Daily Reflector, December 6, 1983


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INSIDE TODAYDEAR SANTA

Southern California county and cities compile Santa lists. All want taxpayers to play Santa by donating varied gifts as weii as cash. (Page 16)

INSIDE TODAYHAPPY TIME

A touch of magic in waiking down rows of freshly cut Christmas trees. Few frowns seen when Pitt Countians are visting iocai tree lots. (Page 6)

SPORTS TODAY

ALL-AMERICA

Terry Long of East Carolina, honored again, was named to the AP All-America football first team today. Page 9.THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 273

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 6, 1983

16 PAGES TODAY

PRICE 25 CENTSProceeding On 40-Unit Housing Project

By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer A notice to proceed with construction of the Housing Authoritys new 40-unit conventional housing development in the West Meadowbrook area has been executed with the general contractor, who has a year to complete the project.

Joe Laney, the authoritys executive director, said Monday night that Eastern Construction Co. of Greenville has initiated site work and hopefully will get started on foundations before cold winter weather sets in.

Laney urged commissioners to consider a possible name for the project, which has been designated as N.C. 22-8. The new units will be constructed on scattered sites.

The director said construction is progressing well on the 40-unit Greentree Village townhouse development off East 10th Street, with initial occupancy possibly 30-60 days away. Greefitree is being developed by the Westminister Co. of Greensboro through financing made possible by the authoritys creation of the Greenville Housing Development Corp. Laney said Westminster plans a two-phased development for Greentree.

Section 8 activity continues to be steady, Laney reported, with 99 out of 100 authorized units leased under the existing housing segment and 108 leased out of 109 units allowed under the moderate rehabilitation program. All 60 units in the

University Towers mid-rise for the elderly are rented, he said.

Laney distributed copies of an audit report of authority activities for the two-year period ending Sept. 30. The review indicated that all of the projects operated by the agency are in sound financial shape.

Ken Noland, director of operations, said phase one of modernization activities in the Kearney Park development are continuing, with about 50 workers on hand each day. He said new windows are going in at a rapid pace and siding is being installed. The installation of furnaces continues and interior painting is progressing, Noland said.

Sallye Streeter, director of resident affairs, reported that four temporary vacancies existed among the authoritys 702 housing units at the end of November. She said average rents include N.C. 22-1 (Meadowbrook), $110.69; N.C. 22-2 (Kearney Park), 116.82; N.C. 22-3 (Moyewood);-114.63;-N:G." 224 (Moyewood), 107.69; N.C. 22-5 (Hopkins Park), $89.06; and N.C. 22-6 (Newtown), $103.51. The overall average amounted to $108.57.

Laney said Martha Roberson, who has been with the authority for 15 years, is leaving to join a Greenville firm. Commissioners adopted a resolution citing Mrs. Roberson for her years of service.

Bus In Jerusahns Bombed

Report 3 Israeli Aircraft Lost

ByG.G.LaBELLE Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Syria reportedly shot downed three Israeli aircraft and captured an Israeli pilot today, and a bomb tore apart a bus in Jerusalem, killing'at least one person and wound

ing more than 40. One witness in Jerusalem counted five people killed.

The Tel Aviv military command said one pilotless Israeli reconnaissance drone was shot down over eastern Lebanons Bekaa Valley. Syria said it shot down two of

the unmanned craft, and Beirut radio said a manned Israeli warplane was downed and its pilot captured.

The explosion in Jerusalem blew the roof off the bus as it waited at a traffic light. Hadassah Hospital said it received one dead pereon

and iO wounded, aiiu Shaarei Zedek Hospital said it received 33 wounded. Photographer Eli Hershkovitz counted five people killed by dhe blast,

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

Moslem west Beirut, meanwhile, closed down in a

NATO Ministers Urge New Proposals To Limit Missiles

By ROBERT WIELAARD Associated Press Writer BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)

- NATOs European defense ministers urged Moscow today to come up with new proposals on limiting medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe and to return to arms negotiations in Geneva.

The issues of the medium-range missile talks

- broken off by the Soviets

- and recent developments in the Mideast were the top subjects of discussion for a two-day NATO strategy session. U.S. Defense Sectary Caspar Weinberger was ready to defend the U.S. military role in Lebanon when he joins the talks later.

The 12 European defense ministers of the alliance met and declared that the possibilities of reaching an

RKFLKCTOR

accord on the medium-range weapons in Europe were not exhausted.

"We should have Soviet' indications and proposals on how to resume the negotiations, said Norways defense minister, Andres C. Sjaastad.

Bi and large we think the time is ripe to try to reconstruct the dialogue between the Soviet Union and the United States at Geneva, Switzerland, but, Sjaastad added, we do not think that we should now be the one to initiate the move.

The Soviets left the Geneva talks on medium-range missiles on Nov. 23 after the first of 572 U.S. nuclear missiles began arriving in Western Europe.

The ministers said the deployment of the cruise and Pershing 2 missiles could

OTLIH

be halted or reversed if an agreement was reached.

Sjaastad said the European defense ministers discussed the possibility of merging negotiations on long-range, strategic weapons, which continued in Geneva, with the talks on medium-range missiles.

The Soviet Union and the United States have so far

opposed merging the talks.

In discussions about Lebanon, mounting Marine casualties and U.S. air strikes against Syrian positions have increased questions about the role of the multinational force in Lebanon. Italy hinted Monday that it may withdraw its contingent of soldiers.

Parker To Seek Assembly Seat

Hotline gets things done. Write and tell us about the iroblem 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 deal with all of those for which we have staff time. Names must be given, but only initials will be published.

Editors note: Hotline has, on a trial basis, discontinued its telephone answering service. Please mail us your items. Thank you. ,

CONSIGNMENT SHOP FEEDBACK A Hotline inquiry about consignment shops in this area was recently published. One not mentioned at the time is Lillies Resale Shop, located V/z miles north of Fountain on Highway 258 (in front of the fire tower). Its operated by Lillie B. Owens from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day. Call 827-5923 for more information.

UNITED CEREBRAL PALSY APPEAL Any organizations, church or civic, wishing to take part in the United Cerebral Palsy Telethon to be broadcast for the second year from the dreenville Moose Lodge Jan. 14-15 or in any related activity, event or pledge is asked to contact Debby Avery, 756-3174, or Nita Rasberry, 756-5390. Last year $81,000 was raised during the telethon to help support the local UCP Center. The goal this year is $100,000.

AHOSKIE - Publisher Joe M. Parker announced today that he will be a candidate in the Democratic primary next May for the 6th District seat in the N.C. House of Representatives.

The district includes parts of Pitt, Bertie, Martin and Hertford counties.

He is president of Parker Brothers Inc. and two other printing and publishing firms headquartered in (^oskie. Among the firms publications are the Bertie Ledger-Advance in Windsor and the Ahoskie News-Herald.

Parker said he will seek to succeed incumbent Rep. Jo^n B. Gillam III of Windsor, who has announced he will challenge U.S. Rep. Walter B. Jones for the 1st Congressional District seat.

With the reduced delegation northeastern North Carolina can send to the Legislature because of re-districting, it is vital that we send people to Raleigh who know how to get things done to adequately represent our

pan ot the state, said Parker.

He stated, Because of my past work on behalf of northeastern North Carolina and

JOE M. PARKER

close involvement with the workings of state government, I feel I can be an immediately effective repre-(PleaseturntoPageS)

general strike to protest t.he car bomb that killed 16 people Monday.

A shadowy group calling itself the Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners claimed responsibility for Mondays bombing, which shattered a nine-story apartment building in west Beirut. The same group claimed responsibility for several previous attacks on Palestinian and Syrian targets, but in this case there seemed to be no political target.

The state radio, which re-poitcu the groups claim, said the official death toll was 16 killed and 100 wounded.

On a brighter note, the English-language Beirut Daily Star resumed publication today, exactly eight years after suspending operations during the 1975-76 civil war.

In a front-page column, publisher Jamil K. Mrowa called the renewal of publication an act of faith in this Lebanon which many think nor longer exists....We believe Lebanon will make it.

However, the paper was filled with news of the car bombing, the drop of the Lebanese pound to its lowest level ever, and American and Syrian threats tsemming from the first U.S. air raids in Lebanon - carried out Sunday against Syrian positions in the central mountains.

A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Beirut said today the body of Lt. Mark A. Lange, 27, of Fraser, Mich. - killed when two American planes were shot down in the raid - had not yet been turned over to U.S. officials.

Another U.S. pilot, Lt. Robert 0. Goodman, 26, of Virginia Beach, Va., was captured by the Syrians, who say they will hold him until U.S. forces leave Lebanon. U.S. Ambassador Jeane J., Kirkpatrick appealed Monday to U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar for help in gaining Goodmans release.

Damascus radio, Syrias government-run station, warned today of a growing conflict with the, United States.

The United States is playing with fire, pushing tension in the Middle East to the brink of war, the radio said.

Sheltered

OUT OF THE RAIN - Ronald Manning of Snow Hill, an independent contractor for Carolina Telephone, makes an installation on Hooker Road while under the protection of an umbrella this morning. Rain blanketed much

of the state today but was forecast to end late this afternoon. Greenville Utilities reported nearly an inch of rain had fallen as of 7 a.m. this morning. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forest)    (

Shuttle Gets An Extra Day For Its Research

By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace Writer

SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - The Columbia-Spacelab astronauts, winding down a successful science mission, received the official green light today to stay in space an extra day to do more research and to snap hundreds of sight-seeing photographs.

The space shuttle will land Thursday at Edwards Air Force Base in the California desert.

Mission Control made the

decision after assessing that a storm front moving in from the Pacific would be clear of the Edwards area at the planned touchdown at 7; 58 a.m. Pacific time. There had been some concern the front would stall and force a Wednesday return.

The weather is going to be a close call, flight director John Cox had said early today.

Ground officials earlier had given a tentative go-ahead to extend the flight from nine to 10 days, de

pendent on the weather.

The astronaut-scientists, meanwhile, continued their round-the-clock science and technology research in the billion-dollar, European-built (Please turn to Page 8)

County Saves Money In Work Program

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The community work experience program - CWEP - operated by the Pitt County Department of Social Services is sAving the county mgney, DirecUnr of Social Services Ed Garrismi told the Board of County Com-missioners Monday.

Garrison, reminding the hoard that Pitt is one of seven counties in the state participating in the de

monstration program, said that for the July-August-September quarter, CWEP, also known as workfare, saved the county $34,000.

Since the program began in July 1982, 279 people fwrmerly receiving financial assistance have been placed in jobs after receiving on-the-job training and work experience with public and non-profit agencies in the county. The retention rate f(MT people placed in jobs.

Garrison said, is 85 percent.

It is not a lucrative program as far as federal participation is concerned, Garrison said. But he suggested that, through training gained under CWEP, welfare recipients can become taXii ring citizens and con-ite to the community. According to a Department of Human Resources report on CWEP activities, Pitt County is leading the other six counties - Ashe,

Caldwell, Davidson, Moore, Nash and Rowan - in participation and success.

The report showed that the 176 persons actively participating in CWEP in Pitt during the quarter which ended Sept. 30 worked a total of 6,237 hours with public and non-profit agencies as part of their work training.

Since July of 1982, the 1,135 participnts have worked a total of 32,005 hours.

Garrison set the value of

the community service work performed by CWEP participants at $107,000.

The 499 active prticipants in the other six counties worked a total of 15,953 hours, while for the entire program period, the 2,144 participants in the other counties worked a total of 64,867 hours.

Of the total number of participants in the otner counties, 638 have been (Please turn to Page 8)

WEATHER

Some showers earl\ tonight followed by clearing: low iti upper ;iOs. Partly c 10 u d y U e d n e s d a y. bree/y. temperatures in low jOs.

Looking Aheod

Fair Thursday and Friday with highs in .'>0s: chance of showers Saturday, again in .it)s. Lows Thursday will sink into 20s and ip, the ;is Friday and Saturday.

Inside Reading

Page 7 .Area items Page S Obituaries Page 12 Poor Steinbeck





2 Th Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C._Tueaday.    Dtwjtnbef    6,1963

Lon;-^ ear Eye Liner .

* IN THE EYES OF THE BEHELD - Dr. Giora G. Angres points out the results of his eye liner implant surgery on Christine Whitney, who had the procedure done a year ago. The patented microsurgical oper,ation, done with local anesthesia, involves implant

ing pigment into the second layer of skin at the base of the eyelashes. Angres, chief of surgery and opthamology at North Las Vegas Hospital, says the liner will last 10 years or longer. (AP Laserphoto)

Worlds Yulelide Fare

By TOM HOGE AP W ine and Food W riter

many food writers, Christmas is the signal for eulogizing roast turkey and the trimmings. We occasionally pay tribute to the yuletide roast goose of England, and that's about it.

This year, I have been browsing through foreign cookbooks to see how the yule is celebrated abroad and have made some interesting discoveries. In many countries Christmas Eve is as big an occasion tor feasting as the Big Day, and many omit turkey on both occasions.

In Germany, which is rich in game, many cooks build the holiday feast around a wild boar or saddle of venison, especially if there is a hunter in the family. The Germans also have a lavish supper the night before Christmas, usually omitting meat and serving carp or some other fish instead.

In Poland. Christmas Eve is a festive day, with the meal running 12 courses in many homes, to symbolize the Apostles. As in Germany, the Poles avoid meat the night before Christmas with the accent on fish. Herring salad and stuffed pike

GARFIELD

usually lead off the feast, followed by a large fish, baked or fried and accompanied by sauerkraut or cabbage-stuffed dumplings.

In provincial France, Christmas Eve is also a

114 E. 5th St.

time-honored event.. In the Mediterranean region of Provence, the, main dish is usually eel, baked on a layer of chopped leeks moistened with white wine and flavored with garlic, bay leaves and black olives.

In Scandiriavia, where December is the bleak time of year when nights are longest, Christmas is pn an-tidote tor the gloom. Christmas Eve is the most lavish meal of the year in most homes, but most Scandinavians keep feasting right on through Christmas Day.

In Sweden, for instance, they usher in the yule with a ham and red cabbage that is deliciously flavored. This is accompanied by many side dishes in this land of smorgasbord, such as liver paste, spareribs, spicy sausage and pickled herring. A high point of the meal comes when everyone dips bits of rye bread into the pot of broth in which the ham and sausages were boiled. Heres a recipe for the Swedish red cabbage, called Rodkaal.

1 medium head red cabbage,

about 24 pounds

4 tablespoons butter, in small pieces

1 tablespoon sugar

1 teaspoon salt

l-3rd cup water ^

l-3rd cup white vinegar

i cup currant jelly

2 tablespoons grated apple

Wash cabbage in cold water, remove tough outer leaves and cut head in half, top to bottom. Lay flat sides down on chopping board, cut away core and slice cabbage finely. Combine butter, sugar, salt, water and vinegar in 5-quart casserole, preferably stainless steel.

CHRISTMAS TOUR of LIBERTY HALL

December 18 from Greenville

$10.00

Christinas open house touring plantation home of Owen Rand & Sarah Graham Kenan in Kenansville, N.C.

See this ancestral home restored to its original simple elegance all aglow with Christmas of the 1800's.

Call:

<3/ QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.

1    319 Cotanche St.

Greenville, N.C. 27834 ^    Phone mmU

When mixture comes to boil and., butter has melted, add shredded cabbage and toss well. Bring to boil again, cover and cook in 325-degree oven 2 hours. If cabbage becomes dry, add water. About 10 minutes before vegetable is done, add jelly and grated apple. Replace cover and complete cooking. Serve hot with the roast.

(To obtain other recipes, taken mostly from Tom Hoges Gourmet Corner over the past years, send $2 for your copy of 101 Recipes to Gourmet Corner. AP Newsfeatures, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10020.)

Forced Heirship In State Of Louisiana

By Abigail Van Buren . ,

1963 by Univwul PraM Syndicbtt

DEAR ABBY: In response to Heartbroken Mother, who had a decision to make concerning how her estate should be divided among her children, you respmided with the question: Where is it written that children should automatically get what their parents have worked and saved for?

The answer is: In the Constitution of the state of Louisiana. Abby, Louisiana is the only state in the United States that has what is known as forced heirship. It's 25 percent to 50 percentdepending on the number of childrenof the deceased parents estate, irrespective of whether the children are deserving, or - whether it was the wish of the parent to exclude a child from the inheritance.    ^

The majority of Louisiana residents are not aware of this law. You would be doing the people of Louisiana a great service if you would print this letter and make them aware of this archaic and unjust law in order for them to take action through their legislators and correct this injustice.

STUCK IN LOUISIANA

DEAR STUCK: If anyone living in the state of Louisiana wishes to chaUenge this so-called archaic and unjust law, I recommend that he/she retain a Louisiana attorney and go to work on it. I have an agreement with the Louisiana Bar Associationits members dont write advice columns and I dont practice law.

DEAR ABBY: Being a single girl, I am at a loss as to how to graciously turn down a date. There are some men whom I choose not to date for one reason or another, but I cant think of a polite way of saying, Thanks, but no thanks without hurting their feelings.

If I say, Im busy next Saturday night, they ask for Sunday, or Monday, or Tuesday, and I have to lie again. And when I say Im busy on all those dates, I am asked when my rst fm evening is, and then I am stuck!

Abby, can you, or any of your readers, suggest a polite way to decline without hurting a mans feelings? -

THANKS, BUT'NO THANKS

DEAR THANKS: Although it would save him a lot of time and repeated turndowns, its not easy to tell a man that you dont want to go out with him next Saturday, Sunday, Monday or ever, without hurting 'hmS fcclsngc.    

Gentlemen? Ladies? Heres a tough one for you, and I welcome your suggestions.

stolen I listed a pair diamond earrings valued at $3,^.

My insurance cmnpany reimbnrsed me for the earrings and I replaced than with a similar pair.

A few days ago I discovered my stolen earrings in an evening Img I seldom use. What should I do now?

MIXED EMOTIONS

DEAR MIXED: Inform your insurance company immediately that the earrings you thou^t were stolen were only misplaced. And be prepared to return the $3,600.

(If youre single and want to know how to meet someone decent, see page 20 of Abbys bookie^ How to Be Popular. Send $2, phu a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed mvelcqm to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, CaUf. 90038.)

Sams Lock 1 Key Shoppe

SmnVMiHiMFirlkdWUiyi

(DedboltolO%Off)

Looking For A Gmt Gift GhmAGiftCcrtificata (OffirGoedThnFtt,OK.2S)

1804 Dickinson Ave. (Across Froni Pepsi Plant GrcenvUlc 757-0075 (24Hr.ScrMce)

Births

Buck

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Glen Buck, Shady Knoll Lot 176, a dau^ter, Tonya Deanna, on Nov. 23, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Bradley Born to Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Lane Bradley, Winterville, twin dai^ters, Krisan Denise and Kristan Michele, on Nov. 24,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

PnSBUKiH

PAINTS

THEFAWTCENTE8

600 Arlington Boulevard Carpstt t In-Stock Wallpaper 756-7611

DEAR ABBY: Four years ago our home was burglarized. Fortunately, we were insured. Among the items that were

Bridal

Policy

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

LAUTARES JEWELERS, INC.

Professional Jewelers Established 1912

Resetting, Repairing and Custom Design All Work Done on Premises

414 Evans Street Registered Jewelers, Certified Gemologist

PUBLIC SALE NOTICE

Wed., Dec. 7 & Thurs., Dec. 8 10 A.M. .8 P.M.

We must sell 75 lans and 45 kerosene heaters. Fans are less than price, example 52 fan list price S139.95. Sale price S49.95, All fans less than '. price.

Kerosene heaters list price S249.95. sale price S99 95 All kerosene

healer-., less than . price. Lavaways. M.istnrc.uu vis.i. i..dsh .i'n" Checks accepted. Sale is held at below location.

Ramada Inn 264 Bypass, Room 199

Wed.. Dec 7 & Thurs . Dec. 8 10A.WI.-8P.M.

Salvation Anny Receives

Over $400 was contributed to The Salvation Army Sunday afternoon during its annual doll show and tea. The show is sponsored by the Salvation Army Womens Auxiliary.

The decorating theme for this year was Its A Small Small World.

Decorating winners were: ladies of East Wright Road with an international theme, first; Black Jack Cadel Girl Scout Troop No. 162. Their theme was football cheerleaders, second; and Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, third.

Rub a freshly-husked corn cob with a wet paper towel to remove sticky corn silk easily.

r"jwpV"j

"I hav iMtt calltd" was what one . sacraUry tald...l wat (hare in 20 * I mlnutaa time to repair her IBM | I typewriter. 355.2723    |

I cut and place on typawritar |

CIEM VIE OFIRIMIS

'snot/isf hefricxigh hatocunts.

CHRETMAS SHOP THE BEST FOR 20-50% LESS

40%

Off

All

Designer

Frames

30%

o

All Other Frames

30%

Off

Ray Ban Sunglasses

Prictt Good Thru Dec. 31.1983

OREENVNIE STORE ONLY

ItttaMMCaatMM

AciMiFiMDietonPiit

0p6alAM.4:Nr.N.ll6n.-Fil. Mdiar KMtoy Nimliti OpMM

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Befexe vou spend a ton of money on 'the thought 1tx3t counts", shop W. S. Qork. We offer you o brond new shopping concept thot lets you sove up to 50% on brond nome clothing. Arid tor beoutifd fashions in slyie right new! So befoie you spend too much money on fcrnous brand norne lingerie, blouses, evenhg wea; slocks, shir1s,jockels, shoes ond children's weCT, spend sometime otW.S.Cfark.And counton gMng o whole lot more tl^ o thought, Merfs,WomentS8t Chldienf3 Fashions

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_TheBeslforifiss

Historic Downtown Tartxxo Phone 823-2101

Operi ir 9PM Monday throucri Frid^ unW 5:30PM Soluday, December 6-23.





A Picasso Backdrop

FASHION RETROSPECTIVE - A mannequin    Museum of Art in New    York Monday. A

wears a three-piece toreador outfit, part of a    Picasso painting is the    backdrop for this^

major retrospective of designer Yves Saint    exhibit.(APLaserphoto)

LdiiieniS wOfk On display the M Opoiitan *

Managing Events Is Big Job

By JAMESE. WALTERS Associated Press Writer TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -Miriam Boegle, who is in charge of an operation with a $7.2-million annual budget, says being a woman boss with many male employees doesnt pose a problem -and shouldnt.

She says she has found that "for the most part its a matter of getting a job done - professionals working with professionals.

Youhave a handful of people in a lifetime you work for, she told a reporter. I can look back at my former bosses, and I can look at problems and things that were good.

But it wasnt at all related to whether they were men or women. It was strength or weakness, or characteristics they had as individuals.

So the woman-man thing just falls right in with the various characteristics as individuals, and to my mind, thats what makes a person hard or easy to work for.

She said she was pleased to see more women assuming executive roles.

At the age of 38, she is assistant vice president for public events at Arizona State University, a job she has held since 1979.

Her management responsibilities range from Gammage Center for the Performing Arts, designed by Frank Llovd Wright and internationally recognized for its acoustics, to Sun Devil Stadium, which seats some 70,000 for football.

She feels her own job probably is easier since she specializes in the enter

tainment field: The entertainment field historically has been color-blind, race-blind, sex-blind. Its what you do as a performer that counts.

The nuances are there at all kinds of levels, of course, she said. Actually, it makes it interesting. I think men dealing only with men, or women dealing only with women, or one race dealing with one race, is, well, sort of boring.

She doesnt decide on opponents for athletes - the Athletic Department does that - but she does manage the sports facilities and makes the decision on performers such as the San Francisco Symphony, country singer John Denver, the Newport Jazz Festival All Stars, the Dance Theater of Harlem or rock stars The Who.

We can do pretty much what we want to, as long as we remain self-sufficient, she said.

She and her staff must be doing something right, as attested to by the box office receipts - much of them from the Phoenix area general public - and the autographed pictures from stars that fill an entire wall of her spacious office in Gammage.

Arizona State, with the nations sixth largest enrollment, is not isolated like many college campuses but is located near the heart

CENTUfiV 21

Tipton & Associates 756-6810

Birth

Cooking Is Fun

The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor A few ctecades ago, two food entrepreneurs in Oi^on started a new trend. They made a round, fairly shaUow fruitcake of candied fruit and whole nuts with the merest lacing of batter.

Eventually, an acqi^tance of mine - the distinguished director of a large test kitchen -copycatted the'recipe for home use. It has been in my files ever since.

Tbi.i year a friend of mine asked to borrow the copycat recipe so she could try it with whole macadamia nuts and update it. She did just that and sent me a sample. I think devotees of macadamias will be pleased with this confection.

MACADAMIA FRUITCAKE \2 cup unbleached all-purpose flour

/2 teaspoon baking powder '.2 teaspoon salt 1/8 teaspoon ground allspice 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg l-3rd cup butter, cut up or at room temperature 3 tablespoons firmly packed light brown sugar 3 tablespoons honey 2 large eggs

2 tablespoons orange juice 1 cup (7 ounces) candied cherries 1 cup (7 ounces) candied pineapple chunks h cup (6 ounces) candied orange peel, finely cut i cup (6 ounces) candied lemon peel, finely cut 31^ cups (16 ounces) salted macadamia nuts Grease a round layer cake pan (8 by Vz inches). Line bottom with wax paper and grease paper.

On another sheet of wax paper or in a small bowl thoroughly stir togethfer the flour, baking powder, salt, allspice and nutmeg.

In a large bowl cream the butter and brown sugar. Beat in the honey until blended. Beat in

Ayden News

of the metropolitan Phoenix area.

"We have the facilities to provide the highest quality not only for students but for folks who want to see a Broadway musical, say, and can afford a $19.50 ticket, she said.

As a student at the University of Wisconsin, she dreamed of being on the stage as a major-leaguer in music.

But I wasnt good enough for a career as a performer. Theres only a handful of people who are. About that time I became impressed with the fact there werent too many people who could do administrative type of work either, she said.

And while the great performers need to be heard theyre not going to be heard unless they have people such as our staff giving them the opportunity.

She says a good staff is an absolute necessity in making sure the entertainers will fill a facilitv.

McKinney Born to Mr. and Mrs. Heyward Harold McKinney Jr., 1312 Fantasia St., a daughter, Alleen Harriett, on Nov. 25,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. J.L. Hulham were local visitors during the weekend.

Johnnie Beland has returned home from Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Harry Stillman has returned home from Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Doug Allen, Beulah Allen and Helen A. Hall of Chareslton,. S.C. spent Thursday with Mrs. Earl Stokes.

Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Martin of Haw River were local visitors during the week.

The Rev. and Mrs. Hal Edwards Jr. and family of Chicago, 111., Lt. Col. and Mrs. Tommy Edwards and family of Kentucky, the Rev. Kemp Edwards of Japan mission field, William Edwards and Marjorie Dielenger and children of Chapel Hill were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hal Edwards Sr., who celebrated their 50th anniversary.

Mr. and Mrs. Hal Edwards entertained his sisters, inlaws and cousins recently at a family reunion held at their home.

^ All Framing

20%

Now Until Christmas

f Galler

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White's Education Department placed orders in anticipation ol previous year sales. Due to budget cuts these sales were unclaimed. These machines must be sold' All machines ottered are the most modern machines m the White line. These machines are MADE OF METAL and sew on all fabrics: Levis, canvas, upholstery, nylon, stretch, vmyl. silk. EVEN SEW ON LEATHER' These machines aie new with 20 year warranty. With ttie new 19H3 White 1066 machine, you )ust set the color-coded dial and see magic happen; straight sewing. ?igag. trutton holes lany si/e). Invisible blindhem. monogram, satin stitch embroidery, appligue, sew on buttons and snaps topstitch elastic stitch straight stretch stitch ..all of this and more, without the need ol old fashioned cams oi uroqiammers. Your price with this ad, S199. Without this ,id. S529 Special Scissors Sharpened lot 50 a pair Layawiiys Mastercard. Visa and Checks accepted.

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Place: Ramada Inn, 264 Bypass. Rm. 199. 756-2792 Two Days Only: Wed.. Dec. 7 & Thurs. Dec. 8 10A.M.-8P.M.

the egK, one at a time, until blendd each time. Stir in one-third of the flour mixture and then 1 tablespoon of the orange juice; r^t, ending with the flour, ^read l-3rd of the batter over the bottom of the jffepared pan.

Reserve some cherries for a tarnish. Into the batter in the wwl, stir in remaining cherries, pineai^le, orange peel, lemon peel and macadamias. Spoon over batter already in the pan. With a small spatula level the top. Decorate with the reserved cherries, pressing down firmly. Cover with greased foil.

Place in a larger baking pan containing ^-inch hot water. Bake in a preheated SOOnlegree oven for 1 hour. Remove from water bath. Continue baking until cake is firm - about 1 hour longer. Place on a wire rack for 10 minutes. With a small metal spatula loosen edge; turn out on

When Prof. Irwin Corey wore gym shoes with a tuxedo, little did he know he was 30 years ahead of his time.

When there was a transit strike in New York, women, faced with walking long distances, wore tennis shoes to work. That was several years ago.

rack; with another rack turn right side up. Cool completely. Store in a ^'ghdv mvprpd pnn-tainer. If desired, brush with a glaze before serving.

Makes one 2^4-pound cake.

Theyre still wearing tham.

Tennis shoes have become a shoe for all seasons.

Frankly, I never thought Id accompany my husband to a formal wedding where the stars on his shoes matched the grooms tie.

I was going out with my son the other night when he looked at my shoes.

Where do you think youre going in those tennis shoes?

Whats the matter with them? I asked.

Nothing if youre shooting baskets in them. You gojight upstairs and change them this minute.

"But everybody elses kids let them wear gym shoes.

I m not everybody else skid, he said. Go! "But theyre comfortable. I said stubbornly.

"Of course they are, but they re not supposed to be worn 24 hours out of every day. Youll ruin your feet.

Tuesday, DecemberB, 1983    3

How?

Theyll spread all over and besides, you dont get enough support out of them.

Do too! Look at these arches.

Look, he smiled condescendingly, listen to your son. I know about these things. I was young once. Theres a place for good shoes to be worn and theres a place for play shoes to be worn. Now go change.

Dad wears tennis shoes everywhere.

Of course he does, he said, which is why you must set the example. After all, youre 26 days older than he is.

Well, were just going to the movie and whos going to notice my feet anyway?

Ill notice, he said. "Now be a good person and go change them.

As I stomped up the stairs, I felt a haunting chill come over me that usually accompanies deja vu. Had I heard this entire conversation 20 years ago? I yelled down the stairs, Why dont you want me to bC/happy?

Eastern

Electrolysis

133 OAKMONT drive. SUITE 6 PHONE 7564034, GREENVILLE, NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST

FRUITCAKE CONFECTION - It is made with whole macadamia nuts and candied fruit and the merest lacing of batter.

Haddock-Nobles Vows Spoken

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Rouse Jr. of Greenville, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Rouse of Grifton and Amanda Haddock of Greenville announce the marriage of their parents, Elaine Nobles and Roger Haddock on Saturday.

Mrs. Haddock is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Manning Nobles of Ayden. She is employed by Wachovia and Trust Co. in Greenville. Her husband is the son of Mrs. May belle Haddock of Greenville and the late Robert Haddock. He is a Pitt County farmer and owner of Roger Haddock Construction Co. ip Greenville.

The couple will live near Greenville.

Women's Agiow Fellowship

December 10. 1983 Place:    Holiday Inn    Call    For    Reservations

Breakfast:    9:30 a.m.    By    Thurs.

Meeting:    10:00 a.m.    756-2212    Or 752-7950

Cost:    $3.00    Please Come & Bring A Fnend!

ANN walker

Ann was born in North Carolina, but later move'dlo St, Louis, Missouri with her family It was in Missouri that she met her husband-to-be, Frank, who was a Marine Once married, the Marine Corp took them to many different places which they called home, but for the past eight years they have lived in Jacksonville, N C, Frank is now retired from the Marine Corp and is in the insurance business Frank and Ann have one daughtei, Beverly, nineteen'years old. They-are members of Queens Creek United Methodist Church

Ann has been in Aglow for six years and has served as treasurer for the Area Board for the past four years.

Ann has a desire to see God's people free and walking la abundant life, regardless of the circumstances which surround them She is very sensitive to the voice of God and teaches the Word with boldness.

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4 Th Dally Reflector, Qfeenvllle, N.C.

/^Tuesday, DecwnberS, 1963

Editorials

Paul OXonnorLittle Has Changed

We read that results of North Carolinas adopting the mixed-drink sales measure didnt match supporters predictions and failed to match the oppositions predictions. It should be no surprise.

Rarely does any legislation passed in the heat of debate match extravagant views of the debating sides.

For instance, supporters said mixed drinks would bring in billions of dollars in tax revenue. There was some revenue attributable to the measure; but not even close to those rosy estimates fed the public.

And while some travel industry businesses undoubtedly had their attention drawn by the then-new N.C. legislation, demographics and geographic potentials of the area were primary factors to a spokesman of a Dallas-based restaurant chajn which has opened in four North Carolina cities in the past five years.

Opponents said mixed drinks would lead to a severe increase in drunken-driving accidents; but state officials say that has not hapj^ned. Instead, a tougher view of driving-while-impaired is a matter of record.

Weve looked at it from several different measures at several different points in time, said J. Richard Stewart, a researcher at the<^N.C. Highway Safety Research Center. Overall, there have been no major changes (since the advent of mixed drinks) either way. Things are generally the same.

Its well to remember these things when people get carried away with their arguments pro and con over any legislative changes. They do tend to exaggerate.Sense Of Sadness

It is regrettable, indeed, when a high government official is convicted of any crime.

It happpens, and the latest to be convicted is Rita Lavalle on charges of perjury and obstructing an investigation into the management of the nations toxic waste cleanup program. It is expected that the conviction will be appealed.

Miss Lavelle had been an official with the Environment Protection Agency who was fired by the president.

If the conviction holds up through the appeals, process. Miss Lavelle will eventually pay the penalty.

The conviction will not change the course of the nation, nor even that of the Reagan administration. It only leaves us all with a sense of sadness that one government official could have let us down.

State Attractmg Foreign Investments

James Kilpatrick

Soft Justice

WASHI.NGTON - .No one at the Department of Justice wants to say much about it. but top officials are fuming at what they regard as an appalling decision by a softhearted federal judge in Los .Angeles, They regard the incident as symptomatic of the kind of jurisprdence that makes a cop turn gray.

This particular case involves a convicted racketeer and mobster by the name of Louis Tom Dragna. The story goes back at least five years, to the time the Justice Departments Organized Crime Strike Force went to work on the Los Angeles family of the Mafia.

It was a difficult and dangerous investigation. Los Angeles is the. acknowledged center of the sordid traffic in pornographic films and publications. Members of the Strike Force were dealing with such figures as Dominic Brooklier, whose record shows convictions for armed robbery and extortion, and Samuel Sciortino, who boasted of his involvement in 20 murders.

Early in 1980 the several defendants were indicted for attempting to shake down various pornographers in Southern California. The FBI had set up a fake company, Forex, to deal in obscene films, and this undercover operation helped to make the case. A confessed hit man named Aladena "Jimmy the Weasel Fra-

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 CoUnctM StrMt, Qranviiie. N.C. 27834

E*labliahdl882 PuMlthad Monday Through Friday Aftarnoon and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHARO Chairman of tha Board

JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publlahars

Sacond Claaa Poalaga Paid at Oraanvlllo. N.C. (USPS14M00)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payabla In Advanca Homa OalWary By Carrlar or Motor Routa Monthly $4.00 MAIL RATES (PrtcM Induda lax whar* ippUcdKa) pm And Adlolning Countlaa $4.00 Par Month

Elaawhara In North Carolina $4.39 Par Month Outaida North Carolina $5.90 Par Month MEMBER OF ASSOCIATCD PKBSS Tha Aaaoclatad Praaa la axcluaWaty antltlad to uaa tor publication all nawa dlapatchaa cradHad to It or not otharwlaa cradHod to this papar and also tha local nawa publlshad haraln. All rights of publications ot spaclal diapatchas haro ara also rasarvad.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Adsartlaing ratas and daadllnas avallabla upon ragussl.

Mambar Audit Buraau of Circulation

SL

T

tianno turned states evidence.

In November 1980, after a seven-week jury trial, five of the mobsters were convicted of charges under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. By this time thousands of man-hours and hundreds of thousands of dollars bad been invested in the case. Look what happened: Brooklier, identified as the boss of the Mafia family, was sentenced to four years. Sciortino suffered the same slap on the wrist. Michael Rizzitello, who had four prior convictions for.robbery, kidnapping and fraud, got five years Jack LoCicero, identified as a Mafia figure for 32 years, got two years.

During the period covered by the indictment, the acting mob boss was Louis Tom Dragna. He is now 63. His father and his uncle have been identified as top-ranking figures in the Los Angeles family. Though Dragna has no record of prior convictions, his involvement as acting boss of the pornography extortion racket was abundantly proved to the jury.

But federal Judge Terry J. Hatter Jr., a Carter appointee to the bench in 1980, formed the opinion that Dragna was genteel. The judge thought Dragna had been drawn into the conspiracy out of a sense of family loyalty. The judge saw Dragna as no more than a little old man trying to make a living in the dressmaking business. So Judge Hatter imposed a sentence of only two years and let the defendant go free on bail while the case was appealed.

To cut a long story short, the convictions were affirmed in September 1982. Months rolled by. In August of 1983 the Bureau of Prisons said Dragna would begin his sentence at a medium-security penal institution in Seagoville, Texas. Judge Hatter could not stand the thought of this genteel person in such bad company. He announced publicly that unless the bureau assigned Dragna to a level one institution a treatment center without walls or armed guards he would reduce the token sentence.

On Oct. 17, Judge Hatter did exactly that: He cut Dragnas sentence to one year in a community center.

The policemans lot is not a happy one. Stories like this story tell us why. According to a Justice Department survey released last week, in one unidentified Western state in a recent 12-month period, only eight of every 100 persons arrested on felony charges were actually prosecuted. Of those eight, only five were convicted. Of those five, only two went to prison, and one of tbe two went to prison for less than a year. The wonaer is that cops keep working at all.

Cimyright 1^ Universal Press Syndicate    ,    ,

R^IGH - Nwlh Carolina is aijoy-ing a banner year for the recruitment of f(H%ign indush7, the director of the International Division of the Department of Commerce reports. ^

James R. Hinkle writes in the November issue of North Carolina" magazine, the official publication of the N.C. Citizens for Business and Industry, that new international investment in the state this year should reach $220 million. That would eclipse the state record of $206.2 million set in 1979.

As of the end of September, 18 foreign companies had announced $206 million worUi of investment in new and expand^ business and industrial facilities this year, ^en Gov. Jim Hunt returned from Europe in November, he announced four more foreign investments which amounted to about $17 million.

This years figures represent a dramatic improvement over 1982 when $127.5 million was invested in the state by

fweign industries and businesses. Hinkle saw a silva* lining even in 1982s gray cloud, however. ()f the 88 new f(M*ei^ investmoits made in the entire United States that year, 22 were in North Carolina. In all, 33 foreign firms either came to the state for the first time in 1982 (H* expanded their operations here.

In one area of foreign investment, Hinkle does not expect North Carolina to be a national leader. That investment comes when a foreign firm either buys out an American firm or its, parent company. Speaking of Northern states like New York and Pennsylvania, he said there are many, many more companies there for sale. In North Carolina, there are fewer and fewer companies that are willing to sell.

England has traditionally led all foreign countries in the amount of money invested in the state. According to figures compiled by the Commerce

Department, it continues to do so after l^s announcements are added. Next comes West Germany, then Japan, Canada and Hcdland. (The Conunerce figures, however, do not include investment made bdore Hunt to(A office in 1977.) Fot the 10 years prior to 1977, Hinkle says, there was little foreign investment in the state, only about ^ milliOTiyear.)

Hinkle says that the major story in those rankings is Japan. Uhtil a few years ago, the Japanese had made little investment in the state. It was almost nil, he says. They had previously concentratal their investments on the west coast." But several years ago the Japanese, for a number of reasons, b^n locating new investments in the east and especially in the Southeast.

Japan was certainly the biggest investor this year. Three announcements made this summer alone amounted to $79 millimi in new investment.

Hinkle says that the grat number of new foreign firms operating in tbe s^te portends a great deal d expansin in the next decade. NOTth Carolina has a lai*ge new base (of foreign-owned firms) hire beina formed that really hasnt had t^e to do the expansion ... Theyre jpst getting started up. Tliis $824 milli( j(in new mvestments since 1977) - I would expect that in the next 10 years will probably add another billi(Hi dollarsiof expanded facilities if the normal coitfse of events takes place. __________

With all of this new investment, the question still remains as to whetho* m new jobs are being created for North Carolinians. According to the Commerce Department, this years foreign investments will create 3,050 new jobs in the state and the total of all foreign investment since 1977 has meant 16,229 new jobs. Some of those jobs have not come on line yet, however.

' 1V

Public Forum

To the editor:

I am upset and disappointed with the actions taken by the city of Greenville regarding the flags flying over the Town Commons. I am especially concerned over the apparent decision to remove two flags which were freely donated to the city by the Pitt County Historical Society.

One of these flags, known as the Confederate Battle Flag, is recognized as the flag of the Confederate States of America. While it was not adopted as a national flag, it was officially designated as the Battle Flag of the Confederate Army after the first Battle of Bull Run, and was the flag carried into battle for the remainder of the war. This flag has kept its distinction through the years and appears countless times in Civil War literature and memorabilia. It is even incorporated into the state flags of Georgia and Mississippi. It also appears on thousands of Confederate monuments scattered throughout the South, including the one on the couithouse lawn in Greenville.

The flag which will be the replacement for the Battle Flag is commonly known as the Stars and Bars. It was adopted by the Confederate Congress in March 1861, before North Carolina seceded from the Union. It was later replaced by a new flag incorporating the Battle Flag in the upper left hand corner on a field of white. Neither of these two national flags approaches the historical significance of the Battle Flag.

The history of our county, state and country make up our heritage which we, as Southerners, all share. Our forefathers, through their courage on the battlefields; the hardships they endured and the monuments they inspired, showed the devotion they felt toward the flag they had fou^t for. I urge the citizens of Greenville to contact the mayor and City Council members to ask that the Battle Flag be restored to its proper place with the other flags of

history flying over the Town Commons. Charles B. Moye 44 Barnes St.

Greenville

To the editor;

I would like to address this letter to the people whose dog I hit Monday morning at5a.m.

Dear Dog owner:

You apparently dont realize that Greenville has a leash law which forbids you" to let your dog run around in-discriminantly. When I hit your dog, it was standing in the middle of the street. Fortunately, T didnt kill it, but its broken leg and whimpers of pain as it crawled away didnt make me feel very happy about your lack of care for your pet. If you tnily loved your pet, you would accept the responsibility that goes along

with owning one; that means looking after its welfare, not pushing it out the door at dark like a piece of trash.

I called the Police Department, since they are in charge of animal control, but they wre unable to find your dog. That means your pet had to wander around with broken bones from 5 a.m. until you got up to go to work. Can you imagine what it might feel like to wander around, unaided, for several hours with a severely broken leg?

I called animal control later in the morning to ask about the leash laws. A very polite, concerned woman gave me some facts that might interest you for monetary reasons, since your pets life apparently isnt a good enough reason for you to keep track of where you pet is. If your dog is found, there will Ik a $10 pickup fee and you will be issued a warning citation this is if your dog has

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

The word gregarious means the disposition of people to get together with their fellows and not habitually to live a life of solitary isolation. The word comes from a Greek term which means to gather together.

Nothing is more productive of unhappiness than a complete lack of the gregarious instinct. The solitary man or woman leads a patlietic and miserable life.

But gregariousness also has its dangers. One can easily be

swayed by the ideals of the crowd if he has a pronounced liking for that crowd. The gregarious person seldom makes strong protest against evils in his environment.

Furthermore, the gregarious person is always being prodded to be popular. If he is in politics, the gregarious instinct is a great asset. Quite likely he can see his influence over other people increase. But in this very process, gregariousness may also lead to compromise and a persistent moral anemia.

tags (which yours does not). If your di^ is picked up a second time, there will be a $15 pickup fee, plus a $15 citation, plus a $5 fine for each tag your dog is missing. Of course, if the dog has no tags, it would be put up for adoption after seven days. If not adopted, it will be put to sleep.

To leave you with a final question^ if 70U dont care enough for your dog to ook after it, why did you get it in the first place?    ;

Larry Beilis    -

1205 E. Wright Road    '    ^

Greenville    *

To the editor:    

1 feel 1 must respond to Mr. CharleyG. Clarks letter appearing in the Nov.29, 1983, issue of 'The    Daily    Reflector.    Mr.

Clarks letter dealt    with    the    cost    of the

new holiday in memory of Dr. Martin Luther King.    ;

Let me preface my remarks by stating that my personal beliefs concerning ftiis holiday are now, and will remain private, but logic demands revenge.    '

Mr. Clark states that according; to figures available to him, the new holi^y will cost... a staggering $5.26 billion... . I accept Mr. Clarks figures, and agnee, the amount is indeed staggering.    ;

But, if I read the information correctly, doesnt this cost apply to ANY hohc^y, not just the one for Dr. King? In otfier words, doesnt Thanksgiving cost $5.26 billion? Doesnt Washingtons birthday cost a staggering $5.26 billion?    :

If the costs apply across the boird, lets do away with aU holidays. (Jjust think how happy Thanksgiving tuikeys would be.) If K costs Krtain only to Dr. Kings holiday, I question their valicDty. The merits of Dr. Kings holiday MUST be argued using terms other than mofiey. I am sure the cost argumenflias noting to do with Dr. Kings race...

Richard D.Kiernan 301 Courtney Place Greenville

W, Dale Nelson

Congress Set A Record Of Sorts

WASHINGTON (AP) Baseball fans who store away such nuggets of information as the record for most home runs in the first game of a World Series have nothing on Congress-watchers.

How about most measures reported out of committee in a first session of Congress since 1979?

For what its worth, the Democratic Study Group, an organization of liberal House Democrats, says the recently completed first session of the 98th Congress achieved that distinction.

As a matter of fact, the lawmakers also passed more bills and resolutions than they had in any odd-numherl year since

1979.

Both records have been eclipsed in the intervening even-numbered years, when Congress holds its second sessions and customarily passes more measures than in the first sessions.

So if history is a guicte, the 611 that were passed by the House and the 590 by the Innate in tbe session that ended Nov. 18 will be not^ to what ie lawmakers accomplish, in quantity anyway, after they return Jan. 23.

The Democratic group says the Houses record for this year was 178 more than were passed in the first ^ion of the last Congress, but 55 shy of

tbe 652 passed in the first session of tbe 96th Congress in 1979.

The Senates output exceeded its 1981 maik by 103 measures but was 62 fewer than the 652 that the Senate cleared in 1979.

Fewer measures were approved by the committees than by the full House and Soiate, because some minor resolutions such as those declaring national doughnut day and the like do not require committee action.

For the recOT*d, House committees reported out 497 measures this year, compared with 336 in 1981 and 614 in 1979. Senate fcommi^tees approved 570

measures this year, 460 in 1981 and 614 in the first session of the 96th Congress.

When Israeli IMme Minister Yitshak Shamir visited the Capitol, the announcement said the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the Senate Armed Services Committee, the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the House Armed Services Committee would meet with him in Room S-116of tbe Ca{Htol.

Now, Senate Armed Services has 18 members, Fweign Relations 17, House Armed Services 45 and Foreign Affairs 37. That adds up to 117 people in a room that will seat about a third that many with some squeezing.





FOCUS

as

Santa the Turk

Today is the festival of St. Nicholas, the figure on whom the modern Santa Claus is based. St. Nicholas was the Bishop of Myra who, in the fourth century, presided in a region that is now Turkey. In eastern nations, St, Nick is the patron saint of sailors. In the West children are his special concern. St. Nicholas was the patron saint of Russia before the 1917 Revolution. Northern Europeans began the tradition of giving gifts in his name.

DO YOU KPOW - Who wrote the poem A Visit From St. Nicholas?

MONDAYS ANSWER - Nevada has the highest per capita consumption of aicohoi.

12-6-8;t    Kndwledtte InHustrie.s, Inc.

Seven Charged In Arson Cases

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Seven p^ple, including a Seagate firefighter, have been charged with setting five fires, and more arrestes are expected, authorities say. -

New Hanover County Sheriff Josephy McQueen, who announced the arrests on Monday at a news conference, said the investiga* tion will continue until we are satisfied all arsonists in the Seagate area are caught.

More than 35 suspicious fires have hit the Seagate * fire district in the past two years, McQueen said. Seagate is a. small town lopflted near Wilmington.

Among those arrested was firefighter Kenneth L. Smith, 18. Smith was charged with

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.

unlawful burning in three 1982 Seagate tires and. was being held under $9,000 bond, authorities said.

CORRECTION

In Sears Credit Mailer, '4 Hour Sale* running Tues* day night, Dec. 6th, the following Items are not available, on page 15, the Window shade for $1.9, on page 23, the 16 price stereo w/cassette #91811, on page 33, the reconditioned video arcades and the three # of binoculars, on page 34, the compact stereo for $179.99 and on page 38, gowns for $14.99, pajamas for $16.99 nri hjirjn! hlf !|b and camisole for $3.29 to $7.29. We regret this merchandise is not available. We hope

.$(ar$RoelNclitCo.

Carolina East Mall Qreenville, N.C.

Theresa gift \paitii)gfor}DuaL

YxJRsRiEE!

An extra 8 X10 Christmas Scenic with the purchase of our regular package.

1-8x10.2-5x7s. 10 W^ets Plus an extra 8x10    QQ

All for only    ludcs

Wc l)cp.isil

Add $1.00 for each additional subject

'* i| t|

a

DAYS: WED&THUR DATES: DEC. 7 & 8 HOURS: 11 TO 7 LOCATION: PITT PLAZA

REGAL

STUDIOS

Save ^6 & MOon Mens slacks.

Sale 13.99 & 14.99

Orlg. $20 and $25. Choose from a group of 'mens polyester/belted slacks in solid colors, or polyester/wool blend dress slacks in solids. Mens sizes.

Sale 79.99

2-Pc. suit.

Orlg. $130. Save $50 on this group of 2-piece suits. Polyester/wool in fashion styling. Assorted stripes, or patterns in men's sizes.    |

Sale 11.99

Dress shirt.

Orlg. $16. Group of Gentry long sleeve dress shirts. Polyester/cotton piaids in assorted colors. Mens sizes.

I Coyo

on Pattern

sweaters'!

Mens knit gloves.

Special buy.

9.99

Mens assorted wallets.

Sal.

Briefcases

Orig. 69.99.

Combination lock. Vinyl cover.

Sale 3 to ^19

Reg. $6 to $28. Here are some great ideas to add to your list. Gifts that keep you busy for hours. Or help you get organized. To decorate, participate, or preserve your fondest npemories. The perfect solution when you dont know what to get someone. Wrap up your Christmas shopping with savings. And wrap one up tor yourself!

Reg.

Hallmark photo albums .. .15.00

Antique jigsaw puzzle  9.00

Cuddly jigsaw puzzle  7.50

Marble jigsaw puzzle  6.50

Covered stationery box ... 9.00

Playing cards............12.00

Pen and pencil set 28.00    19.00

Silver bell ornament 12.00    6.00

Silver sleigh ornament.... 7.50    3.75

Orig. $15. Group of junior acrylic sweaters in assorted colors and patterns. Junior sizes.

Special buy^

Junior skirts.

Holiday skirts in solid or plaids. Elastic waist in wooT acrylic assorted colors. Junior sizes.

Save *11 to *15 on Girls jackets.

Sale 13.99 to 24.99

Orig. $25 to $40. Group of winter ackets for girls, in assorted styles and colors.

Orig. Sale

Hooded jackat,4-6X $35    21.99

Ski jacket, big girls $35    19.99

Zip front jacket, big girls.. $25    13.99

Zip oH sleeves. Big girls... $40    24.99

16.99

Sale

stripe

sweater.

Orig. $24, Junior acrylic bold -stripe sweater with white merona-styled collar. Junior sizes in assorted colors.

Save *11 to *15 Boys NFL jackets.

^ I - Afk

daie lo.tftf & 19.99

Orlg. $30 and $35. Choose from a group of little boys NFL jackets in sizes 4-7, or big boys NFL jackets in sizes 8.

Save *9 Boys cord pants.

Sale 10.99

Orlg. $20. Group of prep boys corduroy pants with elastic waist. Assorted colors in sizes XS, S, M.

Sale

7.50

4.50 3.75 3.25

4.50 8.00

Save *14 on Girls jumpsuits.

Sale 10.99

Orlg. $25. Big girls corduroy jumpsuits in assorted colors. Polyester/cotton with fashion styling. Sizes 7-14.

Save *15 on Girls

Hunt Club dresses.

Sale 13.99

Orlg. $29. Girls pqlyester/cotton Hunt Club dresses in pink or blue. Sizes 7-14.    _

Closeout Electric blankets.

Orig. Sale

twin................29.99    19.99

full  .........39.99    29.99

queen.............. 59.99    39.99

king................79.99    49.99

u

CPennev THE CHRISTMAS PLACE

Shop 9:30-9:30 Phone 756-1190 Pitt Plaza





g The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.

Tuesday, December 6,1983

Shoppers For Christmas Trees Wear Few Frowns

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer

There's something special, even magical, about walking between rows of freshly cut Christmas trees.

Maybe it has something to do with the pungent pine

aroma, or the bright eyed children, maybe even fantasies of Christmases past or dreams of what the holdiays could be. But no matter what the reason, you wont see any frowns on the faces of the thousands of Pitt Countians

a

New Drug I Given Approval

Burroughs Wellcome announced that the Food and Drug Administration has approved what the company termed a "unique surgical muscle-relaxing drug with a built-in. self-destruct mechanisn." the most recent advance in a medical field that began 40 years ago with the therapeutic use of the poison curare.

The pharmaceutical company said its new-neuromuscular blocker, Tracrium brand atracurium besylate, prevents muscles from contracting to allow surgeons easier access to internal organs during procedures such as heart-bypass surgery, gall bladder and colon surgery.

Burroughs Wellcome

the Triig's' self-destruct mechanisn. termed a "major advance in anesthesia," makes it relatively safer than currently available muscle reiaxants and especially useful for patients at high risk for surgery the elderlv and those suf

fering from liver and kidney dysfunction.

The use of neuromuscular blockers as an adjunct to general anesthesia began in the 1940s with drugs derived from curare, a natural substance long used by South American Indians to poison the tips of darts and arrows. Curare relaxes muscles by blocking neurotransmitters, chemical messengers that carry signals from nerves to muscles.

Curare can be lethal because total muscle relaxation ultimately stops respiration, it was noted, but the potential benefits of its muscle-relaxing properties to surgeons were recognized as early as the 19th century.

Dr. Charles Linebeity, who led the Tracrium project group at Burroughs Wellcome, said the drug, a novel compound unrelated to curare, quickly breaks down in the body to inacuve 'oy-products. He said the self-destruct mechanism is the kevtoitssafetv.

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7.19S3

GENERAL TENDENCIFS: A day and avaning to think in terms of what you can do to be more efficient m the performance of regular duties and worldly obligatione. Consult those with experience for answers.

^4 A^f 4fy\

. C. t lU    . I <9/    aiw    a

fairs carefully today; they should be foremost in your consciousness. Better organize your talents.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Obtain information concerning new project that you desire to put into action. Be careful when handling money.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Pay bills early in the day so that your business operates well. Attend an important meeting. Spend a relaxing, quiet evening with mate.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21)Postpone seeking affection from one you admire. This person is wrapped up in business matters now. Try again tonight,

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) Find the best way to become more efficient at work. Take time to improve your health. Avoid the opposite sex for a while.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Plan recreations well. Then get busy at business affairs. Work diligently. Some romantic gesture would appeal to your mate.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Don't lose your equilibrium: handle problems wisely. Be clever regarding a guest. Drive with care this evening.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Be available to persons who come to you for answers. This is a fine day for handling business matters well. Get your bills out on time.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Financial affairs should be first on the agenda today. Consult an expert if you have any doubts about property affairs.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Gain personal aims easily by becoming better organized. Visit a good friend who can give you worthwhile ideas.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Concentrate on how best to carry through with that course action you have in mind. Be more practical; this should please your mate.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Pay attention to detail at work it you are to gain personal longings; carry through with alacrity. Participate in a group activity.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be someone whose feet are firmly on the ground but has a tendency to talk too much before thinking. Provide for an education that is both practical and aesthetic. Teach a toreign language at home.

NOTICE

Home Federal Savings And

Loan Association Of Eastern Nnth 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

who will visit local Christmas tree lots this season.

The selection of trees this year is as varied as the people who come out to buy. Accfording to Jan Kittrel! of Kittrell Greenhouses, tree shoppers are looking for beauty as well as value this year. People are just as particular aWut the looks of the trees as they ever have bwn and are also shopping for prices more than usual.

Kittrells is offering two varieties of trees this year. Canadian Balsam'Firs (regular old Christmas trees) and local Virginia pines that look almost like Scotch pines, but are not as thick or heavy.

The Optimists have their traditional lot near Nichols this year and expect to sell more than 1,500 trees, according to V.D. Omary, who has been manning the pay booth since 1972. Omary said that the Christmaslree business has boomed since he first started working the-Optimist tree sale. "Back then we would sell maybe. 100.125 trees a season; 1,500 is a long way from that," he said.

There are a multitude of other lots around town in addition to these two, but if you're in a rush and want to combine tree shopping with grocery shopping, local grocery stores are the places to go.

'it's just another service we can offer to our

customers during this season, Winn Dixie Manager Phillip Ward said. The trees available at the Carolina East Convenience Center Winn-Dixie are grown in Avery County .

If youre not in the market for a cut tree, you mi^t consider visiting Sunshine Garden Center where live and artificial trees are available as well as cut trees. A center spokesman said thaT Sunshine is selng live Norway Spruce trees this year because they tend to grow better in this area than some of the other conifers. Should you purchase a live tree, he advised planting it in an area that receives full sun.

Artificial trees are leaving Roses in droves, according to store manager Bill Jones. "1 was on the phone just this morning (Monday) ordering more trees because we had already sold all that we had anticipated. We had even gone up to the Raleigh store to get more, and sold all of those, too. Its just been phenomenal.

Jones said that the most popular artifical trees this year are the green Scotch

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and Canadian pines. We got away from the silver, (Hnk and other colored trees several years ago, but the flocked trees - the ones that already have snow blown on them-are selling well.

Not everyone, however, buys their trees. Quite a few people are plunging into the v/oods to scout out a natural tree to save money, and as one potential lumberjack said; It kind of makes Christmas a bit more meaningful tc have the simple things. Of course, we only cut on our own land and when we cut a tree, we make sure its one that wont grow very well because its shaded in by others. I guess thats sort of silly, because the

trees that are sold on the lots    Christmas and youre not    one. I guess its just my

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In The Area

The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.

Tuesday, December 6,1983 ^

Prison Stabbing investigated

Officials are continuing an investigation into an incident Friday at the Eastern Correctional Center at Maury in which : - one inmate stabbed another in the neck, shoulder and back of ; head. The victim of the attack was treated at Pitt County ; Memorial Hospital aiKl released.

; Department of Corrections regulations prohibit the release I of the names of the individuals involved until charges are ; filled, sources said.

; Former Greenville Man Killed

: - Former Greenville resident Jon Cattett, 19, of Raleigh was ;; I killed in an automobile accident Sunday morning near Cary. ; His car, which ran off an embankment on old U.S. 1, was not

' Joundunti! Monday morning.---------

;: Trooper Billy George said Catlett was last seen by his ; girlfrioid early Sunday morning when he dropped her off at ; - her dormitory. He was headed home, he told her, and his parents alerted authorities after he did not arrive later ' kioday. Catlett, a 1983 graduate of Millbrook High School, ! lived in Greenville during his childhood. He was employed by ! a Raleigh design firm and was taking flight lessons and ; planning to enter military pilot training in January 1984, his parents, L.G. and Cindy Cat ett, said.

Cause Of Death Listed

Medical Examiner Stan Harris has ruled that a Route 3, , Greenville, man whose body was found on the side of a road ;ear Pactolus Monday died of alcoholism and exposure, ; 'according to Pitt County Sheriff Ralph Tyson.

;: The sheriff said the body of 69-year-old Manassus Moore, ' ylad in socks and underwear, was discovered Monday

tnoming at the edge of Secondary Road 1557 near the old : PactoliB post office. He said the remainder of Moores

clothing, which contained his wallet, was found about 50

i^ards from the body.

': Tyson said investigation indicated that Moore had been thinking and was last seen around 6 p.m. Sunday.

Parkinson Group To Meet

. The Area Parkinson Support Group will meet in the First ; Prsbyterian Church Thursday at 11 a.m. The purptse of the ; meeting is to begin an exercise program designed especially

for those witfi Parkinson. For more information, call 756-2463.

. Fund-Raising Event Planned

. An Afternoon with Santa will be held Saturday from 1:30 : to 3p.m. at the West Greenville Gymnasium.    _

; Free refreshments will be offered. This is a fund-raising ; event of the Eastern North Carolina Regional Association of

Black Social Workers. Photographs will be taken and portrait I packages will be sold by the group. For more information, : contact Shelly Henderson, president, evenings 756-3039, or : Mildred Council, coordinator, 757-1037.

: Gary Dean Heads Seal Program

Gary Dean, news an-

chorman at WCTI-TV, New I Bern, has been named hon-: orary Christmas Seal : ciiairman for this region, t . The announcement was

made by the American Lung ^ Association of North Caro-i; Una, Eastern Region.

; Dean has been a volunteer ] with the Lung Association for I some time, doing special : work with the Lung Run

: health and fitness fund-: raising event.    GARY    DEAN

: Students Earn Certificates

; Several area adults recently completed requirements for ; high school equivalency certificates at Lenoir Community ; College. The waduates include Beverly Harrison and Dorothy

Smith, both of Snow Hill, and Stephen T. Laur of Ayden.

: Collection Locations Named

Falkland collection locations for Operation Santa Claus are ; W.W. Wootens General Merchandise Store, Sues Country : Kitchen and the Falkland Presbyterian Church, program : officials have announced.

One week remains in the Operation Santa Claus drive,

which collects gifts for patients in Cherry Hospital and Caswell Training Center.

Checks and cash are accepted and checks may be made l>ayable to the Pitt County Mental Health Association. For further information in the Falkand area call Linda Little at 752-5324.

Week Of Services Planned

Services will be held at Simpson Chapel Free Will Baptist Church tonight through Sunday.

Various ministers, choirs and ushers will lead the 7:30 p.m. services; Tuesday, the Rev. J.H. Wilkes and Burney Chapel; Wednesday - the Rev. Jasper "^son and Poplar Hill; Thursday - Eldress Millie Ann Williams and First Timothy ; ;Friday - Elder James Lewis and Antioch Holy. Saturday a -choir festival will be held. Sunday Eldress Martha Tyson and Mount Calvary will be in charge.

Teachers Check Computers

Several companies displayed computer courseware recently at an exhibit at Rose High School. The exhibit, coordinated by Brenda Lewis and Barbara Mallory, was desigmd to provide Rose High teachers an opportunity to preview computer items.

Walstonburg Parade Scheduled

Walstonburgs annual Christmas parade will be held Sundayat3p.m.

The parade is being sponsored by the Walstonburg Womans Club. Units will assemble at the old school athletic field, and then go from the school to North Wilson Street, south to Mill Street, on to South Main Street, then back to the schoolyard.    ^    ^

Peg^ Gay, parade chairman, said any group, church, business or individual wishing to enter a unit may call 753-5667 or 753-3032.

Directory Census Under Way

Census takers working for Johnson Publishing Co. are contacting local residents to obtain current information to update the Greenville City Directoiy.

The survey workers, all local residents, will contact people by telephone or by direct mail questionnaires.

Revival Services Being Held

Revival services will continue through Thursday at the Burning Bush Holiness Church. Bishop Lillie Boyd is the guest speaker. Services start at 8 p.m.

Quarterly meeting will be held Saturday ai 7:30 p.m. and 11 a.m. Sun^y. Boyd will speak at the morning service. A service also will be held at 3 p.mT

Film To Be Shown At ECU

The Great World Cruise of the Queen Elizabeth II, a film presentatiiffl by Doug Jones, will be shown at 8 p.m. tonight at Hendrix Theater in Mendenhall Student Center on the ECU campus. This is the second of the 1983-84 Travel-Adventure series sponsored by the East Carolina University Departr::ent of University Unions.

The film covers departure from New York, south to Miami, then to Brazil. From Rio, the cruise goes to Cape Town and far away India. Northward, the film takes viewers to Hong Kong, east to Honolulu, south to the Panaina Canal, then back to New York harbor. Tickets for this film are $3.50 and will be available at the door prior to screening time.

Classes To Present Program

The fifth grade classes of Ayden Middle School will present the musical production The North Pole Goes Rock-N-Roll at the schools December PTA meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium.

Church To Hold Meeting

Bishop A.L. Matthews, pastor of Saint Pauls Church of Christ Disciples of Christ in Ayden, has announced a special congregational meeting for Thursday. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m.

Pay Adjustments Implemented

The City Council and Greenville Utilities Commission have approved and implemented 4 percent wage adjustments for city and GUC employees.

The revised pay and classification plan ordinance, which was effective Dec. 1 for city employees and Nov. 30 for GUC workers, stipulates a maximum salary adjustment (rf $1,000 for any employee.

SIX ON TRIAL

CALTANISETTA, Sicily (AP) - The trial of six men accused of the car-bombing murder of a top anti-Mafia judge and three other people in downtown Palarmo, opened Monday under tight security.

SURVIVED BOMB PARIS (AP) - Ara Tara-nian, leader of the National Armenian Movement, was slightly injured Monday by a bomb attached to his car, police said.

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Telephone 758-7300

RECORDS-HOW LONG?

Orpanlzii^ tillns and ratatnlng old racorda la a burden tor many bual-. The loUowlnp types ol racorda and ratanllon pa^

tods are ganoral guldallnas and stwuM bo tampered by your own business and Imestmant concerns.

RETamOtl RECORD 3Ysars 3 Years 6 Years Parma nant 3 Years 3 Years Permanent

Cancelled Checks lank Deposit Slips Bank Statements Tax Returns Expanse Reports Entsrtalnment Records Financial Statements Contracts

Minutas ol Meetings Corporate Stock Records Empioyoo Records

Depredation Schediles Real Estate Records Journal A Qenaral Ledger tosentory Record

LHe ol Company Permanent

Period ol Emptoyment plus 3 years

LHe ol Business phis 3 years Permanent

LHa ol business plus 3 years 3 Years

The normal statute ol UfflHsttons on todoral returns la three years. Undar seme droufflslancea N Is six years, and H you ton to fito a return or thoro to fraud tmshwd, the statute ol IlmHatton does not dose.

Thto mseno that the Internal Revenue Service under normal oondHtona would sudR your return any time up ttirough throe years. Since the statute ol HmHatton In seme states exceeds the lodaral statute, you should taHor yaur years ol retontton to tN longer ol the two statutes.

In dsddlng your own rscord retontton schedule, considsr keeping IndsH-nlMIy those records which cannot bo recreated by any other olftee, InstHu-tton or governmental unH.

N. EOWM flMAY, CPA 212 West Fifth Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 27834*7S8-7300*Call us, we understand business and financial con-aems*PsrsoniSl and corporate tax ratums*Tax pianning*Financial statsmentsBusinas8 and farm record keeping*Computer syatams*Estate and gift counseling^Business and real estate sales .jBdaonMlsltlons    .

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any (ter carywi cairy - with no strings attached. Wachovias MasterCard rate for the month of Decembo 1983 is 16% Annual Rate* (APR), compared to 18% APR charged^ most other finan^ i*i_ ttutons and merchants. So if youre carrying a Wachovia MasterCard, use it    uUSnllflUn

and stwe; If you dont have one, see or call a Personal Banker.    wwHwssw^m

*Based on Wachovias prime rate in effect on the next to the last business day of each month plus 5%. The prime rate is set by Wachovia as the basis for interest on many loans and will vary with money market conditions. While automatically providing the benefit of any decline in the prime rate, under current North Carolina law. the Wadiovia MasterCard variable rate cannot exceed 18% APR. Like many other bank cards, the Wachovia MasterCard is available for an annual fee of S18.





g Th Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Tuesday, Decembers, 1963

Stock And Market Reports

Porker,

Bv The Associated Press

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 75 to 1.25 higher. Kinston 42.25, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 42.00, Wilson 42.25, Salisbury 39.50, Rowland 41.50, Spiveys Corner 42.25. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 33.00, Fayetteville 33.00, Whiteville 34.00, Wallace 34.00, Spiveys Corner 34.00, Rowland 34.00, Durham 31.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, .C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 53.25 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2*2 to 3 pound birds, xx percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weighted average of 51.33 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Average weights mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Tuesday was 1,683,0 0, comparetl to i,686.000 last Tuesday.

Hens

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was 2 cents higher. Supplies light. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for^ Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 40 cents.

10 P

and Groen Club meets at club house

WEDNESD.AY

9:30 a m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 10:00 a m - Pitt Golden K Kiwanis Club meets at Greenville Country Club 1:30 p.m Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 6:30 p.m. Kiwanis Club meets 7:30 p m. Winterville Jaycees meetat Jaycee Hut 8:00 p m. Pitt County Ala-'leen Group meets at A.A Bldg . Farmvillehwy

8:00 p m Matrons Club meets with Lillian Jones

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219 Cotanche Street

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices turned downward today after an early advance faltered.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up more than 2 points at midmorning, was off 1.32 at 1,269.21 by noontime.

Losers slightly outnumbered gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

The stock market has been behaving erratically, with only sporadic buying interest concentrated in a relatively small group of blue-chip issue.

Mead Corp. led the active list, up ^4 at 40*2. A 1.1 million-share block traded at

40.

Whittaker Corp. fell 2^8 to 17^8. The company said Monday its large hospital-operating contract in Saudi Arabia will be terminated on March 1.

The NYSEs composite index slipped .15 to 95.62. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down .53 at 233.31.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 38.81 million shares at noontime, against 38.83 million at the same point Monday.

.NEW YORK '.API - Middav stocks:

TIESDAV

7:00 pm. - Family Support Groupat Family Practice Center 7:30 p.m. Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:30 pm Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p m. Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at 110 N Warren St.

7:30 p.m Toughlove parents support group at St Paul's Episcopal Churcn 8:00 p.m. The Bog Book Group of AA has closed meeting at St. James United Methodist Church 8:00 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. Pitt Co .Alcoholics .Anonymous at AA Bldg . Farmville hwy

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Intl Harv Int Paper InlKeclif s Int T&T K mart! Kaisr.Alum KanebSvc KrogeK'o Lockhed s Loews Corp McDrmlnl n McKesson Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Co NabiscoBrd Nat Uislill Norflk.Sou NYNEX WI DlinCp Owenslll PacifTel WI Pennes JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod Philip.Morr PhillpsPel Polaroid PrixtGamb s Uuaker Oat RCA

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High

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87 . 26', 45', 43

55", 39'4 25" 4 24 75 15", 27" 4 29', 56', 22,

20", 33 65", 86G    87

26", 26", 45    45

42"4    43

54"4    .55

39',    39',

25->,    25.

23,

74

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23",

74,

15".

27',    27':

28,    29'4.

55" iK 55" 4 22'>,- 22".

:i5

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41'.

.i'4

52

24,

7:i'-.

54

41.

38'..

.54

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444

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45'" 58 I

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US",

1'2

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38,

41',

'33

52'.

25",

_6

54' 4 41' .

38-',

40'    40'    4

20, 20', 42',    41,

25,    25",

43".    43",

59',    .58",

.53

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74,

:16',

44'..

25",

31

32",

4.5",

59 ,19'. 24', 44', 36", 1:16", :18. 48', 119', 13'. 59.

21

44,

:16, 19". 15, ;(4", 40', 166 24'. 40, 40'. 84, 28'. 110'.. 24, 42', 26 -62 60.

' 32'4 :i7, 54". 59", :16', >5, 714 :13', :13", .58'. 62'. ,16 28', 4', 28 35 60', 32".' 27". 36'

32 27'j 40'. 22", 17,

:15

50'.

:18',

41'.

32,

52

24.

6

73", 54 41' .

:i8i 22 40". 20. 41, 25 4 43' . ,59'.

:164 44' 25.

:!0j

32", 45", 59 .19' 24'4 44, 16'. l:16'. :18, 48 118. 13', .59'.    59'.

'20, 21 44    44.

.16 -

19.    19,

15, :14", :19. 166 24',

15,

:H,

:i9,

166

24.

40'.    40    ,

:19,    40.

84",    84'.

28'. 28", 109' 109", 24".    24',

41,

26',

62',

6",    60',

32    32

59",    59'.

:16'-    :16'.

2.5 ,    25",

71,    71,

32".    32,

:    3:t

.58    58'.

61'.    62'1

:i.5,    :i5.

28    28

4.    4',

28

60'.

:!2'j

27", :16

32

:i.5',

59,

:12.

27

:|6

31,

40',    40'..

22', 22. 17.    17,

Automotive Machine Shop Foreign-Domestic Engines Rebuilt

Auto Specialty Co.

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(Continued from Page 1)

sentative for the 6th District.

Parker has served for six years as a member of the State Goals and Policy Board, the first three as chairman of its balanced growth committee and the last three as vice chairman. He has held 10 appointive positions in state government under Govs. Dan Moore, Bob Scott and Jim Hunt.

Parker, 52, has served as chairman of the 1st Congressional District and as Hertford County chairman. He was a delegate to the 1980 Democratic National Convention, representing the 1st District.

He was one of the founders of Northeastern North Carolina Tomorrow, the two-year-old development group for the 16 northeastern counties, and was elected its first chairman.

Parker recalled that he was a member of the original group which worked with Dr. Leo Jenkins to found the East Carolina University Medical School. He now serves as a trustee of Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he also attended Davidson College and Carnegie-Melloe University. He is a Methodist and a Rotaran.

Parker is married to the former Lauretta Dyer of Shalier Heights. Ohio, and they have two children, Katherine and Wilbur.

Taped TryTo

Bribe Sheriff

Concerned

ST. JOH.NS, Antigua (AP) Attorney General Keith Forde says his government is concerned about the discovery of a cache of arms with Cuban and Soviet markings on one of Antigua's offshore islands.

In view of the recent developments in Grenada, the government is treating the matter v e r y-seriously, he said '.Monday.

.Antigua is one of the five small Eastern Caribbean states that joined In the Oct. 25 U.S.-led invasion of Grenada.

MASONIC NOTICE William Pitt Masonic Lodge No. 734 will hold a regular stated communication Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Supper will be at 6:30. Officers will be elected.

SwstBell WI Sperrv Cp SldDiICdl SldDillnd StdOilOh Stevens JH TRW !fic Texaco Inc TexEastn I n Camp I n Carbide Imroval I'S Steel I'SWest WI Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh El Weverhsr WmnUix s Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

Following are    selected 11 a m stock

market quotations:

.Ashland prC    ,40',

Burrougn.,    ,47'.

Carolina Power & Light    23,

Conner     17

Duke....................25

Eaton ..... 53",

Eckerd's.................. 28",

Exxon    ,8' 1

Fieldcrest    :t7    .

Halteras    15',

flilton    58,

Jefferson     40',

Deere.....................40",

Lowe's ......................23

McDonald's....... 72'.

McGraw    41',

Collins & Aikman    :)9',

Piedmont    36'^

Pizza Inn    14",

P&G......................58',

TKW. Inc    81 ,United Tel 22'.

Dominion Resources    2!'j

Wachovia     45',

OVER THE COUNTER

.Aviation ................ 15", 16

Branch    ..........26',.27',

Little .Mint .................. '

Planters Bank    18'.-19',

14.

. 144

14'4

16"4

16".

16".

59' 4

59'.

59'4

43".

43'4

43".

35',

:4" 1

35

49".

49' .

49".

4:i".

43'4

43".

2U'

20

20'.

81'.

81' 4

81'4

:!5.

:54

35" 1

.56'.

.56'.

56'.

844

84" i

84",

67

66'..

66'i

17 4 30

17.

29.

17".

:io

58

.57.

58

27.

27".

27"4

45'4

45'4

45'4

40'4

39.

40'1

.54

.53" 4

53.

.54 4

54'.

54'.

35.

35".

35".

32" 4

32'*4

32",

37.

37".

37.

.55

55

.55

48'4

47.

48

PAMLICO BEACH, N.C. (AP) - A Beaufort County man allegedly offered the county sheriff up to $100,000 to look the other way on drug-smuggling operations, according to a tape-recorded conversation.

Beaufort County Sheriff Nelson Sheppard testified Monday he made the tape of a July conversation with Masceo E. Daniels without Daniels knowledge. The tape was played during the first day of Daniels' trial on a charge of trying to bribe Sheppard.

Daniels has pleaded innocent, saying he was acting on behalf of federal authorities when he contacted Sheppard. But federal officials deny Daniels was authoritized to bribe officials.

Prosecution testimony was scheduled to continue today before Judge Thomas S. Watts of Elizabeth City.

According to the tape recording, the voice identified as Daniels described smuggling activities in eastern North Carolina and told Sheppard that he had a letter of immunity from prosecution from federal officials.

Sheppard testitied he met with Daniels on July 22 to discuss another legal matter and that Daniels told him he had a w'ay to make money.

Sheppard said Daniels said the sheriff could make up to $1()0,.000 from drug-smuggling operations, and later said Sheppard could make $25,000 every three weeks.

Sheppard told the jury of nine men and three women that he used a secret microphone and recording device when he met with Daniels at his Pamlico Beach

Death Wish Is Argued

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) - The wish of a quadriplegic cerebral palsy victim to die is "a rational and thoughtful choice. her lawyer told a judge who was asked to uphold her demand not to be force-fed or treated by doctors.

"This is not suicide. It is patient autonomy. said Richard Scott, who represents the wheelchair-bound patient, Elizabeth Bouvia, 26.

Ms. Bouvia told the hearing Monday that she has made her choice independently and her wish at this point is absolute." She denied assertions by Riverside County authorities that on three occasions she tried to kill herself.

E.\STERN STAR Pride of the East No. 524, Order of the Eastern Star, will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. New officers will be elected.

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Store on July 28.

During that conversation, Daniels said at least half of the illegal drugs in the country came thro^ Hvde County and he said he had gathered information on participants, according to Sheppard and the recording.

Quite frankly, I thought he was working for the federal government, Sheppard testified. He said he be ieved Daniels was trying to entrap him.

Shuttle...

(Continued from Pge 1)

Spacelab, a 23-foot workshop mounted in Columbias cargo bay.

Astronomer Robert Parker and West German physicist Ulf Merbold are the Red Team working the night shift, while Blue Teamers Owen Garriot, an electrical engineer, and Byron Lichtenberg, a biomedical engineer, labor on the day trick. Commander John Young and pilot Brewster Shaw are alternating at Columbias controls.

Cox said planning teams worked out a schedule for an additional day that includes research projects, but also bows to a crew request for leisure time to become tourists - to look out the window and snap some pictures of the panorama of Earth, stars and sun surrounding their speeding spaceship.

It is about 50 percent science and .50'percent leisure, Cox reported. The science, he said, will be mainly makeup work in the fields of medical research and materials processing.

The astronauts have several hundred frames of 35mm film left, as well as more than 100 frames on a powerful ipetric mapping camera capable of taking high resolution pictures of Earth.

When the planners were scheduling the extra day.

Sentence

LOS ANGELES (AP) - At age 79, Joseph Bonanno Sr. has begun serving a prison term for his first felony conviction in an alleged organized crime career that authorities says date to gun-running for A1 Capone.

He arrived Monday at Terminal Island Federal Prison to start serving a one-year sentence for obstructing a grand jury probe.

Bonanno, portrayed by authorities as a former head of one of five Mafia families. operating in New York City, could be free in six months. An original two-year sentence was reduced because of his age.

Howto Vbur AT&T After the Breakup.

Introducing The Telephone Exchange Fund-AT&T Shares.

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Now you can continue to have an equity investment in the Bell System after the reorganization with all the convenience of a unit investment trust. You can tender your AT&T stock now tor an interest in a portfolio that will only ho'd shares of the new AT&T plus the seven regional phone companies that the divestiture will create. Instead of the paperwork burden of owning securities In eight different companies you own a single investment, which should simplify most shareholders bookkeeping.

Fsaturss o( Ths Tsisphons Lxchangs Fund.

As a holder of Units of the Fund you will be able to:

Fteceive a pro rata share of the net dividend income from the securities held by the Fund (or have your dividend automatically reinvested). Dividends will be paid monthly

Retain investment flexibility (you can redeem your units to the sponsor at any time after the divestiture at the then current market value).

For six months following the divestiture, if you decide to redeem your Units in the Fund in exchange tor Bell System securities you will receive shares in these companies in any combination you wish, without a tee.

Tender shares currently hqld in you IRA, Keogh, or SEP plan tor Units of the Fund.

Minimum tender of 10 shares. Exchange your AT&T stock the easy way for units representing a portfolio that will hold shares in the new AT&T and the seven new regional companies.

To receive a copy of a prospectus containing more complete information including tees and expenses, call the number below. Be sure to read it carefully before exchanging your AT&T shares.

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Drowned

The body of a Wendell man was found in a hot tub today at the Holiday Inn on Memorial Drive. Greenville police, who at noon were continuing their investigation, declined to release the name of the man because his family had not been notified.

Detective Lt. D.R. Bullock said the man, in his early 20s, was a patient at Pitt County Meramia' Hospital from Nov. 28 until Monday, when he was released and checked into a first floor room at the Holiday Inn.

His body was found floating face-up in the hot tub near the swimming pool about 7:30 a.m.

Bullock said the time of death has tentatively been set at about midnight Monday night. He said an autopsy was being performed today, but said the man was believed to have drowned after suffering a seizure.

they initially considered only science. But the astronauts, when asked to contribute, changed that idea.

Something you might want to include is an hour or two for some internal photography that we havent had time to do, Garriott said. Weve still got a lot of 35mm that we could take inside and outside the space-crift.

Young said that sightseeing and taking pictures would be more fun than experiments. It would be a shame to waste the film, he said.

Merbold, the first European to fly on a U.S. spaceship, suggested using the mapping camera on orbit 141. It has Germany, Spain and all sorts of European countries, he said.

Lichtenbergs choice: The east coast of the United States on orbit 144, where he would have a chance to take a picture of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he is a researcher

Scientists at the Space Center in Houston meanwhile are extremely pleased with the way the astronauts have handled their experiments aboard Spacelab.

We think everything weve got is very positive, said Mike Reynolds of Great Britain, a principal investigator on the metric camera. I dont think youll see many miserable faces. Everybody got something out of it.

Saves Money...

(Continued from Pagel)

placed in private jobs.

In other business Monday, commissioners appropriated $17,006 for the Board of Elections, to help fund a new full-time secretary and to pay part-time workers, and to purchase office equipment and supplies and several voting booths.

Obituaries

Bennett

Mrs Mary Vines Bennett died early this morning at Pitt Memorial Hospital. She was the daughter of Jack Vines of Greenville. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Phillips Brothers Mortuary.

Catlett

Mr. Jon Gregory Catlett, 19, of 10228 Bushveld Lane, Raleigh, died Monday as the result of an automobile accident. His funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Trinity Baptist Church in Raleigh. Burial will be in the Flat Rock Baptist Church Cemetery nearYoungsville.

A former resident of Greenville, he was a pitcher for the Wildcats baseball team of Millbrook High School, from which he graduated in 1983. He was employed by Contextural Design of Raleigh.

Surviving are his parents, L.G. and Cynthia McGovern Catlett of the home; a

MASONIC NOTICE Grimesland Masonic Lodge No. 475 AF&AM will have a stated communication tonight at 7:30. Officers will be elected for 1384. Work in the Second Degree. Supper will be served at 6:45.

brother, Glen Catlett of the home; his paternal grandparents, Margaret and Walter Rex of Boca Raton, Fla.; his maternal grandparents, John and Cecile McGovern of Orlando, Fla., and a maternal great-grandmother, Mrs. Esther Abbott of Danbury, Conn.

The family will be at Brown-Wyni Funeral Home on Millbrook Road, Raleigh, tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.

Moore

PACTOLUS - Mr. Manassus Moore died at his home. Route 5, Pactolus on Monday afternoon. He was the brother of Mrs. Mary Ebron of Greenville. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Phillips Brothers Mortuary.

Taylor

FARMVILLE Mr. James W. Taylor died this morning in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. A Farmville barber, he was the husband of Mrs.. Agnes Dupree Taylor. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Joyners Mortuary.,

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Thank You

I would like to thank each of you who have shown acts of kindness towards me and my family after the death of my sister, Nancy Ensiey Harris. Special thanks to SCLC, members of Cornerstone Baptist Church, Pitt "County Alumni of the A&T State University Chapter and very close friends. Even through we are going through some very trying times now, your care and concerns shown towards us have given us added strength and courage.

Glenn Jetter, my husband, has been discharged from the hospital and is recuperating at home.

Christine E. Boomer Jetter, Greenville, N.C.,

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THE DAILY REELEeTGR

TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 6, 1983Long Named To AP All-America Team

NEW YORK (AP ) - East the runnerup. Although he Michigan, with three mem- California tackles Rick Brvan    i,    

Carolina offerave guard    played    only three    seasons,    bers on offense in 1981, have    of Oklahoma and Reggie    UhutemOrt S

   I* sath    leading    placed three players on one    White of Tennessee, inside     ^ I ra^r?eiZ ASl.2^ """

the 1983 Associated Press rusher in major-college histo- umt,    linebacker Carl Ranks nf a oeoi j Ri, Mirfdie cuard-Miehaei carter,

iywith4.74arSW ^Nebraska and BYU each    orltaSenr^^

a^long with Mike Rozier,    Georgias    Herschel    Walker    has two players on the 1983    Russell Carter of Southern    TcNed

All-America team. Rozier is    Methodist and punter Jack    srSSr caSt

Trophy-Manning tailback, and    career.    joined by wide receiver Irving    Weil of Wyoming.    orfo34 and^e^M

Steve Young, Brigham Young led the nation in total Fr^r, while BYU tight end Rozier, Bryan and Carter all Lhdowns tht wlhJk jecord-setting    offense (4,346 yards,    395.1 per Gordon Hudson made it    for moved up from the 1982 sec-    Fmr    Zl^k

QUdrtcrbdck. dnd fMir nlpvprc    anri noccin/T    vck^r    in o n/viir    tcdiii    to is yBHT^s first    ' ' *    iNcprasKa s wingback,

platoon era.

Long, a 6-0, 280-pounder from Columbia, S.C., is the first ever first team selection

and ^ing records. The senior left-hander connected on 306 passes this season - an NCAA record - in 429 at-

by the AP for East Carolina,    tempts for 3,902 yards and 33

which has had a number of touchdowns, with only 10 ih-

second and third team selec tions in recent years. Long has already been named to the first team of the Kodak

team, while Perry jumped from the third team to the first unit. Penn State wide receiver Kenny Jackson made the second unit this year after being a first-teamer in 1982

helped make the Cornhuskers the highest scoring team in history by catching 40 passes for 780 yards - a 19.5-yard average - and eight touchdowns and rushing 23 times for 318 yards and two

terceptions. His 71.33 completion percentage also was a national record.

The Texas representatives

and roverback Terry Hoage of s^opgg (ieorgia, one of the nations    ^Vith    one season remaining.

Zendejas has kicked an NCAA record 65 field goals in 85 attempts. This season, he was 28-of-37, with six of his misses

will be featured Monday, Dec 19, on Bob Hopes Christmas show (NBC-TV, 8-9 p.m.,

EST).

The 24-man team consists of 19 seiifs, fotff jmbre and sophomore running back Bo Jackson of Auburn.

Besides Hudson, others who

''A    ivAoa    icpnaciiuiiives    niade the team for the second uai. nudgc pruuauiy wuuiu    /ith    civ    hie

(Football Coaches of    are offensive guard Doug    year in a row are offensive    have made the first team had    fromSoVardso^^voS

America), Walter Camp    Dawson and three members of    tackle Bill Fralic of Pit-    he played enough but he

Football Foundation and the    the nations No. l-ranked de-    tsburgh, outside linebacker    missed three games and a

Wilber Marshall of Florida and inside linebacker Ricky Hunley of Arizona.

The juniors are Gray,

Fralic, placekicker Luis Zendejas of Arizona State and middle guard William Perry of Clemson.

The rest of the offense consists of wide receiver

-- -............... Gerald McNeil of Baylor,    nm. wv.o^aiua pci

Since the All-America squad    tackle Brian Blados of North    game, but his    average of 7.7

has consisted of both offensive    Carolina, guard Terry Long of    per carry was    second only to

...............and defensive teams - 1950-52    East Carolina and center Tom    Roziers 7.8.

Nebraska star led the nation and beginning again in 1964 - Dixon of Michigan.    Hudson    caught 44 passes for

with a per-game average of only Oklahoma, with thriie Others on defense are out- 596 vards and six fmirhdowns 179.0, some 27.4 better than defenders in 1975, and    side linebacker Ron Rivera of    before he suffered a season-

Football Writers of America fense - linebacker Jeff Leid-All-America teams.    ing, comerback Mossy Cade

Four other Pirates were and free safety Jerry Gray, named to the Honorable Men- Only once before since the

tion list. They included offensive lineman John Robertson, pjnning back Earnest Byner; defensive end Jeff

^ All-America team began in 1925 has a school placed as many as four players on the elite squad. That was in 1945

P^ues, and defensive back when Army had five players

Clint Harris.

Rozier rushed for 2,148 yards, Marcus Allens single-seasoii record of 2,342 for Southern Cal in 1981. The

on what was then an 11-man All-America team.

top defensive players and a first-teamer a year ago, is on the 1983 honorable mention list. Hoage probably would

large portion of several others.

Auburns Jackson concluded a superb regular season by rushing for 256 yards against Alabama on Saturday, including touchdown runs of 69 and 71 yards. He led the Southeastern Conference with 1,213 yards and was 10th nationally with 110.3 yards per

Linefaackers-Jay Bropny. Miami (Fla ); Jim Dumont. Rutgers; Andy Ponseigo, Navy BacksMartin Bayless, Bowling Green; Leonard Coleman. Vanderbilt; Harry Hamilton. Penn State.

PunterHarry Newsome. Wake Forest.

Honorable Mention Offense

Tight Ends-Rickey Bolden. Southern Methodist; Mark Dowdell. Bowling Green. John Frank. Ohio State; Scott Gieselman. Boston College; Dave Hestera. Colorado; Chuck 5;ott. Vanderbilt; Karl Sullivan. San Jose State.

Wide Receivers-Brad Anderson. Arizona; Jeff Champine. Colorado State: Dwayne Dixon. Florida; Reuben Eckels. Wichita State; Duane Gunn. Indiana; Louis Lipre. Southern Mississippi; James Maness. Texas Christian; Erie Martin. LSU; Mark Militello, Duke; Dave_ Naumcheff, Ball State; Eric Richardson. San Jose State; Jim Sandusky, San Diego State; Mike Sherrard. UCLA; Mark Smith, North Carolina; Wayne Smith. Tulane; Eddie Washington, Ohio U., Larry Willis, Fresno Sfate.

TacklesJohn Alt, Iowa; Chris Babyar Illinois, John Berlan. Toledo; Scott Bolzan, Northern Illinois; Rex Burningham, Brigham Young, Kevin Call, Colorado State; Glen Howe, Southern Mississippi; Jeff Johnson, Navy; Jim Juriga, Illinois; Duval Love, UCLA; Mark MacDonald. Boston College; Joe Milinichik. North Carolina State; Brian OMeara, Southern Methodist; Chuck Page, Long Beach State; Rod Patten, Tulsa; Henry Ramelli, San Jose State; John Robertson. East Carolina: Brian Vehar, Toledo; Scott Wachenheim, Air Force.

Guards-Mike Adcock. Alabama ? Urry Baker, Fullerton State; .A-ndrew Campbell, Southern Methodist; Conrad Goooe, Missouri; Kevin Igo, Oklahoma State; 'David Jordan. Aiiburhr John' Kasperski, Tulsa; David Kuresa. Utah State, Dan Lynch, Washington State; Rick Mallory, Washington; Chris McKay. Central Michigan; John Owens, Rutgers; Ron Soil, Maryland; Alvin Ward, Nliami (Fla.I.

CentersPhil Bromley, Florida; Rick rhjtwood, Bi! Sl25 PhiSi*' SC'bi'*'**' Duke; Ctiris Jackson, Southern "Meri^-ist; Mike Kelley. Notre Dame: Matt Long, San Diego State; Tom McCormick, Florida State; David Pearson, Tulsa John Puzar. Long Beach State; Joe Ramunno. Wyoming.

Quarterbacks-.Marlon Adler, Missouri; Randall Cunningham, Nevada-tas Vegas; Mike Epplev, Clemson: Boomer Esiason. Maryland; Doug Flutie, Boston College;' Jeff Hostetler West Virginia; Bernie Kosar, Miami (Fla I; Walter Lewis, Alabama; Chuck Long, Iowa, Martv Louthan, Air Force; Brian McClure, Bowling Green; Lance Mcllhenny, Southern .Methodist Wayne Peace, Florida; Steve Pelluer Washington, Jack Trudeau, Illinois; Tom

.______^    Tunnicliffe,    Arizona.

.ey, Arizona 6-2, 237 Senior,    Running Backs-Curtis Adams, Central

Petereburg. Va ; Jeff Leiding, Texas, 6-4, Michigan; Alfred Anderson, Baylor;

Tulsa,Okla.        Dwighl Beverly, Illinois; Earnest Bvner,

Mr^ct/    'PAenr>        t    lewv     i:__ cs-:-    r-v______ msT*

Nichols Southern Methodist; Kirk Perry Uuisville; Randy Robbins, Arizona Lupe Sanchez, UCLA; Jeff Sanders, Northern Illinois Jon Young, Brigham Young, Greg Zoln-

inger. AirForee _

Punrer-Ricky Andr^n. Vanderbilt; Paul Calhoun. Kentucky; John Conway Oklahoma SUte; Dale Hatcher. Clemson

James Gargus, Texas Chnstian, Kevin Hicks, Oregon; Ron Keller. New Mexico; John Kidd. Northwestern, Ralf Mojsie-nko, Michigan State; Chris Norman, ^th Carolina; Jim Phelps, Bowling uieen; George Reynolds; Pehn State; ' Joe Sartiano, Army; Mike Saxon, San Dimo State; Kip Shenefelt, Temple; John Teltschik, Texas; John Tolish, Duke.

Carolina Back Atop AP Poll

T^ Associated Press 1983 All-America football team:

First Team-Offense Tight End-Gordon Hudson, Brigham Young, 6^. 235, Senior, Salt Lake City, Utah.    '

Wide Receivers-Irving Fryar, Nebraska, 6-0, 195, Senior, Mount Holly, N.J.; Gerald McNeil, Baylor. 5-8, 140 Senior, Killeen, Texas.

TacklesBrian Kladns, North Carolina. M. 300, Senior, .Arlington, Va.; Bill pane, Pitt, 6-5. 290, Junior, Penn Hills,

Guards-Doug Dawson, Texas, 6-3, 267, Senior, Houston. Texas; Terry Long. East Carolina, 64), 280. Senior, Columbia,

Center-Torn Dixon, Michigan, 6-2, 250, Senior, Fort Wayne, Ind.

Quarterback^Steve Young, Brigham Younfif. 6-1. .^ninr (Irppnwirh f^nn Running Backs-Bo JacksonV Auburn, 6-1. 222, Sophomore, Bessemer. Ala ; Mike Rozier, Nebraska, 5-11, 210, Senior, Camden. N.J.

Placekicker-Luis Zendejas, Arizona State, 5-8,170, Junior. Chino, Calif.

Defense

Ends-Outside Linebackers-Wilher Marshall, Florida, 6-1, 237, Senior; Titusville, Fla.; Ron Rivera, California, 6-3.235. Senior, Monterey, Calif tackles-Rick Bryan. Oklahoma, 6-4, 260, Senior, Broken Arrow, Okla.; Reggie White, Tennessee, 6-5, 265, Senior, Ctat-tanooga, Tenn.

Middle Guard William Perry, Clemson. 6-3,320, Junior. Aikn, S.C.

Linebackers-Carl Banks, Michigan State, 6-5, 232, Senior, Flint, Mich., Ricky Hunley, Arizona, 6-2, 237, Senior

By DAVE KAPLAN Associated Press Writer - Unbeaten -North Carolina, the preseason No. 1 college basketball choice, regained the top spot from Kentucky today in the second weekly Associated Press poll.

After beating Stanford on Saturday for Coach Dean Smiths 500th career victory, the Tar Heels, 4-0, usurped Kentucky ^y four points in the nationwide balloting by a panel of 63 sports writers and broadcasters.

Each collected 30 first-place votes. North Carolina attracted 1,221 points and Kentucky, 2-0, drew 1,217 points after struggling to beat unranked Indiana 54-64 Saturday

tftfall fnco/>nnH

239, Senior Tulsa, uiua.

Backs-Mossy Cade, Texas^ 6-1, Senior, Eiqy, Ariz.; husseii Carter Southern Methodist. 6-3, 193, Senior, Ardmore, Pa.; Jerry Gray. Texas, 6-1, 190, Junior. Lubbock, Texas.

Punter-Jack Weil, Wyoming, S-ll'z, 171, Senior, Northglenn, Colo.

o,^vwi mcliiOllTuar

Tight End-Glenn Dennison. Miami (Fla.i.

Wide Receivers-Brian Brennan,

East Carolina; Eric Denson. Wichita State, Keggje Dupard, Southern Methodist; Shawn Faulkner, Western Michigan. Walt Goffigan. Wyoming; Mike Grayson, Duke; Michael Gunter. Tulsa, Ethan Horton. North Carolina: Johnnie Jones, Tennessee; ^Shawn Jone^ Oklahoma State. J'ubiii Kcisiiliei, Air Force; Lenny Montgomery, Long Beach State; Ricky    "    iban        ......

Moore, Alabama; Kevin .Nelson. UCLA, Boston College; Kenny Jackson, Pen'ri Pa^lmer! Temple^^^Kerry ^

Tackles-Mark Adickes, Baylor; Guy McIntyre, Georgia Guards-Stefan Humphries, Michigan; Dean Steinkuhler, Nebraska.

CenterTony Slaton, Southern California Quarterback-TurnerGill, Nebraska

Running Backs-Napoleon McCallum, Mavy; Allen Pinkett, Notre Dame Pfacekicker-Bruce Kallmeyer.

Kansas

Defense

Ends-Outside Linebackers-Freddie Gilbert. Georgia; Kevin Murphv. Oklahoma.

Tackles-William Fuller, North Carolina: Bruce Smith, Virginia Tech

Middle Guard-Brian Pillman, Miami (Ohio)

LinebackersGregg Carr, Auburn Steve DeOssie. Boston College; Vaughan Johnson. North Carolina Slate.

Backs-Don Rogers, UCLA; Victor

Scott, Colorado; CraigSwoope. Illinois -Randall Cunninghar

Punter-

Nevada-Las Vega..

Third TeamOffense . Tight End-Paul Bergmann, UCLA.

Wide Receivers-Tracy Henderson, Iowa State; Dave Moritz, Iowa Tackles-Pat Arrington, Auburn; Scott Raridon, Nebraska.

Guards-James Farr, Clemson: Garv Zimmerman, Oregon

Center-Jim Sweeney, Pittsburgh Quarterback-Ben Bennett. Duke. Running Backs-Greg Allen, F

All-American Again

East Carolinas Terry Long (74) has been named to the Associated Press First Team All-America unit, becoming the first Pirate to be so honored. Long has made first team on four different units

State; Keith Byars. Ohio State Placekicker-Jeif Ward, Tei

Florida

Defense    State: Bill Maas, Pittsburgh; Keitl

Ends-Outside Linebackers-Jimmie Millard, Washington State, .Mike Mills

Texas

Northern Illinois, Casey Tiumalu, Brigham Young; Kirby Warren, Pacific

Placekickers-Jess Atkinson, Maryland; Bob Bergeron, Michigan. Kevin Butler, Georgia; Rocky Costello. Fresno State; Jeff Jaeger. Washington, Jose Oceguera, Long Beach State, Bob Paulling, Clemson: Sean Pavlich. Air Force; Randy Pratt. California; Larrv Roach, Oklahoma State; Vince Scotf. Northern Illinois; Alan Smith, Texas A&M; Tony Wood, Tulane. Paul Woodside, West Virginia; Max Zendejas, Arizona.

Defense

Ends-Outside Linebackers-Steve Bearden, Vanderbilt; Bobby Bell Missouri, Neal Dellocono, UCLA: Kevin Egnatuck, Central Michigan, Hal Garner, Utah State; Mike Golic. Noire Dame; Tim Harris, Memphis Stale, Steve Hathaway, West Virginia; Eric Holle, Texas; David Howard. Long Beach Stale; Jeff Pegues. East Carolina: Todd Shell. Brigham Young; Ervin Randle, Baylor; Jeff Reyes, Utah SUte; Mike Russell, Toledo; A1 Wenglikowski, Pittsburgh

Tackles-Ken Adam, Long Beach Slate; Tom Baldwin. Tulsa Pal Brackett, Central Michigan; .Mark Butkus, Illinois: Alphonso Carreker. Florida State; Ray Childress, Texas A&.M; Tony Degrale, Texas; Brandon Flint. Brigham Young; Chris Funk. Air Force; James Geathers, Wichita State, Tim Green, Syracuse; Ron Holmes, Washington: Paul Hufford, Iowa; Pete Koch, Maryland: Greg Kragen, Utah State: Bill Maas, Pittsburgh; Keith

Kentucky had grabbed the top spot last week by three points over North Carolina. The Tar Heels managed to win Saturday despite getting only 7'2 minutes of action from All-American Michael Jordan because of foul trouble.

Impressive showings by Georgetown - which received the other three first-place votes - and Memphis State secured the third and fourth n n t <; r n c n o l r ! * Georgetown, 4-0, got 1,115 points, and Memphis State, 4-0, drew 1,067 points.

Iowa, 3-0, rcidiiie No. b with 1,007 points after knocking off Oregon State 56-45 Saturday. The Beavers, who wee previously ranked No. 10, dropped to No. 18.

No. 6 Houston, 3-1, and No. 7 UCLA, 3-0, each moved two notches after posting victories. The Cougars received 794 points and the Bruins, 784.

Defending NCAA champion North Carolina State, 5-1, which was humbled by Virginia Tech 89-65, slipped a rung to No. 8 with 771 points. Louisiana State, which raised its record to 4-0, advanced from 12th to ninth by collecting 690 points.

Georgia, 3-0, which squeezed by Georgia Tech 64-62 in its only game last week, also jumped three

places, from 13th to No. 10 with 529 points.

Maryland, 2-1, which was rated No. 6 a week ago, fell to 11th place after losing to Ohio State,

Completing the Second Ten were Boston College, DePaul, Wichita State, Arkansas. St. Johns, Michigan State, Oregon State, Purdue and Fresno State.

The only newcomer to this weeks Top Twenty was Purdue, which claimed No. 19 after an impressive victory, its fourth straight, over Louisville. Dropping frbm the elite was Virginia Commonwealth, No. 20 last week.

AP Rankings

The Top Twenty learns in the Associated Press' 1983-84 college basketball poll, with first-place voles in parentheses, total points based on H-19-18-17-16-1514-13-12 11-10-9-8-78-5-4-3-2 1 , record through Sunday and last week's ranking;

Record Pis Pvs . 1..N. iarulina 1301    48    4,2312-

2 Kentucky Lioi

3 Georgetown i3i

4 Memphis St

5 Iowa

6.Houston

7.UCLA

H.N.Carolina St.

9. Louisiana St

10.Georgia

11..Maryland

12 Boslon Cbllege

13 DePaul

14 Wichita St

15 Arkansas

17 Michigan St

18 Oregon St

19 Purdue 20.Fresno St

28 1.217 48 1,115 48 1,067 3,8 1.007 3-1    794

5-1 48 38 2-1

38

38

48

_3-l

3-1

11

48

3-1

690 .12 ,529 13 189    6

480 15 356 16 349 18 ,337 14

270 11 248 10 196    -

176 17

UPl Rankings

NEW YORK (UPl I - The United Press International Board of Coaches Top 20 college basketball ratings through Dec 4 ifirst-place votes and records tfi

Dec 4 in parentheses I

I Kentucky i2-0i i28i

2. North i arolinl )-0ii9i

3 Georgetown 4-0^

4 .Memphis Stale i4-0i

5 Iowa 13-0'

6 Houston '3-11

7. UCLA '3-0i

8. Georgia i3-IO

9 Louisiana Stale i4-0'

10 St John's '3-()i

II Purdue '5-0'

12 Boston College 8 0'

13, North CarolinaSlli 1 I 14 De Paul l3-()'

15. Maryland (2-li

16 Arkansas '31i

17 Oregon State l u

18 Wicnita State '4U'

19 Ohio Slate Cl-Oi

20. .Michigan State 8 1'

through

545

506

453

398

388

324

302

147

146

125

106

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now, the Football Coaches of America (Kodak), the Walter Camp Foundation, and the Football Writers of America, in addition to the AP. (Reflector Photo)

Pirates Rise To 7 9th

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON AP Sports Writer Nebraska and Texas will continue their season-long race for the national championship in the bowl games -although not against each other - while Alaoama enters postseason play as an unranked team for the first time in Ray Perkins initial season as head coach.

In todays final regular-season Associated Press college football poll, the Top Ten remained the same as last

week, while Alabama dropped out of the Top Twenty and Baylor and Oklahoma tied for the 20th spot.

The Associated Press will announce the 1983 national champion at 6:30 p.m., EST, on Tuesday, Jan. 3,1984.

Nebraska, which has been No. 1 ill every poll this season, received 51 of 54 first-place votes and 1,077 of a possible 1,080 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers and sptscasters. The 12-0 Cor-nnuskers will meet fifth-ranked Miami in the Orange Bowl.

Texas, ll-o, received the other three first-place votes

nois, 889; Miami, 875; SMU, 813; Georgia, 731; Michigan, 671; Brigham Young, 619; Iowa, 566.

In other bowl games which could have a bearing on the

Carolina.

Defects Are No Problem

By The Associated Press Construction defects at the University of North Carolina Student Activities Center in

Central Michigan; Aaron .Moog, Nevada-Las Vegas; Leslie O'Neal, Oklahoma Stale; Dan Ralph, Oregon, James Robinson, (lesson: Reggie Singletary. Kansas State; Eric Williams, Washington Slate .Middle Guards-Joe Aguilar, Fullerton Slate; Dowe Aughtman, Auburn: Jerald Baylis, Southern .Mississippi; .Mike Ruth, Boston College; Al Slncich, Michigan Linebackers-Cliff Abbott, TuKa; Kirk Dodge, Nevada-Las Vegas; Mike Durrah, South Carolina; Mike Emans, Bowling Green; Billy Jackson, .Mississippi State; Johnny Jackson, New Mexico; Mike Johnson Virginia Tech; Mike Knox. Nebraska; Jim Melka, Wisconsin. Raymond Morris. Texas-EI Paso; John Nevens, Fullerton State: John Offerdahl, Western Michigan, Tony Romano. Syracuse; Jackie Shipp, Oklahoma; Larry Station, Iowa; Rowland Tatum,

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Floridas 53-14 roul of Chapel Hill are minor and

l/,m,4n    iL-    r.-.    dOH t WCakcn the structure, a    Missouri;    Henry    Walls.    Clemson;

Florida State lifted the Gators over Clemson, while Air Forces 38-7 triumph over San Diego State moved the

national championship. Falcons into a I6th-place tie Auburn meets Michigan in the with Maryland.

Sugar Bowl and Illinois plays UCLA in the Rose Bowl.

The Second Ten consists of Florida, Clemson, Boston College, Ohio State, Pit-

Baylor, 7-3-1, made the rankings for the first time this season. The Bears meet Oklahoma State in the Bluebonnet Bowl, Oklahoma,

Bert Zinamon, Arkansas,

Backs-Fred Acorn, Texas; Tim Agee, West Virginia; Patrick Allen, Utah State; Clarence Baldwin. Maryland; Jim Bowman, Central Michigan, Mark Brandon. Toledo: Bud Brown, Southern Mississippi; Scott Case, Oklahoma; Bret Hpnnrfmpnt    at    9'''' f^ebraska; Sherman Cocroft, San

ueparimeni    ai    jose state: Evan Cooper. Michigan:

   '            Brent Dennis. Tulsa; David Fulcher,

Arizona State; Clint Harris. East Carolina: Willie Harris. North Carolina;

Sports Calendar

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring    ,-j m moi-

Sfto"^"<1 W,m in Today's Sports    points. Texas faces seventh-

Basketbaii    ranked Georgia in the Cotton

RoseatNorthPittfSp.m.)    D/)u,|

Washington at Roanoke (6:30    . i . . .

p.m.)    Third-ranked Auburn was

North Lenoir at Farmviiie    the only Top Ten team to play

a    weekcHd.    The    Tigers

Greenville Christian at Goldsboro    Clinched an undisputed

(:30p.m.)    c------

South Lenoir at Greene Central Wreatling Rose at Kinston (7 p.m.)

Fike at Conley (7 p.m.)

West Carteret at Washgjngton (7:30 p.m.)

Wednctdayi Sports Wrestling Williamston, Roanoke Rapids at Roanoke (S p.m.)

Beddingfield at Conley (7 p^.m.)

Basketball Williamston girls at Bear Grass

tsburgh. Air Force and which completed an 8-4 season Maryland tied for 16th, with a 21-17 victory over followed by West Virginia,

East Carolina and the Baylor-Oklahoma tie for 20th.

Last week, it was Clemson,

Florida, B.C., Ohio State, Pitt,

Fullerton State; Rod .VIcSwain. Clemson; Steve Newberry. West Virginia; Fred

and 1,028 points. A week ago,. Maryland, Air Force, West With 55 voters participating,' Virginia, Alabama and East Nebraska led 52-3 in first-

AP Rankings

The Top Twenty teams in the final regular-season Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes m parentheses, season records, total points based on 20-l#-ie-17-I8-l5-14-Y3-12 -U-10-9-B-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 and last weeks ranking;

Southeastern Conference championship by defeating    6SoMethi

Alabama 23-20 and received    Jm^^

1.Nebraska (SI)

2.Texas (3)

3.Aubum 4.Illinois S.Miami, Fla.

Methodist

Record Pts Pvs

961 points. Alabama, which had been as high as third during Perkins first season as Bear Bryants successor, will face Southern Methodist in tte Sun Bowl.

The rest of the Top Ten, followed by the pmnts; llli-

9.Brigham Young

10. Iowa

11.Florida

12.C>emion U.Boaton College M.Ohio State ISPitUburgh

16 Air Force lltllelMarylaiid 18 West Virginia llEait Caraliaa 20. Baylor ItieiOklahoma

12-00

11-00

10-18

1018

10-18

1018

9-1-1

9-28

10-18 .9-28 8-2-1 f-l-l 9-28

8-38 8-21

9-28 8-38 8-S8 888

7-J-l

8-48

1.077 1.028 961 889 875 813 731 871

619 .

St 10 560 12 536 II 385 13 368 14 308 15 217 17 211 II 146 18 K 26 41    -

41    -

ctory

Hawaii, returned to the Top Twenty after a four-week absence.

UPl Rankings

NEW YORK (UPl) - The United Press International Board of Coaches Top 20 1963 college football ratings, with first-place votes ar)d recoi-ds in parentheses (total points based uo 15 points for first place, 14 for second, etc. I.

)    Nebraska (311 (12-0)    507

2.    Texas (3) (11-0)    475

3.    Auburn (10-1)    435

4    Miami (Fla ) (10-D    375

5    Illinois (10-11    373

6    Southern MthdstdO-l)    345

7.    Georgia (9-1-1)    258

8.    Mich)gan (9-2i    217

9. Brigham Young (lO-I)    211

10.    Iowa (9-2)    195

11    Florida (8-2-1)    123

12. Boston College i9-2i    116

13    Ohio Stale (8-3)    82

14    Pittsburgh (8-2-1)    71

15.    Maryland (8-1)    41

16.    Air Force (9-2)    29

17.    Baylor (7-3-1)    23

18.    Virginia Tech (9-2)    17

19.    West Virginia (8-3)    14

20    Oklahoma (8-4)    it

Note; By agreement with the American Football Coaches Association, teams on by the NCAA are ineligible for

Ihe Top 20 and national champiomhlD .    I*    6    mlOrma-

conaideratjpn by the UPl Board oT    tlOB, Zia Said Hc    Catmot de-

Coaches. The teams curreny on proba    I*'

lion are Clemson. Southern'^caiifomia; termine if repair will be nec-Anzona, WichiU State and Southern Miltiwippi.

building expert said after a preliminary inspection.

The building is safe, Paul Z. Zia, head of the civil engineering

N.C. State University, said

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(or Ihe safety ot the buildii^    Sya' E'5*g"'a

as a result of these problems.    state; Garcia Lane, Ohio State; Tony

UNC officials asked Zia to SS):

Study the $30 million sports arena, which is under construction, after receiving complaints in October from a subcontractor.

In a letter to university officials. Sterling Jones of Jones Steel Erectors of Rowland alleged that some of the steel rods called for in the buildings reinforced concrete were deficient in three areas.

Zia said he inspected the structure after construction workers removed about four square feet of the walls concrete skin to allow a close look at the alleged defects.

Zia said Monday he was waiting for more information from the centers New^ork designer. He said he w(wld submit his findings to UNC officials in about two weeks.

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10 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Tueylay,    Decembers,    1983Young^ags Look Ahead To Improvement

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer FARMVILLE - When the Farmville Central Jaguars graduated eight players from the 1982-83 basketball team that won the Eastern Carolina 3-A Conference championship, Coach Mike Terrell knew rebuilding the team would take a lot of practice time.

But when eight of his new players were involved in the state Division II football playoffs until eight days before the start of basketball season. Terrell discovered their training would have to be "on the job.

That training started Friday with a 41-22 loss to Wilson Beddingfield. wiLh Ifent Hardy-the only Jaguar in doubledigits with 12 points.

We have a whole new team with the exception of (Donald) Tyson and (James) Newton." Terrell said, "and neither one of them played a lot last year. With our situation this year with football season carrying over, there's a lot you have to talk about rather than work on: it put us about two weeks behind everyone else.

"I didn't think we were in good shape (against Beddingfield). Its a big adjustment from football; basketball is all running. At the same time, the aggressiveness developed in football and the winning attitude should carry over.

Hardy and senior point guard Donald Tyson direct the Farmville offense, while Toronto Moye, Nat Norris, Eric Baker and Scott Lewis will fight for time at guard, as well. Thomas Ragins, Bernard Taylor, Andre Vines and Ronnie Barnes battle for slots in the Jaguars front court.

"Any of those could move in and play. Terrell said. "They ll all get playing time till we determine the best people at each position. Theres no way to develop a sound defensive team in just eight practices. Offensively, with a new' team, it takes time to get used to each other and blend in.

"We must blend in as a team, work together on offense; we dont have any one outstanding player. Evans is a good shooter, but Hardy is our strongest piayer inside. We run a team offense - motion offense. It takes longer to learn, but in the long run it pays off.

Defensively. Terrell will rely on a trapping zone press from

Turnover Pressure

Duke forward Danny Meagher (4.5) reaches in to block a pass by South Floridas Curtis Kitchen (40) during the first half of play Monday night in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Duke defeated the Bulls, 95-6(). (.APLaserphoto) ,

Blue Devils Fly By South Florida

DURHAM iAP( - Duke captured its fourth straight victory thanks to a 25-3 scoring spree in the first half that left the Blue Devils flying and South Florida reeling.

Mark Alarie poured in 21 points and David Henderson scored a career-high 20 points off the bench as the Blue Devils whipped South Florida 95-66 Monday night.

South Florida led 31-29 midway through the first half, but Duke guards Tommy Amaker and Johnny Dawkins combined for 17 points in the final eight minutes as the Blue Devils outscored the Bulls 25-3 for a 54-34 halftime advantage.

They scored 31 points in the first 12 minutes of the game. Then after a time out ^ey only scored three more in the next eight minutes, said Duke coach Mike Kryzyewski,

We were a little shellshocked. They were just taking the ball by us. When we finally made the adjustment and started playing some defense, that was the turning point, he said.

South Florida coach Lee Rose said the Blue Devils fuU-court pressure "took the ball away from us. That was my fault because I had a couple of young players in tWere.

Duke, 44), coasted through the second half as South Florida, 2-2, never drew closer than 15 points and suffered its wont loss since a 75-39 setback at North Carolina in Dec. 19S1.

Dari0M finished with 18

points and seven assists, w'hile Amaker had 17 points and nine assists and Danny Meagher, a junior, chipped in 10.

Charlie Bradley paced South Florida with 17 points, far below his 30-point average entering the game. He also made only three of his last 17 shots.

it wasnt the crowd, Bradley said, It was my poor shooting. I have to forget this and get ready for the next game.

Jim Grandholm, a 7-foot-l forward, added 14 for the Bulls and pulled down seven rebounds,

Duke outscored the Bulls from the field, hitting 37 of 67 shots to South Floridas 27 of 63. From the free-throw line, the Blue Devils were 21 of 30 while the Bulls hit 12 of 33.

S KLdKIDA

Bradley

(jrandlifllm

Kilchen

Ponelh

i)ouKlas

Phoenix

1 3 14

1 2 in

3 3 4 3

Conner

Wallace

Dasllan

Pallerson

Canfall

Totals

MP PU rT K A P PI 28 H-24 1 4 1 1 1 17 28 fi-in 2-3 7 28    4    6    2-    5    9

22    1    3    2    2    3

2-    5    2    2    0    .    _    _

   I    0-    2    U    1    1    

17    3    8    2-    2    3    U    2    8

12    2    3    0-    1    7    1    4    4

19    I    3    0-    0    I    I    2    2

4    0-1    1    2    0    U    0    1

1    (I-    0    0-    0    0    0    0    U

200 27-63 12-23 31 13 21 66

DUKE

Alarie

Meagher

Bilas

Amaker

Dawkins

Henderson

McNeely

Nessley

Ford

Anderson

Bryan

Crump

Totals

MP PC FT R A in-17 1180 5-12 0-170 2-41570 7 8 3- 4 5 9 5-10 8-8 2 7 7 13 6- 7 3 1 11 0-0 1 0 0-1 1-220 0-10-01 1 0- 0 0-0 0 1 O 0 1-2 1 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 3767 21-30 38 19

F PI

1    21 4 10 3 5

2    17 0 18 2 20 2 2

18 95

South Florida Duke

34 32-66 54 41-95

Turnoters .South Florida 17. Duke 15 Technical fouls Duke bench, .South Plorida bench Officials .Moreau. Burch. Porte.

A-8,200

either a 3-2 or 1-3-1 configuration.

I like the zone press on defense, Terrell said. I like to play man-to-man, but that takes a lot of time to leam. EventuaUy well get to all of those things.

The Jaguars wily have until December 16 before they enter the battle for the Eastern Carolina title. Farmville hosts Greene Central in the traditional inter-county rivalry.

Greene Central has a good group returning, Terrell said. They should be one of the stronger teams Uiis year. North Pitt is always a factor in the conference, as well as Southwest Edgecombe.

If you play well as a team, that can go a long ways. Weve been in this situation before; three years ago we lost a lot of people, but at the end of the season we beat the top two teams in the conference. Our team that won the championship last year played as sophomores and got their tails kicked; it could happen again.

"We may take a few lumps to begin with, but down the stretch I feel like well do all right. We may not be factor to win the championship, but I feel like well decide who does. We have a chance to be in the top four in the league.

had nine points against Beddingfield but missed several shots inside when she was (H>en.

Lisa has a lot of athletic ability, Worthington said. She jumped over 19 feet in one AAU (track) meet this summer and was part of the 400-meter relay team that went so far.

Shes very quick; maybe too quick right now. She has to let the ball catch up to hier. She wants to be good, and shes got to leam the soft touch around the basket. Shes going to be vying for a starting spot; shes going to help out a lot insid

The Lady Jags will also rely wi zone defense early in the season, while trapping at half court. But they had trouble

offensively Friday when Wilson shifted to man-to-man.

I thovi^t we handled it well in the first and second quarter, Worthington said. "But we had trouble later in the game.

Worthington favors Greene Central and Southwest Edgecombe in the conference race, but shes not willing to count anyone out.

It kind of goes in cycles, she said. When I first started coaching. North Pitt had it all; then Ayden-Grifton had the good teams for a couple of years. Southwest has been strong for the last few years; maybe this year itll be someone else.'

The Lady Jaguars had more time to prepare, and came away with a narrow 48-46 victory for their efforts. Joy Peaden led Farmville with 11 points, while Stephanie Newton had 10.

Senior center Cynthia Hart is the I^dy Jags tallest player at 5-11, but (^ch Hilda Worthington believes her team wilL compete with the best the Eastern Carolina 3-A has to offer. Newton and Peaden join Hart in the front court, while junior guards Debra Joyner and Kim Smith share the ballhandling.

"Newton has a soft touch around the basket, but she didnt show it Friday night. Worthington said. She should be one of our leaders on offense. And Joyner has one of the best outside shots of any of them.

I think a Tot of it had to do with it being their first game, while Beddingfield had played one already. Our turnovers were not so bad. just our shooting.

But one of the biggest weapons the Lady Jaguars have is Lisa Lang, a 5-9 freshman who also excels on the track. Lang

Sasser Edges Robinson As

Farmville Central

The Farmville Central Jaguars host North Lenoir tonight in their second game of the 1983-84 season. Members of the Farmville team are: (kneeling, L-R) Scott Lewis, Donald Tyson, Eric Baker, Nat

Norris, Joe Smith; (standing) Coach Mike Terrell, Bobbey Evans, Thomas Ragins, Andre Vines, Kent Hardy, Bernard Taylor, Ronnie Barnes, Toronto Moye, James Newton. (Reflector photo)

Top AP Coach Michigan Tops 'Dawgs'

n    .......    an    1A_/I    nr    1K1    irAiiita    *a

ByRlCKSCOPPE .Associated Press RALEIGH (AP) -Charlotte Myers Park second-year coach Glenn Sasser, who was selected Coach of the Year in North

Press, says hes not an easy coach to play for.

I push them physically and mentally, but 1 don t leel bad about that. Sasser said. Youve only got 10 shots at it and we might as well take our best shot at it.

"But I think Im fair with them. 1 think we have an obligation to work with the kids and do more than just showing them how to put on shoulder pads. he said.

Sasser guided his Mustangs to an unbeaten regular season, which helped him capture Coach of the Year honors by a 6 to 4 margin over Williamston coach Harold Robinson.

Fayetteville Douglas Byrd coach Bob Proli was third with three votes in a vote of 25 North Carolina prep sportswriters. Ten other coaches also received votes.

This is unreal, Sasser said after being told of the award. "I cant believe it.

Theres so many good coaches in this state, this has to be a reflection of my team and my assistant coaches because I aint smart enough to coach by myself. he said.

"But, Im not going to give it back.

Under Sasser, Myers Park won the Southwestern 4-A Conference title and finished the regular season with a 10-0 mark. The Mustangs advanced to the second round of the state playoffs before losing to eventual state champion Greensboro Page.

It was just one of those things that everything fell into place. We had some decent kids and I dont have a weak assistant coach on the staff, he said.

"I dont think we have any major college prospects. Sasser slid in a telephone interview. But anytime you

go 104) or 11-1, youve got to have some good players. Its just one of things that everything fell into place.

In fact, Sasser said last years team - which finished 5-5 - may have been better than this season.^

"We never got beat by more than six points, and that football team may have been 'uciler physically than this years team, he said. But I think the program is better this year because weve had a year to work with the coaches and players and the administration.

Sasser, 40, a Tarboro native, played defensive tackle for North Carolina State and played in the Blue-Gray game. After graduating in 1964, he played for the St. Louis Cardinals of the NFL for one year before returning to N.C. State to coach the freshman team.

Later, Sasser was an assistant coach at Sanford before spending six years as head coach at New Hanover. He then left coaching to sell insurance. But two years later he was back coaching at Wilmington Laney. He stayed there as head coach six seasons before moving to Myers Park two years ago.

Still, he said he is not quite sure why he decided to return to coaching.

"I dont know why, Sasser said. When I was out of coaching I really missed it. I just enjoy coaching. I guess its sort of like a fraternity. But its also a challenge. Every year its something new.

By DICK JOYCE AP Sports Writer

Michigans Wolverines are off to a hot start in college basketball, making 10th-ranked Georgia, which made the NCAA Final Four last season, its fifth straight victim.

"Weve got a good shot at getting Tn the Top Twenty,. said Tim McCormick, 6-foot-ll junior center who tossed in a career-high 25 points and grabbed 12 rebounds in leading the Michigan to a 76-70 triumph at Atlanta Monday night. And next year, the skys the limit.

It was the Bulldogs first loss in four starts this season.

In other games involving the Top Twenty, No. 12 Boston Co lege ripped Puget Sound 88-71; No. 15 Arkansas scored a 79-50 home rout over East Tennessee State, and No. 20 Purdue downed visiting Boston University 77-65.

Michigan coach Bill Frieder was happy, yet apprehensive about his squad.

I think this game proved to the kids that if they work hard and play well, they can win against almost anybody, said Freider. Weve got to prove we can win our league.

Michigan got off to a 9-1 start last season against non-conference opponents, then met its match in Big Ten

play, finishing with a 15-13 overall record. The Wolverines finished ninth in the Big Ten with a 6-12 mark and returned all of their key players.

Michigan held the Bulldogs scoreless for nearly seven minutes in the second half. The Wolverines went on a 104) spree to build a two point lead to 68-56 with 2:38 remaining.

Butch Wade added 17 points and Leslie Rockymore 13 for Michigan, while Vem Fleming scored 25 and James Banks 23 foriieorgia.

Boston College increased its record to 5-0, while Puget Sound, 3-4, lost for the third time in a four-game Eastern swing. B.C.s Jay Murphy played only the first half because of the flu, and Michael Adams, 18 points, Martin Clark, 17, and Roger McCready, 13, took up the scoring slack.

Arkansas coach Eddie Sutton won the game but lost a sophomore point guard in Willie Cutts. After Cutts missed a 20-foot jumper, Sutton took him out of the game. Cutts left the arena immediately, prompting Sutton to say: Willie Cutts will never play another game at the University of Arkansas.

The game itself was contest with the Razorbacks piling up a 22-point halftime lead

against East Tennessee for their fourth win in five starts. Joe Kleines 18 points and 10 rebounds paced Arkansas, while James Tandy hit 18 for the Buccaneers.

Purdue, 54), overtook B(Kton U. with a 16-0 surge in the first half and pulled away as Steve Reid scored all 14 of his points

Wisconsin. Dave Hoppen, who finished with 20 points,.,^ blocked a last-second 30-foot attempt by Wisconsins Rick Olsen to preserve the Cor-nhuskers third win in four

JlvCr AulCittiwSkuii. uvi| jpdtcu

by Mike Alexanders 16 points, fell to 2-2.

Meanwhile, new Arizona coach Lute Olsen, who coached^ Iowa for nine years, got a rude homecoming to the state of Iowa. It was unbeaten Iowa State which sent Arizona, 1-3, to its third loss behind Barry Stevens 37 points.

Lamar, paced by Tom Sewells 24 points, extended the nations longest homecourt winning streak to 70 with a 77-56 thumping of Southwest Texas State. The Cardinals last lost at home on Feb. 15, 1978.

Dave Ponces eight-foot jump with six seconds left earned Nebraska a 71-69 double overtime victory over host

outir^.

At South Bend, Ind.. Tom Slubys two field goals helped Notre Dame survive a second-half rally by St. Francis (N.Y.) 71-49; Mark Alarie and David Henderson combined for 41 points in Dukes home 95-66 triumph over South Florida; Kerry Boagni hit 20 points and Grei Dreiling 18 as Kansas belti visiting Jackson State 89-57

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The Daily Reflector, Gree/ivlle, N.C.

Tuesday, Decembers, 1983 HTJireatened Sims Leads Lion Win

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -Billy Sims has given a new meaning to the word courage,^ as far as Detroit Coach Monte Clark is concerned.

Sims, game death

over his head, gained 137 vards on 23 carries to spark the Lions offense in Monday nights crucial 13-2 National football League victory over

playing with a pre-leath threat hanging

Minnesota. The Lions took a one-game lead over the Vikings and Green Bay in the National Conferences Central Division.

Not until after the game was it disclosed that an anony-mou. caller had telephoned a threat on Sims life to Silverdome security officials about 90 minutes before the kickoff.

Ive never experienced

anything like that before, Clark said. I felt the right thing was to tell Billy about it. He said, Tm not going to worry about that, ill worry about it after the game.

That was the damndest thing I ever saw. Wasnt that something for him to say that?

Sims laughed the whole thing off with reporters, too. Its hard to hit a moving

target,he quipped.

Detroits victory {Mit the Lions in the drivers seat with an 8-6 record in the division. The Vikings and Packers are tied at 7-7 with two games remaining. One more victory will clinch the Lions first title of any kind since 1957.

I think its great, said owner William Clay Ford. Weve been looking for revenge against the Vikings and

Kuhn Gives His Farewell

:    By WILL GRIMSLEY

AP Special Correspondent NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Bowie Kuhn normally stretches 6 feet, 6 inches in his low-heel shoes but he .^tood 10 feet tall when he gave his valedictory as cmmissioer of baseball:

He let them have it with .both barrels.

: The them are the minority of owners - five of a total W 26 - who composed a Jianging party that went out lo get him, and succeeded.

: As he made his final speech to club directors and ^ther baseball personnel Monday in the giant ballroom of Nashvilles Opryland Hotel, one could see a lot of people squirming.

Kuhn spoke openly of knives in the back, undermining and killing of the spirit. He numbered the games great gains - at-iendances double those of when he took office, new $1 billion-plus TV contracts, radio plans exceeding fondest dreams and success in keeping baseball as the family game.

He enumerated the dangers - drugs and drug abuse, a financial structure that despite all the gains continues to permit no sunlight teams - noncompetitive clubs which cari-i emerge from the cellar - and deteriorating player

relations - an opportunity rather than a problem.

Adroitly, the commissioner struck back at the small cluster of owners whose )eevishness brought about )is dismissal.

When it was over, friends ~and fof alike gave him a standing, resounding ovation. It was almost as if baseball was telling him it was sorry it let him get away.

The towering Kuhn wasnt the stodgy, stiff-backed former Wall Street attorney that some have imagined him to be when he rose to lecturn.

I think Ive made more retirement speeches than Muhammad Ali, he said.

Borrowing from my old friend. Happy Chandler, I feel like the mosquito that flew into the nudist colony and said, T dont know where U begin.

Then the outgoing commissioner got serious. He said he wishes the baseball screening committee would hurry up and namehis successor because he had other 'irons in the fire.

Its my Christmas wish, he said.

The owners, he said, shouldnt be satisfied with getting an executive whom they regard as a good man who can do a good job.

He must be a strong

commissioner, Kuhn said, with special powers.

He then harked back to 1921 when baseball, its integrity shattered by the Black Sox Scandal, reached out to get an old, curly-haired judge named Kenesaw Mountain Landis to restore the publics confidence.

He helped them draw up the first Major League Agreement, Kuhn related. He told them, I want more than a legal document. I want a moral covenant with the ownership for support.

The judge said he wanted the owners to support him every day in every way, stand by him thick or thin, no knives in the back.

The owners wrote a letter. All signed it.

Kuhn said present owners would be wise to follow the same example - not undermine him, not break his power, not break his spirit - but offer him power and protection, more than I had. Nobody worth his salt should consider the job unless given that kind of commitment by the ownership, he added.

Owners feared Landis but. when Happy Chandler succeeded him as commissioner, they regained the upper hand. Chandler was fired for rnaiidatiiig that Jackie Robinson, a black, be

allowed to play in the majors and giving players other concessions.

Kuhn, seeking to be even-handed, offended influential owners such as Charles Finley, George Steinbrenner and Ted Turner with fines and suspensions. He antagonized others by ordering that spring camps be opened during a contract squabble with the players in the mid-1970s and a split-season in strike-plagued 1981.

When his name came up for contract renewal, five National League clubs, harboring old peeves, cast negative votes - enough to unseat in the undemocratic baseball structure.

We, like others, have been critical of Kuhn on occasions - such as heavy fines against owners for chance remarks construed as tampering, rulings affecting the status of Hall of Fafners Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle because of gambling casino connections, and other instances.

We often have thought him too legalistic.

We have never challenged his integrity or ethics. Perhaps what we have construed as fault in the man really is fault in the game itself. Bowie Kuhn is a man of great class. Baseball will be hard pressed to fill his shoes.

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> High game, Ricky Davis 227, Grace Ward 210; high series, Bruce Williams 591, Joyce Streeter 526.

Baseball Draft

NASHVILLE, Tenn. lAPi - The com plete list of players selected Monday in the major league draft at baseball's winter meetings with team selecting, player, position, and organization from which he was selected:

Chicago Cubs Johnny Abrego, pitcher, Philadelphia Phillies

Cleveland Indians Tom Waddell, pitcher, Atlanta Braves Kansas City Royals Orlando Sanchez, first baseman. St. Louis Cardinals

Milwaukee Brewers Jamie Nelson, catcher. Seattle Mariners

Oakland A s

Jeff Bettendorf, pitcher. New York Mets

Philadelphia Phillies

* Jy Tibbs, pitcher, New York Mets ' - ' San Prancisco Giants

*E^n Mullins, infielder, Chicago White

Seattle Mariners s John Geisel, pitcher. Toronto Blue Jays Texas Rangers

Pat Underwood, pitcher, Detroit Tigers

Toronto Blue Jays Kelly Gruber, infielder, Cleveland Indians

Terry Cormack, catcher, Atlanta Braves    ^

^ College Basketball

   By Thf Associatfd Prfss

EAST

Army 71, Delaware 63 Boston Coll. 88, Puget Sound 71 Bridgeport 79, St. Michael's 59 Buffalo 66. Mercyhurst64 CheyneySO, Morgan St , 74 Qrew'79,Yeshiva53

a Coll. 84. Misericordia 56 wrd 79, Jersey City St. 71 j's. Pa 88, Delaware Val. 79 Kutztown91, Mount St, Marys83

Loyola, Md 78, Lycoming 61 Mo,-Bit. County tl, Shippensburg St. 74 Mansfield 74. Lock Haven 72 OneonU St. 67, Binghamton 51 Pittsburgh 94, St. mncis. Pa. 80 Stevens Tech 93. New England Bible 38 Stockton St. 77, Spring Garden 61 Trinity 100, Queens Coll. 67 Wro. Paterson 84, CCNY 61 Wesleyan 43. MIT 39 SOUTH

AtetumSt. 103, Wiley 95 Aubum76. Florida St 69 Baptist Coll 82. Bethune-Cookman 49     ,U. 86, SE Alabama 71

^llsville 100, Belmont, Tenn. 68 ^..jVal.69.PikeviUe66.0T I. o< Charleston 65, Presbyterian 53 Duke 96. S. Florida 66 Pcrd76.0tterbein67 lnbeth City St. 87, Livingstone 71 Ga?Southem67.ValdosUSt 64 iInst.52,NC-Central50 iUeSt. 84. Shorter Coll. 70 i77.Ala.-HunUvUle66

McN(efeSt.6I.MurraySt.M

Michigan 76. Georgia 70 Middle Tenn 69, Urbana 47 N Alabama 93. Lambuth Coll. 75

36

NC-Wilmington81, Methodist 65 Navy 85, NC Wesleyan 67 Newberry 58, Lander 51 Pembroke 80. Fayetteville St 60 Pfeiffer 68, Belmont Abbey 60 Radford 70, Cabrini 64 Randolph-Macon 64, Hampden-.Sydney

J

Roanoke 72, Va Wesleyan 64 SE Louisiana 59. Tampa 52 Tenn. Temple 112, Tusculum 97 Tuskegee 100, Talladega Coll. 83 VMI83, Bridgewater, Va. 73 Virginia St. 5, St Paul's 78 W. Carolina 93, Mars Hill 72 Wofford 86, Claflin 73

MIDWEST Bradley 58, St. Louis 57 ButlerOl, Indiana St. 86, OT Cent. Methodist 77, Park Coll. 60 Chadron St. 82. Black Hills St. 60 Defiance 74, Cent Michigan 64 Evansville 67. Washburn 66 Hope 85, Bethel 59 Illinois St. 92. Ill. -Chicago 79 Iowa St. 75, Arizona 63 Iowa Wesleyan 91, Culver-Stockton 90 Kansas 89, Jackson St. 57 Loras 57, Dubuque 54 Minnesota 65, Oregon 49 No. Michigan7l. Detroit 67. OT NW Missouri St 88, Tarkio66 Nebraska 71, Wisconsin 69,20T Northwestern 63, 111 Wesleyan 54 NotreDame71,St. Francis, NY49 Oregon 65, Minnesota 49 PiltslMugSl.90.Ottawa72 Purdue 77. Boston U. 65 Rio Grande 118, Circleville Bible 52 Siena Heights 90. Grand Rapids Baptist

j Arbor 57, Northwood 56 h 90. Dyke 79 Wis.-Stout IQ. St Scholastica 38 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 79, E. Tennessee St. 50 Delta St. 73, Ark.-Monticello59 Lamar 77, SW Texas St . 56 Oklahoma City 70. Hardin-Simmons 60 Oral Roberts 62, Oklahoma St. 61 So Arkansas 59, E. Texas St. 53 Texas A4M 71. Southwestern 66 Texas-San Antonio 69, Biscayne 62 FAR WEST Cal-Santa Barbara 59, Chico St. 57, OT California 76. Cal-Davis 50 Denver77, Adams St 56 Hastings, Neb. 73, Alaska-Anchorage 72 Idaho E. Montana 67 So. California 70, American U. 51 So. Utah 99, New Mexico Highlands 80 Utah 91, Colorado 85

Transactions

By The Associated Press BASEBALL American l.eagur CLEVEUND INDIANS-Traded Jim

HtKKEY National llockrv League EDMONTON OILERS-Traded Tom Roulston,    center,    to    the Pittsburgh

Penguins    for    Kevin McClelland, center,

and future considerations.

NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Assigned John MacLean. right wing, to the Osnawa Generals of the Ontario Hockey League

NHL Standings

By The Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick Division

W    1.    T Pis (iK G\

16    9    4    36 118 102

NY Rangers NY Isles Philadelphia Washington Pittsburgh New Jersey

Buffalo

Boston

Quebec

Montreal

Hartford

Minnesota Toronto Chicago Detroit St. Louis

1    35    118    96

3    33    117    97

2    26    93    101

3    15    84    114

72 124

31    129    126

25    112    124

24    97    109

22    89    101

21    99    118

17    9

15    9

,{2    14    2

'6    18    3

4    21    1    I

Ad^s DiVisioie-'^ ne    8    3    35    110    95

16    7    2    34    120    78.

15    11    3    33    138    104

12    14    1    25    106    110

11    11    2    24    91    95

('ampbelUonferencr Norris Division IT    10    3

11    12    3

11    14    2

10    13    2

9    14    3

Smvthe Division Edmonton    20    5    3    43    166    112

Calgary    11    11    4    26    97    105

Vancouver    11    13    3    25    114    117

Winnipeg    9    14    3    21    110    130

Los Angeles    7    16    5    19    114    136

.Mondays Games No games scheduled

Tuesdav's Games Boston at Pittsburgh Hartford at Montreal Calgary at Quebec Buffalo at St. Louis N.Y. Islandel-sat Vancouver Wednesday's Games Washington at N Y Rangers Winnipeg at New Jersey St . Louis at Toronto Detroit at Minnesota Buffalo at Chicago Vancouver at Edmonton N.Y. Islanders at Lbs Angeles

NFL Standings

By The Associated Press Ameritan Conference East

W I. T Pet. PE PA

10    4    0    .714 324 212

0

Monday's Game Detroit 13. Minnesota 2

Saturday, Dec. 10 Pittsburgh at New'York Jets Atlanta at Miami

Sunday, Dec. II Chicago at Minnesota Cleveland at Houston San Francisco at Buffalo Seattle at New York Giants Detroit at Cincinnati New Orleans at Philadelphia Kansas City at San Diego New England at Los Angeles Rams St Louis at Los Angeles^iders Baltimore at Denver Washington at Dallas

Monday, Dec. 12 Green Bay at Tampa Bay

NBA Standings

By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFEREN^'E Atlantic Division

Essian. catcher, to the Oakland A's for a ptoer to be named later,

IETROIT TIGERS-Traded Larry Pashnick, pitcher, to the Minnesota Twins for Rusty KunU, outfielder.

National Leajtue PHIUDELPHIA PHflLIES-Traded Tony Perez, first baseman, lo the Cincinnati Reds for a player to be named later. Traded Ron Reed, pitcher, to the Chicago White Sox fw cash or a player to be named later.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Traded Champ Summers, outfielder, to the San Diego Pathes for Joe Pittman, infielder, and a player to be named later.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Signed John

Lucas, guard, and cut Roger Phegley. guard.

FOOTBALL National Football League,

NEW ENGLAND PATRJOtS-Fred Sleinfort, place-kicker United States FaotbaU SAN an:

Signed Ralph and Grag Davidson, center

y-Miami

Buffalo    8    6    0    .571    259    297

New England    7    7    0    . 500    247    258

N.Y. Jets    7    7    0    500    292    263

Baltimore    6    8    0    .429    225    323

' Eentral

Pittsburgh    9    5    0    .643    304    266

Cleveland    8    6    0    ,571    299    291

Cincinnati    6    8    0    .429    315    273

Houston    1    13    0    .071    244    413

West

y-L.A.Raiders    11    3    0    .786    388    290

Denver    8    6    O    .571    264    260

battle    7    7    0    . 500    362    379

Kansas City    5    9    0    .357    300    .309

San Diego    5    9    0    .357    303    394

National Conference East

x-Dallas    12    2    0    .857    452    287

x-Washmgton    12    2    0    .857    479    300

St. Louis    6    , 7    1    .462    309    397

Philadelphia    5    9    0    .357    209    271

N.Y. Giants    3    10    I    .250    233    299

Central

8    6    0    .571    315    249

7    7    0    .500 396    407

7 70    .500    283    315

6    8    0    .429    309    287

2    12    0    .143 212    345

West

8    6    0

W L Pet.

GB

Philadelphia 14 4

778

Boston

13 6

.684

I'-j

New York

13 6

.684

Vi

New Jersey

8 9

.471

5'i

Washington

7 11

.389

7

Central Division

Milwaukee

12 6

.667

Detroit

10 9

.526

2i

Atlanta

9 9

.500

3

Cleveland

6 13

.316

6'2

Chicago

5 11

.313

6

Indiana .

4 14

.222

8

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Midwest Division

Dallas

13 4

.765

-

Denver

10 8

.556

3'2

Utah

11 9

.550

3*2

Kansas City

8 10

.444

5'2

Houston

7 11

.389

6'2

San Antonio

7 13

.350

7>2

Pacilic Division

Los Angeles

13 5

.722

Portland

12 7

.632

1'2

Golden State

9 10

.474

4'2

Seattle

9 10

.474

4'j

Phoenix

6 13

.316

7'2

San Diego

6 14

.300

8

Monday'sGames No games scheduled

Tuesday's Games

Cleveland at New Jersey

Denver at New York

Phoenix at Atlanta

Boston at Chicago

Dallas at Kansas Cit; Washington at Houst

</

on

Seattle at Golden SUte

San Antonio at Portland

Wednesday's Games

Denver at Philadelphia

Atlanta at Cleveland

Boston at Indiana

Houston at Milwaukee

Washington at Dallas Portland at Utah

San Antonio at San Diego

Detroit Green Bay Minnesota Chicago Tampi Bay

Cut LA. Rams

I States FaotbaU League

TONip GUNSLINGERS-ih Wiluams, offensive guard.

San Francisco    8    6    0

New Orleans    7    7    0

AtlanU    6    8    0

y-clinched division title x-clinched playoff spot

571 328 299 571 367 266 500 275 294 429 315 344

Abb54

S.Carolina 80, A| Winthrop87,

ilachianSt.60 Point 72

Mens College Wrestling Hiram 43. Elon 12 Hiram 28, Pembroke 21 Pembroke 42, Elon 9

to have it come in a game with the divisifm on the line makes it especially sweet.

It was the Lions seventh victory in their last nine 'arnes while the Vikings have ost five of their last six.

When you have a Sims, who is a first class player, you find ways to get the ball to him, Vikings Coach Bud Grant said. They did and he had a good game.

The Lions compressed all their scoring into the second quarter, sandwiching a 10-yard touchdown pass from Eric Hippie to Jeff Chadwick between field goals of 50 and 42 yards by Eddie Murray.

Both clubs came up with goal line stands in the second

half and the Vikings got their only two points with 2:43 to play when Detroit elected to have punter Mike Black run out of the end zone for an intentional safety, rather than risk a blocked kick.

The Detroit defense made the big plays when they had to, said Minnesota quarterback Steve Dils, who was sacked seven times. We also hurt ourselves by getting to the 1-yard line twice and not scoring - first on a penalty, then Detroit stopped us. Minnesota running back Darrin Nelson said, If you cant score a TD from the 1. you cant beat anybody. Hippie, who found Chadwick open five times for 89 yards

and the touchdown, finished minutes of an overtime period with with completions on 9 of against Green Bay.

17 passes for 120 yards with no The Detroit defense is darn interceptions.    good, Dils said. They have

At this point, it looks like some good people and play were in the drivers seat, wellasaunit."

Hippie said. Not only from Chadwick, whose touchdown the won-lost standpoint, but gr^b came at 7:44 of the the way were playing right    quarter from a

now. Were getting off the line fhird-and-5 situation, said he and really beating some peo- was a little nervous before the pie back right now.    gaiDC-

tion. However, the Vikings .    .    ,    ,

ground game was limited to ^ n ciotf just94 yards.    recalled.

The Lions defense has not yielded a touchdown in the last 10 quarters of regulation play - plus about eight

Being The Best Has Its Own Problems

I went out a few minutes later and scored the touchdown.

Clark gave the Lions the day off today before they begin preparing for their game Sunday against the Bengals in Cincinnati. Detroit closes out the season a week later at home against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

By BRUCE LOWITT AP Sports Writer

The problem with becoming the best at a particular skill is that everyone expects - demands - constant perfection.

Witness Mark Moseley, place-kicker extraordinaire W the Washington Redskins.

In 1982, he established records for the m(t consecutive field goals (23) and the highest field-goal percentage (95.24), surpassing marks held by Garo Yepremian and Jan Stenerud. Afid he was the National Football Leagues Most Valuable Player.

In 1983, a few blips appeared.

He missed a 31-yard attempt in the fourth quarter of the season opener against Dallas.

Washington lost 31-30.

Six weeks later he missed a 37-yard field goal on the final play against Green Bay.

Washington lost 48-47.

They are Washingtons only losses in 14 games this year.

The Redskins fans who had elevated Moseley to heroic status began to boo. Some said if he hadnt missed those two kicks which Moseley himself says he should have made Washington just

might be unbeaten today.

Everybody still had last year in mind, he said. They expected me to make every one of them ... Well, Im going to miss a few. Those things are going to happen. If you play the game long enough, youre going to have some downs. The object is to try to stay up as much as possible.

Its just been a typical year for a kicker. What Ive gone through this year is everything that every kicker goes though at one time or another.

Moseley, a dinosaur (thats what Washington quarterback Joe Theismann calls him), the only straightaway kicker in a soccer-style world, began to question his . own abilities after those misses and a few others well within his range.

Mark was in a situation where he had to >fight it himself, said Theismann, the holder on Washingtons place-kicks. Oh, if he wanted to practice a little bit more, work on a few things, 1 was there for support Rut whatever it was that was bothering him had to be cured from the inside out. Nothing

anybody on the outside could do would have helped him.

1 think anytime you have a season like I had last year, you have a tendency to set your sights maybe a little too high, Moseley said. "Then, when you dont live up to them, you start wondering if youve lost it.

If he did, hes found it again. After making his first 50-plus-yard field goal of the season, after going 3-for-3 in field-goal attempts and kicking 13 of Washingtons 37 points against Atlanta on Sunday, Moseley owns yet another NFL record.

He has scored 147 points, the most by any kicker, surpassing the 145 by Jim Turner of the 1968 New York Jets.

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N.C. Scoreboard

By The Assodslrd Press

Men's Collie Basketball

Duke95,S.Florida66 Elizabeth City St. 87. Livirigstone 71 Hampton Institute 52, N.Carolina CentralSO

N Carolina-WilmingtonSl. Methodist 65 Pembroke 80, Fayetteville 60 fTeiffer68, Belmont-Abbey60 W.Carolina 93, Mars Hill 72

Womens College Basketball

Lenoir-Rhyne 79 W Carolina 74 Livingstone 71, Elizabeth City St. 69 N.Carolina Central 71, Louisoura 66 N.Carolina-Wilmington 60. Belmont-

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12 Th Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Tuesday, Decembers, 1983

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREM AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribune Company Syndlcata, Inc.

DRAWING TRUMP - THE HARD WAY

Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH

AQ 'I105 OQJ853

AJ106 WEST EAST

J9S7653 104 ^3    ^J762

0642    OA1097

Q5 973

SOUTH

K2

9 AKQ984 OK

K842

The bidding:

South West North East 1 ^ Pass 3 NT Pass 6 ^ Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Seven of .

No serious student of the game can afford to be without The Bridge World, the foremost magazine on bridge. At $21 per year, it remains one of the great bargains. It makes an attractive gift and if, in addition, you subscribe yourself, you can choose a free book as a bonus. Among the books being offered is Dave Danielss The Golden Age of Contract Bridge, published at $7.95..Indeed, you might want this book ($4.25 post free from Bridge World, 39 West 94th Street, New York, N.Y. 10025) just to get to know some of the legendary characters who made contract bridge the worlds greatest card game,.

This hand features the inventor of contract, Harold S. Vanderbilt, as East and the games greatest showman and publicist. Ely Culbert

son, as South. It was played in a high-stake rubber bridge game in the days before the invention of the various ace-asking conventions. Norths jump response showed at least 2V: honor tricks, so Culbertson could be sure that his partner would produce at least A-Q, A. He wasted no time in getting to six hearts.

Declarer won the spade lead in dummy and led the ten of trumps to tempt a cover. East played low, declarer won the ace and cashed the king of trumps to learn about the 4-1 trump split. Culbertson abandoned trumps and led the king of diamonds, and Vanderbilt could do no better than win the ace ahdlVuTn a spade.

Dummy won, and declarer ruffed a diamond in hand. Since he needed two more entries to the'table to set up a trump coup, he led a low club and finessed the jack! Culbertson ruffed another diamond to shorten his trumps to the same length as Easts, crossed to the ace of clubs and simply ran winning diamonds. ,Whenever East chose to trump, declarer would overruff and claim the rest of the tricks.

HANGING OUT Singer Mick Jagger with Jerri Hall strums his guitar under a palm tree on Gibbs Beach in St. Peter, Barbados. Itis rumored the two will be soon married. They have been vacationing on the island for the last week. (.APLaserphoto)

UNC Reaffirms

Dancer Is Cast Movie Decision

For Major Role

HOLLYWOOD (UPIl -Vicki Frederick, dancing star of the Broadway hits A Chorus Line hnd Dancin, has been cast by director Burt Reynolds for a major role in Universal Pictures Stick.

Miss Frederick, whose previous movies include All That Jazz and All the-Marbles, will play a millionaires girlfriend.

Revnolds will donhle as star "of the picture, which includes a cast of George Segal, Candice Bergen and Charles Durning.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill .has reaffirmed its decision not to let Warner Brothers film Everybodys A11 - American oh campus this spring.

A revised shooting schedule submitted Monday after UNC officials declined a request for use of its campus did not satisfy them, said Rollie Tillman Jr., vice chancellor for university relations.

"The film company gave us a detailed proposal for an optimal filming schedule, he said. We determined

upon seeing it that it was not much different from what we had antfcipated, and therefore no change "ih the decision was warrcTted.

Executive Producer Bob Larson said last month that if'UNC refused the film, he would take it and its $13 million budget to another state.

Tillman said the 10 days of filming would disrupt the academic schedule.

While there are racial themes in the script, which begins in the racially segregated 1950s. Tillman said that was not an issue in turning down the film.

TIL

5:30

ANYTIME

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EDCATING RITA

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Citing Lucas Philanthropy

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f

NEW YORK (AP) - In this season of lists, add "Star Wars creator George Lucas to the list of Americans who have donated millions to worthy causes.

In an article entitled "The Most Generous Living Americans, Town and Country magazine lists Lucas, noting that at 39 hes the youngest of those it names.

The film producer-director gave $4.7 million to create the School of Cinema-Television at the University of Southern California, where he went before making "American Graffiti and the "Star Wars films, the magazine says.

Town and Country came up with- over 100 living Americans who have donated more than $5 million to charities in their lifetimes.

Five people have given away over $100 million: Walter Annenberg, 75, of Philadelphia and Palm

GEORGE LUCAS

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DAILY

Pallid Script Damages Impact

Of Steinbeck's Novel On Film

Springs, diplomat and publisher: Paul Mellon, 76. of Upperville, Va.. hgir to one of the nations largest fortunes; C.B. Pennington, 83, of Baton Rouge, La., an oil magnate; E. Claiborne Robins, 73, of Richmond, Va., a pharmaceutical developer and heir to a drug store chain; and Robert Wo^ruff, 94, of Atlanta, the Coca-Cola king.

11 AM TO 2 PM

Dinner buffet: All the pizza, spaghetti, & salad you can eat

$^09

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Corner Cotanche & 10th St Phone 758-6121

The b*n pliu In tora.7/se*i"/

ByTOMJORY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) -r The Winter of Our Discontent tonight on CBS is an unaf-fecting adaptation of John Steinbecks novel, its downfall a pallid script that seems to demand very little emotion from an extraordinary cast.

You know from this television movie, for instance, that Ethan Hawley and his friend, Danny, are unusually close, constantly hugging one another and professing mutual affection. But why?

Ethan explains the relationship in half a paragraph in the book: In me Danny is a raw sorrow and out of that a guilt. I should be able to help him. Ive tried but he wont let me. Danny is as near to a brother as I ever had, same age and growing up, same weight and strength. Maybe my guilt comes because I am my brothers keeper and I have not saved him.

For TV, the raw sorrow and ... guilt is left to the viewers imagination. Most times, thats OK. But here, its a big part of the story, and the friendship comes across as strangely hollow.

In fairness^ to th^e responsible for Ihe Hallmark Hall of Fame production, dramatizing a work of literature for TV is no easy task.

It means compressing some scenes and dropping others altogether. You can imagine Steinbeck, were he still alive, squirming over someone rewriting his meticulously crafted prose for a two-hour screenplay, minus 20 minutes for commercials.

(Dont worry about Shakespeare, who wrote the title. The lines from Richard III, Act 1, Scene 1 -Now is the winter of our discontent ... Made glorious summer by this sun ol York' - come through intact.) .

Sometimes, a top-flight cast can carry a show -in spite of a bloodless script. And the cast here is indeed impressive: Donald Sutherland in his first Amer-

Singer Faces

Ruling Appeal

LONDON (AP) - Singer Gilbert OSullivan last year won $10.5 million from his former manager in a court case, but now faces an appeal aimed at overturning the judgment.

Irish-born OSullivan, whose hit songs include Clare and Alone Again, worked as a messenger until he was discovered by Gordon Mills. But the High Court ruled in May 1982 that Mills

exploited OSullivan. It canceled the managers con

tracts and returned to the singer the copyright and master tapes of his hits.

Back in court on Monday, lawyers for Mills argued that Mills should be able to keep some reward for helping the singer climb in the 1970s from an urchin image to international stardom.

The judges adjourned the case to an unspecified date.

264 PLAYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE

6 Milts West Of Gretnvlllt On U.S. 264 (Farmville Hwy)

NOW

SHOWING

At Your Adult Entertainment Center

Piinceu end Cover GIri.

JUex

StwwtliM 6:00    5:45

lean TV movie as Ethan; Terri Garr as his wife, Mary; Richard Masur as Danny, and E.G. Marshall as Baker, the town banker. Nonetheless...

Ethan toils as a clerk at Hawleys, a grocery store once owned by his family, proud and prominent New England stock. Hes determined to buy the store back from Manlo (Michael Gazzo) and regain for the Hawleys an eminent position in the community.

Hes a likable fellow who talks to himself, to his fathers portrait on the wall, to the canned goods in his store: You think you can pull the wool over old Hawleys eyes. I know what goes on here at night.... Im speaking specifically to the beans....

He wont budge on the high standards maintained by his family for generations -until Baker offers him the chance to get the store back without investing a penny of his own money.

The banker wants to buy Manillos store and Dannys inherited property next door, and he promises Ethan a

prime location in the mall he plans to build there. All Ethan has to do is talk Danny into selling his home.

Thats no problem, Ethan assures Baker, and he accepts a check for $10,000 a gift, the banker says.

Then, Margie Young-Hunt (Tuesday Weld), whose first hustond died and second ran off, tells Ethan that Marjllc is in the country illegally.

Does Ethan use his

friendship with Danny for il

personal gain? Does he snitch on Marullo to get the store back?

Its not exactly the way Steinbeck wrote the story, but certainly sufficient for a good TV movie. It doesnt work, and its too bad.

Smmhi Of Broadway Miuicab ProdacadByTha

Annie

July 2-7

dilcaflo JulyU

Joieph and the amazing technicolor

dreamcoat July 16-21

Season Ticketa Make Great Chriatmaa Glfta Call 757-6390

rVLog

For complot* rv progrimming information, consult your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Daily Rsflsctor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

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7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough '2 " '8:00 Mississippi 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwalch WEDNESDAY 2:00 Nightwalch 3:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:2S Newsbreak 9.25' hicWibreak 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Press Your

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TUyOAY

7:00 Jefferson 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 News WEDNESDAY 5:00 Overnight 6:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 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 of the _

11:00 Wheel ol 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another WId. 3:00 Match Game 3:30 Hollywood S. 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Brady Bunch 5:00 Corner Pyle 5:30 WKRP 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 China Today 10:00 St. Elsewhere 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Letterman 1:30 News

WCThTV-Ch.12

TUESDAY

7:00 3's Company

7:30 Alice

8:00 Just Our Luck

8:30 Happy Days ) 3's Company

9:00 .. a ..w...

9:30 Oh, Madeline! 10:00 Special 11 00 Action News 11:30 Nighlline

10. m Thirkp fit

12:30 Thicke of WEDNESDAY

5:00 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 Lite 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Cartoons 4:30 Special 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 Thicke of

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 Monty Python 12:00 Sign Oft WEDNESDAY 3:00 Over Easy

3:30 TffA

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Lord iMic, Wrangler, Gloria Vandarbllt, Saaaoif, Laa, Chic and Othara

Ladies Jeans

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Button Collar Oxford, Solida, Strlpaa and Plalda

&Up

Blouses 12.98

Cotton and Blanda, Craw t V-Nack. ^

Sweaters    12.99 s

Alex deRenz/a HOTTEST LADIES: AbagaU Clayton, Dealree Coateau, Klkko, Unda Wong, Chriattne HeUer and Nicole Black. From Alex deRenz/aBESTMfWlES: Babyface, Pretty Peadtea, Femnea deSade, Pualon

Man'a and Ladlaa Poly-Flllad    ^ ^ ^ ^

Jackets    22.99.

Rain Slickers 15.99

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MILL OUTLET CLOTHING

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9 30 'T.| 6:00

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The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Cnamwoni By Et^ Sheffer

IMaryspet SQuiet-mouse 8 Uriah, of Didunsfame tB Hebrew measure tlS Word with ; manorgame :14HeraIdic ^ bearing 15 Card game .17 Blue or : White 18 Prospectors ^find ^USmaU : cactus :n Not quite ; honest 4 Actor Beery 25 Chums 28 Card game

30 Eskimo knife

31 Mel or Steve

32 Dawn .^goddess

33 Pq^ulargame 85Twist ,

X .sideways -SOHolsteins

37 Falk or Graves

38 Ancient ascetic

UGranqws

42 A Waugh

43 Brieve call 48Scarietts

home 49 Yale man 51 True

51 Degree

52 Dailey or OHerlihy

53 Goals Avg. soiutioa hue: 23 miiiutes.

mu

lm

mu ssH wum ifim

um mmm m'!}.    m\

DOWN

11 -Mea

IChop

River

2Parisianpal

Merit

SSorwity

ZlTater

topic

Nimbus

4Sulks

23 An astrin

SYeam

gent

IThesun

24 City in

7 Windflowers

Ohio

8 Japanese

28 Stared

udand

angrily

8 Actor

27 Dissolve

Porter

28 Grimace

10 Fitzgerald

29 Belgian

11 Fruit rind

river

PEANUTS

OH, YEAM? WELL, JUST REMEMBER THIS...

" HE TO WHOM THE EARLY BIRP RUNS BEST LEARNS WI5P0M ANP PATIENCE,'"

CRYPTOQUIP    12-6

PUBQ-PURQ RQ PUBPSWY PCCL LRNQZ

BE aCEQ BSWGZ TRYQRA TRYQWN.

Yesterdays Cryptoqulp - THE HUNNISH HAIRCUTTER IS BARBARIC.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: FequalsC.

'ne Ciyptoquip is a sinqde substitution cipher in adddi eadi 1 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 postrophe can give you clues to locating ; vowels. Solution is acoonqdished by trial and error.

C If King FMturtsSyndicatt. Inc

Real Eosfern N.C.

Pit Cooked Barbecue

100% PORK BARBECUE With A Vinegar Based Sauce.

No Fillers Added

Fully Cooked Ready To Heat And Enjoy

Shipped Frozen In Reusable Ice Chest.

WE SHIP BARBECUE ANYWHERE IN THE U.S.A.

Packed In 2-Five Lb. Buckets Or 12-Twelve Ounce Cups

39.50

(Plua 19.50 Shipping 4 Prepaid hndting)

SHIPPED BY UPS or PARCEL POST Anywhere In The United States! Call For Prices On Shipments Outside The Continental United States.

^ 202 West Blvd.        Telephone    792-5339

Willlamston, North Carolina 27892

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Tuesday, December 6,1983 13

JO. S3 CVD1477 FILM 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 you 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 tallare.to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 18th day of November, 1983.

Willis A. Talton Attorney for Plaintiff 216 S. Washington St.

P O Box 390

Greenville, N.C. 27835 0390 November 22, 29; December 6, 1983

015

Chevrolet

1979 Caprice, red, new tire, excellent condition, $2700 or best offer. Power brakes, cruise control, power locks, AM/FM 752 4332.

017

Dodge

1973 DODGE 4 door Clean Inside and out, new tires Runs good. Call 746 2326

1980 DOOGE OMNI 4 door. Automatic, air, power steering, AM/FM radio, velour interior $3,395. 758 3283 after 6p.m.

018

Ford-

THUNDERBIRO, 1971, loaded, landau Great shape. $2900. Call 746 2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5:30.

1964 THUNDERBIRD. Automatic transmission, heater. $1100. Phone 756 9817.

1982 FORD ESCORT, with air, like new Assume payments. Call 756-9886 after 6 p.m.

$9,200 4-DOOR, loaded 1982 Escort Wagon, automatic. $5,700. Phone 7S8 6S82;    --

021

Oldsmobile

FILE NO: 83 J 60

FILM NO.:

IN THEGENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE JUVENILE COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE: SABRINA LYNN Me CASKILL, A MINOR CHILD SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICAITON TO ROBERT LYNN McCASKILL, father of the minor child Sabrina LynnMcCaskiil 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 the time of the hearing on termination of your parental rights. You are further notified that you are entitled to attend any hearing aftectjng yout parental rights.

This the 22 day of November, H983

WILLIAMSON, HERRIN, STOKES& HEFFELFINGER BY

ANNHEFFELFINGER BARNHILL ATTOKNEV rOfi PETITIONER

210S. WASHINGTON STREET P.O.BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 November 29; December 6, 13, 20, 1983

1972 TORONADA Runs fair Some repairs $300. 746 3367.

1975 OMEGA. Like new New paint and tires. AM/FM stereo cassette, air, 12,000 miles on motor. Excellent condition inside and out. $1800 Call 752 4739.

1976 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

Supreme. Wrecked motor, transmission, othe?'parts in good condition. Call 746 3551 after 6 p.m.

1979 OLDSMOBILE, excellent con dition, diesel, power steering, power brakes, tape deck, $2890 756 7297.

1980 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass, 4 door, V6, vinyl top, 34,000 miles. 758 4491.

023

Pontiac

1978 PONTIAC

cash. 758 1355.

Catalina. $1,950

1979 PONTIAC SUNBIRD.

actual miles, 4 speed Asking ] 756 4836 or 758 0237 after 8 p.m.

024

Foreign

MGB 1969, $1300 756 1025.

NOTICE

The Mid-East Commission on behalf of the Office of the Rural Private Industry Council is solic iting potential deliverers for the operation of Innovative Youth Programs under the Job Training Partnership Act

WE BUY AND SELL Used Cars. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen. 756-1135. 203 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N C

1972 240Z, 3 webbers, header, air, cruise control Call 752 1177.

1974 AUDI 100 LS. 4 speed, excellent condition. Call 756 7807 after 6 p.m.

1977 DATSUN 280Z New paint, tires and ..stereo, F xcelJeot... condition, 758 9820.

1977 OATSUN B2I0. Manual transmission, AM/FM, air condi tioning, good transportation, good tires Assume loan 756 3542

1977 TOYOTA COROLLA. AM FM

cassette, new Michelin radials, c*Cciiciii cumiiiiuh s/iuu negotia ble 757 1936

1978 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER

Champaign Edition with sunroof, air, AM/FM, automatic transmission, hatchback $2,300 or best offer 756 5285

1979 280ZX, Grand Luxury Package. 2 tone. Excellent condition Call Jack 752 1907 or 756 8362 Serious inquiriesonly

I poti Proc

liverers of JTPA Programs Beaufort, Bertie, Hertford, Martin, qnd Pitt Counties who are inter e'sted in bidding can obtain a Request for Proposal package on or after Friday, December 16, 1983 from the Regional Manpower Planner at ihe mid-Easi Corn mission, 1 Harding Square, P.O Drawer 1787, Washington, North Carolina 27889.

In addition to the Innovative Youth Proposals being solicited the ^alWiiiC-prograrrvs Arc else cov,* able JTPA activities: Institutional Skills Training, On The Job Training Private Public, Special Training Programs, Services only Programs, Exemplary Youth Pro grams, and other Programs

The RFP, bid packages are due in the Mid East Commission's Office no later than 12:00 noon on Friday, December 30, 1983.

Additional information on the Request for Proposals may be obtained from Kenneth T. Thompson at 919 946 8043.

December 5, 6, 7, 1983

1980 MAZDA RX-7. Anniversary Edition. All options. New radials, Alpine cassette Excellent condi tion $6,900 negotiable Call 756 0238 after 12 noon.

1981 HONDA ACCORD, 5 speed, AM/FM cassette, air, $6,200. Call 752 9788.

1983 MERCEDES 380 SL, 6000

miles, 2 8 liter. Best offer 756 7891

032

Boats For Sale

ALBERG 37 SAILBOAT Beautiful, fully equipped yawl with many extras. 752 1129 after 6

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

BOAT FOR SALE. 12' aluminum, electric motor, 2 paddles, 2 life preservers. 758 3124 or 752 2334

DISCOUNT BOATING Accessories Christmas Specials! 6 gallon plastic fuel tank, $19.95 Hum mingbird Super 60. $148 88 Bass Seats starting at $12 95 Flush attachments, $6 88 Zebco Rod Reel and Baits, $9 95 Adult Ski Vest, $19,49. Uniden Depth Finder, $99 95 Entire Inventory Reduced We ship!! Marine Salvage Distributors, 1145 Cokey Road, Rocky Mount, NC 27801. (919) 442 8043

DUCK HUNTER'S SPECIAL

Mako 17',    115    Johnson,    fully

equipped and ready to go! Call 746 3839after6p m

WESTERLY 26 DIESEL powered fiberglass cruising sailboat The best buy around at $14,500 752 1129 after 6

034 Campers For Sale

truck C0VJ?S- All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops. 250 units in stock O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774

1973 HARVEST MOTOR home, 21 ,

350 Chevrolet engine. Call 756 7422 after 6.

1976 25' COACHMAN Bunk House Travel Trailer Sleeps 9 Excellent condition. $5,300 firm Call anytime Sundays weekdays after 4 30 p m., 756 2697

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE at

Spectrum Batiks, 1016 Myrtle Avenue. Hand made gifts! Satur day, December 10. 1 p m to 7 p.m , Also open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6 p.m. 752 5646.

036

Cycles For Sale

I, BOBBY LEE STAINBACK JR., ! will no longer be responsible lor any I debts confracted by anyone other than myself.    

WE PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville

Oil

Autos For Sale

YAMAHA GT 80 cycle Low mile age. Excellent condition! Call 753 5466, Farmville

1979 HONDA XL75, excellent condi tion, like new Low mileage Very clean. Call 752 4234 after 4 pm

1982 HONDA CM400, e,xcellent con dition, 5,000 miles, $750. Call 746 4432

1983 HONDA X-R with helment Low mileage. Like new! Phone 756 2824.

039

Trucks 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 MAY SAVE YOU MONEY! Call us before you buy MIDATLANTIC INSURANCE, INC. 756 7723.

1975 CHEVROLET PICK UP,

automatic po/,er steering and brakes, R -i^.od Cali 746 3551 after 6

1976 FORD F too CUSTOM. Good

condition Phone 757 0577,

NEED A CAR? Rent dependable used cars at low rates. Phone RENT A WRECK, 752 2277

1977 DATSUN Long bed. White sport rims, new Radials. Excellent condition. 756 7 14 or 756 6288

1980 DATSUN King Cab condition $3800 752 2933.

great

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114.

312

AMC

1943 RAMBLER WAGON. Good condition. $600. Phone 756-9817.

013

Buick

BUICK CENTURY LIMITED. 83

Demo. 4 door. Loaded! Low Mileage. Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmville. 753-3140.

BUICK 83. LeSabre Limited. 4 door Leaie Cars (2). Loaded! Low Mile age. Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmville 753-3140.

1973 BUICK CENTURY. Air condi tioning, 8-track tape, clean. $1,200. Phone 752 6878.

1977 SKYHAWK. low mileage, air. power, stereo, new tires, motor needs little work. $1600. Call 752 1050,

1977 SKYLARK. 4 door, power steering, power brakes, air. lilt and custom trim. Good tires and mechanical condition. Lady owner. $2.350.756-1075.

014

Cadillac

1974 CADILLAC Sedan Deville All options! $1,500 Phone 758 3283 after 6p.m.

1977 CADILLAC, Sedan DeVille Silver, excellent condition, loaded, $4195. Call 7S6 07S0 after 6 p.m.; anytime weekends.

1979 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille in good condition. Priced to sell. Call 757 0440.    ^

015

Chevrolet

1973 MONTE CARLO Landau, loaded. Well taken care of. Call 825 2831 after 6 p.m

1978 CAPRICE CLASSIC. Baby blue, white vinyl top, very clean. $3900.758 7742after 5p m

1980 CHEVY MONZA. Price re ducedi Phone 1-749 5221.

1981 LONG BED Toyota SR5. loaded, excellent condition $5500 Call 746 3530or 746 6146

1983 DATSUN - King Cab. 4 wheel drive, sunroof, 5 speed. AM/FM stereo, power steering and brakes, 13.000 miles, tool box, and white spoke rims Phone 746 4441.

1983 TOYOTA TRUCK. Low mile age. Excellent condition. Call 758 2947 after 6 pm

040

Child Care

I WOULD LIKE TO KEEP children in my home day or night and weekends Highway 43, 756 6163 anytime

MOTHER EXPERIENCED in

daycare would like to keep a 2 to 3 year old Near Conley, 756 9849

RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care tor 2 children in my home near Grimesland. Hours: 8 a m to 6 p m. Contact Judy at 758 5056,

SOMEONE TO KEEP 2 year old in their home or mine Greenville area Hours: Monday from 12 45 to 9 pm. Wednesday from 8 to 6 p.m., Thursday from 12:45 to 9 p.m., Friday from 8 to 5 p m 1 825 0968 after 6pm

046

PETS

AKC BLACK Labrador Retriever female puppy 3 months old $75 Call 756 7487

AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD

puppies 6 weeks old the 20th of December Black and black and brown $75 758 4665 or 752 3735

AKC REGISTERED GERMAN

Shepherds $100 each Deposit will hold until ChrisJtmas Call 7560700 after 6 pm.

AKC SIBERIAN HUSKYS, 6 weeks

old; black, gray; male and female $100. Call 753 2731 after 3 30 p m

BDXER PUPPIES. Fawn and white, tails docked. 6 weeks old Call 746 3971

FOR SALE: AKC Pekingese. Dachshunds, Pomeranians, 1 male Chihuahua and Cocker Spaniels Clipping and grooming tor all breeds. Call 758 2681.    m





wr-rmsrrrr.

J4 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Tuesday, December 6,1983

04A

PETS

POMERANIAN, 1 year old male. $60. Beautiful dog. Call 7S6-8347.

TWO HOUSE CATS, declawed, all shots. Free. Call 753-2414.

051

Help Wanted

ARTIST/PRINTER:    Immediate

openino for a full time layout Artist/printer. Individual must be experienced in silkscreen printing and illustration. Apply to Cynthia Sutton, H. L. Hodges Co., 210 East Sfh Street. Monday through Friday, 10 to 5

LPNS NEEDED. Part time and tll tim 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available Apply in person or call Oak Manor, Inc Snow Hill, 1 747 2846.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOODSERVICE department HEAD

051

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLER - Grady White Boats has an immediate opening. Experience required in carpet installation and power tool useage. Must be able to work with heavy fiberglass parts. If interested, apply in person at the Personnel Office. AAonday through Friday,8a.m. to4p.m.

BOOKKEEPER and Office AAanag er for small business. Must have good typing, calculating and organizing skills. Experience in book keeping and quarterly tax reports lerred. Start within two weeks.

?;nd resume and salary require-, Greenville,

ments to PO Box 3018 NC 27834 3018.

CRUISE SHIP JOBSI Great income potential. All occupations. For information call:    (312)    742    8420.

extension 493.

tor 76 bed specially hospital, Greenville. N. C. RD eligible required, RD preferred. Salary range: high teens to low twenties, depending on qualifications and experience. 2 years supervisory experience required. State benefits. 758-3151, extension 242.

EOE

EXPERIENCED OR CERTIFIED

Dental Assistant tor growing practice. Excellent benefits. Send resume to Dental /Assistant, PO Box 1947, Greenville, NC 27834.

HEATING AND AIR Conditioning Service Personnel wanted. At least I year of experience required. Can 754-4424 or apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors.

HOME SEWERS and tole painters

needed. Will train. Apply in person only Two Sisters of North

lorth Carolina, 3103 South Memorial Drive, next to Parkers.

LINEMEN - Power line experience and helpers. Work in Virginia. Call 1 944 8164.    ^    .

If that vacant apartment is losing you money, remedy the situation quickly with a result getting Classified ad. Call 752 4164._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

I We will teach you...

Do you have a positive mental attitude Do you desire to be successful

Are you able to follow directions explicitly ~

Do you desire to earn $2000 to S2500 per month If So.

051

Help Wanted

LPNS NEEDED - full time and part time, all shifts. Good benefits, competetive salary. Call Britthaven of Kinston from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., 1 523 0062 tor Interview.

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 447, Greenville, NC. MARKETING CONSULTANT. Re alty World, a natlonyvide real estate franchise with offices coast-to-coast is seeking one highly motivated individual with sales or marketing experience. Professional training provided. Excellent ground floor opportunity. Confidential Interview: call Melissa Burdette, 804-443 4900.

NEEDED IRON WORKER

Foreman to oversee local jobs. Must have experience and good credentials. Should have capabilities ot hiring experienced rravv snd overseeing job. Salary commensurate with' experience. Send resume to J 8. J Steel Erectors Inc , P.O Box 18225, Greensboro, NC 27419. 294 2444

REAL ESTATE BROKERS We

currently have an opening tor a licensed real estate broker. For more information or appointment call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 754 6810.

REGISTERED NURSE to work in Community Mental Health Out Patient Center Located 40 miles West ot Greenville. Experience preferred, but not required. Pay range, $15,660 to $20,616. Excellent benefits, holidays, and regular hours. Please send resume and NC Nursing License Number to Nurse, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC. Equal Opportunity^ E mployer.

HN ADMINISTRATIVE .C5ition Must have NC License, BSN pre ferred. Minimum ot 3 years Supervisory/Administrative expe rience. Excellent growth potential with expanding Company. Must be innovative and creative. Send re sume to RN/Administrative, PO Box.1967, Greenville, NC 27834

RN NEEDED part time, 3 to 11 House Supervisor. Competetive sal ary. Call Britthaven of Kinston from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m , 1 523 0082 for interview

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. Caii7S6 67n

SALES REPRESENJATIVE

Outstahdihg incdm'e dpporturtity selling gourmet steaks, poultry, seafoods Local territory. Call Ken or Bob, 616-459 6189.

SOCIAL WORKER. Howell's Child Care Center Inc. is seeking a highly motivated individual with either a BSW or BSP in social vyork and 2 years experience preferred in an ICF/MR facility Please send re sume to Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center Inc.,- PO Box 607, LaGrange. NC 28551. Equal Oppor tunity Employer, M/F.

AUCTIONU

Farm Equipment And Real Estate Sat., December 10,1983,10:00 A.M.

Locjtion From Farmvlll* Tike Highway 121 To Joynar Crossroad. Turn Right On RPR 1200. Sals Will Be Approximataly 1 Mile On Right From Greenville. N.C. Teke RPR 1200 Past Back Side 01 Hospital. Go Approilmataly 10 Miles. Sale Will Be On Lett.

Tractors

9600 Ford 200 Farmall w/Cult 210 M.F. Barns 6 Long Box Barns Gas Fired Harvester Powell One Row Tobacco Equipment Ford 12 Disc 4 Row Lilliston Cult.

Equipment

Real Estate-10% Day Of Track One -1 Acre Land With 3 Approx. 1850 Sq. Ft Rear

Equipment Cash

4 Row M.F. Planter Ford 4 Bottom Plow M.F. Front End Loader Roto Cutter 3 Customs Trailers 2 Home Made Trailers 9 Tine Athens Chisel Plow* Land Leveler Fart. Sower Unload Equipment

Sale - Balance In 30 Days Bedroom House i. Ofliced and Rec. Building In

Track Two - 4% Acres Cleared Land-This Land Adjoins The House And Lot.

Track Three - 5 Acre Plus Or Minus All Cleared About 5 Miles From House And Lot.

Tobacco - 8113 Pounds To Be Sold In 2000 Pound Lots. The Last One To Be 2113 Pounds.

Sale Subject To Court Approval.

Consignment To Be Accepted

Sale Conducted by

SPECIAL EDUCATION Teacher., Position available tor energetic individual with a BS in mental retardation with an A certificate or BS in education with certification in mental retardation. Basic function ot position istd provide a full array ot educational services, both indi rectly and directly to residence. Competitive salary, excellent benefits Please send resume to Mr Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center Inc , PO Box 407, LaGrange, NC 28551 Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F.

TEMPORARY PART TIME

secretary Call 758 0157

TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs person tor short trips surrounding Greenville Contact customers We iiaiii Vvriie K A Dickerson, rresi-dent. Southwestern Petroleum, Box 789, Fort Worth, Texas 74101.

WANTED Female companioit and la

housekeeper for elderly lady Room and board furnished-plus salary Must furnish references. Call 756 3800 or 756 0068,

WANTED: DRUMMER and Lead Sinqer for a Heavy Metal Band that plays original music 756 5759.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PRIME

LOCATION

200 ARLINGTON BLVD.

1236 SQ. FT. FOR LEASE

BUSINESS-PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE

756-6295

COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. P. 0. Box 12.10 Washington, North Carulina Phone: 946 (>00 7    State    License    No.    .'i.'i

GtTc..

751- 1175    ,V0T    RESPONSIBLE    FOR    ACCIDENTS

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING

THE STRESS BALL

THE ALTERNATIVE STRESS relief

You can squeeze - throw play & carry your Siress Ball everywhere!!

For only *5 per ball

(lMi 4 i/iMwie nwdw) > ptnj

CMcaorUaiwyOrMKinly NoCOP

WB USTRESBAWLECHOefE 4t SEARING STREET HEMPSTEAD, N.V.1IUe

Order Early For Your Holiday Gifts!

NOW LEASING

University Medical Park Townhomes Brand New Luxury Apartments

2 Large Bedrooms

IV2 Baths

Heat Pumps

Spacious Floor Plan

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

Washer-Dryer Hook-ups

Kitchen Appliances

Custom Built Cabinets

Patios with Private fence

Thermopane Windows E-300 Energy Efficient

Beautiful Individual Williamsburg Exteriors

Located Within Walking Distance of Pitt Memorial Hospital

Call 752-6415

Monday-Friday 9-5

t

051

Help Wanted

waNtdT sewing room

Supervisor. Minimum 2 years experience. Ability to handle 50 operators. woven products line. Salary to compensate with ability. Send re-

pMeiTto Sewing Supervisor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding. Free estimates. J.P. Stancil, 752 6331.

ANY TYPE REPAIR WORK.

Carpentry, masonry, roofing. 35

1-__1.__ y-Lll    I

years ex^rience. Call James Har rington, 752-7765 after 6 o.m.

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.

MACHINE DESIGN, tool design

and drafting service, 30 years experience, client facility or mine. 746-4240:

PAINTING INTERIOR and exteri or. Work guaranteed! References free estimates. 13 years experience. 756-6873 otter 6 p.m.

PAINTING INSIDE or outside. No jobs too small. Residential, apartments, and commercial. 15 years experience. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. 758 7815.

PLASTER AND STUCCO REPAIR

y. Also new const 756 7297 anytime.

best quality. Also new construction stucco. Call 1

PORTRAITS. Ink, pencils, pastels, oils, or acrylic or any special commissioned art work. 1 946 0055.

RADIO/TV REPAIR, all work guaranteed, will pickup and deliver. Also available for commission work. Call R.W. Smith at Smith Electronics, 75? 2768.

SHIRLEY'S CLEANING SERVICE

Have your home fall cleaned or just general cleaned Weekly or Mon thiy. We also do windows and

carpet. 753 5908 after 3:30.

SPAIN'S MOBILE HOME Repair , free

and Service, all types estimates, reasonable rates 6575

WALLPAPERING AND Painting 10 years experience Local refer enees. 758'7748

WOULD LIKE to house clean day or night Call Marie at 753 5081.

060

FOR SALE

063 Building Supplies

CECO STEEL BUILDINGS by RIv

orside Iron Works, Inc, Phone

433 312!, New 8ern,.N.C*Si.ncs 1920.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale. J.P Stancil, 752 6331.

ALL HARDWOOD, $75 cord. $40 pickup load. 10 days only, 1 2 cords $100 ueiivereo ana stacked, 'j 5407

FIREWOOD FOR SALE. $35

truckload. $85 a cord. Call after 4 p m , 753 5961

FIREWOOD: Oak: $45 'V cord, $80 cord. Mixed $40 ''2 cord, $70 cord. Call 758 0135.

OAK FIREWOOD tor sale Ready to go Call 752 6420 or 752-8847 after 5 pm.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 or 758 5590

SEASONED OAK firewood. $90 cord; seasoned mixed firewood, $80 cord Free delivery arid stacked

'e>;

Ready to go 756 8358 afteF 5.

SEASONED OAK $45 for >3 cord Call 757 1637,

SEASONED OAK firewood deliv ered and stacked. Phone 758 6143.

WOOD FOR SALE. Mixed. $35. Seasoned Oak, $45. Call 752 6286 anytime

065 Farm Equipment

PICK-UP TRUCK BED MATS and

tool boxes A great Christmas deal Mats to tit full size truck $69 95, intermediate size $64 49, import size $55 95. Crossover tool boxes to tit full size, intermediate or import size trucks $85.49. Other styles in stock. Agri Supply, Greqnvllle, NC 752 3999.

TWO TOBACCO TRUCKS, $35 each Maybe seen at S & W Septic Tanks, Mumtord Road.

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING&WATfcRBEDS

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowesi prices Bedding sets, $49 Waterbeds. $149 Factory Mat tress 8. Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626

COLONIAL LOVE SEAT sofa, used 6 months. Taking loss, $275. Call 756 5555^6x1.311 _...........

FOR SALE: Early American den furniture: 1 sofa, 2 chairs, 1 Lazy boy, end table, and floor lamp. 1 boat cover .lor 19' boat, 1 com mercial security system. All very good condition! 752 2813

NO MONEY DOWN! Instant Credit on new furniture, TVs and stereos Only at Furniture World, 2808 East 10th Street, 757 0451

SOFA, CHAIR, coffee table with 2 matching end tables. 756 4380.

USED SOFA, $35 Call 758 5803 after 6pm

6 PIECE solid wood den suit, 2

lamps free. Take over payments as ith 757 0451,

only $33.63 per mon Furniture World We will not be undersold!

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE

1600 ACRES OR PART-WOODS - SOME TIMBER -DRAINAGE EASEMENTS-SECURED-VANCEBORO SECTION - CRAVEN CO.

CALL 752-3958 NO REALTORS PLEASE

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIOINO. Jarman

Stables, 7S2-S237.

REGISTERED quarter horse Pbilly for sale, green broke. Excellent bloodline. 758-9707 aHer S:30 p.m.

7 YEAR OLD MARE - /2 Arabian.

$850. Phone 746-3837 or 746-40S5.

073 Fruits and Vegetables

BROCCOLI, Cabbage. Ready now. You pick or we pick. Dew's Berry Patch. 756-7116.

074

Miscellaneous

ATARI 2640 GAME SYSTEM with

23 cartridges. Price negotiable. Call 756 7474 after 5:30 p.m

BEAUTY SHOP EQUIPMENT for

sale. Call 746-4676.

BRAND NEW GIRL'S COAT, size 6. Teal green corduroy with hood, acrylic pile lining. $45. 752-1015.

BROWN SOFA, $30. Chair, $10. Kitchen table, $10. Call 752-7476,

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Inventory clearance sale. 4 models. Delivery setup. 919 763 9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.

CASH DISCOUNT of 20% when you shop downtown Steinbeck's tor your men's ciothing needs.

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old

clocks, lamps, portable tape

... ... .

players, bicycles, voilins, doll depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques...anything ot vallue.

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

CEDAR GUN CABINET, like new, single glass door with lock, holds 6 guns and has cabinet tor shells., $100. Call days 355 2076 or nights 756 4593.

CENTURY 300 car seat, brand new, never used, retails $78; will sell for $35. 756 9070.

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and relinishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center. 756-9123.

IF THERE'S something you want to rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns. Call 752-4166 to place your ad.

DOG HOUSE, $40. V2 horsepower

Dayton motor with variable nulley    <h

$25. Gun - tape oiler burner wlfh pump and transformer, $25. Homemade air compressor with .ti horsepower motor. $35. Welding helmet, $10. 24 volt, 25 amp, Lastermatic battery charger, $40. New Klein deluxe linemans safety belt with strap, $90. Emerson under sink garbage disposal. $15. 746-3254.

EASY STREET Leather and Pot tery. Now until Christmas at Cable

ery. Nc . Craft,

818 Dickinson Avenue.

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 Halteras, 1104 Clark Street.

FLC

P<

cirljular saw. Complete with sabre and route)* inserts. Like new. $65 te2 7080,

awi\an( 55, 2^2-

FRIGDAIRE FPCI 16TM, 16 cubic foot, almond refrigerator. New, with full warranty. $550. Call Alan, 756-6101.

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Stripping, Repairing 8, Reflnishing. (Formerly of East Carolina Voca iiuiidl Geiiict) riexi io John ueere on Pactolus Highway. 752 3509. HAND MADE WOODEN TOYS, Christmas decorations, crafts. Spectrum Batiks, 1016 Myrtle Avenue. Open Monday throuoh Friday, 10 to 6 p.m. Also Saturday, December l(?th 1 to 7 p.m. 752 5646.

INSTANT CASH

KNITTING MACHINE for sale $270, Phone 756 8767.

LADIES CLOTHES,

Cheap Call 758 2585

sizes 14-16

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m , Jim Hudson

LARGE NEW Squire yvoodstove, 4lUl-m-box, priced right. Call after 6 30p.m., 825 1169

MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS;

Cinderella In pink ball gown, Napoleon and Josephine, 24" Pussycat 756 9070.

MAGNAVOX CONSOLE Stereo, an Executive desk, 30 x 60", Roberts 770X reel tape recorder. 756 2988.

MOVING SALE.. Brass bed, $150. Dresser, $50. Small desk, $20. Glass end table, $40    7'    long    television

cabinet, $50. Complete stereo unit, $400 752 2200,

NEW ENGLAND style wood stove. $120 negotiable MG Midget parts. Call 752 3826.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS 4 DOORS

C.l. Lupton Co.

/'>j! t>l 10

Auction

Real Estate Saturday, December 10,1:00 P.M.

Location; Highway 33 West From Greenville, N.C. Belvoir Highway. Go 1 Mile. Sale Will Be On Left. Land Adjoins Prison Camp.

Track 1 - 31 Aerea Of Cleared Land. Has Good Davelopment Potential Or Farming.

Tract 2-Apartment House And % Acre Lot. Needs Soote Repair.

8700 Pounds Of Tobacco Will Be Sold In 2000 Pound Lots. Last One 2700 Lbs.

Auctioneer Reserves The Right To Put Tracks Together Or Not.

Terms: 10% Day Of Sale. Balance In 30 Days Upon Delivery Ot Deed. Owner Reserved The Right To Accept Or Reject Any And All Bids.

Salt Conductad by

.OlJNrRY hUYS AtiCTIOI^ AND HI A1 TY (0.

0. [(ox l.M'.'    Wd'>hi    lUjton, North C.nolih.i

'hoiic 'IHtj 1)00/    Stiiti-    Lii    i'MM>    No, 'i

DOUG CURKINS Craanvllla, N. C. 751-1875

RALPH Rl NmN

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR CCIDENTS

HIDE-A-BED SDFA. Good condi tion. $75. Phone 756-4529 after 5:30 p.m.

HOLIDAY PARTY CATERING and

Services. We can do as much or as little as you need in arranging from catering to tacilify and service assistance. 757 1531. C

LOANS ON & BUYING TV's, Stereos,cameras, typewriters, gold 8, silver, anything else ot value Southern Pawn Shop, 752-2464.

NATURAL GAS, Central furnances, Enforced air space heaters. 100,000 BTU and 50,000 BTU. Gas stoves, 21", 24" and 30". Can oe seen at 311 Hillcrest Drive.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Mowers. Goodyear Tire Center,

074 Miocellancous

075 Mobite Homes For Sait

PUERTO AiCAN and Hyman white sweet potatoes. $8.00 bushel.XCall 825-6821.

971 two bEOROOM, 1 bath, washer, dryar, air, undarplnnnwtl' $3,000. Call 758-5277 after 4: M.

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS,

shampooers, and uprights. Call Dealer, 756-6711.

197J 12x65, front living room, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, double sinks In bathroom. Delivered and set up free. $149.25 month. Call Calvary Mobile Homes, Chocowinlty, 1 946-0929.

SEARS WEIGHT BENCH with double leg lift and pully system. 756-)S8.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent sharnpooers and vacuums at Rental tool company.

1976 ARNELL DOUBLEWIDE,

24x70. 2 full baths, 4 bedrooms. Take up payments, only 5 years remaining. Small equity ot only $2,000 down. 1 238-3251.

SHARP, SONY B OE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88.

1979 OAKWOOD Shaggy Bark, 14x70. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Small equity and assume loan. 756 9348.

SHINGLES $13.50 per square. 30 pound felt, $3.95 roll. 8"xl6' masonite. $2.70. Nupiber 1 Builders Supply, AAountOlive, 658 6586.

1980 OAKWOOD, Shaggy Bark, 14x68. 3 bedrooms. Low equity and assume loan. Negotiable. 758-1552.

STEREOS AND TVS - Close out prices on all systems in stock! Marantz, Sony, Sansui. Furniture World/Stereo City. Phone 757-0451. 2808 East 10th Street. In-Store Finance.

1980 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Set up at Branches Estates, underpinned, total electric with central air. Loan assumable. Call 756-8516 after 6 p.m.

1982 BRIGADIER, 14 X 58, like new,

central heat and air, tuily caPpeted, washer-dryer, partially furnished. $11,500 or equity and assume pay ments. 746-2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5:30.

TRAMPOLINES - Wholesale, new/used. Replacement mats. Phone 756 4770.

TRANSITION WARDROBES has

new and nearly new women's clothes in sizes 14 to 52. Come see the selection of coats, suits, and evening wear. Call 355-2508.

1982 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air and heat. Shady Knolls Trailer Park, $15,800. Call 758 4476.

1983 OAKWOOD. $75 and take up payments. Call 758-7652.

TWO GO CARTS: 1 with 5 horse power Briggs and Straton engine and 1 without engine. 2 pinball machines. 746-6083 after 3 p.m.

1913 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068.

WALLPAPER $1.SO-$3.00 per single roll. Odd lots and discontinued papers. Name brands, values up to $20 a single roll. All sales final. Larry's Carpefland, 3010 East 10th Street.

1984 FLEETWOOD, 3 bedroom, I'/i bath, plywood floors, fully furnished, garden tub, frost free refrigerator, $14,995. Delivered and set up tree. Call Calvary Mobile Homes, Chocowinlty, 1-946 0929.

WANT BABY GRAND PIANO. Call 756 9396.

WANTED: U>EO John Deere Lawn-mower. Call 752-3229

,1914 SKYLINE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, total electric, garden tub, cathedral ceiling, paddle tan, frost tree refrigerator, storm windows, bay window. $15,995. Delivered and set up tree. Call Calvary Mobile Homes, Chocowinlty, 1-946-0929.

WASHER. Very good conditloa $125. Phone 746 2072.

WHIRLPOOL WASHER, 2 months old, with 1 year warranty. Love seat, 2 maple dining room tables. 753 4121.

076 Mobile Home Insurance

WHITLEY'S CUSTOM Meat Cut ting. Custom cutting: beet, pork, and deer. Quick frozen. 1-946-2382.

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754.

WOODEN CHICKEN COOP

needed. Call 758 7596.

077 Musical Instruments

WOODEN STORM DOOR, 36x80, 6 panes. Like new with hardware. $50 Call 355 2508.

FLUTE FOR SALE. Like new! Phone 756 0052,

100 MILLION PEOPLE sew easier with Singer Shouldn't you? Specials tor Christmas giving! Every model Singer AAachine discounted tor the Holiday Season. Save everyfime you use it. enjoy sewing, enjoy your new Singer Greenville' Sewing Center, Authorized Singer Dealer, Pitt Plaza, Greenville. 756-0747.

GIBSON LES PAUL, black with case. First $295 takes it. 758 1011.

Need part time work from now until the hoTdays? You'll find a position in

Cidisifieu.

LOWREY GEN1 ORGAN -

Excellent condition. Financing available. Call Atlantic Credit, 756 5185.

12 CUBIC FOOT upright freezer. Good running condition. $100. 753-5736.

PIANO & ORGAN CHRISTMAS

Sale! Save 20% to 50% off on all

104 Farmt

JfTjSi^^rcLfASEO^^ T.45 pound* of

homA DAfk $lt. Contdct Alw 7x6.31500. nloht* Don

SUKd 754 3500. night. Souttwrla^ 756-5260.

0 ACkE Farm

clwred. Falkland Highway, 43 West. 27,559 tobacco cwa-AiiM* liBrm or suitabit lor

Excellant farm or . developmant. $375,000. Phona 752-

7244or 758 3807. _ ...

iaared. 800',pavad

fiontage. Located betWeen Greenvlile "^Washington. ^ drainage. $59,500. Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741

10 Houses For Sale

belvedere. New consiruction. 1500 square foot brick ranch that features large

fireplace. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, large wooded lot, paflo. Call CeStURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756-6810; nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

belvedere - Immaculate ranch home features spacious great room, kitchen with dining . ]! Pj! formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport. Landscaped wo<x^ yard $65,900. Owner transferred, iail    8.    Lane, 752-0025 or

Richard Lane 752-8819. _

BELVEDERE - Owner anxious _ will consider lease with option and credit part ot rent towards purchase for qualified buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with rec room.Prlce reduced to $53,500. Call Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025.    _

BY OWNER FHA assumption, $14,000 Equity, current payment $512 per month. 524-4148 or 524-5042. Ervin Gray, $49,000.    _

50" GE CONSOLE color TV. Quartz

remote ocntrol with chamwi fmrnio--y . $1800. 756-9842.

60 FEET FRIEDRICH produce cases with compressors. Assorted produce dump tables .in top condi tion. May be seen in operation. Overton Supermarket Inc., 752-5025 or 758 7600.

8X12 UITLITY BUILDING with shingle roof, blue and white, $650. 752 7258.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

A SACRIFICE moving, must sell Reduced. 12x65 Parkwood on wooded lot In Shady Knoll, skirted, washer/dryer, stove, refrigerator, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, air, carpet, drapes, sofa. $4900. 758 7489.

BARGAINI 2 bedrooms, $490 equity. Take up payments, less then $107 per month Includes taxes, title, insurance. Call Bob at 756 0191 8 to 8 or 752 0569 after 8 p.m.

COMMODORE, 1983, 14x76. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call 756-

B7<:

Open Sundays! Oroan Distributors

Major brands Piano 8.

Arlington Boulevard, Phone 355 4002

329 Greenville.

VIOLIN for sale, size Excellent condition. Phone 758 5463.

093

OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris 8. Co., Inc. Financial 8< Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N.C. 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

MANUFACTURER In one of the top

growth industries In the :S. expanding its dealer network in North Carolina. Minufeman In dustrles Is looking tor dealers and salespeople to market its WIRELESS SECURITY SYSTEMS. Extremely hign income potential. Call 704 867 2347 or write MIN-UTEMAN, 4213 Frostwood Drive, Gastonia, NC 28052.

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, 1,500 square feet, fenced backyard.

VA financing, some equity. $35,500. 67%

Phone 746

bV OWNER, GREENVILLE loca tion, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, double garage, huge den. Immaculate. Immediate occupancy. $66,900. Call 746 2778. No Brokers please.

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room, kitchen/dlning combination, fenced in backyard, carport. Corner lot. Excellent loca-tion. 355 2461 from 9 5:30; after 6, 756 0652 or 355 2414.

BY OWNER. Nice FMHA brick home. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Located on Highway 13, 8 miles from Greenville. Nice neighborhood Phone 1 745 3891.

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, I'/j baths, garage, living room wlfh fireplace, dining room, sundeck, and fenced In backyard. 222 Commerce Street. Low $SO's. Phone 754-7776.

CAN'T SEEM TO SAVE enough money tor a down payment on a new home! You don't have to have a down payment with Miles Homes. Build it yourself with pre-cut, quail fy, energy-efficient materials. 9.9% APR financing 848 3220, collect.

CED.AH LOG HOME. Lek.e Glenwood, Leon Drive, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood insert, heat pump, beautiful home and lot. 524 4148 or 524 5042. Echo Realty Inc. $72,000.

ELMHURST - Roomy Dutch Col onial otters 4 bedrooms, formal areas, lovely family room, garage with studio/workshop area- Located, on a quiet street and it's only $63,500. Call Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane 752 8819.

FOR PRIVACY - at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, 2,856 square .feet Approximately 6 miles from hospital. 2.3 acres. Living room, sunken great room, family room, 4 bedrooms, Vn baths, carport, patio. 1,120 square foot workshop. Assumable 8% first mortgage. Call 756 7111.

ROUTE BUSINESS...no sellina in volved. Just collect the nrotits from

LOADED WITH EXTRASI 7

bedrooms, $575 equity. Take up payments, less than $122 per month. Includes taxes, title, insurance. Call Bob at 756 0191 8 to 8 or 752 0569 after 8 p.m.

NO MONEY DOWN VA 100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewlde, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral celling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $140 per month,

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191

TRADEWIND

CAN YOU BELIEVE ITSALE!

Can you believe if? NO MONTHLY PAYMENT until APRIL 19841

Can you believe It? 2x6 walls on 16" centers with DUKE POWER PACKAGE which allows you a DISCOUNT at CP&LI

Can you believe it? Doublewides at Invoice prices!

WE'VE GOT IT AT

Tradewind Family Housing

Highway 264 Bypass , NC

Greenville,

CALL USOR COME BUY,

919-756-4833

WHAT A DEAL! 2 bedrooms, $715 equity and assume payments of under $155 month. Definitely a deal you can afford. Call Sue at 756-0191 trom8a.m. to8p.m.

12 X 60 FLEETWOOD. $6,500. Phone 756-3071.

West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue,

OLD FASHION Cedar Christmas trees, 3' to 12', $4 to $15. Cable 8. Craft, 818 Dickinson, 752-0715. Limited Supply

12x50 2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath.

partially furnished, underpinned. Nice deck at rear. In

Trailer Park. Call 756 4632.

12X70 TRAILER, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, appliances included. $7500. Call after 6 p.m., 758 6W4.

1964 RITZCRAFT. furnished, air, carpet, washer. Phone 758-4857.

1964 12x45 Highlander, 2 bedrooms, good condition, $2500. 752 4787.

1969 CAMBRIDGE. Excellent con dition. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, large den/dining room, two 6x12 extensions, central air, washer, dryer, front and rear decks, un-derpinhed. Phone 758-7562 or (919) 983 5651.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL

Safe

Model S-1

Special Price

Y *122

Reg. Price $177.00

'^TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

SOBS.EvaneSt.

752-2175

your protected retail locations. Replace sold stock. Very easy to maintain. High profit potential. $8760.00 minimum investment. Call Mr. Wilson 317 547-6463.

n RESTAURANTS. 2 of which are in Greenville. C.J. Harris & Co.,i Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Con sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 757 0001, 219 Cotanche Street, nights 753 4015.

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP GId Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.

RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, Inc

Dial 633 3121. New Bern, N. C. Certified Welders, precision Machinists, custom fabricators' ot Steel Aluminum, Stainless A-R Plate All types Machine Work 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, 8, Garbage truck packers

100

REAL ESTATE

WATER ACCESS - 10 miles from Aurora. Vj acre with 1974 12x70 mobile home storage building and private boat dock Included. Prime area for fishing and hunting. $16,500. Call 1 322 4428 days, 1 322 4795 evenings.

102 Commercial Property

CHARLES STREET - Vacant cor ner commercial lot for lease. Across from Domino's Pizza. Will build to suit! Excellent highway exposure. Speight Realty 756-3220, nights 758-7741.

FOR LEASE. 10,000 square foot of retail space. Available in West-End Shopping Center beginning January 1984. Call Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; nights Don Southerland 756 5260.

FOR SALE BY Owner, 2 bedroom }r souid be 3 bedroom; or don. Very lood condition. $34,000. 758 3218 10 (0 5,756-4199 after 5.

NEW LISTING. Lakewood Pines. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that features all fuTiiiai areas. Den wiih iireplace, garage and over 1800 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton &

Associates, 756 6810; nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.

NEW LISTING. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom,fc2'/i bath townhouse. Super nicer Lots ot extras. Living room and dining room, and over 1480 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756-6810; nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

NEWLISTINGS

STOKES - 1370 sq. ft 2 or 3 bedroom, living room, kitchen with breakfast area, storm windowns, deep lot. $32,500.

RED OAK SQUARE New

townhouses, 2 bedroom, living dining combinaion. 1,040 sq. ft 10.35% APR Financing available. $41,900 Located on Highway 264 West behind Red Oak Shopping Center.

CANOLEWICK. Larqe country kitchen, great room with built in bookcases French doors to deck. Large master bedroom with walk in closet. 1650 square feet. $69,500.

W.G. Blount & Assoc. 756-3000

W.G. Blount    756 7911

Bob Barker    975 3179

Betty Beacham    756 3880

Bruce Brown    752-4453

PAYMENTS are based on your income! Almost new three and two bedroom ranches! Pay as little as $350 down. Call HIgnite Realtors anytime 757 1969.    _

two

REDUCED-COUNTRY. This story home In the country at Pactolus has been reduced. About 1.7 acres of land Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining room, study, large country kitchen.

double garage, workshop, smoke $73,            -    

house

756-5395.

1,000. Dutfus Realty Inc.,

FOR SALE: 5,000 square toot commercial building In the downtown area. Currently leases for $1400 per month. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756-6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

375 SQUARE FEET of retail store front on the mall. Available Immediately. Rents for $234 per month. Call Clark-Branch Management. 756 6336.

104 Condominiums For Sale

FANTASTIC CONDOMINIUM for

sale! 3 bedrooms, 2'/j baths Windy Ridge. Phone 756-5630.

104

Farms For Sale

BETHEL AREA. Approximately 40 acres with approximately one half cleared. About 2900 pound tobacco

pound

allotment. Good road frontage. $87,500. D. G. Nichols Agency, 752 4012.

100 ACRES suitable tor farm or development. 4 miles out ot Greenville. 756 5891 or 752 3318.

207 ACRE FARM near Chocowinlty.

For more information call Rod Tugwell, CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756-6810; nights 753-4302.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PRODUCT ENGINEER/ DESIGNER

SPECIAL FINANCING AsLowAs9'/i%

AVAILABLE FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION HOMES, CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES Call Joe Bowen

East Carolina Builders, inc. 752-7194 Anytime

TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per

centage rate loan. Attractive 3 bedroom, V/i bath brick ranch wljh carport. Located on woodsy lot near university. Living room/dlning room, eat in kitchen, custom stOrm windows and doors, new furnace, (no air conditioning). Hardw(ood floors, approximately 1350 sqgare feet heated area. Take over approx Imately $33,500 for 25 years remaining with principal and Interest th. (This month at

payment of $280.82 - month, loan would cost you $388 - mo todays rate of 13%). Pay equity of

$16,400 or owner may consider some

financing for part of equity. Very low closing cost and no disi'

, ____   liscOunt

points to buyer. Lease/purchase also possible. Immediate

gzssession. Priced at $49,900. Call wner Agent, Louise Hofige, 804-794-1532 evenings. No agents,

2 STORY LOO HOME near Ayjlen. 7466127.    :

3 BEDROOM BRICK Home 'For

Sale. No Down payment It quality til 746-6555

for FHA loan. Call 746-6555 anytline.

Nbw poaition with a wtll aatabllahad EaatBrn North Carolina liv duatry. Wara looking for a Product Englnoor/Daaignar for our Enorgy Dhtlalon.

This individual must havo at laast 3 yoars manufacturing ax-porianca as wall as dasign axpsrianca in madium ataol tabrleation Industrias. A BSME or qulvalant dagrto dasirod, combustion ax-partanca a daflnlte plus.

Sond rasuma and salary roqulramanta to:

PRODUCT ENGINEER

P.O. Box 1967 QriBnv<llB,N.C. 27836

T

*>

3 BEDROOM, I'/z bath home on large canel. Bulkhead and pier, central heat and air, attic, double insulation, fully carpeted, living room with cathedral calling. Call 1-946 9128 anytime.    *

111 Invtsfment PiY>perty,

FOR SALE: 24 unit multi family fronrPm

lot. $2,000 per unit. mile Tech. Call 756-1307

CLASSIFIED DISPLAHi

NOTICE!

We will strip slraiqht ch.i

Hevolutionary "eA rneiho ConipiplPly 'ilp l.,ii Imp (i nilurp, fTiPtril Wi( kpi Pic tor our low pnrp- .,1 ulh

752-1009

STRIP EASt Of GREENVIlLi

I





^iwrt/lMck brick dupla. Doubla

garafla. 2 waibar <k7ar hookupa, 2 ttovat and 2 rafrigaratort, alio convav. Poulbla partial ownar fl-nanclM. 417-41* Eait 3rd Straat. Call Winiton Koba, 7M-9507; AMrMga ft Souttiarland 7S6-39M. LOWER tH RMTI Naw buplax

apartmant for lala. S3*,000. Ownar

will pay points. Possiblity of 10.35% Intatw bafora Dacembar 6. 757

3**ft 1-795-4323or I-792-4740.

.113

Land For Sale

IM ACRfS naar Simpson with 33 clavad. Road frontage, rail frontage, no allotments. $w,ooo. Contact Aldridge ft Southerland 754-3500, tts

nlght*754-52M 50 ACHT'FXrm south of Aydan In

the St. Johns Community! Road frontage on SR 110 and SR 1753. 51 acres claarad, 7 acres wooded. Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent

road frontage and recital house. Call full details. Moseley-IMarcut

iaalty. 744-2144.

115

Lots For Sale

Completely developed be-

l5T5

tween Kinston and Griffon, close to DuPont Plant, with community watv and paved streets. Approved for mobile homes and conventional houses. Price $3400 with financing available with approved credit. Call 753-5953.

VITOS

No-down-pay ment, low-monthly-payment, low-lnterest ' home loan*. Are your due for honest and faithful service. Let a Veteran help you get your due. Call Bob at 754-0191 8 to 8 or 752-0549 after 8 p.m.

117 Resort Property For Sale

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT. Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securit deposits required, no pets 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

uriy

NEED STORAGE? We have an e to meet your storag llngton Self Storage, day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933

Arllr

Open Mon

WAREHOUSE STORAGE and sales space. Excellent location. Up to 55,000 square feet. Adjacent office available. Price negotiable. 752-4295/754-7417.

121 Apartments For Rent

AFFORDABLE 11111

Townhomes and condominiums with monthly payments lower than rent. Five location.<i auallahl Call today! Iris Cannon at 746-2639 or 758 6050, Owen Norvell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, Wil Reid at 756 0446 or 758-6050 or Jane Warren at 758-7029 or 758 6050.

MOORE & SAUTE R 110 South Evans 758-6050

ATTRACTIVE AND ENERGY et

ficient 1 bedroom apartment. Hooker Road, S225 per month, $225 deposit. Call Tommy, 756 7815

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedrdim apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free yvater and sewer and yard rnoinienance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

S^'ORM WIN[)OWS DOORS & AWNJNGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

FOR LEASE

2500 SO. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

I ne uaiiy Metiector, Greanviiie, N.c.I uesday, Dt mberS, 1983 15

APARt1fHV #6A AtNt. Nair collage. Reasonable. Available Im-medlah

Italy. Call 757-0419.

BRAND NW tastefully decorated townhouse nev hospital and mall. 2 bedrooms, 1V4 baths, washer/dryer

hook ups, efficient, ttopy. 8300 jiar

month. 756-8904 V 753 BRICK TOWNHOUSE

and unit, storage, 756-9006 after 4 p.m.

2 bedroom, near Nichols.

II your resort ilckly usli

prp^ty this tell? You can gat fha lob done quickly using ClasslTled.

I quickly usliy

Cherry Cc

iourt

irry

Spacious 2 bedroom townhousas with IVi baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, wather-dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and FOOL. 752-1557

DUPLEX APARTMENT available

at Frog Laval on 1 acre wooded lot. 2 bedrooms, I'a baths, kitch-

en/dining combination, sundeck, heat pump. 8245 a month. No pets. 754-4424 before 5 p.m. or 754-5148 after.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featui-lng Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100 EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS-

> Dial direct phones ' 25 channel color tv Maid Service

Furnished

All Utilities

Weekly Rates

756SS55

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, $310 month. 754 4295 after 6.

GreeneWay

2 bedroom garden I f e <

Large 2 bedroom garden apart-ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconias, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to GreenvllleCountry Club. 756 6869

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

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

Call 752-3519

121 A|rtmBiits For Ront

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplelT Shetiandoab. $2f$. 754-5289.

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique In apartmant living with naturaoutsida-^our^ -door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

fireplaces, pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable uni

Quality

heat

construction, (heating costs

dishwasher, washer-dryar hookups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    l    -5    Sunday

Marry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd. 756-5067

NEAR HOSPITAL - medical school New duplex townhouses availablii

for Immediate occupancy. $300 pet 752-3152,

month. No pets John or Bryant

ask for

NEW DUPLEX, 3 bedroom townhouse, heat pump, near hospital, $300. 754-4004.

NEW ONE bedroom. Convenient location. Washer/dryer hookups. $220 per month. 754-7417.

NEW TOWNHOUSE, Williamsburg

Manor, ble. Cali:

cial decor, now avalla-i-6522.

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex apart ment, no pets. Call 754-1821 after 3:15.

NICE, LARGE 4 room apartment. Completely furnished. Located at 1301 Dickinson Avenue. $165 monthly. Phone 756-3662.

NICE QUIET DUPLEX, appli anees, carpet, electric heat, wood hater. No pets. 756-2671 Or 758 1543.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, disposal included. We also have Cable TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 756-7815.

RENT FURNITURE; Living, din

Ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per V _ .,    .. r u REN CO,

month. Option to 756-3862.

buy.

RIVER BLUFF 2 bedrooms, air, pool, free cable, dishwasher, bus route, 1'/3 baths. Available immedi ately . Phone 758 3641.    _

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

LANDMARK. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 3 blocks from University. Heat, air and water furnished. No pets. 758-3781 or 756 0889.

LARGE 1 BEDROOM apartment. Near University and Uptown. Carpet, electric heat, appliances furnished. Private and quiet. Phone 758 2225 after 6 p.m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

The H^py Pice To Live

.ETV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CHRISTMAS TREES

Fresh Cut, Well Limbed-PItt Cuniy Grown On Greeniree farm by the Winchesters All Sizes From 4 ft. To 8 ft.

Special Trees For Apartments and Mobile Homes

Dicklnton Av. Extantlon    1    Mil*    W*st    Of    Moos* Lodg*

jmi

OPERATING ROOM NURSES RECOVERY ROOM NURSES SURGICAL TECHNICIANS

W* ar* saaking axparlancad surgical tachnlcians and nursas in th* oparating room at Community Hospital of Rocky Mount. An invastor ownad Amarican Madlcal Intarnational facility, Community Hospital Is a 50 bad acuta car* hospital convaniantly lo-catad in quiat, plaasant surroundings with a family atmosphere. Our operating/recovery room staff offer* primary car*. Excellent benefits; minimal call. For mors Information, contact:

Martana Evaratte, R.N., C.N.O.R. Aaslstant Director of Nursing ORIRR/CSS Community Hospital

Csring Enough To Maks A Dlffsrsnc# An Equal Opportunity Employr

IF

If you can be trained!

If you have a desire for sales!

If you would like a salary while you train! If you would like all fringe benefits!

If you would like a paid vacation!

If you can take supervision!

If you don't mind work!

We would like to talk to you!

Please apply to East Carolina Lincoln-Mercury-GMC between the hours of 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM.

li

LINCOLN

EAST

CAROLINA

Wast End Ciicla    6rnvlllt.    N.C.

' EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

756-4267f

I

121

Apartments For Rent

NOW RENTING

Village East Apartments

V/2

Two bedroom townhouses baths, washer/dryer hook up. $295 par month. Call

756-7755 or 758-3124

TAft RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer hook-ups, cable TV, |wL

121 Apartments For Rent

2 BEDROQMS, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook

ups. No pets. 752-0180 before 5 p.m., 76-3- ^

1-2766 aHer 5 p.m. BEDROQMS,

2 BEDROQMS, I'/i baths. Ridge Place. Leas* and deposit required.

$300 monthly. Ktone 756-7310.

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on AAeade

Street Near ECU. Central air. range, refrigerator, freshly painted. $270. Phone 756-7480.

3 BEDROOM apartment. Located In WIntervllle. Call 746-2011 between

9 a.m.-5 p.I

127

Houses For Rant

house, playground, Naar I

Our Reputation Says It All -

"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm ft Willow

752-4225

TWO BEOCROOM DUPLEX apartment located In Mead-owbrook. Unfurnished. $135 per month. Call 756-1900.

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT.

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

UNIVERSITY AREA. 1304 B Forbes Street. 2 bedroom duplex, living room, kitchen, 1 bath. Ideal for students. Available now. $200. 756 0765.

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, V/i bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. Immediate occupancy.

756-0987

WEST HILLS TOWNHOMES

Located just I'/i miles from the hospital and medical school, these units 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 efficient, washer and dryer hi ok ups and a storage room for all those extras you just can't part with. Call us for an appointment to rent these new two bedroom townhomes minutsfrom the hospital.

Professionally managed by Remco East, f

Weekdays Nights & Weekends

758 6061 752-7490

1 BEDROOM apartment, appll 1 T

anees furnished, Tenth Street, $100 per month. Call after 6 p.m 524 5042.

BELVEDERE. Nice 3 bedroom home available immediately. $400/month. Lease and deposit required. Call Ball Si Lane, 752 0025.

PICK UP A little extra money by selling used item* in the clauified section of this newspaper. Call

FARMVILLE - 3 bedroom house. Phone 753 3327 or 752-6724.

CALL US WITH your classified ad today. You can find a cash buyer (or lawn or garden equipment fasti Call

753-6166.

FOR RENT; House in Hardee Acres. 3 bedrooms, 1'/i baths, heat pump, garage, carpets, fenced in backyard. $350 a month. 752-3993 evenings.

HOMES FOR RENT In Griffon. $200 to $500. Call Max Waters at Unity, 1 524-4147 days, 1 524 4007 nights.

LAKE GLENWOOO, 104 Bryant Circle, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den

with fireplace, large lot. 524-4148 or

^ ifty

534-5042, Echo Realty Inc.

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedroom, baths, living room/dlning room, eat in kitchen, carport. Fresh paint and wallpaper. Hardwood floors. Approximately 1350 square feet, new furnace/no air conditioning. Married couple or small tamify only. No pets. Immediate possession. $375 per month. Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532. No agents

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

OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows it's Important to please you. And we receive hundreds of testimonials every year.

THREE BEDROOMS, two baths, excellent kitchen, central heat and

air, no pets, lease only, security ni

deposit, 615 Oak Street, near un versify, immediate occupancy, $375 per month. Call J.L. Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758 4711.

127

Houses For Rent

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, family rbood, naar schools, oil in-1400 square feet, 752-1050.

BEDROOM house In Simpson.

3

Central heat and air, s'tove furnishad. Shown by appointment

tfclVtE~FRMI$HEO bedroom

752-1503, leave message

12

Lots For Rent

LARGE PRIVATE LOTS for mobile home*. City water. S65 per month. 758-7741 (Jwner/Broker.

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

NICE QUIET HOME for nice quiet person. Carpet, iKxikups, near mall, no pets. 756-2671 or 758-1543.

12X60, 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, $160. No pets, no children. 756-9491.

13x65. Unfurnished on private lot in Ayden. Call 746-2582after 6p.m.

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

2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent.

Call 756-4687 from 9a.m. to8 p.m.

2 BEDROOM, washer/dryer, central heat and air, carpet, fully

13S Office Space For Rent

1,288 SQUARE FOOT (3 offices) on

Evans Street. Price negoltable. 752 4295/756 7417.

131

Rooms For Rent

for male. Available February Across from college. Call 758-2585

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom^ apartment. Call 756-1562.

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom condomi-nlum near Greenville Athletic Club, prefer non-smoking female professional. Call 756 7164after 4 p.m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

144

Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood

timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc 756 8615.

iail

WANT TO

756 3920

BUY PECANS.

WANTED

timber, Ian 6825 or 746 2

TO BUY

le or small tracts

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

furnished 756 2927

No pets, no children.

Acfoss From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6221

135 Office Space For Rent

OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

Available in December. Off 264 By-pass. 2100 square feet of prime office space. Well decorated. 12 month lease or longer, private parki^. $1200 per month.

Call Clark-Branch Management

756-633

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

UPSTAIRS office space available at the Matfok Building, 315 West Sec,Id Street. Everything furnished. $100 per room per month. Call 758 3430.

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

CLASSIFIED OISPI ov

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT, heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn. 756 0545or 758-0635.

1 BEDROOM apartment. Furnished. Located in WIntervllle. Call 746 2011 between 9a.m -sn.m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

2 BEDROOM FARM HOUSE. 9

miles out on Highway 43 So(jth. $225. 746-2291 after 6 p.m.

3 BEDROOM, 1'/2 baths in Elmhurst. Available January 1st, $350. Smith Insurance Realty, 752-2754.

3 BEDROOMS, \'/i baths, garage. Available January 1st. $350 monthly. Lease and deposit. 756-6365..

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furniture RefInlshing snd repairs. Superior caning for all typo chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakesany Isngth, til types of pallets, sslecttd framed reproducilons.

EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 75M188    8AM<4:30PM

Graenvllle, N.C.

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company has a Systems 34 (96K) computar avallabis lor bn-mediate time sharing. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer Is avallabis for Immediate remote hook-up using telephone o munications. Programs retdy lor general butinost us* include general ledger, accounts receivable, inventoryfbllling, accounts paytUs and payroll. Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC L    or 758-1215

QUALITY FARM FOR SALE

5 miles north of Greenville. 105 acres

cleared land with 15,000 pounds (plus or

minus) tobacco allotment. Hog parlor and

feeding system in excellent condition.

752-1010

eKBMSecsaiMWiMceicMWiaxMXKiiWiMiHwaEaiMiflcmssnsianiaciMMrR

Ilie

I

I

Spotter

Gifts

Dad)

THCPROFESSIONAL WOODCUTTERBUYS STiHL MORE THAN ANYOTHER CHAIN SAW INTHE WORLD.

WHICH MEANS ALL THREE OFUSAREDOINC THINGS RIGHT.

Clark & Co.

Of Graanvilla, Inc.

MamoriBtUf Aciobi f io<ii Hat hat I UatMmiG

756-2557

, Sports " Gifts

MENS INSULATED COVERALLS HIP BOOTS

Ltytvtsy Na F ChdtliMt

WARRENS DOG & HUNTING SUPPLIES

]02$-EEBSl181h Tu.iui GrsenvMls.H.C.

SONY-QE-SHARP TELEVISIONS

Close Out Sale 90 Days Same As Cash $1000 Instant Credit

Goodyear Tire Center

West End    m Dickinson Ave.

7IM3T1    TU-4417

Hi

Tech

Electronics

"ixpmt Htfiilr of Sound iqulpitmt nd AvtasuMs huUIMono"

Hit South MimerisI Drive

756-0533

DAVnWIUIAMS

CeOwnsr

GORHAM CURK CoCmtm

Gifts

for

Everyone

nuiouDivfiimiis

Try *11 Iht* Irish Wh'y C''* Choeolats Wslnut Brandy Cikv, Golden Shsrry Spies C*k* A dsllghttui limlly gitt lor the person who hit everythl^! BESTSELECRONOFMPORTEDCMCKERS ANO CHEESE IN GREENVILLE

iBijf

For Special Christmas

GIFTS

COUNTRY CRAnS & ANTIQUES REPRODUaiON FURNITURE HANDCRAFTED DOLL CRADLES CHILDRENS TABLES & CHAIRS

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

Poor Man's Flea Market

Htghwey 264 Eeet- 8 mllet from

Highwey Z Greenville Open Wed.

Sun. 8 to 6 752-1400

Gift

Samsonite Attache Cases

Sheafler Pen & Pencil Sets

Photo Albums

Desk Assessories

SCM PortabI* Typeyyrllers

Santry Safas

Globas

Appointment Books And Many Other Professional Gilts

OIIk* Equipment Co.. Inc. S69S Evans Street

752-2175

177 Arlington Blvd. lOpposile Pill Pliza)

756-4224

IZOD CLOTHING

Entire Slock

20% to 50% Off

AYOUSOlFKmYClUB

Open 7 Day* A Week

Select A Craft ToMake..ToGive

from our full line of

Gifts For Kids

STENCIL SUPPLIES

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

NEEDLEWORK SUPPLIES OMC Embroidery Flo**-25t

Hungates

arts CRAITS HOBBIES

Pitt Pleie Grecnvtlle, N.C. Phone 756-0121

Gifts for the Home

WATERBEDS BEDDING SAVE UP TO 50%

FREE SHEETS OR FRAME with each 8300 Purchase

ONE

STOP

SLEEP

SHOP

FACTOIYMATTIIfl

AWATmiN

355-2626

730Qr**nvlll*BiMl*vard

(NsriToPlttPltis

Give unique, locally handmade, gifts

from

PINEWOOD

200 E.Gr(eavlll Blvd.

756-7978

Gifts

for

Mom

DIAMOND

PENDANTS

70 up

Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers

Indcpodat Jewden    DowBtovB Mall

756-0747

Great

Selection

Of

PINEAPPLS

114 E. Fifth St.

OPEN

til

9:00

Sports

Clifts

Going Out of Ski Business    

.SALE    I

Large Inventory to Liquidate.    |||

IZOD GOLF 1    2

TENNIS SOCKS    J

1/2 PRICE    S

ALL TENNIS BALLS 112 PRICE    w

ALL GOLF BALLS 40% OFF    *

Normal Retail    8

No returns, exchanges or refunds.

GORDON FULP, PRO    K

756-0504

Located At Greenville Country Club B

Open 7 Days A Week    S

A Very Special CHRISTMAS GIFT

For The Entire Family!

1

i

RIDE IT! ENJOY IT! THE

SCHWINN

DELUXE

EXERQSER!

I

I

Simply THE VERY BEST"

Best

Acclaimed by experts . . . a Buy" in stationary exercisers.

Added features Include a built-in speedometer and a built-in audible timer. There's even an easily adjustable seatso that the whole family can enjoy its benefits-akxig with electro-for^ Schwinn frame and ball-bearing pedals with soft toot straps Assembled, ready to nde

su'noN I

I I I

SERVICE CENTER

1105 Dickinson Avenue

752-6121

Wide Selection of Candies Including Williamsburg Candles Christmas Wreaths and Ornaments Gift Items in Wood and Porcciain Wide Selection of Brass Gifts JEWELRY    TOYS

three locations to serve you

Park View Commons 8th & Memorial Drive

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

911 Dickinson Avenue

k

1





^0 Th> Daity Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Tuwday. December 6.1963

Cities in Southern California

Hope Christmas Spirit Strong

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) - Children arent the only ones with wish lists this Christmas season. Orange County and at least eight of its cities are asking taxpayers to play Santa by donating such gifts as computers, trucks and even a $7 million park.

We arent overly optimistic about that gift, assistant Laguna Beach city manager Terry Brandt said of the 522-acre park, listed in the citys eight-page catalog of suggested presents.

Nor does Placentia recreation director Jim Soto expect to get the $50,000 lift truck list^ in that citys 24-page catalog.

But Soto, Brandt and other local officials hope the Christmas spirit prompts citizens to make at least some tax-deductible donations - and the catalogs are intended to help those not

quite sure what to give.

Brandt said Lagunas catalog, distributed after Christmas last year to 500 businesses and residents, elicited about $1,000 in gifts including park benches and picnic tables. A local garden club coughed up cash for bedding plants.

Last yci^r we didnt get our list out in time for people to want to donate as a tax writeoff, he said. We are hoping for more contributions at the end of this year when people are looking for deductions.

Soto said Placentias first-ever catalog, which he compiled, is due out by mid-December. So is a debut catalog titled, Gifts from the Heart: a Fullerton Gift"

Placentia, Fullerton and other first-time catalog issuers, including Fountain Valley and Huntington

Beach, were inspired by the success of cities like Anaheim, which has been putting out catalogs since 1979.

Anaheims citizen Santas have donated $60,000 to $100,000 in years past, and this year the city hopes to receive $70,000.

Sometimes people just need to be asked. said Marie Dixon, the citys recreation manager, who shows the catalog to community groups.

Taking its cue from the Anaheim approach, Orange County will mail only a few of the 2,000 catalogs it has printed. Most will be distributed through personal visits, said administrative analyst Helen Lotos.

Ms. Lotos, who compiled the 30-page county catalogr was somewhat 'skeptical about the response at a time of year when gift dollars may be in short supply.

"Theres a lot of competition at Christnias, but we cant just wait for them (donations) to roll in, we have to ask for what we want, she said.

She said the most popular item requested by department su^rvisors is a computer to streamline office operations.

Some items listed in the catalog are already funded in the county budget, but Ms. Lotos said donations would allow the budget money to be used elsewhere.

Buena Park recreation supervisor Chris Adams said the citys catalog is used to solicit gifts from civic groups such as the Lions and Kiwanis.

Actually, most of the items are things we-can-

LOCAL SADD CHAPTER FORMED...Students from high schools across Pitt County attended an organizational meeting

function without, but the donations would increase the quality of our operations, Ms. Adams said.

Monday for a local .

(SADD), a statewide group that stresses peer pressure to discourage students from drinking and driving. Steve Streater, seated at left, and Brenda Brinson of the North Carolina Youth

Advocacy and Involvement Office in Raleigh, were in Greenville for the meeting. Students were given information on ^Rwrto start a SADD^roup in-their-individual schools. For further information about the Pitt Couiity SADD Chapter contact Wade Johnson of Pitt County Schools at 752-6106. (Barry Gaskins Photo)

WE GLADLY WELCOME

FEDERAL

FOOD STAMPS

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each Of these advertised Items Is required to be readily available for sale In each Kroger sav-on, 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 raln-,check which will entitle you to purchase the advertised Item at the advertised price within 30 days. Lim t one manufacturers coupon per Item.

copyright 1983 Kroger sav-on Quantity Rights Reserved None sold To Dealers

THIS OFFER EFFECTIVE ON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7,1983 IN OUR GREENVILLE STORE ONLY.This Wednesday, December 7

Clip the Manufacturer's cents off Coupons from Your Mail, Newspapers and Magazines...

Then Bring Them to Kroger Sav-on

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS At Kroger Sav-on

FOR EVERY $10.00 PURCHASE WE WILL DOUBLE 5 MFC'S COUPONS EXAMPLE

10 Purchase 5 Coupons 20 Purchase -10 Coupons 100 Purchase - 50 coupons

This Wednesday, December 7, vve Will redeem all national manufacturers cents-off coupons up to 50* for double their value. Offer good on national manufacturers coupons only. (Food retailer coupons not accepted.) Customer must purchase coupon product In specified size. Expired coupons will not be honored. Coupons for free merchandise excluded from this offer. Offer does not apply to Kroger or other store coupons whether manufacturer Is mentioned or not. When the value of the coupon exceeds 50* this offer Is limited to $1.00. If double the value of a coupon exceeds the retail of the Item, this offer Is limited to the retail price. Limit one cigarette and coffee coupon per customer. Limit one coupon for any particular Item, if you, for example, have two coupons for 15* off on Miracle whip and Intend to purchase two Jars of Miracle Whip - only one of these coupons will be doubled. You may use the second coupon but It's face value remains at face value.

MANUFACTURERS

COUPON

Coupon A

Coupon B

Coupon C

Coupon D

MFG.

CENTS

OFF

20

39*

50*

75*

YOU SAVE AT KROGER

40*

78*

1.00

1.OPEN 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT i

DEALERS


Title
Daily Reflector, December 6, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30656
Extent
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NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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