Daily Reflector, December 30, 1983


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SPORTS TODAYNO THANKS!

East Carolina Coach Ed Emory says he already has a job and is not interested in another. Page 11.

INSIDE TODAY

COMING SUNDAYCUBA TODAY

The close of 1983 finds Cuba suffering many shortages that Include items the West regards as near essentials, but Revolutionary zeal abounds. (Page 20)

- The makings of a great party what to do, what not to do. -1983 in Review - a roundup of the major news events.

1984 Agriculture - an outlook for the coming year.THE DAILY REFLECTOR

I02NDYEAR NO. 312

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 30, 1983

20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

Windy Snowstorm Stranding Travelers

By CYNTHIA GREEN Associated Press Writer

A windy snowstorm building drifts high enough to stop a snowplow stranded travelers in emergency shelters in the Pacific Northwest today while more cold weather records fell from the Midwest deep into the Texas citrus belt.

The death toll from the big chill of the past two weeks climbed past 430 and the damage to fruit and vegetable crops in Florida, Texas and Louisiana topped $400 million.

Freezing rain and snow today prompted winter storm warnings or travel advisories across much of Idaho, Washington, Oregon, northern Utah and north-central Montana.

Record low temperatures were reported in at least 28 cities from the northern Plains to the Great Lakes and south to the Gulf Coast. Some of the coldest readings were noted in Illinoil^r)where it was 15 below jero at Springfield, and Indiana, where it was 14 below at Indianapolis. It also was minus 14 at North Platte. Neb.

It was a record 11 below at Toledo, Ohio; Topeka, Kan., and Fort Wayne, Ind.

Another freeze settled on the citrus groves and vegetable fields of southern Texas, where damage to crops from an earlier cold snap had been estimated at $100 million.

The mercury fell to 10 degrees at San Antonio to set an new all-time low mark for December that was set only this past Christmas Day. A reading of 8 in Dallas broke a 66-year-old -record for the date by six degrees.

In other Texas cities this morning, it was 8 degrees in San Angelo, 9 in Amarillo, 10 in Abilene, 13 in Lufkin, 19 in Austin, 20 in Houston, 15 in Victoria, and 17 in El Paso.

Elsewhere in the South, cities reporting record lows for the date included Nashville, Tenn., 1; Tulsa, Okla, 2; Little Rock, Ark, 5; Tulsa, Okla, 2; Roanoke. Va., 10; and New Orleans, 10.

Authorities have placed a 10-day embargo on the shipment of citrus from Texas and Florida, where freeze damage to crops was estimated at about $300 million.

While that probably will mean an increase in the prices of produce at the supermarket, the deep freeze also is costing,, the consumer in other ways. The Edison Electric Institute, a trade organization of investor-owned electric utilities, said consumption of electricity between Dec. 18 and Dec. 25 increased 23 percent over the same period last year.

In Texas, insurance officials said the cold spell has caused more than $50 million in damage to property, mainly from broken water pipes.

In northeastern Oregon, stretches of the states major east-west highway. Interstate" 84. were closed overnight because snowslides blocked lanes in the Columbia River Gorge and blowing snow reduced visibility to zero along a 40-mile stretch from La Grande to Baker.

Stranded motorists packed into motels, churches and a National Guard armory in the two towns at either end of the closed portion.

Weve got drifts up there the snowplow can't even go through, said state Trooper Jack Eckrich.

Four to six inches of snow fell in eastern Washington, and officials warned the accumulation had weakened the earlier snowpack, increasing avalanche danger. One slide closed state Highway 2 through Stevens Pass overnight.

Strong Chinook winds blasting down the eastern slope of the Rockies, clocked at 70 mph in Livingston. Mont.. drifted the snow and created ground blizzards.

Major roads near Portland,, Ore.. were closed by more than half an inch of freezing rain Thursday, with ice on runways shutting Portland International Airport for 34 hours.

About 27.500 customers of Portland General Electric were without power this morning as crews worked to repair lines snapped by ice-toppled tree limbs.

In northern Utah, snow and light freezing rain during the night combined with patches of morning fog to make travel hazardous.

The Utah Highway Patrol reported that roads generally were snowpacked in the southern portion of Box Elder County, and there was extensive black ice farther north.

Relief From Bone-Numbing Cold

B-B-B-R-R-R-R-R Construction workers Floyd Kite, Jeffery Dixon and Mike James get warm by a fire at an apartment complex on Charles Street this morning. Temperature fell once again to below freezing, causing rain that fell Thursday night to become frozen in spots. Forecasters said most of the state would be sunny, windy and cold later today, with highs in the teens and 20s to the west and 30s to the east.

Overnight lows were expected to fall to single digits in the mountains and 20s on the coast. Skies should be partly cloudy along the coast and fair across the rest of the state tonight and Saturday, with highs Saturday mostly in the 30s. The weather outlook for New Year's Day calls for fair skies with highs in the 40s and lows in the 20s.

Jackson On Final Leg Of A Mission To Damascus

Lebanon Moslems Unite To Protest Israeli Stand

FRANKFURT. West Germany (AP) - Democratic presidential candidate Jesse Jackson set out today on the final leg of his journey to Syria, saying he was hopeful of arranging the release of captured U.S. Navy airman Robert 0. Goodman Jr.

We certainly are hopeful. Jackson said when asked during his six-hour stopover at Frankfurt airport whether he expected to bring Goodman back to the United States.

"The point is, if we do nothing, nothing will happen, he told The Associated Press after resting in a VIP lounge after an overnight flight from New

York.

Jackson, accompanied by a delegation of U.S. clergymen, left at 2 p.m. for Damascus, the Syrian capital, aboard a commercial flight.

The black civil rights leader told reporters that neither race nor politics played a role in his decision to fly to Damascus. Goodman is also black.

This is a truly American matter. I have been involved in humanitarian missions in the past, he said.

During an ABC television network interview at the airport, Jackson said it was really unfair to inject race into this dimension. If Lt. Goodman were white, or

Hispanic or Indian or Asian, it would have the same moral imperative ... his presence there is a grim reminder of the low level of relations between Syria and the U.S.

President Reagan has given a cold shoulder to Jacksons initiative, and Syrias defense minister said no release was possibl| while a state of war exists.

Goodmans mother has given her blessing to the trip, but his father said Jackson should be held responsible if the effort prolonged the detention.

Gbodman, a bombadier-navigator, was wounded and captured Dec. 4 when his attack jet was downed during

a raid on Syrian gun positions in Lebanons central mountains. The pilot of his plane was killed.

Jacksons spokeswoman. Florence Tate, said the delegation would be met in Damascus by someone from the U.S. Embassy, possibly Ambassador Robert Paganelli.

We don't know what the program there is yet. she said.

Jackson, before leaving New York, said he had virtual assurance from the Syrian government that he would at least be able to meet with Goodman, as have Paganelli. the Red Cross, and others.

By FAROUK NASSAR Associated Press Writer BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -Moslems staged nationwide sit-ins at mosques and burned an Israeli flag today to show their support for guerrillas fighting the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon.

Near the southern port of Tyre, gunmen hidden in an orange grove fired on an Israeli army convoy, U.N. sources said. There were no casualties, but a United Nations convoy was caught in the crossfire, according to the sources.

Spiritual heads of Lebanons Sunni and Shiite Moslem communities led the sit-ins from Beirut after midday prayers.

And at the Sakiet Al-Ganzir

mosque in west Beirut. Moslem youths set fire to a plastic blue-and-white Israeli flag and stepped on its remains. Others chanted anti-Israeli slogans, including, By fire and gunpowder we will fight the Jews", and some carried banners reading "Lebanon is the graveyard of the Zionists.

In Sidon, Israeli troops with guard dogs entered a mosque and herded out worshipers to conduct a search, state radio and local reporters said. The troops surrounded but did not go into the Zaatari mosque.

Sheik Moha rnmed Jalaleddin. a religious leader in the southern port city, told The Associated Press that Israeli troops surrounded his home, searched it, con

fiscated his pistol and t&ok awav his son for two hours of

questioning before releasing him.

Lawmen Given Pursuit Policy

REFLECTOR    F7

OTLIIf

Hotline gets things done. Write and tell us about the problem or issue into which youd like for Hotline to look. Enclose photostatic copies of any pertinent information. Our address is The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Because of the large numbers received, Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we deal with all of those for which we have staff time. Names must be given, but only initials will be published.

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

FREE MEAL?

Is there any place anyone whos hungry can go and get a free meal. J.C.

Yes, the John XXIII Food Center is located at 1120 W. Fifth St. next to St. Gabriels Catholic Church. Serving times this coming week are Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 1 to 2 p.m. Beginning Jan. 9, the center will be open Monday through Friday weekly from 1 to 2 p.m.

For more information, call Joan M. Chenier, '756-1593.

Rural Home Damaged

FIREMEN BAHLE FIRE - Pitt County firemen battle a blaze that caused heavy damage to the home of Larry and Pam Riegel this morning. According to fire officials, no one was home when the fire started in the two-story wood frame house located near Calico off N.C. 43. Fire departments from Black

Jack, Gardnerville. Ayden and Eastern Pines fought the blaze in sub-freezing temperatures causing ice to form on fire^ fighters clothing. Cause of the fire was not immediately known. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Greenville police now have a written policy on emergency and pursuit operations of vehicles. Published earlier this month, the policy is the first time local officers have had a written policy to follow. Department policy on pursuit and emergency operation of vehicles has been passed on by word of mouth in the past. Chief Ted Holmes, in establishing a written policy, said the move isdesigned for the protection of local officers as well as the city.

Under the policy, local officers are allowed to exceed the posted speed limits and operate under exceptions to normal rules of the road only when the necessity of immediate apprehension outweighs the level of danger created by the pursuit or emergency operation.

The policy, which lists factors to be considered -such as the unpredictable reaction of civilian drivers to lights and siren, the chances that other drivers may not see or hear the lights or siren, road conditions, and the nature and gravity of the offense or situation - cautions that emergency of pursuit driving greatly increases the officer's need to use caution.

Under the policy, lights and siren may be used in emergency situations to clear traffic, except when approaching the vicinity of a "crime in progress call, and speeds are not to exceed 15 mph over the posted limit.

In life threatening situations, such as a violent crime in progress or in cases where an officer needs assistance, lights and sirens shall be

used under the policy and speeds "shall not exceed 25 miles an hour over the posted limit.

Officers must obey traffic signs and signals when entering intersections, unless the intersection appears clear and likely to remain clear, in both cases.

In a normal pursuit situation, lights and siren must be used by officers, and speeds may not exceed 15 mph over the speed limit.

In pursuit situations when officers have reason to believe the person pursued has committed a felony, lights and siren must be used and speeds may not exceed 25 mph over the iimit.

In both pursuit situations, pursuit "shall be discontinued by the initiating officer if, in his judgment, the risks involved outweigh the seriousness of the crime, or the suspect has been identified.

WEATHER

Fair tonight and Saturday with a low of near l.i degrees and Saturday high inthemid-30s.

Looking Ahead

Fair Sunday with increasing cloudiness Monday and a chance yif rain by Tuesday, IlighSSunday in 4ils, low in 20s; mostly 50s Monday and Tuesday with lows close to 40 in east.    

inside Reading

Page 10.Area items Page 9-UNESCO Page 2Obituaries





2 The Daily Reftector, Greenville, N.C.

Mini-Gas War Said Under Way

FILL 'ER IP Motorists have been takin;; advantage of low holiday gasoline prices (Sl.Ol. per gallon for regular gas over the past week and ham Tyson of Route I. Greenville, is no exception. Several (ireenville-area stations lowered prices during the holiday. (Reflector Photo by Tommv Forrest)

By SI E HINSON Reflector Staff Writer

There's a little capitalistic enterprising going on in the Greenville gas business these days - enterprising that one gasoline company distributor spokesman who asked not to be identified called a "minor price war".

"A lot of people think the price has been cut down the line, but what we really have here is a minor gas war with a couple of stations, about three, fighting over who's going to give the lowest prices. 'he said,

"Nobody got a 3-cent per gallon cut, they all probably got a I'-cent cut and decided to they were so close to go ahead and drop below a dollar.

Those stations, the spokesman said, are offering regular gasoline for as little as 99.9 cents per gallon, while the remainder of stations in the Greenville area are selling their product for approximately SI.u,5.

"The proDlem with this." he said, "is that they're depressing the market. For instance in Rocky Mount you won't see 99 9 cents per gallon, you'll see SI.09 which is more realistic and in keeping with what these stations actually pay for their gas."

Why 99.9 cents, you ask"^ 'Well, its the magic number," the spokesman said. "Gas people will do crazy things sometimes to be the first to drop to 99.9 cents pergallon."

The holiday price contest should come to an end soon, however, he said, "rve heard some of the distributors say they've already received notification of a price raise and we expect to receive word soon as well; so you'd better go and fill your car up now."

Tommy Carawan, owner of Carawan Oil and one of the station owners sellin gasoline at lower prices, said the only thing his company is trying to do is meet the competition the best they can. "It is lawful to do this in a competitive market and all we are trying to do is be as fair to our customers as we can and meet the competition. " However, Hobert Barnes, owner of Barnes Gulf, has not cut the price of his gas -SI.% per gallon for regular -and is "hurting",

"I'm giving my gas away at that price and am not making anything. 1 just don't know how long I can hold out," he said. "The thing that bothers me the most about this is that everyone could stay at the same price and still make a profit '

Police Count Three Collisions For City

An estimated Sti.ObO damage resulted from three traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Thursday Officers said heaviest damage resulted from a 5:25 p-.m. -Goll-ismfl-~fifthem--tersection of Farmville Boulevard and Memorial Drive, involving cars driven by Johnnie Randolph Jones of Route 2, Murfreesboro, and Cynthia Lee Barrier of 305B Eastbrook Apartments.

Damage caused by the Collision was estimated at $1,800 to the Jones car and $2.200 to the Barrier vehicle.

Lisa Anne Koontz of 1919 Sherwood Drive was charged with failing to reduce her speed enough to avoid an accident following investigation of a 5:16 p.m. collision on Arlington Boulevard, 150 feet north of the Greenville Boulevard intersection.

Police identificad drivers of the other cars involved as Rebecca Dawn Pollard of Route 6, Greenville, and Sandra Clements Garner of 111 Welcome Drive.

Damage was estimated at $800 to the Koontz car and $200 to the Garner auto. No damage resulted to the Pollard vehicle, investigators said. '* Investigation of an 11:41 p.m. collision at the intersection of Heath and 10th streets is continuing.

Officers said a car driven by Melvin Joseph Pontiff Jr. of 303E Eastbrook Drive was struck by a car owned by Nolan of Route 1,

Friday. Decomber 30,1963

Baker

Funeral services for Mr. Leslie Baker of Route 2, Vanceboro, who died Tuesday, will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Flanagan Funeral Chapel in Greenville by the Rev. David Ham-niond. Burial will be in the Johnson-Tumage Cemetery at Vanceboro.

A Craven County native who spent most of his life in the Vanceboro community, he was a member of Cool Spring Church.

Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Augusta Baker of the home; two daughters. Mrs. Clara Tv^son of Fort Campbell. Ky., and Mrs. Cynthia Garrison of Camden. N.J.; four brothers; two sisters and two grandchildren.

Barrett

Funeral services for Mrs. Agnes Barrett, who died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital, will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Phillips Brothers Mortuary Chapel. Burial will be in the Willoughby Cemetery,

Surviving her are a brother, Roy Lee Daniels of Greenville; two sisters. Mrs. Mary Yates of Greenville and Mrs. Nellie A. Darden of Gardnersville; and two grandchildren.

The family visitation will be held 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday at Phillips Brothers Mortuary, At other times the familv will be at the home of her granddaughter. Miss Shirley Ann Cherry. H2 Wilson Acres Apartments

Bellamy

TARBORO - Funeral services for Mr. Step Bellamy. 90. will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in Salem Chapel Baptist Church by the Rev. Moses Exum. Burial will follow in Dancey Memorial Cemetery.

He is survived by four daughters. Mrs. Maude Draughn of Tarboro, Mrs. Adell Gorham of Norfolk, Va.. and Ethel Mae Bellamy and Mattie Bellamy, both of the home; two brothers, Willie Bellamy and Claude Bellamy, both of Tarboro; one sister. Mrs. Reather Draughn of Bethel: 26 grandchildren; 49 great grandchildren and five

Charge Attempt To Hire Killers

GRAH.AM. N.C. (.AP) - A Haw River man has been charged with solicitation to commit murder after being accused of trying to hire two men to kill an Alamance County deputy because of a grudge.

Ricky Lee Alston was arrested Wednesday by the Alamance County Sheriffs department. He is accused of asking Rayford A. Thompson of Burlington and Leroy Atwater Jr. of Graham to kill Deputy Kenneth Cheek, 32.

Alston is being held in the Alamance County Jail under a $250,006secured bond.

Cheek last summer issued a search warrant for Alston because he suspected Alston of breaking into a van, according to a sheriffs report. Alston was never charged with the crime.

'Bee Sting' Was A Stray Bullet

WINSTON-SALEM; N;C.-(AP) - Jennifer A. James thought she had been stung by a bee while feeding her dogs. But when she woke up early Wednesday morning covered with blood, she worried that a broken rocking chair leg had left splinters under her skin.

Doctors at Forsyth Memorial Hospital discovered Miss James, 27, had been struck in the pelvis by what appeared to be a stray bullet. Lt. C.C. McGee of the Forsyth County Sheriffs Department said the bullet was probably fired by a hunter who did not realize it had struck anyone.

Obituary Column

J(^n

Grantsboro, which left the scene.

The Nolan car was found abandoned a short lime later by investigators who set damage at $200 to the Nolan car and-$800 fo the Pontiff auto.

Suspect Arson In Fatal Fire

DETROIT lAP) - Arson is suspected in an apartment building lire that killed two people and injured nine others, but investigators said they lound no evidence of a firebomb which residents said was tossed into the building.

Residents said they heard gunshots shortly before a firebomb was hurled through a basement window early Thursday, and witnesses said an unidentified man living in the basement fan through the building shouting that someone was trying to kill him.

Investigators found bullet casings but uncovered no signs of a firebomb, 'authorities said.

"All we're saying is that arson is suspected," said Detroit police Sgt. Daniel Carr.

WHEN .SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads. Place your Ad today for quick results.

I B A ieEOT

Gnenvitte'g Hnegt bakeiy lor 63 yearm."

815 Dickinson Ave.

Cakes, Pies, Cookies & Pastries For The Holidays

752-5251

great-greai-grandcluJdren.

The bo^ will be at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro after 5 p.m. Saturday until noon Sunday. Family visitati(m will be Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at the funeral chapel.

Davis

SARATOGA - Funeral ' services for Mrs. Febbie M. Davis. 83. will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Union Primitive Baptist Association Center. Fountain, by Elder Rufus Parker and Elder Dave Bullock. Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park, Farmville.

She was a native of Pitt County and a member of Seven Holly Primitive Baptist Church, where she served on the Mother Board.

She is survived by six daughters, Mrs. Louise Lindsay of the home, Mrs. Fannie Edwards of Farmville, Mrs. Vernelle Smith of Fountain, Mrs. Louise Mooring, Mrs. Christene Lindsay and Mrs. Dorothy Pittman, all of Baltimore; three sons, James Barrett of Key West, Fla., Jonah Maye Jr. of Greenville and Napoleon Maye of Baltimore; one sister.' Mrs. Hattie P. Battle of Fountain; 73 grandchildren and 90 great-grandchildren.

The body will be taken from Hemby Funeral Home to the Association Center after 5 p.m. Saturday. Family visitation will be Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at the Association Center. At other times, the family will assemble at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Lindsay, Saratoga.

Edmonson

ROBERSONVILLE -Mrs. Bettie Norville Edmonson, 85, died Thursday afternoon. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Biggs Funeral Chapel. Burial will be in the Oak City Cemetery.

She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Joyce Haislip of Robersonville, Mrs. Mary Myres of Leggetts and Mrs. Frances Jones of Bethel; one son. Larry Edmonson of Oak City;' four sisters, Mrs. Mittie Liptz and Mrs. Maggie Mercer, both of Macclesfield, Mrs, Martha Owens of Pinetops and Mrs. Mary Peaden of Greenville; one brother, William "Buck" .Norville of Greenville; nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends from' 7 to 9 p.m. tonight at Biggs Funeral Home.

Edwards

Mrs. Cassie Lee Strickland Edwards, 77. of Route 1. Grimesland, died this morning in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Her funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Wiljkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev, Ben James and' the Rev. Linwood Kilpatrick. Buriil will be in Greenw^d Cemetery.    (

Mrs. Edwards, a natiye of Pitt County, spent most of her life in the Bell Arthur community and was a member of the Bell Arthur Christian Church. For the past 10 years she had made her home near Grimesland.

Surviving her are her husband, Albert I. Edwards; two sons. Dr. Ben F. Strickland of Boone and Glenn Strickland of Bell Arthur; a stepson, Reggie Edwards of Route 1, Grimesland; twir stepdaughters, Mrs. Fronfp Ann Crit-cher of Garner and Mrs. Mary Gaskins Wingate of Grifton; a brother, J. Raymond Harris of Win-terville; a sister. Miss Maybelle McLawhorn of

Route 2, Ayden; seven grandchildren; one greatgrandchild; eight step-grandchildren and three

family will receive friends at the funeral home Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Elks

Mrs. Dons Edwards Elks, 61, of Route 2, Chocowinity, died at her home Thursday. Funeral services will be conducted at Paul Funeral Home in Washington, N.C., at 1 p.m, Saturday by the Rev. B.J. McKee. Burial will be in Oakdale Cemetery.

Surviving are her husband, Chester Elks; one son, William C. Elks Jr. of Scarborough, Maine; three daughters, Ms. Renee James and Mrs. Suzanne Moore, both of Washington, N.C., and Mrs. Cynthia Crisp of Chocowinity; a brother, Bruce M. Edwards of Simpson; three sisters, Mrs. Sarah Perkins of Greenville and Ms. Nell Edwards and Mrs. Geraldine Mitchell, both of Simpson, and one grandchild.

The family will be at the funeral home today from 7-8:30 p.m.

Moore

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. -Mr. Jordan K. Moore of 1145 26th St., formerly of Vanceboro, N.C., died Monday. Graveside services will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. at the Ernul cemetary on Route 2,Vanceboro, by the Rev. J.O. Dawson.

He is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Nicola Baker and Mrs. Aphair Moore Jenkins, both of Vanceboro.

The body will be carried from Norcott and Company Funeral Home in Ayden to the cemetary for services.

Murray SNOW HILL - Mr. Joe. Davis Murray, 67, a retired farmer, died Friday. The funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel in Ayden by the Rev. Jim Summerson. Burial will be in the Snow Hill Cemetery.

Mr. Murray was a member of Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Louie Dell Murray of the home; three sons, Donnie Murray and Marty Murray, both of Maury, and Sidney Murray of Ayden; two daughters, Mrs: Nancy Ham of Maury and Mrs. Addie Smith of Franklinton; a brother, Dan Murray of Raleigh; six sisters, Mrs. Billie Ward and Mrs. Esker Wadford, both of Raleigh, Mrs. Ruby Sneed and Mrs. Ada Murray, both of Franklinton. and Mrs. Mavis Edwards and Mrs. Dawnie Murray, both of Spring Hope, and nine grandchildren.

The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Saturday at Farmer Funeral Home.

Nicholson Mrs. Idell Nicholson of 308 Greene St. died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Her funeral service will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in the Back Swamp Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ, in Williamston. Burial will be in the Perry Cemetery.

Sruvving her are her iTu s Ta nJ M r N o a h Nicholson of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Clara Garfield of Robersonville and Miss Della Faye Nicholson of the home; three sons, Jerome Nicholson of Greenville, James Wendell Nicholson of Robersonville and Sgt. Jimmy Randolph Nicholson of Wyoming; a sister, Mrs. Retha Mae Shaw

of Greenvilte; a brother, Walter Brown of Williamston; and eight grandchildren.

The family $Hll receive frirads Satur^y from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. <at Flanagan Chapel, Robersonville.

Payton

WINTERVILLE -Funeral services for Mrs. Maybelle Statwi Payton, 70, of 534 Chapman St., who died Monday at Pitt County M^ morial Hospital, will be conducted at I p.m. Saturday at Mitchells Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Hoyt Hammond. Burial will be in the Win-tervilleCemetei7.

She is survived by four sons. Ernest Payton, Ben Payton Jr. and John Payton, all of Winterville, and William Payton of Washington, DC.; eight grandchildren; one greatgrandchild, and (Mie foster sister, Mrs. Roxie Nobles of Greenville.

Family visitation will be from 8 to 9 tonight at Mitchells Funeral Home, Winterville, and at other times at the home of Ben Payton Jr. at 508 N. Railroad St., Winterville.

Pippen TARBORO - Funeral services for Mrs. Vivian Carney Pippen, 65, will be conducted Monday at 3 p.m. at St. Paul Baptist Church by the Rev. William D. Price. Burial will follow in East Lawn Cemetery.

Mrs. Pippen attended Tarboro schools and Brick Community Center. She was a member of St. Paul Church, where she served on the Mother Board. She was a member of the St. Mary Chapter No. 12 OES, Home Mission Society and the Grand Aid Club and a former daughter of Isis. She was employed by the Coca Cola Bottling Co. for several years, and worked for the Edgecombe County Memorial Library until her retirement.

She is survived by her husband, Emmanuel Pippen of the home; one son, William Earl Pippen of Raleigh; her stepmother, Mrs. Charlotte T. Strong of Tarboro; two sisters, Mrs. Gertrude James of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Mrs. Ann E. Pitt of New York, and a stepsister, Charlotte E. Strong of Greenville.

The body will be at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary from 5 p.m. Sunday until one hour prior to the funeral. Family visitation will be Sunday from 7-8 p.m. in the funeral chapel.

Stocks

AYDEN - Mr. Herman Stocks of Ayden, a retired carpenter and farmer, died Thursday. The funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday at Farmer Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Clyde Yates anil the Rev. Gilbert Mister. Burial will be in the Ayden Cemetery.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Sybil B. Stocks of the home; a son, Tom Stocks of Greenville; two daughters, Mrs. Sybil Taylor of Ayden and Mrs. Wilma Harper of Salisbury; a brother, Luther Stocks of Huntingtown, Md.; six sisters. Miss Elva Stocks of New Bern, Miss Elizabeth Stocks, Mrs. Mar^r^ Sut-tbn d Mrs. Pauline Garris, all of Ayden, Mrs. June Brooks of Grifton, and Mrs. Adell Cox of Kinston, and five grandchildren.

The family suggests that' memorial contributions be made to the Pitt County Heart Fund.

The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. tonight at Farmer Funeral Home.

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (USA)

ANNOUNCES the organizing of a new Presbyterian congregation

in Greenvilie, NC

fllMVTIIIANCHUICH

(USAI

MORNING WORSHIP on SUNDAYS, at 11:00 a.m.

(starting Janury 8th, 1984)

' at the Ramada Inn, Greenvilie Blvd. (temporary location)

For more information, please contact the office of

Albemarle Presbytery

752-7156    P.O.    Box 35, Greenville, NC

27834

Tisdale WILSON - Mr. John Marvin Tisdale of Wilson died Wednesday. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church in Wilson by the Rev. Joe N. Dixon. Burial will be in Hamiltrm BurialGardens.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Beatrice ^11 Tisdale of the home; two sons, Melvin Levert Tisdale of Wilson and Sgt. Marvin Blake Tisdale of Barstow, Calif.; three daughters, Mrs. Anglea Jonise Best of Greenville, Mrs. Josephine Scott Thomas of Gorton. Conn., and Miss Tonya Yvette Tisdale of the home; two brothers, Robert Davis and Melvin Tisdale, both of Brooklyn, N.Y.; three sisters, Mrs. Geneva Copeland of Brooklyn, N.Y., Mrs. Gertrude Bynum of Wilson and Mrs. Hattie Winston of Raleigh, and four grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the residence.

The body will be on view from 3-9 p.m. tonight at the Hamilton Funeral Chapel in Wilson. The family will assemble one hour prior to the funeral service at 603 Gold St., Wilson.

Williams FARMVILLE - Mr. Alfred Bert Williams of Farmville died Sunday. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at Saint Delight Missionary Baptist Church in Greene County. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

He is survived by his wife.

Mrs. Almeta Hagans

Williams of the home; ve dau^ters, Evangelist Bettm Lou Pender, Mrs. Odsa Goriuun and Mrs. Carolyn Jean Lopez, all of Washington, D.C., Mrs. Hilda Marie Brown <A Mumford, Tenn., and Miss Melinda Williams (rf the home; a son, Mr. Charles Alfred Williams of Greoiville; a sister. Miss Minnie Williams of Walstonbi^; four Ixnthers, Jessie Williams and Arthur Williams, both of Snow Hill arid Wijlie D. WiUiatns arid Andrew\ Williams, both of Walstonburg; 17 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren.

The body will be on view from 7-9 p.m. tonight at the church and the family will receive friends at the church from 8-9 tonight. The family wUl assemble one hour prior to the funeral at 404 S. Field St., Farmville.

Arrangements by Hamilton Funeral Chapel of Wilson.

Wooten

Mr. Charles Wooten, formerly of Greenville, died in St. Raphael Hospital in New Haven, Conn., Thursday. He was the husband of Mrs. Goldie Barrett Wooten and the son of Mrs. Bertha Wooten of 1210 W. Third Street, Greenville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

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Wedding Vows Solemnized In Ceremony On Tuesday

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C

Friday, December 30,1983 3

Births

The wedding ceremony of Tamara Layne Garrett and Michael Glenn McKeel was solemnized Tuesday evening at six oclock in the First Pentecostal Holiness Church here. The double ring eerernony was conducted by Frank Gentry.

Debbie Potter, organist, and Lisa Carraway, vocalist, presented a program of wedding music.

The bride, daughter of Ms. Sylvia G. Stokes of Greenville, was given in marriage by her mother. The bridegroom is the son of Michael Glenn McKeel of Greenville.

Her honor attendant was Cheyenne K. Buck and Michelle Malvaso and Carolyn Dunn, all of Greenville, were brides maids. Kim Buck, also of Greenville, was flower girl.

The father of the,bridegroom was best man and ushers included Michael Garrett, Dick Garrett and Jerjy McKeel. all of Greenville.

The bride is employed by Candlite Sales in Greenville and the bridegroom is employed by Eaton Corp.

For the ceremony, the bride wore a format gown of white silkened organza over peau de soie designed with a nigh necklirie encircled with imported Brussels lace. The fitted bodice featured a sheer scooped yoke of English net embroidered in a floral motif and outlined in reembroidered alencon lace centered with seed pearls. Appliques of lace extended over the bodice and enhanced the modified natural waistline. The long fitted sleeves were fashioned in the sheer organza appliqued in the embroidered face and trimmed at the cuffs with scalloped Brussels lace. The full skirt and attached chapel

MRS. MICHAEL GLENN McKEEL

train were edged at th hemline with Brussels lace. Beaded appliques centered the skirt front. She wore a walking length illusion veil edged in re-embroidered alencon lace. It was attached to a Camelot headpiece trimmed in lace and pearls. She carried a bouquet of white mums, pink carnations and babys breath.

The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of mauve knit styled sleeveless

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complemented by a long sleeved jacket.

The honor attendant wore a formal gown of burgundy satin designed with a V-neckline and modified empire waistline with gathered puff sleeves. She wore a hair comb with silk flowers and babys breath. Her bouquet was like that of the bride. The bridesmaids were dressed identically.

A reception was held at the Ramada Inn.

Fuli'

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon David Fulp, 109 Asbi^ Road, a son, JcAn David, (HI Dec. 16, 1963, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Carson

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John Franklin_ Carson Jr., 114 Hilltop Koad, a daughter, Kristen Leigh, on Dec. 16, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Early

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ray Early, 1008 Ward St., a daughter, kanca Michelle, on Dec. 16,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Briley

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Williarp Clayton Briley, Route 5, Greenville, a daughter, Ashley Jean, on Dec. 16, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Holmes

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Keith Duayne Holmes Jr., 510 Bremerton    Drive, a    son.

Benjamin Tucker, on Dec. 17, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Leavy

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

James Junior Leavy, 308-B Paris Ave., a daughter, Sonya Marie, on Dec. 17, 1983. in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Cooper

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Thomas Ray Cooper, 104 Contentnea St.. a son, Marcus Donta, on Dec. 17. 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Paschal

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Jeffrey Killian Paschal. Edgewood Trailer Park, a daughter, Tahlia Elizabeth, on Dec. 17. 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Reader Wants To Receive Junk Mail

By Abigail Van Buren

1983 by UniverMi Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: I enjoy getting mail. Is there some way I can get my name on a mailing list so I can get what is called junk mail? I was told that the post office makes money on every piece of mail it handles, so it encourages it.

I would like to get some junk mail. I am 74 years old. Thank you.

VACAVILLE, CALIF.

DEAR VACAVILLE: Its simple. Just order one item you see advertised in a magazine or catalog: personalized stick-on address labels, flea powder, greeting cards, vegetable seeds, bicycle hornanything at all wiil do. I promise you, in no time at all you will need a bigger mailbox, which can also be ordered from one of the many catalogs you will receive after your initial purchase. Once your name goes into the computer, it will breed like a hutch full of rabbits.

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating the most wonderful man in this entire world for the last four months. (Ill call him Henry.)

His mother died, and Henry asked me if I would go to the wake with him. Of course I said I would, and I did.

Well, his ex-wife of 16 years showed up. (I would like to make it clear that they were divorced before I got involved with him.) His ex did in fact use this occasion to cry on the shoulders of Henrys brother and sistersnot about the death of their mother, but because she and Henry were divorced and he had another woman by his side.

As a result of this, Henrys family asked him not to bring me to the funeral, so he didnt. I can hardly control my rage over this. What should I do?

EXCLUDED

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Iiul(*)(Mul<'nt - Soul Winninq

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Sun. PM - Film Series - C. Swindell "Strengthening Your Grip"

DEAR EXCLUDED: Rejoice. If this hadnt happened you might have gone on thinking Henry was the most wondei^ful man in the worldinstead of a wimp who does what his family asks without thinking it through and with total disregard for your feelings.

DEAR ABBY: A week before Thanksgiving, I telephoned an elderly widowed friend of mine and said, If you arent spending Thanksgiving with your daughter, please spend it with us.

She thanked me nicely, then in a very cheery tone she said, Of course my daughter is coming to get me.

I later learned that this lady did not spend Thanksgiving with her daughter. She stayed home alone and cried all day. Her daughter, I was told, had not invited her, but she was too ashamed to admit it.

I feel guilty because of the way I phrased my invitation. There is nothing I ca do about it now, but please print this so others will not be as stupid and thoughtless as I was.

KICKING MYSELF IN BOSTON

DEAR KICKING: Please stop kicking yourself. You meant well. But Im printing your letter so some other well-meaning person doesnt make the same mistake.

CONFIDENTIAL TO A.J.F. IN EL PASO, TEXAS: Go for it! Fortune is a prize to be won. Adventure is the road to it. Chance is what may lurk in the shadows at the roadside. Those are the words of one William Sydney Porter, whose pen name was 0. Henry. (Surprise!)

Announced

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Light of Huntsville, Ala. announce the engagement of their daughter, Laura Alisa, to Freddie Lee Thomas Brock, son of Mr. and Mrs. Freddie L. Brock of Win-terville. The wedding will take place Jan. 7.

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Bonitz

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Paul Bimitz, 1113 S. Overlook Drive, a son, Robert Paul Jr., on Dec. 18,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Garzn Born to Mr. and Mrs. Norberto Moya Garzn, 103-A Thistle Down Court, a daughter, Anna Katherine Shackelford, on Dec. 18,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

White

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Azor White, Greenville, a son. Travis Azor, on Dec. 19,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Healy

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Charles Healy, Win-terville, a son, Brian Keith, on Dec. 19, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Floyd

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Mendle Wayne Floyd, Route 8, Greenville, a son, Mendle Taylor, on Dec. 19, T983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Hicks

Born to Mr. and Mrs. James Auburn Hicks, 1309 Fantasia St., a daughter, Morgan Elizabeth, on Dec. 19, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Patrick Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Patrick Jr., Winterville, a daughter, Kimberly Janel, on Dec. 20, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

- Roberson Born to Mr. and Mrs. Mack Gilbert Roberson Jr., 201 Lewis St., a son, Matthew Fernandez, on Dec. 20. 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Jones

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Thomas Jones, Winterville, a son, Michael Wade, on Dec. 20. 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Brown

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Brown, Oak City, twin daughters, Laquisha Denise and Lakesha Bernice, on Dec. 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Little

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Glenn Little Jr., 105 Syme Circle, a daughter, Samantha Morgan, on Dec. 21, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Expert Argues For Exercise Instead Of Diet To Lose Weight

By CHARLES s.TAYLOR United Press International

To lose weight, dont go on a diet, says Vanderbilt University psychologist Martin Katahn.

Katahn says repeated or prolonged dieting just makes it easier to gain weight on less and less food. He says exercise is the key to sustained weight loss.

Katahn is director of Vanderbilt's weight management program and the author of the book The 200 Calorie Solution.

He recommends that persons who seriously want to lose weight should make time for 200 calories worth of daily exercise. He says a brisk 45-minute walk or the equivalent in tennis, jogging or swimming will take the pounds off.

Just expending that extra 200 calories a day could mean 20 or 30 fewer pounds of fat on your body within a year. he bid.

Generally. 40 to 60 minutes of steady activity.

such as walking, light jogging, bicycling or swimming, done at 60 to 70 percent of iour maximum heart rate, will burn the necessary 200 calories and allow women to maintain their desired weight on 1.800 to 2.000 calories a day and men on 2.500 to 2.700 calories a day."

Katahn says his views are based on scientific studies that indicate the body has a pre-ordained amount of body fat and a set-point that helps balance food intake with energy expenditures. He said this is a protective mechanism. a relic of an ancient feast-or-famine existence, that helps prevent starvation.

He said when food consumption drops significantly below the level needed to maintain current weight, the body turns down its thermostat and begins burning calories at a slower rate He said this built-in method of energy conservation is the reason more than 20 million Americans stop losing weight or lose it very slowly after several weeks on a low-

By CECILY BROWNSTO.NE Associated Press Food Editor BRUNCH FARE Citrus Compote Ham & Corn Omelet Whole Wheat Buns & Coffee WHOLE WHEAT BUNS They have a pleasantly light texture.

1 cup whole wheat flour '4 cup nonfat dry milk

2 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspcion salt

1 envelope dry yeast

2 tablespoons butter, soft

1 cup very warm tap water 1120 to 130 degrees

1 large egg

1 cup I about I unbleached all-purpose flour In the large bowl of an electric mixer stir together whole wheat flour, dry milk, sugar, salt and yeast; add butter. At low speed gradually beat in water; continue beating at medium speed, scraping bowl a few times, for 2 minutes. Add egg and '2 cup of the white flour; beat at high speed, scraping bowl a few

times, for 2 minutes. At low speed beat in the remaining white flour or enough to make a smooth thick batter. Cover bowl; let rise in a warm, draft-free place until doubled - about l hour. Stir down batter. Fill buttered muffin pan cups 'each 2'j inches across the top and 1 inch deep full. Cover; let rise as previously until doubled - about 45 minutes. Bake in a preheated 375-degree oven until browned and a cake tester inserted in the middle comes out clean - about 20 minutes. Makes 18.

When packing a lunch freeze a sandwich or use frozen bread to keep it longer.

calorie diet.

Katahn said the more severe the diet the more drastic the body's counter measures. A crash diet of less than 500 calories a day can slow metabolism by as much as 45 percent. When eating habits return to normal, a disproportionate amount of fat is put into storage.

He said repeated dieting trains the body to reduce the metabolic rate more quickly and makes unwanted weight even harder to lose by cutting calories.

Katahn said exercise and normal eating is the only effective method of losing weight.

He said dieting rarely works by itself. He said dieting may work in five out of one hundred cases.

And he said dieting deprives a person of one of life's great joys - good eating.

Katahn's rules for losing weight are simple;

1. Do 45 minutes of aerobic exercise each day. preferably a brisk walk. '

2. Eat well-balanced meals and don't skip breakfast.

3. Limit alcohol to one drink a day for women, two for men. Alcohol's calories are immediately burned as energy, forcing other food calories to be converted to fat.

4. Remember there is no magic combination of foods or drugs that will burn fat without exercise.

5. Keep in mind that a successful weight-loss plan requires experimentation an(i persistence. Given two persons of the same sex. age and lifestyle, one may lose weight on 2,:300 calories a day while the other gains on 1,700.

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EditorialsThank You, Pitt

Looking back on 1983 in Pitt County is similar to looking back on the year for the country as a whole.

There were differences, of course. (We do things better.)

Our area ... thanks to an ideal mix of agriculture, business, industry, educational facilities and a growing medical complex ... never did reach the depths of recession that plagued other segments of the nation whose lives were closely tied to one, two or even three economic factors. As a result, we suffered less and found it easier to recoup as the recession ended.

Most of our people had a fine Christmas.

We noticed something less likable in the stories of 1983; there seemed to be more crimes of violence than in years past, just as there were stories approaching the disaster level which we never knew before. We suspect they go with population growth, cannot ever be completely avoided, and will be part of the picture as growth continues.

Our years story included a spurt of new housing construction, business construction and related .signals of optimism and confidence in the future. There were other signals.

For instance, city and county school boards received a Research Triangle Institute study which recommended merger of the systems as the best answer to problems they both face. (We look for reaction to those findings in the year ahead.)

Then the.re were contracts awarded for construction of the first segment of the four-lane U.S. 264 from Greenville to Wilson. (A dream of many years is going to be realized.)

The local medical complex never seems to slow its growth. The ECU Medical Schools new radiation therapy center is in progress, and we fully expect another project, or projects will be announced before Orwells Year bows out.

The eye to the future was never more manifest than when the Greenville Utilities launched construction on its new wastewater treatment plant... a facility assuring capability of growth for the foreseeable future.

Yes, it has been a good year; and its proof is that not only were challenges of 1983 met, but steps were taken to assure other good years to come. That says a lot for Pitt Countys people. And lest we forget, to them we say Thank You.

James Kilpatrick

jTime For Departure Has Come

WASHINGTON - There is a me to keep silence, said the Preacher, and a time to speak. Some of us who generally support the president have kept silent long enoutt. It is time to speak on the matter of our Marines in Lebanon. It is time to get out.

When the Marines were dispatched to Beirut 15 months ago. it seemed a useful idea. Hiey were to provide a neutral but powerful presence while the Israeli and Syrian troops withdrew. Tliereafter, they were to assist in maintaining order while a viable government could begin to function under President Gemayel. The United States would not be intervening gratuitously or unilaterally; we were asked by the Lebanese government to serve as part of a military presence that would include troops from France. Britain and Italy also.

Given these reasons and circumstances, I for one raised no objection. A few conservative Republicans, notably Barry Goldwater, opposed the operation from the outset. Events have proved that Goldwaters reservations were

soundly based. Exactly what he predicted would happen has happened: The Israelis have withdrawn, the Syrians have remained and the fratricidal jealousy of Lebanons own warring factions has prevented the stabilization that Reagan had hop^ to attain.

The two difficulties that peiplexed 0^ policy-makers a year ago are still there today. One involves the strength of the Syrians and their Soviet suppliers. The other involves the weakness of the Gemayel regime. It is time to ask ourselves the serious question: How can 1,460 Marines, pinned down at the Beirut airport, contribute to the solution of either problem?

If the Syrians cannot be removed by diplomacy, surely they cannot be removed by force - not, at least, by a force of 1,460 U.S. Marines. If Lebanese leaders themselves are unwilling to make the concessions required of a government of reconciliation, a few platoons of riflemen can do nothing to spur the task along.

The administration insists that the Marines mission has not been a failure. That view is defensible. Over

the past 15 months, the Gemayel govmunent has taken some steps toward reconciliation. The Lebanese army is beginning to fend for itself in the central part of the nation. The Syrians have not launched wholesale invasion.

When all that has been said, the best has been said. There is a time to keep, said the Preacher, and a time to cast away. We have lived up to whatever obligation we may have had to Lebanon and to our allies in the multinational fm-ce. It is not necessary for bu^es to blow retreat; all that is required is a signal to break camp.

What arguments are offered in favor of remaining? They are mostly arguments of saving face. These are not frivolous contentions. If the United States were perceived around the world as a quitter, as a country that could be intimidated by terrorists, as a weak and unreliable ally, the perception could gravely damage our conduct of foreign affairs. We ought not to withdraw with unseemly haste.

But withdraw we must and soon. Nothing is to be gained and disaster

is to be risked by the escalating war-. fare between Syrian forces and our. own. Hie president is plainly right to' * order swift and ap^opiate retaliation to Syrian attacks; it would be un- thinkable to leave our Marines in the impotent position of tnx^ who are shot at out are prevented from shooting back. Yet, it is only a matter of time Wore small exchanges grow to large exchanges. There is a time of war, said the Preacher, and a time of peace. God knows this is no time for war with Syria - and by extension, with the Soviet Union.

When the Lebanese operation began, no plausible parallel could be drawn with Vietnam. The circumstances were entirely different. Now, I am not so sure. The longer this drags on, the more the agonies of 15 years ago will be recalled. I do not want to see Reagans re-election jeopardized by futile sacrifices 5,000 miles away. There is a time to hold, say the poker players, and a time to fold. In my judgment, its time to fold.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

ms Mms

Afi^Liar futite M*-Re OK WIP wiE

John Cun niffExcitement Lacking

NEW YORK (AP) There isn't this December the usual excitement about the economy for the upcoming year. The consensus forecast looks dull:' more of the same as in 1983, although perhaps weakening as the year wears on.

No local explosions and no virtuoso performances in any sector of the economy, says Albert Sommers. Conference Board economist. The expansion, he forecasts, will be broadly distributed.

The view delivered by the University of (^icagos Walter Fackler is just as unspectacular. "The momentum of the recovery will continue, he says, "albeit at a declining rate

None of the usual tensions that Americans are accustomed to living with. No big turning points, no roaring expansion, no record highs, no record lows, no low rumbles, no big stumbles.

Crises They are there, of course. Who can forget the budget deficit, the trade deficit, the loans that might never be recovered from developing nations? But, it seems, they are destined to be quiescent, like Mount St. Helens. Or. like a mine field, not to be driven through if you can steer around it.

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

mCotanchcStrMt. QrMnvlKa. N.C. 2734

EstaMlslMd 1B82

PuWlatiad AAonday Through Friday Attarnoon and Sunday Morning

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But in spite of the wide agreement, there does remain a big question: How long will the expansion continue? It is in this area that little disagreements grow larger by the month. Everyone agrees that expansions must end. But when

A casual survey of forecasters who have dared to go out on a limb longer than a year suggests that by the second half of 1985, at the latest, the current expansion should begin running into serious trouble, and that by 1986 a familiar enemy in the form of iitflation should have visited again.

That would give the current recovery-expansion a longevity of 24 months or so.

It is unlikely that you could find anyone today who is forecasting an expansion of the magnitude enjoyed in the 1960s, when problems such as exist today werent even dreamed of.

The 1960s were economically stable, free of inflation for many months at a time, free from the burden of big federal budget deficits, and free for a time even from international military entanglements.

Todays economies are beset by unresolved problems - problems that are dealt with at best for a short period of time, but basically never solved. The consequences of the trade deficit, the budget deficit, the foreign loans have been averted through delaying actions whose effectiveness gradually wears out.

It is for such reasons that economists and others believe that recoveries these days might self-destruct more quickly than those before them.

Maybe so. Nevertheless, 24 months of expansion isnt bad when you match it against the expansion of 1980-1981. That one lasted just 12 months. This one might be destined to last twice as long.

A trend

Art Buchwald

Home, Maybe, For The Holidays

Christmas is a trying time for many people. Originally a family holiday, it now divides people as much as it brings them together, specially as the childrettgrow older I discovered this when I talked to Fritzie Newmeyer.

"I guess well see Dannv for the holidays, I said.

She pursed her lips, "Danny isnt coming home for Christmas, Hes going to his girlfriends house in La Crosae, Wisconsin.

"Im sorry to hear that. You must be disappointed."

"Why should I be disappointed? Hes a big boy and if he thinks ita more important to spend Christmas with some girl hes only known for six months, in a houseful of strangers instead of with his mother and father who are shelling out $15,000 a year to send him to college, thats his business.

"Im glad to see youre not taking it personally, I said. I guess Dannys in love.

"Maybe he is or maybe he isnt. It could be he thinks hell have a better time in La Crosse than he will in his own home with the people who raised him. After all, what have we got to offer him, but a bed and three good meals a day?

"Well, even if Danny isnt coming home, your daughter Sarah and her children will be here.

"I dont think so. Sarahs husband Allan wants to spend the holidays with his parents in Fort Lauderdale They already sent the airline tickets

I told her it didnt matter to us, and we could alw'ays mail the grandchildrens presents to them. She seemed apologetic about it. but I said not to make a big deal of it. She doesnt owe us anything now that she has her own famil'y. After all. Florida sounds like such a nice place for Christmas compared to Bethesda. and w-e could always see the grandchildren in the spring and it would save me the trouble of shopping for a big dinner and decorating a large Christmas tree which the whole fami

ly used to love to do.

Youre a good soldier, Fritzie, I told her. Most mothers would be upset if two of their four children werent coming home for the holidays.

Larry isnt coming home either. He isnt?

Hes going skiing in Vail with a group of people from his office. He told me it would be the only opportunity he had and asked me if I minded. Of course I told him I didnt mind. How can you compare skiing in Vaii

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

An authority on crime said recently in a seminar with Christian ministers, In almost every criminal I have ever come in contact with I have noted a dwidedly un-Christian factor in his background or environment, Sometimes this has been divorce, at other times drunkenness in the home, in still other cases the influence of evil companions. I can say that is most cases of criminality I have dealt with, the home in which the

individual was raised was almost completely lacking in a spirit of vital religion.

The criminologist went on to say that religion is the only thing which will clear up the sources of infection which blight peoples lives and transform them into , enemies of society.

Why do we have a religion if not to make it work? Train up a child in the way he should go; then when he is old, he will not depart from it.

with a bunch of people from the offi with a boring two days talking abo Christmases past and dredging i childhood memories that everyoi has heard a hundred times? well, at least he called to ask yoi permission.

Fritzie said, I called him

So that just leaves Mary Lo Surely shell be home ft Christmas, I said.

Shes living here. She doesnt t anything but lie around the house ar complain since she lost her job. To t honest I wouldnt mind if she wei somewhere also.

Its funny, I said. On televisio all the TV commercials show thre generations of families togethe opening presents and drinking ej gnogs. I guess in real life it isnt ths simple.

They dont make children like yo see on television any more, Fritzi said.

Home may be where the heart is but it isnt where the skiing is, I add M. I guess theyll all check ii Christmas Day, though. Probably, unless all circuits an busy, Fritzie said.

I better be getting along, I said to check out whats going on at oui place.

Are your kids coming home? We dont know yet. ^ey said ii we didnt hear from them bj (Christmas Eve, we should assume they were.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Prsonrs Are Going Undernourished

WASHINGTON - Polands dictatwship is descending from mass arrests and subjugation to inducing vitamin deficiencies in Solidaritys best and brightest, a crippling treatment designed to force the jailed leaders of Lech Walesas outlawed union to seek exile abroad.

Even high-level Reagan administration officials with long exposure to communist brutality are sickened. They are

studying evidence of systematic denial of vitamins, proteins and other life-sustaining foods to Walesas imprisoned leadership, the solidarity 11. The evidence, scrupulously collected by a team of French doctors last month, appears credible.

The impact of the cripplers of Warsaw on U.S. policy is not yet decided. But in Poland, it is clear - a brutal attempt to drive Solidaritys high command out of

the country and so abort scheduled trials.

For Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, un-dernoitfishment of Walesas top Solidarity leaders who have been jaUed for two y^rs IS a desperate policy. He knows that pubhcity m the West triggered by the trials, no matter how hard the regime trit to conceal its sordid record, would produce outrage. Running the pocal

gamut from the far Wt to the far right in

every Western nation, this outrage would

make a mockery irf Jaruzelskis efforts to win new economic concessions from the West.

Even without show trails. Secretary of State George Shultz and most - but not all - of his top aides are in no hurry to ease U.S. sanctions. Some presidential advisers would go aloi with Walesas own (Hx^xisals for minor relaxation (rf the' U.S. sancUoos: endlog fishing re-strictiott in U.S. waters and opening

American airfields again to Poland commercial airline. Lot.

But considering the disastrooi state i

Polish economy, that would be aspirin ft

terminal cancer. What Janneiski dei perately wants is a moratorium for hi 225^ foreto debts and huge nei fusions of Westera cash and craditi Sbw of the Solidarity n woifl mate the prospect of such aid





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.

Friday, December 30,1983 G

Court Upholds State's Death Sentence

^ The Associated Press Tm death sentence for James W. Hutchins, convicted in the shooting deaths of two depnties and a state trooper after he and his daughter quarrelled about a bowl of punch,'has been-upheld by the 4th U.S. Circuit CkHirt of Appeals.

A three-member panel of the Richmond, Va., court Thursday rejected request by Hutchins attorneys that the execution be delayed to allow the former textile worker to undergo more psychiatrict evaluations.

As of Thursday, Hutchins remained scheduled for execution Jan. 13. None of the federal courts in Hutchins current appeal efforts have granted him a stay of

Life As It's Lived

execution.

Jean Benoy, tiead of North Carolinas Justice Departments western division and whose Forest City office is near the scene of the May 1979 slayings, said Thursday that he considered the courts ruling as an affirmation that Mr. Hutchins had a fair trial.

All i can say is that they (the judges) have affirmed that he was ably represented every step of the wai during the trial, that finding him guilty was proper and that there were no violations of his rights.

Attorney Roger Smith of Ralei^,^who is representing Hutchins in his appeals, said he plans to petition the U.S. Supreme Court to review the

decision.

Hutchins contended in his appeals that he was denied adequate representation and that his attorneys should have presented an insanity defense at his trial -arguments that Benoy has maintained have no merit.

Hutchins, who has been on death row in Raleigh for four years, was found guilty of first-degree murder in the deaths of Rutherford County Deputy Sheriff Owen Messersmith, 58, and Highway Patrol trooper R.L Peterson, 37, and second-degree murder in the shooting of Deputy Sheriff Capt. Roy Huskey, 48.

Huskey was shot with a high-powered rifle as he got out of his car outside Hut

chins house, according to reports. Messersmith was shot at about the same spot when he went to assist Huskey. Officers said Hutchins then sped away from the scene ana when Peterson attempted to stop the car a few minutes later, he also was fatally shot.

The shootings sparked a massive, night-long manhunt for Hutchins in the hilly rural areas of Rutherford County. By the time he was captured, an estimated 200 law enforcement officers and a pack of trained attack dogs had participated in the search.

It was disclosed during the search that Hutchins, a textile worker and laborer in the Forest City area, had argued

with his 17-year-old daughter, Charlotte Hutchins, over the strength of some vodka spiked punch she had panned to take to a high school graduation party.

The girl called the Sheriffs Department for help when Hutchins began beating her and, when the deputies arrived, Hutchins opened fire.

Superior Court Judge Donald L. Smith of Raleigh, who presided at the September 1979 trial and imposed the death sentence, called Hutchins "the most dangerous man I have ever seen and added that it's my opinion that if he were ppipocoH onto the streets he

would kill again. But several neighbors testified that Hutchins had been friendly to them and a good father to his children.

Although a psychiatrist hired by the defense told the jury that Hutchins was abnormally paranoid and felt persecuted by local law enforcement officers, Benoy said Hutchins was found sane and able to stand trial.

If the Supreme Court refuses Hutchins appeal, only an act of executive clemency by Gov. Jim Hunt could prevent the execution, which would be the first in the state since 1%1.

Broke Back Into A Prison Camp

It Boiled Down To Final Word

TILTING AT WINDMILLS Mark Thbmpson lies on a scaffold beam to do some touch-up work on the City of Carson float The Tournament" inside a work area in Pasadena, Calif. The float features knights on horseback. Hundreds of workers are feverishly preparing dozens of floats for Mondays annual Tournament of Roses Parade. (AP Laserphoto)

More C-of-C Goals Assigned

Burney Warren has been named vice chairman of the organization and membership council of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce, according to Jon Tingelstad, 1984 chairman of the chambers board.

The following goals have been adopted as the councils 1984 program of work, Warren has announced;

To select site, date and plan program of the chambers annual meeting, to recognize volunteer leadership and the recognize the citizen of the year.

To schedule and plan the program for the Pitt-Greenville Leadership Institute.

To schedule dates,, plan program and attendance for the chambers out-of town planning conference.

To create a social fellowship to enhance business among chamber members.

To have the chambers 1984 Program of Work printed and distributed to all

Alcoholic Judge Fears Future

BARRE. Vt. lAP) - A former Superior Court judge who is an admitted alcoholic says he is frightened about "what the future may hold for rwe" after his third conviction for drunken driving.

John Morrissey, 54. who served on the bench for 15 years, was sentenced Thursday to at least 20 days in jail by a judge who said, "A judge ought to receive the same punishment as an ordinary citizen.

Morrissey pleaded no contest last month to his third drunken driving charge in seven years, then resigned from the bench.

chamber members, to make sure every chamber member is offered an opportunity to serve on a task force or committee and to supply membership plaques and door decals to all chamber members.

To form a membership team consisting of business and professional members, to assist chamber membership salesmen in formulating a prospect list in making direct sales calls with salesmen on a scheduled and call basis and to recognize new members m a monthly newsletter.

Other council programs of work will be announced later, according to Tingelstad.

By GAIL MICHAELS

I cant find them! Meg screamed from her room after Phillip had instructed her to put on her bedroom slippers.

I was not surprised. It was a miracle that she could find her room. I had spent 15 minutes the night before trying to locate her bed and had almost dislocated my hip in the process. I think that I stepped on a plastic bowling ball. Then again, it could have been the plastic head my father so obligingly bought for her so that she could learn to apply make-up and dye hair out of a bottle marked Permanent: do not use near carpets, linoleum, formica or clothing.

I couldnt tell which one I had encountered because two sleeping bags, an old bedspread and comforter off her bed obscured everything else on the floor.

Of course, the clutter was not out of the ordinary. But there did seem to be a bit more junk courtesy of Christmas. I had planned before Santas arrival to perform my usual routine with the rubber gloves and two garbage bags, especially

NOTICE OF RESALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION Opening Bid $52,550 Friday, January 6,1984 12:00 Noon Pitt County Courthouse Door Third Street Entrance

Helen A. Snyder Residence & Lot 311 Meade St., Greenville, NC

Lot Approx. 63'x102' House-Entrance Hall, Living Room (Fireplace), Dining Room-Kitchen (Utility Area),

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Judicial Sale - Subject To Court Approval 30 Year Financing Available

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Wachovia Bank & Tniat Co.,N.A. Exacutor of Estate of Helen A. Snyder Barbara B. Allen, Trust Officer 757-7244

Start 1984 off right with a resolution to use energy* wisely. Youll save money, and help keep utility rates low. Here are some ideas.

Insulate your home, including walls, floors, windows, doors, attic, basement and fireplaces.

Have a professional heating and cooling system maintenance check seasonally. Change filters and clean ducts yourself each month.

Heat and cool efficiently. Install clock thermostats on furnace and air condltloner...con8ider an energy-saving heat pump...use attic and house fans effectively In summer...and plant outdoor trees and shrubs to block wind and hot sun rays.

Use leas hot water. Put an Insulation "jacket" around your water heater and reduce Its water .temperature to 120*...wash and rinse laundry In cold water...use

your dishwasher only when full...take short showers instead of baths...and install water flow restrictors in shower head faucets.

. Use appliances wisely. Turn them on only when needed...use energy-saving options...check and clean appliances frequently...and read manufacturer's directions.

Cut lighting costs. Keep all lamps and bulbs clean...use fluorescent lights... install automatic photoelectric cells or time clocks...use sunlight...and turn off ail lights when not in use.

For more energy-saving ideas, call us.

WASTE

N#T

reenville ,

tilities

ommission

since we were down to three pairs of Her Majesty underpants and I knew that the rest must be squirreled away in dim corners and inside game boxes. The task was so distasteful, however, that I opted for other more cheerful activities to fill my spare time, like paying bills and mending ripped seams in Megs clothing.

With my help Meg did eventually find her bedroom slippers. One was in the closet where she would never have thought to look. The other was on top of the books in her bookcase.

That does it! I said.. This room is a disgrace.

It is a bit of a rats nest, she grinned, apparently unaware that some slight indication of repentance was in order.

Most rats would consider, your "statement an insult. I want this room cleaned up now.

But I cleaned it before Christmas!she wailed.

Stuffing your menagerie and your dirty clothes under the bed does not count. I want this place spotless. Anything that is left out gets thrown away.

Thats not fair! I have to live in this room.

You can't even get into this room. Now get started."

Her chin quivered. This is unreasonable. You don't keep your living space spotless."

My bedroom doesnt look like the IRA at Coney Island.

Your desk does.

She had a point. My sewing machine has been. missing since October. Well. I hesitated, thats different. How?

I have to work there.

I have to work here so it isnt different at all.

Yes it is."

How?" she persisted. There was only one logical answer. Because," I said. "Im the mother."

MAIDEN, N.C. (AP) -Catawba County prison officials are puzzled over the latest twist in jailbreaks - a man who broke into the state prison unit near Maiden.

Billy Payne, 32, who was released from the camp Dec, 15, was arrested late Tuesday after he allegedly climbed over a 10-foot fence into the camp. Payne allegedly climbed back over the fence, which is topped with barbed wire, when a guard spotted him.

He was arrested minutes later and charged with misdemeanor breaking and entering. He was being held on $500 bond in the Catawba County Jail.

Officers said they still dont know why he went back into the prison camp. He

didnt want to talk a whole lot about it, said Maj. Richard Cannon of the sheriffs ^department.

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6 Th Daily Reftector, GreenviHe, N.C.

Friday, Decwnbf 30,1963

Church News

Communion Service Planned

Dr. West Shields Jr. will conduct a New Years Eve service Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at St. Luke Free Will Baptist Church. Holy communion will be held.

Watch Night Service Set

A watch night service will be held at the House of Prayer of Heart to Give Saturday starting at 9 p.m. Sermons will be given by Evangelists Carl Andrews. Helen Lofton, Drew Perry, Joseph Barrow and Richard Reed. The Gospel Travelers will also be present.

By SUSAN BIZZARO GUC CommBBications Specialist So you thought Oiristmas came and went without a hitch? Truth is some Pitt County children might have awakened to empty stnekings had it not been for a few hard-working Greenville Utilities employees.

Serv/ce Set In Home

A New Year's Eve service will be held at the home of Hubert and Betty Gardner, 502 Allen Drive, Ayden, starting at 9 p.m. Mrs. Gardner will be the evangelist for the service.

Appreciation Service Planned

An appreciation service for Mamie Gardner, musician, will be held at Rock Spring Dree Will Baptist Church Sunday at 6 p.m.

Bible Class Scheduled

After all, aging Rudolphs dim light couldn't possibly have guided the famous sleigh to the darkened St. John area where high winds had damaged a utility pole. And Santa surely would have careened uncontrollably down 10th Street had he tried to land on the spot where ice from a water main break

made travel hazardous. It was a close call. But it will take more than damage frmn low temperatures-and high winds to keep Santa away. Especially when there are people like Robert Lockamy and Russell Bryan willing to give up their hmiday to make it safe for others.

The two GUC electrical department employees worked fnm 1:30 p.m. until midnight Christmas Eve -sometimes in 4-degree temperatures - making repairs. Then they^ put in anotter eight hours on Christmas Day.

Im lucky my wifes understanding, said Lockamy, an electrical crew leader who has been with GUC for

15 years. At work we put ail the holidays in a hat and drew for them. I got Christinas.

The weather just added to the shifice this year. When Lockamy was hi^ up in tte . bucket trud making repairs, it was one of the coldest times he can remember.

Christmas Eve was^the worst with that wind (wind chill factor was -30 degrees), he said. If it had been freezing rain I dont think I could imve stood it. Assisting Lockamy was Russell Bryan, who was phil-osophical about the overtime. It was a job that had to be done, he said. Were on call 24 hours a day, no matter what day.

usy On Holiday

The regular Bible Class at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m.

New Year's Eve Service Set

A New Years Watch Night service will be held at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church. 226 W. Eighth St.. Saturday at 10 p.m. The service is sponsored by the Black Minister's Conference of Greenville and Pitt Countv.

Many Celebrations To

Candlelight ServiceSet

St. Delight Church in Walstonburg will hold a candlelight service Sunday at 6 p.m. The program will feature The Foreman Sisters and the K Brothers of LaGrange, The Mercer Brothers of Piney Grove, the Happy Brothers of Crisp, the St. Delight Male Choir and the Mighty All Stars of Snow Hill.

Ring In The New Year

Eldress To Speak Sunday

Simpson Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will hold services Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Eldress Roberta Moore will deliver the sermon and will be assisted during the service by the choir and ushers of The Church Of God of Greenville.

WintervHle Plans Service

The Winterville community New Years Eve Watch Night Service will be held at the Winterville Christian Church at 11 p.m. Saturday.

Quarterly Meeting Planned

Quarterly meeting services will be held this weekend at Cherry Lane Free Will Baptist Church Holy Communion will be celebrated Saturday at 7:30 p.m.: the service will be led by Rev. E.B. Williams and the congregation of .Nazarene Church of Christ. Sunday at 11 a.m.. Rev. C.R. Parker and the Cherry Lane senior choir and ushers will conduct the service. The 3 p.m. service will be conducted by Bishop W.L. Phillips and the congregation of St. Paul Free Will Baptist Church.

Mount Calvary Plans Service

An old-fashioned New Year's, Eve service will be held Saturday at 10 p.m. at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church.

Film Series To Be Shown

A film series "Strengthening Your Grip" will start at 6 p.m. Sunday at Harvest Baptist Church, which meets at Carolina Country Day School.

The six films will be presented by Charles Swindoll and the first one is titled "Priorities: Freedom From the Tyranny of the Urgent." For information call 756-3624.

Combined Service Scheduled

A combined watch night service will start at 8::io p.m. at Meadowbrook Pentecostal Holiness Church. Carson .Memorial Holiness and Emmanual Holiness Churches are also spoiisoring the service.

A communion service will be held prior to midnight.

First Service Planned

The first church services in the .Missionary House of Prayer. 129 E. 2nd Street. Ayden. will be held Sunday, ster Sudie Vines will conduct the 11 a.m. service. At 3 p.m.. Sister Debbie Jordan will be in charge of the service Bible classes will be held every Thursday from 7-8 p.m.

ByJ.ANEWELBORN Reflector Staff W riter

Many celebrations will be held Saturday night as Greenville citizens ring in the New Year. Champagne will be flowing as 1984 is ushered in with a host of parties at local country clubs, nightclubs and restaurants. A sampling of the New Years Eve festivities in Greenville includes:

Attic Two rock bands. .No Vacancy and Panic, will bring in the New Year. The cover charge of $5 per person and $9 per couple includes party favors. Patrons can watch the ball drop in Times Square at midnight on the seven-foot television. Doors openat8:30p.m.

Beef Barn One third of the restaurant has been set aside for reservations, but the rest of the Beef Barn will be open to the public. A New Years Eve celebration in the Loft will feature vocalist and pianist Tom Jones from 6 p.m. until. A complimentary glass of champagne will be poured for each patron of the Loft at midnight.

Brook Valley Country Club A buffet dinner for Brook Valley members will be followed' by a dance. Music will be provided by disc jockey Jeff French.

Carolina Opry House Country and country rock music will be performed by Super Grit. Free champagne and. party favors will be supplied. Tickets can be purchased at the Carolina Opry House. Apple Records and the Record Bar at Pitt Plaza.

Greenville Country Club

- A prime rib buffet will be served for .members of the

country club.

Grogs The musical entertainment at Grogs will be Lahn and Loftin. The $2 cover charge includes party favors. There will be a special price on champagne at midnight. Doors open at 8 p.m.

King and Queen North In the banquet room, the '^band Reflections will perform beach and top forty music from 9 p.m.-l a.m. Cover charge will be $6 per person. A special dinner in the dining room includes a choice of stuffed shrimp or a ten-ounce ribeye steak and a half-bottle of champagne for $65 per couple; this price includes admission to the dance in ^ the banquet room plus party favors. The house band. 509 North, will provide music in the dining room. Advance tickets are available. ,

Moose Lodge - The annual New Years Eve dance for members and guests will feature music by the Fortunes Combo.

Paddock Club - The Paddock Club will serve a buffet breakfast at 2 a.m. Party favors and balloons will be provided. The cover charge will be $5 for members and $8 for nonmembers.

Papa Katz The cover charge of $7 for ladies. $9 for men and $15 per couple entitles patrons to free wine, draft beer, and highballs. There will also be free champagne at midnight and party favors, as well as giveaways. Disc jockey John Moore will provide music.

Ramada Inn The band Lyxx will play top forty and beach music in Pagentry Hall; tickets are $10 per

Youth Services Planned

Deacon Anniversary Set

The Warren Chapel Church Deacon Board will observe its annual anniversary Sunday at 3 p m. at the church Eldress Rhuarma Knox and the Good Hope Choir will render the service.

Monthly youth services will be held at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. The sermon will be delivered by the Rev. James Nobles. Music will be provided by the youth choir.

The pastor and officers will meet Monday at Sweet Hope at

/ p.m.

COUCH b LOVE SEATS

person. All-you-can-eat specials in the Arbor restaurant include crab legs, beef and bufgandy, or shrimp and chablis for $11.95. Those attending the party can reserve a room at the Ramada Inn for $19.84 instead of driving home.

Tree House The cover charge of $4 per person and $6 for couples for the New Years Eve party at the Tree House includes party favors, champagne at midnight and a continental breakfast. Music will be provided by guitarist Bruce Frye.

time or    But    luckily

I dont bave'|^tnus next year.

Supervising th^on-cali crews was James Btokes who, after 26 years at^UC, is retiri^ ina few weeks\ Christman Eve wasNas rough as Ive ever seen il he said. We had four (two men to a crew) out until^ midnight. My family waited until I got home before they opened their presents.

The weather caused damage to three utility poles, a three-friiase line and a pad-mounted transformer. Al-th<^ none were major repairs, there were isolated outages. ^

Because tlM damage was from one end of the county to the other, we had to call in extra crews. Repair was time consuming, said electric distribution supervisor Haywood Out-land. Joining the repair team was Larry Jacobs, Kelly Parisher, Willie Gay, Pali Sutton and Adolph Pollard.

Weather also causd the GUC water and sewer department to work overtime. But with reports of nearly 150 broken water pipes and more calls coming in, the work continues.

*One problem now is that a whole lot of frozen pipes are thawing and water is leakii into peoples houses, sail Jimmy Nethercutt, pipe crew leader. Nethercutt was on the team, along with Lee Johnson, that worked all day on Christmas. Some local businesses had pipes break, sending freezing water onto the streets. The crew also had three water main breaks to rejair, one of which left 25 families without water for

even

she probably didnt miss me.

Wherever there was a broimn watw hne, you could also fmd Ernest Spruiell, meter dqartment service water. He put in 34 hours of overtime in three days, shuttn^ off water nw^ so

it^asnt thT^ppiest Christmas Day I ever said S^eU, after workii^ from 9:30 a.m. until 2:30 a.m. But it was oie Christmas Ill never foi^et. Lots of petle in apartments went away, shut off their heat and had their pipes freeze. Plumbers have all the wot they can handle right now.

The GUC gas departments Jay Brown spend his Christmas checking gas pressure at several locations

- obviously some gas m wo% not ^te up

toth^

lowtOE^tufes.

If Christmas is truly a, time to be thaidcful, thra we should give thaiAs to a, utility crews who worked such difficult weather dioing: the holiday hours to soryft-'; our custoners mergfoql^ neecb, said Charles

director of Greenvill Utilities. And this was just'.^ their turn next week, ' month, next year, it will be"! someone elses. And th^^ same dedicated performance, will be shown again.

Tune-Up^, B'.m'Job'. GpPi'il B("p'Tit s.

fluto Specialty Co

758-1131

TRIBAL CLASHES CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - Police sealed off a black squatter camp Thursday after a night of fighting, apparently between tribal factions, authorities said.

six hours.

On Christmas morning I saw my 3'2-and-a-half year old daughter open up a few presents before I got the call to fix a water main break, said Johnson. She was so wrapped up in her presents

tHE MEW YEAt

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SflONEY^

264 Bv Pass Greenville





Stapticalh

Asstssmt Cast

Of Spy

By GRAHAM HEATHCOTE Associated Press Writer LONDON (AP) - Two British lawmaka^ say they are skqitical about Defense 'Ministry asslions that a South African naval (dficer convicted of wying did not five the Soviets secret in-foroatkm about the Royai Navys latest warships and

weapons.

Kienneti

Cenneth Warren of the governing Conservative Party and opposition Lal)prite Ted Leadbitter told reporters Thursday they intend to question Prime Minister Margaret 'DiatciKr abtfit the South African spy case when Parliament reconvenes Jan. 16.

Their comments came af$nr the South African SiBrpe Court on Thursday cdtvicted Commodore Dieter GItardt, 47, and his wife, Rqth, 41, of high treason for spring for the Soviet Union ~a crime fHmishable by hanging Sentencing is expected wRhin the next few days.

Gerhardt, former com-miUKler of South Africas Sinonstown naval base, anitted in a signed statement after the couple was arrested a year ago that he was a Soviet spy.

Supreme Court Justice G.G.A. Munnik said he rejected Gerhardts defense of havi^ been a double agent feeding the Soviets incorrect data. That claim was made only after the trial began behind closed doors Sept. 5.

The judge also rejected Mrs. Gerhardts defense that she first believed her husband was helping Western intelligence. Munnik said he also rejected her claim that by 1960 she realized her husband was aiding the Soviets, but continued to hdp because he threatened her and their 7-year-old son.

Munnik said Gerhardt began spying as a young officer in 1962 and received cash for transmitting navy secrets to the Soviets and his wife was paid for acting as courier of film and documents since 1972.

The two lawmakers said^ their main concern is that' positions of British warships in last year's Falkland Islands war with Argentina might have been passed on to the Soviets.

Gerhardt was based in Britain for at least three years during the time he was accused of spying, including, time spent as the embassys qaval attache, Londons Daily Telegraph reported today.

The newspaper said in-fbrmation supplied by the British and U.S. intelligence siervices was largely re-qxHisible for trapping the Gerhardts, whose work for the Russians seriously compromised Western defense plans.

, When Gerhardt was arrested in January, Mrs. Thatcher was questioned dbout his contacts in Britain and his activities during the falklands war. At the time, she said Gerhardt's in-fcrmation on the Royal Navy dated from the 1960s and was Out of date.

' But Warren and Leadbitter said that in the wake of Gerhardts conviction they did not find that assurance Satisfactory.

"1 have always felt the key questions are; who did he know in this country and what has happened to them since? said Warren.A man having operated for so long must have built up a repertoire of contacts and our security services must really go through them with a toothcomb.

Leadbitter said the Simonstown base is used by the Royal Navy for refueling and maintenance. South Africa, a former British colony, became independent in 1961 aiKl withdrew from the Commonwealth.

He said Exocet missiles like those used by Argentina to sink one British ship and damage two others the war were through Cape Town to tina at the height (rf the hting.

It is a matter of the eipest concern as to the 'extent to which those circumstances and the activ-.ities of Gerhardt combined to ; the risk of our own security duringthe cmflict, be said.

; There has been speculation in the British press about the [extent to which'the . GerlMrdts infonned the Soviet Union ^ tte Wests plans for Simonstown in the *^evcntofaworldwar.

8 am6 pm

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8 Th DHy WIctor, Gfefiville, N.C.

Friday, December 30,1993

ATTICSome Glassy*Eyed Reflections On TV '83

Sat.

6

Dec. 31

NEW YEAR S EVE

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WITH 2 BANDS &

(flnal performance ever)

By FRED ROTHENBERG AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - Reflections on a glossy eye from the 1983TV world;

A Round of Applause for the Weatherman;

As a ratings gimmick, a station in Dayton, Ohio, invited a studio audience for its early evening newscast. If this stunt catches on, maybe it will improve the performance of the actors on the local news.

Never I nderestimate the Power of the Press:

The nuclear disarmament movement latched on to ABC's The Day After and scheduled demonstrations and discussions coordinated to the film's broadcast. Press coverage of the activities and the film helped make The Day After" must-viewing for

100 million Ammcaos.

Before the movie became a political lightning rod, ABC didnt exactly know how to promote its nuclear war film. Would too much hj^ about death and destruction be in poor taste? Even worse, would it turn off potential viewers'?

In the end, ABC let other people do the drumming, and it worked.

A Bluodlfss Coup for NBC;

NBCs A-Team has more bullets flying than any other show, but nobodys been hit this season. Psychologists say the lack of blood and consequences will mislead children.

Maybe so, but this isnt supposed to be reality.For escapist entertainment, we'd rather see The A-Team" fire cabbages and

watermelons and mock the violence 00 TV than see real violence.

The only direct hit for The A-Team is in the ratings.

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Can We Talk about Tacky?

Joan RivCTS, one of the hosts of the Emmy Award telecast on NBC, put her foot in her mouth, calling James Watt an idiot and uttering a profanity;^he also changed her wardr^ each time she made an appearance. Where was Johnny Carson when we really needed him?

Penalty for Piling on;

The fuss over Howard Cosell calling Washington Redskins receiver Alvin Garrett "a little monkey on ABCs Monday Night Football" seemed a case of hitting Howard when he was down. Of course, Cosell shouldn't have said it and shouldnt have denied he said it. But it was wrong of some pundits, perhaps penalizing Cosell for previous pomposity -and egotism, to suggest he's a racist.

When Will this War Ever End?

ABCs The Winds of War" blustered on and on. 18 hours worth of Robert Mitchum

'making the world safe for democracy. He met Roosevelt, Hitler, Churchill and Stalin, and we half expected to see his crags' face on Mount Rushmore.

CBS Brought the Troops Home:

M-A-S-H spent Uh years building friendships and 2>2 hours saying goodbye. This was the war series to end all war series. Where were you the night of Feb. 28? A TV-record 106 million viewers were saluting TV at its finest.

This Guv Could Sell a Used Computer:

. Alan Alda was paid $6 million to plug Atari computers. We dont know about the product, but the pitch was certainly convincing. This Alda is no Mr. Whipple. Maybe hell get a series someday.

Archie Bunker Finally Got His in the End:    ,

CBS canceled Archie Bunkers Place. But the demise of this show couldnt erase the comedy daring and insights of its predecessor, All in the Family.

This Golden Gut Is Suffering from Indigestion:

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"TH.AT'S DANCING" Twiggy, left, and Tommy Tune, stars of the Broadway musical My One and Only", cavort beneath a large billboard from the Tony Award-winning show at the St. James Theater in New York. The two were filming for a segment of the upcoming movie. "Thats Dancing". (AP Laserphoto)

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Fred Silverman, who$e golden oA supposedly inspired brilliant pit^ram-miflg choices at ABC and CBS and SO'SO selections at NBC, is now an independent r. His niicke of the 1 heavy on hype and thin everywhere else. His We Got It Made is insulting, infantile and ungrammatical to boot.

Nightline makes journalism insightful and in-ftmnative every night. Hes

r'ous, witty and curious, if you could hdd conventions with four people simultaneously, make sense of it and still pause at the right' time for the com-merciak.

Broadcast Journalisms Finest Hopr:

Summer series from Charles Kuralt and Bill Moyers, back to back on C^, proved, once agam. ut news and information iresented entertainingly can more entertaining - and interesting - than entertainment.

Best Co-ed Tag Team;

Sam and Diane of NBC's Cheers. Great comedy comes from believable conflict, and these two lovers mix as well a beer and wine. As one of the shows producers said about their match, they may fall in love, but they still wont like each other.

Nobody Does It Better:

Ted Koppel of ABCs

TV Log

For complolo TV programming information, conauit your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Daily Reflactor._

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

FRIDAY

7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 F. Crest 11:00 News 9 11:30 Basketball 2:00 Nightwatch

SATURDAY

7:00 Kangaroo 8:00 Bisketts :X Supercade 9:30 Dungeons 8, 10:00 Plastlcman 10:30 C. Brown 11:00 Benjl

11:30 Bugs 12:00 Football If Game Early 4:00 Soul Train S:00 Dance Fever 5:30 A. Grittlth 6:00 News 6. News If Game Late 1:00 Soul Train 2:00 Dance Fever 2:30 A. Griffith 3:00 NFL 7:00 Solid Gold 8:00 Cutter To 9:00 Movie 11:00 Update 11:30 New Year

WITN-TV-Ch.7

FRIDAY

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11:00 Mr. T.

11:30 Spiderman 12:30 NFL 83 1:00 Football 4:00 B. Bunch 4:30 Muppets 5:00 Wrestling 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Hee Haw 8:00 Parade 9:00 DItt Strokes 9 X Manimal 11:00 Carousel 11:30 New Year 1:00 Closeup 1:30 News

Ihe ARBOR

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9:30 Pac Man 10 30 Littles 11:00 Puppy 12:00 Special 12:30 Bandstand 1:30 Matinee 6:30 Music City 7:00 Wrestling 8 00 T.J Hooker 9:00 L. Boat 10:00 F Island 11:00 Action News 11:15 ABC Weekend 11:30 Dick Clark 1:00 Cinema

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fe

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C._Friday.    December    30.1983    9See UNESCO Hopelessly Politicized, Anti-West

WASHINGTON (AP) -Senior Reagan administra-;tien officials say UNESCO is , so fatally flawed," so politicized and anti-Western, that they see virtually no chance it can make the ..Changes essential to persuade the United States to reverse its decision to . withdraw.

;^TDelegaies to the United ^:j^tioas Educational Scientif-

and Cultural Organization r-in. Paris predict the expected of the large annual U.S. '-^tribution, now about one i-:q^rter of UNESCOs $200 Trswllion budget, will force the 'igency to trim its staff, and ;;^^cut back and re-examine :%^ams.

^IjSome key Reagan administration officials, com-^ining of allegedly run- _^ay UNESCO budgets, say ; ^h steps would provide at fest one dose of the strong ' Jiiedicine they say is essen--Jal if UNESCO is to be "'ftscued from its own Jimismanagement" and dom-fiation by radical elements led by the Soviet Union.

Ending a six-month long ^licy review, the State Department on Thursday ac-. -tiised UNESCO of displaying consistent "hostility towards the basic institutions of a fiw society."

Jean-Pierre Cot. French delegate to the UNESCO Executive Council, said some (k the U.S. complaints were

"well founded." and "some of the criticisms are shared by France." However, the French government had asked the United States not to withdraw, officials in Paris said.

"If the Americans leave. UNESCO will cnly be able to function poorly," said Cot.

UNESCO Secretary-General Amadou Mahtar M'Bow of Senegal said last November that UNESCO would apply for an international loan if the United States pulled out He did not give details of how such a loan would be solicited or who the lenders might be.

Speaking for President Reagan, a State Department spokesman said the United States will withdraw permanently on Dec. 31. 1984. one year from now.

Secretary of State George Shultz appeared to leave an opening for reconciliation, telling UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar in a letter that the year s wait offers UNESCO "a potential opfwrtunity to respond to the serious concerns that have caused our withdrawal.'

"We remain open to indications of significant improvement." Shultz said. *We would welcome meaningful changes that would eliminate the suppression of minority views within UNESCO and restore fiscal integrity to the organization."

But if Shultz left an inning, other officials made clear it is only a small one. They said this is true because U.S. concerns have been plain for months, giving UNESCO ample opportunity to change direction.

"Our conclusion is firm." said Gregory Newell, assistant secretary of State for International Organizatioris. "Our decision to withdraw is not a negotiating tack or a ploy of any sort."

The United States has concluded. Newell said, "there is no conceivable way that UNESCO could change its policies, its direction, its practices, such that we would be enticed to remain."

The Soviet Union reacted harshly to the U.S. announcement. saying through the official news agency Tass that the U.S. withdrawal displayed imperial haughtiness" tow'ard a United Nations agency which, it said, c h a 1*1 e n g e;d Washington's course of militarism and adventurism.

But Jean Gerard, the U.S. ambassador to UNESCO, said the organization "seems to be so skewed, so far off course, so fatally flawed, that if we stayed we would become accomplices to something that it is not accomplishing the high

purposes for which it was founded."

Unless the United States acts in the next 12 months to rescind its withdrawal notice. 37 years of American participation in the 161-member agency will end officially on Dec. 31,1984.

The State Department drew up a bill of particulars agaifiSt UNESCO, accusing it of having "politicized virtually every subject it deals with."

Newell said the United States is particularly upset at a $750,000 "Soviet inspired disarmament and peace initiative which he said has no place in a cultural and scientific agency, especially since only $32.(100 was budgeted for a refugee education program.

He also objected to attempts by some UNESCO members to promote a new "world information and communications order " viewed by many Western news organizations as an organized threat to international press freedoms.

Newell, under questioning from reporters, said that because of Currency fluctuations between the U.S. dollar and the French franc, the U.S. contribution to UNESCO for the 1985 fiscal year would be about $28.5 million, signif

icantly less than the current $50 million U.S. share.

Newell said the United States expects to take part in some aspects of UNESCO, even after final withdrawal, including cooperation under the Universal Copyright Convention and in continuing the development of international communications.

Shultz said the' United States would try to find alternatives to UNESCO to continue scientific, educational and cultural projects.

Newell said the United

States consulted with as many as 50 other UNESCO members and allies before reaching its decision to pull out.

He said the United States found "unanimous agreement with the gravity of the problems." But he offered no evidence any, other government has decided to follew the U.S. lead.

"We are neither encouraging nor pushing other nation states to conclude as we have concluded," Newell said.

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Air Violations By Old Crematorium

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - The smoke rising from the University of Michigan Medical School contains ashes from cadavers, and the state wants to clear the air.

Y(i and I both have stuff in our bodies that just wont bum, said Dennis Drake of the state Department of Natural Resources compliance section.

As a result, he said smoke containing non-combustible remains of cadavers spews from a 14-year-old crematorium at twice the rate allowed under state regulations.

A new crematorium that will meet state standards will not be ready until January 1985, and university officials say they will ask next month for permission to use the current Anatomy Department crematorium until then.

unreasonable interference with the medical schools anatomy program

Such a closing would be costly, since the 225 cadavers used annually by the medical school would have to be burned elsewhere, an associate anatomy professor, Theodore Fischer, said this week.

A spokeswoman for the Michigan Memorial Park in Flat Rock said cremation there costs $150. At that rate, commercial cremation would cost the university $23,750 per year.

All cadavers donated to the medical school are cremated after they are dissected, Fischer said, adding the ashes are packaged individually and buried annually in a mass grave at United Memorial Gardens in Plymouth.

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FLOWER FLOAT NEW YORK (AP) - A bit of the Antarctic will be created in flowers from around the world on a float m the Jan. 2,1984, Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif.

Dominating the scene on the Eastman Kodak Co. float will be six large penguins standing in a landscape of ice and snow made out of blue, lavender and magenta-colored flowers contrasted with whites.

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10 . The Daily Re iectorJ3reenville, N C-

Friday, December 30,1983

Stock And Market Reports

lluc'

RALK.OU, \ I AP (NCDA - TV treiid (>n iho North Carolina iiog niarkft today was 2.(k !n>\er Kinston unreported, Tinton. Elizabethtown h: yei'f^vilit. ^Dunn. PuiK iii.., <, nVCourn. Ayden, i *    '        unir

buri> a;;: 'K>    t;    JT

Wilson iT"fa    -lan

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prelit'k averatc : dock 0. ' f'C! market . supph moderate weieh's slauh",< fryers \ : Frida, a.- pared . . da\

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tainty about the future course of interest rates apparently have prevented many traders from wwking up much enthusiasm for stocks at the moment.

The NYSE index was unchanged at 95.03. The American Stock Exchange index was up .47 at 221.68. Big Board volume totaled 32.59 million shares at noontime, against 40,16 million at the same point Thursday.

.Middav stocks: Low Lasi 35 45'. 16-.

44', 14

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Store Break~ln Reported

Greenville police are continuii^ their investigation of a break-in at Coreys Exxon service station on Memorial Drive that was reported at 1:44 a.m. today.

Officer W.B. Price said entrance to the building was gained by breaking windows from the front of the building and saki eight tires were reported taken.,

Irtstructor Accosted

Greenville police are looking for three black men - one with an injured face - who allegedly attempted to rob Dennis Kurt Halsev of 1019 E. Wright Road about 8; 15 p.m. Thursday behind the'Greenville Academy of Martial Arts on Dickinson Avenue.

Officer T.V. Woolard said the three men accosted Halsey, an instructor at the academy, as he left the building.

One of the would-be robbers, armed with a knife, was struck several times by Hauley who then threw him against a wall, injuring his face. W'oolard said the three attackers were last seen running from the scene, one of them bleeding from the face.

Oysterman Found Safe After Adrift

through that time to try to get peoples attention, Gaskill said. "He said he didnt see a Coast Guard plane or boat in all that time."

It wasnt until the thin ice broke up that Jefferson could risk going ashore. Gaskill said.

By JODY TAYLOR

Associated Press Writer

A Pamlico oysterman wh(Ke powerless boat drifted across Pamlico Sound and became locked in ice near Cedar Island for five days, managed to reach shore and safety Thursday when the bitter cold eased.

Jerry Gaskill. a Cedar Island motel owner, said Albert Jefferson. 43. left Pamlico Saturday to get oysters for Christmas.

Gaskill said the battery on Jefferson's boat went dead during the afternoon and the boat began taking on water. He threw the anchor over, but the chain broke and he began drifting, Jefferson and the boat drifted all through the night, until the boat froze in water about five miles from Cedar Island.

Gaskill said Jefferson had a Coleman stove but ran out of fuel Tuesday afternoon. He then began burning oil-soaked rags in the cabin to keep warm in the subfreezing temperatures.

He said he waved things

County Board To Meet

The Pitt County Board Commissioners will meet Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the county (tffice building at 1717 W. Fifth St.

Included on the agenda are ai^ntments to variois boards, reports from county agoicies including a report on a recently completed study of the jail, and consi^ration of a request to hold a referendum on establishing the Bell Arthur Fire District at the . Bell Arthur Fire Department building on March 13.

Pitt Schools Air 'Viewpoint'

Plans for the Governors Commission on Education for Economic Growth, Greenville public hearing scheduled for Jan. 5 at Wahl-Coates School will be the topic of this week's "Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Dr. Roy Forbes and Dr, Jean Wells of the Governors Commission on Education for Economic Growth.

The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday. 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sunday, 9:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05 p.m. WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.

Liquor, Beer Confiscated

Eleven gallons of liquor and six cases of oeer were confiscated by Greenville police Thursday following searches at Hembys Shoe Shine Parlor at 607 Albemarle Ave. and Moores Pop Shop at 609 Albemarle Ave.

Detective Pete Lavin said 54 gallons of liquor were taken from the shoe shine parlor.

Detective W.E. Barnhill said 5>2 gallons of liquor and six cases of beer were confiscated from the pop shop. He said Pamela Denise Sheppard. 19, was charged with violating ABC permit laws in connection with the pop shop search.

Jewelry Reported Taken

Officer H.D. Hines said jewelry valued at $50 was reported taken in a break-in at 115 N. Jarvis St, Thursday. Hines said Susanna F. Gocke reported the break-in at 10:31 a.m., and noted that investigation of the case is continuing.

Drug Charge Filed

Greenville police Thursday arrested Freda Batts Mayo. 29 of 5 Ford St. on charges of posession and sale of marijuana.

Officer T.V. Woolard said the charges against Ms. Mayo resulted from the sale of a bag of marijuana to one of the departments narcotics and vice squad officers on Nov. 30.

Decal Renewel Announced

Lee Murphy, acting city engineer, reminded local residents who live in the "A and B sections of designated residential controlled parking areas that the deadline for renewal of permit decals is Saturday.

Murphy said the permits expire each year on Dec. 31 and residents have until Feb. 14 to renew them at an annual cost of $5 per decal requested. Application forms for permits should be filled out ahead of time to avoid issuing delays.

He said the permit decals may be purchased at 1he engineering-inspections office on the third floor of the community building on Greene Street. For more information call 752-4137 or visit the engineering-inspections office.

Card Of Thanks

The family of the late Leroy Hill wishes to express thanks for the kindnesses shown toward them during the death of their loved one. And a special thanks to Flanagans Funeral Home and staff.

May God bless each and every one of you.

The Glover & Hill Families

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"He finally got out of the boat (Thursday) morning and and took his compass and waded ashore. He started beating on pots and finally attract^ some hunters who brought him in.

Hes a very lucky man, Gaskill said. "This is as cold and as windy a time as weve seen here in 50 years. He came through the roughest part of Pamlico Sound in a 25-foot boat. But it held together. He said he was a Navy man and hed always learned to stay with the boat as long as it was afloat.

' Gaskill said Jefferson was in excellent condition and complained only of being hungry.

SHRINE NOTICE Greenville area Nobles of Rofelt Pasha Temple No. 175 will meet at the home of Noble Sutton Austin, 403 Greeenfield Terrace. Sunday at 8 p.m.

Church Program

The Rev Tyrone Turnage and the Arthur Chapel chorus will conduct a New Year program at Arthur Chapel Church Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The program is sponsored by the Pastor Aide Club.

M.ASOMC NOTICE Coranation Masonic Lodge No. 151 announces Labor in the Third Degree Saturday at

7 p.m.

CASHREG6TERS ^224 and up!

756^ Greenville 20O1SEvaisa C&ibrylkta^/stms

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Formerly Furniture World    2808    E.    10th    St.    Tel.    757-0451

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6REENVIILE UTILITIES COMMISSION NEW YEARS HOLIDAY

Greenville Utilities office will b closed on Monday, January 2nd, and will reopen Tuesday, January 3rd at 8:00 A.M.

Utility bills may be paid at GUCs Night Depository near the Drive-In Window at any hour.

Emergency service is available 24 hours a day every day during the year, bjj calling 752-7166 or 752-5627.

Have A Safe & Happy Holiday!

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Greenville Square topping Center

Phone: 756-1169    __





Sports TJJE DA TTY REFLECTOR Classified

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 30. 1983Perkins, Jordan Pace Heels By Redmen

By The Associated Prm

Sam Perkins and Michael Jordan returned to double figures just in time to help top-ranked and unbeaten North Carolina hand No. 8 St. Johns a 64-31 setback as all five Atlantic Coast Conference teams in action posted victories.

Perkins was named most valuable player as the Tar Heels won the Holiday Festival basketball tournament. Perkins scored 31 points and pulling down nine rebounds, while Jordan scored

11. The pair had cmbined for only 14 points in the opening-round victory over Iona.

Perkins got the shots inside, said North Carolina coach Dean Smith. We needed that.

In other action involving ACC teams. No. 6 Maryland ^ed Randolph-Macon 38-32 in the Maryland Invitational Tournament to go to 7-1, Virginia, 84), beat Washington 63-61 in the Cabrillo Classic, Duke wait to 8-1 with a 68-66 victory over University of the

Cougs, Vikings In Conley Finals

HOLLYWOOD - Goldsboro and Kinston will meet for the championship of the Conley Girls Invitational Tournament tonight after claiming close victories over Pitt County teams last night.

Goldsboro nipped hosting Conley, 41-39, in overtime, while Kinston held off North Pitt, 33-32.

In the losers bracket, Farmville Central downed Greenville Rose, 63-37.

Tonight, Kinston and Goldsboro meet for the title at 9 p.m. North Pitt and Conley play for third place at 7 p.m., while Farmville takes on West Craven at 5:30 for fifth place. Rose finishes in seventh place in the seventh team field.

Lisa Lang came off the bench to lead Farmville Central past Greenville Rose 63-57 in the consolation bracket and the opening game on'Thursday.

Rose knotted the score with four minutes left in the game before Lang returned to the lineup with four fouls to spark the Lady Jaguars with five points. Cynthia Hart led Farmville with 17 points on the night, while Stephanie Newton added 14 and Lang andJoyPeadenl3each.

Doris Richardson and Vicki Parrott scored 17 each for the Rampettes

Rose committed 14 turnovers in the first half, and Farmville raced to a 34-26 advantage at intermission. The loss leaves the Rampettes 0-8 on the season.

Rose remains idle until opening Big East 4-A Conference action Tuesday hosting Northern Nash.

North Pitt eased out into a 13-9 lead after one period of its game, but was unable to hold onto the lead. Kinston came back with an 18-13 margin in the second frame, moving into a 27-26 lead at the half. The Valkyries pulled away in the third period, 16-12, building a 43-38 lead. North Pitt then tried to rally but fell short.

After closing the gap to 53-52, North Pitt missed on a pair of layups and also had two chances at the foul line to move ahead, but missed out each time.

Kim Williams led Kinston with 29 points, while Perry Sims added 11. Alice Pittman hit 16 points for North Pitt, with Delores Pittman adding 14.

Conley and "Goldsboro matched [Mints in the first period which ended at 6-6. Then in the second quarter, Conley moved' ahead, out-scoring Goldsboro, 12-8 to gain an 18-14 lead at halftime. Goldsboro rallied, however, in the third period, 11-8, cutting the lead back to 27-24. Then, in the final period, the Lady Cougars grabbed the lead late in the action at 35-33.

With 31 seconds left to go in regulation, Latrice Ward missed on a free throw and

Mechio Komegay grabbed off the rebound for Conley and

dashed the length of the floor to score and tie it at 33-alI.

Sports Calendar

Goldsboro missed on its chance to win it, sending the game into overtime.

Goldsboro got two quick baskets in the extra period, but Kornegay scored again to cut the lead to 39-37. Toni Smith then made two free

throws to i|p the lead to four before Conley scored again.

Connie Taylor then missed a free throw attempt for Goldsboro, but a jump ball occurred on the rebound and Goldsboro controlled and ran out the clock to gain the win.

Connie Taylor led Goldsboro with 14 points, while Alma Bethea, a 6-0 center who has signed a grant-in-aid to play with East Carolina next year, added ten.

Conley was led by Komegay with 20 points, while Karen Barrett added 14.

First Game

Rose (37)

Carmon 4 1-4 9, Richardson 7 3-3 17. Parrott 6 5-817. Smith 11-2 3, Trevathan 0

3-4 3, Outlaw 15-6 7. Lambing 0*1-2 1, Drewery OMO. Totals 1 19-2S57. FarmviileCrntraKKt)

Hart 81-217, Joyner 1V. 4, Newton 5

4-514, Peaden 6 1-4 13, K. Smith 1 0-2 2. Lang 61-113. Dixon 0 (H) 0. Totals 29 -l( (3.

Rose............................II 15 l( 15-57

FamvtHeC.......................I    18    1!    17

A&T Wins Tourney

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Today's Sports Basketball Tri-County Finals (7,8:30 p.m.) Conley Girls Invitational Finals <5;30,7and9p.m.)

East Carolina women vs. N.C. State at Fayetteville (7 p.m. > Saturdays Sports ,    , Basketball

East Carolina women vs. North Carolina at Fay^teville (4 p.m.)

Pacific in a consolation round (A the Rainbow Classic in Honolulu and Georgia Tech beat Alabama 57-34 in the Cotton States Classic to go to 6-1.

Maryland didnt have the same look of the Terrapin team that beat Boston College to break into the Top 10 as they struggled against the Division II Yellow Jackets.

I told the club they had one of their best games against Boston College, said

Maryland coach Lefty Driesell, and then they came right back against these guys and played one of their worst.

Weve got a long way to go, Driesell said. Good teams dont play that inconsistently.

The Terps, who got 15 points from Ben Coleman and 12 each from Len Bias and Jeff Adkins, romped to a 20-6 lead midway through the first half. But Randolph-Macon pulid to

within 32-30 with 39 seconds left and Maryland had to hit six free throws to hold on.

Virginia guard Otheli Wilson scored 23 points in his first start of the season after a four-game suspension for disciplinary reasons. But it was m Mullens two free throws with 47 seconds left that staved off Washington and set up a meeting with San Diego State for the finals of the San Diego tournament.

David Henderson scored

eight of the last nine points for Duke as the Blue Devils won by the same margin by which they lost to Navy the previous night.

In the late going, Duke players twice missed on the

Second Game North Pill (52) '

Bradley 3 2-3 8, D. Pittman 6 2-5 14, A. Pittman 8 0-316, Sharpe 3 2-5 8, R. Moore 0 0-2 0, M. Moore 0 2-2 2, Cox 2 0-2 4. Totals 22 8-22 52.

Kinston (531 Murrell 11-2 3. Whitfield 0 (M) 0, Sims 3 5^ 11. C: Williams 3 2-7 8, K. Williams 13 3-3 29. McClean 1 0-2 2, Mercer 0 04) 0, Young 0 04) 0, Mattocks 0 0-10. Totals 21 lt-2253.

North Pitt....................13    13    12    14-52

Kinston.........................9    18    16    10-53

Takes The Ball

Steve Hale of North Carolina (25) gets the loose ball as St. Johns Chris Mullen lunges fruitlessly in the second half of their ECAC Holiday

Festival game at New Yorks Madison Square Garden Thursday. The Tar Heels captured the championship game with a 64-51 win. (AP Laserphoto)

Third Game

Goldsboro 1411

Smith 12 4, Williams 13 5. Best 0 0 0. Dixon 2 0 4, Bethea 5 0 10, Watd 0 2 2, Taylor7 014, Poteat 102. Totals 177 41. Conley I39>

Banretl 7 014. Komegay 8 4 20, Mills 0 2 2, Patrick Oil, Chipman 10 2, Boyd 000, Jackson 0 0 0. Smith 0 0 0. Totals 16 7 39.

Goldsboro.................6 8 10 II tII

Conlev......................6 12 $ 8 4-39

Vikings Take 4 Titles; Finlsn 3rd In Tourney

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Joe Binion scored 22 points and grabbed 16 rebounds as North Carolina A&T defeated North (^rolina-Wilmington 63-54 for the championship in the North Carolina-Charlotte Holiday Classic basketball tournament.

North Carolina-Charlotte beat Appalachian State 67-31 in the consolation game.

Binion, who was named the tournaments most valuable player, was the central figure in staving off a first-half Seahawk comeback. A&T scored the first ei^t points, but also committed the first seven fouls to keep the Seahawks within range.

A late first-half rally pulled the Seahwaks within 33-31 at halftime.

Binion and guard Eric Boyd took charge as the Aggies pulled away for the last time on the strength of a full-court press.

Boyd scored 17 points to joined Binion, . the Seahawks George Durham, and UNC-Charlottes Melvin Johnson and Randy Davis on the all-tournament team.

Jtrfinson scored 26 points and Davis added 21 as North Carolina-Charlotte defeated A^lachian State.

'The 49ers scored only 12 points in the first 14 minutes of the second half, but over the final 4:01, UNCC packed its 3-2 zone and allowed Appalachian State only two points.

David Lawrence led the Mountaineers with 16 points and Wade Capehart added 13.

MOREHEAD CITY - D.H. Conley won four first place crowns, but still finished in third place among seven teams at the West Carteret Invitational Wrestling Tournament yesterday.

The hosting Patriots took the team title with 157 points, while Washington finished second with 133. Conley was only one point further back with 132, while Havelock was fourth with 126. Plymouth finished fifth with 74, followed by White Oak with 44, and Camp Lejeune with 24.

Washington won only one title, but had enough other places, a total of 10, to inch, past the Vikings. West Carteret placed in 11 of the 13 weights, while Conley placed in nine.

Winning championships for the Vikings were Reginald Moore at 121, Kerry Farris at 128, Ricky Rice at 187 and Stacy McCarter at heavyweight. In Rices match, he was behind by one point and gained a takedown with one second remaining tp pull out the win.

Conley had one second place finish as Gerald Harper took that spot at 197. Two Vikes finishd third, Shawn Hardy at 140 and Scott Boyle at 157, while two finished fourth, Joel May at 134 and Martin Anderson at 147.

Washingtons lone champion was Joe Landen, who won at 105. The Pam Pack had four seconds, however, as Bill Harris was the runner-up at 134, Lee Ferguson at 140, Rpb Jackson at 169 and David Cuthrell at heavyweight.

Three other Packers finished third, Brian Stokes at 107, Wayne Cutler at 114, and Sean Phelan at 128. Two others finished fourth, Fred Latham at 157 and John Szymeczekatl87,

We did pretty well, Cwi-ley Coach Milt Sherman said. We had only one wrestler (McCarter at heavywei^t) seeded first apd we wm four

titles."

Moore has now moved to third place in the all-time career point list for the Vikings, trailing only former state champs Gary Harris and Mike Long.

Lonnie Gook tP). 4:59; deleated Chuck Anderson (H). 7-3. to win first place.    , .

128 Kerry Farris pinnedChris Chesson (P), 1:40; defeatedlSean Phelan (W). 8-6; defeated^Thomas Locklear (WC)._ 15-9. to Win first place

134 Joel May pinned Mark

Conley returns to action on Thursday, hosting Havelock in a Coastal Conference dual meet. Havelock finished behind West Carteret twice in holiday tournaments, Sherman pointed out, but beat them in a dual meet. We look for Havelock and West Carteret to be our top competition in the conference.

Reigner iCL), 5:35; pinned by (WC). 2:47;

Washington returns to action on Wednesday at Plymouth, with Roanoke as the third team in the double-dual meet.

Conley Results 100 David Farris lost to Mickey Gunter ((1.), 8-7, and did not place 107 Jackie King pinned by Brian Stokes (W),, 0:14, and did not place.

to win first place.

114 Did not compete.

121 - Reginald Moore pinned Mike Hosey (W), 0:45; pinned

.MP FG FT R

38 2- 7 1-2 40 4-16 6- 9 25 6 - 7 5-6 22 0- 2 0- 1 31 6-7 6-8

7 0-0 1-2 29 2- 9 7-8

8 1-1 0-0 200 21-4 26-36

\ F PI

5 3 2 5

6 1 2 14 8 0 1 17

front ends of l-and-l foul situations, allowing Pacific, 1-9, a chance to tie. But the Tigers couldnt convert on either opportunity.

Mark Alarie led Duke with 18 points while Jay Bilas had 17 and Johnny Dawkins added 11.

Georgia Tech freshman Bruce Dalrymple came back

from a dismal first half to contribute four free-throws and two steals down the stretch as Tech grabbed its fifth straight victory.

Dalrymple finished with 11 points, five rebounds and three assists as he joined temmates Mark Price and Yvon Joseph on the tournament all-star team.

3    0

4    18 I 1 4 II

0 2

MP FG FT R

39 10-20 3- 4 25 2- 6 0-0 30 4-12 3- 4 21 0-4 0-0 30 3 - 7 0- I 24 5-10 0- 0 9 1-2 0-0 5 0- 2 2-2 2 0- 0 0-0 15 4- 4 0-0 200 29-61 8-11

.4 F Pt

14 1 2 23

3

5 4 3 11

5 5 6 1 10 3 2 2 2

0 0 0 0 4 4 3 8 37 I6<29 66

Duke...........................................38    3(^68

Pacific............................... 36    30-66

Turnovers: Duke 17. Pacific 19 Technical fouls: Pacific bench Officials: Carl, Kerfoot, Medairos All: 1,210.

ALARAMA

MP FG FT R

40 4-14 2- 4 19 1-3 0- 0 30 3- 6 0-0 40 8-15 0- 0 40 8-15 0- 0 4 0-10-0 23 1-1 0-0 4 1-2 0-0 200 26-57 2- 4 GEORGIA TFH

MP FG FT R 40 3 - 4 0-1

A F Pi

10 1 4 10

0 0 10 2 12 2

10 3 2 31 15 23 .54

24 1-3 5-5 33 2- 5 7-8 36 6-14 2- 3 36 3- 8 5-6 17 1-2 2-2 ' 7 0- 0 0-0 7 0-1 4-4 200 16-37 25-29

A F Pt

5    0    0    6

2    0    3    7

3    0    4    11

1    2    3    14

5    3    2    11

0    3    0    ,4

10 10

10 0 4 25    3    13    57

Emory Is Not Looking For Job

Thanks, but no thanks.

the state, where he is busv

Thats Ed Emorys reaction to reports that he is one of a number of people being considered for the head coaching position at Indiana University.

A report out of Indianapolis yesterday said that Emory was one of those whose name is being mentioned as a candidate for the job vacated by Sam Wyche, who took the head job at Cincinnati in the NFL.

I dont know anything about it," Emory said from the western part of

recruiting. Nobody has contacted me about it, he said. "I didn't know anything about it until I heard what had been in the paper.

"Im not looking for a job anyway. I just signed a four-year contract with East Carolina and I don't need anything but to have a great recruiting year for East Carolina. I have a job to do at East Carolina. I want to win a national championship here and we're closer to doing it than a lot of people would realize."

Alabama........................ 26    28-54

Georgia Tech  .......................26 31-57

Turnovers: Alabama 14, Georgia Tech

13

Technical fouls: None.

Officials: Nichols, Forte, Clougherty Alt: 10.842

N CAROMN \

MP FG FT R

)6 2-8 4-4

13 11 13 9-10 28 0- 5 0- 1

14 1-6 0-0 31 2- 3 4- 5 34 4- 9. 3- 4

5 0- 2 0-0 9 1-1 0-0 9 1-2 0-0 10-10-0 20 22-50 20-24

A F Pi

4 3 0 8 2 0 31 2 5 0

1 1; 2 4 4 8 1 111 0 1 0 1 I 2 1 0 2 0 1 0

Lady Chargers Top S. Lenoir

MP FG FT R

0- 0 1-5 1-2 4-7 0-0 1-4 0-0 7-18 4- 4 3-4 3-4 24 4-11 1- 2 2 0- 2 0-0 8 0-10-1 200 21-5 9-13

A F Pt

2 2 0 2

4    3

5    8

3    2

4    18

3    9

4    9

10 0 0 10 0 0 32 16 23 51

.V. Carolina..................................24    40-64

S4. John's .................... 26 25-51

Turnovers: North Carolina 18. St. John's 18.

Technical fouls: None

Officials: Maracich. Jaspers. Haggart

Alt: 19,5911 capacity r.

WASHINGTON

Rogers ' Fortier Schrempf Vaughn Williams Welp

Gardner

Kuyper

Viaalo

Totals

VIRGINIA

MP FG FT R A

1- 6 0- 2 9 I 4- 7 2 4 6 0 7-12 6- 8 6 4

3- 8 0- 0 0 4 1-4 2-2 0 3

4-8 1-3 3 0

1- 1 0-000 U- 2 0- 0 0 2

2- 4 4- 4 2 1 0-0 0-0 0 0

23-52 15-23 32 15

F Pt

5 10 4 20

4 6

5 4 3 9 0 2 2 0 2 8 0 0

3 61

Miller

Sheehey

Polynice

Wilson

Carlisle

Stokes

Edelin

Mullen

Meirifield

Totals

MP FG FT R A

3- 3 4- 4 2 0 1- 4 0- 0 2 0

0- 0 3- -4 3 1 8- 9 9-12 5 3 3-12 3- 4 2 1

1-4 5- 6 2 5 1-2 1-2 7 1 0-1 2-200 0-14-500 17-36 31-39 27 II

F Pi

4 10

3 2

3 3

4 25

0 9

1 7 4 3 3 2 0 4

'22 65

WHEAT SWAMP -Ayden-Griftons girls basketball team jumped off to an early lead and romped to a 62-35 victory over South Lenoir in the consolation game of the Tri-County Holiday Tournament last night.

Ayden-Griftons boys take on Greene Central tonight at 8:30 p.m. for the championship. Greene Centrals and North Leniors girls clash for their championship.

The Lady Chargers took charge early, rolling up an 18-4 lead in the opening quarter of the contest. After that it was simply a question of determining the margin.

South Lenoir, however, did put on a second quarter rally, 20-14, cutting the lead back to 32-24. But the Chargers came back with another lopsided margin in the third period, 14-4, to boost the lead to 46-28. They finished off the Lady

Devils with a 16-7 margin in the final period.

Cora Faison led the way in the victory, scoring 32 points, while Doris Moore added 11. No one scored in double figures for South Lenoir.

Ayden-Grifton is now 2-6 and returns to action on Wednesday hosting Southwest Edgecombe in an Eastern Carolina Conference contest,

Consolation Game .Ayden-Grifton (62)

Durant 2 3-5 7. Faison 13 6-8 32, McCotter    4 1-2 9,    Murphy    0    1-2    1.

Moore 5    1-2 11. Whitfield    1    0-0    2,

Edmonds 0 0-10. Artis 0 0-0 0, .Mort 0 0-0 0. Barfield 0 0-0 0. Totals 25 12-2062.

South Lenoir (35)

Smith 1 0-0 2. Thurman 3 2-2 8, Morris 0 0-3 0. Hartsell 4 1-2 9. Williams    1 7-15 9.    Johnson    0    1-3    1.

Thigpen    3 0-1 6.    Wyche 0    0-0    0,

Tvndall U 0-0 0. White 0 0-0 0. Gradv ob-0 0, Potter 0 0-0 0. Totals 12 11-26 35.

Ayden-Grifton 18 14 14 16-62

South Lenoir.........1    20 4 735

Willie Cowperlhwail (WC lost to Mike Jackson (P), 9-6, to finish fourth.

140 Shawn Hardy pinned Lee Young (CL). 0:34; lost to Paul Morton (WO). 21-7; defeated Jeff Peay (H), 7-1, lofinish third.

147 Martin Anderson defeated Joe Wade (CL), 11-10; pinned by D.J. Fleming (H), 1:33; lost to Kafer Peele (WC), 5-1. in overtime, to finish fourth.

'157 - Scott Boyle defeated Tom Reed (WC)'. 8-3; pinned by Mike Rook (H), 2:32; defeated Fred Lantham (W), 5-1, to finish third.

169 - Alton Mobley lost to Rob Jackson (W), 13-2, and did not place.

187 Ricky Rice had bye; pinned

Washington...............................33 28-61

Virginia............. 33    3265

"nirnovers: Washington 12, Virginia 14 Technical fouls: None Officials: Tanco. Dibber, Clark A-5,000.

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John Szymeczek (Wi, 4:54; defeated Chip Greenbush (H), 13-12,

197 - Gerald Harper had bye; defeated Joe Fitzgerald (CL), 6-3; lost to Kevin Sublette (H). 13-1, to finish second.

Hwt - Stacy McCarter had bye; pinned Tim James (P), 1:07; pinned David Cutrell (W), 1:27, lo take first place.

Kentucky Gentleman always a winner!

The well-mannered bourbon.

D U I\I K e: L

1 HI D e: X

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Ranking of remaining teams:

1. Washington 127.9    S.Seattle.........117.8

2. Miami. ........122.9    6.    LA. Rams 115.4

3. LA. Raiders 122.3    7.    Detroit.........114.9

4. San Francisco... 122.1    8.    Pittsburgh 114.8

This week's Khedule: HIGHER RATER

DIFF.. LOWER RATER

Sat.. Dec. 31 NFC Semifinal San Francisco122.1    (7)    Detroit    114.9

AFC Semifinal Miami 122.9    (5)    Seattle    117,8

Sun., Jan. 1 NFC Semifinal Washington127.9    (13)    LA.    Rams    115.4

AFC Semifinal LA. RaWeri* 122.3    (8)    Pittabuigh    114.8

home team

c 1982 Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 86 proof Barton Distilling Co., Bardstown, KY

t

I





A

12 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Friday, December 30,1983

Bowden Hopes For Minimal Turnovers

Irish HolcLOff

ATLANTA (AP) With freezing temperatures expected for Fridays Peach Bowl football game, Florida State Coach Bobby Bowden says turnovers must be held to a minimum against North Carolina or the Seminles likely will self-destruct.

said he talked to Bowden on Wednesday night, and both agreed they had no idea of the outcome.

Weve got to get some turnovers on defense and our offense has got to go out and not make a lot of mistakes," Bowden said Thursday at a combined news conference with Tar Heels Coach Dick Crum.

Both teams were scoring machines during the regular season with both averaging better than 30 points a game. Florida State accounted for 353 points and North Carolina accumulated 334.

"High scoring or low scoring. I think you can flip a coin, said Crum.

Despite a 6-5 record, including a 53-14 thrashing by Florida in its final regular season game, the Seminles are rated a three-point favorite over North Carolina. 8-3, in the 3 p.m. EST nationally televised contest at A.tlanta-Fulton County Stadium.

The weather forecast is for temperatures in the low 30s and winds of 15 mph.

"With the expected cold weather, we have got to execute - instead of getting executed." said Bowden, referring to Florida State's 27 turnovers during the regular season, including six against arch-rival Florida.

He said his biggest fear of Florida State is the Seminles "potential not just for the big play, but the huge, big play. That puts tremendous pressure on a defense. Theyve got the weapons to do it, thats the single biggest thing.

Florida State will do it, however, without its No. 1 quarterback, Kelly Lowery. Lowery dislocated* his knee late in the season and missed two games and most of the Florida contest. He threw for 1,720 yards and 12 touchdowns and scored eight touchdowns.

"I agree, said Crum. Turnovers will play a big part in the game. It was a big part of our season. One of our problems has been our inability to create turnovers. We didnt get many.

I hope to see that tomorrow. We also will try to eliminate turnovers," said Crum, whose Tar Heels had 24 during the season while capturing 17,

As for the outcome, Crum

Bob Davis started the final three games, but Bowden has elected to give sophomore Eric Thomas of Valdosta, Ga his first start. Thomas played in three games, rushing 10 times for 24 yards and completing three of eight passes for51 vards.

Greg Allen leads the Seminles running attack with 1.167 yards.

North Carolina boasts a pair of 1,000-yard rushers in junior Ethan Horton and senior Tyrone Anthony as well as quarterback Scott Stankavage. who passed for 1,721 yards and 16 touchdowns during the regular season.

Woodi

Pecle

East Carolina Universitys drive to raise $1 million for its athletic program is still seeking funds, needing some quarter of a million more to reach its intended goal.

But Chancellor John Howell has already written to a number of donors expressing his thanks for the support given.

And hes let it be candidly known that without these fjinds, the ECU football program probably would have dropped back to the Division I-AA level something nobody wants.

In his letter. Howell points out that the Pirate Club is also at a new high, having recruited some 1.400 new members during the past year. Our ultimate goal is to build a membership of 8,000 to 10.000 members, a level which will be adequate to support a topDivision I-Aprogram.

But the chancellor said. too. that the work is far from over. Much remains to be done to continue our efforts for a nationally recognized program. We still need to increase season ticket sales. We have realized an increase of almost 25 percent for football in the last two seasons, with 1983 sales exceeding 5,000. Also, single game ticket sales increased substantially. We must continue this trend in order to have near capacity crowds in Ficklen Stadium. This will be vital as we bring major football teams into East Carolina, which requires competitive guarantees similar to those we now receive on the road. Howell said that in 1983, ECU realized around $800,000 in the seven road games.

We shall continue to do everything possible to field first rate athletic teams. We will strive to build the Pirate Club to a level of 10,000 members. Promotion and season ticket sales will receive top priority. Our schedules willreflect the trend of upgrading the intercollegiate competition for all our teams, Howell continued.

But he also sounded a note for continued support by all. Without your fine response, we would have had to consider dropping to a lower level of competition. A Division I-A top 20 team needs more money than a team headed back to Division I-AA. Therefore, we still have work to do. Your continued support will be vital in achieving even more progress.

While Howells letter was sent to those who contributed to the million-dollar drive, perhaps it could just have easily been sent to every one who is a Pirate supporter in any sport.

Support is vital to any program. Perhaps athletics take more money than other programs, but the rewards are great too.

While East Carolinas football schedule is yet to be announced, there are hopes that 1984 will see a fifth home game for a change.

It is now known that ECU will face Florida State, N.C. State, Southwestern Louisiana, Central Michigan, Pittsburgh and South Carolina on the road. Currently the home schedule includes Southern Mississippi, Temple, East Tennessee State, and Georgia Southern. The latter two are non-Division I-A teams.

Athletic Director Ken Karr is still seeking the 11th team for the schedule, and has all hopes that it will be a home contest for the Pirates!

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -The new year is still two days away, but Notre Dame coach Gerry Faust figures he already has a good start on 1984 after watching his Fighting Irish upend 13th-ranked Boston (Jollege 19-18 in the Liberty Bowl.

This is a great start for 1984," beamed Faust, minutes after Thursday nights 19-18 victory in the 25th annual game. We played a great football team tonight and Im very proud we could come away with a victory. It was a team effort. This is the begining of something great."

The Irish utilized the talents of sophomore All-American Allen Pinkett. who rushed for 111 yards and two touchdowns, and junior Chris Smith, who added 104 rushing yards, to serve notice that 1984 could be their year.

"I feel really great with this victory," said Irish senior quarterback Blair Kiel, who hit on 11 of 19 passes for 151 yards, including a 14-yard scoring toss to flanker Alvin Miller.

With Pinkett and Miller featured in slashing runs, Notre Dame controlled the ball throughout the contest but still had to survive a late fourth-quarter threat before finishing its season with a 7-5 record.

Boston College quarterback Doug Flutie completed 16 of 37 passes for 287 yards and three touchdowns despite temperatures hovering around 10 de

grees and a wind chill factor of zero to capture the games MVP award and almost lad the 9-3 Eagles to victory.

Boston College cut the Notre Dame lead to one point, 19-18, midway through the third quarter with a 3-yard scoring pass from Flutie to tight end Scott Gicseiman and Eagl^ coach Jack Bickiwll opted to go for the 2-point conversion after seeing placekicker Brian Waldron slip on the frozen turf on his only extra point at-tmept.

But Fluties PAT pass intended for Gieselman was broken up by Notre Dame linebacker Tony Furjanic and the Irish kept the Eagles out of scoring position the remainder of the game. BC failed also failed on a PAT pass following a 28-yard scoring toss from Flutie to flanker Gerard Phelan in the second quarter.

We didnt think we could make the kick at that point, Bicknell explained later.

BC blocked two Notre Dame placements.

The Irish fell behind 64) early in the first qiiimter, but roare^k to take a^ lead as Piiii^~scor8h5rrruns of one an^hree yards and Kiel hit M|y|er with his scoring pass.

The*1^es trailed 19-12 at the half ^r Flutie hit Phelan with 7:02 left in the second quarter.

Boston College made one final run at victory late in the fourth quarter but a fourth-

down pass attempt by Flutie was broken up at the Notre Dame 22 with only 58 seconds reamining.

Im happy with this win... especially for the seniors. They deserved to go out in style, said Pinkett, a sophomore voted Notre Dames

lost valuable offensive

player.

In games today, lOth-ranked Iowa will take on No. 11 Florida in the Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Fla., while North Carolina and Florida State, both unranked, meet in the Peach Bowl.,

Florida Coach Charley Pell says Iowa quarterback Chuck Long, ranked second in the nation in passing efficiency and owner of most of his schools passing records, gives the Hawkeyes a slight edge.

He (Long) speaks for himself, Pell said. He makes things ha(^n ... He seems to have command of a game regardless of the situation. You never have a time when he seems to not be in control.

Florida State, 8-2-1, will counter against Iowa, 9-2, with quarterback Wayne Peace, who is the second leading passer in Southeastern Conference history.

At Atlanta, both Florida State Coach Bobby Bowden and North Carolina Coach Dick Crum say the Peach Bowl is an opportunity to end disappointing seaons on a high note.

Irish Touchdown

Alan Pinkett of Notre Dame dives over for a touchdown Jhursday night in the Liberty Bowl in Memphis. Steve DeOssie (99) defends for

Boston College. The Irish gained a 19-18 victory in the contest. (AP Laserphoto)

Opponents Fall Short In Non-League Games

ByTOMFORE.M.ANJr.

AP Sports Writer Dont mess with the Atlantic . Coast Conference, especially the first month of basketball season.

Boasting four teams in the Associated Press college basketball poll, the conference has a 6H record against non-league foes through games of Wednesday night. That translates to 90.5 percent through Dec. 28.

Last year, the ACC held a 47-19 record in non-conference games for 71 percent for the comparable period. The best start ever was in 1977-78, when ACC teams won their first 20 games before then-reigning national champion North Carolina lost to William & Mary. By the end of December, the conference was 53-4 for 92.9 percent.

That was the best we had, said ACC assistant commissioner Marvin Francis. Were probably playing more holiday tournaments now than we did then.

Carolina State finished third in the NIT to boost the record to 82-13 for 86.3 percent.

When youre winning 90 percent after the first month' of the season, I dont know anyone who can beat it, Francis said.

Very few conferences have. The Big East is led by Boston College at 7-1. The only blemish on the Eagles slate is a Christmas Eve loss to Maryland. St. Johns dropped to 8-1 following Thursday

nights loss to the Tar Heels. Syracuse also lost to North Carolina, and is currently 6-2. Overall, the Big East is 59-17 for 77.6 percent.

The Southeastern Conference has a 43-18 mark for 70.4 percent, while the Big lo is at 57-10, or 85 percent.

Stanford is off to its best start in 30 years at 9-1 to lead the Pacific-10 Conference. UCLA is next at 8-1 and helps give the league a 57-29 record through Wednesday.

1

Including non-conference games after December, teams in the NCAA tournament as well as Wake Forests appearance in the National Invitation Tournament, the ACC finished 1982-83 at 94-32, or 74.6 percent. In the previous year, the ACC was 92-22 for 80.7 percent.

The best non-conference year was in 1975-76. North

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Both ball clubs are coming in here with similar situations, Crum explained. They had high expectations (fw the seasixi) and we had high expectations.

Both teams were highly rated early in the season, but North Carolina, after starting with srven sirai^t victories, finished the regular season at 8-3, while FliHida State is just 5-5 coming into this game.

The Peach Bowl will start at 3 p.m. EST, followed by the Gator Bowl at 8 p.m.

Saturdays only game will

match Baylor, 7-3-1 and tied with Oklahoma for 20th in the national rankings, against unranked Oklahoma State, 7-4, in the Bluebonnet Bowl at Houston. Tlie game is scheduled to start at 8 p.m.

There will I five more games on Monday, headed by the Orai^e Bowl at Miami, matching No. 1 Nebraska, 12-0, against fifth-ranked Miami (Fla.), 10-1,atSp.m.

The days activities will kick off at 1:30 p.m. with the Cotton Bowl at Dallas, featuring No. 2 Texas. 11-0, against No. 7

Georgia, 9-1-1, and the Fiesta Bowl at Tempe, Ariz., pairing 14th-ranked Ohio State, 8^3, against No. 15 Pittsburgh, 8-2-1.

The Rose Bowl, the oldest of the postseason games, will follow in Pasadena, Calif., at 5 p.m., pitting fourth-ranked Illinois against unranked UCLA, 6^-1.

The other night game Monday will be the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans, with third-ranked Auburn, 10-1, meeting No. 8 Michigan, 9-2.

Seattle's Coach Not Satisfied With Berth

By The Associated Press Steve Largent has a simple answer for those who say the Seattle Seahawks should be glad just to be in their first National Football Lague playoff.

Baloney, says Largent, who has been a Seahawk since the club was enfranchised eight years ago.

Seattle, coming off a 31-7 victory over Denver last weekend in the American Conference wild-card playoff, faces the Miami Dolphins Saturday in one of two conference semifinals. The NFC counterpart sends Detroit against San Francisco.

On Sunday, the Los Angeles Rams travel to Washington, and Pittsburgh meets the Raiders at Los Angeles.

This is just as important a game for us as it is for them, Largent says of the Dolphins. If we lose, we get knocked out of the playoffs. Were going into the game with one idea - to win. Dont let anyone tell you differently. Until this season, Largent, a three-time Pro Bowl selection, was the favorite receiver of quarterback Jim Zorn. But Zorn was benched this season in favor of four-year veteran Dave Krieg, who completed 12 of 13 passes for 200 ayrds and three touchdowns against Denver.

Everybody expects them" to win and everybody expects us to lose, Krieg said. Well, well see.

Miami, AFC East champions with a 12-4 record and losers to Washington in last years Super Bowl, were 7>2 points favorites over the Seahawks, who finished the season 9-7.

The 49ers, winners of the NFC West with a 10-6 record, were 7-point favorites over the Lions, whose 9-7 record was best in the NFC Central. But Detroit running back Billy Sims says his club has some-thing it never had before.

Coach Monte Clark feels was our turnaround." At that point, the club was 5-6 coming off a loss to Houston.

Quarterback Joe Montana leads the San Francisco attack. He passed for 3,910 yards and 26 touchdowns this season while rushing for 284 yards.

Defending Super Bowl champion Washington had the best record in the NFL this year, 14-2, and won the NFC East. The Redskins arp 9'2-point favorites to beat the wild-card Rams, 9-7, who advanced to the conference semis by beating Dallas 24-17 last Monday.

Washington Coach Joe Gibbs biggest problem will be injuries to his offensive linemen. All Pros Joe Jacoby and Russ Grimm have been sidelined during practice this week, as has center Jeff Bostic. Theyre expected to be ready Sunday, however.

The Redskins are led by the NFLs Most Valuable Player, quarterback Joe Theismann, and fullback John Riggins, who rushed for a career-high 1,347 yards. A revitalized Vince Ferragamo quarterbacked the Rams upset of Dallas last week.

The Raiders, 12-4 and winners of the AFC West, were favored by 7 points over Pittsburgh, champions of the AFC Central with a 10-6 re-cord. The two clubs, archrivals in the AFC, have not met in the playoffs since 1976, but their 1972 meeting is the best remembered.

The Steelers won that game 13-7 when Franco Harris was recipient of what has become to be known as the Immacu

late Reception touchdown iss. Harris is one of only four

iteelers left from that club. Harris rushed for 1,007 yards this season, leaving him 362 yards shy of Jim Browns all-time record.

Another 1972 holdover, quarterback Terry Bradshaw, is a doubtful starter for the game. Bradshaw has started only one game for the Steelers since undergoing elbow surgery in March.

It was a great rivalry, an outstanding rivaly, says Raiders Coach Tom Flores.

The winners of the conference semifinals will meet Sunday, Jan. 8 to determine the who will play in Super Bowl XVIII at Tampa Stadium on Jan. 22.

Frank Chance of the Chicago Cubs had the dubious distinction of being the first man thrown out of a World Series game by an umpire. It happened in 1910 in the series between the Cubs and Philadelphia Athletics.

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"Befoi^his year, we didnt have the killer instinct, says Sims, who rushed for 1,040 yards this season despite missing four games with a broken hand.

Sims rushed for a career-high 189 yards in Detroits 23-20 victory over Green Bay this season, marking what

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High game: Wade Johnson 264; high senes: Wade Johnson 631

Bowl Games

ByTlif AjsociatrdPrm ResulU and pairings of NCAA Division I-A post-season bowl games:

Saturday, Dec. I Independence Bowl ,, At Shreveport. La.

Air Force 9, Mississippi 3 Saturdaif^Dec. 17 California Bowl At Fresno. Calif.

Northern Illinois 20. Fullerton Slate 13 Florida Cilnis Bowl At Orlando, Fla.

Tennessee 30, Maryland 23 Thursday. Dec. 22 Hall of Fame Bowl

Central Divitian

Milwaukee    17    12    506    

Detroit    IS    14    .517    2

AtlanU    IS    IS    .500    Vi

Chicago    12    14    40    34

Cleveland    9    21    .300    14

Indiana    7    20    2S0    9

WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Utah ,    20    10    .667    -

Dallas    16    13    .552    34

Kansas City    13    IS    .464    6

Denver    13    18    419    74

Houstor    12    18    .400    8

San Antonio    12    20    .375    9

Pacific Division Los Angeles    19    9    .679    -

Portland^    21    II    656    -

Phoenix    14    16    467    6

Golden Slate i4 8    .438    7

Seattle    12    16    .429    7

San Diego    10    21    323    104

Tbursdav's Games Cleveland 88. Atlanta 77 Houston 107. Boston 94 San Antonio 138. Kansas City 127 Chicago 100, Portland 99

Associated Pres*' 1983-84 college basketball poll fared Thursday:

1. North CareUna (84) beat St. John's 64-51.

2. Kentucky (84) (fid not play

3. Houston (10-2) cUdnoti'

4. DePaul (84) did n

Connecticuli .    _______

-bird Place Penn St . 84, Columbia 33, or Cotton sutes Classic

Championship Georgia Tech 57. Alabama 54

5. Georgetown (9-t) dkTmx play

6. Maryland (7-I) heat RanMpb-Macon

5852.

7.UCU(7-l)didnotptay. -.....-    fiflor

8. St. John's (81) lost to North Carolina 64-51.

9. Louisiana sute 181 (did not play to. Wake Forest (84) did not play.

II. Georgia (7-1) beat Xavier. Ohio 7870.

12 Boston College (81) beat Iowa SUte 8840

13. North Caroii State (82) did liut ** li Liwisville (5-4) did not play.

15. Michigan (82) did not play

16. Texas^l Paso i l(H)i did not play

17. Memphis State i7-2t b

eat

Denver 101, Philadelphia 89 Friday's Games )'Jer

Mississippi sute 43-42 18. Purdu

Indiana at New Jersey New York at Washington Chicago at Detroit Cleveland at Atlanta Boston at Dallas

lue (7-3) did not play.

19. Oregon SUte (82) beat Washington sute 7859.

20. Illinois (811 did not play.

Third Place

Michigan St. 58, Nebraska 45 Cowbny SheaUul Third Ptece No. Arizona 59, Wisconain-Green Bay 50 Dolphin Classic ChaiMienship Staten Island 64. F^am St. 61 Third Place Scranton 75, Moravian 68

ECAC Holiday FesUval Chnmphmship No. Carolina 64, St. Mn's 51 Third riacr Iona 66, Fordham 60

Enterprise Classic First Round Bryant 73, SE Massachusetts 70 Stonehillll7.Kings.Pa 76 Far West Classic Semifinal Round

Oregon St. 79, Washington St. 57 ~ PUc

San Diego at Kansas City Portland at Milwaukee

College Basketball

At Birmingham. Ala. West Virginia 20. Kentucky 16 Friday. Dec. 23

Houston at Phoenix Huh at Denver Golden SUte at Los Angeles Philadelphia at Seattle

By The Associated Press EAST

LIU 76, St. Francis, N Y. 74

Saturday 's Games beduied

Spring Garden 65, Eastern 41 Wabash 108, Penn St . Behrend 74

Holidav Bowl .At San Diego, Calif.

Brigham Young 21. Missouri 17 Saturday. Dec. 24 Sun'Bowl At El Paso, Texas Alabama 28, Southern Methodist 7 Sunday. Dec. 25 Blur-Grav Game At Montgomery. Ala.

Gray 17. Blue 13

Monday. Dec. 26 Alob'a Bowl At Honolulu Penn SUte 13, Washington 10 Thursday. Dec. 2

Liberty Bowl At .Memphis. Tenn.

Notre Dame 19, Boston College 18 Friday. Dec. 30 Peach Bowl At Atlanta North Carolina. 8-3, vs. Florida Stale,

No games scl

Sunday's Game Philadelphia at Portland

Wittenberg 81, CamMie-Mellon 51 MIDWEST

NHL Standings

Case Western Reserve 65, Denison 63 Cleveland St. 77, Brooklyn 59 Dubuque 68, Wisconsin-Platteville, OT Emporia St. 95. Western St., Colo. 67 John Carroll 85, Heidelberg 81

Third Place

Cornell 70. Robert Morris 68 Far West Tournament Consolation Round Portland 49. Boise St . 48, OT Fleet Ctauk Championship Providence 65, Temple 59 Third Place Penn 70. Rhode Island 59

Franklin Tourney First Round Franklin 98. Anderson 88 Ferris St . 64, Beloit 57

Great Dane Classic First Round

Albany St . 80, John Jay 63 Buffalo St . 97, Clark 79

85

Gator Bowl .At Jacksonville. Fla. Iowa,82,vs. Florida.8-21 Saturday. Dec. 31 Bluebohncl Bowl At Houston Baylor, 7-3-1, vs. Oklahoma Stale. 7-4-1 Monday..Ian. 2 Cotton Bowl At Dallas Georgia, 81-1, vs. Texas, ll-O FifsU Bowl At Tempe, Arii.

Ohio SUte, 8-3, vs, Pittsburgh, 82-1 Rose Bowl At Pasadena, Calif.

Illinois, 181, vs UCLA, 84-1 Orange Bow l At Miami, Fla.

Nebraska. 124, vs. Miami i Fla. 1.181 Sugar Bow l At New Orleans Auburn. 181. vs. Michigan. 82

By The .Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick Division

W L T Pts GF GA NY Isles    25    10    2    52    176    128

Philadelphia    20    10    6    46    161    124

NY Rangers    20    13    4    44    153    144

Washington    17    19    2    36    130    137

Pittsburgh    9    23    5    23    119    162

New Jersey    7    28    2    16    103    173

Adams Division Boston    24    10    2    SO    164    107

Buffalo    22    12    4    48    153    137

Quebec    20    15    3    43    177    143

Montreal    17    18    2    36    137    138

Hartford    13    19    3    29    125    145

Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota    18    14    4    40    163    1.58

St. Uuis    15    19    4    34    148    161

Chicago    15    20    3    33    131    147

Toronto    14    18    , 5    33    154    177

Detroit    13    20    4    30    134    157

Smvthe Division Edmonton    '27    7    4    58    224    151

Vancouver    15    19    3    :13    155    157

Calgary    13    17    6    32    133    156

Winnipeg    13    19    , 4    30    158    175

Los Angeles    12    19    6    30    158    180

Thursday's Games

Mount Mercy 60, Loras 58 Wis -Stout 63. NW MinnesoU 55

SOUTH

GramblingSt.83,PaulQuinn73 Xavier-Pievv Orleans 60, Auburn-Montgomery 57

FAR WEST Montana 72, SE Missouri 55 TOURNAMENTS Albright Invitalional First Round

Hillsdale Holiday Championship

HilUdale 68, St. Francis, HI. 67 Hoosier Classic First Round Boston Coil^e 88, Iowa St. 80 Indiana 86. Ball St. 43

Huron Holiday Tourney

Missouri-Kansas

Championship City 67, Wi Third Place

estmar 43

Colgate 74, Albright 52 Loyola i Md.) 75, Lehigh 53

All-College Tournament Championship Oklahoma 87, Ark -Little Rock 62 Arrowhead Tournament Championship Grand Canyon 66, Point Loma 49 Third Place Cal Lutheran 78, Coll of Notre Dame 55 Benllev Holiday Festival Championship Bentley 84, Wm. Paterson 7!

Third Place Rhode Island Coll. 103, Pratt 76 Blade-Grass City Classic First Round

Huron 71, Black Hills St. 57

Jaguar Christmas Classic First Round Indiana St.-Evansville90, Morehouse 79 AugusU69.St.Leo62

KOA Classic First Round E. Illinois 73. E. MonUna 66 Krystal Classic

Toledo 70. Army 47 Lamar 78, E. Michigan 70,30T

Buffalo 8, tobecS Detroit 6, New Jersey 1

NBA Standings

Bv The Associated Press E ASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division

W L Pet.    GB

Philadelphia 21    6    .778    -

Boston    23    8    .    742    -    '

.New    York    17    13    567    5',

Washington    14    14    500    74

New    Jersey    13    17    433    O'-

St. Louis 3. Toronto 1

Friday's Games Los Angeles at Hartford Philadelphia at N Y Rangers N Y. Islanders at Winnipeg Boston at Edmonton Vancouver at Calgary

Saturday's Games Washington at New Jersey Quebec at Montreal .N Y Rangers at Buffalo Chicago at Detroit Los Angeles at Toronto Boston at Vancouver N Y Islanders at Minnesota Pittsburgh at St Louis

Sunday's Game Calgary at Winning

62

Blue-Gray Classic First Round Lamar 78, E .Michigan 70,30T First Round William Carey 53, Monlevallo51 Briar Cliff Tournament First Round Bellevue. Neb 86, Dana 75 Briar Cliff 81, Birmingham So 73 Cable Car Classic First Round Santa Clara 85, Alaska-Anchorage 66 Cabrillo Classic First Round Virginia 65. Wash)ngton 61 Chico Invitational Semifinal Oregon Tech 76, Cal-San Diego 65 Consolation Round Alaska Fairbanks 77, Claremont Mudd

srystal First Round

Ga.-Southern 60. Mississippi 58 Tn-Chattanooga 87, Rice 61 |j)ba Invitational First Round New Mexico 74, Idaho St. 53 Bowling Green 59, California 58 Marshall Holiday Tournament First Round Olivet 81, Manchester 68

Maryland Invitational First Round Maryland 58, Randolph-Macon 52 La &lle 65, George Washington 64 Medgar Evers Classic

idgarl

Championship St Thomas Aquinas 115. Medgar Evers

Third Place

Widener 56. Dominican 54

Merrill Lynch Classic First Round Dayton 78, Yale 57 Oklahoma St. 89, Wisconsin 84 Merrimack-Prpsi Classic Championship Merrimack 87, Lowell 74 Third Place St. Michael's. Vt. 62, Gordon 60

Top 20 Results

Bv .Vssocialed Press How the Top Twenty learns in the

CalBaptist 76, Whittier 75

Citrus Bowl Classic First Round Stetson 74, Cent Florida 58

Connecticut .Mutual Classic Championship

Muskingum Tournament Championship Center, Ky. 58, Muskingum 50 Third Place Oberlin78, Wilmington 65

North Central Conl. Tourney Championship Mankato St. 71. N. Colorado 62

Bulls Rally By Portland

By The Associated Press Despite a 14-point deficit entering the final quarter, the Chicago Bulls were not to be ' denied their seventh straight :National Basketball Associa-

;tion victory.

' W had to make it hard for

them to score in the last .^quarter and we had to score at , every opportunity, Coach Kevin Loughery said after the - Bulls defeated Portland 100-99 ! Thursday night by outscoring : the Trail Blazers 34-19 in the ; final period. The Bulls are

now 12-14 after a 5-14 start.

Guard Quintn Dailey, who : lost his starting spot to rookies

Mitchell Wiggins and Ennis

at the end, Blazers Coach Jack Ramsay said. We wanted to have Paxson drive to the basket, but he didnt get his shot. We had a couple of other chances but just didnt doit.

Wayne Cooper and Paxson led Portland scorers with 18 points each. Center Dave Corzine paced the Bulls with 24, while Orlando Woolridge added 15.

Nuggets 101,76ers89

At Denver, the high-scoring Nuggets registered their second-lowest point total of the season, but the^ also allowed the fewest to hand

Reid had 20 points for Houston.

points.

Cavaliers 88, Hawks 77 At Richfield, Ohio, Cleveland snapped a six-game losing streak and held Atlanta to the lowest point total in the NBA this season.

Thompson scored 10 points in the first quarter, which saw

World B. Free scored 23 points and rookie Paul Thompson 20 for the Cavaliers, who were one of three teams who had scored the previous season-low of 83

the Cavaliers outscore the Hawks 20-5 to pull ahead 33-20 at the end of the period.

Cleveland led by as many as 28 points in the second quarter and still had a 21-point margin after three periods, but the Cavaliers equalled an NBA season-low of nine points in the fourth quarter to let Atlanta make the final margin respectable.

Whatley just before the winn-ak .

ing streak started, hit five of vSix shots and scored 12 points ;- in the fourth period to lead the : rally. He was l-for-6 from the field before the fourth quarter and finished with 14 points.

I; I get to see a lot from the ' bench and it helps me,

. Dailey said. The openings

Were there and I felt good late.

I Jlarly in the game, I was

pretty mad.

:' In other NBA games, De-I hver beat Philadelphia 101-89,

' San Antonio outscored Kansas . fity 138-127, Houston defeated ; Boston 107-94 and Cleveland ^ outlasted Atlanta 88-77.

^; The Bulls victory wasnt

secured until Mychal

> Thompson missed a shot at

> ihe buzzer from under the ' basket.

.>; I would have been proud even if we would have lost on -.that last-second shot, Loughery said. This team

can still play much better.

We turned the ball over 'five straight times and they , scored five straight baskets in the first half. Dailey had a bad first half, but came back in

the stretch. It was no secret . that I went to him at the end.

After Portland led 90-84,

Dailey scored six consecutive

points in a span of 1:13 to tie it 90-90 with 4:43 remaining.

It was still deadlocked at 96-96 with 1:48 to go. ^ Thompson made one of two i free tnrows at the 1:00 mark ^ to put the Blazers ahead by :^bne, but Dailey fed Wiggins ' for a layup with 47 seconds I remaining to put the Bulls .''ahead 98-97.

Jim Paxson hit a 20-footer to T iput the Trail Blazers ahead ; 99-98 with just 28 seconds to

gay, but after a timeout, ailey canned a 12-footer with

-19 seconds left. Paxson and ivKenny Carr as well as T-Thompson missed shots in the

final seconds for Portland.

f *. We had a chance to win it

Philadelphia only its sixth loss in 27 games.

Dan Issel scored 28 points and Alex English 23 for Denver, which snapped its five-game losing streak. The 76ers, who got 20 points each from Moses Malone and Andrew Toney, had won six in a row before the loss.

The Nuggets held Philadelphia to 30 percent shooting from the field in the first two periods and led 57-40 at halftime. The 76ers cut the deficit to four early in the fourth quarter, but Denver held on.

Julius Erving scored 14 points for the 76ers, leaving him seven short of the 25,000 mark in his pro career.

Spurs 138, Kings 127 San Aptonio got 44 points from George Gervin to give Bob Bass a home victory over Kansas City in the first game of his third stint as Spurs coach.

A 16-2 streak in the second quarter gave the Spurs a 55-39 lead and the Kings, who were led by Eddie Johnson with 39 points, never got closer than eight points the rest of the way.

Bass, San Antonios general manager, took over from Mo McHone, who was fired on Wednesday.

Rockets 107, Celtics 94 The Rockets, playing before a sellout crowd of 16,016 at Houston, beat Boston behind Ralph Sampsons 27 points.

,, Tne Celtics fell behind 66-45 at halftime, but Larry Bird scored 12 of his 25 points in the third quarter to help Boston outscore the Rockets 33-15 in the period and cut the deficit to 81-78. But Sampson hit three baskets during a 10-1 Rockets spurt that gave them a 98-86 lead with 4:04 left.

Robert Parish scored 28 points for the Celtics, who would have taken over first place in the Atlantic Division with a victory, while Robert

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -Sneaky and underhanded was the way Ray Greene described his firing as Alabama A&M Universitys football coach, despite five consecutive winning seasons.

Greene was notified Wednesday of the firing. His departure is effective March 31.

Greene said there were no reasons given for the action. The decision was made by Athletic Director Gene Bright and A&M President R.D. Morrison.

"Other than a personal thing, I cant see what it would be, Greene told The Huntsville Times. Ive done what a football coach should do. Id like to know the reasons and I intend to find out. Theyre messing with my career. If I get fired. Id like to know why.

Contacted Wednesday night, Morrison said only that he was acting in the best interests of the university.

Im not in a positiorr to discuss it, said Morrison. Im not going to discuss it. All Ill say is, I was acting in the best interests of the university.

Morrison said the usual procedure would be followed to hire a new football coach.

Bright was unavailable for comment.

Greene has never had a losing season at A&M with an overall record of 35-16-2 since replacing Theophilus Danzy in 1979.

His first team went 8-3 and made the semifinal round of the NCAA Division II national playoffs. His teams have since posted records of 6-4 in 1980, 8-2 in 1981, and 6-4-1 in 1982.

Alabama A&M was the only team this year to put a blemish on the record of NCAA II semifinalist North

In the 1934 World Series, outfielder Joe Medwick of the Cardinals was thrown out of the gamp in the seventh contest in Detroit because Tiger fans were showering him with debris. Commissioner Landis issued the order.

NMlbeni InttrcolIe|tetr Tawnty ChamBioMbiB

M)nn.-Duluth67. NortheniSt.,S.D.<2 Third PIac Minn.-Morris60. Wis.-UCroiM52 Fifth PIc

Southwest St.. Minn.. M, Moorhead St.

Sugar Bowl

UhampioMhip

4. Kansas 45

82

Seventh Place

BemidU St. 108. Winona St. 106.20T North Park Toarnamenl First Ronnd Northeastern, lU. 88, III. Benedictine 69 North Park 67. Wis.-Milwaukee 45 Otlerbein Toumammt 'nUrd Place Olterbein 82. Kalamazoo 6S Pacemaker Classic First Round SE Louisiana SO. NW Louisiana SO NE Louisiana 74, Jackson St. 61 Rainbow Classic Consolation Round Duke 68. Pacific 66 Navy 70, Holy Cross 67    <

Richmond Times-Dispatch Tourney

SW Louisiana 54,

Third Place Florida 65. TuUne 53

UNCC Holiday Classic Championship N Carolina A&T 65. N Carolina Wilmington 54

Third PUcc

N. Carolina-Charlotte 67, Appalachian St 51

Utah Classic First Round Texas 62, Utah 61 WeberSt.83,Callrvine65

Utka College-Matts Classic Champ'

Conference Semifinals Saturday.Dec.31 AFC Divisional Plavoff Seattle at Miami

NFC Divisional Plavoff Detroit at San Francisco Sunday.Jan.i NFC Divisional Plavoff L Angeles Rams at Washington AFC Divisional Plavilr Pittsburgh at Los Angeles Raiders

Mike Nieolette

69-73-142

Daviii Glenz

7567-142

Steve Caulkins

69-73-142

Ralph Landrum

72-70-142

DonBies

68-74-142

A1 Chandler

69-73-142

Dems Watson

71-71-142

Barrv Jaeckel Jim Nelford

71-71-142

72-70-142

Bruce Summerhays

72-70-142

Sunday, Jan. 8.1964 Conference Championship games

Transactions

George Maso^89, wapner 77

First Round Richmond 61. Virginia Tech 56 Va Commonwealth 83, Old Dominion 51 Rochester Classic

Chaiiipiooship

(7, St. Bonave

Northeastern 87, St. Bonaventure 72 Third Place Princeton 71, American 36

Sacred Heart Holiday Classic Semifinal Round Distr of Columbia 76, American Intnl

67

TWrd Prac Utica 77. Rider 74 Wayne. Neb. Holiday Tournament Championship Doane68, Wayne, Neb 67, OT Wayne Stale Holidav Tourney Third Place Midland Lutheran 80. Mount Marty 79 Winston Tire Holiday Classic First Round Memphis St. 43, Mississippi St. 42 Wittenberg Tournament First Round Wittenberg 81, Carnegie-Mellon 51 W Pack Classic Third Place Cal-Davis 62. Florida A&M 60 Wooster Tournameni Third Place Wheaton 63. Bluffton 61

SI PER BOWL XVIII Jan. 22,1984 At Tampa Stadium. Tampa. Fla.

Bv The Associated Press BASEBALL American l.eague DETROIT TIGERS-Signed Mill VMslesx. pitcher, to a two vear contract

Spalding Golf

PEBBLE BEACH. Calif 'APi -Second-round leaders Thursday in the

5150.-000 Spalding Invitaliohal golf It, played

r:.    .ca    i

basketball

National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS-Signed Mark Landsberger. forward, to a lO^iay contract

FtMITBALI.

Consolation Round

Oakland, Mich. 94, Queens 71 re 85. Franklin I

New Hampshire 85, Franklin Pierce 84 Siena Classic First Round Siena 61. Dartmouth 52 Ohio U. 68. Manhattan 57

Ski Country Classic First Round Montana Tech 58, Nebraska Wesleyan

NFL Playoffs

56

By The Associated Press .AFC Wild Card Saturday, Dec. 24 Seattle 31, Denver 7

NFC Wildcard Monday, Dec. 26 Los Angeles 24. Dallas 17

tournament, played on three Monterev Peninsula courses i a-denotes amateur i: Johnny Miller    64-68-132

Eric Batten    69-66-135

PattySheehan    71-64-135

Bob Gilder    69-66-135

Bob Eastwood    67-69-136

Andy-North    7166-137

CraigSudler    6968-137

MikeBrannan    65-72- 137

Bobby Clampett    6869-137

Chris Roderick    7366- 139

Mike Gove    69-70-139

Laird Small    70-70-140

George Archer    67-73-140

Lon Hinkle    69-71-140

JohnMahaffey    69-71-140

Pal Lindsey    7268-140

Bob Bold!    69-72-141

Rod Curl    70-71-141

a-Nalhanial Crosbv    7269-141

Peter Oosterhuis    70-71-141

LarrvMize    70-71-141

National Football League GREEN BAY PACKERS-Named

George Sefcik offensive backfield coach United Stales Football l.eague PHILADELPHIA STARS-Named Dom Capers secondary coach HfK'KEV American Hockev League

AHL-Announced that John Brqphy.

5 finer

Nova Scotia VoyageUrs coach, was fined 5750 bv the lea'gue president Jack Bui terfield in the aftermath of a bench-clearing incident in a game Monday in Halifax

N.C. Scoreboard

Bv The \ssociated Press

Men's (ollege Basketball

Duke 68. Pacific 66

N Carolina-Charlotte 67 Appalachian St 51

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

^ired^each^Upset At Alabama A&M

Alabama with a 20-20 tie. The Bulldogs reeled off five straight victories the second half of the season to post a 7-3-1 mark.

A&M won Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championships from 1979-81 and finished second behind Fort Valley State last season with a record of 4-1.

Greene said some concern was mentioned about fan criticism hurting attendance.

But we have increased attendance every year, he said. We had the largest attendance weve ever had last season.

Relations have not been ideal between Greene and Bright for some time. Accusations have been made in the past by the athletic director, but theyve never been substantiated, said Greene.

Greene would not say when his contract expires, but did say that contractually, Im all right for the next couple of years.

Greene came to A&M after one season as head coach at North Carolina Central. Before that he had served on the football staffs at Iowa State (1976-78) and the World Football Leagues Jacksonville Sharks.

Prior to that he coached in the high school ranks in his hometown of Akron, Ohio, and at Fort Pierce, Fla.

Carolina east mall ^^greenville

md

LET US HELP YOU WITH YOUR HOLIDAY ENTERTAINING!

We have a large selection of imported and domestic cheeses and crackers and most anything eise you need for hoiiday entertaining! Givusacirdet us put together a speciai basket of goodies for you!

CHOOSE FROM OUR HUGE SELECTION OF CHAMPAGNES AND SPARKLING WINES INCLUDING:

Dom Perignon Perrier Jouet Moet and Chandon Bollinger Piper Heidsieck Mumm Freixenet Henkell Chandon

Korbel Gold Seal Hans Kornell Great Western Taylor

Paul Masson Jacques Bonet J. Roget

Chateau Laurent

Henri Merchant Franzia Andre Duplin

Martini & Rossi

Ceiia

Zonin

Banfi

Bersano

SPECIAL PRICES AVAILABLE ON NUMEROUS SELECTIONS. SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION.

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10a.m. Until 9 p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-bK (756-2355)

\

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14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Friday, December 30,1963

t By

JOHN LEHT -

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"7" '

7'

.77

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W'A V

3

POWERLESS ON THE BATTLEFIELD!!

A TRADITIONAL CUSTOM, IN EARLV BIBLICAL TIMES, WWICH V\AS A CRUEL BUT EFFECTIVE METUOD BV WHICH WARRIORS WERE MADE P0WERLE5S...WAS TWE CUTTINS OFF OF BOTH A MAN'S THUMBS AND LARGE TOES! ACTUALS THIS WAS LOOKED UPON AS HUMANE TREATMENT RATHER THAN AN OUT-AND-OUT killing, the subjects LIFE WAS SPARED BUT HAVING LOST HIS THUMBS, HE COULD NOT HANDLE WEAPONS, AND LOSlNS HIS LAPSE TOES MEANT ME COULD NOT WALK LET ALONE RUN ON THE BATTLEFIELD, PRQPERLV. A MENTION IS MADE OF THIS IN JUDGES 1:4-7. ADONIBEZEK, A CRUEL AND SUSPICIOUS KING OF BEZEK, WAS GIVEN SUCH PUNISHMENT SV THE WARRIORS OF THE TRIBE OF JUDAH. ODDLY, THIS KINS SAW THE "POETIC JUSTICE"

IN THIS ACT BECAUSE HE'D GIVEN THE SAME TREATMENT TO SEVENTY OTHER KINGS WHOM ME MAD CONQUERED. THIS HE REGARDED AS A DIVINE REQUITAL, VISITED ON HIM BV SOD, FOR THE SIMILAR CRUELTIES PERPETRATED BY HIM.

SAVE THIS FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOKSponsors Of This Page Along With Ministers Of All Faiths, Urge You To Attend Your House Of Worship This Week. To Believe In God And To Trust In His Guidance For Your Lite.

COZART S AUTO SUPPLY, INC.

-g.L.    -75-2    3194

Co.,a- Ei:UllO~v^'^S--

GREENVILLE MARINE & SPORTS CENTER

G-ee'iviiie Biv^! NE 5938 Joe Ve'neison. O/.n'-..

Complin:-.en!e O'

RIVERS & ASSOCIATES ENGINEERS

PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC

Elecl'onios SuOPliei., 756-229' 107 T'dOe S' Gree'V/ille N C

GRANT BUICK. INC.

756 '877 G'ponv.ile Blvd Rei Gra- . Err-pio/fe--

ANNE S TEMPORARIES, INC.

756-6610 120 Reade Si Green'yiiie

JIMMY'S PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE

All 1 yaps Mno' Reaae U-yy WfeeK.p' Service Co'Cfy '418 >, 264 B/p.is-,

J F Bai.e' oAPer 752 2995OVERTON'S SUPERMARKETS, INC.

211 S J.t'v.s'752 502'.

All Erri[j!o./eesSMITH'S HEARING'AID SERVICE

Authorised Bellone Hearing Aid Dealer V716 W 518 Si E-l 758 4334Complimenis of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY

752 0876 1506 N Greene 3t Greenville N CEARL'S CONVENIENCE MART

Route 1 756 6278^

Earl Adulkner ^ Eniployees

TURNAGE REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE AGENCY

_ See John Fmcrrfpr All You'

Insurance Needs Corner 3'cJ Coianche 752 3459 0' 752 2715

WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE

We Pul I! On The Plate'

500 W Greenville Blvd 756-004 2903 E lOtn S 758-2712

FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC.

Jitn Wniiiinqton ' Oarrnont Professional Piasa G-ee-.viUe NC 756 0000

TOM SRESTAURANT

^ne Vev Best in Horne Cooking 756 1012 Ma>/.el| S Wes! End Area

AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE

1007 Cnesinut St 758-7000

Comphments 0*

KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CO

114 E lOtn SI 752 5205

Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.

518 E Greenville Blvd 756 4145ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS

756 3500 226 Cornmerce St GreenvilleHARGETT S DRUG STORE

2500 S Charles Exi 756 3344PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE

' 2105 Dickinson Ave 756-2444 Ricky Jackson 8 EmployeesEAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS

758-3568 1514 N Greene St A Complete Restaurant S Office Coffee ServiceEAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC

2201 Dickinson Ave 756 4267

PLAZA GULF SERVICE

. _ 75i_ 7 lfi J01 _L-Cr.etwai... ----

Ryder Truck Rentals 756-8045 Wrecker Service Day 756 7616 Night 756 6479

HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO.

Residential & Commercial Building 400 N tom St 752 1553

Compliments Of FRED WEBB. INC.

BILL ASKEW MOTORS

Buy Sell Trade S Memorial Dr 756 9102

BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS

218 Arlington BLd lOh S Grpenville 756 6001    7-'2    4i56

PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO,

758 21 13 Greenville

JOHNNY'S MOBILE HOME SALES. INC.

The Finest In Manufactured Homes 316 W Greenville Blvd 756 4687 Johnny L Jackson & Employees

WHITTINGTON, INC.

Charles St Greenville, N C Ray Whiitinqton 756 8537A CLEANER WORLD GARMENT CARE CENTER

622 Greenville Blvd 756 5544 Pickup Station West End Circle 7568995TAPSCOTT DESIGNS

222 E 5lh SI 757 3558 Kate Phillips Interior Designer Associate member ASIDDAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO.

2102 Dickinson Aye 756 1345 Bobby Tripp & EmployeesCAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE

1405 Dickinson Ave 752 3776 Jerry Creech Owner

Compliments Of J4TT-M0T^ PARTS,^Ne7

UUTARES JEWELERS

758-4171 911 S Washington St

GREENVILLE HEATING &

AIR CONDITIONING CO., INC

308 Spruce 758 4939 Cecil Clark 8 Employees

COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN

2905 E 5lh Take Out Only 752-5184 600 S W Greenville Blvd Eai In Or Take Out 756-6434

PUGH'S TIRE & SERVICE CENTER

752-6125 Corner ol 5lh & Greene Greenville N C

JA-LYN SPORT SHOP

Hwy 33' Chicod Creek Bridge 752-2676, Grimesland James 8 Lynda Faulkner

INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.

W M Scales Jr General Agent Waignty Scales, Rep Clarke Stokes Rep 756 3738

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Read 756-31ROBERT C. DUNN CO.

301 Ridgeway 758 5278HOLIDAY SHELL

Steam Cleaning Service All Types.Auto 8 Truck Repair 24 Hour Wrecker Service 724 S Memorial Dr 752-0334PARKERS BARBECUE RESTAURANT

756 2388 S Memorial Dr Doug Parker 8 EmployeesCompliments 01 PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle 756-2150EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY. INC

2739 E 10th St P 0 Box 3785 752-4323 Greenville

AT4 tvans 752 3831

HENORIX-BARNHILL CO.

Memorial Dr 752-4122 All Employees

HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

Where 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 Tarboro

COUNTRY SQUIRE MOBILE HOMES, INC.

703 W Greenville Blvd 756-9874

WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY

756-0317 123 S Railroad, Winierville

LOVEJOY AGENCY

Daybreak Records 756-4774 IlSOakmonI Dr Larry Whittington

Compliments 01 HOLLOWELL S DRUG STORE

- #1 911 Dickinson Ave 42 Memorial Dr & 6th 43 Stantonsburg .Rd at Doctors ParkINA'S HOUSE OF FLOWERS

N Memorial Dr Ext ,752-5656 Management & StallBUCK'S GULF STATION

8 Employees E lOlh St Ext 752-3228 Road & Wrecker Service 758 1033 Jartran Truck 8 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 FarmvilleEASTERN INSULATION, INC.

Owens Corning Fiberglass Phone Day or Night 752 1154

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w

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Come To

CHURCH

THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Soatkeni BaMM)

1510 Greenville Blvd ET. Vinson

9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a m - Morning Worship. Mini i Junior Church 10:00a.m. Mon. Baptist Women 7:30pm Tue. - Batst Young Women

OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road E. Gordon Conklin, Pastor Greg Rogers Minister of Education Treva FuUer, Minister of Music 9:45 a m Sun. - Library Open 10:00 a.m.

9:45a m -SundaySchool

Friday, December 30,1983    15

ARLI.NGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1006 W, Arlington Blvd.

The Rev. Harold Greene

10:00 a.m. 5th Sun. - Union <Hertford. North Carolina i

Please call 752-5991 or 752-6376. Home Bible Studies also available

10:00 am Holy Eucharist and Laving on of Hands

9:45a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a m. - MorningWorshiD 7:30 p.m. - Worshipservk

CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Route 9, Cherry Oaks Subdivision The Rev . James Wright

GREENVILLE BIBLE ( HURCH

Rotary Club i Rotary and Johnston)

- Worship & Children's

7:30 p m Tue. - Baptist Young Wome with Phyllis Nixon, 601 King Arthur Road 5:45 p.m. Wed. Family Night supper 6:30 p.m. - Budget Discussion, Mission Friends. Cherub andCarol Choirs 7:00 p.m Wed. - GAs, RAs, Baptist Women. Deacons 8:00 p.m. Wed. Chancel Choir

10:45a.m.-Library Open lUOOa.in. a m - MORNING WOKHIP

lOa.m &m -Sunday School IIji.m. - Morning Worship Sermon by

10:00 a m Sun Class

II    xvavs    isaa^    vvvioiiip, .^i itlUII IfJ

the Pastor Music will be rendered by the Young Adult Choir 7:30p.m. Mon. - Board Meeting 7:30 p.m. Wed Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Senior Choir will have rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Fri. - General Conference

HOLLY HILL F.W.B. BelvoirNC

Vice-Bishop R E. Worrell 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sund^ School 11:00 a.m. 1st Sun. Rev. Andre Perry

FIRST CKURCK OF CHRIST SR17271 Lake Glenwood Road i Mr Melvin Rawls 10 a.m. Sun. Worship Service 11:00a.m. - Worship Service 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship and Youth Services

7:30p.m Wed. - Board Meeting. Ladies Circle Meeting and Youth Meeting

at Loving Union Washington 11:00 a m 1st Sun. - Youth Day Pastor & *2Choir& Ushers 7:00 p.m. 1st Sun. - Rev Hooks at St. John Stokes with Jr. Choir and Ushers 7:00 p.m Mon - Program Committee Meeting Tyson Home 7:00 p.m. Minister Meeting at Church 7:00p.m. Tue. - Bible Discussion 7:00p m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:00 p m. Thur - Sr Choir meeting Rehearsal

GOOD HOPE FW B CHURCH 404 N . Mill Street Winterville.NC 28590 Bishop W.H. Mitchell, Pastor 5:00 p.m. Sat. - Choir II Call Meeting 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a.m. Sun, Morning Worship 3:00 p.m Bishop W.H. Mitchell & Good Hope Church family will render service at Warren's Chapel Church 7:00 p. m. Wed Prayer Meeting

11:00 a m Communion Service 12:00 p.m. - Special, called meeting of thediaconate 9:l5a.m. Mon StaffDevotionals 7:00 p.m Tue. Church-wide Visitation 6:45 p.m. Wed - Family Night Supper/^rterly Business Mee 7:M p.m. Thur. - Chancel hearsal

7:30p m. Wed. - Prayer Service 8:30p.mChoir

7:30 p.m. Fri. - Adult Bible Study Home of Mr and Mrs Alton Tucker

PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610 Farmville Blvd.

The Rev. Randy Royal 4:00 p m Sat - Pastor's Aide Meet 5:00 p.m. - Evening Star Usher's Meet 9:45a m ,Sun. - Sunday School Sis Mary Jones Supt

)ir Re

COREYS CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH Route 1, Winterville J.B Taylor, Pastor

UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST

100 Crestline Blvd Rick Townsend, Phone: 756-6545 10:00a m. Sun. - Bible School 11:00a.m. - Morning Worship 11:00a.m -Jr.Church 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship and Youth Meeting 6:45Wed.-Bible Study

11 a.m. Morning Worship Rev. Royal 8:00 p m Tue. - Mother's. Deacons and

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P Houston. Jr Rector

7:30a m Sun Holy Eucharist.

10:00a m. - Holv Eucharist 7:30p m. - Al-anon, Friendly Hall 7:45 p.m. Mon Bonners Lane dav

3:30 p.m Holy Eucharist. Greenville Villa Nursing Home 7:30p.m. - Choir Rehearsal. Chapel 10:00 a m Thur Town & Countrv Senior Citizens Meeting. Parish Hall 0O pm. Sat. - AA Open Group Discussion. Friendly Hall

Trustee's Meet l OOp.m Wed.-JoyHOur 8:00 p.m. - Bible Study

Care Center Board .Meeting 8:00 p m - St Lydia's Chapter Meeting. Mable Wolcott's 1720 Forest Hill Dr

7:00 p.m. Fri. Prayer Service 7:30p.m. -Quarterly Conference 7:30 p.m. Sat. - Communion service

BROWNS CHAPEL APOSTOLIC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST

Route4Greenville. North Carolina Bishop R. A. Giswould, Pastor

GREEN VILLE CHURCH OF CHRLST 264 By-Pass and Emerson Road .Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchinson. Campus Evangelist 8 a m Sun. - "Amazing Grace " TV Bible Study Channel 12 10 a.m. - Bible Study. Classes For All Ages

:30 p.m Tue - Greenville Parents' Support Group. Parish Hall 7:00a m Wed Holv Eucharist

ST. PETERS C ATHOLIC CHURCH

2700 East Fourth Rev Michael G. Clay Phone 757-3259 5:30 p m Sat. - Mass 8:00a m Sun - Mass 10 :iOa m.Sun -Mass

BLACKJACK FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH

Route 3. Box 325. Greenville, N.C. 27834 Dr. Cedric D. Pierce, Jr

9:30a.m. Sun. - Library Open chool

10:00a.m. - Sunday Sen

11:00a.m. - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship

with Rev. J.H Wilkes and choir and congregation of Burney's Chapel F.W B Church

9:30a m Sun.-Sunday School

9:45a.m. Devotion

11:00a m.-Morning Worship

2:00pm Diner Served

3:00 p.m. - Rev. J. Randolph and choir

8:00 p m. Thur. - Bible Studies iSister Ida Rufh Staton, Teacher)

lUOOa.m Morning Worship gWorship

8:00 p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 10:30 a.m. 2nd Sun. Sunday School I Deacon J Sharpe. Superintendanf)

11:30 a m 2nd Sun. - Youth &

6:00 p m. - Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study Class for all ages

For Informatinn and nr Transportation

Missionary Day i Mother Lynch in charge) 7:00 p.m. ad Sun. -^ Prison tSmp

and congregation from Joe's Branch F.W.B. Church will

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Comer of Brinkley Road and Plaza Drive Frank Gentry

9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School. Dickie Rook. Supt.

11:00 a.m. Sun. Worship Service 5:30p.m.-S.S. Staff Meeting 6:00p.m. - Choir Practice 7:00 p.m. - Prayer & Praise Service 7:00pm. Mon.-AFC 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Lifeliners 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Missions Service I FILM)

7 p.m. Thurs. Nursing Home, Chocowinity 9:30 a.m. Fr. - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ

7:00 p.m. Fri. - University Nursing Home

ARTHUR CHRISTIAN CHURCH Bell Arthur Ben James. Minister ,

Phone 753-2043

9:45 a.m. Sun. Bible School. Supt. Mike Mills 11 a m Morning Worship 6p.m -EveningWorship 7:OOp.m.-CVF 7:30p m. Tue. - Visitation 7:00p.m. Wed-CMF 8 :00p,,,m -Board Meets 7:30 p m Thur - Choir Practice 6:00a m Fri Breakfast (Tom's)

7:00p,m Mon.-CubScouts 7:30 p.m. - Boy Scouts, Adult Choir Practice

9:00 a.m. Tue. - Ladies Little Church Group meets in Ladies S.S. Dept.

7.30 p m. Women's Auxiliary 7:30 p.m. Tue. - General Board Meeting 7:30p.m. Wed. - Family Circle 8:00p.m. - Youth Choir Practice 7:30p,m. Thur. - Firemen's Meeting 7:30 p.m . - Queenie Clark Circle 10 00 a.m. Sat. - Ladies Little Church Group meets at Joe Hudson's House

close out Quarterly Meeting    ,,

7:30p.m. Wed - Bible Study

Ministry i Missionary Mary Sheppard i 3:00p m. 4th Sat - Business Meeting

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets II a.m. Sun. Sunday School. Sunday Service

7:45 p.m. Wed - Wednesday Evening Meeting

2-4 p.m. Wed. - Reading Room. 400 S Meade St.

leeting

8. 00 p m. 4th Sat 1 Hour Prayer 10:30 a m 4th Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon J Sharpe, Superintendanf i 11:.30 a m 4th Sun - Pastoral Day I Bishop R.A. Griswould, Speaker i 8:00 mm 4th Sun Pastoral Day I BishopR.A. Griswould. Speaker)

'Peace Concert'

To Be Featured

MORNINt; GLORY APOSTOLIC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH

306 Pennsylvania Ave Yet .Sharing luiloii

HOLY TEMPLE A.F.C.O.G.

Rte. 6, Greenville, N.C. Saintsville Elder I.J. Robinson 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Midweek Service 7:30p m, Fri. - Bible Studies 7:00p.m 2nd Sun - Worship Sendee 7 :00b.m, 4th Sun. - Worship Service 10:00a.m. Sun, - Sunday School 11:30 a m 1st Sun. Missionary and Youth Day 11:30 a m 2nd Sun. - Deacon Day 11:30a.m. 4th Sun. - Pastoral Day 6:00 p.m Fri to6:00 p.m. Sat. - 24 hour shut in

9:00 p.m Sat. New year Night Service

Building Eldress Irene Gepps 4th Sun of each month 7:00 p.m Sun Worship and Preaching 7.00 p.m Thur - Worship and Preaching

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 1206 Mumford Rd.

James C. Brown 10:00a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a m. - WorshipService 6:30 p.m. - Youth Service 7:00 p.m. Evangelistic Service 7:30p.m. Wed. -FTayer Meeting

Sees Chance Of An About-Face

Would Accept Leadership Role

RED OAK CHRISTI AN CHURCH

264 By-Pass West

PINEY GROVE FREE WILL B APTIST CHURCH

Hwy, 264 West

AllanSterbin. Pastor, Phone: 756-74,10 10 a m Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - ...Morning Worship Dr. Howard James 8:00 p m Tue. - Narcotics Anonymous .Meeting 7:30p.m Wed.-BibleStudv

264 By-Pass west Dr Maurice Ankrom, Pastor 9:45a.m. Sun. - Church School 11 a.m. Morning Worship Nursery service provided There will be no youth meetings or Choir rehearsals Sunday eve.

EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE CHURCH

102 Laughinghouse Dr. S.J. Williams

CORNERSTONE MI.SSIONARY BAPTIST CHI R( II

Statonsburg and Allen Road Reverend Arlee Griffin. Ji 7:47 a.m. Sun. - Hour of Prayer and Praise

9:15 a.m. Sun. Church School (grades k-12)

9:30a.m. - New Members Meeting 11:00a.m - Worship 6:30 p.m Thur - Youthstones meet for Bible Study and fellowship 7:30 p:m Thur. - Adults meet for Bible Study and prayer

PEOPLE S BAPTIST TEMPLE

2001 W. Greenville Blvd The Rev J..M Bragg, Pastor 10:30 a m . Sun. - Morning Worship No Evening Service 7 :30 p m Wed - Hour of Power 8:45 p m. - Choir Practice 7:00p m Thur Church Visitation Radio Program ' Together Again' WBZQ 7:15 p.m. Mondav through Friday

10 a.m. Sun - Sunday School, Sup Linwood Lawson 11:00a.m. -WorshipService 11:00 a m - Junior Church, Debra Whaley & Carolyn Taylor 7:00 p m. - Celebration of Praise 7 :30p.m. Wed. - Praying and Sharing 7:30 p.m Wed. Teens Service, Ann Crines; Children's Service, Donna Kay Elks

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Bible scholar foresees a reduction in anti-Semitism in Argentina under the new government of President RaulAlfonsin.

He has a good record on human rights and should the new regime be a success, we can see a diminution of organized anti-Semitism in the country, Rabbi Moshe Tutnauer of the Seminario Rabinico Latino Americano in Buenos Aires, told a meeting of the U.S. Rabbinical Assembly. "

PITTSBURGH (AP) -William P. Thompson, now serving jointly with the Rev. James Andrews as co-stated , clerk of the newly reunited Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), says he would accept that chief administrative office, if elected to it.

H ARVEST baptist CHURCH PO Box 8046, Greenville NC Meeting at Carolina Country Dav School David J. LeBlanc 756-3624 10:00a m Sun. - Sunday-School all ages 11:00a.m. Sun. - WorshipService 6:00 p.m - Film ".Strengthening Your Grip"

7:30 p.m. Wed. - Bible .Study & Prayer Service

6:15 a m Thur - Men's Prayer Breakfast at Shoney's 7:00pmEva^elism 9:30a m Sat. - Evangelism

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHI R( H

1400 S. Elm St

Richard R Gammon and Gerald M Anders. Pastors Marily n R. Alexander, Director of Music E Robert Irwin, Organist 9:00 a m Sun - Worship, Koinonia Forum 9 :45 a m . - Church School 11a m Sun. - Worship 7:30 pm .Mon - woe and Circle Councils Bible Moderators' Helps 9:00a m Tue.-Park A Tot 7:30 pm - CE Committee .Mem bership Care Committee 2:00 p.m. Wed. - Address Angels 4:00p m Rainbow Choir 4 45 p m Choristers

Says Religious Broadcasts Up

UNITY CHRIST (HI Rdl

Seventh Day Adventist Church Building 2611 E 10th Street Greenville Co Pastors Bill and Shirley Katrobos ll:OUa m Sun - Worship

7:30 p.m Gallery Choir 9:00a.m Thur. - Park-A-Tot

11:00a m - Parkin-son's Support Group 7:30pm -OvereatersAnonvmous Friday and Saturday Jan 6 and 7 10:00 a m Pandora 's Box

FIKSTdlKI.STIANdlCKdl

520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138.756-0775 Will R Wallace, Minister Lanell Boyetl. Director of Religious Education Becky A StasavichOffice Administrator 9:45p m Sun - Church School 11:00a m - Worship 3 00p m Mon, - Circle 6 7:30 pm. - CWF Executive Board Meeting

9:00a m. Tue - Church Staff Meeting 10:00 am - Newsletter Information Due in Church Office 7:30 p.m Wed Chancel Choir Re hearsal

3:30 p.m Thur. - Brownie Scout Troop 361

SEI.VIAdlAPEI.FREE WILL BAPTISTdIURdI

1701S Green St

The Rev CliftonGardner, Pastor 7:00p m Fri - Senior Choir Rehearsal 3:00p m C G SpiritualClioir rehearsal 9:45a m Sun - SundaySchool 11a m - Worship^Servlce 7:00 p m Wed. Prayer Meeting 7:30 pm Jan. 7 - The Pitt-Green Intedenominational Choir will render a musical program 4:00 pm Jan 8 - The Gospel Chorus will meet in the Fellowship hall 4:00 p.m Jan 28 - The Senior Choir will celebrate their Anniversarv. registration 3:30p.m.

MORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) - Religious broadcasting grew by 10.2 percent in the United States during 1983, says the 1984 Directory of Religious Broadcasting.

Based on figures compiled by the research division of National Religious Broadcasters, the directory reports a 30 percent increase in religious television programs and films and a 2 percent rise in religious radio programming. ,

What has been general knowledge of the surging growth in the field of broadcasting ministries is now available in documented form, says Ben Armstrong, NRB executive director.

AFGHA.N ARRESTS ISLAMABAD. Pakistan (AP) - The Soviet-backed Afghan government says it has arrested 210 insurgents in the northeastern province of Badakhshan.

A single stated clerk (chief administrator) is to be elected at the denominations 1984 assembly. Thompson, who had filled that office in the former mostly Northern United Presbyterian Church, told a news conference that if called upon I would be willing to serve.

NEW YORK (AP) - In contrast to the typical New Years Eve high jinks, a free Concert for Peace is being given at the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine this Saturday evening with noted musicians participating. Astronomer Carl Sagan is to speak and conductor Leonard Bernstein to lead a key prayer for peace.

More than 8,000 are expected to pack the cathedral. Prominent participants include the Soviet Emigre Orchestra led by Lazar Go5man, mezzo-soprano Frederika von Stade, baritone William Warfield, pianist Caroline Stoessinger and violinist Dora Schwarzberg.

Unity Christ Church

P.O. Box 8154    Phone    756-8784

Greeiivliie, N.C. 27835 (An Inter-Denominational Church) Meeting At Seventh-Day Adventist Church 2611 E. 10th St. Extended

Sunday Service............11:00 AM

Monday Evening. (starting jan 9)7:30 P.M.

ciReioue to ma^ (XJOZliili a lixioxiiy in jgS4...

I K T Vinson. Mmistur

9:45 A.M......Bible Study

11:00 A.M......Worship

1510 Greenville Blvd S E

j GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

\    A    Southern    Baptist    Ctiiiich

Andrews, who formerly filled the office in the mostly Southern Presbyterian Church U.S., hasnt indicated whether he would seek the office.

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

The Surest Way To Acquire Good Will Is To Do Good Work -

Nursery School Monday through Friday 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

BLACK JACK FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH

INVITES YOU TO JOIN THEM ON NEW YEARS EVE FOR A TIME OF FELLOWSHIP, GOOD FOOD, AND GOOD MUSIC. This will also be a good opportunity to meet the new Youth Director, Stacy Carter.

TIME:

PLACE:

9:00 Until 12:00 p.m. December 31,1983 FELLOWSHIP HALL, Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church

Cedric D. Pierce, Jr., PastorGREENVILLE CHURCH OF GODDeidicates New Facilities

Sunday, January 1st, 1984 at 2:00 P.M:    3105 Soutb Memorial DriveEveryone Welcome!

Built by:

1 Southern Design and Construction Consultants, Inc.

P.O. Box 642, Lexington, S.C. 29072 (803) 359-7774

Pitt Electric, Inc. 310-A Pennsylvania Ave. Greenville, N.C. 757-3458

Drywali Enterprises / Hwy. 43, Greenville, N.C. ^    756-0053

Robert C. Dunn Co., Inc. Roofing & Sheet MetaLWorks 301 Ridgeway St., Greenville, N.C. 758-5278

James A. Tripp Builders, Inc. 1008 W. 3rd St., Ayden, N.C. 746-4036

Worship With Us Sun(day School-9:45 A.M. Morning Worship-11:00 A.M.

Dedicational Services -2:00 P.M.

Sunday Evening Evangelistic Service

-7:00 P.M.GREENVIUE

CHURCH OF eOD

3105 Soiith Memorial Drive

Rev. Paul Lanier, Jr. Pastor





CtOBSWOtd By Eugene Sbeffir

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY. DECEMBER 31.1M3

ACROSS    52 Tax agency:

1 Docs org.    abbr.

4 Policeman    53 Heart parts

7 Bounds    54 Golf prop

12 U.S. Uncle    55 Actor

13 Wood sorrel    Carney

14 Rims    54 Tease

15 Draw    57 Compass pt.

14 Our Gang    58 Utter

character

18 Tavern

19 Mixture

20 Beatty movie

22Fuk

23 ine King and I setting 27 Apiece 29 Belt part 31 Once more

34 Let go

35 Fail

37 Enemy

38 Poker bet

39 Wise one 41 Bulb unit 45 Peacocks

walk

47 CSA general

48 Orthodontia concern

DOWN

1 Moving

2 Down East 21 Railroad

3 Fix up    nail

Avg. sohiiQ iuue: 26 min.

QSia mm ass) asss mmm mm

feiigg] wgrxiBWBiii

4 Baseballs 23 Propeller Ty    type

5 Eyepiece 24 White House 4 Walked ner- nickname

vously    25    Pub order

7 Lascivious    24    Dr. s subj.

8 Anglu5axon    28    Chemical

letter    suffix

9 Mature    30    Space-

10 Pod unit    craft

11 Concorde 31 Mideast 17 Drawer pull garment

32 Pistol

33 Deed

34 Dorothys dog

37 Woodwinds 40 Penned 42 Pseudonym 43-cotta

44 Peevish

45 ERA, e.g.

44Of-I sing

from the Carroll Rlghtar Instituto

a sing

sirr

Hagen

12-30 50 Raw, in

* t    .    7    f'rance

Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 51

CRYPTOQUIP

12-30

SMHE LTMFYE CYL UYYL FMWTF

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - BRAWNY SWIMMING HERO HAD MADE BIG SPLASH AT POOL PARTY.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: F equals S.

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

193 King Features Syndicate, Inc

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribune Company Syndicate Inc

THE ACE THAT GOT AWAY

North South vulnerable. North deals.

NORTH

J62 ^K97654 0 Void

KJ43

EAST--------

854 7 3

0 J1073

Q10752

WEST

K9 7 A 10 0 986542

A86

SOUTH

AQ1073 ^QJ82

0 AKQ

9 The bidding:

North    East    South    West

2 0    Pass    2    NT    Pass

3 C    Pass    6    Pass

Pass    Pass

Opening lead: Ace of 7.

ing high diamond and spades.

Even if West's analysis was right and South was void in clubs, it still looks right to lead the ace of clubs at trick two. It is most unlikely that one discard in the South hand Would make or break the con

tract.

Will Propose A Plan For Tots

Players in the recent World Team Championship seemed to have great difficul ty staying out of slam when they were missing two aces. In the final, the U.S. team managed to collect both its aces, and with them the world title. In the semifinal, the U.S. team bid a slam off two cashing aces, but with a luckier result.

.North's two diamond open ing bid could have been made on a number of hand types. His diamond rebid showed that he had a weak two-bid in hearts. South obviously expected a better suit from his partner and blasted into slam without stopping off to check on whether his side held a sufficient number of aces.

West led the ace of hearts to take a look at dummy. He decided that South had to be void in clubs for his jump to slam, .so he continued with a trump. Declarer won dummy's king, and he was quick to seize his opportunity.

He came to hand with the ace of spades and sluffed dummy's remaining spades on the ace king of diamonds. When the king of spades ap peared on the next lead of the suit, it was all over. Declarer ruffed on the table, came to hand with a trump and was able to discard all of dummys clubs on his remain

RALEIGH. X.C. (AFi -The slate superintendent of public instruction said Thursday he'll propose to the 198. General .Assembly that a statewide pre-kindergarten program be set up for 3- and 4-year olds.

A. Craig Phillips said he and others believe that with society changing, children of that age are ready to enter school.

The program would not be just a day-care operation, but would include an educational environment for the children, he said.

"We would hope that ... we'd acquire funds as we did during the early 1970s ifor the kindergartens)." he said.

Phillips said he wanted 16 models set up and that pre-kindergarten programs should be implemented statewide by the end of decade.

"As we learn more about child development, we come closer to the moment that we believe school is the best setting, better equipped in terms of personnel and know-how, to do the job of an educational program for 3s and 4s," he said.

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A very good last day of the year to be very definite in thinking about what you want in the years ahead and to make swift and definite plans for gaining such ambitions and goals. ^

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr 19) Plan to see persons of different views to your own or contact those at a distance for a more interesting future.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You are suddenly inspired just how to handle your business matters in the future so that you become more successful.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A blunt partner shows you how to make the future brighter, so listen carefully and follow suggestions given you MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to Jul. 21) You can finish work that needs to be done, but take time to show appreciation to fellow workers.

LEO (Jul. 22 to Aug. 21) You may get an unexpected invitation that will bring you pleasure, so accept quickly. Show good intentions to the one you love.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) You had better carry through with the plans made by family for New Years Eve and be happy. Home entertainment is best.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Being active and making many new contacts is good during the day. Be sure to drive with utmost care.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) A good day to analyze your financial position as the year ends and know just how you do stand. Plan improvements on property.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You can clearly see all the opportunities ahead for the coming year, so be sure to plan wisely. You can become more successful.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) This is a good day to see an advisor who can tell you what is best to do in the coming new year. Reach important decisions.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Fine day and evening to be gregarious and see as many of your friends as you can. both in business and personal life.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Considering what you have accomplished during this year will give you a better idea of what to do in the New Year.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will never be quiet a moment, so early teach to think before speaking so as not to get into trouble. Give a fine education and add languages to the curriculum. Accentuate history and geography since travel is indicated.

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

1983, The McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

VHEN FKYT FKYU-VYY SMEN WYMCTLF.

Speaking of

Your Health...

Lester LCokMUi,N.D.

Cancer S Not Contagious

RECOVER VIOLINS

.STOCKHOLM, Sweden lAP) - Acting on an anonymous tip, police found two 17th century violins worth $200,000 in a luggage locker. The violins had been stolen from the Stockholm Museum in April 1982.

My mother is being treated with chemotherapy. She had a cancer of the breast removed. She comes to visit us and our children a few times a week. My wife seem to be afraid of these visits. Even though she doesnt openly say so, she once admitted that she is afraid that cancer could be caught from my mother. Would you write about this? Mr. L.S.P., Michigan Dear Mr. P.;

You indicate in the rest of your letter that there is a need for an urgent answer to this problem. I enjoy, of course, the fact that readers write to me but I can hardly understand why you did not go to your he.st single source of information namely, the doctor who operated on your mother. The surgeon and the physician who are taking care of her would immediately have assuaged your anxiety and would have relieved your wife of the irrational fear she seems to have.

All physicians today are keenly aware of the emotional reactions of their patients to illnesses, and offer them and their families the security they seek.

Your particular problem might have been resolved by a single telephone call to your doctor. It might have spared all of you the anxiety that beclouds the pleasantry of your mothers visits.

Cancers are not contagious. They cannot be passed on to anyone by contact. Unlike infections by germs and viruses, they are not transmissable.

Although cancers are not contagious, the fear of cancer is most contagious. Unlike infections that are spread by germs to man, the fear of cancer is usually spread by man to man by an inadvertent thought or phrase.

Fear is an insidious disease that grows and thrives in darkness. Talking out ones fears makes them shrivel into insignificance.

Remember that you cannot catch any cancers from your mother. You can, however, catch a great deal of joy by the sympathetic understanding and support that you give her during this emotionally precarious time for her.

I do hope that your wife wipes out her own fears and helps devote herself to the rehabilitation of your mother.

The tongue is very often a reliable indication of some kind of illness. Grandmothers have always used the appearance of the tongue as an index of their own medical wisdom. That, coupled with a kiss on the brow for fever, was their CAT scan at the turn of the century. Often they were remarkably right.

Some diseases show a characteristic change of the tongue. A raspberry-colored tongue is often seen during scarlet fever. White patches on the tongue may be due to thrush. Fine tremors occur with thyroid disorders and some nerve conditions.

The surface of the tongue often indicates_drug reactions-and-or allergic reactions.

In pernicious anemia and nutritional disturbances, changes in the tongue may be one of the earliest signs. The moisture of the tongue is a good guide to the fluid balance of the body.

The tongue is really a great help in diagnosis.

New Jail

Has No Locks

NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP) - Officials postponed the opening of the new $18 million county jail for fear it would have bwn too open - no locks had been installed.

Anthony W. Pellicane, deputy director of corrections and youth services for Middlesex County, said Wednesday the new Adult Correction Center, scheduled to go into use Sunday, will be opened three to five months late because of a delay in the delivery of the elaborate lock system.

The locks, connected to a computerized, automatic system, showed up last week, but Pellicane said It will take the extra time to install the system and train the employees.

"Its just one of those unfortunate things, said Pellicane.

You cant open a prison without locks.

What does a doctor see when he looks at the tongue and does it in a flash? - Miss R.Y., Washington Dear Miss Y.:

EXPECTS .MEETING

MOSCOW (AP) - A senior U.S. official predicts Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko will meet with Secretary of State George Shultz at a disarmament conference ihStockholm next month.

PEANUTS

INEWRfiCTINVlTEPTO NEW YEAR'S PARTIES

vvE    Tnc-    TcAM    NiEEPS

A MASCOT.

TtAh, A AlY

IM A UrriE 6QsruME

THAT    OR

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pbal cHiMPf*

BLONDIE

ITS PfflOAY NIGHT AND I DON'T HAVE

1 A OATE/y^'^-

YOU DON'T SEE ME SITTING AROUND, PEELING SORRY ^/POR MYSELF, DO YOU /

HEY, YOU'RE RIGHT, SIS...LET'S GO TO A MOVIE

BEETLE BAILEY

PHANTOM

FRANK & ERNEST

ACfe IN TbucH WITH

RFAHTY?.. you HAVf anything

fETTf/??

n-io

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

I





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0 Reflector Classified

COMPLAINT AND NOTICE

OF HEARING BEFORE THE BUILDING INSPECTOR '

OF THE TOWN OF BETHEL TO: CALLIE WILLIAMS, RICH ARD WILLIAMS, NAPOLEON WfLLIAMS AND THEIR HEIRS, AND ANY OWNERS, MORTGAGES, JUDGMENT CREDITORS, AND ANY OTHER PARTIES IN INTEREST IN THAT RTAIN STRUCTURE DATED AT 409 BARNHILL -^REET IN THE TOWN OF BETHEL, NORTH CAROLINA, WHICH STRUCTURE IS SITUAT ED ON LAND COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE CALLIE WULIAMS AND RICHARD WILLIAMS LOT ON THE EAST SIDE OF BARNHILL STREET, ALSO KNOWN AS PITT STREET, BETWEEN CHURCH STREET AND CRAWFORD STREET, IN THE TOWN OF BETHEL, NORTH CAROLINA. SAID LOT IS DESIG NATED AS LOT 14 IN BLOCK A AS SHOWN ON BETHEL TAX MAP 309 IN THE OFFICE OF THE PITT COUNTY TAX SUPERVISOR, AND being the same TO WHICH WAS CONVEYED TO CALLIE WILLIAMS BY DEED DATED JANUARY 17, 1911, AND RECORDED IN BOOK U9 AT PAGE 460 OF THE PITT COUNTY PUBLIC REGISTRY.

You are hereby notified that the aforesaid structure situated upon the aforesaid lof and af fhe above deslgnafed address Is abandoned and is in a condition that appears to be a health, fire, or safety hazard in the following ways:

1. Violations of fhe Sfate Building code, the State Electrical Code, and the Fire Prevention Code, which violations constitute a fire hazard In such structure;

2. Dilapidation and disrepair of the structure's floors, walls, ceilings, or roof which creafe a fire hazard and which might attract or admit rodents and insects or become breeding places for rodenfs and insects;

3. Defects within the structure as aforesaid which consfitufe a threaf to children and increase the haz ards of accident or other calamities;

4. The collection of garbage, rubbish, or combusflble maferlal in or near the said structure which might attract rodents and insects, or become breeding places tor rodenfs and Insects, and which also constitutes a fire hazard in or about such structure.

You are further notified that a hearing will be held before the building Inspector of fhe Town of Bethel at Town Hall on the southwest corner of James Street and South Railroad Street at 10:00 o'clock A.M. on the 16th day of January, 1904, for the purpose of finding facts as to whether or not the condition of such abandoned structure creates a health, fire, or safety hazard which necessitates the repair, closing, or demolition of said abondoned structure pursuant to Town Ordinance. At the hearing, you shall be entitled to offer sucn evidence which is relavent or material to the questions sought to be determined or the remedies sought to be effective.

You are further notified that if, upon such hearing, the building inspector shall find that fhe conditions In the above described abandoned dwelling do in fact constitute a health, fire, or safety hazard, the building Inspector will issue an order Tn writing directed to the owner of said structure requiring the owner to remedy these condl tions by repairing the same, or by demolishing or removing tne same, or by taking such other steps as may be necessary to remedy these conditions. The building Inspector may make such other orders and take such other procedures as are authorized under the Code of the Town of Bethel and the General Statutes of North Carolina.

Further information as to this matter may be'obtained by contacting the undersigned.

This 28th day of December. 1983. KENNETH R. WHITEHURST BUILDING INSPECTOR TOWN OF BETHEL (919)-825-6191 December 30,1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Execufrix of the estate of Hoyle Alvin Hendrix late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or betore June 16, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate yment.

his 13th day of December, 1983. Martha Josephine Gorham Hendrix

1020 W. Wright Road Greenville, North Carolina 27834

Executrix of the estate Of Hoyle Alvin Hendrix, deceased. December 16. 23, 30, 1983; January 6,1984

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Administrator CtA of fhe Estate of ALICE G. LONG, late of Pitt Cognty, North Carolina, the un der^lgned hereby authorizes all ^ persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned, w'hose mailing address is'P.O. Box 1767, 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 undersigned.

This ttM 6th day of December, 1983.

Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, N.A.

By; Ie. May. Vice President P.O. Box )76t Greenville, N.C. 27835 E. Cordell Avery Jamas, Hite, Cavendish 8, Blount Attorneys-at-Law P.O. Drawer 15 Greenville, N.C. 27835 0015 December f, 16,23,30,1983

MTieiTftDitol

Having qualified as Ad mlnlstrator of the Estate of HARVEY DIXON JOYNER, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all Ofsrsons having claims against said Estate to present them to the

002

PERSONALS

WHITE MALE 38 to meet female 25 to 40. Reply to PO Box 1704, Greenville, NC.

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

FREEI Stop in and register at Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary.

PECAN LOVERS - We will crack your pecans for 20 a pound. Bijty Wilson, 758 4476.

on

Autos For Sale

INSURANCE POINTS

OUR RATES MAY SAVE YOU MONEY! Call us before you buy. MID-ATLANTIC INSURANCE, INC. 756-7723.

SELL YOUR CAR fhe National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer In PIft County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.

013

Buick

BUICK LESABRE LIMITED. (5). 4 door. 83. Lease Cars. Loaded. Low Mileage. Like New. Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmvllle. 753-3140.

1978 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED -

4 door. Full power, 55,000 miles, 1 owner. $4,10(r negotiable. 753-5756, Farmvllle.

1980 BUICK CENTURY, 38,000 miles. Excellent condition. AM/FM radio. Cruise, electric seats, electric trunk opener. Transferable warranty. Call 756 3109or 758-3175.

014

Cadillac

1978 Cadillac Coupe Deville. Clean. Excellent condition. Phone 355-2352.

015

Chevrolet

CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC. 4 door. 78. Loaded, One owner. Duke Buick Pontiac, Farmvllle, 7533140.

1973 CAMARO. Engine in good condition. M50 fires and keystone cragers. Needs paint |ob. $1,000 firm. 756 2857

1976 CAPRICE CLASSIC -' 4 door hard and ins( cruise

excellent tires and body. 758 9860.

fop. Burgundy; bottom, top. Inside. Full power, tilt wheel, e control, AM/FM radio, air.

1977 CHEVY NOVA. 6 cylinder, power steering and brakes, air. Good condition. $1,500. Phone 1 747 8111 days (ask for Kevin), nights 1-747 8504.

1979 CHEVROLET Monte Carlo, landau roof, air condition, cruise control. 54,000 miles, extra clean. $4995.753-4325

1979 Z28, t top. Loaded. Call 758 5779.

1984 CHEVETTE. Fully loaded. 1500 miles. Take up payments. Call 355 2255 or 746 6017 anytime.

018

Ford

THUNOERBIRD, 1978, loaded, landau. Great shape. $2900. Call 746 2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5:30.

1977 MUSTANG Mach I. Good condition. $1,950 negotiable. Phone 752 1705.

023

Pontiac

1977 GRAND PRIX. 70,000 miles, one owner. Very good condition. $3,500 negotiable. 746 4270 after 8.

1978 PONTIAC Catalina, air, AM/FM, $1,645. 758 1355.

024

Foreign

MERCEDES 3V-SD. 1983. 11,000 miles, sunroof, leather Inferior, 5 months old. 756-2899 after 6 p.m.

WE BUY AND SELL Used Cars. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen. 756-1135. 203 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C.

1963 MARK II Jaguar. Right hand drive. $2900 or best offer. Must sell. Call 752 0151, 756 8233 or 758 0471.

1971 TOYOTA. $400. Call 756 9382 anytime.

1971 VOLKSWAGEN. Outstanding condition. 756-400V.

1980 FIAT SPIDER. White con vertible. AM/FM cassette. Brand new top. Local car. 30.000 miles. $6400 negotiable. 756 4233 after 6.

1982 VOLVO GL Statlonwagon. Diesel, leather, cruise, AM/FM cassette, air,* power windows. Excellent condition. Nights only -355-2452.

032

Boats For Sale

CLOSEOUT SALE. Save up to 50% on everything. Rag Bag Sailor, Hwy 264 East. Open 4-6 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday.

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and ^rtsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N.C. 834-2774.

036

Cycles For Sale

FOR SALE: 1975 Harley. Full dress. Phone 753 5751.

MOPED for sale. Good condition. Windshield and all extras. $225. Call 752-7981.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

wndertlgned, whose mailing address Tt Pott Office Box 36<; iefial, North Carolina, 27812, on or before 23rd day of June, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of Itieir recovery. All persons Indebted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment to the un-

^^fSSrthe 1*th day of December, 1889.

1.1. Dennis Poet Office Box 368 Bethel, North Carolina 27812

1^'"

^^vllle, North Carolina 27835

Oaeember 23, 30, 1883; January 6, IB. 1884

036 CyclBs For Salt

18^ HONDA liixl ihadow. 4,(ioo miles. Excellent condition. 82,200. Phone 758-6380 after 5 p.m.

1803 Moped MMdA. Like newl Has signal lights, windshield, saddle battets. Cost - $772, will sell $450 or best offer. 758-8860.

03f

Trucks For Salo

Jllp CtlftOKE CHIIF. 1983. 2 door. Loaded. Must sell, offer. 758-9132 after 6 p.m.

TIGER TOP aMpER SHELL, 1 year old, excellent condition, fits full size short bed trucks, $300 firm. Call 758-4021 after 4:30.

1874 DATSUN tAuCK. Fair condh tion. $600. Phone 752-1146 before 1:30p.m.

1876 DODGE VAN. 6

running condition, new paint new fires. Excellent on gas. and assume loan. 746-4644.

1880 CHEVROLET Silverado, 39,000 miles. Clean. 1 owner, loaded. 758-0849.

1980 DATSUN Pickup truck. 5 speed, air conditioning, long bed. $3,300. Phone 756-2750.

040

Child Care

BABYSITTER NEEDED part time in your home. Experience and references required. Call 756 6396 anytime.

MATURE PERSN to care for infant, my home, must have own car. 756-2684.

046

PETS

AKC COCKER SPANIEL pups for sale, $100. Call 752 2448.

AKC DOBERA8AN puppies, black ipiop bloodline. Christmas gifts! Call 757-3769 after

and rust, Champic

Good

6:30p.m. or 1-825-8101.

AKC REGISTERED German Shep herd puppies, |ust been weened. Will hold til Christmas. 752-2540 or 752 3170.

AMERICAN BLACK AND TAN

Coon Hound Pups. 752-4345 or 758 7795.

CHIHUAHUA/TERRIER female, $20 born July 17,1983. 2 AKC males, $20 and $30. 1-grown, 1 born June 23, 1983. 1 female AKC, $25. 756 0061.

CHRISTMAS SIBERIAN HUSKY

puppies, AKC Registered, black and white. 753 2081.

FOR SALE: AKC Pekingese, Dachshunds, Pomeranians, 1 male Chihuahua' and Cocker Spaniels. Clipping and grooming for all breeds. Call 758-2681.

FOR SALE: Full blooded Border Collie Puppies. Dewormed. Call Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279.

GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies for sale, $15. 7 weeks old. 3 left. Call

050

EMPLOYMENT

051

Help Wanted

ADVERTISING POSITION avalla ble. Advertising position open for an Individual to manage an advertising department. Must excel in newspaper layout and design, radio copy, and printed media. Individual must have strong creative display talents. Must have innovative retail advertising ideas and be patient, persistent, and able to work with others. Excellent opportunity for the right person. Apply Brody's, PItf Plaza, Monday-Friday, 2 to 5, Libby Kinley.

representatives. Call 758

I pan 3159.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY in sales with a locally based national firm. Excellent income which includes salary, commissions and bonuses. Benefits include life, health and dental insurance. Extensive train

ing at company expense. Collie required.

Box 3097, Greenville, NC 27834.

3'

ree

Send resume fo:

CRUISE SHIP JOBSI Great income potential. All occupations. For information calf:    (312)    742-8620,

extension 493.

DOMINO'S PIZZA

Now hiring delivery personnel. Must have own car and Insurance, must be over 18. Hiring at both locations In Greenville 1201 Charles Boulevard and RIvergate Shopping Center. Apply In person

DRY CLEANING PRESSER and

shirt presser. Call 756-9455 from 8 to 6.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY, Large corporation has outstanding sales opoening for a sales repre sentafive. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress for age. Business or sales background helpful, tn requesting personal Interview please submit resume stating personal history, education, and business experience. Write PO Box 406, Greenville, NC 27835.

EXPERIENCED sheetrock hangers and finishers. Call 756-0053.

EXPERIENCED WORD Processor or CRT Operator needed. Dictaphone experience necessary. Speed, accuracy, and good gram metical skills a must! Send resume to T. Harris, PO Box 5026, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE. -

GO GETTER, Ambitious person. Energetic, reliable. Available for immediate employment. Electrolux, 756 6711.

INTERIOR DECORATOR/Sales

Person. Experience preferred. Salary plus commission. Send resumo with references to Inferior Decorator, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.

LPNS NEEDED. Part time and full time. 7 to 3 and 3 to 11 shifts are available. Apply In person or call Oak Atanor, Inc., Snow Hill, 1-747-2868.

MAID WANTED. Must be able and

willing to cook, serve, clean house, laundry, shop, drive, furnish own transportation. Large home, 2 people, some night entertaining, excellent pay and fringe benefits It qualified. Send resume fo Housekeeper, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, N. 1:27835.

MECHANIC WANTED . Ford LIncoln-Mercury Experience. Must have own tools. Excellent pay and company benefits. Apply to Buck Sutton, East Carolina Lincoln AAer-cury. Dickinson Avenue, Greenville.

ONE OF THE COUNTRY'S leading Insurance companies Is looking for an Individual In its Greenville office. The candidate must have an aptitude for selling. This is a substantial earning opportunity. Phone Ron Jevlcxy or David Haynes at United Insurance Company of America, 120 Reade Street, Greenville, NC, 752-3840 or 734-4141. This Is An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F. All replies are confidential.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AFTER CHRISTMAS SPECIALS FROM Art Dellano Homes

USED 12 X 65 2 bedrooms, front kitchen. $700 down, $130 per month.

USED 14 X 60 2 bedrooms, front kitchen. $1,000 down, $157 per month.

USED 12 X 401 bedroom, 1 bath. $1000 down, $90 per month.

USED 2 bedroom, 1 bath. $300 down, $97 per month.

II *t i 82t 14 X 70 3 bedroom Repos. $500 down and tow monthly payments.

Call 756-9841

A.

051

HtlpWantad

NtPb 11-7 NilNG assistant or orderly. University Nursing Canter. Contact Employment Security Commlulon, 756-26I4.

OPriCE NiAAGlk/Personnel Consultant. Sales experience helpful but not necessary. Send resumes to Atlantic Personnel Service, P.O. Box 4144, Wilmington, NC 28403, Attn; AAary Jo Davis.

PART tiME counterperson and part time doughnut maker needed. Apply in parson at Jerry's Sweet Shop, Pitt Plaza.

PART TIM POSItlN

Earnings of $4.00 per hour, 13 to 15 hours per week, servicing Greeting Card and Gift Wrap departments In several surrounding retell stores, available to a responsible individual having seed transporattor. )n She araaof (xreenvllla.I

Please send brief resume including your phone number and this ad to: P.O.Box410,Taylorvllle, IL. 62568.

PART TIME help wanted. vening hours. Good pay plan. Start imme diately. 756-^9 between 2 and 4

only.

PLUMBER with one year experi-ence In repair work to be trained to make repairs to mobile homes. Azalea AAobile Homes, 756-7815.

REAL ESTATEiN YOUR FUTURE?

We currently have an opening tor a sales associate. Must have NC real estate license. You must be willing to attend our CENTURY 21 training program which consist of 40 hours of classroom instruction on the basics of listing, selling real estate, financing and working with fhe transferee. Sales tools, referrals and in house training offered. Expected income the first year to be $15,000 plus. For more Information call Ann Bass, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty or Madalyn McGuffin, 756 5868.

REGISTERED NURSE to serve as Director of Nursing in 75 bed Intermediate Care facility. Immediate opening. Call ad-mlnlstrator af (919) 747 2868.

RESIDENT COUNSELOR -

Rrlmarlly interested in those with luman Service background wishing fo gain valuable experience in the field. No monitory compensation, however room, utilities, and phone provided. Call Mary Smith at The Real Crisis Center, 758 4357.

SALES - ELECTROLUX. Prestige manufacturer of home cleaning products requires 3 representatives in this area. A go getter attitude, energy, creativity. Earnings based on performance. Benefits and incentives. Promotions from within. Call 756-6711.

SALESPERSON needed. Apply in person af Tradewind Family Hous ng, 264 Bypass.

TELEPHONE SURVEY Workers needed part time to up-date the Greenville City Directory. Work at home! Send name, address, and telephone number in your own handwriting to Survey Worker, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs mature person for short trips surrounding Greenville. Confacf customers. We train. Write N.X. Dickerson, President, Southwestern Petroleum, Box 789, Fort Worth, Texas 76101.

059

Work Wanted

INtRtdfc and exferl or. Work guarantoedi Rafarencts -fraa astlmatas. 13 years axperlanca. 756-6e73 attar 6 p.m.

PAINTING INSIDE or outside. No lobs too small. Residential, apartments, and commercial. 15 years experience. Fraa astlmatas. All work guarantead. 758-7815.

t>LASTER AND STUCCO REPAIR bast quality. Also new construction stucco. Call 756-7297 anytime.

RAIMO/TV REPAIR, all work guarantead, will pickup and deliver. Also available for commission work. Call R.W. Smith at Smith Electronics, 752 2768.

WALLPAPERING AND Painting. 10 years experience. Local refer eneas. 758 7748.

WANTED: HOUSE in need of

repairs. Will do repairs for lease. 10 years maintenance experience. References upon request. 758-2128.

ObO

FOR SALE

042

Auctions

DEAN'S AUCTION SERVICE Holly Ridge, NC at Paradise Auction House. Sunday, January 1, 1984. 2:00 p.m. Free Hangover black coffeel Special New Years Day Sale for Garland Ramsey from Pennsylvania. Antiques, collectibles, depression, and etc. to be offered! Such as: oak; tall bed, ornate sideboard with tall mirror back, wash stand. Bonnet chest of drawers. Office desk, Planter table, Pressback chairs, Morris chair with claw feet. Humidor. Walnut: Victorian table with 3 leaves, marble top wash stand. Queen Anne china cabinet with Bonnet top, server, sideboard. Chiffarobe: office chair, old carpenters trunk, carved ornate French sofa and chair, 2 Chlppen dale chairs, wing back chair with claw feet. Pedestal wash basin, 2 maple ladder back chairs. Mahoga ny: Tier table, 10 pice Rope edge bedroom set, secretarial desk with ball and claw feet, Kneehole desk, Windsor Rocker, Planter fable, double bed, carved rocker. Unusual Duncan Phyfe desk; old milking stool, brass fire extinguisher, mag azine table, mirrors, rare copper wash tub. Camel back trunk, flat-back trunk, Duncan Phyfe game table, Duncan Phyfe dropleat table, 8 leg Inlaid table. Primitive single rope bed, 9 piece dining room set, Birds Eye chest of drawers, 3 piece bedroom set oval. Old Wicker planter. Wicker chair, 9" Ruby Red hand blown vase. Old wash board. Old TInnery items, Iron stone chamber pot, 7 piece black Amethyst pails. Occupied Japan lamps. Occupied Japan pieces, Ironstone pitcher, old Aggie lunch pails, Ornate brass floor lamp, 4 piece Ornately carved bedroom suit, brass blow torch, old books. The usual good selection of Bric-A Brae and odds and ends will accompany this load! There will be much, much, more by Auction DayJ.^ Inspection; 10 a.m. - Sunday. Terms: cash or COD check. Auction conducted by: Col. R. Dean Fouts, NCAL 1253 PO Box 104, Holly Ridge, NC 28445. Phone 1 329 7271, Member: Onslow County Auctioneers Association. Hope fo see you New Years Day!

Tha Daily Reflgctor,

N.C.Friday, Dactmbef 30,1963

066

FURNITURE

BROYHILL SOFA and chair. $200 or bast offar. Phona 756-7984.

DNINO AM Stf - tabla with laaf, 6 chaira, china and tarvar. $400. Phona 756-1646.

047    Garage-Yr4 Salt

DECEMBER 31ST. 202 North Warren Street, under carport. 8 until 12. Women's clothes, sizes 12 13, queen size sofa sleeper, like new. China; other bargain Iterhs.

OPEN EVERY SATURDAYI

Raynor, Forbes 8, Clark Warehouse Flea Market. 7 a.m. to 1 Across from Moose Lodge. 756-

p.m

4090.

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING, Jarman

Stables, 752-5237.

LARGE BUCKSKIN mare pony. S200 or best offer. Call 752-4517.

074

Miscellaneous

ALL REFRIGERATORS, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Rebuilt, like new. Cc^ll B. J. Mills, 746 2446 af Blackjack.

APACHE INSERT for sale. Good condition. $300. Call 1 825 0284.

AUTOMATIC 30-06 RIFLE for sale. New with good Redfield scope. A bargain at $400 firm. 756-1297.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables inventory clearance sale. 4 models Delivery setup. 919 763 9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 753 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and sfone. Also driveway work.

044

Fuel, Wood, Coal

WORK AVAILABLE

WE HAVE NEED for experienced bookkeepers, word processors, se nior typists and data entry opera tors. Work when you want, stay home when you want. Not a fee agency. Call for appointment, please. MANPOWER TEMPO RARY SERVICES, 757 3300.

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J.P.Stancil,752 633l.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.

Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cuffing and removal, stump removal by grinding. Free estimates. J.P. Sfancil, 752 6331,

ANY TYPE REPAIR WORK.

Carpentry, masonry, roofing. 35 years exMrlence. Call James Har rington, 752-7765after 6p.m.

EXPERIENCED NURSE'S Aide wishes to sit with an elderly or disabled person In your home. 756-4600 after 4 p.m.

FLOOR SANOINO and refinlshing. Call 756 2747.

NEED INSULATION or plastic put under the house to keep out fhe cold? Curtis, 752-1928 after 7 p.m.

I par

domestic work. 746 2389 after 3 p.m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FIREWOOD - </2 cord, all oak, $40. Mixed, $35 a load. Phone 355 2363.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call us before you buy! 752 1359 or 758 5590.

SEASONED OAK $45 for '/j cord Call 757 1637.

WOOD HEATING. Complete line of woodstoves, chimney pipe nd ac cessories. Squire Stoves. Chimney sweeping service available at Tar Road Antiques, Winfervllle. 756-9123, nights 756 1007.

045 Farm Equipment

ANTIFREEZE-Permanent type, compatible with most brands, $3.56 per gallon for 6 or more. 55 gallon drum $171.90. We carry several types of antifreeze testers and battery testers. Agri Supply. Greenville, NC 752-3999.

FARM MACHINERY Auction Sale. Tuesday, January 3. 10 a.m. 150 tractors, 350 implements. We buy and sell used equipment daily. Wayne Implemenf Auction Corporation, PO Box 233. Highway 117 South, Goldsboro, NC 27530. NC 4188. Phone 734 4234.

3 ROANOKE 126 rack, gas fired tobacco barns. Phone 1 946-5115.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION

PLANT MAINTENANCE MECHANIC

Salary Range $13,187-$17,742

Position available for person to perform skilled mechenicel work In the instellatlon, maintenance and repair of specialized equipment such as pumps, motors and valves at the Wastewater Treatment Plant. Some experience In carpentry, masonry and plumbing Is required.

Apply at the Personal Office, Greenville Utilities Commission, 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27834.

"An Equtl Opportunity Employor"

VALUABLE FARM FOR SALE

AT PUBLIC AUCTION

THE GRIFFIN FARM

"Formerly The Watts Farm" Highway 17-13 By Pass Williamstoa N.C.

Between Martin Plaza B Wonder Bread

?a/e W/7/Be Held At 10:30 AM. On The Premises For Cesh To The Highest Bidder On

SAL JAN. 21, 1984

I Firm Contiitt of 300 Acres (Mora Or Loss) To Bs Dividsd Into Coimnorciol And Farm Land

APPROXIMATE21QACREFARMOWOODLAND APPROXIMATE 90 ACRES COMMERCIAL

1903 ASCS ALLOTMENTS

TOBACC016.32 ACRES ... (27,789 lbs.)

PEANUTS 48 ACRES (90,194 lbs.)

SELLER RETAINS THE RIGHT TO ACCEPT OR REFUSE ALL BIOS FURTHER INFORMATION CONCERNING THIS SALE ALONG WITH MAPS MAY BE OBTAINED BY CONTACTING

UNWOOD 6. BOYD

AUCTIOn ntIM    ATTOmEY

NC AUCTION FIRM NO 1650    jack    mvEL8

AUCnOSIiSlM]

T*l 792-2165

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo components, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, 'depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and antiques...anything of vallue.

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

COMPLETE FURNITURE STRIPPING and refinlshing at Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center, 756-9123.

FISHER GRANDPA Bear woodstove for sale or trade for smaller sfove. Phone 757-1050.

FOR SALE; Kenmore Portable washer and dryer. Excellent condition. Phone 758-7328 after 5 p.m.

FOR SALE: Epiphone guitar with case, $175. Shotgun, Model 870, Remington 28" barrel improved cylinder, $175. Winchester Rifle, Model 250, 22 calibur with scope, $60. Phone 756-3542.

074

Miscellancous

KAitNrHEATtA, 10,000 BtU. good condition. Call 758-9121.

K'yUN~FgRtAALt HAT. ERS. Factory rabate ala continuas at Goodyaar Tire Cantar, West End Shopping Contor And Dickinson Avonuo.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top

soil, lot clearing, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.

074

MHctllaiMOUS

hihOSSESSEO VACUUMS, shampooors, and uprights. Call Doalar, 756-6711

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rant shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

SHARP, SONY a OE closeout sale now at Goodyaar TIra Cantar, West End Shopping Contar And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88.

HINOLES $13.S0 per square. 30 pound felt, $3.95 roll. 8"xl6' masonift, $2.70. Number 1 Builders

_ Supply,    Mount    Olive,    658-6566.

LYNX PRO 90lf bag, $25. Lynx utlLITY TEaileA, 4x8, axcallant Driver, new, $45. Frigidare refrig- condition, $400. Homo computer TRS-80 Model I, $250 or be$t offor. 756-4009.

LOVE SEAT and couch, paftern; gold and black, axcallant condition. 2 tires, L70X15, Good condition. All prices nogotiablo! 752-9484.

Frigidare erafor wlfh ice maker, $i()0 negotiable. Phone 753-4750.

Have pets to sollf Roach more people with an economical Classified ad. Ca!! 752 l.

MOVING SALE. Whirlpool washer and dryer; Sears 22 cubic foot refrigerator/freezer; Bassett dinette set with 4 chairs; Quasar 25" cabinet model TV; 2 end tables and matching coffee table; boy's Schwinn-20" dirt bike. Excellent condition. Call 756-9032.

NATURAL OAS, Central furnances. Enforced air space heaters. 100,000 BTU and 50,(100 BTU Gas stoves, 21", 24" and 30". Can be seen af 311 Hillcrest Drive.

ONE FLOOR transmission jack, one f'/3 fon hydraulic bumper lack, one 4 ton floor jack, one 10 ton body jack. Call 757 1861

PORTABLE YARD BUILDINGS.

Great for workshop, storage, etc. Any size, any color. 4 contemporary models to choose from. Can be seen on 264 By-pass before Carolina East Mall entrance or call 756-1502 any time and leave message.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WALLPAPE$l.S0-$3.00 per single roll. Odd lots and dlKontinued papers. Nam* brand, vaiu> up io $2() a single roll. All sales final. Larry's Carpetland. 3010 East 10th Street.

WHITLEY'S CUSTOM AKeat Cut ting. Custom cuffing: beef, pork, and deer. Quick frozen. 1-946-2382.

WOOD BURNINO STOVE, $275. Smith Corona portable electric typewriter, used 3 months, $160. 756 5924 after 4 p.m.

WOODEN BOOKCASE bunkbed, Sealey mattresses. $125. Phone 752 2644.

2 DOOR refrigerator/freezer, harvest gold; glass door fireplace (29"x38"). In excellent conchtion. Call 756-8745after 6p.m.

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.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TRANSPORTATION

SPECIALS

1983 Mazda Sport Truck - Spoke wheels, white lettered tire, 11,000 miles. Beige and brown two tone.

1983 Buick Electra Limited - 2 door. T300 miles. Brand new in everv 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 RX-7 - Sparkling black, 5 speed, air. Very sharp!

1983 Buick Regal - Dark brown, loaded with options. Executive lease Car. New Carl

1983 Mazda Sundowner Pickup - Low mileage, AM-FM stereo, chrome wheels, tool box, sliding rear wincfow, bright red.

1983 Mazda 626 - 5 door. Touring Sedan. LX package Tvnr.

23,000 miles. Burgundy ice with burgundy velour interior.

1983 Honda Civic 4 door, only 15,000 miles, new in every wav. Dark brown.

1983 Honda Accord - 4 door, automatic transmission, cruise control, power steering and brakes. Only 11,000 miles. Beige, like new.

1982 Buick Regal Limited 4 door. This car is loaded with equipment! Clean.as new! Brown with beige roof.

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 Olds Cutlass Ciera LS 4 door, darX 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 Mazda 626 Luxury - 4 door, power windows, power door locks cruise control, stereo and cassette, automatic transmission, air condit c" Very clean local car. Brown.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix - Sharp car! Low miles, new tires, local traae. Silver with marcan roof.

1981 Buick Park Avenue - 4 door, local trade, only 31,000 miles, ever/ option. Jadestone.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - Dark blue with matching leather, 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 LeSabre Limited Diesel - All the option, 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 Olds Cutlass Supreme 2 door, dark blue, wire wheel covers, AM-FM stereo, nice car! 41,000 miles.

1980 Plymouth Volare 2 door, local car with only 26,000 miles, 6 cylinder, power steering and brakes, air, AM-FM radio, very clean!

1980 Buick Regal Limited 2 door, loaded with equipment, black with maroon velour interior, very nice, low mileage.

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Landau - 305 V-8, Black with maroon interior, powr windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo, wire wheel covers, low mileage. Double sharp car!

1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme - 2 door skv wi*h lanlau 'coh C'uise control. AM-FM stereo, read wheo.s., .

* TV.,





1S The Daily Reftactor. Greenville. N.C.

Friday, December 30.1983

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

A NICE iSxM - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, air, furnished, washer; un derplnned. On private lot in country. Excellent condition. $4,800 Phone 752 3619.

ALL NEW 1984 Scott Homes. 6 side well' R Factors ot R18 tor

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

TRADEWIND

CAN YOU BELIEVE IT SALE!

floor, RI3 for outside walls, R28 for ceilinfl. This qualifies you for CP&L discount rate. Tradewind Family Housing. 705 W. Greenville Blvd. 756 4833.

IF THERE'S something you want to rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns Call 752 6166 to

ng you want to tell, check the

place your ad.

NO DOWN PAYMENT. 14x60. 1981 Vogue. Take over payments of $149.67. Unfurnished Call 758-1842.

NO MONEY DOWN

VA100% Financing

New 1984 Singlewide, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, cathedral ceiling. Carpeted, appliances, total electric. Minimum down payment with payments ot less than $140 per month.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191

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 DISCOUNTatCP&L!

Can you believe it? DOUBLEWIDES at -INVOICE RICES!

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

1971 NATIONAL. 6ood condition.

Extras, unfurnished, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Available January. Asking, $5,500. Call 752 6778

1972 MOBILE HOME 3 bedrooms,

2 full baths, central air, underpinn ing and porch. $7,000. Call 1 825 4476 days or 1 -825-0750 after 6 p. m.

1982 BRIGADIER. 14 X 58, like new,

WE'VE GOT IT AT

central heat and air, folly carpeted, washer-dryer, partially furnished. $11,500 or equity and assume pay ments. 746-2598 or 746 6790 8 to 5:30. 1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91 At Greenville's

Tradewind Family Housing Highway 264 B Greenville, NC

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CALL US OR COME BUY,

919 756 4833

12X65. 2 bedrooms, air conditioned. Set up in a park. $4500 negotiable. Furnished. 746 3788.

14x70. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 758 4553

1964 12x45 HIGHLANDER. 2

bedrooms, refrigerator and stove Good condition $2,500. 752 4787.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

volume dealer. Thomas Mobile home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068.

1983 14x54 KNOX. 10 months old Must see! Features cathedral ceiling, porch, treated wood underpinning, ceiling tan, plenty of cabinet and closet space. Moving to new job, must seiii iil.Ou. Phone I-747-8111 days (ask for Kevin), nights 1-747 8504.

075 Mobile Homts For Sal*

24x60 trailer and loFon approximate ly 1 acre, 33 Highway across from Shady Knoll Mobile Estates. 752 2991 or 1^0261.

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOM^WNER Insurance

the best coverage tor less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.

077 Musical Instruments

PIANO A ORGAN </i PRICE SaleJ Saturday and Monday only..Over $50,000 In merchandise at 'y price must go. Piano & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville. Phone 355-6002.

WURLITZR

1981

$800 Call 752-0151 days; nights.

spinet piano, 56-8233

4 BEDROOM FURNISHED

Doublewlde situated on 1 acre lot with frees; 2. baths, central air, and detached workshop. 2 miles South ot Ayden $31,000. Estate Realty Company 752 5058 or Billy Wilson 758-4476.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY,

1984 Nissan Truck

On Sale Now During Our Year End Closeout Sale

$5,799.00* $127.55**

* N.C. Sales Tax And License Fees Extras

Per Month

^345 APR, 48 monthly payments, finance

charges $1407.42, total of payments $6,122.40.

King Cabs And 4 X 4s Also In Stock Ready For Immediate Delivery

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd

Greenville

756-3115

104 Condominiums Fbr Salt

TT

.    "        QUAR E.

Mtabli^ complex. 2 bedroom, 1 Vi bath townhouae. Living room, dining m-ea, washer/dryer nook.

e^losed petio wifh $torage, convenient emi unit adfacent to ,

< .I... yi lecent fo athletic

f^MItla*. Call 7S6-S323 after 7 p.m. Nq brokers please I

m6nthm

ISO A MNtHM For your own condominium. Our payments really are lower than rant. Call today for

details. Wilt Raid at 756 04M/7M-6050, Iris Cannon at 746-**39/^8-6050, Owen ^rvell at or Jane Warren at * 7029/758-6050. Moora A Sautar, 110 South Evans, Graenvilla, NC. 758-6050.

lOf    Houses For lale

bV dWNE - 3 bedrooms. * battisl

living

ipli

   ,    dining    room,    den,

flr^lat, fenced' backyard and

patio. llVi% assumable mortgage. Asking price of $72,000. Assumable amount 158,700. t07 Azalea Drive. 756-8211 or 752-4844.

Y OWNER. 3 bedroomg, ivi baffis:

living iroom, kltchan/dlnlng combination, roncad In backyard, carport. Comor lot. Exeollont loca

tkm. 355-2461 from 9-5:30; aftor 6, 756-0652 or 355-2414.

106

Farms For Sale

082 LOST AND FOUND

FEMALE GERMAN Shepherd, black and white, no collar, lost in Gardnerville area. Last seen Friday night, December 23. If you have any Information, call, Allen Stokes, 746-6562 after 6 p.m.

FOUND: SMALL black and brown kitten. Lake Ellsworth area. Phone 758 5282.

LOST; MEN'S GOLD ring - vicinity of Carolina East Center and Caro lina East Mall. Reward! 746 6269.

093

OPPORTUNITY

INVEST $500 OR 15,000. Will gross you $175,000 on first order alone. Pi

roducts sell for $30, your cost $1.00. Call Mr. Craig, 714 760 1612.

LIST OR BUY your business with C.J. Harris & Co., Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman.

North Carolinas original chimney* sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

VALUABLE FARM LAND for sale.

Located i'* miles West of B>jr rough's Welcome. 74 acres of cleared land, 35 acres woods land with tobacco allotment available. It

interested, please contact Harvey's Auction, Kinston, NC.

Realty & 1 523 9090

WANT TO LEASE or buy or rent tobacco pounds tor 1984. Call 756* 4509 after 6 p.m.

190 ACRES TOTAL 140 acres cleared, sizeable tobacco poundage. Phone 1 946 5t15.

207 ACRE FARM east of

Chocowinity. 150 cleared acres. Call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton A Associates, 756 6810, nights 753-4302.

107

Farms For Lease

WANTED TO RENT tobacco

poundage and farm land in Pitt County. 756-4634.'

YOiVNKI.3bedroomt, 1W baths, OArage, living room with flraplace, dining room, sundeck, and fenced In backyard. 222 Commerce Street. Low $50's. Phone 756-7776.

POPULAR olonlat Heights!

thOb and three bedroom or obe price! Only $43,500.

IN

Beauty house for Call Hignlte Realtors, 757-1969 anytime.

LAKE OLENWOD. 3 bedroom.

109

Houses For Sale

uNtkV blimti Privacy with

wooded lot. ),m square feet,

tachad garage. Only $35,900. Red Carpet - Stave Evans & Associates, 355 2727.

UNTRV NMt

.      leedy

Branch Church. Approximately 2900 square feet- plM 703 garage, 4 bedrooms, baths, 3.79 acres. Assumable fixed, conventional tv>%. $275J5 paymbnts. Tax value 116,400. sale prlco' $06.500. Bill Williams Real tate, 752-2615.

iTc: Houtuid MNtV still

available on this really share three bedroom ranch I Great room nas old

brick

deck.

fireplace, eat-ln kitchen, and fanced in back

deck, garage, and fanced in back yard. Only $45,430. Call Hignlta Realtors, 757 1969anytime.

hills5ale

PICTURE PERFiCTI Tender

bath brick home with fireplace, large lot, 1692 square feet. FHA assumption. $69,000.

Inc, 524-4148.

Echo Realty

ON TAR RAD. Assume present

loan of $51,000 at 8ki% with equity 1 lovelv

Call for more details on this home located on one acre wooded lot! Hignite Realtors, 757 1969 anytime.

PRICED UNDER TAX value for quick sale. Over 1700 square feet for only $54,900. Call Hignlte Realtors, 757-1969 anytime.

109

Houses For Sale

102 Commercial Property

COMMERCIAL LOTS on 264 west Call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates. 756 6810; nights 753 4302

FOR SALE OR LEASE 11,000 square foot warehouse with heated Offices and security fencing 10 miles east of Greenville. $900 month. Call The Rich Company, 1 946 8021; nights 1 946 6829

AYDEN

MUST SELL- Spacious home, . 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, living room, bath on large lot

$18,000.

375 SQUARE FEET of retail store front on the mall Available imme diafely Rents for $234 per month Call Clark Branch Management 756 6336

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

LOTS, WESTWOOD Subdivision water taps and septic tank perrnlts. Large wooded lots, 2 miles weat of Ayden Owner will finance

Ayden Loan& Insurance

Company, Inc.

746-3761    746-6474

BASEMENT LOVERS, check out this lovely home in Englewood, with four bedrooms, den with fireplace, formal areas, playroom, study, and eat in kitchen. Hignlte Realtors 757 1969 anytime.

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home In the country 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump Located on over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adioining acres) Possibly Federal Land Bank financ ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 35(X), nights 756

5716.

No Credit Check

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

BRICK HOME - 3 years old. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, central heat and air. 752 2366 for appointment No brokers! Asking, $47,500.

BY OWNER. $15,000 down, $524 monthly. No city taxes, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths Many extras. Call 1-633 461) days; 1 633 6058 nights.

BEST

CAN'T SEEM' TO SAVE enough money for a down payment on a new home! You don't have to have a down payment with Miles Homes. Build it yourself with pre cut, quail ty. energy efficient materials. 9.9% APR financing 848 3220, collect.

CEDAR LOG HOME in Lake

Glenwood 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wooded lot $72,000 Echo Realty

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS i DOORS

C I. Lupton Co

REDUCED 12500. You can enjoy privacy In this multi-level contem porary, located In Baywood on i heavily wooded lot. This home features 3 bedrooms. -2 baths, greatroom, loft area, large kitchen and separate dining room, also double garage. Now listed for $87,500. Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500 or 355-2588.

REDUCED M.000 for quick sale! Brick, custom built. On corner lot

Double

garage, heat pump, fireplace with woodstove. Possible loan assumption. Call for details: Red Carpet Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727.

RENT WITH OPTION to buy! Three homes...$58,900 to $81,900 Call Hignite Realtors, 757 1969.

COLONIAL HEIGHTS - 3 bedroom brick ranch, carpet, hardwood floors, fireplace, pool, deck, totally private. Reduced by owner, $59,400. Call 758 1355.

EXECUTIVE HOME for rent Contemporary in styling with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, loft area, garage, over 2,000 square feet. $550 a month. Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500 or 355 2588.

FARMER'S HOME SPECIALI Pay

closing cost and take over pay ments. Brick, 3 bedrooms, waiting for your Inspection. Red Carpet Steve Evans4 Associates, 355 2727.

FARMERS HOME ASSUMPTION!

Payments are based on your in come! Call Hignlte Realtors, 757 1969 anytime.

ClARK-BRANCH SELLS THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40'S

OWNERS SAY SELL NOW Very nice brick ranch located just minutes from Greenville. Features living room, 3 bedrooms, I'rz baths, fully equipped kitchen with sepa rate dinette area. Extra room Ideal for a family room. Fenced In back yard. 10.35% financing available with 5% down. Reduced to $44,300.

loving care shows through In this ag. Glassed in

three bedroom cottage, porch, hardwood floors and fireplace, corner Igl and manicured lawn. Owner says sail I $44,995.

HAROEE ACRES A POSSIBLE LOAN Assumption on this three bedroom and i'/4 bath ranch home. Living, room with fireplace, dining area, well organized kitchen, patio, paneled garage. $52,900.

109

HoustsFor SbIb

nm' LllTrkS;' WiniTKt^, bedroom, 2/S bath tawnhoui

bedroom, 2/S bath lawnnousa. Sqptr nice. Lott of extras. Uytng

room and dtnlnq room, and'dvar 1410 aquart faet. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 4 Associate's, 7S0-f10; hqhts Rod Tugwatl 753-4302.

SfW

LISTIN<^ - This home faatures 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, custom kitchen with bu(,lt-in microwave, great- room .with firaplaca, an additional are* makts axcailani racraational rootn. Larga cornar lot. $51,900. Call SM Ounn at Aldridge 4 Southerland 7S8-SSOO or 3S5 2M8.

NW LirriNO; Horseshoe Acres 3

bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch that faaturas double garage, office and large lot. Excellent buy at 857,500. Call Rod Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton 4 Associates, 7$e-*8i0; nights 753-4302.

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY

758-0655

"We Have N^C. Housing AAoney neHomes!'

Available (On These Finel

$56,500 - RUSTIC SALT-BOX styling perfect for the single parson or

PINERIDGE GREAT LOAN ASSUMPTION on

this new home. Never occupied. FHA 10',^% APR, 30 years Fixed rate, monthly payments ot $545.22, equity of about $4,000. Three bedroom brick ranch, living room with fireplace, dining area, two baths, deck. $60,100.

CONDOMINIUM ASSUMPTION AN EXCELLENT loan assumption

on this practically new Quail RIdge ilnium. Three bedrooms and

condom!

2'/2 baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, deck. If you want a Quail Ridge condo, this is It! $63,500

DUFFUS REALTY INC,

756-5395 CLARK-BRANCH SELLS

THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$50'S

JUST IN TIME! You can be settled in this roomy 3 bedrgom home in WInterville school district by tall. Great low interest loan assumption at 9'/j%. Modern built in kitchen and attractive great room' with brick fireplace. Mid $50's. Call today for showing.

CAMELOT. Just started. You can select your own decor. This 3 bedroom brick ranch offers nearly 1300 square feet, large kitchen, ireat room with fireplace, patio. Iffered in the mid $50's. Fixed rate financing available at l2'/z%.

PINERIDGE. New section. Been waiting for a 3 bedroom contemporary on a wooded lot at 10.35% Inancing and you want new con struction with the builder paying points, all in the mid $50's! We've )0t you In mind with several plans 0 select from. Hurry and get the best selection of lots.

small family. Features great room

......    Of(

with fireplace, country kitchen with dining area and sliding glass doors to deck, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths (2 bedrooms upstairs and ovsf-look kltchen/dlnlng area from lott).

DESIdNED FOR .easy

VI

er, large great roonf with

$56,500 - DESIONED FOR .easy living - contemporary styllnf^ Of

fireplace, dining' room, - galley kitchen, laundry room, small porch off back, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,-attic storage. Still time to choose all interior colors and floor coverings and exterior stains.

$57,500 - GREENWOOD FORST

only minutes from Hospitat and Doctors Park areas. New construe tion buy now and build If your way! Features great room with fireplace, dining room, eat In kItch en, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, pull-down attic, washer/dryer/utilify room, heat pump, thermopane windows and deck.

$45,500 - COZY BRICK ranch on

lovely corner lot. Offers living f-oom

with, provision for woodstove, kltch-with

th dining area, laundry area, sliding glass doors to patio and fenced back yard, 3 bedrooms, l'i baths and carport with storage.

$44,500 ATTRACTIVE BRICK

home In popular Pineridge. Perfect home lor fhe med student, young family or retired couple that need less room. Features living room, country kitchen, laundry room, 3 bedrooms, I'/j baths C/z bath Is plumbed for bathtub), carport with storage and deep lot.

Shirley Morrison.,

Elaine Trolano.....

Jane Butts...........

Mavis Butts.........

.758 5463 ..756 4346 .756 2851 ..752 7073

CAMELOT. Great home in a great neighborhood. Three bedrooms and baths, den with fireplace. Loan

assurnption available or 12% fixed loan. Reduced tu$56,500

SHERWOOD GREENS, No city taxes in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with fireplace and carport. This home qualifies for NCHFA financing at 10.35% . Call today for appointment. Offered in mid $40's. Inside freshly painted. Some new carpet.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40's

QUAILRIDGE. We just started a new building with several flats and two bedrooms available. Give us a call and use our 10.35% fixed financing on these units to be corr^leled this spring. Priced in the upper $40's to mid $60's. Call now to get the best selection.

REALTORS

355-2000

HERE'S A LOG home with over 1114 square feet of living spac that's (ust right for the first In

vestment. Singles and couples love the value ot the Homestead II log

home which features 3 bedroomsi '/3 baths and a full front porch on over % of ah acre. Priced to sell in themid$40's.

Harold Hewitt...ON CALL...754-1188

Geep Johnson......................752-1561

Richard Allen.....................756 4563

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Teresa Hqwitt.....................756 1188

John Jackson......................756 4360

Marie Davis........................756-540^

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS

THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

REALTORS 355-2000

Harold Hewitt...ON CALL. .756 1188

Geep Johnson......................752    1561

Richard Allen.....................756 4553

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

Ray Holloman.....................753 5147

Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188

John Jackson......................756-4360

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

$60'S

NEW OFFERING in convenient Belvedere. 3 bedroom, 2'-2 baths, nearly 1500 square feet. 12% fixed loan assumption of $55,600. Availa ble immediately. Large deck plus extra outside storage. This Cia Cod is sure to please at $61,900.

Cape

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MOVE TODAY! Near the hospital. Enjoy this rustic 3 bedroom ranch in quiet rural neighborhood near the hospital 26 X 26 great room with fireplace, 12 x 12 dinng room, kitchen including 611 appliances and large garage. Immediate possession. $62,800.

COUNTRY PLACE. Select your plan now and take advantage of wooded lots, secluded privacy, custom features and 10.15% NCHFA funds. Quality not often found in an 1100 Square foot home. Priced at $48.400 and extra energy efficient.

TWIN OAKS. Great investment. No closing or points. 1200 square tool ranch leased at $425 per month Assume 12% FHA loan of $36.000 Offered at $48,900. Call today. Exceptional buy for fhe area.

CAMELOT. Offered at $49,900, this three bedroom ranch offers all the quality of homes In the $60's but NCHFA funds at 10.35%' mean monthly payments of $450 tofal with 10% equity and we pay points. Call now, one of Greenville's best buys for sure.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

355-2000

Harold Hewitt...ON CALL...756 1188

Geep Johnson......................752-1561

Richard Allen.....................?56 4553

Tim Smith..........................752-9811

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Teresa Hewift.....................756 1188

John Jackson......................756-4360

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Toll Free; 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

IMMEDIATE OPENING

Established local company

is looking for an

A-1 Secretary Receptionist

Typing a must, other office akUls helpful. Must have pleasant telephone voice. Must be neat and dependable. Salary and benefits commensurate with experience.

Send resume to:

A-1 Secretary

P.O. 00X1967 Greenville, NC 27835

OWNER READY TO SELL. You will want to see what you can get

for $63,500. Well kept, beautifully

"            1th

landscaped yard, rose garden wItt

30 rose bushes, nice garden In rear for

and fenced area for dog plus carport and outside storage house 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, living room, dining room, den with fireplace. Corridor kitchen with plenty ot cabinet space. New carpoet and custom made drapes. Located at 107 Fairlane Road, a quiet neighborhood. Call today.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANGH SELLS THREEHOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

AURORA. Live or vacation In this 2 bedroom mobile home which features a 12' x 30' family room, a screened-ln front and back porches, less than a block from the water Priced to sell at $27,000,

355-2000

Harold Hewitt...ON CALL.,.756 1188

Geep Johnson......................752 1 561

Richard Allen.....................756-4553

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

Ray Holloman. ..................753 5147

Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188

John Jackson. ....................756 4360

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Toll Free: 1 800=525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

FOR LEASE

2500 sa FT.

(Sale Begins December 27th)

TO BUY A BUICK

1. Buy a Skylark before January 4 and you won't have a payment til March!*

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE

On Arlington Blvd.

CALL 756-8111

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINH^. Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bedroom, H/a bath townheuse for the same monthly payment as rent This unit was recently re-carpeted Call today. Low$30'S.

A LOVELY VIEW ot Crystal Bpach. Only 15 minutes from Washington.

ont I

Scenic beauty large watertronl lot, has bath house with separate cook ing area. Perfect tor the sailboat enthusiast. Large deck overlooking the water. $34,500 with assumable 12% loan.

INVESTORS. Consider this

practically new duplex near the hospital. Assume 13% fixed rate

loan with payments ot $367.00 total. Leased at $325 per month. Reason

epully required. Ottered af $40,500. each side.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS : 3SS'200O

Harold Hewitt...ON CALL.,

Richard Allen................iilS6-4553

Tim Srnith..........................752-9811

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Teresa Hewitt.....................756    1188

.     756    4360

Marie Davis........................756-5402

Toll Free: 1 800 525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal HousingOooortitnlty

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOW LEASING

2. If you use your car for business you may now claim depreciation for the entire calendar year!* *

Off Hi|bwajr 111 Across from Hardee'a Ayden, NortbCorollno

Were selling our entire stock at Reduced prices because We take inventory New Years Day!

<

Grant Buick

603 Greenville Blvd.

lBUICK

756-1877

otiitm ctn O' "f

;*iTA7

Weekday*: 8;30-6:30 Saturday: 9:00*2:00

Sulck VtaUxi

1-story, cedar-sldcd Colonials

Fully carpeted with range / refrigerator furnished

Washer / dryer hook ups

Energy-efficient individually controlled heat pump

Spacious, wcll-mainiaincd grounds and ouidoor storage

1 - Bedroom from $180

2 - Bedroom from $195

3 - Bedroom from $215

University Medical Park Townhomes Brand New Luxury Apartments

Qualified buyers must take new vehicle retail delivery from dealer stock by January 4th, 1984. Make no monthly payments until March 1st, 1984 with G.M.A.C. financing. **Must take delivery by December 31st, 1983.

Call for Information and appointment:

> Teresa Stallinga, Manager 1:30-5 p.m. Daily Except Wednetdayt.

AYpENS NEWEST APARTMENT COMMUNITY

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

2 Large Bedrooms        Washer-Dryer Hook-ups

1'iBahs        Kitchen Appliances

Heal Pumps        Custom -Built Cabinets

I Spacious Floor Plan        Patios with Private fence

Thermopane Windows E-300 Energy Efficient

Beautiful Individual WHIiamsburg Exteriors

Located Within Walking Distance ol Pitt Memorial Hospital

Call 752-6415

MondayFridaV 9*5





W HowtPorSlt

NRM nd comfort

WAi 1m ALkIa    4..

vwawKMfv vrvMTCfvi na comroH

surrounds you In this statoly Wllllomittur homo. This now custom bullf homo tooturos all tormal oroas with hardwood floors, family room with firaplaco, aoprox-imatoly J700 soMro foot, ^lity workmanship fhrouohout. Many oxtros. Tho woodod sotting In

y    wTTing in

Groanvlllo's nowost and finost aroa provl^ lyst tho right atmosphoro for fhls ologant homo. Call June yrlck, Aldridge I.

^3500; nights 75* 5716.

CKftk-BRANCHSLLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

STO's

'CLUB PINES. Roducod. Prico re ducod from mid MO'S to STO's. Soaclous and ologant. Family raom with firoplaco, wino rack and built j Ins, fornMl living and dining room, < built-lns, Intorcom systom and much moro. Call today, it's a steal.

CHERRY OAKS. Over 1700 well used square feet of ^ce in this contemporary ranch. Offers tormal proas as well as convenient dorch/dock area off great room Largo master bedroom with sepa

.rate powder room and walk-ln .Closet. Fully appllanced with quail ' ty throughout. Enjoy country living

across from pool and tennis courts' Inga

13</^% financing available. .^CHERRY OAKS. Rustic ranch with

double garage. 1667 square feet, two full baths, lots of extras with patio.

Select your own decor. Builder pays

rnts for 12'/>% fixed loan. Occupy January. Offered at $76,200. Exceeds E-MO energy standards.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS

355-2000

Harold Hewitt . ON CALL. .756-1188

Geep Johnson......................752 1561

Richard Allen.....................756 4553

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

Ray Holloman.....................753-5147

Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188

John Jackson......................756 4360

Marie Davis........................756 5402

Toll Free: 1 800 525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40'S

FmHA ASSUMPTION in Deerfield. This three bedroom brick ranch is only 3 years old, vacant and ready for you to enjoy low monthly payments. Offered at $41,000. Low equity. Call today.

FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot In Oakgrove. Offered at $41,500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end street. Income should be under $21,000. Call today.

THIS BRICK RANCH In Ayden is ready for an owner. Has 1150 square feet, central heat and air, enclosed garage and the owner has been .transferred and is ready to negoti ate. Has assumable FmHA assumption at 8%. Reduced to $41,500.

FHA 235 ASSUMPTION. Just on the 'market, this Immaculate 3 bedroom

ranch In Ayden Is sure to please.

Several extras Including drapes;

payments as low as $240 i^r month ifyouqual '

f you qualify. Call today. Offered at $43.000.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.

REALTORS

355-2000

Harold Hewitt...ON CALL.. 756 1188

Geep Johnson ...........752-1561

Richard Allen.....................756 4553

Tim Smith..........................752 9811

Ray Holloman.....................753 5147

Teresa Hewitt.....................756 1188

John Jackson......................756 4360

Marie Davis........................756 5402

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext, AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

111 Investment Property

'ASSUME 8'/2% nonqualified loan. Brick, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, carport.

Red Carpet Steve Evans 8. Associates. 355-2727.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY.

Front/back brick duplex. Double garage. 2 washer dryer hookups, 2 stoves and 2 refrigerators, also

e' convey. Possible partial owner ti ' nancing. 417 419 East 3rd Street. Call Winston Kobe, 756 9507, Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500.

113 Land For Sale

LAND FOR SALE; 55 acres near Stokes, State Road 1550. Cutover

woodsland with good growth of

id

young pines, road frontage, good development potential. $650 an . acre. Call 1 825 1581.

33 ACRES OFF of Stantonsburg

ef

Road. Good for housing deve opment or trailer park. Call Rod (.Tugwell at CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 756 6810; nights 753 4302.

50 ACRE FARM south ot'Ayden in the St. John's Community. Road frontage on SR 110 and SR 1753. 51 acres cleared, 7 acres wooded. ' Tobacco allotment, pond, excellent road frontage and rental house. Call for full details. Moseley-Marcus Realty. 746 2166.

115

Lots For Sale

BUILDING LOT tor sale in Baytree Subdivision. Priced fdr quick sale, $10,700. 758 0641, ask for Jay.

HUNTINGRID6E

For country

living with city convenience. Large residential lots, community wafer.

restricted, FHA and VA approved. Only minutes from hospital com

plex on Highway 43. Millie Lilley, Owner-Broker, 752-4139.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

f,

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6721

115

Uts For Sale

LYs ' Completely develoMd be-tw^ Kinston and Gritton, close to DuPont Plant, with community water and paved streets. Approved ^ mobile homes end conventlonel

aPPfoved credit. Cell

752-5t53.

117 Resort Property for Sale

ocean front lot at Delmar Beach, Topsoll Beach, $26,000. 704-264-0576.

RiVER COTTAGE on wooded water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington, NC. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days. 752-0310 nights.

120

RENTALS

Lots FDR REt. Also 2 ar.d 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security debits required, no pets. Call 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have an

slie to meet your storage need. Cal Arlington Sett Storage, Open Mon day - Friday 9-5. Call 756-9933.

121 Apartments For Rent

ACONDOMINIUM FOR CHRISTMAS???

Why not? Cannon Court Condominiums have monthly payments lower than rent! Two bedroom units available now. Call Iris Cannon at 746 2639 or 758 6050, Owen Nor veil at 756 1498 or 758-6050, WII Reid at 756-0446 or 758-6050 or Jane Warren at 758 7029 or 758-6050.

AAOORE& SAUTE R

110 South Evans 758-6050

AFFORDABLE and energy efficient 1 bedroom apartment on Hooker Road - near Bypass. Call Tommy, 756-7^15.

APARTMENT FOR RENT - on 305

Elizabeth Street. $150 a month. Reference. Phone 758-5503.

APPLICATIONS NOW being taken tor new 2 and 3 bedroom carpeted townhouse apartments. All electric. Energy efficient. Stove and refrigerator furnished. Rent based on income. Equal Housing Opportunity. For more information call 1-827 4414or1 323 1481.

ATTRACTIVE LOFT apartment at Surrey's Square. New 1 bedroom with fireplace and skylights, private, wooded area. $275. Avalla ble February 1.756-6903.

ATTRACTIVE ONE bedroom, furnished apartments - or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 756^7815.

AZALEA GARDENS*

ONE BEDROOM furnished apartments, energy elficient, free water and sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable T.V.. Couples or singles only.

MOBILE HOME RENTALS

Couples or singles only. Apartments .......ecli        

and mobile homes located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.

Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815

BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse near hospital and mall. 2 bedrooms, 1j baths, washer/dryer hook ups, efficient. No pets. $300 per month. 756 8904 or 752 2040.

BRICK TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedroom, end unit, storage, near Nichols. 756 9006 after 6 p.m.

CARRIAGE HOUSE APARTMENTS

NEW BERN HIGHWAY

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES near schools and Pitt Plaza. Energy efficient heat pumps, tree cable TV, pool and laundry room. Call Manager 756-3450.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom fownhouses with 1'/z baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, tree cable TV, wasner-dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557

DUPLEX APARTMENT. 2

bedrooms, 1'/2 baths. Appliances. Excellent location, shopping, theatre and hospital. Call 756-4498 after 6 p.m.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tionlna. clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive 752-5100

> Dial direct phones 25 channel color tv Maid Service

Furnished

All Utilities

Weekly Rates

756 5555

HERITAGE INN MOTEL

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

IBM SYSTEMS 34 COMPUTER

Local company has a Systems 34 I96KI computer available lor immediate lime sharing. 1 CRT display station and t 5224 Printer is available lor immediate remote hook-up using telephone communications. Programs ready lor general business use include general ledger, accounts receivable, inventorylbilling. ac counts payable and payroll. Contact; President P.O. Box 8066 Greenville, NC or 758-1215

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTIED MONTHLY SALARY

firstThree months

NO IXmilNCI NICIftARY

We will teach you...

Do you have a positive mental attitude Do you detire to be successful Are you able to follow directions explicitly Do you desire to earn $2000 to $2500 per month H fe....

Tv w It ro Yenrnlf T tlv* H A Try.

Apply in person only.

Absolutely no phone calls.

Sm Ltland Tucker

' Xmrm.vl Usi-4t iM CuniiMm

Hast

FORD

TenWiStrMllIMBy^aas

758-0114 GrMnvtlN N C 27134

121 Apartments For Rent

NEROY^FFTCIInY 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, $310 month. 7S6-639S after .

CNkiOY EFFICIENT. 2 bedroom townhouse, wooded area, S310. 756-6295 afterp.m.

FuRnISHEO 1 bedroom efflclartcy apartment. Close to Campus. 756-4364 after 7 p.m., ask for Donnie.

GreeneWav

Large 2 bedroom garden apart-ments, carpeted, dish

washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, specious grounds with abundant parking, economical

utilities and poof. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

HOSPITAL AREA, Med School. New fownhouses, 2 bedrooms, baths. No pets. $300.756-2193.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden

apartments. Carpeted, range, frigerator, dishwasher, disp and cable TV. Conveniently located

to shopping center and schools. Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LANDMARK. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 3 blocks from UnlversI ty. Heat, air and water furnished. No pets. 758-3781 or 756 0889.

LARGE 3 BEDROOM downstairs apartment, I'/i baths, 9 miles south. Highway 13. $250 month. 753 4151.

LEXINGTON SQUARE - 2 bedroom townhouse for rent. Available immediately. J. R. Yorke Construction Company Inc., 355-2286.

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hookups, cable TV.wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays 9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756 5067

NEW ONE bedroom. Convenient location. Washer/dryer hookups. $220 per month. 756-7417.

NEW TOWNHOUSE, Williamsburg Manor. Special decor, now available. Call 355 6522.

NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG MANOR

BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS

Features

> 2 large bedrooms 1 '/i baths

> Thermopane windows

> E-300 Energy efficient

Heat Pumps

^aclous floor plan

> Beautiful individual Williamsburg interior

Patios with privacy fence

> Washer/dryer hookups

Kitchen appliances

Custom built cabinets

CALL 756-7647

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 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

CALL US WITH your classified ad today. You can find a cash buyer tor lawn or garden equipment fast! Call 752 6166.

RIVER BLUFF otters 1 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments. Six months

121 AiMrtments For Rent

STRATFORD ARAAS APARTMENTS

The

EXCELLENT LC>CATION NEAR fGCENTr-

ECU AND SHOPPING CE NTE RS

Offica hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

StUDENT HOUSING. Pirate's Landing. Available second semester off Reade Circle. Private rooms, cooking facilities. $150 per month. For information call Clark-Branch Management, 756-6336.

SUB LEASE - River Bluff. 2

bedrooms, 1V5 baths, all appliances furnished, new carpet. $280 per

month. 758 7700 days, 757 3820 nights.

TAR RIVER 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 & Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT,

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

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, IV2 bath fownhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. Will accept a 6 months lease. Immediate occupancy. Now through December 31 - 50% off security deposit.

7^6-0987

WESTHILLS

TOWNHOMES

Located just I'/S miles from the hospital and medical school, these units are designed to house two or more. If you have a roommate and would love to have that second full bath, give us a call. Energy etfi

121 Apartmtnts For Rent

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 1W baths, fireplace. Near Hospital. S32S

monthly. Deposit required. No pets. 3SS-24lfor7M-6906afte

ef6p.m

2 AEDROOM townhouse. 4 miles West of Hospital. Available January 1. Call 756-5780 weekdays, 752-0181 nights.

2 BEDROOMS, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups. No p^s. 752-0180 before 5 p.m., 756-2766 after 5 p.m.

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT

irpeted with central heat and air. 75 per 758 3311.

$27i

month. Bryton Hills. Call

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE -

carpeted with central heat and air, l'/4 baths. $295 per month. Cedar Court. Call 758 3311.

2 BEDROOMS - Near ECU. Heat and water turnished. $300 a month. Available now! Phone 758-0491 or 756-7809 before 9 p.m.

127

Houses For Rent

rBk0R6M "H0US n~yden. Phone 746-3674.

rSkb00M~40UikE - ^Jiilable

January I.- Near Carolina East AAall. $3S a month. 750-6200 days, 756-5217 nights.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE - 2 blocks from ECU. Appliances. $300 a

month. Lease and deposit. Avalla

8-7&.

ble immediately! 758 3 OR 4 BEDROOMS. Near the

University. $235 monthly. Red Carpet - Sw 355-2727.

iteve Evans 8, Associates,

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

2 STORY one bedroom apartment. Brookwood Drive. $250 per month. Call 756 6336.

3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS for

rent, Lakeview Terrace. Call 756 5610 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

125 Condominiums For Rent

TWO TOWNHOUSES available In Quail Ridge and Windy Ridge. One rents for $500 per month, other for $475 per month. 3 bedrooms, 2'/s baths. Call Clark Branch Management, 756 6336.

127 Houses For Rent

FOR RENT: room with house

privileges. $75 per month plus phone bill. In Gritton. (703) 670-4183

or 1-524 4424 after January 8.

HOUSES AND Apartments in Greenville. Call 746 3284 or 524-3180.

LAKE ELLSWORTH - 3 bedrooms.

2 baths, great room, dining room, and garage. On wooded lot. 756-9371

days, 756 7887 nights.

LAKE GLENWOOD. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home with fireplace, large lot, 1692 square feet. Echo Realty Inc, 524 4148.

Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified

dent, washer and dryer hook-ups fc

and a storage room for all thpse extras you just can't part with. Call us tor an appointment to rent these new two bedroom townhomes minutes from the hospital.

Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc.

Weekdays Nights 8, 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, self-cleaning oven, frost-free refrigerator. 3 blocks from ECU Call 752 0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportunity.

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments available, also 3 bedroom house for rent. 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT, heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn. $215. 756 0545 or 758 0635.

1 BEDROOM - Near campus. All electric. No pets. $215. Call 756 3923.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT

carpeted with central heat and air.

carpeted

$210 per month. Greenville Manor. Call 758 3311.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

leases. Call 758 4015 for more in formation

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RIGGAN SHOE REPAIR

113 W. 4th street - Phone 75841204 Downtown Greenville 2 Door* from Cox Florist

Parking in Front & Rear

758-0204

Open: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. til 6 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. til 3 p.m.

MECHANIC

Ford-Lincoln-Mercury Experienced. Must have own tools. Excellent Pay and Company Benefits. Apply to:

Buck Sutton

East Carolina Lincoln-Mercury-GMC 2201 Dickinson Avenue Greenville, N.C.

SAFt Safe Buy BuOUsedCars

1983 Ford Mustang Convertible

Ford Executive Demo

1983 Lincoln Continental

Ford Executive Demo

1983 Ford Country Squire Station Wagon

9 Passenger, Executive Demo

1983 Mercury Marquis Station Wagon

E)^ecutive Demo

(3) 1983 Lincoln Town Cars

All Fully Loaded!

1982 Mercury Cougar GS

4 Door, Loaded!

1981 Lincoln Mark VI

4 Door, 30,000 Mi!es.

1980 Lincoln Mark VI

2 Door, 30,000 miles.

1980 Chevrolet Camaro Berlinetta

Local Car

1980 Grand Marquis

4 Door, 30,000 Miles

1981 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup

Loaded

S599500

1979 Lincoln Town Car

Sunroof, Loaded!

*5495

Ifgi^EAST SB rCAROLINA

WniEmlCltcU

Greenville

756-4267

NICE 3 BEDROOM brick ranch, 1 bath, family room. Available immediately. $325. 752 2644.

THREE BEDROOMS, two baths, excellent kitchen, central heat and air, no pets, lease only, security deposit, 615 Oak Street, near university, immediate occupancy, $375 per month. Call J.L. Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors. 758 4711.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT

82 Volvo GLT Turbo    (36| S365 per month

81 Chrysler LeBaron    (24) SI 80 per month

77 Ford Granada 82 Olds Cutlass 78Chev Malibu 79 Ford T-Bird 74 Fo^dF-600 Truck 'TTGTant irTi LJ

S85 per month |30)S215per month (18) SI 37 per month (24)5150 per month (24)S200 per month '18) S115 per month

12 X 60 MOBILE home furnished, washer, dryer, air. Underpinned. Available January 2. Two miles from hospital. Phone 756-4545.

Tiidi

12X60. 3 bedrooms, washer and dryer, $160. Also 2 bedrooms with carpet. $125. No pets, no children. 756 9491 or 758-0745.

12x65. 2 bedrooms, central heat and air. Washer, stove, and refrigerator supplied unfurnished. On private 1 acre lot. 10 minutes West of Greenville. Call 756 1928 days, 756 1971 after 6 p.m.

12X65, 3 bedrooms, 1/? baths Available January 1. In Greenville No pets. References required. $75 deposit; $175 month. 746 3788.

2 BEDROOM mobile home tor rent Call 756-4687 from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

Looking for an apartmentr You'll find a wide range of available units listed In the Classified columns of today's paper.

140

WANTED

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, very nice. In city. 756-0264.

2 BEDROOMS. Located in city

limits. Call 756-1900.

135 Office Space For Rent

APPROXIMATELY 48X80 Can be

divided in half. Call days 756-2747; nights 756 4866.

OFFICE SPACE for rent 700 square feet, East 10th Street Call

758 2300 days

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

UP TO 2,500 SQUARE feet each location. Prime office space available at 3205 South Memorial Drive and 2820 East 10th Street. Phone 756 5991.

138 Rooms For Rent

PRIVATE ROOM, private entrance tor student or professional person.

Phone 756 8785 or 756 0611

ROOM AVAILABLE - Full privi leges. Near ECU. Clean, quiet, comfortable. Short term lease op tional. 758 7026 after 6 p.m.

2 BEDROOMS, completely turnished. Nonets. Phone752-0196.

ROOM CLOSE TO ECU. Women only. No pets, no parties. $100 Phone 752 2644.

2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Call 752 5635.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

78 Olds Culliss Wagon (181 SI 30 per monlb 76FordLTD    |12)S100 per month

80OldsToronado 130)5295 per month

Wtih approved ciedir Based upon an open-end lease Residual values many vary according to mileage SIOO security deposit required

Low Rate Daily & Weekly Rentals

MID-EASTERN LEASING CO.

#14 Pitt Plaza

SINGLE FURNISHED room in nice residential section, near Pitt Plaza tor discreet, young business man or graduate student. 756 3466

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE TO SHARE cozy two bedroom, furnished apartment near campus. $125 rent includes heat and water. No lease or deposit. C6II 752 1891 after 5:30 or 803 489 7877 between December 22-26.

NON SMOKING female roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house near campus. $70 month. Call after

5p.m., 757 1175.

144

Wanted To Buy

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

Want to sell livestock? Run a

Classified ad tor quick response.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOTICE!

We will strip straight chajrs

For

Revolutionaiy new method! Completely sale for fine furniture, metal, wicker, etc. Call lor our low prices of other items.

752-1009

STRIP-EASE OF GREENVILLE

628 South Pitt SI.

Americas #1 Selling Automobiie

1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme

OnSaieNow During Our Year End Closeout Sale

$10,613.00* $249.72

Equipped with 60/40 seat, landau vinyl top, pulsating wipers, tilt wheel, cruise control, locking wire wheel covers, AM-FM stereo, power antenna.

' N.C. Sales Tax And License Fees Extras

** Based on $1500.00 down (cash or trade), 12.9 APR, 48 monthly payments, finance charges $2661.30, total of payments $11,986.56.

HOLTOLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

Greenville

756-3115

YEAR END CLOi

>EOl

WAS

IT SAL

SALE PRICE

.E

YEAR END SAVINGS

1983 OLDS CUTLASS CALAIS - stock no.

R-4830. Loaded, white with brown top, clean.

$11,495

$10,333

$1,162

1983 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME - stock no.

P-4874.4 door Brougham, loaded, extra clean, low miles.

$11,895

$10,538

$1,357

1983 SUBARU GL WAGON - stock no.

4870-A. One owner, low miles, red, clean.

$8,995

$7,862

$1,133

1983 BUICK REGAL stock no. p-4959.

Automatic, air condition, stereo, V-6, clean.

$10,295

$9,165

$1,130

1983 DATSUN 200-SX stock no. R-5003. Light

blue, automatic, air condition, stereo, low mileage.

$8,995

$7,895

$1,100

1983 OLDS CUTLASS CRUISER WAGON

- stock no. P-50J 9, Loaded, dJesel, low mileage.

$12,295

$10,520

$1,775

1983 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

BROUGHAM stock no. 4996-A. Loaded, dark blue, one owner.

$11,495

$10,365

$1,130

1983 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA BROUGHAM

stock no. 5002-A. 4 door, loaded, low mileage, extra clean.

$10,995

$9,665

$1,330

1983 AtSUN PULSAR - stock no. 5148-a. 2

door, dark blue, 5 speed, air condition, cruise control, sunroof, stereo, low mileage.

$7,895

$6,835

$1,060

1982 DATSUN KING CAB - mvp package.

Local trade, only 14,000 miles.

$7,495 '

$6,245

$1250

1982 CHEVROLET CAVALIER WAGON -

stock no. 3764-A. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, beige.

$5,895

$4,668

$1,227

1982 FORD EXP stock no. 4823-A. Good transportation, great gas mileage, 5 speed, air, stereo, blue.

$5,595

$4,387

$1,208

1982 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA stock no.

P-4966.4 door, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, nice.

$8,495

$7,546

$949

1982 OLDS CUSTOM CRUISER WAGON

- Stock no. P-4969. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio.

$9,495

$8,670

$825

1982 DATSUN 280-ZX - stock no. S02VA.

T-tops, local trade, low mileage, sharp.

$12,995

$12,165

$830

1982 OLDS 98 REGENCY - stock no. 5082-A.

Dark blue, loaded, only 20,049 miles.

$11,895

$10,965

$930

1981 FORD THUNDERBIRD - stock no.

4547-B. Copper with tan top, sharp, low mileage.

$7,955

$6,991

$964

1981 OLDS 98 REGENCY - stock no. p-4964. 2 door, light green, loaded, clean.

$9,895

$8,996

$899

1981 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO - stock

no. P-4965. Light green, bucket seats, sharp.

$7,895 ^

$6,798 ^

$1,097

1981 PONTIAC GRAND LEMANS WAGON

Stock no. P-4967. Whlte\vith woodgrain, clean.

$7,495 ^

$6,780

$715

1980 BUICK REGAL * stock no. 4882-A. Two tone blue, bucket seats, automatic, air condition, stereo.

$6,495

$5,314

$1,181

1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD - stock no.

4694-A. Dark blue, T-top, loaded. Sporty.

$4,995

$3,765

$1,230

I979 OLDS 98 REGENCY - stock no. 5061-A. 4

door, loaded, local trade, clean.

$6,895

$6,145

$750

1978 DATSUN TRUCK - stock no. 4459-A. 4

speed transmission, white spoke rims, sporty red.

$3,695

$2,865

$830

1978 DODGE COLT stock no. 4970-A. 2 door, silver, 4 speed, air condition, gas saver.

$3,595

$2,785

$810

"f978.....DODGE MAGNUM - stock no. 4907-a. '

Dove gray, must go.

$3,495

$2,025

$1,470

1978 CHEVROLET MALIBU CLASSIC -

Stock no. P-487S-A. 2 door, light blue, automatic, air condition, stereo, low mlleefle.

$3,495

$2,785

$710

1977 HONDA WAGON ~ stock no. 4946-a. 4

soeed. air condition, light blue, good transportation.

$2,795

$1,995

$800

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd. Greenville, N.C. 756-3115

I





* ?

20 . Jhe Daiiy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

Friday, December 30,1983Cuba Land Of Shortages And Revolutionary Zeal

B> niAKLKSJ, MWLKV Associated Fre-is Writer HAVANA \Pi ~ The Havana city museum features a "rubbish bin of history," a iunk pile of Coca-Cola bottles, a Shell gasoline sign, the busts of old Cuban dictators This, the guide explains, is tiie debns of yesterday > Wt-stern imperialism.'

A glance out the window finds the debris ol today -crumbling tenements of did Havana. c<'dap<:ng from years of ne.-dec! as Cuban communism <t rung les

througrcc'.i. ;; K I fiSVS,

A quaitfi ceuiury alter fidel Castro.s uT'cls seized power on dan. i M.n ano ended generate..." oi eoinipl dietatorsliips ani' 1 S domination ( il'i.i N ,:! -[,1'id ()> shortage am: (nolu'.ionarv spirit, oi ..f,d a.oniie uncertain\

It IS a place von edueatum i-decent hou.-im.' where ;.'0(. good he.ii:. availa!'e. '-iiiw'

three-quarters of a pound of beef every nine da^, at 81 cents a pound Aurelio Miro. 69. standing in line with a dozen other people outside a butcher shop, said he eats meat only two or three times a week.

"Of course Id like more, but at least this much is guaranteed. he said.

Rationing also covers such other staples as rice, sugar and milk, clothing and shoes, appliances and gasoline.

Miros pension, equivalent to $106 a month, is not enough to buy additional, ration-free pork or chicken at a state-run parallel market." at a price of $2.38 a pound, or at a peasant market, where Cubas few remaining private farmers sell limited produce at still higher prices 58 cents for a single banana, for example.

But even those with more money - Cuban wages range from about $100 a month to

bilk--an; lUicai mzef, deac Ab..\ a I'iaci led" . e\'cn .1 wlk e ba,"(

-aJ

U'C

i(t" I-

nnn." ( ul iling He! -

IjU."

.Inc.

ga.-.'

< Kl .MBLI.NG TKNKMK.NTS - People walk (i<un Havana streets amid wooden rein-toneineiils that prop one building up against aiiotlK'r. Some of the reinforcements, such as this one. Iiave been in place for seven years, (AP l.aserphoto)

!):i

C'.-.. u /-: rc!':'

m:

ee:-I he e.'i

be...;.

Tiie

111 IV >

i-;V

aig

'V'

f\i'    11

11;,;

01

gm-si.'.

'i; I' eaei.

.... . ^

MISKIM The Havana city museum meludes a "junk pile" exhibiting (oca-Cola Ixittles, a Shell gasoline sign, and busts of old (Tihan dictators described by a guide as debris ot yesterdays Western imperialism. (AP l.aserphoto)

Can f Get Driveway Off Hazardous Waste List

. 1

1 .. M,..

'i' T '-; --ni' '

, ' ii;

' --a iia/

> .

<

Tr- T \(,rm.'ui

i :

" ' - i\ IS'

li' '

'!" it liic ;ail

Mi' 1',tni()lieij's

(Ir.vc

nu lii'ir, tbxie

th.i:. ,

B'.il "tlieia!.''

S,:\ 'I, ^

' irilii'e l! Will

be

:"i iK'lore

the -'

Anc

'.a.' appar-

ently m:

:i;r nearly'

two yea'

mnnd out

by read I.e. newspapi I In a ie|. Wednesda\ residen! ol. Washington apparently got

nil in Ihe

"terview ear-old .rhwest I'd he '!!'* list

after a neighUir e.i.Td the agency in 1981 'and told them put 450gallons ut ICB (polychlorinated biphein is i in my driveway

PCBs were once commonly in lubricants and coo-

ing oil in electrical equipment. but have been banned "nice they were found to cause skin and liver damage and other health problems.

In reality. Campbell said, he poured less than than 20 aallons of oil from the crankcases of his three cars on about 30 yards of his dirt driveway to hold down dust in 1980.

Nonetheless, EPA officials put his driveway on the list "instead of being logical and calling me up. .. or taking the time to check the story, he said

He learned he was on the list only in October, when a report was published in The Bellingham Herald.

Since then, tests have iound PCBs in one of two driveway soil samples, but at a level ,000 times less than the threshold for concern.

Campbell said that when he called the regional EPA office in Seattle, the only person who would talk with him was "a press-release officer who knew absolutely nothing about what was

goingoii.

The agency then sent him only "a list of these (potential hazardous waste) places and a two-page press release that didn't explain anything, he said.

That's the thing that I think bugged me the most... the stupidity of the Bureaucracy, that they can pull things like this and its not up to them to clean things up, it's up to you, Campbell said. To me it was a big matter, because jf I hadnt had The Bellingham Herald to back me up. Id have had to fight the whole thing -and they werent listening. Even now, Campbells driveway remains in the computer, although it has been put in the no further action category, said Deborah Flood, an EPA specialist in Seattle.

We cant delete from the c()mputer, she said, EPA will have to decide on a mechanism to remove.

The problem may be resolved at a national EPA meeting in March or April.

K

about $500 - often must hunt fOT quality goods.

In Havanas Cathedral Plaza one recent Saturday, scores of women pushed and shoved to reach a makeshift stand for a chance to buy one of a few pairs of homemade shoes for $40. In the ration stores, they can buy only one pair of shoes per year.

The housing shortage developed because of a lack of wood, cement and other building materials, and because of the post-revolution collapse of the pnvaAo coftstr-uction in dustry.

It has reshaped Cuban life.

Newlywed couples rarely find their own apartments and must live with parents. Workers sent to other parts ol Cuba must crowd into spartan hostels.

In historic Havanas teeming central streets, thousands of city residents still live in 18th-century buildings that, mildewed and cracking, lean against support scaffolds. Some have already collapsed.

The 1981-85 economic plan calls for building 200,000 new housing units. But Cuban officials report gloomily that only 60,000 have been constructed in the plan's first three years.

Despite its economic shortcomings. Cuba's successes are obvious.

Drab Havana no longer has the life or flair of a Rio de Janeiro or Buenos Aires. But neither does it have the

alse claims it has no major dnig-addiction or alci^lism problems. Average life expectancy has reached 72 years of age, on a par with the United States, according to government figures.

These advances are spearheaded by a highly centralized and often oppressive bureaucracy.

If a pregnant woman ignores a checkup appointment. or a child is truant from school, the family will hear from the local Committee for the Defense of the Revolution, a kind of revolu

tionary block association.

The CDRs are the grass roots of a system that reaches up to the Communist Party elite and the National Assembly, which was established in 1976 under a new Peoples Power constitution.

The assemUy meets only four days a year, when with little question it adopts bills presented by Castros Cabinet.

It is elected by local assemblies whose members are chosen in direct popular elections. But campiaigning

on political issues is fOTWddei.

Public debate has been extinguished in other ways as well. The newspapers and lx)adcast stations are voices of the government and party.

The only independent institution is the Roman

Catholic Chuch, and its activities are sharply restricted.

Outside estimates of the number of political prisoners remaining in Cuban jails, many from the 1960s, range from 300 to 1,000.

Anti-Castro Cuban exile leaders retort that all of the

Comniunists schools and hospitals do not justify their monolithic political system.

At least one gray-haired man on Old Havanas San Ignacio Street would agree.

Stopped by a foreigner who asked about La Revolution." the Cuban looked around warily and then spat out:

It may be all right for the voung people. They dont know anything else. In the old days I was only a poor shoemaker, but at least I could do what I pleased.... Freedom has no price.

squalid shantytowns. Swarms of ragged children

do not beg in Havanas streets, as in Mexico City.

And although the Cuban eats meat on the time, untold millions of other Latin Americans never taste it at all.

Cuba today claims - and few dispute R -'that it has nine times as many teachers as before the revolution. It

HOMEMADE SHOES Scores of women push    $40 in Havanas Cathedral Plaza    recently.    In

and shove to reach a makeshift stand for a chance    ration stores women can buy only    one pair    of

to buy one of a few pairs of "homemade" shoes for    shoes a vear. (AP Laserphoto)

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Title
Daily Reflector, December 30, 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.) - 30680
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Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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