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INSIDE TODAY
INSIDE TODAYSOCtAL SECURtTY
Senate committee to weigh compiaints and hear testimony government withdrew money from recipients bank account after paperwork error. (Page 16)DEATH POSTPONED
Another temporary stay of execution for convicted Fiorida kiiler Robert Suiiivan, who has been on Death Row ionger than any other American in history. (Page 5)
SPORTS TODAYLONG HONORED
East Carolinas Terry Long has been selected to the Kodak All-America football team, his second A-A selection. Page 9.THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 267
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 29, 1983
16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
Weather Toll Now 68
New Storm For Midwest
Snow, Too
RO,AD CLOSED Eastbound travelers on Kansas state line Saturday night due to a Interstate 70 at Tower Road just east of winter storm that had dropped about 20 inches Denver wait for the road to open Monday. 1-70 of snow on the area. (APLaserphoto) eastbound from Denver was closed to the
KKFLKCTOK
MOILIti
Hotline gets things done. Write and tell us about the problem or issue into which youd like for Hotline to look. Enclose photostatic copies of any pertinent information. Our address is The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Because of the large numbers received. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we ocal with all of those for which we have staff time. Names must be given, but only initials will be published.
Editor^ liote: Hotline has, on a trial basis, discontinued its telephone answering service. Please mail us your items. Thank you.
RUBBERJAR RINGS I have been looking for the rubber jar rings people lised to use for home canning. I need them for a crafts project and have been unable to find them in this area. I would appreciate hearing from anyone. E.N., 756-3001.
THANKSGIVING FEEDBACK Pastor Nina Blount of Tabernacle of Prayer for All People Church and Pastor Jerry Sherba of St. Gabriels Catholic Church have asked Hotline for a feedback item to express appreciation to everyone who donated to the Thanksgiving dinner provided for the elderly and needy on Thanksgiving Day and appealed about in Hotline. Approximately 300 dinners were served, they said.
Full-Time Job
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners agreed Monday night to hire a full-time registered civil engineer.
The board, meeting at a workshop session, agreed to retain former Greenville City Engineer Charles Holiday on a part-time basis. Holiday has been working part time for the county since his retirement from the city several years ago.
One of the duties of Uie engineer will be to work with the county planning board.
In other business the board and representatives of the town of Farmville met with representatives of the N.C. Department of Transportation to ask DOT'S assistance in finding a site to relocate the Farmville solid waste container site.
The present site serving the Farmville area will be closed when a portion of the new U.S. 264 freeway between Wilson and Greenville is built across it.
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 supply.
By CY.NTHIA GREEN Associated Press Writer While Midwesterners dug out from a record blizzard and a trickle of travel resumed, forecasters warned that a new sister storm threatened to dump more icy. inches on the Great Plains today as the fierce weathers death toll rose to 68.
Snow from the new storm began falling in Utah early today and the National Weather Service said up to 4 more inches could top the 1 to 2 feet that paralyzed the nations midsection Monday. Travelers advisories were in effect today for much of Wyoming, northern Utah and eastern Colorado.
As the western Plains braced for another, though milder, onslaught, the storm that left 9-foot drifts in some areas and brought the Midwest to a halt was still packing a wallop further east.
Snow continued to fall today in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, with up to 6 new inches expected before it ended. Freezing rain and sleet left a slippery sheen over northern New England.
At least 15 more storm-related deaths were reported Monday, including four stranded motorists who were overcome by carbon monoxide fumes from their idling engines in Kansas and seven people who suffered heart attacks while shoveling snow in Minnesota and Nebraska.
At the same time, a doctor in Colorado hitched a ride on a snowplow to reach an blizzard-bound Colorado home and deliver a baby.
The Nebraska State Patrol advised the hundreds of stranded travelers - many of whom bunked on church pews and armory floors Sunday night - to stay off the roads another day. Although Interstate 80 was cleared of 8-foot drifts and reopened Monday afternoon, "were telling everybody that its still ice- and snow-packed, that there is still snow and blowing snow, and that travel is not recommended. said a patrol spokesman in Lincoln.
I can see drifts from the office here, and it looks like theyre six or seven feet deep, said Greeley County, Neb., Deputy Bill Callister. Theres nothing moving here in town.t You're just asking for it by being out, said Bill Brennan of Grand Island. Neb. Theres cars strewn
all over the place.
Ranchers in western Nebraska labored to get food to livestock herds that were caught on the range during the storm. The Nebraska Livestock Feeders Association canceled its convention, which was to have run Monday through Wednesday in Kearney, because so many cattlemen would be tied up trying to save their animals, spokesman Rex Messersmith said.
Denver city officials were keeping a snow emergency in effect today after Stapleton International Airport was reoined to 50 percent of capacity Monday and more than 3,000 stranded passengers began to move out. Bob Coates, director of operations, said he expected to have all runways operating this morning - except weve got another small snowstorm coming in and that could slow down things a bit.
Power was still out today for about 8,000 customers in northeast Kansas as crews worked to hook up lines downed by ice and snow, said Bill J. Ohlemeier of the Kansas Electric Cooperatives Inc. As many as 21,000 customers were without electricity at the height of the storm, he said.
Mondays tortuous excavation brought tales of triumph as well as tragedy.
A physician hitched a ride on a snowplow to deliver a healthy baby boy at a home in Limon. Colo., which was isolated by the storm. Danny Ray Brown and his mother, Mrs. Leonard Brown, were both in good condition Monday after Dr. Thomas Jeffershouse call.
A seriously ill Colorado toddler was rescued from his familys snowbound farm after a radioed plea for help was heard 1,000 miles away in Oregon. Two-year-old Bryan Kester was taken to the hospital through 18 miles of swirling snow.
Newlyweds Dwayne and Paul Simmons of Oklahoma City returned to their snowbound car Monday after spending the first night of their honeymoon on the floor of a National Guard armory in Garden City, Kan. But sympathetic emergency workers helped the couple salvage some romance -they were the only stranded travelers given a private room, a makeshift bridal suite in an armory office.
NEW FLAGS ORDERED ... Two new flags, replacing the traditional Confederate battle standard and the British Union Jack, have been ordered by the city for the Town
Common. They will fly with two current American flags, a North Carolina flag, and a Betsy Ross flag, which was the first flag of the United States.
Order New Flags For Town Common
ByTOMB.UNES Reflector Staff Writer
The city, after consulting with the state Division of Archives and History, has ordered two new flags for the Town Common to replace two that were questioned by an East Carolina University student as to their relevance in local history.
City Manager Gail Meeks said today that
she and Mayor Percy Cox received letters back in the spring from Glenn Maughan. who she said expressed concern about the symbolic meaning of the Confederate Stars and Bars. She said .Maughan also questioned why the British Union Jack was being flown here.
Mrs. Meeks said the standards, along with four others, were presented to the city by the (Please turn to Page 8)
Scientific Experiments Are Begun in Spacelab
By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - The scientists aboard Spacelab, not content with testing their own bodies to learn how humans adapt to space, turned today to a related question: How do
CIVILIAN IN SPACE - West German Ulf Merbold, space-load specialist aboard the Shuttle Col-
umbia/Stands beside the hatch that opens to Spacelab. (AP Laserphoto)
plants know which way is up when there is no up"?
Except for the usual minor hitches, the shuttle Columbia and the $1 billion European-built laboratory in its cargo hold were doing well after their Monday launch. And so were the six men aboard the orbiting spacecraft, with one fleeting exception.
Byron Lichtenberg, a biomedical engineer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was unable to complete a hop and drop" test in which he jumped, then let elastic bands pull him to the Spacelab floor. Lichtenberg complained of "a little dizziness and disorientation" and Mission Control assured him that you did the right thing to stop when you did.
The astronautssplit into two teams for their round-the-clock, round-the-world experiments and about midnight EST - dawn in Europe - the red shift took over with West German scientist Ulf Merbold in the laboratory along with Robert Parker.
One of Merbolds first tasks was to photograph some dwarf sqnflower seedlings, in various stages of growth, to observe the growth ihpvements of the plants in weightlessness. On Earth, growing plant parts move in tiny spiral patterns, but scientists dont know why. The movement, called nutation, is affected by gravity and scientists want to see, through a series of time lapse pictures, what happens
when there is none.
Merbold and Parker continued the Spacelab mission of subjecting orbiting humans to tests to see what causes space sickness, at one point placing their heads into a rotating dome painted inside with dots of various sizes and colors.
The slowly whirling dome was designed to induce a sensation of left to right rotation while a camera records the subjects eye
(Please turn to Page 8)
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Inside Reading
Pageti Area items Pagel Drug traffic Pages-Obituaries
2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
Tueeday, November 29,1963
Anti-Drug Program Spawns Parent Groups
By PATRICIA McCORMACK I PI Health Editor
Come on America! Stick vour neck out for kids and telp prevent adolescent drug ana alcohol use," says a brand new flyer funded by the American Medical Association and circulated by the National Federation of Parents for Drug-Free Youth.
The quote is from Nancy Reagan.
The card also features a )icture of the nations first ady with her arms around a 6-foot-tall stuffed giraffe, given to her when she attended the groups annual meeting recently in Washington, DC.
One million of the flyers are being distribted to participants of the more than 10,000 town meeting held Nov. 2 and 9 in conjunction with the television broadcast, The Chemical People," an anti-drug show featuring Mrs. Reagan as host.
Mrs. Joyce Nalepka, senior vice president, said the giraffe was given to Mrs. Reagan for sticking her neck out in the badtle against teenage drug abuse.
The secret service men took it home in a limousine, Mrs. Nalepka said. Ann Wrobleski, special projects director for the first lady, told me the giraffe is residing in the first familys living quarters on the second floor of the White House
An informal link between the federation and Mrs. Reagans campaign against the teenage drug epidemic also involves the Nancy
Reagan Speakers Bureau, created by the parents grwip last year and recently funded by the National Football League.
Mrs. Nalepka, a founder of the national parents group that has spawned more than 4,000 community parent groups nationwide, said the Nancy Reagan Speakers Bureau was named to salute Mrs. Reagan for trying to get more parents involved in preventing and fighting drug abuse among children and teenagers.
In response to Mrs. Reagans recent appeals to parents during The Chemical People" broadcasts, the federation opened a drug hotline for parents.
Congresional wives are among those manning it from 9 to 5, Monday to Friday. Mrs. Nalepka said the hours will be expanded with need.
The line is for parents seeking help with a drug problem affecting one of their children or wanting to know how to protect children not yet into chemical abuse.
Among the first callers was a girl, 13, who wanted to know if she could still be saved.
She said she was into marijuana and alcohol for a few weeks, Mrs. Nalepka said.
Some children wanted to know what to do about their parents using marijuana.
Mrs. Nalepka said the NFP was founded in May 1980 to help parents.
We were desperate to find
On The Young Side
Congratulations and kudos for Christine Gantt who has added another award to an already growing list for the 1983-84 school year. Mrs. Gantt, head of the math department at Rose High, was presented the "Governors Award for Outstand-ing Contributions to Mathematics and Science Education by Gov. Jim Hunt. Earlier this year Mrs. Gantt and Virginia Read
Christmas
Portraits...
Theres Still Plenty Of Time
At
tmagei
CRBATIW W 7 PHOTORAPHY
2904 East 10th Street
Deadline for Christmas Portraits: November 30. Open Thursday And Friday Nights By Appointment
Call Today
752-0123
received a $2,500 grant from GTE.
Leaders in school spirit, the Rose High Marching Band and both cheerleading squads have recently received awards for excellence in their fields. The band, for the first time in three years, received a rating of excellent at the East Carolina University Band Day. The majorettes placed second in their division while the drum line placed third. The cheerleaders competed at the Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival and both squads did well. The junior varsity team placed first in their category and the varsity squad placed second in theirs.
As part of several foreign exchange programs, Rose is being attended this year by 10 students from different countries. These students and the countries they hail from are: Bertram Pflasterer and Kirsten Soetebier from Germany; Anne Stormoen of Norway; Kirsi Arvola from Finland; Pedro Gener of Spain; Didier Uzan of France; Katherine Jamieson from England; Malin Forsberg of Sweden; Hugo Rondino of Italy; and Stratos Lakios of Greece. They will be staying for the remainder of the school year.
Tickets for the drama clubs production of The Drunkard are still available from club members or by contacting the Rose High office. The play is scheduled for Dec. 2-4 at the Wahl-Coates auditorium.
The date - Nov. 30 - is very important at Rose for two reasons. The ASVAB (Armed Services Vocation Aptitude Battery) -will be given and all creative work for Insights (the schools literai7 magazine) is to be submitted.
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Family Eye Care and Contact Lenses
r'arkvlew Commons
_ Stantonsburg Road
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help for those children already involved and even more determined to invent the rest from bectnning involved, she said.
Mrs. Nalepka said she learned of the epidemic levels of use when a teenage neighbw asked her to (Mt)-vide transpcxtatioa to a rock cwicert.
Her sons were only 5 and 9 and her reasons for becoming an activist were simple.
I was terrified for my own children, angry that it was happening to anyones children and determined to help stop it, she said.
She baked bread for the children to eat when they came home from school and in other ways provicted a good upbrin^ng and a nice warm bomeUfe, all the things meant to make a kid feel secure.
But when she witnessed young people tripping on drugs and alcohol during the rock concert, Mrs. Nalepka said she saw that more was needed if her children were to be protected.
The way to protect any children against the drug epidemic, she said, is with education that starts at age 6 or 7. But even that may be too late.
She said one way to protect children against the po^ibil-ity of drug abuse is by teaching them about the responsible use of even over-the-counter drugs.
Take orange-flavored aspirin for children. Mrs. Nalepka said children should be taught that its medicine, and eating it like candy can
%
be dangerous.
Bob Kramer, NFPs new president, said the federation can give parents guidelines that will prevent the spread of drug use among adolescents - and help parents see when they neea to seek professskmal treatment.
I learned the hard way -afto* my boys were alrtady so b^vUy involved that both needed treatment, said Carolyn Burns of Burtonsville. Md., director of the NFP Nancy Reagan Speakers Bureau.
Theres lois more help
available now and we want to share it.
"My advice to parents is, get yourself educated, prevent drug use by younger children, get help for those already using drugs.
Our family was hurt but still we feel lucky. NFP gets many calls from parents whose children have committed suicide or died as a result of an accident caused by drug or alcohol. We want you to pick up that phone and call.
The toll-free number is (800)554-K-I-D-S.
Elks
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Reading Neil Elks, Grimesland, a daughter, Laura Neal, on Nov. 15,1963, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Briley
Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf^ Cornilus Briley, 432 Wedgewood Arms Apartments, a son, Christopher Shaun, on Nov. 15, 1963, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
McArthur Boro to Mr. and Mrs. James Dawson McArthur, 274 Circle Drive, a son, James Dawson Jr., on Nov. 15, 1983, in, Pitt Memorial Hospital. '
Lynch
Born to Mr. and Mrs.
James Lynch, Oak City, a daughter, Kenya Latrice, on Nov. 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Williams Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Donnell Williams, Chocowinity, a son, Christofrfier Eugene, on Nov. 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Taft
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Winslow Tah, 107 Crown Point Road, a daughter, Janie Pendleton, on Nov.
16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Forbes
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thompson Hollingsworth Forbes Jr., Route 3, Greenville, a son, Thompson Hollingsworth III, on Nov. 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Scholtens Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Ral[^ Scholtens, 311 Crestline Blvd., a daughter, Stephanie Marcella, on Nov.
17, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor LIGHT FARE Chicken Sandwiches Fruit Conserve Cupcakes & Beverage FRUIT CONSERVE Good to have on hand to serve with sliced meats and poultry. 20K)unce can crushed pineapple in syrup 2 cups sugar 16 ounces cranberries 2 oranges, grated rind of 1 and membrane-free pulp of. other >2 cup raisins h cup coarsely chopped walnuts
Drain pineapple well; add enough water to the pineapple syrup to make 2 cups. In a large saucepot over low heat, stir together the pineapple syrup mixture and sugar until sugar dissolves. Add cranberries; do not cover or stir; bring to a boil and boil until cranberries pop -5 to 10 minutes. Add drained pineapple, orange rind and pulp and raisins. Boil gently, stirring often, until thick - about 15 minutes. Stir in walnuts. Makes about 6 cups. Store, tightly covered, in the refrigerator. This conserve is not overly sweet.
A New Best Seller
CHEETAH PRINT PANTYHOSE - Model Dawna MUler shows a best seller in pantyhose by James Casty for Easton Print Plant, Inc. which makes its own line and also prints for oUier manufacturers. (UPI Telephoto)
All Framing 20%
off
Now Until Christmas
Gallery
INSIDE STEINBECKS DOWNTOWN 752-7076
Welcome to teaching. Miss Stevenson.
Your mission is to teach 26 frst-graders how to read. Shi^d you decide to accept the job you will be reinforced by every modern bit of technology known to education, including visuals, computers and teaching aids.
You will have the confidence of the parents, the support of the administration and the love of the children. You have nine months in which to accomplish this miracle with three and a half weeks of holidays and an occasional closing of the schools for an Act of God. Good luck.
Oh, just one thing. You wont forget to instill good nutrition habits, teach the gifted, the neurologically impaired, the emotionally disturbed, and develop civic responsibility, will you? Good.
And check for head lice, make sure they have a hot breakfast, collect milk money and arrange their transportation to and from school.
Did I mention eye testing and inoculations and instruction of first aid procedures? It goes without saying you will provide sex education ... in a tasteful way, of course.
By the way, dont forget to maintain birth information and age certification data, be on the lookout for child abuse, and collect money for the repairing of the Statue of Liberty.
And youll have to make time to build economic awareness, assist in bladder control, stress bilingual development and eliminate sex discrimination.
Just be glad. Miss Stevenson, you arent in secondary education. They have to assist in career planning, money management, teach kids how to drive a car, counsel them in their career, place them in jobs, identify and solve alcohol And drug abuse problems, and counsel them in pregnancy.
Youre fortunate. All you have is bicycle safety, iraining in pulmonary resuscitation, promotion of physical fitness and metrics, building self-
w(th and respect, and instilling in them a sense of patriotism.
Teaching them to read, I know, sounds simple, but its important. But then so is daily fund-raising, protecting students privacy, following due process procedures, counseling problem children, maintaining discipline, fostering integration, and teaching the principles of free
enterprise.
All we expect from you is to give the public what they want... a back-to-basics education. Good luck, Miss Stevenson. Miss Stevenson? MISS STEVENSON!
Another one self-d^tructed. No om wants to teach kids how to read anymore.
About 2,300,000 North Carolinians use alcohol.
Joseph V"
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919-523-7002
Pre-Christmas
Warehouse Sale
Mens Beeutiful 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.
Tuesday Night Is Hallmark Night!
All merchandise from Hallmark 20%
Christmas cards gift wrap party goods puzzles playing cards photo albums scrapbooks candles stationery
(counter cards excluded)
6:00 til 9:00 ONLY
114 E. 5th St.
Unfinished Furniture
CHIPPENDALE
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521 West lOth St. Beside The Railroad Depot 752-3223
Pats Pointers
By Pat Trexler
Christmas, for many, is a special time of sharing. So it is very fitting that these clever plastic can-vas needlepointed Christmas ornaments are the original designs of two of my readers who are willing to share their ideas with all of us.
Although all the ornaments appear to be flat in the photo^aph, seven of them, designed by Josephine Bridwell of Franklin, Ind., are three-
a most unique shaping for ornaments and one that will have every<me wondering how you did it. The two-sided circles and squares are the work of Olive Wightman of Bellevue, Pa. Many thanks to both of these generous ladies!
All the ornaments are quick, easy and fun to make from odds and ends of yam and plastic canvas. Make a few extra for little rm-thinking-of-you" gifts for friends and neighbors.
To obtain directions for making these Designer Ornaments, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-1I27 with $l and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to; Pat Trexler ("The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810,
North Myrtle Beach, S,C. 29597.
Or you may order Kit No. N-1127 by sending a check or mwiey order for $11.50 to Pat Trexler at the same address. The kit price includes the shipp-ii^ charges, full instructions and sufficient materials for making up to 20 ornaments.
Dear Readers: I am writing this column before Thanksgiving, but today I feel so thankful that I have been blessed with the opportunity to share ideas with other needlecrafters each week.
Through the years I have always known that you who love to do handwork are very special, warm and giving people and this was brought
CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS...are needlepointed on plastic canvas and can be made from odds and ends of yarn. Some of the ornaments are' three sided.
Christmas Bride Is In A Panic
By Abigail Van Buren
* 1963 by Univarul Preu Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: My wedding invitations went out two weeks ago and the response cards are coming in. Abby, they are throwing me into total panic!
I sent invitations to 31 single people. Nowhere on the invitation did I indicate and guest, but so far 14 of these single guests have returned cards with the names of their guests written in.
Two couples have informed me that if they cant bring their children, they will not attend. I do not want children under 12 years old. And if I allow one, I will have to have at least 20.
Abby, due to space limitations and a tight budget, I cannot accommodate any more than I have already invited.
Please tell me what to do.
CHRISTMAS BRIDE
DEAR BRIDE: If you cant personally write or phone those who have informeid you that they are bringing a guest (or their children), enlist the help of one or two close friends. Be assured that you are in no way being rude or unreasonable to inform invited guests that due to space limitations you regret that you cannot accommodate their guests or children.
DEAR ABBY: Has there ever been a book written on wheelchair etiquette? If so, I would like to buy several dozen copies and pass them around.
Because of an accident, I am confined to a wheelchair. It is a difficult enough adjustment to make without having to put up with the thoughtlessness and insensitivity of some people.
When I am shopping with my husband, the salesperson will invariably ask my husband, What size is she? Being unable to walk does not necessarily mean that I am deaf, mute or of diminished mental capacity.
Also, when I am out with friends, I have had so many coats, hats, pocketbooks and packages piled on top of me that I look like a rolling rummage sale!
And, lest I forget, theres the clown who likes to let go of my wheelchair at the top of an incline, only to run up after a few steps to catch it with a jerk.
Please print this, Abby. Im sure there are thousands (at least) who get around in wheelchairs who would appreciate it
FOUR-WHEELER
(Problems? Whats buggihg you? Unload on Abby, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. For a personal reply, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.)
Rep. Jones Is Guest Speaker
Rep. Waller B. Jones Jr. was speaker at the meeting of the Greenville Credit Women-International held last week at Abrams Family Restaurant.
"Lobbying Your State Legislature" was Jones program topic. He pointed out the importance of contacting the state legislature concerning matters of importance to various groups. He has ^n appointed to the Governors Advocacy on Youth, Economics Needs of Women and is a study commissioner on day care. He was introduced by Gloria Hathaway.
Mildred Porter said the Christmas party will be held Dec, 6 at First State Bank.
Martha Knight was welcomed as a new member.
Bridal
Policy
A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For pubfication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks,' only an announcement will be printed.
Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.
Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.
home to me again this week when I called the two ladies who designed the Christmas ornaments featured today.
I have met neither of these ladies, but feel that I have two new friends. Both were so warm and friendly and their conversations just sparkled with enthusiasm over their needlework.
When I called Olive Wightman, 1 immediately pictured from her voice a busy young homemaker. Imagine my surprise when she volunteer^ the information that she was 81 years old and full of ideas for needlepoint designs.
Josephine Bridwell told me that she saw a threesided Santa ornament demonstrated at a crafts club she attends and then went home and started playing around with the idea and in doing so, developed her own designs.
Both have shown a lot of creativity in their designs in a perfect willingness to experiment and to slant their stitches in any direction to achieve a desired effect. Too many people still think of needlepoint as simply small diagonal stitches slanting from left to right and therefore limit themselves in the area of design.
Now, just before the start of the busiest of holi
day seasons, most of you will probablv want to work from other peoples desi^ for your handmade gifts and decorations. But why dont you plan to make it a new years resolution to ^ your hand at desiping original items? Plastic canvas particularly lends itself to this in many ways not the least of which is the ease of ripping out a design area that doesnt come out as well as youd like.
Someone once asked me how I went about the creation of an original design. My rather flip answer, which popped out unex-)ectedly, was that I rip a ot! There was more than a little truth to that, however.
I often sit with needle, yam and canvas and try out a variety of stitches and color schemes before a good design forms. I never feel that this is wasted time, though, as nothing is more relaxing.
The real thrill comes when a design I have just worked out looks special and someone says I like that! Heres hoping you can have that tlu*ill with
CNTURV 21
Tipton & Associates 756-6810
Tha D<ly Rafleclof, Greenville, N.C
one of your own original designs one day.
Dear Readers; Several of you have written me to express confusion about the tiny toboggan tree ornament I described in my Nov. 6 column. My fellow Southerners and 1 associate a winter cap with the word toboggan, whereas the rest of you probably think of a sled. The directions I have given you are for making a tobc^ggan cap not a sled!
Marriage
Announced
The family of Joseph Saieed announces the marriage of their sister, Margaruite Saieed, to Rupert Ziegler of Jacksonville, Fla. The ceremony took place during a nuptial mass at St. Pauls Catholic Church in Jacksonville, Fla. Nov. 25.
Pledge Ritual Held By Group
Tte Eta Delta Chafrter of Beta Sigma Phi held a ritual ceremony last week at the home of Ann Pfeifer.
Receiving the pledge ritual which explained the Beta Sigma Phi motto (rf Life, Learning and Friendship were Janice Ht^ins, Gail Costello and Pat Lindsey. Participating in the transfer ritual were Ann Simo, Terri
Tuesday, November 29,1983 3
Lackey and Stephanie Evancho. Conducting the ceremonies were Georgia Potter, president, assisted by Bonnie Marten, vice president.
A reception in honor of the new members followed.
The business session included a discussion on food distribution during the holidays, updating the yearbook and plans for the Christmas social which will be held with the two other Greenville chapters.
The chapter Christmas party will be held Dec. 13.
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Editorials
Riding A Gamble
Farmers have to be the biggest gluttons for punishment we know. Year after year, they face the hazards of weather and inflation, of labor that doesnt want to work or labor that wants all of the profits, of political expediencies that tend to hurt those being helped more than anyone else.
This year certainly has not been different. Congress has battled tooth and nail over legislation that would virtually wipe out tobacco as a cash crop. Weather conditions were terrible for tobacco, corn, soybeans, virtually everything that grows in the soil.
Tobacco yield fell 22 percent this year, to the lowest level since 1941. The corn crop declined 57 percent and the soybean crop is forecast to fall 42 percent below last years record crop. Peanuts are down 29 percent. Even cotton, no longer really a major cash crop in this state, still makes its presence felt. Cotton is expected to fall 56 percent below the 1982 yield.
Gamble? No doubt about it. Farming is a gamble of the first , order. Even if you get past the harvest with a good yield, chances are the market prices will fall.
As the saying goes, you cant win for losing. But North Carolina growers have shown in the past that they can win and, although many have dropped by the wayside in the last 10 years, agriculture will continue.
The classic tobacco farmer alvvays vows Im quitting midway through the harvest season. But when fall comes and its time to get the seed beds ready for the following year, s^eldom indeed does that farmer not show up.
Its the native pride in his work, the enjoyment of what he or she is doing and, of course, the possibility of making it big this year that keeps the farmer going.
Idea With Merit
Katheryn Lewis, director of the Rural Education Institute at East Carolina University, recently discussed with Pitt County Commissioners the establishment of a nature museum at River Park North.
The Greenville-owned park would be ideal for an outdoor education program and a childrens museum, she said.
She suggested participation by city-county governments and schools and said an outstanding fossil collection and one of the best taxidermy collections in the Southeast could be made available.
It strikes us as a positive idea. It would seem that costs could be held to a reasonable level if the governments and the schools participated and drew on support from the university. The museum would provide an education exhibit which would be impossible to duplicate in individual schools.
Pou/ O'Connor---
Environmentalists See Their Image
Donald Rofhberg
Democratic Tangle
WASHINGTON (AP) - For the best of motives, Democratic Party officials got themselves in a terrible tangle that threatened to turn party priorities upside down and distract the rank and file from the goal of beating Republicans next year.
Ironically, the current trouble can be traced to the rules revision designed to do away with the internal bloodletting that characterized earlier battles for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Outsiders might reasonably wonder what possible difference it could make if Iowa holds its caucuses and New Hampshire its primary a week earlier than the new party rules require.
But to party Chairman Charles T. Manatt the rules are the rules and everyone signed off on the deal and ought to stick by it.
Recently Manatt has acted as if prepared to fight to the last Democrat to prevent Iowa and New Hampshire from undoing the caucus and primary calendar.
His concern goes beyond those two states. If Iowa and New Hampshire can buck the rules then how can Manatt insist that Wisconsin abandon its open primary, a tradition which permitted any
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voter, including Republicans, to vote in the Democratic primary?
That made it a battle worth fighting but only if there were a chance of victory.
It took no time at all for the contenders for the partys presidential nomination to decide their best interests lay in giving support and comfort to the two states which kick off the delegate selection process.
Sen. Alan Cranston needs Iowa and New Hampshire votes more than he needs his fellow Californian, Manatt.
Neither former Vice President Walter F. Mndale or Sen. John Glenn of Ohio, the contenders who rank one and two, respectively, in the opinion polls, has been willing to anger party officials in Iowa or New Hampshire by siding with Manatt.
So Cranston declared last week that he wouldnt join other presidential candidates in a fund-raising tour sponsored by the national party. It was time, said Cranston campaign manager Sergio Bendixen, for Manatt to concentrate on resolving the calendar dispute.
It seemed a little extreme for a leader of a party that needs every dollar it can get to compete with the bulging Re-jublican treasury which is constantly fed 3y a fund-raising apparatus far more efficient than anything the Democrats can hope to have for many years.
But the dispute seems to have moved beyond the point where people can act rationally. There now is too heavy an investment in egos and what the candidates perceive as their chance for a slight edge in the states that will hold the first caucuses and primary in 1984.
Both states jealously guard their first in the nation status which attracts all die presidential contenders and a lot of national attention every four years.
The calendar everyone seemed to accept two years ago began to unravel when New Hampshire officials balked at sharing March 6 with a non-binding straw p^ll in neighboring Vermont. New Hampshire officials invoked a state law which provides that their primary be held one week earlier than any similar event and set a new primary date of Feb. 28.
Then Iowa moved its caucuses from Feb. 27 to Feb. 20.
Manatts muscle in the dispute was the national partys authority, affirmed by the Supreme Court, to override state laws when it comes to determine who gets seated at its natiorj^l convention.
But the party canf override its presidential candidates and the longer the dispute drags on, the likelier it is that Manatt will have to find a face-saving way to cave in.
RALEIGH - Environmentalists lobby at the General Assembly under the burden of a stereotype. Rural conservative legislators often show little wlitical respect for environmentalists )ecause they see them as a bunch of wealthy- or professional-class city slickers who are left of center in the political spectrum.
The stereotype is of a white, upper middle-class person whos got theirs and wants to protect it. Hes the person whos bought a cottage at the beach and is opposed to development, explains Bill Holman, the Sierra Clubs North Carolina lobbyist.
North Carolina environmentalists are touting a new poll and saying it proves that the stereotype is incorrect. They say the poll shows that the stereotype exists only in the minds of people like former Interior Secretary James Watt and not in the general population.
Ive been working in the environmental field for five years and found
environmentalists to be as diverse as youre likely to come across, Holman says. Weve got Republicans and Democrats, liberals and conservatives, white-collar and blue-collar workers ... the stereotyped image doesnt stand up and this poll shows that a lot of blue^ollar people, blacks, farmers, busi-nessmen, consider themselves environmentalists or conservationists.
The poll was conducted by the Friends of the Earth Foundation and funded by the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation. In all, 609 North Carolinians were randomly interviewed in early October.
The major finding of the poll was that 72 percent of the North Carolinians interviewed described themselves as sympathetic to the environmental movement or active participants in it. That compares to a national average of only 61 percent as determined by other 11s.
pol
Equally important to the environmen
talists is a finding about their own public image, that the stereotype doesnt exist in the Hiblics mind. The frequent allegation that the environmental movement is elitist, aloof and preoccupied with peri^eral issues is rejected by most North Carolinians, the poll report sa^.
The poll ftnind that 65 percent of all North Carolinians agreed with the statement, Environmentalists really care about people like me. An equal number of people rejected the statement, The environmental movement is led by a bunch of wealthy people who dont understand my problems.
The poll did find a minor Achilles heel for environmentalists, however. Of those polled, 37 percent of the respondents agreed with the statement, Even though the environmental movement does some good things, I dont trust it because there are too many radicals and extreme liberals in it.
One frequent target of state
James Kilpatrick
ERA Isn't Dead, Yet
WASHINGTON - It is said of the fabled phoenix that this rare bird lives for an unusual span of years, then builds a massive nest on a hill, sets fire to the nest and burns itself to ashes. After a decent interval, the bird comes forth anew. In the continuing life cycle of the Equal Rights Amendment, we have just passed through another self-immolation. Further resurrection is yet to come.
What happened in the House of Representatives on Nov. 15 was a piece of political cynicism as raw as any such demonstration we have seen this year. You will recall that the ERA first was approved by Congress in 1972 for a seven-year period of ratification. When the seven years ran out. Congress provided an unprecedented 39 months more. The states still refused to ratify, and the ERA expired in the summer of 1982 in flames of bitterness and recrimination.
But when Congress reconvened last January, behold: The ERA, unchanged by so much as a comma, arose from its ashes as House Joint Resolution 1. Its sponsors resisted every effort at amendment. Speaker Thomas P. ONeill succumbed to the kind of devious temptation that old pols find irresistible. He fixed things so that the ERA would fly out of committee on one procedural understanding, but would land on the floor under a wholly different procedure; and he figured he would win either way the vote went.
TTiis was a catch-22 of magnificent
dimensions. Critics of the Equal Rights Amendment were eager to add five or six amendments to the original text. These were amendments to say that the ERA would not create a right to an abortion, that it would not require the drafting of women for mi itary service, that it would not require women in the armed services to undergo combat, that it would not affect the preference given to veterans in civil service jobs and that it would not apply to private and parochial schools.
Some of these proposed amendments, notably the ones dealing with abortion, combat service and veterans preference, had strong support. Brought to a vote on the floor, they probably could have commanded simple majorities, and thus would have been added to the resolution.
But these same amendments were absolutely opposed by such outfits as the National Organization for Women. The more militant proponents of ERA wanted the original version, pure and undefiled; and they threatened political reprisal against any member who sought to make changes.
The House leadership had promised proponents of the amendments that they would have an opportunity to offer their proposals on the floor. But in a change of mind that infuriated many of the ERAs supporters on both sides of the aisle. Speaker ONeill reneged. He sent the resolution to the floor under a rule that barred amendments and permitted only 40 minutes of debate. When
the roll was called that Tuesday afternoon, the resolution fell half a dozen votes short of the two-thirds required for passage.
The debate, such as it was, saw demagoguery on one side and resentment on the other. This is not a vote on procedure, cried Don Edwards of-ali
California, this is a vote on whether you oppose or support equality. This was rubbish, but we heard a vast deal of rubbish that afternoon. This Constitution was never intended to be amended in such a cavalier fashion, cried Hamilton Fish of New York. And in that remark the gentleman was exactly right..
Did the speaker win? Or did he lose? My own guess is that his ploy will fail. The resolution lost only because of the ruthless power play' attempted by the leadership. Democrats will insult the intelligence of the American people if they propose to get away with hanging Edwards simplistic formulation on opposing Republicans.
ONeill and Edwards lost this round because they deserved to lose. The proposed amendments were not frivolous amsndments. Their purpose was to clear up deep uncertainties about what ERA would mean as a matter of constitutional law. The House should have been granted the chance to vote them up or down. Eventually, because this phoenix will rise again, that time will have to come.
environmentalists is Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, powerful Senate A{^ropriations chairman and sponsor of legislation that says no state environmental regulation can be stricter than that promulgated by the federal government. After being read the results of the poll, Hardison said, One humlred percent of the petle are concerned about the environment ... Im an environmentalist, too. I want clean water, clean air and the public safety protected ... But a lot (tf them (people who care about the environment) dont agree with the methods of those who call themselv environmentalists.
The poll shows that North Carolinians want the environment protected and that they respect environmentalists. But before the environmental lobby becomes a major force in the General Assembly, the environmentalists will have to provide more evidence that the puolic supports their methods of protecting the environment.
Public
Forum
Cot Synidcate
1983 Universal Press
To the editor:
Several weeks ago I wrote to you regarding the national holiday for Martin Luther King. I had no estimate of the cost of a national holiday at that time. I would like to give your readers an estimate of those costs found in Sen. John Easts Washington Update.
The Library of Congress estimates a cost to th federal government of $270 million - and for state and local Governments a cost of $692 million is forecast. That comes to a total of nearly $1 billion in pay, benefits and lost productivity for all government workers.
In addition, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce estimates that the cost of King Day to the private sector will be about $4.3 billion per year. Added to the * public sector costs, this means that the total cost of the new holiday will be a staggering $5.26 billion. Colliers Encyclopedia states, In 1940, total government expenditures amounted to ^.5 billion.
What will this day cost our grandchildren?
Charles G. Clark Greenville
Elisha Douglass
Strength For Today
So often do the sayings of Jesus seem to be contrary to the practical ideals of the world in which we live that we wonder whether or not such counsel is sound. Someone has expressed it by saying that what Christ said seems upside down when we look at it through the eyes of the world.
We are told to love our enemies, to turn the other cheek, to take no thought for the morrow, to have faith that whatever needs to be done for the fulfillment of our lives can indeed be done.
In the physical process of perception the image of the things which our eyes behold is upside down, but the brain turns these images right side up so that we can see things as they really are. In the same way, when people enter sympathetically into the ideals of Jesus kingdom, then the precepts of the Gospel shine forth right side up.
Then, much of what the world calls practical wisdom appears iri its true light upside down.
JERUSALEM When he came here at the beginning of November seeking help in Lebanon, Undersecretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger received little sympathy but did get an unusually blunt warning from top Israeli leaders.
The warning: President Reagan had better not think U.S. air and naval pressure, with or without Israeli help, can end disorder in Lebanon and permit withdrawal of the Marines. If so, they told Eagleburger, he will be turning the 1984 presidential election over to the Syrians and the Russians.
The problem is Reagans pledge to leave the Marines in Beirut until domestic tranquility is restored or all foreign forces are pulled out. That, the Israelis believe, gives trump cards to Soviet-backed Syria to force delays any time it wants, at a mounting cost of Marine casualties. The answer, these Israeli leaders warned Eagleburger, cannot be found without dealing with Syria directly and at length.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Israel Sees Solution In Syria
Such a warning to the diplomat respected in Israel as Reagan s most
experienced policy-maker exposes the concern here that the U.S. has lost its way in the quicksand of Lebanon. Eagleburgers plea for closer U.S.-Israeli collaboration to avoid recurrences of the Oct. 23 Marine massacre in Beirut was listened to, but specific pledges were not even asked, much less given.
The specifics are supposed to be unveiled when Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Defense Minister Moshe Arens meet in Washington. But the White House failure to arm Eagleburger with specific proposals on his mission here left Israeli politicians alarmed.
They are alarmed because, with all the talk from Washington about strategic cooperation with Israel, they dont know exactly what it is Reagan wants from them. A few Israeli air attacks on extremist Iranian-Shiite camps in the Syrian-controlled northern Bekaa Valley of Lebanon are not seen here as adding
1 muscle to Reagans bargaining power with Damascus.
Beyond that, Shamirs Israel privately rules out the kind of large-scale ground assault on Syrian forces in the Bekaa that might, if successful, force Syrias President Hafez el-Assad to do Washingtons bidding and withdraw from Lebanon. A lieutenant of the prime minister told us: If thy push Shamir to do that, it will be very bad because we will not oblige.
Even talk about restoring the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), a deal for vague strategic cooperation between the U.S. and Israel, arouses little interest among the men who are closest to Shamir. Temporarily shelved in 1981 as a gesture to punish Israel, the MOU is looked at here as the property of former defense minister Ariel Sharon. Shamir sees it as a made-by-Washington trick to limit Israels freedom of action.
Concern over the immediate future of relations with the U.S. is tied to
Israeli bewilderment over the baffling course of American diplomacy since Israels invasion of Lebanon in June 1982. Reciting chapter and verse of his countrys effort to keep the U.S. from inflicting major damage on itself, a prominent political leader told us that the whole American position on Syria was wrong, and wrong in the most basic way.
This Israeli leader warned Secretary of State CJeorge Shultz in May that he would have to deal directly and at length with Syrias Assad to resolve the stalemated troop-withdrawal issue. But Shultz became xtremely angry. 'ITie secretary of state then rejected Israels assurances that Syria is the ally but not the puppet of Moscow and that without extended talks with Assad the troop withdrawal puzzle would never be solved.
Shamir will reject any appeal from Reagan to ue Israeli military power as Americas sword to bring home the Marines.
New Stay Of Execution Given Death Row Veteran
By KEN KLEIN Afiociated Press Writer STARKE, Fla. (AP) -Convicted killer R(^ Sullivan, who has been on Death Row longer than any other American, drew a rare mercy plea from Pope John Paul II and g temporary stay of todays scheduled execu-ti(H) from a federal judge.
Sullivan, 36, was scl^uled to die in Floridas electric chair for the April 9, 1973, murder of a south Florida restaurant manager. Sullivan, who has been on Death Row a record 10 years, says he is innocent.
Florida Gov. Bob Graham rejected the papal appeal
and an aide said the governor would not stay tie electrocution.
But the chief judge of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta, acting on a motion by Sullivans tew-yers, delayed the electrocution until the 12-judge panel could be polled on whether to consider a last-minute appeal. On Monday, a three-judge panel of the same court voted 2-1 to reject his
XI.
e officials expected the full court to act on Sullivans request for a hearing by noon today. If they deny a new hearing and a last-gasp appeal to the U.S. Supreme
Court failed, Sullivan could be executed anytime before noon Wednesday, according to the terms of a death warrant signed by the governor.
Roman Catholic Church officials said Archbishop Edward McCarthy of Miaim, with authorization from the pope, telephoned a mercy plea to Graham on Monday.
A Roman Catholic bishop in Florida has said a Boston man confessed to a priest that he was with Sullivan at a homosexual bar at the time of the killing. The unidentified priest IS barred from revealing details of the conversation but he and several
Filipino Guard Says He Killed Alleged Assassin
By RUBN G. ALABASTRO Associated Press Writer MANILA, Philippines (AP) - An air force sergeant testified today that he fired nine bullets at the alleged assassin of opposition leader Benigno Aouino because the man triea to get up after another airman shot him several times.
Sfit. Ernesto Mateo, 29, told the commission investigating the slaying of President Ferdinand E. Marcos chief political foe that he was the first of several troopers to leap from a special weapons and tactics van immediately after Aquino was shot Aug. 21 at Manilas airport.
Last week, Sgt. Rolando de Guzman of the Philippines air force told the commission
he saw Aquino being shot and immediately shot the alleged gunman, identified by the government as Rolando Galman. He said he shot the gunman in the head and fired six more bullets into his body before it hit the ground.
Today, Mateo told the commission that as soon as he jumped out of the van, he saw Aquino lying on his face on the tarmac and de Guzman, armed with a 45-caliber semi-automatic pistol, firing on another figure sprawled a few feet away. Mateo said he then opened fire with his M-16 automatic rifle on the same man his companion was shooting.
Asked by commission deputy general counsel Mario Ongkiko why he fired on a
Trying Again
WASHINGTON (AP) -r The government today launches a new effort to "lick the mob" and assess the extent of organized crime in the United States, including the relatively new gangs that have formed in prisons or around motorcycles.
The new Commission on Organized Crime is chaired by Irving R. Kaufman, a judge for the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York who said, organized cnme today is a more dangerous and pervasive force than ever before. In a statement he added, It affects virtually every aspect of our nation and its economy.
Attorney General William French Smith is lead-off witness at the first public hearing called by the commission which has been authorized by President Reagan to make a complete analysis of organized crime.
The commission is to report to the president by March 1, 1986 with proposals to change laws and to improve the administration of justice.
Commission member John Duffy, sheriff of San Diego County, Calif., resigned Monday from the panel because of allegations that he had had connections to organized crime, though the Justice Department found no basis for the allegations.
Duffy said the commission should be "completely free of any controversy arising from the allegations.
Hearings are planned in several regions of the country following todays hearing in Washington called to hear Smith, FBI director William H. Webster and Drug Enforcement Administration chief Francis M. Mullen.
Dates for the additional hearings have not yet been set.
To do its job, the commission is seeking the broadest lossible powers to subpoena witnesses, according to Justice )epartment spokesman Art Brill. He said the commission wants the authority to compel people to testify, authority that must come from the Congress. Congress has adjourned for the year and is not scheduled to reconvene until Jan. 23.
We need that subpoena power. Itd be very important and we dont have any doubt were going to get it, said Brill.
COCAINE BUST Galveston Police Officer Rick Boyle and U.S. Custom agents remove plastic sacks of pure cocaine discovered on board the banana ship Rio Sulaco at a pier in Galveston Monday. The 68 pounds of cocaine, valued at about $210 million, was found in the engine room of the Costa Rican vessel by a U.S. Customs d<^, a black Labrador named Funky. (APLaserfdioto)
man already lying on the ground, Mateo replied, All I know is that while Sergeant de Guzman was shooting, he (the alleged gunman) was trying to get up.
The man was moving his hands and lifting his head, Mateo said. I was afraid he might harm Senatm* Aquino again or anyone of us.
Mateo, who wore two medals he said were awarded as a sharpshooter and expert with M-16 rifles, said he fired nine bullets from a distance of about eight feet and all found their mark.
'The opposition has accused the Marcos government of complicity in Aquinos assassination, provoking a steady wave of anti-government demonstrations and calls for Marcos to resign.
Marcos, in power for 18 years, has repeatedly denied the charges, claiming Galman killed Aquino on orders from communist subversives.
Aquino, a former senator, was jailed by Marcos between 1972 and 1980. Mateo said at todays hearing that he had been assigned to pick Aquino up in his van and take him to the same military camp where he had been held earlier.
In Manila today, squads of police and soldiers stopped an anti-U.S. protest near the U.S. Embassy, arresting 12 of the estimated 100 demonstrators.
Two truckloads of police, two dozen helmeted riot troops and firemen with a water truck had been guarding the embassy for several hours when the youths, on a march from the university district, appeared.
aiild Colter To Continue
LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP) - A Davidson County Superior Court Judge ruled Monday that the Creative Learning Center, a day care center targeted by allegations of child abuse, may remain open.
Judge Judson DeRamus handed down an 11-page ruling that provides for strict supervision of the day-care center nd certain stipulations that owner Jean Drum must follow.
The ruling followed six days of testimony earlier this month, including charges by several parents that their children had been neglected. Some alleged that children were placed in closets and their noses were held as a disciplinary measure.
Mrs. Drum had been allowed to continue operating the center pending the ruling.
DeRamus found that Mrs. Drum repeatedly, willingly and knowingly failed to maintain adequate child-staff ratios and that continued violations would seriously threaten safety of children.
He said he couldnt find a continuing threat of harm to children from evidence in case, and that even if the alleged mistreatment did occur in the past, it doesn't .constitute a continuing danger to the children.
Mrs. Drum had testified that she hadnt been incompliance with all state regulations, such as keeping enough staff (Hi duty during childrens lunch breaks.
of his colleagues asked fcx clemency because they believed Sullivan was innocent.
In Washington a spokesman for Archbishop Pio Laghi, the popes personal representative in the United States, said the pope had not formally asked for mercy, but had joined his voice in a pastoral way to those of his brother pastors.
I apfxeciate the thoughts and concern of the holy father, Graham said, according to Steve Hull, the governors press secretary.
Were not going to commute Mr. Sullivans sentence, Hull said today. Were not going to stay the execution.
If Sullivans exeucution is carried out, he would be the first person executed in Florida since John Spenkelink died on May 25, 1979, and the ninth in the United States since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1972.
In an emotional interview with a reporter Monday, Sullivan was not (^timistic. If I had to say yes or no. Id say Id be executed tomorrow, Sullivan said.
But he denied killing Homestead, Fla., restaurant manager Donald Schmidt and said Florida officials wanted to show that they will execute a middle-class white boy.
Prosecutors said Sullivan and an acccnnplice robbed Schmidt at gunpoint of $2,700 and then (Irove him to an isolated section of the Everglades in western Dade County.
Originally Sullivn confessed but later said he had been at a bar frequented by homosexuals and was drunk and frightened when he spoke to police.
He is appealing his death sentence on three grounds;
racial discrimination, the fairness of his sentence compared to others who have committed similar crimes and the alleged failure of his trial attorney to investigate his alibi claims.
Shortly before 11 p.m. Monday, Chief Judge John Godbold granted a temporary stay in order to poll the 12-member court on whether to grant a hearing.
The Rev. Joe Ingle, director of the Nashville, Tenn.-based Southern Coalition of Jails and Prisons, spent Monday evening with Sullivan at Florida Sta'te Prison. Ingle called the court action a shaky stay and was hopeful for a permanent stay.
TTie state viewed the 11th Circuit action as inconclusive, said Don North, spokesman for Florida Attorney (General Jim Smith.
Meanwhile in Tallahassee, about 60 death penalty foes held a candleli^t vigil outside the governors mansion Monday night.
' Graham was unmoved by their pleas and anti-death penalty placards I support the death penalty because I believe it is an effective deterrent, Graham told the somber gathering. He talked with protesters for about 20 minutes.
In Starke, a small town about 40 miles southwest of Jacksonville, several clergymen of various faiths led a candlelight ceremony at the tiny St. Edwards Catholic Church.
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15th YEAR - Emmanuel Vitria, the world's longest surviving heart transplant patient, celebrated the IStb anniversary of his life-saving operation. I think Ill die at 100 years of age, joked the 62-year-old Vitria. (AP Laserphoto)
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Safety Council To Hear West
The Pitt County Safety Council will meet Thursday at the Greenville Country Club at 12:30 p.m. Eddie West, superintendent of Pitt County schools, will be the guest speaker.
Services Schedule Emphasized
The Salvation Army asks that those who will use its services for food and toys at Christmas to make application at definite times.
The unemployed with no income should apply Nov. 30, Dec. 1,2 and 5; the elderly and handicapped, Dec. 6 and 7; and those on limited income Dec. 8,9,12, and 13. Hours each of these days are from 9:30 a.m. to noon and from 2-4 p.m.
Those applying should bring verification of income and s,Capt.Ro
expenses.
.Ronald Davis said.
Priest Receives Graham Award
The Rev. Charles Mulholland, priest of St. Michaels Church in Cary, has been awarded the North Carolina Civil Liberties Unions Frank Porter Graham Award for outstanding contribution to the cause of civil liberties. The award was presented to Mulholland Saturday in Greensboro.
Mulholland, formerly a priest at St. Gabriels Church in Greenville and later at a church in Washington, N.C., is a long-time member of the Civil Liberties Union. He served as president of the Greenville NCCLU chapter and as its representative to the state baord from 1971 to 1978. In 1977, he was elected president of the organization.
The Graham Award is named for the late Frank Porter Graham, U.S. senator, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and president of the University of North Carolina.
Carter Presented Service A ward
Edward E. Carter was presented the "Council Community Service Award of the North Carolina Joint Council on Health and Citizenship Sunday in ceremonies held at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church.,
The presentation was made by Dr. Andrew A. Best, president of the council, and Dr. Wiley E. Hines, president of Zeta Eta Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Carter was cited for extraordinary achievements and community service in multiple areas of endeavor through the years. Carter recently was elected to the Greenville City Council.
Deacons To Hold Workshop
A deacons workshop will be conducted Saturday, at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. by Dr. William H. Brock of Shaw University. A registration fee of $5 will be charged.
For further information call Danny Stancil at 524-4651 or 566^1826, or Jimmie Graham at 566-3887.
Basketball League Discussed
A meeting will be held at G.R. Whitfield School tonight at 7 p.m. to discuss the organization of a youth basketball league with a Christian orientation. Representatives of area churches or businesses may attend. For further information call 746-3103.
Senior Choir To Meet
The Senior Choir of Mount Calvary Church will have a business meeting Wednesday. The session will begin at 8 p.m. '
Auxiliary Honors Member
OComa Wilson Day was celebrated at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church Sunday at 4 p.m. by the Pastors Aide Auxiliary, with tributes by members and friends.
Mrs. Wilson was honored for her long-time membership in and support of the church. She belong to the church Sunday School. Deaconess Board, Junior Ladies Auxiliary, Pastors Aide Auxiliary and Senior Missionary Circle.
For Sale At Public Auction
Various tracts and parcels of land in Pitt County (as described in Deed of Trust recorded in Book F-49, page 697, Pitt Public Registry), including:
1. Property fronting approximateiy 170 feet on Memorial Drive (U.S. Hwy 13), Greenville, N.C., including 1400 square foot modern office building, with asphalt paved parking areas (Present location of Hoke Contracting Co., Inc.).
2. Lot approximately 125' x 175' on Memorial Drive (U.S. Hwy 13), Greenviile, N.C., with underground fuel storage capacity.
3. Lots 50' X 150' on Moore Street and Langiey Street in Greenville, N.C.
4. 6.84 acre Sand Pitt located in Pactolus Township.
' Thursday, December 8,1983 11:00 A.M. at
Pitt County Courthouse Steps
The highest bidder at the sale will be required to make a cash deposit of 10% of the amount of the bid up to $1,000.00, plus 5% of any excess over $1,000.00. All sales will be made subject to any unpaid taxes and assessments and will be held open for 10 days for upset bids.
For Further Information Contact:
D. Nelson Hoke (823-8381)
Melvin R. Hoke (758-5001)
Edward B. Simmons, Trustee (823-3183)
Toastmasters Schedule Meeting
Greenville Toastmasters Club No. 2595 will hold a special meeting Wednesday at Archies Steak House with dinner at 6 p.m. and a program at 7 p.m.
The educational program will feature the Youth Leadership Class from the Boys Club of Pitt County. Eight Youtn Leadership participants will present prepared speeches. Pat Flanagan, Youth Leadership coordinator, will serve as toastmaster and Charlotte Flanagan will present table topics.
For more information about the Toastmasters leadership development program, call Tom Houston at 756-8171.
Periodontist Attends Seminar
Greenville periodontist Dr. M.W. Aldridge and his staff recently attended a patient management seminar in Atlanta. The four-day meeting was designed to teach dentists and their staffs better ways to communicate with each other and their patients. Dr. Aldridge said.
Kidney Group To Meet
The Eastern Carolina chapter of the North Carolina Kidney Foundation will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Gaskins-Leslie Building, adjacent to Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Revival Starts Wednesday
The Rev. James Vance will preach in a three-night revival crusade at the Nazerene Church of Christ, 205 W. Skinner St. The services begin Wednesday and will be held nightly at 7:30 p.m.
Special musical groups will be featured each night.
Bank Reports Break-In
Greenville police and agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation today were investigating a break-in at Peoples Bank at Carolina East Mall, which was reported at 8:38 a.m. Monday.
Detective Pete Lavin said someone broke open a doer and took $995 in coins from the banks teller line.
FBLA To Hold Bake Sale
The J.H. Rose High School Future Business Leaders of America chapter will hold a bake sale Dec. 7 before and after school.
The project is one of several related to the holiday season. Chapter members collected canned goods for donation to the Salvation Army, and they will aid in manning the Salvation Army kettles on Dec. 10 at three local department stores.
Collision Investigated
Cars driven by Biscello La vert Gardner of Route 1, Grifton, and Hill Whichard Stancil of Route 2, Farmville, collided about 1:23 a.m. Sunday on Memorial Drive, 150 feet north of the Village Drive intersection. Police estimated damage at $800 to each cars.
Ladies Night Set Thursday
The Community Fellowship Club will hold its Christmas Ladies Night Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Loyd (Buddy) Mills party house on state road 1756 near Galloways Crossroads.
The speaker will be the Rev. Willis Wilson, pastor of Reedy Branch Church. A short business meeting is scheduled to discuss a petition asksing the state to widen state road 1756.
The Ladies Night will feature a steak dinner. The cost per member for their wives is $5.
Police Investigate 5 Collisions Here
An estimated $8,750 damage resulted from a series of five traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Monday.
Officers said heaviest damage resulted when cars driven by Janice Lee Carlton of Route 3, Grifton, and Carl Ellis Stanfield of Stokes collided about 7:30 a.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Greenville Boulevard.
Police, who charged Ms. Carlton with exceeding a safe speed, set damage at $2,500 to the Carlton car and $1,000 to the Stanfield auto.
Vehicles driven by Janice Phillips Harding of Route 1, Valdese, and Billy Ray Harrelson Jr. of Route 2, Winterville, collided about 10:20 a.m. at the intersection of Greenville and Arlington boulevards, causing $2,500 damage to the Harding car and $50 damage to the Harrelson truck.
Investigators charged Casandra Denise Belcher of Grimesland with following too closely following in
vestigation of a 5:17 p.m. collision at the intersection of Fifth and Ford streets.
The Belcher car, officers said, collided with a car driven by Kimberly Sue Cain of Route 2, Clarkton, causing $500 damage to each of the two vehicles.
Kenneth Brannen Anderson of Cannon Court Apartments was charged with hit-and-run driving following investigation of an 11:49 a.m. collision at the intersection of 10th Street and Cedar Lane.
Police said the Anderson car collided with an auto driven by Thomas VanDyke Lee of 402 Pine St., causing $600 damage to the Lee car and $300 damage to the Anderson vehicle.
An estimated $400 damage resulted to each of two cars involved in a 9:16 a.m. col-
Claims 'New Money Plan Is Considered
By MICHAEL LGRACZYK Associated Press Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - Pink and blue money could replace the familiar U.S. grwnback, with a metallic strip on the bills to trace how much cash is being taken out of the country, a Texas congressman says.
Rep. Ron Paul said Monday he learned of the federal plan Nov. 3 in a closed meeting which included the Treasurer of the United States, Katherine Ortega.
Paul said representatives of the Federal Reserve and the Secret Service also attended the session, along with members of the House subcommittee on coinage and consumer affairs, of which Paul is a member.
Besides new colors, Paul said Monday, the bills would carry a metallic strip running vertically next to the licture of the person on the )ill to allow authorities to determine whether huge amounts of money are being taken out of the country.
The solution is not to change the color of our money, Paul, a Republican, said at a Houston news conference. The inflation, the monetary system, as well as the tax system - thats where the problems are.
In Washington, a Treasury spokesman who would comment only if he remained unidentified said any discussion about changing the color of currency was very, very premature. The motive for any change would be to foil counterfeiters, he said.
The point to be stressed here is that while a number of options are under review, there have been absolutely no decisions made, he said.
As for the metallic strip, the congressman said it would violate a citizens freedom to leave the country.
Americans must have the freedom to travel out of the United States without any restrictions, he said, calling any attempt at restrictions outrageous and a violation of our rights.
Paul said federal officials who showed him examples of the projwsed money would not let him to keep the bills. So he had an artist draw renderings of the bills, which he unveiled at the news conference.
The drawings were of a blue $10 bill and a pink $1 bill.
Paul said the size of the bill would remain the same.
The colors of the bills had not yet been decided, he said, with each denomination a different color and each bill only one color.
SOLID BRASS BEDS
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lision at the intersecton of Greenville Boulevard and Charles Street.
Officers said drivers of the cars were Kim Jean Mertz of Danville, Pa., and Bobby Maurice Harris Jr. of 430 Pittman Drive. Harris was charged with exceeding a safe speed.
NOTICE
Home Federal Savings And
Loan Association Of Eastem North Carolina Annual Stockholders Meeting
Time: 4:00 PM Date: December 13,1983 Place: Home Federal Savings And Loan Association 543 Evans Street Greenville, NC Faye Adams,
Secretary
evisIng Robot For Army Guns
DOVER, N.J. (AP) - A robot designed to load howitzers during the heat of battle could be ready for use by the 1990s, taking a lot of stress off soldiers, the Army says.
A spokesman said Monday that engineers at the U.S. Army Armament Research & Development Center are developing the robotic system which will automatically load 155 mm shells weighing more than 100 pounds each into the Armys M-109 howitzers.
Currently, a crew of four soldiers must load shells into the howitzer from an interior rack or from the resupply truck that follows the self-propelled guns on battlefields, said Ralph Ahrens, a civilian public affairs officer for the Army.
The Army estimates the robot will load five rounds per minute, he said. While a trained crew of soldiers can load as many as eight rounds per minute, their efficiency decreases as they become tired, Ahrens noted.
You have to keep moving on a battlefield because if you stop in one place for long, youre going to get blown up, Ahrens added. This will take a tot of stress off soldiers in battle.
The design is an advance over systems now being used in private industry, officials say.
One of the problems we have to overcome is that commercial robots generally operate in controlled environments, such as factories, said Steve Floroff, the project engineer. This is the first mobile robotic system in this country that we know of.
Twenty-Seven Oppose Jetties
WASHINGTON (AP) -Twenty-seven congressmen have signed a letter voicing strong opposition to a bill to clear the way for building $110 million worth of jetties at Oregon Inlet in North Carolina.
The letter, written by Rep. Silvio 0. Conte, D-Mass., says it would be an environmental and economic disaster.
Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., who sponsored the legislation, questioned whether all those who signed the letter were strongly opposed to the project.
Jones added his jetties legislation to a bill to expand federal acquisition of wetlands for conservation. His porposal would override the Interior Departments opposition to the jetties by transferring ownership of the wetlands from the department to the Army.. If approved, the legislation still would require appropriations to be undertaken.
He said Army officials think the loading systems may eventually be used in tanks.
The howitzer loader wil weigh 1,500 pounds and have an arm about 40 inches long, with a 30-pound gripper to handle the 155 mm projectiles and charges.
In addition, the Armys engineers are developing a second loader that will be able to transfer as many as three projectiles at once from the resupply vehicle into the howitzer, said Ralph Becker, the project engineer for the resupply loader.
The loaders will receive instructions from a computer program on the size of charge needed and where the gripper must go to load the gun, Army engineers said.
Army strategists wilt be able to change the type of projectile with ease by changiitf the computer program, officials said.
A small model of the loading device is being used in testing by the engineers in the Weapons Division of the centers Larger Caliber Weapon Systems Laboratory-
Ahrens said the M-109 ^howitzer may have been last by U.S. soldiers in Vi^m and is presently bein^^ by the Israeli army. X
The ArnV expects to test the howitzeifS^^ in 1986 and the resupplyTtiader in 1987, with tests of both expected to follow in 1989, he said. He said he could not estimate the cost of developing the system.
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YEAR-END TAX PLANNING
(With Stocks)
It you hava invaatmants In stocks, soma planning bafora yaar-and may cut your 1983 tax bill.
If you own soma stocks that hava droppad in valua sinca you purchatad tham, considar sailing tham II youva hald tham for lass than a yaar. Such a sale would produc a short-tarm capital loss that oltsats your othar Incoma dollar tor dollar. It you hold tha stock (or more than a yaar before sailing it and atlll suffer a loss, it will be a long-term loss and it will than take $2.00 of the lota to offset SI.00 of ordinary income.
If you are planning to make charitabla contributions bafora yaar-and, give some thought to giving appraciatad atock instead of money. You avoid the capital gains tax and you gat a deduction equal to the (air market value ot tha stock.
H youre an investor in public utility stock, taka stock dividandt rather than cash dividends this yaar to allow tor tha exclusion ot up to S750 of income on a single return, $1,500 on a joint return.
Sailing stock tor a gain near tha and ot 1983 but not delivering tha slock to your broker or receiving payment until 1984 gives you tha option ot reporting tha gain on tha sale in either 1983 or 1984. Your decision will, ot course, depend on which yaar will create tha lower tax conaaquancaa on tha sale. Heres how it works.
The sale was made In 1983, but because tha money was not received until 1984, you qualify tor an installment sale and could report tha gain as income In 1984. However, because i1 is an installment sale, you may elect to hava tha Inatallmant sale njathod not apply and report tha gain In 1983. The alactlon is made at tha time of your 1983 tax filing; therefore, you hava until than to determine which year is batter tor reporting the Income.
Consult your tax advisor tor assistance with your yaar-and stock transactions.
H. EDWIN GRAY, CPA 212 West Fifth Street, Greenville, N.C 27834 27834758-7300*Call us, we understand business and financial con-cerns'Personal and corporate tax returnsTax planningFinancial statementsBusiness and farm record keepingComputer systems'Estate and gift counselingBusiness and real estate sales and acquisitions*
DID YOU KNOW THAT THE GREENVILLE ATHLETIC CLUB HAS:
A Nursery With A Trained Staff
Childrens Programs (Parties, Camps, Instructional Classes)
Family Events (Socials, Parties)
Special Fitness Programs That Help Motivate You To Reach Your Fitness Goals
Co-Ed Aerobic Classes (Minimum Of 7 Classes/Day)
8 Modern Racquetball Courts
Mens And Womens Sauna And Steam Rooms And Hot Tubs Nautilus And Free Weights
A Swimming Pool (Longest Season Of Any Outdoor Pool In Town)
A Restaurant (Serves Lunch And Dinner And Has A Big Screen T V For Special Events)
Why Settle For Less When You Can Have All Of This For Only A Few Dollars More. Be A Part Of The Most Energetic And Enjoyable Atmosphere In Greenville.
Right Now The Greenville Athletic Club Is Offering A Great Package Of Gifts When You Join Or Give A Membership As A Christmas Gift-Over $100.00 In Merchandise From Our Pro Shop (Items Vary With The Type Of Membership). Call Or Come By For Additional Information.
Greenville O'" Athletic Ciub
140 Oakmont Dr. 756-9175
Bring This Ad For A Free Visit (Expires 12/6/83)
The Dally Reflector, Gfeenville, N.COfficials Say Drug Traffic In N.C. Hasn't Abated
Tuesday. November 29,1963 J
Afghan Official Is Assassins' Target
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) Afghan Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Qader reportedly survived an assassination attempt in Kabul on Nov. 10, a Western diplomatic source here said today.
According to the source, Qader was shot at by two gunmen in a passing car as he climbed out of his limousine near his home after work.
Qader was not hit but two soldiers, presumably his bodyguards, were slightly wounded in the attack, said the source, quoting "credible reports" from Kabul.
The source, who declined to be identified, said the
attack was staged in the early evening. He said the assailants escaped by the time helicopters arrived on the scene.
He had no further details of the assault, which could not be independently confirmed.
In mid-May, Qader re-wrtedly was severely beaten >y his deputy, who was said to be disgruntled over being passed over in a list of promotions at the Defense Ministry.According to one account, Qader was shot in the leg while another had him being hit over the head with a chair, and most accounts agreed the beating was severe enough to warrant hospitalization.
By ERICA JOHNSTON Associated Press Writer Despite increased efforts to stem the flow of marijuana and cocaine into North Carolina, officials say the drugs appear to be coming in as fast as ever because of the smugglers increasing sophistication.
"We dont know how much is coming ih, but we have the
feeling that many, many more (drug smugglers) get away than are being cau^t, said Robert Pence, ^ial agent in charge of the FBI in North Carolina.
State' and federal officials seized more than 166,000 pminds of smuggled marijuana and almost 200 pounds of smuggled cocaine in North Carolina during fiscal year
Twice Accused Of 'Brutality'
GREENSBORO, N.C. I API
- A state Highway Patrol trooper who shot and killed an Asheboro man on Sunday has been investigated and cleared twice this year after citizen complaints of brutality, officials say.
In both previous cases. Trooper G.D. Blackwood was found not to have used excessive force, said Heman Clark, secretary of the N.C.
Department of Crime Control and Public Safety, which oversees the patrol.
The circumstances of the Asheboro shooting are being reviewed by the State Bureau of Investigation.
Clark declined to detail previous accusations against Blackwood, but said it is not uncommon for such active troopers to have complaints lodged against them by citizens.
1983, said Gil Payette of the U.S. Customs Service in Wilmington, lliat was about twice the amount seized in 1979, he said.
The increase probably reflects increased smuggling as well as tightened law enforcement, he said.
Over the weekend, federal authorities seized an airplane carrying almost 1,000 pounds of pressed marijuana valued at $714,000 in Raeford. No arrests had been made Monday, said Hoke (^nty Sheriff D M. Barrington.
Pence said more people have been added to the stales arsenal of narcotics agents, but they still are greatly outnumbered. He added that drug trafficking now is the bureaus highest priority, just one year after the agency joined the State Bureau of Investigation, federal Drug Enforcement Agency, U.S. Coast Guard and In customs service in the business of patrolling for
narcotics.
But as state and federal governments have beefed up their efforts, so have smugglers, Pence said.
A iM-esidential task force on dnigs is putting pressure on smugglers in Florida, so a lot of the activity is ai^rently moving up the coast to Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee, Pence said.
The state is especially attractive because of its hundreds of miles of coastline and sheltered harbors,
North Carolina has had a history of smuggling back to the pirates and Blackbeard, Payette said. Weve had an enforcement problem .forever.
And as patrols intensify on the coast, smugglers increasingly have moved inland, using aircraft and some of the states many airstrips.
If anything, more is coming in by air than by sea, Pence said.
The smugglers know everyones lodiing at them, Pence said. Theyre putting out more money for protection and taking extra precautions, So it isnt as easy to catch them now as it was a year ago.
But Pence said he doesnt think the drug agents are fighting a losing battle.
We re playing a game of catch-up now, he said, Its a battle that hasnt been pushed with the fervor that the opposition has been using. But that's changing now.
As law enforcemwit (agencies work together), were going to identify a lot more people. Theyre beginning to feel the pinch now.
But Im not sayii^ were going to put the drug people out of business, he said. We dont even know how big the business is.
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ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each Of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale in each Kroger Savon, except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an item we will offer you your choice of a comparable item when available, reflecting the same savings or a rain-check which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 50 days. Limit one manufacturer's coupon per item.
copyright 1983 Kroger sav-on Quantity Rights Reserved None Sold To Dealers
THIS OFFER EFFECTIVE ON WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1983 IN OUR GREENVILLE STORE ONLY.
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g The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Tuesday, November 29,1983
Stock And Market Reports
NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were mixed through morning trading today but the, Dow Jones industrial average rebounded from its loss in the previous session.
Steel and drug issues paced the gainers, while auto, utility and mining stocks retreated.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 7.62 on Monday for its biggest drop in three weeks, recovered 6.40 to 1,276.22 in the first two hours of trading today.
Gainers held a slight edge over losers on the New York Stock Exchange, whose composite index rose 0.09 to 96.28.
Big Board volume totaled 43.50 million shares at noon EST, against 34.76 million at that hour Monday,
Traders said Mondays pull-back was not surprising since, after a three-week rally, some investors were expected to sell and take profits.
Analysts were encouraged by the markets ability to stabilize its slide in late trading Monday, and they noted the broader mabket wac not as weak as the Dow Jones industrial average.
"New American Telephone & Telegraph, off '4 to 20^8, was the early leader on the NYSEs active list today.
Other active issues included old AT&T, down >4 to 64^4; Comsat, down P4 to 33; Coleco, up 2's to 23^; and Westinghouse, up Ph to
5314.
At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index rose 0.95 to 223.65.
EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt Fla Progress FordMot Fuqua s GTE Corp GnDynam GenlElect s Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM
Intl Harv Int Paper IntRectif s Int T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrcwerCo Lockhed s Loews Corp Masonite McDrmInt n .McKesson Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou NYNEX wi OlinCp Owenslll PacifTel wi Pennev JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
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NEW YORK lAPi -Middav slocks.
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4', 27'4 34"4 60', 32", 24" 4 35'. 31"4 28'.. 40", 21, 18', 13", 16, 59, 42" 4 34, 49 47'4 20", 78 35",
57 16, 92'4 66'4 17'4 29'4
58 28", 45'. 42"4 54", 52'4 36 32 38", 48
New Hehnet Saved Life
FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - A soldier with the 82nd Airborne Division says he could have been killed in a gunfire exchange with the enemy in Grenada if it hadnt been for his new U.S. Army plastic helmet.
I didnt know the helmet took a direct hit until someone brought the helmet and showed me the round, said Spec. 4 Brent Taylor, showing a Soviet-made AK-47 round still imbedded in the $104 Kelvar helmet. The 82nd Airborne was the first U.S. group to receive the new helmet.
Taylor, 20, said he was securing an area about a mile from St. Georges on Oct. 27 when three uniformed soldiers fired at him with automatic weapons.
First to go were his helmet and glasses. A bullet and shrapnel then tore through his leg, said Taylor. As the ammunition clip in his weapon was about to run out. Taylor felt another bullet tear through his upper left arm.
A horseshoe-shaped dirt mound 15 yards behind him gave Taylor cover. Temporarily separated from his squad, Taylor and the three exchanged gunfire for several hours.
Taylor said they used automatic weapons fire while he continued to shoot on semi-automatic mode, hitting one of the three uniformed soldiers.
WILL BOYCOTT
KINGSTON. Jamaica (AP) - Jamaicas left-wing opposition party says it will boycott the Dec. 15 general elections called by Prime Minister Edward Seaga.
Shitfe Gunmen Kidnap Lebanon Airline Empbyees On 2 Buses
Obituaries
ByFAROUKNASSAR Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Shiite Moslem gunmen kid-napf^ about 60 Lebanese Christian employees of Lebanons Middle East Airlines on the airport highway today, airport sources reported.
The employees were heading to the Clmistian sector of Beirut aboard two buses when hooded gunmen blocked the way, jumped into both vehicles and forced them into southern Beiruts Shiite-inhabited slums, the sources said.
The sources, who declined to be named, said it could not be determined to which Shiite group the kidnappers belonged to.
A spokesman at the office of Nabih Berri, head of the Shiite Amal militia, told The Associated Press by telephone that Berri had issued orders for the immediate release of all the abducted employees.
tW spokesman, who declined to be named, said the abduction was a reaction to kidnappings of Shiite travelers by rightist Christian militiamen of the Phalange Party in southern Lebanon earlier in the day.
Israeli troops today freed seven Palestinians from Lebanese Christian militiamen who kidnapped them after their release from Ansar detention camp in south Lebanon last week, Israeli military sources said.
The Christians were quoted as saying the Palestinians were terrorists who could not be allowed to go free, but Israeli troops forced them to release the men, who were among some 4,600 Arab prisoners exchanged last week
for six Israeli prisoners of war.
The sources said the Palestinians were seized by the Christian troops while traveling north near the town of Jezzine, intending to leave Israeli-controlled territory for their homes in the central Lebanese mountains.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Marine base was shelled twice during the night and one U.S. peacekeeper suffered a concussion when he fell off a bunker, a Marine spokesman said.
The injured Marine was evacuated by helicopter from the base at Beiruts international airport to the amphibious assault ship Guam off the coast for medical observation,'said Maj. Dennis Brooks.
Brooks said the Marine was injured Monday evening when five rounds of artillery crashed just east of the airport, sending the leathernecks ducking into foxholes and bunkers.
The second attack came early today when six artillery rounds hit close to the southern edge of the airport. Brooks said. In both cases, he said, there was no damage and the Marines did not return fire.
It was the fourth attack on the Marine base in two days of spordic clashes between Lebanese army troops and anti-government Druse and Shiite Moslem militiamen in Beiruts southern suburbs and surrounding hills.
On Monday, a bombardment of the port wounded four construction workers. Police were unable to determine who was responsible for the first shelling of the harbor area since Israels 1982 summer invasion of
Town Common Flags...
Following are selected II am stock
43"
52"4
38", 39'4.
26",
24", 72", 15', 27'4 26"4 53",
23", 23',K 23',
28, 28"4 28"4
51", 51'2 51'4
37'4 37'4 J7'4
40", 40'4 40'4
32'4 32', 32',
53"4 53 53'2
25", 25', 25",
(Continued from Pagel)
3,,^ Pitt County Historical Society in 1974 for use at Bun-jxigiB . : 49;" the Town Common to reflect flags that have
S?'*'"**'::::::::::::: been flown over Greenville,
" She said she decided that, until research could be completed regarding which flags Fieidcrest:.^:;:.would be proper, the two flags questioned by HfitOT^^:::::::.:.: Maughan would be removed.
Jefferson .'...............................,..39'4
Deere......................... 38
Lowe's..............................................23'
.McDonalds.......................................70
Mrs. Meeks said the Division of Archives and History of the state Department of Mc^'.''.* Cultm-al Resources was contacted and asked
considered would be proper flags for Pizza iM;:;::;:::::;:::::: : . .: Greenville. Based upon the divisions recom-
TRw; Inc;:;:;:...... mendation, two new flags have been ordered.
UiiitedTei.........................................23'4 ~ ' .......
Seek To Block Beach Access
EMERALD ISLE, N.C. (AP) - The town of Emerald Isle is trying to block construction of a beach access facility mandated by the General Assembly over town officials' objections.
"The town board is convinced that most if not all of the bill is unconstitutional, said Town Administrator James E. Caldwell on Monday.
Officials have filed a lawsuit in Carteret County Superior Court saying the legislation was illegal because it would force the town to maintain a state facility while closing its vehicle access ramp, which officials want to leave open.
Caldwell said the town would continue to operate the access ramp until "we are ordered to shut it down by a court of competent jurisdiction.
The lawsuit claims the law would give exclusive privileges to area property owners while forcing the town to maintain the facility without providing for voter approval.
'Dominion Resources..........................22
Wachovia....................................... 45'.
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation........................................16"4-17
Branch.........................................25'-.-26
Little Mint........................................'
Planters Bank............................18"4-19'4
ILLEGAL GIFTS PEKING (AP) - Chinese defense industries illegally gave their workers allowances, washing machines, briefcases, calculators, food and other items, official press reports say.
The new banners will include the British Union Flag of 1606 that combines the English Cross of St. George with the Scottish Cross of St, Andrew, and the first government flag adopted by the Confederate Congress in March of 1861. She said the British Union Flag is considered appropriate for the Colonial period, while the Confederate flag differs from the traditional battle flag that had been flown here in that it has a blue canton of seven stars on a field of three red. white and blue stripes.
The new flags will be here in several weeks, Mrs. Meeks said, and will be flown with two current U.S. flags, one Betsy Ross flag and the state of North Carolina flag.
, Tl ESD.AY 7:(K) pm - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:3(J pm Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m - Vernon Howard Success W ilhout Stress study group at 110.\' Warren .St.
7:30 p.m Toughlove parents support group at St. Paul s Episcopal Churcn 8 :00 p m The Big Book Group of \A has an open meeting at St James United Methodist Church 8:00 p m. .Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church 8:(K) p m - Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmvillehw'v.
Unemployment Is Below N.C. Level
Pitt Countys unemployment rate for October stood at 7 percent, one-half of a percentage point below the statewide jobless level, the Employment Security Commission reported today.
ESC Chairman Glenn Jernigan said 3,430 members of Pitt Countys 48,990-member work force were unemployed in October.
Greene Countys rate was even better, at 5.6 percent, while Martin County reported a 10.2 percent jobless figure.
Across the state, Jernigan said unemployment rates in Octoter increased in 50 counties, decreased in 45 counties and remained the same in five counties.
Statewide, the North Carolina unemployment rate for October was 7.5 percent, compared to the national unadjusted rateof8.4Mrcent.
Double-digit unemployment rates were posted in 27 counties with Graham the highest at 15.9 percent. Other counties with high rates of unemployment were Pender. 15,7 percent; Brunswick, 14.5 percent; Bladen, 14,4 percent; Swain, 13.8 percent, and Tyrrell, 13.7 percent.
Orange County had the states lowest unemployment rate at 3.5 percent. Other counties with low unemployment figures were Dare, 3.9 percent; Gates, 4.3 percent; Wake. 4.4 percent; Watauga, 4.5 percent, and Durham, 4.6 percent.
In the states ten largest metropolitan areas, Raleigh-Durham registered the lowest rate. 4.3 percent, with Wilmington at the highest end of the scale with a rate of 12.1 percent.
Solar Fraction
The solar fraction for this area Monday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 6. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 6 percent of your hot water needs.
Card Of Thanks
1 would like to thank all my relatives and friends for their love and help after the death of my mother, Ellen Mayo Thanks and may God bless all of you.
W.C.
Mayo
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Maughan said today he had questioned city policy regarding the flying of the Confederate and Union Jack flags in his letter to the city officials, saying that he saw no connection with the city and either of the two flags.
Maughan said he was more concerned with the Confederate flag, suggesting that it is not a symbol of unity but rather one qf divisiMi. He said the Confederacy existed during trying times and while the flag deserves to be displayed as a part of history, it should be done in a museum "like a lot of other symbols, but not as a symbol flying over a town.
He said he considered the flag, which was never adopted for official use by the Confederate congress, a racist symbol of the Ku Klux Klan and added, I dont see where the Klan has any part in society.
Maughan said he also wondered why Greenville was flying the Union Jack and said that, although he had not gone into research as to the citys ties with Great Britain, he felt it would make more sense to fly the flag down in Dare County, the s'tte-^ofthe first English exploration and settlement.
He suggested that the United Nations flag would make more sense as it goes a much longer way toward fostering peace and unity than the Stars and Bars.
The president of the Historical Society, Irma Worthington, could not be reached for comment.
Lebanon.
The rightist Christian Phalange Party and the Progressive Socialist Party of leftist Druse leader Walid Jumblatt blamed each other for the widening breaches of Lebanons Sept. 26 civil war ceasefire.
Jumblatts weekly newspaper, Al-Anbaa, accused the Phalangist-dominated Lebanese Forces militia of waging a war of attrition in central Lebanons Chouf mountains, the Druse main base. The newspaper said a conclusive response will come after President Amin Gemayel returns from a visit to Washington this week.
Either Lebanons national reconciliation talks will be resumed in Geneva, or a military blow will be dealt to
Spacelab...
(Continued from Pagel) movements. The pictures will be analyzed when the shuttle returns home.
This first use of Spacelab, with 73 experiments scheduled before Columbia lands in California on Dec. 7. monopolized air-to-ground conversations. Little was heard from spacecraft commander John Young and )ilot Brewster Shaw, who lad to guide the spacecraft through a series of changes in position to satisfy requirements in five major scientific disciplines.
Our new Spacelab systems appear to be working great, said Chuck Lewis, a flight director. The crew had trouble with a computer that communicates between the pressurized laboratory and an experiment pallet that is open to space, but a way was found to work around it.
There were periodic problems with communications and a temporary anxiety when the hatch to the Spacelab tunnel seemed to defy all attempts to open it because one clasp was hanging up.
"Thats not much in the way of problems and thats the way we like it, Lewis said.
Lichlenberg and astronaut Owen Garriott spent two hours on the complex job of turning on equipment in the 23-foot-long Spacelab, reached from Columbias middeck by a tunnel. Astronauts and scientists worked in jumpsuits.
Garriott and Parker are mission specialists, able both to work on shuttle systems and in Spacelab.
Merbold, a physicist with the Max-Planck Institute in Stuttgart, West Germany, is the first non-American aboard a U.S. spacecraft. He and Lichtenberg, a researcher from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, are the first payload specialists - nonastronauts - to be on a U.S. spacecraft.
check this war of attrition, Al-Anbaa said.
A conference of Lebanons top Moslem and Christian leaders was held in Geneva, Switzerland, last month in an attempt to work out a new balance of power to end eight years of civil warfare.
Gemayel, now in Italy, had a private audience Monday with Pope John Paul II in the Vatican and met with Italys premier, Bettino Craxi.
Gemayels Washington visit will follow a visit by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, who meets President Reagan today for a second time. U.S. and Israeli officials say the talks will mark a new era of cooperation aimed at resolving the impasse in Lebanon and stopping Syrian advances in the Middle East.
In Israel, the respected Haaretz newspaper reported Monday that Shamir had taken to Washington a military position paper calling for a speedy pullback of Israeli troops from Lebanon's coastal area to the international border and a de facto partition of Lebanon.
According to Haaretz, the position paper says Israel should withdraw from Lebanon as soon as possible after securing its northern settlements from guerrilla attacks through arrangements with the Lebanese government.
But while it calls for a pullback along the Lebanese coast, the paper recommends keeping troops on the eastern front to face Syrian forces, Haaretz said.
Sneed
Mr. Joseph Sneed of Route 1, Bethel, clied Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.
Wells
Mrs. Sarah Wells of 300 Tyson St. died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the mother of Mrs. Lillie Wel^ Brown of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.
Whichard
DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. -CW03 Howard C. Whichard, 40, of Scarlet Oak Drive, Douglasville, Ga., died Saturday in an automobile accident. His funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the First Presbyterian Church of Douglasville by the Rev, Leon Jeffords. Burial will be in the Marietta National Cemetery.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Treva Hemgst Whichard of the home; three daughters. Kerry Rebecca Whichard, Brooke Estelle Whichard and Danielle Terre Whichard, all of the home; a son. Pvt. Howard Clyde Whichard of Fort McClellan, Ala.; his parents. Clarence and Marian Carroll Whichard of Frederick, Md., both natives of Greenville. N.C.; a brother, Clarence Whichard Jr of Medfield, Mass.. and a sister, Mrs. Carol Ann Werking of Frederick. Md.
Lottery Winner Tore Up Ticket
TRENTON, N J.lAPl-A winner of $1.6 million in the New Jersey Lottery had ripped up his winning ticket by mistake and later "almost cried when he read on it, Void if tom or altered.
But state officials said Monday they were ignoring the damage because the ticket was in good enough shape to pass the lotterys validation process.
Joseph R. Wyatt of Union Townsnip will receive the bonanza over 20 years. He
DISRUPT PROTEST
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Police used tear gas and water cannon to break up a group of women staging a protest Monday night that the military government had declared illegal.
told a news conference he tore up the ticket after hearing a number on the radio that didn't match his. That number was from the previous week, and he later saw his winning number in the newspaper ^
CREWMEN SAVED ETEL, France (APi - A military helicopter ferried the last of 25 crewmen to safety Monday from a Greek cargo ship that was listing heavily in stormy seas 180 miles off Brest
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Sports XHE DAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedTUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 29, 1983
Demoted Heels Blister UT-C
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer North Carolina got a demotion in the Associated Press college basketball poll, then went right out to prove that it wasnt worthy of the change.
The Tar Heels fell to second behind Kentucky in the poll. Although both teams captured 24 first-place votes, North Carolina missed first place by two points. A re-election
TKN,\4'HATTA.N<iA
MP f(; FT K A I Pt
37 9-17 1 2 3 4 3 1
36 4 15 3- 8 5
12 O' I 0- I 3
38 5-17 2- 4 1
25 3 - 4 0- 0 0
31 5-12 0- 0
13 15 1-2 2
12 0-0 0
Wilkiw
StrickUnd
Oen
White
McCray
Morgan
Hunter
Brown
Head
Ferguson
FilAe
Totals
.VORTHCAK(H.INA
MP Ft; FT K A F PI
2 4 II 0 0 0 2 2 12 4 I 6 I 0 10 0 2 3 3 2
4 1 2 0-0 0 1 2o-oirooouo
I 0-00-00000 I 000-00000 200 28-73 7-17 25 14 15 3
Doherty
Popton
Daugherty
Jordan
Hale
Peterson
Perkins
Exum
Smith
Wolf
Makkonen
.Morris
ToUis
1-6 0-0
It I I 0-0 3
31 7- 2-2 3
26 13-17 2 4 6 18 1-2 5-6 0 15 0 2 0 0 0 28 7 - 9 2 4 13 5 11 003 26 4 8 2 - 2 I
9 I I 0 0 I 0 I 2
I 0-0 000000 100000000 200 36-56 13-18 40 20 15 85
4 2
1 2 2 0 2 16 0 4 28
2 0 7 2 I 0 2 0 16 0 1 2 5 0 10
Traa-Chatl................................3* 11-63
N. Carotina........................ 33 52-lti
Turnovers Tennessee Chattanooga 14. North Carolina 21 Technical fouls None Officials Haley. Hart, Vuares A-IO.OOO
AU. AliM MP
Keedus
Thomas
Facen
.SUten
Whitehurst
Davenport
Williams
Barnett
Davis
Perry
Totals
Total (iA TKt H MP
Salley
Petway
Joseph
Pnce
Dalrymple
Harvey
Neal
Mansell
Wilson
Touts
F(. FT RAF
a 3 10 0-0 4 0 2
22 5 11 0 0 6 0 3
20 1 3 0 0 f. 0 5
40 10 29 6-10 4 2 3
34 4-10 0 0 2 7 2
30 6 13 1 4 8 - 2 2
II 1 4 0 0 4 0 I
8 4 7 0 1 2 0 0
4 0 0 0- 2 0 I 0
0 0 O 0 0
200 34-87 7-17 44 14 20 75
F(. FT R A F Pi
33 017 5 - 6 7 4 2 23
20 I 4 O 0 4 4 2 2
20 4 7 6 7 9 I 1 14
.12 1015 I 2 3 2 2 21
36 015 5-12 17 4 4 21 22 2 4 0 0 6 3 I 4
32 4900373 8
3010020
campaign was started immediately as iuniorguard Michael Jordan scored 28 points, including 18 points in 10 minutes, to lead North Carolina to an 8^69 victory over Tennessee-Chattanooga.
Junior guard Delaney Rudd scored 18 points as Wake Forest opened its season with a 74-59 triumph over Furman. Georgia Tech started the season .with a 95-75 victory over Alabama A&M.
Tennessee-Chattanooga claimed a one-point lead midway through the second half before a 14-2 spurt took the Tar Heels out of danger. The Moccasins broke that streak, only to suffer a 10-point spree which Jordan capped with a dunk with 9; 45 left.
It was North Carolinas second strai^t victory and coach Dean Smiths 498th triumph.
UTC came in and played with poise, Smith said. They handled our scramble dfense pretty well and attacked the zone extremely well.
Furman pulled to within 33-29 at haftime, but Rudd and forward Kenny Green led the Demon Deacons to 11 straight points and a safe cushion.
It was really good getting into the season and meeting somebody besides our own players, Wake Forest coach Carl Tacy said. Weve been playing each other for so long, It s a very welcoirie thing
John Salley scored a career-high 23 points as the
ast Carojina Cagers Hosting Christopher. Newport Wednesaay
Tar Heel Trap
North Carolina players Steve Hale (25) and Matt Doherty (44) trap University of Tennessee-Chattanoogas Gerald Wilkins (20) as they try to force a turnover during the first half of play Monday night in Chapel Hill. The Tar Heels won the game. 85-62. (AP Laserphoto)
Yellow Jackets
ell behind by
2 1- 1 (3 0 0 0 1 2
200 39-71 17-27 53 25 17 95
Alabama AAM.. (iforgia Tfch ..
.............41 34- 71
.............44 SI- *5
Turnovers Alabama A&.M 14. Ueorgia Tech 2D Technical fouls Salley Officials Wooldridge, Jagg. Rife All: 4.348
as much as 12 points before using man-to-man pressure Mark Price added 21 points and freshman Bruce Dalrymple scored 21 points and pulled down 17 rebounds.
Virginia meets Randolph-Macon tonight in the only action involving an ACC team. Wednesday night.
Furman goes to Clemson while Duke is at William & Mary.
North Carolina State, fresh off a victory in the Great Alaska Shootout, went to seventh in the AP poll.
MP
FIRMAN
Hilliard Singlelon Moms D^ton
Thomas
Creed
Sims
Washington
Moore
Totals
Ft. FT R A F
25 1 6 0- 0 2 I 2
33 7 13 2 4 5 1 5
22 d 2 0- 0 3 1 2
7 0-0 0-0 011 35 3- 8 0- 0 3 2 2
I 0- 0 0^ 0 0 0 I
22 2- 5 1 3 I 1 2
3 1-20-0100 33 6- 6 0- 0 4 2 2 I 6-9 4-7 2
W AKE FOR. MP
Toms
Green
Teachey
Rudd
Young
Bogues
Garber
(Tine
Karasek
Davis
Hillman
Wessel
Touls
FC FT R A
20 3 - 7 3 - 4 3 0
31 5: 9 0- 0 5 0
30 I - 6 4- 4 8 1
23 5-10 8- 8 3 3 26 2 - 8 1- 2 2 4
10 2- 2 0- 0 0 4
15 3-4 3-3 1 0
9 0- 2 0- 0 1 4
13 2- 4 0- 0 1 0
11 0- 0 0- 0 1 0
4 1-1 2-220
1-1 0-0 0 1- 1 I- I 0
F PI
0 9
1 10 3 6 2 18
0 5
200 26-55 22-24 30 16 12 74
200 26-51 7-14 23 9 I 59
F'urman.....................................21 30- 51
Wake For...................................33 41- 74
Turnovers Furman 20, Wake Forest 14
Technical fouls: Green.
OTficials: Clougherty. Herring. Everett Att : 6.754.
Terry ^ong Named To Kodak All-America Football Squad
For the second time in less than a week. East Carolina offensive guard Terry Long has been named to presitgious all-America football team.
Long, a 6-0,280-pound senior from Columbia, S.C., was today named to the Kodak All-America team, one of only two players from the state, and just one of seven from the South picked to the 24-man team.
The Kodak team is picked by the American Football Coaches Association.
Some 137 Division 1-A coaches participated in the selection process which Charlie McC endon, AFCA executive director, termed as not as easy thing to accomplish.
There are so many great young players around, McClendon added. We expended considerable blood, sweat and tears coming up with the team.
McClendon added that players were selected for the team based on their ability to work within the framework of their college teams as well as their individual performance. Because football coaches are perhaps the toughest judges of athletic talent, many observers consider the Kodak All-America Team college footballs most prestigious.
The teams roots can be traced directly back to 1889, when Yales Walter Camp
Sports Calendar
Editor'<! Note: Schedules are supplieo oy schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice
Todays Sports Basketball Jacksonville at Rose (4:30 p.m. I Ayden-Grifton at Roanoke (5 p.m.)
Bear Grass at Williamston (6:30
p.m.)
Greenville (Kristian at Bethel Tournament Beddingfield at Greene Central Tarboro at North Pitt (5p.m.) Washington at Conley ChocowTnityat Dixon Wrestling Jacksonville at Conley (7 p.m. I Wednesday's Sports Basketball Christopher Newport at East Carolina (7:30 p.m.)
Wrestling Roanoke, Edenton at Washington (5 p.m.)
Eastern Wayne at Rose (7 p.m. I
originated the All-America concept. Kodak has sponsored the team since 1960. In early December, the entire squad will be assembled in Hollywood, Calif., for a weekend of honors and relaxation.
The Camp team is also still in existance, sponsored by the Walter Camp Football Foundation. Long was also named to that All-Ariierica team, announced last week.
While in Holljwood, a television special will be taped to introduce the team to the country. It will be shown in this area on December 10 over WlTN-TV,at 12:30 p.m.
Long, who has also been named to play in two all-star post-season games, said he was honored % the selection. 1 hope that it will be easier for East Carolina to get players on these teams in the future, Long said. Some of them should have made it this year,
However, Long doesnt feel that being named to a number of All-America team would
have helped the Pirates get into bowl games this year. But he is hopeful that it will help him when it comes to the draft.
Several teams have been in touch with me, but none of them have given any indication as to what will happen in the draft, Long saicl. Long has a couple of choices, Pittsburgh and Dallas, but isnt limiting himself to those two only. Pittsburgh has shown a tendancy to draft guards who arent real tall and Dallas is the team thats been in touch with me the most.
But while Long is hopeful of staying at the offensive guard position, he admits that he might be moved to center or even to nose guard. It doesnt really matter to me.
He also said that a few of the USFL teams have also talked with him, and hes not eliminating that league. Ill see where they draft me and what they have to offer, then Ill make up my mind.
Seven years ago. Long completed his first year of
football as a senior at Eau Claire High School in Columbia as a 160-pounder. I was just getting into weigh liftig them, and I had no idea that it would lead to ail it has, he said. Of course, its always been my dream to make someones all-America team.
That dream has been answered, and may be repeated a few more times before its over.
Also picked to the team from the state was North Carolina defensive lineman William Fuller. Other players from the South included running back Bo Jackson of Auburn, defensive lineman Bruce Smith of Virginia Tech, defensive lineman Reggie White of Tennessee, linebacker Wilber Marshall of Florida, and defensive back Terry Hoage of Georgia.
GCA Captures Opening Win
KINSTON - The Greenville Christian Academy basketball teams rallied from first-half deficits toi win their opening games of the season Monday and advance to the finals of the Bethel Christian Invitational Tournament. The boys team downed Wilson 59^9, while the girls earned a 34-25 victory over hosting Bethel.
The girls, who play Wilson for the championship today at 5:30, trailed 14-8 at halftime, but outscored the tourney hosts 26-11 down the stretch. Kathy Vemelson led GCA with 18 points, while Patti Can-added seven. Christy Ormand paced Bethel with 16 points.
The GCA boys were behind 25-20 at intermission and came back with 39 points to earn a spot in the finals against Bethel at 8:30.
Mike Bragg bucketed 16 points for GCA, while Brian
House added 12 and Mike Griner 10. Jeff Attoe and Todd Boykin led Wilson with 15 points, and Michael Barnes added 11.
GIRLS GAME Bethel (>
R. Mercer 11-4 3, West 10-12, P. Mercer 2 04) 4, Ward 0 04) 0, Ormand 5 6-10 16, McCoy 0 0-0. Totals 9 7-15 25.
Greenville Christian (34)
J. Williams 1 1-4 3, Huggins 0 04) 0, 'isp 0 04) 0, Carr 3 1-4 7, Kathy Vemelson 8 2-6 18, Boyd 2 2-2 6. Totals 146-1634.
Bethel.....................4 10 5 6-25
G'ville Christian 8 0 10 16-34
BOYS GAME Wilson (49)
Strickland 1 0-1 2, Attoe 7 1-2 15, Barnette 3 0-1 6, Barnes 5 1-2 11, Boykin 6 3^15. Totals 22 5-10 49. Greenville Christian (59) Harria 4 00 8, Bragg 6 4-6 16, Andrews 4 0-2 8, B. House 5 2-5 12, Roeser 1 04) 2, Griner 4 2-4 10, Stancill 0 04) 0, D. Harris 1 1-2 3. Totals 25 9-19 59.
Wilson................II 14 12 12-49
Greenville............8 12 16 23-39
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East .Carolinas basketball Pirates go after their second straight victory Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Minges Coliseum, as they host Christopher Newport.
The Pirates i^ned their season with a 75-66 victory over Campbell University on Saturday night in a game that some them play with moments ofbrillance.
The youthful Pirates will seek to show Coach (Tiarlie
Harrison some improvement in this second game of the new year.
Harrison was fairly well pleased with most of the play on Saturday night. After lodcing at the film, I saw some positive things, Harrison said. We got impatient at times on offense, but when we were patient in allowing things to happen, we generally got the shots we wanted and scored easily. But in the
second half, we got impatient and didnt shoot well. That didnt allow us to get into our pressing defense and we got sloppy at times.
They got 18 of their points in the second half on defensive breakdowns by us." he added. After we shut them down on their first and second and third and fourth option, they still got a basket. Wlien we force things like that weve got to take advantage of it and
Nebraska Tops Regular Season Poll; ECU 20th
By The Associated Press
Nebraska finished its regular season lust where it started - as the No. 1 college football team in the nation -while runnerup Texas managed to inch a little closer to the top-ranked Comhuskers in the Associated Press poll.
Nebraska, bidding to become the first team to be ranked No. 1 in the preseason poll and to hold that ranking through the end of the postseason, received 52 of 55 first-place ballots Monday.
The 12-0 Comhuskers wrapped up their regular season by beating Oklahoma 28-21 Saturday and got 1,097 of a possible 1,100 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers and sportscasters in the next-to-last regular-season poll.
Texas. 11-0 and the only other unbeaten-untied major college team in the country, remained second for the 11th consecutive week. The Longhorns crushed Texas A&M 45-13 and got three first-place votes and 1,048 points.
Last week, Nebraska led Texas 58-1 in first-place ballots and 1,179-1,118 in points.
The rest of the Top Ten remained the same as last week with Auburn, Illinois and Miami holding onto the 3-4-5
positions with 973, 910 and 885 points, respectively. Auburn,
9-1, winds up Saturday against No. 19 Alabama, while Illinois and Miami have completed
10-1 regular seasons. Southern Methodist,
(Georgia, Michigan, Brigham Young and Iowa complete the Top Ten.
SMU beat Houston 32-14, Georgia edged (ieorgia Tech 27-24, while the others finished the season earlier. The points were 824 for SMU, 732 for Georgia. 694 for Michigan, 649 for BYU and 586 for Iowa.
The 10 teams that were in the Second Ten remained there, although there was some shuffling.
This weeks Second Ten are:
AP Rankings
Clemson, Florida. Boston College, Ohio State, Pittsburgh, Maryland, Air Force. West Virginia, Alabama and East Carolina.
Last week it was Florida. Clemson, Alabama, Ohio State, Boston College, Pitt. Maryland, Air Force. West Virginia and East Carolina.
In the only game involving members of the Second Ten. Boston College defeated Alabama 20-13.
UPl Rankings
M;w YORK ILPII - The L'nited Press International Board of Coaches Top 20 1983 college football ratings; with first-place voles and records in parentheses itoul points based on 15 points for first place. 14 for second, etc )
The Top Twenty teams in.
the
Associated Press college football poll.
with first-place votes in
parentheses.
season records, total poinl
is based
on
2O-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-1M1-10-9-8-7-6-5-4
-3-2-1 and last week's ranking
Record
Pts Pvs
I Nebraska i52i
12-04)
1,097
1
2.Texas i3i
11-04)
1.048
2
3.Aubum
9-14)
973
3
4 Illinois
10-1-0
910
4
5 Miami. Fla
10-14)
885
5
6.So Methodist
10-14)
824
6
7.(ieorgia
9-1-1.
732
7
8 Michigan
9-24)
694
8
9 Bngham Young
10-1-0
649
9
10 Iowa
9-24)
586
10
ll.Clemsm
9-1-1
548
12
U.Flonda
7-2-1
521
n
13. Boston College
9-2-0
415
15
14 0hio Sute
8-3-0
386
14
15 Pittsburgh 16..Maryland
17 Air Force
1-2-1
289
16
8-3-0
223
17
8-2-0
149
18
18.West Virginia
8-3-0
146
19
19 Alabama
7-34)
126
13
.East Carolina
-3^
93
20
Neorasxa ijji 1I201 537
Texas i3) (ll-Oi 504
Auburn i9-li 464
Miami iFla 1 ilO-li 414
Illinois ilO-n 412
Southern MthdstilO-li 347
Georgia 19-I-I)/ 313
Michigan i9-2i 271
Brigham Young 110-11 246
Iowa <9-21 210
Florida i7-2-li 154
Boston College i92i 127
Ohio State 18-31 83
Pittsburgh 18-2 1) 73
Maryland i8-31 2S
Air Porce i8-2i 22
Bavlor i7-3-li 20
Virginia Tech i92i 19
West Virginia '8-3i 16
Oklahoma -7-4i 12
Note By agreement with the Amencan Football Coaches Association, teams on probation by the NCAA are ineligible for the Top 20 and national championship consideration by the IP) Board of Coaches The teams currently on probation are Clemson .'ojinem Califorma. Arizona. W'ichiia State and Southern Mississippi r
not give up easy points,
As to Wednesdays foe. Harrison noted that while Christopher Newport is a small team, they have several atheletes who shoot the ball well. Theyre very patient and run a patterned offense. Last year, our pressure defense didnt seem to bother them. They'd just clear out and bring it down the court. That gave us problems at times. Like a lof of Virginia schools they run the flex offense. This is the first time weve seen that much movement and it gives us a chance to work against it.
1 anticipate them running a lot of zone against us. and I hope that well be able to pull them out of it,Harrison said.
The Captains come into the game with a 1-3 record, having beaten Newport Apprentice School, 80-74, in their opener. They have since lost to Randolph-Macon, 74-61; Apprentice School, 66-57; anti to St. Marys (Md.). 52-40.
Christopher Newports leading scorer is 6-1 forward Buck Moore, with a 16.3 average. Hes also the leading rebounder with a 6.0 average. Jimmy Deans, a 10.7 scorer, is not expected to play this weekend.
Vince Eure, a 6-3 forward, is hitting 9.3 points and pulling 5.3 rebounds.
The other starters are expected to be 6-0 guard Keith Cobb and 6-0 guard Brian Schuhart, and 6-4 center Joel Fortune.
Schuhart has started in three of the four previous games, while the other four have started in all four games.
Following the Wednesday game, the Pirates take to the road for the first time, traveling to Richmond to face #20 Virginia Commonwealth.
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Ayden-Grifton Chargers
The Ayden-Grifton Chargers open the 1983-84 campaign tonight against Roanoke. Members of the team are: (first row, L-R) David Wiggins, Calvin Peterson, Gerald Newton, James Anderson; (second row) Rob
Kentucky Takes First In Basketball Poll
By The Associated Press Kentucky climbed past )reseason choice North (aro-ina in the first weekly Associated Press college basketball rankings of the 1983-84 campaign.
The Wildcats had a scant two point-edge for the No. 1 spot in the results announced Monday as both schools attracted 24 first-place votes from the nationwide panel of 51 sports writers and broadcasters.
Kentucky, a 65-44 winner in its opening game over pre-viously sixth-ranked Louisville, received 988 points. North Carolina, which drew 986 points, opened the season with an unimpressive 64-57 opening win over unranked Missouri, and defeated Tennessee-Chattanooga 85-63 Monday night after the rankings had been announced.
Both teams played their season-openers Saturday. Kentucky routed No. 6 Louisville 65-44, while North Carolina downed unranked Missouri 64-57.
The setback dropped Louisville from the Top Twenty.
Georgetown, fourth in the
preseason, drew the only other three No. 1 votes for 868 points, good for the third spot. The Hoyas opened with two victories over Hawaii-Hilo over the weekend.
Memphis State, 2-0, advanced one place to fourth with 819 points. Iowa, 1-0 and No. 7 in the preseason, took over the No. 5 spot with 706 points. Maryland, 1-0, advanced two spots to sixth with 612 points.
Defending NCAA champion North Carolina State, unranked in the preseason, is back among the elite - No. 7 - with 602 points after winning its first four games. After upsetting Houston, No. 3 in the preseason, in the Hall of Fame Game Nov. 19, the Wolfpack swept past Alaska-Anchorage, Santa Clara and Arkansas, rated No. 14 in the preseason, to win the Great Alaska Shootout title over the weekend.
Houston, which beat Kansas Saturday, fell to the No. 8 spot with 589 points. No. 9 UCLA and No. 10 Oregon State remained in the same place.
UCLA, 2-0, received 562 points.Oregon State, which
1. Kentucky (24i
2.N. Carolina (24)
3.Georgeton (3)
4.Memphis St
5. Iowa (.Maryland 7..\.Carolina St. SHouston
9 UCLA lOOregon St.
II Michigan St.
12.Louisiana St.
13.Gorgia
14 Arkansas
15 Boston College KDePaul
17 FYesno St Ig.WichiU St 19.St. John's 20 Va Commnw
1-0
1-0
2-0
2-0
1-0
1-0
4-0
1-1
2-0
8 1
868 4
819 5
706 7
(12 8 (02 -589 3 562 9
454 10 1
299 14
289 15 181 18 145 13 117 -
98 -
86 -
Perkins,
Benched
By The Associated Press
Sam Perkins and Kenny Smith, key operatives for No. 2 North Carolinas attack, were late for the teams pre-game meal and. consequently, were not in the starting lineup for their game against Tennessee-Chattanooga.
But Michael Jordan had a strong game with 28 points and Perkins came off the bench to add 16 as the Tar Heels broke open a close game early in the second half and ate up their visitors 85-63 Monday night.
North Carolina Coach Dean Smith, who won his 498th career game, disciplined Perkins and Smith for being five minutes late to the meal as Dave Popson started ahead of Perkins and Steve Hale replaced Smith.
The Tar Heels, 2-0, led 33-30 at halftime before Tennessee-Chattanooga, the Southern Conference champions, surged ahead early in the second half. Thats when North Carolina used a 14-2 streak to get out of trouble.
Brad Daugherty added 16 points for the Tar Heels, who had dropped from No. 1 to second behind Kentucky in the Associated Press poll released earlier in the day.
Only two other Top Twenty teams played Monday -12th-ranked Louisiana State beat North Carolina-Wilmington 94-59 and No. 15 Boston College routed Stonehill 97-63.
Jordan said he felt slightly miffed that Moccassin defenders were talking to him during the game in an attempt to distract him.
It got me angry and it gave me extra incentive, Jordan said. I concentrated on executing the defense a lot harder.
Smith Miss Meal; At Game's Tipoff
Despite the loss, Tennessee-Chattanooga Coach Murray Arnold saw some bright spots for his 1-1 team.
I saw some pretty nice things I feel we can build on, Arnold said. Before we came in here, I felt North Carolina was No. 1 in the country and I still feel that way.
If we leave here tonight as a better team, then our time was well-invested, he said.
Jerry Reynolds scored 14 points and four other Louisiana State players were in double figures for the Tigers. Derrick Taylor and reserve Nikita Wilson each had 12 points as LSU, 2-0, scored the first eight points of the game and was ahead 39-21 at halftime.
Senior forward Jay Murphy, who underwent arthoscopic knee surgery three weeks ago, scored 17 of his 22 points in the first half to help Boston College win its season opener. Junior guard Michael Adams scored 17 of his 19 points in the first half as the Eagles raced to a 57-30 lead at intermission.
Kenneth Perkins had 17 points and Tom Sewell 13 as Lamar extended the nations longest homecourt winning streak to 69 games with a 78-57 triumph over St. Marys of Texas.
Robert Morris College, which has reached the NCAA tournament the past two seasons, opened its season with an 86-63 victory over Lock Haven as Forest Grant scored 20 points. It was the Colonials 22nd straight victory game at home.
Delaney Rudd hit for a game-high 18 points as Wake Forest started its season by breezing to a 74-59 victory over Furman.
Charles Barkley, an all-Southeastern Conference junior recovering from back
injuries, played only 24 minutes early in the second half but helped rally Auburn past Columbus College 58-54. Barkley scored just two points but blocked two shots during a streak in which Auburn scored 10 straight points to overcome a one-point naiftime deficit.
Buck Johnson hit 27 points as Alabama downed Cincinnati 83-64.
Senior forward Art Aarons 21 points paced Northwestern past Bradley 63-42. The game was the first for Northwestern in the Welsh-Ryan Arena at newly remodeled McGraw Hall.
Ron Tarpley scored 17 points and Leslie Rockymore had 16 as Michigan raced to a 15-3 lead and cruised to a 71-55 triumph over North Carolina A&T.
Reserve guard J.J. Crawl tallied 14 points to help West
Chargers Prepare For Opener
Congleton, Mike Dixon, Mike Woods, Doug Anderson, Kelvin Harris; (third row) Billy Wiggins, Leavy Thompson, Marvin Smith, Lucian Anderson. (Reflector photo)
opens its season Friday, collected 454 points.
Michigan State, 2-0, advanced a notch to rank 11th. Then, in order, came Louisiana State, Georgia, Arkansas, Boston College, DePaul, Fresno State, Wichita State, St. Johns and Virginia Commonwealth.
In addition to N.C. State, other newcomers in the Top Twenty, were Wichita State, St. Johns and Virginia Commonwealth.
Besides Louisville, other losers dropped from the Top Twenty were Kansas, Indiana and Oklahoma.
The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press' 1983-84 college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, total points based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12 -11-10-9-8-7-6-54-3-2-1 , record through Sunday and last weeks ranking:
Record Pts Pvs
By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer LITTLEFIELD - When the 1983-84 version of the Ayden-Grifton basketball squads take the court tonight to open the season against Roanoke, both the boys and girls teams will be faced with the same dilemma - the lack of a proven point guard.
we have one glaring weakness, its ballhanding, Lady Chargers Coach Kathy Frazier said. We lost Linda Brown at the point guard position from last year, and we just have no one who has jroven they can handle the 11 consistently.
The Char^r men lost point guard Jeff Dixon, but Calvin Peterson returns to give A-G experience in the backcourt. Last year, however, Peterson was used at the shooting guard position, and the transition could make the difference in the Chargers early schedule.
The Chargers finished 12-10 in the regular season a year ago, including a 7-6 mark in the Eastern Carolina 3-A Conference race. But the Chargers lost a trio of starters from a year ago - Dixon, Thomas Anderson and Tyrone Gay. Youth will be the key through the early portion of Ayden-Griftons schedule.
But Ayden-Grifton has 6-2 sophomore Marvin Smith returning at center, and senior guard Mike Woods served as the t^ reserve a year ago. Fighting for the other starting slots are junior Mike Dixon, senior Billy Wiggins and sophomores Leavy Thompson and Doug Anderson.
We lost quite a bit of scoring from last year, Charger Coach Bob Murphrey said. We expect Peterson to score well from the perimeter, but were not sure if hell be our point guard through all the way. Hes more of the shooting guard, or we may even use him at the small forward; hes a good jumper.
Peterson was benched from his starting role for disciplinary reasons late last season, but later returned to the lineup.
I guess you could attribute that to growing up, Murphrey said. Hes matured, and I hope hes going to provide leadership for us this year. I think he can be a steady performer.
Right now, Peterson, David Wiggins and Mike Dix-g are working out at the it. But Id have to give the fge to Peterson because of his experience. (Mike) Woods
Virginia past Indiana, Pa., 73-46 in a sloppy game.
Fred Lee hit 10 of 13 shots from the floor and finished with 27 points, leading Rider over James Madison 76-68.
John Dixon and A1 Young keyed a 15-point spree in the first half that carried Virginia Tech over Towson State 93-53. The winning Hokies hit 37 of 52 shots from the floor.
Freshman Bruce Dalrymple made his college debut by scoring 21 points and grabbing 17 rebounds as Georgia Tech downed Alabama A&M 95-75.
Junior guard Vernon Moore hit an eight-foot jump shot over three defenders with two seconds left to lift Creighton past Southern 57-55.
LaSalle guard Steve Black scored eight of his 23 points in the final eight minutes as the Explorers topped Morjnouth 75-60.
Guard Terrence Stansbury stole a pass and scored on a breakaway dunk with just over a minute remaining to give Temple the lead, and he then blocked a last-second shot as the Owls held off Drexel 61-60.
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and (Gerald) Newton should be good outside shovrters for us, as well.
Weve got some people
back from last year, Murphrev said. "But not many wiui experience. Weve got three sophomores Im really high on. Marvin Smith started for us a year ago as a freshman and should continue to be stnMig inside. Leavy Thompson and Doug Anderson are both good on the boards.
Were relatively small, although we have a little mwe height than we had last year. I hope that befrxe the year is over, well be a pretty good rebounding team.
The Chargers play in six non-conference games before the Christmas Mliday, then participate in the Tri-C)ounty Classic at North Lenoir before entering the Eastern Carolina 3-A schedule.
I would prefu' to have 14 conference games; an eight-team league rather than seven, Murphrey said. Our goal for this year is to finish in the top two or three in the conference and make it to the district tournament.
Were not completely ready to play right now, but I guess no (Hie else would say they are either. Were not hampered by players coming in late from football this year; we dont have any reason not to be ready.
If I had to point to one weakness it would be our lack of returning scorers. Thats going to be a weakness early, but itll be less and less as the season moves on - someones always willing to shoot. Murphrey picks Southwest Edgecombe and maybe Greene Central as the strongest teams of the Eastern Carolina group, but quickly adds Farmville is mighty young and could come through, and North Pitt is always good in the conference race.
The thing I hope is that this years team will improve as the season goes on - I think they will, Murphrey said. Last year we had the nine-game winning streak, then faded at the end of the year.
A necessity of this team to
survive is to play well together. ITieyve got to play team ddense and be willii^ to give up the ball on offense. If we have one strength, its that we have good team spirit and depth.
t
The solution m the Lady Chargers point guard woes will likely be sophomore Stelena Rountree, but Ayden-Grifton could use six duferent lineups in as many non-conference games trying to find the right combinaticm. Frazier said the likely starters for the opeiMr are Rountree and Cynt^ Hicks at guard, with seniors Tracy Durant and Danita McOitter at forward and soii(H Cora Faison at centw.
Im going to use the first five or six non-conference mes to determine who will tlw starters, Frazier said. Ill be trying combinations
with basically seven of the girls, but were going to .be stronger di the bench than we have neen in a while. In eight games, theres no tellii^ what will happen. We have some speed - theyre faster than my team last year.
Rountree started a year ago, but did not stick out in a crowd by any meaiB. This year shell be moving to the pcHnt and running the offense at the start of the season. Her shooting has improved, as wellasherballhandling.
"Faison and Hicks will probably be our leading scorers, but under them its pretty even.
Durant is the tallest player on the Lady Chargers roster at 6-1, with Faison following at 5-llandMcCotterat5-8.
Defensively, the Lady Chargers will rely on zone coverage, with Frazier instilling the idea that one person
SPORT
LINE
To The Sports Editor:
East Carolina came within one inch and a two-point conversion of being number one in the nation!
Nebraska was leading Oklahoma 28-21. In ?he final seconds of the game a pass by Okla' was missed in the end zone by one im two-point conversion would have beat Nebr. ranked number one.
Oklahoma was defeated by Missouri and Missouri was defeated by East Carolina. Thus, these events would have put ECU number one.
I am sure the polls would have used this logic to give us the rating. Now let me get serious. The momentum behind the ECU athletic program is at an all-time high in my opinion. We must back up our interest with DOLLARS! Teams we are playing are raising ten times what we are.
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The Lady Chargers finished the 1963-84 season with a 7-16 overall record while 3-9 in the conference, but Frazier attributes that finish to a lack of killer instinct.
We started stronger in the early part (rf the season and deteriorated from then on, Frazier said. Ayden-Grifton has a tendency over the years to not play as hard in the fourth quarter - thats what wins or loses ballgames.
"Im hoping to be .500 or better this year. The conference looks pretty strong overall. Southwest has a pair of freshman twins that played volleyball this year - they showed a high level of athletic ability for ninth-graders. But North Pitt, Greene Central and Southwest will probably be the best in the league.
Rec Spikers In State Tourney
A team representing the Greenville City League volleyball league will play in the State Regional Tournament in Beaufort on Saturday The tournament is a double elimination event for the eastern regional title. Games will start at 8 a.m. at Beaufort Middle School with Greenvilles first game scheduled for 10 a.m. The winner of the tournament will advance to the state tournament, scheduled for (Charlotte on December 10.
Last year in a best of five series with Beaufort, Greenville, losing 2-1 and behind 10-2 in the fourth game, rallied to win the tournament, three games to two.
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Marino, Duper Best Bengals
MIAMI (AP) - The redhot passing combination of Dan Marino to Mark Duper is setting the National Football Leape on fire and blazing the trail the Miami Dolphins are traveling toward the playoffs.
The Cincinnati Bengals are but the latest victims of the dynamic duos destruction, yielding a pair of touchdowns to the tanoem Monday night during a 38-14 loss to the defending American Conference champions.
Theyve got my vote for the Pro Bowl, Bengals wide receiver Cris Collinsworth said of Marino and Duper. We've been around the league now, and those guys are in a special class at their positions.
Marino, the AFCs passing efficiency leader, threw for 217 yards and three TDs as the 9^ Dolphins took a two-game lead over Buffalo in the Eastern Division and moved to within a game of wrapping up the title.
Duper, who caught scoring passes of 7 and 15 yards, had five catches for 84 yards, allowing him to maintain a pace that would give him a 1,000-yard receiving season -the first in Dolphin history.
Theyre the best defense I ever played against. said Duper, a second-year pro who moved into the starting lineup eight weeks ago. "They really punish you after you catch the ball. lialf of my body was numb.
Marino, meanwhile, boosted his record as a starter to 6-2 and a victory over Houston next Sunday will clinch the division crown and send the Dolphins into the playoffs.
You have to say Marino really kept his cool. He was able to move around and find his receivers, said Miami Coach Don Shula, who earlier in the day signed a new, multi-year contract to remain with the team hes guided to four Super Bowl appearances.
Its been a good dayj Shula added. "First the announcement, and to have that precede an effort like this would have to make you feel pretty proud.
The loss all but eliminated
the 5-8 Bengals from the ilayoff picture, and Coach 'orrest Gregg and players agreed they were their own worst enemy Monday night.
Cincinnati, which trailed 17-14 at halftime, lost two fumbles and quarterback Ken Anderson threw two interceptions, one that led to Marinos 3-yard, fourth-quarter touchdown toss to tight end Dan Johnson.
Anderson and Isaac Curtis teammed on an 80-yard scoring play in the secoiid quarter, and the Bengal quarterback set up Pete Johnsons 1-yard plunge with a 48-yard completion to Collinsworth.
"Those two big plays were the biggest part of their offense the entire night, said Shula. It was one great effort by our football team.
The defense got the ball and the offense was able to take advantage of the field losition and put points on the )oard, he added.
Gregg said errors were the key to the contest, played before an Orange Bowl sellout of 74,506.
It gets down to this: you cant turn the ball over four times against a team as good as the Dolphins and expect to win, the Cincinnati coach said.
We played well enough in the first half offensively, but frankly we didnt execute in the second, he added.
Anderson completed 23 of 36 passes for 342 yards and was sacked twice for 17 yards in losses.
The 13-year veteran said the Bengals were forced out of their game plan when the Dolphins extended their halftime lead.
"They didn't show us anything fancy (defensively), nothing that we didnt expect, said Anderson. We started off O.K. in the first half, but then when you get behind you have to throw it.
As a result, Johnson, the Bengals leading rusher, was held to 44 yards on 15 carries.
We were gonna do whatever it takes to win," he said. "Tonight, nothing worked. They just outplayed us. They beat us and we lost.
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C. Tuesday. November 29,1983
Southern California Atop Women's Poll
By The Associated Press
Southern Californias back-to-back victories over previously No. 8 Maryland and No. 5 Tennessee in the Notre Dame tournament chased away the doubters as the Women of Troy grabbed 59 of 60 first-place votes and 1,197 points in the first weekly Womens Basketball rankings announced today.
The defending NCAA champions had 28 first-place votes but led Louisiana Tech by just one point in the preseason rankings with the entire nationwide panel of 65 womens coaches participating, The balloting is compiled by Mel Greenberg of The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Louisiana
ech, which
Touchdown Trip
Miami Dolphin running back Andra Franklin (37) powers past Cincinnati Bengal defenders Jerry Boyarsky (61) and Ross Browner (right) to score a fourth quarter touchdown
Monday night at the Orange Bowl Stadium in Miami. The Dolphins won the game, 38-14, despite gaining fewer total net yards than the Bengals. (AP Laserphoto)
Shula Elects To Stay With The Dolphins
opens its season tonight at Arkansas, remained second with 1,113 points and received the other first-place ballot.
Georgia, which received 18 first-place votes in the preseason rankings, remained third with 1,083 points after opening the swson with wins over St. John's and Bowling Green to take the University of Detroit Tournament.
I didnt vote for them at the top before but Im voting for them' now, Maryland Coach Chris Weller said after use defeated the Terrapins last weekend, 86-68. They
really lodced strong for this time of year.
Texas opened with a win over visiting Alabama and held fourth with 1,018 points, Tennessee, which lost to USC, 78-64, and snapped a three-game winning streak, held fifth with 896 points, but sixth-place Long Beach State drew closer with 890 points. The 49ers open the season at Pepperdine tonight.
Kansas State won its own tournament and jumped from ninth to seventh with 764 points. Mississippi, which doesnt open its season until Southeastern Ckinference rival Vanderbilt visits Saturdajr night, reached an all-time high at eighth with 757 points. Maryland fell a notch to ninth with 710 points while North Carolina State climbed to 10th with 611 points.
The big news was Old Dominions 84-80 overtime loss to host Western Kentucky in the Bowling Green Bank tournament last week. The defeat sent the Monarchs tumbling from seventh to 11th. It is the first time Old Dominion has been out of the top 10 since finishing 12th in the final poll of the 1977-78 season.
The second 10 in order are Old Dominion, Auburn. Louisiana State. Rutgers, Penn State, Ohio State,
Missouri, Western Kentucky, Clemson and Cheyney The second 10 last week was North Carolina State. Auburn, Louisiana State. Rutgers. Missouri. Arizona State, Penn State. Ohio State and South Carolina.
Western Kentucky's win enabled the Lady 'Toppers to become the 71st team to be ranked since the poll began eight years ago. Clemson moved back after a-year's absence with a three-game sweep, including a 95-75 win over Stephen F. Austin in the title game of the Wayland Baptist tournament.
Arizona State ended a 33-W'eek run in the rankings after losing to Colorado. 95-73, South Carolina, which opens by hosting South Carolina Slate tomorrow mght, also fell from the list.
The top 20 collegiate uomen s basketball teams in the nation through Nov 27 as compiled by .Mel Greenberg o The Philadelphia Inquirer on the votes of 60 women s coaches Teams First Place votes in parentheses season s records, points and last week s ranking Voting based on 20-lS 18-17-16 l.; i4-13-l!
MIAMI (AP) - Don Shula's contract to coach the Miami Dolphins may be new, but the boss says the wording isnt.
I still own the football team and he still runs it, Dolphins owner Joe Robbie said Monday after he and Shula signed the new deal. Coach Shula's contract is the same contract he had a year ago, except for the numbers. Both Shula, 53, and Robbie said terms of the deal, including its duration, were personal to both of us and would remain secret.
Neither man would say whether the pact will make Shula, whose current contract expires in February, the National Football Leagues first $1 million-a-year coach. But they did say the contract
doesnt include any real estate.
Shula turned down an offer of at least $1 million from the New Jersey Generals of the rival United States Football League after Generals owner Donald Trump said on national television Shula would sign if given a luxury apartment in New York City.
The key to this was a one-bedroom efficiency on Biscayne Boulevard, Shula quipped after agreeing to stay in Miami.
But then he got serious, looking back on his four Super Bowl seasons here and the nine times his Dolphins made in the playoffs over 132 seasons.
Rather than wait to see what would be available in
TANK IFNAMARA
Tife 9fW?r'2 MVlMG
IffiCKJP M6U C>AC CX/T Of EtiRM0OT AFTtR
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
AUP SrM0l Af06 LIWG Of ACOUPU OF
TiCKC'5 A PAMEAP-
MCXJ'Re EkiTOZlMG
SCOREBOARD
NBA Standings
Bv Thf .-XModilfd Prrvs KA.'iTKRNniNKKRKNCK .MUnlic Uivliiion
W I. Pci,
Philadelphia II 3 786
Boston II S 688 I
New York 9 6 60U 2'j
New jersey 8 6 571 3
Washington 6 9 400 S';
CmlralDiiikion Milwaukee 9 6 6(iii -
AllanU 8 6 571
Detroit 7 9 438 2'v
Chicago 5 8 385 3
Cleveland 4 II 267 5
Indiana 4 II 287 5
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Dallas 10 4 714 -
Denver 8 7 533 2'j
Kansas City 7 8 467 3',
CUh 7 9 438 4
San Antonio 6 10 375 5
Houston 5 9 357 5
Pacific Division Los Angeles 11 4 733 -
Portland II 5 688 'j
Golden State 8 8 500 3';
Seattle 8 8 . 500 3'-;
Phoenix 5 10 .333 6
San Diego 5 II .313 6';
Monday's Game Kansas City 113, Portland 104 'fuesdav's Games San Antonio at New York, i n I Milwaukee at Washington, ini Cleveland at Detroit, mi DenveratAtlanla.ini Chicago at Houston, mi Philadelphia at Indiana, mi Phoenix vs Utah, at Las Vegas, mi San Diego at Seattle, mi Los Angeles at Golden Stale. (n i Wednesday's Games New York at New Jersey, mi AtlanUalPWladelphia.ipi Portland at Cleveland, mi San Antonio at Beaton, mi Denver at Milwaukee, ini Houston at Dallas, mi Kansas City at Phoenix, mi UUh at San Diego, mi
NFL Standings
Bv The Associated Press American Conference East
W L T Pet. PF PA 9 4 0 692 300 195
7 6 0 .538 245 288
6 7 0 462 219 313
0 462 240 .258
0 462 282 257
Minnesota
7 6
0
.538 281
302
Chicago
6 7
0
462 241
236
Green Bay
6 7
0
,462 365
379
Tampa Bay
2 n
0
154 191
310
West
L A Rams
8 5
U
615 319
286
New iirleans 7 6
u
538 275
287
San Francisco 7 6
0
538 332
245
Atlanta
6 7
0
462 294
307
x-clinched
playoff spot Monday's Game
Miami 38. Cincinnati 14
Thursdav. Dec. I lais Angeles Raiders at San Diego, i Sunday. Dec. i Buffalo at Kansas City Chicago at Green Bay Miami at Houston New Orleans at New England Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Atlanta at Washington IxK Angeles Rams at Philadelphia St Louis at New York Giants Dallas at Seattle Tampa Bay at San Francisco Cleveland at Denver New York Jets at Baltimore Monday. Dec. 5 Minnesota at Detroit, mi
NHL Standings
By The Associated Press W ales Conference Patrick Division
2. North Carolina i2- beat Chattanooga. 85-63.
3 Georgetown 12-01 did not plav
4 Memphis St < 2-01 did not play
5 Iowa 11-01 did not play
6. Maryland i Hli din not play.
7. N. Carolina SI. (4-0) did not play.
8 Houston 11-11 did not plav
9 UCLA 12-0i did not plav '
10 Oregon St ' 0-01 did not play
11 Michigan St. 12-01 did not play.
12 Louisiana St. i2-0i Mat
NC
W I.
T Pts
GF
G\
NY Isles
16 8
0
32
107
83
NY Rangers
14 8
4
32
108
92
Philadelphia
Washington
13 8 II 12
2
1
28
23
95
79
8(1
85
Pittsburgh
6 15
3
15
73
96
New Jersey
2 20
0
4
57
112
.\dams Division
Boston
14 6
2
30
107
70
Buffalo
13 8
3
29
92
83
Quebec
Montreal
12 II
.3
27
123
%
11 11
1
23
95
91
Hartford
9 10
2
20
76
82
Campbell Confrrencr
Norris Divisin
Minnesota
11 9
3
25
107
110
Chicago
Detroit
10 12
2
22
89
103
10 10
2
22
84
86
Toronto
10 12
2
22
102
116
St Louis
9 12
2
20
86
99
Edmohlon
Smythe Division
19 4
2
40
154
102
Calgary
10 9
4
24
84
91
Vancouver
10 12
2
22
102
103
Los Angeles
7 12
5
19
96
110
Winnipeg
6 14
3
15
91
115
Sundays Games
Miami Buffalo Baltimore New England N Y JeU
4
6 7 7
6 7
Central PilUburgh 9 4 0
Cleveland 8 50
Cincinnati 5 8 0
Houston I 12 0
West
L.A.Raiders 10 3 0
Denver 760
Seattle 7 6 0
Kansas City 5 8 0
San Diego 5 8 0
.SaUMUIConfereMe East
x-Dallas II 2 0
X-Washington II 2 0
St Laws 5 7 I
Philadelphia 4 0
N Y Giants 3 9 I
I'eatral
692 294 243 .615 293 264 385 292 263 .077 227 389
769 346 280 538 237 254 .538 352 346 385 291 295 385 293 352
846 417 277 846 442 279
423 299 391 306 196 254 268 227 289
No games scheduled
Monday'Game Vancouver 3, NY.' Rangers 3, tie Tuesdavs Games Buffalo at Montreal, mi Washington at Quebec. i n i Chicago at New Jersey, m i NY. DlandersatSt. Louis, mi Pittsburgh at Minnesota, i n i Philadelphia at Calgary, ml
Winnipeg at Los Angeles
Wednesdays Games Vancouver at Hartford, i n i Chicago at NY Rangers, mi Torontoal Detroit, mi Philadelphia at Edmonton. i n >
Wilmington. 94 59
13 Georgia 12-ui did not play
14 Arkansas i2 II didnotplav
15 Boston College n-Oi beat Stonehill,
97-6.1,
'16 DePaul Hii did nol plav
17 Fresno St 11 11 did not plav
18 Wichita St I l-Oi did nol play.
19 SI John's'2-01 did nol play
2(1 Va Commonwealth lU-ili did nol play
Transactions
Bv The .Associated Press BASEBALL National League
CINCINNATI REDS-Sold Kelly Pans, infielder, to the Chicago White Sox EtMtTBALI.
National Football league HOUSTON OILERS-Placed Mike Re nfro. wide receiver, on the injured reserve list
United Stales Football l.eague NEW JERSEY GENERALS-.Signed Kern Justin, cornerback, lo a four year conlfaci
NEW ORLEANS BREAKERS Reached agreement with Tim Mazzetli. place-kicker. on a new ihree-vear contract
S4KCER North American Soccer League
COSMOS-Signed Stan Terlecki forward, to a one-vear contract that will cover the current .North American Soccer Leagues indoor season and the 1984 outdoor season
College Basketball
By The Associated Press E.AST
Boston Coll 97, Stonehill 63 George Washington 110, Md Eastern Shore 75 Hofstra60. Lehigh 58 Iona 92. Morgan St. 46 La Salle 75. Monmouth 60 Lafavette70. Moravian 58 Maine 88. St Michael's 65 Navy 77, California. Pa 63 Niagara 105. .SI John Pisher73 Providence 83, Brown 50 Robert Morns 86, Lock Haven St 63 Temple 61. Drexel 60
SOlTtI
Alabama 83. Cincinnati 64 Alabama St 93. Baptist. S C. 68 Auburn 58. Columbus 54 Baptist 76.Toccoa Falls 64 Centenary 63. Cent Florida 62 Citadel IIK. Piedmont 54 Creighton 57. .Southern U 55
Men's College Basketball
ilachiart 90, St. Adusta 64
Appalachi Eton 108.1 Fayettevii
JoihnsonC Smith 76, Catawba 75
9 4
----- Creighton 57. .Southern U 55
Top 20 Results liffiSlKiS!lS'SSs.
February, I decided there were a lot of things here that were positive. Ive been happy here and this is where I want to be, said Shula, who is 210-80^ in 21 years as coach of the Dolphins and Baltimore Colts.
I was very impressed with the attitude that Joe Robbie had. He wanted to continue to put the best possible product on the field, Shula said, noting that the owner took over contract negotiations ' with a third of the team going into their option years after the death of personnel director Joe Thomas last spring.
A small group of fans roared their approval and slapped the grinning coach on the back early today as Shula left the locker room after his team routed the Cincinnati Bengals 38-14, capping what he called a pretty good day.
This was the first time since joining the Dolphins that Shula, already the NFLs best-paid coach at a reported $450,000 annually, entered his option season without being sewn up in a new pact.
UTC Coach To Showboat
U-10-9-8-7-6-54-3-2I
Record
Pts Pvs
1 Southrn Cl 59
2-0
1.197
1
2 Louisiana Tch 1
04)
1.113
2
3 Georgia
2-0
1.083
3
4 Texas
14)
1.018
4
5 Tennessee
3-1
896
5
6 Long Beach Sute (Mj
890
6
7 Kansas Suie
24)
764
9
8 Mississiroi
9 .Marvlano
04)
757
10
1-1
710
8
10 .Nortti Carolin St
24)
611
11
11 Old Dominion
21
5t
7
12 Auburn
14)
555
12
13 Louisiana Sute
1-0
495
13
14 Rutgers
14)
:82
14
15 Penn SUte
24)
329
17
16 Ohio Stale
14)
278
18
17 Missouri.
3-1
200
15
18 Western Knicky
24)
143
19Clemson
3-0
102
20 Chevney
04)
75
19
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) - Bill Oliver, stepping down after four seasons as football CO achat Tennessee-Chattanooga, says he hopes one of his assistants gets his old job.
"I have no idea who theyll hire, Oliver said Mon(lay after announcing that he had taken a position as secondary coach of the USFLs new Memphis Showboats.
I wish they would hire somebody on the staff, like Joe Pate, Mike Hand or Tom Grant...they could do the job. They could do everything (UTC) needs-andmore. Pate, assistant head coach and defensive coordinator, has been at UTC for five years, producing the No. 1 defense in the Southern Conference the last two seasons.
Grant has been offensive coordinator and backfield coach for two years, while Hand just finished his first
season at UTC as offensive line coach.
But observers feel UTC will look elsewhere for Olivers successor. Candidates most often mentioned are South Carolina offensive coordinator Frank Sadler and Jacksonville (Ala.) Coach Jim Fuller. Both have expressed interest in the job.
UTC Athletic Director Harold Wilkes said he planned to meet with university President Frederick W, Obear today to begin the search for a new coach.
Oliver compiled a 29-14-1 in four years at UTC. the third-winningest record in the schools history.
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Mississippi St. 47, Birmingham Southern 40 Morehead 89. Lincoln .Memorial 57 N r -Asheville 57. N C Charlotte 56 NE Louisiana 96, NTV Louisiana 66 North Carolina 85, Tn -Chattanooga 63 Pennsylvania 69, Davidson 59 Rider i6. James Madison 68 S. Flonda 90. Bethune-Cookman 63 S Mississippi 108. Rollins 79 Stetson 68. Mississippi Coll 67 Virginia Tech 93. Towson St 53 V.MI 75, Emorv & Henrv 48 W Carolina 95', Milligan 67 Wake Forest 74, Furman 59 West Virginia 73. Indiana. Pa 46
MIDWEST
Detroit 70, Grand Valiev St 65, OT Drake62, BallSt 60 Illinois Tech 81, Oakland 76, OT Kent SI 50. Wittenberg 45 Michigan7l, North Carolina A&T55 Minnesota 96. Indiana St. 70 Mo .Southern 72. School of the Ozarks
63
N Iowa83. Westmar67 Northwestern 63. Bradley 42 S Illinois 79. Mo -Kansas' City 60 SW Missouri 75,.Lincoln,'Mo'55 Valparaiso 86. Goshen 65 W Illinois 74, Wis Parkside62 Wis,-Green Bay74, Butler 65. OT Wayne St. Mich 82, Mich -Dearborn 42 Xavier 75, Kenvon37
SOl'THWEST
Baylor 64, Tarleton St 57 Houston Byitisl 75, Oklahoma St. 65 l-amar 78, SI Mary's, Texas, 57 Oklahoma City 72,'SW Kansas 70. OT Southern Meinodisl 90, Southwestern 71 Texas-Arlington 69, Texas A&I 64
F AR WEST Cal lryine91.ldaho7l Colorado 58, Regis 42 Denver 79. Doane68 Idaho St 99, S UUh 78 Wng Beach SI 73, San Diego 65, OT Los Angeles St, 81. Cal.-Davis 76. OT Montana 80, St Martin's 51 San Diego St 72. St Mary s, Calif 67, OT
Stanford 98. BemidjiSi 59
TOIRN.AMENTS Cystic Fibrosis Tip-Off Tournament Championship
Florida Inti 77. Longwood 58 Third Place ValdosUSl,77,St Leo63
N.C. Scoreboard
By The Associated Press
ByAsMclalcd Press ua. soutnem 80, tcKera 55 '
How the top Twenty teams in the Georgia Tech 95. AUbamaAAM 75
iiocialed Press' 1983-84 college GramblingSt 89, Wiley College58
Florida St 83. Tampa 70 Ga. Southern 80. Eckerd 55
Detroit
Associated
basketball poll lared Monday
ikv
7 S 0 .5312K 247 l.Kenluckvil-Oididnotplay
8, LynchI _ Fayetteville St. 77, Pembroke St
Louisiana SI N.CarohnaWilmington 59 Michigan 71, N.Carolina A4T55 N Carolina 85, Tennessee-ihatanooga
63
N Carolina Asheville 57. N Carolina-Charlotte 56 Pennsylvania 69, Davidson 59 Pfeiffer 75, Atlantic Christian 63 Wake Forest 74, Furman 59 W Carolina 95, Milligan 63
W omen's College Basketball
Pfeiffer 73. Atlantic Tliristian 66 Shaw 45. SI Paul 37
Winston-Salem St 77, Elriabeth City St
20T
ALL YOU CAN EAT .
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Euery Monda\^ and Wedr\esday from now until Nov. 30th between 5:00-10:00 Darryls 1907, Greenville is celebrating the Holiday Season early with an ALL YOU CAN EAT FEAST of our tender, juicy beef ribs for the unbelievable price of $7.95. Well even include a free salad!
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|2 The Daily Reflector. Grwoyllle, N.C. Tuesday, November 29,1983'Captives Of Care' Has Point To Make For Public
ByTOMJORY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Captives of Care is the rea -life story of some courageous patients who take over the hospital to prove, in the words of one named Neil, that freaks are people, too.
The television docudrama, starring five of the wheelchair-bound rebels who challenged authority at the Leumeah Home for the Handicapped near Sydney, Australia, will be broadcast tonight as part of public TVs Nova science series.
The widely acclaimed Australian production was based on a book by one of the disabled protagonists, John Roarty, a prominent player in Captives of Care, along with fellow revolutionaries Jeannie Best, Neil Russ, Les Hume and Jill Dennis.
An actress, Julieanne Newbould, is Sister Robin Bishop, an idealistic young nurse who listens to the patients complaints and ultimately helps them in their campaign for respect and responsibility.
Many of the patientc abe grossly deformed, and others are virtually immobile without assistance. They play out the drama naturally, without calling undue attention to their.disabilities. It is their dignity, and their concern for one another, that is the dominant image created by Captives of Care.
A decision by Leumeahs administrator to bar one patient. Les, from obtaining
TV Log
For cofflpitt* TV programming information, consuit your weakiy TV SHOWTiME from Sunday's Daiiy Refiactor._
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
TUESDAY
7:00 Jokers Wild 7.30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Mississippi 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch
WEDNESDAY
2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 5:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:25 Newsbreak 9:25 Newsbreak 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Press Your
11:00 Price Is 12:00 News 9 12:30 Young and 1:30 As The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 A, Gritfith 5:30 IWASH 6:00 News 9 6:30 News 7:00 Joker's Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8 00 Whiz Kids 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 9 11:30 AAovie 2:00 Nightwatch
WITN-TV-Ch.7
TUESDAY
7:00 Jetferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 A Team 9:00 Rem. Steele 10:00 Bay City 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2 30 News WEDNESDAY 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the 10:00 Ditt. Strokes 10:30 Sale ot the 11:00 Wheel ot 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News
12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 A.nother WId, 3:00 Match Game 3:30 Hollywood S. 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Brady Bunch 5:00 Gomer Pyle 5:30 WKRP 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 Facts ot 9:30 Family Ties 10:00 St. Elsewhere 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News
WCTHV-Ch.12
TUESDAY
7:00 3's Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Just Our Luck 8:30 Hai^y Days 9:00 3'S Company 9:30 Oh, Madeline! 10:00 Hart to Hart 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:30 Thickeof
WEDNESDAY
s:00 H. Field 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 Stretch ,
6:30 News 7:00 Good Morning 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue
10:00 Connection 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Benson 11:30 Loving 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Cartoons 4:30 BJ LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 3's Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Fall Guy 9:00 Dynasty 10:00 Hotel 11:00 Action News 11:30 ABC News 12:30 Thickeof
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
TUESDAY
7:00 Report 7:30 Almanac 8:00 Nova 9:00 Vietnam 10:00 Railway 11:00 Dr. Who 11:30 AAonty Pythor 12:00 Sign Off WEDNESDAY 3:00 TBA 3:30 Adult B.
4:00 Sesame St, 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 3 2 1 6.00 Newshour 7:00 Report 7:30 Almanac 8:00 Don't Eat 9:00 The Kid 10:00 11:00 Dr,
11:30 Monty Python 12:00 Sign Off
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an electric wheelchair touches off the revolt. It would give me more freedom to go where I want. says Les, who cant even cross the room without help. "And it would allow the staff to do things more important than pushing me about.
There are going to be others who want the- same thing and cant afford it, the bureaucrat reasons, "and then they will feel deprived. And lets face it, our job is to see that they dont feel any more deprived than they already are.
Sister Bishop suggests that the patients be allowed to vote on Les request. If we allow the patients to make those kinds of decisions, shes told, "before you know it, they will be deciding all
Prince Has Stage Debut
CAMBRIDGE, England (AP) - Prince Edward, youngest son of Queen Elizabeth II, sounded a bit philosophical after making his Cambridge University stage debut in Arthur Millers The Crucible.
"Life is one big act, he commented. "You may be nervous but you dont show it.
The 19-year-old prince, who played Deputy Governor Danforth, the 60-year-old Puritan judge in the play about.the 17th-century Salem, Mass., witch trials, admitted having stage fright before he went on. but still found the experience thoroughly enjoyable.
"The part suits him like a glove. said Nicholas Walmsley, who directed the production Monday in the chapel of the universitys Jesus College.
However, Edward, who is studying history and archaeology at Cambridge, said he doubts he will appear in another university production. "It has been fun.^ he told reporters. But he said he felt the press attention he received was not fair to the other people involved.
As much as I want to lead the life of a normal undergraduate, I cannot because of who I am, the prince said.
kinds of things, and we would be in all sorts of trouble.
The patients, led by Roarty and Neil Russ, the bearded activist in the group, organize in protest and take their case to a local TV station. The patients feelings, expressed in interviews with a television reporter, are interspersed throughout the show.
Neil: I think Im pretty normal, really....
Jeannie: The thing that bugs me is that we all are loded upon as one big blob of people.
Neil, again: They try to impose in areas that you people accept as your own privacy.
The hospitals administrators jare enraged by the TV sho^, and announce their intention to evict the dissidents. Now its Sister Bishops turn to be angry: Every one of these pwple have more basic humanity in their little fingers than you, she shouts at her boss.
Ultimately, Australias Council of Civil Liberties enters the dispute, and the patients prevail.
Captives of Care is an extraordinary film, sensitive and life-affirming and universal in its message, that the physically hancapped are not children unable to make the decisions that affect their lives.
In a separate segment toward the end discussing the problems of the disabled in the United States, Jim Woods, a victim of cerebral palsy, offers an impassioned argument in favor of more freedom and responsibility for the handicapped: I un-
Old Pros Find Starring Roles
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Robert Mitchum and Ellen Burstyn, a pair of old pros, will co-star in The Ambassador, a new political thriller to be directed by J. Lee Thompson on locations in Israel and Egypt.
Mitchum will play an American ambassador to a Middle Eastern country who becomes a victim of malicious blackmail. Miss Burstyn will portray his wife, who sets off the diplo
derstand that I cant do much for myself, he says. But J cant understand why they put me in prison for it. Or, as Roarty says in his book, Im not worried about things I cant do. I just want the right to do things I can do.
FannGirl
Playmate
SPRINGVILLE, N Y. (AP) - Playboy Magazines 30th Anniversary Playmate, 18-year-old Penny Baker of Springville, is described as a real farm girl by her mother.
Mrs. Frances Baker says Playboy founder Hugh Hefner apparently was looking for something different for this anniversary playmate, noting he wanted a person with a rural background.
powder-keg.
iiplomatic
PENNY BAKER
The Bakers live on- a farm in this rural area of Erie County and the family does raise cattle. Says Mrs. Baker, but more as a hobby than for a living.
She said of her daughter, Shes a real farm girl. She can drive a tractor and all of that.
Mrs. Baker also said Penny, a graduate of Springville-Griffin Institute Central School and a model-actress in New York City, was selected over more than 7,000 candidates.
"The whole family is proud of her,she said.
The 30th anniversary issue is due out today.
IN FRANTIC DEMAND - Pictured are two Cabbage Patch Kid dolls, marketed by Coleco Industries, Inc. of West Hartford Conn., whose popularity among Christmas shoppers has been unparalleled. Coleco plans to market
2.5 million of the moon-faced cloth dolls by Dec. 31 in order to satisfy customer demand, but to date the dolls are selling out in most stores. (APLaserphoto)
Survey Shows Revenue Gains For The Typical TV Station
By NORMAN BLACK
.Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The typical American television station employs 78 fulltime workers, depends almost equally on national and local advertisers and returned a pre-tax profit of $1.25 million in 1982, up roughly 25 percent from 1981, a new survey shows.
The survey, performed annually by the National Association of Broadcasters, shows local TV stations enjoyed their best year in 1982 from the standpoint of profit gains since 1978. And they did so largely by holding down expenses.
While net revenues did climb more than 7 prcent thanks to increased advertising - to $5.37 million in 1982 compared to $5 million in 1981 - the typical station managed to hold operating expenses to just a 3 percent increase over 1981 -$4.1 million vs. $4 million.
That produced a pre-tax profit figure of $1.25 million in 1982. or a profit margin of
23.3 percent, compared to $1 million and a margin of 21 percent in 1981, tne NAB said.
The 1982 survey is based on a questionnaire that was completed by 447 commercial TV stations, or alm(t 60 percent of all the commercial stations operating in the United States. For the purpo^ of the survey, the association describes a typical station by using median figures, meaning 50 percent of all those surveyed did better than the totals while the other 50 percent did worse.
The survey found the typical station sold $6.3 million worth of advertising time to produce net revenues of $5.37 million after sales expenses and commissions.
The typical stations
for general and administrative, the survey adds. Typically, station payroll totaled $1.6 million in 1982.
That typical station employed 78 full-time worxers and seven part-time employees, although those figures change dramatically depending upon the size of the market in which the station is located and whether its affiliated with a major network or is independent.
According to the study, 1982 expenses at network affiliates totaled $4.1 million vs. $6.8 million at independents. But the independents
managed to beat local network affiliates in advertising income and thus ended up with the same pre-tax profit figure - $1.34 million.
expense dol
xpei follows:
ar was spent as 11 cents for
engineering; 26 cents for program and production; 13 cents for news; 13 cents for sales; 4 cents for advertising and .promotion, and 33 cents
Family Restaurants 105 Airport Rd.
Greenville, NC 27834
I
758*0327 Hours: Open Daily Sunday thru Thursday 11:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Friday and Saturday 11:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.
Small Combination Special
Trout, Shrimp, and Deviled Crab
099
Only \3 No Substitute* Take-Out* Welcome
Rather Thinks He's Overpaid
CHICAGO (API - CBS anchorman Dan Rather says hes getting paid more than anyone in the news business could reasonably be expected to be paid and its more than Im worth.
Intercepted
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Customs authorities say two shipments of U.S. computer programs believed intended for use with computers illegally headed for the Soviet Union have been intercepted.
The programs and the computers seized in Helsinborg and Malmo constitute war material when used together, Swedish radio said.
264 PLAYHOUSE
INDOOR THEATRE BMIlMWcit OfOrMnvill* OnU.S.264(FirmvillHwy.)
NOW
SHOWING
AT YOUR ADULT ENTERTAINMgHT CENTER '
At This Clinic The Women Beg For An Exam!!
n?Lsf-
JOHN LESLIE ADULTS ONLY
756-0848 Showtime 6:00
Doors Open
miil^
SHRIMPferfection WBd.&Fri.
All The Fried, Broiled Or Boiled Shrimp >txj Can Eat, Salad Bar, Stuffed Or BaKed Potato. PLUS AH The Chablis Mxj Can Drinl-JUST $8.95
Lunch Buffet Lovers, Take Your
PickOf Ihe Pizzas AtGattils.
SPAGHETTI
All You Can Eat! Wednesday
5 PM TO 8 PM
$265^
PERSON
LASAGNA & SALAD
Thursday
The lunch buffet: All the pizza, spaghetti and salad i/ou can eat
$299
DA1L.Y 11 AM TO 2 PM
Dinner buffetr All the pizza, spaghetti, & salad you can eat
Corner Cotanche & 10th St Phone 758-6121
MON&TUES
5PMT08PM
The bill pUu In town,
While he says he doesnt feel comfortable about the situation, Rather adds that "in the end, your worth is what anybody is willing to pay.
He was asked how much he makes, but would not say.
> In an interview in the January issue of Playboy, Rather. 52, had some complimentary comments for newspapers.
"I think that in print, one has a better chance of get-ting in touch with mainstream journalistic traditions, such as accuracy and fairness, he said. "If it were up to me, I wouldnt hire anybody at CBS News who didnt have some print experience.
ADULTS $100 TIL 5:30 ="11*5
BUCCANEER MOVIES
1-3-5-7-9 'HERE AND NOW" R
Christmas
STORY 4G-
1:15-3:15
5:15-7:15-9:15
"AMITYVILLE 3-D -fO-
1:10-3;10-5:10-7:10-9:10
Cnmmwotd By Eugene SbefferThe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C Tuesday, November 29.1963 13
ACR088 Feather
1-Alto scarfs
I ** - for Me 42 Harem room 2 Nabokov (1967song) 41 Professional novel
I Manx, for gambler
one 4SEIectrical
ItShevat unit
follower 49 Its before
ISQiillsand luinteror
fever start
14 Anthropoid ilCasefor
II Sweaters small
17 Creek articlM
If Flair SI Ninny
lIBikeor S2Ana^
piano part for
21 Transfer sort
design S3 Baseballs
24 Cassava Bucky
Avg.tall.llme:!4mlnal.
21 Gin drinks 20 Poets word SI Mansfield, of Fisk fame
32 She passes the buck
33 Blushed 3S Dissolve
31 Set of nested boxes 37Putsa spell on 38 Biblical mountain
mm i:og umm
!=Sl WlflwBl
QflWW iaW:Mll liapw: itifii
m
11-29
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
DOWN ll-SeeYouin 1 Video man My Dreams
20 Lamp topper
21 He gets thin^done
22 Item for Aramis
23 St. Louis team
24 Barren 21 Start for
gram or rail 27Enzj^
28 (Captive of Hercules
29 Hardens SlWaUedcity
34 Genetic stuff
35 Fitted, as gears
37 Possesses
38 Rail bird
39 When Brutus got brutal
40 Unruly child
41 Excess of chances
44 Air; comb, form
45 Corroded 48 Operate 47 The-and
the Pendulum
3 Gibbon
4 Trying experience
5 Tale lActor
Richard
7 Sister of asort
8 In defiance of
9 Office item
10 Samoan seap(t
llRiver duck
lYouunaooiai
AMDOMJUinUUOr 1SS1 Trtbuw Comptny SyndtMM, Inc;
BOLD BIDDING PAYS OFF East-West vulnerable. South visualize slam if his partner
CRYPTOQUIP
FDC LCHF VUNYC FX VWYM QV KWYD LNLCH - FDC HFXKM YUQL.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip - A SURE-FOOTED SURFER COASTED TO SUCCESS.
Todays Oyptoquip clue: L equals B.
ITie Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which eadi 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.
C <*) King FMturn Syndkalc. Inc
deals.
NOBTH
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09
543 WEST EAST
954 403
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South West North East Pass Pass 1 Pass 3 Pass 4 NT Pass 5 0 Pass 6 Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead; King of <7.
The United States beat Italy by 5 International Match Points over 160 boards to win the 1983 World Team Championship. The lead seesawed throughout the final, and the United States clinched the title with only a couple of boards left to play when an Itajian pair bid a slam off two cashing aces.
Earlier, the Italians had come from behind in the semifinal to defeat a highly rated French team by 11 IMPs. Benito Garozzo and Giorgio Belladonna, architects of so many Italian comebacks in recent years, were benched for the last session by the Italian captain.
This deal, with only five boards left to play, was decisive in Italys semifinal win. The French North-South pair got no further.than four spades. For Italy, Arturo Franco and Soldano De Falco bid as shown. De Falcos jump to three clubs as a passed hand showed a strong club suit with little outside. It was not difficult for Franco to
CHURCHES BOMBED BUCARAMANGA, Colombia (AP) - Police suspect leftist guerrillas were responsible for exploding eight bombs in two Mormon churches Monday, causing $100,000 in damages.
Doubled Fines Collections
WASHINGTON lAP) -Debts, civil fines and criminal fines brought in $477.8 million to the Justice Department in fiscal 1983, more than double the $200.1 million collected a year earlier.
Of the 1983 total, $71.9 million came from criminal fines. The other $405.9 million came from civil, tax, antitrust, civil rights or environmental judgments, collected debts, and civil fines.
The Justice Department has placed more emphasis on seeking monetary damages in bom civil and criminal cases and is participating in a government crackdown on individuals who have failed to repay federal loans, Attorney General William French Smith says. The department has increased resources and instituted special training devoted to debt collection.
The City Control can designate certain areas of Greenville as controlled residential parking area. For more information, call 752-4137. Ask for Engineering.
' The B*e( Eaters Fevorlle"
LUNCH
Now Being Served *...featuring their famous
SALAD BAR
and
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
Feeding Times: 11:30-2:00 P.M. Monday thru Friday
Special Occasions...Give Beef Barn Gift Certificates!
400 St. Andrews Dr. 756-1161
New
20x3(r
poster
prints
by Kodak!
Made from 35 mm Kodacolor film negatives or transparencies.
Overnite Photo
703 OrMnvlllt Boulevard Qreenvllle Square Shopping Canter Qraanvilla, N.C.,
Phone 7S6-9S00 * Use Our Convenient Drlve-T(iru Window
Only
$1000
held the ace of clubs, so he checked via Blackwood and then bid the small slaiq.
West led the king of hearts, knocking out a key entry to the dummy. Now declarer cashed two high trumps, and when the suit split evenly, he had no problems. He went after the spade suit, and the slam was safe if that suit broke no worse than 3-2 or if East held four spades to the queen -the lady could be ruffed out and declarer still had an entry to the table by leading the two of clubs to the five.
Against a 3-1 trump division, declarer would probably have gone down. He would have had to set up spades, and the percentage play in that suit would have been to finesse. Had the siam failed, France would have been in the final instead of Italy.
PEANUTS
FILE NO. S3 CVD1477 FILAA NO.
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY GLORIA JEAN PARKER VS.
WILLIE GRAY PARKER
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: WILLIE GRAY PARKER Take notice that a pleading seek-ing relief against yoo has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is for an absolute divorce from the bonds of matrimony based on sepa ration for one year.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than January 1, 1984, and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The rehef sought This the nth day ot November, 1983
Willis A. Talton Attorney for Plaintiff
PUBLIC NOTICES
314 s. Washington St.
P.O Box 390
Graanvilla, N C. 37S35 0390 Novamber 23,39; Decambar , 19S3
FILE NO: S3 J M
FILAA NO.:
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE JUVENILE COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IN RE: SABRINA LYNN AAc CASKILL, A AAINOR CHILD SERVICE OF PROCESS
BYPUBLICAITON TO ROBERT LYNN AAcCASKILL, father of the minor child Sabrina Lynn AAcCaskill TAKE NOTICE that a Petition seeking to terminate your parental rights for Sabrina Lynn McCaskill, a minor child, has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: Termination of Your Parental Rights
You are required to make defense to Such pleading not later than January 9, 1984, and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The relief sought You are hereby notified that as the parent of the above named minor child, you are entitled to appointed counsel if you are in digent, provided you request counsel at or before fne time of the hearing on termination of your parental rights. You are further notified that you are entitled to attend any hearing affecting your parental rights This the 22 day of November, 1983
WILLIAAASON, HERRIN,
STOKES.HEFFELFINGER
BY
ANNHEFFELFINGER BARNHILL ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER
210S WASHINGTON STREET P O BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 November 29, December 6, 13, 20, 1983
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad minittralrlx ot the estate of George Allen Newby late of Pitt County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Ad ministretrix on or before May 8, 1984 or this notice or same, will be pleeded in bar of thair recovery All persons irxlebted to said estate please make immediate payment This 28th day ot October, 1983.
Iona Smith Newby Route 2, Box 409 Ayden, N C 28513 Administratrix of the estate of George Allen Newby, deceased November 8, 15, 22, 29, 1983
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WANT
ADS
752-6166
03A Cycles For Sale
1984 KAWAsIkI 250 street bike, condition $450 or best otter
good 754 51
<54 5854 after 5
1982 YAA4AH IT175 dirt bike, used 300 miles, never raced. New 11700, will sacrifice tor $1200. Call after 4 749 6451 or 753 4349
039
Trucks For Salt
1974 CHEVROLET truck, V8 straight drive, new tires. Good truck for hauling wood $900. 746
6017 or 355 2255 anytime
1974 FORO RANGER, oood condi tion, $2500 negotiable CaW 758 0904 afierpm
condition $3800 752
great
1911 LONG BED Toyota SR5, loaded, excellent condition. $5500. Call 746 3530 or 744 6144.
1913 MAZDA B3400 Surxtowner deluxe, long bed. 5 speed, white with blue cloth interior, AM-FM. heavy duty bumper, bed liner, tool box, 21,000 miles Perfect condition. Book value, $5,250, sell for $4,950. Call 757 3343.
1983 FORD RANGER, speed Call 746 6825
White. 4
040
Child Care
RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care
tor 2 infants in my home Monday through Friday References required Call 757 1163.
044
PETS
lAKC REGISTERED GERMAN
Shepherds $100 each Deposit will hold until Christmas.'Call 756-0700 after 6 p m
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
FREE VIDEO TAPE. Will trade for taping local TV news VHS only Call (415 ) 775 3670 collect.
WE PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756-1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar
INSURANCE POINTS
OUR RATES AAAY SAVE YOU MONEY! Call us before you buy. MID ATLANTIC INSURANCE, INC 7567723.
BOXER PUPPIES. Fawn and white, tails docked, 6 weeks old. Call 746 3971
COCK-A-POO, white male. Call 756 1592
PITT BULL female, 6 months old. All shots, ears cropped $75 Phone 752 8596
050
EMPLOYMENT
051
Help Wanted
A RESUME EXPERTLY WRITTEN OPENS THE DOOR TO A GOOD JOB
Call Cushman Writing Associates, 1 637 2889
MUST SELL 2 CARS! I 1982 Mazda GLC Wagon. Low miles, low price 1973 Olds 88 Convertible Low miles, excellent condition. Bill Byrd 1-823 1928 or 1 641 3516.
NEED A CAR7 Rent dependable used cars at low rates Phone RENT A WRECK, 752 2277
AN OHIO OIL COMPANY offers high income, plus cash bonuses, benefits to mature person in Greenville area Regardless of experience, write G.G. Read, Ameri-I can Lubricants Company. Box 426, I Dayton, Ohio45401 ,
I AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON.
Call for interview 756 1877 or send resume to Grant Buick Inc., P.O. Box 2097, Greenville, N C. 27834. Attn:, Jack AAewborn.
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114
012
AMC
1945 RAMBLER WAGON. Good condition. $600. Phone 754-9817
013
Buick
1977 SKYHAWK. low mileage, air. power, stereo, new tires, motor needs little work. $1600. Call 753 1050
1977 SKYLARK. 4 door, power steering, power brakes, air, tilt and custom trim. Good tires and mechanical condition Lady owner. $2,350. 756 1075.
014
Cadillac
CADILLAC ELDORADO convert! ble, 1974, 9,600 miles, cranberry fire mist, white leather, white top, original tires, spare never used. Atl papers and brochures, always garaged. Mint original condition. $13,600. 1 596 2775after 6p.m.
015
Chevrolet
1973 MONTE CARLO Landau. Good condition Call 825 2831 or 758 1539, ask tor John.
BABYSITTER WANTED: to keep
child in my home or yours. Phone 758 5822
BALLOONING ANYONE? Try it.
youTI like it! Need crew members to help fly during the week. Call 752 2303 for details
BOAT BUILDER. Company has immediate opening! Must have 3 to 5 years experience in Finished Carpentry Cali 752-2111, extension 251 between9a m and4p.m.
BOOKKEEPER and Office Manag er for small business. Must have good typing, calculating and organizing skills Experience in bookkeeping and quarterly tax reports preferred. Start within tv Send resume and salary
'erred. Start within two weeks.
ary I
menfs to PO Box 3018, Greenville,
require-
NC 27836 3018.
CARPENTER CREWS - framing and finishing. Contact Mid-South Construction Company. Out on Maddox Road, just past Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center on right; Highway 43 North.
CRUISE SHIP JOBS! Great income potential. All occupations. For information call. (312) 742 8620, extension 493.
DRAFTSMAN - full time. Experience with ink and Leroy equipment. Excellent benefits. Call McDavid Associates. 753-2139.
1971 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Baby
blue, white vinyl top, very clean.e 13900. 758 7742 after 5 p.m.
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales representative. Individual must be local
_ resident with managerial ability,
1982 MONTE CARLO, T top, lots of ambition and show progress for extras, low mileage. Call after 6 !age Business or sales background
1982 CORVETTE. Metallic blue. All options. $1,000 under average retail. ! 355-2347
EARN EXTRA MONEY for
Christmas Sell Avon!!! Call 758 3159.
p.m. 752 4557
Dodge
1981 DODGE COLT. 25,000 miles, air. 4 speed Loaded with extras. I Sporty economy car. Reduced. 355-2860
1982 DODGE COLT.
negotiable, 752-5121.
New $5500
Ford
FOR SALE: 1973 LTD, fair condi tion, 89,000 miles, $550 or best offer. Call after 3:30 p.m., 756-7838.
helpful. In requesting personal interview, please submit resume stating personal history, education, I and business experience. Write PO ! Box 406, Greenville, NC 27835.
EXCELLENT SECRETARY. Full time, experience, various duties, must be able to handle responsibility. Salary commensurate with experience. Reply to Secretary, PO I Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 EXPERIENCED 3RD SHIFT I cashier. 48 hours per week 6 days I $190 per week. Apply in person at I The bodge Store, South Memorial I Drive.
EXPERIENCED OR CERTIFIED
1964 THUNDERBIRD^ Automatic Dental Assistant for growing practice. Excellent benefits. Send
756-9817._ I resume to Dental Assistant, PO Box
1982 FORD ESCORT, with air, like i 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
new. Assume payments. Call 756 HEAD NURSE Pheresis Unit.
9886after6p.m._ American Red Cross has full time
$9,200 4-DOOR, loaded 1982 Escort management position in pheresis Wagon, automatic. $5.700. Phone I unit in which specialized blood donor and patient treatment pro cedures are performed Position requires graduate of accredited school of nursing with current NC
Mercury
1671 MQMTFGQ MX WAGON~35 Minimum 5 years recent
1973 MONTEGO MX WAUON. 351 i nursing experience with demon
engine, all options. Good trans portation. Call 756-4500 evenings.
021_Oldsmobile_
1972 DELTA 88. Air, new brakes. Steel Radials. Very good mechanical condition. $875. Call 752 7706 nights.
1972 OLDS 442 No engine. 4 speed Positive traction mags. $450 cash. 746-2657.
strated supervisory capabilities. Responsibilities include; supervision and coordination of all donor, patient, and staff activity. Administrative duties include: scheduling, reports, quality control, etc. Hours basically 8:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. with some flexibility. Salary and benefits competitive. Apply American Red Cross, PO Box 6003, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE.
1975 OLDS REGENCY Silver with black vinyl top, loaded, clean, 71,0(X) miles. Good condition. Nice car. Call 758-0362after 6 p.m.
Plymouth
PLYMOUTH SATELLITE, 1973. Best offer. Call anytime 757 3508.
1965 VALIANT. Good condition. $350. Call 756-1972.
023
Pontiac
1978 PONTIAC Catalina, $1,950 cash, 758 1355.
1979 PONTIAC SUNBIRD. 40,000 actual miles, 4 speed. Asking $2,6(X). Phone 756 4836 after 8 p.m.
024
Foreign
FOR SALE: Like new 1982 Toyota Cressida. fully loaded, low mileage, $13,000 value; will sell for $12,000. Call 355 6972 or after 6 p.m 758 3697.
WE BUY AND SELL Used Cars. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen. 756-1135. 203 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N C.
1970 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE. Needs body work or good for parts. Asking $500. Call 758 7042 between 9 and 3 p.m., ask for Cindy.
1974 AUD1100 LS. 4 speed, excellent condition Call 756 7807 after 6p.m.
1974 PINTO Statlonwagon. 4 speed, air. Very good condition. $750. 355 6972 or 1 795 3586, ask for Jamie.
1977 DATSUN 2S0Z. New paint, tires and stereo. Excellent condition. 758 9820.
1979 TOYOTA COROLLA. Cal 757 0367 after 4 p.m.
1980 TOYOTA TERCEL - 5 speed. Good condition. Phone 752 2641.
1981 DATSUN 200SX. Call 746 3187.
1983 MAZDA 626 LUXURY Touring Sedan. All possible options! Best offer. Phone355-2661 afterp.m.
032
Boats For Sale
DUCK HUNTER'S SPECIAL -Mako 17'; 115 Johnson, fully equipped and ready to go! Call 746 339atter6p.m.
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizas, colors. Lear Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Brlants, Raleigh. N .C. 834 2774.
1973 HARVEST MOTOR home, 21', 350 Chevrolet engine Call 756-7422 after 6.
HEATING AND AIR Conditioning Service Personnel wanted. At least 1 year of experience required. Call 756-4624 or apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors.
HOME SEWERS and tole painters needed. Will train Apply in person only. Two Sisters of North Carolina, 3103 South Memorial Drive, next to Parkers
LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time. 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available. Apply in person or call Oak Manor, Inc., Snow Hill, 1-747 2B68
MAINTENANCE AND GROUND
Keeper. Must be experienced in hear pumps, minor plumbing, and electrical problems. Pay com mensrate with experience. Send resume to PO Box 717, Griffon, NC 28530 EOE
MARKETING - Imaginative and innovative person for marketing functions will work with inside marketing programs, phone programs, direct mail. Advancement potential with a fast growing Financial Services Company. Resume to Coastal Leasing Corporation, PO Box 647, Greenville, NC.
MOBILE HOME Serviceperson. Must be experienced in all phases of mobile home delivery, set up and service We are the most progressive company in the business and we have been in business over 25 years. Salary commensurate with experience, hospitalization, paid vacation and 5 paid holidays ear Call 919 355 2302, ask for
ill Jackson.
NEEDED: WOMAN for general
house cleaning, laundry, and ironing. One day a week. Must have . own transportation. Please reply to Housekeeping, Route 8. Box 458K, Greenville giving name, phone, salary desired, and references If applicable.
OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR
Growing Greenville financial firm needs administrator/bookkeeper with accounting, budget, and gen era! office administration experience. College degree and computer experience a plus. To be considered tor an interview, please send current resume to PO Box 1581, Greenville, NC.
PART-TIME Medlcal/Surgtcal Nursing Instructor needed. B.S.N. and 2 years hospital experience required, M S N. preferred. Fulltime (acuity appointment possible. Starting date January 4, 1984. Contact: Veronica Warrener, Director of Nursing, Beaufort County Community Codega, PO Box 1069, Washington, NC 27889, at 946-6194. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Tuesday, November 29,1983
051
Help Wanted
HOMES FOR RENT in Griffon. $200 fo $S00. Caii AAax Waters af Unity, 1 524 4147 days, 1 524 4007 nights
PART TIME HELP. No phone
calls. Apply to A t Quality Cleaners,
!SI --------------
Rivergate Shopping Center AAonday through Thursday
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 & Associates, 756-6810.
RESUMES WRITTEN to get results plus |ob search programs Call for brochure or appointment. Cushman Writing Associates, 1-637-2889.
RN'S AND LPN'S. We are looking for a few good nurses interested in
giving quality care. Part time positions avalle
liable. Contact Lydia Morgan, D O N. at 758 7100.
SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area. A go getter attitude, energy, creativity. Earnings based on performance. Benefits and in centives. Promotions from within. Call 756-6711.
051
Help Wanted
PART TIME PERSON. Well established firm requires a mechanically Inclined person to repair and service its product line. Inventory control public contact. 756 3861.
SALES REPRESENTATIVE AAa
ior national company has an open Ing for a Sales Associate In the Greenville area. Prior sales expert ence not as important as ability arul willingness to learn. Salary negotiable. Excellent benefit
package. For a confidential interview send resume to Manager, PO Box 1985, Greenville, NC 27835.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
wanted for life Insurance debit in Farmville and surrounding area. Salary, $250 per week plus fringe benefits. Call Tuesday and Friday
nights between 7 and 9 pm only. 753:
I 5706.
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.
SELLTHE COMPLETE LINE...
CLAS?1FIED DISPLAY
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1982 Chevetts, 4 door, automatic, power steering, air. $4695.
1982 Chevy SIO, power steering, air, AM-FM. $6,795.
1982 Buick Regal, full equipped. $6995.
1981 Monte Carlo, fully equipped. $6450.
1981 Camero V6, sharp. $6595.
1981 Datsun B210, 5 speed, air, sunroof, SL package. $4895.
1980 Toyota Corolla, FR5, air
sunroof, nice car. $5150.
1979 Champ, 5 speed, AM-FM. $2795.
1979 VW Rabbit, 4 speed, air. $3350.
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix, fully equipped. $4950.
1979 Toyoto Corolla, 5 speed, AM-FM. $3350.
1978 Chevy Station Wagon, fully equipped. $3550.
1978 Honda Accord LX, loaded, 5 speed. $3850.
1977 Chevy Truck, automatic, nice, 37,000 miles. $3650. 1977 Oldsmobile Omega, 2 door. $2550.
12 Monthe, 12.000 MHee Warranty AveilaMe FbiMClne Mk AaraM CisdH
Hvry 43 North TS2-5237BuakMaa
Grant Jarman.......75M542
Edgar Denton.......756-2921
Donald Garra.......75841929'
Health, life, and soon homeowner's insurance, as well as mutual funds. A five-mlnute phone call is all it takes to see It you can qualify for
this exciting and profitable career. Call Lee Weaver In Kinstor^ at
1-527 4155 for 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
---
pany benefits and starting ^lary. efe
rrefer previous Ford experience Reply In writing to: East Carolina Lincoln 2201 Dickinson Avenue Greenville. N.C. 756-4267.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER
Local company has a Systems 34 (96K) computer avallsMs for immediate time sharing. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer Is svsllable for Immediate remote hook-up using telephone communications. Programs ready lor general business use Include general ledger, accounts receivable, Inventory/billing, accounts payable and payroll.
Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215
051
Help Wanted
secretaRy/receptionist.
Hours 8 to 5. Apply In person, 313 East 10th Street.
TELEPHNE $OLICITORS.
Immediate employment. $3.50 per
hour starting plus bonus. 20 hours
- .'tI
week, Sunday-Thursday, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Call 757 1200 for appoint menta.m. toSp.m.
WANTED: SEWING ROOM
Supervisor. Minimum 2 years experience. Ability fo handle SO opera tors, woven products line. Salary to compensate with ability. Send re
plies to Sewing Supervisor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
WANTED; TALENTED PERSONS
Interested in portraying AAotown such as Diana Ross,
artists
Michael Jackson, etc. in a special salute to Motown Stars Show. Only serious persons need Inquire. CafI Ann 11a.m. to 2 p.m., 756-0340.
3 MATURE PERSONS to service our equipment and learn other work. May mean 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. Trim ming, cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding. Free estimates. J.P. Stancll, 752-6331
BATH AND KITCHEN repairs. Plumbing, carpentry, tie board, tops. State License. 752 1920 or 746 2657.
CARPENTRY REPAIR, remodel ing, room additions. Free estimates. 758-3693 or 757 3919.
COMPLETE CLEANING Service Experienced office and home cleaning. Phone 746-3374 after 5.
GET YOUR CHRISTMAS painting done: Interior and exterior, carpenter repair. Phone 758-5226.
HANDYMAN SERVICE - You
name it. I'll fix It!! No job too small Reasonable rates! 758 7748.
HOME IMPROVEMENT and Re
modeling. 20 years experience. Robert Price 8, Son, 752-4862.
HOUSECLEANING work done. Own transportation. References. Honest and dependable. 746-6619.
PAINTING Inside or outside. 15 years experience. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. 758-7815.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S'^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNJNGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
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 refinisher 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 Offer Good Thru December 31 Call Or Stop In To Inquire About Other Low Prices
Stripease Of treenville
628 S. Pitt SI. (OH Dickinson Ave)
Greenville, N.C.
Phone (919) 752-1009
059
Work Wanted
KLLY'S CUSTODIAL SERVICE. Call 1-946-0609.
sHirly^s clanIno service
Hava your home fall claanad or just ganaral claenad. Waakly or AAon-tnly. Wa also do windows and
carpal. 7S3-S908 affar 3:30.
WALLPAPIRINO and Painting.
10 yaars ax^^ianca. Local rafar-
ancas. 75I-:
WOULD LIKE fo sif with aldarly lady. Phona 752-3479.
WOULD LIKE to do housa claanlng. Own transpc.'tatlon and ratarances. Call 757 0475.
OM
FOR SALE
061 Antiques
jo^le'T Hs^^Pant^^
1310 Dickinson Avanua, Graanvllle, NC. Phona 758 3276. Open 9 to S. Monday through Friday. Large selection of furniture and gifts I
063 Building Supplies
CECO STEEL BUILDINGS by Riv ersida Iron Works, Inc. Phone 633 3121, New Bern, N.C. Since 1920.
064 FueUWood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J. P. Stancll, 752-6331.
ALL HARDWOOD, $75 cord, $40 pickup load. 10 days only, IVv 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 FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752-1359 or 758 5590.
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD.
Delivered arKi stacked. Phone 758-6143.
SEASONED OAK firewood, $90 cord, seasoned mixed firewood, $80 cord. Free delivery and stacked. Ready to go. 756 8358 after 5.
065 Farm Equipment
CHRISTMAS GIFTS for the sportsman back leather
tman from AgrI Supply. Lock folding hunting knife with er sheath $20.49. 300,000
candle-power Big Max spot light $26.95. Chest waders $31.95. AAany
other gift ideas In sfock. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999
ONE SET OF COMBINE DUAL
wheels and tires, 23.1 x 26. Tires like new. $1,000. Call 752 9585.
066
FURNITURE
BEDDING&WATERBEDS
LARGEST SELECTION at guaran
teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory Mat tress 8. Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza.355 2626.
NO MONEY DOWNI Instant Credit on new furniture, TVs and stereos. Only at Furniture World, 2808 East 10th 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, 2 lamps tree. Take over payments as only $33.63 per month. 757 0451, Furniture World. We will not be undersold!
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752-5237.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS JOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across From Wachovia Compuler Center Memorial Or 756-6221
THUNDERBIRD SALE
SAVE LIKE NEVER BEFORE ON A NEW THUNDERBIRD *
Does not include NC Seles Tax and licensing Fees
Stock #1196-1983 Ford Thunderbird Turbo - Loaded!
WAS $15,189.95
NOW M 2,200.00
DISCOUNT OF *2889.95
stock # 1132 -1983 Ford Thunderbird Heritage automatic overdrive, air, AM/FM with casette, deluxe
two tone, power seats and windows, luxury interior.
WAS discount of *2305.95
NOW M 2,300.00
074
Miscellaneous
A LONG WOOD burning itove
fireplace Iniart, heating capacit up to 1,900 *quare feat.
J$ad
wintars. Excallent condition. Phona 758 1259.
AUTOMOBILE utility trailar with hitch, S200. Vented gat haatar, heati 1 or 3 rooms, S100. Saars 23,000 BTU window air conditionar, $200. 300 gallon oil drum with stand and 75 gallons 12 oil, SISO. Call 757-0572 or 752 5671.
BALI CUSTOM Mini blinds, 40%
off. 1 weak delivary. Throughout -3241 to
Novamber only. Call 7S6-: place your order.
BE ONE OF THE PEOPLE with CloutI Buy Clout discount card. Phone Allen Hardy. 752 6902.
BEAUTY SHOP EQUIPMENT tor
sale. Call 746-4676.
BROWNING BAR, >mm AAagnum, , Belgium
2x7 WIdevlew Redtield. Made, $400.758 1217 after 5 p.m
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables
inventory clearance sale. 4 models. Delivery setup 919 763 9734.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work.
CASH NOW
FOR
Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old
clocks, lamps, portable ta|>e
players, bicycles, vollins, doll depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques. . .anything of vallue.
COIN & RING MAN
On The Corner
CHRISTMAS SALEI Toys, glHs, and Christmas decorations. All new
salesman samples. W price Tues day and Wednesday, 2 until 9.
Thursday and Friday 10 until 4. 211 Ragland Road, WIntervllle. Phone
756 6610.
CITRUS FRUIT FOR CHRISTMAS.
4/5 bushel of Navel oranges or Red seedless grapefruit Pick up date December IS at Brookhaven SOA School. Call 758 2459or 758 5717.
COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and refinlshing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756-9123.
CRIB, White Basset with mattress, porta crib playpen, stroller. Call 758 6535 aHer 5:30 p.m
DIAMOND RING, 1 carat Solitaire, will sacrifice for $1,000. fall 756-1779 after 6 p.m.
ELECTRIC OYER, good condition.
!ter4i
$50 Phone 756-5378 after 4 p.m.
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
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture.
Stripping, Repairing 8. Refinlshing. (Formerly of East Carolina Voca
tional Center) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway 752 3509
I'LL MAKE YOU AN offer you
can't refuse on CB Base Station In excellent condition 746 2780
INSTANT CASH
LOANS ON A BUYING TVs. Stereos.cameras, typewriters, gold & silver, anything else of value Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2464
KIMBALL PIANO, I year old. new condition, $1,000 Wood Insert heal er. $250 Call 746 2384
LARGE LOADS ol sand and ;ip
soil, lot clearing, baikhoe >o available 756 4742 alter 6 p m , Jim Hudson
LARGE SQUIRE wood stove, S6
825 1169
MAGNAVOX CONSLE Stereo, n
Executive desk, 30 x 60", Roberts 770X reel tape recorder 756 2988
MARUSHKA PRINTS Great
Christmas gifts. Phqnt 756 3161.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE
2500 SO. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
074
Miscellaneous
Nf'VfiTd. wcr$T^iL n
Refrigerator, dlehwailwr, oak ta-dfi......
ble, dining table and chairs, gardan
aqulpmilr^, and ntora. 746-677,
enAiHiiifiei iiLr:on'"$n8P^
nfar,
AAowart. Goodyaar Tira Cani Watt End Shopping Cantor And Dickinson Avsnua
NO ROOAA, Must SELLI kanwood
KR5 400 Rocolvar with pair of Bota SOI Sarlts II spaakart, S4S0. Now watorbad, complato with wavalast mattrass, banph saat, rails, S6S0. Call 756-3161.
OOYSSEV II Vidoo ama Systom
with 9 cartridgas. Lets than '*/7 price. $135. 756 attar 5 p.m
P I T N Y B 0 W E S Addrasssr-Prlntar, Modal #0736. Plate Embosser, AAodel 7950. AAetal plate cabinets, AAodel 7835. Any reasonable otter accepted. 751-6945 days; 823-4175 nights
PORTABLE washing machine and dryer, white Westlnghouse, $150. Call 756 8553 after 5 p.m
PUERTO RICAN and Hyman white sweet potatoes. $8 00 bushel. Call 825 6821.
REPOSSESSED VACUUMS,
shampooers, and uprights. Call Dealer, 756 6711.
SANTA CLAUS available (or parties, etc. Call Santa at 756 2352 after 6 p.m.
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.
SHARP, SONY OE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88.
SILK SUIT, size 36 waist, $50 3
nylon wool suits, 36 waist, like new. $25 each 752 8887.
SOFA, 102", blue and white floral Very good condition. $85. 756 4219
SOFA AND RECLINER and 2
chairs. Very good condition. Call 757 0577.
SOFA AND CHAIR, gold valour, $150. Kitchen range hood with exhaust tan and fight, $25. OH heater with circulating fan, $60
Camper shell tor longbed, louvered ntlli'
windows, top ventilator, running lights, $75. 746 6013
SPEED SKATES, size 7. Like new!
$115. Phone 752 8596
STEREO SYSTEM tor sale Call
758 4859
STEREOS AND TVS - Close out prices on all systems In stock! Marantz, Sony, Sansul. Furniture World/Stereo City. Phone 757 0451 2808 East 10th Street. In Store Finance.
STOVE, 30" Kenmore. Like new! $225. Phone 758 2393.
TRAMPOLINES - Wholesale, new/used. Replacement mats Phone 756 4770
USED LP OAS STOVE, coppertone Price negotiable. Phone 752-2965 after 6p.m.
WALLPAPER S1.S0 $3.00 per single roll Odd lots and discontinued papers. Name brands, values up to tM a single roll All sales final Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street
60 FEEt FRIEDRICH produce cases with compressors. Assorted
produce dump tables in top condl
H
Ion May be seen In operation Overton Supermarket Inc., 752 5025 or 758 7600
0" EARLY AMERICAN couch In good condition, $65. 746 2780
07S Mobile Homes For Sale
BARISAIHi 2 bedrooms, $490 equity Take up payments, less than $107 per month Includes taxes, title, Insurance Call Bob at 756 0)91 8 to8or 752 0569after 8p m
LOADED WITH EXTRAS! 2
bedrooms, $575 equity Take up
07S Mobile Homes For Sele
USED 12x70, 3 bodroomt, 3 (uil baths I At a steal. Call 756-4122.
1974 lIxM Yogue. 2 bodrooms, 1
bath, total alectrlc, furnished, storm wliulows, $6,900.758 4611.
190# Ux7o Guerdeon, assume loan with low down payment. Call 756 8516 after 6 p.m.
1901 14' Wibt HMt'S: l^ayments as low as $140.91. At Greenvllla's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sales, North AAemorlal Drive across from airport. Phone 752-4060.
074 Mobile Homo Insurinco
MOBIL# U^MkWNf insurance
the b4t coverage tor J[#*s .tnoney.
Smith Insurance and Realty 2754
077 Musical Instruments
COMPLETELY REStORED an
tlque piano. Must sell $500 or make offer. 757 3624 after 5 p.m
EPIPHONE GUITAR, made by
Gibson, case and strap included.
brand new, $200 Call 756 4257.
PIANO a ORGAN CHRISTMAS
Salel Save 20% to 50% oft on all
Major brands. Open Sundaysl
- * -ils'
Plano & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. Phone 355 6002.
SNARE DRUM KIT, good condl tlon,$50 Phone 754 7437
093 OPPORTUNITY
payments, less than $122 per month includes ti
taxes, title, insurance Call Bob af 754 0191 8 fo 8 or 752 0569 after 8 pm.
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New 1984 SInglewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral celling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 Wrst Greenville Boulevard 7560191
NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $177 on 1979 12x65 Brigadier. Call 758 4491 or 355 6683 afefer5p.m.
OAKWOOD, 19#0, 14X60. Excellent condition, total electric, un derpinned, large deck Price negotiable. I 793 3402 after 6 p m
12X65 Deerbrook, 2 bedroom, I'/i bath, furnished, central air, 752 6458
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
SALESPERSON
Previous Experience Necessary Excellent Benefits:
Hospitialization,
Retirement.
Paid Vacation,
Apply in Person to:
Bob Brown BROWN WOOD PONTIAC
Dickinson Avenue & 14th Street
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stock #1179-1983 Ford Thunderbird Turbo lilt, speed control, air, special handling packace
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DISCOUNTOF M 785.98
WAS $13,985.98
NOW M 2,200.00
PUT SOME THUNDER IN YOUR LIFE WITH AN AFFORDABLE FORD AT HASTINGS FORD
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America's #1 Used Car Company Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass 758"UT14 __ Greenville, N. C. 27834
THUNDERBIRD SALE
BEST BUY IN N.C.!!
76'x14'ONLy 514,995 PlusTax
25 YEARS IN THE BUSINESS
Over 35 Families In The Last 6 Months Have Taken Advantage Of This OHer. We Hope Your Family Can Also Receive One Of These Homes!
INCLUDES;
Deluxe Furniture
Cathedral Ceiling
Storm Windows
Refrigerator
Total Electric
100 Mile Free Delivery
AZALEA
MOBILE HOMES OF N.C.
Greenville-756-7815
Tarboro-823-7161
Wllllamston-792-7533
Chocowlnlty-948-5839
BEAUTY SHOP - 12x40 trailer 2 wet stations. 5 hair dryers, mani
cure table and stool, reception area 75
Must be moved 758-7570 days, 758 4763 nights and weekends. _
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.
109
Houses For Solo
IILVIDkm. New construction 1500 square foot brick ranch that teaturae larga greatreem with flreplaca. 3 baOroom, 2 full baths, large wooded lot, patio. Call CENTURY 31 Tipton A Aswclatas, 756-MIO; nights Rod Tugwall 753 4302.
LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris & Co.. Inc. Financial & AAarketIng Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville. N.C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.
095 PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP GId Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience workino on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.
RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, Inc
Dial 633 3121, New Bern. N C Certified Welders, precision Machinists, custom fabricators ol Steel Aluminum, Stainless A R
Plate All types Machine Work Mil
Lathes, End Millers, Boring Mill, Iron 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. A Garbage truck packers.
102 Commercial Property
FOR LEASE. 10.000 square foot of retail smce. Available In West End Shtojslna Center beginning January 1984 (tail Aldridge 8> Southerland 7S6 350, nights Don Southerland 756 5260.
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 (<od Tugwell 753 4302.
375 SQUARE FEET of retail store
front on the mall. Available Imme diately Rents lor $234 per month. Call Clark Branch Management 756 6336
108
Farms For Sale
100 ACRES suitable tor farm or development 4 miles out of Greenville 756 5891 or 752 3318
109 Houses For Sale
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CRAFTED SERVICES
Qutllty furniture Relinlthlng and repelrt. Superior caning lor all lypa chair*, largar talaction of custom plctura Iraming, turvay stakatmy langth, all typat of palltlt, salaclad tramad raproductlon*.
EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER
Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758-4188 8AM-4:30PM
Qreenvilla, N.C.
BELVEDIRI Immaculat# ranch homa taaturas spacious great room,
kitchen with dlnlnj ^ area plus
formal dining room, 3 bodrooms, 2 baths, carport. Landscaped wooded yard. $65,900. Owner frantferred. Call Ball & Lane, 752-0035 or Richard Lane 753 sai9.
BELVfOthi Owner anxious
will contidor Itasa with option and credit part of rent towards purchaso for qualified buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with roc room. $55,500. Call Ball A Lane, 753 0025 or Lee Ball 753 1646.
BY OWNk*. New log home naar Ayden on quiot country road. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R. H. McLawhorn. 752750Of 975 26aa
BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, I'/V baths, fenced In backyard and sun dock Great location. Low $50's. 756 7776.
BY OWNR. 3 bedroom, 1>/> bath.
living room, kitchen and dining combination. Fenced in backyard,
linatlon. Fenced in backyard carport, corner lot. Approximately 1180 square feet. Excellent location. Call 355 2461 from 9 to 5:30; after 6, 756-0652 or 355 2414.
BY OWNR FHA assumption.
$14,000 Equity, curront paymant $512 per month. 524 4148 or 524 5042
Ervin Gray, $69,000
BY OWNER. 3 bedroom, bath.
carport, living room with fireplace. Id ^
sundeck, and fenced in backyard 222 Comnterce Street. Low $50's 756 7776.
CEDAR LOG HOME, Lake Glenwood, Leon Drive, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood Insert, heet pump, beautiful home and lot 524 4148 or 524 5042. Echo Realty Inc. $72,000
CHERRY OAKS. Choice Cape Cod with everything. Foyer, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, breakfast area, three bedrooms, 2'/7 beths, com
ictor, pantry, storaga shed, nicely
Du"
landscaped. $74,900 IJuttus Realty Inc ,756 5395
EASTERN street, 3 bedrooms. I bafh, fireplace Convenient loca
repi; ------------- ----
tion, $42,500 Speight Realty. 756 3220, nights 758 7741
FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, 2,856 square feet Approximately 6 miles from hospital. 2.3 acros. Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 bedrooms, 2'/V baths, carport, patio. .1,120 square loot workshop. Assumable 8% first mortgage. Call 756 7111.
FOR SALE BY Owner. 2 bedroom or could be 3 bedrooms or den Very good condition. $34,000. 758 32)8 10 to 5, 756 4199 aHer 5
HOUSE FOA sale In Ayden Loan
assumption low equity. 746 3040
HOW WOULD YOU like to have a ^
brand new home? How does no down payment and 9 9% A.P.R sound? Build II yourself and save 1 848 3220 collect
NEW LISTING. Lakewood Pines 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that features all formal areas. Oen with fireplace, garage and over 1800 square feet Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates. 756-6810; nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302
NEW LISTING. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2'/^ bath townhouse Super nice Lots of extras. Living room and dining room, and over 1480 square feet Call CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates. 756 6810. nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302
OWNERS ARE MOVING from U$A and must sail 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, bac
fireplace, fenced backyard and
patio. H'^% assumable mortgage 107 Azalea Drive 756 8281 or 752
4844.
21 ACRES - 18 CLEARED. 5,454 pounds of tobacco. 2.455 pounds of peanuts. Located near the Belvoir Grammar School Excellent mobile
home park site. Contact Aldridge A
...
Southerland 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260
TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per centage rate loan Attractive 3 bedroom, I'^j bath brick ranch with carport. Located on woodsy lot near university. Living room/dlning room, eat In kitchen, custom storm windows and doors, new furnace, (no air conditioning). Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square feet healed area Take over approx Imately $33,500 (or 25 years re malning with principal and Interest
payment of $280.82 month. (This loan would cost you $388 month at todays rate of 13%). Pay equity of
$16.400 or owner may consider some financing (or part of equity Very low closing cost and no discount points to buyer Lease/purchase also possible Immediate possession Priced at $49,900. Call Owner Agent. Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532 evenings No agents
UNIVERSITY DISTRICT. 2''j
blocks from ECU. Nice older home. Completely redecorated Inside, 3 or 4 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, dining room, large eat In kitchen Garage and attic storage. Metal siding, windows, and roof less than 6 years old Central heat and air $50.500 Telephone 752 2488 or Washington. 946 9471.
PAYMENTS are based on your Income! Almost new three and two bedroom ranches! Pay as little as $350 down Call HIgniie Realtors .anytime 757 )969
SPECIAL FINANCING As LowAs9/i%'
/cAVAILABLE FOR
NEWCONSTRUCTION HOMES, CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES
Call Joe Bowen
EastCarolinaBuilfjers, Inc.
752 7194 Anytime
113
Land For Sale
HOLLY RIDGE. Country living (1st class). 2'/^ to 5 acre tracts. CallCarl
(or details Darden Realty 758 )983 or nights, weekends 758 2230
LAND AND TIMBER for sale 16
acres, 100,000 B.F Doyle. pine, Co{
hardwood Edgecombe County Field bid Thursday at 11 a m ,
December 1, 1983. Roger Sauerborn 1 82
Associates NCREB 1 823 8732
50 ACRE FARM south of Ayden In
the St. John's Community. Road frontage on SR 110 and SR 1753. 5) acres cleared. 7 acres wooded Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house. Call for full details. Moseley Marcus Realty 746 2166
8 WOODED ACRES. $14.500 Owner will finance. Call Carl for details.
Darden Realty. 758 1983, nights and 2230,
weekends 758 :
115
Lots For Sale
*4 ACRES NEAR Procter and Gamble, restricted for houses.
$7.000 Owner financing Speight Realty, 756 3220; nights 7S8 7741.
LYNNOALE LOT on Queen Annes Road. Phone 355 2221 after 6p.m.
3 ACRES NEAR Stokes Owner
financing. $12,500. Speight Realty. 756 3220; nights 758 7741.
117 Resort Property For Sale
REDUCED BY OWNER - Water
front lot, 72x120 with 3 bedroom doublewlde mobile home, bricked, underpinned, chain linked fence, t'Z Interest In 200' pier. Location at Portslde, Washington, NC. Call (919 ) 746-4271.
RIVER COTTAOE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 niohts.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Multi-Line Automobile Dealership Has Openings For
1 DATA INPUT OPERATOR AND 1 OFFICE SUPERVISOR
Automotive txwkkeeplng experience preferred. Submit resume and salary requirements to:
P.O. Box 1812
Greenville, N. C. 27834
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 5-8 years of Brown & Sharpe screw machine set-up.
This Is a ground floor opportunity. Salary commenaurate with experience. Benefit package exceptional.
Send resumes to:
Screw Machine Technician
p.p. Box 1967 Qraenvilla,N.C. 27834
I
I
IMOtCIIIUOt I WOO 1{)
120
RENTALS
SrPSlnRTfTiM 2 an 3 bedroom mobllt homo*. Socurit dMOOlto roqulrod, no po(
7Sl-44l3bowoonlondS.
dy-Friday f
WOTH5DIITT3SSI7ST5M
ipeco. Cxcoilont location. Up to (Tom souaro faat. Ad|acant oftica vaH*b^ Prica nagotlabla 752 42M/7S*-74I7
121 AyartmnU For Rtnt
AFFORDABLE
11111 t
Townhoma* and condominium* with monthly paymant* lowar than rant. FIva location* avallabla. Call today I in* Cannon at 744 2439 or 75I'40S0, Owan Norvall at 754 1491 or 75( 4050. WII Raid at 754 0444 or 75(-4050 or Jana Warran at 754 7029 or 75( 4050
MOORE & SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
ALY new TOWNHOUSE - 2 badroom*. V/i bath*. Conveniant location. Call 754 7314 day*, 754 49(0 night*.
AfTftA<;tiVE AND ENERGY ef ficlant 1 badroom apartmant, Hookar Road $225 par month, $225 daiMlt. Call Tommy, 754 7815.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 1 and 2 badroom apartmant* and a 3 badroom houta 752 3311
AZALEAGARDENS
Graanvilla'* nawa*t and mo*t unlqualy turnl*had one bedroom apartmant*.
All anergy atficient de*igned
Quaen tlie beds and *tudlo couches.
Washer* and dryer* optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance
All apartment* on ground tioor with porche*
Frosttraa refrigerator*.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appdntmant only. Couples or singles. No pats.
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 754 7(15
BRAND New tastefully decorated townhousa near hospital and mall 2 bedrooms. I'/y baths, washer/dryer hook ups, efticlant No pets $315 per month. 754 (904 or 752 2040 BRICK TOWNHOUSE. 2 badroom, and unit, storage, near Nichols 754 74(0
Sell your used talavision tha Classified way Call 752 4144
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartmtfits For Ront
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bawoom townhousas with IV* baths Also I bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club houseand POOL. 752-1157
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one. two and three badroom garden and townhousa apartments, featuring Cable TV. modern appli ancas, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Orive
752 5100
TrnCIECYPlTMTS'
Dial direct phone*
25 channel color tv
Maid Service
F urnished
All Utilities
Weekly Rate*
754 5555
HERITAGE INN MOTEL
FOR RENT: New 2 bedroom duplex apartment Carpeted, heat pump, stove, retrlgerafor and dishwasher furnished No pet*. Deposit re-quired. $210 month. 758 7540 or 754 7537
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Country Club. 754 4849
LANDMARK. I bedroom furnished apartment, 3 blocks from Universi ty Heat, air and water furnished. No pets 758 3781 or 754 0889
LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex. Shenandoah $290 754 5389
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation
Office Open 9 5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday I-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756 5067
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartmtnt For Rwrt
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located just off lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
NAA ktPiYAL medical school New duplex townhousas available for Immediate occupancy. $300 per month No pets. 752 31, ask tor John or Bryant.
NEW ONE bedroom Convenient location Washer/dryer hookups. $220 per month. 754 747.
NICE OUIET DUPLEX, appll anees, carpet, electric heat, wood
heater. No pats. 754 2471 or 75( 1543.
OAKMONTsquare APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhousa ments. 1212 Redbanks Road washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ap6rt-
Dlsh
0T1 BEDROOM, furnished apartment* or mobile home* for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 754 7815.
RENt FURNITURE: Living, din Ing, bedroom complete $79J py month. Option to buy U REN CO, 754 3842
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The
Office hours 10 a m. to 5 p.m Monday through Friday
Calf u* 24 hours a day at
756-4800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook-ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near
1^-.
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
121 Apartments For Rnt
TWS-imM AFATTftrT.
carpeted, central air and heat, appltancas, wether- dryer hookup. tJrytonHIII*.$275.75( 3311
WEST HILLS ' TOWNHOMES
Located |ust 1'/* miles from the hospital and medical school, these unlf* are designed to house two or more. If you have a roommate and would love to have that second full bath, give us a call. Energy effi clent, washer and dryer hook up* and a storage room for all those extras you just can't part with. Call us for an appointmenf to rent these new two bedroom townhome* minute* from the hospltal-
Professionally managed by.
Remco East, Inc.
Weekdays 75(4041
N Ight* A Weekends 75( 5940
WILSON ACRE APARTMENTS. 1(04 East 1st Street. New 2 and 3 bedrooms, washer/dryer hook ups, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis, pool, sauna, self cleaning oven, frost free refrigerator. 3 block* from ECU CaM 752 0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportunity
1 BEDROOM apartment, anees turnished, Tei
per month, 1 524 5042
appll
enth Street, $100 Call alter 4 p.m .
2 BEDROOMS, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups No pet*. 752 01(0 before 5 p m
754 r
12744 after 5 p.m. BEDROOM,
2 BEDROOM, semi furnished Perfect tor single* 3 block* tram campus. $150 monthly. 752 1742
125 Condominiums For Rint
DEClMBEinr~DiCfMBER~ii Beach condominium, $150 Fort Macon Call 758 4487after 7p m
127
Houses For Rent
BRICK VENEER RANCH for rent Carport Excellent neighborhood 3 bedrooms, family room, fireplace, kitchen with stove and retrlgerator, (urnished, central heat and air. Call Lyle Davis at Davis Realty 752-3000 or nights 754 2904.
HOUSE FOR RENT; Hardee Acres, 3 bedrooms, 1W baths, garage, fenced in backyard, heat pump, $350 a month. Phone 752-3993 after 5 p.m.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
127 Houses For Rent
f^SSurSflSi^rTbedr^
brick, $350. Lease and deposit. 754 5772 after Ip.m lli 'I'n'TOWN and house In country . Call 744 32(4 or 524 31(0 LAKE OLENWOOD, 104 Bryant Circle, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, large lot. 524 414( or 524 5042, Echo Realty Inc
NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedroom, l'/2 baths, living room/dining room, eat In kitchen, carport Fresh paint Hardwood tIoor* faet.
and wallpaper Approximately 1350 square feet new furnace/no air conditioning Married couple or small family only. No pet* Immediate possession $375 per month. Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532. No agents NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedrooms No pet*. 1-724 7415.
NEW HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $550 per month Call 752 1232 or 754 5097
133 Mobilt HomM For Rtnt
12x45. Unfurnished on private lot in Aydan. Call 744-25(3 attar 4 p.m.
2 BEDROMS, furnished, washer.
air No pats.
75(4(57
No children. Phone
2 BEDRoOMS, central air, 12x40. 2 mile* from Pitt Plaza on Highway 43 $185 plus deposit 758 0174
2 BEDRoOM mobile home~, furnished, washer, air. No pets. Taylor's Estates Phone 754 7381
13S Offict Space For Rent
OFFICE SPACCAVATLABrr
Available in December. Otf 244 By-pass. 3100 square feet of prime office space Well decorated 12 month lease or longer, private parking. $1200 per month
(Tall Clark-Branch Management
756 6336
13S
OHice Space For Rent rSoToUAR^EE^flce^Iiid
ing on 244 Bypass Plenty of park Ing Call 75(-2300days
137 Resort Property For Rent
WINTEROREEN SKI RESORT - 2
bedroom fully equipped con dominium For more information, call 355 2341 after 4 30 p m
142
Roommate Wanted
OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows it's important to pleap receive hundred* of
I you And we testimonials
every year _____
3 bedroom, 1'/3 bath* in Elmhurst Available January 1st, $350 Smith Insurance Realty, 752 2754
3 llbllMi: I bath, living room, dining 'Oom In Winterville. Call alter 5pm 355 4023 3 BIDAOM house located close to University 754 0528 otter 4 p m.
129
Lots For Rent
LARGE Private mobile home lot, city water, near city $45 a month. Speight Realty, 754 3220; nights 758 7741
MOBILE home lot for rent 7 miles east of Greenville. $40 . 754-3237
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
ONE 2 bedroom trailer 7 miles east of Greenville. 754 3237
13X40, 2 bedroom, I'/i bath, un
furnished except stove, refrigei /dryer, underpinned ana tied down Set up In small park.
Park restrictions, no children, no pets $190 a month Call 754 4497 after 4 p.m. _
12X40, 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, $145. No pets, no children. 758 0745
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom, l'/4 bath townhouse*. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. Immediate occupancy.
754-0987 .
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
BOYD
ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
P.O. BOX I7M. GREENVILLE. NORTO CAROLINA I7RM
GENERALCOWniACrORS 7SR-42S4
CONCRETE FOUNDATIONS
IjWRa
f I >
1 I t I I L
Yhe
Spotter
Gifts
for
Everyone
THE PROFESSIONAL WOODCUntRBUYS STIHL MORETHAN ANYOTHERCHAINSAW INTHE WORLD.
WHICH MEANSALL THREEOrUS ARE DOING THINGS RIGHT.
Clark & Co.
Of CrMnvilU, Inc.
ILEtk
TCCftL'
:cn5Ki^ STn
All For Gifts & EntertBining
Italian
Wines
GiRRimll* Squjr* StappRS CrrRi
1=15=.
For Special Christinas
GIFTS
COUNTRY CRAnSAANTIQUES R?HpDUaiON FURNITURE HANDCRAFTED DOLL CRADLES CHILDRENS TABLES A CHAIRS Handmade Bonnets. Aprogs, Bib*. Dolls. Toy* ft StuHcd Animal*.
Poor Mans Fks Market
Highway 264 Eail- ( mllct from Grccnviilc
Open Wed.-Sun. (to 6 752-1400
MEN'S INSULATED COVERALLS HIP BOOTS
UfSMf Nrw ChrlttiM*
WARREN'S DOG & HUNTING SUPPLIES
3(2(-CEs*(1(th tsmSSI
QrMnvUlf. N.C
Gilt yy Suggeslions^^
Samsonite Attache Cises
Shealiaz Psn i Ptncil Sets
Photo Albums
Desk Assessories
SCMPorlabtoTyptwrilort
Sanlry Silft
Globes
Appoinlmtnt Books And Many Other Prolasiional Gilts
Select A Craft ToMake.JoGive
from our full line of
STENCIL SUPPLIES
Stencil Decor and Stencil Magic Stencils, Stencil brushes, stencil paint* and books to create beautiful wood ornament*, fabrics, boxes andplaque*.
NEEDLEWORK SUPPLIES DMCEmbrotderv Flo*#-25<
Hungates
AT5 CRAIT5 HOS9II5
Pitl'pu*
Greenville, N.C. PtwM 756-0121
Gifts for the Home
WATERBEDS BEDDING SAVE UP
A suprentely handsofnt naw Schwinn-Approved lightweight style bicycle with the finest workmanship down to the hand sthp-Jng. 27-inch wheels end a truly ^thfltty price. ASSEMBLY INaUDED.
Gifts For Kids
Give unique, locally handmad gifts
from
PINEWOOD
too E.GretsvUI Blvd. 756-7970
#
Gifts
for
Mom
DIAMOND
PENDANTS
*70 up
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers
iRdqwadcat Jewdcn Dowetow*K*U
Sports Gifts
; 1
CLOSEOUT ON ALL 5 SKI EQUIPMENT f
.n.
Exceptionally large inventory to liquidate.
Golf Inventory To Be Reduced Drastically!
No returns, exehangas or refunds.
GORDON FULP, PRO
756-0504 Located At Greenville Country Club Open 7 Days A Week
!
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J.T or Tommy Williams, 754 7815.
UPSTAIRS office space available at the Mattox Building, 315 West Second Street. Everything furnished $100 per room per month. Call 758 3430
1,200 SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on Evans Street Price negoitable. 752 4295/754 7417.
2,000 SQUARE FEET office or retail. Will divide. Ayden New interior, heat and air $225 month. 754 7194
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.i. Lupton Co.
SPECIAL
Safe
Model S-1 Special Price
*122
Reg. Price $177.00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
sees. Evans St.
752-2175
HOUSEMATES to share 3 bedroom home Near D. H. Conley. Call 754 4735 or 754 4144 for detail*
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. 409
Holly Street, across from Campus 4 bedroom house, $87.50 plus utilities Begins December 1. 752 2503
142
Roommate Wanted
ROOMMATE WANTED. 2 bedroom turnished apertment. AvailNbla end of November Rent $132 per month. Call 752 5828 before 9 a.m. and aftar 10pm.
2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wantad.
3 bedroom house $(4.40 a placa plus utilities Call 355 43(5
144
Wanted To Buy
GAS STOVE, good condition. Car cover for large car Phona 750-7045.
WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood
timber Pamlico Timbar Company, Inc. 754 8415
WANTED TO BUY standing timber, large or snYall tracts. 744-482Sor 744 2041
:lassified display
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Sport Coupe, air, power steerinq, full instrumentation
stock 1037
*174.09
per month
Selling price of $7400.00, $900 Down Payment (Cash or Trade), Amount financed $6500.00, 12.9% APR, 48 Monthly payments. Finance charges of $1854.88, Total of Payments $8354.88.
N.C. Sales Tax, License and Tags not included.
UastingC
li, nEoL^Slu
Ameitca's !
Used Cir Compeny
|TenfhSreet*264ByPass
758-0114
GraenvWe N C ?7834
Special
Announcement
Today a Greenville man turned 63.
In July, he played a trick on me.
You may recall that he, without hesitation.
Called off my birthday celebration.
But hes still kinda special in his unique way So if you see Dixie McGIohon, wish him a very
Happy Birthday!
MADE OVERSEAS FOR
unoB)'\ t,
Holly Ridge
COUNTRY LIVING - FIRST CLASS
B 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.
758-2230
OlwiueiisitijuUedlcai^a/tfc^ouiRliomcs
^/iawd(^eu/SEu)<:u/iijuA|3iiiitmewts
Nouj jCeaiLn^
2^ange^ednooms
t V2 Pattis
9^eat^uw()S
Spacious
^oslicA^AijGA^ioofc-ufis
9(itckctiuA()f>CiaBCCs
Custom ^uiit Cabinets
9atlos u/itli9wi/ate ence
Thrt# Locations To Serve You
COUPON
4
'DTieAmofwncQAiinciouis C-300 CneAgij CJJicient
<^cauti{uit9nc(ii/lc(uaiQAilCitam8bug CideAot
Socated QAiitbln QiUaifcing Distance o{ 9itt uUemokiai ^ospitai
(laif 752-64/5 9-5
Resume Inquiry Into Social Security's Mistakes
By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A woman who says the U.S. Treasury raided her widowed mother-in-laws bank account is testifying before a Senate committee on complaints about poor service from the Social Security administration.
The Senates Special Committee on Aging, chaired by Sen. John Heinz. R-Pa., was also to hear today from an official of
FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30.1M3
from the Carroll Rightar Inatituta
GENERAL TENDENCIES; Another unusually beneficial day for you to engage in harmonious relations with other persons and to come to a new meeting of minds with whomever you come in contact.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Situations arise that permit you to gain more support from those you deal with regularly. Show more cooperation.
TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Be very precise in handling your work, tasks and gain fine benefits from them; make real progress.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Your creativity is high now and you can get your talents working like a charm and gain fine benefits. Accept social invitations.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Make additions to your home of either a practical or aesthetic nature that will improve conditions there.
LEO (Jul 22 to Aug. 21) Have conversations with others that can lead to greater understanding and rapport in the future. Make your home more charming.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Get at those business matters with those you can trust and get good results so that income is increased. Make property repairs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Spread your love for humankind around today and get nice responses. Be happier yourself as a result.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Showing real affection for those you love can bring much happiness to you also.
Superior Court
Report
The following cases were disposed of during the Nov.
14 criminal session of Pitt County Superior Court with Judge John B. Lewis Jr. presiding;
Yvonne Hartsfield, 106 Joise Lane, three counts contempt, remanded to district court for proper entry of judgement.
Sandra Jean Hawley, Apt. A-2, Glendale Court, three counts, uttering forged checks, prayer of judgement continued until first term after 1-6-84.
Lori Ann Dickins, Rocky Mount, misdemeanor possession of methaqualone, one year jail suspended on payment of costs, attorney fees and three years probation. *
Larry D. Davis, 506 Darden Dr., common law forgery, 18 months jail
suspended on pyrnent of costs, tees and one year
fine, attorney probation.
Marvin James Dail, Route 4, felonious breaking or entering, three years jail suspended on
pyrnent of costs, fine, attorney lees and one year probation.
Johnny Ruel Taylor, Fountain,
felonious breaking or entering, three years jail.
Debra Felder, 301 Elizabeth St., three counts misdemeanor larceny, one year jail.
Mary Lee Rowe, 506 Terrace Drive, Ayden, driving under the influence, six months jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, surrender operators license and one year probation Bennie Earl Stanley, 413 Vance St.. injury to personal properly, six months jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution and attorney fees; second degree arson and injury to real property, voluntary dismissal.
Michael Anthony Schronce, 1301 S. Cotanche St., forgery and uttering, deferred prosecution for one year upn payment of costs and restitution.
Clarence Cherry, Ayden, obtain property by means of worthless check, one year jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution, attorney fees and two years probation.
Steve Whitehurst, Shady Knoll Trailer Park, assault with a deadly weapon, six months jail.
Lee Norris Parker, 617 Hudson St., assault with a deadly weapon, remanded to district court for compliance.
Cameron Lindell Vick, 384 Aycock Dorm, ECU, assault on a female, prayer for judgement continued upon payment of costs.
Mike Anderson, Farmville, assault inflicting serious injury, one year jail suspended on payment of costs, attorney fees, restitution and two years mx)oation.
Bobby Ray Barnes, Farmville, unathorized use of motor conveyance, one year and six months jail.
Frank Smith Jr., Stokes, felonious breaking or entering, three years jail.
Claybome Hixon, Route 1, Box 184, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, court declares a mistrial.
Vicki Jessup Kinzie, 2004 E. Fourth St., obtain possession of controlled substances by misrepresentation, fraud, deception and subterfuge, two years jail suspended on payment of costs, 275 hours community service and three years probation.
Billy Lee Nobles, 1013 W. Third St., felonious breaking or entering, prayer for judgement continued for 60 days; two counts breaking, entering and larceny, and possession of stolen goods, volun
tary dismissal. Jol
John Boston, 426 Davis Lane, Washington, two counts felonious breaking or entering, two years jail. 60 days active, remainder suspended on payment of restitution, costs remitted and three years
firobation; breaking, entering and arceny, voluntary oismissal.
FOCUS
Americas Record Keeper
Today is the birthday of an important but little known figure in American history Charles Thomson. Thomson was the Secretary of the Continental Congress for the duration of its existence. As Secretary, he was one of only two men who actually signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4,1776. In April of 1789 Charles Thomson traveled to Virginia to inform George Washington that he had been elected the new Republics first President.
DO YOU KNOW Who proposed the name United States of America?
MONDAYS ANSWER - Roald Amundsen led the first expedition to reach the South Pole.
11 29-83 ' Knowledge Industries, Inc 1983
I
the General Accounting Office, the investigatory arm of Congress, about the errors that Social Security makes in computing benefits and handling retirees accounts.
In testimony prepared for delivery to the committee, Carole Williams of Pittsburgh, Pa., said the government withdrew the money from the bank account fcause the Social Security administration made a mistake on her father-in-laws date of death.
The federal government was making Social Security retiree payments into the account of Joseph E. and Naomi Williams
Carry on with plans you have for the future.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) A good day for sociability and spreading warmth and good cheer all around. Give a party or accept an invitation to one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Show more admiration for bigwigs of your acquaintance or are allied with and get good results. Gain more benefits.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Find those new enterprises that can soon give you a sizable income and get you out of the rut youre in.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Show that you are willing to be more cooperative with others you are connected with in business. Add to present happiness.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will always have a ready smile that can bring more cheer into their lives. Be encouraging and your progeny can be a source for good in the lives of the distressed. This child will always be very romantic so needs to be less gullible.
under a special direct deposit prt^am.
Naomi Williams husband died on March 11, 1982 and Carole Williams written testimony related how her family notified Social Security five days after the death.
According to the t^timony, the family was called by two Social Security offices in September and October 1982 asking for information about Williams date of death.
Then last January, a doctors office informed the Williams family that Medicare was refusing to pay his bills because its records showed he died in February 1982. A Social Security official again told the family it would be straightened out. But in late February, the family got a letter from their savings and loan informing us the U.S. Treasury made a claim againsther (Mrs. Williams) account for $381.50.
Even though the savings and loan was aware that Mr. Williams died on March 11, 1982, they had no choice but to debit the account. It would seem that Mrs. Williams had direct deposit but also direct withdrawal because this was
done without any type of notification being given my mother-in-law, Mrs. Williams testimony said. TTie family
finally got the matter straightened out by asking Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., to intercede.
"The Stars impel; they do not compel What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
There was no answer Monday night and early today at the home telephone of Social Security spokesman Jim Brown.
Meanwhile, the Social Security Administration said Monday that 99.6 percent of its payments to retirees and survivors were correct in 1981-82, but the 0.4 percent in mistakes wasted more than $500 million.
The agency revealed Monday it made $243.3 million in incorrect payments from March-through-September 1981, and
$258.5 million from ^tember l961-through-March 1982.
However, an official of the GAO reported iat in a review of M^tirement cases, auditors from the GAO and Social Mmy found that the agency made iptakes in 41 percent oMBrcases. In 18 percent of the cases, there were eirors in the amount the beneficiis received, with underpayments and overpayments ranging from $1 to more than $4,800.
The agency also made errors in documentation or the notices sent out to beneficiaries in a third of the cas in the samtde, which involved people who turned 68 in October 1982, according to the testimony iN*epared for todays Senate committee hearing by Joseph F. Deifico, associate director of the human resources division of the GAO.
The Social Security administration, meanwhile, in response to an inquiry from The Associated Press, also releas^ on Monday its latest error rates and overpayments in two welfare programs.
In the Supplemental Security Income program for elderly, blind or disabled poor people, the error rate duri^ the 12 months ending in March 1983 was 4.1 percent, with $360.2 million in overpayments during that period. 'Rjat error rate was down from 4.8 percent a year earlier.
The average error rate nationwide in the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program - which is administered by states but primarily funded by the federal government -was 7.3 percent in the six months ending in March 1982 and 7 percent in the previous six months.
Total overpayments during those 12 months were $963.2 million. The AFDC error rate was down from 8.3 percent in March 1981.
All figures are the latest available.
Social Security is spending $162 billion this year on retirement and survivors benefits.
iVitrux-Dliic
riUlK rllfolVlOiHOV^dlU Ma8ieiCardjfteorfltmonth{rfNovemberl983isl6%Aimaal. ' Percentage Rate* (APR), compared to 18% APR charged^ most (Xher financial ' .
institutions and merchants. So if youre carrying a fedrovia MasteiCard, use it UUjaflhmm
Bank&Trust ,
and save. If you dont have one, see or call a Personal Bank'.
Based on Wachovias prime rate in effect on the next to the last business day <rfeach month plus 5%. The prime rate is set by Wadiovia as the basis for interest on many loans and will vary with money market conditions. While automatically proriding the benefit qf any decline in the prime rate, under current North Carolina law, the Wachovia MasterCard variable rate cannot exceed 18% APR. Like many other bank caids, the Wachovia MasterCard is available an annual fee of $18.
4
i
I
sam
8ton Location! Rmmtord, MC Mpring Lmk, MC
9mHMMd, A McIIm, 04 OmaMtt, V4 Xmbulon, MC
ChtrfvUl9, MC Ymdklnvlllt, MC
Mwanaboro, MC Oranga, A
Habana, MC Laalngton, SC Loulavllla, OA Manebaatar, QA
Savings You Can 8ee.,.Quallty You Can Trust!
Storo Locations
tandaravUla, 04 Badtord, A Paarlaburg, A Wfthavllla, A
Mlllavllla, A 9anford, MC
FarmvUla, MC MuUtarfordton, MC Karnaravllla, MC Mlllaborough, MC
Tror, MC Franklin, MC
Canton, MC Laalngton, A
Rmgular Up To 13.97Mens Shirt or Pants
Mens active pants with elastic waist and contrasting piping in assorted colors. Long sleeve active knit shirt with woven collar and placket. With or without pouch pocket, in assorted solids and stripes. S-M-L-XL.
Rogular 7.99Save $2.11 On Your Choice Of Lovely Gowns
Perfect for gift-giving! Choose from 3 styles of nylon gowns: gown with lace bodice and spaghetti straps in Red or Black; toga-look gown with lace trim in Pink, Blue or Lilac; gown with embroidered camisole bodice in Blue, Pink, or Mint. AM in S-M-L.Jumpsuit, Regular 11.99..... 7.88
Sheer nylon jumpsuit with bikini panty in Red, Black, Purple, or Royal. S-M-L Bra not included.
Compare at 26.00
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Sa ve $9.12 On Ladies Lee Jeans
100% Cotton prewashed denim jeans in 5 pocket style. Jr. sizes 3-15 and Misses sizes 8-20.
G/r/s' Jeans, Sizes 7-14, Reg. and Slim, Ilo0.16.00. . . 14.88. No rainchecks.
Cotton Sweater
Boat neck sweater with sailboat intarsia on front, in 100% cotton. White, Red, or Royal in S-M-L. Subject to early sellout. No rainchecks.
11
Save $3.11 On Brushed Sweaters
Brushed acrylic sweaters with crew neck and all-over cable effect. Solid or flecked styles in assorted soft pastels. S-M-L. No rainchecks.
Cotton/Acrylic Sweaters
Pointelle design with lace insert at neck. Of 75% Rag. cotton/25% acrylic, in Natural, Pink, Blue, or Lilac.
13.00 S-M-L. No rainchecks.
3* ^ - R.9.
4.67
3 Pr. Pkg.
Mens Briefs
Mens Fruit of the Loom briefs in sizes 28-44.
2*^ -
3.57
3 Pr. Pkg.
BoysBriefs
Boys Fruit of the Loom briefs in sizes 4-16.
Boys Tee Shirts
Boys Fruit of the Loom Tee ShirtiS in sizes 4-16.
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T ' -^4?" ^ \ *+.Bentwood Rocker
Walnut Finish with velvet back and seat. Approximately 39Vz high. Subject to early sellout. No rainchecks. Unassembled.
Canm Seat S Back, Reg. 69.99 .....39,99
Walnut Rocker not available at all stores. No rainchecks. Unassembled.
Reg. 21.99Bentwood Hat Rack
Hat Rack has Barms and revolving top. Bottom is umbrella rack. Oak finish. 72 high. Subject to early sellout. No rainchecks.
Walnut Hat Rack, Reg. 19.99......14.66
Not available at all stores. Subject to early sellout. No rainchecks.
33 Twin
Rag. 12.97Sheet Sets
Assorted coordinated prints. Each set contains 1 fitted sheet and 1 flat. Full and Queen sets have 2 pillow cases and Twin has 1.
FllSiMet 17.97......... 14e88Queen Slse, Rag. 21.97.......17m88
Rag. B.99
Solid Blankets
100% Polyester with 3 nylon binding. 72" x90. Blue, Bone and Yellow.
Print Blankata, Rag. 7.99.............6.44
72 X 90 In Assorted prints.
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9i9ot tht Shtttend* Hot 8fuh^ wttti and fMdy dot indlcttor, Shotlan^ fki(Kilir #Dfi with built In tafoty taebor tlii " * lipn.
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OurSalPric $9.97
MfQ. Rebate........-3.00
Your Final Coat
AHar Mfg. Rebate $0.97
WITH mriUCTABLE BRI8TLE8.
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Your
Choice
Regular up to 14.97
Select from Regal* Snnjp Poly Perk electric coffee pot, Shetland* electric Can Opener with inetic lid holder and knife sharpener, Shetland* 2 s ice toaster, Windmere* abraCURLdabra^
magnet
curling wand with bristles that retiact with the twist of tip. It can be a bnjsh or an iron for tighter, tangle'free cuds, Shetland* 3-to^ hot brush and curling iron kit Kit contains 2 curling irons and 1 hot brush, or choose the Shetland* 1500 watt hair dryer.
97
Our Sale Price $19.971
Mfg. Rebate...........-4.00l
Your Final Cost After Mfg. Rebate
$15.97
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mP P9gul9r .97
Coffee Meker
Automatic coffee brewing system, with precise temperature control. Brews up to 10-cups. Automatically switches from brewing to warming cycia Almond color with brown accents. ^
Tf Aegiiiar 13,94
Seute Pen
Buy 10 Saute Pan wid get an 8 Saute Pan free. Sliver-
exterior. No
lor with poll ralnchecka
182L 99,99
Cookware Set
7 Piece Silverstone* cookware includes 1 qt covered saucepan, 2 qt. covered saucepan, 10 open saute and 5 qt covered dutch oven. Polished exterior. Subject to early sellout No rainchecks.
Proctor-
rati- 19.97
Iron
ht, steam/dry iron by lex*. Features rev. cord for right or left hand use.
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Regular 4.99
Recollection Serlee
Select from Butter & Cover, Hurricane lamp with 5 candle. Salt & Pepper shakers, 9V^ Center bowl or 10 Oval Serving bowl. Available in crystal or pink. Subject to early sellout
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KODAK
3000
Camera
L-.
97
Regular 39,97
Kodmk Dle 3000 Camera
Comes with wrist strap, 9-volt alkaline batte^, 3 year warranty and instruction manual. Automatically flashes when you need light
KoUaeolorMaeFlkn949.9,99...... ,2e27
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^99
1# Regular 4.99
Cheeee Dome
Boxed ready for gift wrapping. Wooden bottom with glass dome top. Subject to early sellout No rainchecks.
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Beoteh* Tapa
Transparent carded, Scotch* brand tape. V^x80^.
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Regular 9.97
Holy Bible
King James version with 80 page bible dictionary. White padded gold stamp cover with gold edges. Words of Christ in red.
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Rmgular 1.99 aach
Desk Accessories
Choose memo pad, chunky memo pads, address books, pencil cups or desk pad with blotter.
Men^s QIH Items
Tool kits, knife and nail clippers, quarter saver, tic tac toe, Coca<)oia sharpener, and many more.
H0R8MAN'
Regular 18.97"Happy Baby
Self-activatmg voice - Laughs. Gurgles and Chuckle's.
Foam and cotton filled body with Vinyl arms, legs and head.
14" Tall has rooted hair and painted eyes.
Dressed in 2-piece terry pajamas.Save $3On "Happy Baby
Ums 9 volt battoriM (not Includf
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0.1.409 WMlm TMIm
2 Solkl^tite waikit talklM.
V Rmgutmr 9,99 Commmnd Tmmm
Action set includes helicopter, Jeep and 2 movable action figures.
QeL Jam O^Ca9t
Tough metal models with realistic details. Tanks, cannons, lasers, missiles, motorcycles and Jeeps. Ages 5 and up.
4%,
Bagular 9,99 09if-Ani Up itocr
Durable molded piaatio does 2-wheel side stunts. Turbo Firabird or Camaro 1*28.
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20
5%
Bagutar 7,99
Monopaiv
The real esuite trading gm loved by the whole family. Ageal diru adult. 2-8 players, ^
11,97 ^
9Mrt Buaumr Cuf9 ^
7^0 battery operated bumper cars, each featuring flashing headlights apd sound. &ioh car to 4 iong. Comes complete with fpurooior chip
9,99
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9,99
iittif ^ wooden chair. Height Inches overali. PHOTOFINISHING SPECIAL
I ENLARGEMENTSj 3 5x7s F0R^3
MADE FROM YOUR
FAVORITE KODACOLOR TYPE
NEGATIVE ONLY
! MULTIPLES OF 3 ONLY
OFFER EXPIRES IN 30 DAYSti^MAXWAYJ
tanMMBBThis Coupon Must Accompany Order
Affr Mfg. mfmf
Atari 2600 VC8
Purchase an Atari* 2600 and receive a rebate check for $30, plus a $60 Rebate Coupon Book! System includes 2 sets of controls, true-to-life sound, orvscreen scoring, difficulty options and morel
MODEL #9281
Boys or Girls 20 bike w/hi-rise chromed Rmgular steel handelbars. Chromed sport fenders, full-length chainguard, & deluxe contour saddle.
79.97