Daily Reflector, December 9, 1983


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SPORTS TODAY

ECU MEETS DUKE

East Carolinas men travel to Durham Saturday to face unbeaten Duke University in college basketball. Page 15.

INSIDE TODAYCOMING SUNDAYUNSUBSTANTIATED

Presidential counselor says he has seen no sound evidence there are hungry children in America. Record government sums to food assistance. (Page 12)

-A handful of Greek monks still live in monasteries isolated nigh m the mountains.

The art of brass rubbings flourishes in a shop established in Manteo, and on the Outer Banks, work is underway in restoring historic Chicamacomico.

Buy a telephone for a Christmas present? Check out the wide availability and number assortment of different models.you can pick from for that hard-to-buy-for person on your gift list.

Learning to use a new voicea first^hand account.THE DAILY REFLECTOR

I02ND YEAR NO. 276

- TRUTH    IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONG.REENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 9, 1983

28 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

A New City Council Sworn in Thursday

By TO.M B \I\KS Refieclor Staff Writer

An overflow city hall gathering witnessed a historic occasion Thursday night as Greenville's first female mayor assumed her duties along with a newly elected City Council that includes the first local black mayor pro tern.

Janice Buck, who was first elected to the council two years ago. joined four incumbent council members and two new officials in receiving the oaths of office from Superior Court Judge David E. Reid.

Returning to the council are Louis Clark, Judy W Greene, William Hadden and Stuart Shinn, while Dr. M.W, i Henry i Aldridge and Edward E. Carter begin new Ienure.s

The council followed tradition by electing Carter as mayor pro tern for the next two years. Carter was the choice of the board after leading the council field in the November elections and returning black representation to the board fnUnwino a two-vcar abscnce. Ironically Ciirter's election as

mayor pro tern came only two years after he narrowly missed gaining a seat on the council in the 1981 balloting.

Mrs. Buck, who occupied the mayor pro tern chair the past two years, began her administration by paying tribute to outgoing Mayor Percy Cox. a 17-year veteran of city service. She said the three-term mayor, in providing "outstanding leadership." was dedicated to the betterment of the quality of life" here and "answered the call to serve."

The new board honored Cox and outgoing Councilman George Pugh by adopting for the record resolutions citing the retiring officials for their service and presenting them engraved plaques. Pugh, a former member of the city's Board of .Aldermen, served one term on (he council......

A supportive crowd that spilled out into the hall adjoining the third-floor council chambers turned out for the ceremonies, A reception honoring Mayor Buck and the new members o( the council followed the city hall activities,

NFCVV CITY OFFMCI.VLS ... taking their oaths    hers joined incumbents Louis ( lark,.Iudy (ii eene

from Judge David E. Heid (L) were (L-R) .Mayor    William Hadden and Stuart Shinn    tor Thursday

Pro Tern Edward E. Carter, Mayor Janice Buck    evenings installation ceremonies. (Hellector Staff

and Councilman .M.W. .Aldridge. The new mem-    Photo)

Two Marines Wounded In Shiite Militia Shelling Scientists Aglow Over

Shuttle's Reseorch Role

ByG.G.LaBELLE

Associated Press W riter

BEIRUT. Lebanon lAPi -smite mlVuiamen fired on the Marine base at Beirut airport today, wounding two U.S. servicemen, and Israeli gunboats and helicopter gunshlps attacked a PLO base near Tripoli.

A PLO Spokesman said the Israeli shelling killed one person and wounded three and that the Israelis .set up a naval blockade to prevent Yasser Arafat and his

loyalists from evacuating Tripoli. Israel denied it set upa blockade.

The Marine contingent at the airport retaliated with small arms. 40mm grenades and anti-tank Dragon missiles and "the tiring ceased. There were no other casualties or damage." Marine spokesman Mj. Dennis Brooks said.

Beirut radio stations said the counterattack devastated the Shiite position, the sec ond wiped out in two days bySanta Parade Here Saturday

The Greenville Jaycees' Christmas parade Saturday will begin at noon on First Street near the Willis Building

Jaycee spokesman Bobby Tripp said the parade will proceed south down Reade Street, follow Reade Circle to Dickinson Avenue, turn right on Dickinson and proceed half a block to Washington Street for a left turn, and continue out Washington north to First Street for termination.

Tripp said the noon starting time is a departure from the 10 a.m. schedule followed in recent years.

REFLECT()R

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 inail us your items. Thank you.

TUTORS NEEDED Brenda Tyson Joyner has asked Hotline to appeal for volunteers to tutor area students for the California Standardized Tests and the High School Reading and Writing Examination.

The CST tests are for all grade levels; the reading and writing exams for high school juniors and seniors. She said volunteers will be needed after Jan. 7, when students return from their Christmas break. She especially would like retired teachers and East Carolina University and Pitt Community College education majors to take part, she said. Anyone interested may call Ms. Joyner at 752-9959 between 9 and 11 a.m. and 2 and J p.m. any weekday.

the .Marines.

Brooks said one Marine was slightly wounded and one Navy Seatiee .sutierea minor wounds when two rocket-propelled grenades and smaliarms fire struck near the northeastern perimeter ot the base shortly betore8a.m. 'la m.'ESti.

Brooks said the Marine was in a bunker and the Seabee was driving a bulldozer when the base came underfire.

The wounded .Marine was evacuated by helicopter to the amphibious assault ship Guam. The Seabee suffered a broken eardrum when a rocket propelled grenade blast hurled him oil the tractor He was treated at the airport. Brooks said.

The PLO base shelled by Israeli gunboats contained tents, buildings and vehicles. Israel's military command announced. It said the bombardment scored "accurate hits" on the fortification which It said was a half-mile north of Tripoli, where Arafat is trapped.

The Israeli attack came three days after a bomb exploded on a Jerusalem bus, killing four Israelis and wounding 46. Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization claimed responsibility for the blast.

But a government official in Jerusalem, speaking to reporters on condition he not be identified, said the Israeli attack today "shouldn't be considered an eye-for-an-eye action" and "should not be viewed as an effort to prevent Arafat from leaving Tripoli"

The Israeli official said the gunboat assault on the Tripoli base was "in line with our long-standing policy of hitting terrorist targets from which terrorists are sent out on actions or where terrorist actions are planned '

The official reiterated Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's condemnation of the United Nations' decision to allow the use of its flag on Greek ships heading for Tripoli to evacuate Aralat and his loyalists from the siege mounted by Syrian-backed rebels in the PLO.

"If the United Nations lets them leave, it lends them international legitimacy... We can't go along with this, he said. "It is inconceivable to have an international organization of which we are also a member give safe conduct to people who have committed such a terrible, heinous crime'' as the Jerusalem bus bombing.

A Fatah spokesman in Tripoli, Ahmed Abdul-Rahman said one person was

killed and three wounded in the pre-dawn attack, and that after the shelling the israeii navy set up a blockade to halt the evacuation of Arafat and 4.00 of his fighters from Tripoli.

Abdul-Rahman said Arafat sent an urgent message to the U.N. Security Council to , intervene and lift the Israeli blockade. He said Aratal also sent messages to France and Greece seeking a reaffirmation of their commitment to help carry out the evacuation.

Abdul-Rahman said France had agreed to provide a naval escort for four Greek ships that will take Arafat and his fighters to Tunisia and North Yemen, probably next week.

Arafat has been trpped in Tripoli since Nov. 3 by guerrilla mutineers who accuse him of softening his stance toward Israel,

By John ank zak Associated Press Writer EDWARDS AIR FOR(E BASE. Calif. lAFi - Scientists inspected Columbia and its astronauts today for signs of wear from a record 10-day flight, but it may be weeks before officials know why a computer and a navigation device failed and forced an 8-hour landing delay.

With the $1 billion European Spacelab in its cargo bay. Columbia ended its flight of more than 4 million miles in a dusty touchdown at 3:47 p.m. Pacific time Thursday, less than an hour before sunset.

The ninth space .shuttle mission was hailed as a success for the reams ot scientific data accumulated

during the voyage. Fourteen countries contributed to 73 experiments conducted round-the-clock in an unprecedented amount ot .scientific activity.

"We have many scientific firsts that came out of this mission. " said NASA administrator Gen. James Abrahamson, flanked by shuttle Commander John Young and pilot Brewster Shaw at a post-landing news conference.

"We also have one that has been proven time and time again, and that's that the level ot uncertainty in the universe is a constant. " Abrahamson said.

The four mission specialists - Owen Garriot. Robert Parker. Bvron

Former Congressman

Jenrette Draws Fine And 2 Years In Prison

WASHINGTO.N. (AP) -Former South Cafolina Rep. John Jenrette was sentenced to two years in prison and fined $20,000 today following his bribery conviciton in the FBI's Abscam case.

"You have betrayed your public trust, not only as it relates to the citizens of your district in South Carolina, but for everybody, everybody in the country," U.S. District Judge John Garrett Penn told Jenrette in handing down the sentence.

Jenrette, a Democrat, is one of seven members of the House and Senate convicted on various charges in the undercover investigation involving a phony Arab sheik offering bribes for help with an immigration bill.

Five have received sentences ot from one vear to

AVOID THE CHRISTMAS RUSH. ONLV 13 SHOPPING PAYS LIFT.

three years and tines up to S50.UU0. Only one, former Rep. Richard Kelly, R-Fla.. has yet to be sentenced,

Jenrette's lawyer. Kenneth Robinson, pleaded with Penn for a sentence of no more than'six months because, the attorney said. Jenrette was the only Abscam defendant whose judgment was distorted by alcoholism.

Can't there be more mercy for Mr, Jenrette when the prosecutor says the man has been remorseful and he has suffered'?" Robinson asked.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Reid Weingarten, in urging that Jenrette receive at least as severe a sentence as the other defendants, told Penn he realized Jenrette had performed important community service since his conviction three years ago and was remorseful

But Weingarten added that "these compassionate feelings must be overcome by the objective component .. his almost unbelievably gross sellout."

"1 don't think it would be fair or accurate to pin Mr. Jenrettes conduct in Abscam on his alcoholism." Weingarteenwenton.

Jenrettes real offense, the prosecutor said, was that the

.-\meric;yi public "will conclude that's-how business is done on Capitol Hill. Anything less than a substantial prison sentence will fuel' the cynicism .Mr, Jenrette's conduct has caused."

The judge said he was disturbed that the government's case against Jenrette seemed to originate with the desire to "get at you or some congressman."

Penn said he was "astounded" to learn during testimony that the FBI targeted Jenrette without having any suspicion that he had been involved in any previous crimes.

The judge said he saw no evidence that Jenrette, a Democrat, solicited a bribe, 'but 1 still cannot overlook the tact that ... you could have walked out of the room and reported to the FBI or someone else. "

Penn's sentence was as follows: Two years and a $10.000 tine tor conviction ot accepting a bribe, two years and $10.000 for conviction of conspiracy, the prison terms to run concurrently; a suspended sentence ot two years and $10.000 on a third count involving Jenrette's attempt to solicit more bribe monev.

Lichtenberg and West German sclenti.sN,< L it .Mei'bold - were hurried oft for a. week ol 12-hour-a-day experiments on how the body reacts to weightlessne.ss and the return to gravity. The tests will duplicate those done during the flight.

(olumbia. which has' now made six trips into space, was towed to a scatiold-like device which will hoist it onto a Bot'ing 747 jetliner tor its return to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, planned for .Monday,

.National .-\eronauties and Space Administration scientists examined its exterior tor damage and planned another briefing today.

However, inspection ot its failed computer - which had four backups on board - and a broken navigational guidance device will await Columbia's arrival in Florida Abrahamson said "weeks ' ot tests would be needed to determine the reasons tor the breakdowns.

The six astronauts - the biggest crew on any space flight - were not endangered by the delay from the scheduled 7:59 a.m. FST landing, and had food and fuel tor another two days, NASA ol-ticials said. The flight had already been extended by one day to gie the astronauts time tor more experiments and some sightseeing.

But Young, praising Shaw's handling ot the situation, joked that when the computers tailed. I turned to jelly,"

"There was a problem and I don't want to minimize that, but ... we were not on the edge of some huge problem, "Abrahamson said.

.Mission Control ordered the delay after a powerful jolt shuddered through the craft, followed by the failure ot two computers and the navigational device, called an Inertial .Measuring Unit or IMU. Oiic computer was quickly brought back up Columbia had two backup IMUs and only one was needed for landing

' Young reported iho |hi. came during the tiring o( i control jc! a.' he ua.- pit-paring lor the return to Earth

'It really hit the vehicle hard, " said Young, who was on his sixth shpttle tlight. "It was really an impactlype ot thing, probabl.N as high magnitude as we'\x* seen around here in a longtime."

Abrahamson s.od the first computer tailure "In itsell wasn't ot any great eon-cern"

"However, when there wa." a relationship clearly between the lirst one and the second one and the lirings o! the KCS reaction conrol .system jets, then the right thing It) do and the proper thing was to slov\ down.' he said,

.Mission Control told the crew to he read\ to land at 2:15 p.m PST. but th;i! \\a> delayed tor an addiiioiial on minutes to allow time lor a computer program redcMgn

Later. Mission Cimlroi said the computer taiiure wa> not associated with the ihribtci' tirmgs and it "looked as i! tin. computer had been altered tor some undoiermincd reason in "multiple loca tions,"

At 2;.55 p.m [.ST. Young tired powertul rockets for 2' minutes, 1,55 miles over the Indian Ocean during the Kitith orbit. That tiring

I Ileasc liirii to Iagetl'Crimestoppers

If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt ( 0 u n t \ . call Crimesloppers, 7,58-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid tor the information \ou supply.

IWEATHER

I'artl.v cloud.N tonight with temperatures in ;:iis. .Mostly Miiiiiv .saturdas with highs in iipiici 5iis.Looking Ahead

A c'liaiice ot rain Sniula.\ and Mondas. hecoming fair Tuesday. Highs during period will generalh be in the 511s (some 6Hs along coast), and lows from mid-:iOs to mid-4i)s.Inside Reading

Page 9 Area items PageKtGreylord PageUObliuaries ^





2 The Daily Reflector. Greenvllle. N C

Friday, December 9.1983

Sarah McClendon Is Cited As Woman Of Conscience: 1983

Amount Of Bill Should Be Total Concern Of Host

By Abigail Van Buren

   * 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: Please, settle this long-standing dispute between my daughter-in-law and me.

I say that when we are out for dinner and I am the host "and the bill comes to the table, the gue,sts should engage in polite conversation and show no interest in the (iheck.

My daughter-in-law not only insists oh knowing how much the bill is, she offers her unsolicited opinion on how much the tip should be!

Please print your answer. 1 want to show it to her.

S.TORMY IN SUNUNl), CALIF.

DEAR STORMY: The amount of the bill and the size of the tip should be the exclusive concern of the host or hostess. Your daugRter-in-law should contribute her opinion only if she is going to con;lribute to the bill.

DEAR ABBY: Im 22 and my fiance is 21. I'll call him Leon." Weve been engaged for two years, but we never set a wedding date because Leon wanted to pay off his motorcycle, van and boat first.

Well, in the two years weve been engaged. Ive had two abortions, and I just found out Im jjregniint again. 1 honestly dont know how this keeps happening, Ahby. Ive been on the pill for two years and I hardly ever forget to take it. Leon never uses any protection because its against his religion.

He wants me to get another abortion, but this time I think we'd better keep the baby and get married, i ve always wanted a pretty church wedding. My parents promised me one, but Im afraid if I tell them I'm pregnant, I wont get the wedding. Also, the kind of wedding I want will take four or five months to plan, and Ill be showing by then. Please tell me what to do. ,

IN LOVE IN TAMPA

DEAR IN LOVE: Tell your parents you are pregnant and want to be married as soon as possible. Forgo the kind of wedding that will take four or five months to plan. Theres no reason why your wedding cant be both pretty and prompt. And if its against Leons religion to use birth control, tell him to use self-control.

DEAR ABBY: 1 just returned from picking up my 9-year-o!d son at sc.hool. aod I om the end my rope.

This is the fourth time in as many days that Johnnys" teacher called and asked me to pick up Johnny because he had wet his pants. Today she told me that unless something is done about this I will have to take him out of school.

.Johnny stopped wetting his bed when he was 4, but he has not as yet achieved consistent daytime dryness. Sometimes he will be fine for weeks, then for no apparent reason he starts to wet his pants again. It doesnt matter if hes in school or on vacation, he stills wets his pants.

Ive had him to a pediatrician, then to a urologist, and neither doctor could find anything physically wrong, so I took him to a child psychologist. She said, "Ignore it and dont make an issue of it; in time the boy will outgrow it.

This is verv hard to ignore, Abbv. Now what'.'

END OF ROPE

DEAR FiND: Take the psychologists advice, then ask her to write (or telephone) Johnnys teacher enlisting her patience and cooperation.

To expel the boy from school for this reason would only compound his problem. In the meantime, buy him some disposable, absorbent, diaper-type underpants with plastic linings. Your urologist can tell you where to get them.

CONFIDENTIAL TO HAVING PROBLEMS IN PALM BEACH, FLA.: Sex therapy is in. Faking satisfaction is out.

BvP.ATRIClA.Mc-(OR.M.ACK I'nited Press International

Accustomed as she is. Washington reporter Sarah .McClendon, 73. found herself in the spotlight the other day.

Attention this time, however. wasn't trained on her during a televised presidential press conference while she asked a thorny question - her trademark during scores of news conferences spanning administrations of nine presidents.

The scene this day was a luncheon at the Pierre Hotel in ,\ew York City. Mrs. McClendon was being honored as the 1983 Woman of Conscience, a prestigious award . from the National Council of Women of the United States, an umbrella group for 27 organizations whose aggregate membership totals millions of women.

Leaders of these organizations, ranging from the Women's Relief Society of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints '.Mormons! to the YWCA, saluted .Mrs. .McClendon g r a n d 1 i . n mA native of Tyier, Te.xas, Mrs. .McClendon began her news career writing for newspapers in Texas, and later founded her own news seiwice for newspapers and radio stations m Te.xas and elsewhere.

' She accepted the award and then launched an attack on secrecy m government, 'Taxpayers don't know what's going on. " she said, 'There's too much -secrec>-.-V\ e~don J know what- -goes on between the president and heads of state when they meet. They don't tell us "We usually find out some things from the other countries later It we found out what they really talked about maybe we would know whvthelalksfail '

"If we keep on asking questions maybe, jast maybe, we will be able to find out why there is poverty, what IS fWhind the high interest rates. wh> we have the arms race with the .Soviets and why we now are on the verge of world war. "

The first Woman ot Conscience award m 1983 went to aufhor Rachel Carson, who was cited for protecting the environment from pollution. Other award recipients have included anthropologist Margaret .Mead and medical pioneer -Dr. Mary Allen Engle.

"Sarah .McClendon has made tremendous contributions as a journalist." said .\ancy Barker, president of .the New. presenting the award.

It includes a grant contributed by Clairol Inc. as part of its public service program Mrs McClendon came to Washington as a WAC

(Womens Army Corps) public affairs officer during the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

In January she will join a new public television program. Inside the White House," that also will feature Helen Thomas, veteran White House correspondent for United Press International, and columnist Betty Beale.

The Woman of Conscience award this year focused on peoples right to know through communications, marking United Nations World Communications Yeaf.

Mrs. .McClendon said she is firmly committed to the people's right to know.

She has-aimed-questions-during the Reagan administration at such explosive issues as civil rights and sex discrintinaiion in the federal government During Richard Nixon's administration she often harped on the issue of neglected veterans. During President John F. Kennedy's administration she sought to uncover information about security risks.

Mrs. .McClendon said she sees -herself as a "bridge between big government and little people."

The citation said .Mrs, McClendon had been named 198:! .VVora^ii of Conscience "Because she has fearlessly asked tough questions of nine United Slates presidents."

.Mrs, McClendon recalled her dealings with some.

"When I asked President Nixon about the failure of the \'eterans .Administration to get educatfon checks to veterans all over the country, he at first .said it was not true.

"But in 10 minutes afterwards he started an investiga! inn Later he changed administrators and the whole \'A personnel at the top and went on national radio tosayl was right.

About President Reagan. .Mrs. .McClendon said:

"He'doesn't like for any one to disagree with him. He dodges questions. He often plays down a reporter's question as if the reporter actually had no basis for asking.

"If a reporter pursues, as I did one time in trying to get out the report on the study of discrimination against women from the Justice Department, he may end up making the reporter look silly, disrespectful or antagonistic.

"But in the end he found the report and is now giving it to us gradually."

The National Concil of Women ol the United .States, a non-profit, non-partisan association, is an information center and forum for current national jjisues for its membership of autonomous organizations and individual members.

Dr. (j)Ihii D (jIhM Speaker

The Pitt Count) Association ol Insurance Women held its meeting last week at the Ramada Inn Dr Steven Cohen, chiropractor, presented a program on 'Health Care and Your Health Care Dollars "

Joyce .Mijls. CPIW. safety chairman, reported that Dec 13 had been set lor the Christmas party at Caswell Center in Kinston Dr Cohen volunteered to donate all bakery Items tor the party

President Sandra Sawyer announced the regional board meeting would be held in Wheeling. W Va. .March :!Oand April 1

A guest tor the meeting was Verdie Chitty of Ahoskie.

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MR. AND MRS. FRANCIS 0. NUNN

Couple Honored On 50th Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Francis 0. Nunn of Greenville celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday night at a reception given in

Vddiu (ioiT

(iive.s Pro^Tain

"Uhristmas Treats From the Kitchen" was the program topic given by Addie 'Gore at the meeting of the Cherry Daks Garden Club Tuesday night.

Miss Gore is a home extenstoH agent for Pitt County.

Plans ''to help a needy tamily at Christmas were discussed.

The judging of decorations in Cherry Oaks will take place Dec. 11. Ribbons will be placed on the mail boxes

of winners......

President Barbara Hall conducted the meeting.

Meeting hostesses were Novella Barber. Carolyn Rollins and Glenda McLawhorn.

M arria;:!*

\llll(Ulll('(*<l

Mr and Mrs. Ernest S. Silva announce the marriage ol their daughter. Geneveva Mary Silva, to Steven Eric Feuerstein. son of Mr. and .Mrs. Sheldon Feuerstein of Wyandanch, N Y. The couple was married Dec. 1 in Chicago. 111., where they will make their home.

their honor.

The couples children are Francis 0. Nunn Jr. of Winston-Salem, Kenneth Dean Nunn of Greenville, Mrs._Les Elis of Dumfries, Va., Mrs. Vance Corey of Winterville, Ms. Gayle Leudesdorf and Ms. Judy Mizell of the home. The couple also has seven grandchildren.

Mr. and Mrs. Nunn were married Dec. 3,1933, in Red Banks Church in Pitt County.

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The Tea a.nd Topics Book Club held its meeting Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. Linwood Stoneham. Marcy Bypd, cuiui diidiyMb iur Beauty for all Seasons, presented the program.

She demonstrated the value of color in clothing the correct application of make-up

Thank You

I would like to thank Mr, Herbert Modley and all the men of Hollywood Presbyterian Church for all the good food that we received for Thanksgiving

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9.





Pitt County Farm Bureau Receives Award This Year

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

The best public relations Jrogram in North Carolina or 1983 has been awarded to the Pitt County Farm Bureau.

The award was presented at the annual meeting of the N.C, Farm Bureau Federation Convention held in Asheville Sunday through Wednesday.

Gray Faughter, vice president of the federation said. "Pitt County has done an outstanding job telling the farmer's story during 1983.

The committee used the ; newspaper, radio and television to help create a better image of the farmer,"

"The purpose of the public . relations effort is to create a : better understanding be-; tween the farmer and the

~Tirbair population. This is the ; second year Pitt County has

received the award." said ; Helen Wooten, chairman. .Pitt County Farm Bureau ; Public Relations Committee.'

Alma Worthington is a member of the N.C. Farm Bureau Women's Advisory 'Committee. Twenty-five .women from across the state .make up this committee ; whose purpose is to work to - involve women in every area -of Farm Bureau and to ;coordinate the state and :county work.

Fnday. December 9,1983 3

TWICE IS NICE I

1726 W. 5th Street    H

Next To Jefferson Florist J

Now Open I

Good Selection Of Boys & Girls j Winter Coats & Sweaters    J

Nearly New Childrens Clothing,    2

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^ Wed. 3-8 Sat. 9:30-1:00    '    9

All Wrapped Up For Holidays

FANCY THESE - Special styles add to the festivities. At left, the Victorian embroidered and lace-trimmed panel is the focal point of this double-tiered red, dotted dress; for sizes 2-6x. At right, a luxurious black velvet" bodice enhances

the red and black taffeta dobby skirt; lace trim edges the short sleeves and white Peter Pan collar, accented by a matching taffeta bow: for sizes 2-4T. (By Nannette.)

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BEST PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM .has been awarded to the Pitt County Farm Bureau. Holding the award are Helen Wooten, left, and Alma Worthington.

BvCKCILVBROW.SSTONK Associated Press Food Editor BRUNCH FARE Hot Buttered Rum Cranberry Pancakes Palmiers & Coffee CR.A.\BERHYP.A.NC.AKES Good way to use a small amount of fresh cranberries,

1 cup fork-stirred unbleached all-purpose flour

l-j teaspoons baking powder '_> teaspoon salt

2 tablespoons sugar

1 large egg _

4 cup milk

2 tablespoons oil

cup fresh cranberries, chopped medium fine On wax paper or in a small bowl thoroughly stir together flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. In a mediuim bowl beat together egg. milk and oil until blended; add flour tiiixture and stir until it is moistened; stir in cfanberries. Pour by U-cupfuls, well apart, onto a greased electric griddle heated to 375 degrees. Bake until a few bubbles break on surface and bottom sides are brown; turn and brown other sides. Serve hot with maple syrup. Makes 9 good-size pancakes - plenty for 3 servings.

: When cooking, match the :.size of pots to the range !units. Heat is wasted when !the pot is smaller than the :unit.

Two Programs Cooperate To Keep Elderly At Home

Bv ELIZABETH RICCT

SCHENECTADY, N Y, (UPl) - A recently retired Schenectady letter caPrier, Alfred Villano, probably saved a life two months ago when he noticed an unusual mail build-up at the home of an elderly man on his route.

Police were notified and 'discovered the man had been without food or water for at least three days.

Even the most independent senior citizen living alone shudders at stories like this, of contemporaries who suffer medical emergencies at home and are unable call for help.

Two nationwide programs are helping prevent such situations in Schenectady. One is the Boston-based

Lifeline, whose more than 800 programs serve 30,000 subscribers in the United States.

In Schenectady, where the elderly population is 8 percent higher than the national average, the postal Carrier Alert system takes over where Lifeline leaves off.

The postal system formalizes what many letter carriers have been doing for years - keeping an eye on mail build-up at the homes of elderly people who live alone.

Lifeline operates locally through Ellis Hospitals new personal emergency response center.

For subscribers, help is as close as a 2-ounce, l'2-inch-square electronic switch, worn on a necklace

orstrappedtoawrist.

The button activates an alarm hooked into the telephone, which automatically dials the hospitals new center and buzzes for 5 minutes.

After a call to the home to assure that the alarm was not set off accidentally, hospital personnel contact a relative or neighbor from a . list chosen by the subscriber, said Katherine Cardini. the Lifeline coordinator at Ellis.

If none is available to check on the caller, police or paramedics are sent to the scene.

Hospital officials say the "$16-per-month cost of the service, which can be waived in cases of financial need, is a small price to pay for the degree of independence and security the system offers.

I want to live here (at home), and now I dont see any reason why I cant," said Mrs. Edith Cusato, 77. a Schenectady widow who joined the program after recovering from injuries suffered in an emergency at home.

She had slipped and fallen on her garage floor. She sustained a broken shoulder and wrist and her calls for help were unheard for more than two hours.

"Finally the little boy next door who always picked up my mail - Id give him a lo|^p or some candy, you knw - came by with his mother and heard me calling.Mrs. Cusato said.

She decided to join Lifeline at the urging of her daugh

ter, who live^ out of state.

"I like to be doing things. I cant just sit around and do nothing, she said.

The emergency button functions up to 200 feet away from the telephone, allowing most users to wear it anywhere in the home or yard, hospital officials said.

At this writing Ellis has 12 subscribers. Mrs. Cardini said she hopes the program eventually will cover 75 people.

The program is restricted to people with known medical problems. But in cases like Mrs. Cusatos, health emergencies strike unexpectedly.

The Carrier Alert program 'in Schenectady has been working informally since 1974, pioneered by William Cooke, president of local 358 of the National Association of Letter Carriers, and the local Office for the Aging.

"The Postal Service and the national union realized that some locals were doing it and decided to take the bull by the horns and give it some organization," Cooke said.

People join the postal service program by filling out cards with names of friends or relatives to be contacted in case of

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4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. f^.C.

Friday, December 9,1963

Editorials

'Free' Can Cost

Studies show that people who have to pay part of their medical bills are just as healthy as those who have free medical care. Additionally, the studies show that those who pay a part of their medical costs make orie-third less visits to physicians.

Sadly, those who receive free medical care do little to chaij^ their, poor health habits and thus the implication is that the more fi-equent visits do little to change their general health.

Soaring cost of health care is a matter of major concern to our nation and cost-sharing programs are being considered as a way of reducing the costs.

Many private health plans require cost sharing through deductibles and by the insured paying a percent of the routine health care cost, with full coverage being reserved for major medical matters.

It is likely that government-sponsored health care programs will move in this direction.

!t has often been shown that that which c^mes free is largely wasted.

John Cunniff

Fortune Hunting

picking up properiies at distress prices from fhose who have had to repossess them ,\nd. it must be added, are anxious '10 get the properties off their books. '

You find such properties by asking lenders such as savings institutions, by-reading the legal newspapers, by checking for possible postings in court houses or sheriffs'offices.

As in the IsTtts, you might still obtain creative financing terms. Lending institutions aren't in the business of managing properties They are in the money business, however, and they might use their money lo move properties

Lowry estimates he has purchased S6 million of property this year alone, and throughout his career has been involved in S35 million worth of purchases, sales and exchanged Less than two decades ago at age J7 Lowry was a supermarket butcher in Oakland. Cal, who "wanted to be a very successfulperson,"

That, he says, is when he found out about real estate, and learned that "the ability to read, write, add and subtract were the onlv skills needed '

NEW YijRK' AP - .As viewed by Aioert Lowry, the mar. who helps people ruild fortunes m real estate, the li&.is are "m some wayra mirror of thei9T(s

In that earlier decade "smart' people nought property through the use of .reat.ve financing, which often meant' MTrowing iw percent of the property's value, fixing the property up and taking out still another mortgage So long as values rose and rents were sufficient to cover the payments, it could 'oe done Not a day went by that inflation didn't bail out scores of buyers who had gone in over their heal^ without reading the terms

Lenders were equally creative, especially in the repayment terms Some of the mortgages t.hey offered called for rising monthly payments Many .mortgages were written for very short terms. Lots of them included 'oalloon payments

Recession came The two incomes that often supported the investmients were reduced to one. The tenant lost his job and couldn't pay the rent The monthly terms continued to rise The balloion note came due

.And inflation -.vasn t mere to oail out the harried owner Hu pro:>ertv was repossessed How times ..nbnge feru of thousands ot people did indeed make their own little fortunes m. the is7',s But maybe as m.any failed Lowry, therefore, r.as produced another , txtok. "Hidden Fortunes." subtitled "How To Protit From The New upportumties Of The IsBi.s The new opportunities are .m.i;iniv m

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

UiS. Sfiows Its Paranoia

Growth Lies Ahead

A new mayor and City Council have formally taken office with the swearing in ceremonies Thursday night.

With four incumbant members of the council, along with a previous council member, there should be enough experience there to carry on city business affairs adequ^ely.

The citys first woman mayor, Janice Bu^, took office. She had previously served on the council.

It should be an interesting and productive two years for the new council. Its members have many problems to face, but they are problems most councils would like to have, for they involve the amazing growth our city has seen in recent years.

With growth, however, comes the need for better traffic movement, more efficient policing, better fire protection, more adequate recreation and libraries.    

We are sure the council and mayor are aware of these things and they will be doing what they can to maintain adequate city serxdces for a growing municipality. There is much to be done, but Greenville is an economically healthy community and that is a major base to build upon.

WASHINGTON - Last May, President Reagan afforded us an c^rtunity to test a f(N%ign governmrat's attitude toward travel restrictions. Almost immediately after Reag^ went before" television cameras with amal (Mi^phs (rf alleged Soviet arms deliveries to Nicaragua, we ap{HX>ached Sandinista press Officials in Managua about visiting the port city of Corinto, the arms depot in question.

To our request, a government official promptly replied, Go ahead. No escort, she said, would be necessary. (When we got to Corinto, less than 24 hours after Reagans speech, we found that field kitchens, not tanks, had been off-loaded.)

The story comes to mind in the wake of Reagans decision recently to deny Nicaraguan leader Tomas Borge that ri^t to visit the United States. While, in the interest of dialogue, a supposedly unfrioidly nation r^ularly opens its docMTs to citizens and (tfficials of the United States, the bastion of freedom closes its own for the pettiest of reasons: Basically, as State Department sources conceded, the idea of a B^e tour simply gave Washington the willies.

F(w some time, Borge has wanted to speak directly to influential Americans in academic and foreign policy circles. Despite years of solitude in strongman Anastasio Somoza Debates prisons, hes a masterful pol anxious to test his

persuasive powers on U.S. audiences.

That one more politician would pose any threat to this nations interests is laughable, as Anthonly Quainton, our level-headed Managua envoy who sup-pwted Borges visit, apparently believed.

Yet, White House higher-ups who understand media manipulation as well as anybody, (rt)viously thought otherwise. Their simultaneous decision to deny a visa to Salvadoran rightist leader Roberto DAubuisson, who visited the United States last spring, was said to demonstrate a (fcdain for extremists of any sort. Such a comparison betrays the ignorance of Nicaraguan history that has helped soil Americas name in the region.

U.S. leaders paranoia about exposing

Americans to terrorist attacks is justifiable. Their paranoia about exposing

Americans to alternative ideas is not.

Footnote: The ill will from Washington toward Managua is sure to pass througji. Havana as well. Constantine Menges, National Security Council adviser, told t: group of Cuban emigres that the ad-* ministration will upgrade pressure oft* Cuba in the coming months.

Menges, who is widely credited with! applying the "domino theory to Central: America, said the United States wiH; move to "isolate Havana and increase-support for Cuban resistance groups.: Menges added that reports of moderating* the guerrilla war against the Sandinistas. were groundless.

THEMH.,UKEEKH.1X<L

Paul O'Connor

State Teems With 'Official' Panels

R.ALEIGH - North Carolina has a commission that studies ridesharing. a commission that places art in public building, a licensing board for Cape Fear River pilots, a task force on "New Horizons.

Look in the executive branch of government and you'll find enough commissions,' study committees, task forces and licensing boards to fill up an organizational chart. In all. the executive branch is currently authorized to operate 32 permanent boards and commissions.

This week, the General .Assembly will begm looking at the need for all of'these boards and commissions. A committee of the Legislative Research Commission will hold its first meeting Friday. First up on the agenda will be Ran Coble, executive director of the N.C. Center for Public Policv Research For nearlv two

and a half years, the center has 'oeen researching these panels

The center has compiled a rour-i.nch thick directory .of state boards and commissions, it is the largest research project, in terms of sheer volume, the center has ever published The center s report will, for the first time, fnx a pnce tag on the operation of these boards and commissions - the governor's office is unable to proride such a figure but Coble refused to release it beforehand saying he wants the legislative panel to hear it first. Accompanjing the directory will be a set of recommendations which Coble estimates could affect 15 of the boards and commissions.

"There are groups in there that we ve been really impressed with bow conscientiously they have represented all groups and regions of the state and how

C'onscier.'.iousiy they do the work set out for the.m,' Coble said m an intenie'w 'JT. the other ,har>i there are groups which haven t met m a year .An-d there might be six groups domg w&rk in one small area of government expertise. So, there s some dupbcatioc of effort'

Many of these boards and commissions are cnticized as political tools of the sitting governor Jimi Hunt is widely considered to be a master of creating panels upon which he can place his political supporters In that way. he keeps his grassroots organization working.

Coble said the center pursued that angle but could not find any proof Lhat Hunt had used these pa.nels ^itically to any greater extent than did pre.ious goverr/jrs They ve always .nad'a political r.ature. Goble savj But .ne adds that

Chef Currier

Tax-Fev^r Rush Can Hurt

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 CoUnch*    GrMnille.    N    C    2734

EstaUist>) ie<2 PuMislMd Monday Thfough Friday Atiernoon I *nd Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WMICHARO Chairmjn of th Bord

JOHN S. WHICHARD-OAVID J WHICHARD Pubitsners ^

Socond Cls Postg Pid 1 Greonyill# N C    (USPS145-00|

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EMowhore in North Carolina S4.3S Par Month Outaido North Caroiina tJ.SO Par Month

MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PfIESS Tha AaaodaMd Prast M aidustvaty antttiad lo aaa lor piMcallMliB craMM to H or not olharwiaa ctadRad to this papar and alao llw locai nawa puMatwd harain. AM dgMs o puMcationa of special dhpatehae here are alao reservad.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL AdeaiUatoB ratoa and rtaadHnaa avaiaMa aponraquasi

rAnMI Bureau of Circulalton

NEW YORK AP - In the waning weeks of the year, many Amencaris develop a case of tax-shelter fever And as financial experts unanimously agree, it can often prove to be a painfiil and costly affliction.

".At this time of the year, we urge extremq,. caution in selecting any tax sheltered investment." says William Brennan, publisher of a newsletter on tax matters. "There is simply not enough time for a proper evaluation from both a tax and economic standpoint "Some of t.he investments offered this late in the year are viable and will be beneficial in the right circumstances." adds the accounting firm of .Arthur Young. "Others, however, are not The annual yearend rush to obtain tax shelters sometimes clouds the true issues, and you must be attentive to the vanous nsks-benefits involved.

Not so long ago, tax-shelter investments. in areas like real estate, oil and gas. cattle breeding and equipment leasing, were aimed mainly at wealthy people But as inflation pushed more and more .Americans into high tax brackets, they gained much broader appeal.

From about (1 billion in publicly registered funds in 1975. the market has ^roMu to more than $10 billioo this year, says Howard Slayen, tax partner in the Palo .Alto. Calif., office of Coopers & Lybrand. accountants.

"Furthermore, total investment activity in this area is probably understated by as much as ^ percem since many investments are priv^ely placed,

Slayen obsened.

It's a standard precept in personal finance that investors shixild plan their tax-shelter moves early in the year, when they have plenty of time to evaluate the deals available and consider which will best suit their individual circumstances.

But in the p^ of all the other business of life, it s easy enough to put off taking any action until tlw yearend

deadline gets uncomfortably close N-. one knows that better than people me business of selling shelter vehicles During the next few weeks, vmerv me rational, conservative investors rmm .nto easy prey for the army of 'mx ineiter promoters. says Jay    i

broker at Cantor, Fitzjgeralc t ':<} ji Beverly Hills. Calif,

For those who are detefm.me! 4 into a shelter before yearetx:. Giuiinger

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

The mail brings a picture of a little child from an Asian country and underneath is the caption, Hunger is all she has ever known.

This youngster is slowly dying of malnutrition. In America we eat almost five pixmds of food per day per person and throw away enough garbage to fcd a family of six in India. The average dog in America has a higher protein diet than millions ofpeopleinAsia.

Is this our fault? Only partly

so - if at all. But certaintly it is our responsibility. We cannot afford to allow the Third World to starve.

The fact of such deprivation does not mean that our lawmakers are'remiss or that the church is remiss in its ministry. What it means is that here is a desperate situation, and the best brains in the world will ' have to be put to work trying to find a solution.

God will not be complacent if we fail to do our utmost.

iiri'.ses Bfiwjri; :t jnrnuuonai bvpe :ne of, me .r.Gst    oig-a    of    a

questionable :a.x meiter 13 ahck. .nuitcoiored ach/erosing. Remember, it m the mvestior ho itimateiy pays for "he expense "

One the 'oiggest nazards in the game .nght .now IS tlK militant apfRxiach the Internal Revenue .Service is taking toward what it considers abusive shelters IRS policy is that every tax return identified as containing a questionable shelter be examined," notes RoGer. Stanger. an investment adviser specializing in tax shelters.

Ji course the experts note, many gooc. perfectly legal tax shelters exist tnai can withsund the most stringent IRS audi! But there are also lot^ of them that may cress the line into abusive territory

"Finding legitimate tax shelters requires diligence and research on the part of investors," Goldinger observes.

Just how difficult that assignment can be was illustrated by a news story that broke only a few weeks ago. A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging that a group of shelterpromoters had en^ged in a $130 million fraud involvii^ a raie tia-shelter scheme.

Their customers included not only an imposing array of celebrities frtrni the entertainment world, but the chairman of a bank and the head of a large financial con^omerate - all of whom may face additional jax bills if the government wins its case. '

Hunt's computerized system of keeping track of appointments to the panels has added a level of sophistication unknown before Hunt took office,

The center's study found a number of problems which the legislative study will want to address. Some of the panels rarely meet. Some duplicate each other. Some regulate such narrowly defined fields that they affect only a ^ndful of people Some focus so narrowly on one problem that they are unable, in their recommendations, to provide the executive branch with any sensible perspective.

In general. Gary Pearce, Hunts press secretary, defends the principle behind' the panels. "They provide a citizens perspective and involvement in the workmgs of state government. A lot of these things are too important to be dealt *ith just by bureaucrats and these boards give a perspective from outside of state goverment.

Coble agrees with Pearce, to an extent. You're getting a lot of citizen involvement. a lot of good advice, for the money . he said. But, at some point, you have to ask just how much citizenry involvement and advice the executive branch needs.

Public

Forum

To the editor;

Referring to the editorial which concerned itself with the subject (rf Flag Changes Reflect Haste on Dec. 4,1983, in The Daily Reflector, I would like to present some of my thoughts.

My roots are in Pitt County. I have seen these two flags, the Union Jack and Confederare flags all my life. When I think of the Union Jack, I think of our mother country, accepting that much which was done was a reflection of the pattern of circumiUnttit thinking of a given era. When I look at the Confederate ilag, I do not think wbitt nor "black, I think of an era of days gone by,

I queation the judgment of any one citizen to dlcuti a preient change to the past pattern of thought. 11 ilmj^y means that tradition Is tra^ion, and the right of the individual is to make a critical judgment for his/her own good. It slwuld not demand that my criUcil judjpnent acquiese to his/hers.

MiryLoiiSUtoa im Sherwood Dr.

GreeRvUle





Educator Raps Higher Admission Standards

RICHMOND UP) -Norfolk State University President Harrison Wilson says, Higher admission standards will effectively deny an opportunity for a college education to half the minority students.

Dr. Wilson, who heads one of the states two predominantly black state-suported universities, differed sharply with the presidents of several mostly white schools.

Dr. William Anderson, president of Mary Washington College, said the new standards are only a^ starting place.

We urge you to go further, he said.

Too long we have fostered the notion that education is fun and games. We must tell

students they have to work harder - the results are worth it, he said.

Their comments came Thursday during a joint meeting of the Council of Higher Education and the State Board of Education.

Wilson said the state boards adoption of tighter high school graduation requirements and the push for more restrictive college admission standards will hurt many in need of the greatest educational opportunities possible.

He said 122,000 Virginia families, many of them black, live in poverty, and. Only education can provide the means to remedy this.

Wilson said many minority students still suffer the effects of historic socio-

Join Forces To Criticize Koch

B\TTI.I.\(i KIKE - Chicago Fire Department rescue ladders, used to evacuate about .)(! people from a smokey^fire, lean against a Chicago hotel Thursday as smoke billows from an upper fl(M)r of the eighl-slory

building on the city's near-north side. Firefighters battled the blaze for > hours, and officials said at least three people died in the fire and M others were injured. (AP Laserphoto)

NEW YORK (AP) -Women's rights advocates and liquor producers joined in criticizing .Mayor Ed Koch for signing a law requiring bars to post warnings that drinking alcohol during pregnancy can harm the unborn.

Koch insisteJ" Thursday, Pregnant women aren't required to read - never mind heed the posted warning. He said it was educational.

But the local president of the National Organization lor Women, Barbara Rochman. sajd the notices could lead to

harassment of pregnant women" and added the group was "uneasy about a law protecting the unborn at the expense of women's freedom.

SAID INHL.MAN

BONN, West Germany (APi - The West German Bishops' Conference has labeled "inhuman a Soviet court's sentence of six years in jail and four years' internal exile for a priest from Lithuania.

North Carolina Grown Cut & Living

Deadline On Ridge Law Limits Drav/ing Near

By The Associated Press With a Jan. 1 deadline facing them, it appears many of North Carolina's mountain counties will accept the state's ridge construction limits instead of adopting their own rules, officials say.

"Most of the counties are at a fish-or-cut-bait stage." said Alan Lang, a planner With the North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development in Asheville.

' Most of the counties in his western region apparently will not adopt local regulations, he said,

"If you simply allow the state ban to take effect, it simply prohibs." said Lang. "It's simply less of a hassle for them than enforcing their own regulations,"

However, at least one county has passed its own ordinance.

The Avery County Board of Commissioners on Thursday passed an Avery County Mountain Ridge Protection Ordinance. The ordinance prohibits buildings taller than 40 feet or three stories

on ridge tops.

The board also passed a companion ordinance prohibiting tall buildings in the valleys, except in special cases.

Meanwhile, officials in many of the 23 other mountain counties are mulling the law passed by the Legislature this year which prohibits buildings of more than 40 feet on ridges higher than 3,000 feet.

It also gives counties the option of passing its own ordinance if it wants stricter or more lenient limits than are in the state law.

In Burke County, commissioners on Tuesday rejected a planning board proposal to make the state prohibition apply to the county's peaks belov,' 3,000 feet.

Some officials say the state law confuses them, which may have contributed to the delay in some counties deciding what to do.

"We all understand the

ADS are as close as your telephone. Just dial 752-6166 and ask for a friendlv Ad-Visor.

intent of the law. but the wording seems tq indicate something different, said Wilkes County planner Cecil Wood. "We're trying to connect the intent with the wording.

The state Association of County Commissioners has held workshops in an attempt to help local officials decide what to do. Ten counties were represented at one such meeting Tuesday in Lenoir, "The distressing thing to me is that there were several counties represented ... that still didn't seem to be clea on some fundamental points, said Butch Gunnells, the association's general

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economic disadvantages and often have lower academic scores than whites, even though the achievement gap is narrowing.

He suggested that many minority students don't take courses aimed at college entrance because junior high school counselors steer them toward vocational education.

He urged that application., of the new high school graduation requirements begin with children entering the first grade in 1984.

This would give schools and children more time to prepare and policymakers more time to study the implications, he said.'

Wilson said minorities will make up 30 percent of all Virginia students by the end of the decade and, without -broadeducational opportunity, "many will wind up with no iobs, no money and no future.

It will cost Virginia a great deal more money to deal with that problem than it will to provide the kind of education that could avert it. he said.

Dr. Dpnald Dedmon, Rad-d'ord University president, applauded higher standards but said too much attention these days is being paid to : college entrance lest scoxes.

"We must look at how well high school students have done in weathervane courses - science. English and mathematics^ That's more important than looking at test scores,"he said.

Dedmon said the greatest problem in education is not underachieving students but poor quality teachers.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

"There are too many C-minus teachers fooling around with the minds of our children. he said.

Dedmon also cautioned against too much e.mphasis on high-tech courses that might detract from the'arts.

"You can't be truly educated without having been

Friday. December 9.1983    5

exposed to the history of man through his works. he said. _

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g The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C

Friday, December 9,1983

Next Shuttle Step Is An 'Ploy Down' Rift With Rea9Cin

In-Orbit Repair Test

By noWAKI) BENKDK T AP Aerospate Writer

SPACE CENTER. Houston lAPi - In nine flights, .America s space shuttle has proved it is a reliable satellite delivery system and an outstanding science platform Nou NASA IS ready to test It as a repair truck, for . recovering and tixmg^nrbit-ingpayloads.

The initial step toward the in-orbit repair capabilit} is a Buck Rogers-like test on the lOth shuttle flight, scheduled to start Jan in Becoming the first space-walking astronaut not attached by a safety line to his spacecraft, astronaut Bruce McCanuiess will don a rucket-powered back pack and maneuver up* to 3(ki feet awa\ irom the

-ibuftleXhalleniier--------

That will be an important rehearsal tor Flight 11. set tor littott- April 4. when' a Challenger crew attempts the first satellite rescue mission - a rendezvous with a sun-stud\ pa\load called Solar-.Max that tailed in orbit more than three >ears aao .Astronaut Ceortie Nelson, weann the rix'ket pack, will flit over to the satellite, secure it to the shuttle's robot arm tni hnna it into

the carao bav.iur repair..The..

corrected pa>load '.ull be returned to orbit, hut it the astronauts cannot iix it. Solar-.Max will tie bmuaht to Earth tor an overhaul and carried back up later These two tlmhts kick oti a

busy 1984 N.ASA schedule that will see 50 astronauts rocket into space on 10 shuttle missions. They will de-plo\ more than a dozen new satellites tor paying commercial customers Six ot the astronauts will be women, including a second flight in August for Sally Ride., who in June became America's first woman

astronaut m space. Kathryn Sullivan will become the first female to walk in space She and Ms Ride will be on the same flight, with Columbia as the carrier.

Three blacks also will fly next year, following in the !lHJi^>iep;^ ui Guion Bluiufu, who in August became the tirst black to ride in a C S spaceship

_Ihe_nat lonj^^ihinLshuftle L

Discovery, makes its flight debut in June on a commercial satellite delivery trip. A fourth shuttle.

Atlantis, will be launched-for the first time in 198.')

.Starting in June, shuttle launches from Cape Canaveral. Fla., will accelerate to one a month -except tor August, when there will be two - tor the rest ot the year. .Most flights will deliver communications and . scjeniiiic., satellites tg. orbit.

The first Detense Department military flight carrying a cargo labeled ."secret" is set tor blastott in June. A second Defense tlight IS scheduled tor .Sep-

Shuttle Flight

|( ontiiuied troni Pane 1'

slowed the shuttles 17,4oo mph orbital speed and started it on an hour-long, high-speed ii'de across the Pacific ocean The :>:).iHHi-pound .''pacelab was desmned and built, by the European Space Agency which donated the science module to NASA in exchange tor the orbital fliaht. and 'dozens'"of European scientists were present tor. the landing .Some.oi the scientiiic data will take months or years to analyze, but already .scientists were taikma ot the disco'.ery o: iron in- distant star neids, a new reading on the a.H-s in the upper at-mospnere and new knowledge about how numaiis' adapt to'pacellight

Kidnapper Faces Life

GAL\'EST( N. Texas AF - A .)8-year-old man convicted ot abducting his tormer employer'- son and burying him alive lor tour days while demanding a S75.HHI ransom laces up to life in prison.

Ronald Floyd White ot Conroe. Texas, was convicted Thursday o! aggravated kidnappina 'iiieo! the witnesses again-' him -was .Michael Baucon. _i who was, rescued by -fierii! -deputies from a make-hitt coffin buried in an oiltield north ot Houston :n .September 1982

Baucom said the \erdict did not surprise him It'was pretty well apparent." he said, dismissing u defense Lawyer's argument that Baucom was invobed in the plot

Order Death By Lethal Injection

FREEHOLD.-N .1 .AP Richard F Biegenwald. convicted of killing an 18-year-old woman because, prosecutors said, "he wanted to see someone die." has been sentenced to execution by lethal injection

The jury that convicted him of murdering Anna DIesiewicz. one ot five deaths Biegenwald has been indicted tor this year, returned the death sentence Thursday, His execution was set tor Jan 26. but he has the right to automatic review by the state Supreme Court

Miss Olesiewicz was shot in the head in August 1982 Biegenwald had been paroled in 1981 after serving 2.5 years of^ life sentence for milrder.

tember.

Spacelab. just back from a successful journey, will be refitted as a medical laboratory for a tlight aooard Challenger in November.

The shuttle launches are to increase to 12 in 1985. with NASA working up to a takeoff rate of 24 a year by 1987. The agency has 90 mh^ion^ booked through ^ptember 1988.

By MICHAEL WEST .Associated Press M riter LONDON lAPi - Prime Minister .Margaret Thatcher played down reports today of a bitter rift with President Reagan over his economic policies and his decision to lift the ban on U.S. arms sales to Argentina. Britain's enemy in the Falklands War.

Anglo-American relations are in good heart. she said

Mrs. Thatcher denied re-

ports in British newspapers that said relations were

Speaking of YeurJIeaith...

Lester LColaui,N.DL

Complacency About

Immunization

Research on .Spacelab has revmed a 77-year-old theory ' on the workings ot the human inner .ear and established ..new dat-a on. the enengv. explodinhesun

"It is not sufficient to say that we are all pleased and ali-saiistred with the flight," >aid Michel Bignier ot France, director ot the European agency's shuttle uperations.

The next shuttle mission is scheduled for Jan. ;!o. when Challenger will be launched on a flight that will feature a spacewalk

Disturbed By Nobel Prize

^Tiii'KHoLM. Sweden AP - Professor Barbara .Mci'iintock. the 81-year-old NnOe: Prize-winning eenetici>t. ha.-a complaint -all the :u-.- over her getting the award has interfered with her w ork

Mms .McClintock. trom Cold Spring Harbor. N.V,. delivered the traditional lecture given by Nobel laureate- Thursday, speaking tor almost an hour on the mobile elements in genes

Atter her address, .Miss McClintock said the Nobel prize uproar has seriously disturbed her routine.

"1 haven't been able to work at all since the day 1 got It Oct 111." she complained. Noted tor her singlemindedness and for perseverance in her research, Miss .McClintock added. "I hope to continue once this is over and done with, it 1 am only given the time.''

She gets her award and S190.t)0(i prize money Saturday

Charge Mother With Drowning

WINSTON-SALEM. N.C. lAPi - A Winston-Salem woman was charged with second^degree murder Thursday. 15.months after her 13-year-old daughter was found drowned in the family bathtub.

Winston-Salem police Capt. E.L. Moreau said that on the morning of Michelle Jeanne Lachat's death, her mother, Louisette Lachat, 53. was found in her bedroom, un conscious froth a drug overdose.

.Mrs. Lachat was released on $25,900 bond, part of which was posted by her husband. RemyJ. Lachat,

Moreau, said .Mrs. Lachat came with her attorney Thursday morning to the poljce statign. where the warr'ant was served.

V

Despite the most active educational campaign about the unportance oil immunization and vaccination, a serious deficiency still exists. Exactly why the American public is so complacent about infectious diseases is difficult to explain.

Those of us who can recall the panic of the poliomyelitis pEgueTbnow the devastation caused by this catastrophic infectious disease. Yet with the advent of the polio vaccine those fears have melted into insignificance.

Throughout the ages infectious diseases devastated countries and reduced their populations by the plague.

Today the comparative rarity of irifectious diseases adds to the complacency about immunization. This complacency is filled with potential harm. Most people dont realize that measles, mumps, whooping cough, rubella and tetanus still take a heavy toll in those areas wliere vaccination and immunization are not maintained.

Prevention of disease is the foundation of modern living. Untold energy is being dev'oted to the means by which major diseases can be more easily controlled by early detection and early treatnvent.

Nowhere in the science of medicine is prevention more accurately defined than in the field of immunization against disease.

The basis of immunization is to aid the body in building up its own defense systems so that it can withstand an attack by an invading germ or virus. A vaccine is a substance which can cause a slight infection m the bo^ and stimulate the bodys defense reaction or antibodies. Once these antibodies are built up to a high concentration, an invasion by a germ or a virus is then repulsed and controlled before it can establish itself as a-threat to health.

The magnitude of the contribution of immunization and vaccination can only be stated in the phrase, Smallpox is already an eradicated disease. This is a truth that occurs in lands where the nutrition level is high, where

FIFTEEN (IIARGEI)

LOS .A.NGELES ,AP. -The city attorney's otiice has filed nine misdemeanor charges against each of 25 men arrested at a KKK crossburning in the San Fernando Valiev.

the housing is adequate, and where sanitation is completely controlled.

Adequate vaccination coupled with the advent of antibiotics have liberated many nations from the threat of this plague which so often destroyed them.

Diphtheria was a disease of devastation. At the turn of tiie century, thousands of people, especially young children, died from it. Today sporadic cases still occur .'Fortunately, uiany of thcSc aF6 C ured by the combination of antibiotics and serum injections. Nevertheless, about 10 percent of all children who acquire diphtheria at this time still succumb to it.

Measles, a disease that is taken for granted as just a passing factor in childhood, still takes a high toll.

German measles, when it occurs in women during pregnancy, is responsible for

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defonfiities in their offspring.

It is pathetic to learn that there are still thousands of families all over the United States wh(5 carelessly disregard the teachings of their doctors and the Public Health officials and do not maintain the level of immunization.

Vaccinations are administered free of charge at all Board of Health Stations. Is there really any rational reason why a child should be deprived of vaccinations that now are available

strained over Reagan's action on Argentina and over the United States' huge budget deficit and high inter-est rates, which she criticized acidly in the House of Commons on Thursday.

The prime minister, speaking today at the opening of a new office building in London, said the press reports contradicted the warm and friendly dis-cussion she had Thursday evening with U'S. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan.

It is with friends that you can talk frankly, never with rancor, always with friendship, always with understanding. * she said. "That's the way it is between Britain and the United

TUr>*C ...... ; ..Gll

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continue tobe."

In the House of Commons, the government moved swiftly to head off whal Jhe _ liberal Guardian newspaper predicted would be "an intensified wave of anti-American feeling "

Ray Whitney-, a junior Foreign Office minister, said in a statement he welcomed Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger's assurance that Washington would not supply weapons that would help Argentina to invade the Falklands again Weinberger met defense ministers of NATO in a private session this week.

Thatcher's criticism of U S. economic policies came within hours ot the decision to lift the ban on arms sales , to Argentina.As a result. British newspapers reported today "major friction" in U.S.-British relations ! The Daily .Mail, which supports Mrs. Thatcher's Conservative government, said Reagan had delivered "a bitter fnub " to the prime

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minister. Relations between the two governments, it said, were at rock bottom. "

Reagan Sells Out Thatcher." the Daily Mirror, which supports Britain's , opposition Labor Party, headlined its report.

The United States backed Britain in the 74-day war in the South Atlantic to regain possession of the Falkland Islands,

U.S. State Department, spokesman .Alan Rom^rg announced Thursday that Argentina's improved human rights performance and its imminent return to civilian government merited a lifting of the arms sale ban. imposed by former President Carter in 1977.

President-eleci Raui Alfonsin will be inaugurated Saturday as Argentina's new civilian president, replacing the military junta_ that has _ ruled for seven years Vice President George Bush will attend the ceremony, indicating the importance being placed on U.S.-Argentine ties.

A few hours after Romberg's statement - and shortly before meeting here with U.S. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan - .Mrs. Thatcher delivered a scathing attack on Reagan's economic policies. She told the House of Commons that large U.S. budget deficits were hurting Europe and would in time damage the United States as well.

The budget deiicits are causing high interest rates which are extremelv damaging to this country and other European countries, she said, adding that they "are. in fact, preventing us from getting the amount ot investment we should have here by withdrawing a lot of capital to the United States."

Noting what she called America's, fantastic

balance of trade delicit." she

saidr'T would rather be in our position, which is sustainable. than theirs, which 1 believe will cause great trouble within 12 months." she added.

Legislators said they were shocked by the prime minister s vehemence and uisdairi

Regan told a news con-lerence shortly lielore meeting Mrs Thatcher that U.S. intpresi raie> are likelv to remain high at least until next spring He ^aid annual U S deticits could remain around S2(NibiHion until 1988

The lifting of the ban on arms sales to Argentina represents the most serious rift between Downing Street and the White House since the Thatcher-Reagan partnership began 3-.. years ago, the liberal newspaper The Guardian wrote.

The rift between the two leaders first surfaced when Reagan, ignoring warnings from .Mrs Thatcher, ordered the invasion of Grenada last October by U.S. troops. Grenada is a former British colony and its governor-general is a representative of chequeen.

Another point of friction is the reported American failure to keep Britain informed about its intentions In Lebanon. Mrs. Thatcher on Wednesday ruled out demands for Britain to withdraw its 110-man contingent from the rnultina-tional peacekeeping force in Beirut but indicated the need for closer consultation with the Reagan administration.

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NATO Ministers Debate Soviet Impasse Policy

By DAVID MASON Chief European Correspondent

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - NATO foreign ministers end a strategy conference today with debate on how to break the impasse in U.S.-Soviet nuclear disarmament negotiations.

The latest round of U.S.-Soviet strategic arms talks, or START, ended Thursday in Geneva with the Soviets refusing to agree on a date for resuming talks on long-range missiles and bombers. Ordinarily, the two sides would have set a resumption date for approximately eight wks from now.

The Soviets said NATOs deployment of U.S.-built medium-range missiles in Western Europe has created a change in 'the overall strategic situation. forcing them to re-examine the START issues.

On Nov. 23. the Soviets walked out of the separate medium-range nuclear missile talks after the arrival of the first of 572 cruise and Pershing 2 missiles in Europe.

In their final communique. U.S. Secretari of State George P. Shultz and the foreign ministers of 15 allied countries planned to urged a quick Soviet return to the arms talks and to stress a

Hunt Campaign Share Attacked

RALEIGH. N.C, (APi -Gov, Jim Hunt's expected bid for the U.S. Senate is not draining money " from other North Carolina candidates as some Democrats claim, the chairman of the party says.

Smne Democrats say advertisements critical of Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., are another example of how Hunt is getting more than its share of party rezurces.

But David Price, chairman of the slate Democraiic Party, said that is not true.

"In no sense is this draining money from state races, so no one need have any fear on that score," Price said. We're very aware that the party has to be very concerned in balancing the efforts in all the races."

The ads. which cost about $.50.(X)0 to produce and air. attack Helms' Senate voting record. Price said they were bought with money froml'ne N.C. Democratic Victory Fund, an account specifically for use in federal races.

Some Council of State members recently discussed sending Price a formal complaint on the matter, the Greensboro News and Re cord reported Thujsday.

"Some (of US) suggested 1 that something be drafted to show our position, but there hasnt been any unanimity on it, and nothing was drawn up." said Secretary of State

ThadEure

The 10-member Council of State is composed of the states constitutional executive officers - such as the governor, lieutenant governor. auditor, insurance commissioner and attorney general. It advises the governor and decides certain state policy matters.

During an informal meeting last week, which Hunt didn't attend, the subject of campaign financing arose. The feeling was widespread that "all the money is going in one channel" - the Hunt-Helms race. Eure said.

All Council of State members are up for re-election next year, although several are seeking higher office.

Eure confirmed that he and Labor Commissioner John Brooks were behind the move to draft a protest resolution about the money spent on Hunt's behalf, but said other council members agreed.

The News and Record said .AttGi iiey Geiicidi uufus Edmisten discouraged drafting a letter, fearing that an open squabble might embarrass the party. Edmisten could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Eure said two or three council members didnt attend the meeting and said he couldnt recall who was or wa.sn't present.

TOKYO (AP) - A Paiwanese violinist and a Phinese pianist will give a loncert in Tokyo on Phristmas Eve, organizers laid today. It is believed to )e the first joint concert by nusicians from the two muntries.

Pianist Li Xian. 18. from he Shanghai Insitute of Vlusic, and Lin Chiao-liang, >3. from Taipei and a per-'ormer with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, will perform five classical pieces and one Beatles song, a spokesman for the Japanese organizers said.

The two will be accompanied by' the Waseda University Orchestra at Showa Women's College in Tokyo, he said.

Hiroshi Shigenobu. producer at Televiman Union Co. Ltd., told The Associated Press the musicians also would perform on a special Japanese TV program to be aired Dec. 29.

He said they were selected for the concerts from four possible promising musicians from China and Taiwan.

We selected the two performers not because of creed, religion or nationality, Shigenobu said. "But one happened to be from

Quarterly Service

The Nazarene Church of Christ. 205 W. Skinner St.. will observe quarterly services this weekend with holy communion Saturday at 8 p.m.

At 11 a.m. Sunday, the pastor will deliver the sermon. At 3 p.m., the Rev. Matthew Best and Best Chapel will be in charge of the service. At 5 p.m..

Eldress Hattie Mae Cobb and

St. Matthew will render the service.

commitment to balanced and verifiable arms reductions. They spent Thursday assessing the state of the arms talks and general East-West relations.

A senior U.S. official in the Shultz party said nobody is running around in a state of frenzy looking for new ideas for easing U.S.-Soviet tensions. But Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson of France termed the arms talk deadlock a crisis in East-West relations.

NATO officials, including Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe of Britaiii, said

they were not surprised by the Soviet move, and felt there still were strong reasons to hope the Soviet Union would return to the START negotiations next year.

There appeared to be less optimism among NATO officials that the Soviets would return to the medium-range missile talks. The alliance was expected to reaffirm its determination to continue a program of deploying cruise and Pershing 2 missiles begun last month in Britain. West Germany and Italy.

A nuclear advisory group

made up of NATO delegations said Thursday the five-year deployment program can be halted or reversed should an arms accord be reached.

Also today, NATO named Lord Carrington, former British foreign secrtary, to succeed Joseph Luns of the Netherlands as the sixth secretary general of the 34-year-old alliance. Carringtons ascension to NATOs top civilian post was expected.

Luns, 72, who has held the post for 12 years, had said he would announce his long-

expected resignation to the foreign ministers. He is to be replaced by Carrington sometime next summer.

Carrington, 64. resigned as foreign secretary in April 1982, accepting responsibility for British policy leading up to the Argentine invasion of the Falkland Islands. The British won back their South Atlantic colony in a 74-day war.

Although the Middle East is technically outside the North Atlantic Treaty Organization area, officials have paid close attention to the violence and political insta

bility in Lebanon.

Shultz, Howe. Cheysson and Foreign Minister Guilio Andreotti Of Italy met Thursday to discuss the status of the multinational peacekeeping force in Beirut to which their four coutries contribute.

The ministers explored ways to prop up the government of President Amin Gemayel of Lebanon and there was no indication of any immediate plans to reduce or withdraw their contingents.

Andreotti recalled that Italy had originally agreed to

field 1,100 troops, but that the present number is twice that.

Some doubts have arisen in both Italy and Britain over the continued meaningfulness of the multinational force, which numbers about 5.600 troops. More than 300 peacekeepers have been killed since they first arrived in Lebanon last year, including 256 U.S. servicemen.

After the NATO meeting. Shultz was to join four other U.S. Cabinet members in discussions with Common Market executives on trans-Atlantic economic disputes.

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China and the other Taiwan. They are both very gifted and'promising as performing artists."

Li gained recognition when he won an international competition in Paris in 1980. Lin, a graduate of the Julliard School of Music in New York, gained fame when he won the Queen Sophia international competition in Madrid in 1976.

The two musicians will play a selection of pieces frcim Haydn, Chopin, Beethoven and two pieces by Chinese composers. Their finale will be an arrangement of the Beaties' Let It Be, Shigenobu said.

Mainland China and the Chinese Nationalist government on Taiwan have been in dispute since 1949, when the nationalists broke awav from Communist rule.

Anniversary

, Haddocks Chapel Free Will Church will observe its pastor's anniversary with three services Sunday.

The Rev. Charlie Wilson, the congregation of Bethel Chapel Free Will Baptist Church of Washington, the Bishop S. James Gospel Chorus and the young adult choir and senior ushers of Zion Chapel FWB Church of Ayden will be in charge of the 11 a.m. service. At 3 p.m., the Rev. Jimmy Dix-ion, the congregation of St. Paul Baptist Church of Oak City and the congregation of Joseph Branch FWB Church of Vanceboro will be in charge of the service. At 7:30 p.m.. Bishop J.E. Reddick, the congregation of Maury Chapel FWB Church, the Rev. Blake Phillips and the congregation of St. Matthew FWB Church of Beaufort County will be charge of the service.

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0 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

Friday, December 9,1983

Pelicans Losing War With Fishermen

NOT AT ODDS John Jimenez of Culver City, Calif., feeds a pelican aboard the Betty-O" in Marina del Key. Many fisheimen sympathize with

the federally protected birds plight, a situtation some feel is caused by a depletion of the anchovy population. (AP Laserphoto)

Corps Of Engineers Claim No ine Environmental Harm

Pipeli

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The rs Army ((irp." oi Engineers has (iedured lhat a proposed water pipeline from Lake Gaston to Virginia Beach won't harm the enviropment.

Virginia olticials are pleased but North Carolina Gov Jim Hunt on Thursday

threatened to take legal action to block construction The corps' Norfolk District Engineer. Col. Ronald Hudson, signed a document on Wednesday declaring that the pipeline "will have no significant impact on the quality of the human environment"

Price-Setting In Bride Reid

HONIARA. Solomon Islands lAPi - Fearing skyrocketing inflation in the cost of marriage, a provincial government says a man can't pay more than Stioo tor a wife.

The government of Temotu Province in the former British colony in the Pacilic passed legislation this week .setting the maximum price for a bride,

A bride price or buying a wife IS common among the .Melanesian nations of the Pacific such as the Solomons

and Vanuatu.

Anyone paying more than SfiUt) in Temotu Province will face a hearing before the Council of Chiefs and three months in jail or a fine of up to .Stfo, officials said.

The action was taken because local officials leared inflation in the price of bridt|^ similar to what has taken place in Papua New Guinea, where the price tor a wile averages around S:5.ihhi, One Papua New Guinea man reportedly paidSlK.OOO.

Solomon Islanders say a wile can still W had for less than S300 in more remote areas ol the country.

Office Trees Are Regulated

W.VSHLNGTON APi -Not even Christmas trees are spared a flurry ol bureaucratic regulations. The Defense Department, in a I'rpage memo, is laying down the law for decorating Pentagon offices for Christmas.

The regulations urge the use of phony trees because they're less likely to catch fire. They allow "only sparing quantities" of holly and cornstalk, no decorative snow and no lighted candles. The directive also says: "decorations and displays within assigned space shall conform to the general use of the space, as appropriate.'

The rules cover all 7U local offices with Department employees, including the Pentagon.

Defer Decision In TAAI Survey

W.ASHINGTON i.APi -The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is postponing until next week a decision on whether it will investigate the repair of thousands of steam generator tubes at Three Mile Island.

The repairs to 29,858 cracked tubes at the undamaged Unit 1 reactor were made with a kinetic expansion process that had never been used that way before in a nuclear plant.

The commission decided to postpone Its decision, although its staff argued that the tubes performed well on recent tests - leaking only one-sixtieth of the legally permissable amounts.

Both advocates and foc's of the pipeline said that a corps permit allowing the project to proceed IS now a formality

The report and a draft environmental assessment will be circulated tor Jo days before the corps issues a permit to allow the pipeline to be built, Virginia Beach Mayor Loins H .Iones said

"We re pleased that the colonel has decided to sign the two statements." Jones said.

\irgima Beach sees the 85-mile, S176-million pipeline as the means of meeting its ever growing water supply needs into the next century, the city hopes to take as much as (id million gallons of water a day from the lake The city of Chesapeake, which also will need additional water during the 1990s, has expre.ssed an interest in joining Virginia Beach in the project.

Lake Gaston straddles the Virginia-North Carolina border The pipeline is almost unanimously opposed by residents ol communities surrounding the lake in both states. They contend that the project would cause water levels to drop in that lake and Kerr Lake upstream.

Hunt said. "This seems to indcate that the granting of a permit for construction of the pip|eline is a foregone conclusion. 1 am very disappointed that the crops is refusing to comply with our request for a full environmental impact statement.'

Hunt said he would consult with state Attorney General Rufus Edmisten and, "We will use every legal means at our disposal to prevent construction of the pipeline '

Gov Charles S. Robbwas in northern Virginia at a meeting and unavailable for comment but his press secretary, George Stoddart, said the news of the decision reached the governor's office late Thursday that the engineers would not require a full environmental impact statement.

"This IS something we have been abguing all along and we feel Virginia Beach has adequately addressed the question already," Stoddart said. "And we're glad the Army Corps of Engineers has agreed with the position of Gov. Robb that a full environmental impact statement is duplicative* and unnecessary"

The Hunt administration indicated a willingness to compromi.se with Virginia Beach on the project earlier this year, but backed off when Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.. came out against it. Hunt, a Democrat, hopes fo unseat Helms, a Republican, in the state's .Senate election next year.

Hudson's statement rejected contentions that the pipeline would harm lake levels. The document predicts that the pipeline would cause lake levels to fall less than three inches in a severe drought. "During such a situation. water levels would be drawn down seven feet. ... without the city's project," the statement said

Pipeline opponents "predicted economic catastrophe 1 rom t he proposed withdrawal," the statement said. "While these impacts are perceived, there is no evidence to indicate that they would actually occur. "

.Sen. John Warner, R-Va,, called Hudson's statement "a good bedrock finding for Virginia Beach. "

Sen. Paul S. Trible, R-Va.,

By DAN GARCIA AsWiated Press Writer

REDONDO BEACH, Calif. (AP) - "Pier bum" pelicans that rely on easy pickings from fishermens bait or catches have become such pests that fishermen sometimes pelt them with cherry bombs or tie their foot-long bills shut with fishing line.

But even those who consider the birds unwelcome fish thieves were bewildered when 31 birds were found electrocuted last week. Police and game workers say a 68-year-old bait company worker and his grandson used a 115-volt generator and four strands of electrical wire to keep the pelicans off their barge.'

Wildlife workers say the pelicans themselves become vulnerable because they are trusting, friendly creatures who stand tolerantly while tourists pet them. They divebomb for fishermens-bait or steal their catches -often becoming so dependent on fishermen that theyJiever _ learn when young to find their own food.

Dan Armstrong, operator of the Redondo Sport Fishing Co.. said the decline in the oceans anchovy population - which he blames on commercial fishermen - is

^^forcing the pelicans to rely

increasingly on barges and piers.

The latest incident in the Los Angeles area followed a string of attacks, from October 1982 to March 1983. in which 23 California brown pelicans - protected by both federal and state laws - had their upper bills sawed off or left dangling.

Early attempts to replace the bills surgically with fiberglass replicas failed when the bones to which they were attached deteriorated.

Another 22 pelicans were the victims this fall of apparently unrelated mutilations up the coast in Monterey, where their pouches were slit, their windpipes slashed or their throats cut open On Thursday, dozens of hungry pelicans bobbed in the water or sat on the rails of the Redondo Bait Co. barge, about 100 yards of

fshore, where John Perry Wilson and his grandson. Ronald Cullen Johnson. 24. were arrested ^turday for investigation of cruelty to animals in the electrocution of the 31 birds.

Armstrong was surprised because Wilson has always respected the pelicans

"Ive known him for many years and I cant believe he would be involved in something like that," Armstrong said. "Ive seen him feeding the pelicans and 1 know he has found fishing spots by watching the birds diving for fish."

Pat Moore, a spokesman for the state Department of Fish and Game, said warden Carroll Cox is preparing cruelty-to-animals cases against the two. who are free on bail and scheduled to be arraigned Jan. 3------------

Wilson and Johnson could not be found at the harbor this week, and other fishermen said they were probably working at s*ea.

At popular King Harbor, sport fishermen say the persistent birds are robbing the sport of its appeal.

On the dock, Ed Faulkner. 66. a licensed fisherman for 25 years, said he knows the birds are federally protected, so he only waves them away with his hand.

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said, "Im sure theres dancing in the streets in Virginia Beach. Its good news for the people of Tidewater Virginia.

"This was not a political decision; it was a technical decision," he said. "I think the I corpsI administrative process has worked it$ jjill. Virginia Beach made a very persuasive case. The corps based its decision on that evidence."

"When I go out, there chn be hundreds of them around the boat. Faulkner said. "You have to throw a bunch of anchovies over one side to distract them and then throw your line out the other side.

"They get, tangled up in our fishing lines and take hooks in their bills, and when you go to free them from the hooks, theyre full of lice. Faulkner said.

While fishermen know not to feed the birds, other wharf visitors feed them out of kindness of heart. But in essence, they are killing off the birds.Moore said. .

But Armstrong said fishermen were also to blame,

"Ive seen some fishermen step on ihem, or hold ihem under water till they drown, or tied their bills with line so they cant feed on their bait," he said. "The birds have become such a problem that even skiff rentals (for amateur fishermen) were down this summer."

Fishermen have caught some birds with more than a dozen hooks rotting in their beaks. Armstrong said, adding: "Theyre not very bright birds."

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Friday, December 9,1963    9

Council To Elect Directors

S The Pitt County Council on Aging will hold its annual 'meting Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. in the second floor auditorium ; J the Pitt County Office Building. 1717 W. Fifth St. Directors 'Ipr 1984 will be elected at the meeting, which is open to the xQublic.

: Etudents Pian Fund-Raiser

: The College Hill Area Residents Council, a group of East . parolina University students who reside in campus dormito-iries located on College Hill, are sponsoring a two-day auto

; demolition event to benefit cerebral palsy.___________-___

; The event is scheduled for Monday and Tuesday from 10 ;a.m. until 4 p.m. at the intersection of College Hill Drive and ,10th Street, where area residents and students will purchase a wance to smash a junk automobile with a sledgehammer.

' The ECU student effort is one of a series of ongoing ^community fund-raising events leading up to the "Weekend ^With the Stars Telethon for Cerebral Palsv." which will be , televised Jan. 14-15 on WITN-TV. Seventy-five percent of the ; funds raised will remain in Greenville to support the

:GreenvilleCerebralPalsyCentef.lllGreenvilleBlvd,

; Rose Students Recognized

^Student^ffom-4rH. RoseHiglhSehoels-maktng-alk^for-

f

;the past marking period were Mary Helen Allen. Sheila Craft. :Anne-Lynne Davis. Clay Deanhardt, Elizabeth Ellen. Tracey .Heath. Mickey Herrin. Grace Jendrasiak. Amanda Johnson, Kelly Jones, Ingrid Lalik, and    ^

Leigh Lanier, Ginger McLawhorn, Rena Meteye, Amv Moore, Lisa Michelle Quinn, Amy Kathleen Roscoe, Thomas :Michael Rosche. Lisa Salisbury, Sara Marie Scott, Rebecca Thompson. Catherine Tingelstad. Alana Tinkham. William Dale Waters, Carl Wille and Steve Worlev.

Dixon Elected By Council

Phillip R. Dixon of .Greenville has been elected ;;vice president of the North Carolina Council of School Board Attorneys.

' Dixon, who is a partner in ;the law firm of Dixon, Duffus and Doub. has served as attorney for the Greenville Board of Education for the .past five years. He also serves as a special education : hearing officer |n cases in-.volving handicapped children for the State De-partment of Public Instruc-,tion.

: A native of Wake Forest.

*he graduated from East Car-Olina University itb hnnnrs and has a law degree from ;the University of North ;Carolina-Chapel Hill. He and ;uis wife, Candace, hav^ two sons, Phil Jr. and Davey,

PHILLIP DIXON

FmHA Accepting Applications

Applications for emergency farm loans for losses caused by this summers drought are now being accepted at the Farmers Home Administration Office in Pitt County, according to Bert Hall, FmHA acting county supervisor.

Pitt County has been designated eligible by the Secretary of Agriculture John Block for loans to cover part of production losses resulting from drought.

Hall said farmers may be eligible for loans of up to 80 percent of their actual losses, or the operating loan needed to continue in business, or $500,000, whichever is less.

The FmHA office in Pitt County is open from 9 a,m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. - -    -

NAA CP To Meet Sunday

The Pitt County chapter of the NAACP will meet Sunday at 7 p.m. at Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church, Wallace and Walnut streets, Farmville. School Superintendent Delma Blinson of Greenville will be the guest speaker.

Society Inducts Student

Melissa Ruth Taft of Greenville has been inducted into St. Marys College chapter of the Phi Theta Kappa honor organization. Miss Taft is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Taft Jr. of 308 Granville Drive.

To be eligible for the honor, a student must have a scholastic average of 3.5 or higher, be of good mroal character and possess recognized qualities of citizenship.

Festival Selects Theme

Shad Fever - Catch It! has been selected as thethere of the 1984 Grifton Shad Festival, festival officials have announced.

The theme was submitted by Sandy Mitchell of Grifton, who will serve as co-chairman of the Shad Festival Parade for 1984. Floats, costumes and decorations at the festival will center around this theme.

New Program Approved

~~The4984=program of work and budget for the Bethel Council Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce was approved by the board of driectors at its December meeting Thursday. Chairman Robert Young announced that the Pitt-Greenville annual meeting wil be held Jan. 26 and the Bethel Council annua! meeting will he held Feb 9

Scholarship Awarded

David Allen Bradley of Kill Devil Hills, an East Carolina University student majoring in decision science, has been awarded a University Book Exchange scholarship.

The $500 scholarship is presented annually to a school of business student selectd for his or her academic excellent. The award is sponsored by UBE, a Greenville store specializing in text books and publications for ECU students and faculty.

Bradley is a member of the Phi Eta Sigma Honor Society and the ECU honors program. He is also active in intramural sports.

Kerosene Heater Taken

Greenville police are continuing their investigation of a break-in at 600 South Pitt St. which was reported about 8:16 a.m. Thursday. Officer L.E. White said a kerosene heater was taken.

McCallum To Be Guest

Dr. James H. McCallum, director of the Student Health Service at East Carolina University, will be the guest on ECU Concepts at 8 a.m. Sunday on radio station WOOW, 1090 on the radio dial.

McCallum will discuss the services his department provides to students at ECU and will also offer advice about staying healthy to include the cause and precention of ailments such as the cominon cold.

ECU Concepts is a weekly, 15-minute program produced by ECU. It is hosted by James Rees of the ECU Department of Theater Arts.

Co-Op Joins Purchase Program

The Edgecombe-Martin County Electric Membership Corp. has announced that, as of Nov. i, it joined 26 other cooperatives in signing an agreement with Duke Power Co. to purchase 56.25 percent interest in Unit 1 of the Catawba Nuclear Station on Lake Wylie in South Carolina.

Rudolph Sexton, EMC manager, said the purchase involved cooperatives that make up the North Carolina Electric Membership Corp. He said Duke Power has nledspd to buv excess energy from the plant that is not r^uired for thi cooperatives.

Sexton said electricity the NCEMC began receiving on Nov 1 is from Duke Powers McGuire Nuclear Station Unit 1, part ^ an exchange arrangement worked our with the ifivestoF owned utility when the Catawba arrangement was made. He said the cooperatives, will draw power from McGuire until the Catawba unit goes on line, now expected to be completed in July 1985.

Siexton said the buy-in agreement should result in a "recognizable savings in wholesale power cost in the future as well as now.

Private Club Plans Opening

The grand opening of Wrong Way Corrigans, a private club in Greenville, was scheduled for today beginning at 5 p.m., according to owners James W. Lashley and Patrick K Speckman,

The spokesmen for the new club said a ribbon-cutting was planned for 4 p.m. with Mayor Pro Tern Edward E. Carter participating. The club is located at 122 E. Fifth St.

Wreck Leads To Charge

Luther Anderson of 110 Oak Grove Ave. was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 6:56 a.m. collision Thursday at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Greenfield Boulevard.

Police said the Anderson car collided with an auto driven by Barbara Barrett Coley of 107 Rawl Road, causing $500 damagito the Coley car and $75 damage to the Anderson auto.

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Three Hurt In Wreck

Three persons were injured in a a collision at the intersection of U.S. 264 and U.S. 13 Thursday about 10p.m..

According to Trooper Coy Taylor, a car driven by Jasper Earl Barrett of 1107 W. Fifth St. was headed west on U.S. 264 when it collided with a truck driven by Russell Ray Knowles of Raeford. Taylor said that, after the collision, the Barrett vehcile collided with another car driven by Thomas Wayne CurkinofSmithfield.

Both Knowles and Barrett were reported injured, as well as a passenger in the Knowles vehicle.

Taylor said Barrett was charged with failing to stop for a red light. Damage was placed at $l,50fr to'-thc'"Knowles~ vehicle, $300 to the Curkin auto and the Barrett car was listed as a total loss.

Scholarship Announced

Dirk C. Van Raendonck of Antwerp, Belgium, an East Carolina University senior majoring in business and marketing, is one of four ECU School of Business students to be awarded scholarships sponsored by North Carolina National Bank.

The scholarship pays one-half of a year's tuition and fees for an in-state student and is given in recognition of academic excellence.

Van Raendonck has served as president of Omicron Delta Tp^on, and economicniOnor socIyTaffas treasureroT the CU chapter of the American Marketing Society. He is a member of the Phi Eta Sigm, Beta Gamma Sigma, and Phi Kappa Phi honor societies, and is a past recipient of the Max R. Joyner scholarship for business majors.

Officers Will Be Insfalled

The American Association of Retired Persons will install 1984 officers at its December luncheon meeting Tuesday at 11:30 a.m. at the Greenville Golf and Country Club.

R.AIVIP.AGE PENALTY

LUXEMBOURG lAPi -Thirteen Britons have been fined and jailed for assaults and thefts during a rampage by scores of British soccer fans here last month.

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10 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C Friday, December 9,1983 ^    ___Wife Of Lech Walesa Placed In World Spotlight

By BKVW BKl MLK'i .\ssociated Press Writer

W.ARSSW. Poland lAPi -Danuta Walesa, the quiet wile of Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, ventures onto center stage Saturday to collect the .Nobel Peace Prize her husband won for heading the only free trade union in Soviet bloc historv.

I m scared." the short, brown-haired mother of seven said as she frantically prepared for her flight today to Oslo. Norway Walesa will remain at home. He has been quoted as saying he fears he may not be allowed back in if he leaves Poland.

Mrs. Walesa doesn't

welcome the limelight.

I like the peaceful, calm life." she said^ during a quieter but more difficult time, her husband's 11-month martial law internment His confinement began with the martial law declaration of

Dec. 13, 1981 - which suspended Solidarity - and ended in November 1982.

Walesa describes his wife as "a splendid woman, a good wife and an ideal mother. It is she who supports all of us, although it is

Team To Survey Senior Housing

IN SPOTLKIHT - Danuta Walesa holds her daughter Maria-Victoria. The quiet wile of Solidarity leader Leeh Walesa venftires onto center stage Saturday. ( ,\P I.aserphotoi

Found Navy Is Not Ready For Combat

NKW YORK ,\P .An investigative arm ol ('on-gress ^a}s the Navy remain^ unread\ lur war despite tag budget increases in the past three years. The New A'ork Tinier reported today A contidential report by .V' ijfT.eral Accounting ')f-'cj.d *.he Navy has spent .m.c.". nioiie'. on.^new '.r.:.- -jr: a.rpiunes and not -r. r. .-..T.rr.uni'.ion luel.

.nd ^uppor! -v-r^'por,-uid ; ',': T'- '..ppiy protaem .mear..' N^. ; could r.o* >pioy eno.iar. ;u!; drmec .^rd equ.pp*-: aircran car-ro'f' and a.rp.dr.es ir. 'ne

'j! c V,

Na'.secm-'.cr. .Jonr I l.eniTidr. re-pon-'a-d oy -ayina 'ne .Na',y ' r*-dd.ne'; .' .rr.-provinti alter year^ o: inadequate tundina He ^ald the improvemer,' '.couid con-tiiiue.it f or.gress approved the .Nav;, .' budge', reque't.' lor the next tive year.', the Times reported The congressional report said that two months alter a war began, only eiaht ot the Navy '.' 14 carriers could put to sea ready lor battle, and then only by stripping shore bases ot weapons and equipment. Lehman agreed, adding, "But it was six when we came m. "

The report also said that tewer than 6H percent ot the Navy's tactical carrier aircraft were readv tor

Reinstated By Judge's Order

NEW YORK AFi - Two female firefighters lired after a year on phobalion have won reinstatement with back pay atter a judge found "extraordinary evidence o intentional discrimination" The ruling Thursday was a victory lor Brenda Berkinan.

whose earlier lawsuit forced the city to accept women firefighters, and Zaida Gonzalez. They lost their jobs in September L.S. District Judge Charles P. Sifton said, "The Fire Department failed lamentably to prepare its officers and members for the extraordinary task of integrating women into its previously all-male ranks."

combat on any given day. despite a minimum requirement ot Pitpereent

Furthermore. the>account mg ollice charged that the Navy used mtlatcii e>timates ot it> rate,' ot readini*. the Tmum I'eported

The report, completed late in the ,'Ummer. said the Navy irom Pil-lii to pii-',:; increased 'pending on new aircratt by -'..ii percent, to ill 2 billion, while it raised spendmt; on aviation operations and maintenance by only lo 4 percent: to s4.ii billion

The report 'aid 'he Navy had ticaun to correct that imnaianco. t,ut that with curren! tejriuet trends, it .would take un'il \%V, or I'Wi torecitv

By RANDOLPH E. S( IIMID

.Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON 'APi - A task force of senior citizens will be dispatched next year to check on safetyHtaards^m housing for the elderly, Consumer Product Safety Commissioner Sam Zagoria says.

He said the task force will study about 2,(K)0 residences for possible hazards, Zagoria said today in remarks prepared for delivery lo a lorum on elderly consumers organized by the Better Business Bureau.

Zagoria said a site lor the study has not yet been selected by fhcH ive-member commission.

The checks will cover private homes, row houses, apartments and mobile homes, with inspectors looking for common hazards and making recommendations to correct any problems they tind.

If It IS a success. Zagoria said: the commission hopes to expand the project in the tollowmg year with the cooperation of state and local governments.

The forum on the older consumer was also (old that the business community has dilticultv deft.ning and categorizing the elderly.

Industry knows the older consumer is out there in growing ifumbers. said Dr George Baker o the Center on .Aging at the Cniversity of .Maryland,

But while industry knows the elderly have special needs, those needs have not . been communicated effectively.

"Busine.ss is discovering that older consumers comprise a large, highly diverse market " William 11. Tankersiey, president of the .National Council ot Better Business Bureaus, said in prepared remarks .As we move Irom a youth-oriented to an older society, we must be prepared to work more elticiently with thb burgeoning segment ot the consumer popufation," Tankersiey said He noted that in 198:1, lor the lirst time, there are more Americans over li.i than there are teen-agers.

While otiicial estimates tor 198:1 have not been issued. Census Bureau projections list 27,427.000 persons aged 6.7

and over, compared to 26,546,000 aged between 13 and 19.

In his speech, Zagoria cited several hazards that pose a particular danger to the elderly, and where a market for safer products is waiting.

'^For example, he listed non-slip surfaces on scatter rugs. Safety tapes or other materials could help avoid up to 12,000 injuries from falls by persons aged 65 and older, he said.

Bathtubs and showers are an area where safety products would find an audience, he said, because the eklerk are so prone to slip-' ping and falling in them.

Other products ripe for development, he said, are monitors to warn of air pollution and some sort of mechanism to prevent scalding by hot water in tubs and showers.

Loses Fight To Restore Pledge

- BEKKKLEY. Caiif. i.4P

- One official said the city was known as the un-American "People's Republic ot Berkeley, Dut he lost a bid to bring back the Pledge of Allegiance at city council meetings.

Another ofticial who voted against the proposal said she didn't want the city to be thought of as "Berserkeley."

The city council voted 4-3 Tuesday for the status quo: No pledge before meetings. Ttie practice was droppc'd in 1971. when three council members refused to stand during the recitation.

Councilman Leo Bach proposed reviving it to counter publicity from a widely distributed photo of the burning ol a U.S. flag in Berkeley.

The city is known as "Berserkeley. Nutsville. And we don't want to be an object ot ridicule." said Vice Mayor Giida Feller, voting no

harder for her. She is more of a hero than I am,"

Like her husband, the 34-year-old Mrs. Walesa is a devout Roman Catholic, and he has shielded her from the international publicity surrounding them since he led the shipyard strike which forged Solidarity.

She raises their three daughters, ages one, three and four, and four sons, seven to 13 years, in a seven-room apartment filled with an endless stream of visitors and a small army of advisers, secretaries and drivers.

The assistants, whose number on any given day ranges from six to a dozen, include driver Mieczyslaw Wachowski, who spends much of his time acting as deputy father to the Walesa boys, to the sturdy Henryk Mazul, a retired shipyard workei^ who acts as gatekeeper at the second floor apartment.

Most of them, reportedly supported by gifts from union backers, have been with Walesa since Solidarity's early days and remain with him'out of a sense of loyalty to the man and the free trade union movement.

Walesa has spent much of

their 14-year marriage either in hiding or in jail, leaving his wife alone with their children.

"She is such a magnificent woman that she manages well by herself." said the family's priest and friend, the Rev. Henryk Jankowski. I wish every man had a womanlike that.

Walesa, an electrician at the Lenin shipyard in the Baltic port of Gdansk, has been detained scores of times since he married Danuta, a pretty florist six years his" junior, on Nov. 8,1%9.

"He tried to keep me as far from these matters as possible." she said, referring not only to the era of Solidarity but' to the decade 'before when Walesa waged an offten dangerous struggle for free trade unions.

In 1980, police dragged him from their two-room apartment in central Gdansk just as his wife went into labor with their sixth child. Magda.

"She screamed terribly then." said a neighbor. "Don't take my husband.' She screamed so that the whole block could hear."

The couple met when Walesa, newly employed at the vard. entered the florist

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shop where his future wife worked and asked her for change.

"He was apparently under the impression that he was such a handsome man that he didn't have lo buy flowers." she said. Walesa passed by the shop daily on his way to work, and romance blossomed. They were married a vear later.

Mrs. Walesa says the early years of their marriage were the happiest, although her husband was soon embroiled in labor disputes.

He got involved in the workers' movement at the Lenin Shipyard, On Dec. 16. 1970. more than 50 people died when security forces fired on striking workers. Years later. Walesa told Westerner reporters the incident taught him to avoid direct physical confrontation.

In 1976. he was dismissed from the yard for making a remark critical of then Communist Party First Secretary Edward Gierek.

Walesa, reportedly a Iftrd worker and an exceltMt electrician, was fired fcon two subsequent jobs for polD-ical reasons, and was unem-)loyed in August 1980. ;ellow workers. howefr. took collections every piy day and turned the mt^y over to Mrs. Walesa to*-^ the family through hard times.    .;

Walesa became a symbol of the workers' struggle 6n Aug. 14. 1980. when |je climbed the wall of the Lenin Shipyard to take commandf a workers'protest.    -

After two weeks of negotiations. he and governmijit officials signed the Gdarek Agreement, promising the legalization of Solidarity, and Walesa became a national hero.    '

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.14 CT ............. $165.1

.15 CT....................... $175.

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.12    t.w................   $120.00

.14    t.w......................... $145.00

.16    t.w..  ......................  .$170.00

.18    t.w...................  $200.00

.20    t.w.............  $225.00

.24    t.w.............  $280.00

.26    t.w..................   ...$300.00

.28    t.w................................$350.00

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J 2 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C

Friday, December 9,1983Meese Cites No Real Evidence Of Hungry Children

Bv I)().\ALI) M. K()THBKKO Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON lAPi - Presidential counselor Edvcin Meese 111 says he has not .seen any authoritative evidence there are hungry children in America and that many people

go to soup kitchens "because the food is free and that's easier than paying for it."

In an interview Thursday. Meese said the Task Force on Food Assistance was created by President Reagan in September "to get to the bottom of some of these allegations that have been unsubstantiated.

"So, if there are hungry children, the question is why are they hungry'? The United States government is spending more on food assistance than it ever has in history.*

Proclaiming World Food Day last Oct. 14. the president said there was no reason for hunger anywhere in America ... Food and help are available to anyone who is hungry in America."

The U.S. Conference of Mayors said in October that economic recovery had not yet reached the hungry in U.S.

cities.

"The problem of hunger is indeed continuing to grow in cities despite recent reports and indications of an economic recoverv." said the mavors.

They added that the hunger problem "has been exacerbated, clearly, by the recent drastic cuts in federal benefits and the high cost of basic nec^sities. such as food, shelter and energy ." ,

During the same period, a group of physician told a House subcommittee that studies in the the states of Massachusetts and New York as well as in Chicago found increases in the number of people, especially children and the elderly, suffering from inadequate diets.

Asked about reports of hungry children, Meese said. "Ive heard a lot of anecdotal stuff, but I'havent beard any authoritative figures."

"With all the resources of the federal government, with all of the resources of state and local government, with all of the voluntary organizations," he added, "if people are going hungry there must be some problem that has not yet been addressed and it is not lack of funds."

He called some of the allegations "purely political."

N.C. Elections Board Asks Law To Bar Tactics Used By The FBI

rsSES IM NGKf - Presidential couiis(lor Kdwiii Meese III. says he has not seen .iii\ authoritative evidence there are hiing;rv ( hildren in America. (AP Laserphoto)

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RALEIGH, N.C. i.AP.i -iht North Carolina Board of Elections has called for legislation to bar law enforcement agencies from using tactics like those the FBI employed in a mixed-drink referendum m Bolton last year

The board said on Thursday the FBI denied voters in the Columbus County town their constitutional rights by rigging a mixed-drink referendum during an undercover corruption probe The "dioard asked FBI Director William Webster to review the guidelines for undercover operations "to ensure that in the future such operations are not utilized to intluence North Carolina elections"

It also asked the state congressional delegation to outlaw the "use of FBI funds to initiate or influence elec-tions in any slate or municipality in this country,".

An FBI spokesman in Washington said the agency will respond to the board's request for a rc'ciev, of undercover tactics after it has received a cop\ of the opinion.

The board on .Saturday o\erturned the April :i(). 1982 liquor-by-the-drink referendum. .

Board Chairman Robert Spearman .said the FBI's tactics contribute to voter "cMiicism and mistrust of the electoral proc^iss"

"1 would hope very much that C ongress and the FBD uDuki take another look' at this kind ol thing." he said. Federal olticial.'^. however.

defended the Bolton referen- not Bolton residents, dum as an integral part of "Neither the laws of North the probe and insisted the Carolina nor the First

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FBI only followed instructions outlined by local politicians.

The referendum followed a probe known as Colcor. short for Columbus County corruption. and resulted in con-victjons of orjuilty pleas by county corni^sioner. a state representative, a police chief and a district court judge, among others.

State Sen. R.C. Soles was acqiiittpd of fharge.s stemming from the probe. Undercover agents posing as crooked businessmen asked local politicians to help them to get a mixed-drink referendum passed so they could open a bar.

In its opinion, the elections board says the referendum was the idea of the agents.

Shark is On Prison Menu

COLUMBIA. S.C. (.API -Shark is now on the menu at South Carolina prisons, and officials say the inmates are taking to it.

"It's gotten ,a real good reception," said prison food service director Tim .Miller on Tuesday. "Weve had hardly any response that was . non-positjve.L-

Miller likes it too, because the shark meat is currently shipped free to the prisons, courtesy of the state Wildlife and Marine Resources Department,

' The department's seafood marketing services section is .in the midst of a one-year effort sponsored by the Gulf and South Atlantic Fisheries Development Foundation in Tampa, Fla., to cultivate South Carolina tastes for shark.

They figured the state prison system would be a good place to start.

SELLlNti PORTRAIT

LONDON (AP) - A portrait of the American-born wife of Sir Thomas Gage, the British General who helped provoke the American Revolutionary War, is to be sold here in February. The work was painted by John Singleton Copley.

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Amendment to the U.S. Constitution permit that elections tnay be initiated, or election workers paid with funds supplied by secret undercover agents," the opi-_ nionsaid.

Douglas McCullough, assistant U.S. attorney, said federal authorities tried to halt the election but could not without blowing the agents cover.

McCullough said he called each memter of the Bolton Town Board and the town attorney the day before the Vote and warned them of "very strong indications" that the referendum was fixed The boq^rd voted to proceed with the referendum. in which voters

"In order for a commercial shark fishery to become established in South Carolina. we feel it is important to deielop large-scale markets such as the prison system that can purchase in bulk," says section head Will Lacey.

the prison system has gobbled up more than 3,000 pounds of the meat, and state marketers have fed hundreds more pounds in bite-sized nuggets to anyone who woulcf take them from booths in shopping malls, fairs and fetivals.

Prison inmates seem to prefer the shark batter-fried, but Lacey says you can also broil it, bake it. grill it, stew it or use it in soup.

The shark is very versatile," he said. "Its as good as anything that comes out of the ocean."

approved liquor-by-the-drink 136-76.    -

Reasonable people can disagree over what was best," McCullough said. "We made a judgment that it was more important to eliminate the drug dealers we were dealing with rather than bring fully to the surface the role of the undercover agents."

McCullough said the elections boards decision to overturn the vote was welcome since "we asked them not to hold it in the first place

The boards opinion stemmed from a hearing Saturday in Whiteville, the .Columbus County seat, where participants in the FBIs operation testified about their roles. The U.S. Attorneys Office refused to allow the FBI agents subpoenaed for the hearing to testify.

He said the Reagan administration has "provided tor those

who are truly needy "and then added:    ,

"I think some people are going.to soup I know we have considerable information that people g Lurkitchens because the food is free and that s easier than

^^We have a system in this country that virtuall\' everyone

is taken care of by one program or another. _

Meese was interviewed by reporters from The Associated Press. Reuters and United Press International On other matters, he said:

-He is confident Reagan will run for a second term but the president has not told his closest adiisers ot his plans tor

^^He does not expect White House Chief of Stall James Ar Baker 111 to leave government to become commissioner of baseball. He also has no expectation that Martin relasteim Reagans chief economic adviser, will soon lea\e administration. Feldstein came under tire lor dissenting from Reagans opposition to tax increases to reduce budget

-Said Reagan is concerned about deficits 'and he concerned about the fact that he has been unable to convince the Congress and they have been unwilling to cooperate on a real deficit reduction program.'    .

He expects the administration to ask for a larger increase in next years defense budget, but be-declined to liQw much _ larger.

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The Daily Reflector, Gfeenvllle, N.C.

Friday, December 9,1983 1 3Chicago Courts Shudder Over 'Operation Greylord'

By SHARON COHEN Associated Press Writer CHICAGO (AP) In the nations largest court system, these are days of high anxiety. Names are about to be named. Secrets

are about to be revealed. Scandal is in the air.

Now, three years after it began, Operation Greylord, an Abscam-style probe touted as the most ambitious investigation of judicial

corruption in U.S. history, is about to go public.

It promises to be a tale of intri^e and adventure: a white knight judge who concealed a tape recorder in his cowboy boots, FBI

Wyoming Antelope Are In Wintry Death Trap

Bv MARGUERITE HERMAN

Associated Press W riter

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP)

- Desperate to reach clear areas to feed amid unrelenting snows, hundreds of antelope have been killed by trains while others await^ slow death bunched up"^ along a fence erected to protect a cattle range, officials say.

About 1,500 antelope are being prevented from reaching Red Rim, a southern Wyoming plateau that dependably blows clear, by the 40-mile fence which has become a focus of wildlife protecters protests.

The rancher who built the fence argues the antelope herd has been mismanaged by the state Game and Fish Department and is destroying his range for grazing, an issue hotly contested in Wyoming for years.

W'ildlife groups have charged that the real reason for the obstruction is to clear the land for coal mining.

Rancher Taylor Lawrence has offered to open some gates, but insists the fence won't come down.

And Bureau of Land Management spokeswoman Pat Korp of Cheyenne said Wednesday her agency and the U.S. attorney's office were checking all the alternatives to see if legal action might bring the Red Rim fence down.

Bitter cold and as much as 2 feet of snow have created a death trap for thousands of antelope in southern Wyoming that cannot find exposed sagebrush for feeding, state wildlife officials said.

Trains have killed at least 2(X) antelope that gathered in the cleared areas along railroad tracks in the past two weeks, and more have died on highways.

The plight of the Red Rim antelope has prompted a "flood of calls Wednesday to the National Wildlife Federation and the Wyoming federation from people who "want, to do something. spokesman Tom Dougherty in Cheyenne said.

Dougherty said some members of Congress called

- and a New Hampshire woman offered to sell her property to pay for feeding the animals.

Stopping the antelope is a 5-foot fence erected by

Ticketing By Firemen

SAN DIEGO (AP) -Starting next week, city firefighters will be taking on an extra chore - handing out citations to cars illegally parked in fire lanes and handicapped zones.

The parking laws have been on the books for years, but it wasnt until a City Council action earlier this year that firefighters were authorized to dispense the citations, says Fire Department Capt. Gerald Perkins.

Perkins, who will be coordinating the new program, says the councils action permits firefighters to go into parking lots private property and enforce t|[)6 Idws

Those caught illegally parked in handicapped zones will be issued a $52 ticket, while those cited for parking in a fire lane will receive a $30 citation, Perkins says.

"The citations are printed and should be distributed to all (fire) stations by Monday, and well be under way, he said.

Perkins said Fire Department personnel were trained for two months last summer to write parking tickets and were also instructed on how to answer citizen complaints about the ' violations.

Lawrence, who owns land on Red Rim.

About 400,000 antelope roamed Wyoming before this years hunting season, which killed about one-quarter of the herd and brought it nearer to ideal size, state Game and Fish Department spokesmannJaTeStrickIad has said.

When the national and Wyoming wildlife federations warned last fall the fence would mean death to thousands of antelope during a severe winter, Lawrence said the animals would go elsewhere.

Instead, the animals are bunched up along the fence, trying to find a way into the one area they rely on during critical winters, according to Game and Fish biologist Dave Moody.

"Im morally responsible to those animals, Moody said. Itll be tougher than hell for me to sit back and watch them die.

According to Moody,. Lawrence has said he might open some gates in the fence. But Moody questioned whether antelope would use

the 20-foot openings.

Hes willing to let hundreds of antelope die, the biologist said.

Lawrence was reported out of the state Wednesday and did not return several phone calls to his Casper office.

Lawrence has denied ac-aBatorstf tlRTwildlife^ erations the fence was prompted by a desire to remove. his lands status as antelope winter habitat. That status has stalled possible federal coal leasing in Red Rim.

The federations asked that Red Rim be declared unsuitable for mining because poor soil and low rainfall make it imp(sible to reclaim to antelope winter range. Under Lawrences land in Red Rim is coal owned by Rocky Mountain Energy, which contends it can reclaim the land and seeks a compromise with officials on the leasing question.

Holbrook was pessimistic about the herds prospects.

The whole antelope population out here is beginning to approach some real risk, he said.

moles posing as corrupt prosecutors and a Boy Scout states attorney who turned to life in the fast lane to snare crooked defense lawyers.

Reports also have surfaced of deals cut in bars, an FBI agent snapping pictures of a judge counting money and even electronic bugs' placed inside the chambers of at least two judges - believed to be the first such court-approved eavesdropping.

As many as 100 phony criminal cases also were created to ferret out Cook Countys kinky lawyers, judges and courtroom fixers as part of Greylord. said former Police Superintendent Richard Brzeczek.

Now", some judges, at- ' torneys and police officers accustomed to ajudicating millions of cases each year, induding-tens of thousands of felonies, will be getting fresh look at law and order -from a defendants eye view.

In recent days, scores have been advised by the Justice Department they were overheard in legal wiretaps - sometimes in judges chambers. Not all are suspected of criminal activity. Some also have been advised they are targets of the Greylord probe.

Part of Greylord, named after 4he wigs woFftJjy Brit-ish jurists, reportedly focused on narcotics and traffic courts - just two parts of Cook Countys immense judicial system that includes 322 judges and 20,000 licensed attorneys.

One judge - who was relieved of official duties Moniday - predicts he will be indicted. By the end of next

week, as many as four judges, eight lawyers and four police officers and other court personnel reportedly will be charged with crimes.

What this has done is intimidate everybody, said Edward Genson, a veteran defense attorney who has confirmed his client. Judge Wayne Olson, is expected to be indicted. People are afraid to practice law. Peo-pl are afaid to be judges.

Indeed, som.e say caution has replaced cordiality since word of Greylord first leaked last summer when Brocton Lockwood, a southern Illinois judge serving a stint in Chicagos Traffic Court, dis closed he was an undercover agent, wearing a microphone under his robe and and carrying a tape recorder in his cow^y boot.

Since then, some say judges are anxious to put more--on therecotcL Attorneys are reluctant to waive juries for fear of being misinterpreted. And every word in private conferences is being weighed carefully.

Though no one has yet been charged with a crime, the Greylord investigation already has created legal tremors - both for its methods and the message it may carry.

Some veteran defense attorneys are outraged, arguing-the- legal w^retapping^-judicial chambers is an invasion of private conversations of hundreds of innocent people.

. There are certain things I say to people that are not crimes but I dont want the FBI to know it, said Sam Adam, a defense attorney who said hes been approached to represent

some lawyers who fear they may be indicted in the Greylord case.

Adds Sherman Magidson, another defense attorney: Its 1984 and the tape recorder has taken over.

Others in the system say Greylord will further tarnish an already tarnished reputation in a town where cops on the take,' politicians on the make and wheeling and dealing sometimes have been a way of life.

Its going to confirm a (mistaken) belief that all lawyers and judges are corrupt everywhere, Adam said. People in general think lawyers are fixers and all judges are on the take ... Judges are in big trouble come November.

Though some judges say

there is no apprehension. Judge James Bailey, who serves in criminal court, said Greylord will hurt jurists who are on the retention ballot this fall and must get a 60 percent approval rate to stay on the bench.

Nobody likes a crook. Bailey said. "Nobody likes anyone under indictment. Nobody likes anyone with a cloud over his or her head.

And that cloud definitely is hovering over the judicial system, said Judge Kenneth Gillis.

The public. Gillis said, could perceive that 50 percent of the judiciary is involved, when it could be only two to three, if any . "

The number of indictments expected is a tiny percentage of the lawyers and judgos

operating m Cook County.

In addition to the countys regular judges, downstate judges, such as Lockwood, also serve temporary stints in Cook Countys 365 courts. The result is as many as 600 judges handle the nearly six million cases filed each year ranging from traffic tickets to murder.

"We're talking about a few bad apples, said William J. Kunkle Jr., assistant states attorney. "This is not an indictment of the whole system. This is^the system cleansing itself.

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Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH. N.C. lAP (NCDAi - The trend on the .North Carolina hog market today was SI to $1.75 higher. Kinston 45.00. Clinton. Elizabethtown. Fayetteville. Dunn. Pink Hill. Chadbourn. Ayden. Pine Level. Laurin-burg and Benson 44.75. VVilson 4.5.5; Salisbury-42.4M). -Rowland 4:)'.50. Spivey's Corner 45.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson :i4.0o. Fayetteville :)4 00. Whiteville 34.00. Wallace 34.(H). Spivey's Corner 34.00. Rowland 34.00. Durham 31.00.

lomvi Edis Con.Agra I'onll Group Crown Zell DellaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Po Easln.AirL East Kodak Eaton! p Esmark > Exxon Firestone FlaPowi.l Ela Progress Ford Mol s iua-s-i

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RALEIGH. N C. i.APi NCDAI - The North Carolina t o.b. dock quoted price'

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trading was 51.(lu cents, based on lull truck load lots ot ice pack I'SDA Grade A sized 2'/to 3 pound birds 7ti percent oGthe loads ottered ha\e been confirmed with a final weighted average of 52.23 cents t.o.b. dock or equivalent The market is steady to firm, mostly stead}, and the live supply is moderate tor a moderate to mostly good demand. Average weights desirable. E.4mwted-skHig4ite-r 4f f>rod-ers and tryers in North Carolina Fbiday was 1.392.00(1. compared to 1.748,000 last Fridav,

HALEUiH. NC -AH' NCDA - The North Carolina hen market was steady with a weak undertone. Supplies moderate. Demand mo(ierate Prices paid per pound tor hens over 7 pounds at larm tor Wednesday. Thursda} and Friday slaughter was 4ocents.

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NEW YORK AF The stock markpt lost more ground toda} in a^*arryover:--t-n'p'>ji ot the selling that -set in on tyvw-Twi VSi'v cp

r J'iw Dow .l(ies average.of... ^^yijrt ^ :;o industrials, down 11.89 we'igh7! points Thursda}. dropped another 3.15 to 1,2.58.74 by noontime toda}

Lo-xers held a :>-2'lead over gainerx among New York Stock Exchanue-listed issues

T h e m -a r k e t tur n e d downward Thursda} as interest rate' tumped in the bonti market and precious metal places tell sharply.

Interest rates were little changed in the early going, toda}, and gohi i.iullion prices s I a t) i I / e (I 0 n world exchange'

But anabsts said concerns lingered atmut possible upward pressure on interest rates in the weeks ahead International Business Machines moved against the market current, gaming 2 to 121 itn Thursda}. IBM predicted that sales would grow more than 14. percent next vear -ind announced plans to bu\ as man} as 8 million ot Its shares on the open market lor an emplo\ee stock plan.

The NYsK s composite index dropped 21 to 95.24 At t h e .\ men c an St o c k Exchange, the market value index was (lit 3oat 221 !40 \'olume on the Big Hoard totaled 4(, 17 million shares at noontime against 39 o3 at the 'ome point

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Ski Area Will Deliver Snow

CORNWALL. Conn cAPi - Do you miss shoveling snow' Do you long for the slush of a melting storm or the hush that falls over your newly blanketed lav, n'

No need to move north -. the Mohawk Mount Ski Area will supply you with all the frost you want.

Promoters at Mohawk Mount will deliver up ot 1,000 pounds of snow - in a variety of colors to anyone within too miles of their Connecticut resort

Mohawk charges 25 cents a mile for a delivery, with the snow costing $49.49 per half-ton The minimum order is $10

Marketing director Gary Schoenknecht said he came up with the idea for "snow-grams" after seeing so many plates without snow last winter

I just feel it is selfish to keep It all to ourselves," he said.

Musical Program

Gospel Music'83" will be presented at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 2 p.m. The Vines Sisters, the Faithfuletts, the Spiritualaires and the Loving Sisters of Roxboro will be featured.

Pastor Hattie Cobb, choir, ushers and congregation of Nazarene Church of Christ on Skinner Street will hold services Sunday at 5 p.m.

Eldress Phillis Thomas will preach at, St. Matthew Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Music will be by the Last Generation.

Lawyer-Swifch Obituary Column

Delaying Trial

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A West Virginia woman found innocent of killing her Marine husband earlier this year has had her trial on perjury charges moved to January after she switched attorneys.

Delsenia Mae Delgado. 26. of Charleston. W. Va., faces six charges of perjury stemming for her 10-day trial in May. She could be sentenced to 60 years in prison if convicted on all counts.

Her trial was scheduled to start Monday in Onslow County Superior Court. But at a special hearing Thursday. Judge James D. LievNellyn granted a motion by her defense attorney. Edward G. Bailey of Jacksonville, that Bailey be removed from the case.

_ BaileyLf ited irrepa_rab!^ conflict" with Ms. Delgado in asking to be removed.

Attorney Jimmy Gaylor was appointed by Llewellyn as Ms. Delgado's new defense lawyer and set the trial date for Jan.23.

Ms. Delgado was acquitted of murder charges May 19 in the death of her husband. Marine Sgt. Jorge R. Delgado. 23. of Miami, Fja.

Delgado's body was discovered Dec. 8. 1982, in an isolated, wooded area in_ Hubert. He' had been sTiot three times in the head and once in the shoulder with a ,25-caliber pistol. His throat had been slashed.

Willie J. Gladden. 22. ot Central Islet. N.Y.. Ms. Delgado's acknowledged lover, was found guilty of murder on April 17,. The former Marine sergeant was sentenced to die in the state's gas chamber. The case is being appealed to the state Supreme Court,

Two weeks after her acquittal. Ms. Delgado was charged with perjury. Her $30.000 bond was revoked Nov. 18. when her bondsman alleged nonpayment. She is currently in the Onslow C ounty Jail.,.

After the hearing Thursday assistant district at-

Bethel Bd, Is Sworn In

BETHEL - Mayor Frank M. Heminway and Bethel's new Board of Commissioners took office this week in an oath-taking ceremony conducted by .Magistrate Paul Cullifer.

The commissioners are Don C Carson 111, who was elected mayor pro tern, and Sammy T Carson. Delton E. Perry. John L. Watson and Robert C. Young Jr.

Dale Holland, vice president of Talbert. Cox and Associates, presented administrative guidelines lor use of community development grant money to the new board. The board adopted the project ordinance for the year 1983-84.

In additional business the board voted to: rehire town employees, designate Sammy T. Carson to serve on the Mid-East Commission Board, reappoint James H, Tetterton to serve on the recreation committee, to install approximately 70 feet of sidewalk in front of Wachovia Bank in Bethel, and to adopt resolutions honoring Richard B. Johnson, deceased commissioner, and Cieve M. Burton Jr who served 12 years as town commissioner and who has now retired

torney Walter Vatcher called Central Prison to stop plans to move Gladden to Onslow County. Gladden had been scheduled to be taken to Onslow County in preparation for a Monday trial.

The Wilmington Morning Star, which interviewed Gladden June 16 in Raleighs Central Prison, quoted him as saying was willing to^, testify in Ms. Delgado's behalf because he thought she was pregnant with his child.

According to Gladden, who maintains he killed Delgado in self-defense, Ms. Delgado told him she was not pregnant shortly before she testified. During her test! mony, she said she was "terrified" of Gladden and that he had forced her at knifepoint to the crime scene.

Prosecutors say Gladden may testify for the state against Ms. Delgado.

Imlicteil In Bid-Rim

- "-RAi-ElG{f.-^-.-fAF>A-federal grand jury has indicted a Greensboro electrical company and its president on bid-rigging conspiracy charges on a project at a Raleigh hospital.

Starr Electric Co. Inc. and John D. Starr were indicted on Thursday on charges of conspiring to restrain trade in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.

The indictment accused the company and its president of conspiring with other companies - unidentified in the indictment - to fix artifically high bids on a Rex Hospital project.

' The indictment said the companies had agreed that the low bidder "would com-p e It sale the other participating electrical construction contractors for their assistance in the scheme."

The indictment did not specify the amount of the compensation.

The $2.3 million contract was given in June 1978 to Richards & Associates Inc. of Carrollton. Ga. Richards & Associates and Bryant-Durham Electric Co. of Durham have since pleaded guilty to bid rigging on the project.

If convicted, Starr Electric Co. could be fined a maximum of $1 million and Starr could face a maximum fine of $100.000 and three years in prison.

Concert Planned

The Junior Consolators of Greenville will present a musical prorgam at St. John Baptist Church of Stokes at 3 p.m. Sunday. The concert is open to the public.

Program

Christmas around the world" will be celebrated at Arthur Chapel Church Saturday starting at 6 p.m. Dudley Flood will be the guest speaker.

MASONIC NOTICE

Mount Hermon Masonic Lodge 35 will burn the mortgage of its building Monday at 7:30 p.m.

Briley

Survivors of Miss Ella Briley, who died this week, include a foster brother. Herman Joyner of Washington, D.C.

.Moore

Funeral services for Mr. Manassus Moore will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Hayes Chapel Missionary Baptist Church by the Rev. J.B. Crandol. Burial will be in the Rehovia Cemetery at Pactolus.

Mr. Moore attended school Pactolus and was a

in

member of Hayes Chapel Missionary Baptist Church, which he served as Sunday School treasurer for several

Carlisle

BLOUNTS CREEK-Mr.

Herbert McGee Carlisle, 67. retired tobacconist of Blounts Creek (Crystal Beach community), died Thursday. The funeral service will be conducted at 10 a.m. Saturday at Paul    years..

Funeral Home Chapel in    He is    survived

Washington by the Rev. A.G.

Smith. A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at Woodlawn Memorial Park in Durham.

Surviving are his wife,

Mrs. Myrtle Sewell Carlisle; two daughters. Mrs. Thomas

Poe of Greenville and Mrs.. Jill C. Kelly of Durham; a son. Jack Carlisle of Durham, and four lgrandchildren. _- ...............

The family will receive friends at Paul Funeral Home in Washington from 7:30-8; 30 p.m. today.

Jolly

BETHEL-Mr. William J. Jolly died at his home on Second Street Thursday. He was the husband of Mrs.' Minnie Jolly.

Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Flanagan Funeral Home.

Moore

Mr. Jessie Lee Moore of 905 Hines Ave., Ayden. died Saturday at his home.

. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Burneys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church in Grimesland by Elder J.H. Wilkes. Burial will follow in the Burney's Chapel Church Cemetery.

Mr. Moore was born and reared in the Grimesland community but had made his home around Ayden for the past 35 years. He was a member t Burney's Chapel Free Will Baptist Church. "Surviving are his .wife. Mrs. Lillian Earl Dudley Moore of the home; three sons. Jessie Moore Jr. and Danny Earl Moore, both of Ayden, and Clifton Moore of the home; one stepson, Clarence Earl Ormond of Greenville; two daughters. Mrs. Mary M. Thomas of Baltimore and Ms. Shirley Diann Moore of Ayden; three brothers. Walter"^ Moore of Winterville. Josephus Moore of Greenville and Lennon Moore of Baltimore; three sisters. Mrs. Sudie Johnson of White Plains, Mrs Annie Lee Moore of Farmville and Mrs. Ella Randall of Bath, and four grandchildren.

The body wijl be at Norcott Memorial Funeral Chapel in Ayden from 6 p.m. Saturday until carried to the church one hour before the funeral. Family visitation at the chapel will be from 8-9 p.m. Saturday.

Concerts Planned

The Golden Jubilees will present a musical program at 7:30 p.m. Saturday.

The Rev. Charles Eldward and his congregation will conduct a service at 7:30 p.m. tonight. On Sunday, the pastor will conduct the 11 a.m. service and, at 7:30 p.m.. the Spiritual Aires of Kinston will present a musical program.

.M.ASOMC NOTICE Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 will hold a communication today at 8 p.m. at the Masonic Hall.

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by one daughter. Mrs. Patricia Timmons of New York; one brother. Andrew Little of Baltimore; five sisters. Mrs. Mary M. Ebron of Greenville, Mrs. Annie Bell Hariston of Danville, Va.. Mrs. Mary Johnson and Mrs. Ethel Williams, both of Pactolus. and Mrs. Julia Price of New York: five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.--------------

Family visitation will be Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at the Hayes Chapel Church in Pactolus.

Parker

Mr. James B. Parker died at his home in Ayden Wednesday. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the chapel of. the Flanagan Funeral Home by the Rev. David Hammond. Burial will be in Erown Hill Cemetery.

^.Sucyjing... ace his... wife.,

Nannie Hvman Parker of Newport .News. Va.; a son. Michael Parker of Washington. D C ; a daugh-Jer, Phvllis Parker of Washington. D.C.; his mother. .Mrs. Mattie Parker of Tacoma Park. Md.. and a sister, Mrs. Erma Coleman of Tacoma Park.Md.

The family will receive friends at Flanagan Funeral Home tonight from 7-8 p.m.

morial Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church by the Rev. Earl Jones. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Park.

Mr. Taylor was a member of the Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church, where he served on the deacon and trustee boards and as a Sunday school teacher, was a member of the Silver Crescent Club. Church Aid and P as 10 r A i d _C 1 u h.s. th Missionary Department, the Old Eastern Missionary Union and Association He 'was a former church custodian, superintendent of Sunday school and a member of the usher board. In addition, he was a member of Calumet Lodge No 273. IBPOE of W and Livingstone Lodge No. 102, AF&AM. a member of the civil liberties department, past PTA president of H,B. Sugg SchooL-a member . of the Pitt County Branch of NAACP. a member of the Farmville Housing .Authority and co-owner of Taylor and Gay Barbershop. _    

He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Agnes Dupree Taylor of the home, and one brother, the Rev, Samuel Taylor of Alexander. Va.

The body will be taken to Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church Saturday at 5 p.m. by Joyner's .Mortuary lior. viejviJig....utO;.I3-p-ni-Family visitation will be Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at the church.

The family will assemble at 1 p.m. Sunday at 7t)9 S. Main St. for the funeral procession.

Teel

.Mr. Elijah Teel, retired farmer of Route 6, died Thursday. The funeral service will be held at 2:3U

p.m. at Little Savanna Primitive Baptist CTiurch Penny Hill. Burial will be the Teel family cemetery.

Surviving are his wi Mrs. Sally J. Teel of th home; five daughters. ^ Christine Armfield Greenville. Mrs. Gwendolynj Duncan and Mrs. Sue Evans,4 both of Norwalk. Conn,. Mrs. Claudine Lypns of Newport: News. Va.. and Mrs. Ernestine Barnes of; Washington. DC.; two-brothers. Marcellus Teel andl .Mack Teel, both of Route 6; a' sister. Mrs. Laura Randolph of Newport News, Va.; 24 grandchildren and 32 great grandehildren.    ------

The family will receive friends at Flanagan's Funeral Home Chapel Saturday from 7-8 p.m.

Wainright

AYDEN - Mr. Raymond Wainright. 7. died Thursday. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel in .Ayden by the Rev. Steve Hargrove. Burial wifi follow iirthe Ayden-Cemetery.

Surviving are his wife. .Mrs. Joyce P. Wainright of the home; one daughter. Mrs. Martha B; Justice of Washington: two brothers. Holton Dail and Ray Dail. both of Ayden; six sisters. Mrs, Lucy Burney. Mrs. Bertha Williams and Mrs. Minnie Dennis, all of .Ayden. Mrs. Laura Mae Garris of Vanceboro. Mrs. Alice Smith of Knightdale and Mrs. Mary Brickhouse ot Greenville; -tbree-grtndehtldren and two great-grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Saturdav.

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86. died Wednesday in Pqngo District Hospital. Graveside services were to be con-VlsIt Ssnts CkuS At ducted today at 2 p.m. in the '

Soule Cemetery near Swan-quarter.

Mrs Sawvpf, the wife of late Luke Sawyer, was the dietician and manager of the Swan Quarter Public School cafeteria for many years and was a member of Rose Bay Baptist church in Rose Bay Surviving her arc two sons.

Dewey Sawyer and Thurman Evans, both of Rose Bay: two daughters, Mrs, Thomas E. Carawan of Greenville and Mrs, Eileen Coggins of Swan Quarter; a brother.

A.W. Carawan of Pantego; a sister. Mrs, Roy Peele of Williamston; 14 grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren.

Funeral arrangements were, handled by Owens Funeral Home of Swan Quarter.

Taylor

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SportsREFLECTOR

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 9, 1983Duke Offers Challenge For Pirates

Last Carolina's basketball Pirates, after suffering their Jirst loss of the season last Saturday night, from one lions den into another this Saturday when thev travel to Durham to face Duke University.

lipott IS set for 7:30 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium.

The Pirates, who won their fiist two outings, went up against then-ranked 20 \irgjnia Commonwealth Uni

versity last Saturday and viere drubbed 75-44. The 31-point margin was the largest suf-tered by a GharTk Harrison-coached team.

Oddly enough. V'CU dropped out of the standings after taking two lop-sided wins during the week.

Duke is unranked, but the Blue Devils bring in a 5-0 record. The young Blue Devils got off to a slow start, dovvnirig Vanderbuilt 78-74 and then

nipping William & Marv, 70-68.

^But in their .last three games, they rolled to lopsided wins, beating Davidson 90-63. Suth Florida 95-66 and Ohio University. 82-63.

Sophomore guard Johnny Dawkins. 6-2. leads the Blue Devils in scoring with a 25.6 average, but Duke has four other players in double figures. They include 6-8 sophomore center Mark Alarie at

13.4. 6-5 sophomore forward David Henderson at 12.6 and 6-0 freshman guard Tom^iv Amakeratl0.2.

All but Henderson have been starting. The other tw'o starters usually are 6-7 junior forward Dan Meagher, averaging 6.8 points a game, and 6-8 sophomore forward Jay Bilas. hitting 9,2.

Dawkins is the leading re-bounder with 6.6 per game, while Alarie and Bilas are both pulling 6,2 per game.

Overall. Duke is scoring 83.0 points a game, while allowing 66.8. The Blue Devils are outrebounding their opponents. 36.8 to 31.4.

"Duke is probably more explosive than Virginia Commonwealth on offense." Harrison said. "Dawkins is a phenomenal talent and has the intelligence to go vvith their talent. Henderson hurt us last year and he's playing extremely well this year as a sixth man. This will be

another very tough test for us at this point in the season."

To a large extent, the Blue Devils went through a season last year similar to the one the Pirates lace this year -having very young players The Blue Devils were 11-17 last year as Coach .Mike Krzyzewski went with a lineup composed mostly of freshmen. That experience appears to be paying off for the Blue Devils so far this year.

Lady Piratej^ Hosting JMU

Last Carolinas Lady Pirates __seek to snap a two-game losing streak Saturday night when ECU hosts James Madison at 7:30 p.m. in Mmges Coliseum.

The game is the first ECAC-South contest for the Lady Piries .While there will be no league standings this year, the .women'will play a post-season tournament to decide a champion for the first time. That tournament will be

held in Greenville in early March,

East Carolina comes in with a 2-3 record, having lost to Fayetteville State. 64-.53. and U.\C Charlotte. ,56-.50. in play last week. In the latter game, the Lady Pirates built up as mudras a ll-point leadhefore losing.

James .Madison was 2-2 on the year prior to a game last night with American Umversi-.

ty on the Dutchesses' home court. East Carolina leads the series between the two schools. 8-2. winning last year's only meeting. .54-48.

JMU opened the 1983-84 sea.son with an 88-48 win over

Loyola and then took a 68-53 win over George .Mason in a conference meeting.

That, hoyvever. was followed by a 66-65 loss to Howard on a buzzer shot and a 60-57 overtime loss to George

UNC-Wlmngton To ECAC-Soufh?

Stelnkuhler Wins Lombardi

HOUSTO.N i.APi - Dean Steinkuhler. a hulking offensive guard for the top-ranked .Nebraska Cor-nhuskers, shared the ho.nor of being college footballs best lineman with the nation's top running back.

Stciiikuhlei' 6-ioot-3 alid 275 pounds, won the 14th annual Lombardi Award on Thursday night over Doug Dawson of Texas. Bill Fralic of Pittsburgh and Heggie White of Tennessee.

Part of the award, given in honor of the late Green Bay Packers Coach Vince Lombardi. belonged to Mike Rozier. winner of the 1983 Heisman Trophy. Steinkuhler said.

"Any time you have a guy like Mike behind you. it can't help but make the line look better," Steinkuhler said after receiving the award, "1 want to thank Mike, without him I probably wouldn't be here. People don't get up on Sunday morning and read our ithe offensive linemen's) stats in the paper.

The four finalists were chosen by a panel of 1.58 college football coaches, sports writers and sportscasters to receive the 40-pound block of granite that is given as the trophy. Results of the balloting were not released.

Steinkuhler is the Cor-nhuskers' fastest lineman ever, running 40 yards in 4,67 seconds.

A native of Burr. vNeb.. a rural community of 300. where he played only eight-man football for Sterling High School, Steinkuhler was selected to the AP's All-Big-Eight team and was a second team .All-American.

"I don't know if this is the biggest thing to ever happen to Burr.- .Nebraska, but it's definitely the biggest thing to ever happen to Dean Steinkuhler. Most kids from small towns dont get the chance to play football for a major university." he said.

He was described by his coach, Tom Osborne, as possibly the best lineman" he has seen in his 20 years of coaching at Nebraska. "The main thing about Dean is his speed and balance." Osborne said.

He has good coordination. He is strong and very in-

Sports Calendar

f.diliir ^ Voic Si lmlult'r- jrv >uppln'd b\ si hiiols or ^pooaoniin .i^cncie.'. him orv nuhiivl lodiHimo u ilfloiil nolu f TiMl;it \ .S|MNls Kuskrlhull K(t'al('(nk> i .'ip m

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telligent and you just dont find guys that size who could move like that. I think that's why the pros and every body who's seen him play are quite impressed with him

Even as a junior, playinu with with, All-American. 1982 Lombaidi wirmei and i\vo-time Outland Trophy winner Dave Rimington and all-Big Eight linemen liandy Theiss and .Mike M a n d e 1 k o. Steinkuhler consistently graded highest.

"A lot of people have compared me to Dave. 1 really don't see how they can, 1 used Dave as a leader. He has helped me get where 1 am today," Steinkuhler .said

This year Steinkuhler was the foundation of a line that a number of opposing coaches said was. among the best They had ever seen.

Rozier continually credited the offensive line for optming holes that helped him become only the second man ever- to rush for more than 2.(ioo yards in a collegiate season, gaming 2.148.

"Those guys open holes anybody could run through." said Rozier.

UNC-Wilmington could liecome the newest member of the ECAC-South when the full ECAC holds its next meeting.

.According to Dean Ehlers. athletic director of James .Madison University and president of the ECAC-South, only the approval of the entire EC.AC remains. A two-thirds vote of the entire membership is necessary for final approv-:-aL V -0-    .

UNC-Wilmington has been seeking affiliation with a conference tor several years now and will become ihe second North Carolina member of the

league if it does gain approval. The ECAC-South. has already given its stamp of approval to UNCW's entry into the conference.

It is doubtful that UNCW could receive admission in time for any sports this year, but the school could become a full member in time for next falls opening programs.

Current members o the ECAC-South are East Carolina. William & Mary, Richmond. James .Madison. George .Mason and the U S', Naval .Academv.

.Mason in the consolation game of the George Washington Invitational tournament.

Junior Sue Manelski, a .5-6 guard, is the leading scorer for the Dutchesses with a 16.8 average, while 6- freshman center Julie Franken is hitting 15.5 points a game. Forward4 .Michele James, a 6-0 junior, is scoring at a 10.0 clip.

Other starters are expected = to be .5-6 senior guard .Mary Gilligan 12.5 ppg) and .5-11 freshman forward Besty Witman (8.8ppgi.

The Dutchess are led in the rebounding column by James with 13.3 per game, while Franken is pulling 10.0.

East Carolina is led by Sylvia Bragg, a 5-8 sophomore guard with an 11.2 average, while Annette Phillips, a ,5-10 junior forward, has a 10.2 mark. Other starters are 5-4 sophemoc guard Delphine .Mabry. 9.4: 6-2 senior center Darlene Hedges. l4. and ,5-10 junior forward Anita

Anderson. 5.8.

The leading ECU rebounder IS Phillips with 6.6. while Hedges is pulling 6.0.

Following the game this weekend, the Lady Pirates are idle until next Saturday when they host Cincinnati at 3 p.m.-

Last year, the two teams met with Duke escaping with a 70-65 win after trailing thorughout most ot the tirst half

This year, however, the shoe is on the other foot with Duke having the more experienced team and the Pirates the youngsters. Three sta-ters tor the Pirates are freshmen -6-7L' center Roy Smith. 6-n forward Derrick Battle and 6-2 guard William Grady

The only experience in the starting lineup comes Irom 6-1 point guard Tony Kobinsiin and 6-5 forvvard Barry \\ right Wright is the leading scorer for the Pirates with a 12 o average, while Robinson is the only other player in double figures at ,fii;7; Smith isyscor; ! mg at 9.0 per game.' wiie Grady has a 7.0 and Battle, a 5.0 average.

Reserve guard Curt Van derhorst.is scoring a 7.0 The leading Pirate rebounder is Smith al 8.3, followed by Battle at 5.o The Prrades-haAe a-\^^raged

.59.3 points a game while allowing 61,3.'They've been outrebounded 39.0 to 35.7 ' You know I said we proba bly would not be a real good team in December and take our lumps." Harrison said "Well. I teel we are still trying to get the feel ot our team Until all veterans play as they are capable and we tind out gist vhat our youngsters really can do. then I'm i>ot sure we know enough atiout our team to know just how to play certain .Mtualions,

"Gur poor shoot ma. lack ot aggressiveness a.nd in consistency must change in order to lie a good basketball team." the coach continued Following this Saturday Tjight.;s:. ;coatM..Ite_, Pmal are again idle tor a week betore playing host to Drexel University the lollowmg Sat urday. December 17, in .Mmges Coliseum Then, they travel to Peoria: Illinois, the toll()Wing Tuesday and Wednesday tor the Bjver . City - Shootout .-hoSied fn-Bttrdle\ ~

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TeDaily Hetiector, breenviiie, N C.

Friday. December 9,1983

Woody

Peclc

February.

At any rate, Terrell deserves a hardy salute from the NCHSAA and all high school athletes, past and present, for the work he has done over the past 16 years.

The panel returns one last time this week to give you its predictions of the 1983 bowl games, running from tomorrows Independence Bowl to the finale in the Orange Bowl when Miami. Fla., takes on ^1 ranked Nebraska.

But more about that later. First a couple of other things.

Yesterday Simon Terrell, the, executive director of the North Carolina High School Athletic Association, announced that he will retire following the nd of his current term, which ends July 1. 1984. Terrell is only the fourth man to head the organization and has done so since 1967.

During his tenure, the NCHSAA has grown to cover 334 schools with some 90.000 athletes annually. The association is now in the process of coming up with a plan for a major realignment of the state, with several options available including one which would have a 5-A ranking of the super-sized schools. Another possibility would be to reduce the rankings to only three.

That, however, will not be fully settled until after Terrell has stepped down, next December.

His replacement will be sought shortly after the first of the year, but the best bet is his current assistant Charles Adams.

Adams would come into the job totally familiar with the situation, having served under Terrell for some years now. Terrell, if pur memory serves us, was the assistant to L.J. Perry, the previous executive director, before moving up with Perry stepped down.

Adams would therefore seem to be the logical replacement.

Now to our picks. With Vickie Spivey still in the lead, it would appear that she had a lock on first place. A comparison of her picks and ours we are in second place show that at best, we could only pull even. There are only two differences, the margin of her lead.

The current standings show Spivey with a 96-44 mark, followed by this writer at 94-46. The guests rank third with a 92-48 record, followed by Tom Baines at 91-49. Jimmy DuPree is fifth with a 90-50 mark, followed by Joe Jenkins at 89-51.

Our guest for the finale is the best guest of the year, WNCT-TV's Slim Short.

Whereas last year, there were enough differences in the pack to allow for some general overhauls, it isnt likely to occur this season.

The only question is whether it will be a tie for Vickie or an outright championship.

In this area, the biggest game, of course, is the Florida State-North Carolina meeting in the Peach Bow l. Florida State comes in following one of its biggest defeats, suffered last weekend at the hands of Florida. Whether the Seminles can rebound from that is questionable but if they do they certainly will be hungry. A lot depends on how quickly Kelly Lowery is ready to play.

Our pick is that the Tar Heels will come out on top, but the panel gives them only a 4-2 edge.

The other concensus picks: Air Force over Mississippi; Maryland over Tennessee; Southern Methodist and Alabama, a toss-up; Boston College over Notre Dame; West Virginia over Kentucky; Oklahoma State over Baylor; Ohio State and Pitteburgh, a toss-up; Illinois over UCLA; Northern Illinois over Fullerton State; Brigham Young over Missouri; Penn State over Washington; Florida over Iowa; Texas over Georgia; Nebraska over Miami, Fla.; and

Peele

Air Force over Ole .Miss Tennessee over .Maryland SMU over Alabama Boston C, over Dame W. Virginia over Kentucky Okla. State over Baylor Ohio State over Pitt Illinois over UCLA N. 111. over Fullerton BYU over .Missouri Penn State over Washington Florida over Iowa UNC ovgr Florida State Texas over Georgia Nebraska over .\Iiami Auburn over Michigan

' expected to be made to as to a replacment in

Auburn over Michigan. The full poll:

Baines

Spivey

Short

DuPree

Jenkins

Air Force

Air Force

Ole Miss

Air Force

Air Force

Maryland

Marvland

Maryland

.Marvland

Maryland

Alabama

SMU

Alabama

SMU

Alabama

Notre Dame

Boston C.

Boston C.

Boston C.

Boston C.

VV. Virginia

W. Virginia

W. Virginia

W, Virginia

W. Virginia

Okla. State

Okla. State

Okla. State

Bavlor

Bavlor

Ohio Stafe

Ohio State

Pitt

Pitt

- Pitt

Illinois

Illinois

UCLA

Illinois

UCLA

N. Illinois

N. Illinois

N. Illinois

F'lrilertonSt.

N; Illinois

Brig. Young

Brig. Voun^-x

. Brigh. Young

Brig. Young

Missouri

Peon State

Penn State

Penn Stale

Penn State

Penn State

Florida

Florida

Florida

Florida

Iowa

N, Carolina

Fla. State

N. Carolina

fla. State

Fla, State

Texas

Texas

Texas

Texas

Te.xas *

Nebraska

Nebraska

Nebraska

Nebraska

Miami

Auburn

Auburn

Auburn

Auburn .

Auburn

Different Styles In Peach

ATLA.N'TA (.AP> - Coach Bobby Bowden of Florida State says the 16th annual Peach Bowl football game will offer two contrasting styles of offense

"We depend upon the big play,'" Bowden said. "Dick (Crum, coach of North Carolina) is more methodical.

"I use ooh-aah football." Bowden added. "Ooh. 1 loved that plav. or aah. that was bad."

The two coaches were in Atlanta Thursday for a news conference to preview the Dec. 30 clash, set for a 3 p.m. EST kickoff at Atlanta Stadium.

"I hate that expression you're no better than your last game."' Bowden said, prompting an outburst of laughter.

FSU enters the game with a 6-5 record, having lost four close decisions before being demolished 53-14 by archrival Florida last Saturday at Gainesville.

"The worst thing about our football team is our record." Bowden said. "Were a lot better than our record. I've never been with a team that lost so many close games." Last week 1 can't explain."

Despite the thrashing last week, oddsmakers have made the Seminles an early 3-point favorite over the Tar Heels, the Atlantic Coast Conference runnerup with an 8-3 record.

Crum said he watched the FSU-Florida game on television and figured out what happened.

"Everytime they did something great, there was a penalty." Crum said. "When you have turnovers and penalties, it's pretty tough to win."

"I need you to come to Tallahassee and tell the people that." Bowden said.

Crum has an 84-29 record in Hi years as a head coach at .Miami of Ohio and North Carolina, including a 50-19 mark in six vears at the helm

of the Tar Heels.

The most significant Crum record as far as the Peach Bowl is concerned is his perfect 6-0 mark in postseason competition.

"I can't explain it." Crum said. "Our kids are going to

work hard, but we let them have a good time. too. That's been the approach we've had."

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Pepperdine Likes 07s

By The Associated Press Pepperdine has this thing about playing national powers in overtfme, as 14th-ranked Wichita State has discovered toils dismay.

Pepperdine. which took national champion North Carolina State into two overtimes before losing in the first round last season's NCAA basketball tournament, put in only five extra minutes Thursday night. But they were enough to hand the Wichita its first defeat, 67-66.

It was a light night for college basketball, with only three ranked teams in action.

No. 15 Arkansas topped Southwest Missouri State 56-41. and No. 20 Fresno State routed Portland 70-45. And unranked Virginia continued to get along without Ralph Sampson, winning its sixth game without a loss. 52-41 over William & Mary.

Dwayne Polee and Scott McColium had 14 points each to lead Pepperdine. But it was Mark Wilson, who made made some key steals in both regulation and overtime and made a key free throw after missing the first of two to tie it with four seconds left in regulation.

I've been in that situation before." Wilson said. I rushed the first shot, but then I took my time, bent my knees and hit the second. When you miss a shot, you just have to come back and play hard."

Pepperdine Coach Jim Harrick said his plan all along was to take advantage of Wichitas weakness in the backcourt.

Theyre not a very good outside team, but they can sure beat you inside." Harrick said.        -

Wichita's Xavier McDaniel was the game's leading scorer with 20 points.

Top 20

Joe Kleine had 23 points and 12 rebounds to lead Arkansas over Southwest Missouri prompting opposing Coach Charlie Spoonhour to put it simply,

Joe Kleine is a monster." Spoonhour said of the 6-foot-ll center, who scored a game-high 23 points and lead both teams in rebounding with 12. "He is a great rebounder.

Ron Anderson hit all eight of his field goal attempts and scored 20 points to lea Fresno State.The Bulldogs, 4-1, rolled to an early 35-18 lead and built it to 56-27 midway through the second half.

Bernard Thompson and Scott Barnes added 12 points each for Fresno.

I'nranked Teams Senior Rick Carlisle paced a balanced Virginia attack with 12 points. He got help from veteran guards Ricky Stokes and Othell Wilson as well as Tom Sheehey and Olden Polynice, two highly-touted freshman Coach Terry Holland hopes can compensate for Sampson's absence.

Wilson, came off the bench to tally 11 points. Sheehey had nine, Stokes had eight and Polynice. a 6-10 center, contributed two key foul shots in a seven-point burst that broke the game open early in the sec<)nd half;

That prompted William & Mary Coach Barry Parkhill, a one-time Virginia star, to say: "I really think they are a whole lot better than people are giving them credit for. I think they are one of the top 30 teams in the country," Parkhill said.

Wayman Tisdale had 23 points and 11 rebounds as

Oklahoma ran its record to 5-1 with a 94-66 rout of Georgia State.

Chuck Person scored 17 points as Auburn routed outmanned Youngstown State 78-52 in the opening round of the Colonial Classic. The Tigers will meet South Alabama, who downed Florida A&M 81-70 in the tournament opener.

John Price had 21 points. Shawn Campbell 19 and Charles Carradine 17 to lead Weber State to a 94-83 victory over Utah.

Tulane won its fourth game without a loss, routing Central Florida 82-54 as Howard Jenkins led the way with 20 points.

Sophomore Earl Kelley

scored 21 points and had nine assists as Connecticut topped winless U.S. International 98-80.

Vince Hinchen scored 25 points as Boise State defeated Wyoming 66-52,

Vince Martellos 18 points paced Florida State to a 76-63 victory over Jacksonville.

Southern California beat San Jose State 69-62 behind Ron Holmes 19 points and 16 by Wayne Carlander.

Lefty ODoul of the Philadelphia Phillies set a National League record in 1929 by reaching base 334 times. He made 254 hits, drew 76 walks, and was hit by a pitched ball four times.

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. College Basketball

Hi The Associated Press K\ST

Alleghen.i 7ii. h'redonia .St .>2

. .\Kerniatii. Penn .St Capital.'i4 . American71.TowsonSI .'iti

. Ibockporl St .7.1 ol Rochester?:) ,CW Posl7X.N V Tech71

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Harvard )4. St Anselin .71

; Johns Hopkins90. Lebanon \'al H4 . Messiah 0.). W Marvland02

. Mount St. .Marv .)(). Nvack .)7 . ,\\ Maritime :)H, Baruch .).)

. (lid Westburi 70. .\ew Pallz 72 . Phila Teslile92, Sus(|iiehanna IH

S Connecticut tat, Brvani 02

Swarlhmore .).7. Dick'inson 4H

I ol Harllord lilt) C ol New HavenH4 W Connecticut ,71 Anna Maria 42

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StH Til

,\ppalachian.Si ,77. Lenoir Kin ne 4H * .\uhurn78. Aoungslown.St ,72' Bridgewater. Va 7,7, Hampden-Sydney

Bradley .77. Chicago St .72 Dyke 0.1. .Siena Heights .70 Fort Havs SI H2, Kearney SI 7H (iraeelandoi). Parkoo Indiana SI 0.7. EvanvilleOl Mo.-Kansas Cilv :l. William'Jewell 34 Ml Marlv 91. ST) -Springfield 78 MoorheaSSI. .74. Si Cloud Si .72 .\W Iowa 86, Midland 82 Rose-Hulman78. Principia 40 SE .Missouri 7.7. Drury ,78 W'arlburg 84, Buena Visla 77' SOITHWKST Arkansas SI hi, Belhaven.72 Texas Wesleian79. SWTexasOO .NE Oklahom'a 81. John Brown7H. OT \W Oklahoma 44. Barllesville

Wesleyan 39

~OkhihomallTrtieorgrwSt tio Phillips 71. Cenlral SI .Okla 02 W Texas SI HO. .So ('nlnrado7o FAR H FS T Azusa Pacilic 06. Whillier .70 Boise SI 06. Wvoming .72 Cal Davis 07. Bakersfield SI 02 E Monlana 41. W Monlana 40 E New .\IexicoH9 Sania FeH2 Fresno.Sl.7o. Porlland4.7 HumboldJSI 4{|. .Northwesttoll 6;f-Lewis & Clark 84. Warner Pacific'OH U'wisClarkSi 80.E OregonOO Long Beach SI 73. Lovola. Calif 71 Pepperdme 07. Wichifa Si 66. (IT Pacilic Lutheran .70. ,S| Marlin's 77 So,Cahlorma09, SanJoseSi 02 WetK'rSl 94. l'tahH3

NBA Standings

B\ The Associated Press EASTERN ((INFEREM E

BrvanColl 08 Lee Coll ,77 .

Clinch Val 7o. King Tt)

Columbus Coll 79..shorler4ii ,

FJa' Memorial 91. K'htgler 117 Florida St 70. .lacksonMlletg! Franklin?'!, (icorgelown, Ky 72 Longwood04 Mary Washington .79 l.oULsiana Tech 77. NW Louisiana 01 N ('. Asheville HO. Barber-Scotia 69 N C.-Charlolleoj. Erskine?? NorlolkSi %, N C Cntralo? Randolph Macon 61. Va Wesleyan 44 S AlalwmaHl. Florida A4M7ii S C Aiken 73. Newberri 72 s C-Spartanburg 07. Wiillord 111 St Augustine s 74 Hampton Inst 7o Southern L lo2. Dillard 70 Tenn Martin 87. Frit'd Hardeman 69

Tenn Temple HI . Covenant 61 TulapeH2. ceni Florida .74

Tu.skegee lot. Benedicl Coll 78 Virginia .72. Wilham 4 Marv 41 MIIV\EST \rkansas .7(i. SW Missouri Si 41 Auguslana.S I) 78 VanklonO'i

Mlantir Dii ision

IV

1. i*el.

GK

Philadelphia 17 4

789

Boston 17 8

714

1

New York 13 8

619

New Jersey 9 9

,7(K(

71 ,

Washingto'n 9 11

4,>0

ti'!-

( enlral Di\Ision

Milwaukee 13 ti

1)84

MJanla . in ,10

.VXi

31,1

Delroll 10 10

.70(1

3'.-

Cleveland 7 14

333

Chicago 7 12

294

7

Indiana 4 17

211

9

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MiduesI Division

Dallas 13 i>

l4

I tah 12 9

,771

2

Denver 11 9

770

2'

Kansas (IIV 9 11

4.70

4'.

llouslon 7 13

- 3.70

8'

SanAnlonio 7 17

318

71,

Paeifie Division'

1.os .Angeles 14 7

737

Portland 13 ' 8

819

2

Golden Stale 11 10

.724

4

Seattle 9 11

4.70

Phoenix 7 14

333

8

San Diego 7 14

33:!

8

Thursriav's(,anies

Phoenix 120. New York 97

l.os Angeles 129. KansasCilv lixi

(ioldeiiSlart-l.lo. Detroit 129

Long, Kodak Team On WITN

Terry Long. East Carolina offensive guard, will be among those honored as fliembers of the Kodak All-America team Saturday in a syndicated television program to be carried over WITN-T\'. Channel?.

I The program will begin at 12:30 p.m. Long and North Carolina's William Fuller, a efensive tackle^ will be anjong those featured on the

f'rpgram which honors the otball Coaches of America All-America squad, sponsored annually by Kodak.

Then, at 1:30 p.m., WlT.N' will broadcast the annual Sorth and South Carolina Shrine Bowl from Charlotte. This game features the top players from the two states in battle that annual benefits rippled children.

If Friday s(iamis

Denver vs Itusliinal llarlliird New .Icrscy al Philadelphia Allanta al Indiaiiu Milwaukee al Cleveland Houston al Chicago San ..r.lnmnvi, ! lahaf Ian-Vegas Dclroil al Pori bind New Vorkal .San Dicgo DallasatSeallle

Salurda\'s(.ames Boslonal Atlania Washington .it San Anionio Cleveland al Chicago Indiana at Kansas Cily I'lahal Houston San Diego al Phoenix'

Dallas al (iolden Stale

NFL Standings

By I'hr \ssih laled Press Amerieanl onference Fast

V Miami liullalo

vv

1.

T 1

M. PF

PA

h)

8

4

t

0

0

714

.771

.324

2.79

212

297

New Knglaiid

7

7

0

TilKI

247

2.78

N 7 dels

7

7

0

.7011

292

203

Ballimore

f.

K

0

429

323

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il

Piltsbiirgh

0

.1

11

(.43

im

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Cleveland

K

ti

11

.771

299

291

Cineinnali

H

H

0

429

31.7

273

llouslon

1

(I

071

244

413

UrsI

v U A Kaiders

11

0

780

188

290

Ilenver

K

ti

II

.771

204

200

Seattle

7

7

II

,7iXI

302

379

Kansas City

II

3.77

3IKI

.109

San Diego

f)

9

II

3,77

3IU

394

Nalional

1.

(onfm*

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\ DulLis

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877

4,72

287

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12

2

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G

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Ti

9

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209

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\ V (uinis

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29<i

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Detroit Green Bav Minnesota Chicago Tarnpa Bay

571 315 249 500 396 407 .700 283 315 429 269 267 143 212 345

L A Rahis

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

Central

8    6    0

7    7    0

7    7    0

6    8    0

2    12    0

West

8    6    0

San    Francisco    8    6    0

.New Orleans    7    7    0

Atlanta    6    8    0

y-clinched division title x-clinchedplayoff spot

.Saturday. Dec. Ill Pittsburgh at NewYork Jets Atlanta al Miami

Sunday. Dec. II Chicago at Minnesota Clevefand at Houston San Francisco at BuHalo Seattle at New York Giants Detroit al Cincinnati New Orleans at Philadelphia Kansas Cily al San Diego New England al Los Angeles Rams St Louisal Los Angeles Raiders Baltimore at Denver Washington at Dallas

Monday. Dec. 12 Green Bay al Tanipa Bav

Minnesota Toronto Chicago St. Louis Detroit

Edmonton Calgarv Vancouver Winnipeg Los Angeles

Campbell Conference Norris Division

15    lU    3

12    13    3

12    15    2

II    14    3

10    14    2    22    91    108

Smythe Division

33    I:t6    128

27    123    134

26    1W3    114

25    111

SchlieDencr. delenseman, and Frank Caprice, goalie, Irom Fredericton ol the American Hockey League

123

N.C Scoreboard

21 11 13 11 17

9 15 16

116

NHL Standings

Pittsburgh New Jersey

By The Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick Division W I. T Pis

IK 9    2    38

17    9

16    9

13 17

6 19

7 21

Thursday's (.ames Boston 6. Montreal 2 Philadelphia 3, Chicago 2 Toronloft. Hartford 6 Washington!. Calgarv 3

Friday's Games

^ No games scheduled -------

Saturriav's Games Buffalo at Boston Montreal at Washington Philadelphia al New Jersey Winnipeg at Hartford Calgary al Toronto Edmonton al Vancouver Detroit at SI Louis N.Y. Islanders al Minnesota Quebec at Los Angeles

Sunday's Games Winnipeg at Boston Buffalo at Philadelphia Montreal at Pittsburgh Detroil.al Chicago

45 171 26 101 117 25 120 127 21 113 136 20 118 140

By The AssiK'iaIrd Press Men's College Kaskclball

Appalachian St 77 l,enoir Bhy ne 48 N.Carolina-CharlotteOH, Erskine 77 W'nine!!' College Baskelball.. Elon 76. Wingatb73

Men's College Swimming N.Carolina 90, Duke 23

Wuinen's College Swimming .\ Carolina 89, Duke 22

Rose Edmonds Named Top Female Athlete

NY Isles NY Rangers

PbiladeShia

Washinglt

4    38

,3    35

2 28 3    15

1 II

GF G.\

127 102 125 107 120    99

102 III 87 119 78 127

Transactions

Bv The .\ssocialed Press BASEBALL

MAJOR LEAGLE BASEBALL Extended the conlract ol Bowie Kuhn.

Boston

Buffalo

Quebec

Montreal

Hartford

Adams Division

18    7    2

16    10    3

16    11    3

13    15    1

II    13    2

131    83

114 107

commissioner through March 1,1984 and elected Nelson Doubledav to the execu

146 105 112 117

GCA Sweeps Pair At Chicad

CHICOD - Greenville Christain Academy swept a pair of junior high basketball games from Chicod, with the boys winning 33-19 and the girls taking a 31-19 victory.

Paige Bragg led the GCA gjrfs with 10 points, while,.. Nicole Brinkley paced Chicod with 12.

Robin House fired in 19 to lead the GCA boys.

Greenville Christian girls are now 2-0 on the season, while the boys are 1-1. travels to G.R. Whitfield Junior High Tuesday. Chicod, which played its opener, hosts Griffon Monday.

live council and .Bob llowsam to the National League's executive committee .American League

AL-Elected Dr Bobby Brown league president

CALIFORNIA ANGELS-Traded Tim Fob. shortstop, to the New York Yankees for Cur! Kaufman, pitcher, and an undisclosed amount of cash Sigped Frank LaCorte, pitcher, to a three-vear contract

KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Traded Mike Armstrong, pitcher, and Duane Dewev. catcher, to the New York Yankees lor Roger Erickson, pitcher, and Steve Balboni, firstliaseman.

MILWAL'KEE BREWERS-Traded Ned Yost and Dan Scarpetta, pitcher, to the Texas Rangers (or Jim Sundberg. catcher

OAKLAND A SSent Luis Quinones, infielder, to the Cleveland Indians to complete a trade that brought Jim Essian. catcher, to Oakland Traded Rusty McNealv, outfielder, to the Montreal Expos for Ray Burris, pitcher

ROCKY MOUNT - Rose Edmonds of Fountain, a former Farmville Central High School basketballer, has been named as the Female Athlete of the Week by N.C. JVesleyan College.

Edmonds, a 5-10 forward, had two outstanding performances for the Battling Bishops womens basketball team last week, scoring 17 and 13 'against Methodist and Averett, respectively. The women currently have a 3-0 Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic Conference record and a 5-0 overall mark.

National l.rague LOS ANGELES DODGERS- Traded

!. pile

infielder-outfielder. to the New York Mets

for Carlos Diaz, pitcher, and a player to be named later Traded Joe BeCKwiih.

pitcher, to the Kansas Citv Royals for Joe Szekely. catcher, and Jse Torres and John Serntella. pitchers

BASKETBAl.l.

Naliunal Baskelball Asswiation SEATTLE Sl'PEKSONICS-Pidveil Charles Bradlev, forward-guard, on waivers Signed Clay Johnson, guard FOOTBALL CHICAGO BEARS-Signed Tim Norman, guard, and placed Rickey Watts, wide receiver, on injured reserve IKK KEY National llorkry I.eague NHL-Upheld the 20-'game suspension of Tom Lvslak of the Chicago Black Hpwks for assaulting linesman Ron Fovi NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Recatled

G.R. Whitfield 30

Snowden...............19

'aurora - G.R. Whitfield split a pair of junior high basketba 1 games with Aurora Snowden last night.

Whitfield won the boys' game, 30-19. James Smith led Whitfield with 10. while Holiday paced Snowden with 14.

Snowden won the girls game, 13-8, led by Grimes with 11 points.

Yvon Vaulour, right wing, Irom .Maine ol ")CKe

the American Hocltev League TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS- Called up Ken Wregget. goal lender. Irom Lethbridge of the Western Hockcv League

VANCOUVER CANUCKS- Called up Cam Neelv. righi wing, from Portland of the Western Hockey League, and Andv

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320S South Mtmoiiil Or. GrKtinille. N.C Telephone 75MIU

108 East Second St., Ayden. N C Telephone 746-4021

SALES a SERVICE

The Daily heflector, Greenville. N G

Friday. December 9.1983    17

HELP A child! CLUB

GREENVILLE

A annual ,

%MAS TREE

At Nichols

Discount Gity

264 By-Pass

Trees Have Just Arrived Priced To Fit All Budgets

Hurry For Best Selection ALL PROCEEDS GO TO YOUTH WORK

9A.M.-9:30 P.M. Monday Saturday, 12-5 P.M. Sunday

iiaaiaiaiaiaaaaaJataiiaiWiaaaiaiMiMiaiiat

Brown '50-50' On Comeback

CLEVELAND (AP) -Former Cleveland Browns fullback Jum Brown, who rushed for more yards than any other runner in National Football League history, says there is a 50-50 chance he will end an 18-year retirement and try a comeback.

Brown retired in 1966 after nine NFL seasons in which he gained 12,312 yards rushing.

Brown said two weeks ago he would come out of retirement if Pittsburgh Steelers fullback Franco Harris, still active and with a 11,791-vard career rushing total, breaks his record.

f

Bartoiiis Canadian, leads the league!

Growing fast 'cause it tastes so great.

D U I%l K e; l I x n t -V

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE Current rankg:    -    -------

1. Washington    ... 127.4    15. New England

2. Dallas........126.5    16. Seattle

3.L.A.Raiders.    .122.8    17. Philadelphia

4. Miami........120.6    TIE San Diego

5. San Francisco.    .118.6    19. Cleveland .

6. Cincinnati.....118.3    TIE Kansas City

7. Denver.......

.116.9 21. Chicago.......112.6

8. Detroit.......

.116.8 22. St. Louis______112.0

9, Atlanta......

.115.2 23. Nhw Orleans 1119

TIE N.Y. Jets

115.2 24. Minnesota 111.6

11. Pittsburgh .

.114.8 25. N.Y Giants . 110.1

12. LA. Rams

.114.7 26.

Baltimore.....107.5

13. Buffalo

114.4 27. Tampa Bay.....107.4

14. Green Bay

.114.2 28 Houston 1041

This weeks schedule:

HIGHER RATER DIFF,

LOWER RATER

Sat.. Dec. 10

Miami' 120.6

(5)

Atlanta 115.2

N.Y. Jets'115.2

(0)

Pittsburgh 114.8

Sun., Dec. 11

LA. Raiders'122.8 (11)

St. Louis 112,0

Cleveland 112.8

(9)

Houston' 104,1

Denver' 116.9

(9)

Baltimore 107.5

San Franmrn 119 6 141

Bnffaln' 114 4

Seattle 113.5

(3)

N.Y, Giants' 110.1

Cincinnati' 118.3

(21

Detroit 116.8

Chicago 112.6

111

Minnesota' 111.6

L A. Rams' 114.7

(11

New England 113.9

Philadelphia' 113.0 (1)

New Orleans 111.9

Washington 127.4

(1)

Dallas' 126.5

San Diego' 113.0

10)

Kansas City 112.8

Mon., Dec. 12

Green Bay 114.2

17)

Tampa Bay' 107.4

home team

BARTO'

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Solids. Pinslrlpes and Glen Plaids Select Group Of Brody's Own

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100% Wools And Poly-Wools-Beltless & Beltloop Sizes 2^A2 /

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Poly-Cotton Blends. Pin And Wide W'ale Corduroy, Beltles^ N: Beliloop Sizes 2S42

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Cotton Sweaters. Rugby Shirts Reg Up To $b5 Select Group Of

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18 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C

Friday, December 9.1983THE MAGNITUDE OF THE BIBLICAL ARMIES

THE ARMV OF KRAEL CONSISTED OF INF4NTRV ONW AND WS COMPOSED OF SPEARMEN, SLINSERS, AND ARCMEBS. (NUM.11:21) IT INCLUDED ALL THE ABLE BODIED AAEN OF THE NATION FROM TWENTY YEARS ao AND UPWARD, ABLE TO SO FORTH TO WAR. THE LEVITES WERE THE OMY MALES EXEMPTED FROM SERVICE BECAUSE THEY WERE THE PRIESTHOOD. WHEN KIN6 SOLOMON RULED, HE ADDED CAVALRY AND CHARIOTS ID HIS FORCES, SWELLING THE NUMBERS AND THEREBY INCREASING THEIR EFFECTIVE POWER. HOWEVER, WHEN IT f- CAME TO SREAT PC^R,THE ANCIENT ARMIES OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR OF BABYLON OUTRANKED THEM All' besides infantry AND CAVALRY HE EMPLOYED A CORPS OF ELEPHANT DRIVERS, POSSIBLY THE FORERUNNER OF THE MODERN-DAY TANK. IT WAS JUST SUCH AN IMPOSING FORCE THAT ONE DAY, SUDDENI>, ENCIRCLES JERUSALEM......

Sponsors Of This Page Along With Ministers Ot All Faiths, Urge You To Attend Your House Ot Worship This Week. To Believe In God And To Trust In His Guidance For Your Life.

V,

1

4i

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A

COZART S AUTO SUPPLY. INC.

GREENVILLE MARINE & SPORTS CENTER

G---;- .''-r; B .J NE 'io ' '-J    'S',''    O.v    -

RIVERS & ASSOCIATES ENGINEERS

PAIR ELECTRONICS. INC

E ' ", Si,; ;

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GRANT BUICK, INC.

ANNE S TEMPORARIES, INC.

120 Reacif; S ,

JIMMY'S PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE

"    M'';    R-PHi'

vG-"--'.    %

G 'L-    26-:

1 p Bd- '    7^,2    2W

OVERTON S SUPERMARKETS, INC.

2-1 S Ja-vis /")2Srj20 A.:

SMITH S HEARING AID SERVICE

Au'iipri.f.-'-j Bellone Hpannr; Aid Df.il'.' "716 V; 5th Si E< 75aA334

Con" plirre.nts ol YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY

752 0876 1506 N Gfef'nfi 3' GAenville. N CEARL S CONVENIENCE MART

RouIa,! 756 5278    .

Earl FaulKnA* ,S EmployoAS

TURNAGE REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE AGENCY

j ...1- t,. -r ^ A, YOU-N C .    C..G'    ,ii-

.    -.-ri    >'    .'A2    2715

WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE

P.d ! O'l Piai-5ui, W G-.C'm: B . J 756 00A0 % A hS r2712

FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC.

O iM- .-i- P" '-,1 Pia.-a 'iC 756 5000

TOM SRESTAURANT

V-', I'l H; 'T. Coii-I'i ,

756 ir:!2 Vd.'.Aii S' lO'est E'iii Arc-i

AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE

1007 Ch-sinu! St 758 7000

KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CO.

MAE h'ln S'

752 ^.205

Cr.'r'pliTitnlS Of

HEILIG MEYERS CO.

518 E GAf'Tvilli Blvd 756 A1A5

ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS

756 3500 226 ConHTif'fcf; Si OrAAnviileHARGETT S DRUG STORE

2500 S Charles Ext '756 334APIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE

2105 Dickinson Ave 756 2444 Hicky Jafikson 8 EiTi[jloyeesEAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS

758-3568 1514 N Greene St A Complete Reslauranl & Office Coffee ServiceEAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC

2201 Dickinson Ave 756-4267

PLAZA GULF SERVICE

756 7615 701 E Greenville Blvd Ryder Truck Rentals 766 8045 Wrecker Service Day 756 7616 Night 756 6479HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO.

Residential ft Commercial Builamq 400 N 10th St 752 1553

Compliments Ot FRED WEBB. INC.BILL ASKEW MOTORS

Buy-Seii Trade S Memorial D' 756 9102BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS

218 Arlington BYd 10"-- S' Greenville 756 6001    752    4156PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO.

758 2113 GrenvilleJOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES. INC.

The Finest In Manufactured Homes 316 VJ Greenville Blvd 756-468^ Johrwy L Jackson & EmployeesWHITTINGTON, INC.

Charles St Greenville. N C Ray Whittington 756-8537-A CLEANER WORLD GARMENT CARE CENTER

622 Greenville Blvd 756-5544 Pickup Stalion West End Circle 756-8995TAPSCOTT DESIGNS

222 E 5th St 757 3558 Kale Phillips Inlerior Designer Associate member ASIDDAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO.

2102 Dickinson Ave 756 1345 Bobby Tripp & EmployeesCAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE

1405 Dickinson Ave 752 3776 Jerry Creech, Owner

Con" plime''its Of PITT MOTOR PARTS. INC.

756 4171 911 S' VJasnington StGREENVILLE HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING CO.. INC.

308 Spruce 756-4939 Cecil Clark i EmployeesCOLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN

2905 E 5tn Take Out On'y 752 5184 600 S W Greenville Blvd Eat In Or Take Out 756 6434PUGH S TIRE & SERVICE CENTER

752-6125 Corner of 5th it Greene Greenville N CJA-LYN SPORT SHOP

Hwy 33 Chicod Creek Bridge 752-2676. Grimesland James & Lynda FaulknerINTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.

WM Scales Jr General Agent Waighty Scales Rep Clarke Stokes Rep 756 3738HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Road 756 3115ROBERT C. DUNN CO.

301 Ridgeway 758-5278HOLIDAY SHELL

Steam Cleaning Service All Types Auto & Truck Repair 24 Hour Wrecker Service 724 S Memorial Dr 752-0334PARKERS BARBECUE RESTAURANT

756 2388 S Memorial Dr Doug Parker ft Employees

Compliments Of PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle 756 2150EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY. INC.

2739 E 10th St PO Box 3785

752-4323 Greenville

LAUTARES JEWELERS

414 Evans 752-3831 -HENDRIX-BARNHILL CO.

Memorial Dr 752-4122 All EmployeesHARRIS SUPERMARKETS. INC.

VJhere Shopping Is A Pleasure 1 Memorial Dr 756 0110 2 2612 E 10th St Ext 757-1880 #4 Bethel #5 N Greene 752-4110 #6 Ayden #7 TarboroCOUNTRY SOUIRE MOBILE HOMES, INC.

703 W Greenville Blvd 756-9874WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY

756-0317

*    123    S Railroad. WiniervilleLOVEJOY AGENCY

Daybreak Records 756 4774 118 Oakmoni Dr Larry Whittington

Compliments Of HOLLOWELL'S DRUG STORE

111 911 Dickinson Ae #2 Memorial Dr & 6th 3 Slanionsbufg Rd at Doctors ParkINAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS

N Memorial Dr Ext 752-5656 Management & StallBUCK'S GULF STATION

& Employees E 10th St Ext 752-3228 Road & Wrecker Service 758 1033 Jartran Truck & Trailer Renlals-758 4885ART DELLANO HOMES. INC.

A Place You Can Count-On 264 Bypass Greenville 756 9841FARRIOR & SONS, INC.

General Contractors

753-2005 Hwy 264 Bypass Farmville

EASTERN INSULATION. INC.

Owens Corning Fiberglass Phone D^ or Night 752-1154

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mFAITH CAN CLAIM ALL OF GODS PROMISES'





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Com To CHURCH

Area Church News

It*

< >:i)AR (iROVK MISSIOWRV HAPTISTdlTRill

Route a. Cherry Oaks Subdivision The Rev James Wright 7:3(1 p m Fri - (Juarterlv Conference lOa .m Sun - Sunday School 11^ m. - Morning worship. Sermon by the Pastor Music will be rendered by the Senior Choir I2;45p.m - Holy Communion 2:00 p.m. - Dinner will be served 3:00 p m. - Rev Jasper Tvson. choir and congregation of Poplar Hill f W.B, Church will close out (Juarterlv Meeting services

7:30 p m. Mon. _______    

meet This meeting is ofereat importance - Christian Aide will

arty

! riday Class Christmas Party Saturday - Class <7 Christmas P;

10 a m Sun - Sunday School It a.m. - Morning Worship 6:,30pm. - Prayer Service 7:00 p m. - Evening Worship 8:00 p m. - Choir Practice 8:00 p.m Tue. - Narcotics Anonvmous Meeting 7:30pm Wed.-BibleStudy

:30 p m Tue" meet 7:30 p m rehearsal 7:30pm. Wed -Prayer Meeti

Male Chorus will have

have 7:30 meet a

:30 p.m. Thur -rehearsal

ir will

PEOPI.es BAPTIST TEMPI.E

2001 W Greenville Blvd The Hev J M. Bragg, Pastor 7:30 a m Sun Lavmen's Prayer - Senior Ushers will Breakfast'ThreeSteers Rest i 10a.m.-Sunday School II a m. - Morning Worship 3:30 p.m. - Choir mctice 6:30 p m. - Children's Christmas Play. Choir's Christmas Cantata Church-wioe meal

7:t0 pm Wed - Sunday School Teachers Meeting 7:30p,m Wed - Hour of Power 8:45pm - Choir Practice 7:00 p m. Thur, - Church Visitation Radio Program "Together Again" WBZQ 7:15 p. m. Monday through Fricwy

FIR.ST PRESBYTERIA.S ( HI KCH

1400S Elm St

Richard R Gammon and Gerald M Anders. Pastors Marilyn R Alexander. Director of Music E Robert lrwin.,()rganisl 9:00a.m. Sun. KoinOnta Class 9:(iOa.m - Worship 9:45 a m - Church School

p.m. Fri. - The Gospel Chorus will I the home of Sis Ziddie Hardv

ST.JOHN MISSIONARY RAPTIST(HIRCH

P 0 Box 134. Falkland The Rev Anton T Weslev. Pastor 5:30 pm Fri - Pastor, Deacons & Trustees Meet 6:30p m. - .MissionCircle Meets 7:30p m. - General(hurchConference 4:0Upm .Sat -SenioCi^'hoir Rehearsaf 7:00 p.m. - Annual Christmas Dinner bv the Young Adult Choir in Fellowship Hall ' 10a,m Sun - Sunday School II a m. - MorningWorship with Holv Communion 7:00 p m. Tue - Praver Meeting and Bible Sfudy    

T Otr pm Wed, - Young AdulCChoTr Rehearsal

6 00 p m. 3rd Sun, - Annual Christmas program

FIRST (Ttl'Rt H HE CHRIST

SR 17271 Lake Glenwood Road I .Mr Melvin Rawls lua.m. Sun - Bible School 11 a m - Worship Service

O.IU. ftUiOllipOCi AIA.C

7:00 p m. - Evening Worship and Youth ^

ujnp    2    00    p    i

11a m - Worship 6:(l0p m. - Joy (iift Service lO OOa.m Mon.-Circles 1.2,3 12:00a m.-Circlc9

2:J0pm. Circled -    ------

7:00p.m.-GirlScouts 8:IIOp,m. - Cirlce4 8:OOpm -SierraClub 9a.m.Tues.-Park A Tol 10:00a.m.-Circles6,7 12:00 p m. - News Deadline    '

7:30p.m. - Commitment Committee 8:00 p.m.-Circles

1:00 p m Wed. Party.-Aiitistic

Service

7:30p.m. Wed - Adull Christmas Part at Golden Carral 7:00 p m Wed - Youth Christmas Plav Practice

FIRST PENTEKtSTAI.

HOI.INESSCHl'RCH

Corner of Brinkley Road and Plaza Drive Frank Ontry

9:45 a m Siin.    Sunday School, Supl

Dickie Rook 11 a m - WorshipService 5:00p t Chrislmas Play Practice 6:00p m - (hoir Practice 7:00pm Praver and Praise 7:30pm Wed    Bible Study/Lifeliners

7:30pm W'ed -Children's/TeenChoir 7 p m Thurs - Nursing Home. Chocowinity 9:30 am Fr - Sunday .School Lesson y.'KZii 7:00 pm Fri I Home

7:00pm Sat Christmas Cantata

00 p m Wed - Address Angels 4pm Wed Rainbow Choir 4:45p m. - Choristers 7 ,30 p m - Gallery Choir 9:00a m Thur. - Park-A-Tot ll:00a m. - Parsinon Group Exercise 4:00 pm Age-Venturers 3:U0p.m. - Bulletin Deadline 7:00 p.m Parly -Foster Children 7 :iO p m. - Overeaters Anonymous loa.m Fri. - Pandora's Box 7 30pm Parents without Partners 7:00 a.m. Sat - Men of the church Breakfast lOa m S-at Pandora-sHex 6:00 p m - Covenant Cla.ss Christmas Party

IKII.V TEMPI.E A,F.( .0.(.,

Rte 6, Greenville, N C Saint.sville Elder I J Kohinson 7:00 pm 2nd Sun    WorshipService

7:00pm 4thSun    Communion .Service

7:30pm Tue    Midweek .Service

7:30pm Fri    BibleSludies

l(l:0()a m .Sun Sunday School 11:30 a m Kst .Sun Youth Day 11 :lam 2nd Sun    Deacon Day

11:30a m. 4thSun    (juarlerly Meeting

SEI.VIAdlAPEI.FREE WII.I.B.XPTISTdURCH

fiOlS Green .St.

The Rev Clifton Gardner. Pastor 3:00 p m Sat C.G Spiritual Choir 'niversitv Nursing rehearsal    .. j . u ,

9 4sa m Sun Sunday School 11am Worship .Serv'ice 2:00 p m The C G Spiritual Choir wl

sponsor an appreciation service for their (irganist

3 (Wp m -The Gospel Chorus will meet with Mrs Dorothy Jarmon, IBlKi Kennedy Cir

4 (XI p m Carnation I shers will meet with Mrs SudieDuvis

We will render service at St

( (IRNERSTdNE MISSIONARY BXPTISTdllRdI

Statonsburgand Allen Road

jre

Reverend ArleeGnltin. Jr

..........op

Missionary and John hAVB Church Farmville, N C

7 30 p m Tue Gospel Chorus Re hearsal

7 (XI p m Wed Prayer .Meeting 7:30 p.m Thur - We will render service at Corey s Chapel FWB Church :i (XI pm Sun The No One Ushers will meet

Chrisfma$ Musical Planned

Hark, The Herald Angel", a Christmas musical aranged by Tom Fettke, will be presented Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Black Jack Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church, Route 3, Greenville.

The program will be presented by the Combined Teen and Childrens Choirs, and will feature Elaine Dixon, Ronald Cannon and Chris Stewart. Betty Hardee and Annie Stewart are directors.

Choir To Perform Twice

The Unity Free Will Baptist Church Choir will present its third annual "Living Christmas Tree Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 7 p.m.

This year the choir will perform Ring the Bells, a Christmas cantata. Participants will include soloists David McGowan, Alyna Stoll and Eddie Walker; narrators Don Lewellyn, Charlene Hill, Ricky Hill, Robbie Tugwell and Mitch Turner; orchestration arranger and conductor Don Wyrtzen, and director Pam Smith.

Assisting will be Bill Highsmith, Nelda Highsmith, Michael Turner, Kevin Joyner, Eddie Finnegan, Amanda Phelps, Kristi Bowen, Lori Ange, Noel Palmer, and Amy Davis.

Joy Night Service Set

St. Rest Holy Church, at 202 Hammond St. in Winterville, will celebrate joy night Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Bishop Arlester Coward of St. James National Holiness Church in New Haven, Conn., will be in charge of the service.

Pitt-Greene Choir To Meet

The Pitt-Greene Interdenominational Choir will hold rehearsal Saturday at 5 p.m* at the Little Creek Church of Christ on Route I, Ayden. Ar7:30 p.m. Saturday, the choir will render a musical program at Morning Star Holiness Church in Ayden.

Quarterly Meeting Set

Mount Shiloh Baptist Church of Winterville will hold its quarterly meeting Sunday at 3 p.m. The Rev. Tryon Greene will be the guest speaker.

Church To Mark Anniversary

Members and pastor of St. James Free Will Baptist Church in Farmville will observe the churchs 73rd anniversary Sunday.

, The Rev. C.R. Parker will speak at 11 a.m. The Rev* Roger Hooks and choir of Holly Hill Free Will Baptist Church of Belvoir will be in charge of the 3 p.m. service.

Pastor's Anniversary Set

Cherry Lane Free Will Baptist Church will celebrate its pastors anniversary Sunday at 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. Elmer Jackson as the guest speaker.

The Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church Choir will provide the music.

Philippi Plans Services

Quarterly meeting will be held at Philippi Church of Christ starting Friday at 7:30 p.m. Communion will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. Morning worship will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday and, at 3 p.m., the service will be presented by Holy Trinity Church and its choir and ushers.

Jarvis Schedules Service

The annual hanging of the greens celebration will be held at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday.

The service of worship will feature the presentation and hanging of wreaths and chains of greens, which symbolizes the opening of human hearts, during the Advent season.

Missionary To Speak

An outreach service will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Friendship Pentecostal Holiness Church at Falkland. The speaker will be Missionary Violene Britt of Monas Chapel Penleocstal Holiness Church,

Christmas Program Set

Greenville Christian Academy will presenff its annual Christmas program Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the main auditorium of Peoples Baptist Temple.

The program will consist of carol singing, special Christmas music and a musical play entitled "The Little Bell That Wouldnt Stop Ringing. .

Cantata Slated Sunday

The Arlington Street Baptist Church will present a Christmas Cantata titled Love Transcending Sunday at 7 p.m. The choir will be under the direction of music director Orell Cottrell. For further information call 756-2122;

The Helping Hands Club of Clemons Grove Holiness Church in Stokes will sponsor a "Giveaway Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the church. Clothing, shoes and other items will be given to the needy.

Christmas Dinner Planned

The Young Adult Choir of St. John Missionary Baptist Church in Falkland will hold its annual Christmas Dinner Saturday at 7 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall. Viola Vines, clerk of the church, will be the speaker.

Church Meeting Scheduled

Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church of Ayden wiir hold a meeting at 6 p.m. Saturday for its deacons, mothers and trustees. Sunday School will begin at 9:30 a.m. Sunday followed at 11 a.m. by morning worship services.

Joint Concert Planned

The Mightly Golden Jubilees and the Edwards Sisters, both of Greenville, will be in concert at Mill Chapel Church Saturdayat7:30p.m.

Quarterly Services Planned

Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church will hold quarterly meetings this weekend, starting with quarterly conference at 7:30 p.m. tonight.

The Rev. Jasper Tyson and the congregation of Allen Chapel will conduct a service with holy communion at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. On Sunday. Bishop W.L. Phillips and the senior choir will be in charge of the 11 a.m. service and, at 3 p.m.. the Lewis Chapel Church congregation of Farmville will be in charge of the service.

You are cordially welcome to

THE RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

(Disciples of Christ)

264 Bypass West

9:45 a.m. Bible School Classes for all ages 11:00 a.m. Service of Worship

Come See our Christmas Program Sunday at 6:00 p.m.

Nursery School Monday through Friday 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

The Voices of

Cornerstone CORNERSTONE'MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH

will present its

Second Annual Winter Concert --PRA3N9 iN S0ii6''    ^

An Evening of Contemporary Gospel Music

Sunday, December 11, 1983 4:00 pm

Stantonsburg & Allen Roads Greenville, N.C. 27834

THI PUILRC RS RNVRTEO

Pastor: Arlee Griffin    Music    Director: Michael Garrett

7:47 a m Sun Hour of Prayer

9:15 a m ,S.un Chiiri'h .School I Kindergarleii 12th grade'

4: (XI pm Gospel ('oncerl

6:;ipm Baptisl Training Union

6 :t0pm Thur Voulhslones meet lor Bible sTudv and Fellowship

7 :l pm' Thur AdullMneel (or Bihle Studyandpra\er

1(1 (XI a m Sal Learning KnrichmenI PrMram

The Voices ol Cornerslone Choir pres enls Its second annual concerl ol conlem porarv gospel music on Sunday, December    ,    , ,,.

11. I9&3 at 4 (XI pm "The concert yyi be (fueen Anne s Rd held at Uornerstune Missionary Baptisl '    > -

('hurch. Slatonsburv and Allen Road

THE MEMdKI XI. B XPTtST (III R( H I Southern KaplisI I

UlGrrtmviKFBivd E T Vinson

7 45 a III Sun Men's Prayer Hreaklast 9 45 am Sun Sunday School Ham Morning Worship, Christmas

Musii. Tnmv and Juni.or Charcl:

uting

4 (X) p Class ()u 6 :hi Class.

Youth with the

Lila Bendall Sunday .School Heath, Reggie Davis

7:15 p.m. SI James Ringers

7 :iOp m. - BovScoutTroop"JJO

8 (Xip m. - ChiincelChoir 6:30p.m. Thur. - Evangelism Explosion 7:00 p.m - Greenville District (Tirisliar

Advocate representatives meet at St James

I tXl p m Fri - UMXX Udies Nighi Steak Supper Acolytes Paula Lynch, Michele Hunt December Ushers Bruce Hudson Cliaiics nimeiurd, lairry hough, boDoy a m . Sunday School

lO OOa.m Tue. - MorningUircle 7;30p.m -CirclesMeet 7 00 p m. Wed. - Bible Study 8:00p.m -Choir Practice

O.XKMHNT BAPTIST CHCRl II

1100 Red Banks Road

E Gordon Conkltn. Pastor

Greg Rogers Minister of Education

Treva Fidler. Minister of Music

.9:45 a m Sun Librarv Open uniil m

Service 7:45 p m Wed Meeting 2-4 p m Wed -

MpaHp ^1

Wednesday Evening Reading Room. 4(Xl S

10;45a m.-Librar

luntillla m

Progressive Sunday School High Youth at church, sr High Harold s Joneses, 2(12

H XRXE.ST BAPTIST ( III l II

POBox 8046, Greenville NC

Meeling al Carolina Counlrv Day .School

David J LeBlane 756-:!624

10 UOa m Sun. - Sunday School all ages

11 iXia.m Sun. WorshipService 6:(X)p m. - Evening Service

7 :iOpm - Youth Meeting '30 p m Wed - Prayer Service and -Sfui

BUCK J ACK FREE XVII.I.

BXPTISTCIICRdI

Route 3, Box 325, Greenville. N.C. 27834 Dr Cedric D Pierce, Jr lO iXla m Sun - Sunday-School 11:00a m. Morning Worship 7:(X)pm - Evening Worship

7:(X) p m .Mon - Brownies. Girl Scout.' and Feflowshlp Hour Ml and Cadets

7:,30p m - Adult Choir Practice 7:30p m Wed Family Circle fXfp.m. - Youth Choir Practice

Mens Praver

Bible.Sludy 6:15 am Thur Breakfast at Shoney';

7 (X)p.m Soul Winning Evangelism 9 30 a m Sal Soul Winning Evangelism 6:iXlpm , Chrislmas Caroling

SF:X ENTH l) XV XDX ENTIsTt III K( II 2611 E lOlh Street Greenville RotM-rl H Kerr

9 3UamSal Sabbath Schwl ICtXia m Sat .Stewardship Sabbath Sermon by (he Pastor All that I have is Thine"

Mnn-Fri Bible Highlights A Daily Radio Broadcast al I txt p m WBZt) 1550KC

6:30pm Tue PathlinderClub 7 :lp m Wed - Praver and Fellowship Hour

Fl Rsm XKE CHItlSTI XV ( KNTEII

Hwy II Winterville Max Flvnn

9:3Uam .Sun-SundaySchool 10:30 a m Sunday Morning Worship Service

7:00 p m - Sunday Evening Worship Service

7 :iOp.m Tue BibleInslilule 7:30 p m Fn LiVerne Tripp Family Ayden Middle School Home Cell Groups Call office 7.56-5003 for locations and lime

GREENViLI.EHIHI.ElHCHCH

Rolarv Club (Rotarv and Johnston i lU lXi'a m Sun. Worship & Children s Class I David Applegate speaking (

4:1X1 pm - Childrens Christmas He hearsal

6:00 pm Children's Christmas Pro gram, (Recreation & Parks Building(

6:15 a m Mon Men's Breakfast and Bible Study (Three Steers Restaurant i lU 00 a m Thur Women s Bible Study (James home I " liUp m Fn Famdy Caroling Parly (Mulvaney home i

CMTARIXN-CNiVERSAl.lST

FELI,OWSIIIP

Oak .Street at Fifth Not there this week Dr Sydney Barnwell, President 752-0787,7te-7158

7:30 p m Sun - Christmas meeting al 207 Cherrywood Drive

HOI.I.V IIILI.F.W.B.

Belvoir NC

Vice-Bishop R E Worrell 10:00 a m, 1st, '2nd. 3rd Sun, - .Sunday School

11:00 a m 1st, 2nd, 3rd Sun. - Morning WorshipService 7 :OOp m-Tue. - Bible Study 7:(X)p rii Wed. - Praver Meeling 7::tO pm. Fri. - J, Choir Cairsimas Dinner

7:30 p m. Fri, - Elder J N Perry, Jr. al Fleming Chapel 7:(Xl p m. Sal - .No '2 Choir Christmas Dinner

ICOUa m Sun -Eldress Vera Pelleway al Holly Hill Jr Choir and Ushers 3:00 p m - Elder Roger Hooks at SI. James Farmville B&H Singers 7:00 p m Elder Jesse Tripp al Lewis Chapel Farmville 2 Choir and Ushers 11:00 a m. - Elder A 1. Perry at Perry s Temple, .Saratoga 7::)0 p m, Tue. - Elder Roger Hooks al Christ Temple, Bethel Sr Choir and Ushers

7:30 p m Thur - Elder Roger Hooks at St. Joes, Vanceboro *2Choir and Ushers

ARTHUR I HKfSTI XM III KOI

Bell Arthur Ben James. .Minister Phone 7.53 2043

9 45 am Sun - Bible School, Supl Mike Mills Ham Morning Worship 6p.m -Eveningworship 6:00p.m.-Play Practice 7 00p.m. Mon - C.W F WesternSizzler 7:30pm.Tue -Visitation 7:30 pm Wed. - Bible Study and Prayer

7:30 p.m, Thur, - Choir Practice 6:00a.m Fri."- Breakfast (Tom si 7:00 pm Sal - Young Adull Class (Southern Sportsman I

morning glory xpobtolic

FXITIIHOI.ISF..S.SIIIIRCII

306 Pennsylvania Ave Yet Sharing Building Eldress Irene Gepps 4th Sun of each month 7:00pm Sun - Worship and Preaching 7:00 pm Thur - Worship and Pre-

PINKY GROVE FKE:KW'II,I. BAPTIST I HURCH Hwy 264 West

'AllanSterbin. Pastor, Phone: 7.i-T4:iO

2:'30 a m .Mon Monday AflermHm Bible Study with Mrs Irma tlverton. 1805 Drewry I.a'nc 9:45' a m Tue . Morning Current Mission Group with Dons .Salisbury Quail Ridge Rd 2 :i pm Tue Tuesday Atler Bible Study    '

5:i5 p m Wed. Family Night CHRISTMAS SUPPER 6::tO p m Devotional, Mission Friends. Cherub and (arol Choirs 7:00p m - GAs. RAs 8:(Xipm Chancel Choir 2 :io p m Thur Fidelis Sunday Sch(l Class (hristmas Meeting

J XRX Is UNITED MEMOKI XI. METHODISTtHUKdl

51uS Washington SI

Jim Bailev. Susan Pale. Marlin Armstrong, Adrian Brown, Ministers Jerry .holey. Music Minister MarkGansur. (irgamsl 8:45a m .Sun - Morning Worship 9:15a m    Church Library Open

9 40am    Church .School'

Ham Morning Worship 12:15 p m - Communion Chapel ' 5 (XI p m Jarvis Singers 6(Xlpm I'MYFsupper 6:30 p.m UMYFPreram 6:;ip m Children's Bells

7:30pm -HangmgoftheGteen 7:00p m Mon EE HICK

7:30 pm Tue - Greenville ASPO Parlor    *

9:30a m Wed. - EE HI lU iXia m if^OOp m Clothesline 4:30 pm. - Children's Choir (ages 4 through 6lh grade I 71)0 pm. - Jarvis Explorer Post Sr High Room 7:30 p. m. - Chancel Choir 10:00a m. -Adult Bible Study 7:30p m. - Singles Class 8:(XI pm; Marlin's Bible Study 6:30 a m Fri. Men's Prayer Breakfast al Tom's Restaurant 12:00 p.m - Women's Praver Luncheon CR

10:00am.-I2:00p.m Sal - Clothesline

SAINT J.XMESl III R( H UMTEl) METHODIST

2000 East Sixth Forest Hill Circle Greenville, North Carolina '27B34 (919 ( 7,52-61541 ,M Dewey Tyson. Minister Ralph A Brown. Associate Minister Stephen W Vaughn, Diaconal Minister 9:40a m Sun - Church .School 10:30a m - ChancelChoir H txia m. - WorshipotGod 3:45pm. Charles Wesley Ringers 4:30pm. - Youth Choir 5:30p m -Jr. andSr. High UMYF 7:30 p m. - Family Nighl Christmas Program

9:00 a m 12:00 p m Mon-Fri. - Weekday School

ci,Sk,r- -

TV Open

11 a.m.-Morning Worship 5:00p m - BYF. College/Career 6:00 p.m - Chapel Choir Rehearsal G\ s

9;15a m Mon. - Staff Devotional 7:00 p.m Tue. - Church-wide Visitation

6:45p m - Family Night .Supper 8:00 p m Wed - Mid-week Medi

tation

lip Hour    !

:) p.m Thur Chancel Choir He-hearsal

THE CHI RI H OK GOD OK PROPHECY

l206MumfordRd James C Brown 10:00a m. Sun. - Sunday-School 11:00a m. - WorshipService 6:30p.m. - YouthService 7:(Xtpm - Evangelistic Service 7::iOp m Wed Prayer Meeting HOOKEK MEMORIXI. (IIRlSTIXNtllUKtll 111 Greenville Blvd

The Rev Ralph Messick, Phone. 756-2275 Susie Pair. Cnoir director Dr Rosemary Fischer. Organist to a m. .Sunday school Ham WorshipService 7:0(ipm Wed.-ChoirPractice

RED OAK CHRISTI AN *    CHURCH

264 Bv-Pass West Dr Maurice Ankrom, Pastor 5:30-6:30 pm Sat - Christmas program practice 9:45 a m Sun - Church School II a m Morning Worship Nursery service provided 6:00p m. -ChrislmasProgram t0:30a.m Wed. - Red Oak Club

EIRST FREE WILL B APTIST CHI RI H

26(X)S Charles St

Harry Grubbs. Pastor

9:45 a m Sun. - Sunday School

Ham - Morning Worship

7:0Up m. Evening Worship Service

7:30p,m. Wed.-BibleStudy

8:15 p m. - Choir Rehearsal

EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE CHURCH

l02LaughinghouseDr.

S J Williams

10 a m. Sun - Sunday .School, Sup Linwood Lawson H a m Worship Service. Junior Church. Debra Whaley 7:00p.m - Celebration of Praise 7:30p m Wed. - Praying and Sharing 7:30 p.m. Wed - Youth Service, Donna Elks and Ann Grimes

HOLLVW(M)I) PRESBVTKRIXN CHURCH

Hwy 43 South . Minister Rev C Weslev Jennings S.S. Supl Elsie Evans Music Director Vivian Mills Organist Leida McGowan Youth Leaders Debbie and Steve Asl-

ARLINGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH

1006 W Arlington Blvd.

The Rev Harold Greene 9 45am .Son r-.Sunday School 11 a m . Morning Worship ll iXla m - Mission Friends 12:15 p m - 1st and 2nd grades SS Class Chrislmas Party at Church 7:00p m. Mon Ladies No 2 and Gibbs S.S. Class Christmas party Covered Dish Supper alchurch 7:.3np m Worship 7:30p.m Wed. -PraverService 8:.30pm Wed - Cho'ir

BROWN SI H XPEI. XPOsroi.K F xrril ( HURt HOF(.OI) XNDI HRIST

Route 4, Greenville. Norlh Carolina Bishop R A. Giswould, Pastor 8:00 p m. Thur. - Bible Studies (Sister Ida Ruth Slaton. Teacher i 8:00 pm .Sat Pastor Anniversary (Ending of Pastor's Anniversary.

3:(X)p.m 4thSat. - Business Meeting 8:00pm 4thSat - iHourPraver 10:30 a m 4th Sun Sunday .School (Deacon John Sharpe, Superinlendanl i 11:30 a m. 4th .Sun - Pastoral Dav (Bishop R A Grisyvould (

8:00 pm 4lh Sun Pasional Day 1 Bishop tt A Griswould' Holy Communion

IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHI lU H

HOI S. Elm St.

Hugh Burlington. Pastor -Lvnwood Wallers, Minister of Education and Youth 9:30 a.m. Sun. - Library Opens 9:45 a m - Sunday School 10:45 a m - Library Open Ham - Morning Service 3:30p m - Youth Committee .Meets 4:30 pm.-Puppets

6:30 pm Sun - Graded Choirs Christmas music program 7:30 p m - Deacons Meeling (immedi alelv after program >    PHILIPPI    t 111 Ki ll OE (IIKI.ST

9:'45a m .Mon - Dr Sallie Pence Bible    1610Farmville Blvd

Study Ms Lillie Parks    The Rev Randv Roval

6:30 p.m Annies Higgs .Sunday School    7:30pm. Fri -Quarterly conference

Class ITirislmas Dinner in Fellowship Hall    2 :00 p.m    Sat. - Communion with sick.

7:30 a m Tue. - Sr High Fellowship    8:00p m    - Holv communion

Breakfast with Chap Tucker    9:45 a m    Sun. - Sunday School Sis Marv

5:00p.m Tue. - Spark " BSU    JonesSupt

5:30 p.m Tue, - Baptist Student Union    n a.m. - Morning Worship

supper    3:00 pm Sun - Rev Love and Holv

7:00 p m. - DISCIPLEYOUTH with Trinity Donna West    11:30 p m. Tue - Willing Workers

7;30p m - Christmas Party for ECVC    Praver Band

10:00 a m Wed - Current Missions    I :(X) p m    W'ed.-Jov Hour al Church

Group Ms Louise Buck,,    8:(X)p m    Wed - BibleStudy

5:15 p.m Grades 1-3, 4-6. Children's    t oo p m Thur - Willing Workers

Choirs    Praver    Band

5:15-6:nop m. - Librarv Open

5:45 p m - Supper lines opens    GREENVILLE    (Til Kl II OE CHRIST

6:30 p.m. - G.A sand RA's    264 Bv-Pass and Emerson Road

6:45 p.m - Preschool music and    BriaiiWhelchel, Community Evangelist

slorytime fpr 3's, Preschool choir for 4's    Carl Elchinson. Campus Evangelist

and Vs; youth choir    8 am Sun "Amazing Grace TV

7:40p.m.Wed -Adull Choir    BibleStudy Channel 12

7:30 p m. Thur. - BSU "Praise    lu a mBible Study, Classes For All

Worship'    Ages

7:30 p.m, - MASTERLIFE with Susar    ii:tX) a m - Morning Worship "Church

Metzler, MASTERLIFE with Doris Hen Building Hospitality" derson and Helen McClanahan    6:00 p.m. - Evening VVorship

6:30 p.m Fri. - Lena Jackson Sunday "Jehosphaphat: King Who Tormented School Class Chrismas Dinner at Daphm God " (2Chronicles20 d-13(

Richardson's    7:00 p.m Wed. - Bible Study Class for

all ages

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Clll'RCII    For Information    and    or    Transporlalion

Fourth and Meade Streets    Please    call 752 ,5991    or 752-63i6    Home Bible

tt a m Sun. - Sunday School. Sunday Studiesalsoavailable

ST. P XIT.'S EPISCOPAL ( III K( II

401 East Fourth Street The Rev laiyyrence P Houston. .Ir, Reelor_

The third Sunday ol Advent 7 ;!0a m .Sun Holy Eucharist 9 lXiam Holy Eucharist 9;(Xla m - Children'sChap*l 9:(Xlam Children s Choir Rehearsal. Choir Room

Hixiam Holy Eucharist H iXipm Jr Eve

6:1X1 p m - .Sr EYC, Lisa Holloman s. 102 El David Drive 7 ;iop m Al anon, Enendly Hall 7:30pm Mon    Jr Choir Kehearsal.

Chapel

7 3(1 pm    Vestry Meeting. Enendlv

Hall

5 :tO pm Tge    Holy fCueharisl.

Canterbury 7 :io 0 hi    Greenville Parent Sup|)ort

(iroup,Friendly Hall 7:(x)a m.Wed Holy Euchansl 10:00 a m    Holy Eucharist and

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Villa Nursing Home 7 :io pni    Wed    Choir Kehearsal.

Chapel

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Meeting At Carolina Country Day School A Family Centered Church You Owe It To Yourself!! Study Baptist Distinctives

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Wed. Prayer Service, . . 7:30 PM [ (Nursery Provided)

David J. LeBlanc. Pastor

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10:30 AM...............Morning Worship

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The public is cordially invited to attend.





20 The Daily Reflector Greenville. N C

Fnday Decefhtjer 9.1963Early TV Days Recalled By Actor E.G. Marshall

B\ Jl LiA\\KH \>TIN(.S I PI TV Reporter

XEWVURK rPI - Fiit>

, years in the business, tuo Emmys. more than television credits to his name When E G Marshall starts reminiscing about televbion the time goes b\ tar too quickly Marshall has been doing teJeviMon since it oegan His fin>t ap|>earance a^iS :r. June imu in 'iiur To'An, starring Ravmond Ma>se> on NBC The late Fred Coe was the television direvtor. Martin "Chiets" Manulis was the stage director "in those days you went on the air when you a ere ready and when \ou tinishec. it

there was tune to spare. the> "d tell some new s or play some music. Marshall said during an interview in .Manhattarr's Greenwich \'iilage, where he still has an apartment .Audience sizes were not huge, but no one worried We didn't have Nielsen s in th'isedays

You used to have to go to ,j bJr to watch T\ A colleague once t|)ld me. The AA ot me out ot babs and now television s putting me back in Vxi have to go to a bar and watch your show or watch a kinnie a week later

Kmme>. otticiallv known a> kinescope recordings, were the onK records that c.vuid made ot those'old

teievnsion programs in the days betore videotape They were made by filming a television raoniiw and the picture quality, needless to say. was poor the first audience was ufKcale. middleclass. city people who went to theater and concerts "You could tell by the mail that the audience was changing. " Marshall said. "What they would object to You shouldn't show anything above the knee and you shouldn t discuss religion and never use a cuss word, hell or damn, because that was forbidden "If there was any accent, like an Irish plav or a cockney play, you'd get mail sa'ving. Whv vou do vou do

For complete TV pfogrjmming infof-tnjtion. consult your weelOy TV SHOWTIME Irom Sunday's Daily Refioctor_'

WNCT-TV^Ch.9

FRIDAY    ; A

Trying To Lure

these plays with these foreign bn^ues'" I'd think, now we re reaching out to Indiana, no longer just New York. .Philadelphia. Chicago

Much of what was done on the air were works that are public domain -Shakespeare. Ibsen. Faulkner "When did you see Faulkner last on television." Marshall sighed .Marshall, who most recently was seen on television in his excellent portrayal of the late Ambassador Joseph Kennedy Sr in the .NBC miniseries "Kennedy.' will be seen this week in the CBS presentation of John Steinbeck's "The Winter of Our Discontent ' with Donald Sutherland. Ten Garr and Tuesday Weld What s heartening about this IS here we are getting back -to .American writers and doing real stufl," Marshall said of the Steinbeck movie He said he was disappointed with the course television took as it matured---------

"It never developed the

way we all hoped and thought it would.'

I suppose a lot of people w ill be watching the numbers on Winter of Our Discontent to see whether they can say. i told you so.' or i toid you. ' he said, switching the tone of his voice to indicate first disafpDval and then approval The .Minnesota-born Marshall started his acting career on the stage in Chicago "The first week you'd be sold out and the second week you'd have half a house, he said.

In 1937. he and three pals paid ST apiece to share a nde to New York He got a room at the 44th Street Hotel and struck out "Er. better phrase that set out. 'he laughed Since then he has been on Broadway in "The Iceman Cometh.-"Jason.' "Waiting For Godot." and "Plaza Suite, and made such movies as "The Caine .Mutinv." "Twelve .Angry .Men " and "Superman II "

In 1963 and 1963. Marshall won Emmys for his starnng

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H\ HHUKM *MITM Associated Press Writer

CHARLESTON S C .AP - Satisiieii iChs vome up witr, the oest deai possible, Njuih CuToima otticiais have put their cards or. the table in u nigh-staKes game oi industrial recruitment with North Carolina The lackpot is -p sk iDn I ua.en:u._-. p a eij u 1 n pie\

I; iOOKs verv inod. We teel er L rr d">le witn ou jc    up to

the    1 L Gov

Nl ke D e Tbuf d , after the tinal details ot the state's pjsHior. were .hammered out Behind closed diwrs The state is trying to lure De Laurentiis 'Toposec ' dio trom Wiimington. N C . to a large auditorium Knovtr. ..a'    Hali    .iiere . The

state also plans to assist vuth s, million ir. ir.dustnal dev el opm.ent bonds Emitrtu-;nmem- attorney -DaVid Sonenberg of New V-r.s whu works as a con-su.tant tor the state, presente,: the package to De Laurer.tits ahursday evening He'A as expecting-a response ' by nivi.mtixia'w    *

Last month. LV Laurentiis anc North Carolina Gov Jam.es B Hunt. Jr. an-r.uunie: pians to build a

.jVilm.ingiiin studiDar.ouriC .ar..

'.c, >-s,quare-foot soundstae 'Ahere his .test film.

Fmestarter ' ;s rem.c pr'.'iCUceif But .v.uth Car-I.na m-tm.a.s .earne: ot t.ne pr-oect

an:    since tne contracs

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st'_:r nere In me meant.me Nerm V a: '..r.a mtieia.s m.tensinec tr.em ett''>rs to keep the ''roteet .r, tne Tar Heel State itate Fi.m "itice Director Bil, Arr.ui: returned late W edr.es Uav mom. a m.eetm.s 'Aitn tne pr-.etjcer ;r. Los

' Fra.nKy we naa a very r.'.ee meetir.t I tn;nK tnat s

ar'Ut a.. I ShOUid SaV at thlS

p-m.t Arr.OiC 'aid from; h;s Rale.in. N C , -ttice Thursday

He sa.: ne '.vasn t certain if ne Aouic .nave any more Visits 'Ait.h De Laurentiis, nut -^dued. : 'A.e haveiu!-.finished-

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by any means Meanwhile, Sonenberg said South Carolina would have to reach an agreement with the ..producer by the close ot business today "or Mr De Laurentiis will go to Wilmington"

Sonenberg. a consultant tor the state, said De Laurentiis'

- filming schedule leaves- liHle room for delay.

"He would need S3<.iu.ii(io in structural changes and im-provemients to the building In order to do that he has to know as quickly as possible." he said The Charleston County Council finance committee. :o|iowir. j 4i,>-minute execu-N.f 'e"ior Thursday, gave the council chairman and cour.tv, attorneys authority to nct'.iiatc j deal Sonenberg

A tOd^>l^I

couniv Hail, an 81-year-oid >tructure that was tormerlv a r,ce mull, is now an du:;tonu.T; It > on a 3 8-acre trjc; ut land and De Lauren-ti;.' want-' to build a structure o: simular Size behind it

some of the lund is. owned by the county school district, .which has agreed to work Aiih the county or. the pro-

Although details weren t re.eu^ed. the county apparently hope> to either give the proper} to the producer or -'ell ,t jt a mii'ioeYt price The pr..if>ery wa> appraised at

'!' ir

role as Lawrwjce Preston in the CBS series The Defenders" He also played in the NBC series "the Bold Ones"

Now'

"No more series, he said. "I enjoy what I'm doing now. so many things 1 would never want to be lied down like that again "

He also is not interested in directing.-Can you imagine dealing with actors' I'd rather sneak around and say to the director. Wby doii t you tell him or her to do this Or what about this idea'

"I recognize directorial con. They say. Oh that's terrific how you do that. Oh my God, that's magnificent the way you do that:

"Mike Nichols has a thing that he says at the end of a scene or am act. he does his imitation of W.C Fields -sounds nothing like him He says. 'Very goooood Just^ two small theeeengs. ' They* are always two very important things." .Marshall said He's a very good director " Despite all his T\' and movie experience. Marshall's first love is still the stage "Fm in control - or I am not in control.' he said "You

can do your own editing when you're on stage It sup to you When you see a movie or television film you say to vourself. Why the hell do they cut to that person now

Because that s a very important line I was trying to make a point there.

But when you're on stage, they can't dim the lights on vou "

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Educating Rita is one of the suq>rise delights of the season.

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Spacecraft Tq Watch

Hailey Comet's Fly-by

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

Friday December 9.1983 21

By LEE SIEGEL Associated Press W riter

SAN FRANCISCO '.APi -Spacecraft from Japan, the Soviet Union and the European Space Agency will greet Hailey's Comet" when it zooms into the solar system in two years, marking a 'very useful " step in East-West cooperation, scientists say.

The United States, concentrating on the space shuttle program, will play a limited role in the missions to the so-called dirty snowball" which streaks into the solar system every 76 vears, the last time in 1910 and 1911.

The comet's visit in late 1985 and early 1986 will be the first time spacecraft laden with modern scientific instruments will be used for observations - including some U.S. experiments.

"At the moment, there are not too many cooperative efforts between the Soviet Union and the United States. ' said Tamas I. Gombosi of Hungary, a leading scientist on the U.S.S.R.'s international Vega 1 and 2 comet missions.

This international Hailey's effort involves a lot of nations." he added. "It makes it easier for the United States and the Soviet Union to cooperate in this joint effort. .. These projects are very useful from a political point of v1ew.> This is a basis for further coopera^ tion."

Gom.bosi and several other scientists from European. Japanese and U.S. space agencies met to discuss the Hailey s missions Thursday during the American Geophysical Union's meet-in&.

"This is a very important occasion," said University of Iowa physicist and AGU President James A Van Allen, who discovered the Van Allen radiation belt surrounding the Earth, "To my knowledge, it's the first open, public discussion of all the comet missions around the world."

Hailey's Comet will round the sun in February 1986. It wiU be encountered the foU lowing month by the Soviet Vega 1 and 2. by Japan's MT5 and Planet-A space-cralt and by the the European Space Agency's Giotto, which will contain some U.S. experiments. All five spacecraft will be launched between December 1984 and August 1985.

In Tokyo todav. scientists

from Japan's Institute of Astronomical Science unveiled the 6-foot-high. 308-pound MS-T5. which is to go into solar orbit in January

1985. The craft will fly about 625.000 miles from the comet, collecting-data on solar winds, the clash between plasma waves of the sun and the comet, and the difference in the magnetic waves of the two, said professor Kunio Hirao.

The possible but still uncertain mission with most American involvement" is ISEE-3. launched in 1978 as a joint project of the U.S. and European space agencies initially designed to study the solar-wind-blown magnetic tail of the Earth.

But for lSEE-3 to approach Hally 's Comet in late March

1986, it first must survive space dust that will hit it during its planned encounter with the smaller Comet Giacobini-Zinner on Sept. 11. 1985.

Numerous American scientists are involved in the Soviet-. Japan-and European-sponsored Hailey's missions, although official U.S. government involvment is relatively small. The reason, van Allen said, is that "we're spending all our money on the space shuttle "

A 1979 U.S. government decision not to participate as a partner in the Giotto mission "was a big disappointment on both sides of the .Atlantic," said Ruedeger

mission project

Reinhard, scientist.

But many American scientists are participating individually in the Soviet Vega missions, and the U.S. Deep Space .Network will help track the spacecraft, said Gombosi.

In addition. European Space Agency and Soviet officials soon will meet in Japan to negotiate an agreement to make Vega data available to improve the navigation of the Giotto spacecraft, he said.

Comets are believed to be "dirty snowballs" made up of frozen water, ammonia and carbon dixide and "some dirt," said Van Allen.

The immediate purpose of the Hailey missions is to learn more about the 3-mile diameter comet nucleus, how its 100 million-mile long tail is formed and how it and the planets interact with solar wind.

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In the spring of 1980, the port at Mariel Harbor was opened, and thousands set sail for the United States. They came in search of the American Dream.

One of them found it on the sun-w'ashed avenues cif Miami... wealth, {wwer and passion beyond his wilde.st dreams.

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He lovod the AmerieHn Dream. With a vengeance.

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m

I ne Ual^ly Retiector. (jreetivme. .u__>-riaay.    Uecemper 9,19b.i

Life As If's Lived

Heroic Efforts Down The Drain

PEANUTS

B,\(.\11.MI(II\KI.S

Last week 1 was asked to host a Monday morning meeting tor the purpose ot organizing a series ot Saturday enrichment activities for children

The mere thought ot inviting people into my home on a Monday was enough to wreak ha\oc on m\ equilibrium. The other days ot the week are bad enough, but anyone brave enough to treatTmy carpet atier a* weekend ot non-stop kids and Phillip would do well to bring a shovel or at least a guideline to attach to the Lndle otthetront door

But tool that 1 am. I refused to reveal to a new acquaintance that m> den on Monday morning niirmally bore a strong reseintilance to Kansas City on "The Day Alter." 1 qiiietly determined that somehow 1 would

manage" to' keep~The'. usuar weekend wreckage to a minimum I was overly optimistic. In spite 01 all my etiorts, the children scaitered their toys and books and Kleenex with their ciistjunary .gay abandon, and Phillip was right behind them with his newspapr'is. \ ideo cartridges and junk mail The only thing I managed to do over the weekeiTO in preparation tor mv guests was to tuike SucbTiiTe "acrrviiy iiaiu~ rally attracted an audience The children ho\ered around me like starved vultures The cat had to be (lut out liecause she has such a'strongatiinrfy-tor liaked goods that it invariably overcomes her instinct torselt-preservation I'ntortunately. 1 could not put out Philiip He even made a pot ot cottee tor me in the hope that its bewitching aroma would induce

me to share a few fresh crumbs with him The aroma did indeed have a strong effect on me as did the coffee Itself I disposed ot it m the same place that I throw the muritic acid with which 1 clean brass.

At 6 a.m. Monday morning.

1 struggled out of bed and started cleaning. I vacuumed. dusted, cleaned bathrooms, and mopped with heroic ettort. The committee wasrdue to^-arrrve-at !() a m-By H:4. I was dressed and ready to put on the coffee Phillip had left me approximately one and a halt scoops.

After a brief moment of panic. I located a generous neighbor. 1 brewed the cot-fee. rinsed the dust oft my good china, and waited lor the doorbell to ring. And waited. At lo::5(i the phone rang instead Oh. {ail. there's been a imsTake:^-1 hr* cafler-satdr-"We changed the meeting to my house because I'm expecting a package and we just realized that we forgot to call you. 1 hope this hasn't cau.sed a problem "

"No." I sighed. "I always clean my house before daw n on .Mondays '

"(iood. You just put everything away, and we'll have the meeting at your hou.se next Monday And I do hope you'll lorgiveus '

I puT- every-thmga-wa-y. -including the cottee I hope they like It strong

(OMAMINATKI)

' AMBLER. Pa '.AP' oiticials have closed a small play ground next to a 2rvacre dump tiecause ot asbestos contamination ot the playground.

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[astern N.C Pit Cooked Barbecue

By .Any Other Name

l)(i you reinember a roi k and roll hand named "lohnnv aii(l the .Moondog^ ahout " 1 he ('aveineiT .Aetuallv, they are the same hand. A'ou prohahly remember them better as " I'lu' Beatles", the name lhe\ tin.illy .'ettled on ()ther names the Kah hour used included "The hori'Verlv Brothers . ' The .Moonshiners . and "T'ln' l^uarrymeii .Skiffle (Iroup". The nann-"Beatles" was chosen as ,i tribute to Buddy Holly's "Crickets ". This week marks the third anniversary ot .lohn Lennon s death.

DO YOl KNOW Who was the original drummer lor the "Beatles"'.

THURSDAY S ANSWER - Blair House is the Washington house used by visiting dignitaries.

' ,    K;.. h 'Il.1 iriUii'lMrv In. !'" .

100% PORK BARBECUE With A Vinegat Based Sauce.

No fiiiers Auded

Fully Cooked Ready To Heat And En)oy

Shipped Frozen In Reusable Ice Chest

WE SHIP BARBECUE ANYWHERE 1NTHETi.^A.

Packed in 2-Five Lb. Buckets Or 12-Tweive Ounce Cups

*39.50

(Plus $9.50 Shipping & Prepaid Handling)

SHIPPED BY UPS or PAF^CEL POST Anywhere In The United States! Call For Prices On Shipments Outside The Continental United States.

S4aat

202 West Blvd.        Telephone    792-5339

Williamston. North Carolina 27892

I nKme.

I CITY/STATE/ZIP.

ADDRESS.

2 FIVE POUND BUCKETS

12 TWELVE OUNCE CUPS

 .Enclosed Is My Money Order

Please Charge Bv VISA MASTER CARD

NUBBiN

BIOFDE

0OSS, 0LONOIE WANTS

TO t^MOw IF you <

ANO M(?S. DITHERS CAN COME TO dinner ; ^ TONIGHT

\ HELLO, 0LONOIE... V WHAT ARE VDU 4^G0ING TO HAVE?

A 0IG RI0 ROAST, U MASHED POTATOES, ASPARAGUS, HOME-MAOE 0SCITS,

AND BANANA CREAM Pie

YOU COULD PUT ALL HIS TACT ON A PINHEAD WITH v. ENOUGm room left OVER FOR(f HIS HEART

BEETLE BAILEY

FoPoEr IT.





wmr

PANDA HKLPKKS - National Zoo \eteiinarians and medical personnel from Children's Hospital National Medical Center use ultrasound equipment to get a look at the ailing kidneys of the giant panda Ling-Cing in

Washington Thursday. The animal, which workers watch at bottom of picture, was anesthetized for the procedure. Ling Lings prognosis is poor. (AP Laserphoto)

Suggests A 'Message'

In Camouflage Craze

ByKLLIOTTMINDK

Associated Press Writer

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Whether it's politics, patriotism or just the latest fad. Pennsylvania surplus store owners say kids have gone 'nut' over military camouflage clothing this Christmas season.

Warren Sudler, manager of I. Goldbergs, a military surplus store in downtown Philadelphia, said he's even selling tiny, specially made camouflage uniforms tor toddlers at $27 each.

"We have a lot of frantic parents looking for camouflage for their kids. " he said. "1 would call if more than a tad."

Bill Bonn of Army-Navy Surplus in Pittsburgh said he Ijoticed just before Halloween that kids were buying camouflage uniforms, green camouflage face paint and matching hats.

, Since then, he said, the demand is so great his store had to start a waiting list.

Bonn speculated that the Oct. 23 terrorist attack that killed 240 U.S. servicemen in Beirut, Lebanon, and the U.S. invasion of Grenada may have boosted the popelabity of military garb.

"I think we've finally bounced back from our Vietnam Yippies or hippies or whatever. " Bonn observed.

"The kids have gone nuts for camouflage." said Don Keefer of Keefer's Army-.\avy in Kingston, in northeastern Luzerne County, as goods flowed steadily past cashiers. There's no way anyone could have anticipated this demand. It's whacky."

Sudler had no ready explanation. but said he got the feeling that "underneath it seems to be a kind of unity for the United States." Keefer suggested patriotism.

"1 would say this whole tough-guy image is part of the Reagan administration and that filters down in lots of ways." said David M. Jacobs, an associate professor of history and popular

culture at Temple University in Philadelphia.

"In a way it's a kind of bizarre throwback to the 1950s when ... America had power, unbelievable power compared to other countries." he said. "You get a longing for that, a feeling that America should reclaim its rightful place, that America shouldn't be bullied around. This may come out in military clothes. Military clothes do suggest an aggressiveness and toughness, a kind of belligerency."

Whatever the reason. Bobbie .Selizker of Ardmore Army-.Navy. which has four stores in the Philadelphia suburbs, said. "Camouflage is extremely big these days and we re having difficulty getting the merchandise.

"At one time it was just hunters; now it's kids," said

Arlene Ross of the Broad Street Army-Navy Store in Harrisburg. And. she said, some people are also inquiring about buying helicopters, parachutes and anti-tank weapons.

Jacobs noted that during the 1960s and '70s. when the military became unpopular because of the Vietnam war, some youths wore military clothing as a form of protest.

"R was a way of making

irt    QpYvuf"

ing the uniform out of context." the professor recalled.

.According to Jacobs, military styles also have become high fashion among women. By wearing such garments, he said, a woman is showing that she is "an assertive, independent woman, willing to take her place beside

man.

lacocca Keeps r Helm

Chrysle

HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. (AP) - Squelching speculation that he might retire or seek political office. Lee lacocca says he'll spend af . least three more years as leader of Chrysler Corp.. which escaped banki jptcy in 1979 under his leadership.

"This ought to put an end to the rumors. " lacocca said Thursday after the No, 3 automaker's outside directors announced an agreement that could give him as much as $5.5 million if he sfays at Chrysler's helm for four years. The agreement calis for lacocca to stay for three years as chairman and chief executive. with the option to remain a fourth.

The announcement from the New York board meeting created what spokesman Bill Stempien called a "party atmosphere" at the com

pany s Highland Park headquarters.

lacocca. whose appearances in Chrysler advertisements have helped him become one of the most recognized corporate figures in America, will get l,5,O shares of Chrysler common stock at the end of three years, plus 5.0 more if he kays another year or more.

Options to' buy another 400.000 shares also were included in the contract, the company said in a statement. Chrysler stock closed on the New York Slock Exchange Thursday at 27\ per share.

lacocca's current salary has not been disclosed, but was $365,000 in 1982. Stempien said.

"I'm happy about it, I feel honored they want me to stay on board four or more^ years." lacocca said in a statement issued by Chrvsler.

There Oughta Be A Law

L FRIEND WHO V6IT5 VOU IN THE HOSPITAL 15 A SIGHT FOR

WH/,

^ yxi!

NO yMpi^

TWe    UP-    '

/MAN 16

ILHE CREAIES

MCN)G AND

a*?

IKDUr

Classified

Advertising

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

2.90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monday........Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. Tuesday3p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m. Friday .-. .. . Thursday 3p.m: Sunday.........Friday    noon

Ciassified Dispiay Deadiines

Monday Friday noon

Tuesday    Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday . Monday 4 p.m. Thursday ... .Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

PUBLIC

NOTICES

paym'rrt

This

30th day of November, 1983 Jasper Jackson 104 Tuckahoe Drive Greenville, N C 27034 E xecutor of the estate of LawrencieA Jackson, deceased December 2, 9, 16, 23, 1983

752-6166

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C

Friday. December 9.1983 23

013

Buick

BUIK CENTURY LIMltEO. 83.

Demo. 4 door. Loaded! Low Mile age. Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmville. 753 3140.

BUiCK S3. LeSabre Limited. door. Lease Cars (2). Loaded! low Mile age. Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmville 753 3)40.

1*7* AEGAL. 47,000 miles, whit

with red landau top and interior Tilt, power steering and brakes, air AM/FM stereo, factory chrome wheels on Michelln steel belted radials $2995. 827 2313 Dealer Number 963

014

Cadillac

1977 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Silver, excellent condition, loaded, $4195. Call 756 0750 after 6 p.m.; anytime weekends.

197* CADILLAC Sedan DeVille iri good condition. Priced to sell. Call 757 0440.

015

Chevrolet

1972 MONTE CARLO Completely reconditioned, dove gray. Burgundy top and black interior. Buckets, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, AM-'FtW stereo, factory rally wheels, $2195. 827 2313. Dealer Number 963.

1973 MONTE CARLO Landau, loaded Well taken care of. Call 825 2831 after 6p.m.

1975 CHEVROLET Malibu owner, air conditioned. $1800. 756 0574

One

Call

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executor ot the estate of Lawrencie A Jackson 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 Executor on or before June 2, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Having qualified as Ad ministrator CTA of the Estate ot ALICE G LONG, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, the un dersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is PO. Box 176 7, Greenville, N C 27835, on or before the 9th day of June. 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the un dersigned This the 6th day of December, 1983

Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, N.A.

By; J E May, Vice President P O. Box 1767 Greenville, N C 27835 E. Cordell Avery

James, Hite, Cavendish 8. Blount Attorneys at Law P O Drawer 15 . Greenville, N C 27835 0015 'December 9, 16, 23, 30, 1983

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE at

Spectrum Batiks, 1016 Myrtle Avenue. Hand made gifts! Satur day, December 10 1 p.m. to 7 p.m , Also open Monday through Friday, 10to6p.m. 752 5646.

FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly No purchase necessary.

I, BOBBY LEE STAINBACK JR.,

will no longer be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself.

OPEN HOUSE for 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? If so, remember the Pitt Memorial Hospital Foundation and Gifts Fund Contributions are tax de ductable. For information call 757 4869

Oil

Autos For Sale

INSURANCE POINTS

OUR RATES MAY SAVE YOU MONEY! Call us before you buy. MID ATLANTIC INSURANCE, INC. 756 7723

012

AMC

013

Buick

975 mONTt CARLO Landau:

67,000 miles White with buckskin top and interior. Swivel buckets and console Tilt, AM/FM stereo, 8 track, power windows and door locks. Rear window defogger Fac tory rally wheels on steel belted -radials. $2295. 827-2313 Dealer Number 963.

032

Boats For Sale

ALBERO 37 SAILBOAT Beautiful,

fully equipped yawl extras. 752 1129 after 6.

with many

DtSCOUNT BOATING AcQessories Christmas Soacials! 6 gallon plastic fuel tank-; $19.95. Hum mingbird Super 60, $148.88. Bass Seats starting at $12.95. Flush attachments, $6.88. Zebco Rod/Reel and Baits, $9.95. AduJt Ski Vest, $19.49. Uniden Depth Finder, $99.95 Entire Inventory Reduced We ship!! Marine Salvage Distributors,

IHTERIOR DECORATOR/Sales

278m W9) K43.    NCii,    Person.    Experience    preferred    Sal

WESTERLY 26 DIESEL powered fiberglass cruising sailboat. The best buy around af $14,500 752 1129 after 6

14' BANDIT Fiberglass Sail boat with trailer. Sails included $800. Phone 756 5339.

034

Campers For Sale

CAMPER - Panel, cabinets, roll out windows Fits 'j ton Pickup Phone 746 2473

PROWLER, 18'. Extra clean, air conditioning and bath $2,400 Call 355 6780 after 6 p m

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock O'Briants, Raleigh, N C. 834 2774

1976 25' COACHMAN Bunk House Travel Trailer. Sleeps V. Excellent condition. $5,300 firm Call anytime Sundays weekdays after 4:30 p.m., 756 2697.

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA EXPRESS MOPED. 1979 model. Completely rebuilt $200. 756 2208

051

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

TYPISTS 60wpm BOOKKEEPERS ACCOUNTING CLERKS DATA ENTRY OPERATORS Please call for an appointment

Anne's Temporaries Inc.

12OREADE STREET

758-6610

ary plus commission Send resume with references to Interior Decora tor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835

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 con struction, must know layout, foot ings, and concrete work and have ability to over see the total job, GreenviTte area Good pay, benefits, and security for the right individu al Send resume to Samet Con struction Co . PO Box 3957, Wilson, NC 27893

LINEMEN - Power line experience and helpers Work in Virginia Call 1 946 8(64

LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available. Apply in person or call Oak Manor. Inc , Snow Hill, 1 747 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

059

Work Wanted

PAINTING INSIDE or outside. No

jobs too small Residential, apartments, and commercial. 15 years experience. Free estimates AHwvork guaranteed 758 7815 PLASTER AND STUCCO REPAIR

best quality. Also new construction stucco Call 756 7297 anytime

SPAIN'S MOBILE HOME Repair and Service, all types, tree estimates, reasonable rates. 146 6575

WALLPAPERING AND Painting 10 years experience Local refer enees 758 7748

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

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.

197* MATADOR WAGON. Extra clean, drives perfect. Must sell! $1,075 or make otter. 752-8154 or 757 3188.

1973 BUICK ENTURY. Air condi tioning, 8-track tape, clean. $1,200. Phone 752 *878.

with options, excellent condition, low mileage 758 3175 or 756 3109    '

1976 CAMARO Rally Sport Wrecked but runs. Best offer! 758 7816 evenings

197* CHEVETTE, motor completely rebuilt, new clutch Good running shape . and looks good. $1950 negotiable 758 2264.

1977 CHEVROLET IMPALA. new

paint, vinyl roof, excellent condi tion. $2,500. Call 746 2179,

1977 MONTE CARLO. 1 owner, Real good condition Fully equipped. $1,495 negotiable Phone 758 1603.

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

1978 CHEVROLET CAPRICE.

owner, all power, $3200 752 1729.

17V CHtVY MONZA. 4 cylinder automatic transmission Very de pendable car $2,600 negotiable Phone I 524 4337

1979 CHEVETTE, 4 door, AM/FM radio, very clean Low mileage. For more information days 758 0696, after 7. 756 4180

016

Chrysler

1978 CORDOBA. Power windows, stereo, air, cruise, 70,000 miles, extra clean Drives perfect I owner Price negotiable 752 8154

017

Dodge

1973 DODGE 4 door Clean inside and out, new tires Runs good. Call 746 2326

018

Ford

THUNDERBIRD, 1978, loaded, landau. Great shape. $2900 Call 746 2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5; 3.

1977 MUSTANG, automatic, fully equipped, 63,000 miles, new tires, CACeiii'n COnuHiOti, S223G fiiiyOtia ble 752 1705

YAMAHA GT 80 cycle. Low mile age Excellent condition! Call 753 5466,.Farmville    _    _    .

1980 YAMAHA 650 Special New tires, full wtndshield. Excellent condition $1,200 752 3677

1983 HONDA X R 80 with helment Low mileage Like new! Phone 756 2824.

1983 SUZUKI 450. Automatic shaft drive, 3000 miles, luggage rack,, 3 heJmets $1800. Call 758 1558

1983 V45 SABRE HONDA, excellent condition Negotiable 6 months old 758 5823

039

Trucks For Sale

FOR SALE: 1981 Chevrolet pickup truck Scottsdale. 8 foot 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 like new Kept in garage by one owner Price $7,200 Call M Buck 756 3727.

OWNER MUST SELL, 1968 Chevy Pickup. Looks good runs good Phone 753 3902

1967 FORD TRUCK. Good shape $750 firm. Phone 7SA 7381

1976 FORD PICKUP. 1 owner, automatic transmission, AM/FM Stereo radio Clean and in real good condition $1,895 negotiable Phone 758 1603

1977 DATSUN Long bed, White sport rims, new Radials Excellent condition 756 71 14 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, $3650 Call 756 2750 or 1 946 0363

NEEDED EXPERIENCED Iron workers with tool belts Apply at job site in Washington, N C Highway 264, take.firs! right aftef-AIMance' Church ot God Samet Construe tion/Donnelly Marketing job site Apply to J & J Steel Erectors Inc on December 14

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 tor a licensed real estate broker For more information or appointment call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810

ANTIQUE AUCTION SALE.

Sunday December 11, 2 p m Selling large load of antiques for Clarence Slangle from up state New York. 2 Bow front china cabinets, round oak table, 4 oak chairs. 3 drawer stool cabinet, spindle back rocking chairs, old Rayo oil lamp, banquej-lamp, figurine lamps, 8 day clocks, piano stool, old four string banjo, oak side board, very fancy mahog any what not stand with mirrored back, old dove tailed blanket chest, old wooden doll swing, oval pedestal table, large variety of depression glass A tremendous amount ot old picture frames and many, many other item.-, too numerous to men tion Sale to be held by George T Hawley, NCAL -76, Route 2. Box 898, Rocky Muunt, NC 27801 442 2867 Luiated 5 miles east of Rocky w Mount lustotf US64

NINA'S ANTIQUES. 3 dealers Open Friday Saturday, Sunday 1 til 5    100 year old house Farmville

Hiqhwav 264

063 Building Supplies

CECO STEBL BUILDINGS 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, S75 cord S40 pickup load 10 days only, 1', cords SlOO Delivered and slacked 823 5407

REAL ESTATE IN YOUR FUTURE?

FIREWOOD FOR SALE. S35 for

truckload Call 757 1772 after 6pm

NUMBER ONE solid oak wood, S40 half cord; $80 cord Delivered and stacked Call before you buy Deiiv erd anytime 758 3340

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Ready ta go Call 752 6420 or 752 884/ atter 5pm

We currently have an opening for a sales associate Must have NC real estate license You must be willing to attend our CENTLLR YJZl trajfting. program which consist of 40 hours of classroom instruction on the basics of listing, selling real estate, financing and working with the transferee Sales tools, referrals and in house training offered Expected income the first year to ,

be $15,000 plus For more informa cr    -    -

tion call .Ann Bass, CENTURY T Bass Realty or Madalyn McGutfin, I 756 5868

OAK WOOD FOR SALE. Call 752 3379

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 or 758 5590

REGISTERED NURSE to serve as Director of Nursing in 75 bed Intermediate Care facility Im mediate opening Call ad ministrator at (919) 747 2868

SEASONED OAK firewood deliv ered and stacked Phone 758 6143

1981 LONG BED Toyota SR5, loaded, excellent condition. $5500 Call 746 3530or 746 6146

1979 FORD FIESTA, $1900 Cal 752 7483 before 5 p.m

1979 MOPED Honda Express Been

rcb'jiv ^sHtn^ *200. |97G Ford Torino, motor has been re built, will sacrifice, $450 756 2208

1981 FORD ESCORT with air. automatic, excellent condition Call 756 6678

$9,200 4 DOOR, loaded 1982 Escort Wagon, automatic $5,700 Phone 758 6582

021

Oldsmobiie

1967 OLDS 442 has new engine, 52,000 miles on the bqdy, needs paint $2500 negotiable Call 752 6239

1976 CUSTOM CRUISER. 9 passen ger, fully loaded NADA. $1,650 Asking $1,250. 752 8154

1976 CUTLASS Salon T top, black with wine interior, cruise, AM/FM stereo, factory rally wheels, white letter radials $2995. 827 2313 Dealer Number 963.

1977 CUTLASS SALON. Black with buckskin vinyl interior, buckets and console. Tilt, cruise, AM/FM stereo Factory rally wheels on new Firestone SS white letter radials. $2995 827 2313 Dealer Number 963

_ ,    AKC REGISTERED German Shep

1979 OLDSMOBILE. excellent con I herd puppies, just been weened

..r4-__ J-___I ___   I__    K/\I/4 4il r^Krte4rv9AC 7^0 0)Rzin ftr

1983 TOYOTA TRUCK. Low mile age Excellent condition Call 758 2947 after 6 p.m

040

Child Care

CHILDCARE POSITION Fulltime my home. Require mature, Chris tian individual. Experience, own transportation, references Call be tween 5 9p m. only, 756 2684

I WILL KEEP children in my home at anytime. Call 758 5822.

REGISTERED NURSE to work in Community Mental Health Out Patient Center Located 40 miles West ot Greenville Experience preferred, but not required Pay range, $15,660 to $20,616 Excellent benefits, holidays, and regular hours Please send resume and NC Nursing License Number to Nurse, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC Equal Opportunity Employer

Resumes written to get results

WOOD FOR SALE. Mixed $35 Seasoned Oak $45 Call 752 6286 anytime

WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodstoves, chimney pipe and ac cessories Squire Stoves Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques Wmterville 756 9123, nights 756 1007

065

Farm Equipment

plus job search programs Call for brochure or appointment Cushman, Virriting Associates, 1 37 2889

RN ADMINISTRATIVE Position Must have NC License, BSN pre lerred Minimum of 3 years Supervisory Administrative expe rience Fxcellent growth pofonfial

PICK UP TRUCK BED MATS and

tool boxes A great Christmas 'idea! M.at to tit full size truck $69 95; intermediate Size $64 49 import size $55 95 Crossover tool boxes to tit full Size intermedate o-import size trucks $85 49 Other styles in stock Agn Supply, Greenville. NC 752 3999

I 066

FURNITURE

with expanding Company 'Must be BEDDING & WATERBEDS

nnovative and creative Send re

RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care for 2 infants in my home Begins January 3, 1984 7;30 a 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 pm, Wednesday from 8 to 6 pm, Thursday from 12:45 to 9 p.m . Friday from 8 to 5 p m I 825 0960 atter 6 pm

046

PETS

sume to RN Administrative, Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

PO

RN NEEDED part time, 3 to ll House Supervisor Competetive sal ary. Call Britthaven of Kinston from 9 a m to 4 pm, 1 523 0082 for interview

LARGEST SELECTION at guaran teed lowest pnces Bedding sets. $69 Waterbeds. SU9 Factory Mat tress 8, Waterbeds next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626

SALES ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer ot home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area A go getter attitude, energy, creativity Earnings based i OO' on performance Benefits and in centives Promotions from within , BiG Call 756 6711.

COLONIAL LOVE SEAT sofa used 6 months Taking loss. $275 Call 756 5555, ext 311

SMALL OAK Dresser with Bevel mirror. $200 Phone 756 4114

Garage-Yard Sale

AKC DOBERMAN PUPPIES.

females, $100. Call 746 4055

AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD

guppies. 6 weeks old the 20th of ecember. Black and black and brown. $75 758 4669or 752 3735

AKC GOLDEN Retriever pups Shots and wormed Will be ready Christmas week 795 3549

dition, diesel, power steering, power brakes, tape deck, $2890 756 7297

Will hold til Christmas 752 2540 or 752 3170

023

Pontiac

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! 1981 Grand Prix AM/FM, cruise, extras, low mileage $7,200 Anne Monday through Friday 752 6889.

1976 PONTIAC Grand Prix SJ, new tires, fully loaded. Excellent condi tion $2295 Mike 752 7173 before 5, atter 5, 752 4491

1978 GRAND PRIX.

355 6388..

$3,495. Phone

1978 PONTIAC

cash 758 1355.

Catalina, $1.645

1979 PONTIAC SUNBIRD. 40,000 actual miles. 4 speed. Asking $2,600. 756 4836 or 758 0237 atter 8 p.m

024

Foreign

AUDI. 1982. Silver gray, blue inte rior, electric sunroof, dclby cassette stereo system, alloy wheels, like new. 756 3000, evenings I 975 3179

MGB 1969,$1300. 756 1025

WE BUY AND SELL Used Cars Joe Pecheles Volkswagen. 756 1135. 203 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C.

1975 DATSUN Stationwagon Looks good, runs good, good tires, $1895. Call 758 4096.

197* BMW 2002, air, AMFM cassette deck. $4950 758 2703.

197* HONDA ACCORD, air. rebuilt engine. AM/FM cassette deck. $2500.7Sfl 2703.

197* TOYOTA COROLLA SR 5, 5

eed, 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 $2500 negotia ble, 757 1936.

1978 TOYOTA Clica GTLB. 5 eed, air, stereo, low miles $4,400 Phone 752 7703

1978 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER -

Champaign Edition with sunroof, air, AM/FM, automatic transmission, hatchback $2,300 or best offer. 756 5285.

1979 280ZX, Grand Luxury Package. 2 tone. Excellent condition Call Jack 752 1907 or 756 8362. Serious inquiries only

1*77 SKYHAWK, low mileage, air, power, stereo, new tires, motor needs little work $1600 Call 752 1050.

1980 CENTURY LIMITED, loaded

1980 MAZDA RX-7 Anniversary Edition. All options. New radials, Alpine cassette. Excellent condi tion. S6.900 negotiable. Call 756 0238 after 12 noon.

AKC REGISTERED GERMAN

Shepherds $75 each Call 756 0700 after 6 p.m

AKC Registered Champion oloodline Norwegian pups. Ready for Christmas 524 5436 atter 5:30.

AKC SIBERIAN HUSKYS, 6 weeks old; black, gray; male and female $100. Call 753 2731 after 3 :30 p.m.

DOBERMAN PINSCHER puppies Good Christmas gifts. Tails cut and shots. Priced right! Call 752 5266 after 5:30p.m.

FOR SALE; AKC Pekingese.

Dachshunds, Pomeranians, 1 male Chihuahua and Cocker Spaniels. , -Clipping and grooming for all    '

breeds. Call 758-2681.    |    NC    28551. . E_qual Opportunity

SA L E SB EPRESENTATIV E .

Silver Sprink Water Purification Company is now looking for quali tied 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

YARD SALE. Friday and Saturday December 9 and 10    1

p m Friday to 1 p m Saturday 212 Tuckahoe Drive, East I4th Street extension look for signs Furniture, washing machine re frigerator. lawn mower tools and much more

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 years experience preferred in an ICF MR facility Plea.e send re sume to Mr, Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center Inc., PO Box 607, LaGrange, NC 28551 Equal Oppor tunlty Employer. M F

FOR SALE: Lots of nice things The New Greenville Church of God, Memorial Drive. Greenville. De cember 10. 7 a m til 12

GARAGE/MOVING SALE. Great Christmas buys Small appliances, stereo, clothes, games, toys Some thing tor everyone .Priced to sell Saturday, December TOth, 9 4, 104 Bryant Circle, Lake Glenwood, Greenville

GARAGE SALE Saturday. 8 30 to 12 00, 222 East Woodstock Clothes, dishes, small appliances and furniture

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 ot educational services, both indi rectly and directly to residence Competitive salary, ei^cellent benefits Please send resume to Mr Jan Harper, (Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care

HAVING TROUBLE with your Christmas Shopping Yard Sale at i 805 Johnston Street Saturday, De I cember lOth 8am until 3pm I Christmas decorations, children s I games and stuffed animals, men's j clothes, women's clothes, and children's clothes and shoes

INSIDE GARAGE Sale December 10 at 7,30 Corner of 13th and Cotanche Street Golf clubs, new small Chevy Tire and deck chair, many household items and so forth

FOR SALE: Full blooded Border Collie Puppies, 7 weeks old. De wormed Call Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279

FREE BEAUTIFUL KITTENS to

good home. 756 8324 after 6 or anytime weekends.

PITT BULL DOGS, 3 months old, $50. Call 758 3029.

QUALITY PUPPIES Chows, Siberian Huskies, Basset Hounds, Poodles. Miniature Schnauzers, Lhasa Apsos, Shih Tzus, Eskimo Spitz. Metro Lind Kennels, Highway 24, Morehead City, 1 726 7798    _

051

Help Wanted

APPLICATIONS ARE NOW being taken for temporary employment in 1984 at the Pitt County ASCS Office, 215 Evans Street, Greenville, NC Telephone: 752 6112, The applica lions are for the positions of report ers, marketing recorders, tempo rary office and aerial observation Applications will be accepted through December 16,1983.

ARTIST/PRINTER; Immediate opening for a full time layout Artist/Printer Individual must be experienced in silkscrefn printing and illustration. Apply to Cynthia Sutton, H L Hodges Co., 210 East 5th Street Monday through Friday, 10 to 5

ASSEMBLER Grady White Boats has an immediate opening. Experi ence required in carpet installation and power tool useage. Must be able to work with heavy fiberglass parts. If interested, apply in person at the PersonnqJ Office. Monday through Friday, 8a.m. to 4 p.m.

AVON Can MAKE YOUR

1980 VOLKSWAGEN Rabbit pickup for sale. Call 9)9 946 9285

1981 HONDA ACCORD, 5 speed, AM/FM cassette, air, $6,200. Call 752 9788

030

Bicycles For Sale

TWO GIRLS 26" 10 speed bikes. Like new. SSOeach. 757 0634.

CHRISTMASMERRIER!

Be an Avon Representative in your neighborhood, earn money and win valuable gifts, too!

Call 7527006

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!

DRIVERS NEEDED. Must be over

20" GIRLS BIKE, almost new, S50. Training wheels, $5. Call 758-4163 atterSp.m

032

Boats For Salt

16' CATAMARAN with trailer, excellent condition. Call 758 3449 after 5 p.m

1978 80 HORSEPOWER Mercury, Trim and Tilt. $1,350. 1978 Glasstron with 175 Black Max Cox trailer $5,300. Call 757 3636

18. Part time and full time. $3.35 per hour plus commission. Must have own car Apply at Alano's Pizza, 1403 Dickinson Avenue. EXPERIENCED OR CERTIFIED

Dental Assistant tor growing practice. Excellent benefits. Send resume to Dental Assistant. PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC 27834

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

: LARGE YARD SALE, Saturday.

December 10, 9 a m, to 1 p.m , I Large used bike selection, used woodheater. used vacuum cleaners.

^ hair dryers sewing patterns, lace,

, ribbon, colored elastic many used i clothes for all sizes, sweaters I coats Flower pots and tools Kitch I en hand appliances, lamps and I much more 629 Dickinson Avenue

wanted experienced insurance agent. Please send resumes to Insurance Agent, PO Box 456. Ayden, NC 28513

MANY ITEMS: bicycles, games ; men's suit (size 42), Johnny's I Mobile Home Sales 264 By Pass 8 -i until 1

WANTED: SEWING ROOM

Supervisor Minimum 2 years expe rience Ability to handle 50 opera tors, woven products line Salary to compensate with ability Send re plies to Sewing Supervisor. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

{OPEN EVERY SATURDAY!

Raynor, Forbes 8, 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

RAINED OUT last week 202 Montague Avenue Ayden Satur day. 8 until Baby items, maternity clothes and household items

WEEKLY Pitt County publication needs full or part time salespersons Excellent commission plan for the right individuals For interview call 757 0474

WORK AVAILABLE

WE HAVE NEED tor experienced bookkeepers, word processors, se nior typists and data entry opera tors Work when you want, stay home when you want Not a lee agency Call tor appointment, please MANPOWER TEMPO RARY SERVICES, 757 3300.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured Trim ming. cutting and removal, stump removal by grinding Free estimates J.P Stancil, 752 6331

ANY TYPE REPAIR WORK,

Carpentry, masonry, roofing 35 years experience Call James Har rington, 752 7765 atter6p m

BATH AND KITCHEN repairs Plumbing, carpentry, tie board, tops. Slate License 746 2657 after 6

GET YOUR CHRISTMAS painting done interior and exterior carpenter repair Phone 758 5226

HOME AND BUSINESS REPAIRS.

We can do it all Additions built Specialist in mobile home repairs, sundecks, porches, electrical work, plumbing, etc Professional sign work. Repairs to furniture Wood

work is our glory, superb quality We do not gamble

our reputation Reasonable too! Free estimates Phone 7S2 7737 alter 5 p.m

H O'tl se C L E A N I N G

Price

negotiable Call Brenda at 746 6775 after 4 30 p m

HEATING AND AIR Conditioning Service Personnel wanted. At least 1 year ot experience required. Call 756-4624 or apply in person Larmar Mechanical Contractors

LANDSCAPING DESIGN, mainte nance, winter and spring clean up License 361 757 3462 atter 6

PAINTING INTERIOR and exteri or Work guaranteed! References tree estimates. 13 years experiertte 756 6873 atter 6 p m

YARD SALE. 116 Osceola Drive Near Peppermint Park on I4th Street Household items 10 until 2

YARD SALE SATURDAY 302 Lee

Street, Cherry Oak's, 8 30 Appli anees, toys furniture books, etc.

YARD SALE. Saturday. 8 to 1, 2 family sale Corner of Belvedere and Placid Way, across from Ken lucky Fried Chicken

YARD SALE, Saturday. December lOfh, 8 30 a m Lot 152 Shady Knoll Turntable. 250 watt speakers, furniture clotnes and household items

YARD SALE Miscellaneous items Saturday from 7 to 12 Great buys for Christmas 1302 East First Street

YARD SALE repeated due to rain 3 families Bike toys, etc Saturday, December 10, 7 30 to II 30 a m . 1405 Red Banks Road

YARD SALE. 9 1 Saturday De cember 10 2619 South Wnght Road

103 GRAHAM STREET (College Court) Radios tape players, mis cellaneous items Saturday, 7 until

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING.

Stables. 752 5237

7 YEAR OLD. MARE '/ 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

074

Miscellaneous

BRAND NEW GULLS COAT, size 6

Teal green corduroy with hood, acrylic pile lining $45 752 1015,

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables

inventory clearance sale 4 models Delivery setup 919 763 9734

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013,' for small loads ot sand, topsoij^and

stone Also driveway work

L





r

24 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Friday. December 9,1983

074

Miscellaneous

CASH DISCOUNT of 20% when you shop downtown Steinbeck's for your men's clothing needs.

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old

clocks, lamps, portable tape

)lls.

074

Miscellaneous

ALL REFRIGERATORS, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Rebuilt, like new Call B. J Mills, 746 2446 at Blackjack

APACHE WOODSTOVE, like new, make an offer. Call 756 2407.

ARGUS SLIDE PROJECTOR, plus 16 magazines, $50. Binoculars, 10x50

players, bicycles, voilins. doll depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques...anything ot vallue

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

ig .

field five decrees, $40. Cannon OL Camera. $35. C.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company has a Systems 34 (96K) computer available tor immediate lime sharing. 1 CRT display station and 1 5224 Printer is available tor immediate remote hook-up using telephone communications Programs ready lor general business use include general ledger, accounts receivable, invenloryibilling, accounts payable and payroll.

Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville. NC or 758-1215

ATARI 2600 GAME SYSTEM with 23 cartridges. Price negotiable. Call 756-'/474after5:30p.m.

BALDWIN PIANO. Like new $850. Call 758 12.55 before 2 p.m.. or 746 4885after 5p.m.

BARBEE DOLL collection, over 20 dolls in all, including Barbie, Ken, P J, Skipper, Skooter and Francie. $160 756 9070.

BICYCLE EXERCISER, like new $40. Call 758 1773.

BOY'S BMX BIKE customized Mongoose chromoly frame, tufwheel mags, etc Excellent con dition $175 756 1277 after 6 p m.

074

Miscellaneous

CASH REGISTER money box with

lock, new. PA system, 2 speakers, useful for schools, chuches, bingo.

Like new Call 746 4978.

CHEST FREEZER, 10 cubic feet. 1 year old. $200. Call 758 4553.

CHIPPENDALE SOFA for sale

Excellent condition! Best offer. 758-8376 after 6 p.m weekdays, anytime weekends

COFFEE TABLE for sale, $30. Chest of drawers, $25. Night stand, $10. Call 752 7476.

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and reflnishing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south ot Sunshine Garden Center. 756-9123.

COUNTRY WOOD CRAFTS.

Cabinets, folk arts, doll beds, etc. Check my quality and price before you buy. Custom orders welcome. 756 6887.

DARE IV FIREPLACE insert. Used 1 year. Super 8 Kodak camera and projector. 756-7912 after 5 p.m

DIAMOND RING carat. White, flawless, $600. 757 0634,

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE. $850. Cal 756 1076 from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.

DINETTE SUIT, Solid maple, 4 wood chairs. Call 753 3683.

DUCK DECOYS, 1 dozen, $40. Excellent condition. Call 756-2208.

ELECTROLUX SHAMPOOER, $65. Snoopy twin bedspread, 1 set ot curtains, pillow sham, $50 set, new. Lavender long dress, size 9/10,

worn once, $25. Little girl's lon^

dress, size 8, worn once, $15. Ca 756 7320 or 756 2550 anytime

Eastern North Carolina Taxtile Company Needs

MANAGEMENT

TRAINEE

Must be college graduate. Send resume to;

' PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

2500 Airport Road Kinston. N C 26501

An Equal Opportunity Employer

FACTORY OUTLET now open to the public. Buy direct and save. Rope hammocks, tote bags, athletic bags, cutting boards, and a variety of other great Christmas items manufactured by Hatteras, 1104 Clark Street

FOLDING PING Pong table, $35 756 5389

FOR RENT: Complete Santa Suit. Tax deductible donation Call 756 0500

FOR RENT: SANTA SUIT.jPhone

752 5934.

FOR SALE : Saxaphone, Guitar, h

and Intellivision with 6 cartridges Call 756 4510

FOR SALE: Refrigerator/freezer, 17 2 cubic foot wilh icemaker, avocadogreen, $300. Call 758 6321.

TKiS WEEK'S SPEiAL

1977 Olds Cutlass 2 door Coupe

*99

per month

Selling price of $2100.00, $550 Down payment, Cash or Trade wilh approved credit. 18 payments at $99.52, APR 17%, Life insurance included, Total amount financed $1571.50, Total note due $1791.36. Plus NC Sales Tax and License.    -    --

Carolina East Sales

264 Bypass & Hooker Road Greenville N.C.

756-5860

Owned and Operated by Dallas Tripp & Rickie Moore

FOR SALE:    Real    Fur    Cape.

Excellent condition Call 758 3839 or 752 2065

FUN GOCART, 5 horsepower, 2

n 7

seater. runs good, $250 Call 752 0001 after 7pm

GLASSWARE, miscellaneous items New and used merchandise. Some antiques, some junk Come see Open 11 to 5, Monday Saturday, Crafts 8. Auction House, Simpson, 752 5382 We buy merchandise

HAND MADE WOODEN TOYS,

Christmas decorations, crafts Spectrum Batiks, 1016 Myrtle Avenue Open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6 p m Also Saturday, December 10th 1 to 7 p m 752 5646.

HOLIDAY PARTY CATERING and

Services We can do as much or as little as you need in arranging from cafering fo facility and service assistance 757 1531

AUCXIOM

Farm Equipment And Real Estate Sat., December 10,1983,10:00 A.M.

Loclion: From Ftrmvill Tak Highway 121 To Joynar Crossroad Turn Right On RPR 1200 Sala Will 8* Approximately 1 Milt On Right From Greenville. N C Taka RPR 1200 Paat Back Side 01 Hoapital Go Approximately 10 Miles Sale Will Be On Lett.

Tractors

Equipment Cash

Equipment

9600 Ford 200 Farmall w/Cult 210 M.F, Barns 6 Long Box Barns Gas Fired Harvester Powell One Row Tobacco Equipmerit Ford 12 Disc 4 Row Lilliston Cult.

4 Row M.F. Planter Ford 4 Bottom Plow M.F. Front End Loader Roto Cutter 3 Customs Trailers 2 Home Made Trailers 9 Tine Athens Chisel Plow Land Leveler Fert. Sower Unload Equipment

Real Estate -10% Day Of Sale - Balance In 30 Days Track One -1 Acre Land With 3 Bedroom House

Approx. 1850 Sq. Ft. Officed and Rec. Building In Rear

Track Two - 4Vj Acres Cleared Land-This Land Adjoins The House And Lot.

Track Three 5 Acre Plus Or Minus All Cleared About 5 Mites From House And Lot.

Tobacco - 8113 Pounds To Be Sold In 2000 Pound Lots. Thq Last One To Be 2113 Pounds.

Sale Subject To Court Approval.

Consignment To Be Accepted

Sale Conducted by

HORSE BLANKET and all other tack for horses Wesfern Boots to size 14 William Shoe Shop, 808 Dickinson Avenue 752 4121

INSTANT CASH

LOANS ON & BUYING TVs, Stereos,cameras, typewriters, gold & silver, anything else of value. Southern Pawn Shop, 752 2464

KEROSENE HEATER (new perfection type), $15 Stereo record player recorder 8 track, like new, $89. Portable Philco stereo record player, $39 G.E stereo, like new, $39 Gas heater. 20,000 BTU, (un vented). $39 Store shelving and display items, negotiable 355 2211

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 is available for immediate remote hook-up using telephone com munications. Programs ready for general business use iitclude general ledger, accounts receivable, inventory/billing, ac counts payable and payroll.

Contact: President P.O. Box 8068 Greenville, NC or 758-1215

074

Miscellantous

KEFOSUN PORTABLE HEAT-ERS. Factory rebate sale continues at Goodyear Tire Center, West End

Shopping Cenfer And Dickinson Avenue

KNITTING MACHINE for sale. $270. Phone 756-8767.

HERE'S ALL YOU have to do. Call the cla$lfled departnvent with your ad for a still-good Item you' make some extra cash! Call 752-61M.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.

MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS:

Cinderella in pink ball gown, Napoleon and Josephine, 24" Pussycat. 756-9070.

MATCHING COUCH and chair, traditional 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 22U0.

NATURAL GAS, Central furnances. Enforced air space heaters. 100,000 BTU and 50,000 BTU. Gas stoves, 21", 24" and 30". Can be seen at 311 Hillcrest Drive.

PORTABLE YARD BUILDINGS.

Great for workshop, storage, etc. Any size, any color. 4 contemporary models fo choose from. Can be seen on 264 By pass before Carolina East Mall entrance or call 756-1502 any time and leave message.

PULRTO RICAN and Hyman white sweet potatoes. $8.00 bushel. Call 825 6821.

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS,

stfampooers. and uprights. Call Dealer, 756-6711.

SCHEFFLERA 6'a' tall in large plastic pot, $25 Rocker with rope Bottom, needs refinishing, $25. 355 2136,

SEARS WEIGHT BENCH with double leg lift and pully system. 756 4058.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Comp

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.

GIVE US A call soon. We'd like to help you place a classified ad In this newspaper today. Call 752-6166.

SHINGLES $13.50 per square. 30 pound felt, $3.95 roll., 8"x16' masonite, $2.70. Number 1 Builders Supply, Mount Olive. 658 6586.

SINGER SEWING MACHINE with cabinet, $200 or near offer. Call 756 7627 after 5:30 p.m.

SOFA- love seat, 2 chairs, 3 end tables, one coffee fable,. 3 l^mps. $1500. Call 756 2128after 5 p.m.

STUFFED ANIMALS Large and medium. Smurfs Price others, then see ours! Call 758 2213

THE "AUDIOTECHNICIANS"

atthe TECH SHOP aren't charging for estimates Call 757 1980

TRAMPOLINES - Wholesale, new/used. Replacement mats Phone 756 4770.

TWO 60 CARTS: 1 with 5 horse

power Briggs and Straton engine fho

and 1 without engine 2 pinball machines 746 6083 after 3 p.m

TWO 30-30 RIFLES with scopes. Savage and Marlin, $150 each Call 752 3856.

ULTRA LIGHT Weed Hopper Less than 15 hours flight time Call

752 0154.

USED WHEEL CHAIR, 24 " Ameri can Touristor Luggage. Call 756 6356.

WALLPAPER $1.50 $3 00 per single roH. Odd lots 2nd discontjjiuod papers Name brands, values' up fo $20 a single roll All sales final Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street.

WASHER AND DRYER avocado Very good condition $225. Phone 752 3619.

WASHING MACHINE, 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 culling: beel, pork, and deer Quick frozen 1 946 2382

WOOD FIRED INSERT, Cost $600, will sell tor $250 Used 1 year Call 752 3856

WOODEN CHICKEN COOP

needed Call 758 7596

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO.^. P. 0. Box UT) Washington, North Carolina Phone. <)ilf) 600 7    State    License    No.    /hS

OUG CURKIN5

Greenville, N, C,    w    r

758 1875    responsible    FOR    ACCIDENTS    946-8l7B

MEDICAL CLERICAL POSITION

Immediate need tor 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 Employar MIF

074

Miscellaneous

YAMAHA RECEIVER and turnta

ble, 2 inflnYty speaker*. $550. Call      "    -9550,    a:

756-0199 or 756-9550, ask tor David.

roo MILLION PEOPLE sew easier with Singer - Shouldn't you? pedals tor Christmas giving! ^ery model Singer Machine discounted tor the Holiday Season. Save everytlme 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

           Fo

engagement ring. Good price. For more Intofmatlon, call 756-5174

19" RCA' COLOR TV, $200. Call 756 7473.

2 USED GOCARTS tof sale. One single and one double seat. Call 752 0874.

23" G E CONSOLE color TV, dark walnut cabinet, works great. Just In time tor Christmas. $100. Call 758 0626.

3 MONTH OLD Sony 19" rerhote control TV, $600. Hoover vacuum cleaner, $120. Toaster Broiler oven $40. Call 752 7227.

50" GE CONSOLE color TV. Quartz remote Control with channel memory $1800. 756 9842.

60 FEET FRIEDRICH produce cases with compressors. Assorted produce dump tables In top condition. May be seen in operation. Overton Supermarket Inc., 752-5025 or 758 7600.

757 "Nineteen Eighty" HOP

THE TECHSHC

8X12 UITLITY BUILDING with shingle roof, blue and white, $650. 752 7258

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

A SACRIFICE moving, must sell Reduced. 12x65 Parkwood on wooded lot in Shady Knoll, skirted, washer/dryer, stove, refrigerator, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, air, carpet, drapes, sofa $4900. 758 7489.

COMMODORE, 1983, 14x76. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call 756 8785.

MOBILE HOME - 14x70 Oakwood. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, total electric with heat pump. Can be seen at Stan-clll Trailer Park. Assume loan, no equity. Excellent condition - untur nfshed Phone 756 6022 days, 752 1299 evenings.

MOBILE HOME AND LOT.

Located Homestead Estafes, 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, tofel electric. Minimum down payment with payments ot less than $140 per month

GROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191

TRADEWIND

CAN YOU BELIEVE iTSALE!

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 ItAt

Tradewind Family Housing Highway 264 Bypass Greenville, NC

CALL USOR COME BUY,

919-756-4833

WHAT A DEAL! 2 bedrooms, $715 equity and assume payments of under $155 month Definitely a deal you can afford. Call Sue at 756 0191 irom 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 storacffe building included. 758 2066.

12X6S Deerbrook, 2 bedroom, I'j bath, furnished, central air, 752 6458

1964 RITZCRAFT, furnished, air, carpel, washer Phone 758 4657

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

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING

THE STRESS BALL

the A1.TEHNATIVE STRESS RELIEF

You can squeeze - throw - play & carry your Stress Ball everywhere!!

For only *5" per bell

(Ux W 4 (TW<qe nCUeM n Chta01 MoneyCXOWone NoCOOi

MMIO USTRESBAWLECHOm 4 SEARING STREET HEUPSTEAO,Ny.t)UO

Order Early For Your Holiday Gifts!

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.

> k

LINCOLN

EAST

CAROLINA

We$t End Circle    Greenville,    N.C.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

756-4267

THIS WHK'S SPECIAL

1983 Ford LTD

per month

Selling price of $6470.00, $850 Down payment, Cash or Trade with approved credit. 48 payments at $158.77, APR 13.5%, Life insurance included Total amount financed $5863.87, Total note due $7620.96, Plua NC Salas Tax and License.

Carolina East Sales

264 Bypass & Hooker Road Greenville N.C.

756-5860 Owned and Operated by Dallas Tripp & Rickie Moore

Auction

Real Estate Saturday, December 10,1:00 P.M.

Location: Highway 33 West From Greenville, N.C. Belvoir Highway". Go 1 Mile. Sale Will Be On LeH. Land Adjoins Prison Camp.

Track 1 - 31 Acres Of Cleared Land. Has Good Oavelopment Potential Or Farming.

Tract 2-Apartment House And Vt Acre Lot. Needs Some Repair.

8700 Pounds Of Tobacco Will Be Sold In 2000 Pound Lots. Last One 2700 Lbs.

Auctioneer Reserves The Right To Put Tracks Together Or Not.

Terms: 10% Day Of Sale. Balence In 30 Days Upon Delivery Of Deed. Owner Reaerved The Right To Accept Or Rejeet Any And All Bids.

Sat* CoMluCtad bjr

( OIJN TBY BOYS AUC' T ION AND B! A

0. Ih.x l.'B.    Nn.l

l!in(i, v'ltj hjn,'    St,ill 1 H.i'tis,

MSfOmBU

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

1974 ARNELL DOUBLWIDE,

24x70. 2 full baths, 4 badrooms.

Take up payments, only 5 years remaining.i^Small equity ot only

$2,000down. 1 238 3251.

1979 OAKWOOD Shaggy Bark, 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.

19S0 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Set up at Branches Estates, underpinned, total electric with central air. Loan assumable. Call 756 8516after 6p.m.

19SI TWO BEDROOM, 14x60, $500 equity and take up payments. Call 757 1677 after 5 p.m.

19S2 BRIGADIER, 14 X 58, like new. central heat and air, fully carpeted, washer-dryer, partially furnished. $11,500 or equity and assume payments. 746 2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5:30.

19S2 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air and heat. Shady Knolls Trailer Park, $15,00. Call 758 4476.

I9S3 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.

076 AAobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance: and Realty, 752 2754.

077 Musical Instruments

BALDWIN PIANO, 5 months old for sale or take up payments. For more information calf 752-2199.

BUNDY FLUTE, excellent condi tion, $160. Call 756 0052.

GEMEINHAROT FLUTE. $100. Call 756 3252.

LOWREY GENIE ORGAN

Excellent condition. Financing available. Call Atlantic Credit, 756 5185.

LUDWIG DRUMS, 5 piece, cym bals, hardware, cases, $450. Call

752 7941.

PIANO & ORGAN CHRISTMAS

Sale! Save 20% to 50% oft on all Major brands. Open Sundays! Piano 8. Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. Phone 355 6002.

VIOLIN tor sale, 44 size. Excellent condition. PhoneJ58-5463.

1981 WURLiTZER console piano, $900. Call 752-0151 days; 756 8233 nights.

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND: SMA! I hlark puppy in Winferville vicinity. Call 756-7486 after 6 p.m.

LOST: Male collie, 4 months old, brown and white with black tail. Answers fo Alex. Last seen in vicinity of Arlington Boulevard and Memorial Drive. Black collar

Reward ottered. Days 756 0345;

Ar

after 5 p.m. 756 3351. Any informa tion please call.

093

OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8. Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

OCEAN CONDO-TEL conversion Developer Investor fo convert 20 unit existing motel plus additJenal 20 to 30 units. Excellent opportunity in a market with few comparables Call owner, J. M. Cornwell, Emerald Isle, 1 354-2800.

ROUTE BUSINESS...no selling in fr

volved. Juil collec lUe proHa from your protected retail locations Re place sold stock. Very easy to maintain. Hioh profit potential. $8760.00 minir    stmenl.    Call

Mr Wilson 317 w,

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid H illoman North Carolina's original himney 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, 8, Garbage truck packers._

100

REAL ESTATE

WATER ACCESS - 10 miles from Aurora 'z acre with 1974 12x70 mobile home storage building and private boat dock included. Prime area for fishing and hunting $16,500. Call 1 322 4428 days, 1 322 4795 evenings.

102 Commercial Property

CHARLES STREET Vacant cor ner commercial lot for lease Across from Domino's Pizza Wil build to suit! Excellent highway exposure. Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

102 Commercial Property

FOR LEASE. Corhmarclal Storage space available immediately. New brick building, crinkled, nMt^, concrete floor, 2 loading docks.

security alarm system, _ 14^000 square feet

752 4915.

larm

$1200 per month. Call

FOR SALE: 5,000 iquare foot commercial building In the downtown area. Currently for $1400 per month. Call CEN

too per

TURY 21 Tipton A Associates 756 6810, night* tfod Tugwell 753-4302

fv5i^R. Ctwrry oak*. Nearly 3,000 square feat In this spacious 4 level spH.1- Immaculate! * {drooms, W baths, family room with Dare IV fireplace, living r(m with flr^laca, eaf-ln kitchen,, dln-mg riwm; intercom, goubta garaae. Slos, plus 30x19    Tu*r

Sac. room. All ot this on tjMvaiy wooclad 44 acre privacy lot. Low SlOO's. Shown by appointment, 756-8936. No realtors please!_

sVfcsTTTinfc

SALE Highway 264 By-Pass,

.A .    ^ t _ I

Commercial Property, Highway frontage on J44 and Evan* Strw. Richard D. LyMIe, Broker, 757-3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834.

SALE 10 acre* and 20 acres - Both zoned R-6. Richard D. Lyttle, Broker, 757-3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834.

SALE OR LEASE 17,000 sqoar Drive

toot building on Memorial Drive acreage available, will divide for tenants. Richard D. Lyttia, Broker, 757-3107, PO Box 652, Greenville, NC 27834

SALE OR LEASE Commercial lots, will build to suit tenant*. RIvergate Shopping Centw. Rleh^ ard D. Lyttle, Broker, 757-3107, PO Box 652. Greenville, NC 27834.

375 SQUARE FEET of retail store

front on the mall. Available immediately. Rents for $234 per month. Call Clark Branch Management. 756 6336

104 Condominiums For Sale

FANTASTIC CONDOMINIUM for

sale! 3 bedrooms, 2'/li baths Windy Ridge. Phone 756-5630.    _

106

Farms For Sale

. AREA. Approximately ^ th approximately one halt About 2900 pound tobacco

BETHEL

acres with -......,

cleared. About 2900 pound --------

allotment Good road frontage $87,500. D. G. Nichols Agency, 752 4012.

207 ACRE FARM near Chocowinity. For more information call Rod

rwi Miuic iiiiwr*    ----

Tugwell, CENTURY 21 T^|>^ton

Associates. 756 6810; nights 753 4302

250 ACRE FARM - 110 acres cleared. Falkland Highway, 43

West 27,559 tobacco poundag iitable fi

Excellent farm or suitable tor development. $375,000. Phone 752 7244 or 758 3807

36 ACRES - Cleared 800' paved frontage Located between Greenvifie and Washington. Good drainage. $59,500. Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 758 7741

107 Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT tobacco poundage and farm land in Pitt County. 756 4634.

T09

Houses Fur Sale

A SET OF TWINS has convinced us that we need 4 bedrooms so we are selling our 1,600 square toot 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 rooin with woodsfove and a garage. Westhaven I. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322.

AYDEN

MUST SELL- Spacious home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace (includes Fisher wood stove), living room, large eat-in kitchen, utility room, 2 car garage with storage room, large wooded lot. Ask for more details. 2000 sq. ft. living area. Low $70'S.

OLDER HOME, 4 bedrooms, kitch en, Jiving room, bath on large lot $18,000.

LOTS, WESTWOOD SubdK'ision, water taps and septic tank permits. Large wooded lots, 2 miles weat of Ayden Owner will finance

109

HousRS For Salt

BY OWNER, ORkENVILL^a^

tion, 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. d<wble garage, huge den,

Immediate occupancy. $66,900. Call,

746-2778. No Brokers please._

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, V/i batns,

carport. Corner lot. Excellent loco tion. 355-2461 from 9 5:30; after 6,

756-0652 or 355-2414.     ^

N'c. FMHA TO

BY OWNKK. niCB home. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Located on Highway 13, 8 miles from Greenville. Nice neighborhood. Phone 1-745-3891.

Ayden Loan & Insurance

Company, Inc.

746-3761    746-6474

BAYTREE. New listing with "lA

possible assumable FHA loan Great room, dining room, three bedrooms, 2 baths, just like new. $78,900. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756 1322

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with tirepiace Heat pump. Located on over 1 acre (also available tor purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank tinanc ing Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 5716.

BELVEDERE. New construction. 1500 square foot brick ranch that features large greatroom with fireplace. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, large wooded lot, patio. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810; nights Rod Tugwell 753-4302.

BELVEDERE - Owner anxious will consider lease with option and credit part ot rent towards purchase for qualified buyer. Nice 3 bedroom ranch with rec room.Price reduced to $53,500. Call Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025.

BY OWNER 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, tirepiace, fenced backyard and patio 11 >2% assumable mortgage. Asking price ot $72,000. Assumable amount $58,700. 107 Azalea Drive. 756 8281 or 752 4844

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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 company.

THE RICH COMPANY

Nights, 919-946-6829

919-946-8021

CHRISTMAS TREES

Fresh Cut, Well Limbed-Pitt County Grown On Greentree Farm by the Winchesters All Sizes From 4 ft. To 8 ft.

Special Trees For Apartments and Mobile Homes

Dickinson Ave. Extention    1    Mile    West    Of    Moose    Lodge

PRODUCT ENGINEER/ DESIGNER

New position with a well established Eastern North Carolina Industry. Wara looking for a Product Englnaer/Daslgnar for our Energy Division.

This individual must have at least 3 yaars manufacturing ax-parlfnct as wall at dasign axparianca In medium staal fabrication Industrias. A B8ME or oqulvalont dogroo doairod, combustion ox-porioneo a doflnlta plus.

tond resume and salary raquiramants to:

PRODUCT ENGINEER

P.0.I0X1M7 QronvlHo.N.C. 27138

BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, garage, living room with fireplace, dining room, sundeck, and fenced In backyard. 222 Commerce Street Low $50'*. Phone 756 7776._

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY

756- or 756-5868

Broker On Call: Tony Mallard 758 0303

EYE APPEAL - HEART APPEAL PURSE APPEAL! This centrally located brick ranch in Eastern Subdivision otters a shaded oversized lotr 3 tsedrooms, forma! llvlna room, family room with fireplace, and much more. AND it has been reduced to $57,900. 4584.

YOU'LL BE IMPRESSED with the like new appearance of this 2 year old traditional home. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, hardwood floors in dining room and foyer, spacious living areas. And be sure fo ask about the energy saving Irhprovements. $67,950    .4614.

WE ARE PROUD to otter one ot the most charming homes on the market today! Many quality features enhance this gracious tour bedroom home with over 4,000 square feet ot warmth and charm Home is surrounded by over 2 acres of beautiful wooded property, and is conveniently located in a pre stiglous area of Greenville. Shown by appointment only. 4594.

CONTEMPORARY DESIGN You

could hide in warmed comfort in this 3 bedrooom, 2 bath home, built on a wooded hill highlighting privacy. Features fireplace and built-lns. and Is listed at just $69,900    .4    6    41

QUALITY HOME built by the woner with lots of extra attention. You will have all the formal areas plus 4 bedrooms, and 2 baths, and a

rec room with fireplace and built in grill. Priced at $79,750. 4616^_

COGHILL North Carolina Housing money is wailing to be used on this 3 bedroom, l'j bath brick ranch, large-? living room/tireplace* and efficient kitchen. Central air, fenced in back yard, just to name a tew assets. Perfect starter home at $44,900. Call Sue Dunn. Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 355 2588

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

LOVELY WCXDDED LOT in Brook Valley. This lot is loaded with shrubs, dogwood and azaleas Large ranch features big formal living and dining areas, great

kitchen and eating area, den with tirepiace, three very large

bedrooms, two full baths. Dovbl narage and storage. $96,508. 122 King George Road

IMMACULATE IN EVERY D^ TAIL. Unbelievable two story .in popular Lynndale subdivision Nice

wooded lot with tall tines highlight   2100

this lovely two story with over square feet of heated area plus a

double garage. Formal living and

ifcl

dining rooms, gorgeous kifchan, family room, tour b^rooms, marty, many extras. Priced at $139,060 Located at 109 Jamestown Road. *

CAN'T MENTION WHAT the owtfer will lake bul it's better than the

asking price of $56,000. What a deal with a I0'j% fixed rate VA loan assumption Balance approximate ly $45,000, payments approximately $490 PITl. Nice plan with great

room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two. full

baths, deck and storage. Located'at

us an otter!

PRICE REDUCTION in Horseshoe Acres. Owner has cut the price $2.000 on this home In excellent condition at 119 Blacksmith Lane Close to the hospital and medical complex this fine home features a large great room and dining arfea with fireplace, very well designed kitchen, three bedrooms, two tpl baths. Large lot with storage buijd ing. Possible Federal Land Bapk loan assumption. Reduced Jo $60,000.

NEW LISTING In the Griffon area. Located just outside Griffon in the country. Well built home'features

living and dining area, family room ...... ,    fhr

with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, garage, big 1.9 acre H6t Priced at $72,000.

DO YOU WANT to live in Lynndale

but need to sell your present home first? Then call about this home today because it may be possibleto trade your present home. Fornfal rooms, den, playroom, thrpe bedrooms, and three batt. $120,000. Jeannette Cox Agency. Inc., 756 1322

ESTATE REALTYCa

752-5058

TWO BEDROOM home with large living room, tirepiace, nice kitchen and dining area. Hurry and we may be able to get a low interest loan only $41,900.

COLLEGE COURT price re ducedl! Three bedrooms, liv^g room with tirepiace, huge kitchpn, family room, detached two-gpr gar^. The area's best buy tor oply

WESTWOOD - spacious thrae bedroom home, fireplace In living room with heat exchanger, kitchen with breakfast room area, p^io

with built-in grill. Call toY otRer details. A good buy for $59,900.

COUNTRY HOME 15 mlnuies west. Brick ranch with thcee bedrooms, spacious kitchen. Craft Insert to eliminate fuel bills. Fen*ed backyard with garage and swimming pool. Exclusive listing - only

COUNTRY HOME - 10 mlniRe* south. Vey attractive home w|th three bedrooms, formal llvlfig md dining, family room with tireplice insert. Large shop on 1.57 wooged acres. Possible Faaderal Land Bank financing. Call now - $74,900

Billy Wilson 7M-4476

Jarvis or Dorlls Mills

752-3647    ;

FHA LOAN assumption possible. 3.

badrooms, l'/i baths, carport. Buhd-' Ing In backyard with bath CENTURY 21 B, Forbes Agetlcy 756 2121 or 756 7426.

FmHA LOAN assumption possH horn#

fee

on this 3 badroom, i '/j bath   

country. Larga lot. CENTURY 29 B Forbes Agency 756-2121 or 756 7426,

CLASSIFIED display:

HILP

WANTIMII;

RNt A LPN't FULLTM. 8aliry eomiMnturiblt xpcrtonea. Cill 94-9Srb for furthor Informttlon. ri oquol opportunliy

mployor.





The Daily Hetlector, Greenville, n o.

hfiday, December 9.1983 26

1 Houses For Sale

CAN't SEEM to SAVE enough

money for a down payment on'a new home! You don'f have to have

a'down payment with Miles Homes. Quild it yourseif with pre-cut, qu< ii ty, energy-efficient materiais. 9. % ' APfl financinq. 848-3220, collect.

Home for the Holidays?

-VILLAGE EAST Townhouses, 1000 square feet, 2 bedrooms, liv iog/dining combination. Kitchen wJth appliances. Convenient location on Cedar Court. $41,900.

CYPRESS CREEK. New con

dominiums, 2 or 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, washer dryer hook up. New units available.

CLUB PINES, lovely brick home, '1736 square feet, greatroom with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, dining room, deck, garage. $84,500.

GRAYLEIGH. Williamsburg style, 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, living room, dining room, kitchen with nook. Greenhouse window in kitchen. $110,500.

W. G. Blount & Assoc.

756-3000

W.Q. Blount    756    7911

Bob Barker    975    3179

Betty Beacham    756    3880

Bruce Brown    752    4453

Homes of Quality

from

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY

758-0655

JUST REDUCED! Charming brick home is ready tor immediate oc cupancy. Only minutes from hospital and Doctors Park. Features include living room, large country kitchen with dining area, laundry room, 3 bedrooms, 1>'j baths, carport with storage and deep lot ithha......-

with hard woods. Now only $44,500.

COZY BRICK RANCH is conve niently located on corner lot near shopping and recreational areas. Floor plan made for efficiency! Offers 3 bedrooms, 1'j baths, living room with provision for woodstove, kitchen with dining area and sliding doors to patio, fenced rear yard and carport with storage $47,000

UNIQUE CONTEMPORARY Twin Oaks ...beautifully landscaped cor ner lot sets off this one of a kind home! Starting with the great room with fireplace and loft, kitchen with dining area, solarium, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 decks, patio and privacy fencing. $55,600

109

Houses For Sale

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCYI 3

bedroom, i'/4 bath ranch. Living room, dining room, utility and carport. CENfURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7426.

JINGLE BELLS all the way to this n^ew ^listing in Weatherington Heights. Three bedrooms, 1'^j baths, living room, eat in kitchen.

carport and fenced yard for only

$42,900. Hignite, Realtors. 757 1969 anytime.

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 75-66 or 756-5868

BrokerOnCall: Tony Mallard 758 0303

WHISPERING PINES CONTEMPORARY for the small family 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, plus a greatroom, dining room, and kitchen with appliances. Wood stove in fireplace to keep you warm this winter. Come on out and take a look! $53,900. #554.

DRIVE A LITTLE save alot! More home for the money is the only way to describe this immaculate older home. Traditional in style, it features 2440 square feet with extras such as heat pump, screened in porch, and much more. Conve nient to the hospital, it is priced at just $59,900. #608.

COUNTRY COMFORTS bound'in

this offering just minutes from town in a quiet subdivision. Nesfeld on a

corner lot it features eat in kitchen with bay window, formal areas, and a cozy den. Owner says SELL, and has reduced the price to $63,000. Why not take a look, it could be just what you have been waiting for. #541.

DON'T SQEEZE THE KIDS, let

each of your children have his own bedroom in this spacious 4 bedroom Cape Cod with lots of yard and many features, including a nice sized screened porch. Priced in the 70's call lor more information and your personal showing. #600.

QUIET PLACE for your family on CuLde-Sac with 13x19 screened porch to relax and watch natures activities on your wooded property. Features 3 bedrooms, and 2 oaths, and if Dad likes to work with his ahnds there is a workshop too. All this for $66,900. #631.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sale

MRS. CLAUS would love the kithen in this new wood siding ranch with over 1700 square feet. This home would sell for $65 $70,000 in Greenville! But priced at _pnly

$54,900 in the Pines in Ayden. Open

-    -    '    ,    757

Sunday 2 4. Hignite, Realtors, 1969 anytime.

PUT YOUR BOW on this farmers

home assumption. Pay small equity and assume the payments. Only $41,500. Call Hignite, Realtors.

757 1969 anytime.

REDUCED. University area. Three bedrooms, formal areas, side and back glassed in porches. $55,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756-1322.

REDUCEDI Hurry and see this 3 bedroom, 2 bath newly constructed home. Possible 10.35% APR financing. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7426.

REINDEER COULD JUMP all

over the great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace. Fixed rate financing is available on this 3 bedroom contemporary in the hard to find $50's. Hignite, Realtors, 757 1969 anytime.

RUDOLPH WOULD love this 4 5 bedroom home in Lake Ellsworth. Located on a corner lot and only $81,900. Hignite. Realtors. 757 1969 anytime.

SANTA WOULD BAG this 8V4% assumption! Located past the T.V. station on Evans Extension. ^Pay equity and assume $51,000 mortgage. Hignite, Realtors. 757-1969 anytime.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PRIME

LOCATION

200 ARLINGTON BLVD.

1236 SO. FT. FOR LEASE

BUSINESS-PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE

756-6295

109

Houses For Sale

SOUTHERN CHARM and comfort surrounds you In this stately Williamsburg home. This new custom built home features all formal areas with hardwood floors, family room with fireplace, approximately 2700 square feet. Quality workmanship throughout. Many extras. The wooded setting In Greenville's newest and finest area /ides iust the right atmosphere this elegant home. Call June

provii for tl

Wyrick, Aldridge & SoutWland, 756-3500, nights 75-----

756 5716.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109 Houses For Sale

109 Houses For Sale

109 Houses For Sale

OLD BRICK FIREPLACE in the

living room, three bedrooms, V/t baths, breakfast bar, deck, garage and priced for 10.35% financing. Only S45,430. Call Hignite, Realtors quick on this one, 757-T969 anytime.

PAYMENTS are based on your income 1 Almost new three and two bedroom ranches! Pay as little as^ S350 down. Call Hignite Realtors anytime 757 1969.

PRICE REDUCED - owner is ready to sell and will consider financing at below market rafe. Immaculafe 3 bedroom ranch with warm earth tone decor. $51,500 Call Jeff Aldridge at Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500. Nights 355 6700.

DONT CONTINUE TO pay rent. You can now afford to buy this 3 bedroom, ]'/2 bath brick ranch with living room and efficient kitchen. Huge 4 car detached gr^e makes an excellent work shop. This home qualifies for N C Housing loan. Call me now to see if you do. Call Sue Dunn, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 355 2588

ONLY A FEW miles from Greenville you will find this home overlooking the river on'3 acres of land. Great room, formal dining room, three bedrooms, 2 baths, large deck, plus garage. $150,000. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc., 756-1322.

NEW LISTING. Windy Ridge. 3 bedroom, 2Vj bafh fownhou^e Sujjer nice. Lots of extras Living room and dining room, and over 1480 square feet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756 6810, nights Rod Tugwel 1753 4302.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

POPULAR FAMILY Neighborhood this fine home is conveniently located to all schools, shopping areas and parks Corner lot enhances the styling of this brick rancher. Inside you'll find living room, kitchen with dining area, fireplace with woodburning insert, laundry area, 3 bedroopms, 2 baths > outside find garage and patio with privacy fencing. $61,900.

A HOME THAT SAYS Welcome the

minute you walk in the door of this home full of Colonial charm

Country kitchen with eating area,

panfry and laundry area, den with lit

ling

double carport with storage, fenced

fireplace and built ins, living and dining rooms, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.

back yard with storage shed. $69,500.

Elaine Troiano, Realtor Jane Butts, Broker

756 6346 756 2851

Shirley Morrison.Bioker    758 5463

hMavisButts. Realtor.GRl.CRS    752    7873

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE

2500 SQ. FT.

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

Sales

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.

For an appointment. Call:

Carolina

Model Homes

758-3171

NOW LEASING

University Medical Park Townhomes Brand New Luxury Apartments

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

Washer-Dryer Hook-ups

Kitchen Appliances

Custom Built Cabinets

Patios with Private fence Thermopane Windows E-300 Energy Efficient

9 Beautiful Individuai Williamsburg Exteriors

2 Large Bedrooms

VA Baths

Heat Pumps

Spacious Floor Plan

Located Within Walking Distance of Pitt Memorial Hospital

Call 752-6415

Monday-Friday 9-5

109

Houses For Sale

ELMHURST - Roomy Dutch Col onial offers 4 bedrooms, formol areas, lovely-famity room, garaga with sfudio/workshop area. Located on a quiet street and it's only $61,900. Call Ball & Lane, 752-0025 or Richard Lane 752 8819.

ENERGY EFFICIENT contam

porary home in the country. Large lot with detached storage building. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large great room CENTURY 21 B. Forbe* Agency 756 2121 or 756-7426.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

Greenbtiar

illage

746-2020

Off Highway 11 Across from Hardee'i Ayden, North Carolina

1-story, Lcdiir-sidcd ('olonicils

Fully cariH'ti'd with ranjjc / rcirijfrrator runiishrd

Washer I dryer hook-ups

Ener^y-ellieieiil individuallv onlrdlled la at

Spacious, well-uiamt,lined lirouiids ,i!id outdoor sior.ii.>e

1 - Bedroom trom S I 80

2 - Bedroom from SI95

3 - Bedroom from S215

Call for information and appointment:

Teresa Stallings. Manager

1:30-5 p.m. Daily Except Wednesdays.

AYDE\'S SEWEST M'AN IME\I ( OMMI XITY

Ilie

Spotter

SAFE^ Safe Buy BuOUsedCars

Lincoln Town Car

(4) 1983 Previously Owned Lincoln Town Cars

9 All fully equipped 9 All carry remaining Low Mileage    factory    warranty

1981 Mark VI

White with green leather interior, low mileage, local one owner.

1980 Mark VI

Fawn, 2 door. Fully equipped, leather interior, low mileage, local one owner.

1980 Lincoln Town Car

4 door, fully equipped. Excellent Buy!

1979 Lincoln Town Car

Fully equipped. Excellent Condition!

EAST

CAROLINA

GMC

TRUCKS

UNCOLNMERCURYGMC WtatEndClrcU    GrMwrtUt,    N.C.

i

7564267

THEPROFFSSIONAL WOODCUTTERBUYS STIHL MORE THAN ANYOTHER CHAIN SAW INTHEWORLO.

WHICH MEANSALL THREEOrUSAREDOINC THINGS RIGHT.

Clark & Co.

Of GrMnvill*, Inc.

MiiiufiiDt Afaiu I imii

756-2557

Sports Gifts

MEN'S INSULATED COVERALLS HIP BOOTS

Liytmy Nm Fm CM.Mms

WARRENS DOG & HUNTING SUPPLIES

J02I-E East 10m

QiMnvUla.N.C. '54"I

Gifts for the Home

SONY-GE-SHARP TELEVISIONS

Clote Out Sala 90 Days Sama As Cash $1000 Instant Cradit

Goodyear Tire Center

WastEnd    721 Dickinson Aa.

7IMJ71    7524417

t

,Hi Tech

! !!='' II

Elcctvonici

" j imtlkpHf of Sound equlfiumi g tndAuioniobllolnoltfMem"

I 3112 South Mafflorlal Orlvt

4    756-9533    "

DAVID WILLIAMS DORHAM CLARK CoOwnsf    CoOwntr

Gifts

4    for

X Everyone

fOR NOUDllY EIFIING

Try all thrM lrih Whlik.y Cak., Chocolata Walnut Brandy Cake, Ooldan Sharry Spica Cakt A dolightful family gilt for tha paraon who has aaarything! BEST SELECTION OF IMPORTED CRACKERS AND CHEESE IN GREENVILLE

For Special Christmas

GIFTS

HANDCRAFTED WOOD ITEMS COUNTRY CRAFTS & ANTIQUES Toys, Dolls & Stuffed Animals SPECIAL Vast assortmant ol power tools, large, small. Christmas Decorations, Qlasswara-iormal t informal. Poor Mans Flea Market

Highway 264 Eaat- 8 milea from Greenvlile

Open Wed.-Sun. 8 lo 6 752-1400

Suggestions^^^

Samsonite Attache Cases Shealler Pen & Pencil Sals Photo Albums Desk Assassories SCM Portabla Typewriters Senlry Safas Globes

Appoinlment Books

And Many Other Professional

a

r0

Office Equipmeni Co.. Inc. S69S Evans Siraei

752-2175

427 Aihngton Bld. (Opposite Pill Plszs)

756-4224

t Sports

Gifts

IZOD CLOTHING

Entirs Stock

20% to 50% Off

MontiiiFtcoiiiimMi

Open 7 Osys A Waak

Select A Craft ToMake..ToGive

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 DMC Embroidery Floss-25<

Hungate*s

AKTi (RAITS . HOBDIIS

Pitt Plaza Greenville, N.C. Phone 756-0121

Gifts for the Home

WATERBEDS BEDDING SAVE UP TO 50%

FREE SHEETS OR FRAME with each $300 Purchase

ONE

STOP

SLEEP

SHOP

FACTORY MAimf AWATIRIIN^

355-2626 730QrssmllleBoulsvsrd (Next To Pitt Pisa

wwwieaiBawwi*

Gifts For Kids

Locally Hand Made Cabbage Patch Like DOLLS

Hand Made

RAGGEDY ANN & ANDY DOLLS

Sports

Gifts

Lois ol unique hand made gifts lo choose Irom

PINEWOOD

200 E. Greenville Blvd.    756-7978

Gifts

for

Mom

Ladies 14 Karat Gold

DIAMOND STUD EARRINGS

$70

up

Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers

Independent Jewelers Downtown Mall

A/ MakcItA^.

// Special Christmas

Give Her A SINGER

GREENVILLE SEWING All X. CENTER Machines

Specially Priced For Christmas

Going Out of Ski Business    B

SALE    3

Large Inventory to Liquidate.

IZOD GOLF &    $

TENNIS SOCKS 1/2 PRICE

ALL TENNIS BALLSI/2 PRICE ALL GOLF BALLS 40% OFF    J

Normal Retail    K

No returns, exchanges or refunds. ^

GORDON FULP, PRO K

756-0504    

Located At Greenville Country Club Open 7 Days A Week    2

A Very Special I CHRISTMAS f GIFT

For The Entire Family!

RIDE IT! ENJOY IT! THE

SCHWINN

DELUXE

EXERQSER! *

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 an easily adjustable seat-so that the whole family can enjoy its benefits-along with electfo-lorged Schwinn frame and ball-beanng pedals with soft foot straps Assembled, ready to ride

SUTTON

SERVICE CENTER \

1105 Dickinson Avenue I

752-6121    (

I

MKMfiCMMfMfieaiSaiMIMIMtliatWtWCiefSfMVMWCIM

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    i-i-as    a

THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

911 Dickinson Avenue^ Park View Commons 8th & Memorial Drive ^ w





26 I n3 uatly Hwtiectof, Oreenvilie. N.u

>-tiay, Ueceirioei a,

109

Houses For Sale

COLONIAL HEIGHTS 3 bedroom ranth, carpet, hardwood floors, fireplace, pool, deck, totally piivrtfe Reduced by owner, *59,400 Call m 1355

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109 Houses For Sale

DON'T MISS this excellent buy 4 bedroom, 1'5 bath ranch, excellent condition Possible 0.35% ArR tinancing CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 754 2121 or 756 7426

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO EXPERIINCE NECESSARY

We will teach you..

Do you have a positive mental attitude Do you desire to be successful

Are you able to follow directions explicitly

Do you desire to earn S2000 to S2500 per month If to....

Yo Ow It To TowrMlf To Oivo H A Try.

Apply in person only Absolutely no phone calls

See Leland Tucker

IAS^ING^:

'FORD    :W

768-0114 f.ifeenyiiHr N L ?7b64

109 Houses For Sale

for privacy at an attordable

price! Large 2 story brick home, approximafely miles trom hc^i-tal 8 acre 2,8S4 square feet 4 bedrooms, 2'i baths, living room, sunken great room, tamily room, carport, patio 1,120 square foot workshop Assumable 8% first mortgage Call 756 7111

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Olds Toronado

D.irh Bliif, Lf'.iilf'l. Moot) root. Look', Now

1983 Chevrolet Camaro

Wiiitf* witTi tjrown f.loth inttMior 4 spe(,*(]. tiir (.(jncitliijri. AM FM

Mf'fiM, r tfjp'i 11 UO fiiilfi*,

1983 Subaru GL Wagon

fiurijtiiMi/ with li(;tit tirowii tiolh iiitcrK^f In,filed liko now. iHOO null-,        '    

1983 Buick Regal

,/ot wt.ili'Witti hijfijandy vt.'lour intfffiof Loifdod

1983 Olds Cutlass Cruiser Wagon

Hcir;c With woodcjfdin. loadod with equipment. 11,000

1983 Old? Cutlass Calais

; !(,(,( In.idcd wdti etiuipment Whitf.-with brown landau top

1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

i ..lih':    wilti woi)d()tam qray.lotti interior ,,i.20(1 miles

1982 Datsun 280ZX

: ,.-r ( li,( 20 !)00 miles I ike Nf.-w*

1982 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

ib'i > Aiit't.uiqundy w'luur iiiltTiuf J si.vite luqqaije t.if K

1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera    i

], , r ISrf' .Iirfn witti li'iti! (rcen.clolti inheidi

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon

iS'Hjc -wdh -tai-v-y-in-vLaivlefuJ ...AoU-liuiIu-- *i oufdiuil. AM/FM

,!r>cl

1981 Ford Thunderbird

o..    m!rri(,l    nlU'    IWHfl    Inadt'd

1981 Pontiac LeMans Wagon

,\,'ndi;Min sidiiuj Beuic viiiyi inh'ina

1981 OIds 98 Regency

wittnii'Tii vfluiu inlriiiji l.indau tool lo.idi'd

1981 Chevrolet Monte Cario

1 nn    ,,,)y|    uHiMIOf    tlU.M'l    SIMIs    .Uld

1981 Toyota Corona

1. v'..e. ..lll^l i(|hl tiiown elolh inleriot 21 OO miles. I I..V -M' New

1980 OIds Cutlass LS

n.'    lujfii    tiroAiv    vinyl    inteiior    .lutomatii"    an

AM f M i.ld'n nllrnWllel    "    *

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

Al,' "Mil ,in bniwn witf) buckskin veloui iiilenor

109

Houses For Safe

SPECIAL FINANCING AsLowAs915%

AVAILABLE FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION HOMES, CONDOS, TOWNHOUSES Call Joe Bowen

East Carolina Builders, Inc. 752-7194 Anytime_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sale

MAKE AN OFFER on this 3 bedroom, ivn both homo in Hardee Acra*. Screened and covered patio,

fireplace, and lanced yard. CENTURY 21 B. Forfoe* Agency 756 2121 or 756 742*.

NEW 1983 CHEVROLET CARS & TRUCKS STILL IN STOCK

PRICED LOW FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Caprice Classic Sedan

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier ......

1980 Chevrolet Corvette......

1979 Buick Le Sabre.........

.1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo... 1977 Toyota Celica LIftback....

.. .27,000 miles

Low miles

  .*3295.00

... Low mileage  *3295.00

BRUCE JONES CHEVROLET, INC.

Formerly Rex Smith Chevrolet

VW /JW/*4Me.

NEW LISTING. Lakewood Pine*. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on large wooded lot that feature* all formal area*. Den with fireplace, oarage and over 1800 *qyere feet. Call^ENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates, 756-6810; night* Rod Tugwell 753 4302.    _

109 HoustsFf Sate

LEASE This Panch

buy! Pretfy    on    quit    ,

*ec Call for detail*. Hignite. Real

or*. 7S719*anyttm___

STAY TOASTY WARM this winter with the wood stove *n    ]

bedroom home on    X    ^

acre lot In the country. CENTURY 21 B. Forbe* Agency 7562121 or 756 7426

Hiway 11 Bypass

Ayden, N.C. 748-3141

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

COLLEGE COURT AREA. Located on a cornar wooded lot at 1204 East Wright Road Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area features a unique floor plan with lots of space^ Recently remodeled with lots of nice features. Must see to appreciate *69,500

CONVENIENT TO EVERYTHING. Large corner lot at 1113 Raq^le Road in convenient College Court. 1760 square feet of heated area with formal living and dining area, kitchen, den with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, screened In back porch, carport *64,500

COUNTRY LIVING. Winterville area. Big 4 acre lot in a desirable area. Convenient lo Mall and Greenville yef in the country. 2200 square feet of area with a different type floor plan. Large great room and dinig area, three bedrooms, loads of storage area, big rec or play room. *87,500.

BELVEDERE AT A great price Hard to find home in this desirable neighborhood st thid type price Located at 104 Belvedere Drive this excellent home in great condition offers 1445 square feet of heated area with large den eating kitchen area with cozy fireplace, formal living room, three bedrooms, two full baths, carport, fenced in yard Call tor an appointment.    ^

TAKE OVER 9% ANNUAL piT

centage rate loan. Attractive 3 bedroom, 1'.^ bath carport. Located on woodsy lot near university Living room/dimng room, eat in kitchen, custom storm windovrs and doors, new turnace, (no air condit(oning). Hardwood floors, approximately 1350 square tw1 hiatid area. Take over approx imately *33,500 for 25 years re maining with principal and int^est payment of *280.82 month jpis ^n would cost you month at todays rate of 13%) Pay equity of *16,400 or owner may consider ^e financing for part equity. Very low closing cost and no olscwf.t

points to buyer. Lease/purchase also possible. Immediate (session. Priced at 49,9(XT Call uwner Agent, Louise Hodge, 804 794 1532 evenings No agents

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Rent To Own

CURTIS

756-8990

No Credit Check

109 HoMses For Sate

r bedroom brick    rw

Sale No Down payment if qwlify for FHAloan Cail746 *555anytime.

Ill investment Property

EXCELLENT INVESTMk*T

2 duplexes over 1 acre Knd^urrent rent *1,W Financing available, brokers. AHer 6 p m 75* 5217 or 355 2544

GREAT INVESTMENT^2

house,

heat pump Current rent *280 month. Financing availably No brokers. After 6 p.m. 754 5217 or 355 2544

VA 9Vj% APR LOAN assumption possible. 3 bedroom, m bath h^e not far from city. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 75* 2121 or 75* 742*

WAKE UP to a warm morning with vour wood stove in this 3 bedroom, I'-y bath brick ranch in the country CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 756-2191 or 756-7426

TNVESTMENT PROPfcKiT

Front/back brick duplex Double garage 2 washer dryer hookups, 2 stoves and 2 refrigerators, also convey. Possible partial owner ti nancing 417 419 East 3rd Strwf Call Winston '^obe, 756^507. Aldridge & Southerland 75* 3500 Qwen TUXN PENT! New Duplex

120

RENTALS

lots for rent Also 2 ano J bedroom mobile homes, purity deposits required, no pets. Call

758 4413 between 8 and 5

BRICK TOWNHOUS^i end unit, storage, near Nichols 756 9006 aHer 4 pm.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhwses with 1-7 baths Also 1 bedr^ apartments Carpet, dishwash^s, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, 'fundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool - 752 1557

need STRAGET We have any

size to meet your

Arlington Self StorfO^^ ^ day Friday 9 5. Call 75*-9933

WAREHOUSE STORAGE and Mlw

space Excellent location. Up to 55,000 square feet. Adjacent office available Price negotiable. 752 4295/75* 7417

wiM pay points. Possiblity of 10.35% interest before December 6

3998, 1 795 4323 or 1 792 4740__

WANTED

6 to 12 existing apartment units. Fully rented. Call 9 to 5, 75* 8811.

113

Land For Sale

WOULD YOU LIKE to own a small farm See this 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch on approximafely 19 acres Possibility of some owner financ

ing CENTURY 21 B Agency 756 2121 or 75* 742*.

Forbes

YOU CAN NOW have over 1800 square feet of living space, formal living room, great room with fireplace and built ins in this bnck ranch convenient to all shoPP'^9 Best of all it is priced in the $50 s. Call Sue Dunn, Aldridge 8. Southerland, 75* 3500 or 355 2588

YOU WONT believe what you can buy tor less than $20 per square foot. Check out this 2500 souare foot house with rental unit tor extra income. CENTURY 21 B. Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 742*

2 STORY LOG HOME near Ayden 746 6127.

2509 JEFFERSON. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large landscaped lot, workshop 16x36 plus shed and shelter 1677 square feet of living area. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615

3 bedroom, I'J bath home an Targe cajiai. Bulkheau and pier, central heat and air, attic, double insulation, fully carpeted, living room with cathedral ceiling. Call 1 946 9128 anytime.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY .

WE BUY USED CARS JOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6221

1980 Buick Regal

;            ;!'    t'luu    -aTii    I,UK

Idu riKil blue vinyl inlurior buCkut . i! . .ii,-,,ni,i!ii III AM/f- M i.icJiu

1979 Olds 98 Regency

1. ' i i,l.-il I Kjhl blown tu'ige Vinyl roof. Liqhl brown

, I. !'    ,    ilir iiwni'I

1979 Ford Thunderbird

liKulau root, white vinyl interior. T tops

1979 Chevrolet K-5 Blazer

.. lOrO (.liii i.vner white III COlOi

1978 Chevrolet Malibu

;     nil,.- ,Mlli tilue cloth interior, dutoniatio. .Ill oonilitiori.

AN' r M i-l'- Sti OllO iMill.'S

1978 Datsun Truck

. :    Ked    Ailh tilai.k inleiioi. AM;FM laifio sIkIuk] (jiass

i.ii' .-.heels, very nice

1978 Olds Delta 88

.-. I 1,' Hlue with white vinyl interior' luadeil

1978 Chevrolet Malibu

tool- ;i ;hl I'lue with tilue cloth interior Autoniatic. an q.' ,,"1 AM FM radio b.OO miles, one owner

1977 Honda Civic Wagon

B    piaeK    mlenoi Nice car

GM EXECUTIVE CARS SAVINGS UP TO $2000.00

1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham

4 ,0.' .\hite A'!" -qht grav velour m

nterior Loaded 3.121

1983 Olds Omega

4 joc Ma'oon w'th maroc' .e -terior Loaded, 3.785 r-nnes

HOLT OIDS-DATSDN

756-3115

GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS

1

land for SALE: 55 acres near Stokes, State Road 1550. Cutover woodsland with grxxJ growth of ourig pines roari frontaoe, qood development (jotential. Call 825 1581 after 6pm

SO ACRE FARM south of Ayden in the St. John's Community. Road frontage on SR 110 and SR 175:l 51 acres cleared, 7 acres wooded Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house Call tor full details. Moseley Marcus Realty. 746 2166. _

115

Lots For Sale

HUNTINGRIOGE - For country living with city convenience. Large residential Tots, community water, restricted, FHA and VA approved. Only minutes trom hospital com plex on Highway 43. Millie Lilley, Owner Broker. 752-4139

121    Apartments For jent_

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 Novell at 756 1498 or 758 6050, Wil Reid at 756 0446 or 758 6050 or Jane Warren at 75b 7029 or 755 6S5G.

AAOORE& SAUTE R

no South Evans 758-6050

ALMOST NEW TOWNHOUSt 2

bedrooms, I'-z baths^ location Call 756 7314 days, 756 4980 nights.

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 pay men!, low interest home loans. Are 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 p.m.     ^_

AN ENERGY EFFICIENI 2

bedroom,. 1'T bath fownhouse with fireplace Washer/dryer hook ups. 752 8949.

ATTRACTIVE AND ENERGY et

ficient 1 bedroom apartment. Hooker Road, *225 per month, *225 deposit. Call Tommy, 756 7815.

117 Resort Property For Sale

BAYVIEW Buy now at off-sleason price: tour bedroom trailer with I'z Baths, including lot. Only $14,900. Estate Realty Co., 752 5058, nights 758 4476 or 752 3647

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded wafer front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 niohts.

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Broek Valley Country Club Shnwn by appointment only. Couples or singles No pets.

Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815

If that vacant apartment is losing you money remedy the situation quickly with a result getting Classitied ad Call 752 6166^_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

\ FOR SALE TO BE MOVED

3 room house with bath. Approximately 700 square feet. Ideal for cabin or retreat house. Located on Pactolus Highway. Just off Greene Street, Greenville.

Price includes building, move and foundation.

TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS .

INNAl MOTOtt COIFOf ATION

1983 Mazda Sport Truck - Spokei Wheels, white lettered tires, 11,000 miles. Beige and Brown Two-Tone.

1983 Regal Limited Demo 3,800 miles, every option including sunroof. Dark blue with Sand Gray roof.

1983 Buick Electra Limited - 2 door, 1300 miles. Brand new in every way. Charcoal with sand gray roof.

1983 Mazda Pickup - Very nice, new tires, low mileage, silver with blue trim.

1983 Chevrolet Customized Van - Raised roof, all the options, silver with dark blue velour interior.

1983 Mazda RX7 Sparkling Black, 5 speed, air, Very Sharp!

1983 Buick Regal - dark brown, loaded with options, Executive Lease Car - New Car!

1983 Mazda Sundowner Pickup - Low mileage, AM-FM stereo, chrome wheels, tool box, sliding rear window, bright red.

1982 Buick Regal Limited 4 door. This car is loaded with equipment! Clean as New! Brown with beige roof.

1982 Buick Regal Limited - Charcoal Firemist, Loaded, with equipment, new tires. Sharp!

1982 Chevrolet Malibu Classic - 4 door, dove gray, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise, power door locks, AM-FM stereo, low mileage, very, very clean.

1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme 4 door, maroon with maroon cloth interior, low mileage, AM-FM stereo, sport wheels, very nice.

1982 Mazda RX7 GLS Package - Black, wire wheel covers, air, cruise, power windows, leather trim.

1982 Cutlass Ciera LS 4 door, dark blue with beige top. Clean Car!

1982 Datsun 280 ZX -- Dark brown and Copper two tone, loaded with all equipment, including T-Tops!

1982 Chevrolet Custom Van - Like New In Every Way! Local van with every option. Beige.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix - Sharp Car! Low miles, New tires, local trade. Silver with maroom roof.

1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans Safari Wagon - Woodgrain paneling, cruise, wire wheels, maroon, 33,000 miles.

1981 Buick Park Avenue 4 door, local trade, only 31,000 miles. Every option, Jadestone.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - Dark blue with matching interior, cruise, rally wheels, stereo, local trade-in. 32,000 miles.

1981 Mazda 626 Luxury - 2 door, air, 5 speed, green metallic, 40,000 miles.

1981 Datsun Pickup -13,000 miles, new in every way. Solid white. 1981 Buick LeSabrc Limited Diesel All the options, white with blue top. Very Nice Local Car!

1981 Buick Electra Park Avenue White with Jadestone roof and interior. Loaded! New Tires! Very Sharp!

1981 Cutlass Supreme - 2 door, dark blue, wire wheel covers, AM/FM stereo, Nice Car! 41,000 miles.

1980 Buick Regal - 2 door, sunroof, bucket seats, loaded with options, 49,000 miles. Local car. Like New! Blue 1979 Cutlass Supreme 2 door. Sky blue with landau roof. Cruise

control, AM/FM stereo, Road Wheels. $4995.00.

1978 Ford Thunderbird - Diamond Jubilee Edition All Available Options, Steel Blue, 62,00 miles. Sharp!

GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.d.

6.500'

J.W. LANDEN 4 SONS, INC.

House Moving Contractors Day 758-8575    Greenville    Night    756-4031

CLASSIFIED mSPLAjr

NOTICE!

We will strip straight chairs

For WOO

Revolutionary new method! Completely safe for fine furniture, metal, wicker, etc. Call tor our low prices of other

items.

753-1009

STRIPiiSEOffilStlltllLE

628 SoulhPit1 St

TRANSPORTATION SFEdALS CARS

1983 Datsun 280-ZX - 5 speed, air condition, charcoal gray.

1983 Buick Regal - 2 door hardtop, sandstone, fully equipped.

1983 Chevrolet Cavalier - 2 door CS coupe, 5 speed,    ^

1983 Maida GLC Sport 2 door, 5 speed, air condition, 7,000 miles, burgundy.

1982 Ford Escort-2 door, hatchback, 4 speed, white.

1982 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - 2 door hardtop, bronze, automatic, air^

1982 Dodge 400 Convertible - 2 door, 7,000 miles, fully equipped, white on white.

1982 AMC Jeep CJ-7 - Renegade. Black and red.

1962 Dodge B-200 Maxivan - Automatic, 318 engine, air condi loning, blue. Special.

1981 Pontiac T-1000 - 2 door coupe, 4 speed, air, brown metallic.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door, 4 speed, air, beige_

1981 Dodge Omni 4 door, 4 speed transmission, white.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette - Automatic, air condition, nice. Burgundy.

1981 Olds 98 Regency-2 door, all options, 28,000 miles, beige.

' 1981 Pontiac Trana AM - T-lop, automatic, air condition, fully equipped, red.

1980 Mercury Cougar XR-7 - 2 door hardtop, burgundy, automatic, air.

1960 Chrysler Cordobe - Automatic, air condition, tilt wheel, yellow, nice.

1980 Ford Thunderbird - Automatic, air condition, all options, white, blue vinyl top.

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic - 2 door coupe, automatic, air condition, M-80 package.

1980 Buick Electra Limited 4 door, fully equipped, charcoal gray.

1980 Ford Pinto - 2 door hatchback, automatic, air, sunroof.

1980 Dodge Omni 2 door, automatic, black.

1980 Plymouth TC-3 - 2 door coupe, 4 speed, red and black.

1979 MGB Convertible - 4 speed transmission, orange.

1979 Buick Regal - 2 door hardtop, fully equipped, blue.

1979 Cadillac Seville-4 door, fully equipped, brown.

1978 Chevrolet Caprice Classic - 4 door sedan, automatic, air condition, blue.

1978 Dodge Diplomat - 4 door, fully equipped, black.

1978 Toyota Celica - 5 speed, brown.

1978 Plymouth Arrow 5 speed, air condition.

1978 Buick Skylark 4 door, automatic, dark green.

1978 Dodge Aspen - 2 door, automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, air condition.

1978 Oldamobile Omega 4 door, automatic transmission, air condition, dark green.

1978 Datsun 510 2 door, 5 speed, air condition, dark green.

1977 AMC Gremlin - Automatic transmission, 6 cylinder, blue.

1977 Mercury Monarch - 2 door, automatic, air condition, silver

1977 Lincoln Continental Mark V - Cartier Designer Series, all factory options, extra clean.

1976 Ford Granada 4 door, automatic, air condition, 39,000 miles.

1976 Oldamobile 98 Regency - 4 door, fully equipped, white.

1976 Ford Granada 2 door, automatic, air condition, white.

1965 Oldamobile 98 Luxury - 4 door, fully equipped, low mileage, white 1961 Studebaker 4 door, 6 cylinder, standard shift, green.

TRUCKS

1983 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup - All factory options, red and white.

1982 AMC Jeep Laredo Pickup - Automatic, air, fully equipped, one owner, black,

1981 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup - fully equipped, black.

1981 Ford Courier Pickup - 5 speed transmission, blue.

19"i Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Automatic, air condition, blue.

19 lodge 4X4 Power Wagon Automatic, air condition, black.

1E, jodge Van 6 cylinder, automatic, green.

SPECIAL PURCHASE 1483 CHRVSUREXECUTIUE CARS

Chr||sWr New Vdrktr fifth Avenues Chr|sler LeSarvns Ptumouth heliantt - H 4 Doors Do4$e Aries iDa^ons flumouth Horizon Turismos

Joe Cullipher

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge

Peugeot

3401 S. Mnmorial Dr.

Greenville, N.C.

756-0186





mm

m Apartmtnti For Rwt

BlANO M'CWlMta^ully (tocoratod

tawnhouM nMr hospital and mall. 2 badrooms, V/t baths, washar/dryar hook ups, afficlant. No pats. $300 par month. 7M-8904 or 752-2(M>.

DUPLEX APARtM^Nt available

at Ffw Laval on i acre wooded lot. 2 badrooms, m baths, kitch an/dlning combination, sundeck, heat pump. (26S a month. No pats. 7S 4624 before 5 p.m. or 7M?I68 aHar.

DUPLEX APARTMENT, 2

Mrooms, }'/i baths. Appliances. Excallant location, shoppi theatre and hospital. Call 756- after 6 p.m.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, fsatwrlns Cable TV, modern appii anees, central heat and air condi tionlng. clean laundry facilities, tfirea swimming pools.

Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100 efficiency APARTMENTS

Dial direct phones

25 channel color tv

AAaid Service

Furnished

All Utilities

Weekly Rates

756 5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

ELM VILLA Apartments, 208 South Elm Street. 1 bedroom furnished; heat, air and water furnished. Call 7523376.

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, $3)0 month. 756 6295 after 6.

ENERGY EFFICIENT. 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, $3)0. 756 6295 after 6 p.m.

apart

dish

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden ments, carpeted. ..... washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

HOSPITAL- AREA, Med School. New fownhouses, 2 bedrooms, )'/i baths. No pets. $300. 756 2)93.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

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

Call 752-3519

LANDMARK. ) bedroom furnished apartment, 3 hlocks from Uniyersi ty. Heat, air and water furnished. No pets 758 378) or 756 0889

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

'Quality construction, fireplaces, .heat 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

tfon.

' . OicOph 9-5 Weekdays .9-5 Saturday    )    5    Sunday

. Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd. 756 5067

. NEAR OSrSTAL medical school. .New duplex townhouses available .for immediate occupancy. $300 per rponth. No pets. 752 3152, ask tor iohnor Bryant.

.NEW E bedroom. Convenient .Ideation. Washer/dryer hookups. -$220 per month. 756 74)7.

NEW TOWNHOUSE, Williamsburg .Manor. Special decor, now tivaila-

* Me Call 355 6522

fiEW 2 6DROM duplex apart *ment, no pets. Call 756-1821 after 3:15.

NOW RENTING :WILLIAMSBURGMANOR

: BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS

[    ,    Features

.2 large bedrooms .I'jbaths

. Thermopane windows

-'E 300 Energy etticient

- Heat Pumps

^acious floor plan

5 Beautiful individual Williamsburg

- interior

' .PStios with privacy fence I Washer/dryer hookups [Kitchen appliances .Custom built cabinets

:    CALL    756-7647

'\OAKMONT SQUARE ;    APARTMENTS

.Two bedroom townhouse apart .ments. 12)2 Redbanks Road. Dish-.washer, refrigerator, range, dis -posal included. We also have Cable -TV. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza -and University. Also some - furnished apartments available.

:    756-4151

-ONE BEDROOM, furnished 'apartments or mobile homes tor 'rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy 'Williams, 756 7815.

-SHENANDOAH, brand new apartments, townhouse and a flat. '$3(X) per month and deposit. No 'pets. Bill Williams Real Estate. *752 26)5.

: STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Ofticehours 10a.m. to5p.m.

" Monday through'Friday

' Cal I us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TUDENT HOUSING. Pirate's 'Landing. Available second semester oft Reade Circle. Private [rooms, cooking facilities. $150 per [month. For information call . Clark-Branch Management, 756-,6336.

; TAR RIVER i    ESTATES

- 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook-ups, cable TV, pool, club

- house, playground. Near ECU.

Our Reputation Says It All [    "A Community Complex.

[    1401 Willow Street

Office Corner Elm 8. Willow

'.    752-4225

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT

77 Ford    S8F por moiilf

79 Dodge V:in i2-l| S119 per month 92 0ldsCulr.i'.'- i30i S2f-per month 78Chev M.pihii -te:    t37 per month

'9FordI-Bird Mi $t 90 per month 4FordF eOOTrui'i i2Ji S20C

Anil iipin.ivf'l t ri' III H.'r.td iipim ,iii opiMi i-iKl ic.i-.f he-.iclu.il -..iiui'-. rii.iy i.uv .mcorduic) to miliMqo '5100

V,F lAKf IHAOt IN',

MID-EASTERN LEASING CO

#14 Pitt Plaza 756-4

V

HI Apartmgntt For Ront

* i^DXOOAil townhouse. Avallabla January 1.7S3-10t0.

*. PPo"* apartmanf, ttova Sr    '"I-    Locatad

129 Dickinson Avanua. $t3S monthly. 756-3362.

TWO BEDROOM APAhtMENt

carpatad, cantral air and haat, appliances, washer- dryer hookup. Bryton Hills. $275.758-3311.

TWO PEOPLE to take ovar lease tor 2 bedroom townhouse at RIverbluff. V/2 baths. $280 month Includes water and cable. 758-2070

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, 1'/5 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. Immediate occupancy.

756-0987

WEST HILLS TOWNHOMES

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

Professional^ managed by

Remco East, Inc Weekdays Nights S. Weekends

758 6061 752 7490

WILSON ACRE APARTMENTS.

1806 East 1st Street. New 2 and 3 bedrooms, washer/dryer hook ups, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis,

pool, sauna, selt-cleaning oven, trost-tree refrigerator. 3 bloc' trpm ECU. Can 752 0277 day night. Equal Housing Opportunity

1 BEDROOM apartment, appliances furnished. Tenth Street, $100 per month. Call after 6 p.m., 524 5042.

I BEDROOM APARTMENT, heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn. $215. 756 0545 or 758 0635.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, IVj baths, fireplace. Near Hospital. $325 monthly. Deposit required. No pets. 355 24)9 or 756 6906 after 6 p.m.

2 BEDROOMS, V/j baths. Ridge Place. Lease and deposit requirM. $300 monthly. Phone 756-7310.

2 BEDROOMS, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups. No pets. 752-0180 before 5 p.m., 756 2766 after 5p.m. ,

2 BEDROOM, ]'/i bath new duplex. Conveniently located to hospital and Carolina East Mall in Shenandcah. Washer/dryer hook ups. Brand new! Available immediately. $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.

2 STORY one bedroom apartment. Brookwood Drive. $250 per month. Call 756 6336

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meade Street Near ECU. Central air, range, refrigerator, freshly painted. $270. Phone 756 7480.

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT

located in WIntervllle, unfurnished. Available now. Call 758-1280 after 6 weekdays; anytime weekends.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RIGGAN SHOE REPAtR

113 W. 4th Street Phone 7SI-02W Downtown Qroonvlllo 2 Dooft from Cox Floriel

Parking in Front A Raar

758-0204

^ Opwn. mun.-fri. 8 a.m.

'til 6 p.m.

Saturday 9 a.m. til 3 p.m.

121 Apirtments For Rent

I

tec

I5SS5T

ictrlc. No pe

No pets. $215

Naar campus. All ;. Call 756-3923.

125 Condominiums For Ront

two BEDM University Townhouse Condominium (#47), well located and ideally suited for ) 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 1. $275 per month. Call 752-4440 after 7:30 p.m. or weekends.

TWO TOWNHOUSES available in Quail Ridge and Windy Ridge. One rents for $500 per month, ofner for $475 per month. 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths. Call Clark-Branch AAanage-ment, 756-6336.

127

Houses For Rent

BELVEDERE. Nice 3 bedroom home available immediately. $400/month. Lease and deposit required. Call Ball & Lens, 752 0025.

FARMVILLE - 3 bedroom house. Phone 753 3327 or 752-6724.

FOR RENT: House in Hardee Acres. 3 bedrooms, ivy baths, heat pump, garage, carpets, fenced in backyard. U50 a month. 752-3993 evenings.

HOMES FOR RENT in Griffon. $200 to $500. Call Max Waters at Unity, 1 524 4147 days, 1-524-4007 nights.

HOUSES AND Apartments In Greenville. Call 746-3284 or 524-3180.

THREE BEDROOM, i'/y bxth, nice neighborhood. S37S plus deposit; Call 355-6966after 5 p.m.

2 BEDROOMS, large combination kitchen and dining. $260 per month. Call 752-2025.

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

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

CM . l upton Co.

127

Houses For Rent

3 BEDROOMS, V/i baths, garage. Available January 1st. $350 mon thiy. Lease and deposit. 756-6365.

3 BEDROOMS, V/t baths, near Eastern Elementary School. $350. 7570634.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, family neighborhood, near schools, oil included, 1400 square feet, 752-1050.

3 BEDROOM house in Simpson. Central heat and air, stove furnished. Shown by appointment only. Call 752-6471, if no answer call 752-1503, leave message.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE in Ayden. Phone 746-3674.

129

Lots For Rent

LARGE PRIVATE LOTS for mobile homes. City water. $65 per month. 758-7741 Owner/Broker.

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

RENT OR SALEI 12x60 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, furnished, carpet. Very nice and clean! Available now. 752-3619 or 758 1618.

13X60, 2 bedroom, 1'/y bath, unfurnished except stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer, underpinned and tied down. Set up in small park. Park restrictions, no children, no pets. $190 a month. Call, 756-6697 after 6 p.m.

12X60, 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, $160. Also 2 bedrooms with carpet. $125. No pets, no children. 756-9491 or 758-0745.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY'

133 AAobile Homes Fbr Rent

TWO BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Furnished. Call 753-5635.

2 AND 3 BEDROOM trailers for rent furnished. Behind Venters Grill. $140 and $170. Deposit required. 756^4982 after 4 p.m

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

2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Call 756-4687 from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.

2 BEDROOM mobile home near Greanvllle. No pets. Call 746-3734.

2 BEDROOM, washer/dryer, central heat and air, carpet, fully No pets, no children.

furnished 758 2927

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath. Located 7 miles West of Greenville on 264. Call355 2474 or 753 5449.

135 Office Space For Rent

FFICSPAC AVAILABLE

Available in December. Off 264 By pass. 2108 square feet of prime office space. Well decorated. 12 month lease or longer, private parklM. $1200 per month.

Call Clark-Branch AAanagement

756-6336

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

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

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

THIS WIIK'S SPECIAL

1978 Ford Mustang

per month

Selling pricv$2600.00, $650 Down payment, Cash or Trade with approved credit, 24 payments at $98.27, APR 17%, Life insurance Included, Total financed amount $1967.74, Total note due $2358.48, Plus NC Sales Tax and Licsnse.

Carolina East Sales

264 Bypass & Hooker Road Greenville N.C.

756-5860

Owned and Operated by Dallas Tripp & Rickie Moors

135 Office Space For Rent

BUILDING at 1209 Evans Street, 1140 square feet, heating and air. Reasonable rent. Days 752 8559 or nights 752-2498.

5,000 SQUARE FEET office bulld-Ing on 264 Bypats. Plenty of park Ing. Call 758-2300 days.

608 ARLINGTON BOULEVARD

Suite of two offices with reception area. Utilities furnished. 560 square feet. Van Fleming Jr., 756-6235 or 758-2887.

142

Roommate Wanted

FEMALE UPPER CLASSMAN or

Young Professional to share '/i rent. Pool, laundry, bus route. Call Pamela at 752 9951 after 5:30 p. m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

142

Roommate Wanted

LOOKING FOR NEAT mature male college student. Private room with shared bath available. 1 block from campus. Rent $125 month plus deposit. Call Kyle between 6 p.m. and 7p,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 condominium near Greenville Athletic Club, prefer non-smoking female professional Call756 7l64atter 4p m

ROOMMATE NEEDED for 3

bedroom house. Call 752 3)03, Kelly before 3 p.m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

142

>eiy. uccvCMiuci g, itfOO 2/

Roommate Wantad

ROOMMATE NEEDED. House 5

miles from country, vy expenses. Call 758 8158 after 5 p.m.

ROOMMATE WANTED pro

fessional male to share 3 bedroom townhouse. Call 8 to S, 757-4701.

ROOMMATE NEEDED

immediately. Nice apartment to share half rent and utilities. Call Monday-Friday, between 8 and 12 noon, 757 6233.

144 Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and hardwood

timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 756 8615.

WANTED TO BUY standing

timber, large or small tracts. 746-6825 or 746 2041.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GRANT BUICK INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

ROLLS BACK PRICES!!

1984Buick Skyhawk

WABEUOUSE 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

CASK ONLY! NO CHECKS ACCEPTED.

^8899

PlusNC Sales Tax

00

Stock Number 84162

*9889

PlusNC Sales Tax

1984Buick Skylark

1984 Buick Century

*10,798

Plus 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

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

OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY On Call This Weekend Sue Castellow Broker

During NON-Office Hours Please Call

756-3082

DUFFUS REALTY, INC.

^^^^7M-5395

9

GnMKyi

Irrn" T

TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

$35,000 - Hillsdale. 3 bedroom, 1 bath bungalow. Good investment potential. $54,500 -Windy Ridge. Thinking about investment property? Think about this Vv'indy Ridge townhouse. 3 bedrooms, baths, lots of extras. Currently leased for $450 per month.

$57,500 - New Listing. Horseshoe Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick ranch that features large lot, garage, dining room, spacious den with fireplace, lots of extras. Call today.

$68,000 - New Listing. Grifton area. Very nice brick ranch on one acre that features double garage, patio, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Better hurry.

$72,000 - Lakewood Pines. The charm that says You have come home welcomes you to this lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch with garage. Beautiful backyard. All formal areas.

W have several nice homes that qualify for the new N.C. Housing Money. Call for details.

Call today about our new construction in Club PInea, Belvedere and Brentwood.

756-6810^

NEW LISTING

PERFECT FOR N.C. HOUSING MONEY

NEW LISTING IN A-ONE CONDITION. This new listing at 2609 Calvin Way is priced just right tor the below market N.C. Housing Finance Agency money at the below market rate of 10.35%. It you quality this could be it. This immaculate home features living room, recently remodeled and like new kitchen-eating area, three bedrooms, one bath, hardwood floors throughout, carport with good storage area, big fenced in back yard. Wont last long. $44,900.

HE DJI. NICflOlS MENCY

752-4012

NEW LISTING

INVESTMENT

LOOKING FOR A CASH FLOW? This rental property currently generating $5(K) per month income features 7 bedrooms, 2 baths, close to downtown. $26,000. Listing Broker: David Heni-tord 758-0180.

OnluK

756-2121

2717 s. Memorial Drive Ollice Open Sal 9-5

B. FORBES AGENCY

EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

Weve Not Only Got The Money!!

Weve Got The Product!!

10.35% N.C. Housing Finance Agency Money Avaiiable On

New Homes In Orchard Hilis NOW

Homes Soon To Be Built in Convenient Eastwood Subdivision. Starting After January lat, Cali For More Details To See If You Qualify.

THE D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

House Hunting? Bag this bargain!

\

New Listing in Stokes

Comfortable country house features two or three bedrooms, kitchen, living room, dining * room. Aluminum siding.

Call For Details

w.g. blount & associates

756-3000

I

OPEN HOUSE

RED OAK SQUARE TOWNHOMES

Saturday, Dec. 10; Sunday Dec. 11 1-5 p.m.

10.35%

APR

Financing

OR

Shared

Equity

located on 264 W. behind Red Oak Shopping Center

We Invite You To Compare!

w.g. blount & assoc.

756-3000





28 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Crossword By Evgene Sxffer

Friday, PecTnber 9,1963    '

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, OECEMSER IS, 1913

ACROSS 45 Nureyevs 1 Lamas home    field

6 Pull    47    Wars

9 French friend 49 The end

12 Have in 52 A Chorus the hole    Line    song

13 Wrath 53 Corroded

14 Actor Howard 54 Worn out

15 Use the tub 55 Aries

16 They face 56 Loony the mound 57 Fashion

18 Oft removed    DOWN

20ne-milliw)

3 Fastens hatchways

4 Reverberation

17 Court activity 19 Dutch painter Jan 21 Dr.s org. 22^iece

^ tissue

20 Simplicity

21 Mimic

23 Depot; abbr.

24 Beginning

25 Fix

27 Puckish

29 Detective I.upin

31 Excuses

35 Coloration of yore

37 Rani swear

38 Paint ingredient

41 Owns

43 Ivcvy

44 Andy's partner

7Spoki

8 Sopping

9 Scopes

10 Code name 1 Typewriter 11 Map

key    feature

Avg. solution time; 25 min.

mm

mm

12-9

Answer to yesterday's puzzle.

39

40

26

35

23

30

48

53

56

45

28

24

42

49

54

20

46

43

33

50

34

CRYPTOQUIP

12-9

URY RLGGC ZLIITU RLW ALSC IZTWYD TS RTD RLZYA.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - MOMS PURCHASE OF DRUMS FOR SON HAD PERCUSSION REPERCUSSIONS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: T equals I.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it ' will equal 0 ughOt tile pUZZlc. Single Icci, ahOrt WOi'ds, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

19*3 King Features Syndicate. Inc

GOREN BRIDGE

Both vulncrabk NORTH

1098643 J10.5 Q8

Q3 WEST AQ5

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

- 1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc

EVERYBODYS HAND

South deals.

EAST K J72 A632 Void J742

109732 AK109 SOUTH

Void KQ984 AKJ6.54

6.5 The hidding:

South    West    North    East

1    Pass    1        Pass

2    Pass    3    ;    Pass

3    Pass    4    '    Pass

Pass    Pass

()[Wning lead: Three of v .

This deal i' from a recent tournanienl in Italy. It highlights two points that we have often made: U Bridge is an art, not a science; 2* Point count is only a guide, not a master. It you count points slavishly, you will see that East West have 22 and North .'houth Ih, so it would seem that there is. at best, a partscore in the cards.

Now let's take a look at what happened. The auction >hown occurred at one table. Note that, at his second turn. North returned to his part aer's first bid suit - he did not yet know that his partner had more than four hearts, so he could not raise on three card support. However, a two spade rebid would have been wiser,

THEVKTIM

VIENNA, .Austria (APi -Gabor Demszky, co-publisher of an underground Hungarian literary magazine, IS scheduled to be tried in Budapest Dec. 21 on charges of assaulting police, a dissident writer reported Thursday, Demszky reportedly suffered a concussion and other injuries from two policemen.

Four hearts had no chance as the cards lie. After the opening diamond lead, the defenders collected two clubs, another diamond ruff and the ace of hearts for down two. East-West were happy with their score until they saw the complete results. Several E W pairs climbed to four spades and, since South could not lead a trump, ten tricks were there on a crossruff.

There were also a number of E W pairs who got to five clubs. That contract was unbeatable no matter what the lead. Indeed, there were even a few pairs in six clubs! If West was declarer, a spade lead defeated that contract one trick, but if East declared there was no way to prevent declarer from scroing 12 tricks. Declarer only has to ruff tw'o hearts in dummy and, with the qu^en of trumps falling, he loses no more than one heart trick.

Let's look again at th^ unlucky East West paijf who defended four heart^. Neither of them can be blamed for failing to get his side into the auction, so they had no way to avoid the poor result.

Nome Educator To Head Govm't

from the Carroll Rightar Inatltula

5 Adolescents 24 Paint type

6 Of leg bones 26 Abhor 28 Deadly 30Deny,slang-

style

32 Power source

33 Georges brother

34 News hour, often

36 Pursued

38 Work

39 Noted church commune

40 Tribal symbol

42 One-armed bandits, for short

45 Greek letter

46 Give off 48 Flee

50 Solidify

51 Citrus drink

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A good day for putting into motion your talents and special abilities and to show you are alert to opportunities now arising for more advance-/nent. The evening is excellent for entertainment.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You can gain your desires with relative ease today. Stop worrying about the past and be more interested in the future.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Please higher-ups by finding the right mechanisms to improve your work. Get involved in a civic matter.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Search out good ideas on how to make new deals work out successfully for you. Don't confide in others so much in the future.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) Look for persons who can teach you ways of becoming more proficient at your work. (Concentrate on the one you love.

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) Be alert to ideas given to you by progressive individuals you couldn't understand before. Finalize contracts. Prepare for an active week.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Plan to make changes in work Listen to what a fellow worker has to suggest. Be happy at home.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) (Concentrate on a new plan that you can work on during the coming week. Then go out and have fun with friends.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Yesterdays activities should have made your home life more sastisfying. Reconcile with a family tie if youve had a argument.

SAGIHARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Handle travel and communication affairs in the morning. Clarify matters between you and a close tie. Have a good time at home.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Take care of home and money affairs in the morning. Plan a modern system of business in the future. Do some Christmas shopping.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Go after personal aims wisely for good results. Concentrate on something practical. Be active.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) (Concentrate on a new plan to put in operation next week, and you can gain improved personal and business matters.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .. . he or she will be a person who will be interestkf in getting into fascinating, unique activities Upon reaching adulthood, the traditional side takes over The combination can lead to a very fine success in life. Sports vent excess energy.

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

.? 1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

ST. GEORGES, Grenada (AP) - Nicholas Brathwi^e, an educator, has been nuned head of the advisory council that will oversee Grenadas interim government until elections next year.

. Sir Paul Scoon, the islands governor general, announced the ppointment Thursday in a radio address.

Scoon also said formal charges would be brought against some of the 47 people who have been in custody since they were apprehended during the Oct. 25 U.S.-led invasion.

Most prominent of the detainees are fornier Deputy Prime Minister Bernard

Coard, considered the engineer of the coup in which Prime Minister Maurice Bishop was slain Oct. 19. and Gten. Hudson Austin, who headed the Revolutionary Military Council that seized power.

Scoon did not say what charges would be filed^.

The appointment of Brathwaite. who has been acting chairman since the advisory council was formed Nov. 10, ended speculation on the Caribbean island that Alister McIntyre might still head the council.

McIntyre, a Grenadian who holds a high United Nations post in Geneva, had been named chairman, but

turned down the job for health reasons

He said the council would need time and outside assistance to draw up a new voter list because no elections have been held in (jrenada since the 1979 coup that brought Bishop to power.

The governor general also announced three other ap

pointments: Allan Kurtin. a Grenadian serving as per-manent secretary to Jamaica's Prime Minister Edward Seaga. as Braithwaite's deputy: William Demas. secretary general of the Caribbean Development Bank, as economic adviser to the council, and Randolph Mark, a farmer. to the nine-member council.

TIEE

295 gq.lt.

rnMDi CTCIV

COMPLETELY INSTALLED Includes: Material & Labor

I

DRIVEWAYS POOLDECKS

FLOORS

ALL STYLES

OARRY SLATES

ITALIAN BRICK PAVERS^

MEXICAN

EAST COAST URO TILE

355-2354 Hvyy. 11 South Across From Pitt Community College j

SPORTSMAN

SALE

20 to 50% discounts on everything

Browning Boots Insulated Clothing Thompson/Center Blackpowder Guns and Kits Rockford Wick Dry Socks Deer Lures Game Calls Rangefinders Tree Stands and Ladders

Camo Clothing G & H Decoys Snake Chaps Turkey Calls Browning Down Coats Archery Targets Arrows

Largest Archery Selection in the South Insulated Coveralls Camo or Regular Nylon Rain Suits

SPORT SHOP

110 GORDON ST. GRlFTOf^, NC _

Phone 1-800-682-6264

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Grenades In 2 Churches

TEL.WIV. Israel (APt -Grenades primed to detonate were found today in two Christian churches and a religious" sernmary. all located in the Arab sector of Jerusalem, police said.

Police spokesman Ziv Rotem said two grenades were found in the Franciscan Church, one in the Dormition Abbey and one in the Greek Orthodox seminary, a spokesman said. Bomb experts dismantled the grenades without harm, he said.

.Meanwhile, police continued a search for gunmen who killed an 11-year-old Arab girl and wounded her sister Thursday in the West Bank city of .Nablus.

Police said eye witnesses reported the gunmen opened fire from a car bearing Israeli license dfetes. The shooting followed a stoning incident in the city center, police said.

The grenades were found in buildings inside the old walled city of Jerusalem, in the Arab sector formerly ruled by Jordan.Rotem said the grenades were of Israeli army issue, but he added this did not automatically mean Jews were responsible.

There have been several incidents of violence and vandalism against Christian institutions in the city in the past year. Suspicions have pointed to Jewish extremists who claim the churches are abetting missionary work among Jews, No arrests have been made.

Several churches say they have received threatening letters, and anti-Christian slogans have been daubed on some Christian buildings.

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Title
Daily Reflector, December 9, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30659
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NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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