roolty 738 1983 or nightt, wookondt 738-2230.

LAND ANb Timber tor toio u

acrtt, 100,000 B.F. Ooyla. Vt olno, hardwood. Edgocombo County. Field bid Thursday at 1) a.m., Dacambar 1, 1983. Roger Sauarborn Attoclalat. NCREB I%3-8732.

34 ACltE FARM south of Aydan in the St. John's Community. Rood frontage on SR 110 and SR 1753. 51 acres cleared, 7 acres woodad Tobacco allotment, pond, axcallont road frontage and rental house. Call for full dotalls. Motoloy-AAorcut Really. 744-3144.

8 WOOOEO ACRki. $14,300. wnar will finance. Call Carl for datallt, Dardon Raalty, 738 1983; nightt and waakandt738 2330.

115

Lots For Slit

LdtS FOR SALt: ft

$4,300 to $13,300. Up I Call Rad Carpal Stave Event & Atsoclatas, 333-2737

from

crof.

LYNNDALE Lt on Ouoan Annas Road. Phona33S 233lattar4p.m.

3.2 WOOOEO ACkB lot 8 milat East of Grotnvillo. State Road 1338 Asking, $12,000. Mutt talll Will nagotlata. Phone 732 1913

117 Rtsoii Proptrty For Silo

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico RIvar. I mile from Wathlngton. NC. (juiat, attabllshed neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nightt.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

4-DAY

SPECIAL

Gf A Gretf Streak Going With Rower Streak II

BlackwaH

Size

aUPERSAU

P1NCE

878x13

29.00

C78X14

32.00

E78x14

35.00

078x14

38.00

078x15

38.00

H7lx1S I

1 39.00

Plut t1.34le$2.SS F.I.T.

*26

A7B-13 blockwalt plus II 42 FET.

SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST

Oil Change, Lube & Filter

I. *13

2.00 lor mutthMight oil

Instill now oil (lltor Lubricito clMtsii to

manuficturor's spocificitloni| Up to 5 quarts mijor brand 30W Oil

Front Oioc or Roir Drum

BRAKE SERVICE

VOUR CHOICE

2TUUH unuicc

0 $5488

SomHitotilllc pads cost $15.00 oxtra if noodod.

InsUill now diac briko pods Rosurfaco rotore and ropack whool boirlnga (ixcluding aoalod bnrings)

Inspict hydraulic systim and roar brakos

SHOCK ABSORBERS

4 FOR Extra hoavy duty ahocka faaturlng a full piston Doalgnod to offor maximum porformanca and dspandsbillty in tough work and pioasura Installation Avallabla 1 3/6" platn._

RADIATOR FLUSH AND FILL

Drain and back lluah cooling ystom

Install up to 2 gallont pormanont | typa antMraazo/coolant Inspact cooling syatom hooos. bolts i clamps

A run $

3. *67

4,*14

000 000 ooir^*--"

Use The Silver Card' nationwide at participating Goodyear retail outlets.

Enjoy credit convenience and security whenever you travel.

729 Dickinson Ave. Phone 752-4417 West End Center Phone 756-9371

Stores Also In Rocky Mount & Tarboro





8 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Monday, November 28.1983

Stock And Market Reports

Shuttle...

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - There was no trend on the North Carolina h(^ market today. Kinston 40.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 41.00, Wilson 40.75, Salisbury 38.50, Rowland

40.00, Spiveys Comer 40.50. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 33.00, Fayetteville

33.00, Whiteville 34.00, Wallace 33.50, Spiveys Corner 34.00, Rowland 34.00, Durham 31.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 56.25 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'2 to 3 pound birds. 90 )ercent of the loads offered lave been confirmed with a final weighted average of 56.34 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a light to moderate demand. Weights mostly desireable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was

1.774.000, compared to 1,507,000 last Monday.

The

Meeting

Place

MONDAY

6:15 p.m. - Professional International Secretaries meet at Western Sizzlin'

6:30p.m. Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m. Host Lions Club meets at Toms Restaurant 6:30 p.m. Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:00 p.m. Eastern Pines Volunteer Fire Department meets at fire department 7:30 pm. - Sweet Adelines, Eastern Chapter meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Grefenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park BIdg.

8:00 p m, - Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose

Thank You

The family of Mr James F Dupree would like to thank each and everyone for the

B kindness shown to them during the death of their loved one. May God forever bless you.

NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were mostly lower through morning trading today, stalling the markets rally over the previous week.

Auto, aerospace and telephone issues were among those retreating, while mining stocks rose sharply after gold prices shot up $17 an ounce on the Commodity Exchange in New York.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, up 26.42 points last week, lost 7.22 to 1,270.22 after two hours of trading.

Losers held a 7-5 lead over gainers on the New York Stock Exchange, whose composite index fell 0.38 to 96.17.

Big Board volume totaled 34.76 million shares at noon EST, against 28.80 million at that hour Friday, when volume was light following Thanksgiving Day.

Stocks of the new American Telephone & Telegraph, and of the regional telephone companies to be created by AT&Ts breakup on Jan. 1, were mostly lower today, including Bell Atlantic, down 1% to 67i/j; Ameritech, off IVs to 643/4, and Pacific Telesis, down IV4 to 53%.

The new AT&T was unchanged at 20%. A l.l million-share block traded at 21%.

The new telephone stocks are trading on a when-issued basis - that is, in transactions conducted now for settlement after the breakup is completed.

The old AT&T, which will continue to trade until mid-February, was off 4 to 65%.

Among the mining stocks rising in tandem with gold irices were Homestake iilining, up 2 to 29^4, and Hecla Mining, up 1% to 19%.

McDonnell Douglas, down 1 to 56%, agreed in principle to acquire Tymshare for $31 a share. Tymshare rose 1%

to28V4.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index slipped 0.13 to 222.44.

NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks:

High Low Last

37^    36%

44% I 44%

16'

Mrs. Letha Dupree and Children

Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola C(dg Palm

37

44%

16%

45

14%

57%

48%

52%

22%

64%

7%

34^4

65%

20%

30%

67

86%

25%

43%

43%

53

38%

25%

24%

73%

15%

28

25,

(Cratinuedfrom Pagel)

partly cloudy sky.

Working with Young at the controls is pilot Brewster Shaw, a 38-year-old space rodtie.

The four astronauts who will work in Spacelab, which is mounted in Columbias cargo bay, are mission specialists Owen Garriott, 53, an electrical engineer, and Robert Parker, an astronomer, and payload specialists Ulf Merbold, 42, a West German Aysicist, and Byron Lichtenberg, a biomedical engineer at Massachusetts Institute of Technolc^.

Merbold and Lichtenberg are the first of a new breed of space travelers who are not career astronauts. These payload specialists are selected by their scientific peers for a specific mission, train for six month or more, and after the flight return to their regular jobs.

Spacelab is a cylinder 23 feet long and 14 feet in diameter. The astronauts, working in shirtsleeves, transfer between the station and Colmbias cabin through a 19-foot tunnel.

They will use powerful telecopes to study stellar objects and will attempt to answer questions such as whether certain stars are dying and whether the energy output of the sun varies.

Sixteen of the more than 70 experiments are in the life sciences field, including investigations^)! the space sickness phenomena which has affected nearly half the 26 shuttle astronauts. The inner ear and balance systems of the mission specialists will be studied to determine how the body reacts in weightlessness. Blood samples will be drawn and analyzed throughout the flight, and some of the crew will be spun in a rotating chair.

Three Spacelab furnaces will be used to conduct processing experiments in crystal growth, fluid physics and metallurgy - experiments that could lead to orbiting factories where exotic metals and pure pharmaceuticals are manufactured.

Also aboard is a German-made camera capable of taking photographs of Earth with a resolution of 32 feet, much better than photos now obtained by Earth observation satellites. A microwave radar device will photograph the Earth through clouds.

There are also instruments to measure chemical emissions in the upper atmosphere and the plasma field caused by the interaction of the magnetic fields of Earth and sun.

Throughout the night, forecasters kept a wary eye on the approaching weather front and another storm at an emergency landing site in Zaragoza that earlier had threatened to delay the mission.

The front slowed and the Spanish storm passed, and at 5 a.m. NASA ordered the loading of more than 500,000 pounds of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into Columbias fuel tanks.

The astronauts, divided into two teams, have been sleeping and eating at different hours to prepare for the first around-theH;iock operation in space. Each team will work a 12-hour shift.    1

Young, Parker and Merbold will be the Red Team and work during daylight hours in the United States. Shaw, Garriott and Lichtenberg, the Blue Team, will work nights.

The Red Team was awakened at 3 a.m. today and the Blue Team at 6:40. At their morning meal in the crews quarters, they all ate steak and eggs, &jt for the Blue Team it was breakfast while for the Red Team it was lunch.

The mission is a cooperative effort by the United States and the 10-nation European Space Agency, which built Spacelab, gave it to NASA and is sponsoring half the experiments. Canada, Japan and the U.S. also have proyided experiments.

Because of the requirement of several of the experiments, the shuttles orbit will fly over a greater area of the world than any previous manned spaceship. The path will cover all of South America, Africa, Australia, all the U.S. states except Alaska, and most of Europe, (3iina and the Soviet Union.

The flight marks the return of Columbia after a year on the sidelines during which it was extensively remodeled for the Spacelab mission. Columbia flew the first five shuttle missions, and Challenger the next three.

Comw Edis

ConAgra

Conti Group

Crown Zell

OeltaAirl

DowChem

duPont

Duke Pow

EastnAirL

East Kodak

EatonCp

Esmark

Esmark wi

Exxon

Firestone

FlaPowLt

FlaProgress

FordMot

FordMot wi

Card Of Thanks

The family of the late Rev. C.T. "Tom Wells wishes to express its appreciation for the kindness shown by all during a period of need that words cannot describe.

A special thank you to the Emergency Room Staff on duty Sunday morning of November 13,1983. God bless you all.

Maggie Wells & Family

Card Of Thanks

The Family Of The Late Rev. Jhon H. Carney Wishes To Thank Our Many Friends For The Kind Deeds, Food, Cards, Flowers, Telegrams And Especially Your Prayers During The Loss Of Our Loved One. We Would Especially Like To Thank Mount Zion H. Church Of Bethel, N.C., The Middle District Union And The Old Eastern M. Batt. Assoc.

May God Forever Bless You.

The Carney & Weaver Family

Nat DistiU

NorflkSou

NYNEX wi

OlinCp

Owenslll

PacilTel wi

Penney JC

PepsiCo

Phelps Dod

PhilipMorr

PhiU^Pet

Polaroid

ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

RCA

29

28,

28,

RalstnPur

27%

27%

27%

34%

34%

34%

RpubAir

4%

4%

4%

53%

52%

52,

ReiMblic StI

27%

27%

27%

37%

36%

37%

Revlon

34%

34%

34%

40,

40%

Reynldind

60

59%

60

32%

32%

32%

Rockwl i

32%

32%

32%

53-4

25%

52%

25%

52%

25%

RqyCrown

StRegisCp

25%

35%

25'4

35%

25%

351,

5%

5%

5%

Scott Paper

31%

31

31%

74%

73%

74

SealdPwri

304

29%

29%

53%

52%

52%

SearsRoeb

40%

40%

40%

83

82%

82%

Shaklee s

21%

21%

21%

41

41

41

Skylii Cp

18%

17%

18

37%

23%

37%

23%

37%

23%

Sony Co^ Soulhem Co

13%

17%

13%

17%

13%

17%

41%

41%

41%

SwstBell wi

61%

60%

60,

22%

63%

22%

62%

22%

63

irair

43%

35

42%

34%

42%

35

43

43

43

StdOUInd

49%

48%

48,

27%

26^4

27%

StdOUOh

4?

46%

46%

46%

46%

46%

Stevens JP

20%

194,

191,

61%

60%

60%

TRW Inc

77%

76%

76%

56%

56%

56%

Texaco Inc

35%

35%

35%

51%

51%

51%

TexEastn

57%

57

57%

52%

52%

52%

UMC Ind

17

17

17

75%

74%

75

Un Camp

82

82

82

36%

36%

36%

Un Carbide

67%

67%

67%

44%

25%

44

25%

44

25%

Uniroyal US Steel

17%

29%

17%

28%

17%

29

31

30%

30%

USWest wi

58%

58%

58%

34%

33%

33%

Unocal

28%

28%

28%

46%

4frV4

461,

Wachov Cp

45%

45%

45%

55%

55

55

WalMart s

42%

42%

42%

22,

22%

22%

WestPtPep

West^EH

54%

54%

54%

43%

43%

43%

53%

53

53

37%

37%

37%

Weyerhsr

36%

36%

36%

134%

133%

133%

WinnDix s

32%

32%

32%

40%

40%

40%

Woolwortb

38%

38%

38%

49I4

49%

49^4

Wrigley

53%

53%

53%

121

119%

119%

Xerox Cp

SS'.

47%

47%

13%

13%

13%

57%

56^

56%

21%

21%

21%

42%

42%

42%

Following are selected 11

a.m.

stock

38%

38

38

market quotations:

20%

20

20

Ashland prC...............

39%

19%

19%

19%

Burrougfe..................

16%

16%

16%

Carolina Power 4 Light.

...24%

35%

n

35%

35%

tonner.......................

42

47

41%

46%

41%

47

Eaton.........................

25%

25%

25%

Eckerd's.....................

40%

40%

40%

Exxon.........................

39%

39%

39%

Fieldcrest...................

87

86%

86%

Halteras.....................

29%

28%

28%

Hilton.........................

104%

104%

104%

Jefferson.....................

25

24%

24%

Deere..........................

37%

41%

41%

41%

Lowes........................

24%

24%

24%

McDonalds.................

63%

63%

63%

McGraw......................

62%

62

62

Collins 4 Aikman

31%

30%

30%

Piedmont....................

35%

35%

35%

Pizza Inn.....................

54%

53%

53%

P4G...........................

60%

60%

60%

TRW. Inc....................

38

37%

38

United Tel...................

23%

26

25%

26

Dominion Resources

23

69%

69%

69%

33%

Wachovia....................

33%

33%

OVER THE COUNTER

36%

36%

36%

Aviation......................

57%

57%

57%

Branch........................

61

6KV4

60%

LitUeMint...................

36%

36

36%

'Ultralights' Going To War

Obituarios

HOUSTON UVP) - A Florida company is buying 200 ultralight airplanes to sell for military use in Central America, say the owners of a Houston firm which has accepted a $1.3 milliwi order for the aircraft.

Del Martin and Fr^ Bell, partners in Worldwide Ul-tralites of Houston, said they have agreed to build 200 planes for Lorken International Inc. of Miami.

Martin and Bell said they do not know where their planes wiU wind up.

They havent told us what governments theyre going to and we havent made it our concern, Bell said.

But Domingo Linale, a spokesman for Lorken, said ^turday sinne of the planes will go to the governments of Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Costa Rica.

Linale said Lorken officials would have no aversion to selling the 330-pound planes to rebels fighting the San-dinista government in Nicaragua, but added that no deal has been made with the U.S.-backed rebels.

Bell said workers from his company will train the buyerspilots.

Linale said the planes.

which can cruise at 60 mph for two hours on their 55-horsepower engines, would change warfare in Central America because of their low cost, mobility and ease of (^ration.

For patrols and hit-and-run activities, they would be very useful, he said.

The buyers will mount weapons on the planes, Linale said.

Linale, a Bolivian who has been in the United States for 10 years, said Lorken is a medium-sized trading company that buys and sells coffee, sugar and heavy equipment. He said it also sells military equipment.

The companys president, Lorenzo Lacayo, is a native of Nicaragua, he said.

The companys policy is, We will not deal with any communists, Linale said.

Ultralight aircraft have broad wings made of dacron and Fibergla^ and frames made of aluminum.

Martin said the planes sell for between $7,000 and ^,000, which makes them much cheaper than a helicopter or larger aircraft. Pilots 1^ quire only 10 hours of instruction to fly the tiny planes, he said.

Nigerian Airliner Crash Takes Lives

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - A Nigerian Airways jet on "a domestic flight caught fire and crashed Monday into a farm near an aiiport in

HauiteilBy Abscam Case

OAKLAND PARK, Fla. (AP) - Former Congressman John Jenrette left Washington, D.C., three years ago and now sells floor tile in Boca Raton, but he says the bitter memories of his Abscam conviction still haunt him.

It was a lesson that I will never be able to get over and never be able to forget, said the 47-year-old former South Carolina Congressman. A day doesnt go by that I dont think about it and shudder and wake up at night and sweat.

Jenrette was one of seven congressmen caught in the FBI Abscam investigation of )olitical corruption. All have )een sentenced except Jenrette and Richard Kelly, a former Florida congressman, whose sentence has been delayed by the appeal courts.

Jenrette said he expects to be sentenced within three weeks, although he can file an appeal that would delay it until 1987.

I guess if I appeal. Ive got three more years of going through the agony of not knowing, although at least I will know what the bottom line is basically, Jenrette said.

The Justice Department has said he deserves three years in prison, the maximum given to other congressmen convicted in Abscam.

southern Nigeria, killing at least 53 people, the Nigerian News Agency reported.

The pilot ana at least 17 others on the flight survived the crash of the FiAker F-28 aircraft, the news agency said.

The exact number of people on the flight was not immediately known, but the news agency said about 77 people had boarded the plane.

The plane caught fire as it was descending toward Enugu airprt after an early morning flight from Lagos, the Nigerian capital, the agency said. Enugu, capital of Anambra State, is 300 miles east of Lagos.

'The Nigerian Broadcasting Corp. said its reporter saw burned bodies scattered over a farm where the crash occurred, about four miles from the landing strip.

The station said burning metal chunks of the plane were thrown over a wide area and that government and airline officials searched the site for government documents believed to have been on the plane.

The broadcast report said the cause of the crash was not immediately determined.

The news agency said the crash occurred at 11; 13 a.m.

On Sunday morning, a Colombian jet, an Aviar a Boeing 747, crashed into a hilly area five miles east of Barajas airport at Madrid, Spain,'and burst into flames. Authorities said the crash killed 183 people and that 11 survived.

In March 1978, a Nigerian Airways airliner and a Nigerian air force plane collided in the air and exploded. The collision, over an area in northern Nigeria, killed 18 people, according to Nigerian news reports.

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM

The City of Greenvilles Community Development Annual Grantee Performance Report for the 1982-83 Small Cities Program year has been submitted to the North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development for review and approval. Copies of the Performance Report are available for public inspection in City Hall, in the City Clerks Office, Sheppard Memorial Library and its branches.

City of Greenville

For Sale At Public Auction

Various tracts and paresis of land In Pitt County (as dascrlbad In Dead of Trust racordad In Book F-49, page 697, Pitt Public Ragiatry), Including:

1. Proparty fronting approximataly 170 fsat on Mamorlal Driva (U.S. Hwy 13), Qraanvllle, N.C., including 1400 squara foot modern office building, with asphalt paved parking areas (Prasant location of Hoka Contracting Co., Inc.).

2. Lot approximataly 12S* x 175' on Mamorlal DrIva (U.S. Hwy 13), Qraanvilla, N.C., with underground fuel storage capacity.

3. Lots SO' X ISO' on Moors Street and Langley Street In Qraanvilla, N.C.

4. 6.84 acre Sand PHt located In Pactolus Township.

Thursday, December 8,1983 11:00 A.M. at

Pitt County Courthouse Steps

The highest bidder at the salt will bt required to make a cash deposit of 10% of the amount of the bid up to $1,000.00, plus 5% of any axcaas over $1,000.00. All sales will be made subject to any unpaid Uxas and asaasamants and will be held open tor 10 days for upset Mda.

For Further Information Contact:

0. Nelson Hoka (823-8381)

Mahrin R. Hoka (7S8-5001)

Edward B. Simmons, Trusts# (823-3183)

Johnson AYDEN - Miss Shannon Ray Johnson, 18, died &in-dav as a result of injuries suffered in a traffic accident near Banner Elk.

Funeral services will be conducted at Farmer Funeral Home Wednesday at 11 a.m. by the Rev. Ted Wilson and Rev. Travis Owens. Burial will be in the Ayden Cemetery.

Miss Johnson was a freshman at Lees-McRae

Snowstorms...

(Continued from Pagel) dispatcher for the Nebraska State Patrol this morning.

National Guard armories were opened for stranded travelers in the Nebraska towns of Sidney, Ogallala and York. Three churhces in Oglalla also opened their doors.

Sioux Falls, S.D., was at a standstill with a foot of new snow whipped into hip-high drifts atop a layer d slick ice. The blowing snow closed streets as soon as they were plowed and authorities asked everyone to stay home except in emergencies. The airport was closed.

Snowplows were sent out to rescue motorists and passengers from a bus that slid off a highway west of Yankton, S.D.

Some other accumulations included 26 inches at at Greeley in centrol Nebraska; 19 inches at Goodland in western Kansas; 11 inches at Mankato, Minn., and 9 inches at Minneapolis where more than a foot was expected.

A family of four from Cody, Neb., was missing north of Greeley after setting out to drive from Cody to Grand Island lust before the blizzard closed in Sunday.

We dont know whether theyre out there in a car or a farmhouse or what, said Greeley County Deputy Bill Callister, adding that all roads in the county were blocked.

I can seen drifts from the office here, and it looks like theyre six or seven feet deep. Theres nothing moving here in town.

Denver declared a snow emergency Sunday, and Stapleton International Airport, the nations fifth busiest, was closed. The airport was partially reopened this morning and officials said it would operate at 50 percent of capacity until Tuesday.

As many as 3,000 would-be passengers waited in the terminal overnight, sprawling on coats and bags, dozing or reading books and news-papers.

'nie storm was posing a major threat to livestock in Nebraska. Im snowbound and most of my livestock is out on winter range, said James Bowlin, a rancher near Arthur in the western part of the state. The cattle are going to need feed and water, but theres nothing I can do right now.

Even major highways remained impassable, with a 300-mile stretch of Interstate 70 closed from Aurora, Colo., to Wakeeney, Kan., and Interstate 80 shut the length of Nebraska.

College in Banner Elk. She graduated from Parrott Academy in Kinston and was a member of the Ayden United MeUiodist Church.

Surviving are her mother, Mrs. R(^ N. Johnson of the home; a iHYither, Luthn* Coart Johnson of Greenville; her paternal grandparents, Mrs. Robert N. Johnson Sr. at Ayden, and her matamal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Arnold of Raleigh.

The family will be at the funeral hiMne Tuesday fnm 7-9 p.m. In lieu of flowers the family suuests that memorial contriMitioas be made to the Ayden United Methodist Church in memoriy of Shannon Ray Johnson.

King

Mrs. Oaiszel Moore Kin^ ot the Piney Grove Commumty, Route 1, Grifton, died Saturday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the wife of George B. King Sr. of the home.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott & Company Funeral Home in Ayden;

Moore

GRIFTON - Mr. Larry Whitney Moore, 80, died today. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesdav at 2 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel in Ayden by the Rev. Gene Purcell. Burial will follow in the Riverside Church Cemetery.

Mr. Moore was a native of Pitt County and was a member of Riverside Christian Church.

Surviving are one brother, Leon C. Moore of Grifton, and two sisters. Miss Merle Reade Moore and Mrs. Christine Jackson, both of Grifton.

The family will be at Farmer Funeral Home in Ayden from 7-8:30 p.m. Tuesday.

In lieu of flowers, memori-als may be made to the Pitt County chapter (rf the American (iancer Society.

Williami

Mrs. Nell Elizabeth Whichard Williams, 72, of 1229 River Road, Suffolk, Va., died Sunday.

Her funeral service will be conducted Tuesdav at 2 p.m. at the graveside in the Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery in Suffolk by Dr. Robert Marr. Memorial donations may be made to Nansemond-Suffolk Rescue Squad or the landscaping fund of the Nansemond-Suffolk Academy.

A Pitt County native, she was a sales cleric for Hcanes Ltd. in Suffolk and a member of the Suffolk Christian Oiurch.

Surviving her are three daughters, Mrs. Sylvia W. Stradley of Franklin, Va., Mrs. Joann Walters and Mrs. Betsy Brothers, both of Suffolk; a sister, Mrs. Christine Morton of Greenville; a brother, John Ashley Whichard of Greenville; seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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Title
Daily Reflector, November 28, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30648
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