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INSIDE TODAY
INSIDE TODAYHAPPY REUNIONThe jubilation was mutuai when U.S. Marines were weicomed home yesterday from their long and bloodstained assignment in Beirut. (Page 18)WILL RESISTElizabeth Bouvia says she will ignore any court ruling against her determinination to escape lifelong ordeal as suffering paraplegic. (Page 18)
SPORTS TODAYYIKINGSWlbl
D.H. Conleys wrestling Vikings claimed their fourth straight wrestling win of the season last night defeateding Beddingfield. Page 15.THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 275
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 8, 1983
32 PAGES - 3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS
Preparation
STUDENTS P.^INT NATIVITY SCENE ... hartnville Central students Sally Gullette. Terry Butts and Kenneth Powell bring life to the face of a wise man that will be part of a Farmville churchs nativity scene. The art
students at the school are painting the figures for the churchs Christmas scene, which wiii be on display throughout the holidays. (Barry Gaskins Photo)
By R. GREGORY NOKES
Associated Press Writer
BRUSSELS (AP) - The United States and its three partners in the peacekeeping force expressed their determination today to remain in Lebanon. But there were hints their patience could run out if solutions to Lebanons problems dont soon emerge.
Im sure there are the realities of the patience of
REFLKCTOR
various publics, said a U.S. spokesman. A British source restated his countrys position that its commitment isnt open-ended.
Secretary of State George P. Shultz held a breakfast meeting in his hotel suite with the foreign ministers of Britain, France ant Italy, all of which contribute to the 5,600-man force.
The U.S. spokesman said
OTilH
tf
Hotline gets things done. Write and tell us about the problem or issue into which youd like for Hotline to look. Enclose photostatic copies of any pertinent information. Our address is The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Because of the large numbers received. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we 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.
RING AT ORIGINAL PRICE
Last May while attending an Omega Psi Phi Fraternity in Winston-Salem, I ordered a fraternity ring which cost $260.1 made a deposit of $50. The ring was shipped to me in September by the Jostens Company of Owatonna, Minn., and the balance was listed as $342.76.1 called the vender and he suggested that 1 refuse the package, assuring me it would later bei-eshipped at the original price. I did this and have since been receiving statements for the $342.76 price. I am at a loss as to what to do. I have tried to communicate with the company and further with the vender unsuccessfully. F.S.
Hotline called the company and explained your situation. We were assured that the company always honors its originally promised price and that you would be called immediately and told the date of shipment. You were called that very day, you report, and in less than a week you came in to show us your ring.
there was no discussion whatsoever about withdrawing the force, nor is there a plan to increase its size or expand its role. More than 300 troops of the multinational force - including 256 U.S. servicemen - have been killed in Lebanon.
The spokesman said the four ministers, here for a meeting of NATO foreign ministers, were agreed on the urgent need for efforts at national reconciliation in Lebanon to succeed.
The official briefed rep<)rt-ers on r^ults of the meeting on the understanding he would not be identified.
The NATO meeting comes as Italy and Britain question the usefulness of the peacekeeping force in the wake of Sundays U.S. air strikes against Syrian positions in Lebanon and repeated attacks on the peacekeeping forces.
Neither Shultz, Foreign Secretary Geoffrey Howe of Britain nor Foreign Minister Giulio Andreotti of Italy would comment on todays meeting.
But French Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson said, There are no changes that would lead us to change our views - we do not want to give the impression that we would abandon the Lebanese.
We support President (Amin) Gemayel, Cheysson said. We would like Gemayels government to represent Lebanon in its entirety so that the process of
(Please turn to Page 10)
Delay Columbia's Return Due To Computer Failure
Patience Eroding On Lebanon Chore
By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace Writer SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) - Columbia and its six crewmen were forced to delay their return to Earth today after veteran spaceship commander John Young reported computer failure on the shuttle just 42 hours before this mornings planned touchdown.
The astronauts were in no immediate danger. Only one computer was out, and Columbia has four others, any one of which could guide the ship to a safe landing. The computers operate wing flaps and other spaceship control surfaces during reentry.
Controllers considered a landing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., later today.
Mission Control said it delayed the touchdown because it did not fully understand the problem at a critical time when it had to give the crew> the go-ahead to close the payload doors and prepare for the engine firing that would ciabl the shuttle back toward Earth.
We have waved off a landing for this morning, Mission Control said. We need time to better understand the problem before we commit to re-entry
Four hours later, the control center said: We still do not know what happened. Columbia was to have landed on a desert runway at Edwards at 10:59 a.m. EST after a successful 10-day orbital mission in which the astronauts reaped a bonanza of science data in the Spacelab workshop mounted in the cargo bay.
That landing would have been on the astronauts 162nd circuit of the globe. The control center said that, assuming the computer problem is resolved, it might bring the crew home on landing opportunities on either the 165th or 166th orbits.
Landing for the 165th would be about 5:17 p.m. (2:17 p.m. PST) and on the 166th, about 6:47 p.m. Forecasters said weather conditions would be good throughout the day at Edwards.
Officials said there will be no night landing considered, and that the shuttle has enough fuel and other consummables to stay up/or ^ two more days.
Young radioed the control center about 5:30 a.m. EST
that two of the ships five computers had failed.
I think it was the upfiring jets in the nose that made the computers fail, he radioed. It really hit the vehicle hard.
Minutes later, Young reported Computer No. 2 was back on line, but that No. 1 apparently had hard failed. Young tried without luck several times to restart it. and finally, the control center told him to declare it failed.
Columbia has four general purpose computers and a backup. Any single one is enough to guide the ship.
Discussing the thrusters, Young said: I recommend we close the forward RCS (reaction control system) and not run anymore of those rascals.
Controllers agreed and capsule communicator John Blaha^ told him to shift Columbia into free-drift and not to fire the thrusters. Columbia was orbiting at
17,400 mph 150 miles up.
Instead, Young said he would use only small vernier jets at the rear for control.
Then the commander asked. Want us to continue the preparations for deorbif He was about two hours away from firing the shuttle braking rockets.
'Negative,- came the reply.
The problem cropped up as Columbia and its Spacelab
(Please turn to Page 10)
Sovt 'Suspends' Talks At Nuclear Arms Forum
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - The Soviet Union today suspended talks on reducing nuclear long-range rockeis and bombers, saying deployment of new U.S. missiles in Europe had created a "change in the overall strategic situation. The suspension of the U.S.-Soviet negotiations was
announced at the end of a 35-minute session today and two weeks after the Soviets broke off talks on reducing nuclear medium-range missiles.
It meant that for the first time in two years the superpowers were without a major forum for negotiating reductions in nuclear
Extended
N.4SHV1LLE, Tenn. (AP) Baseball owners, for the second time, extended outgoing commissioner Bowie Kuhns contract today to give their search committee additional time to find his replacement.
Kuhns contract was extended until next March l. Last summer, in Boston, his contract had been extended from its original expiration date of Aug. 15 to Dec. 31.
In the face of reports that the search committees only viable candidate. White House Chief of Staff James Baker, had turned down the job, it appeared the committee was having trouble finding a new commissioner.
Committee chairman Bud Selig, owner of the Milwaukee Brewers, called the latest extension a "transitory bridge that "needs to be built at all times like this.
A Thank-You' Luncheon For Outgoing Officials
Community leaders honored the outgoing mayor and City Council with a collective expression of thanks Wednesday and weicomed the new mayor and board members during a Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce luncheon.
David Duffus, chairman of the chamber board, said, On behalf of our Chamber of Commerce which represents the business, industrial and professional community, I say a big thank you to Mayor Percy Cox, Janice Buck, Louis Clark, Stuart Shinn, Judy Greene, Bill Hadden and George Pugh for a job well done.
Duffus also offered sincere congratulations to the new members elected to serve the fastest growing city in eastern North Carolina. The new slate, which will be installed tonight, includes Mayor-Elect Buck and council members Ed Carter, M.W. (Henry) Aldridge, Clark, Greene, Shinn and Hadden.
The spokesman said the outgoing officials dedicated themselves to good government and the betterment of our city through their de^cation to the City Council during the past
two years.
Speaking to the new council, Duffus said, We ;as a chamber see you as people with a vision and desire to insure a proper and orderly growth of our city that deserves sincerity in planning for the future.
He said, It has been predicted that by 1995 Greenville will be a metropolitan city. We feel good that a firm foundation has been laid on which to build a city for the future.
Duffus said a book by Hugh Bayless entitled The Best Towns in America cites Greenville as one of Americas 50 most desirable cities to live in because of our affordable homes, stable economy, rich cultural and educational opportunities, low crime rates, moderate taxes, reasonable energy costs, safe natural environment, clean, plentiful water, abundant shopping centers and good government. Duffus offered special thanks to Cox. who served 17 years on the governing board, including six as mayor. He told the mayor, Your dedication speaks loud and the many things, acts and creative ideas that you have injected into our city, its progress and government will be long remembered.
weapons.
"A change in the overall strategic situation due to the beginning of the deployment of new American iiflissiies in Europe compels the Soviet side to re-examine all the issues which are the subject of the discussion at the talks on the limitation and reduc-tion of strategic armamentc, the Soviet news agency Tass said in a Geneva dispatch. The date for the resumption of the talks has not been set due to this."
U.S. negotiator Edward L. Rowny told repo -ters outside the .S. disarmament headquarters, We regret that the U.S.S.R. has chosen not to set a resumption date for the next round." He added that the United States was fully prepareif" to continue the regular pattern of the talks.
Rowny said the United States proposed to resume the talks in early February, and we hope that the U.S.S.R. will soon agree on a date for resuming these negotiations which are in the interest of both our nations and of the entire world. "
"We cannot agree with Soviet assertions that developments outside the scope of these negotiations require the Soviet Union to withhold agreement on a resumption date, Rowny said.
At a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels. Belgium, there was no immediate public comment on the suspension of the talks.
The Strategic Arms Reduction Talks - called START - which opened June 18. 1982, would have normally gone into a two-month recess with the resumption date announced at
the end of the round.
Rowny conducted 78 sessions with Soiviet Ambassador Viktor P. Karpov over iV nionths 10 discuss long-range nuclear forces.
The two sides agreed earlier that todays meeting would be the last of the two-month round hegun Oct. 5, but there has t^en no indication from the Soviets that they will resume the talks in february.
On Monday. Soviet leaders in Moscow said the United States was indulging in "wishful thinking " if it thought the Soviets \\ould resume parallel talks on medium-range nuclear missiles.
The Soviets walked out of those talks Nov. '23 after the arrival of the first of 572 U.S. cruise and Pershing 2 missiles to be deployed in Western Europe by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
The Soviets have announced plans to put nuclear missiles in Czechoslovakia and East Germany, increase the number ot SS-20s in the Soviet Union and have sea-based nuclear weapons aimed at the United States to counter the NATO deployment.
Crimestoppers
If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt County, call Crimestoppers, 758-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.
WEATHER
i ;ii' liih!i;lit. low .iruiuiil .(I, tin rt'ciMiiL; cloudiiiCNs
Frid.i'. with iiiuh in thr inid-.Vis:
Looking Ahead
,\ Ouiiuc of rain over the weekend ami lair Mondav Highs during period will be around lii) and lows in the tl)s.
Inside Reading
Iage 7 Area items Page 12 llliiit gold Page U Obituaries
Rose High School Has 2 Morehead Finalists
Two Rose High students. Hunter Bost and Elizabeth Ellen, are among the seven high school seniors selected as Morehead Scholar finalist nominees for 1984 from District 1, which comprises 20 eastern North Carolina counties.
Selection of the seven from District 1 was announced today. They will compete in the final Morehead Scholarship competition to be held in Chapel Hill in late February or early March.
Tlie other seniors chosen as district finalists are: Emily Blount and Sean Pelan, both of Washington High ScImoI,
Washington; Benjamin Burroughs, Halteras High School, Cape Halteras, and Elizateth Stanley, Plymouth High School, Plymouth.
Bost, son of Dr. and Mrs. William S. Bost, was the 1983 Greenville Community Ambassador representing the community in Spain during this past summer. He is a member of the National Honor Society and for three years has served on the Student Government Association. He plays on the basketball and baseball teams.
Miss Ellen, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John C. Ellen, Jr., is a
member of the East Carolina University ^ympnony, me Eastern Youth Orchestra and other area musical groups. She is a ballet student and a member of the National Honor Society.
Winners of the 1984 John Motley Morehead scholarship awards will receive four academic years and also summer programs at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Currently, each award is worth approximately $'20,000. The awards are given on the basic of academic, school and community achievements.
2 The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
Thursday, Decembers. 1983
Different (^olnr Of Mink
NEW LOOK - Black and brown mink are most familiar, but there are actually over 14 natural shades. Cross mink comes in several colors and is identified by a dark shaded line running down the fur. These Brown Cross mink coats are accented with mink-trimmed suede accessories: a triangular scarf, left, and a capelet. right. (By Boecker, Essen in SAGA Mink.)
Service League Names New Provisionals
New provisional members were welcomed and introduced by Mrs Edward Smith, membership chairman, at the Monday. meeting of the Greenville Service League,
Named were Mrs. Ray J, Boleman. Mrs. F. Spencer Cosby. Mrs. E G Crawford Jr.. Mrs. Derek. P Dunn. Mrs. William H. Durham Jr.. Mrs. J. Harry Hastings. Mrs. Fred Stanley Holec. Mrs. James F. Lewis Jr.. Mrs. Carrie Gray Oakley, .Mrs. Garry T. Pegram and Mrs, Bill Williams.
A program of Christmas, music was presented by Mrs. Smith, soloist, and Mrs. BoVd Lee, pianist.
Mrs. Frank Layne. president, conducted the business
Perfectly , Beautiful,
Beautifully
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$2,000
LAUTARES
JEWELERS
Kcglstered Jcwewn Certified Gemobsifts 414 Evans Street
; j MEMBER AMERICAN
i ^ GEM society
session. .Mrs. Kelly Barnhill said the next Bloodmobile visit would be at Procter and Gamble Wednesday, The November report included a visit to Pitt Community College where ;)6 hours were contributed by 12 workers and 73 units were donated; at D.H. Conley High School. 23 workers volunteered 74'j hours, and 157 units were obtained; and Nov. 30 at Fletcher Dormitory, 119 units were,given with 22 members working 69 hours'
Mrs. C.W, Harvey, hospital activities, reported that 400 tray favors were prepared for'the hospital patients at Thanksgiving. A Christmas workshop will be held Dec. 8 and volunteers were asked to help decorate the hospital Dec. 14,
Mrs. Horton Rountree reported the receipt of three memorials to the Laughinghouse Fund and rendered assistance to six patients. Mrs. Norwood Whitehurst furnished three layettes last month and Jo Betts Barrett loaned three items of equipment from the lending chest and had two items returned.
Christmas baskets will be delived to needy families Dec. 22 and donations were received from the membership,
Mrs. J.W.H, Roberts requested volunteers to help staff the .Mental Health office and thanked members for their gifts for Operation Santa Claus.
Mrs. Layne said Jan. 9 is the next meeting date.
A coffee hour was held in honor of the new provisionals.
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PECIAL'^
Children Having Holiday Birthdays Veed Attention
By PATRICIA
^ McCORMACK UPI Health Editor
When a birthday must compete with Santa Claus or New Years celebrations and deny a child the inborn right to be 100 percent the center of attesition on his or her natal day, alls not joyful.
Boys and girls born in December and January claim having a birthday in or near the Christmas and New Years month means being lost in the gift and party shuffle. That was the finding of a survey conducted by Gregory Brock, associate professor of family studies at the University of Wisconsin-Stout in Menomonie, Wis.
As the parent of a January child, I can testify that its no fun for parents either to have to drop all the holiday juggling (or recuperation) and focus on a birthday. Cast in the role of Santas helper and Fairy Godmother within within the span of two or three weeks short circuits nerves every time.
January and December children apparently have been able to see through this parental weakness.' Brock discovered in his survey of 150 Stout students asked to recall childhood feelings about the month in which they were born.
"College students are at an age when it would be easy for them lo remember what their feelings were when they were 6 to 10 years of age." Brock said, explaining why he selected the students.
He said 77 percent of those born in December and January claimed both months are rotten for birthdays.
The students recalled the December and Janurary childs birthday parties lacked the highly-concentrated razzle-dazzle of parties and significant presents experienced by friends or siblings born 'in other months.
Spring months were recalled as the best to be born. Birthday parties could be held while school was in session and the weather was nice, giving some promise of a good turnout - which mean more presents.
Vacation months were de-" scribed as less than ideal for birthday celebrations though not nearly as bad as December-January.
Brock said the trouble with the summer is that too many kids are at grandmothers house or visiting the Grand Canyon or otherwise not in the neighborhood. This makes it hard to get up a good crowd for a party, A poor crowd means fewer presents.
Brock said parents should be aware of these negative
feelings about December-January birthdays, especially feelings that are acquired between the ages of Gando.
It is easy for these children to feel left out or to get the sense that their birthday isnt as important as that of a brother or sister. It may create a sense of not being as valued.
This is liable to be the case if parents stint on birthday presents because Christmas buying strains the money suply. Brock said.
He suggested that parents talk through birthday feelings with their December-January children and work out a solution for the problem.
Tn some cases, parents might consider having a birthday celebration at another time of the year, he said.
For very young children, it may be better to give them many small gifts for their birthday instead of one expensive one. The younger children are into quantity.
Brock, who likes September for birthdays, is the father of two, going on three -- the third due sometime in December.
"I did this study because we are going to have our first child born in December and my vyifo iiJQrfi WOflder-ing what it is like for a child to have Christmas and birthday celebrations in the same month,he said.
1 have several friends who were born in December and they recalled that from a child's point of view it is not the best month to be born."
Brock said the study is significant to parents.
"Children who dislike their birthdays may also acquire feelings of not being wanted, loved and appreciated," he said.
"It is just one of the many factors leading to these feelings. but it is a factor.
"Parents should be concerned about putting some time into thinking about what lo do if a child is born close to the holiday season.
I think it is important that parents take some steps to help these kids feel appreciated on holiday season birthdays.
Births
Culbreath
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Landcn Culbreath, 1505 Mills St., a daughter, Lydia Monique, on Nov. 29,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Little
Born to Mr. and Mrs.
William Lindell Little, Ayden, a son, Vonkia Dale Lamontay. on Nov. 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Easiern
Electrolysis
mOAKMONT drive, SUITE I PHONE 7SMS34. GREENVILLE, NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOQIST
The childbearing patterns of todays young women , (ages 18-34) are very different from those of their mothers generation, says the American Council of Life Insurance. Unlike World War II postwar brides, women of the Baby Boom generation are often postponing having children. In addition to becoming mothers later in life, they expect to have
Transportation And Tab Is Question
By Abigail Van Buren
* 1963 by Univerul Press Syrrdicate
DEAR ABBY: In these days of the liberated woman, more women are phoning men and asking them out. Not that there is anything wrong with that, but it does raise some questions:
If the woman calls the man, does she pick him up? Or is he expected to pick her up? Who pays the tab? It seems to me that the person who does the inviting should pick up the tab. But some men might not feel right letting a woman treat them.
NO SIG
DEAR NO SIG: When the woman calls the man, the transportation is provided by the person for whom it is most convenient. As for the tab: The person who did the inviting should be prepared to pick up the tab.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 26-year-old man with a problem Ive never heard of before. Im engaged to a 22-year-old girl named Gina (not her real name). Weve gone together for a year, and I thought we knew each other well, but she laid something on me yesterday that set me to wondering.
While shopping for a bedroom set, Gina insisted on a double bed with bedposts. I said it looked kind of old-fashioned, but Gina said that is what she wanted in case we wanted to tie each other up! Abby, the way she said it Im sure she was serious. 1 was totally surprised. Now I am wondering if maybe my fiancee isnt some kind of pervert.
I have no desire to be tied up, and I certainly dont want to tie her up. Am I square or is there something wrong with Gina?
NO TIES IN TEXAS
DEAR NO TIES: It's time you and Gina had a frank talk about your sexual expectations. Tying up ones partner, or being tied up, is part of a not-uncommon fantasy to heighten sexual pleasure. Its called bondage. If your fancee is seriously entertaining these thoughts, it doesnt necessarily mean shes a pervert. The best rule of limitations is: Anything that goes on between consenting adults is OK as long as its agreeable to both parties and harms no one.
DEAR ABBY: What do you think of the following? My husband and I were shopping last week, and as we were walking along the street, I became very dizzy.
I noticed a cleaning shop nearby where I saw some empty chairs. I told my husband to continue shopping, and I went into the cleaning'shop and asked the young man there if I could sit down for a few minutes because I wasnt feeling well. This was his answer: "These chairs are only for people who are having their things cleaned here. If you are sick, go to a doctor.
Please comment.
MARION T.
DEAR MARION: Im sure that cleaning establishment will never get a penny (or a good word) from you, and I dont blame you. But please, take a few minutes to write a letter, addressed to the owner, describing your experience. Clip this column and enclose it. Be sure to state the day and time it occurred. There is always a chance that some uncaring or poorly trained employee acted without authority. Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a reply, and let me know what happens.
(If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.)
The Choice For Christmas
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Like this classic Orlon'^' acrylic pullover sweater with ribbed V-neck, waistband and cuffs. In colors to coordinate with Lacoste shirts, slacks and other sportswear. Izod Lacoste...obviously for winners. S, M, L, XL,
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The elegance of wool crepe has never been emphasized so chicly as this. Flattering to the eye and tempting to the touch. Savor the look and feel in a palette of softly blue plus black and white.
Fall Clearance Now In Progress
Open Thursday until 9:00
331 Arlington Blvd. 756-5844
Pottery for Sale...
Mrs. Gail Ritzer, local artist in handbuilt pottery, will be demonstrating in the Williamsburg Area of our store on Friday and Saturday, December 9 and 10 from 10:00 A.M. until 10:00 P.M. Items for sale will include vases, bowls, mugs, honey pots, platters, masks, goblets, and clay critters. These make perfect gifts! Mrs. Ritzer is one of only a few artisc^s who doJcstfn work and special orders.
Shop Monday thru Saturday 10 A.M. Until 10 P.M.^Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355).
The Daily Reftector, Greenville, N.C.
Thursday, December 8,1983 3
Denver Exhibit Shows Century Of Fashion ^
By s.J. GUFFEY
Associated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) - When Imelda DeGraw set out to display some of the Denver Art Museums abundant lingerie collection, she didnt give much thought to the political significance of the whalebone corset.
Our main concern was not to offend people, Ms. DeGraw confided as she showed a visitor around Intimate Fashions Then And Now.
"We get a lot of people in the museum and we dont want anyone upset, she explained.
But there is more than a wealth of delicate handwork and luxurious fabric here among lavender walls in a sixth-floor gallery where a century of underpinnings is laid out in style. The exhibit also reflects what women chose - or were allowed to do, once they were fully dressed.
In the mid-1800s, for example, overdressed might be a better description. A line of mannequins show the necessary components for the fashionable of that day: a loose, thigh-length chemise first, then antaloons, corset, corset cover and a petticoat form stiffened with wire or wfelebone. Over that, pet-ticoatfr galore up to 0 at a time - then, finally, a floor-length dress.
A life of leisure had real meaning in those days; three to five different complete changes of clothes a day -from the chemise out were not uncommon, said Ms. DeGraw, curator of the museums textile collection.
Across the room is an elaborate tucked and embroidered silk "morning dress, the sort worn each day until it was time to change again and "go out. Back home in the afternoon, it was time for a looser, still elaborate, tea dress until the hour came to dress for dinner.
Servants were de rigueur for such opulent behavior. "You couldnt possibly lace yourself up, Ms. DeGraw says of the corsets, adding that an immense amount of someones time had to go into washing and ironing the delicate items as they were discarded.
A "progression of silhouettes is how Ms. DeGraw describes changes in fashion over the century. Illustrations that stretch back to Elizabethan England line the museum wall.
Cinched-in. tiny waists -
Bridal
Policy
A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.
Wedding write-ups will be printed* through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.
Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.
13 inches around was once the goal - go back at least 400 years, when Elizabethan women encased their torsos in steel to denote their social rank and wealth.
In the 1600s, steel gave way to whalebone and made fortunes for New Englands whaling fleet. The fullness of skirts moved from bell shapes to and toward the back. Bustles arrived.
Reproductions of etchings show the apex of 18th-century fashion the rococo creations of Louis XVIs court in the days before the Bastille fell and leveled couture francais. For a while.
On another wall, an 1883 ad for an electric corset guarantees to deliver health-giving current to the whole system, though it doesnt explain where the batteries go. Beside it, an illustration doctors used to lobby against corsets, showing the drastic realignment of internal organs that such get-ups would induce with prolonged wear.
In 1851, Amanda Bloomer promoted Turkish-style trousers and a knee-length skirted bodice that allowed for the more natural female figure. The ensemble never caught on, though Amandas last name was certainly immortalized.
However uncomfortable or unhealthful many underclothes have been, they were beautifully made. A center case shows clothes for ' little girls and their dolls -traveling seamstresses outfitted whole" families, including favored toys'- with the underwear just as lavishly detailed as mamas.
Silhouettes straightened out in the 1920s. Finally able to vote and eager to be part of the u'^side-down world that followed World War 1, women of fashi^ moved into the straight-lined adolescent look of the flappci'.
As acceptance of womens sexuality grew, so fashions changed. Selections from the
Greg and Louise are in their early 30s. Theyre the parents of a 12-year-old daughter and a nine-year-old son.
In Louises words, their marriage ie one of those liberated, non-conforming unions where she worked at nights and Greg helped in rearing the little people.
In that role, Greg became a fantastic homemaker, good cook, did laundry, windows and made great novelty cakes on birthdays". It did something to a woman, Louise wrote, to overhear your son tell a friend, Oh, you dont want to eat over here tonight. My mom cooked.
Louise confessed she was fed up with it all. .. the work, not the marriage. She needed a vacation and couldnt afford one, so what did she do? She joined the Army. Late in October, she left for active duty at Ft. Dix, N.J.
I know youre a busy woman, she wrote, but could you possibly write a few humorous words to my husband? He is good person and is going to experience some difficult days.
Louise, youve come to the wrong person. I write humor for a living.
Forget the fact that your life isnt exactly go
ing to be a day at the beach; you have just volunteered your husband into membership in the loneliest club in the world .... the domestic vigilantes who sit your' children, feed your dog and keep a light in your window until your next visit.
They unclog your plumbing, fight your roaches, repair your car, shovel snow from your sidewalks and try to remember what you looked like and why they loved you.
Frankly, I hold no hope of cheering Greg up. When the newness wears off the Happy Homemaker, hell get a little squirrely like the rest of us. Hell talk to himself in the car, hide behind the shower curtain when the kids are looking
for him and write a suicide note using his newest skill . calligraphy.
When he is watching his soaps, he will repel the advances of his kids who want to change the channel by holding out a cross like an exorcist. Some night, he will just Sit in the car in the garage with all the lights off . . . humming.
He will try to envision his wife in uniform with an American flag flying behind her and him declaring, I regret that I have but one wife to give to my country.
And dont be surprised if you come home on leave and discover Greg needed a vacation too . . . and went to serve in the Mideast for a couple of years.
/
CENTUfiV 21
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Thursday, Decembers, 1983
4 The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.EditorialsComes Out Ahead
A Michigan research organization says North Carolina taxpayers paid out $4.3 billion to support the defense establishment last year, while the Defense Department spending in the state amounted to $3.6 billion which spells some sort of red ink for North Carolina.
The apparent point was that taxes for defense in North Carolina were a money-loser.
We think otherwise.
For one thing, North Carolinians are historically defense-minded, and the thousands of men and women from this state who are in uniform are proof of that. So, in a real sense, we are supporting our own.
Another point: thousands of businesses located near North Carolinas military bases rely heavily on their patrons in uniform ... evident to any motorist passing through or visiting those communities. Its a big plus for business, as well as revenue producing.
And finally, if there were no military installations in North Carolina, Tar Heel taxes would still be going toward the cost of national defense; but with those military centers inside our borders, the state is getting the greater part of that outflow back.
The only possible conclusion is that North Carolina comes out ahead.
jomes Kilpatrick
Happy Days On The Phone Are Gone
SCRABBLE, Va. - A couple of Sundays ago, 70 millim Americans watched a fictional disaster on TV. In another three or four weeks, as of January 1, they will experience a real one. We have had the finest telephone service in the world. Those happy days are gone, if not forever, at least for the forese^ble future.
The newspapers and magazines have been filled with stories about the breakup of the giant American Telephone & Telegraph Co. The figures are impressive. AT&T has $155 billion in assets. It has been handling roughly 650 million telephone calls a day through 150 million of its own leased telephones. With nearly 1 million employees, it is the second largest employer in the country. Only the federal government is larger.
Never mind.all these millions and billions. For an example of what we can now expect, let me offer the wall telephone in my kitchen. This past Monday it woilld not ring.
We husbands and fathers know how to take care of such things. I dialed the number listed in our local directory for residential repair service. After a considerable time, this put me through to a young lady in Richmond, a hundred miles away. She in
quired of my age, height, weight, identifying marks and mothers maiden name before asking what trouble I was having.
Its the phone in the kitchen, I said. It wont ring.
We no longer fool with that kind of thing, said she. You must call AT&T at 1-800-555-8111.
So I did. Some awful sense of foreboding caused me to take a stopwatch froB^ my desk drawer. A recorded voice informed me that I had reached the telephone equipment office, but that all ines were busy. The first available agent would discuss my problem with me. Meanwhile, I could listen to Strauss waltzes in the background. The watch ticked off 16 minutes and 22 seconds without further action. I hung up, breathing hard, and tried again. This time I waited 21 minutes and 10 seconds, and I passed the time by swearing at the office dog and reading magazine pieces about our changing telephone service.
The young lady who at last came on the line was in Maryland, 110 miles away. She could not have been more pleasant. A repair crew would come out the following Friday, five days later. She was sorry for the delay in
fielding my call. And toodle-oo.
Before the madness known as divestiture, we had a telephone repair office just 16 miles away. Our phones got repaired in a jiffy. Our experience in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia was the universal American experience. The Bell System, up to this melancholy moment, has been the envy of the civilized world. No more.
This is the certain prospect: Our local telephone bills will go up, and in most instances they will go way up. Our service will get worse, and in most instances it will get much worse. This is because the giant AT&T truly cannot waste time, or be much concerned, with repairing the phones it leases to us; this is penny-ante stuff. Hence forth, we subscribers must decide whether a given problem is in the telephone instrument or in the line. If its in the instrument, it will take hours and days to get service from AT&T. If we think the problem is in the line, and it proves not to be in the line, our local Bell company will impose a charge of up to $25 for our misjudgment.
How did we bring this disaster upon ourselves? It is because iaeologues of both the left and the right successfully trumpeted their
causes. On the left, zealots cried Down with monopoly! On the right, my crowd hollered Up with competition! Intoxicated by our own oratory, we bought the idealistic notion that under deregulation things w(mld be better. We ignored the homely maxim that tells us, If it aint broke, dont fix it.
Well, things doubtless will be better for the top brass of AT&T, who now can romp in the playgrounds of computer technology. Doubtless this is a great thing for the stockbrokers also, but it promises to be pure hell for all of us who have a telephone in the kitchen. Here is the biggest corporation in the world, American Telephone & Telegraph, and it lacks either the resources, the heads-up management or the willingness to hire 20 additional operators to man repair lines in the Washington area.
But the thought crosses my mind that maybe some supervisors at AT&T tried to get 20 additional lines installed, and after waiting 37 minutes and 32 seconds for the equipment office to answer, gave up in disgust. If so, they heard a lot of Strauss waltzes.
Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
Gratitude Deserved
Following the tragedy in Beirut, it was a happy contrast to see 1,800 Marines return to Morehead City Wednesday.
The Marines disembarked from troop ships to a tumultuous welcome arranged by chambers of commerce in Carteret County and Jacksonville.
Government officials welcomed them and there were traditional yellow ribbons lining the roads to the Cherry Point entrance.
It was a heros welcome which was deserved by the returning Marines who have been serving in Lebenon under conditions which make their defense difficult at best.
The Marines have served their nation well and some of their comrades will not be coming home alive. They deserve our gratitude.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Fateful Decision
W.ASHI.NGTO.N - When Soviet negotiators walked out of the Geneva medium-range nuclear arms talks, they triggered S fateful decision by President Reagan to .send the Senate a precise list of alleged Soviet SALT violations - the first time the United States has ever accused the Russians of cheating on treaty obligations.
The president has informed top aides of his decision to comply with the Senate's request, voted overwhelmingly after the KAL 9007 disaster. When the record arrives on Capitol Hill in January, it will end feuding among high-level Reaganites on the cheating issue. This has pitted senior presidential aides James A, Baker III and Michael K. Deaver against Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and. when he served as national security adviser. Interior Secretary William Clark.
The decision follows the president's own inclinations so closely that he might eventually have blown the whistle on the Soviets even had they continued to negotiate in Geneva. But their walkout warmed the climate for Reagan to finally shrug off restraints,
Reagan's decision enhances the feeling here that, starting with the Korean Air Lines shoot-down, the Kremlin has been on the run. Backed into a politically weak position by boycotting the Geneva talks, Moscow will be hard put to explain away the carefully researched U.S. record of non-compliance with signed treaties.
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That sould mitigate anti-Reagan sentiment in the nuclear freeze movement.
Boiled down, these are the violations the president will allege:
Discovery of a huge new radar in Southern Sibera, The Central Intelligence Agency (CIAi calls this an indisputable violation of the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, the heart of SALT I signed by President Nixon in 1972.
Continued testing of a second new type" long-range ballistic missile. Only one is permitted by SALT II, the unratified agreement signed by President Carter in 1979 that both countries agreed to abide by .
The discovery by reconnaissance satellites, not yet publicly known, that Soviet Backfires are deployed as intercontinental bombers on the Kola Peninsula above Scandinavia. As part of SALT II, then Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev pledged in, writing that the Backfire never would be used as intercontinental bomber.
Wholesale encryption of data from missile test flights, a violation of SALT II. Encoding denies the United States its legal right to check on the new weapon being tested.
Beyond these allegations. Reagan may shock the Soviets with another accusation of an entirely different character: a charge of blatant refusal to abide by human rights pledges made at the 1975 Helsinki Conference on European Security. That would carry the presidents attack beyond U.S.-Soviet bilateral relations to affect, perhaps profoundly, European signers of the Helsinki accords.
Two documents are not getting final editing touches on Soviet treaty violations. The one to be sent to Capitol Hill is under control of national security adviser Robert McFarlane. The other, written expressly and only for Reagan and a few top officials, is a 300-page document drafted by the General Advisory Committee to the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA).
The second document, kept under lock and key, is said to be an unprecedented examination of every foreign obligation entered into by the Soviets since 1917. It Includes the first analysis of SALT violations by non-government, outside specialists, breaking the monopoly on such studies by a small bureaucracy assigned to a U.S.-Soviet commission that sits in Geneva.
Ever since taking office, Ronald Reagan has favored a frank, frontal approach to the Russians on SALT violations. But, like his predecessors, he was always advised: Wait, now is not the right time to move.
The president has ruled otherwise in a courageous, long-overdue decision, helped along by Soviet bullying in Geneva. His whistle-blowing leads the two superpowers into new, uncharted terrain.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.Public Forum
To the editor:
The ABC-TV broadcast of The Day After has been a great boost for the anti-nuclear movement because it showed THE FACTS -If there is a nuclear war, the world may end.
The Day After has forced many people to stop living in a fog, believing that our leaders have the situation under control. THEY DONT. Others have said it much better than I can:
Soviet and American children live on a nuclear death row. In the time it takes a child to fix and eat a bowl of cereal, his (her) world could become a fiery radioactive hell, wrote Mark Gerzon in a New York Times opinion.
If deterrence fails, you will get to watch your own wife (husband, baby, mother) eviscerated by flying glass, or decapitated, turned incandescent, starved to death in the cold, or die slowly in excruciating agony, without medical aid, wrote Stanford University Professor Paul Ehrlich, also in the New York Times.
The atomic age itself is our joint enemy, said Peta Kelly, a West German legislator.
It is nuclear weaponry itself which is unacceptable. As long as nuclear weajwns exist, - and are targeted on our adversaries - the threat of nuclear war exists, wrote Jeffrey Mevissen in a letter to the Washington Post.
The risks are real. The Day After can easily become a reality. The movie also lets us.hear a fictional presidents message to the citizens of Lawrence, Kan. America has not surrendered, are his words. Somehow, its not difficult for me to imagine Ronald Reagan speaking them.
Were living in a dangerous time. The planet is terminally ill, wrote Dr. Helen Caldecott, president emeritus of Physicians for Social Responsibility. We are having an acute clinical emergency. Only 24-hour intensive medical care will save this patient. Preventive medicine in the nuclear age must be practiced through the political process.
The responsibility to avert The Day After is ours. Lets begin.
Patrick ONeill 411E. Second St.
Greenville
To the editor:
During the past few months I have sat wiUi guiet contemplation over the question 01 what would be the best solution to maintaining and improving the quality of educationa systems in our area. This is not a new question to people in Pitt County or Greenville.
Fortunately, on at least one of those occaions, I was a student of J.H. Rose High School in a city that $as reaping the benefits of fast growth, industrialization
and a general economic upswing. At this same period of time, Pitt County and the Pitt County school system was not economically as fortunate as Greenville and the Greenville city school system. During this period of time, due to its needs, the Pitt County school system was instrumental in raising the question of merger.
What were the countys reasons for wanting to merge? Basically, the reasons were the same then as now - maintaining high levels of education and adequate facilities in the face of limited funds. The racial balancing question fits todays modern educational concept more than it was emphasized in times past.
What were the results of the cries for help from the Pitt County school system? Well, I can tell you. Those cries for help fell on the deaf ears of the Greenville Board of Education. The real results were that the Pitt County school system found strength in its hour of need. Economizing, emphasizing necessity over want, the courage resulted in an accelerated building program and ambitious goals to raise levels of learning for all county students.
Perhaps the Greenville Board of Education would do well to take a lesson from the Pitt County Board of Education. Andy Andrews Greenville
To the editor:
I was interested to read, in an advertising column headed, The Republican Corner (A flag decorates the column, of course) that our great country was built on a free market economic system, and Republicans are willing to fight for its preservation.
The column came out about a week after the Republican president signed a bill which would authorize the payment, by the government, of millions of dollars to dairy farmers for not producing dairy products.
I dont understand.
John G. Clark Jr.
235 Orton Drive Greenville
To the editor:
I wish to take this opportunity to publicly thank Rep. Walter B. Jones and the dedicated members of his Washington, D.C., staff who have assisted the citizens of Hyde County in maintaining essential primary h^lth care services fw our citizens.
Hyde County is a medically underserved area, ranked as a nui^r one priority for additional health manpower recruitment nationally by the Department of Health and Human Services Bureau of Health Manpower.
The citizens of Hyde County have ciooperated with the federal government.
the North Carolina Office of Rural Health Services and others to create and maintain primary health care services, including medicine, dentistry and home health, for the past several years.
Congressman Jones and his office staff have been important allies in our efforts to deal with the multitude of federal agencies involved with our projects. Without their dedicated sensitive and professional assistance, the availability of primary health care services in Hyde County would still be a dream rather than a reality.
Lt. Col. (Ret.) William F. Williams
To the editor:
Events of recent weeks and reaction to them confirm that communist plans for domination of the world remain in operation. Their basic plan states, First we will take eastern Europe, then the masses of Asia, then we will encircle the United States, which will be the last hastian of capitalism. We will not have to attack. It will fall into our hands like overripe fruit. ,
How are communists succeeding in their plan? In May 1919, at Dusseldorf, Germany, Allied Forces captured a very significant document: Communist Rdes for Revolution. As you read these Rules now almost 65 years later, keep in mind what you are reading and hearing via news media.
1. Corrupt the young: get them away from religion; interest them in sex; make them superficial; destroy their ruggedness.
2. Get control of all means of publicity, thereby:
a. Get peoples minds off their government by focusing their attention on athletics, sexy books, plays and other trivialities.
b. Divide the people into hostile groups by constantly harping on controversial matters of no importance.
c. Destroy the peoples faith in their natural leaders by holding them up for contempt, ridicule and obloquv.
d. Always preach true democracy, but seize power as fast and ruthlessly as possible.
e. By encouraging governmental extravagance, destroy the credit, fear of inflation with rising prices and general discontent.
f. Promote unnecessary strikes in vital industries, encourage civil disorders, and foster a lenient and s<^t attitude on the part of the government toward such disorders.
g. By specious, argument, cause the breakdown of the old moral valuw, honesty and sobriety.
3. Cause the registration of all firearms on some pretext with a view of confiscating them and leaving the population helpless. * jC
^Elisha DouglassStrength For Today
John Mark, who wrote the Gospel of Mark, accompanied Paul and Barnabas on their first missionary journey. But halfway through he became alarmed at the dangerous country through which they were traveling and went back home. Paul was furious at his defection.
But Mark recovered from his timidity and youthful weaknesses. Ke regained Pauls confidence to such an extent that Paul, toward the end of his life, asked that Mark be sent to him because he is useful to me in ministering.
So Mark, who started out badly, turned out well in the end. This has been the life story of many a young person since those ancient days. If a boy has the stuff in him and is honest and diligent, he can surmount almost any difficulty and rise above past mistakes.
So let us not be hasty in our judgments. We ourselves, in the past, have undoubtedly at some time shown weaknesses as great or greater than that of John Mark.
A general moral lapse exists in America. According to the late Gen. Douglas MacArthur, when such conditions exist, either there must be a spiritual awakening or progressive deterioration will lead to ultimate national disaster. Shall we continue our trend toward moral collapse and eventually succumb to atheistic communism or have a spiritual awakening and enjoy freedom?
Josh Potter Greenville
To the editor:
In recent days a significant first step toward responsible government was taken in Catawba County, where a bipartisan county commission unanimously adopted an ordinance that allows our courts to imp^e stiff fines and civil penalties on public officials - including th^e same commissioners - who violate North Carolinas so-called open meetings laws. These officials have ^tablished a precedent that, if followed by other government bodies, could eliminate the kind of mischief that occurs when: arrogant or dishonest public agencies: conduct their business behind closed, doors.
The need for an enforceable Sunshine law is obvious. Under present: statutes there is no provision for! punishing public officials who flaunt their: authority by holding illegal secret meetings. Except in Catawba County, the' severest action the courts can take! against even the most flagrant violators' is to plead with them to discontinue their illegal practices. The law that applies.to 99 other counties and all other state agencies - including the Legislature -contains no threat of fine or imprisonment. (Imagine how effective our drunken driving laws would be if the imly enforcement provision was an appeal to the conscience of the offender.)
Catawba County Commissiners have thus closed a gaping hole in our open meeting laws. I would hope that tlKe who share my intereat in a m( responsive, responsible government would bring to the attention of persons seeking potions of public trust the need for statewide reform of our ineffectual open meetings laws.
T. Cass Ballenger
N.. Senate Minority Leader
Hickory t ^
Teachers Are Provided Extra Year To Qualify
By MARY ANNE RHYNE
Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina teachers have an extra year to qualify to teach subjects outside their field because of delays in notifying teachers of defi-ciencies in meeting certification requirements.
The state Board of Education agreed Wednesday to give teachers the extra year - until 1985 - to get the additional course credits to qualify to teach in areas outside their expertise.
The board also heard a report indicating that almost all school units are complying with a 1983 General Assembly mandate to give fulltime classroom teachers a duty-freeperiod each day.
Nine-five percent of them do not yet know whether or not they have deficiencies and, if so, what they are, said J. Arthur Taylor, director of the Division of Certification.
A teacher is considered out of field if he or she is assigned to teach more than half of the time outside his or her area of certification.
Few (teachers) would get their note of deficiency in time to register for spring classes, Taylor said, adding that the yearlong delay would let teachers take additional courses to become certified in new areas.
Officials said 8,000 individ-ual forms for adding certification have been sent to the state and 224 certificates have been processed and returned to the school units.
Those assigned out of field this year were given provisional certificates and expected to begin working toward full certification before the 1984-85 school year. The boards action extends that deadline to the
EXECUTIONS PARIS (AP) - An Iranian exile group claimed Wednesday that the regime of Ayatollah Ruhallah Khomeini has executed at least 214 political prisoners over the past month.
1985-86 school year, a move thats expected to affect about 14,000 of the states approximately 60,000 teachers.
The Board of Education adopted the certification guidelines in May, after more than two years of study.
Jim Burch, a deputy assistant superintendent, told the board a recent survey showed that only 183 teachers, or less than 1 percent, are not being provided a daily duty-free period as required by the Legislature.
'The survey was based on responses from 125 of 142 local school units.
The Legislature set aside approximately $2.1 million a year for the duty-free periods. Of the school units responding, 49 said they used the money to hire additional personnel in elementary schools, 33 in junior or mi(i-dle highs and 16 in senior highs.
The study indicated that before the Legislature ordered duty-free periods, many high schools but few elementary schools already offered teachers that option.
The survey showed that elementary schools tend to offer duty-free lunches while junior and senior highs offer free class periods.
Eighty-five units were of-
fering duty-free lunches in elementary schools, 55 in junior or middle highs and 61 in senior highs. Sixty-six units were offering a free class period in elementary schools, 95 in junior and middle highs and 101 in senior highs.
The length of the free time ranged from about 30 minutes in elementary schools to 46 minutes in senior highs.
Remember
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That Precious Gift is now at a Great Price!
14K Gold
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Thursday, Decembers, 1983 5
-
Downtown Pitt Plaza
Downtown Pitt Plaza
has Oifts for The
Downtown Pitt Plaza
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5 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Thursday, December 8,1983Scieniisis Say Nuclear War Can Mean Exfincthn
By LEE SIEGEL Associated Press Writer SAN FRANCISCO lAP) -Smivors of a nuclear war would struggle for survival in darkness and cold and might face mass extinction much like the dinosaurs that are believed to have died after an immense meteorite struck the Earth, scientists say.
The effects of nuclear war unfortunately have significant parallels to the effects of a giant meteorite, California Institute of Technology geophysicist Thomas J. Ahrens said Wednesday.
Ahrens and other researchers at the American Geophysical Union's meeting conducted a session entitled Geophysical and
of Nuclear Explosions." which drew a standing-room-only crowd of up to 500 scientists.
The studies presented during the session were developed through crude theoretical "models" in which the researchers used data on the atmospheric effects of
nuclear tests- and natural disasters such as volcanic eruptions to sketch a picture of what Earth might look like after a nuclear war.
Until about two years ago. scientists and policymakers believed a nuclear war would kill a relatively small percentage of the Earth's population in combat zones and didnt believe that widespread deaths could result from disruption of the climate, said Brian Toon, of the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations Ames Research Center.
But now scientists are moving closer to the long-held belief of the average man on the street (who) already thought the world would end. "he said.
Smoke and dust sent into from cities and forests ignited by a nuclear exchange could have a major climatic impact - prolonged darkness and gloom, subfreezing land temperatures and dramatic disturbances in weather and precipitation - a harsh nuclear winter' m any season." said Richard Turco.
a senior scientist at R&D Associates, a Marina del Rey think-tank.
Sixty five million years ago, the dinosaurs and most other animal life on Earth died in the largest mass extinction in the geologic record. Ahrens said there is strong evidence to support the still controversial view that the cause was a massive meteorite smashing into the planet.
Both a meteorite and a nuclear war would loft
tremendous amounts of ejecta (debris) into the atmosphere in the form of fine particles distributed worldwide. he added.
Tn the case of a five-mile diameter meteorite or comet impact 65 million years ago, Ahrens said, the resulting dust cloud blocked the sun, reducing global temperatures, .leading to a massive exiinction of marine organisms, the collapse of the ocean food chain and the extinction of 90 percent of the
animal life of that time. Ahrens said the theorized meteorite collision with the Earth released 10,000 times the energy of a nuclear war, but that the sun-blocking dust and debris sent into the atmosphere by both catastrophes could have similar results.
Toon said the bulk of previous studies on the effects of nuclear war suggest things would be very nasty, but not cause mass extinction. However, new studies to be
Lawmen Hunting In Area Robbery
Pair
published later this month in Science magazine surest such extinction is a possibility for the survivors of nuclear blasts, he said.
We must take into account that the indirect effects felt by survivOTS of a nuclear war will be as serious as the war itself, and possibly more serious, said Paul Crutzen, of West Germanys Max Planck Institute of Chemistry.
Large portions of the biosphere (the environment for Earths living things) will be wiped out - its a possibility, he said.
The new conclusions could cause some Third World countries, banking on surviving a superpower war, to put more pressure on the
big guys to be more careful, said Stephen Schneider, a climatologist at the National Center (or Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.
Joseph B. Knox, a scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, said uncertainties about the aftereffects of nuclear war con
stitute a new elemrat (rf deterrence.
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would like to thank the Merchants, Businesses, and Citizens for their donations and support at the annual Barbecue Dinner and Auction.
Pitt County authorities and agents of the FBI and SBI continued their search today for two men who forced their way into the home of a local banker, tied up his wife and fled with assorted personal
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property. Sheriff Ralph Tyson said.
Tyson said the agents were asked to assist in the late morning incident Wednesday at the home of C.D. Langston on N.C. 11 just beyond Carolina East Mall. Langston is president of First State Bank of Greenville and Win-terville.
Tyson said Langston's ~wiferMary7-told-officers that two men. one of them armed with a handgun, forced their way into her home, tied her up' in a chair using an extensiGn cord, and gagged her. Mrs. Langston reported that the intruders then went through the house, taking various items, including s(er-ling silver pieces and jewelry-
The sheriff said that, while the robbery was taking place, a friend of Mrs. Langstons. Roxie Waters, arrived and was at the back door when the two men ran from the house. Mrs. Waters told officers that the men pushed the back door against her and grabbed her pocketbook before fleeing.
According to Tyson, the men apparently fled in a vehicle that had been stolen earlier Wednesday from the parking lot at Carolina East Mall. He said the car, owned by Mrs. Tommy Lee Harrell of Avden. was found about 30
minutes after the robbery about a mile from the Langston home in the area behind the mall. Tyson said the vehicles motor was still running, the front doors were open, and assorted pieces of silver, jewelry and money were found scattered on the ground near the car.
Tyson said the men apparently abandoned the Harrell car and left 4fi-aflotheF-vhi-
cle.
He said neither lady was injured in the incident, which was reported at 11:31 a.m. He said Mrs. Langston noted that the men wore ski masks over their faces during the robbery.
Tyson said officers have not yet completed an inven-torj of the items taken in the incident.
VO A Reaching Polish People
WASHINGTON lAP) - An estimated 11.5 million people hear Voice of America broadcasts in Poland despite Soviet jamming of the radio frequency, the U.S. Information Agency says.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
Thursday, Decembers, 1983 ^
Deadline Is Extended
Operation Santa Clauss deadline has been extended to Dec. 16.
Un^pped gifts for clients of Caswell Center and Cherry Hos{Mtal and other mental health agencies in this area may be left at a storefront located next to First State Bank on the north end of Evans Mall. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Anyone wishing to make tax-deductible monetary contributions may send them to Mental Health Association in Pitt County, P.O. Box 167, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Boxes are also available in many local church, schools and businesses.
Pitt Schools Air 'Viewpoint'
The school principals job as an instructional manager will be the topic of this weeks Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.
Host Barry Gaskins wilt talk with principals Beth Ward and Charles Long.
n show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sunday, 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05p.m. WBZQ-FM.
Fot further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.
Junior Wins Scholarship
Karen W. Sneed, a junior accounting major at East Carolina University, has been awarded a Credit Women International scholarship for spring semetser.
The $200 award, sponsored annually by the Greenville Chapter of Credit Women International, recognizes outstanding scholarship and citizenship. The recipient must have graduated from a high school in Pitt County.
An active member of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Chruch, Ms.Sneed teaches a Sunday School class and leads a Fellowship of Christian Athletes group at J.H. Rose High School
Plant Breeaer Honored
Plant breeder Mark L. Grimsley of Greenville was honored for his contribution to the tobacco industry at a recent Tobacco Day 83 luncheon at North Carolina State University.
Grimsley has been employed by Speight Seed Farms of Winter.'illc for the past 25 years. He has been responsible for., developing and releasing 16 varieties of flue-cured tobacco, including Speight G-28 and Speight G-70.
' Hart To Be Interviewed
Four Pitt County high school representatives will be among 100 North Carolina teen-agers and teachers who will interview Sen. Gary Hart, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president, during a national live television broadcast Friday.
Delano Wilson and ^avid Wiggins of .\vden-Grifton, Peggy Jenkins of North Pitt and Brian Windham of Frmville will interview the candidates on a 90-minute program which will air at 7:30 p.m. Friday on station C-SPAN, the Cable Satellite Public Affairs Network.
Lecture Set On Algonkians
The Algorikian Indians, the people who met the English on Roanoke Island 400 years ago, will be discussed by an East Carolina University archaeologist Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in room 244 of Mendenhall Student Center on the ECU campus.
Dr. Davis S. Phelps, a professor of anthropology, will discuss the Advances in Algonkian Archaeology in his lecture sponsored by Sigma Xi, the universitys scientific research society . The lecture will be open to the public.
Phelps is currently engaged in a two-year project aimed at locating and identifying some of the more than 200 Algonkian sites in coastal North Carolina. Included in his research, funded by a $140.000 grant from the Z. Smith Reynold^ Foundation, is an effort to find the site of the Algonkian village that was on Roanoke Island when Sir Walter Raleigh attempted to establish a foothold on the continent in 1585.
Cox And Pugh Honored
Percy Cox and George Pugh, who conclude their tenures tonight as mayor and city councilman, respectively, were honored this week with a surmise party given by the city staff. The gathering was attended by 72 pef^le, includi^ city and Greenville Utilities employees, county commissioners and Rep. Ed Warren of Greenville.
Following a roast of the outgoing officials, Cox and Pugh were rach {esajted a book of memory compiled by the staff, containing phoU^ai^ o the citys 390 employees by departments and ^visions with personal notes by many of the workers. The staff Mt^nted each official with a collage done by narks and recreation departinent members showing Cox and Pugh in situatiwis syinbolic of their tenures in office. Silver trays were also presented to the retiring board members.
Driver Is Charged
Joe Frank Sparkman of 605 Bancroft Ave. was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 10:30 a.m. collision Wednesday at the intersection of Fifth Street and Moyewood Drive.
Officers said the Sparkman car collided with an auto driven by Kimberlee Haddock Stalling of Route 6, Greenville, causing $350 damage to the Stallings ear and $200 damage to the Sparkman car.
Convenience Store Robbed
Greenville police are looking for a man who, armed with a pistol, took an undetermined amount of money from the Fast Fare at 425 Hooker Road Wednesday night. *
Detective Sgt. John Ennis said a man wearing a black-and-white stripped scarf as a mask entered the store about 9:18 p.m., produced a pistol and demanded the money from the cash drawer.
Ennis said the clerk removed the entire cash tray from the drawer and gave it to the robber, who then left the building. The robber was last seen running toward the rear of the building.
The robber was described as a black man, about 5 feet 9 inches tall, weighing 150 to 160 pounds. He was wearing a long grey wool overcoat and a dark cap.
^Uospeiomg ocneauiea
A gospel sing featuring Heaven Bound will be held tonight starting at 7:30 at Foursquare Giristian Center located on N.C. 11 between Winterville and Ayden.
In 1982, Heaven Bound had the top gospel song of the year and this year were voted one of the top 10 gospel groups in the nation.
A miracle service will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m., with Marquita Clevenger of Jacksonville as the speaker. She is a featured speaker in Aglow Chapters.
Larceny Charge Filed
A 29-year-old Greenville man was arrested Wednesday bv Pitt County deputies and charged with the October larceny of a bank bag containing over $29,000 in cash and checks from an area automobile dealership. ,
Shpriff Ralph Tyson said Jimmio loo Harris of 40! Darden Drive was charged with taking the bag from the office of Rex Smith Chevrolet on N.C. 11 at Ayden on Oct. 25. He said the firm reported the bag contained $28,847 in checks and seven $100 bills. The dealership stopped payment on the checks, Tyson said.
Bond for Harris was set at $5,000.
West To Speak Monday
Superintendent Eddie West of Pitt County schools will be the guest speaker at the annual Ladies Night of the Pactolus Ruritan Club on Monday at 7 p.m.
Dr. West will speak on issues concerning public edcuation in the 1980s and how they will affect Pitt County schools.
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Q The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.
Thursday. December 8,1983
Madrid Airport Death Toll Set At 93
BySl'SANLlNNEE Associated Press Writer MADRID. Spain (AP) -Survivors of a plane collision that killed 93 people wandered through fog so dense it had closed Madrid's airport to incoming traffic A baggage handler said he heard the two planes crash but had to be led to the site because he could not se the = wreck, and an American survivor said neither plane should have been allowed to take off in the fog Barajas International Airport has no ground radar.
The collision Wednesday between an Aviaco DC-9 and an Iberia Air Lines Boeing 727 was the second major air disaster in Madrid in 11 days. But it bore eerie similarities to a 1977 collision when two jumbo jets collided at another fog-bound Spanish airport Transport Minister Enrique Baron and Iberia President Carlos Espinosa de los Monteros said the DC-9 got lost in the fog while taxiing and collided with the midsection of the 727. then went under it and burst into flames. The 727. preparing for takeoff, was heading down the runwav at about 100
mph, officials said.
Spokesmen for Iberia, Spains national airline, and Aviaco. a domestic airliner, said 50 passengers and one crew member aboard Iberia Flight .No. 350 to Rome died. All 37 passengers and five crew members of Aviaco Flight No 134 to the northern Spanish city of Santander werekiHed. they said.
The Iberia plane was carrying 34 passengers and nine crew members. Forty Japanese. 12 of them honey-mooners, were among the dead.* Only six Japanese survived
.An estimated 23 of the survivors of the 727 jetliner were hospitalized, officials said.
We all heard the explosions.' but no one could find the planes," ^aid Antonio Rodrigo, a baggage handler for Iberia who was loading an aircraft at the time of the collision. "We ran out towards the noise. A survivor had to lead us to the wrecks"
Thomas Goltz. 39. a .Madrid resident from El Paso. Texas, and his wife Sydney. 32, survived the crash with minor bruises. Goltz. manager of the Singer
Co. in Madrid, said neither plane should have been allowed to take off.
It (the 727) was just about to take off when we heard this big crunching sound of metal. The plane sort of broke up in pieces and smoke
started to fill the cabin, Goltz told The Associated Press by telephone.
I grabbed my wife and jumped out when the (back) door was ()pen .... We f(Mind ourselves in a sort of field with the co-pilot and a badly
Principal Talks To Academic Boosters
Rose High Principal Howard Hurt spoke to the Rose Academic Boosters Club recently about the school's new policy on extra-curricular activity eligibility program, according to a club spokesman.
Hurt told the students that eligibility for athletics will be determined by grades each marking period. More specifically, if a student fails two subjects, a conference will be held with parents to determine if the student should continue extra curricular participation.
If the decision is made
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that the student can continue. a clre monitoring system will be established. If the student fails three or more subjects, the student will not be eligible to participate for at least three weeks. At the end of three weeks, a particpation decision will be made based on the degree of improvement, Hurt said.
Hurt also appointed the following people to the executive committee during the meeting: Joan VanScoy, Anne May, Dr. Billy Jones, Mary Roscoe. Charles M. Dickens. Mary Anglea Lee and Daisy_Best. The follow", ing were appointed to the Principals Advisory Committee: Dn Billy Bost, Betty Hardee. Mary Akinkerotn, and Betsy Allen.
Stude.nts and advisers also discussed scheduled activities to upgrade academics at the school including the all-A honor roll, honors banquet, medical science honors program. model math/science program, drop-out prevention program, quiz bowl and the image committee.
Ho Ho Hotline For Children
Guardian Care Center have established a Ho Ho Hotline" to enable children of this area to talk to Santa Claus or Mrs. Santa Claus.
Any time between 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Santa will be by the phone. The number to call is 753-5141.
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burned man. We wandered around in the fog fw about 15 minutes and finally were picked up by some people in a jeep.
Oknat Berkawitz, an Israeli who was sitting by the door in the left front section of the Iberia plane, told reporters she heard an explosion, unbuckled her seatbelt, took several steps and found myself on the ground in the fog.
On Nov. 27,181 people were killed when a Boeing 747 jumbo jet of Avianca^ the Colombian national airlines, crashed five minutes before landing in Madrid on a flight from Paris. Eleven people survived.
Investigators have indicated the pilot of the jumbo misread altitude indicators and believed his aircraft was flying higher than it actually was.
But airline officials said Wednesdays accident was similar to the March 1977 Canary Islands disaster in which two jum|K) jets collided on the ground in heavy fog, killing 582 people -aviation historys worst crash.
After Wednesdays collision, three dazed Japanese couples on their honeymoons,
" the only sur\'ivors of the Japanese tour group, were taken to a Madrid hotel by Japanese Ambassdor Eikichi Hayashiya.
In Tokyo, relative.s gathered at" a hotel to await final word on the fate of their loved ones.
I cant conceive of anything like this happening in Japan. A domestic flight here would not end up this way, said Yoshiyuki Jada, a brother of Michiyo Tada Shinozuka, who had been on her honeymoon.
Kazuko Yuki, an aunt of 36-year-old Shizuko Onishi, said. Im resigned to the fact that Shizuko died.... She went all by herself to Europe and I keep thinking if only she had been with a friend, she could at least have held
s(Hneones band wbra it all hajmied.
'The Japanese tourists left Narita Aiiport near Tokyo on Dec. 4 on a 11-day package tour.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Thursday, Decembers. 1983 9
School's Accreditation Congressmen To Get Pay Hike
Is Termed Vindication
%
GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP) - North Carolina A&T State Universitys School of Nursings accreditation is a vindication for the school and the result of hard work, university officials say.
N.C. A&Ts School of Nursing, once endangered because its graduates did poorly on the state nursing exam, received accreditation from the National League of Nursing, officials announced Wetfaiesday.
The latest accreditation makes us all very elated, said A&T Chahcellor Edward B. Fort after the announcement was made in New York by officials of the national o^nization.
It is a vindication of the master plan initiated for the School of Nursing nearly two years ago. It also validates
(Marietta) Raines, the facul
ty, and the nursing students. Theyve done an outstanding job.
The accreditation means the A&T program has been accredited on a state and national level.
We now have met the requirements for both of our accrediting agencies, said Ms. Raines. We have worked extremely hard to make sure that we were meeting all of the criteria. We were working together to doit.
A National League of Nursing team visited the A&T campus last October after issuing it a two-year accreditation with warning in 1981. The new accreditation lasts eight years.
The schools nursing pro-im was put on probation the North Carolina Board Nursrnf in 1978, and/or ficials warned it could be
closed down without quick improvement.
Critics said the program had unqualified facility and students, didnt provide enough clinical experience for or supervision of students, and assigned students to sub-par facilities for training.
But in the fall of 1981, the school implemented new admission standards and retention policies for nursing students.
Last Sept. 10, officials said the program had improved and that 78.9 percent of the nursing graduates had passed the state exam.
We have been able to accomplish this by revising the nursing schools retention standards and by providing programs to strengthen the students, such as a sp^ial review^esion, Foitsaid at the time.
By CLIFF HAAS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Beginning in January, members of Congress will enjoy a 3.5 percent electkm-year boost in their $69,800 annual salaries. They can thank legislative action in previous years and inaction this year for the $2,400 increase.
Earlier this year, senators voted to raise their $60,662.30 salaries by 15 percent to the
current level of $69,800. House members had given themselves the same $9,138 pay increase in December 1982.
The histmy of the upcoming increase reflects the political sensitivitv that has been connected with the issue ever since the first Congress in 1789 - members of both chambers then were paid $6 a da^.
Whenever it can. Congress takes the most indirect route
Grimsley Resigns To Aid Hunt Staff
Corvette Winner Happy To Be Passenger In Car
I
SEAL BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Watch out, little old lady from Pasadena.
Theres a little fourth-grader from Seal Beach who has some of the hottest wheels in town - a 1984 Corvette that shes still seven years too young to drive.
Freckle-faced Amy Barlow, who. won the sleek machine and a $25,000 check in a restaurant contest, was thrilled to cut the ribbon o the auto Wednesday. But reality may set in April 15.
I believe she does have to pay taxes on it, said Judy Barlow, mother of the pigtailed winner But wlttever is left over is a lot more than she had before."
Unlike the hard-driving little old lady from Pasadena immortalized in a Beach Boys song of the
same name, Amy says she doesnt pine to pilot her chocolate-colored vette. Shes happy just to be a passenger.
Id rather have it now and have someone chauffeur me, she said. Ill let daddy borrow it.
Her father, Jim Barlow, a shoe company sales repre-sentative^ has been giving rides to Amy and her frienc daily.
I feel like a cab driver, Barlow said. He noted that Amy, who cant even see over the steering wheel, has sat on his lap and steered the car.
Amy won the car and the money in a national Jack-in-the-Box contest. Her name was picked during a random drawing in October in Westport, Conn., from
Two-Year-Old Is Victim In Fire
RAMSEUR, N.C. (AP) -A 2-year-old Ramseur area giridied Wednesday morning in a fire at a relatives Tesidence.---------------------
Randolph County Sheriffs Department Det. Lt. Don Andrews said Lisa Ann Robbins was visiting with a cousin in the small white frame house when the fire started. The 2-year-old lived in the trailer next door, authorities said.
Andrews said there were three pwple in the residence at the time of the fire, which apparently resulted during an effort to start up a fire in a wood stove. Both were children an 11-year-old girl and a boy of undetermined age, authorities said. Both
the children escaped.
Firemen wearing air packs entered the house in an effort to rescue the 2-year-old, but thick smoke prevented them from doing so. Relatives of the child also attempted to rescue her before firefighters arrived, but were also unsuccessful.
POLLUTION PROTEST BERLIN (AP) - West Berlin environmentalists tossed about 50 derd pine trees over the Berlin Wall Tuesday to protest air pollution in East and West Germany.
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among about 900,000 entries nationwide, restaurant spokeswoman Kathy McNelis said.
At Wednesdays ceremony at a Jack-in-the-Box restaurant in Los Alamitos, Amy cut the ribbon around the car her family has had for about a week. Restaurant officials gave her the $25,000 check, the car keys and the Corvette.
Amy's parents say they plan to bank the money for Amys college education. Amy has also said she wants to sell the car and put the money away - after spending some for a television and perhaps a stereo.
This is a pretty frugal kid were talking about here, Mrs. Carlow said.
Were growing fonder of it by the (lay, she said, but acknowledged that the insurance cost would be high. Its not practical for us.
But the car will remain at least through Christmas, she said.
The Corvette has an AM-FM stereo, adjustable steering wheel and computerized instrument panel complete with graphics -and digital readouts. A local Chevrolet dealer estimates its worth between $26,000 and $30,000.
The family has never ever )von anything before, Mrs. Barlow said.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The deputy secretary of the stateT)partment of NaliifaT Resources and Community Development will replace NRCD Secretary Joseph Grimsley, who is resigning to direct Gov. Jim Hunts expected bid for the U.S. Senate.
Hunt said on Wednesday that Grimsley will resign this month and will be replaced in the $51,636-a-year post by Jim Summers, deputy secretary of the department since Feb. 1, 1981. Hunt said Summers, 55, will assume the job on Dec. 31.
Grimsley'*s new official title is director of the Jim Hunt Exploratory Committee, but a news release from the group left little doubt that the committee has finished exploring and is ready to begin campaigning.
Were going to run a strong primary campaign and a tough issues campaign in the fall, Grimsley said in a prepare(l statement.
Hunt is expected to challenge Republican Sen. Jesse Helms re-election bid.
We know were going to have to work hard to win this election, but we believe Gov. Hunt will win it the same way hes won his past three staiewide campaigns, with solid issues, an inclusive organization and adequate financing, Grimsley said.
Grimsley, 47, managed Hunts campaigns for governor in, 1976 and 1980 and his drive to be lieutenant governor in 1972. He served as Administration secretary from 1977-1981 except for a time when he took leave without pay to direct Hunts gubernatorial campaign.
Hunt appointed him NRCD secretary in July 1981. Grimsley also was a special assistant to Hunt as lieutenant governor from September 1974 through January 1976.
Secretary Grimsley has been an extraordinary public servant, Huntsaid.
Summers is a former mayor of Salisbury and was an investment consultant from 1975 until 1981.
Board OKs New Building
WILLIAMSTON - The Martin County Board of Commissioners has un-amimously approved the appropriation of $175,537 for construction of a new doctors office building near Martin General Hospital. The building will be designed to house three doctors offices.
About $150,000 of the amount will come from the current years budget with the additonal amount to be taken fioiil the countys fund surplus.
The approval motion was made subject to the condition that the matter be approved by the county attorney to satisfy conditions expressed by the North Carolina at-tui iiey geiierai'b Office. Earlier this year, county officials expressed some concern about spending public tax money for an office that essentially will be for use of individuals (doctors) in a private business.
Attorneys for the hospital and county will have to work out recommendations by the attorney generals office prior to letting bids for the building. Low bids for the various construction portion total $165,537.
Another action taken was that of extending the deadline of the county mapping program from Jan. 1 to March 1,1984.
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to a pay raise. Rep. David R. Obey, D-Wis., has said legislators place public discussion of their salaries in the same category as an unmentionable social disease.
Effective Jan. 1, legislators automatically will be receifing the same 3.5 percent cost-of-living wage increase that will go to most federal government white collar workers.
Hie legislative path leading to the increase began in 1975 when Congress voted to include its members among the federal workers who automatically get pay hikes. However, the rules still re-(luired a separate vote for the annual appropriation providing the additional money.
In 1977,.1978,1980 and 1981, Congress voted against appropriating additional money for pay faise^
In 1981, however. Congress removed the necessity for a separate vote on appropriating money for legislators salaries. Language was inserted in a bill that year saying the provisions herein for the various items of official expenses of members, officers and committees of the Senate and House, and clerk hire for senators and members shall be the permanent law with respect thereto.
The bill died. But that language was only referred to, not included, in a separate stopgap spending bill that was enacted. That was enough.
The effect was that members of the House and Senate no longer have to vote every year to provide the money for their salaries because the
money automatically is there under permanent law -regardless of how much Congress decides to pay itsei.
Meanwhile, the provision was in place applying scheduled pay raises for white collar government workers to members of the House and Senate so long as Congress does nothing to exempt itself from the increases.
Congress did nothing to block the next increase before it adjourned for the ear on Nov. 18, thus mem-rs automatically will^re-
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Also effective Jan. 1, senators outside income earned from spewhes, ap-learance and writings will X limited to 30 percent of their congressional salaries. House members already are under the same limitation.
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(Contifloed from Pagel)
cargo were heading home with a treasure chest of scientific knowledge gathered during 16 un{%ce-dented days that proved the value of humans as researchers in space.
See you back an Earth," Young told Mission Control as he. and his crewmates gathered in Columbias cabin for a final telecast Wednesday night.
Young and pilot Brewster Shaw were to guide the shuttle, with Spacelab in its cargo bay, to the landing.
Once back on Earth, Young and Shaw will fly to their homes near Houstons Johns(Hi Space Center. But Spacelab scientists Garriott, Lichtenberg, Parker and Ulf Merbold will spend a week at Edwards undergoing medical tests to help validate the findings of tests conducted in orbit.
The crew was returning with mixed emotions.
Wed sure like to spend another 10 days up here, but I dont think they'll let us do that, Lichtenberg said Wednesday. But it will be good to get back.
For Young, 53, who has made more space trips than any other human, this sixth one may be his last. He hinted before the flight that he might call it quits after this one.
He would go out satisfied
that he commanded the most ambitious and most successful manned science mission yet.
Plaudits were ringing in the astronauts ears even before they headed home.
Mission Control played them taped recordings of congratulatory messages on the international mission from the Chancellor of Austria, Canadas minister of science and technology and the prime ministers of Italy, The Netherlands and Belgium.
Their countries were among 14 whose scientists contributed experiments to Spacelab - which was built at a, cost of $l-biIlion by the European Space Agency and donated to Americas space transportation system, whose core is the reuseable shuttle.
Researchers waited at Edwards for the scores of samples, thousands of frames of film and reels of data and videotape coming back from space.
Researchers credited the astronaut-scientists - Garriott, Lichtenberg, Parker and Merbold - with rescuing much of the scientific return. Working in two non-stop shifts, the four repaired a number of instruments, revised experiments to give new findings and thought up experiments of their own.
Forbes Winner Pope Asks To Meet Detained Assassin Realtors' Award
The Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors has named Blanche Forbes of Century 21 B. Forbes Agency here as recipient Pf the annual Realtor of the Year award.
Ms. Forbes was installed recently as president of the Board of Realtors. A Pitt County native, Ms. Forbes has operated the B. Forbes
BLANCHE FORBES
Agency for three and a half years and has been involved in the real tate business for eighUyears. She chaired the chapters Make America Better committee for 1982.
Ms. Forbes, a resident of 803 Greenville Blvd., has three daughters and two grandchildren.
The Realtor also honored Jean Hopper as recipient of the chapters first Outstanding Service Award. She was 1983 chairman of the Make America Better project, which won state and national awards for community betterment and patrionism, and a state citation for crime prevention.
Ms. Hopper has been in real estate for M) years and has been associated with Aldridge and Southerland in Greenville for the past two years. She is president of the Womens Council of Realtors and secretary-treasurer of the Board of Realtors. She and her husband, Bill, have three daughters and two sons.
Bob Hope May Go To Beirut
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WASHINGTON (AP) -Bob Hope, who has entertained the troops during the holidays starting back in World War II, may not be home for Christmas once again.
A United Services Organization spokesman says the 80-year-old comedian may be entertaining U.S. Marines and sailors stationed in Lebanon.
Details have yet to be worked out. USO spokesman
Paul Regaski said Wednesday.
Pentagon sources, who spoke only on the condition they not be named, said if Hope makes the trip this year he probably will not' land in L-ehanon but will give his shows aboard Navy ships offshore, with Marines being ferried out to the U.S. fleet.
"It is too hot in the Beirut area for him to go there, one source said.
$1 Billion Price To Cleanup Bay
FAIRFAX. Va. (AP) -Cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay could cost $1 billion and must not be blocked by those who know the cost of everything and the value of nothing," a U.S. senator says. '
Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md., speaking Wednesday to a gathering of federal officials and those from
states surrounding the bay, called for cooperation in cleansing the Chesapeake of toxic chemicals and other pollutants that have caused fish and plant life to decline.
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ROME (AP) - P(^ John Paul n has a^ed to meet with the Tuitish gunman who shot him in 1961 so he can personally convey his forgiveness, Italian newspapers said today.
Leading Italian papers, including La Refkibblica of Rome and La Stampa of Turin, cited authorative
Lebanon.
(Continued from Page 1)
national recmiciliation can continue and lead to a truly representative executive force.
Cheysson was referring to the Lebanese national reconciliation talks in Geneva, which are currently in recess.
The U.S. spokesman said there wasnt any direct criticism of the U.S. air strikes against Syrian positions in Lebanon Sunday, which Washington said were acts of self-defense. But he added that everybody agreed that escalation is not the name of the game.
A British source, who also insisted in anonymity, said the four partners agreed on the right of each to act in self-defense in Lebanon. But he said stress was placed on the role of the multinational force as a peaceful one.
The U.S. official said Washington doesnt rule out having at least some of the Marines spend their night on ships offshore, but this wasnt discussed here. If such an arrangement were made, he said, it wouldnt be a. weakening of U.S. participation.
Any suggestion that there is any pending withdrawal of American ground forces from Lebanon has no foundation that I know of, he said.
After the breakfast meet-ing, the four foreign ministers joined the 12 other foreign ministers of the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance for the start of their twoKlay strategy conference. The ministers will be searching for ways to keep open contacts with the Soviet Union on nuclear disarmament and are likely to continue discussiiHis about the situation in Lebanon.
Vatican sources as saying the p(^ has asked to meet withAgca.
The Vatican announced earlier this week that the pontiff will visit a Rome prison during the Christmas - season as part of the celebrations for the current Holv Year of Redemption. It said the prison probably
no immediate reaction from the ministers on the Soviet Unions suspension today of long-range missile negotiations in Geneva. The suspension eliminated the last superpower forum for negotiating nuclear arsenals.
wcMild be the Rebibbia facility where Mehmet Ali Agca is serving a life sentence for the May 13,196i, attack on the pope and that the visit probably will take place Dec. 26.
However, the Rev. Romeo Panciroli, the Vaticans chief spokesman, told The A^ociated Press in a iele-phone interview that he did not know of any such meeting being planned'between the
! papers said John Paul wishes to tell Agca in person that he forgives him for the attack in St. Peters Square. Five days after the shooting, the pontiff sincerely pardoned his attacker, an action which had no,effect on
legal proceedings agaiMt Agca. 4
^papersadded that Vlt^ lean officials have been working with the Italian Justice Ministry on the numerous details a possible face-to-face meeting would involve.
Pope John XXIII celebrated Mass at Romes Regina Coeli prison on Dec. 26, 1958. Pope Paul VI celebrated Mass there on April 9,1964.
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illions Of Bits Of Data From Spacelab Research
By WARREN E. LEAKY Science Writer
GREENBELT, Md. (AP) - The world has watched the Spacelab astronauts perform hundreds of experiments )rodiK:iiig billions of pieces of data. Ever wonder what lappenstoitall?
The Kklay mission of Spacelab, scheduled to end Thursday when the space shuttle Columbia lands in California, has generated the expected outpouring of data from the more than 70 expmments aboard.
. Billions ol bits of invaluable data, which when put together form the numbers, words and pictures that scientists will study, flow from Spacelab each hour.
Scientists and technicians at the Goddard Space Flight Center, near Washington, are on the receiving end of a long electronic pipeline handling the information.
And, with the help of supercomputers, high-speed tape recorders and millions of dollars worth of electronics, they say they have recovered almost every bit of data.
William P. Barnes, head of the high-rate data handling group in Goddards information processing division, says data from Spacelab flows in at an average rate of 1 million bits per second. And during peak periods, the rate can go up to 48 million bits every second.
This is a lot of information, by any measure,'^ Barnes said in an interview. 1 did a little calculation and figured that if nine days worth of data, coming in at l million bits a second, were put into book form, they would stack up to be 2'2 times
Tobacco Quota Cut Said Set
By The Associated Press
Federal officials are expected to announce next week that they have set 13;5 percent as the new maximum amount the 1984 flue-cured tobacco marketing quota can be cut, a
Doloinh nAurcnoivar cotrc
Agriculture Secretary John Block will announce the quota, the amount of tobacco that can be marketed. The News an Observer of Raleigh aaid in its Thursday editions.
" The deadline for setting the quota is Dec. 15. r A spokesman for tobacco Z growers said Wednesday he ;; was optimistic the cut would * be lower, but the newspaper ^ said that according to m sources the Reagan ad-ministration is under pre-ssure to keep the quota cut at
13.5 percent to help reduce M theneralueicii.
Leaders of the Tobacco 2 Growers Association of - North Caorlina met with ~ Block on Tuesday in an effort
to hold down the size of the quota cut.
T. Carlton Blalock, executive vice president of the association, said Block was extremely attentive and sympathetic to the growers )lea that the quota rduction )e kept small.
Blalock said the 13.5 cut would be extremely negative for growers.
Blalock said the group told Block that another quota cut after the 10 percent reduction in 1983 would hurt tobacco exports because foreign buyers want a stable and full supply of tobacco.
Last week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture was reportedly considering up to a 16.5 percent cut in the quota. That was the maximum cut allowed under the old tobacco program law, which was changed last week
when President Reagan signed new tobacco legislation.
The new rules include several program changes, including a continuation of the freeze on tobacco price supports for the 1984 and possibly the 1985 crops. The level of price supports and the quota are the two main devices for controlling federally supported tobacco surpluses.
See Growth In Economy
CHARLOHE, N.C. (AP) - North Carolinas economy will continue to grow quickly in i984, accoriiiiig lo forecasters from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and First Union National Bank.
The N.C. Forecast predicted Tuesday the gross state product - a sum of the states goods and services -will increase 6.3 percent this year and another 4.5 percent next year
The projections revise upward the forecasts previous view that North Carolinas economy would grow by 4.2 percent this year and 4 percent in 1984.
1984 is looking a lot more like 1983, said Robert Allsbrook, vice president and economist at First Union.
The latest available figures show the states economy grew by 17.7 percent in this years second quarter - the highest quarterly growth rate since the third quarter of 1961 - as businesses rebuilt their inventories and consumer confidence improved, he said.
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The $1 billion, European-built science workshop in the shuttles cargo bay pours out information from 16 data channels and three voice circuits. This information is relayed throu^ the shuttle to a special tracking and data relay satellite. If temporarily out of range, recorders on the shuttle store the data for later transmission to the satellite.
The satellite retransmits the information to Earth, primarily to a ground terminal at White Sands, N.M. From there, the data goes back up into space to a regular communications satellite and bounces back down to Goddard's Spacelab data processing facility.
At this facility, all data is recorded on high-density magnetic tape recorders and checked for quality by computers and other special equipment. The Spacelab input processing system does initial sorting and cataloging, and makes sure data from each experiment stays together.
This system transfers the information to low-density tapes that can be read by ordinary computers. These tapes go to the Spacelab output processing system which does the initial analysis work and makes copies for the researchers.
Since this first Spacelab mission is sponsored by the European Space Agency, 60 percent of the data will go directly to European scientists from input processing system
before the normal second stage of processing. Barnes said.
The space agency has agreed to get all preliminary data from European experiments to researchers within 30 days after the end of the mission and all second-stage information from the output processing system to them in 60 days.
We shipped the first computer tapes to Europe on Monday," Barnes said. "and I don't anticipate any problems getting it all out on time."
The system has worked essentially as expected and we are very happy with it." he continued. ' Sure, there have been a few problems but nothing major. The key thing is that we have lost no data,"
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00
RETAIL *1060.00. GRAYSON MANOR CHERRY GRANDFATHER CLOCK.
LYRE PENDULUM. WESTMINSTER CHIMES. ^ $
m-
RICH COLONIAL CHERRY CABINET SAE
GLASS SIDE PANELS ON CABINET PRICE
690
00
RETAIL *950.00. THE WOODLAWN MAHOGANY GRANDFATHER CLOCK.
18TH CENTURY STYLE MAHOGANY cai r $ '
CABINET. LYRE PENDULUM. WESTMINSTER
CHIMES. LOCK ON DOOR 8 DAY WIND PRICE
595
00
RETAIL *1280.00. THE PORTSMOUTH
OAK GRANDFATHER CLOCK. C 7 C AOO
WESTMINSTER CHIMES. MOON DIAL Ij 11
LARGE LYRE PENDULUM BRASS FACE
PRICE
RETAIL 1395.00. THE MADISON ^ ,
GRANDFATHER CLOCK. ^
ELEGANT 18TH CENTURY CHERRY C Q ^ QA
CABINET. TRIPLE CHIMES. CABLE WIND ^ ^ ^ ^
LARGE LYRE PENDULUM MOON DIAL PRICE \J ^ \M
RETAIL 1350.00. THE LUNDSFORD CHERRY GRANDFATHER CLOCK
MOON DIAL, WESTMINSTER CHIMES.
8 DAY CHAIN. WEIGHT WIND WITH LYRE PENDULUM, RICH MAHOGANY CABINET......
SALE
PRICE
$79500
^2 Thg Dally Reflector, Greenvilla. N.C
Thursday, Decembar 8,1983Eager, WorldwideMarket For Even Stolen Gold
By LARRY THORSON Associated Press Writer LONDON (AP) - With 6,800 little gold bars in hand, the thieves who pulled off Britains biggest robbery could have eager buyers all over the world.
Thats the opinion of police, security companies and the insurers who are payinj^ out $36.1 million to the still unidentified owners of the three tons of gold.
Police announced the first arrest in the case Tuesday. Anthony John Black, 31, a security guard at the Brinks-Met warehouse, was charged with conspiracy in the Nov. 26 robbery. He was ordered held for three days of questioning.
But there was no word on
other members of the gang, believed to number six men, or the whereabouts of the gold, which, if stacked, takes up the space of a twin bed.
Some officials fear the gold was quickly slipped into clandestine markets abroad.
Since the Bronze Age, the lustrous, heavy tnetal has been molded into shapes that have survived in their original form for centuries, such as King Tuts coffin with its unique signature of ancient Egypt.
But gold can also be anonymous and untraceable, and at almost $400 a troy ounce, very desirable.
Thieves can melt modern bullion bars to remove identifying serial numbers and assayers' stamps, and then
slip them into any number of illicit markets to be transformed into jewelry, bought for hoarding or used to pay for other illicit goods such as arms or drugs.
"CTold is a commodity which is very easily disposed of injhe world, particularly if it is melted down and you change its description," John Wheeler, a Conservative member of Parliament, said in an interview.
Youve only got to think of its value in the Middle East, the Far East, Taiwan, or any other place," said Wheeler, who specializes in police matters and is chairman of the British Security Industry Association.
David Powis, a deputy
assistant police commissioner, said there are numerous no questions asked markets for gold around the world. But he refused to give any further information for fear of tipping the direction of the police investigation.
Asked at a news conference whether it would be hard to dispose of the gold.
Powis said, It would not be difficult knowing the amount of gold smuggled on the international scene.
Others disagreed.
A source with one of the insurers, who insisted on anonymity, said, It will be difficult to get rid of gold in that quantity, but the most likely market is the backstreet jewelry market
Charge Threat To Kill 3 Men
Dont Miss
The Living Christmas Tree
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Police have charged a Winston-Salem man with threatening to kill three people in the Hall of Justice, then breaking a patrolmans nose while fighting with police outside a car dealership.
James Calvin Segers, 46, was accused Tuesday of punching officer M.E. OBrien in the face and biting him on the right thigh. He was also charged with two counts of resisting arrest and one count of communicating threats.
around the world.
It would have to be melted down and would take some time to disperse, the source said, indicating that the insurers believe the thieves still have it.
The recipient of the stolen hoard could also have been someone in the secret world of international arms trading, said a second insurance company official who asked not to be identified.
They can handle large amounts of gold, often paid clandestinely. They would want payment in gold if they dont want the transaction to be traced, he speculated. Other possible markets are
in the Middle East, South Asia and the Far East, where hoarding of precious metals is a traditional hedge against hard times or political upheaval.
Illicit gold could be slipped into the legal market and end up as bracelets in India -ome of many places where a substantial part of a familys net worth goes on the matriarchs arm or ankle.
Gold hoarded in Vietnam during decades of war has been used to bribe communist Vietnamese officials and buy a way out for boatloads of refugees.
Gold also has been a vehicle for tax fraud in Britain. A
court in London is hearing a case involving evasion of $9 million in sales tax on $60 million worth of gold.
The gimmick, according to the testimony, was to buy South African Krugerrand gold coins, which were not subject to the 15-percent VAT when imported into Britain.
Then te coins were melted and sold legitimately as bullion bars, with the purchaser paying the seller the routine 15 percent sales tax, known here as Value Added Tax.
The five defendants are accused of pwketing the $9 million VAT instead of paying it to the government.
At Unity Free Will Baptist Church
2020 West Greenville Blvd.
Saturday, December 10th at 7:30 P.M. and Sunday, December 11th at 7:00 P.M.
RING THE BELLS, A Joyous Christmas Cantata by Harry Bollback and Don Wyrtzen. Directed by Pam Smith. Let this be a part of your celebration of Christmas.
The public is cordially invited to attend.
Great Books For Christmas Giving...'
1. South Bv Southeast by Ray Ellis/Walter Cronkite
Cronkite and Ellis have teamed on a beautiful book that truly was produced con amore. Their love of the waterway shines through every page. $39.95.
2. Motherhood. The Second Oldest Profession by Erma Bombeck
Erma views with warmth, humor, insight, and compassion the variety of roles mothers play and rescues mother-hood from the unreal realm of cliche, myth, and make-believe. $12.95.
3. Changes by Danielle Steel
In Changes, Danielle has depicted a man and woman faced with the greatest challenge we all face today - how to deal with commitment, careers, and relationships in a world where changed roles have altered irrevocably the old rules of love and marriage. $15.95.
4. Pet Sematarv by Stephen King
A novel by the author of The Shining, and Christine. Today Stephen King is recognized worldwide as the modern master of horror. Pet Sematary begins with a visit to the graveyard in the woods where generations of children have buried their beloved pets. But behind the pet sematary there is another burial ground, one that lures people to it with seductive promises...and ungodly temptations. As the story unfolds, so does a nightmare of the supematurar$l5.95.
ROSY .AS EVER - Jane Russell, making her first appearance in a television series after a long absence from Hollywood, smiles during an informal press conference Tuesday afternoon during a breas in taping for her guest appearance in NBCs "The Yellow Rose". .Ms. Russell will be cast in the role of Rose Hollister, mother of Sam Elliott. (AP Laserphoto)
\
CENTRAL BOOK & NEWS
Open 9:30 AM-10 PM Seven Days A Week Greenvilie Square Shopping Center 756-7177
%'S
on
Copyright 1985 Kroger Sav on
DVfTlSfDiTIMPOtlC
tacr 0* tnete idverrnefl itfrru ti required to Of readii jviiisDif tor sjif in eacn Kroger sjv on ficeot as spfciticaiiy noTfd in tnti d wf do run out 0 an Item wih ofr you vour cnoicf ot a compaf aeif item wnen avaiiaoif reflecting toe M>T>e yjvings or a raincneck wnicn ni entitle you to purchase rne aoveTneo item n tne aowertised price itnm 50 flaw Limit ore ma'-utafTurf' v coupor' per Item
Quantity Rights Reserved None Sold TO Dealers
Items end Prices Effective Thru Wed. Dec. 21,.1913.
OtECKOVTHrS
HOUDAYSAVWGS
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WRHYDRO-SONIC^
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I I
Mr. Grocer. After refund payment to customer by you, HR will redeem this coupon directly via our representative f received on the rental of a Hydro-Sonic Carpet Cleaning system. Offer is good from Dec. 7,1983 to Dec. 21,1983. Limit one per rental, void where prohibited, taxed or restricted bv law. CUSTOMER SIGNATURE
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Economists Watch Inflation Prospects For 1984
By SALLYJACOBSEN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - Inflation, the economys untamed lion of just a few years ago, has been quieted recently and most economists say theres no reason for it to roar back next year.
Many, though, are predicting prices will climb somewhat more than they did this year^ and some are even keeping a watchful eye out for worrisome flare-ups later in the yean Paul Volcker, who as chairman of the Federal Reserve is the nations chief inflation-fighter, says, We are in a period of testing. X
In a recent speech, he said, Memories of inflation - and of failed anti-inflation programs - remain strong. The temptation to return to habits learned in the previous decade - to anticipate inflation, to take precautionary steps to protect oneself, or to make up for losses of the past in one fell swoop-could return.
Adds Donald Ratajczak, economic forecaster at Georgia State University in Atlanta, This is a period of lasting opportunities... 1984 is our year of realty solidifying the gain made against high inflation rates.
The inflation rate, as measured by the Labor Departments Consumer Price Index, is expected to rise approximately 4 percent this year, just about the same as the 3.9 percent of 1982, which was the best price-showing since the early 1970s.
It was 8.9 percent in 1981 and 12.4 percent in 1980.
For next year, analysts are predicting an advance in the
rai _
We still have one more really good year left on inflation, says Allen Sinai, chief economist at Lehman Brokers Kuhn Loeb Inc. in New York.
Agrees Ratajczak, I dont see any bad (ffoblem next year.
Volcker asserted recently, Those of us responsible for monetary p(dicy dont mean to let inflation get a head of steam again. The Federal Reserve has helped reduce price increases by restraining the amount of money in banks, checking accounts and wallets.
Even so, Lawrence Kudlow, former chief economist of the federal Office of Management and Budget and now an economic consultant here, sees warning signs already pointing to stronger price rises next year. Consumer prices, he notes, rose at a 5.5 percent annual rate in the August-October quarter.
Analysts generally attribute the recent moderation in prices to last years recession, worldwide oil glut and abundant harvests.
Next years expected price pickup is mostly attributed to just the reverse - the healthy economic recovery, stabilizing energy prices and the harsh summer drought which hurt the grain crop in Americas breadbasket.
The price rises showing up next year, will, as usual, be most noticeable to consumers at the grocery checkout counter.
Meat prices are expected to climb in the second half of the year because of the effects of the drought. Those prices have been tumbling this fall as producers send their herds to slaughter rather than pay higher feedgrain prices. When supplies diminish next year, the trend should reverse itself, analysts say.
But prices for other goods also may rise. And analysts offer a variety of reasons for that - the economys return to health, wage settlements negotiated by unions and the efficiency of workers on the job.
Explaining their predictions, analysts say the inflation rate usually goes up in a period of economic recovery as some manufacturers boost their prices to try to make up for lost profits. Corporate profits, though, have soared this year after sharp declines in 1982, which may ease price pressures.
Wages have not risen sharply in the past year, and some unions have even agreed to salary give-backs to hold onto industry jobs, analysts note. Added to that has been a marked increase in worker efficiency.
'The salary and productivity trends put less pressure on manufacturers to j^ss along their increased laf>or costs to consumers in the form of higher prices for their products.
Both of those factors have helped enormously in achieving a sharper reduction in inflation than almost any had anticipated, Volcker said in a recent speech.
But he said there also are some potentially disquieting signs because restraint on wages and costs so far has been quite uneven among industries.'
Improvement has been greatest in manufacturing and construction, he said.
There has been less improvement," he said, in finance, utilities and service sectors. Wage hikes have been in the range of 6 percent to 8 percent, or more, he said, "seemingly signaling further upward pressures on prices in those areas. Indeed, private analysts look for some increase next year in the ampunt of money unions are able to negotiate in new labor contracts and they also expect slower improvement in worker efficiency, or productivity.
Local Winners In Hunter Ass'n Show
Cabin Branch Farms of Kinston hosted the last Eastern Hunter Association horse show of the year Dec. 3. Local winners were as follows:
Warm-up Over Fences -.Missy Daughtry, 1st; Emily Nobles, 2nd; Alysa Rawls, 3rd.
Short Stirrup Over Fences - Jennifer Whichard, 1st; Emily Nobles, 2nd; Heather Garris, 5th.
Short Stirrup Walk-Trot -Emily Nobles, 1st; Jennifer Whichard, 2nd; Heather Garris, 3rd.
Short-Stirrup Walk-Trot-, Canter - Emily Nobles, 1st; Jennifer Whichard, 2nd; Heather Garris, 3rd; Heather Crawford, 5th.
Emily Nobles was champion rider in the Short-
Stirrup Division and Jennifer Whichard was the reserve rider.
Novice Equitation - Susan McLwahorn, 4th; Dara Trought, 5th.
Low Pony Hunters Over Fences - Jennifer Whichard, 1st; Emily Nobles, 2nd.
Low Pony Hunters Over Fences - Missy Daughtry, 1st; Jennifer Whichard, 3rd; Emily Nobles, 6th.
Low Pony Hunters Under Saddle Jennifer Whichard, 2nd; Missy Daughtry, 3rd; Emily Nobles, 4th; Heather Crawford, 6th.
Jennifer Whichard was the champion rider in the Low Pony Division.
^ Pony Pleasure - Susan McLawhorn, 1st; Dara Trought, 2nd.
Hunter Hack - Emily Nobles,- 2nd; Heather Crawford, 4th.
Go As You Please - Susan McLawhorn, 1st; Dara
Trought, 5th.
An awards banquet for end-of-the-year awards will be held Dec. 12 at the Ayden Country Club.
Sed Supplies May Be Short
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina farmers could face shortages of seed supplies for. some major crops in 1984, according to the director of the North Carolina Crop Improvement Association at North Carolina State University.
Foil McLaughlin blamed the tight supplies on last summers drought, which cut seed yields, and larger anticipated plantings of some crops in 1984.
Peanuts and soybeams are th two major crops" most likely to be affected by shortages, he said. Corn seeds are being increased this winter in Central America and Florida, and tobacco seed supplies should be adequate, he said.
ItTakesA BkStoreTo Fill'mese Shoes
Finding clothing that fits the big or tall man is no small task . C.ome to the store that specializes in extra large^ sizes.YouTl find a tremendous selection of quality measwear bv famous names such as Robert Bruce. Jamar Ruby, Members Onlv. I>amon Sportswear and .Manhattan shirts.
In fact,The Hub Ltd. Big & Tall Store is one of the largest in the L. S.
Well even gifrw rap and ship your purchase anywhere in the continental U.S. for free.
'WlbeHublMfW^
DIGfiflALL
pcda! Hours Shop .Mon-Sat !0-9 "-tin 1 Crabtree Nalley .Mall Raleigh 919 ~2-()br
Shop Saslows at Pitt Plaza For Fine Christmas Gifts OPEN 10 A.M.mOP.M.SAVE 50%
14K CHAINS AND BRACELETS
ON
ALLSALE ENDS SAT., DEC. 17TH
Visa, Amex, Master Charge or use Saslows own Charge PlanFirst Insured Money FndFirst Class Yields... Convenieiice... Safety!
Keejp your funds In step with the money market. The First Insured Money Fund always earns high comparable money market yields.
Enjoy the convenience of 3-way accessibility to your funds through in-person deposits or withdrawals...6 preauthorized transfers a month, including 3 by check...and our 24-hour Prestige Automated Teller Machine located on the 264 Bypass in Greenville.
The safety of your funds cant be greater, because all your money at First Federal is insured to $100,000 by the FSLIC.To open your First Insured Money Fund, come to any of our 5 Pitt County offices now. First Federal... Because you deserve First Class.
Minimum openinii deposit ^2.500 Federal leguldlions requite that the Fiist Insured Mones Fund interest rate .ill be the same as NOW act ounts t uirentU V per veai when the balance falls below ^2 500
You Deserve First Class!
HRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Pit! County
EQUAL HOUSING LENDER
GREENVILLE: 324 S Evans St 768-2145 514 E Greenville Bivd 756-6525 AYDEN: 107 W 3rd St 746 3043 FARMVILLE: 128 N MAm St 753 4139 GRIFTON: H8 Qtieen St '524 4128
^4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.
Thureday, Decembers, 1983
Stock And Market Reports
Un Carbide
Uni royal Stee
US Steel USWest wi Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s WeslPlPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix s Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp
By The Associated Press Grain. No. 2 yellow shelled corn higher at 3.46-3.74, mostly 3.55-3.65 in East and 3.58-3.85, mostly 3.58-3.78 in Piedmont; No 1 yellow soybeans higher at 7.77-7.97 in the East and 7.65-7.81, mostly 7..72-7.81 in Piedmont; wheat 3.50-4.05, mostly 3.69-3.74; oats 1.15-2.35; (New Crop-corn 2.66-2.85; wheat 2.98-3.28). Soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 237.50-244.50. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Wednesday by location for corn and soybeans; Cofield 3.74. 7.97; Conwav 3.65,7.80; Dunn 3.59, 7.82; Elizabeth City 3.46, 7.93; Farmville 3.57, 7.77; Fayetteville- -7.97_, 1-4; Goldsboro 3,63. 7.86; Greenville 3.61,7.85; Kinston 3.64. 7,88; Lumberton 13.55-3,57). 17.77-7.78); Pan-tego'3.61. 7.85; Raleigh -, 7.97; Selma 3.56. 7.88; Whiteville 3.57, 7.77; Williamston 3.61, 7.85; Wilson 13.64-3.69). 7.88; Albemarle 3..58.7,81; Barber 3,59. 7.72; Durham 3.75; Mocksville 3.78; Monroe 13.73-3.78); Mount Ulla -, 7.73; Roaring River 3,78; Statesville 3,85,7,65.
By The .\ssociated Press Hogs
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP INCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was $1 to $1.25 higher. Kinston 43.50. Clinton. Elizabethtown, Fayetteville. Dunn. Pink Hill, Cfiadbourn. Ayden. Pine Level. Laurin-biirg and Benson 43.25. Wilson 43,50, Salisbury 40,50. Rowland 43.00, Spivey's Corner 43.50. Sows; all weights .500 pounds up; Wilson 34.00. Fayetteville 34.00, Whiteville 34.00, Wallace 34.00, Spivey's Corner 34,00, Rowland 34.00. Durham 31.00.
The market made a bid to rally at midsession Wednesday, but began slipping back again toward the close.
Analysts said it was difficult fw stock prices to launch a sustained move in either direction amid the churning forces of yearend tax selling and reinvestment.
Interest rates rose in the credit markets this morning, putting an added damper on stocks. Prices of long-term government bonds, which move in the opposite direction from interest rates, fell about $5 for every $1,000 in face value.
American Telephone & Telegraph led the active list, down Vg a 64>g. The when-issued stock of the new. smaller AT&T that will-emerge from the breakup of the Bell System also dropped ig,tol94.
The NYSEs composite index slipped .04 to 95.82. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off ,07 at 222.82.
Volume on the Big Board came to 39.03 million shares at noontime, against 40.95 million at the same point Wednesday.
66
65',
65',
17'..
17".'
17".
29h
29",
29",
57-,
57".
57",
28
27',
27",
45',
45',
45',
40',
39',
40
53'.
52.
53'.
55.
55".
55",
35',
35',
35',
32',
32',
32',
36',
36",
36",
54',
54',
54'.
49'.
4",
49'.
selected 11
am
StOCK
market quotations;
Ashland prC
Burroughs ^ ^
Carolina Power & Light
Conner
Duke
Eaton
Eckerd's
Exxon
Fieldcrest
Hatteras
Hilton
Jefferson
Deere
Lowe's............
McDonald's
McGraw
Collins Si Aikman Piedmont Pizza Inn PSiG
TRW, Inc United Tel
Dominion Resources Wachovia
OVERTHECOUNTER
Aviation
Branch
Little Mint
Planters Bank
4
.24',
t:.
54' 1 2Sv .1)1'1 :17'| tt) 5H', :i9'i
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.23 ..72-; 41) I 40-1 :i', 14'. ,tK'.
80'I
21 ,
45'.
5'' 15 ' 27-27'
Books Gift To Marines
NEW VORK AMRCorp
lAP' -Midday stocks
High Low l.ast
36'j
44, 45
Poullry
HALEIGH. N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this week's trading was 51.00 cents, based on full truck-load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2L' to 3 pound birds. 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 Thursday was 1,713,(KK), compared to l,750,(HX)last Thursday,
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market drifted lower today, giving up some of Wednesday's gams.
The Dow .Jones average of 30 industrials, up 4.4 points on Wednesday, dropped back 2.,54 to 1,271.24 by noontime today.
Declining issues held a 6-5 lead over advances among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Till KSDAY
iKi pm (ireenville Civitan
Club meets at Three Steers 7::iiipm - D.AV and Auxiliary meets at VFW Home T :iO pm - Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church
8:(K) p m - Chapter 1308 of the Women of the .Moose
FRIDAY
7:30p m. - Red Men meet 8:(H) pm - .Narcotics Anonymous meets at Mendenhall Center, room 238
Allis Chaim
17',
17
17'.
Alcoa
45-'>.
45',
45',
Am Baker
14.
14.
14.
AmBrands
59',
59'.
59'
Amer Can
49".
49
49
Am- Cyan
50'.
50'i .
50.
AmFa'mily Ameritecn wi
23
23
23
65',
64,
65'.
Am Motors
7'.
7
7'.
AmStand
31',
31',
31',
64'.
Amer T&T
64.
64
Amer T&T wi
19',
19-.
19"
Beat Food
32.
32",
.32.
BellAtlan wi
66',
66'.
66".
BellSouth WI
85.
85.
Beth .Steel
26'.
26".
26 .
Boeing
46',
46
46',
Boise Cased
42',
42'.
42,
Borden
54",
54",
.54,
Burlngl Ind CSX (^p s
, 3S". 26",
38". 26' .
:i8".
26",
CaroPwLi
24'. .
24
24
Celanese
75',
75',
75' .
Cent Sova
L5',
15",
15 ,
Champ Int Chrysler
271.,
27',
27',
h'.
7.
28
CocaCola
56',
M'.K
.56',
Colg Palm
22-,
22'.
22".
Comw Edis
'27.'
>7. J
27.
ConAgra
35".
he
.15 7
Conti Group
51'.
51',
51',
Crown Zell
37',
371,
.'17',
DeltaAirl
4U'.
41".
41".
DowChem
33',
33 .
:i:r,
duPon^
52'.
52
.52' 1
Duke ru
25' '
25',
2.7 .
EaslnAirL
6".
6'.
6" .
Easi Kodak
75
74'
74.
EatonCp
.54'.
54',
54',
Esmark s
42
41',
42
Exxon
38',
:<8
;ia
Firestone
22 ,
22',
22' .
FlaPowLt
40'.
40',
40'.
FlaProgress
20".
20',
20".
FordMol s
42
41".
42
Fuqua s GTE Corp
27'.
26-
27
43,
43';
4.3',
GnDynam GenlElect s
59.
59",
59,
58',
58',
58.
Gen Food
53
52t
.52.
Gen Mills
53'.
53'.
.53.
Gen Motors
75
74',
74.
Gen Tire
36',
:16',
36',
GehuParts
45
44.
44.
GaPacil
"25 u_
25'.
.25', .
Goodrich
30",
:)'.
:iO.
Goodyear
31".
31'.
31 '.
Grace Co
45".
44'.
45',
GlNor Nek
60
59',
60
Greyhound
24'.
23.
23.
Gulf Oil
42.
42' -
42.
Hercules Inc
:i6".
;16
!6
Honeywell
137 .
i:)6.
i;)7
HospiCp s
39'.
38',
:i8. i
Ing Rand IBM
49
48 ,
49
119".
118'.
119',
Inil Hary
12.
12'.
12 .
Int Paper IntRecfif s
58".
58',
.58
20'.
20 .
20".
Int T4T
45' ,
45
45',
K marl
35
34'2
34",
KaisrAlum
19' .
19',
19' .
Kane Mill
19.
19.
19.
KanebSvc
15'.
15
15
KrogerCo Lockhed s
'34',
39.
34'.
39",
34', 39 ,
Loews Corp
169'
169
169
Masonite
49".
49'.
49'.
McDrmlnt n
24',
24'.
24>,
McKesson
40.
40',
4<l',
.Mead Corp
40.
40".
40".
MinnMM
85'-
85'.
85 .
Mobil
28
27,
27.
Monsanto
li)6.
106".
106.
NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd
25',
25'.
25' 1
41-
41',
41.
Nat Distill
25'.
25
25 .
NorflkSou
64'.
63'.
64',
NYNEX wi
60.
60".
60 ,
OlinCp
' 31' -
31',
31'.
Owenslll
38'.
:17.
37.
PacifTel WI
54.
54',
54.
Penney JC '
58.
58',
58 .
PepsiCo
37',
37
:!T
Phelps Dod
26'.
26
26 ,
PhilipMorr
72
71 .
71".
PhillpsPel
33
32.
32 ,
Polaroid
34
33',
:13'
ProctGamb s
58',
58
58
Quaker Oat
RCA
62', 36'.
62
35".
62 33',
RalslnPur
29'.
29
29
RepubAir
4'.
4
4'.
Republic StI
27.
27",
27",
Revlon
35',
35
35'.
Reynldind
59.
59',
59.
Rockwl s
33'.
32',
33'.
RovCrown
28".
28.
. 28".
SiRegisCp
35',
35".
, 35',
.Scotl Paper
31',
31'.
. 31'.
SealdPwr s
29
28,
1 29
SearsRoeb
39',
1 :!8"
, :i8
Shaklee s
22'j
, 22
22',
' Skyline Cp
17'.
. 17'1
. 17'
Sony Corp . Southern Co
14",
. 14';
. 14'
16",
, 16'
16".
SwslBell WI
58,
. .58"|
. 58",
Sperry Cp StdOilCai
45'
. 45'
. 45.
34"
. 34'
, 34".
StdOilInd
49",
, 49'
. 49'.
StdOilOh
41",
. 41'
. 41',
- TRW Inc
81'
. 80"
> 81
Texaco Inc
35'
, 35'
, 35',
TexEastn
54"
. .54'
, ,54'.
UMC Ind
16'
, 16'
1 16',
Un Camp
84'
, 84
84
STAMFORD. Conn. (AP) - Waldenbooks is donating 175 books to help rebuild the Marine library in Lebanon recently destroyed by bombing attacks.
"We're donating the books to the Marines as a gesture of appreciation for the good job they're doing and as a remembrance during Christmas." said Harry Hoffman, president and chief executive officer of the Stamford-based 'vVaIden-books.
Company spokeswoman Dara Tyson said the idea for the gift came from a customer in a Waldenbooks store in North Carolina located near Camp Lejeune.
The books were sent Tuesday to the North Carolina store, which will ship them to Camp Lejeune where they will be readied for shipment to Lebanon, Ms. Tyson said.
The books include fiction and non-fiction of a military nature, she said. Some are biographies of tormer president John F. Kennedy, Dwight D. -Eisenhower, and Gen. George Patton. Others include the Encyclopedia of Weapons and illustrated books on planes, warships, martial arts and history.
The company is the largest book distributor in the United States, with more than 830 stores in all 50. states. Ms. Tvson said.
Tenement Fire
Deeds
Obituaries
George S. Attmore al TO James V. Lyons al
65.00
D.T. House Jr. TO Dept, of Trans. .50 Brereton Properties Inc. TO Nabisco Inc. 26.50 Louise Speight Elks al TO Jessie D. Dixon al 36.50
Joseph D. Speight al TO Jessie D. Dixon al 150.00 David Aaron Boyd Jr. TO Donnie Lee McLawhorn al 3.50 Gene C. Brewer al TO Dan Ray Wilder al 59,00 M.C. Byrom al TO R.E. Deans Jr. al 45.00 Philip E. Carroll TO Laura M. Carroll al 60.00 Philip E. Carroll TO Laura M. Carroll al 10.00 Laura M. Carroll TO Philip E: Carroll 70.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Richard H. Jennings 8.00 Elizabeth D. PollarTl al TO R.E. Deans Jr. al 32.50 James Burely Smith al TO Berean Independent Baptist Church 3.00 Speight Realty & Invest. Albert Richard Riggan
3.00
Rare Condor Is Multiplying
VENTURA. Calif. (AP) -The future is looking brighter for the threatened California condor with the number of captive birds rising from one to nine in 1983. "a really good year for the condor." an Aububon Society official says.
The upbeat analysis Wed-nesday.came from spokesman Dick Beamish, despite a report by the society that the tiny wild flock of condors had declined in 1983. from 21 to 18.
Audubon biologist John Ogden, co-director of the Condor Recovery Program, said one bird was captured, one died and one disappeared.
The condors, which have a 9-foot wing span and bald red heads, appeared doomed four years ago when the recovery plan started.
Admits Role In Kickback Plan
BOSTON (APi - A 19-year-old man faces arson charges in a wind-whipped fire that burned a section of a crowded tenement, where residents escaped only after two policemen on a burglary call raised an alarm
More than 20 people safely fled Wednesday from three-story apartment buildings in East Boston near the Porter Furniture Building. One fireman suffered a back injury.
The fire was discovered by two police officers on a burglary call who turned on their siren and pounded on doors to alert residents.
Announcing the arrest Wednesday, police identified the suspect as one of three men being chased in the area of the fire. Two others were being sought.
NEW YORK (.4P) - The defunct Frigitemp Corp.'s former chairman has admitted being involved in a scheme to pay $2.7 million in kickbacks to* two General Dynamics Corp. executives, prosecutors say.
Gerald E. Lee, 57. said Wednesday the scheme was set up to secure $45 million in subcontracts to Frigitemp for insulation work on tankers and Navy submarines built by General Dynamics at (Quincy. Mass.. and Groton, Conn.
Lee, one of four people indicted by a federal grand jury on Sept. 6, agreed to testify as a government witness, said Assistant U.S. Attorney David W. Denton. In return, prosecutors will tell his sentencing judge about his cooperation.
Also indicted were former Frigitemp president George G. Davis,* free on bail; P. Takis Veliotis. ex-president of the Quincy facility, a fugitive; and his assistant, James H. Gilliland, arrested in England.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS DEMOLITION OF OLD COUNTY HOME BUILDING
COUNTY OF Pin, GREENVILLE, N.C.
Sealeid proposals will be received by the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, Greenville, North Carolina, in the Commissioners' regular meeting room on the second floor of the Pitt County Office Building, 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 11:00 ^m., E.S.T., on the 19 day of December, 1983 and immediately thereafter publicly read for the furnishing of all labor and necessary equipment to completely demolish the existing masonry structure at the old County Home site and remove all demolition materials from the site; also, for filling existing basement with suitable fill materials in accordance with the specifications as setforth In their
proposal. ^ ^ ^
Complete plans, specifications, and contract
documents will be open in the office of C.A. Holliday, P.E., County Engineer, and may be obtained by those qualified and proposing to submit a bid.\ '
's.JV
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J.B. VentersSr. TO J.B. Venters Jr. 15.00 Donald R. Warren al TO Clemons Grove Holy 1.00 Doris A. Wilkerson TO Dept, of Trans. 50.00 Walter L. Williams al TO Grvl. Pool & Supply
23.50
Lyman Z. Dunn al TO James Philip Matthews
2.50
Burton P. Evans al TO Amos J. Evans al NS ^ The Evans Co. of Grvl. Inc. TO Melvin Phillips
3.00
The Evans Co. of Grvl. Inc. TO William E. Schulte 68.00 Garland M. Lancaster al TO Mattie Lucille Tripp
37.00
Jimmy Cole Mobley al TO Bobby Ray Guy al NS G. Howard Powell al TO Dalton D. Bright Jr. 92.00 Tipton Builders Inc. TO G, Howard Powell al
146.50
Gerald Tripp Jr. TO Betty Eakes Boling -University Medical Pk. TO Dept, of Trans. 15.50 Jesse James Brady aP TO Fellowship Baptist
35.00
Elizabeth H. Buchanan TO Robert Wrad Causey
8.00
Philip E. Carroll TO Ralph Erminio Vitle 100.00
Bill Clark Consi, Co,_ Inc. TO Mary Jane Brewer 57.00 Justiniano Antonio Lopez al TO Garfield Car-mon al NS Thomas R. Overstreet al TO Jospeh Warren 18.00 Tipton Builders Inc. TO Mary S. Honeycutt Brickhouse 5.50 G. Roger Winbon al TO G. Roger Winbon NS Michael Lee Aldridge al TO Robert L. Boyd 42.00 Michael Lee Aldridge al TO Kenneth L. Sigmon
39.50
Marianne L. Arvin TO Thomas L. Arvin -NCNB TO J. Carlton Taylor 200.00 Ayden United Methodist TO Donald W. Carman al 35.00
James R. Horne al TO Young Dahl Song al 15.00 Lila F. McGowan al TO Goldsboro Bidrs. Supply Co. al 67.50 Preferred Properties of Grvl. Inc. TO Gaylord Bldrs Inc. 15.00 Jean Wilson Savage TO Lindsay S. Savage NS Lucv M. Smith TO Ledrew Mills 10.00 Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co. Inc. TO Barbara S. Hardee 51.50
Bennett Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Lee Vines Bennett will be conducted Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at Holy Trinity Holiness Church by Bishop Ralph Love. Burial will follow in Brown Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Bennett attended Pitt County schools. She was a member of Holy Trinity Holiness Church, where she was vice president of the senior choir, a member of the pastors aid club and an officer of the sick committee.
Surviving are her father, Jack Vines of the home; a daughter, Mrs. Jean Bennett Shields of Silver Spring, Md., and a sister, Mrs. Sarah Lucille Vines of Greenville.
Family visitation will be held Friday from 8-9 p m. at Holy Trinity Ho Church
iness
was professor of physical education and later an adviser to women in the school of commerce and program director of Leob Student Center. In 1963 she came to Greenville and operated Sarells Needlecraft Shop until 1980. She was a member of Moore Memorial Presbyterian Church in Nashville. ^
She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. James L. Fleming of Greenville and Mrs. Walter Greene of NashvUle, Tenn.
The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home from 7:30-9 p.m. tonight. The family suggests that anyone desiring to make memorial contributions consider the Heart Fund.
Martin-Bracy'Welsh Funeral Home in Nashville will handle the funeral service.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Fay M. Keck; two sons. Hunter B. Keck Jr. of Newport Beach, Calif., and William D. Keck of Radford, Va.; a sister, Miss Mary B. Keck of Richmond, Va.; five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Briley .......
Funeral services for Miss Ella Briley of 903A Colonial Ave. will be conducted Saturday at 11 a.m. at Selvia . Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. Clifton Gardner. Burial will fojlow in Brown Hill Cemetery.
Surviving is a foster daughter, Mrs. Herman Joyner of Washington. D.C.
Miss Briley was a member of the United Order of Morning Light Tent Lodge ,.-No..458.
Family visitation will be held Friday from 7-8 p.m. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary. At other times the family will be at the home of Mrs. Marie Jones, 100 Vance St.
Keck
Mr. Hunter B. Keck, 91. died Thursday morning at Jiis home. tOOO E. Third St. The funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Richard Gammon and the Rev. Jerry Anders. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mr. Keck, a native of Richmoill. Va., had lived m Greenville for 40 years. A member of the First Presbyterian Church, he was a deacon and elder. He was associated with the wholesaie hardrare business prior to his retirement in 1975. A 32nd Degree Mason, he was a member of the Scottish Rite Bodies, Sudan Temple and the Golden K Kiwanis Club
Sangmeister
NEW BERN Leonard Henry Sangmeister, 57, of Havelock died Wednesday in Craven County Hospital. A funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday at Cotton Funeral Home by Chaplain Rex Darling and the Rev. Lonnie Mann. Burial will be in New Bern National Cemetery with full military honors.
Surviving are his wife, Ann Sangmeister; four sons, Donnie W. Anderson, Ronnie W. Anderson, Leonard L. Sangmeister and Randy E. Sangmeister, all of Havelock; two sisters. Dorothy Connor and Mary Parry, both of Denver, Colo., and 10 grandchildren.
The family will receive friends at the funeraLhome tonight from 7-8:30 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests a donation to the American Cancer Society.
REWARD
Would The Person Who Called Sunday And
Said He Had Found My
Purse On Kroger Parking Lot, Please Call Back. Reward Offered.
Caldwell
Miss Amanda Caldwell. 72, died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. A graveside service will be held Saturday in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Nashville, Tenn.
Miss Caldwell, a native of Nashville. Tenn., was. a graduate of Peabody De-monsiraiion School and Ward-Belmont College in Nashville and New York University in New York. She held a master s degree irom Columbia University. She
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THF, DAILY REFLECTOR?""'*'THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 8, 1983State, Duke Roll To Easy Victories
By The Associated Press Eighth-ranked North Carolina State, playing its first home since winning the NCAA basketball title last year, did just what the coach ordered en route to an easy victory over Western Carolina.
N.C. State basketball coach Jim Valvano told his players to try to take command of the game early, which is just what the Wolfpack did as it rolled to a 82-61 victory over the
Catamounts on Wednesday
Long Is 2nd Team
For the first time this year, East Carolinas Terry Long has failed to make first team on a major All-America football team, the United Press-International.
Long was relegated to the second team by the wire service, after making first team on the Coaches. Football Writers, Walter Camp and Associated Press All-America teams. He had also been listed as a third team selection by Football News.
Long, a 6-0, 280-pound senior from Columbia, S.C., has also been picked to appear in the Blue-Gray Classic in Montgomery on Christmas Day. and in the Hula Bowl, in Honolulu in January. _
OHIO
'.Ml*
Cole
Mexander
Devereaux
Talum
Baron
Smith
Hicks
Carlson
Kowalski
Scarberry
Totals
DIKE
MP
Meagher
Alarie
Rilas
Amaker
Oawkms
Henderson
McNeeiy -
Nessley
Anderson
Ford
Bryan
Crump
Totals
F<; FT R A F Pi
15 0- 2 0- 0 I 0 5 U
25 9-H 6- 8 :i 0 4 21
32 4-13 2- 2 lU I 4 lU
:M 7-15 0- 0 2_ 3 3 14
21 1- 7 1- 2 3 6 5 3
28 2-10 1-5 2 5 1 5
14 1- 3 1- 2 1 t 2 3
16 I - 2 0- 0 4 1 4 2
2 1-30-12132 1 0 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
200 26-69 11-20 30 18 31 63
F(; FT R A F Pt
23 3- 5 1-5 6 2 4 7
28 4 - 9 6- 8 8 I 4 14
27 6 - 8 5- 8 4 0 2 17
:I9 4- 8 0- r 3 4 2 8
35 6-10 9-11 10 6 3 21
26 3- 7 3- 5 2 4 3 9
8 0- 1 0-0 0 I 2 0
9 2 2 0-1 2 0 1 4
2 0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
1 0- 0 2- 2 0 0 1 2
1 0- 0 0-00000 1 0- 00-00000 200 28-5026-41 37 17 22 82
In the ^y other game involving an Atlantic Coast Conference team, Duke whipped Ohio 82-63.
We followed our game plan, Valvano said. It was imperative that we get an early lead and make them play our way.
N.C. State never trailed m the game as it won its sixth game in seven outings before a crowd of 12,400.
Junior forward Lorenzo Charles scored a career-high 27 points and hauled down 14 rebounds, followed by Terry Gannon with 16 and Anthony
Webb with 10.
Im really pleased with Terry Gannon, Valvano said. I cant ask for more from him. He doesnt have blazing speed. He plays from the nec!^ up, and hes doing an outstanding job.
Quinton Lytle led the Catamounts with 19 points, followed by Cedric Cokley with 14 and Pat Sharp with 10.
With Charles dominating playing inside and Gannon firing from the outside, N.C. State jumped out to a 23-8 lead. The Catamounts, 3-2, could get no closer than 25-18 with 5:30 left in the half.
The Wolfpack led 35-23 at intermission and upped the margin to 45-29 on Gannons 20-footer with 14:26 left. Western Carolina trimmed the lead to 47-39 with Hf52 left. But the Wolfpack converted 17 of 20 free throws the rest of the game to take the contest.
Cozell McQueen added 13 rebounds as the Wolfpack won the battle of the boardb 44-34.
In Durham, sophomore guard Johnny Dawkins scored 21 points and grabbed 10 rebounds as Didce ran its
record to 5-0 - the Blue Devils longest winning streak in four seasons.
Dawkins, who has scored 128 points in Dukes five victories, dished out a .team-high six assists and hit 9 of 11 free throws. Sophomore forward Jay Bilas finished with 17 points and sophomore forward Mark Alarie added 14 points and 8 rebounds.
I thought we were not as Sharpe as we have been and we struggled a little bit. Duke coach Mik Krzyzewski
said. But the thing I was pleased with was that everyone still stayed in there. There were a number of opertunities for us to hang our heads and let it effect the outcome of the came, but we didnt do that.
Junior forward Vic Alexander scored a game-high 24 points for Ohio. Sophomore guard Robert Tatum scored 14 points on long jumpers. Senior center John Devereaux, who averages 19.7 points, was 'ourdened by early foul trouble
and scored 10 points.
Bilas sank all five of his first half field goal attempts as unranked Duke broke to a 43-33 lead at intermission.
JThe Blue Devils hit 26 of 41 free throws while Ohio. 2-2. made only 11 of 20.
Ohio coach Danny Nee said the Duke crowd bother his team.
it takes poise and it takes kids who can play without hearing the crowd to win on the road. he said. Duke has a great Gth man." -
Ohio............. ;i3 :|0IM
Duke.....................................,...43 39-82
Turnovers: Ohio 16. Duke 18 Technical fouls: .None.
Officials: Donaiihy.Stoudt, Herring.
A-8.400
W. ( AROI.INA MP
Sharp
Wad^'
MacFarlane
Moore
Lvtle
Cokely
Tipton
Walker
Hawkins
Rogers
Brunson
Totals
\.(. STATE
F(i FT R A F PI
39 5-11 U- 0 6 2 2 10
22 1- 4 (H-0 2
16 2- 3 0- 0 2
19 2- 6 0- 1 2
:i6 9-18 1-2.7 2;) :M0 8-9 2
10 1-1 0-0 1
17' 3- 7 0- 0 4
5 0-1 0-0 0
9 0- 2 0- 2 3
4 0-10-0 0 0 0 0
21KI 26-64 9-14 34 18 29 61
11. FT P. .\ F P!
10 0- 7 " 3- 0 4 - 3 1 .1
36 7-14 13-17 14 1 3 27
32 3- 6 0- 0 13 0 3 6
26 4- 8 2 4 1 .3 1 10
37 7-14 2- 2 3 5 2 16
14 I 5 4 4 1 2 2 6
22 4 6 0- 2 4 1 2 8
4 0- 0 2- 2 0 0 0 2
2 .0- 1 0. 0.0 2 0 0
5 I- I 0 0 0 0 2 2
2 0- (I 0- 0 0 (I 0 0
2 0- 0 2- 2 0 0 0 2
200 27-62 28-39 44 17 16 82
Lady
Down
Buiunr
Charles
McQueen
Webb
Cannon
Mvers
Pierre
Bulls
MeCliiin .
Battle
Thompson
Warren
Totals
\\. ( arulina.. N.l Slate.....
Turnovers: Western Carolina 18. NC Slate 12 Technical fouls: None Officials: Wooldridge.Dodge, Bovd A- 12,4U)
Bears
Tigers
BEAR GRASS - Mary Rogerson and Amy Lilly each scored ten points as Bear Grass High Schools girls basketball team gained a 32-28 vic^ over Williamston last night.
It was the opening game for both teams. The boys teams met in a scrimmage game later in the evening.
Williamston pushed out into a 9-3 lead in the first period of the game, but the Bears fought back in the second frame and turned things around exactly and knotted it at 12-12 at halftime.
The Lady Bears pulled away in the third period, outscoring Williamston. 10-3, to take a 22-15 lead. The Lady Tigers then tried to rally, but fell short.
Bear Grass actually Won the game at the foul line, hitting 12 of 20 free throws while Williamston made only six of 14.
Williamston's scoring was led by Timberly Rodgerson with 15.
Bear Grass returns to action on Friday, hosting Jamesville in its owning Tobacco Belt Conference game, while Williamston begins Northeastern Conference play hosting Bertie on Tuesday.
(iirls Game Williamston 12KI
Bowen 4 1-3 9. Rodgers 5 5-11 15,
Speller 0 0-0 0, "wiiis I Miiitr 0 (MIC, Wilkins 0 0-0 0, A. Speller 1 0-0 2, Edwards 0 0-0 0, Johnson 0 0-0 0, Gardner 0 0-0 0, Harrington 0 0-0 0, Totals II6-14 2H.
Bear Grass 1321 ?
Knox 2 0-1 4, Rogerson 2 6-7 10, Lilly .2 6-10 10, Cowen 3 0-1 6, Land 1 04) 2, Bell 0 0-0 0, Harrison 0 IW) 0. Totals 10 12-2032.
Williamston...........9 3 3 KI-2
Bear Grass............3 9 10 10-32
Conley Captures Fourth Win; Williamston Takes 1st Victory
HOLLYWOOD - D.H. Conleys wrestling Vikings won the final three matches on two pins and a forfeit to sew up a 45-24 mat victory over Wilson Beddingfield last night.
The victory was the fourth straight for the unbeaten Vikings, while Beddingfield falls to 2-2 on the season.
Were very happy with the win, Coach Milt Sherman said. I feel were doing well to be 4-0 at this point in the season.
Four Vikings. Reginald Moore, Shawn Hardy. Martin Anderson and Stacy McCarter all posted their fourth victories of the year to remain unbeaten.
Conley travels to New Bern on Tuesday for^a 7:3ft p.m. match with the Bears.
Summary:
98 Chris Wilder t-Bi^d, David Farris, 9-5,
105 Jackie King (C) p. Ricky Hall. 1:56.
112 - Allen .Nelhercutt (Ci p.
Moving Around ^
Dukes Jay Bilas (21) makes a move around Ohio Universitys John Devereaux (41) during first half action Wednesday night in Durhams Cameron Indoor Stadium. (AP Laserphoto)
Arthur Donovan was the referee for 14 heavyweight championship fights, most of them involving Joe Louis.
Sylvester Hutcherson, 5:12.
'll9 - Reginald Moore iCi p Donald Pope,: 50.
126 Greg Bynum (Bid. Kerry Farris, 9-5.
132 - Donald Bynum (Bi won by injury default over Joel Maye.
138 - Shawn Hardy (Ci p. Anthony Newton, 1:21.
U5 MarlmAnderson (Ci d. Robert WiHms, 16-11.
155 - Tim Langston (B i p. Scott Boyle, 4:00.
167 - Dennis James (B) p. Alton Mobley, 2:13.
185 Ricky Rice (Ci p. Greg Worsley, i -49 195Gerald Harper (Cl won by forfeit.
Hwt - Stacy .McCarter (Ci Keith Poole, 5:35.
ROBERSONWILLE -Williamston High School won its first wrestling match of the season last night, but Roanoke^ Rapids came away with a pair of wins in a double-dual Northeastern Conference meeting at Roanoke.
The Tigers defeated the hosting Redskins of Roanoke. 30-27, but then lost to Roanoke* Rapids, 33-27. Roanoke Rapids also bested Roanoke, 48-18, to come away with a sweep^ _
The victory left Williamston with a 1-3 record on the young season, while Roanoke fails to 0-4.
Roanoke returns to action next Wednesday, traveling to Tarboro where Edenton will also participate. Williamston is idle until after the Christmas break.
Summaries:
Williamstun 3(1, Roanoke 27
98-Double forfeit.
105 - Double forfeit
112-Double forfeit.
119 - Cornell Stanley (Ri d Tony Jones, 12-9.
126 - Brian Whitfield ' W i p .Michael Bunting, 1:;12.
132 - Donald Lewis (W) p Roy Stevenson.:47.
138 - John Anderson iR) p. Jeff Mobley, 1:05.
145 *- Marty Garrett i W i p. Jamie Bowen, 1:;18.
155 - Donnell Lawrence 'Wi p Dwayne Morning. 1:51.
167 David Council (R) p Rustv Willard. 1:10.
185 - Jeffrey Morning iRi won by forfeit,
195 Dennis Smith (H i w on by forfeit.
Hwt - Keith Griffin (Wi won by forfeit, _ .
132 -:14.
138 -:58.
145
Bowen,
- Smith (RRi p Stevenson,
- .Anderson (Ri p Daniels,
-j, Richardson > RR > p
:;(4.
.Morning Rip White, :09. Ricks RRi p Council, 44
- Morning iRi won by
Id;) ifiT-
18.D
forfeit ^ 9S-=13ifiible iorteii Hwt Smith,
- Thompson (RRi p Dennis
2:45,
Roanoke Kapids :>3. Williamston 27
OH I InijhU* t/irfoir 105 - ivey HR won hy lorteit 112 - Gibson I KRi won by forlcit
119-Cotter HRip Jones, 4 15 126 - W'hitlicid W'l d Gordon. 5-3. *
i:i2-Smith HR p Lewis. 54 i:i8 - Mohlev \Vi p Daniels, 3:01
145 - Richardson iRR' d Gar rett.7-6.
1,55 Lawrence IWI p White. :,58
167 - Kicks HR I won by lorleit 185,- Willard IW' worjty iorteit 195 - Double forfeit Hwt - Griffin Wi p Thompson
;U7.
Roanoke Rapids 48, Roanoke 18
'98- Double forfeit
105 Ivey (RR' won by forfeit.
112 Gibson (RRi won hy forfeit.
119 - Cotter (RRi p. Stanley.
3:40.
126 Gordon iRRi p. Bunting. :,58.
SAAD'S SHOE REPAIR
QUALITY SHOF REPAIRING
113 Grande Ave., Phone 758-1228
Mon .Ft. S t AdlicentTo
Sal t ) College View
'Periling In Front " Cleenerf
Sports Calendar
Editor's Sole: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice Friday s .Sports Basketball Hose at Conley 15 p.m. I Roanokeal Edenton i6:30p.m.I Jamesville at Bear Grass 15:13 p.m. i Farmville Central at Beddingfield Ayden Grifton at Havelock North Umoir at Greene Central Columbia at Chocowinity Wrestling Washington at West Carteret i7 p m. i
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^0 The Daily Reflector, Gfeenvilie, N.C_Thursday. Decembers, 1983 ^
Baker Emerging As Top Exec Choice
, ____Tiw..oc ..rkn have nmp hflme runs and 88 runs batted and six saves last season, Chicago. The Expos and Cubs Cubs wanted, and Luca
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - little willing to pay whatever slu^er Gorman Tlwin^, who co^it^. in the Min- were happy to oblige. 2.87.17 saves) to Montr
Thursday, Decembers. 1983
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) -Pitching remains the top shopping priority at the winter baseball meetings, and James A. Baker's status as a candidate for the commissioners job remains a leading topic of conversation
The White House chief of staff had emerged as the No. 1 choice to succeed Bowie Kuhn, while no one was saying so for the record. Some cold water was tossed on the conjecture, however, by a published report
The Washington Post said in todav's editions that Baker is almost certain to turn down the job if It IS offered. An unidentified source close to Baker was quoted as saying it was '99 percent sure Baker would not take the job. even though he was interested in it when he uas approached by major league team owners several weeks ago
On the trading front, teams apparently were more than a
little willing to pay whatever price needed to get pitching.
The Minnesota Twins surrendered their only 1983 All-Star representative Wednesday, swapping outfielder Gary Ward to Texas for three players including a pair of highly-regarded arms - Mike Smithson and John Butcher.
Montreal and the Chicago Cubs both came up with important new hurers in a three-way deal constructed by San Diego General Manager Jack^McKeon, The Padres' payoff was three young play ers including a pitcher.
The Expos bolstered their bullpen with the addition of Gary Lucas from San Diego and delivered starter Scott Sanderson to Chicago In exchaiige, the Cubs sent two young sluggers, first baseman Carmelo Martinez and third baseman Fritz Connally. and reliever Craig Lefferts to the Padres.
In Wednesdays other deal.
slugger Gorman Thomas, who had exercised his right to demand a trade, was dealt by Cleveland along with infielder Jack Perconte to Seattle fw second baseman Tony Bernazard.
Meanwhile, Cincinnati signed two-time National League batting champion Dave Parker, who leaves Pittsburgh as a free agent after 10 seasons
Executive Council meetings started the major league portion of the convention today and a number of owners were discussing Baker, whose name has surfaced as a successor for Kuhn.
No comment on this one or any other name involved. said Milwaukee owner Bud Selig. chairman of the search
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committee. Well have some comment after my ronarks to the owners tomorrow.
Baker, in Washington, offered no help whm asked by reporters, Are you going to play ball? His only response was an underhand sweep of his pitching arm.
President Reagan's chief spokesman, Larry Speakes, was just as elusive.
The Rangers came to these meetings determined to add some offense and they had the pitching necessary to get Ward, who celebrated his 30th birthday Tuesday.
We consider Gary Ward a multi dimensional player, said Ranger Manager Doug Rader. He has unlimited capabilities.
Ward batted .278 with 19
iMHne runs and 88 runs batted last season and has a career .285 batting average. The price for him, however, was higii. Smithson was 10-14 with a 3.91 earned run average as a rookie last season and is considered a top prospect.
We traded a premium pitcher for a premium outfielder, Rader said. For us to give up Smithson was just as painful as for them to give up Ward.
Smithson moves into the Twins starting rotation and Butcher. 6-6 with a 3.51 ERA
and six saves last season, joins Ron Davis in the Minnesota bullpen. We need people to get us (through the early and middle innings) to Davis, said Billy Gardner, manager of the Twins.
The Twins also obtained minor league catcher Sam Sorce in the deal and completed a tmsy day by resigning infielder John Castino to a four-year contract.
San Diegos McKeon was determined to put together the deal that sent Lucas to Montreal and Sanderson to
Chicago. The Expos and Cubs were haippy to oblige.
We couldnt have done this without Jack, said Dallas Green, general manager of the Cubs, who had been stalemated in talks with Montreal's John McHale until McKeon came along. Im not sure J(^ and I could have worked it out. We were not compatable.
McKeon solved that, routing Sanderson (6-7 with a 4.65 ERA last year) to Chicago to give Green the starter the
Cubs wanted, and Lucas (5-8. 2.87.17 saves) to Montreal for the left-hander they were after.
For his efforts. McKeon came away with three young prospects. Martinez hit .251 with 31 homers and 94 runs batted in at Iowa and finished the season at Chicago, batting .258 with six homers and 16 RBIs in 29 games. Connally hit .288 with 22 homers and 85 RBIs at Iowa and Lefferts was 3-4 with a 3.13 ERA as a rookie with the Cubs.
Defense To Carry Rams
SPORT
I
By (HARl.lF HARRISON K( I Basketball ( oat h
.Another vear and another column. .No profound words of wisdom from the mean ole coach this_^week but a loUf bits and pieces from the Coach's Corner about others and ECU's own.
First of all. I would like to mention the awesome accomplishment of U.N'C's basketball coach Dean Srnith. -Coaching as long as he has )21 years) at Carolina is an accolade in itself. Surviving in the coaching profession is difficult and Dean has not only survived, he and his program have flourished. A hearty salute to Dean Smith and his .5(K) wins at Carolina. He's not only a tough one that survived an effigy hanging m his vounger years; he s not only a good one - he's a great one and a hearty thank you from this coach to another And in the same vein, with words of congratulations. 1 would like to thank Ed Emory, his staff, and players for an entertaining and fun vear of ECU Pirate football. Unfortunately. we re not in a bowl although. I feel, most deserving. ECU's football team brought all of East Carolina University and all of its programs needed national recognition by their superb performances.
Thanks to you. also Pirate football, and may I add. 1 hope that your season can start a reaction within our student body and community to keep the enthusiasm going.
Our basketball team is young and very mistake-prone because of this vouth. I knew it would struggle in December and January, biit the effort is there and your support needs to be there as'it was with our football team if we are going to create and sustain any kind of successful athlete program image, both in the state of North Carolina and on a national level. We need a continued band of supporters and fans. 1 hope we can develop and all be a part of a following that will carry over from fall to winter, to spring and then again into the fall and not a group on a band wagon that jumps on and
off as the wagon speeds up or slows down.
Football made a prodigious step in the right direction to help all of us here at ECU. 1 hope you'll all help us in basketball and those of us in other sports by showing your support by your presence at our games.
To The Sports Editor:
This past Saturday, WNCT-TV Channel 9, broadcast the movie Quarterback Princess. It was aiT Bxtr^meiy touching movie based on a true story. For those of you that didnt watch, it was the story of a young lady who challenged tradition by trying out for a position on her high .school football team. She beat the odds and won the position of Quarterback. She was a strong, determined, and courageous young lady that knew what she wanted and went after it. She didn't expect a lot of publicity, but she certainly got it. A female playing football just wasnt normal. She was unusual and different, and some of her classmates treated her that way too, but with her teammates, it was a completely different story. They respected her for her talents, and one of them even nominated her for Homecoming Princess. The teammates, knowing she needed a gown for Homecoming, took up a collection and bought her one. She had absolutely no idea that she would win, but she did! She walked up on that stage, accepted her crown, and a football from her teammates as a keepsake. She was moving to Canada and wouldnt be there the next year. The movie ended with her standing on the state, football in hand, with tears running down her cheeks, felling her teammates That she would always, ALWAYS, remember them.
I think that any team that is able to have such a player, the sky would be the limit. Strong, determined, and courageous athletes working together on any team are hard to beat. This Quarterback Princess touched the lives of every teammate she had and together they were awesome. We come into this world with nothing, and were going to leave with nothing, its what we do with our lives in between that matters!
Linda M. Pierce Rt. 3, Box 448-C Greenville
(Letters to the editor are welcome, but must be limited to 300 words or less. The editor reserves the right to edit longer letters. Letters must be signed; no unsigned letters will be published.)
BvWOODYPEELE Reflector Sports Editor SNOW HILL - Greene Central coach Lewis Godwin got a little bit of a surprise last week in the opening game of the year when the Rams took a 4543 win over Wilson Beddingfield. It marked the first time the Rams had beaten that school.
"I felt that by the end of the year we might play decently, but our defense against Beddingfield was really good. We were down 13-1 at one point and came back to win, Godwin said.
The defense will have to carry the Rams this year, the coach says, since the offense doesnt have the big punch to win on its own.
Two siartei's reiurn to this years team, 5-10 guard Boneree Johnson and 6-4 center Theodore Edwards. Johnson, however, didnt play until this Tuesday night, having been ineligible until then.
'Two other lettermen join them} 64) forward Elmer Dixon and 6-1 forward Anthony Thompson.
While Johnson was sidelined. Otis Barnes, a 5-9 point guard, filled in for him, while Maurice Edwards, a 5-10 guard, occupied the other starting spot.
Godwin is hopeful of getting help soon from another sidelined player, guard Mike Cogdell, currently out recovering from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. He also feels he will get good help from guards Mike Fulton and Mike Warren.
So far this year, the Rams have built a 2-1 record, beating Beddingfield and then splitting with South Lenoir.
"We have some offensive problems, but our defense fell apart against South Lenoir (in the loss). It didnt come back until the second half of the other game (with South Lenoir). Weve got some new guys, so its going to take us a little time to become consis-tant. But we are striving to be more consistant on both offense and defense.
While Godwin said that the field goal shooting has been somewhat erratic - in the 43-45 percent level - hes
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more worried about the free throw shooting. The best weve done in three games is 56 percent, he said. That wont help you much. It seems like when we make the first one, we miss the second. Its just a lack of concentration. With a lack of height, (}odwin feels that the Rams are going to have to work hard to get position. I thought that really would be one of our strong points; but so far we havent looked that good.
In the Eastern Carolina Conference race, Godwin looks to Southwest Edgecombe to be the leader. Theyre head and shoulders over the rest of us, he said. But he also likes the looks of Southern Nash, North Pitt and Ayden-Grifton.
I really dont know where well finish. Im hoping that' well win some early since we have so many games on the road in the latter part of the season. If we can get off to a good start, maybe we can come in around the middle of the league. Of course, we want towin them all.
Greene Centrals girls, off to a 3-0 start, will get their big test Friday night when they face strong North Lenoir. In the three wins, coach Brenda Dail doesnt feel theyve really faced a toughic.
The Lady Rams have plenty of experience, with all five starters from last year and the top two reserves all returning. Were still young. Dail said, were mostly juniors. ^
There is one senior in the starting lineup, 5-3 point guard Allison Battle. Joining her in the backcourt is 5-7 Cindi Hicks, the leading scorer on the team.
The front court finds 5-8 Anntionette Wilkes, and 5-8 Melody Brown at the forwards
and 5-9 Cynthia Jones at center.
The two top people off the bench who are back are 5=9 senior center Sharon Wilkes and 5-6 swing Sharon Myatt. All but the two listed are juniors.
Dail also feels she has some strength in 5-8 swing Kim Rogers, a freshman who has seen actign in all three games. Shes learning the routine very nicely. the coach,said. A fourth reserve, sophomore Dalen Herring saw some action last year and is expected to see more this season.
So far things have gone well, but North Lenoir will be our first real test. We'll find out then how good we are. " There has been an improvement in the I.,ady Ram shooting so far. both from the field and the foul line, and that pleases Dail. One of our goals was to improve our percentages this year."
Rebounding has been strong too, but Dail says that th = Lady Rams really haven't been challenged for position under the board, or gone up against players their own size.
We re a little quicker this year, and that helps the defense. The girls know what the other girls are going to do. too. and can anticipate them '
Dail favors North Pitt in the Eastern Carolina battle, because of their height. She also feels that Southwest Edgecombe will be in there because of their fine tradition, but she doesn't expect the Lady Cougars to dominate the league as in the past.
And Im going to be disappointed if we're not in the top three I really think we have the potential to be right up there if we can control the game like I think we can."
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SCOREBOARD
The Daily Reflector, Gfeenville, N C
Thursday. Decembef 8,1983 17
Bowling
Thursda> NighI Mixrd W
Home Cleaners Bonanza Shoney's
Alley Cats.....
Rug Doctor Team 6
Hang Ten.............
Strugalers HigHTimes The Four' V s Butt Busters Team 10
Granny^^s Fried Chicken
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Team#?............................,19 33
Ten Down.............................18 34
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Dial-A Pizza ...................16 36
Phase Four.........................12 40
High game, Ed Diehl 255. Pal Cannon 222: high series. Garry Watson 638; Pat Cannon 641.
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High game. Martin Van Sant 223. Dot Van Sant 172: high series. Martin Van Sant 619: Joyce Cates 442
College Basketball
Bv The Associated Press EAST
Albany St. 63. Oneonta SI 54 Army 91, Kings Point 64 BluelieldSI 102, Alderson Broaddus 91 Boston Coll 90. Brown 59 Bridgeport 67. Cent. Connecticut 60 Buffalo90. Oswego SI. 74 C W Post 86, Pace 73 CanisiusTS. BuffaloSt. 76 Cheyney61. Bloomspurg St 50 Concord 83, L of Charleston 80 Delaware 85. Lovola. Md. 83 DelawareVal 8J. FDC-Madison74 Drew 81. Stevens Tech 66 Fairmont St. 50, West Liberty 45 Fordham 78, Columbia 65. OT Franklin & Marshall 74, Moravian .54 GlassboroSt 67,Kean58 GlenvilleSt 77. Wheeling71.()T Hamilton 88. RIT75 Hofstra 71. Wagner 66 lonaOl.DetroiFsi JerseyCitvSl 73. Wm Paterson 71 LeMoyne 4. Clarkson 57 Manhattanville 87. Dominican 73 Mansfield 66. KutztownSt 5:1 .Marietta Coll. 80, Bethany. W. Va 75 Mercvhurst 84, Clarion St 74 Montclair St 98. Ramapo72 Muskingum 64, Carnegie Mellon 57 .'Vavyao. L-ehigh67 Nazareth 58, St John Fisher 55 .New .lerspv Tech >*4 Yechiva 57
New York Poly 59. Cathedral 54 New York Tech 7, Queens Coll. 65 .Northeastern 78. Merrimack 54 Phila Pharmacy89. Haverford7i Point Park 112. Alliance. Pa. 79 Providence 64. Marquette 60 Rutgers 63, Rider 62. OT St Bonaventure73. Niagara 69 St Vincent 60. Indiana. Pa. 58 SUNY Purchase 66. Stony Brook 65 Seton Hall 62. ManhatUn 45 Shepheid 66. Davis k Elkins 63 Shippensburg St. 56. E Stroudsburg St.
Siena 76. Vermont 68 SUtei. Island 83. York. N Y 73 Stockton St . 85. Rutgers-Camden 76 Wash AJeff 78.0berlin69 W Chester St. 75, MillersvilleSt 72 W Virginia Tech 95. W Virginia St 77 W.Va Wesleyan 82. Salem76 Westminster 82, Pitt-Bradford 68 West Virginia 72, Robert Morris 62 Widener 61, Muhlenberg 45
StilTH
Alabama 87, E Tennessee SI 64 Ark Little Rock 60. SE Louisiana 48 Bethune-Cookman 88. Fla Memorial 78 Duke 82. Ohio U 63 Elon66, N.C.-Greensboro62 Greensboro Coll 84. Methodist 74 High Point 62. Atlantic Christian 60 Louisville 79. Iowa 58 N.C. Central 76. Elizabeth City St. 74 N. Carolina St 82. W Carolina 61 New Orleans 87. Mississippi 73 Pembroke St 80. Catawba 74 Roanoke 73. BluefieldColl. 71 St. Paul's 93, Fayetteville St. 73 Sewanee70. Fisa 54 Southern U. 74. Spring Hill Coll 62 Tn -Chattanooga 79. The Citadel 67 Tampa 61. Urbana 60 Tennessee 75, Morehead St 63 Tennessee St 84. Grambling 63 VM175, Averett58 Virginia Union BS.Coppin St, 82.20T Wash 4 Lee 86. Cathofic U 70 MIDWEST Adrian 96. Nazareth 49 Akron 90, Hiram 60 Augsburg 82. Gustav Adolphus 76 BanSI 77, E Illinois 76, OT Briarcliff94,S Dakota 90 Carleton81.St. Marys. Minn. 71, OT Carthage 79, Aurora 75 Cent Methodist 72. Columbia Coll 49 Defiance 90. Manchester 80 Dordt 68. Dakota St 65 Findlay 91. Bluffton75 Grandview69, Central. Iowa, .56 Heidelberg 87. Windsor. Ont. 79 Ind. St. Evansville 65. Indiana SE 62 John Carroll 72. Kenyon 51 Kansas St 65. Centenary 58 LeMoyne 84. Clarkson 57 Miami. Ohio 67. Davtoii^59 Minn Duluth97. St. .Scnolastica 57 MoorheadSt. 77. St. Thomas 68 NW Missouri St 85. Dana. Neb 55 Nebraska 82, SE Missouri St. 61 Northwestern 40, Notre Dame 36. OT Ohio Wesleyan 57. Capital 52 Olivet 91. Aquinas 74 Ottawa 92. McPherson 69 PittsburgSt 75. Mo Southern 69 Quincy 96. Mo St, Louis 76 Rio Grande 105. Pikeville66 S. Illinois 69, St, Louis 67 St John's. Minn 83. StOlaf 66 St Joseph's. Ind. 72. NE Illinois S3 Temple 79. Bowling Green 70 Upper Iowa 87. Winona St 77
Valparaiso 43. Lewis 41 Washington 54. Missouri 49 WiscoKin90,N.IUinoU88 ,
Wis.-Milwaukee 72, Rosary. 111. 64 Wooster 58. Ashland 56 Wright St 83. Imfiana Central 71 SOUTHWEST Angelo Si . 64. Midwestern 63 Baylor 67. Texas-Arlington 65 Oklahoma St. 60, Cenfaliieoun St. 45 Pan American 101, Trinity 56 Texas Tech 79. New Mexico St. 66 FAR WEST CalSt.-SacramentoTS. Hawaii-Loa 69 Cal Tech 78, Pacific Christian 27 Colorado69. Colorado St. 58 Gonz^ 86. E. Washington 57 Nevada-Reno 57. California 54 S. Utah 68. Bri^m Young-Hawaii 66 EXHIBITIOV Spirit Express 74. Virginia Tech 72
NBA Standings
By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Divisioa
W L Pet. G
Miami
Baltimore
East
W L T Pci. PF PA 0 714 4 212
571 259 297 500 247 258 500 292 263 429 225 323
Pittsburgh
Geveland
Cincinnati
Houston
10 4
8 6 0
7 7 0
7 7 0
6 8 0
Central
0 0 0 0
TANK SFNAMARA
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
9 5
8 6 6 8 1 13 West
y-L.A.Raiders II 3
Denver 8 6
Seattle 7 7
Kansas City 5 9
San Diego
x-Dallas 12 x-Washington 12 St. Louis Philadelphia N Y. Giants
National Conference East
643 304 266 .571 299 291 429 315 273 07i 244 413
.786 386 290 .571 264 260 .500 362 379 .357 300 309 .357 303 394
Philadelphia Boston New York New Jersey Washington
15 4
IS 6 13 7
9 9 9 11
Milwaukee
Detroit
AtlanU
Cleveland
Chicago
Indiana
Central Division
13 6
to 9 10 10 7 14 5 12 4 15
789
.714
.650
500
.450
684
.526
.500
.333
.294
.211
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwesl Division Dallas 13 6 .684
UUh 12 9 .571
Denver 11 9 550
Kansas City 9 10 .474
Houston-----------7 13 350
San Antonio 7 15 .318
Los Angeles Portland Golden State Seattle San Diego Phoenix
Pacific Division
13 13 8 10 10 9 II 7 14 14
.722
.619
.500
450
.333
300
Detroit Green Bay Minnesota Chicago Tampa Bay
2 2
6 7
5 9
3 to Central
.857 452 287 .857 479 300 .462 309 397 357 209 271 .250 233 299
571 315 249 .500 396 407 500 283 315 429 269 267 143 212 345
571 328 299 571 367 266 500 275 294 429 315 344
Wednesdays Games Philadel^ia 133. Denver 128 Cleveland 106. Atlanta 92 Boston too. Indiana 95 Milwaukee 103. Houston 101 Washington 114. Dallas 112 UUh 116. Portland 111 San Diego 106. San Antonio 102 Thursday's Games New York at Phoehix Kansas City at Los Angeles Detroit at Golden Slate
Friday's Games Denver vs Boston at Hartford New Jersey at Philadelphia Atlanta at Indiana Milwaukee at Cleveland Houston at Chicago San Antonio vs Utahat Las Vegas Detroit at Portland New York at San Diego Dallas at Seattle
NFL Standings
By The Associated Press American rnnference
2 12 Wnl
L A Rams 8 6 (
San Francisco 8 6 i
New Orleans 7 7 i
Atlanta 6 8 i
y-clinched division title x-clinchedplayoff spot
SaUirday s Games Pittsburgh at New York Jets Atlanta at Miami
Sunday's Games Chicago at Minnmota 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's Game Green Bay at Tampa Bay
^ NHLStartdings
By The Associated Press ^ Wales Conference Patrick Division
W L T PU GF GA
NY Isles NY Rangers Philadelphia Washington Pittsburgh New Jersey
Boston Buffalo Quebec Montreal Hartford
18 17 9
15 9
12 15 6 19 5 21
38 127 102 38 125 107 33 117 97
26 98 108
15 87 119
II 78 127
Adams Division
17 7 2 36 125 81
Minnesota Chicago Toronto St. Louis Detroit
16 10
16 II
13 14
11 12 . ..
Campbell Conference Norris Division 15 10 3
12 14 2
II 13 3
11 14 3
10 14
35 114 107
35 146 105
27 no Ml
92 99
33 136 128 26 101 III 25 115 128 25 111
Smvthr Division
'22 91 108
Holmes Not Quitting
PHILLIPSBURG, N.J. (AP) - Larry Holmes, the World Boxing Councils undefeated heavyweight champion, is talking about promoting his own fights, adding that he has no immediate plans to meet No. 1 challenger Greg Page.
Holmes, 34, who had said he might announce his retirement at Wednesdays news conference at his hotel here, instead said, Im not going to quit and I'm not going to be forced to quit by any organiza-tioil or by any promoter. I will not honor my contract for Greg Page unless they increase the purse.
The fight Holmes seems to want most is one with South African Gerrie Coetzee, the World Boxing Association champion. But Wednesday he said that because of media criticism he would now fight Coetzee only in the United States.
Holmes also talked about possible fights with John Tate, the former WBA champion, and unbeaten Pinklon Thomas.
He mentioned a $4-million purse for a fight against Tate and $10 million for a Coetzee fight. Many boxing observers consider both figures to be vastly inflated.
Promoter Don King and Holmes have an agreement for a $2.55-million purse for a Page fight.
Holmes has a contract with King to make a mandatory defense against Page in Felp ruary or March. If he doesnt, the WBC is expected to strip him of his title recognition.
But while challenging the WBC and King, Holmes also said he would go to Las Vegas, Nev., today to confer with Jose Sulaiman, WBC president, and King at the WBC convention at Caesars Palace.
Holmes is upset about WBC pressure to meet the Page commitment, noting that he has until March to fulfill that contract.
The champion, 45-0 with 32 knockouts, said early in the news conference that Murad Muhammad would be his exclusive promoter. But later he said Muhammad would serve as his agent. If you deal with me, you have to deal with Murad, the champion said.
He added, Im promoting my own fights. Im Don King with a haircut.
Holmes was introduced at the news conference as the heavyweight champion of the world and also a businessman. The champion then emphasized that boxing was, for him, strictly business fom now on.
I feel I should fight one
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Activate or lockout groups of channels quickly Scan channels 1-10 11-16 or both
Priority
Lets you sample a designated frequency on Channel 1 every two seconds to prevent missing important calls
0n/0 Volume.
Power switch and continuously variable volume
Automatic squelch control.
Factory set for easier operation or manually adjust to block out unwanted noise
Dual srjn speed.
Scan 'itei' ler 5 or 15 channe:': < ach second
/Umll key
Sets lower and upper frequency limits for Automatic Search Also used to step down through frequencies in Manual Search
...and Value.
single Antenna.
Single telescoping antenna ' provides optimized reception without the need tor long low band antenna
Automatic lockout. .
By-pass any channel not of current interest tor taster scanning cycle
Patented SelecUve Scan Delay
Adds a two-second delay on desired channels to prevent missing transmissions when calls and answers areon"^ the same frequency
Weather key
Allows instant reception ol government weather forecasts anytime at the touch of a key.
A /Hold key
Stops searching action to hold on frequency of interest Also used to step up through frequencies in Manual Search
CrystaMree.
Program thousands of frequencies with pushbutton ease.. and without a single crystal needed
Oedmal display
Bright vacuum fluorescent display shows frequency being receiv^
One piece keyboard.
Sealed keyboard with key locator ridges for positive, easy operation
8 band coverage.
Includes Low. High, UHF and UHF- T bands. 2-meter and 70-centrmeter Amateur ( ham ) bands extended Land-Mobile bands
Direct channel acceu.
Go directly to any channel, without stepping through other channels
Automatic search.
Seek and find new active frequencies automatically between frequency limits you select
UL Usted/FCC Certified.
Tested tor safe quality design and manufacture
107 Trade Street Phone 756-2291 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-6:30 MK. Saturday 8:30-6:30
Edmonton Calgary Vancouver Winnipeg Los Angeles
46 171 116
26 98 113
25 120 127
21 113 136
20 118 140
Wednesday's Games
N Y Rangers7, Washington5 New Jersey 6. W innipeg 3 St Louis 4. Toronto 3
Minnesota 7. Detroit 2--
Chicago 4. Buffalo 2 '
Edmonton 5, Vancouver 4 N Y Islanders 4. Los Angeles 4. tie Ttiursdav's Games .Montreal at Boston Toronto at Hartford Chicago at Philadelphia Calgary at Washington
Friday's Games No games scheduled
Saturday's Games Buffalo at Boston Montreal at Washington Philadelphia at New Jersey Winnipeg at Hartford Calgarv at Toronto Edmonton at V'ancouver Detroit at St N.Y Islanders at M
Quebec at Los ^
Transactions
Bv Tke Associated Press BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS Acquired
Tonv Bernazard. second baseman, from the'Seattle Mariners in exchange for Gorman Thomas, outfielder, and Jack Perconte, second baseman MINNESOTA TWI.NS- Acquired Mike Smithson and John Butcher, pitchers, and Sam .Sorce, catcher, from the Texas Rangers in exchange for Gary Ward, outfielder
Signed John Castino. infielder. to a four-vear contract new YORK YANKEES-Signed Mike O'Berry. catcher, and assigned him to Columbus of the International League TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Signed Alfredo Griffin, shortstop, to a five-year contract
Vatkuial League - -
CINCINNATI REDS-Slgnea Dave Parker, outfielder, to a two-year contract
MONTREAL EXPOS-Acquired Craig Lefferts, pitcher, Carmelo Martinez, first baseman, and Fritz Connally. third baseman from the Chicago Cubs in exchange for Scott Sanderson, pitcher Traded Lefferts. Martinez and Connallv to the San DiMo Padres for Gary Lucas, pitcher. - ^
FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS-Cut Bob Parsons, punter Signed Rav Stachowicz. punter DALLAS COWBOYS-Signed Don Smerek. defensive tackle, to a series of one-vear contracts HOLSTON OlLERS-Signed Kevin Turner linebacker
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS- Placed Henry Marshall, wide receiver, oh the injured reserve list Signed Rav Yakavonis. nose tackle
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Lifted the suspension of Ted Brow n, running back I'niled .Stales Football League ARIZONA WRANGLERS-.Acquired the rights to Tim Norman, guard, and Tyrone Howard, defensive end, and received a fourth-round draft pick from the San Antonio Gunslingers m exchange for the rights to Brad Wright, quarterback, and James Bell and Mark Allen, defensive backs PITTSBURGH MAL'LERS-Signed Larrv Swider. punier
-H(kk:v~
National Hockey League LOS ANGELES KIN'GS-Sent Kevin LaVallee. left wing, to New Haven of the American Hockey League PITTSBURGH PENGl INS-Called up Tom O'Regan, center, from Baltimore ol the American Hockey League
N.C. Scoreboard
By The Associated Press
Menstollege Basketball
Duke 82. Ohio 63
Elon66. N Carahna-Greensboro62 Greensboro 84, Methodist 74
High Point 62. Atlantic Christian 60 N Carolina Central 76. Elizabeth Citv St 74
N Carolina St 82 W Carolina 61
W omul's College Basketball_
E Tehnessee5t iSTLehoir-Rhvne 56 Elizabeth City St 87, V Carolina Central 77 High Point 66. Radford 64 Shaw 96. Bennett 60 Virginia 78 Wake Forest 69 Winston-Salem St 78. \ Carolina AiT
64
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year for Larry Holmes, he said. "I remember fighting nine times one year (1975. three years before he won the title) for a total of $18,000. 1 really paid my dues."
Holmes has earned an estimated $25 million in the ring and has made 17 defenses of the WBC crown.
SUPERSTITIOUS JACK PONTE VEDRA. Fla. (AP) - Many athletes are superstitious and pro golfers are no exception ... not even the mighty Jack Nicklaus.
The Golden Bear admitted he always had three pennies in his pocket when he playea a tournament. He added that he wasnt sure it was a superstition but he did it anyway.
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'Ig The Daity Reflector. Gfeenville. N C
Thursday, December 8,1963
Mutual Jubilant Feeling
On Welcome To Marines
By DENNIS PATTERSON Associatfd Press Writer CAMP LEJELNE. N.C (API - .As 1,71)0 Marines who survived the bombing of their Beirut headquarters returned to blaring bands and the arms of loved ones, their commander said the jubilant feeling was mutual.
"They have been good to the country, and the country has been good to them." said Maj. pen. A1 Gray who welcomed the returnees Wednesday at the port of Morehead City. N C . where tearful relatives cheered and waved signs and flags Thousands of yellow ribbons fluttered along the 60 mile route from the port to Camp Lejeune. where the returning 24th Marine Amphibious Init is stationed and where more reunions
were held for the men who lost 240 comrades when a terrorist s dynamite-packed truck exploded Oct. 23. The unit also lost several members to snipers bullets.
"Thank God. he's safe," said Gladys Harding as her son. Pfc. Keith Ezell, embraced his wife for the first time in seven months
"We had a lot of fan mail over there." said Lance Cpl. Paul Schoolfield "People wrote us and told us they were thinking of us. We knew they were."
Even so. Gray, commander of the 2nd Marine Division of which the 24th MAC IS a part, said, the hero s welcome "was a real uplift for these men."
The returnees, wearing camouflage uniforms and carrying backpacks and
rifles, had spent a violeoi half-year in Lebanon as part of the multinational peacekeeping force.
"Its been too long. I've -been gone too long. I cant believe Im really back home." said Sgt. George WalkCT.
"People were out in the streets waving and cheering like we were the biggest heroes in the world. Walker said.
Another Marine in a quieter reunion, leaned his rifle against the glass of a telephone booth and wiped his eye as he said into the receiver. "Hello. Mom. Im home,"
Pfc William C. Kilmer Jr. on Wednesday saw his son. William Kilmer III. for the first time His wife. Barbara, drove from Pittsburgh, Pa..
Tuesday and waited all day We^e^ay to meet her husband at Camp Geiger, part of the Camp Lejeune complex.
"I can't describe it, Mrs. Kilmer said. Its just too wonderful to have him
home
Gray, the commander, had jokingly asked the Marines before dismissing them for the homecoming: Charlie Company, are you ready to go and do what has to be done*?"
The reply, shouted in unison; "Sir. yes sir."'
Asked what he planned to do during his leave. Marine hospital corpsman Joe Sutton, whose 7-year-old son Spanky clung to his leg. said. "I'm just going to stay home.
A Little Lead Affects Brains
VVELCO.ME. HONEY - Sgt. Larry Millen is greeted by his wife Christine as he arrives at Camp Geiger near Jacksonville, N.C. on his return from Beirut. ( AP Laserphoto)
CHAPEL HILL. N.C. (AP) - Children s brains are affected by lead at levels far below w'hat was previously considered safe, researches at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill say.
Studies of electrical activity in the brains of 100 children showed increasingly pronounced changes as concentrations of lead measured m their blood increased from six to 55 migrograms per deciliter, said Dr. Stephen Schroeder clinical psychologist at UNCs Biological Research Center.
The current environmental lead standard. Set by the Centers tor Disease Control in 1979 as the maximum safe level that children can absorb. IS 30 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood.
"Apparently, almost any amount of ead can alter brain waves, but we arent sure yet when these changes become important to health." he said. "We dont' have firm evidence to be able to say that below a particular
level youre safe and above it youre not."
^Working with Schroeder on the study were Dr. David Otto and Dr. Vernon Benignus of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Paul Mushak, associate professor of pathology at UNC.
The study has found no physical signs of lead poisoning in the children with very low lead levels, Schroeder said. But the toxic metal may have subtle effects on the childrens physical and mental abilities that need to be understood and prevented, he said.
About half the subjects in the research, who ranged in age from 11 months to 6 years in 1977. are the children of people employen at a Raleigh battery factory who brought lead dust home on their clothing. Schroeder said. The others have been identified as being at risk of lead exposure because they lived in older homes with peeling paint.
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PATRIOTIC WELCOME - Schoolchildren from back from Lebanon at the port in Morehead City
Beaufort .N.C. Elementary School wave flags and Wednesday. (.AP Laserphoto)
ribbons as they hold a sign welcoming .Marines
Wliile heavy absorption of lead can cause convulsions or brain damage and results in about 200 deaths in the United States per year, even reiatively small arnounts can disturb formation of hemoglobin. the blood protein that carries oxygen to tissues.
First Satellite
Launch In 1958
PRINCETON, N.J.1AP1-The United States launched its first communications satellite 25 years ago.
The satellite. SCORE, was
produced by RCA for the .Army Signal Corps. It was .placed in orbit by an .Atlas missile in December of 1958 and relayed voice conversations. code and teletype messages.
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^S/<
1 Ka
Steven Kanor watches as 3-year-old Ruthie Carroll plays with a toy in Kanors workshop in Hastings-On
Hudson, N.Y. Kanor designs toys* f# hahandicapped children. (AP Laserphoto) ^
Free Medical Care^ Failing Meet A Target
B> DANIEL Q. HANEY AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - People who get free medical care arent much healthier than / those who pay part of their own doctor bills - although costless treatment does help poor people with high blood pressure or vision problems, a study today shows.
The research, part of a $78; million study, demonstrates* that people are not necessari-jy Qfj whsn thsy c tc the doctor more often. It provides ammunition for those who say cutting back insurance benefits is a way to hold down the ra{Md rise in th^rice of medical care.
The project enrolled families in a variety of medical insurance plans. Some got unlimited free care, while others had to pay part of their bills.
People with free care visited their doctors and were hospitalized a third more often.
For the average, non-elderly American, ie additional health care bought by free care didnt do very ihuch, and I dont think
theres much doubt about that, said Dr. Robert H. Brook, who directed the study for the Rand Corp.
There are some advantages to free care. The researchers found that poor peoples high blood pressure drops slightly, and nearsighted people take advantage of the program to get glasses, so their vision improves a bit.
Otherwise, people who avoid doctors because nf the expense are about as healthy.
The federally financed research, conducted on 3,958 people in ^,005 families, was published in todays New England Journal of Medicine.
Children, the elderly and those with serious disabilities were excluded from the experiment.
Dr. Arnold Reiman, the journals editor, criticized the study for following only relatively healthy adults, employing only a few limited measures of health and observing patients for only three to five years. Still, in an editorial he called it a
Sanford, Belk For Faircloth
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Former Gov. Terry Sanford and former Charlotte Mayor Jolm Belk endorsed Democratic gubernatorial candidate D.M. Lauch Faircloth Wednesday night.
The two made their announcements at a dinner and strategy session involving about 300 Faircloth supporters from across the state.
Faircloth, a former state secretary of commerce, told the group hes confident he can win in 1984 because he has good advertising, a strong organization and the
right position on issues that concern North Carolinians.
He said the issues will be jobs, education, and which candidate has the ability to lead the state. "
RESIGNS POST SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -The ambassador to the Unit-ed States. Enrique Valenzuela, has resigned and will return to Chile in January, the government announced.
landmark study.
The researchers found that the more people had to pay for medical care, the less of it they used.
Free health care had no effect on the bad health habits that are linked to heart trouble and some kinds of cancer. Even though people getting free care saw doctors once, twice or more often a year, they were just as likely to smoke, be overweight and have high blood cholesterol levels as the other people.
The free care plans effect on blood pressure was its major benefit. This can save lives among people who are at high risk. If 1,000 50-year-old men at elevated risk were enrolled in a free insurance plan, we could anticipate that 10.5 of them, who would otherwise have died, would be alive five years later, they wrote.
But the doctors said there are cheaper and more efficient ways of accomplishing this, such as screening programs.
The study was conducted between 1974 and 1982 in Seattle; Dayton, Ohio; Fitchburg and Franklin County, Mass., and Charleston anci Georgetown County, S.C.
Families were given either free care or were randomly assigned to 14 different cost-sharii^ insurance plans. Some families had to pay as much as 15 percent of their income on health bills.
Designs Toys For Handicapped
By MARLENE AIG Associated Press Writer HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON, N.Y. (AP) - Bernadette Carroll had nearly despaired of finding toys for her handicapped 3-year-old daughter - even the simplest Jack-in-the-box was beyond the childs scope.
But then she discovered Dr. Steven Kaqor, the special Santa who makes special kids Christmas dreams come true.
In his basement workshop crammed with toys, wires, batteries and switches, Kanor devises means by which even the most severely handicapped child can play.
No matter what handicap a kid has, I can design a toy . he can operate, said the 47-year-old Kanor, a biomedical engineer by training. I can make a switch that operates on an eye blink, a touch, a sip, a puff.
Kanor hadnt set out to become Kris Kringle to the nations 200,000 to 300,000 handicapped children, but now that he does it regularly, he shows an almost religious zeal.
There are almost no toys for these kids, but they want toys as much as other kidc, he said recently.
Once a child learns how to use a switch to make a top spin or a train run, he can operate a computer, he can communicate and can be educated. He can answer phones. He can do anything in his environment that can be controlled by a switch, and this makes them a useful human being and have a profession, Kanor said.
He got the idea for special toys about 15 years agq while working for the Nassau County branch of United Cerebral Palsy.
He was helping children who couldnt keep their heads up learn to sit up.
Sleep-Driver?
PORTSMOUTH. England (AP) Everyones heard of sleep-walking, and now police have reported the case of a 15-year-old youth who drove his fathers car 27 miles while asleep.
For good measure, he had never driven before.
*i know it sounds incredible but we have no reason to disbelieve the story, it checked out. Chief Inspector Colin Lewis said.
Lewis said police found the shivering youth wearing pajamas and a dressing gown standing in the middle of Southampton at about 3:30 a.m. Tuesday. The youth apparently had gotten out of bed at his parents nome, walked to the auto and still asleep drove i t t o Southampton. The car was not damaged and no charges were filed.
Then I thought, what if tiey got something out of making the movement? If I attached a switch to their head or chest and something happened when the child moved, it was worth it, he said.
So Kanor began adapting conventional toys, from trucks to mechanical bears, so they could be (grated by the smallest gesture of hand, head or eye. He sells his creations at cost, most between $30 and $100.
Some toys,he gets wholesale by buying in bulk, but mostly he relies on the kindness of seven or eight part-time elves and don?-tions from strangers. He supports himself by working ^as a consultant to United Cerebral Palsy of Westchester and other groi^.
'Theres little money in-this, Kanor said. So I know why the major toymakers are reluctant to go into the market for only a couple of hundred thousand kids while there are 30 million others to appeal to.
For'children like Bernadette Carrolls daughter, Ruthie, the special toys can mean all the difference in the world.
Ruthie has an undiagnosed condition that wreaked havoc
Fieldhouse Bids Killed
WILLIAMSTON - All bids for a proposed football fieldhouse addition to Skewarkee Park have been rejected by the Martin County Board of Education due to budgetary concerns.
The board voted to reject various bids general contract, plumbing, heating and air conditioning, and electrical. The bids collectively ranged from a low bid of $142,742 to $183,603.
Board members noted that the low figure still is nearly twice the $74,000 amount previously budgeted in the 1983-84 budget.
In agreeing to review their position on the proposed fieldhouse addition, the board members discussed options that include redesigning the facility or an attempt to secure additional funding for a new complex on the Williamston High School campus.
In other actions, the school board approved a new pay scale for substitute teachers with all substitutes to receive $30 a day, and adopted a policy concerning group field trips to the N.C. State Fair. In the future, only sixth graders and high school vocational classes will be permitted to attend as a group. Other students who attend on a school day will be counted as being absent.
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with the development of her fine motor control. She can hardly use her hands.
She used to be so frustrated. She wanted to do things but couldnt, and
would have nothing to do with toys, her mother said.
But with the toys bought from Kanor over the past two years, Ruthie is getting her confidence back. When other
children come over, they've never seen the switches and cant make the toy work. She can. She has an edge and can do something they cant. Mrs. Carroll said.
Tired Of Fighting The Christmas Crowds?
Want To Give A Gift That Wont Be Returned?
Give a membership to the Greenviiie Athietic Club. You can give a full Initiation fee or part of one towards a membership. What a great gift!
If you purchase a full membership (individual, couple or family) you receive over $100.00 worth of merchandise from our pro shop. Buying a gift certificate towards an initiation fee also entitles you to merchandise from our pro shop.
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Open 7 Days a Week
T
Use Your Credit At Lowe's
20 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Thursday December 8.1963
Ctossmford By Eugtne Shefftr
ACROSS 1 Qk)w f Chinese dishi 5 Tablet 8Tiff
12 Actor Ray
13 llover
14 Aura
15 Place for a coin
1( British brew
17 Elevator man
18 Salty
20 "A thousand and One -'
22 Supportin:
23 Actors prompt
24 Duplicate
27 Protected, as inventions
32 .Actress Ciardner
33 .Another British brew
34 P'urv______
35 Fatherly
38 Read over
3? Vat
40 Self
42 Portugal andS^in oiyore
45 Urged on
49Cballenge
50 Evergreen
52 -cle^r
53 Chain part
54 Nabokov novel
55 Cruel
50 Actress Lan-chester
57 Battenng tool
SI Relay DOWN
1 Religious seiMce
2 Singer Fitzgerald
3 Baal, for ona.^
4 Inform 5Bame
character 0 Nautical assent 7 Cc^ece VIP
Avg. soluboo time: 23 min.
Answer to yesterdaypuzzle.
8 dawU novel
9 lamitable II Stepped down 11 Fling
IS What Ado .Annie could not say 21 Rudt stuff
24 Topper
25 Eggs 2ITem|^tes
28 In the manner of
29 Wav 31 Penod 31 lair 3Si'ry of
discovery
37 Baseball slat
38 Da\tiine T\'show-
41 Onental game
42 Unemployed
43 Use a bucket
44 Distantly 48 Opera star
47 Great tale
48 S'lTike from cop>
51 Actress lapino
FOCUS
Obscure Architect
Tixlay IS the annuersary of the death of James Hoban In 1792. Hoban designed the Executive Mansion later known as the White House. The White House had a telephone before it had indoor plumbing The phene was installed tor ('rover Cleveland, who answeieii it_ himself. When Harry Truman dtvided t(> ado a balcony ti> the second floor, the Treasury Uepartmenl rV^ueTTvTirS2iHTtf^^ issued new one?^ showing the balcon\.
DO YOU KNOW VVhat is the n.ime of the Washington himseust'tl by visiting oignitanes. 'WEDNESDAY'S ANSWER power is the coital city of Delaware.
forecast for FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9,1993
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GENERAL TENDENCIES A day to put in motion your most unusual plans. Put talk tham over first with those who are expenerx:d so that you wiif pe able to achieve far more Shop tor unusual jifts on your list
ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr 19) Be with pais who can be of asststance to you show appreciation kx thaw talents Han-dje business matters first Ehfoy yourself th evening.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Find out how to bacoma more proficiert at your vocation and make nxxe money Show your Viiiiance and fine personality to superiors.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Seek more nxxlem ways of getting ahead and get into the swing of things Be carefuc -her. spending, money
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 tcJul 21 )Domg something d^amatc can make a good impression on your mate now Dress ncefy if you go out sociaify LtO (Jui 22 to Aug 21) Receive assisiancs frOm those of different ideas and experience Wohd situations can be ascinating to you Keep abreast of the times ViRGO (Aug 22 to Sept 22) Try a different tack with the one you k?ve Your hunches need to be understood oetie' if they a'-e to work for you libra (Sept 23 to Oct 22) Some unusual recreation IS especial'y good for you today Take good tnendsaiong with yOb for best rpsufts Dnve safety SCORPfO ((Dct 23 to Nov 2D Home affairs should be uopermos: on you-- mmd today Invite charming peopfe mo you^ home ana entertain them well SAGCTARUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) Communctng with gooo f'-erx wise Then proceed with your advahced >oeas See highe^-ups for backing you may need CAPRCIDRN (Dec 22 to Jan 20) You may have to take some small risn today Plan to get your home fixed up Look to an expert for lOeas Keep active and happy AQUARIUS (Jan. 2i to Feb 19I Carry out good, practica! Ideas Group meetings shouic be of the progressive kind Don t *aste time fooiishty PISCES Feb 20 to Mar 20) Get good ideas tor your acvahcement by talking to experts or reaomg oenodcafs Speno 2 oeiigntfui time with your mate
(F-YOUR Child is born T(X>ay ne or sne a pro-ouct the Jet Age anc will neec a modem type of education He or she shoud be encoursged to act m an ongmai way since this is the key to possible success This s a g^eat to ver music
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Opening lead: Seven of T.
A strong candidate for Hand of the Year" has been reported by Australian George Havas, it cropped up in his countrys national team championship and the declarer was John Stretton.
South showed his strength with a cue bid over the one heart opening bid. When his partner showed general values. Stretton cut the bidding short by jumping to SIX spades.
West led a heart and declarer ruffed. Since the opening bid marked Elast with the king of diamonds.
Minority Vote
IMTED NXTIONS AP' The L niied States and Britain cast the only negative \otes on a General Assembly resolution against colonialism
Wednesdays vote vias ltl-3 ith s abstentions H 0 w e \ e r ( e n e r a i \s>embly resolutions are not binding on the membership
In debate on the resolution. British delegate John W Nlargetson objected to a pro\ ision calling Britain the illegal occupying regime in its dependent territories. 1 have never heard such nonsense", he said,
I S delegate William C. Sherman took exception to a clause recognizing "the legitimacy of the stniggie of colonial peoples to get independence by all the necessary means at their disposal ' He said that came perilously close to providing an endorsement tor murder and terror .
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declarer crossed to dummy with the aee of diamonds, and was sorprised by the great fall thereon. He paused to take stock. Why had East elected to (^n with one heart on a hand deficient in high cards rather than with a preempt? Declaofer decided that the only reason was that East held spade length with his heart suit. .
Backing his reaiding of the cards, declarer led the nine of trumps from dummy and ran it! When that held, he returned to his hand with the ace of clubs and drew ail the trumps. With six tricks to play, declarer was down to one trump, one diamond and four clubs. West held three diamonds and three clubs. indThe able had three diamonds, two clubs and a heart.
When declarer led his last trump. West w as caught in a strip squeeze. He could not let go of a xiub. for that would set up declarer's club suit, so he was forced to come down to only two diamonds. Declarer now led a diamond to the queen and threw West in with his remaining dia mond. Left with nothing but clubs. West was forced to lead away from his jack into declarer's tenace and the slam was home.
In the other room, the con tract was also six spades -do-wn two.
Nostiilfia Is Bnpy Road
WINTER PARK. Fla. (AP) - Nostalgia may be fine for some, and they may support a plan to strip away the asphalt from streets in this C^mk) suburb, revealing quaint bricks.
But. as for George Haddad. "It will be bumpy ."
He wwidered. Why are they going back to the primitive way? '
Realists and automobile shock absxbers may not like tmck streets. Iwt many people love them, says Com-missi(Mier David Currie, as the OMnmissioners scheduled a public hearing for Dec 13.
Winter Park has many bnck streets in its older neighlxwrhoods. but at least 10 streets were paved before an outcry ended the practice years ago
-Much of the work will have
citv employees know how to lay brick, finding more workers for big bricklaying jobs would be difficult, said City Manager David Harden, calling it "a lost art.
To further complicate things, the 3-inch paving bricks are no longer manufactured, he said.
City officials concede that the brick streets' washboard surfaces slow traffic as if they were little speed bumps.
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Thursday, Decembers, 1983 21Changes Ahead For Familiar American Currency
By ROBERTFURLOW .Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Picture, if you will, George Washington winking as you move a dollar bill from side to side.
A blue dollar bill, that is. Woven with metal threads carrying information in secret code.
Our currency for the 1990s? The mental picture goes well beyond what the government is willing to say about plans to change Americas folding money in the next few years. And its probably wilder than what will actually happen.
But changes are indeed coming for familiar old U.S. currency - the first substantial changes in more than half a century. And the possibilities apparently do include colors, coded threaite' and optical variables that change shape when viewed from different angles.
Though officials are secretive about proposed alterations, they are open about the cause: a fear that sophisticated new photocopying machines could soon make counterfeiting much easier than it has been.
Need groceries on the way home from work? Before leaving, just run off some cash on the office copier. Federal officials, studying the problem for several years, dont think thats far-fetched in light of expected technological advances in copiers.
And former U.S. Treasurer Angela Buchanan, whose signature still appears on new currency, real or counterfeit, said in an interview before she left Washington earlier this year, "When you bring counterfeiters into the office-boy level, you really have problems.
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul. Volcker, who is responsible for guarding the credibility of the U.S. monetary system, said recently the threat seemed to be genuine and the desire to keep ahead of that technology may point to some technical devices in American currency.
Treasury spokesmen say ? no decisions have been made
on how to change paper money. And they play down the possibility of drastic changes, noting that the government wouldnt want do anything to lower the respect U.S. currency commands.
However, a decision is close enough that officials felt the need to show a few congressmen prototype bills in a secret meeting last month. Rep. Ron Paul, a Texas Republican, reacted to the secrecy by calling a news conference.
Paul, a critic of even the current U.S. monetary system, said Treasury wouldnt let him keep any of the mock'ups. So he showed the press some artists renderings of pink and blue bills.
Government officials said that was preposterous. At
most, there would be a few tinted threads woven into the bills backgrounds -detectible only at close range by holding the bills up at an
Pauls aides disputed that reaction, saying the colors were much more noticeable. The general public isnt getting a look now, so the proof will have to be in the eventual printing.
Other changes being considered, according to sources in the government and out;
-Holograms, which produce three-dimensional pictures, or plastic strips that would show different images when viewed from different directions. A winking George Washington would never be seriously
Auto Inspection Role Defended
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolinas automobile inspection program should not be abolished because it helps keep the highways safe, despite claims some mechanics only give vehicles a quick once-over, a state official says.
R.V. Wilkins, commissioner of the state Division of Motor Vehicles, testified before a legislative study committee studying whether the .18-year-old inspection program should be abolished. :
We think the program is working, and its doing a good job, Wilkins testified on Tuesday.
The program also drew support from two study panel members. There is some sentiment in Jhe (state) House to do away with the prugraiii, but we diuut see it in the committee, said chairman Rep. Aaron E. Fussell, D-Wake.
One out of every five cars in North Carolina didnt pass its state inspection on the
first trip last year.
Meanwhile, six percent of the garages licensed to inspect autos had their privileges suspended for passing faulty cars or flunking cars that should have passed.
As complaints about auto inspections have grown nationwide, 11 states have re-)ealed all or part of their aws requiring the yearly checks. .Only 21 states, including North Carolina, still require inspections.
Wilkins asked the General Assembly this year to raise the auto inspection fee from $4.25 to $6. One-fourth of the fee would go to hire undercover investigators to monitor suspicious service stations and garages.
Right now, were doing it as we can, he said. We dont have anyone assigned to investigate it full time.
The Legislature tabled Wilkins proposed fee increase and formed the committee to decide the worth of the inspection program.
HERO WANTS HIS MEDALS - Jacinto Acebal sits in front of Army plaques earned during a 1964-85 tour of duty in Vietnam. After a trip to Washington and the monument to those slain in Southeast Asia, Jacinto wants
the 18 medals he earned there. The medals will be presented to the 42-year-old postman at a ceremony in Miami on December 20. (AP Laserphoto)
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considered, but one po^ibili-ty is changeable wording on the Federal Reserve seal on the left front of bills. -The tinted backgrounds, though Treasury spcesman Robert Levine says the idea of brighter colors was discarded after being kicked around
-Coded, metallic threads that special machines could read, thus detecting counterfeits. However, that wouldnt be much'help to people who casually pay out and accept cash every day.
Paul also objected to the idea of such threads or'
metallic strips on privacy grounds, implying that the government mi^t use it to monitor cash being taken out of the country.
Americans must have the freedom to travel out of the United States without any restrictions, he said. And he said any attempt to impose restrictions would be outrageous and a violation of our rights.
His comments seemed to indicate that any major currency change, which would require congressional approval, would not be made without debate.
Levine and other officials have said that a switchover to new currency would take about two years after final decisions are made.
Apparently the new bills would be printed and injected into the economy gradually with old bills continuing to be legal tender.
Secret Service officials, responsible for fighting counterfeiting, have suggested such a drawn-out process could be a problem since bogus copies of the old bills could still be turned out. But Levine said no sudden call-in of old currency was
likely.
Since the size of U.S. currency was reduced in 1929, only minor changes have
been made, such as the addition of the words In God We Trust three decades ago.
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Real And Fictional Death In Popular Series
ByFRKDROTHENBERG AP Telev ision Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Lt. Howard Hunter, whose suicide attempt will be foiled in tonight's episode of Hill Street Blues. is not the first major character from NBCs Emmy award-winning series to be saved by the almighty pencil.
In the first script of the verv first episode of Hill Street Blues," the pepper-and-salt team of Bobby Hill (Michael Warren) and Andy Renko (Charles Haid) both
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died in the line of duty. Executive producer Steven Bochcos wife, Barbara, who pl^ys Fay Furillo on the show, pleaded for Hill to survive.
"Being a total pushover, 1 charlged that." said Bochco. We also wanted Charlie to live*, buf Charlie made it clear that he was going to do another pilot. So there was no way we could have him live. But I told him if his pilot didnt sell, please feel free to comeback.
The pilot was shot with Capt. Frank Furillo (Daniel J. Travanti) being told over the phone: "One DOA. one critical But before that Droeram was broadcast in January 1981, Haid's other commitment fell through, and through the magic of post-production audio dubbing, an updated phone message to Furillo had Kill and Renko clinging to life.
In last week's episode of "Hill Street," Hunter (James Sikking) put a gun to. his head, the screen went to black and a shot was heard. Hunter was despondent because he had been Ie-vealed as a go-between in a police corruption case 15
TV Log
For complete TV programming inlor-ntaiion, COnsuif your Weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Reflector._
WNCT-TV~Ch.9
THURSDAY 5^ Newsbreak 7:M Jokers Wild 12 00 News 7:30 Tic Tac Dough I? 30 Youj|g &
8:00 Magnum P I
years earlier.
But have no fear: the scriptwriters, who control the fates of alt our fictional TV heroes, dont let Hunter kill himself.
Tonights story summary, which NBC inadvertently sent to last Sundays TV supplements, says: (Fellow officer) J.D. LaRue becomes something of a hero as he saves Lt. Hunters life.
The word didnt get to the guy who prepared the sum
mary that this was suppos^ to be a cliffhanger, said Curt Block, an NBC vice president for communications.
Bochco and his fellow writers will have to deal with a real death in future stories. Michael Conrad, who played the genial, literate Sgt. Phil Esterhaus, died of cancer Nov. 22.
Esterhaus handed out assignments and philosophy while conducting the dawn
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ByTOMJORY
.Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - So whats wrong with putting Beethoven and Foggy on the same cable-TV channel? The wonder is that no one thought of the ARTS & Entertainment Network before now.
If it sounds like the marriage of Hearst-ABC's Alpha Repertory Television Service and RCAs dormant Entertainment Channel, it is. The two parties were expected to sign the merger papers today.
And it means, starting Feb. 1. a mix of classical music, like Beethovens Concerto No. 1 in C, and comedy, like The Last of the Summer Wine," featuring Clegg. Compo and Foggy, the three elderly gents who get involved in extremely unlikely situations.
Theres more, of course, to the new service than that: drama,, theater, the cinema, music, opera, dance, art. poetry and literature, conversation.
Whats behind the merger? Survival, no doubt, in the increasingly chancy world of cable TV. And that seems to demand a lineup of shows that will appeal to as many people as possible, while attracting advertisers interested in a so-called Hjp-scale" audience.
It might be Wilkie Collins "Woman in White" one evening, with "Bach Goes East the next, A Midsummer Nights Dream" the third night, maybe British comedy shows "Twos Company and "Kelly Mon-teith" the fourth.
Though there is no sign that ARTS was' anywhere near the precipice, the service, introduced in April 1981. was indeed losing money ... a reported $11) million a year.
The Entertainment Channel, built largely on a wide selection of programs from the British Broadcasting Corp., collapsed in a much bigger heap of debt in February. The merger with ARTS probably saves face for some people, and money for others.
ARTS was introduced as a basic service, supported by ' advertising and available to cable-TV subscribers at no
additional charge, and A&E .will stay that way.
Cable-system operators, however, will be assessed for distributing the service: a nickel per subscriber each month in the first year, beginning March 11, 6 cents in the second and 7 in the third.
The tactic is not uncommon in cable, though some system operators are reluctant to pay the subscriber fee. So it will cost the new service some viewers: ARTS is available in 12^ miHion homes, and A&E is counting on about 9 million to start.
Will it work?
CBS Cable, which devoted most of its short ran to the performing arts, lost an estimated $30 million to $35 million before its demise toward the end of 1982. The Entertainment Channel, a pay service, lost about as much in 10 months, and '"listed only 45,000 subscribers when service was discontinued.
Commenting in Electronic Media, a trade paper, on the prospect of merger with the Entertainment Channel. Herb Granath, president of ABC Video Services, said, "If the industry cant support what seems lo be the last quality cable service, maybe there isnt room for one.
roll call, the scene which opens each Hill Street Blues episode. He always ended those sessions with the caveat, Lets be careful out there.
The first program without Conrad will be broadcast Jan. 12. Lt. Henry Goldblume (Joe Spano) will handle that roll call.
A brief text paying tribute to Conrad was carried at the begTnhing of the Nov. 24 Hill Street episode. Last year, a similar dedication was made to actress Dominique Dunne, who was murdered after playing a bit part on Hill Street.
While MTM Enterprises, which produces "Hill Street Blues, was able to pay tribute to these actors, the production company was prevented from paying on-air respects to a dead actress^ from one of its programs from the 1970s, Phyllis.
Barbara Colby had played in one episode when she was brutally murdered. Liz Torres replaced her, but CBS did not allow any on-air explanation why a different actress was playing the same character.
Maybe because Hill Street deals with death, we can do these messages without rendering an audience incapable of watching the show. said Larry Blaustein, a vice president for public relations at MTM.
As a realistic police drama, "Hill Street Blues" weaves violence and death into many of its story lines.
Already this season, a cop. checking out a possible prowler, accidentally killed a young boy who had a toy gun in his hand. On another show, a massage parlor owner, who
had just explained how his business is a service to lifes loneliest people, was caught in a crossfire and died in the arms of Detective Mick Belkerf Bruce Weitz).
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758'0327 Houra: Open Daily Sunday thru Thuraday 11:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M Friday and Saturday 11:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.
2725 Memorial Drive 756-2414
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
7 Days A Week
Banquet Facilities All ABC Permits
Where Good Food Is A Family Tradition
THE LOFT
Tonight
(Dec. 8)
Phil Chestnut Guitar & Vocals
Fri.(Dec. 9)&Sat.(Dec. 10) Eric Holt Piano
' The B*l Esieti Fsvoflte'
400 St. Andrews Dr. 756-1 161
dollars in new business and immeasurable goodwill, a North Dakota congressman says.
That avenue is barter, the old-fashioned and often complicated process of swapping goods. Rep. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., says the practice is on the u^wing, esi^ially among cash-short Third-World countries, and represents a great opportunity for the United States.
The paradox is that we have the food, and other countries have hungry people, but have no money," Dorgan said Tuesday, suggesting that the hunger problem could be eased through specific swaps of U.S. food for strategic materials like minerals and rubber.
A report requested by Dorgan from the Congressional Research Service
major barriers to gearing up a large-scale bartering arrangement, the United States could earn as much as $27 billion in new overseas trade if it chose to make the practice a priority.
The study suggested, for example, swaps of wheat, corn and cheese for rubber from Liberia, Indonesia and Malaysia; wheat and corn for iron ore from Brazil and Venezuela; and dairy prp-ambian cobalt and copper.
U.S. supplies of certain strategic materials, the raw inputs to the manufacture of defen.se-. related goods, come largely from foreign sources. The g^ovemment tries to maintain stockpiles of those materials, but many of the inventories are low, the study noted.
If the unfilled inventories of defense materials and petroleum were filled through barter of Americas farm surplus, and agricultural products were bartered in lieu of some overseas -sppnding for defense installations and development )rograms, the study said, )arter trade could total $27.2 billion.
But Dorgan said his conversations with administration officials have elicited nearly uniform opposition to the idea. The administration
prefers private enterprise to any government-to-government trading arrangement.
He said he will pursue legislation in 1984 that would force the administration to enter into bartering arrangements. Some barter legislation already has been proposed by other members of Congress, particularly ~ Rep. Cooper Evans, R-Iowa.
The report noted several barriers to bartering. Strict two-way deals run counter to the world goal of free, non-discriminatory multilateral trade sought in the General Agreement on Tarriffs and Trade, the accord governing most international commerce. There also is the problem of barter trade displacing existing cash business with some countries.
In addition, many
government bureaucracy to handle such swaps and barter requires long, drawn-out negotiations on quality of ,goo^, quantities, prices ana delivery schedules.
Direct supply of farm goods to underdeveloped countries can stall efforts to make those nations self-sufficient in feeding themselves, the CRS report noted. And cash-starved countries may prefer to sell
NUBBIN
1HAM,H6R6t QOEeWT KNOW. WHldH BKID le UP AN' erfete OUMBBR BV6RV QAV.
VOUVE e?OT - CON PueEP -WITH
BLONDIE
Godfattierls Pizza
COUPON-
vF
OFF LARGE PIZZA
Coupon must be presented. Offer expires Dec. 14, 1983 Not valid with any other offer.
Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville, N.C.*
COUPON.
OFF Medium PIZZA
Coupon must be presented. Offer expires Dec Not valid, with any other offer,
Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville, N.C.
14, 1983
Head to Pizza Inn every Thursday Night for...
Buy one Lasagna Dinner at regular price-$3.19 and get the other one at only $1.19! Eat in or take out!
SlzzaJUui
For pizza out iU Pizza Inn*
264 East By^asa, Qraanvllla, N.C. '
7584266
their raw goods for currency rather than taking goods in trade, even if the goods are discounted.
Dorgan said although barter with the Third World may not be a panacea, it would help develop new trading partners and build bridges of peace and bridges of friendship with other nations.
He said there is substantial precedent for the idea. From 1950-1973 a formal. barter office existed within the Agriculture Department to dispose of huge surpluses of farm commodities and help buy strategic materials from abroad. More than $6 billion in trade was conducted in this way, but thp program was halted when surpluses were exhausted.
The only recent instance of bartering under the governments existing authority came in 1982 when the United States agreed to swap nonfat dry milk with Jamaica for aluminum ore.
Dog To Get Juiy Trial
NORFOLK (AP) - Max, a mixed-breed dog sentenced to death after neighbors complained that he barked too much, faces a jury trial in an appeal of his case.
Jury selection was to begin , today in Circuit Court.
Thomas M. Atkinson, a city policeman who owns the dog, has contended that Max never had a barking problem. But neighbors in Atkinsons Forest Park nei^borhood said the dog, which resembles a German shepherd, barked for up to 90 minutes several times a week when his owner was not at home.
On Aug. 9, General District Judge Joseph A. Jordan ruled the dog a nuisance and ordered that it be destroyed after Atkinson refused to give up the animal.
The ruling, which received international attention and prompted howls of protest rom animal lovers, was appealed to Circuit Court.
In a Sept. 23 hearing. Circuit Judge Alfred W. Whitehurst agreed to a proposal that the matter be dropped if complaints about Max subsided over the next two months.
But when attorneys returned to court Nov. 29, Whitehurst set the case for trial after the city attorneys office declined to drop charges against Atkinson.
Things are not tranouil in the neighborhood where Max lives, Martha Rollins, assistant city attorney, said after the court session.
Atkinsons lawyer, Joseph A. Pennington, said he had received a letter from Mrs. Rollins two weeks earlier telling of one complaint. Mrs. Rollins said the issue is not the number of complaints, but whether theres peace in the neighborhood.
AOS are as close as your telephone. Just dial 752-6166 and ask for a friendly Ad-Visor.
I'M GONNA OPEN A CHAIN OP RESTAURANTS CALLED 'THE .
CHILI HOUSE'
BEETLE BAILEY
_7-
FRANK & ERNEST
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
I DON'T CARE WHflrr Ai^eoDo sAoe!
BTWRROCT) ARE HERE!
SHOE
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TWEOWClALP($C(j$
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24 rue OHy Rettactor. GrnvHK, N.C.
Thursday, Decembers, 1983
MONEY
InYctir
Pocket!
need money ...IS n :re items that .iv a, 'M around tf\e Items that you no
' ;er ise
Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of $200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.
Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
Classified Ads 752-6166
FILENO.83-E-260 NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST COMPANY, N.A., Executor of the Estate of Helen A. Snyder, De ceased.
Petitioner
VS.
JARVIS MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH, Greenville, North Card lina; SALEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST, Allentovwn, PennsylvanTa; URSINUS COL LEGE, Collegeville, Pennsylvania; EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION, Greenville, North Carolina; ORAL ROBERTS UNI VERSITY, Tulsa, Oklahoma, Respondents
NOTICE OF SALE
Pursuant to the Order of The Honorable Sandra Gaskins, Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, dated the 3rd day of November, 1983, notice is hereby given of the public sale by Wachovia Bank & Trust Company, N.A., Execuior of the Estate of ' HeWiil A Synder, deceased; Of The below described real property on the 9fh day of December, 1983, at twelve o'clock pm (noon), said sale to be held at the Pitt County Courthouse door, Third Street entrance. Greenville, North Caro lina. The real property to be sold Is a lot or oarcel of land with a residence situated thereon located at 311 Meade Street, Greenville, North Carolina, which lot or parcel of land is more particularly de scribed as follows:
"That certain lot or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being Lot No 3 in Block 'E' of the Johnston Heights Subdivision, as will appear on tb^ certain map duly recorded in tRf' Register's office for Pitt County in Map Book 2, page 23t, which map was made by Henry L Rivers, Surveyor, on September 12, 1928, to which reference is made, said lot being situated and fronting 63 feet on Meade Street, with a depth of 102 feet, with a width of 66 feet in the rear thereof," and being the iden tical lot or parcel of land conveyed to Helen A Snyder bj Darvid R Davis and wife. Vera K'. avis. by that certain deed recorded in Book K 34, Page 653, Pitt County Regis try.
The said sale shall be made to the highest bidder for cash who shall depocit fen pereer.f of the amount o the purchase btice at the time of sale as a good faith deposit
This sale is subject to confirma tion by the Court pursuant to N.C.G S. 1 339 28(a)(3).
This the 4th day of November, 1983.
WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST COMPANY, N A , Executor of the Estate of Helen A Snyder, De ceased
JHN E MAY, Vice President Speight, Watson and Brewer Attorneys for Estate Post Office Drawer 99 Greenville, NC 27835 0099 Telephone: (919) 758 1161 November 14, 22, 30; December 8,
1983
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE
ing qua
the estate of J.B. Cutchin late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix an or before May 24, 19*4 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.
This 21st day of November, 1983. Thelma Exum Cutfchin , 1800E.4fhSt.
Greenville, N.C. 27834 Executrix of the estate of J.B. Cutchin, deceased. November 24; Oecemtwr 1, 8, 15, 1983
021
Oldsmobilt
IM7 OLDS 442 has new engine, 52,000 miles on the body, needs paint. $2500 negotiable. Call 752 4239.
1972 TORONAOA. Runs fair. Some repairs. $300.744-3347.
Call WITH your ciaMiTteo today. You can find a cash buyer lawn or garden aqulpmeni fasti ( 752 4144.
for
Call
1974 CUSTOM CRUISER. 9 passen
ger, fully loaded. NADA $1,450 Asking $1,250. 752-8154.
1979 OLDSMOBILE, excellent con dition, diesel, power steering, power brakes, tape deck, $2890. 754 7297.
1980 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass. 4 door, V4, vinyl top, 34,000 miles. 758 4491.
023
Pontiac
CHRISTMAS SPECIALI 1981 Grand Prix. AM/FM, cruise, extras, low mileage. $7,200. Anne Monday through Friday 752 6889.
1978 GRAND PRIX. $3,495. Phoite 355 6388.
1978 PONTIAC Catalina. $1,445 cash. 758 1355.
1979 PONTIAC SUNBIRD. 40,000 actual miles, 4 speed. Asking $2,400. 754 4834 or 758 0237 after 8pm.
024
Foreign
MGB 1949, $1300. 754-1025.
WE BUY AND SELL Used Cars. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen. 754 1135. 203 Greenville Blvd. Greenville,' N.C.
1971 DATSUN, needs head gasket,
$195. Call 756 3335.
1976 BMW 2002, air, AM/FM cassette deck $4950. 758-2703.
1976 HONDA ACCORD, air, rebuilt engine, AM'FM cassette _d_ec.k-$2500.758 2703
1974 TOYOTA COROLLA SR 5, 5
speed, new engine, 20,000 miles. Runs great $1975. Call 756-4913
1977 DATSUN B210. Manual transmission, AM'FM, air condi tioning, good transportation, good tires 'Assume loan 756 3542.
1977 TOYOTA'COROLLA, AM FM
cassette, new Michelin radials, excellent condition S2i>00 negotia ble 757 1936
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE ._ai
Spectrum Batiks, 1016 Myrtle Avenue Hand made gifts! Satur day, December 10 "1 p m. to 7 p.m.. Also open Monday through Friday, lOfop.m. 752 5646.
I, BOBBY LEE STAINBACK JR.,
will no longer be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself.
OPEN HOUSE tor Parents without Partners. Sunday, December 11, 3 5 P.M. St Peter's Catholic Church. Greenville
TAX DEDUCTIONS! Are you
making year end income tax plans? It so, remember the Pitt Memorial Hospital Foundation and Gitts Fund Contributions are tax de dudable For information call 757 4869
WE PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd 'G Robinson Jewelers. 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenvrlle
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick We will pay top dollar
INSURANCE POINTS
OUR RATES MAY SAVE YOU MONEY! Call us betore you buy. MID ATLANTIC INSURANCE,
iniC /M f/2j
1978 VOLKSWAGEN DAS'hER
Champaign Edition with sunroof, air, AAA FM, automatic transmission, hatchback. $2,300 or best after. 756 5285
1979 280ZX, Grand Luxury Package, 2 tone. Excellent condition. Call Jack 752 1907 or 754 8362, Serious inquiries only.
MO MADA RX-7, Anniversary Edition. All options. New radials, Alpine cassette. Excellent condi tion. $6,900 negotiable. Call 756 0238 attor 12 noon
1980 VOLKSWAGEN Rabbit pickup for sale. Call 919 946 9285.
1981 HONDA ACCORD, 5 speed, AM/FM cassette, air, $4,200. Ca!! 752 9788.
1983 MERCEDES 380 SL. 6000 miles, 2.8 liter. Best offer. 756 7891.
032
Boats For Sale
ALBERG 37 SAILBOAT Beaufiful, fully equipped yawl with many extras 752 1129 after 6.
DISCOUNT BOATING Accessories . Christmas Specials! 6 gallon plstic fuel tank. $19.95. Hum minqbird Super 60 $148 88 Bass Seals 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 .
WESTERLY 24 DIESEL powered fiberglass cruising sailboat. The best buy around at $14,500. 752 1129 atter6.
NEED A Car? Rent dependable used cars at low rates Phone RENT A WRECK, 752 2277
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.
012
AMC
1974 MATADOR WAGON. Extra clean, drives perfect Must sell! $1,075 or make offer 752 8154 or 757 3188
013
Buick
IN THEGENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTUY
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Ad ministrator of the estate of Emma Barnhill Hardee ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said Emma Barnhill Hardee to present them to the undersigned within 4 months from date of the publication ot this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make im mediate payment This the 24th day ot November, 1983
Bruce Parris Hardee Adhhinistrator 111 Wedgewood Drive Greenville, N.C 27834 Robert A. Bruce Attorney at Law PAMLICO SOUND LEGAL SERVICES 213 Pollock Street Post Office Box 1045 New Bern, North Carolina 28560 (919) 637 9502
November 24, December 1, 8, 15, 1983
BUICK CENTURY LIMITED. 83
Demo 4 door Loaded! Low Mile age Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmville 753 3140
BUICK 83. LeSabre Limited 4 door. Lease 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
IN THE GENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ROSA (EE HAR RELL, DECEASED
NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Executrices of the Estate of ROSA LEE HAR RELL, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of Rosa Lee Harrell to present them to the undersigned Executrices, or their attorneys, on or before June 9, 1984, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment This 2nd day of December, 1983 Lee Harrell Bradley P O Box 1172 Pittsboro, NC 27312 Norma S Harrell 1004 W, Forest Hills Boulevard Durham, NC 27707 Executrices ot the Estate of Rosa Lee Harrell, Deceased Gaylord, Singleton, McNally & Strickland Attorneys at Law P O Box 545 Greenville. NC 27834 December 8, 15, 22, 29, 1983
1977 SKYHAWK low mileage, a r, power, stereo, new tires, motor needs little work S'600 Call 752 1050
(i BANOIT rlbergiass Sail 'ooai with trailer. Sails included. $800. Phone 756 5339.
14' CATAMARAN with trailer, excellent condition. Call 758 3449 after 5 pm
034 Campers For Sale
CAMPER - Panel, cabinets, roll out windows Fits '? ton Pickup. Phone 746 2473.
PROWLER, 18'. Extra clean, air conditioning and bath. $2,400. Call 355 6780after6p.m.
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C .834 2774
1976 25' COACHMAN Bunk House Travel Trailer Sleeps 9. Excellent condition $5,300 firm Call anytime Sundays weekdays after 4:30 pm, 756 2697
036
Cycles For Sale
YAMAHA GT 80 cycle Low mile age Excellent condition! Call 753 5466, Farmville
014
Cadillac
1974 CADILLAC Sedan Deville All options' $1,500. Phone 758 3283 after 6pm
1977 CADILLAC, Sedan DeVille Silver, excellent condition, loaded. $4195 Call 756 0750 after 6 p.m.; anytime weekends
1979 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille in good condition Priced to sell Call 757 0440
1980 YAMAHA 650 Special. New tires, full windshielo. Excellent condition $1,200, 752 3677.
1982 HONDA CM400, excellent con dition, 5,000 miles, $750. Call 746 4432
1983 HONDA X-R with helment Low mileage Like new! Phone 756 2824.
1983 SUZUKI 450. Automatic shaft drive, 3000 miles, luggage rack, 3 helmets $1800 Calf 758 1558.
1983 V45 SABRE HONDA, excellent condition Negotiable 4 months old. 758 5823
015
Chevrolet
CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto Sales 756 7765.
1973 MONTE CARLO Landau, loaded. Well taken care of. Call 825 2831 after6p m
1975 CHEVROLET Malibu One owner, air conditioned $1800 Call 756 0574
1977^ CAMA'r'O RaTly Spo^rT Wrecked but runs Best offer! 758 7816 c.i-ninqs
1976 CHVETTE, motor completely rebuilt, new clutch Good running shape and looks good $1950 negotiable 758 2264
039
Trucks For Sale
Need part time work from now until the holdavs? You'll find a position in Classified
1978 CAMARO type LT Brand new 350 engine installed. Body in good condition, AM/FM Craig Auto Re verse stereo system and speakers $3.500. 758 6754, Jett,
You've decided to sell your resort property this fall? You can get the |0b done quickly using Classitied.
1978 CHEVROLET CAPRICE, 1
owner, all power, $3200. 752 1729.
NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad ministrator of the estate of Judy McKelthan Melton late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Admlnstrator on or before May 17, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.
This 15th day ot November, 1983 Robert S Melton, Jr 126 Fletcher Place Greenville. N.C. 27834
Administrtor of the estate of Judy McKeithan Melton, deceased November 17, 24, December 1, 8, 1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of James Israel Vick late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the esiate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before June 8, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate
pa^.
ment
iy<
Verchie A Vick
his 6th day of December, 1983.
105 Vernon Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834
E xecutrix ot the estate of James Israel Vick, deceased December 8, 15, 22, 29, 1983
1979 CHEVY MONZA. 4 cylinder, automatic transmission. Very de ~endable car. $2,6(X) negotiable, hone 1 524 4337
1980 CHEVY MONZA. Price re duced! Phone 1 749 5221.
016
Chrysler
1978 CORDOBA. Power windows, stereo, air, cruise, 70,000 miles, extra clean Drives perfect 1 owner. Price negotiable. 752 8154
FOR SALE: 1981 Chevrolet pickup truck Scottsdale, 8 toot body V 8 engine 305, automatic transmission with cooler, AM/FM radio, air conditioning, cruise, power steering and brakes Dark blue with silver trim 17,000 miles Exceptionally clean hkf' new Kepi in garage by one owner Price $7,200 Call M. Buck 756 3727.
1967 FORD TRUCK. Good shape $750 firm Phone 756 7381.
975 CHEVROLET PICK UP,
automatic, power steering and brakes Runs good. Call 746 3551 after 6.
1974 FORD F-lOO CUSTOM.. Good
condition Phone 757 0577.
1977 DATSUN - Long bed. White sport rims, new Radials Excellent ^condition. 756-7114 or 756 6288.
1980 LUV TRUCK, long body, AM/FM radio, 38,000 miles, $3900. 756 0148.
1981 DATSUN. 5 speed, air, step bumper, longbed, $3610 Call 756 2750 or 1 946 0363.
1981 LONG BED Toyota SR5, loaded, excellent condition. $5500. Call 746 3530or 746 6146.
1983 TOYOTA TRUCK. Low mile age. Excellent condition. Call 758-2947after6p.m.
040
Child Care
017
Dodge
1973 DODGE 4 door Clean Inside and out, new tires. Runs good. Call 746 2326
1980 DODGE OMNI 4 door Automatic, air, power steering, AM/FM radio, velour interior. $3,395 758 3283alter 6p m.
018
Ford
THUNDERBIRD, 1978, loaded, landau Greaf shape $2900 Call 746 2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5 30
1977 MUSTANG, automatic, fully equipped, 63,000 miles, new tires, excellent condition, $2250 negotiable. 752 1705.
1979 FORD FIESTA, ,W900. Call 752 7483before5p.m.
1981 FORD ESCRT with air, automatic, excellent condition. Call 756 6678
1982 FORD ESCORT, with air, like new Assume payments Call 756 9886 after 6pm
$9^00 4-DO<riTload(S'^198r?^rt Wagon, automatic. $5,700. Phone 758 6582.
CHILD CARE POSITION. Full time my home. Require mature, Christian individual. Experience, own transportation, references. Call be tween 5 9 p.m only, 756-2684.
I WILL KEEP children in my home at anytime Call 758 5822.
MOTHER EXPERIENCED in
daycare would like to keep a 2 to 3 year old. Near Conley, 756 9849.
RESPQNSIBLE PERSON to care for 2 children in my home neat' Grimesland Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p m. Contact Judy at 758 5056
RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care tor 2 infants in my home. Begins January 3, 1984. 7:30a.m. 5:30 p.m , Monday Friday. Experience, own transportation, references. Call 758 8570between 4 and 7 p.m. only.
SOMEONE TO KEEP 2 year old in their home or mine Greenville area. Hours: Monday from 12:45 to 9 p.m., Wednesday from 8 to 6 p.m Thursday from 12:45 to 9 p.m., Friday from 8 to 5 p.m. 1 82^0968 after 6 p.m. ,
044
PETS
046
PETS
AKC RdlStED German Skep
herd puppies, just Will hold til Christmas. 7S3-2540 or 752,3170.
AKC RtOISTERBO GRMAN
Shepherds. $75 each. Call 756-0700 after 6 p.m
AKC Registered Champion bloodline Norwegian pups. Re for Christmas. 524-5436 affw 5:30
bloodline Norwegian
Ready
AKC SIBERIAN HUKYS, 6 weeks
old: black, gray; male and female. $100. Call 753 2731 after 3:30p.m.
DOBERMAN PINSCHER puppies.
Good Christmas gifts. Tails cut and shots. Priced right! Call 752 5266 after 5;30p.m
FOR SALE: AKC PekingeseT
Dachshunds, Pomeranians, 1 male Chihuahua and Cocker Spaniels. Clipping and grooming for all breeds. Call 758-2681.
FOR SALE; Full blooded Border Collie Puppies, 7 weeks old. De-wormed. Call Marlon Mae Mills, 756 3279.
PITT BULL DOGS, 3 months old, $50. Call 758 3029.
POMERANIAN, 1 year old male. $60. Beautiful dog. Call 756 8367.
TWO HOUSE CATS, declawed, all shots. Free. Call 753 2614.
051
Help Wanted
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW being taken for femporary employment in 1984 at the PIH County ASCS Office, 215 Evans Sfreet, Greenville, NC. Telephone; 752-6112. The applications are for the positions of reporters, marketing recorders, temporary office and aerial observation. Applications will be accepted through December 16,1983.
ARTIST/PRINTER; Immediafe opening for a full time layout Artlst/Prlnter. Individual must be experienced In silkscreen printing and IITijstftTorj."Apply to Cynthia SuMon, H. L. Hodges Co., 210 East 5th Street. Monday through Friday, 10to5.
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. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to4 p.m.
AVON Can MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS MERRIER!
Be an Avon Representative in your neighborhood, earn money and win valuable gifts, too!
Call 752-7006
CABLE INSTALLER, experience preferred, but will train. Apply in person only to Greenville Cable TV, 517 Arlington Boulevard,
Greenville, NC;EOE.
CASHIER - Experience please! Apply in person only at Sav A Ton, 612 West Greenville Boulevard. No phone calls!
EXPERIENCED OR CERTIFIED
Dental Assistant tor growing practice. Excellent benefits. Send resume to Dental Assistant, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
HEATING AND AIR Conditioning Service Personnel wanted. At least 1 year of experience required. Call 756 4624 or apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors.
JOB FOREMAN - 2 positions available for experienced men. 1) Experience in Industrial Construe tion, must know layout, footings, masonry, and concrete work, Wilson area. 2) Experience in Apartment and Condominium construction, must know layout, foot ings, and concrete work and have ability to over see the total job, Greenville area Good pay, benefits, and security for the right individu al. Send resume to Samet Construction Co., PO Box 3957, Wilson, NC 27893.
LINEMEN - Power line experience and helpers. Work in Virginia. Call 1 946 8164.
LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time. 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are
auaiiahie, .Apply in person or c-all Oak Manor, Inc., Snow Hill, 1 747-2868.
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 0082 for interview.
OPPORTUNITY. Ambitious man woman. Available for immediate employment. Earnings opportunity $150-$300 per week to start. Large national company. Call 756 3861.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS. We
currently have an opening for a licensed real estate broker. For more information or appointment call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tiptons, Associates, 756 6810.
REGISTERED NURSE to work in Community Mental Health Out Patient Center. Located 40 miles West of .^efiville 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 Employer
RESUMES WRITTEN to get results
plus job search programs. Call for brochure or appointment. Cui Writing Associates, 1 637 2889.
RN - ADMINISTRATIVE Position. Must have NC License, BSN pre ferred. Minimum of 3 years Supervisory/Administrative experience. Excellent growth potential with expanding Company. Must be innovative and creative. Send resume to RN/Admlnistrative, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
RN NEEDED part time, 3 to 11 House Supervisor. Competetive salary. Call Britthaven of Kinston from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., 1 523-(X)82 for interview.
AKC BLACK Labrador Retriever
female puppy 3 months old. $75 Call 756 7487
AKC GERMAN SHEPHE!rD
puppies 6 weeks old the 20th ot December. Black and black and brown. $75 758 4669 or 752 3735.
SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of home cleaning
firoducts requires 3 representatives n this area. A go getter attitude, energy, creativity. Earnings based on performance. Benefits and incentives. Promotions from within. Call 756 6711
SALES REPRESENTATIVE.
Silver Sprink Water Purification Company is now looking for quail fied sales reps to market one of the fastest growing products to fight water pollution. Highly com missioned paid job. Comapny will set up all appointments. For more information and an Interview, call 756 5477 or write PO Box 1353, Greenville, NC 27834.
SOCIAL WORKER. Howell's Child Care Center Inc. is seeking a highly motivated individual with either a BSW or BSP in social work and 2 ears experience preferred In an CF/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.
SPECIAL EDUCATION Teacher. Position available for energetic individual with a BS In mental retardation with an A certificate or BS In education with certification In mental retardation. Basic function of position is to provide a full array of educational services, both indirectly and directly to residence. Competitive salary, excellent benefits. Please send resume to Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel OIrector, Howell's Child Care Center Inc., PO Box 607, LaGrange, NC 28551. Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F.
TELEPHONE SOLICITORS.
Immediate employment. $3.50 per hour starting plus bonus. 20 hours week, Sunday-Thursday, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Call 757-1200 for appoint-ment9a.m. to5p.m.
TEMPORARY OFFICE HELP
Typing skills a must..Send resume to Temporary, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27835.
WANTED experienced insurance agent. Please send resumes to Insurance Agent, PO Box 456, Ayden, NC 28513.
WANTED: SEWING ROOM
Supervisor. Minimum 2 years experience. Ability to handle 50 operators, woven products line. Salary to compensate with ability. Send replies to Sewing Supervisor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834._
WEEKLY Fitt County publication needs full or part time salespersons. Excellent commission plan for the right Individuals. For Interview call 757 0474.
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.
Licensed and fully insured. Trim rnlng, cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding. Free estimates. J P. Stancll, 752 6331.
;
0S9
Work Wanted
AHy TVPl li#AirW61k.
Carpantry. rrunonry, rooflno. 35 years ex^lence. Call Jartnes Harrington, 752-77*5 aHer 6 p.m.
COMPLETE CLEANING Service Experienced office and home cleaning. Phone 746-3374 after 5.
Y YOUR CHRISTMAS painting done: Interior and exterior, carpenter repair. Phone 758-5226.
HOUSECLEANING. Price negotiable. Call Brenda at 746-6775 after 4;30p.m.
MACHINE DESIGN, tool design and drafting service, 30 years experience. Client facility or mine. 746-4240.
PAINTING INTERIOR and exterl or. Work guaranteed! References free estimates. 13 years experience. 756 6873 after 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 best quality. Also new construction stucco. Cali 756-7297 anytime.
PORTRAITS. Ink, pencils, pastels, oils, or acrylic or any special commissioned art work. 1-946-0055.
SPAIN'S MOBILE HOME Repair and Service, all types, free estimates, reasonable rates. 746 6575.
WALLPAPERING AND Painting 10 years experience. Local references. 758 7748. a
060
FOR SALE
062
Auctions
258 TRADING POST and Auction Barn, Highway 258 8, Smith St , Fountain, NC (behind old bus sta tion). Auction every Saturday night 7:30. Sellers and dealers welcome. Prize drawing. If you have anything to sell, call 749 6431. We Buy, Sell & Trade. Everything sold as is. Auc tioneer, Peggy L. Peaden, P.O. Box 141, Falkland, NC. NC License 3104
063 Building Supplies
CECO STEEL BLTILDINGS by Riv
erside Iron Works, Inc. Phone 633-3121, New Bern, N.C. Since 1920.
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J.P.Stancil,752 6331.
ALL HARDWOOD, $75 cord, $40 pickup load. 10 days only, 1' z cords $100. Delivered and stacked. 823 5407.
FIREWOOD FOR SALE. $35 for
truckload. Call 757-1772 after 6p.m.
NUMBER ONE solid oak wood, $40 half cord; $80 cord. Delivered and stacked. Call before you buy. Deliv ered anytime. 758 3340.
OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Ready to go. Call 752 6420 or 752 8847 after 5p.m.
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752-1359 or 758 5590 f
SEASONED OAK $45 for 'z cord. Call 757 1637.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
SEASONED OAK firewood (Miv-red and slacked. Phon* 758-6143.
ihlOOD Foil SALE. Mixed, $ Seasoned Oak, $45. Call 752 628* anytime.
063 Farm EquipOMfl
PICK Up tAuCK BED MAtS and tool bbxet- A great Chrlstmai Ideal Mats to fit full size truck $69.95; intermediate size $64.49; Import size $55.95. Crossover tool boxes to fit full size, intermediate or Import size trucks $85.49. Other styles in stock. AgrI Supply, Greenville. NC 752-3999.
TWO TOBACCO TRUCKS, $35 each. Maybe seen at S & W Mptic Tanks.
Mumford Road
066
FURNITURE
BEDDING&WATERBEDS
largest selection at guaran teed lowest prices. Bedding sets, $69. Waterbeds, $149. Factory Mattress 8i Waterbeds next to Pitt
Plaia. 355 2626.
COLONIAL LOVE SEAT sofa, used 6 months. Taking loss, $275. Call 756 5555, ext. 311.
SOFA, CHAIR, coffee table with 2 matching end tables. 756-4380.
USED SOFA, $35. Call 758 5803 after 6p.m.
067 Garage-Yard Sale
OPEN EVERY SATUROAYI
Raynor, Forbes & Clark Warehouse Flea Market. 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Come out and visit Santa Claus from 9 11. Across from Moose Lodge. 756-4090. YARD SALE SATURDAY, 302 Lee Street, Cherry Oaks. 8:30. Appliances, toys, furniture, books, etc
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman
Stables, 752 5237
7 YEAR OLD MARE - >z Arabian. $850. Phone 746 3837 or 746 4055.
073 Fruits and Vegetables
BROCCOLI, Cabbage. Ready now. You pick or we pick. Dew's Berry Patch 756 7116
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
THE SJffESS BALL
THE A.TERNATIVE STRESS BELIEF
You can squeeze - throw play & carry your Siress Ball everywherell
For only *5 per ball
(ItiM I i/inxne ncWKKipm)
CmOfMOfwyOMioiW NsC.OO.'t
MWU USTRESaAWLECHOm 44SEARWG STREET HEHKTEA0,NV.11tiS
Order Early For Your Holiday GiftsI
074 NUsCtllBIMOUS ALL WgAflfc
(G7Sx14) fubelen. tmoefh-rutinlng. Reduced to half new prfc* ms eech).C6ll 752-4348
APAkfW66gt6v. like new, make an offer. Call 756-2407.
ATARI 1488 AHc SYSTIM 9^
23 carfridge*. Pri negotiable. Call 756-7474 after 5:30 p.m.
BALDWIN PIANO. Like new. $850 Call 758 1255 before 2 p.m., or 746 4885 afters p.m.
BARBE DOLL collection, over M dolls In all, including Barbie, Kep, P J, Skipper, Skooter and Francia. $160. 756 9070.
BIYCL EXCISER, like neW. $40. Call 758-1273.
BOY'S BMX BIKE - customlzad. Mongoose chromoly frame, tufwheel mags, etc. Excellent condition. $175. 756 1277 after 6 p.m. ^
BRAND NEW GIRL'S CbAt, size*. Teal green corduroy with hood, acrylic pile lining. $45. 7S2-101.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale. 4 modeU. Delivery setup. 919-763 9734.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758-3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Alsodriveway work.
CASH DISCOUNT of 20% when you shop downtown Steinbeck's for your men's clothing needs.
CASH NOW
FOR
Electric typewriters, stereo components, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voillns, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques anything of vallue.
COIN & RING MAN
On The Corner
CASH REGISTER money box with lock, new. PA system, 2 speakers, useful for schools, chuches, bingo. Like new. Call 746 4978.
IF THERE'S something you want to rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns. Call 752-6166 to place your ad.
CHEST FREEZER, 10 cubjc feel, 1
year old. $200. Call 7'58 4553. ......
DON'T THROW IT away! Sell It for cash with a fast-actlon Classified ' Ad!
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER
Local company has a Systems 34 (96K) computer available for immediate lime sharing. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer it available for immediate remote hook-up using telephone communications. Programs ready hr general business use include general ledger, accounts receivable, inventory/billing, accounts payable and payroll.
Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215
*199
QUALITY IS PRICEIess
0NSA\EN0W QSxBxsEiyjKiisnKis)
4 DR SEDAN SPECIAL SALE PRICE OF $8378 13 WITH $1500 DOWN 48 MONTHLY INSTALLMENTS AT 13 APR TOTAL FINANCE CHARGE OF $2697 87 INCLUDES CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE.
THiNK
BROWN & WOOD. INC.
ISUZU
PER MONTH
1205 DICKINSON AVE.
and you will buy. GREENVILLE
752-7111
26.00 DELIVERS
With Red Carpet Lease*
TAKE YOUR PICK!
Based on 15,000 miles per year, 48 Month Lease with approvto credit.
Through Special Arrangements with Ford Motor Company
Amori( d's I UsFd C.II Coinpdiiy
H
ASTI
FORD
Tenih Sireel & 264 By Piiss 758-0114 CiioenviHo. N C
I
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
Thursday, Decembers, 1983 25
074
MiscellanMus
CHIPPEn6aLE OI^A tor Mier Excellent condition! Best offer. 758-837A after 6 p.m. weekdays; anytime weekends.
COFFEE TABLE for sale, $30. Chest of drawers. $33. Night stand, $10. Call 7527476
COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and refinishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 miie south of Sunshine Garden Cenfer. 736 9123.
COUNTRY WOOD CRAFTS.
Cabinefs, foik arts, doii beds, etc. Check my quailty and price before you buy. Cusfom orders welcome. 736 6887.
blAMONO SOLITAIRE, S850. Call 756 1076 from 5:30 fo8:30p.m.
DUCK DECOYS, 1 dozen, $40. Excellenf condition. Call 756 2208.
FACTORY OUTLET now open fo the public. Buy direct and save. Rope hammocks, tote bags, athietic bags, cutting boards, and a variety of ofher greaf Christmas items manufactured by Hatteras, 1104 Clark Street.
FISHER WOOD HEATER, $150 Call 752 0258.
FOLDING PING Pong table. $35. 756 5389.
FOR SALE: Refrigerator/freezer, 17.2 cubic foot with icemaker, avocadogreen, $300. Cail 758 6321.
FUN GOCART, 5 horsepower, 2 seater, runs good, $250. Call 752-0001 after 7 p.m.
074
Misctllantous
TWO op CARTS: 1 with T horse engine pinball
power Briggs and Straton engine and 1 without engine. 2 c machines. 746 6083 after 3 p.m.
TWO 20" bikes, two 26" bikes, one 10 speed bike. 1 electric heater with blower, I electric cord organ for child. Burroughs electric adding machine, toaster-oven, black horse collar and hange. Polaroid camera; pair of fhree-way nice lamps; pair his and her watches, new. Sonic made by Quartz. All good items. Reasonable prices. 758 4576.
TYPEWRITER FOR SALE tan.
manual. Remington, newly cleaned and reconditioned; types like new, priced at just $125. Call 752 4348.
ULTRA LIGHT Weed Hopper. Less than 15 hours flight time. Call 752 0154.
WALLPAPER $1.50-$3.00 per single roll. Odd lots and discontinued papers. Name brands, values up fo $20 a single roll. All sales final. Larry's Carpefland, 3010 Easf lOfh Sfreef.
60 FEET FRIEDRICH produce cases wifh compressors. Assorfed produce dump fables in fop condi fion. May be seen in operafion. Overfon Supermarkef Inc., 752 5025 or 758 7600.
757 "Nineteen Eighty" / THE TECH SHOP
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Stripping, Repairing & Refinishing. (Formerly of Easf Carolina Voca fional Cenfer) next to John Deere on Pactolus Highway. 752 3509.
GO CART, i'^2 horsepower. Silver Streak, $195. Hardly used! Boy's brcycle^by Huffy (Thunder RoadlT $25. 756 0902after 5p.m. I
HAND MADE WOODEN TOYS,
Christmas decorations, crafts. I , Spectrum Batiks, 1016 Myrtle ' Avenue. Open Monday through | Friday, 10 to 6 p.m. Also Saturday, December 10th 1 to7p.m. 752 5646. |
Shopping for a new car? The most I complete listings in town are found I in the Classified ads every day. |
HOLIDAY PARTY CATERING and
Services. We can do as much or as I little as you need in arranging I from catering to facility and service | assistance. 757 1531.
'HORSE BLANKET and all other tfack for horses. Western Boots to size 14. William Shoe Shop, 608 I Dickinson Avenue. 752 4121. |
INSTANT CASH
LOANS ON & BUYING TV's.
11.Stereos,cameras, typewriters, gold ra, silver, anything else of value. I Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2464 j
KEROSUN OMNI 105 heater in .eludes 5 gallon kerosene can and .siphon pump, $100. Call 758 2208. j
'"KEROSUN PORTABLE HEAT ]
ERS. Factory rebate sale conti.nues at Goodyear Tire Center, West End ,Shopping Center And Dickinson , Avenue.
KNITTING MACHINE for saie $270 Phone 756 8767.
IlARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m.. Jim Hudson.
LARGE NEW Squire wopdstove. .still in box, priced right. Cali after 6:30p m . 825 1169.
MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS:
Cinderella in pink ball gown, Napoleon and Josephine. 24 .Pussycat. 756 9070
MATCHING COUCH and chair,
' traditionai styling, only 4 months old, $300 firm. Call 756 5842 after 7:30p.m.
MOVING SALE. Brass bed. $150 Dresser, $50. Small desk, $20. Glass end table, $40 7' long television cabinet. $50 Complete stereo unit, $600 752 2200
NATURAL GAS, Central furnanccs. Enforced air space heaters. 100.000 BTU and 50.0(i0 BTU Gas stoves. 21", 24 and 30", Can be seen at 311 Hillcrest Drive.
NEW ENGLAND style woci stove $120 negotiable. MG Midget parts. Call 752 3826
NEW GREENVILLE City Directo ry for sale one copy available.
; Reduced to $100 Call 752 4348 be tween9a.m. and6p.m.
OLD FASHION Cedar Christmas trees, 3' to 12', $4 to $15 Cable & Craft. 818 Dickinson. 752 0715 Limited Supply.
"puerto RICAN and Hyman white sweet potatoes. $8.00 bushel Call 825 6821
'refrigerator for sale
large, golden harvest Hotpoint. looks very good, runs like new; size is 28"x28"x63'z". Priced to move fast at $165. Call 752 4348.
'REPOSSESSED VACUUMS,
shampooers, and uprights. Cail Dealer. 756 6711.
SEARS WEIGHT BENCH with double leg lift and pully system. 756 4058
SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental ,Tool Company
SHARP, SONY a GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at , $69.88.
^SHINGLES $13.50 per square 30 pound felt, $3.95 roll. 8"x16'
II masonite, $2.70. Number 1 Builders ^ Supply, Mount Olive, 658-6586.
SMALL REFRIGRATOR for sale Perfect tor office or dormitory room; (18''2"xI9"x19") Reduced ;$50toonly$79.Call752 4348.
a SOFA, love seat, 2 chairs, 3 end tables, one coffee table. 3 lamps, y $1500. Call 756 2128 after 5 p.m
^STUFFED ANIMALS - Large and . medium. Smurfs Price others,
. then see ours! Call 758 2213.
THE "AUDIOTECHNICIANS"
at fheTECHSHOP aren't charging for estimates.
Can 757 1980.
TRAMPOLINES Wholesale,
new/used. Replacement mats. I* Phone 756 4770
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
074
MIscellBneous
WANTED: USED John Deere Lawn
mower. Call 752-3229.
WASHING MAHINE, Whirlpool, good condition, $125. Zenith black and white TV, remote'control, $100, needs some work. Call 752-0490 after 6:30p.m.
WHIRLPOOL WASHER, 2 months old, with 1 year warranty. Love seat, 2 maple dining room tables. 753 4121.
WHITLEY'S CUSTOM Meat Cut ting. Custom cutting: beef, pork, and deer. Quick frozen. 1-946-2382.
WOODEN CHICKEN COOP
needed. Cail 758-7596.
YAMAHA RECEIVER and turnta ble, 2 Infinity speakers. $550. Call 756 0199 or 756 9550, ask for David.
100 MILLION PEOPLE sew easier with Singer - Shouldn't you? pedals for Christmas giving! E^^very model Singer Machine discounted tor the Holiday Season. Save everytime you use it, enjoy sewing, enjoy your new Singer. Greenville Sewing Center, Authorized Singer Dealer, Pitt Plaza, Greenville. 756 0747.
14 KARAT, 1/5 carat marquis style engagement ring. Good price. For more information, call 756 5174
$0" GE CONSOLE color TV. Quartz remote control with channel memory. $1800.756 9842
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
074
Miscellaneous
8X12 UITLITY BUILDING with shingle roof, blue and whife, $650. 752 7258.
075 AAobile 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.
COMMODORE, 1983, 14x76. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call 756 8785.
MOBILE HOME - 14x70 Oak wood. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, total electric with heat pump. Can be seen at Stancill Trailer Park. Assume loan, no equity. Excellent condition -unfurnished. Phone 752-6022 days, 752-1299 evenings.
MOBILE HOME AND LOT. Located Homestead Estates, 1972, 12x65, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished. $14,300. 756 0975.
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments of less than $ 140 per month
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
TRADEWIND
CAN YOU BELIEVE IT SALE!
Can you believe It? NO MONTHLY PAYMENT until APRIL 1984!
Can you believe it? 2x6 walls on 16" centers with DUKE POWER PACKAGE which allows you a DISCOUNT at CP8.L!
Can you believe it? Doublewides at Invoice prices!
WE'VE GOT IT AT
Tradewind Family Housing Highway 264 Bypass Greenville, NC
CALL us OR 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 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
12x50 2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, partially furnished, underpinned. Nice deck at rear. In Branch Trailer Park. Call 756 4632.
12X55, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, un furnished except tor stove and refrigerator, set up in Shady Knoll, skirted with porch and outside storage building included. 758-2066.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
12X65 Deerbrook, 2 bedroom, l'i bath, furnished, central air, 752 6458. ----- ---------
1964 RITZCRAFT, furnished, air, carpet, washer. Phone 758 4857.
1964 12x45 Highlander, 2 bedrooms, good condition, $2500. 752-4787.
1971 TWO BEDROOM, 1 bath, washer, dryer, air, underpinnmed. $3,000. Call 758 5277 after 4:30.
1976 ARNELL DOUBLEWIDE,
24x70. 2 full baths, 4 bedrooms. Take up payments, only 5 years remaining. Small equity of only $2,000down. 1 238 3251.
1979 OAKWOOO Shaggy
I, 2 full baths.
14x70. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths Small equity and assume loan 756 9348.
1980 OAKWOOD, Shaggy Bark, 14x68. 3 bedrooms. Low equity and assume loan Negotiable. 758 1552.
1981 TWO BEDROOM, 14x60, $500 equity and take up payments. Call 757 1677 after 5 p.m.
1982 BRIGADIER, 14 X 58. like new. central heat and air, fully carpeted, washer dryer, partially furnished. $11,500 or equity and assume pay ments. 746 2598 or 746 67908 to 5:30
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
1983 OAKWOOD $75 and take up payments. Call 758 7652
1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91 At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sales. North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1982 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air and heat. Shady Knolls Trailer Park, $15,800, Call 758 4476.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ssimsasaiiaeaccesiin(](sci!fl(s9<sfa(tfi(sa!fa(aix!ncxaia(car)i
fssimsasaiiaca!
The
Spotter
THEPROFFSSIONAL WOODCUTTER BUYS STIHL MORETHAN ANYOTHER CHAIN SAW INTHEWQRLD.
WHICHMEANSALL THREEOrUSARE DOING TMINGSRIGHI
Clark & Co.
Of Creenvill*, Inc.
MtnkHiBiUi
A4,iub f IQtlt PI ki t bdf bi4w
MENS INSULATED COVERALLS HIP BOOTS
Uytmi New Fw ChrliliM.
WARRENS DOG & HUNTING SUPPLIES
382$-EEMl101h QfeenvUla. N.C.
#
Gifts for the Home
SONY-GE-SHARP TELEVISIONS
Close Out Sale 90 Deys Seme As Cash $1000 Instant Credit
Goodyear Tire Center
West End 7 Dickinson Ae.
7SM371 7M-4417
FOR LEASE
2500 SQ. FT.
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE
On Arlington Blvd.
CALL 756-8111
Hi Tech
m
Electronics
"xp9rt Rptir ol Sound EquipmnI tnd Aulomobil InsMotlons''
3112 South Memorial Drivs
756-9533
OAVID WILLIAMS QOnHAM CLARK CoOwner CfrOwiwr
Gifts for Everyone
HU lOUBH m
Try II Ihr.. - Irish Whltk.y Ck., Chocolst. Wilnul Brndy Cak., Golden Stwrry Spice Cak. - A dallohllul i.mlly Oitt lor Ih. person who has rrarything! BEST SELECTION Of IM9OBTE0 CRACKERS ANDCHEESE IN GREENVILLE
For Special Christinas
GIFTS
.HANDCRAFTED WOOD ITEMS COUNTRY CRAFTS & ANTIQUES Toys. Dolls a Stuffed Animals SPECIAL Vast issonment of power tools Christmas Decorations, large, small Glassware formal t Informal Poor Mans Flea Market
Highway 264 East- 8 miles from GrecnvUle
Open Wed.-Sun. 8 to 6 752-1400
Suggestions^^^
Samsonite Attache Cases
Sheatter Pen A Pencil Sets
Photo Albums
Desk Assessories
SCM Portable Typewriters
Sentry Salea
Globes
Appointment Books
And Many Other Prolessional
Gilts
wf
iiiinmAne ^
Ollic# Equipment Co.. Inc. 3HS Evans Street
752-2175
if^,
477 Arlington Bird. (Opposite Pill Plaza)
756-4224
IZOD CLOTHING
Entire Stock
20% to 50% Off AYDENGOLF (COUNTRYCLUB
Open 7 Days A Weak 746-33S9
Select A Craft To Make..To Give
from our full line of
STENCIL SUPPLIES
Stencil Decor and Stencil Magic Stencils. Stencil brushes, stencil paints and books to create beautiful wood ornaments, fabrics, boxes andplaques.
NEEDLEWORK SUPPLIES . DMCEmbroiderv Floss-25( ,
Hungates
ARTb'-CRCIIS HHBII5
Pin Plaza Grpenville, N.C. Phone 756-0121
Gifts for the Home
Gifts For Kids
Locally Hand Made
Cabbage Patch Like
^ dolls
^ Hand Made
RAGGEDY ANN nj & ANDY DOLLS
Lota ol unique hand made gilts to choosa Irom.
PINEWOOD
200 E.Gre*avlll Blvd. 756-7978
#
Gifts
for
Mom
Ladies 14 Karat Gold
DIAMOND STUD EARRINGS
$70
up
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers
ladfptndcnljweleia Downtown Mall
WATERBEDS BEDDING SAVE UP TO 50%
FREE SHEETS OR FRAME with each $300 Purchase
ONE
STOP
SLEEP
SHOP
FACTOBYMATfRiSS
AWATIRBiDS
355-2626 730 Ortamlllt Boutavsrd (NaxtToPKtPlsza
^
GREENVILLE SEWING
All V. CENTER ,
Machines
Specially Priced For Christmas
OPEN til
114 E. Fifth St. 9:00
Gifts
Going Out of Ski Business K
SALE 8
Large Inventory to Liquidate. S
IZOD GOLF & i; TENNIS SOCKS 1/2 PRICE g
ALL TENNIS BALLS 1/2 PRICE i
ALL GOLF BALLS 40% OFF
Normal Retail K
No returns, exchanges or refunds, R
GORDON FULP, PRO \
756-0504
Located At Greenville Country Club Open 7 Days A Week S
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage lor less money Smith Insurance and Really, 752
2754 ^
Moving away? Make the trlpllgnter by selling those unneeded items with a fast action Ctassilied ad. Call 752 6'66 ___
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FREE HOMEBUILDING SEMINAR
Learn how you can build your own home without $10,000, $5,000, or even $1,000 - even if you dont own you own lot.
DECEMBERS 7:30P.M.
HOLIDAY INN
Memorial Drive
Greenville, NC
MEDICAL CLERICAL POSITION
Immediate need for skilled clerical person with strong background in health related disciplines (LPN preferred). Leading area manufacturing industry has opening for candidate who will assist in workers compensation claims, medical insurance claims, first aid, plant safety, and other personnel administrative systems. Strong typing and administrative skills required.
Please send resume to:
MEDICAL CLERICAL POSITION
P.O. Box 1967 Greenville. NC 27835
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
A Very Special CHRISTMAS ^ d GIFT I
For The Entire Family!
RIDEIT! ENJOY IT! THE
SCHWINN
DELUXE
EXERCISER!
1
Simply THE VERY BEST
Acclaimed by experts a "Best Buy" in stationary exercisers.
Added features include a built-in speedometer and a built-in audible timer. There's even arr easily adjustable seat-so that the whole family can enjoy its benefitsalong with electro-forged Schwinn trame and ball-bearing pedals with sott foot straps. Assembled, ready to ride.
SUTTON
SERVICE CENTER
1105 Dickinson Avenue
752-6121
Wide Selection of Candles Including Williamsburg Candles Christmas Wreaths and Ornaments ^ - Gift Items in Wood and Porcelain
Wide Selection of Brass Gifts FREE GIFT JEWELRY TOYS
WRAPPING a
THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 911 Dickinson Avenue Park View Commons 8th & Memor*! Drive
(isfiaiBai]WSBMiEaEas]sa]msaiEax^iisfi(BBieaiieflxiitefac iBaifaeasaxaxBfifiiifiiiettSGiMisasEfidsnifiiifsieKiAi
WUThougMOf
U^Cars
THINK
But l^erAbused Used Cars
1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera oark
blue with cloth inferior, split seats, tilt wheel, AM-FM stereo, wire wheels, 12,000 miles.
1983 Buick Century 4 door Dark
brown metallic with cloth interior trim, extras include tilt wheel, cruise, air, AM/FM stereo, only 14,000 miles, like new.
1983 Pontiac Bonneville 4 door.
Beige with brown padded vinyl top and velour trim. Equipped with most factory options, only 5,000 miles, local car.
1982 Datsun 280-ZX - 2 plus 2
Charcoal, 'T-tops, air condition, 5 speed transmission, AM-FM %tereo with cassette, power windows, loaded.
1982 Pontiac Bonneville Wagon
^ Beige with woodgrain and tan vinyl interior, tilt wheel, air, AM/FM stereo, lu rack, rajly wheels, 60/40 split seat,
rtiilee, local car.
1982 Cadillac Coupe
Do Ville - 2 door. Gray, loaded equipment, 40,000 miles, one owner.
1981 Mercury Lynx Wagon
Medium blue with blue vinyl trim, automatic, air, AM/FM radio, luggage rack, local car.
1981 Cadillac Seville Silver
metallic with leather trim. Fully equipped including power sunroof, 33,000 miles, local trade.
1981 Mercury Cougar XR-7
Light blue with dark blue landau top and blue with trim, tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo, split seats, wire wheels, 35,000 miles, local trade.
1981 Honda Prelude Dark blue
metallic with convertible top, 4 speed, air condition, stereo, local trade. Must see to appreciate.
1980 Chevrolet Chevette Gray
with blue vinyl trim, 4 speed, | stereo, local
trade
Dickinson Ave.
%
Brown-Wood, Inc.
andyouwiilbuy
D
752-7111
ISUZU
1980 Ford Fairmont 4 door.
Pastel blue with blue vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, 30,000 miles, local trade.
1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme -
Dark green metallic with green landau vinyl top and trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM/FM stereo, 46,000 miles, local trade.
1979 Cadillac Coupe ~ oark blue
metallic with tan landau top and tan leather trim, fully equipped, one ownpr.
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix
Carmel beige with tan vinyl trim, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise, AM/FM stereo, wire wheel covers, bucket seats, local trade.
1978 Cadillac Seville veiiow
with white padded top and yellow leather trim, fully equipped, local trade.
1976 Pontiac Ventura 4 door,
medium blue with blue trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, 57,000 miles, local trade.
Eastern North Carolina Textile Company Needs
MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
Must be college graduate. Send resume to:
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
2500 Airport Road Kinston. NC 28501
An Equal Opportunity Employer
'I
6 DAY SALE
PRICES GOOD THRU DEC. 15TH
ARRIVA RADIAL
P155/80R13
Fuel-saving radial ply construction For all season year round service Tough steel belts for long tire life For cars with front or rear wheel drive
SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST
Oil Change, Lube & Filter
I ^$1388
2.00 for multiweight oil
Install new oil filter Lubricate chassis to
manufacturer's specifications Up to 5 quarts major brand 30W Oil
Front Disc or Rear Drum
BRAKE SERVICE
YOUR CHOICE
2e $5488
Semi-metallic pads cost $15.00 extra if needed.
Install new disc brake pads Resurface rotors and repack wheel bearings (excluding sealed bearings)
Inspect hydraulic system and rear brakes
Heavy Duty SHOCK ABSORBERS
4 FOR Extra heavy duty shocks featuring a full piston Designed to offer maximum performance and dependability in tough work and pleasure Installation Available 1 3/8" piston.
H run
3, $6788
RADIATOR FLUSH AND FILL
4.*14
Drain and back flush cooling system
Install up to 2 gallons permanent | type anti-freeze/coolant Inspect cooling system hoses, belts & clamps
000
Use The Silver Card nationwide at participating Goodyear retail outlets.
Enjoy credit convenience and security whenever you travel.
729 Dickinson Ave. Phone 752-4417 West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371
Stores Also In Rocky Mount & Tarboro
26 n iMniy wx.
inmsuay. LNK:itofo, moi
077 Mwsicl N*$nmwwn
BALDWIN PIANO S nxwINs M Mr S4le or tak* up pa>tn*nt fot mr* intormjfion catl 'S J W
LOWRE CTrr NOAli ^
Ercellent ^i'ndiion Tinanvirifl available Ca l Aiar< c Cn^d.i
756 5)85
Wf MwskBl InstmiMnfs
LOWlll ORMS S piece cym bN> Hardware caaes $450 Cali S 7*41
$O Sur Genie Lowrey Moviei *L 5 L 15 Oolv been used approimatelv J montbs Excellent condiiton Same as isew Including beginners boox Regular pnce, Ses willsetiS'SO 5*1<00
077 Mtisical Instrumtnts
PIANO OROAN CHRITMAS
Sale! Save 20% to 50% off on all Majur brands. Open Sundays! Piano & Organ Oistributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard. Greenville. Phone 355 6002 i
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
IWI WURLITZER console piano. 7561
S900 Call 752 0151 days. 756 8233 nights
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
077 Musical Instruments
VIOLIN for sale, % size. Excellent condition. Phone 758 5463.
080
INSTRUCTION
WILL TUTOR children with learn ing disabilities. NC Teacher's Certificate. Master's Degree Phone 756 10765:30 fo8:30pm
082 LOST AND FOUND
USED CARS
1983 Mustang Convertible 8.000 miles, automatic, power steering, a/c, tilt, cruise, stereo
1983 Ford Fairmont 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c. 1983 Ford LTD Brougham 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c, tilt, cruise, power windows, power seats. 36 months, 36,000 mile warranty.
1983 Ford Thunderbird automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c, low miles.
1981 Buick Century - 4 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows. AM FM stereo, wire wheel covers.
1980 Cutlass-2 door, automatic, power steering, power brakes, a/c, V-6.
This Weeks Special
1979 Cutlass Brougham SW - Diesel, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning. NADA Retail $3725.00 Hastings Special: $2650.00
BUDGET CORNEH
1983 Honda 250 Motorcycle - . ................. $995.00
1977 Maverick 37.000 actual miles, automatic, power steering, a/c.. $1495.00
1972 Chevrolet Camaro automatic, power steering, a/c...........$1900.00
1966 Comet 57.000 actual miles, automatic, a/c, power steering.... $1250.00
ASTING
LOST: Male collie, 4 months old, brown and white with black tail Answers to Alex. Last seen in vicinity of Arlington Boulevard and Memorial Drive. Black collar. Reward ottered. Days 756 0345, after 5 p.m. 756 3351. Any informa tion please call.
093
OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESSES FOR SALE in East ern N.C ...full service restaurants
(3) .figure salon. transfer com pany .iGA grocery, neighborhood
grocery. needlework stencil shop beauty salon, .convenience stores (2). .self service car wash clothing stores (2)..fabric shop .graphics firm, fast food res taurant and others. For additional information, contact The Marketplace, Inc through either Harold Creech in Greenville'(752 3666) or Murray Bronstein in Goldsboro (735 0603).
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8. Co , Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville. N.C 757 0001, nights 753 4015 - '
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.l. Lupton Co.
FOODSERVICE DEPARTMENT HEAD
tor 76 bed specially hospital, Greenville. N. C. RD eligible required. RD preferred. Salary range: high teens to low twenties, depending on qualitications and experience. 2< years supervisory experience required. State benefits. 758-3151, extension 242.
EOE
>093
OPPORTUNITY
OCEAN .CONDO-TEL conversion. Developer-Investor to convert 20 unit existing motel plus additional 20 to 30 units. Excellent opportunity in a market with tew comparables. Call owner, J. M. Cornwell. Emerald Isle. 1 354 2800.
ROUTE BUSINESS...no sell!
ROUTE BUSINESS...no selling in volved. Just collect the profits from your protected retail locations. Replace sold stock Very easy to maintain. High profit potential. $8760.00 minimum investment. Call Mr Wilson 317 547 6463.
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.
MOBILE HOME SERVICE Open 7 days a week Kenneth Manning, 746 2473.
RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, Inc
Dial 633 3121, New Bern, N. C. Certified Welders, precision Machinists, custom fabricators of 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, & Garbage truck packers
100
REAL ESTATE
WATER ACCESS 10 miles from Aurora '3 acre with 1974 12x70 mobile home storage building and private boat dock included Prime area for fishing and hunting. $J6,500 Call 1322 4428 days, 1322 479sevnings
102 Commercial Property
CHARLES STREET - Vacant cor ner commercial lot tor lease Across from Domino's Pizza. Will build to suit! Excellent, highway exposure Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741.
FOR SALE: 5,000 square toot commercial building in the downtown area Currently leases for $1400 per month Call CEN TURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.
375 SQUARE FEET of retail store front on the mall Available imme diately Rents tor $234 per month Calt Clark Branch Management 756 6336
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HELP
WANTED!!!
RNs & LPNs FULLTIME. Salary commensurable with experience. Call 946-9570 (or further information. An equal opportuaity employer.
104 Condominiums For Safe
Fantastic noominium tor
sale! 3 bedrooms, 3Vy baths - Windy Ridge. Phone 756 S630.
108
Farms For Sale
100 ACRES suitable for farm or development. 4 miles out of Greenville. 756 5891 or 752 3318.
160 ACRE FARM with 74 cleared. 10,7(M pounds tobacco allotment and 4000 feet of road frontage. Located 2
4000 reet ot road frontage. Located ( miles south ot Bethel on NC 11 Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500. nights Don Southerland 756-5260.
207 ACRE FARM near Chocowlnity. For more information call Rod
TugWell, CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810, nights 753
4302.
21 ACRES 18 CLEARED. 5,454 pounds of tobacco, 2,455 pounds of peanuts. Located near the Belvoir Grammar School. Excellent mobile home park site. Contact Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500, nights Southerland 756 5260.
250 ACRE FARM 110 acres cleared. Falkland Highway, 43
West 27,559 tobacco poundage liable to
Excellent farm or suitable for development. $375,000. Phone 752 7244 or 758 3807.
36 ACRES - Cleared 800' paved frontage. Located between Greenville and Washington Good drainage $59,500 Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741.
Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified
109
Houses For Sale
A SET OF TWINS has convinced us that we need 4 bedrooms so we are selling our 1,600 square foot 3 bedroom,- 2 bath brick ranch, with deck, workshop, fenced yard and heat pump. 756-6935. No realtors.
ALOT OF HOUSE for just $73,900 Three bedrooms, formal areas, family room with woodstove and a garage. Westhaven I. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.
BAYTREE. New listing with possible assumable FHA loan Great room, dining room, three bedrooms, 2 baths, just tike new. $78,900. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.
BELVEDERE. New construction. tSOO square foot brick ranch that features large greafroom with fireplace 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, large wooded lot. patio. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.
BELVEDERE - Immaculate ranch home features spacious great room, kitchen with dining area plus formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport Landscaped wooded yard $65,900. Owner transferred. Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane 752 8819.
BELVEDERE - Owner anxious will consider lease with option and credit part of rent towards purchase for qualified buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with rec room.Price 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, $69,000
BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1,500 square feet, fenced backyard. VA financing, sorhe equity. $35,500 Phone 746 6774 .
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
109
Houses For Sale
Y 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, 1< z baths, living room, kitchen/dining com bination, fenced in backyard, carport. Corner lot. Excellent loca tion. 3SS 246I from 95:30, 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, t>^ baths, garage, living room with fireplace, dining room, sundeck, and fenced in backyard. 222 Commerce Street Low $50's. Phone 756 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 ty, energy efficient materials. 9.9% APR financing. 848 3220, cQect
CEDAR LOG HOME, Lake Glenwood, Leon Drive, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood insert, heat pump, beautiful home and lot 524 4148 or 524 5042. Echo Realty lijc. $72,000:
ELMHURST Roomy Dutch Col onial offers 4 bedrooms, formal areas, lovely family room, garage with studio/workshop area. Located on a quiet street and it's only $61.900. Call Ball 8. Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane 752 8819
FOR PRIVACY at an affordable price! Large 2 story brick home, approximately 6 miles from hospj tal. .8 acre. 2,856 square (eel, 4 bedrooms, 2'z baths, living room, sunken great room, family room, carport, patio. 1,120 square foot workshop. Assumable 8% first roorigage,_Cal|756 711T
NEW LISTING. Lakewood Pines 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that features all formal areas Den with fireplace.
garage and over 1800 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8.
Associates, 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwell 753 4302.
NEW LISTING. Windy Ridge. 3 bedroom, 2'j bath to^nhouse. Super nice. Lots of 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 witq 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.
CANpLEWICK. Large 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 Bob Barker Betty Beacham Bruce Brown
756 7911 975 3179 756 3880
752 4453
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1984 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup Trucks
Starting At
*5995
Plus freight and tax
Free Air Conditioning on Most Full Size Trucks A $730 Value
1984 Chevrolet Chevettes
Starting At
*4888
Plus freight and tax
Register To Win Miniature Corvette Drawing to be Held December 23rd, 1983
Mini-Corvette
Need Not be Present To Win No Purchase Necessary
WRAP UP A CHEVY DEAL NOW
WAREHOUSE SALVAGE SALE
ALL ITEMS PRICED TO SELL!!!
DATE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10TH
TIME: 8:00 A.M.-12:00 NOON
PLACE: ECONOMY STORAGE WAREHOUSE
(LOCATED DOWN FARMER STREET WHICH RUNS ALONG SIDE FARMERS WAREHOUSE ON NORTH GREENE STREET)
We at Garner Wholesale Merchandisers have accumulated a wide variety of merchandise which we have to sell. It will be priced at salvage prices in order to move it. We will have JOVAN cologne, sunglasses, toys, grills, TIMEX watches, ZIPPO lighters, KODAK film (outdated), plates, bowls and various other items. We need to move these items out of this warehouse which we use for extra storage space.
ONE DAY SALE ONLY FINAL SALE-NO REFUNDS CASH ONLY! NO CHECKS ACCEPTED.
GREENVILLE
GMttUAUTY SERVICE RARTS
m
MNHAl MOTORS CORPORATION
I
f
WYNNE
CHEVROLET
On The Corner, On The Square
IS ON THE MOVE
Bethel N.C,
Hiwy 64 & 13 Phone 825-4321
Bethels Finest Used Cars
1983 Chevrolet Caprice Gray and Silver, One Owner.
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 door, green. Like new!
1981 Dodge Aries 4 door, white, like new.
1980 Chevrolet Chevette Blue, 4 speed, air conditioning. One Owner. 1979 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door, beige 1979 Buick Limited Brown 1978 Chevrolet Malibu 4 door 1977 Buick Electra 4 door, white, loaded.
1975 Mercury Montego Blue, nice car.
PRICED TO GO USED CARS
1975 Oldsmobile Convertible Silver 1975 Oldsmobile Convertible Maroon 1975 Chevrolet Monza Silver 1971 Chevrolet Impala 4 door, green
1983 Ford F-100 Pickup -r Automatic, air, low mileage, black
1982 Chevrolet Scottsdale Pickup Red and silver, one owner,
mileage.
1979 Chevrolet C-10 Pick-up automatic, One Owner, Like New!
1979 Datsun Pickup Yellow. Priced to go!
1972 Dodge Pickup Priced to gol
low
m
GMQUAUTY SEWCE WLRTS
GM
109
Houses For Sale
CLUB PINES. Adorbl# two story with a floor plan that will
X . 1 ..X fmir
you it has everything, with tour bedrooms, 2z baths, living room.
dining room and family room with hardwood floors, screened porch, pretty lot. $95,9(X) Duttus Realty
Inc., 756 5395.__
COLONIAL HEIGHTS - 3 bedroom brick ranch, carpet, hardwood floors, fireplace, pool, deck, totally private. Reduced by owner, $59,400. Call 758-1355.
DO YOU WANT to live in Lynndale but need to sell your present home first? Then call about this horne today because it may be possible to trade your present home. Formal rooms, den, playroom, three bedrooms, and three baths. $120,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.
ONLY A FEW miles from Greenville you will find this home overlooking the river on 3 acres ot land. Great room, formal dining room, fhree bedrooms, 2 bafhs, large deck, plus garage, $150,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756-1322.
PAYMENTS are based on your income! Almost new fhree and two bedroom ranches! Pay as little as $350 down Call Hignife Realtors
anytime 757 1969__
REDUCED. University area Three bedrooms, formal areas, side and back glassed in porches. $55,0<X). Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.
SPECIAL FINANCING AsLowAs9'/2%
" AVAILABLE FOR NEWCONSTRUCTION HOMES, CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES
Call Joe Bowen
East Carolina Builders, Inc. 752-7194Anytime '
TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL per
centage rate loan. Attractive 3 bedroom, t'z bath brick ranch with carport. Located on woodsy lot near university. Living room/dining room, eat in ,kifchen, custom storm windows and doors, new furnace, (no air conditioning) Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square feet heated area. Take over approx imafely $33,500 for 25 years re maining with principal and interest payment of $280.82 month (This loan would cost you $388 month at todays rate of 13%). Pay equity of $16,4(X) or owner may consider some financing for part of equity Very low closing cost and no discount points to buyer Lease/purchase also possible Immediate possession. Priced at $49,900 Call Owner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532evenings. Noagenfs
2 STORY LOG HOME near Ayderi 746 6127
3 BEDROOM, I'z bath home on large canal. Bulkhead and pier, central heat and air, attic, double insulation, fully carpeted, living room with cathedral ceiling. Call 1 946 9128 anyfirne.
Ill Investment Property
INVESTMENT PROPERTY.
Front'back brick duplex. Double garage 2 washer dryer hookups, 2 stoves and 2 refrigerators, also convey. Possible partial owner fi nancing 417 4)9 East 3rd Street Call Winston Kobe, 756 9507, Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500.
LOWER THAN RENT! New Duplex apartment for sale."538,000 Owner will pay points. Possiblity of 10 35% interest before December 6 757
3998, ) 795 4323 or 1 792 4740.
113
Land For Sale
LAND FOR SALE: 55 acres near Stokes, State Road 1550. Cutover woodsland with good growth of young pines, road frontage, good development potential Call 825 1581 after 6 p.m.
103 ACRES near Simpson with 33 cleared Road frontage, rail fron tanp nn allotmeote $90 000 Contact Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500, nights 756 5260
103 ACRES with 33 cleared. 8 miles east of Greenville Over 2000 feet of road frontage Owner will divide $90,000 Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500; nights Don Southerland 756 5260.
50 ACRE FARM south of Ayden in the St John's Community Road frontage on SR )I0 and SR 1753. 5t acres cleared, 7 acres wooded Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house Call tor full details Moseley Marcus Really 746 2166
115
Lots For Sale
BEAUTIFUL LOT IN COUNTRY
loca red only minutes from
Greenville on paved highway S R 1212 (Voice of America Road) between Stantonsburg Road and Highway 32, has community water (Bell Arthur) and is already approved for septic tank For addi tional information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348
LARGE RESIDENTIAL lot tor sale conveniently located in beautiful Baywood; restricted to house of 1,700 square feet or more, com munity water, paved streets Call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348
LOTS Completely developed be tween Kinston and Griffon, close to DuPont Plant, with community water and paved streets Approved for mobile homes and conventional houses Price $3400 with financing available with approved credit. Call 752 5953
VETERANS! No down payment.
low monthly payment, low interest home loans Are your d
your due for honest and faithful service Let a Veteran help you get your due Call Bob at 756 0191 8 to 8 or 752 0569 after 8 pm.
WOODED LOT IN Country for sale approximately 1 acre; located on paved highway S.R. 1751 (approxi mately 10 miles from Greenville near Venters Crossroads). For ad ditlonal information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CRAFTED SERVICES
Quality furniture Rafinishing and repairs. Superior caning for all type chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakes-any length, all types of pallets, selected framed reproductions.
EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER
Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758-4188 8AM4:30PM
Oraanvilla, N C.
SPECIAL Executive Desks
M i30 beautiful walnut finish Ideal lor home or office
Reg.Prici .
$259 00 *1 79
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 Evans St. 752-2175
PRIME
LOCATION
200 ARUNQTON BLVD.
1236 SQ. FT. FOR LEASE
BU8INE884>ROFESSIONAL OfnCE SPACE
75M295t
t
ne uau/ i iet(cv.>iui. Oieoii w.^udy. ucccniuci Q. t;OJ n
117' Resort PnHMrty For Sale
BAYVIEW Buy now at off SMion pnc; four bedroom trailer witb m baths. Includino lot. Only SI4.900. Estate Realty Co., 7S2'S05a. nights 758-4470 or 7S2 3647
RIVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico
River. 1 mile trem Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Aiso 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between Sand 5.
NEED STORAOET We have any )ur storage need. Cal Storage, Open Mon
size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933
WAREHOUSE STORAGE and sales space. Excellent location. Up to 55,000 square feet. Adjacent office available. Price negotiable. 752 4295/756 7417.
121 Apjirttnents For Ren!
ACONDOMINIUM FOR CHRISTMAS???
Why not? Cannon Court Con dominiums have monthly payments lower than rent! Two bedroom units available now. Call Iris Cannon at 746 2639 or 758 6050, Owen Norvell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, Wil Reid at 756 0446 or 758 6050 or Jane Wqrren at 758 7029 or 758 6050
AACX)RE&SAUTER
no South Evans 758-605a---------
ALMOST NEW TOWNHOUSE - 2
bedrooms, 1'j baths. Convenient location. Call 7& 7314 days, 756 4980 nights.
AN ENERGY EFFICIENT 2
bedroom. I'a bath townhouse with fireplace. WaSHer/dryer hbok ups. 752 8949
ATTRACTIVE AND ENERGY ef
ticient 1 bedroom apartment. Hooker Road. $225 per month, $225 deposit. Call Tommy, 756 7815.
AZALEA GARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio xouches _ ____
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost free refrigerators
Located in Azalea Gardens near Grook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets
Contact J T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815
BRICK TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedroom, end unit, storage, near Nichols 756 9006 atter 6 p.m
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'z baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishvvashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV. wasner dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557
DUPLEX APARTMENT available at Frog Level on I acre wooded lot. 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, kitch en/dining combination, sundeck, heat pump. $io5 a month No pets 756 4624 before 5 p.m. or 756 5168 after
DUPLEX APARTMENT, 2
bedrooms, 1'z baths Appliances. Excellent location, shopping, theatre and hospital tall 756 44W atter 6p m
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom
?iarden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry tacilities. 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
756 5555
HERITAGE INNAAOTEL
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, $310 month. 756 6295 atter 6.
ENERGY EFFICIENT. 2 bedroom townhouse. wooded area. $310. 756 6295 atter 6 p.m
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
BRAND NW tastefully decorated townhouse near ttospital and mall. 2 bedrooms, 1 baths, washer/dryer hook ups, efticient. No pets. $300 per month. 756 8904or 752 2040.
HOSPITAL AREA, Med School. New townhouses, 2 bedrooms, IM: baths. No pets. $300. 756 2193.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located just off 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
LANDMARK. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 3 blocks from Universi ty. Heat, air and water furnished. No pets 758 3781 or 756-0889.
LARGE I BEDROOM apartment. Near University and Uptown. Carpet, electric heat, appliances furnished. Private and quiet. Phone 758 2225after6p.m.
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heal pumps (heating costs 50 per cent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insula tion.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 15 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
75A-5067
NEAR HOSPITAL medical school. New duplex townhouses available tor Immediate occupancy. $300 per month. No pets. 752-3152, ask tor John or Bryant
NEW DUPLEX. 2 bedroom townhouse, heat pump, near hospi lal, $300. 756 6004.
NEW ONE bedroom. Convenient location. Washer/dryer hookups. $220 per month, 756 7417.
NEW TOWNHOUSE, Williamsburg Manor. Special decor, now avalla ble. Call 355 6522.
NEW 2 BEDROOM (Kjplex apart menf, no pets. Call 756-1821 after 3:15.
Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in -Cfassiljad----------------------
NICE 3 ROOM apartment, stove and refrigerator furnished. Located at 1301 Dickinson Avenue. $135 monthly . 756 3362.
OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTAAENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish wqsher, refrigerator, range, dis pbsal included We also have Cable TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4T51
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 month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live
'^['1
TV
Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p m. /Vionday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
121 Apartments For Rent
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT,
carpeted, central ^alr and heat, appliances, washer dryer hookup. Bryton Hills. $275. 758 3311.
TWO PEOPLE to take over lease for 2 bedroom townhouse at Jiiverbluff. 1V5 baths. $280 month includes water and cable. 758-2070.
UNIVERSITY AREA. 1204 B Forbes Street. 2 bedroom duplex, living room, kitchen, 1 bath, ideal for students. Available now. $200. 756 0765.
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom, 1',^ bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. Immediate occupancy.
756
WEST HILLS TOWNHOMES'
Located just l'/j miles from the hospital and medical school, these units are designed to house two or more, if you have 6 reommate and would love to have that second full bath, give us a call. Energy effi cient, washer and dryer hook ups and a storage room for all those extras you just can't part with. Call us for an appolhtment to rent these new two bedroom townhomes minutes from the hospital.
Professionally managed by RemcoEast, Inc. Weekdays 758 6061
Nights & Weekends 752 7490
WILSON ACRE APARTMENTS.
1804 East 1st'Street New 2 and 3 bedrooms, washer/dryer hook ups, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis, pool, sauna, self cleaning oven, frost-free refrigerator. 3 blocks from ECU. Call 752 0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportunity
r-BEDR^M-apartment, appli anees furnished. Tenth Street, $100 per month. Call after 6 p.m., 524 5042.
1 BEDROOM apartment. Furnished. Located in Winterville. Call746 2011 between 9a.m. 5p.m.
I BEDROOM APARTMENT, heat and hot wafer furnished. 201 North Woodlawn $215. 756 0545 or 758 0635.
1 BEDROOM - Near campus. All electric. No pets. $215. Call 756 3923.
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, I'j baths, fireplace Near Hospital. ,$325 monthly. Deposit required. No pets. 355 24l9or 756 6906 after 6 p.m
2 BEDROOMS, 1'i baths. Ridge Place. Lease and deposit required $300 monthly. Phone 756-7310.
2 BEDROOM, I-z bath new duplex. Conveniently located to hospital and Carolina East Mall in Shenandoah. Washer /dryer... hoalc._ufWi.._, Grand, new! Available immediatety. $300 per month. 752 5169.
2 BEDROOM, close to university,, most utilities furnished. $300 month. Lease and security deposit. No pets. Call 758 0491 or 756 7809.
3 BEDROOM-DUPLEX on Meade Streiet Near ECU. Central air, range, refrigerator, freshly painted $270. Phone 756 7480
3 BEDROOM apartment. Located in Winterville. Call 746 2011 between 9a.m. 5p m.
125 Condominiums For Rent
TWO BEDROOM University Townhouse Condominium (#47), well located and ideally suited tor I or 2 people We lived here originally and if you take an interest in your home, you will love it! "Beat the Peak" saves you money. Smoke alarm. Bedroom bay window. Pool. Tennis courts and library nearby. Available January ). $275 per month. Call 752 4440 after 7:30 p.m. or weekends.
127
Houses For Rent
3 BEDROOM HOUSE in Ayden Phone 746 3674.
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1,2, and 3 bedroorns. washer dryer hook ups. cable TV. pool, club house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"
4I Willow Street Office Corner Elm a. Willow
752 4225
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
iinCC DISPLAY
NOTICE!
We will strip straight chairs
For $H00
# EACH Revolutionary new method! Completely safe for fine furniture, metal, wicker, etc. Call for our low prices of other Items.
752-1009
STRIP-EASE OF GREENVILLE
628 South Pill SI
CHRISTMAS TREES
Fresh Cut, Weil Limbed-Pitt County Grown On Greentree Farm by the Winchesters Ail Sires From 4 ft. To 8 ft.
Special Trees For Apartments and Mobile Homes
Dickinson Ave. Extentlon 1 Mile West Of Moose Lodge
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 dont 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.
LINCOLN
EAST
CARLINA
WMt End Circle Greenville, N.C.
equal opportunity employer
756-4267
t
T
127
Houses For Rent
BELVEDERE. Nice 3 btdroom homt available Immedlataly. $400/month. Lease and deposit re quired. Cell Ball & Lane, 752-0025.
FARMVILLE - 3 bedroom house. Phone 753-3327 or 752-6724.
FOR RENT: House in Hardee Acres. 3 bedrooms, 1'/> baths, heat pump, garage, carpets, fenced in backyard. $350 a month 752 3993 evenings.
HOMES FOR RENT in Grifton. $200 to $500. Call Max Waters at Unity, 1 524-4147 days. 1 524 4007 nights.
HOUSES AND Apartments in Greenville. Call 746 3284or 524 3180.
LAKE GLENWOOO, 104 Bryant Circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, large lot. 524 4148 or 524 5042, Echo Realty Inc.
NEW HOUSE FOR RENT with option to buy. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $550 per month. Call 752-1232 or 756 5097.
THREE BEDROOMS, two baths, excellent kitchen, central heat and air, no pets, lease only, security deposit, 615 Oak Street, near uni versify, immediate occupancy. $375 per month. Call j.L. Harris 8, Sons, Inc , Realtors, 758 4711.
THREE BEDROOM house, living room, dining room. In Winterville. Call atter 5,355 6023.
2 BEDROOM FARM HOUSE. 9
miles out on Highway 43 South. $225 746 2291 after 6p.m.
2 BEDROOMS, large combination kitchen and dining. $260 per month. Call 752 2025.
3 BEDROOM, 1 >/z baths in Elmhurst. Available January 1st, $350. Smith Insurance Realty. 752-2754.
3 BEDROOMS, 1'/} baths. Available January 1st. $350 mon thiy. Lease and deposit. 756 6365
3 BEDROOMS, V/j baths, near Eastern Elementary School. $350.
757 0634^---- -
3 BEDROOM HOUSE, family neighborhood, near schools, oil included, 1400 square teet, 752 1050.
3 BEDROOM house in Simpson. Central heat and air, stove furnished. Shown by appointment only.. Call 752 6471, if no answer call 752 503, leave message.
129
Lots For Rent
LARGE PRIVATE LOTS for mobile homes. City water. $65 per month, 758 7741 Owner/Broker.
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
41 you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it this fall in these columns. Call 752 6166.
TWO BEDROOM mobile home for Tint,. Fumi$hed.XalL752 5635*.________
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
12X60, 2 bedroom, 1>,^ bath, un
furnlthad except stove, refrigera tor, washer/dryer, underpinned and tied down. Set up in small perk.
Perk restrictkxis, no children, no pets. $190 a month. Call 756 6697
after 6 p.m._
12X60, 3 uedrooms, washer and dryer. $160. Also 2 bedrooms with carpet. $125. No pets, no children. 756 9491 or 758 0745.
2 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer, air. No pets. No children. Phone 750 4857.
2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Call 756-4607 from 9a.m. to8 p.m.
2 BEDROOM mobile home near Greenville No pets. Call 746 3734.
2 BEDROOM, washer/dryer, central heat and air. carpet, fully furnished. No pets, no children. 756 2927.
13S Office Space For Rent
OFFICE SPACE available
Available in December Off 264 By-pass. 21(KI square feet of prime office space. Well decorated. 12 month lease or longer, private parking. $1200 per month.
CallClark-Branch
Management
756-6336
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
TERRIFIC OFFICE LOCATION for rent Located in the 2700 block of East 10th Street, one of the most heavily travelled streets in Greenville; large and small offices at extremely reasonable rates. For additionai information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348.
UPSTAIRS office space available af the Mattox Building, 315 West Second Street. Everythi-ng furnished. $100 per room per month Call 758 3430.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
135 Office Space For Rent
1,200 SQUARE FOOT (3 Offices) on Evans Street. Price negoitable. 752 4295/756 7417.
5,000 SQUARE FEET offico build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty ot parking. Call 758 2300 days.
600 ARLINGTON BOULEVARD -
Suite ot two offices with reception area. Utilities furnished. 560 square feet. Van Fleming Jr., 756 6235 or 758 2887
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE UPPA CLASSMAN or
Young Professional to share 'j rent. Pool, laundry, bus route. Call Pamela at 752 9951 after 5:30 p.m.
LOOKING FOR NEAT mature male college student. Private room with shared bath available. 1 block
from canyjus. Rent $125 month plus deposit. Call Kyle between 6 p.m. and7p.m only. 758 6708
MALE TO SHARE home near D.H. Conley, $160 includes utilities, washer dryer, phone, heat. 756 4164 or 756 6735
ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2
bedroom condorriiniufM near Greenville Athletic Club, prefer non smoking female professional Call 756 7164 after 4 p.m
ROOMMATE NEEDED for 3
bedroom house. Call 752 3103, Kelly before 3 p.m.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. House 5 miles from country, 'j expenses. Call 758 8158 atter 5 p.m.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton. Co.
INCOME PROPERTY
Average $1600 per month for 8 years. Ideal for absentee owner.
4600 SQ. FT. MASONRY BUILDING IN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA Very secure lease with AAA Southeast companf
THE RICH COMPANY
3-^46-8021 f4ighls,^S-S46-632e
NOW LEASING
142 Roommate Wanted
ROOMMATE WANTED pro
fessional male to share 2 bedroom townhouse. Call 8 to 5,757 4701
ROOMMATE NEEDED
mmediately. Nice apartment to share halt rent and utilities Call Monday Friday, between 8 and 12 noon, 757 6233
University Medical Park Townhomes
Brand New Luxury Aparinens
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
2 Lurge Bedrooms
IV2 Baths
Heat Pumps
Spacious Floor Plan
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
GRANT BUICK INC.
603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.
ROLLS BACK PRICES!!
1984 Buick Skyhawk
Plus NC Sales Tax
Stock Number 84162
*9889
PlusNC Sales Tax
*8899
1984 Buick Skylark
Slock Number 84140
1984 Buick Century
*10,798
Pius NC Sales Tax
Stock Number 84167
The Dealership That You Can Always Depend On!!
Weekdays: 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday: 9:00 to 2:00
Phone: 756-1877
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
144
Wanted To Buy
WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood
timber Pamlico Timber Contpany, Inc 756 8615
WANTED TO BUY standing
timber, large or small tracts 746 6825 or 746 2041
2 TO $ ACRES OF land suitable tor house and garden within 10 miles ot Greenville Call 752 4348
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
We are in need of several salespeople for a local, well established firm. We offer excellent company benefits, including Free hospitalization and life insurance. No overnight travel involved.
n
For an appointment, Call:
Carolina Model Homes
758-3171
FARM EQUIPMENT
AUCTION
Friday, Dec. 9,1983 - 10:00 A.M.
Location: Take Hwy 43. south from Greenville, N.C., go approximately 20 miles, turn right on Rural Paved Road 1476, go approximately 3 miles. Sale will be on right.
TRACTORS M.F. 2745
Ford 9700 (1456 Hours)
Ford 5000 '
Ford 3000
TRUCKS 1969 Ford 2 Ton
BARNS 5 Roanoke 18 Box (Gas Fired)
4 Powell 150 Rack (Gasf ired) Powell Turn Table with press
EQUIPMENT One Row Roanoke Primer with Both Heads 4 Row Mixmizer 18 Ft. M.F. Disc Lilliston 9 Tine Chisel Plow 3YardCCC Gas Rig
4 Row KMC Rolling Cultivator DeCologt High Boy Sprayer 4 Bottom Ford Plow Hardee Side Boy 6 Lilliston Mower Hoe Drain Plow Ford 3 Bottom Plow Ford 2 Bottom Plow 6 Ford Blade 6 Ford Harrow
4 Row M.F. Planter
2 mO'vy Moliand Transpiiitet
5 Row Powell Topper 16 Ft. Long Disc Unloading Rack
KMC 4 Row Rolling Cultivator 48
4 Row Planter
5 Roanoke Tobacco Trucks Regular Tobacco Trucks
2 Row Lilliston Rolling Cultivator
Sale Conducted by
COilNTKY HOYS AUCTION AND REAl.TY CO. P. O. ((ox l/iS Washincjton, North Cciroliti.i PtioMf, )i(b 6007 State License No. SS
loouc CURKINS Creanville, N. C 751-1875
RALPH RESPESS Washlngton^,^ *Bt7
SOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
The
,,11 isrReal -Estate rner
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
Exceptional
Elmhurst!
This well maintained Dutch Colonial offers generous living areas and a superb neighborhood at a modest price. Four bedrooms, formal areas, lovely den, spacious country kitchen plus a garage with studio/workshop space.
*61,900
ball & lane
752-0025
V
28. The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Thursday. December 8,1983
1/
Will 'Ignore
Seaiy Mattress & Boxsprings
Quilted Top Mattress Firm Support
Twin Size...............Reg. $99.95 SALE '79.95
Full Size...............Reg. $129.00 SALe'89.95
Queen Size............Reg. $349.00 SALE '249.95
Also:
Price Sale On All Famous Sealy Posturepedics, ChooscJThc JEirmness To Fit Yorf.
DKFKNDS KKiHTS Elizabeth Bouvia sits in her wheelchair during testimony in which she defended what she believes is a right to self-determination. (AP Laserphoto)
HIVEH.SIDE, Calif .APi - Elizabeth Bouvia. a (juadnplegie who says her cerebral palsy makes life unbearable, has told a court she v\ ill carry out her plan to starve to death even if the judge rules against her
am going to refuse the best way I can any nutrients and medical care." she testified Wednesday I will ask them to please not do it to me:Jorce-ieed hen because 1 don't have the physical abilitv to resist."
.Mrs Bouvia. 2ti. is .seeking a court-injunction to prevent Riverside General Hospital staff trom force-feeding her or giving her medical treatment, but she still wants the hospital to keep her free frompam until she dies.
She told Superior Court .Judge John H. Hews; 1 have come to this court to ask not to be force-fed against m> will" llews said he wilf issue a" temporarv injunction at the end ot the current round of hearings, not a permanent line, meaning another series 01 heanng.v will have to be heki He did not indicate what the ruling would be Dr Donald E Fisher, the hospital's chief o t psvchiatrv. has .^ald he will detv an> court order allowing Mrs Bouvia to starve. He has said he will either discharge her from the hospitaf or torce-teed her Fisher testified that he thought Bouvia could be turned away trom her de-cifoon by treatment or by time alone.
'i think the. prognosis for this lady is very good." he said, noting the immensity of the success of this lady" in her completion ot high school, junior college and college, plus her beginning work on a master's degree.
He called it amazing, thrilling" and said the fact that she has bogged down, become perhaps even dysfunctional . is understandable."
In her testimony before Hews. Mrs. Bouvia said. I choose no longer to be dependent on others. I have to be taken care ot every day of my life and It's humiliating." She said it she were fed
through an intravenous tube. I would try to the best of my ability to pull Ghe tubei out with my right hand."
A** Riverside County attorney asked the wheelchair-bound Mrs Bouvia why she did not starve herself when she lived in Bandon. Ore.. a coastal town 75 miles north of the California border.
"My father would not leave me aione in my apartment to starve W' death." she said. "To do that would be committing a crime."
When Deputy County Counsel Barbara Milliken asked what crime. -Mrs. Bouvia said. The crime of killing someone. On top of that, it's an emotional thing. He's my father and I'm his daughter."
I'm not asking for anybody to kill me." said Mrs. Bouvia. "Fm asking that the natural process of death take over."
Mrs. Bouvia lived in Oregon about two weeks before her father. Ren Castner. drove her to Riverside, where she checked into the hospital Sept 3.
A Business In Fabric Decoys
PINCKNEY, Mich. (AP) - For Bonnie Everett, 31. what began as a hobby is now a bird of a different feather.
Three years ago. she opened her own firm to make fabric duck decoys. Starting with ducks handmade from corduroy. Ducks and Co has expanded to produce ducks made from muslin or chintz and trimmed with ribbons and lace.
The ducks are usually used for decoration, although the firm also makes weighted versions for use as doorstops.
. PROTESTSETTLERS
^ ARAGUA1N, Brazil (AP) - Thousands of Indians have seized a government outpost in this remote Amazon jungle area to protest an influx of settlers on Hieir tribal lands.
Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?
First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector
752-3952
Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.
FUmE COMPANYS
ramrruMsa
Big Pre- Christinas Sale
Sale Starts Friday 8:30 A.M.
Storewide Savings 25% to 60%
w jIus1=z cochrane Received...
In Time For Christmas
Maple & Oak Cochrane Dinettes
25%.o50%o
Entire giuupings reduced. Save up to $400.00 on 7 pc. suite Large selection of matching chipas & hutches - All greatly reduced!
Tabie and 6 Bow Back Chairs Regular $900.00........................... Sale
As Shown in oal< or maple.
557900
MAKE IT A
Comfort Christmas
with a Genuine Berkline chaiH
Pre-
Christmas
Sale
Savings up to
50%
0
Large Selection of Styles & Covers
Loufvging T V.VItwing FuIIRmIIiw
i Easy room arranging since chair may
TCBiiBway
VViii not touch wa'i in any position A great space saver'
Give Dad What Hell Really Enjoy!
Large selection of covers in corduroy, nylon, tweeds, plaids and vinyls.
A small deposit will hold your selection until Christmas.
Over 150 in stock to choose from.
Sale Priced
from
189
00
rM( 0(6., s( o-r B(i sf DU'vf mo SOv* ['((SSlt )r|i.
399
00
Colonial Living Room Styled For Comfort
Outsmrrtiing ArrreTtcan tracirtionat pieces.
Sofa ... Regular $699.95 SALE^489^^ Ottoman . Regular $139.00 SALE^99 Chair. .Regular $399.00 SALE^289^^ LoVC Seat. .Regular $519,00 SALE'
,33900
Student Desk
Maple GrOak Finish. Reg. $179.00.... Sale
129*
Oriental Rugs
100% Wccl
Reg. $ 9x12 . . $499.99 Sale
269
Reg $ 6x9 $279.00
2x4....................... Reg. $69.95
189
$4488
All Lamps, Pictures O C 0/
& Mirrors. .......... . . . ^0_/Ooh
$17900
Gun Cabinets
Helds 6 Guns Reg. $279.00...... Sale
One Group Glass Top
End Tables and Ccffee Tables. Pecan Finish.
Regular $179.00................. Sale
$7995
Bedroom Suite Sale
4 Piece Oak Finish Bedrc'' Suite
Double Dresser, Mirror. Bed. ^ /v/v
5 Drawer Chest and Nightstand S C
Regular $799.00. Sale
All Wicker Q/\ 0/
Bedroom Furniture White Or Natural Finish......... $3
"0 Off
4 Piece Maple Finish Bedroom Suite
Double Dresser & Mirror. Tall Poster Bed,. ^
5 Drawer Chest & Nightstand
Reg. $1029.00...... Sale
4 Piece French Provincial Bedroom Suite
White With Gold Trim Double Dresser & Mirror. ^
Tall Poster Bed, 5 Drawer Chest & Nightstand $
Reg. $849.00.... . Sale
One Group Pine Bedroom Furniture
For Boys Room. Bookcase
Beds, Desk, Double Dresser & Chest.. . . . ......
4 Piece Solid Mahogany Bedroom Suite by Link Taylor
Pencil Post Bed, Triple Dresser and Mirror, Chest on Chest, and Commode Nightstand
599
00
1/2
Off Entire Group
Regular $4329.00.......................Sale
2589
00
Grandfather
Clocks
straight Sides with glass Side panels Westminster Chimes
Regular 949.00
$
Sale
599
Howard Miller Clock Co. X*
GhristmaS Howard Miller Mantel Clocks, Xt t Wall Clocks, and Grand-
Clock Sale father Clocks
Large Selection - Save 25% to 50%
CHRISTMAS
SALE
on
Entire Group of Henkle Harris Solid Mahogany
Or Solid Cherry Furniture - End Tables, Bedroom
and Dining Room Pieces included.
90 Day Cash Plan No Interest Free Delivery Up To 100 Miles
FURNITURE CO.
535 Dickinson Avenue Downtown Greenville 752-5161 86 Years Of Continuous Service To Eastern North Carolina" Plenty Of Free Parking Next To Our Store.
Open Friday Nights Until 9:00 P.M.
90 Day Cash Plan - No Interest Charge. Or Use Convenient Monthly Terms With Approved Credit. I
l>
'...'A .n. A
frM
Gift WrapptnK
$IXLOaTIONS
WINDSOR AHOSKIE GREENVILLE MT. OLIVE KINSTON WASHINGTON*
Sale Begins Fri., Dec. 9th
OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 O'CLOCK
Sauce
Set
N0.7SK.
Your Choice
$399
Each
Bon Bon
Ho.3flC^-
Ci' 'i
bVi Chrome Dish With Crystal Liner. Gift Boxed.
^ 5W ^
5" Bowl With Imported Serving Ladle. Gift Boxed
Bosket
No. 74A
4ondvOr Nut Dish
Oval Server
Mo. 719
9y2"By6V2" 5" Bowl On
Engraved All Over.., Chrome Tripod
Shell & Godroom Bose With Curved, Reeded Legs Border. Chrome^^ Gift Boxed:
Scalloped Bon Bon Basket. Glass 5^ With Reeded
Chrome-Plated Handle Gift Boxed.
Plated. Gift Boxed.
r r
^ 0- C
Christmos
Sole
Each
Jumbo Gift Wrap
35 Sq. Ft. Roll
Christmos
Bows
Pkg. 20 Bows In Pkg.
Party Server
N0.34K.
5" Bowl On Chrome Feet. Gift Bcxed^
Oblong Truy
No. 100c.
by 9-5/8" Chrome Plated Serving Tray. Engraved Design. Ribbed Edge.
Christmas
Sale
1st Quality
Dan River
Sheets And Pillow Case Sets ^
Twin Bed Size
Christmos
Sole
Each
K4 ^V>
2-Sheets
1-Case
Full Bed Size
Gift
Wrapped Free
2-Sheets
2-Cases
$1588
(ZX>
Embroidery
Pillow Cose Sets
Shop Our Jewelry Department For Christmas Gifts!
Girls
Sweaters
100% Acrylic Sizes 7-14
Sale
Reg.
$5.99
Sale
$499
Large Selection
Indiono
e g|p55
Amber-Crystal-Olive orPric
$399 $499 $599
New Fall Ladies'
Boxed Hankerchiefs
Box Of 3 69-'3"
Christmas Sale
Better Quality a White On White
Deluxe Corded
Rolled Hems
Full Size
Christmas
Sale
Pocket Caculator
Compare At $20.00
A'
Swiss Embroider
Wide Lace
Box of Two Reg. $3.19
Men's Dress
Gloves
Black Or Brown
P oeacon
Warm
Pile
Lined
Ladies' Embroidered
Boxed Hondkerchiefs
Bv Beacon
Leather Look Vinyl
Acrylic Pile Lining
Gift Wrapped Tree
$37
Leather-^ilcjB.
Kid Graih Vinyl 0 Excellent Color
Selection
N, M, And W Widths
Dee, Sale
$12
Save On Men's Worm
Sweaters
Reg. $10.95
Popular Men's Basic V-Neck Sweater In 100% Orion Knit
Co/ors:
Ton, Block, Natural, Green, Burgundy, Navy
Jordache Jeans
For Ladies
Reg7
$38.00
Value
$24
Men's Sizes; 28 To 42 Designer Jeans At A Tremendous Savings
Greenville
Kinston
Washington
Ahoskie Mount Olive
Windsor
mm
Six Stores Serving fetfeni Morth CaroBna
Greenville - Kinston - Ahoskie
Washington - Mount Olive - Windsor
Sale Starts Friday, Dec. 9th
emwrapptd Free Of Course
Open Every Wight 7119 O'clock Until Christmas All Six Stores
Gift Wrapped Free Of Course
Men's
Pajamas
Dm. Serf*
Ski Sweaters
$12**
Value
50%Kodel,50% Cotton, Permanent Press.
Contrast Piping
AEasy Care 100% Acrylic Knit
Beautiful Patterns And Colors
Sizes S, M, L, XL.
ivy Classics Traditional Elegance
Dress Shirts
Dm.
Sob
Button Down Collar
Oxford Cloth
Permo-Press
Men's Warm Hooded
Sweat Shirts
. Men's Sizes S-M-L-XL
Dec, Sale
Uy4 Oz. Cotton Denim
Straight Leg Or Boot Cut
Our Best
Sizes 29-42.
Men's
Rohes
Christmas
Sale
*13
Reg.
*16
Solid Color Broadcloth
65% Dacron 35% Cotton
White Piping On Collar, Cuff And Pockets
Navy, Burgundy, Lt. Blue
Good Selection Of Colors
Sale Last Two Days Only
Men's Matched Sets
Work Shirts And Pants
Dee. Sale
Pants
Reg. Mow $12.99 Only
Boys Sizes To 8 To 16
Shirts Mew
Reg. $9.95 (My
Khaki Or Green Heavy Wt. Twill In Easy Core Fortrel & Cotton. Needs No Ironing.
e Extra Large Sizes:
Shirts 18 To 20 Only 9.77
Pants 44 To 50 Only 11.77
Boys Basic V-Neck
SKp-Over
Sweaters
Christmas Sale
100% Oflon Knit
Ctont tiirgondy Cornel, White, Navy, Brown And Block
80% Cotton-20 % Poly
Heavyweight Flannel
Permanent Press
Two Pockets
Western Style Buttondown Flap Pockets
Children's Size 4 to 7
V-Neck Sweaters
By "Wrangler Kids"
$11.95 . Value
Dec.
Sole
$^88
Colors For Both Boys And Girls
Fine Guage Orion Acrylic
Men's
Thermal
Underwear
Men's Knit
Warm-Up
Suits
Dec, Sale
Reg $1T88
$24.95 I #
Zipper Top With
Collar
Contrast Color Trimmed
Worm Fleece Inner-Lining
All First Quality
Sole Two Days Only
Sizes-Smoll, Med., Large, Extra Large
Coveralls
Dec.
Sale
65/35% Poly/Cotton Navy Twill-Perma Press
Zips From Top Or Bottom
Action Bock For Comfort
Concealed Metal Snaps
Combination Rule-Plier Pocket and Hammer Loop
Seven Pockets and Pencil Pocket
Reg. $3.99 Dm. fate
$27,
Full Cut
First Quality
Sizes # 8T0I6 V
Open Every Night m 9 O'clock
Free Gift Wrapping
Ea. Pc.
Shirts & Drawers Two Days Only
Compare Sizes At 7-13 30
Full Grom Leather
Oil Resistant
Some Plain. Some Moc-Toe
Fleece Lined
Boys Crew Neck
Sweatshirts $
Dee. Sak $^47 V
Men's 6 Inch Leather Work Boots
fes
GREENVIilE WASHINGTON
WINDSOR
AHOSKIE KINSTON
MT. OLIVE
Qpefl Everjr Mgfcf T 9 O'cfodr
SahBegias friday, December 9tk FRttGIFTWRAPPIMG
One Group
Ladles' Sweaters
Sizes: Small, Medium, Large And 38 Through 44
Sale
Ladies'
Skirts
Regular $12.95 and $15.95
Safe
Warm And Cozy Cotton flannel
Pajimias And Granny Gowns
Sizes 32 To 48 Reg. $6.99 And $7.99
n
Sale
Ladies'
Jeans
All Styles In Our
$16.95 & $17.95 Price Range Your Choice
Sale
Nylon
Gowns
S4VI-L Dec. Safe
Regular
$12.95
Matching
Robe
Sale
I
''
All Ladies'
Dresses
t Values To $20.95
Your
Choice Sale
$]488
Each
Patti Green Peggi Gee
Allison Page
Ladies'
Half SBps
100% Nylon Colors: White, Block, Asst. Pastels
Sale
Polyester Cotton Ladies
Coffee Coat
Gripper Front Permanent Press
Reg. $7.99
Sale
Luxurious
Brushed
Long
Gown
Sizes S-M-L Reg. $4.99
Sale
Ex. Lg. Sizes X-XX-XXX Reg. $5.99
Ladies' Knit Fashion A/\atching
Hot And Muffler Sets
Reg.
$5.99
Value
Solid Colors And Stripes
5 Inch Muffler With Fringe
Assorted Colors
Special Buyl
Ladies Long Sleeve
Blouses
ixtra Good Buy!
Reg. $12.95
Sale
100% Acrylic Fashionable 'Nova Knit" Ladies' And Misses
Gbves
Reg. $2.99 Value
A Nice Christmos Gift Buy Now And Sove
Ladies Leather-Like Warm Vinyl
Gloves
By "Snow Country^ Dec. Sale
Fleece Lined
Stitched Design
Gift
Wrapped
Free
Ladies'
7/ 'I A Cotton Bloomers
f i
Small-Med.-Large-X-Large XXL
Sale
Vinyl
Mattress Covers
Full or Twin Reg. $1.99 $100
Contour Fitted
,/'X__
Each
Acrylic Pile
VEST
100% Cotton
Vest or Snuggle Fonts
Small, Med., Large,
XXXL
Each
Leg
Warmers
Ladies'
ladles' Slippers
Sapphire Blue - Block Or Plum
Dense Acrylic Pile-Padded Vinyl Sole - Pile Sock
Ladies'
Panties
Irregulars Of Regulor$1.29to $1.99
Infants Two Piece
Spencer
Sleeper
Girls' 7-14 Sizes
V
Mt
Cobbler's
Apron
Small
Medium
Large
X-Large
Reg.
4 and 5^
GREENVILLE
WASHINGTON
WINDSOR
AHOSKIE KINSTON
MT. OLIVE
Open Every Night IN 9 O'ehekSah Begins Friday, December 9th FRU GIFT WRAPPING
Men's Denim Work Jackets
100% Cotton Denim
^ by Wran^l^
Men's
Blanket Lined
Worit
Coots
Srit
V:'
Blue Denim Zipper Front Lined Jacket
Sizes
38-50
Hip Length
Corduroy Collar
Sizes 38-52
t CorduroyCollor
Cotton pre-shrunk
Areo
Decorotor
Rugs
Hush
PupRite
Dec. Sole
For Men
Duke II Bowser IV
THECXtlQINAL
mKI^iG9m
Gift Wrapped Free
Duke ll-Tan Or Gray Brushed Pigskin
Bowser IV-Tqn Brushed Pigskin
Medium And Wide Widths e Sale Lasts Two Days Only
All
1st Quality TobeSocks
For^**
Men's Over-The-Colf
Tube Socks
Packaged 6Prs. To A Pock
STEAM BUTTON TEMPERATURE SELECTOR
FABRIC
OIAL
FILL HOLE
Large Size
Bed Piiiows
Special Purchase Tremendous Value Men's
Casual
Slacks.
Dec. Sole
With
Matching
Belt
Poly/Cotton Twills In A Large Selection Of Styles And Colors
Waist Sizes 28 To 42
Gift Wrapped Free
One Group
Draperies
Reg. $7.99, $9.95 And $12.95
First And Some Irregulars
Hand
Lotion
16 0z. -(l Pint) Reg. 89' Value
Sole
00
Shower Curtain
Suntan Vinyl Upper
Soft Foam Lining And In-Sole Covered With Nylon Tricot
Hrm Crepe Sole And Heel Wrapped Free
FABRIC
6UI0E
With 12 Vinyl Shower Curtain Rings Reg. $5.99
Matching
Towel Sets
*Bath Towels
$399
*Hond Towels $249
Wa>h
Clothi
Furniture
Throws
/ \
1 \ '1
4: ' * -
^ Velvet Mist
Bdspreods
Reg. $16.95
Childs Sizes 11 To Men's Sizes 13
Irregulars At Our Regular $22.95
Sole
$14
One Group
Chenille Bedspreads
Full Bed Size
Mens And Boys Insulated
Rubber Boots
$1]97
Reg.
$19.95
Sole
M3
"Cummer II"
Ladies'
Duck Shoe
0 9 Eyelet Lace Thick Foam Steel Shank Insulated
Reg.
$18.95
Value
QconveRse
Sizes 6 To 10
An Star $16
Christmas
Sale
High and Low Tops
Men's And Boy's Sizes
Hush PupnlM
So comfortable anything goes
. Doc. Sole
Dec. Sale
Ladies'
Handbags
Reduced All Reg. $7.99 & $8.99
Now
All Reg. $9.95 & $11,95
Now
$788
All
$12.99 To $14.99 Now
Entire Stock Of Fashion Dress
And Casual Styles Reduced
Some Styles In N-M And W Widths
Ladies' Over-The-Shoe
Rain Boots
One Fostner
Woven Like Design
Smoke Color
Sizes 5 To 11
Reg.
$6.99
Ai
Greenville
Kinston
Washington
Ahoskie
Mount Olive
Windsor
Whites
SxStertsSerflv
infemllorffcOiriftw
Greenville Kinston - Ahoskie Washington - Mount Olive - Windsor
Sole Starts Friday, Dec. 9th
Gift Wrapped Free Of CourseOpen Every Night/Til 9 O'clock Until Christmas All Six Stores
fn$OfCam
Men's
Pajamas
Dec, Sale
*12
Value
50% Kodel,50% Cotton, Permanent Press.
Contrast Piping
Regular
$18,95
Value
Dee. Sale
, !
14^4 Oz. Cotton Denim
Straight Leg Or Boot Cut
Our Best
Sizes 29-42.
Ski Sweaters
Easy Care 100% Acrylic Knit
Beautiful Patterns And Colors
Sizes S,M,L, XL.
Ivy Classics Traditional Elegance
Dress
Shirts
Dec.
Sah
Reg.
$14.99
Button Down Collar
Oxford Cloth
Permo-Press
Gift Wrapped Free
\
Underwear
For Men M Kseomt _ ericas
Briefs
Pkg.OfS
a. $7.59
T-Shirts
Pkg.Ofa
Save!
Je^9^
Men's
Warm Hooded
Sweat Shirts
Men's Sizes S-M-L-XL
Dec. Sale
Boys Plaid
Fkinnel
Shirts
Dec. Sale
Two Days Only
Sizes 8 To 18
Perma Press
Good Selection Of Colors
Zipper Front
Worm Fleece Lining
Two Fiond Warmer Pockets
Values To $2.00
Knit Orion
Solid-Stripes
fr
. Men's
Robes
\ Christmas Sale
Reg. 16'
Solid Color Broadcloth
65% Dacron 35% Cotton
White Piping On Collar, Cuff And Pockets
Navy, Burgundy,
Lt. Blue
Sale Last Two Days Only
Men's Matched Sets
Woii Shifts And Pants
Dee. Sale
Ponts
Reg. Now $12.99 Only
Shirts Now
Reg. $9.95 Only
KhokiOr Green Heavy Wt. Twill In Easy Core Fortrel & Cotton. Needs No Ironing.
Extra Large Sizes:
Shirts 18 To 20 Only 9.77
Pants 44 To 50 Only 11.77
Knitted Headwear
Men's Plaid
Flonnel Shirts
Matching Plaids-Lined Yoke Long Tails
Reg.
$8.99
Value
Dec,
Sale
80% Cotton-20 % Poly
Heavyweight Flannel
Permanent Press
Two Pockets
Western Style Buttondown Flap Pockets
Boys Sizes To 8 To 16
Boys Basic V-Neck
Slip-Over
Sweaters
Christmas Salo
Children's %ze 4 to 7
V-NeckSweaters
By "Wrangler Kids"
100% Orion Knit
Colors: Burgondy Camel, White, Navy, Brown And Block
Reg
$11.95
Value
Colors For Both Boy s^ And Girls
Fine Guage Orion Acrylic
Men's
Themiol
Underweor
Reg. $3.99 $09?
Dec.Sale A E
AAen's Crew Neck
Dee. Serf*
Heavyweight Double Fleecj^ Raglan Sleeves AAen's Sizes S,M,L, XL
Hooded
Sweotshirts
For Boys Dec. Sale
Zipper Front Two Hand Warmer Pockets Sizes 4 to 16
Men's Knit
Worm-Up
Suits
Dec. Sale
*17
Zipper Top With
Collar '
Contrast Color Trimmed
Warm Fleece Inner-Lining
All First Quality
Sale Two Days Only ' Sizes-Small, Med., Large,Extra Large
^BlGd
^ben!
Coverolls
a *19
65/35% Poly/Cotton Navy Twill-Perma Press
Zips From Top Or Bottom
Action Back For Comfort
Concealed Metal Snaps
Combination Rule-Plie'r Pocket and Hommer Loop
Seven Pockets and Pencil Pocket -
Fleece Sizes Lined 8 To 16
Boys Crew Neck
Sweotshirts
Dec. Sale
Full Cut First Quality
Ea.Pc.
Shirts & Drawers
Two Days Only
Men's 6 Inch Leather WeikBooti
Every Night rd 90'aock
Free Gift Wrapping
Compare Sizes At 7-13 *3(r
Full Gram Leather
Oil Resistant
Some Plain. Some AAoc-Toe