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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Generally cold (below freezing) tonight and mosUy sunny and wanner Tuesday.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>PagesExtortion Pages(X)ituaries Page 11Arabs protest</p>
        <p>98TH YEAR NO. 73</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 26, 1979</p>
        <p>16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 15 CENTS</p>
        <p>Peace Treaty Ends Thirty Years Of War</p>
        <p>By ROBERT B. CULLEN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin prepared to sign a treaty today to end 30 years of war between their countries and, they hoped, lay the cornerstone of peace in the Middle East.</p>
        <p>The treaty they planned to sign did not come easily. The bargaining lasted until late Sunday evening as the two ancient enemies haggled over the final details of their new and fragile peace.</p>
        <p>This morning, State Department officials said experts from the three countries were still going over the language of the treaty, although all issues had been settled in principle.</p>
        <p>As a result, the text was not made public until after Sadat, Begin and President Carter met at the White House and sat down at a table used by Ulysses S. Grant. They planned to sign three treaty versions, in English, Hebrew and Arabic.</p>
        <p>Egyptian officials said the final compromise involved an Israel pledge to withdraw from the Sinai oil fields seven months after the signing of the treaty, instead of nine months after, as the Israelis had wanted, or six months after, as the Egyptians proposed.</p>
        <p>American officials confirmed that schedule and said that it represented, basically a return to an agreement tentatively struck several months ago.</p>
        <p>Sadat arrived at the White House for the treaty signing and a conference with Carter at 11 a.m. EST. They posed</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>for pictures and Carter told the Egyptian leader he saw a good importunity in the next few months to open up Egypt to American investments.</p>
        <p>The leaders planned to celebrate the occasion with a state dinner this evening with 1,300 guests under a red and yellow tent on the South Lawn of the White House.</p>
        <p>Begin arrived at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington a few hours later in a light rain and added a few more issues to the agenda.</p>
        <p>He said he wanted to talk to Sadat about a three-part signing ceremony in which he and Sadat would leave Washington to sign the Arabic and Hebrew versions of the treaty in Cairo and Jerusalem. He said Sadat and Carter had agreed to this idea.</p>
        <p>Begin also said he wanted to open the borders between Egypt and Israel 10 months after ratification of the treaties so Egyptians might visit Israel and Israelis might gaze at the Pyramids, in which their forefathers invested some labor.</p>
        <p>Shortly after 6 p.m., Begin arrived at the Egyptian Embassy where Sadat was staying. The two leaders coitferred until 7:35 when Begin, his expression grim, got into his car and drove back to his hotel.</p>
        <p>During the conversation. Begin apparently gave im on his plan to get Sadat to visit Jerusalem. Israel and Egyptian spokesmen announced that Begin would make a one^lay visit to Cairo on April 2 to repay Sadatr historic visit to Jersalem in November, 1977. All three</p>
        <p>OTUPK</p>
        <p>752-1336</p>
        <p>Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used. Transcribing is done once a day.</p>
        <p>HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY?</p>
        <p>I would like to know \^ere I could finish my hi^ school education, pertiaps by attending night classes. I would like to get started as soon as possible.G.T.</p>
        <p>Hotline talked to Charles M. Dickens, coordinator of the Human Resources Development (HRD) program at Pitt Technical Institute.</p>
        <p>The HRD program, eight weeks long, offers basic skills, instruction in English, math, science, literature, and social studies in preparation for the General Educational Development test, better known as the high school equivalency test. The program emphasizes individualized learning and group activities.</p>
        <p>According to Dickens, classes are from 9 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 to 4 p.m., five days a week.</p>
        <p>Persons who are unemployed, underemployed, or economically disadvantaged are eligible to apply. Also, persons applying must be 18-years-old or older and officially withdrawn from school, according to Dickens.</p>
        <p>Our bottom line, or primary goal, is to produce individuals who will go out into the community as wage earners and tax payers, explained Dickens. We try to develop conscientious workers and find employment for persons in our program.</p>
        <p>Persons may apply anytime from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and our application pool is open right now, regardless of race or sex, said Dickens.</p>
        <p>Registration costs $5, and all materials and books are provided at no cost. For further information, call 756-3130, extension 255.</p>
        <p>Hotline also talked to Eleanor Webber, instructor of the Adult High School (AHS) program at Pitt Technical Institute.</p>
        <p>Unlike the HDR program, the primary objective of the AHS program is to prepare persons for the GED only. Classes in that program are from 7 to 10 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays.</p>
        <p>Persons interested in the AHS program should contact Webber in Room 113 of the Humber Buil^g at Pitt Technical Institute during dasapoom hours.</p>
        <p>versions of the treaty would be signed at the White House.</p>
        <p>A short time later. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance arrived at the hotel to cimfer with Begin, repeating a visit he had paid in New York on Saturday night.</p>
        <p>When Vance emerged, he and Dayan were smiling. There would be a treaty-signing, Vance said. Asked if the oilfields problem had been settled, Vance responded, I believe it has.</p>
        <p>TTien Vance went to the White House to report to Carter, who had spent Sun</p>
        <p>day in Texas and Oklahoma. He said at a news conference in Dallas that 50 or 100 years from now, history may call the achievement of peace between Egypt and Israel the most significant occurence during my own term of office as president.</p>
        <p>But Carter added that the treaty is only one step in a long process that must continue during the next year, addressing the emotional and Intractable questions surrounding the fate of the Palestinian Arabs.</p>
        <p>Carter broke an impasse</p>
        <p>between the two countries last September at Camp David, where he persuaded Begin and Sadat to agree to a compromise under which the two countries would make peace.</p>
        <p>E^t would regain the Sinai and Israel also agreed to begin negotiations on an autonomy plan for the West Bank and Gaza Strip that would require the end of Israeli military government and the withdrawal of Israeli troops to specified areas.</p>
        <p>Negotiators met in (ContiauedOttPagfiS)</p>
        <p>PROPOSED PEACE TREATY BOUNDARIES  This map based on information from the text of the prcqx&amp;gt;sed IsraeU-Egyptian peace</p>
        <p>treaty gives the general geographic changes in store for the countries of Egypt and Israel. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Pres. Carter Asserts It's Time To Regain Bureaucracy Control</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -President Carter, saying its time to regain control over the government bureaucracy, is proposing legislation to streamline a regulatory assembly line of federal rules and paperwork.</p>
        <p>In a ^)eech to the National Association of Broadcasters, Carter said Sunday that he will send to Congress today a comprehensive proposal to reduce, to rationalize and to streamline the regulatory burden throughout American life.</p>
        <p>For far too long, he declared, we have acted as if we could throw another law or another rule at every problem in our society without thinking seriously about the consequences.</p>
        <p>The president said many Americans encounter a bewildering mass of paperwork, bureaucracy and delay in dealing with the federal government and are</p>
        <p>not willing to support needless rules, excessive costs, duplication, overlap and waste.</p>
        <p>After announcing the proposal in Dallas, the president returned to Washington to prepare for todays signing of the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt. The president said the signing may be the most significant occurrence during my own term as president. The NAB speech capped a weekend of presidential travel that began Saturday in Elk City, Okla., with a warning to business to comply with the administrations anti-inflation program.</p>
        <p>Carter told the broadcasters that 90 separate regulatory agencies issue 7,000 new rules each year. As a specific example, he said the Federal (^tommunications Commission requires 18 million manhours a year from broadcasters to fill out forms.</p>
        <p>Special Meet</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Board of Education will meet in woikshop session Tuesday, March 27, 7:30 p.m., at the Pitt County Courthouse.</p>
        <p>Highli^ts of the agenda wiU include the Mowing:</p>
        <p> An Association of Classroom Teachers discus-si(m of the 1978-79 sdhool year workday and the assigned dates for the April standardized testing.</p>
        <p> A request for approval for a Junior-Soiior Prom at D. H. Conley and a ^ring Formal at Ayden-Grifton April 27.</p>
        <p> further ddiberatkm on the school budget for 19794.</p>
        <p> Discussion of the SdKxd Board Day at the North Candina Legislature, April 11-12.</p>
        <p>Hospital Help By Gov. Hunt</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  Spokesmen in Gov. Jim Hunts press office said this morning that the governor has ordered an exception to the states health care plan which would allow teaching hospitals to add additional beds.</p>
        <p>Stephanie Bass said Hunts order would include a $5.4 million addition at Pitt County Memorial Hospital to provide 166 additional beds for the School of Medicine at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Ms. Bass said the exemption must be approved by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. We dont know how long that will take, she emphasized.</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Board of</p>
        <p>Commissioners Friday asked the governor for help in gaining approval for construction of an additional bed tower at Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>In a letter, signed by board chairman R. L. Martin, Hunt was asked, please help us and help the State to meet its committment, to the medical school and to the peo-ple of Eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>According to the letter, A moratorium on new beds has been declared by the Department of Human Resources for North Carolina. "The letter noted that, it appears that the basis, for the moratorium is a lack of up-to-date information and a</p>
        <p>lack of consideration of the growth of the Pitt County Memorial Hospital reviewed in the current State of North Carolina Medical Facilities Plan.</p>
        <p>The letter pointed out that the additional beds at the hospital, has been an essential element in the accreditation of the School of Medicine, by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, and, the Liaison Committee expects the State and University to keep this committment.</p>
        <p>Construction of the bed tower is being funded by the North Carolina General Assembly.</p>
        <p>OPEC Ministers Apparently Ready</p>
        <p>Hike Oil Prices</p>
        <p>By MARK POTTS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)  The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries opened a special meeting today with most of its 13 members apparently ready to boost oil prices. But there seemed to be no agreement on how much the increase would be.</p>
        <p>We anticipate a rise in prices and we think that all are in favor,said Venezuelan Oil Minister Humberto Calderon Briti.</p>
        <p>Sheik Ahmad Zaki Yamani, Saudi Arabias oil minister and one of OPECs moderates, said he would resist a price increase. But since he failed to block the 14.5 percent increase voted in December, his opposition was not expected to be decisive.</p>
        <p>Qatars Abdul Aziz bin Khalifa said it was very possible there would be an increase.</p>
        <p>Tayeh Abdul Karim of Iraq called.for a 23 percent increase in the current base price of $13.34 a barrel of Arabian light crude oil. Algeria urged a 25 percent increase, and Nigeria recommended 15 percent. Libya advocted diversion of oil from the long-term contract market to the higher-priced spot market.</p>
        <p>Iran and Indonesia also were believed favoring an increase. But Mana Said Otaibah of Aub Dhabi, the current OPEC chairman, said his government would prefer to stick to prices already agreed upon.</p>
        <p>I think many delegations, including our own, believe the market situation justifies an increase in the price of</p>
        <p>market crude, said Nordine AitLaousssine, vice chairman of Sonatrach, the Algerian national oil company.</p>
        <p>OPEC in December agreed on a four-stage schedule of increases totaling 14.5 percent by Oct. 1. The second increase, to $13.84, is scheduled for next Sunday, and the October base price is scheduled to be $14.55.</p>
        <p>The two-month stoppage in exports by Iran, once OPECs second-largest producer, and the new Iranian governments plans to keep future</p>
        <p>exports at half what they were pushed prices in the spot oil market to record highs. Some OPEC members increased prices by adding surcharges to the OPEC base price. They also accused the international oil companies of making huge windfall profits by buying at the base price and selling on the spot market.</p>
        <p>There is speculation that the meeting may consider changing the type of oil used for the benchmark price on which the prices of other types of oil are based.</p>
        <p>Rescue Squad Recovers Body In Chicod Creek</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND - The Greenville Rescue Squad recovered the body Sunday morning of a Rt. 1, Chocowinity man who drowned Saturday night in Chicod Creek near here.</p>
        <p>Sheriff Ralph Tyson said that rescuers found the body of Hurlet (Hubby) Levone Lewis, 32, around 10:15 a.m, Sunday in water approximately 16 feet deep.</p>
        <p>Sheriff Tyson said that Lewis was reportedly fishing for herring in CJiicod Creek with a dip net when the incident occurred. The sheriff added that Lewis apparently</p>
        <p>was wading out to a net in the creek when he went under.</p>
        <p>According to Sheriff Tyson, three of Lewis brothers and a sister-in-law were with Lewis at the creek when the incident occurred. The Sheriffs Department  received the</p>
        <p>report at llr07 p. m. Saturday.</p>
        <p>Rescuers,  after unsuc</p>
        <p>cessful attempts to locate the body Saturday night, resumed their efforts Sunday morning, it was noted.</p>
        <p>The Pitt  Medical Ex</p>
        <p>aminers officer reported that Lewis death was ruled an accidental drowning.</p>
        <p>Tire-Slashing Damage Is Said Above $5,400</p>
        <p>Greenville Police Chief Glenn Cannon said this morning that more than $5,400 property dainage resulted from Friday nights tire cutting spree by vandals along Webb, Pine and Millbrook Streets and on Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>A total of 89 tires an 34 vehicles were flattened, the chief said.</p>
        <p>The first of the reports came before midnight, whi</p>
        <p>the owner of a car parked on a parking lot at 2718 Memorial Dr. reported four tires on his car, valued at $500, had been cut.</p>
        <p>A witness hdd investigators that a Uond-headed man about 18 years old, wearing a Uue daiiim jacket with a motMxycle emblem on the back, was seen running from the scene.</p>
        <p>Officers investigating that</p>
        <p>incident found other vdiicles with flat tires in the area. In some cases, owners rqwrted the vandalism. In other cases, officers notified owners that their tires had been cut.</p>
        <p>Chief Cannon cited several of the incidents: two tires on a car in a garage at 212 Pine St. were cut; four tires on a truck, two on a car, and two tires on a boat trailer at 209</p>
        <p>Millbrook St. were slashed; three tires on each of two cars parked at 205 Millbrook St. were attacked.</p>
        <p>In other incidents, the chief, said, a total of 20 tires on sue vehicles parked at a service station at 2800 South Memorial Dr. were cut, while four tires on a motor home parked at 2700 Webb St. were pierced with a knife or similar object while people</p>
        <p>slept inside.</p>
        <p>Addresses where vehicle tires were damaged included 212,212 and 214 Pine St.; 2718, 2727, 2800, and 2828 Memorial Dr.;201, 203,205, 207 and 209 Millbrook; and 2700, 2703, 2704, 2709, 2711, 2715 and 2806 Webb St.</p>
        <p>One owner, whose tire repair bill was $482, said it gave her goose bumps just looking at ail the cars along</p>
        <p>the street with flat tires.</p>
        <p>A repairman changing tires on one of the vandalized vehicles said he had heard oi things like this happening in big cities but didnt believe it could happen in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Chief Cannon said investigation of the incident is continuing, although he indicated there is little hope of finding the culprit.</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0002" />
        <p>STtaeDaUy ReOectnr, OranvlUe. N 0 Monday, March X. im</p>
        <p>Pats</p>
        <p>Pointers</p>
        <p>By Pat Trexler</p>
        <p>Safety Club Teaches Children</p>
        <p>Heres a Jiiiy-quick crocheted shawl that lets you jump on the faahkm bandwagon without putting a big cteit in your budget. Its a modified version of the great triangle,' slightly squared at the back for a more flattering shape.</p>
        <p>This wear-anywhere fashloo nutkes a cherished gift item, too ... no proUem about what size to make as one size fits all! The instructions are writtra with the beginner in mind without the usual abbreviations. Make it in wool or synthetic in 4-ply worsted weight yarn. Four skeins will do the trick.</p>
        <p>To obtain directi(ms for making the lacy crocheted shawl, send your request for Leaflet No. 7435 with $1.00 and a long, self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler, The Daily Reflector,* P. 0. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S. C. 29582.</p>
        <p>Or you may order Kit No. K-7435 by sending check or money order for $9.90 to Pat Trexler at the same address. Kit price includes Brunswick Win-drush (an orion acrylic yarn), the instruction leaflet and the shipping charges. Please ^&amp;gt;ecify your choice of white, ecru, cherry pink, li^t gold or persimmon.</p>
        <p>Dear Readers: The crocheted popcorn stitch is a very versatile one which is far easier than you might think. To practice it, work a foundation chain of any desired laigth.</p>
        <p>Row 1: Work 5 double crochets in the sixth chain from hook. Pull the last loop up and remove hook from it. Insert hook in the top of the first (kxible crochet made in this group of five, then insert hook back into the loop you dropped and pull this loop through the other loop on the hook and chain 1. This completes (Hie popcorn stitch.</p>
        <p>To OMitinue on row one, (chain 1, skip one stitch, double . crochet in next stitch, chain 2, skip next stitch, make a popcorn in next stitch). Rq&amp;gt;eat the steps between parenthe^ all across row, chain 3 and turn.</p>
        <p>For the second row, (make a double crochet in popcorn, a dou-tde crochet in the next chain-2</p>
        <p>CROCHETED SHAWL.. .is an easy, cpiick project which will help stretch the spring clothing budget.</p>
        <p>Bridge Winners Announced</p>
        <p>^ce, a double crochet in next double crochet, a double crochet in next chain-2 space). Again repeat the stq)s between parentheses all across the row, ending with a double crochet in the turning chain of the previous row. Rq&amp;gt;eat these two rows over and over for desired length.</p>
        <p>niere are many different ways to use popcorn stitches. You may want to make popcorns all across without the double crochet between or you may wish to have several double crochets worked between each popcorn.</p>
        <p>You may prefer to work rows of single crochet between the popcorn rows. In this event, chain (me instead of three at the end of row one. Or, you may Wednesday morning duplicate want to have scattered popcorns bridge winners at Planters Bank in a random or planned design, were:  If you decide to do this, work a</p>
        <p>North-South: Mrs. Sidney p(^)corn in place of a double Skinner and Mrs. Stuart Pa^, crochet, chain one and skip next first with a .615 percent game; stitch.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ledyard Ross and Mrs. Or, have you ever thought of Charles Mitchell, second; Mrs. having the popcorns worked in Fred Adams and Mrs. Tliomas contrasting colors? To do this, Lunny, third.  work in double crochet to within</p>
        <p>East-West: Mrs. Edna Fisher and Mrs. J. N. LeConte, first with a .599 percent game; Mrs.</p>
        <p>Eloise Gabbert and Mrs. Clara Schackell, second; Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>Wenddl Smiley, third.</p>
        <p>Wednesday afternoon winners included:</p>
        <p>Tied for first with a .625 percent game were: Mrs. David Stevens and Mrs. Mavis Smith with Mrs. J. W. H. Roberts and Mrs. Lacy Harrell; Mrs. J. S.</p>
        <p>Rhodes Jr. and George Martin, third; Mrs. Effie WUUams and Gaude Goodman, fourth; tied for fifth were Mrs. Harold Forbes and Mrs. Gail Mc-Gelland with Mrs. M. H. Bynum and Mrs. Eli Bloom.</p>
        <p>one stitch of where the next p&amp;lt;^ corn is to be made. In this next stitch, work a double crochet to the point where there are just two loops on the hook.</p>
        <p>Now, dn^ main color and draw throu^ a 1(k^ of ccmtrast color. Make the popcorn with the contrast color, dropping it before making the chain-one at end of p&amp;lt;^orn. Use main color for this chain-one and for the following double crochets.</p>
        <p>You can make a p&amp;lt;i)corn braid to use as trim by simply working ; yw one of the pattern stitch. You may want to finish this off with a row of single crochet along each long edge. Use your leftover yarns to practice and have fun making popcorns!</p>
        <p>Because of the large volume of mail she receives, Pat is unable to answer your letters personally. However, she welcomes all (juestions and hints, and will use those of general interest in the coluirm whenever possible.</p>
        <p>By SHARON RirrENBERG</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (UPI) - Joy Lynchs 18-month-oId son was injured when he sli^ied in a puddle of water, fell and hit the bathtub in their home in suburban Niqmrville.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lynch doesnt want that to hjqipen to her &amp;lt;^r children, 3-year-old twins Brian and Brit. So she enrolled them in the new Child Safety Gub of the National Safety (Council.</p>
        <p>The council says accidents killed 4,692 children under age 5 in 1976, the most recent year for \Kdiich statistics are available. More than 1,500 of the deaths resulted from automotive mishaps; 822 from fires and burns; 720, drowning; 455, ingestion of foods or objects; 201, falls; 148, poison; and 61, firearms.</p>
        <p>Hk club is designed to help parents teach their pre-sclKxrt-ers how to avoid such accidents. Each child member receives an Ifrpage bocMet with safety-related puzzles, pop-outs and qpiizzes on his or her third birthday, and at six-month intervals until the fifth birthday.</p>
        <p>Advice in the booklets includes how to sit in a car properly, why safety belts should be worn, &amp;gt;^y it is important to walk on sidewalks, not in streets, vliere to play and how to avoid hot stoves and puddles of spilled water.</p>
        <p>The booklets aim to develop decision-making abilities in children, and encourage adult-child interaction and adult awareness of the hazards preschool children face, says Barb Caracci, a curriculum devel(^ment i^)ecialist for the council.  ,</p>
        <p>One less(m asks describe the dangers of playing with electrical cords and plugs and says, you should always ask a big pers(Hi to plug the c(hx1 into the</p>
        <p>Utility Bond Program Held</p>
        <p>wall or take the plug out of the wall. A big person knows how to plug the cord in and take the plug out of the wall.</p>
        <p>Paraits then are instructed to place the pop-outs depicting cords in tq^ropriate places in the living room illustration.</p>
        <p>Another example describes the dangers of IdUdwn ranges that can hurt you if you get too close to it. Parents are</p>
        <p>off the curb on his own.</p>
        <p>The earlier you start any learning experience, Ms. Caracci said, the Icmger its reinforced in a parsons life and the greato* the probability thQTU be (k^ vtdiatever it is the right way. Its like building blocks.</p>
        <p>She said some groups have expressed interest in buying club booklets in bulk to</p>
        <p>On The</p>
        <p>Local Scene</p>
        <p>by Rosalie Trotman</p>
        <p>hdd to pick iq&amp;gt; the (diild, show distribute to poverty-levd chil-</p>
        <p>him the fire and how it cooks water, but that it is hot and dangerous.</p>
        <p>Nancy Kuzniar, also of suburban NapovUle, said the program has helped her son,</p>
        <p>dren, but this is still in the talking stage.</p>
        <p>The club is the councils first program f(M- pre^5cho(ers. It Is based on a Scandinavian project that was found to</p>
        <p>Brian, 3, especially the section decrease the number and on (xsrds and plugs. He loves to severity of accidents anxmg play with them. He occasionally young children, will touch them and we bring in Individual membersh^ dues the book and he understands it of $15 pay for the series of better. He can rdate to the bad booklets. They are also availa-feeling hell get if he touches Me at bulk prices In lots of 50 the electricity.  or nxMe, with a rebate aUowed</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lynch said the club has f&amp;lt;HT fund-raising contributions made her twins so aware of where a^ilicable. the dangers of things, they continually point this out. When Im baking a cake and they go</p>
        <p>to the stove, they say, We wr  .</p>
        <p>cant touch this. Its hot and W ntUlg V^iOnteSt will hurt us.</p>
        <p>All the b(xAlets messages  Qot</p>
        <p>are keyed to childrens ages. -'COUmiC OCl For instance, a 3-year-&amp;lt;rfd has his mother put him in a car seat or restraint, but a 5-year-old [Hits (Ml his own seat bdt or restraint. A 3-year-old holds his mothers hand while crossing the street, but a 5-year-old looks both ways before stepping</p>
        <p>Microwave Classes Set</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. L. Savage, chairman of the annual Geative Writing GMitest, has announced the deadline for submitting entries is Saturday, April 7.</p>
        <p>Entries should be mailed to Mrs. Savage, P. 0. Box 178, Greenville, 27834.</p>
        <p>Last years winners are asked to return their awards to Mrs. Savage.</p>
        <p>The writing contest is sponsored yearly by the Greenville Womans Gub and winners in the evoit will be announced at the Authors LiuKheon scheduled for Tuesday, May 1.</p>
        <p>of classes will be started.</p>
        <p>Interested persons are asked to regista- by M(Miday, April 2, by calling'^8-1196.</p>
        <p>Members of the Greenville Women of the Moose, Chapter 1308, were given details of the utility bond referendum by spokesman Ed Waldrop at their March business meeting Thursday night.</p>
        <p>Senior Regent Shirley Daughtridge presided at the meeting.</p>
        <p>Utflltles Commission Direewr PTati A WixnlToti Charles Horne showed a slide  /1.LUV1UCS</p>
        <p>Microwave classes will be held by the Agricultural Extension Service Wednesday, April 4.</p>
        <p>Miss Addie R. Gore, home ec(MM&amp;gt;mics extension agent, will conduct the same class at 9 a.m.,</p>
        <p>2 p.m. and 7 p.m. at the T vnnilniA C\nh Agricultural Extension Office, J-&amp;lt;yiinaaie 203W. Third St., Greenville.</p>
        <p>The class will cover microwave care, cooking utoi-</p>
        <p>lVnLa.,^,o.PUta.See J  Nureery.wia present a program</p>
        <p>Martha Beale Komegay was crowned North Carolinas Cherry Blossom Festival princess Saturday night by Senator Jesse Helms.</p>
        <p>The coronation ball and banquet were sponsored by the N. C. Society of Washington.</p>
        <p>Her parents are former Congressman and Mrs. Horace Robinson Komegay of Greensboro and Washington. She is a senior at St. Marys College, Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Martha will represent the Tar Heel State in a variety of official functions in connection with the National Cherry Blossom Festival during April 2-7. The Grand Presentation Ball will be held Saturday, April 7.</p>
        <p>Members of the N. C. Cherry Blossom Court honored included; Laura Cowell; Carolyn Yvonne Fleming; Claire Elizabeth Gibson; Shelly Gay Hefner; Emily Wood Martin; Margaret Anne and Mary Elizabeth Morgan; and Sara Whitley.</p>
        <p>A pre-Easter parade of homes and gard^is on the annual tour has been announced by the Womans Auxiliary of the Mint Museum of Art and the Charlotte Garden Club.</p>
        <p>The tour will include six homes and five gardens with tea served each afternoon in the Tower Suite of NCNB. On view in the Dwelle Gallery of the Mint contemporaneousy will be a special traveling exhibit of the Smithsonian Folk Art and Crafts: The Deep South, a unique presentation of in-depth studies of homes, techniques and lives of individual artists with a representative work by each artist.</p>
        <p>A special (^tional tour of 21 town houses and gardens on Perrin Place will be offered Sunday, April 8. The tour dates are April 5-7 from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and 2-5 p.m. Sunday.</p>
        <p>Meets Tuesday</p>
        <p>Be sure to ripen avocados, bananas and pears at room temperature before storing them in the refrigerator. Use as soon as possible after the refrigerator storage.</p>
        <p>Cakes Decorated</p>
        <p>For All Occasions</p>
        <p>Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>815 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>Members</p>
        <p>program illustrating Greenville areas involved In the recommended water and sewage expansion.</p>
        <p>Senior Regent Dau^tridge announced the Academy of Friendship session will be held in Greensboro May 6 for presentation of the Academy of Friendship awards to eligible coworkers. All current academy members are invited to attoul.</p>
        <p>on Prt^)agation at the Lynn-dale Garden Gub meeting Tuesday at 9:45a.m.</p>
        <p>The meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Guurley White with Mrs. BUI Britt and Mrs. Lee BaU as co-hostesses.</p>
        <p>Winners of the yard-of-the-moqth award for March were Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Page.</p>
        <p>On April 2, Mrs. Ranxma Hut-Delta Omega, Chapter of Ep- ton wUl appear on the television sUon Sigma Alpha, met Tuesday program Carolina Today, evening. Plans were made for Oiannel Nine, to discuss the fund raising activities to benefit ,^rU flower show which is (^n St. Judes ChUdrois Ho^ital. to any member of a Greenville A social was also planned for garden club. Entries for the the foUowing week.  show, to be held April M at the</p>
        <p>The next meeting wUl be held GreenvUle Art Center, wUl close April 17at7p.m.  March 26 at 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>REVIVAL</p>
        <p>Apostle Johnnie Washington</p>
        <p>will be conducting a</p>
        <p>Supernatural Revival</p>
        <p>at the</p>
        <p>Tabernacle of Prayer Church</p>
        <p>1601 Lane St. Exit,</p>
        <p>Off Highway 301 Wilson N.C.</p>
        <p>Revival will begin March 24 through 29.</p>
        <p>Service will begin each night at 7:30 P. M.</p>
        <p>Sunday morning service will begin at 11:00 A.M. Come and bring the sick, afflicted, and unsaved. Mans extremities are yet Gods opportunity. What the doctors cannot do is just right for God.</p>
        <p>You dont have any trouble all you need is faith in God.</p>
        <p>Come and expect a Miracle from God. _</p>
        <p>Personal</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Amit-tizzo of Jamestown, N. Y., have returned home after visiting his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Harris, and his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gaskins.</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>Happy 25th Anniversary Mom &amp;amp; Dad!</p>
        <p>We love you.</p>
        <p>Your Kids,</p>
        <p>Sharon, Peggy, Julie, Carolyn, Hank</p>
        <p>EASTER FABRICS ON</p>
        <p>PARADE</p>
        <p>Shop Whites fabric department for your very special Easter outfit. Choose from a wide array of new Spring fabrics.</p>
        <p>Cooking Is Fun</p>
        <p>By CECILY BROWNSTNE Associated Press Food Edihx* COMPANY SUPPER Fried Chicken  Biscuit</p>
        <p>SkUlet Corn  Salad</p>
        <p>Angelfood Cake SKILLET CORN Fresh c(hti is with us earlier than it used to be.</p>
        <p>6 to 8 good-size ears of corn Va cup butter 1 medium (mion, diced cup)</p>
        <p>1 large green pepper, diced (1 cup)</p>
        <p>1 teaspoon salt 1 tea^xxxi sugar  Vil cup thinly sliced ripe (ilves Vil cup mineed parsley</p>
        <p>kernels (without scoring) from cobs; run dull side of knife down cobs to release pulp; there should be about 4 ciQ)s. In a 10-inch skillet in the hot butter gently cook the cniion and green pq^ until wilted. Add the remaining ingredients and cook, stirring c(xistantly, imtil the corn is cooked through  several minutes. Serve hot. Makes 6 servings.</p>
        <p>MANAGER SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Package Of 15 Saunas</p>
        <p>(Reg. Price $20.00)</p>
        <p>When You Purchase A 4 Month Program Call</p>
        <p>UNITED FIGURE SALON</p>
        <p>756-2820</p>
        <p>Mew Equipment_</p>
        <p>Slim Down For Summer</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>(^United Figure Salon</p>
        <p>Red Oak Plaza</p>
        <p>Mon.-Fri.10A.M.-9 P.M. Saturday 10 A.M.-2 P.M.</p>
        <p>Special Good This Week Only</p>
        <p>Soft And Natural Linen, Gauzes, And Silk Blends. This Season Fashion Look Fabrics By: Razor, Concord, Melco, And Loomtex.</p>
        <p>Our Prices:</p>
        <p>Luxurious 100% Nylon Qiana Soft And Senuous. Good Assortment Of Solid Colors. By Blue Ridge Winkler.</p>
        <p>Our Price:</p>
        <p>Polyester And Cotton Prints. 45 Wide For Girls Of All Ages: By: Dan River, Concord, Forecaster, And A Special Designers Collection-Cacharel By Wamsutta.</p>
        <p>Our Price</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0003" />
        <p>He Wants To Be A Coddled Yegg</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>t) 1879 by Chicago Tribuna N.Y. Nawa 8yn0. Inc.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: TV reporters recently visited a federal prison in Allenwood, Pa., where there are no bars, fences or cells. The inmates including some Watergaters-enjoy their dormitory-styled rooms and tennis and handball courts in a country club setting.</p>
        <p>They even have low-calorie meals for those who want to lose weighti</p>
        <p>I'm a psychology professor, and aside from a few minor traffic violations. Ive had no experience with-crime.</p>
        <p>My question. Dear Abby: How can I get from six months to a year in Allenwood?</p>
        <p>NEEDS A VACATION</p>
        <p>DEAR NEEDS: I cant tell yon how to get into Allenwood, bnt if that tongue in your cheek had ever tasted a loss of personal freedom, yon wouldnt wish prison (even AUen-wfliod) on your worst eneniy.</p>
        <p>After cheeking it out, I learned that most inmates of AHenwood had been transferred there as a reward for good behavior after having served part of their sentence in other federal prisons. Their crimes are usually non-violent, such as fraud, tax evasion, embesxlement, forgery, etc.</p>
        <p>Prisoners must work in food services, laundry or on the prisons 2,(M)0-acre farm. Exercise facilities are available after work to encourage physical fitness.</p>
        <p>Its true that there are no Imucs or fences, but very few in-nutes attempt escape. If they do, their sentences are extended, and theyve learned tlut Uie loss of ones personal freedom is one of the most devastating experiences a free man can endure. Ask anyone whos ever served time.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I enjoyed the exchanges in your column in which women were compared with cars  new models vs. the antiques.</p>
        <p>May I submit that an older woman is like a treasured volume filled with shared history, rich with human experience, overflowing with responsiveness and understanding, abundant with wisdom and a saga of suffering surmounted. It is a story which grows dearer with every reading, to which equally-loved pages are added every day.</p>
        <p>If a man is lucky enough to possess such a masterpiece, who would trade it for a pretty cover and a bunch of blank pages?</p>
        <p>CONSTANCE IN SAN DIEGO</p>
        <p>DEAR CONSTANCE: Possibly a man who doesnt want to road about history, but prefers to write his own.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My friend and I are having an argument. It all started when a mutual friend had a baby boy. The mother is white and the father is black. The babys skin is a light as the mothers.</p>
        <p>My friend says if the boy grows up and marries a white girl, because of his black genes they could have a black baby. Also, she says that in generations to come, even if they all marry whites, a coal-black baby could suddenly appear.</p>
        <p>Can you straighten me out on this?</p>
        <p>PROVING A POINT</p>
        <p>DEAR PROVING: A child can be no darker than the darker parent.</p>
        <p>U yen need help in writing letters of sympathy, con-gratulatfons or thank-you letters, get Abbys booklet How to Write Letters for aO Occasions. Send II ^ stamped (28 cental, self-addressed envelope to"</p>
        <p>Laaky Dr., Beveriy Hills, CaUf. 90212  ^  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>t c</p>
        <p>f '</p>
        <p>Foreign Students To Raleigh Event</p>
        <p>AW, GEE-E-E-Z! - Bobby, a chimp at Marine Worid-Afrlca USA in Redwood City, Calif., had this reaction to being fitted with new summer apparel designed for the cmning season at the amusement park. AU the animal entertainers  and the humans who woHc with them  will be outfitted in style fw the warmer weather when the park is open daily. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>Overbooking Fault Persists</p>
        <p>By MURRAY J. BROWN UPI Travel Editor</p>
        <p>There probably is nothing more shattering for the traveler than to be informed at the airport check-in counter that he cant board the plane he is booked on because all the seats already have been filled.</p>
        <p>Unless it is being told by the desk clerk that there is no room for him at the inn.</p>
        <p>And what with more people traveling these days, such incidents are becoming more common. The fact is that even holding confirmed reservations does not necessarily guarantee you a seat on a plane or a room in a hotel.</p>
        <p>In the travel industry it is known as bumping.</p>
        <p>It is caused by overbooking, which airlines and hotels spokespeople admit is a common practice and which they blame mainly on no-shows, people with reservations who either canct out at the last minute or dont show at all. Overbooking is a necessary evil, they maintain, because otherwise planes would fly with empty seats and hotels would be stuck with vacant rooms.</p>
        <p>Figures for 1978 are not available yet, but about 150,000 passengers with confirmed reservations were bumped by U.S. airlines in 1977, continuing an upward trend in recent years.</p>
        <p>Last year the Civil Aeronau</p>
        <p>tics Board, uiiile noting that those bumped were only a small percentage of the 200 million passengers who travel by air annually, said the numbers were significant in absolute terms and that the existing compensation levels are inadequate to redress the inconvenience and distress often resulting from involuntary bumping incidents.</p>
        <p>So it revised the rules under which U.S. carriers must pay Denied Boarding Compensation to passengers with confirmed reservations who comply with the airlines check-in and reconfirmation procedures and are bumped because of overbooking on flights originating or terminating in the United States.</p>
        <p>The DBC regulation does not apply to flights that are canceled or delayed because of mechanical difficulties, weather or other acts of God.</p>
        <p>'Solutions On Potholes</p>
        <p>DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) -Motorists are grumbling about this iq)rings crop of chuckholes in Iowa roads, but William D. Southers of Davenport has a few suggestions on making the most of the situation.</p>
        <p>In a letter to the editor of the Quad-City Times last week, he offered;</p>
        <p>"Instead of being Irritated by potholes, Davenport should try to find ways to cope with them. I offer the following:</p>
        <p>" I. Advertise Davenport as Iowas Most Humorous City. Our streets are full of chuckles.</p>
        <p>2. Fill them with Army mess-hall tapioca. Its usually black, is durable and hardens quickly.</p>
        <p>3. Let the park department use them for sununer games.</p>
        <p>4. Rent them to misers as places to bury money.</p>
        <p>5. Fill them with unclaimed snow-towed cars.</p>
        <p>6. Help Illinois get federal funding to fill potholes. If theres a bounty on them, they may be stolen. Deftly.</p>
        <p>7. Have Congress declare them a national monument. Tourists will bring millions to Davenport.</p>
        <p>8. Sponsor a road race around them. The one we have now is not sponsored.</p>
        <p>9. Mail them to Congress as a protest against taxes and inflation.</p>
        <p>10. Line them with apricot-colored velour as conversation pits for wine-tasting parties.</p>
        <p>11. Connect them with tunnels to begin a mass-transit system.</p>
        <p>Hm DaUy Reflector, OnenviUe, N.C.Monday, March M, 187-S</p>
        <p>Ring Lost In Italy 35 Years Ago Is Recovered</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) -When John W. King left his high school class ring beside a bed in an Army hospital in northern Italy during World War II, he thought hed never see it again.</p>
        <p>Thirty-five years later, fate proved him wrong.</p>
        <p>On a recent Sunday morning. King was scanning the local newspaper over coffee when an</p>
        <p>Honor Pupils At G.R. Whitfield</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND  The following students were named to the G. R. Whitfield School Honor Roll for the fourth marking period: Judy Boyd, Ray Taft, Trudy Coggins, Nicky Gatlin, Trey Arthur and Alisha McLawhom.</p>
        <p>The following students were named to the Principals List: Anthony Smith, Renee Rice, Michael Neil Harrington, Patricia Lynn Jones, Denise Stancill, Stephanie Tolar, Randy Anderson, Darrell Stephenson, Angela Haddock and Ann Hardy.</p>
        <p>New Chapter Held Meeting In Rocky Mount</p>
        <p>The newly-formed Eastern North Carolina Chapter of the American Society of Chartered Life Underwriters held its first meeting recently in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Members of the new chapter from Greenville are Reginald Fountain Jr., CLU, Jerry P. Fulford, CLU, Max Ray Joyner, CLU, and G. Philip Koonce, CLU.</p>
        <p>Thomas E. Clark, CLU, who serves as vice president, presided at the meeting. Other officers are: Fountain, president; and John A. Forsythe, CLU, secretary-treasurer.</p>
        <p>Speakers for the meeting were Jack Dunlap, (XU, of Jefferson Standard life Insurance Co., and Lawrence L. McCallister, CLU, of The Life Insurance Co. of Virginia.</p>
        <p>The chapter, which will meet quarterly, will hold it next session in June at Walnut Creek Country Qub in Goldsboro.</p>
        <p>Item caught his eye. It read:</p>
        <p>I have a 1939 mans class ring from New Hanover High School in Wilmington which I found in northern Italy during World War II. The initials inside the are T.W.K. The T could possibly be an L or J. Id like very much to return the ring to the owner or his family.</p>
        <p>It almost knocked me out of the chair, King said. I was confidant it had to be referring to me. Id had no thought Id ever get the ring back.</p>
        <p>King was so excited, he immediately called Marvin G. Behling of Beloit, Wis., who had sent the notice to the newspaper. llie two veterans shared their taies by telephone and pieced hither the following account of the rings whereabouts;</p>
        <p>King, a navigator in the Air Force, had spent two months recuperating in the 26th General Hospital in Bari, Italy, after being severely wounded on a mission over Germany. He inadvertently left the ring behind before being transferred to Naples.</p>
        <p>Behling found the ring on the ground outside Florence several months later when he was stationed there with his Medical Ck)rps unit.</p>
        <p>How the ring got to Florence is anybodys guess.</p>
        <p>Behling said the ring fit his finger, and he wore it for some time after returning to the United States in 1945.</p>
        <p>About a year ago, my wife decided to make a memory box, Behling said, explaining why he decided to try to locate the rings owner after all those years. She was looking through my old foot locker</p>
        <p>where Id put the souvenirs when she came across the ring. She asked me about it and I told her the story.</p>
        <p>The couple decided to try to locate the owner.</p>
        <p>It was like a shot in the dark, Behling said. I didnt really think hed still be living there (Wilmington) anymore, the way people move around these days.</p>
        <p>But he was. And to top it off  the ring still fits.</p>
        <p>Nursery School Now Accepting Applications</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau</p>
        <p>nie Nursery School Program operated by the East Carolina University Department of Child Development and Family Relations is now accepting applications for the 1979-80 school year. The last day to apply is April 6.</p>
        <p>The program is open to children who have third or fourtli birthdays by Oct. 15. Although a limited number of spaces are available, any parent of a three- or four-year-old child may apply. Applications may be obtained in Room 128 of the Home Economics building.</p>
        <p>According to Dr. Charles Snow, Coordinator of Preschool Programs at ECU, the program is designed to provide a variety of enrichment experiences which enhance the social, emotional and intellectual development of the children enrolled.</p>
        <p>Further information about the program is available by telephoning 757-6926 or 757-6908.</p>
        <p>BOTH RESIGN</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP) - Chads feuding Christian president and Moslem premier have resigned, and another Moslem leader, Goulouni Oueddei, is forming a transitional government, the Nigerian government radio reports.</p>
        <p>Paascll^Badger-Xactor</p>
        <p>Air Brushes</p>
        <p>Hungates</p>
        <p>Hobbies-Crafts-Arts</p>
        <p>Pitt Plaza, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>^200 REWARD</p>
        <p>for information leading to the arrest and conviction of person or persons responsible for the hit and run accident involving a red MG parked on Ficklen Drive during the concert held March 22,1979 at Minges Coliseum. Call 756-4904 ar^time.</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau</p>
        <p>Twelve East Carolina University students from 10 nations will r^resent the campus at this years International Student</p>
        <p>Sunday G&amp;gt;llision Killed Vyoman</p>
        <p> A Wintervilie woman was killed instantly as a result of a two-car collision Sunday morning, according to State Highway Patrol Tnx^ D. W. Taylor.</p>
        <p>Taylor stated that a car driven by Roy R. Byrum of Ayden, 38, was traveling on rural paved road 1131, a half mile west of WinterviUe.</p>
        <p>Byrums car abided with a car driven by Amos Russell Averett of Wintervilie, 63. Myrtle M. Averett of Wintervilie, 63 a passenger, was killed instantly in the collision. Another passenger in the Averett car, three-year-old David Garrett, was seriously injured. Byrum, Averett and Garrett were taken to Pitt Memorial Hospital, all seriously injured.</p>
        <p>Acc(Hxling to Trooper Taylor, no charges have been filed in the incident.</p>
        <p>Day in Raleigh, March</p>
        <p>'The students, who wiH be accompanied by staff advisor Ron Scronce, include:</p>
        <p>Rony Chitayat, and Marcia Garrison, Brazil; Benoit Her-que, 'France; Nooraini Ismail, Malaysia; Huy Nguyen , Vietnam; Leonor Osorio, Venezuela; Young-key Park, Korea; Fadia Sahhar, Lebanon; Mohammad Saleiman, Iran; Tekuang Chang Tan and Chi Juin Yang, Taiwan; and Bius Umulap, Truk Islands.</p>
        <p>Students from the states other campuses are also expected to participate in the days events, which will feature an address by Gov. James Hunt, tours of the state legislative building and visits to legislators chambers and tours of the Governors Mansion and the state art and natural history museums.</p>
        <p>The day was officially proclaimed by Governor Hunt, who noted that many of the 3,000 foreign students studying at North Carolina colleges and universities will return to their home nations to assume leadership roles.</p>
        <p>Offering Course In Decoration</p>
        <p>Pitt Technical Institute will offer a course, Do It Yourself Decoration, beginning Tuesday, March 27, 7 p.m., at the school.</p>
        <p>The course will cover different kinds of wall coverings and their installation; types of paint; different types of draperies; paneling; limiting; and many more items.</p>
        <p>Registrati(m will be $5 per per-s(Hi for those a^ 18 and dder and not enrolled in public scho(d. Those who are age 65 or (der are exetrqrt from paying the fee</p>
        <p>Court-Watchers Meet Tuesday</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Court Monitoring Programs Steering Committee will meet Tuesday,</p>
        <p>March 27, 7 p.m., at the First Presbyterian Church, corner of 14th and Elm Streets. The committee will hear progress rqxxts on the program and schedule further developments.</p>
        <p>Anyone interested in the court monitoring program or wishing For more information, call PTI to become a volunteer court Continuing Education Division, monitor is invited to attend. 756-3130, extensions 238 or 266.</p>
        <p>pc OPTICIANS</p>
        <p>EYEGLASS SPECIAL</p>
        <p>-X)</p>
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        <p>BERKLEY MALL GOLDSBORO</p>
        <p>114 E. WALNUT DOWNTOWN GOLDSBORO</p>
        <p>General Electric</p>
        <p>TRUOOOAD SAU!</p>
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        <p> Energy Saver Switch helps cut operating cost  Shelves adjust easily for large items  4.67 cu. ft. freezer can reduce shopping trips</p>
        <p> Easy-to-clean ... rolls out on wheels</p>
        <p>Regular Price $549.00 w t Sale Price 450.00 wt</p>
        <p>Save *99"</p>
        <p>2* Save twice with (SE Replacement Allowances plus Special Trainload Prices!</p>
        <p>Replacement Allowances are direct from General Electric with retail purchase of selected models from March 19 through May 20,1979.</p>
        <p>Replacement</p>
        <p>Allowance</p>
        <p>12 CYCLE POTSCRUBBER III DISHWASHER WITH POWER SCRUB CYCLE FOR POTS, PANS.</p>
        <p> PermaTuf* interior won't chip, crack, rust or peel in normal use  3-Level wash action and Multi-Orbit* wash arm get dishes really clean</p>
        <p>Regular Price $529 Our Allowance $79 GE Replacement</p>
        <p>Allowance $50</p>
        <p>GSD1200</p>
        <p>YOUR COST $400</p>
        <p>Replacement Allowances are direct from General Electric on retail purchases of selected models from March 19 through May 20,1979.</p>
        <p>V.A. Merritt &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>207 Evans StrMt Downtown Qreenvllle</p>
        <p>752-3736</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0004" />
        <p>4-lHe Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Monday, March 38, U79</p>
        <p>Fantastic Boom In Greenville</p>
        <p>DIFFICULT SANCTUARY!</p>
        <p>I you dont think things are humming in Pitt County, you only have to look at one important criteria  value of new construction permits issue during the year 1978.</p>
        <p>Oreenville was ranked fourth in the state among cities over 10,000 population with permits totling a whopping $51.1 million for the year.</p>
        <p>That total was behind only Raleigh at $123.7 million, Charlotte at $106.7 million and Greehsboro at $71.3 million.</p>
        <p>For a city the size of Greenville the total value of new construction during 1978 is nothing short of fantastic. It is the result of business, industrial.</p>
        <p>public facilities and home expansion which mirror the growth of the area economy.</p>
        <p>Nor is this likely to be a one-time thing. For the current year the $26 million medical sciences building will soon be under construction adjacent to the Pitt County Memorial Hospital. That will mean the 1979 figures for new construction will be a long way towards meeting the record of 1978.</p>
        <p>There is more to the (Quality of life in a community than bricks and mortar alone. However, the amount of new construction in the area is a good indication that we are living in a prospering section of the nation.</p>
        <p>Wrecking Family Household Budgets</p>
        <p>. Its hardly surprising that consumer price index soared during February.</p>
        <p>Every motorist is aware of the sharp^increases in the price of gasoline and other cost's of transporation. Housing has increased and 6P bas food.  </p>
        <p>It added up to a 1.2 percent increase during the</p>
        <p>THIS AFTERNOON</p>
        <p>month. If continued at that rate, the annual increase would be 15.4 percent, although administration spokesmen are confident of a slowdown in inflation.</p>
        <p>We hope they are correct. The escalating living costs are wrecking household budgets.</p>
        <p>Relaxing Elevator Rules</p>
        <p>ByBILLNOBLnr</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  Sometimes state rules and regulations sin^)ly run against common sense. Its rare that a state agency admits as much and proposes to change the rules.</p>
        <p>But that is exactly what the Labor Department is doing regarding older elevators in North Carolina. A sustained blast at the elevator division from businessmen  and particularly from State Senator Dallas Alford of Rocky Mount has produced the reversal.</p>
        <p>There are some 1,200 old elevators across the state, installed prior to 1938 wheri state inspection first began, which do not have the sophisticated safety devices on more modem lifts; things such as automatic doors, cutoff switches, lights and ladders in the pit rooms, friction brakes.</p>
        <p>But most of those elevators are in the low-rise buildings and typically are for freight or employe use  not public convenience.</p>
        <p>A couple of years ago. North Carolina elevator in-q&amp;gt;ectors at a national convention got involved in a program to bring the old elevators into compliance</p>
        <p>with more modem safety regulation.</p>
        <p>Crackdown</p>
        <p>A little over a year ago, a crackdown started in this state as inspectors told the owners what changes needed to be made.</p>
        <p>In most cases the cost was high. In some cases compliance was impossible to achieve. Besides, says Senator Alford, the in^)ec-tors kept changing their demands from time to time until nobody knew what they were suppo^ to do.</p>
        <p>That is when Alford got busy challenging the state program.</p>
        <p>The elevator division headed by Charles M. Shaw countered Alfords attack by issuing a long list of fatalities and injuries on older elevators. Alford investigated the claims and found only two were valid: a child killed while not authorized to use an elevator, and a burglar who was trapped after breaking into a store. The other alleged fatalities, he argued, occurred during demolition of buildings  to workmen installing or rep?.1ng eqip-</p>
        <p>ment, of in other circumstances which meant the normal aise of the elevator was not at issue.</p>
        <p>BILL</p>
        <p>NOBLITT</p>
        <p>Pushing his case with stacks of letters from affected businessmen, Alford has won a rehearing for the program. That public hearing is today in Raleigh. The conclusion, however, is foregone  the regulations will be relaxed.</p>
        <p>We especially want to notify any owners of such equipment, who are now in the process of bringing their installation into- compliance with our present rules, that we are prqx)sing certain relaxations in the current requirements, Labor Commissioner John C. Brooks says.</p>
        <p>The. cost to modify, or even replace, some of this older equipment to comply with our present regulations is potentially extensive .... this cost may be out of pro</p>
        <p>portion to the limited risk taken by continued use of the equipment, Brooks said.</p>
        <p>Vdimtary</p>
        <p>Pointing to a tradition of voluntary compliance by businesses. Brooks said the approach will be to point out elevator problems and rely on the owner to respond. We believe that we will have done our job pix^rly if we alert the general public that certain of these elevator devices are not equipped with some of the safety features required in elevators installed more currently, Brooks said.</p>
        <p>Signs stating such a warning, and stating that only trained operators may ride the elevators will be required.</p>
        <p>True to bureaucratic tradition, the Labor Department held public hearings before the new regulations were launched last year. Now, says Deputy Labor Commissioner Taylor McMillan, it is unrealistic to expect the average small businessman to attend every public hearing that might affect him. Generally, he says, people arent aware of ^vemment regulations until the inspector is at the door.</p>
        <p>THE INSIDE REPORT</p>
        <p>Jackson-Vanik Debate</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Profound disagreement over strategy toward the Soviet Union which exists within the Democratic party was exposed again March 8 when Rep. Charles Vanik of Ohio signalled his intention to disavow the most famous legislation that bears his name, the Jackson-Vanik amendment.</p>
        <p>His signal.took a curious form: an unsent draft of a letter to President Carter suggesting that he reconunend full trade relations with the Soviet Union (as well as Communist (^ina) because of higher Soviet emigration. In effect, Vanik was proposing that Jackson-Vanik become a dead letter.</p>
        <p>The four-year-old Jackson-</p>
        <p>Vanik amendment requires assurances from Moscow that it will not impede emigration of Jews and other minority groups; otherwise it cannot enjoy normalized trade relations (most favored nation treatment) from the U.S. To that, the Soviets say absolutely nyet. So, Vanik now suggests that the president declare rising Soviet emigration figures constitute assurance enough.</p>
        <p>It is as though Fred Hartley had urged a presidential edict overriding key provisions of the Taft-Hartley labor act. Consequently, there is suspicion that Vaniks letter to the president was inspired by the presidents men, or at least the State Department.</p>
        <p>Vanik flatly denied to us any such adniinistration role.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>209 Cotanche Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Established 1882 Pubiished Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULiAN WHiCHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD  DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, N.C.</p>
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        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
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        <p>and colleagues on the House foreign trade subcommittee, which he heads, believe it was his own idea. Nevertheless, it is most congenial to the administrations views and probably the presidents own thou^ts. And it is most uncongenial to Vaniks erstwhile legislative collaborator, Sen. Henry M. Jackson.</p>
        <p>Jacksoti is the reason Vaniks letter has not been and may never be dispatched to the White House. When Jacksoa got wind of Vaniks initiative, he raised the roof. Vanik told us he has delayed a final deI:ision on the letter until he visits Moscow next month. But a meeting with Jackson on Wednesday mi^t have dissuaded Vanik permanently.</p>
        <p>Whether the Jackson-Vanik partnership is healed, the real argument is between Jackson and the president. Scoop Jackson wants to play hardball with the Kremlin, and Jimmy Carter does not.</p>
        <p>Vaniks March 8 draft letter to Carter relates a Feb. 28 conversation between the</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>WHILE THERE IS TIME TO ACT</p>
        <p>'Die legend is told of a blacksmith in the Middle Ages who, proud of his superior workmanship, always put a special mark on his iron products to distinguish them from the work of inferior competitors. Suddenly he was captured by an invading army and thrown into a dark dungeon. Skilled in making locks and chains, he carefully felt over the chains that bound him, hoping to find some imperfection somevrtiere that would enable him to slip his bfxids. Then he cried out in dismay. He had</p>
        <p>congressman and Soviet Ambassador Anatoliy Dobrynin. Vanik expressed pleasure over 31,000 Soviet exit visas granted last year, then came to the point: In view of the improved climate, I asked him if his country would be willing to provide the assurances required (by Jackson-Vanik)...as a condition of MFN (most favored nation) extension. He was very quick to respond that this was not possible.</p>
        <p>According to Vaniks letter, he then suggested to Dobrynin that it mi^t be possible for Carter to recommend most favored status for both China and Russia. Wii respect to the Soviet Union, I suggested that the presidents recommendation could be based on a finding that the positive trend of Soviet emigration indicates the process of human rights in the U.S.S.R. is proceeding at a much improved level. There went Jackson-Vanik.</p>
        <p>Ambassador Dobrynin reacted very warmly,</p>
        <p>fCoDtimiedonpageS)</p>
        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>The Trail Led To Nome</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Ever since President Carter said that our energy crisis was the moral equivalent of war, I have believed we should have war crime trials for people who contributed to screwing up what little hq&amp;gt;e we had of not being so dependent on the Middle East.</p>
        <p>High on my list of Energy War Criminals are the people who designed the Alaska pipeline so it would point directly toward Japan. After spending $7 billion constructing what was publicized as tbe eighth wonder of the world, these brilliant engineers, scientists and government bureaucrats have now discovered it is cheaper and more practical to send our Alaskan oil to the Far Bast than to the United States.</p>
        <p>Rather than admit they</p>
        <p>made a mistake, the oil consortium is lobbying to get permission to sell our Alaskan oil to Japan, and is suggesting that we buy Japanese oil supplies from the Middle East to make up the difference. At the moment the pipeline is running at halfcapacity because there is a glut of oil on the West Coast, and to deliver it to the refineries on the East Coast the tankers have to go through the Panama Canal, to get the oil to where it is needed.</p>
        <p>The main problem with fin-din9 Energy War Criminals is that no one will admit responsibility for selecting the route over which the pipeline was eventually built.</p>
        <p>One engineer said, It isnt my fault. I was only following orders.</p>
        <p>Whose orders?</p>
        <p>The oil companies all</p>
        <p>decided they wanted the pipeline to go to the coast of Alaska. I would have been shot if I hadnt built it \rtiere they wanted it.</p>
        <p>The heads of the oil companies, of course, claim theyre innocent. Were small potatoes just doing our</p>
        <p>ART</p>
        <p>Public Forum</p>
        <p>Letters submitted for iPubllc Forum must be limited to 300 words.</p>
        <p>To tbe editor:</p>
        <p>It has been called to my attention that a group of North Carolina principals has masterminded a plan for a new state salary schedule for state school personnel. As proposed, this plan (over the next four years) would give principals a salary increase of $4,320 to $7,056 annually, for a percentage range of 22 to 29 percent. Under the same plan, the career teachers would Mdy receive an approximate increase of $190 to $350 a year, for a po-centage range of 1.3 to 2.3 percent.</p>
        <p>One of the tactics used by the principals to justify this enormous difference in the pn^xised salary schedule is the fiction that principals have been left out over the past 10 years. However, statistics prove this to be erroneous. The Index Salary Schedule has been adjusted twice to give administrators bigger increases than teachers. The only time teachers received more than principals was in 1975 when the salary increase was four percent, plus a flat $300, hardly enough to throw anybodys salary schedule out of kilter.</p>
        <p>Schedule three, unofficially referred to as the Kimel Bill, has been introduced into the General Assembly as Senate Bill 242 and House Bill 342. It is not surprising that such a plan exists; however, it is shocking that so many principals, siqierintendents, and legislators support the inequity.</p>
        <p>In my (pinion, this is unjust and both ethically and morally imsound.</p>
        <p>Thelma Allen, President Assn. of Classroom Teadiers GreoivUleUnit'</p>
        <p>BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>jobs. The State Department couldnt negotiate a treaty with Canada to put the pipeline on its territory, so we had no choice but to Iniild it where it is. The environmentalists wouldnt let us bring tbe oil into California for refining so we had no. choice but to ship it through the Panama Canal. We still could have delivered the Alaskan oil at a cheaper price, but they wouldnt let our siqier-tankers go through the Panama locks.</p>
        <p>A retired official of the Panama Canal said, We wouldnt let the siqiertankers through because they couldnt get through. I told them that at the time, and they said I was a troublemaker.</p>
        <p>I went to the pipeline people, and related to them irtiat the former official said about the siqiertankers and was told, niats exactly what he would say. But irtiy couldnt they have - widened the canal?</p>
        <p>No one at the State Department would admit having had anything to do with the Alaban pipeline, and I was referred to the Department of Energy which refused to take responsibility because the agency did not exist at the time the pipeline was built.</p>
        <p>A Canadian government spi^esman said Canada was innocent. We would never tell another sovereign</p>
        <p>(CoatimiedoapageS)</p>
        <p>Savers Suffer A Loss</p>
        <p>By R. GREGORY NOKES AMOdated Pren Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -Americans whove been told all their lives they should have money in a savings account have discovered recently that fdlowing the advice has cost them money.</p>
        <p>Tbe government appears to be about to propose remedies for the situation, which it acknowledges is unfair, especially for the great mass of savers with passbook savings accounts.</p>
        <p>With banks able to pay only 5 percait interest a year for a passbook account, the loss when inflation is 9 percent is obvious. Savings and loan associations can pay 5V4 percoit interest.</p>
        <p>A 9 percent inflation rate reduces the buying power of a dollar by nine cents. A 5 percoit bank interest rate earns back Mdy five cents, leaving a net loss for the year of four cents.</p>
        <p>When interest is compounded and paid quarterly, the interest will be a fraction ofacenthi^er.</p>
        <p>But savers suffered about a four-cent loss for each ddlar of savings in 1978 \rtien inflation was 9.2 percent. They also lost in 1977, when inflation was 6.8 percent; in 1975, when it was 7 percent; 1974, 12.2 percent, and 1973, 8.8 percent.</p>
        <p>And it will h^^ again this year, when inflation is exected to be at least 7.5 percent, possibly much higher.</p>
        <p>In fact, in only three years in this decade have savers managed to come out ahead Ml a savings account.</p>
        <p>Government officials, such as Chairman G. William Miller of the Federal Reserve Board, have been candid in saying the situation has created a disincentive to save.</p>
        <p>He and others are concerned that inflation-weary cMisumers now have an incentive to spend their money as soon as they receive it, buying houses, cars or other goods that will retain value better than will the in-flationailed dollar.</p>
        <p>Their CMicem is supported in statistics that show Americans savings are declining steadily as a proportion of income. Total savings last year were 5.3 percent of income, and in the final three mMiths of the year they sank to a 4.8 percent annual rate.</p>
        <p>The total for the year was slightly higher than the 1977 savings of 5.1 percent, but otherwise was tte lowest in 15 years. Savings were 7.8 percent in 1973.</p>
        <p>The interest rate that banks and savings and loan associations can pay on savings accounts and other time dqiosits  they range up to 8 percent for $1,000 dqxisited for eight years or more  are set by the governments Regulation Q.</p>
        <p>There have been considerable pressure from cMisumer groups and others in recent numths to mxI the regulation and permit banks and savings and loan associatiMvs to set interest limits. A government task force is stwfying the problem.</p>
        <p>Bank regulators and other government officials already are showing which way they are leaning on the question. The cdlective verdict... is</p>
        <p>(CoatiauedcDpageS)</p>
        <p>A Corporate Web That Snares</p>
        <p>discovered his own mark on the chains. He knew now that there could be no escape.</p>
        <p>Most of the things irtch bind us in life are chains of our own forging. 'They have our mark on them. Ungovernable temper, laziness, over-indulgence in food or drink, the bearing of grudges  these are just a few of the many chains that can bind us. No one else locks them abmit us; we do it ourselves.</p>
        <p>Now, before we find ourselves iin the dark dungeMi, is tbe time to do something about these chains.</p>
        <p>Elisha Douglass</p>
        <p>ByJOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The old girl network through which women executives propose their female associates as candidates for corporate boards could easily be a cobweb that traps them instead.</p>
        <p>That was the immediate reaction of Professor Eugene Jennings on learning that the Financial Womens Association of New York had pr(^)osed a list of 10 women it deemed suitable to sit as corporate directors.</p>
        <p>Jennings, an adviser to corporate tiq) executives, some of whom are womai, recalls a similar experience when he was commissioned in 1964 to produce a list of eligible blacks. None was selected.</p>
        <p>The list wasnt totally</p>
        <p>ignored, however. After publication, Jennings received many confidential inquiries. Could he, the callers asked, recommend blacks not on the list? He did, and about 20 were chosen.</p>
        <p>But those listed were avoided. The list, he learned, was a web that aiared, and now he now feels the women have spun another. Pride, he * said, prevents a company from choosing from a public list.</p>
        <p>Jennings, management professor at Michigan State and author of many bodis on corporate personnel and management, iggests the women avoid a disservice to themselves by seeing things from the chairmans view.</p>
        <p>In Jennings opinion, an Mcecutive presented with a pid)lished list of candidates would ask: Why should I use</p>
        <p>it when any number of search firms have larger and better lists that offM privacy?</p>
        <p>. Using the Financial Womens Association list as an example, Jennings said the chief executive would wonder also why he should consider women wdiose experience has been in smaU business, or as cMisultants.</p>
        <p>He would ask other questions also, and all, Jennings believes, might begin: Why should I use their list whMi...</p>
        <p>I could choose from educational institutions, as I have in the past, and get presidents, deans and distinquished sciMitists with national status and prestige?</p>
        <p>I am already receiving biographical data sheets from female executives incpiiring about board opportunities?</p>
        <p>There are many male executives more qualified?</p>
        <p> It is made up predominately of financially oriented women at a time whMi such competency is a glut on boards, since a companys own banks and insurance companies can provide such talent?</p>
        <p>Those listed dont sit on boards already, at a time when so many experienced women, already sitting on one or two corporate boards, are available to serve mi more?</p>
        <p>It appears to be a positionwantedlist?</p>
        <p>Better than publishing a list, said Jennings, would be for the womMi to announce they are in the search business and are willing to hdp corporatkms seardi fM competent board mmnbers.</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0005" />
        <p>Buchwatd Col....</p>
        <p>(Continued rom page 4} government where to build its pipeline.</p>
        <p>My travels finally took me to Nome, Alaska, wh% I met a drunken engineering draftsman in a bar. He admitted, after several drinks, that he was the one who drew up the filial plans for the pipeline.</p>
        <p>I was in Joes bar one night drawing a picture of the lady, Madeleine, who Jilted me, when my boss came in and said they needed the final plans for the pipeline immediately. He grabbed the picture off the barroom floor, and before I knew what happened they had 80,000 guys laying pipe from the North Slope to Valdez.</p>
        <p>Everyone must be furious with you.</p>
        <p>Nah. They gave me a pension for life providing I never set foot outside of Nome, Alaska.</p>
        <p>Evans-Novak . . .</p>
        <p>(Continued horn page 4) Vaniks letter cmtinued, promising his government would react promptly and confidentially. Dobrynin agreed with Vaniks view that a Carter most favored nation request for both communist powers might be accepted by senators who favor it for China but not Russia (a category that includes Jackson). In conclusion, Vanik urged the president to move well before the campaign.</p>
        <p>A P.S. sttes that aU members of the stdMom-mittee &amp;lt;ni trade have read this letter and a strong majority concur with my approach. Actually, before Vanik could p(dl the subcommittee, Jackson protested vehemently.</p>
        <p>Jackson feels that the increase in emigration was forced by Jackson-Vanik ecmomic pressure, and now is no time to let up on the pressure. Soviet emigration is far from free, and Vaniks assertion of much improved human rights in Russia is a blatant overstatement. On March 12, a Ukrainian dissident historian mcMiitoring Soviet compliance with the Helsinki human rights agreement committed suicide under pcriice harassment.</p>
        <p>Whether or not Vanik was acting on his own, high administration officials are aware of and sympathetic to his initiative. Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumeithal felt out Jackson on Vaniks idea (and found him totally unreceptive). Candidate Carter in 1976 pledged support of Jackson-Vanik, which produced Jacksons badly needed help among Jewish voters. But the defection of Vanik could make easier the larger defection of Carter.</p>
        <p>The words of Ciiarley Vanik reflect the ideas of men at the State Department who want even-handed treatment for China and the Soviet Union. In contrast, Jackson would grant trade advantages, including credits, to CMia but withhold them from a Soviet Union now on the march worldwide. Thus the Jackson-Vanik squabble reflects a foreign policy debate of incalculable importance.</p>
        <p>NokesCol....</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) that the costs to society of continuing Regulation Q outweigh the benefits, John G. Heimann, the comptroller of the currency, t(dd a House panel Thursday, referring to several recent studies.</p>
        <p>The Council on Wage and Price Stability, the administrations wage and rice monitoring agency, said Regulation Q is helping ke^ bank profits high, hurts smaller savers and ought to be abolished.</p>
        <p>In the short run, even limited upward adjustments in allowable deposit rates would be helpfiil because these adjustments would increase incentives to hold assets in financial form  reducing price pressures on those physical commodities that are used as a hedge against inflation, it said in a report.</p>
        <p>J, Charles Partee, a member of the Federal Reserve Board, told a House Government Operations subcommittee Thursday that changes may be difficult because the banking agencies dont want to put savings and loan associations, which depoid largely on income from fixedrate home mor-tages, in a cost squeeze.</p>
        <p>But he tdd Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal, D-N.Y., I want to assure you that the regulatory agencies in recent weeks have been analyzing and evaluating a large number of... alternatives in an effort to develop a naore attractive deposit instrument for the small saver.</p>
        <p>Extortion Done On</p>
        <p>In N.C Schools Is Large, Small Scales</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.Monday, Idarch X,</p>
        <p>officials do, and the matter one Wilson County law enforce-goes to court.  ment official put it, You know</p>
        <p>Schoolyard extortion takes its going on, probaWy, in every may forms  from the 50^*nt county and in every school, to protection fee demanded by some extent. the Wilson (bounty student to</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Extortion in North Carolina schools has resulted in as much</p>
        <p>Panelists Talk Needs</p>
        <p>What Employers Expect from Pitt Technical Institutes Graduates was the topic of a recent staff developmental workshop at Pitt Technical Institute.</p>
        <p>The workshop panel included:</p>
        <p>Craig Quick, personnel manager, Pitt Memorial</p>
        <p>Ho^ital; Robert Bowman, per- return for oFbeig beaten up sonnel relations. Burroughs by the student. After the stu-Wellcome Company; Bill</p>
        <p>as $1,100 exchanging hands between two students, as well as put a number of young pupils into correctional centers.</p>
        <p>Officials in a dozen schools said most reported cases of schoolyard extortion involve a single incident  a timid student gives up his or her lunch money to one or more threatening fellow pupils.</p>
        <p>But extortion is also done on a much larger scale  for example by me 12-year-old student at Spei^t Middle School in rural Wilson County who was arrested earlier this month and charged with extorting mwiey from a fellow classmate.</p>
        <p>The classmate says he paid the student 50 cents a day in</p>
        <p>dent was arrested, seven other boys came forward to say they, too, had been bullied into paying him regularly.</p>
        <p>The student is to be tried in juvenile court later this month on five charges of extortion and one charge of robbery. The latter charge stemmed from a playground Incident in which the student allegedly beat up another student and held him down long enough to pull some change from the youths pocket.</p>
        <p>The student is alleged to have extorted $10 to $12 each week from fellow pupils over a three-mcmth ^an.</p>
        <p>School and law enforcement officials said schoolyard extortion is frequently unreported. They agreed that incidences peaked during the ear-</p>
        <p>payments that totaled $1,100 from another Wilson County pu-pU.</p>
        <p>In the latter case, an ll-year-old extortionist ordered a younger boy to take money from his fathers cash box. The younger boys father was self-employed and kept a sizeable</p>
        <p>$2 Million For Endowment</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)  R.J. Reynolds Industries has given the University of North</p>
        <p>HELPING HAND The Community Helping Hand Club anniversary will be held Sunday, April 1, at 2:30 p.m. at the St. James FWB Church in Fountain, instead of in Farm-vUle.</p>
        <p>amount of money at home On orders of the ll-year-old, Carolina a $2 million grant for ly 1970s, when racial tensions the younger boy took as much use in its Carolina Challenge to were high at newly-deseg- as $20 at a time from the cash increase the schools unrest-regated schools, and have de- box. By the time the father re- ^cted endowment funding, dined in the past two to five alized wiiat was happening, the u^c chancellor Ferebee years.  older youth had squeezed $1,100 jayjor said the earnings from</p>
        <p>Most school systems leave out of his son.  an enlarged unrestricted en-</p>
        <p>the handling of such matters to The ll-year-old was convicted dowment will provide funding the discretion of the principal, of extortion and sdjit to a cor- financial aid to students, who often solves the matter at rectional center for youthful of- faculty research and such</p>
        <p>things as library acquisitions.</p>
        <p>a meeting with the offenders fenders.  _    _</p>
        <p>parents.  School  officials  said  they  do  enhancement of Uie universitys</p>
        <p>But sometimes, a local law not haye figures to show how development program, special enforcment agency learns widespread schoolyard ex- institutional studies and awards about an incident before school tortiori is in the state. But, as for exceptional service.</p>
        <p>McDonald, owner, McDonalds Insurance Agency; A. D. McArthur, personnel manager, A. C. Monk, Company; and Ms. Gerry Dail, personnel manager. City of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Several t(^ics were addressed by the panllsts. These tq)ics included required skills, relations with co-workers, attitude toward work and reaction to supervision.</p>
        <p>Forty Pitt Technical Institute faculty and staff members par</p>
        <p>Brother-In-Law Held For Killing</p>
        <p>ticipated in the workshop. Panel members were introduced by Ed Martin, chairman of PTIs Architectural Drafting Department. Ms. Terry Shank, PTI Cooperative Education director, served as panel moderator.</p>
        <p>According to PTIs Dean of Instruction, Dr. E. B. Bri^t, The workshq) was very helpful and meanin^ul to the faculty and staff. This information will be valuable to our instructional pro-</p>
        <p>HIGH POINT, N.C. (AP) -The brother-m-law of a chiro-</p>
        <p>praetor who was slain Saturday is being held in Guilford County Jail without bond on a murder charge in connection with the fatal shooting.</p>
        <p>High Point Police said they arrested 22-year-old Steven Skeen of Archdale in connection with the death of Randy D. Johnson who was killed by a single bullet from a .357-caliber Mangum revolver.</p>
        <p>development.</p>
        <p>Honor Pupils At Pactolus School</p>
        <p>PACTOLUS - Kimberly Farmer was named to the Honor Roll for the fourth marking period at Pactolus Elementary</p>
        <p>Police Capt. E.A. Whitaker School, said the diooting occurred dur- The following students were ing a domestic argument in the named to the Principals List: driveway of the Johnson home. Darrin Briley, Angela Oakley, Whitaker said the dispute ap- David Salzlien and Max Stroud, parntly involved the victim; fourth grade; Mallssa Harris, his wife, Vicki, and her broth- Tina Woodall and Lena Bowen, er, Skeen.  fifth grade.</p>
        <p>Waters Carpet Center</p>
        <p>S J. WatersBuddy Waters</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE,. N.C.</p>
        <p>YOUR MOHAWK-BIGELOW CARPET HEADQUARTERS</p>
        <p>Where Quality Installation Counts" Phone 75B-2541  Night 756^)240</p>
        <p>IS YOUR GETTIN</p>
        <p>You don't have to step on a scale to keep track of what's happening. You can tell by the notches on your belt.</p>
        <p>Each notch out is bad news It brings you closer to diseases of the heart, arteries, internal organs, even diabetes.</p>
        <p>Dieting is the answer. Along with exercise and guidance from your doctor.</p>
        <p>A recent study shows that people who follow 7 simple rules can expect an actual eleven extra years of life. One of those rules:</p>
        <p>Watch your weight.</p>
        <p>We want to help you get all the life that's coming to you.For a brochure listing all 7 rules for longer life, write to: Public Relations, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, RO. Box 2291, Durham, North Carolina 27702.</p>
        <p>Blue Croes Blue Shield</p>
        <p>otNorttiCafofna</p>
        <p>1979 Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, Durham, North Carolina</p>
        <p>OPEN 7AM-MIDNIGHT ,7,,',' 600 GREENVILLE ROAD</p>
        <p>PHARMflC^^ 756-^1</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0006" />
        <p>N.C. Was A Pioneer In Soybean Crop</p>
        <p>ByGAYLON AMBROSE Aaoclate Agrtcidtural 'Extension Agent</p>
        <p>Your field practices continue to be the most important elements in the control of tobacco quality. It will be necessary for inoat farmers to raise the Qualit]ro( iqbacco and control production coata.in order to end up with the same level of tobacco profit as last year.</p>
        <p>Most people will have abput ten percent less quota this year. Even thou^i the support price is predicted to increase from $1.22 to $1.29 per pound, it is possible the crop could average no more then the $1.35 average of 1978. Also, the fact that leaf inventories are currently the highest in ten years will not help the situation. Thats why it is so important to produce the highest quality of tobacco this year thats possible.</p>
        <p>According to the 15 tobacco growers who went on Gov. Jim Hunts tobacco trade mission, European buyers are more concerned about the quality of U. S. tobacco than its price.</p>
        <p>Whats quality? It is easier to answer with a list of some factors that reduce quality such as foreign matter (weeds, gras and suckers), sheets of tobacco with mixed qualities of growth, tobacco mixed from several stalk positimis, and high residues of sucker control chemicals.</p>
        <p>The best thing a farmer can do is to perform practices that will put a healthy root system under the crop. These practices are key factors to uniform early-season growth and production of a high quality cured leaf. Growing a good root system is about all a tobacco crop does the first month after transplanting.</p>
        <p>Here are sonie simple practices that a farmer can do to start production of a quality crop and increase chances for profits:</p>
        <p>- CONTROL WIREWORMS  A soil-applied chemical should be disced into the soil two to four weeks before transplanting. To save money, use only the rate suggested for wireworms, which is much lower than the rate used for nematodes.</p>
        <p>- AVOID FERTILIZER SALTS INJURY  Farmers can avoid injury by applying fertilizer in two bands, sidei&amp;gt;iaced during the tran^anting operation. An increasing number of growers, e^)ecially in the Sandhills and Coastal Plains, are not applying fertilizer until about</p>
        <p>ten , days after transplanting. This practice avoids the fertilizer salts problem and reduces the chances of leaching costly nutrlwits. However, the practice may prove risky, e^&amp;gt;ecially in the edmont, when wet soils may make it difficult to apply the nutrients within ten days after transplanting.</p>
        <p>- AVOID FUMIGANT INJURY- This Injury can be avoided by allowing a three-week pei^ between application and traimanting. Fumigant injury is m^ more likely under cod, wetNswiditions, as experienced last Q)rin^|</p>
        <p>- TRANSPLAIT THE TOBACCO ON X HteH ROW RIDGE  This practice reduces chances of water-damae^ roots during wet periods. ToWco is very sensitive to wet soils. </p>
        <p>Finally, also beware that soil-incorporated tobacco hticides may contritxite to slow or stunted early-season growth. Plant leaves are narrow with restricted growth when this happens to plants.</p>
        <p>Can Aid On N.C. Taxes</p>
        <p>The Internal Revenue Service reported that taxpayers in Fitt County who need help in preparing their income tax forms this year can find free assistance.</p>
        <p>The IRS said that through the Vdunteer Tax Assistance Program (VITA), IRS-trained volunteers will help fill out tax forms of low income and elderly taxpayers who cannot afford a professional tax preparer.</p>
        <p>VITA vdunteers, it was noted, are members of local civic and social organizations, college studits or other persons who have some free time to assist. VITA help is similar to that offered by the IRS offices, but some taxpayers prefer the VITA offices which often are close to home, the IRS reported.</p>
        <p>The agency said that in order to find out the location of the VITA site in this area, persons should call the ms toll-free at 1-800^-8800 any weekday.</p>
        <p>By BILL HUMPHRIES NCSU Agricidtural Informatton</p>
        <p>RALEIGH - Most Tar Heels probably dont realize it, but North Carolina was a pioneer state in developing the wonder crop of modem American Agriculture- the soybean.</p>
        <p>Much of this development occurred as a result of the vision, foresight, and persistence of one man, the late C.B. Williams, an agronomist at North Carolina A &amp;amp; M College, now N. C. State University at Raleigh. ,</p>
        <p>Williams ^nt a half-centry promoting the soybean. He became convinced early in his career that is was oik of the most valuable plants ever to come to the state.</p>
        <p>Few agricultural scientists of his day agreed with that opinion. And most farmer considered sojabeans, as they were commonly called, to be useful only for soil improvement.</p>
        <p>At the time of WUliams death in 1947, the soybean was beginn</p>
        <p>ing to take hold in a big way. It was becoming a U. S. crop of national and worldwide importance.</p>
        <p>U. S. farmers last year produced 1.84 billion bushels of soybeans valued at $11.8 billion. The only farm crop that ranked higher in value was com.</p>
        <p>Soybeans are now the U. S.s leading agricultural export. Shipments this marketing year are expected to take more than 40 percent of the crop.</p>
        <p>Because of continuing international interest in the soybean, and its role in helping to solve the global food problem, the World Soybean Research Conference-II will be held at NCSU March 26-29.</p>
        <p>The program is designed to bring participants up to date on the latest technology and research conducted with the cn^ since the first such conference was held at the University of Illinois in 1975, according to Dr. Billy E. Caldwell, general conference</p>
        <p>Hog Farming Big Business For N.C.</p>
        <p>The safety lamp, invented by Britains Sir Humphrey Davy, was first used in coal mines in 1816.</p>
        <p>SCOTLNf NECK, N.C. (AP)  farming has become a mming business in North Camina in the past several yeare, ranking behind tobacco and broilers in cash receipts from the agriculture industry.</p>
        <p>Not only has the number of hogs marketed in the state continued to increase, but for the first time ever, a person from North Carolina  in fact, from the entire Southeast  was presented the Producer of Tomorrow Award.</p>
        <p>Tony L. Hale, 27, of Scotland Neck walked off with the 1979 honors at the American Pork Congress in Indianapolis, Ind. Hale moves 4,500 hogs through his farm in a year.</p>
        <p>He began his hog farm only six years ago with 80 acres of land, 60 hogs and a lot of dreams. Through techniques he learned from his father and from two years of school at N.C. State  plus a lot of hard work  his farm grew.</p>
        <p>Hales is one of 40,000 hog farms in North Carolina, according to Dan C. Ledford, an agricultural statisticiau with the state Crop and Livestock R^rting Service. ;</p>
        <p>And just as Hale's farm is growing, so are farms across the entire state. In fact. North</p>
        <p>Carolina is the fastest growing pork-producing state in the country, said Z. Tom Farmer, executive secretary of the North Carolina Pork Producers Association.</p>
        <p>The future, in my opinion, is unlimited, Farmer said. With the environmental cimditions and the climatic conditions, were going to see the swine, industry continue to grow.</p>
        <p>North Carolina ranked seventh nationally in the number of hogs and pigs in 1978, and the industry brou^t the state about $300 million in revenues.</p>
        <p>N.C. Pig, Hog Count Increased</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  All hogs and pigs on North Carolina farms as of March 1 totaled 2,220,000 head, an increase of 11 percent from a year earlier and 23 percent above March 1, 1977, according to a recently-completed survey by the state Crop and Livestock Reporting Service.</p>
        <p>This years March 1 inventory consisted of 355,000 head kept for breeding purposes and 1,865,000 head of market market hogs.</p>
        <p>chairman and head of NCSUs crop science department.</p>
        <p>Tar Heel farm^s last year produced their largest soybean crop on record- 37.2 million bushels valued at $240 million. The season average price received by producers was $6.45 per bushel.</p>
        <p>Pioneer agronomist Williams, who was bom in 1871, learned about the soybean while growing up on a Camden County farm. The plant had been bou^t into the area a few years before.</p>
        <p>Williams once said that the first soybeans in North Carolina were brought to Hyde County about 1870 by an old sea captain who obtained them in the Orient. They later ^read to other coastal areas. Farmers called them, Japan Japan peas, coffee berries, and other names, as weU as sojabeans.</p>
        <p>Williams was a member of the first class at what is now N. C. State University and was captain of its first football team. Later, he was its first chemistry instructor, first head of Uk agronomy department, and the first dean of agriculture.</p>
        <p>He served the university for 53 years, a record yet to be equalled. It is said that in his prime he knew more about the crops and soils of North Carolina than any other man. Williams Hall, the NCSU Agronomy Hall, is named after him.</p>
        <p>It was the soybean, however, that occupied a special place in</p>
        <p>April Is For Poultry, Eggs</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  (5ov. James B. Hunt has proclaimed the month of April as Poultry and Egg Moni in Nmth Carolina.</p>
        <p>According to the Governors proclamation, poultry is North Carolinas largest food industry, and provides thousands of jobs for Tar Heels.</p>
        <p>According to Ed Woodhouse, executive director of the North Carolina Poultry Federation, the poultry food industry has grown tremendously over the years and continues to grow at a rapid rate. Gross farm income from state poultry has climbed from $167 million in 1958 to approximately $710 million in 1978.</p>
        <p>Williams life. As one of the first Americans to see great potential in this crop, he conducted variety and fertilizer dononstrations, did breeding work and wrote numerous articles for newspapers and magazines.</p>
        <p>Not only did he aicourage farmers to grow soybeans, but he urged oil mills to buy the beans for crushing, and he made suggestions to numufacturers about using the bean for varnishes, paints and other purposes.</p>
        <p>To some extent, Williams was successful. North Carolina adopted the soybean for a brief period. New varieties were originated; studies were made as to shattering; a two-wheeled mechanical harvester was invented; and the place of the bean in crop rotations was investigated.</p>
        <p>A milestone was reached Dec. 13,1915, when the Elizabeth City Oil and Fertilizer Co. changed over from crushing cottonseed to crushing soybeans. This company thus became the first commercial manufacturer of soybean oil and meal in the United States.</p>
        <p>But then trouble set in, with</p>
        <p>Now Providing Form Pond Info</p>
        <p>According to Mike Regans, Pitt County Agricultural Extension agent, persons now may call the N. C. Agricultural Extension Teletip to obtain information on farmpmids.</p>
        <p>Teletip, a toll-free telqihone information system, now offers five messages on farm ponds. They are as follows: Fertilizing Farm Ponds, no. 2675; (Hearing Up Muddy Ponds, no. 2676; CwitroUing Weeds in Ponds, no 2677; Controlling Algae in Ponds, no. 2678; and Stocking Farm Ponds, no. 2679.</p>
        <p>To use the system, a person must dial 1-800-662-730L and then tell the qperator what number of the messages he/she wants to hear. The system offers messages On 762 h^ics.</p>
        <p>For a directory of the numbered messages, one may contact the Pitt County extension service or call the Teletip number.</p>
        <p>soybeans spreading from the coastal lowlands, and complaints from tobacco growers that the leffune made the soils too fertile. Other kinds of trouble seemed to fdlow the bean when it was planted on the farm for a number of years.</p>
        <p>Eventually soybeans lost favor in North Carolina and the Midwest took them on.</p>
        <p>After Worid War II, however.</p>
        <p>the crop began to make a crnn-eback in the Tar Heel state. Plantings in 1978 exceeded 1.5 million acres, and in 1979, they are expected to ai^roach 1.7 millkm acres.</p>
        <p>The indicated bean crop in the state this year will be (mly 50,000 acres short of the com crop, which has been the leader in planted acreage.</p>
        <p>Feeder Cattle Tele-Auctions</p>
        <p>RALEIGH - Eastern North Carolinas, feeder cattle industry got a boost this week through a grant from the Ckiastal Plains Regional &amp;lt;3onunission.</p>
        <p>According to Agriculture (3om-missioner Jim Graham, the grant of $11,000 will be used by the Nwth Carolina D^artment of Agriculture to hdd teleauctions in the states Ckiastal Plain to improve feeder cattle sales potential. The first teleauction will be held Thursday, March 29, at the Eastern N. C. Livestock Center, Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Buyers from the com belt and western states come to Western North Carolina to buy cattle, Graham said. However, to reach the Coastal Plain, they have to travel much further. This new system will cut down on buyer expense and travel time, and provide more buying strength.</p>
        <p>(Hiuck MUler, head of the states livestock section, explained the system; The teleauction would consist of a conference call with cattle buyers in the western and com belt states. Local buyers or anyone wishing to participate in person could also bid.</p>
        <p>We believe this will improve sales potential for our eastern Norih Carolina cattlemen, Miller continued. In the past, they have bem a little remote for out-of-state buyers, but the tele-auction should put them in the mainstream of feeder cattle sales.</p>
        <p>Students Mark Wildlife Week</p>
        <p>FARMVDLLE - Students at H. B. Sugg SdKX)l celebrated National WUcQife Week March 19-23 by writing reports, creating nature semes .and participating in a drawing cmtest.</p>
        <p>Each day, a different animal was featured in a di^lay in the school library. These dii^lays exhibited sw^ animals as the bobcat, largemouth bass, and white-tailed deer.</p>
        <p>Kindergarteners drew pictures of deer and fish, with fourth and fifth graders prlray-ing bobcats, moles, pheasants and turtles. Special prizes were awarded to two winners in each -Class.</p>
        <p>NEED A TAX BREAK?</p>
        <p>CALL 756-1377</p>
        <p>WATSON ASSOCIATES OF GREENVItLE, INC.</p>
        <p>Duplexes, Quadrapiexes and Apartments are being developed and are for sale</p>
        <p>Call For An Appointment Today</p>
        <p>Dillon F. Watson Etsii S. Gordon</p>
        <p>N.C. Contractors LlconM No. 9029</p>
        <p>Hangs tax^ against (dde-bur,</p>
        <p>jnnson weed and morning-</p>
        <p>gioyi</p>
        <p>rlOft. of row</p>
        <p>Stops broadleaf breakthrough in soybeans.</p>
        <p>This may shock you, but it only takes 2 cocklebur plants per 1 of row to slash soybean yields 26%. (Jp it to 4 plants per 10 ft. and the loss explodes to 41%.</p>
        <p>Thats wlw your soybean herbicide should be Dyanap? Its ERA cleared for use at planting, cracking, or postemerge. It can be piggybacked over your favorite preplant herbicide or tank mixed with Lasso* or Surflan**</p>
        <p>Its a smart choice for cocklebur, jimsonweed, and morning-glory. And its priced to treat you right. Thats Dvanap. See your</p>
        <p>chemical dealer or custom applicator for all the details. (Jniroyal Chemical, Division of Uniroya , Inc., Naugatuck, CT06770.</p>
        <p>'Registered trademark of Monsanto Co. "Registered trademark of Banco Products Co.</p>
        <p>Dyanap</p>
        <p>As with my herbicide, always follow instructions on the label.</p>
        <p>UHIWOYAL Extra stm Id get the tough ones.</p>
        <p>TOBACCO GROWERS TALK ABOUT VIKING SHIP* CALCIUM NITRATE</p>
        <p>Hbm</p>
        <p>iHrnnI</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>Ed Morton, Proctorville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Ill be using 200 lbs. of Calcium Nitrate per acre next year. It finishes right because it goes to work faster. CN' fills out all the way to the top with more body and grain. This year proved Calcium Nitrates performance. We didn't get a rain for 40 days after transplanting and CN' got the crop off to a good start. Also, frost hit one and a half weeks after application and CN stayed with the crop, kept it green, and started it growing. CN has never burned my plant beds and if you have to reset, you dont have to re-ridge. </p>
        <p>VIKING SHIR ,((( WeMV Hydro</p>
        <p>Calcium nitrate</p>
        <p>VmiNO SHIP BRAND AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS</p>
        <p>SALES REPRESENTATIVES WIISON &amp;amp; GEO. MEYER &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>Home Office: 270 Lawrence Avenue South San Franclaco CA 94080 (415) 871-1770  Viking  Shipn Calcium Nitrate</p>
        <p>East Coast; One Koger Executive Center. Suite 108 Norfolk VA 23502 (804) 461-8925  'S manulaclur^ ay</p>
        <p>Norsk Hydro.' Oslo. Norway</p>
        <p>The results expressed by this leslimdnial reltect the grower s analysis ol the eltec-tivenesi ol Calcium Nitrate. Similar use by others may produce Oillerent results</p>
        <p>MUCH MORE THAN A GREAT FERTILIZER!</p>
        <p>Swift Chem. Co.</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>BftyslfiLEfimLSfiDiififi</p>
        <p>Farmvllle</p>
        <p>See Your Fertilizer Dealer Pamlico Chem. Corp.</p>
        <p>Greenville Morgan Grain &amp;amp; Fert. Co.</p>
        <p>Farmvllle</p>
        <p>Blount Fertllber</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>USS AgrI, C-hem.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0007" />
        <p>x-POW Loathes Marine Deserter</p>
        <p>arwood's Attorney Is For Compassion</p>
        <p>The DaUy Reflector, GreenvtUe, N.C.Monday, March X, im7</p>
        <p>ERWIN, N.C. (AP) - When ex-POW Jim Stricand looks back on the 22 months he spent in a North Vietnamese prison camp, he remembers with bitterness a Marine private vi^o helped stand guard over American prisoners.</p>
        <p>Strictland said the private was Robert A. Garwood  who returned home to Illinois from Vietnam Sunday to face charges that he deserted his unit and sided with the North Vietnamese in 1965.</p>
        <p>Theres no question in my mind that he helped them, Strictland said, recalling the day he met Garwood 11 years ago.</p>
        <p>Strictland, then 20, said he watched as a tall Caucasian, wearing black pajamas and carrying a Soviet-made assault</p>
        <p>Inducted By Honor Soc.</p>
        <p>rifle, helped North Vietnamese soldiers herd three new American prisoners into the camp.</p>
        <p>He said he silently wished for an M-16 rifle.</p>
        <p>Later, Strictland said, the dark-haired guard casually walked over to the bamboo pen where Strictland and several other prisoners were being held and introduced himself.</p>
        <p>He said his name was Robert Garwood, Strictland recalled in an interview in his home near Erwin.</p>
        <p>It was a name he would never forget. And one he had not expected to hear again  until he picked up a newspaper recently and read that Garwood was being returned to the United States.</p>
        <p>Strictland, now a shipping clerk in Dunn, recognized Garwoods picture in newspapers and Ml television as the man he saw living and working with North Vietnamese soldiers in 1968 and 1969.</p>
        <p>Garwood carried enemy weapons, guarded and interrogated prisoners and held urging prisoners to</p>
        <p>disease  legacies of malnutri-tiMi and the fetid environmait of the prison camp.</p>
        <p>He said he and a lot of other soldiers paid a price in Vietnam, and he thinks Garwood should too.</p>
        <p>I dont think they ought to blow him away or anything, he said. But Ill say this: Im going to be very bitter if they dont do something with him.</p>
        <p>Revival</p>
        <p>Beginning March 26-April 1</p>
        <p>Ballards Crossroads Missionary Baptist Churcli</p>
        <p>Kenneth Cloud, Evangelist</p>
        <p>G.Dewey Allen, Pastor</p>
        <p>7:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>Nursery Provided</p>
        <p>ttl</p>
        <p>GARWOOD COMES HOME - Marine PFX: Robot Garwood emo^ from car at Great Lakes Naval Training Center cm Sunday. Garwood flew into Chicagos OHare International airport from Tokyo and was whisked to Great ijike after spencUng 13 years in Vietnam. Gun-</p>
        <p>By MARC WILSON Associated Press Writo-</p>
        <p>GREAT LAKES NAVAL TRAINING STATION, 111. (AP)</p>
        <p> Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood came home accused as a traitor, speaking with an accent and as a stranger to his loved ones. But he cried at returning to the United States.</p>
        <p>I love you America, Im glad to be home, he shouted, with a big smile on his face, over the din of reporters and photographers.</p>
        <p>On adrice from his attorney, Garwood refused comment Sunday 1 preliminary charges that he deserted in time of war, urged American soldiers to quit flghting and unlawfully conunu-nicated with the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War.</p>
        <p>The only one who knows what has gone on in the last 14 years is Bobby Garwood, said Dermot Foiey, his cirilian attorney. Lets give him his constitutional right to presumption of innocence and remember that the last 14 years have not been very good for Bobby. Lets give Bobby the additional benefit of compassion.</p>
        <p>Garwood, accompanied by three Marine officers, arrived in Chicago on Sunday after a 15-hour flight from Okinawa, Japan. He was k^t away from reporters at the airport and was seen only for about one minute when he entered the Navy ho^ital here for medical tests.</p>
        <p>He was taken to a room for a reunion with relatives, including his father and stepmother, all from Greensburg, Jnd. They will have three days to visit with him.</p>
        <p>Marine Corps officials said Garwood read letters from his famUy during the plane trip. They brought tears to his eyes, knowing that his family still supported him, said Cq&amp;gt;t. Bob Bowen. He was 18 when he saw his younger brothers and sisters, and now they have fanndlies of their own. He was Just happy to hear about their lives.</p>
        <p>And he was Just hq&amp;gt;py to talk to Americans in En^ish. He hadnt i^en much in English in a long time  hes got a definite accent. But he was Just happy to order American food in English.</p>
        <p>U. Col. Arthur Brill said Garwood isnt under arrest.... He could get iq? and leave if he wanted to, but he doesnt want to.</p>
        <p>Foley cwnplained that the Marine Corps is holding up</p>
        <p>to throw down their weapons and refuse to fight; attempting to cause insubordination; disloyalty and refusal of duty among fellow POWs; unlawful dealings with the enemy; and misbehavior while a prisoner of war. Conviction could bring the death penalty.</p>
        <p>Garwood disappeared Sept.</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau</p>
        <p>Dr. Mohammed A. Ahad, an associate professor in the East Carolina University Schooi of Nursing, has been inducted into Sigma Theta Tau national honor society for nurses.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ahad was formally made a member of the society in a recent ceremony here conducted by ECUs Beta Nu chapter, at which Dr. 'Thomas Brewer, ECU Chancellor, was guest speaker.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ahad had basic nursing education in India and London and graduate education at Columbia University. Before Joining the ECU faculty, he had an extensive career in India and at Fairieigh Dickinson Univeristy in New Jersey.</p>
        <p>He is president of the International Center for Nurses in New</p>
        <p>28, 1965, vrtlle based mar Da IT, .KrZIS</p>
        <p>nery Sgt. David Langd(^, Garwoods official escmt, is behind Garwood. Garwood, 33 of GreeiMburgb, Ind., is accused of desertimi and (xdlaboratkm with the Viet Cong. (AP Laser-photo)</p>
        <p>rinef listed him as a POW, a  '  '  JSf  T</p>
        <p>slatus which Ihe Vietnamese CouncUol Nurses in Montreal, deny.  The  author  of  two books and</p>
        <p>Foley says Marine officers numerous articles. Dr. Ahad has tried to, have Garwood declared done research on innovations in-a deserter 10 years ago but troduced in the practice of nurs-</p>
        <p>failed because of lack of evidence.</p>
        <p>ing in India by foreign-retumed nurses.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ahad and his wife, Raneezunnisa, are the parents of two children.</p>
        <p>Symposium On Death, Dying</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau</p>
        <p>Dying  A Part of Living, a symposiuip on the needs and resources available for terminally ill patients and their families, will be held at East Carolina University Wednesday, March 28.</p>
        <p>The afternoon and evening programs, beginning at 3:30 p.m., is sponsored by ECUs Beta Nu chapter of Sigma 'Theta Tau honor society in nursing, and is scheduled for the Willis Building at the comer of First and Reade Streets here.</p>
        <p>Symposium topics and ^)eakersare:</p>
        <p>The History of the Movement to Improve Taminal Care, Including the History and Status of the Hospice Movement, Carl Whitney, director of Hospice of North Carolina, Inc., Winston-Salem, and The Gaieral Needs of and Resources Available for the Terminally 111 Patient and</p>
        <p>His Family, Mary Kay Kirkpatrick and Mary Ann Rose, ECU School of Nursing.</p>
        <p>Also featured will be a panel discussion on types of approaches to terminal care with Hiliary Wood, clinical nurse specialist for N. C. Memorial Hospitals medical oncology division, C!hapel Hill; Diane Wildman, N. C. Memorial Hospital social worker; Dr. Mary Rabb of the Pitt County Memorial Hospitals hematology and oncology department; Rev. Dan Earnhardt, director of the Wesley Foundation, Greenville; and Jeff McAllister, director of the Pitt (]!ounty (Council on Aging.</p>
        <p>The symposiom is open to all persons interested in learning more about terminal care. Further information is available from the ECU School of Nursing, 757-6061.</p>
        <p>PRINCIPALS UST</p>
        <p>FALKLAND  The following students were named to the Falkland Elementary School Principals List for the fourth marking period: Bridgett Cobum, Doris Brown, 'Troy Barnes, Nicole Beamon, Jo Ann Campbell, Lisa Deans, Sandra Haddock, Niki Vandiford and Karen Witherington.</p>
        <p>classes defect, Strictland said, adding that the Vietnamese called Garwood Bobby.</p>
        <p>But Strictland said he never saw Garwood harm any of the prisoners or fire on American tnx^s. In fact, he said Garwood did small favors for the prisoners  such as stealing eggs for them  and was apparently homesick for America.</p>
        <p>Strictland had been a rifleman with the l%th Infantry Division for only a few weeks when his unit walked into an ambush near Da Nang in January 1968. He said he and two other soldiers were captured and forced to walk barefoot for several days through mountains to a series of prison camps.</p>
        <p>He met Garwood a few months later at a prison camp in South Vietnam near the Loa-tian border and said he quickly learned not to trust him.</p>
        <p>Everything you told him, he told the Viets, Strictland said. I didnt want to talk to him. I didnt want to have anything to do with him, but 1 saw him a tot.</p>
        <p>Garwood was returned Sunday to Great Lakes Naval 'Training Center in North Chicago, m., for medical tests and to see his family.</p>
        <p>'The U.S. government listed Garwood as a prisoner o war for 13*/^ years, but the Vietnamese government announced recently that he had changed sides to the Vietnam Liberation Army in 1965.</p>
        <p>Garwood has refused to answer any questions on a lawyers advice.</p>
        <p>During the 22 months Strictland spent in prison camps, he lost 30 pounds and constantly battled malaria and diarrhea. He said he now has an incurable bone condition and a skin</p>
        <p>Offering Workshop In Business Basics</p>
        <p>'The Basics of Business will be theme of the Small Business Workshop to be dumsored by the Coastal Plains Chapter of the Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE).</p>
        <p>tors, Doug Starr, senior vice president. Planters National Bani an3 Trust Co., Marketing, Advertising and Public Relations, Frank</p>
        <p>'The workshop will be held 'Thursday, March 29 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn in Greenville, according to Ed Williford, chairman of workshop.</p>
        <p>The purpose of the Small Business Workshop is to discuss some of the problems and suc-</p>
        <p>Longino, Jr., president of Allen and Longino; Management Assistance to Small Business, Dr. R. B. Keisch, School of Business, ECU; and Record ^ Ke^ing,\Taxes and Insurance, Frank Freuler, CPA partner, Lowrimore, Warwick and Co.</p>
        <p>about $150,000 in back pay, say- cesses of owning and operating a ing Garwood needs the mwiey business.</p>
        <p>fcNT legal fees.</p>
        <p>Garwood, who will be 33 next Sunday, will be debriefed sometime this wedc. Brill said. The military reportedly hopes</p>
        <p>sible other POWs still in Viet</p>
        <p>nam.</p>
        <p>The Marines have givoi no details about the charges filed against Garwood last week:</p>
        <p>Special guest speakers and the topics they will discuss are as follows: Importance of Small Business to Society, Dr. Jim Bearden, Dean of the School of Business, East Candna University; Forms of Business Organization, Dr. J. E. Hamblem, attorney. School Of Business, ECU; Source of Capital, Mike OCalla^, loan</p>
        <p>desertimi in time of war; solic- office of Snudl Business Ad iHng American combat fcsrces ministratiim; Financial Fac-</p>
        <p>R. L. Martin, chairman of the SCORE Coastal Plains Chapter No. 426 will preside at the workshop. SCORE members will be present to nieet with the participants and to discuss the services which the local SCORE chapter offers.</p>
        <p>R^tration fw the woitahop is $10 po* persm vdch includes coffee breaks, lunch and a variety of materials. Persons who are interested in attending the workshop may contact the Greenville Area Chamber Conunerce at 752-4101.</p>
        <p>WELLCOME TO YOUR RULM WITH AGOOD SWIFT KICK.</p>
        <p>see what a good Swift* kick can do for crop or</p>
        <p>When your fields are eady and its time for fertilizer, give us a call. Well be right out to spread Swift Certified Harvest King? Evenly and smoothly, just as you would.</p>
        <p>This service leaves you free to keep pre paring your soil for planting and to keep up with your other chores. Then, in no time, youll</p>
        <p>forage production.</p>
        <p>tittia</p>
        <p>Howell &amp;amp; McClellan Sts. Greenville, N.C. Telephone 756-4330</p>
        <p>*Rc^lered tiddemarks 0 Swift Affvultural Chemicals Corporation</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0008" />
        <p>-The Dily Reflector, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Monday, lierch, 197</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Hogs</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -The overall trend on the North Carolina hog market today was steady to .75 lower. Wilson, 47 50; Rocky Mount, 46.50; Oin-ton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Lanrinburg and Benson,</p>
        <p>48.00. Salisbury, 47.50. Spiveys Comer, 4.00; and Kinston</p>
        <p>47.00.</p>
        <p>Poultry</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -The North Carolina F.O.B. dock broiler market was steady, siq&amp;gt;-plies adequate, demand very good, weights desirable. The dock weighted average price for this week is 44.25 for small purchases of plant grade broilers picked up at processing plants. Estimated slaughter today was 1,504,000.</p>
        <p>Following are selected II a.m. stock market quotations:</p>
        <p>Burroughs  WI'A</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications Prd. 73'A Heublein  28^</p>
        <p>Jeff Pilot  Vj</p>
        <p>TrI South  3</p>
        <p>Wicks  U4</p>
        <p>Wachovia Realty</p>
        <p>Eckerds  2S^</p>
        <p>Central Soya  13Vj</p>
        <p>Hardees  HVk</p>
        <p>Integon  1&amp;lt;'k</p>
        <p>Fleldcrest  '/</p>
        <p>Hatteras Income  IS</p>
        <p>Vepco  13'A</p>
        <p>Eaton  384k</p>
        <p>John Deere  364k</p>
        <p>P.C  80'A</p>
        <p>Piedmont Aviation  1144</p>
        <p>Conner Homes  T-'s</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTER Combined Insurance  l8Vk-Vj</p>
        <p>NCNB  134k</p>
        <p>Little Mint  '/j-44</p>
        <p>Planters Bank  1444  1744</p>
        <p>Lowe  1-44</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market pulled back a bit today amid caution over oil-price prospects.</p>
        <p>The noon Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 3.63 at 856.12.</p>
        <p>Losers outnumbered gainers by about a 7-4 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.</p>
        <p>Analysts said the market was bracing for more moves toward hi^r oil prices from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, meeting in Geneva on production and prices.</p>
        <p>An Iranian official said his country and others considered to be among OPECs pricing militants were backing a 29 percent price increase.</p>
        <p>The dollar declined in European foreign-exchange markets following that development.</p>
        <p>In addition, brokers said the news reached the stock market at a time when it seemed to be vulnerable to a setback after three consecutive weeks of gains.</p>
        <p>Many of the North American oil and gas issues listed (m the American Stock Exchange advanced amid expectations of upward pressure on energy prices. Houston Oil &amp;amp; Minerals was iq) at 18% and Dome Petroleum climbed 4% to 115%.</p>
        <p>That helped the Amex market value index rise .46 to 177.26, reaching its hipest levels since the index was inaugurated in 1973.</p>
        <p>The NYSEs composite index, meanwhile, dropped .21 to 56.20.</p>
        <p>Volume on the Big Board came to 11.15 million shares by nomitime, against 15.35 million at the same point on Friday.</p>
        <p>(AP) Midday  stocks:</p>
        <p>High  Low  Last</p>
        <p>32&amp;gt;/3  334k  324k</p>
        <p>13&amp;lt;A  13&amp;lt;A  13'/4</p>
        <p>32VII  33  32&amp;lt;/k</p>
        <p>544k  54&amp;lt;/k  544k</p>
        <p>114k  114k  114k</p>
        <p>144k  144k  144k</p>
        <p>53W  53  52</p>
        <p>37'A  37'A  37'A</p>
        <p>AbbtLab Akzona Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Alrlln Am Baker Am Brands Amar Can Am Cyan Am Motors Am Stand AmTT Boat Food Bath Steel Boeing Borden</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>8'/j</p>
        <p>36V&amp;lt;  36</p>
        <p>8V3  84k</p>
        <p>424k  4244  4244</p>
        <p>6I'/3  614k  614k</p>
        <p>214k  21'/k  214k</p>
        <p>234k  23V7  23'/j</p>
        <p>654  65&amp;gt;A  654k</p>
        <p>26'/3  26'/4  26'A</p>
        <p>Burl Ind CannonMllls n CaroPwLt Calanasa Cent Soya Champ Int Chassla Sys Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis Conagra s Conti (jroup Della AIrL OowChem duPonl Duke Pow EastnAIrL East Kodak Eaton Corp Esmark Exxon Firestone FlaPowLf Fla Pow FordMot Per.^KesS Fuqda Ind GenDynam s Gen Elec Gan Food Gen Mills Gan Motors GanTdSiEI GaPacIf Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell IBM</p>
        <p>Inti Harv Int Paper IntT T K mart KalsrAlum Kane Mill Kraftinc Kroger Co LIgget Grp Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite McDermott Mead Corp MlnnMM Mobil Monsanto Nabisco Nat Distill OllnCp Owenslll</p>
        <p>Philip Morr PhlllpsPet Polaroid Proct Gamb Quaker Oat RCA</p>
        <p>RalstnPur Republic StI Revlon Reynold Ind Rockwel Int RoyCrown StRegis Pap Scott Paper SeabCst Lin SealdPow SearsRoeb Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co South Ry Sperry Rnd Std Brands StdOil Cal StdOII Ind StdOilOh Stevens JP Texaco Inc TexEastn Texasgult UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide UnOil Cal Unlroyal US Steel Westgh El Weyerhsr WInnDIx Wool worth Xerox Cp</p>
        <p>138</p>
        <p>174k  1744</p>
        <p>23&amp;lt;/&amp;gt;  2314</p>
        <p>33Vk 23 48  474k</p>
        <p>13'/k  13&amp;gt;/k</p>
        <p>244k  24</p>
        <p>274k  2744</p>
        <p>lOVk 10 4044  401/3</p>
        <p>17  164k</p>
        <p>26  254k</p>
        <p>18'/3  18'A</p>
        <p>284k  28H</p>
        <p>3'A  39</p>
        <p>384k  38Vk</p>
        <p>137&amp;gt;/k 194k  19Vk</p>
        <p>74k  744</p>
        <p>6444  64Vi</p>
        <p>M'/7  384k</p>
        <p>26% 26 52%  S14k</p>
        <p>13%  13Vk</p>
        <p>2744  27&amp;lt;/k</p>
        <p>31  304k</p>
        <p>43&amp;lt;/k  43%</p>
        <p>184k  184k</p>
        <p>11  104k</p>
        <p>344k  34%</p>
        <p>48V3  48%</p>
        <p>32%  XP/i</p>
        <p>2PH,  24%</p>
        <p>56%  564k</p>
        <p>2t4k  28%</p>
        <p>204k  29H</p>
        <p>19%  19%</p>
        <p>174k  17%</p>
        <p>2844  &amp;gt;v284k</p>
        <p>3644  ,B6%</p>
        <p>114k  ni44</p>
        <p>27%  21%</p>
        <p>304-.  20%</p>
        <p>66  6S14</p>
        <p>314%  313%</p>
        <p>40%  40%</p>
        <p>46%  46</p>
        <p>28%  28%</p>
        <p>25  244k</p>
        <p>30%  20%</p>
        <p>8% 8 46%  46%</p>
        <p>40%  4C/k</p>
        <p>37%  37&amp;gt;/k</p>
        <p>19%  184k</p>
        <p>474k  4744</p>
        <p>2844  28</p>
        <p>21%  21%</p>
        <p>28% 28 57%  57'k</p>
        <p>74'/3  74</p>
        <p>50%  49%</p>
        <p>23%  23%</p>
        <p>20%  30%</p>
        <p>18%  18%</p>
        <p>20%  20%</p>
        <p>29%  '/l</p>
        <p>24%  24V3</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>34%  34%</p>
        <p>41  40%</p>
        <p>80% 80%</p>
        <p>23%  23%</p>
        <p>364k  2644</p>
        <p>1144  11%</p>
        <p>26% 26% 48%  48%</p>
        <p>58%  58</p>
        <p>37%  37%</p>
        <p>13%  13%</p>
        <p>32%  32%</p>
        <p>18% 18% 25%  25%</p>
        <p>22% 22% 2044  20%</p>
        <p>W/7  10&amp;gt;/3</p>
        <p>8% 8% 13%  13'/k</p>
        <p>52V3  52%</p>
        <p>47  4644</p>
        <p>24%  2344</p>
        <p>47%  47%</p>
        <p>59%  59%</p>
        <p>51%  50%</p>
        <p>1444  14%</p>
        <p>26% 26 4144  4144</p>
        <p>25&amp;lt;/k  25</p>
        <p>16% 16% 51'/3  51%</p>
        <p>39%  39</p>
        <p>63%  63</p>
        <p>644  6%</p>
        <p>2444  24%</p>
        <p>20%  19%</p>
        <p>32  3144</p>
        <p>2844  28%</p>
        <p>22% 22 58%  58%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>23&amp;gt;/3</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>13&amp;gt;%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>4044</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>13T/1</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>64%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>13%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>3644</p>
        <p>1144</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>314%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>4744</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>31%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>571/9</p>
        <p>74Vj</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>80%</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>2644</p>
        <p>1144</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>58%</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>131/j</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>22%</p>
        <p>2044</p>
        <p>lOVj</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>1444</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>4144</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>16Vj</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>(OoaOnuedtnm pagel)</p>
        <p>Washington to conclude the treaty and in November announced that they had reached a tentative agreement.</p>
        <p>But in the interim, the rest of the Arab world condenuied Sadat fra* nuiking peace with Israel without getting a guarantee of Isradi withdrawal from all the territory it had taken in a 1967 war. Sadat requested tighter links between the peace treaty and solution of the Palestinian problem, while the Israeli Cabinet raised objectimis of its own.</p>
        <p>From the verge of peace, the two sides again stepped back. The negotiations became more rancorous this time and threatoied to break down altogether. Finally, Carter went to Cairo and Jerusalem eariier this mmith. His mission seemed about to fail before a dramatic breakfast meeting with Begin resulted in the final compromises.</p>
        <p>Under the final agreement, Israel will begin withdrawing from the Sinai within three months, vacating the principal city of El Arish.</p>
        <p>Within nine months, Israeli troops are to withdraw to a line drawn between El Arish in the north and Ras Muhanunad in the south, giving Egypt two-thirds of the Sinai, including its oil fields.</p>
        <p>After M mmths, Egypt and Israel Are to exchange ambassadors and Israel must withdraw to its 1967 border within three years.</p>
        <p>Meanvriiile, the two sides must begin talks on the Palestinian autonomy plan within a month. They have agreed on a goal of completing those talks within a</p>
        <p>year, paving the way for the election of a Palestinian council to govern the West Bank and Gaza.</p>
        <p>The extent of that councils power is only one of the difficult questions to be solved. Others include the fate of Israels settlements in the area, the status of East Jerusalem, and the role of hostile entities like the Palestine Liberation Organization and Jordan.</p>
        <p>If they cannot be solved to the mutual satisfaction of Egypt and Israel, another crisis is possible. The treaty is vulnerable, one American official, who asked not to be identified, said last week.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the American role in the region seems certain to grow. Part of Israels bargain was a new bilateral agreement with the .United States in vriiich the Carter administration pledged $3 billion in military grants and loans to pay for the Sinai withdrawal. It also promised to accelerate delivery schedules of sophisticated F-16 filter jets to the Israelis.</p>
        <p>Moreover, the administration guaranteed Israel a 15-year oil stq)ply if it cannot obtain oil (i the world market and promised pditical support in case the treaty breaks down.</p>
        <p>For Egypt, the administration has promised an initial $1.5 billion in military grants and loans to buy new weapons. In addition, the administration is weighing Egypts enormous economic devel(^ment needs. Officials say the economic assistance program is likely to be financed by the World Bank, spreading the burden to Western Europe and Japan.</p>
        <p>Peace Treaty... Obituaries Idi Amin Said</p>
        <p>To Be Trapped</p>
        <p>Avorett</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Mrs. Myrtle McLawhom Averett, 63, wife of Amos R. Averett, was killed in an automobile accident near Winterville Sunday.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be hdd Tuesday, 2 p.m., in the WUker-son Funeral Chapel by her pastor, the Rev. WUlis WUson. Burial wOl be in the Reedy Branch F. W. B. Church Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Averett spent most of her life in the Winterville community and was employed at A. W. Ange and Company, Winterville. She was a member of Reedy Branch F. W. B. Church.</p>
        <p>Survivors: her husband, Amos R. Averett; a son, Russell Averett of Ayden; a daughter, Mrs. Robert Garrett of Winterville; a brother, Bruce A. McLawhom of Jacksonville, Fla.; a sister, Mrs. Cecil Ed-</p>
        <p>Study Topic Is Annexation</p>
        <p>Land annexation will be the topic of study at this months general meeting of the League of Women Voters.</p>
        <p>Scheduled for Tuesday at 8 p. m. in the First Presbyterian Church, the meeting will focus on Greenvilles annexation plans. Featured speaker is Bobby Roberson, GreenviUe City Planner, who will present an overview of laws regulating the process of annexation. He also will exjplain \riiy a city considers annexation, as well as the status of local plans.</p>
        <p>All persons interested in how land annexation might affect them in Greenville and Pitt County are invited to attend.</p>
        <p>Poll Shows Opposition To U.S. Paying The Bill</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>8:15 p.m.  Granville Chapter, National Secretaries Association meets at Three Steers 8:30 p.m.  Rotary Club meets 8:30 p.m.  Host Lions Club meets at AAoose Lodge 8:30 p.m.  Pilot Club meets at Ramada Inn 8:30 p.m.  Greenville TOPS Club meets at Planters Bank 8:45 p.m.  Optimist Club meets at Tom's Restaurant 7:00 p.m.  Eastern Pines Volunteer Fire Department meets at fire department 7:30 p.m.  Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Our Redeemer Lutheran Church.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Order of the Rainbow for Girls meets at AAasonic Temple 8:00 p.m.  Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the AAoose 8:00 p.m.  Grimesland AA meets at Grimesland AAethodist Church TUESDAY 7:00 a.m.  Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 a.m.  Progressive City Kiwanis Club meets at Ramada Inn 10:00 a.m.  Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Moose Lodge 10:00 a.m.  Mothers and Toddlers II meet dh 14th Street Extension. Telephon^58-8408 10:00 a.m.  AAothers and Toddlers I meet at 2310 Deal Place, call 758-2933</p>
        <p>2:30 p.m.  Pitt County Senior Citizens meet at Senior Citizens Social Center 8:00p.m.-WIthIa Council, Degree ot Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m.  Greenville Community Chorus meets at Memorial Baptist Church</p>
        <p>Vote Tuesday</p>
        <p>Tomorrow to the day for a vote in the N.C. General Assembly on the question of whether funding of health professional sdiools wiU be reduced for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.</p>
        <p>The proposed reductloo of funds was defeated in the House of Represertatives in earty March, but was apiMov-ed by the Senate in the amoimt of iqiprozlmately $45 million Mar. 14. In a Senate-House Committee Conference, ttie House agreed to the Senates apfnoved rescission. If iq)proved by both houses Urdmtow, ttiese an-ttcipated funds wUl not be availaUe to the health professional sdiools and students next fall.</p>
        <p>Pyschological Tests Institued</p>
        <p>BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -Tarnished by brutality complaints, the Buffalo Police Department plans to begin testing recruits this fall to learn how they would react in hostile or violent situations, a civil service official says.</p>
        <p>William CTeary, director of the citys Civil Service Commission, said the dqiartments image had suffered with the c&amp;lt;mvicti(xi of a number of off-duty pdice officers on charges stemming from a police brutality complaint in 1977. Other investigations are pending, he said. Psychological testing has been used by departments in New York, Boston, Miami, Los Angeles, Detroit and other major cities.</p>
        <p>Hope For Trade Office In China</p>
        <p>COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The state of Ohio hopes to open a trade liaison office in China, possibly within the next year, a trade official says. Fred Sexton, of the state Dq&amp;gt;artmait of Econcnnic and Community Development, said a state trade delation will visit China this summer to study the feasibility of the plan.</p>
        <p>The office would rq&amp;gt;resent Ohio businesses to the Oiinese, and funnel information from the Chinese back to (Mo. Similar state offices have already been estaUished in TiAyo and Brussds. Belgium, he said.</p>
        <p>By EVANS WITT Associated Pre$s Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Worried that peace in the Middle East is still a l(Nig way off, Americans (^pose giving Israel and</p>
        <p>agreements could be reached. Nineteen percait of the 1,600 adults interviewed nationwide by telephone were not sure.</p>
        <p>The peace pact between Israel and Egypt is important to</p>
        <p>Egypt the additional $&amp;amp; billieB .-Americans, the poll shows. For-Presldent Carter has promised ty-four percent said It was very</p>
        <p>as part of the peace process, an Associated Press-NBC News poll shows.</p>
        <p>Even though the public says the peace pact between Israel and Egypt is important, Americans are concerned that Israel may not be able to strike similar deals with other Arab nei^bors. Thus, they are not h^y with deeper U.S. involvement in that strategic region of the world, which once again could become embroiled in war.</p>
        <p>The extra military and economic aid Carter has promised the two countries is exposed by a 2-to-l margin, according to the p(dl, taken March 19-20.</p>
        <p>Sbcty percait oppose the additional aid, and 30 percent favor it. Two percent favored aid to only one of the countries and 8 percmt were not sure.</p>
        <p>TTiis o(^ition to additional aid has a number of sources, but the most relevant one is that Amfliricans are ^lit on wijether Israel will be able to use the agi^ment with Egypt as the ^ridgboard for agreements with other Arab countries.</p>
        <p>Forty-three percent of those questi(med said they dont think Israel will be able to readi such agreements. Thirty-eight percoit cmcluded that such</p>
        <p>important and 42 percent said it was somewhat important. Twelve percent said it was not important and 2 percent were not sure.</p>
        <p>As with any sample survey, the results of the AP-NBC News poll could differ from the results of interviews with all Americans with telephones because of chance variations in the sample.</p>
        <p>LODGE MEETING</p>
        <p>Bright Star Lodge No. 385 will meet toni^it at 7:30 at the lodge haU. All members are asked to be present.</p>
        <p>Galloway Thonq&amp;gt;son,</p>
        <p>Master</p>
        <p>Walter Gatlin, Secy</p>
        <p>For polls with 1,600 interviews, the results should vary no more than three percentage points either way simply because of sample errors. That is, there is only one chance out of 20 that the results of interviews with all American adults would vary from these results by more than three percentage points.</p>
        <p>wards of Whiteville; two grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.</p>
        <p>Cox</p>
        <p>Mrs. Esther S. Cox, 76, died in the University Nursing Home this morning, aie resided ot Sylvania Street in Winterville. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the WUker-son Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>KeuBch</p>
        <p>Mrs. Helai Terry Keusch, 61, died at her home, 1603 E. Wright Road, this morning.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Wilker-son Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Keusch, a Wisconsm native, received degrees from the University of WiscOTsin and Columbia University. She was a psychiatric social worker. For the past three years she had made her home in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Surviving her are her husband, Dr. R. B. Keusch; a daughter, Mrs. Rita Benedict of Williamsburg, Va.; and a sister, Mrs. Catherine Malone of Milwaukee, Wise.</p>
        <p>Killefrey</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Mr. WUlie Killefrey, 62, died Saturday in Baltimore, Md.</p>
        <p>The funeral service will be held Wednesday evening in Baltimore.</p>
        <p>Mr. Killefrey, a Pitt County native, is survived by two foster brottiOTs, David Henderson and James Henderson, both of Winterville, N.C.</p>
        <p>All telegrams and cards may be sent to 2604 E. Oliver St., Baltimore, Md., 21217.</p>
        <p>Talk'Cardboard'</p>
        <p>Coffin-Use</p>
        <p>BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -Erie County is COTsidering using cardboard coffins to cut the cost of publicly financed burials, the countys purchasing director says. John J. Gross said he is checking the legality of putting caskets  actually made from pressed wood  into bid q;iecifications.</p>
        <p>Since most caskets go into concrete vaults, it might not matter whether theyre cardboard or wood, he said. Concrete or steel vaults are. required in about half the countys cemeteries. The coffins cost $6, while the cheapest conventional casket costs slightly more than $100.</p>
        <p>By ANDREW TORCHIA Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)  Tanzanian tanks trai^ped Presi-dOTt Idi Amin in his official residence in Entebbe today, cutting off him and Ugandas international airport from Kampala, the capital 20 miles to the north, a Ugandan ^v-emment ^&amp;gt;okesman reported.</p>
        <p>The report was denied in Dar es Salaam, the Tanzanian capital, by high-level intelligence sources with direct access to the Tanzanian military command. They said the invasion force of Tanzanians and Ugandan exiles were at Mpigi, 15 miles northwest of Entebbe and 20 miles south of Kampala.</p>
        <p>Confirmation of the reports was not available.</p>
        <p>The Ugandan governmOTt spokesman telephoned reporters in Nairobi and told them Amin r^rted the armored vanguard of the invasion force reached Entdbbe during the night from Mpigi and 12 tanks could be seen from his resi-dOTce beside Lake Victoria.</p>
        <p>Amin was talking by telephone to his family in Kanqiala when the line went dead, the qx)kesman continued.</p>
        <p>Amins morale is very, very high and he said he was looking forward to having breakfast with the enemy, meaning he was preparing for battle, the i^xricesman said.</p>
        <p>He added that Kanqiala, a city of 400,000 people, was quiet and there was no panic despite reports of a big battle on the other side of Mpigi.</p>
        <p>After the denial from Dar es Salaam, some observers in Nairobi suggested that the flamboyant Ugandan leader was pulling a grandstand play. ThQi said at least once before he falsely r^rted a major Tanzanian advance and later announced a successful Ugandan counterattack.</p>
        <p>Radio Kampala said Amin called OT men, women and chil</p>
        <p>dren to use any type of gun to fight the enemy. The broadcast called OT the Ugandan anny to remain loyal to the end and to break through the enemy line to unite Entebbe with the rest of the country.</p>
        <p>As the invaders drive neared Kampala, Amins Defense Council announced Sunday that the Entebbe airport was closed to foreign flights and that any aircraft violating Ugandan air space would be shot down.</p>
        <p>TTie council also inqxised a 12-hour nightly curfew on Kampala, and the governmOTt radio today said this had beOT extended to all territory under Amins control.</p>
        <p>Kampala residents reached by tel^hone Sunday night said the city was dark and the streets deserted.</p>
        <p>We are just staying home in the dark, and its a bit frightening, said one.</p>
        <p>The Uganda-Tanzania war began in October when Amins forces crossed the border and occupied 710 square miles of Tanzanian territory. Tanzanian troops pushed the Ugandan tnx^s back across the border within two weeks. Joined by anti-Amin exiles, they invaded southwest Uganda, took control of much of that section and three weeks ago began to advance toward Kampala.</p>
        <p>LOST HER BABY AMMAN, Jordan (AP)  After three months of pregnancy, American-born Queen Noor of Jordan has lost her unborn baby, the royal palace said today.</p>
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        <pb facs="00093953_0009" />
        <p>Sports XHE DAILY^ REFLECTOR ClassifiedMONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 26, 1979</p>
        <p>Bucs Avenge Saturday Loss</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflectm-%mrts EdlUnr</p>
        <p>stranding 14 men on bases, including three in the final inning, which came to a close only when East Carolina Universitys Billy Best made a running catch Pirates came up with four eighth in deep center field, inning runs to gain a 6-2 triumph I was proud of the guys, over Virginia Tech yesterday, Coach Monte UtUe said after-</p>
        <p>avenging a 6-3 Saturday night loss at the hands of the Gobblers.</p>
        <p>Virginia Tech scored first in the game, getting an unearned run in the first, but the Pirates came back to score twice in the fourth. Tech tied it up in the sixth, and it stayed that way until the Pirates came up with their four winning runs in the eighth.</p>
        <p>The Gobblers kept the pressure on the Pirates throughout the game, however.</p>
        <p>wards. They came back after playing a real poor game on Saturday night. It would have been easy for them to have had their heads down, but they fought back and did a good job. Little said that Tech had one of the better teams the Pirates had seen this year. They attack you all the time. We saw their best two pitchers, and we beat their ace today.</p>
        <p>Parker Davis started the con</p>
        <p>test for the Pirates, but was The throw by catcher Rick lifted after less than two innings Derechailo was over third, and with control problems. He walk- Phillips raced on home to stake ed five batters in 12. Bobby Pat- the Hokies to a 1-0 lead, terson came on to pitch an inning Virginia Tech loaded the bises and a tMrd, before gving way to on Davis walks in the second, Rick Ramey, who went the last but a double play helped get the six innings and got the win, his Pirates out of a jam. The Gob-second in five decisions.  biers also left men in scoring</p>
        <p>Tech got only six hits off the Position in the fourth and fifth. Pirates Sunday, as compared to wasnt; until the sixth that 13 on Saturday night. East scored again</p>
        <p>Carolina, held to eight in the Saturday loss, came up with nine in the victory.</p>
        <p>Tech started the scoring in the first. Jay Phillips led off, reaching on an error. Jim Foit walked, and Phillips stole third.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Championship Rivals</p>
        <p>Earvin Magic Johnson (1) from Michigan State and Larry Bird from Indiana State will be the big guns in</p>
        <p>t(Miights final game of the NCAA Basketball Championsh4;)s In Salt Lake City, Utah. In their semifinal games, Johnson scored 29 points and Bird 35. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>Wadkins Has Game Where He Wants It</p>
        <p>Superstars To Meet In Tonight's Finals</p>
        <p>SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -This is Larry Birds last shot, and he hopes to make it his best.</p>
        <p>Were a bunch of guys who have stayed together, says Indiana States grim superstar, and I feel we can win this championship.</p>
        <p>Tonight is the night that Bird and his Indiana State playmates have waited for all season  the finals of the NCAA basketball playoffs.</p>
        <p>And it surely stacks up as a storybook ending to the 1978-79 college season, pitting Birds to{&amp;gt;-ranked Sycamores against the fourth-ranked Michigan State Spartans, a couple of hi^-rolling teams dominated by three of the finest players in the game.</p>
        <p>Both teams have players with extremely tall profiles in the high-flying Bird and the gifted leading men from Michigan State, Earvin Magic Johnson and Greg Kelser.</p>
        <p>And both teams have been</p>
        <p>close calls of late in this tournament.</p>
        <p>The Sycamores, virtual unknowns at the start of the season, made a name for themselves despite criticism that they played a soft-touch schedule.</p>
        <p>Riding Birds coattails, the Missouri Valley Conference champions had a tough time proving themselves and had to win all 33 of their games, including a two-point decision over Arkansas in the Midwest finals and a two-point victory over DePaul in the national semifinals Saturday.</p>
        <p>The ^artans, meanwhile, struggled at the start of the season, losing half of their first eight Big Ten games. It was after an embarrassing 18-point loss to conference doormat</p>
        <p>Northwestern that Jud Heat-hcotes team straightened itself out.</p>
        <p>If any loss probably helped</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)  Lanny Wadkins, the first man to master Sawgrass, has a simple goal for the rest of the golf season.</p>
        <p>Id just like to keep on winning, Wadkins said after scrambling through 45 mph winds to a convincing, 5-shot victory Sunday in the Tournament Players Championship.</p>
        <p>Im off to a great start for the year. Ive got my game where I want it. I just want to keep on trucking.</p>
        <p>And Wadkins, the only double winner of the season and now Upping the seasons money-winning list, is going to give</p>
        <p>us, was the Northwestern himself eve;y iirti^ity to do loss, Kelser said Sunday a a  jj^s playing  ta all but two</p>
        <p>pregame news conference^ It tournaments tonigh the U.S. was early m the season and we  in Tnnn</p>
        <p>had a chance to do things. It probably woke us up.</p>
        <p>The Spartans didnt rest until they had a bid to the NCAA</p>
        <p>He collected $72,000 from the total purse of $440,000 after his spectacular effort in the ambitious event that is billed as</p>
        <p>lur^tse^up.Aiidthey  championship  of</p>
        <p>60H'sthurihgpn..ewhas</p>
        <p>M^ielming Lamar, Louisiana</p>
        <p>State, Notre Dame and Penn and accumulating a 25-6 record en route to the national finals.</p>
        <p>The championship game is a publicity mans delight  matching two of., the games best players in Bird and Johnson.</p>
        <p>$134,948 for the year and has last round, shooting  71 that stamped himself a prime candi- put him in second for the third date for the Masters, two time this year. He finished at weeks away.  par 288.</p>
        <p>Ill worry about the Masters Jack Renner was third at 75-when I get there, Wadkins 289 and was followed by Phil said. Right now Im just look- Hancock, 74-291. Tied for fourth ing ahead to next week. at 293 were Lee Trevino and Wadkins built a 3-shot lead Bill Kratzert, each with a clos-with opening rounds of 67-68 in ing 79, and Wayne Levi, 75. the Trc, was able to maintain that margin despite a wind-raked 76 in the third round and finished with a par 72 that made him the first ever to break par for 72 holes over Sawgrass. Mark Hayes and Jack Nicklaus won the first two tournaments here at 289, 1 over par. Wadkins won at 283, 5 under.</p>
        <p>Ive never really thought of myself as a good wind player,</p>
        <p>Wadkins said. When Im playing well, I can handle it. When Im not, it gets me like it gets everybody else.</p>
        <p>And it got everyone else.</p>
        <p>Tom Watson was the only man able to break par over the</p>
        <p>NBA West Is Wild</p>
        <p>By ALEX SACHARE  waukee 122-110 in overtime Sun-</p>
        <p>AP Sports Writer  (j3y night, now finds itself the</p>
        <p>Suddenly its the wild, wUd odd team out in the West race. West in the National Basketball i&amp;gt;ije Blazers are one-half game Association with just games behind surprising San Diego in separating the top seven teams, u,e batUe for the sixth and fi-one of which wont make the nal playoff spot, playoffs.  In  other  games  Sunday,  the</p>
        <p>Seattle has the best mark in pboenix Suns beat the Golden</p>
        <p>-------------- .  .  the conference, 46-27, following state Warriors 111-95, the</p>
        <p>playing some of their best bas- Nancy Lopez, who rewrote the better now. Her recent accom- Sundays 111-101 victory over Washington Bullets topped the</p>
        <p> &amp;lt;1 &amp;lt;  Jt  .  ..   .1.  T  flAlf  A00/\_  6a   i.i_  _  _ai .</p>
        <p>Meanwhile; the Pirates had come up with two of their own. After goiag down in order in the first two Innings, the Pirates got their fu'st baserunner on Bob Neffs single in the third.</p>
        <p>Billy Best led off the fourth with a single to right and moved to third when Raymie Styons reached on an error. A wild pitch scored Best and moved Styons to second. Max Raynor doubled to right center, scoring Styons with the go-ahead run, and the Pirates had a 2-1 lead.</p>
        <p>Tech tied it up in the top of the sixth. James Stewart led off with a double to left center and scored on Eric Kellers single to right. Keller took second on an error and was sacrificed to third before Derechailo picked him off that base.</p>
        <p>The Hokies loaded the bases on a walk, an error and an infield hit in the seventh, and two walks bracketed around a double in the ninth gave them another chance, but each time the Pirate defense came up with the plays to halt them.</p>
        <p>The Bucs left a man on third in the bottom of the sixth, and on second in the seventh, then broke it open in the eighth.</p>
        <p>Mike Sorrell reached on an infield hit but was cut down at second when Best reached attempting to sacrifice. Styons then cleared the bases with a line-drive shot over the fence in left, a two-run homer. Macon Moye beat out a hit to deep short and Raynor singled to right. Tim Hardison also reached on an in</p>
        <p>field hit to short, scoring Moye.</p>
        <p>Relief pitcher Jim diellis then tried to pick Hardison off first, but didnt realize until he had thrown the ball that the first baseman was not covering the bag. The error allowed Raynor to score all the way from seomd before the ball could be retrieved from the fence along right field.</p>
        <p>Stewart led the Gobbler hitting with two, while Hardison had two for the Pirates.</p>
        <p>East Carolina goes to 10-7 with the win, while Tech falls to 54.</p>
        <p>The Bucs are idle until Thursday when they travel to Wilmington to face the UNC-W Seahawks. They return home on Friday to entertain the University of Virginia in a 7:30 p.m. game.</p>
        <p>Vlrg*mTK)i ab rtirt EHtCanKliH abrhrb</p>
        <p>Phillips,  4  10 0 Sorrell.ss  4  0  10</p>
        <p>Foif.ss  2  0 0 0 Best.cf  4  2  10</p>
        <p>Rupe.cl  5  0 10 Styons,*  3  2  12</p>
        <p>Williams,  4  0 1 OAAoye.rf  4  110</p>
        <p>Aldrich,*  4  0 0 0 Raynor,  3  0  11</p>
        <p>Dodd,H  3 0 10 Sage,  1110</p>
        <p>Stewarl,rt  4  12 0 Hardison,!!  4  0  2 1</p>
        <p>Keller,*  4  0 11 Derechailo,c  3  0  0 0</p>
        <p>Smi,c  3  0 0 0 Carr'way,  4  0  0 0</p>
        <p>Nett,  3  0  10</p>
        <p>Totals 33 I  1 Totals S S 0 4</p>
        <p>VlrglnlaTach..................10000100  0-3</p>
        <p>East Carotins.................0 0030004  i-4</p>
        <p>E  Sorrell 3, Derechailo. Phillips, Moye, Chellis, OP - East Carolina; LOB - VPI 14, ECU 5; 2B -Stewart, Raynor, Williams, HR - Styons; SB -Phiilips, Rupe, S-Smith, Derechailo,</p>
        <p>Pitching:  |p  h  r  arbbio</p>
        <p>Grier(L,2ll...............n-j  8  6  4  1  1</p>
        <p>Chellis......................is  I  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>P Davis............- Its 0 1 0  5 3</p>
        <p>Patterson................ IVj  i  o  0  1  0</p>
        <p>Ramey (W, 2 31...................6  5  1  1  3  4</p>
        <p>WP  Grier; PB  Smi.</p>
        <p>Lanny Wadkins</p>
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        <p>Lopez Wins Saraha</p>
        <p>LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)  of 21 last year, says shes much</p>
        <p>ketball of the year, although In- Ladies Professional Gdf Asso-diana State has had a couple of ciation record book at the age</p>
        <p>Sports Calendar</p>
        <p>Todays Sports</p>
        <p>Beddingfield at Rose girls (3:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>ConleV/ Southwest Edgecombe at FarmvilleCentral girls (3:30p.m.) Softball</p>
        <p>Bear Grass at Mattamuskeet Baseball</p>
        <p>Goldsboro at Greenvii ie Christian Tuesday's Sports Baseball</p>
        <p>Rose at Hunt (4 p.m.)</p>
        <p>North Pitt at C. B. Aycock (4 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Roanoke at Williamston (3:30 p.m.)  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Greene Central at Southern Nash (4p.m.)</p>
        <p>Ayden-Gritton at Conley (3:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Southwest Edgecombe at Farmville Central (3:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>AAartinat RIdgecroft (3:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Bear Grass at Belhaven</p>
        <p>Jamesville at Mattamuskeet (7 p.m.)</p>
        <p>pli^ments make it difficult to (]uestion that feeling.</p>
        <p>Lopez, who won nine tournaments and set an LPGA singleyear record with official earnings of close to $190,000 in 1978, fired a 2-under-par 69 Sunday to climax an uphill battle to the championship of the $100,000 Sahara National Pro-^.</p>
        <p>Lopez finished with a 72-hoIe| total of 274, two shots ahead of E^S(4?mT'  faltering Donna C. Young, who</p>
        <p>i^in at Rickjecroft (3:30p.m.) had 3 2-stroke advantage at  the</p>
        <p>beginning of the final round Tsnnis  and a 4-shot lead early in  the</p>
        <p>Greene Central at Camp Leieune (2 p.m.)  Ody.</p>
        <p>Glassboro State at East Carolina (2:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Roanoke at Williamston (3:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Rose at Hunt (3 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Roanoke at Williamston Golf</p>
        <p>Southern Nash at Farmville Cen-traK 1:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Kansas City. But the other six Detroit Pistons 116-107, the In-</p>
        <p>Softball</p>
        <p>East Carolina at N. C. State 2 (2 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Williamston at Roanoke (4 p.m.) Conley at Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.) Southern Nash at Greene Central (4p.m.)</p>
        <p>(.. B. Aycock at North Pitt (4 p.m.) Huntaf Rose (4 p.m.)</p>
        <p>tams are bunched within games of each other, and a dogfight is shaping up for the final two weeks of the regular season.</p>
        <p>The Kings have led the Midwest Division for nearly the entire season, but injuries to Tom Burleson and Scott Wedman sent them into a late-season slun^). 'The Denver Nuggets climbed to within one-half game of Kansas City by rallying to beat the Los Angeles Lakers 123-113 Sunday.</p>
        <p>Portland, wliich if^t to Mil-</p>
        <p>diana Pacers defeated the San Antomo Spurs 121-113, the Boston Celtics downed the Philadelphia 76ers 103-94 and the New Jersey Nets beat the Chicago Bulles 99-98.</p>
        <p>Sonics 111, Kings 101 Seattle guard Gus Williams (Coatinuedaapage 10)</p>
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        <p>Bill McDonald</p>
        <p>East 10th St. Ext. Phone 752-6680 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Like a good neighbor.</p>
        <p>State Farm is diere. _</p>
        <p>STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY Home Office Bloomington. Illinois</p>
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        <p>N.C. STATE INSPECTION STATION</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0010" />
        <p>Allison Climbs</p>
        <p>To Top Position</p>
        <p>With the naming of East Carolina Universitys new basketball coach, a new era sweeps into the school in the sport.</p>
        <p>Hopefully, it will be a bright one that will turn around the woeful records of the past few years. Only once in the 1970s have the Pirates posted a respectable record. That came during Dave Pattons first year, when his Pirates went 19-^, finished second in the Southern Conference and got a bid to the now-defunct Conference Commtesioners Association Tournament, where they mad^ respectable showing before bowing in the first ijj^d to eventual champion Arizona.</p>
        <p>Dave Odom is in many ways the exact opposite of former coach Larry Gillman. He did not comipg in making promises of this and that. In fact, he made very few promises other than to do the best he could-</p>
        <p>NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (AP)  Bobby Allison has beai racing Grand Natimial stock cars since 1961. In that time, he has won 53 races and nearly $2 million in prize money.</p>
        <p>Yet the 41-year-old Hueytown, Ala., star has never won the national championship.</p>
        <p>It appears this season may be his best chance.</p>
        <p>With his dramatic victory  his ri^t front wheel snapped off just as he took the checkered flag  in Sundays 400-lap Grand National event, Allison took over the No. 1 ^x)t in the point standings.</p>
        <p>I h(^ we can keep the pressure up the rest of the sea-</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>To UCLA?</p>
        <p>What Odoms future will be will be watched however. He comes from a good basketball school in Wake Forest, although his career on the college level is only three years old. It will be interesting to see 'what Idnd of staff he gathers around him, and &amp;gt;4diat successes he has in the recruiting wars.</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA has hired Larry Brown, former Denver Nuggets coach, to succeed Gary Cunningham as the Bruins basketball coach, the Los Angeles Times reported in todays editions.</p>
        <p>son and be in a position to win the championship. Thats a very big goal for me at the moment, Allison said.</p>
        <p>Allison leads Darrell Waltrip, who finished fifth Sunday, by nine points after six of 31 scheduled events in 1979. Cale Yarborough, the ninth place finisher and winner of the last three national titles, is third, 30 points behind Waltrip.</p>
        <p>Allismis victory was worth 180 points and $16,675.</p>
        <p>I believe we have the five major ingredients for successful racing going for our team now  thats the driver, the car, the crew, the tires and the luck, he said.</p>
        <p>The luck was certainly the important ingredient in Sundays 3.6-second victory over Richard Petty, who had the faster car.</p>
        <p>We gambled that we could make it without making our last scheduled pit stop, Allison said. We gambled right, but not with much to spare.</p>
        <p>Petty led 214 of the 400 laps around North Wilkesboro Speedways five-ei^ths of a niile oval, but when he made</p>
        <p>his final stop with 47 lips to go, he came back onto the track with an insurmountabte 204ec-ond deficit. He whittted neariy 17 seconds off in the final 20 miles.</p>
        <p>Im 0ad it wasnt a 500, Allison said with a lau^. Actually, Im lucky it wasnt a 401 either.</p>
        <p>Allison said it was the first time hes ever walked to Victory Lane. I dont mind the walk, thou^, he offoed.</p>
        <p>Allison blamed the slickness of the 19S2-vintage a^&amp;gt;halt track for his cars erratic behavior most of the race. In the early stages, he bounced the wall lightly several times.</p>
        <p>I think that may have had a detrimental effect on the wheel, he said, smiling. The track was as slick as Ive ever sei it. But if you win, you dont conq&amp;gt;lain about things like that. You are ^ad to take the win.</p>
        <p>It was Allisons second victory of the season. In his last four starts he has finished first, second, second and first.</p>
        <p>I think we have some momentum right now, he said.</p>
        <p>Will Hickman (2nd from r) teamed iQ) with Btirt Aycock (not pictured) to ci4&amp;gt;ture the Rfember-Member Cham</p>
        <p>pionship at Greenville Country Cluh with a net 126 this weekoKl. diaries Bridgers (1) and Steve Home (r) totric sectMid place. Also pictured is profes-sitmal G&amp;lt;don Fulp. (Reflector rtioto)</p>
        <p>ODU Captures AlAW</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Old Dominions Inge Nissen and Louisiana Tedis Elinor Griffin looked as if they would</p>
        <p>It would appear now that Odom may have as many as nine players to work with. Transfer Tom Szyman-ski apparently will remain at East Carolina, becoming eligible at the end of the first semester next fall. However, whether some of those in academic trouble will return is questionable.</p>
        <p>scoreboard</p>
        <p>NCAA</p>
        <p>I Swnlflnalt</p>
        <p>The Pirates do need help, and they could use it at all three main positions. George Maynor, who will be back at point guard, wUl need back-up help, whUe Herb Krusen can play at the other guard position, or at the small forward slot. David Underwood and Frank Hobson wUl provide experience up front. Clarence Miles, who showed that he can become an outstanding player, is a swing man, while Al Tyson can handle either a forward or center spot.</p>
        <p>Saturday At SaH Laka City</p>
        <p>Michigan St. 101, Penn 67 Indiana St. 76, OePaul 74</p>
        <p>0)</p>
        <p>National Champlonihlp Monday</p>
        <p>At SaH Lake CHy ChonvkmNilp</p>
        <p>Miehlgan St. (2S-6) vs. Indiana SI. (33</p>
        <p>Third Place</p>
        <p>Penn (25^) vs. DePaul (JS-i)</p>
        <p>sota, Fla.</p>
        <p>Chicago (A) "B" vs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla.</p>
        <p>Minnesota vs. Texas at Pompano Beach, Fla.</p>
        <p>Oakland vs Cleveland at Tucson, Arli.</p>
        <p>Chicago (N) vs. Milwaukee at Sun City, Arlz.</p>
        <p>California vs. SeaHle at Tempe, Arlz.</p>
        <p>San Diego vs. San Francisco at Phoenix, Arlz.</p>
        <p>Philadelphia vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla. (n)</p>
        <p>New York (N) vs. Atlanta at West Palm Beach. Fla. (n)</p>
        <p>Phil Hancock, SI9.300 Lae Trevino, *14,000 Bill Ktratzart, *14,000 Wayne Levi, *14,00 Andy Bean, *12,400 Jay Haas, *10,100 Jack Newton, *10,800 Tom Kite, *10,800</p>
        <p>-73-75-74-291</p>
        <p>70-08-75-72*3 9-70-75-7*293 9-72-77-75-293 72-73-74-75-294</p>
        <p>71-74-74-7*295 9-74-77-75-295</p>
        <p>72-73-75-75295</p>
        <p>Notional Laague CINCINNATI REDS-Sent Dave Van</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>Amarlcan Laaoua</p>
        <p>CHICAGO WHITE SOXSent BrIH</p>
        <p>Bums, pitcher, to Iowa of the American</p>
        <p>Pro Hockey</p>
        <p>Bums, pi Associate</p>
        <p>Ion.</p>
        <p>NBA</p>
        <p>DETROIT TIGERS-Purchased Hw contract of Ed Putman, third baseman-catch-</p>
        <p>Gorder, catcher, to their minor league camp for reassignment.</p>
        <p>HOUSTON ASTROS-Sent Dave Alol, Mark Higgins, Dave Smith and Rick Williams, pitchers, Gary Woods, ouHlelder, and Dave Augustine, Infielder-outflalder, to their minor leagle camp for reassignment.  ^</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Optloned Mike Scloccia, catcher; Dave Stewart, Tad Power and Mike Tennant, pitchers; Kelly Snidar. first baseman; and Rudy Law and Myron White, ouHieldw, to Albuquerque of the Pacific Coast League. Outrlghtad Joe Simpson, outfielder, to Al-</p>
        <p>How each of them will fit into Odoms style of offense and defense probably wont be known until next fall, however.</p>
        <p>We hope that the new coach has a successful recruiting class this time out, so that he will be able to get off to a good start.</p>
        <p>Eastern Confsrenca Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>W L Pet.</p>
        <p>X Washington  SO  23  85</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  41  34  .547</p>
        <p>New Jersey  35  39  .473</p>
        <p>New York  31  45  .408</p>
        <p>Boston  28  45</p>
        <p>Central Division San Antonio  43  32</p>
        <p>Houston  41  32</p>
        <p>Atlanta  42  34</p>
        <p>Detroit  29  45</p>
        <p>Cleveland  28  4</p>
        <p>New Orleans  24  52</p>
        <p>.384</p>
        <p>1S&amp;gt;/i</p>
        <p>20Vj</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>13'/ii</p>
        <p>14Vj</p>
        <p>19Vj</p>
        <p>Chicago Vancouver St. Louis Colorado</p>
        <p>But at the same time, we hate to see East Carolina lose the likes of former assistant coach Terry Kunze, who was a candidate for the job, and had the backing, not &amp;lt;My of most of the area media, but a number of people on the ECU staff as well.</p>
        <p>Kunze showed us in the short time that he was with East Carolina that he was a class individual, and a good coach. We feel he has a bright future ahead of him. Unfortunately, it will not be here.</p>
        <p>MidwMt Division</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>.373</p>
        <p>.547</p>
        <p>We wish him luck too, and we look forward to following his career in the coaching profession.</p>
        <p>If not for the fact that he was already at East Carolina, the odds are that he would have been selected as the new coach.</p>
        <p>But there were too many people in power positions who wanted to clean house, and guilt by association became too much of an obstacle to overcome.</p>
        <p>To both Kunze and Odom, we wish the best of luck, for we have a friend in the former, hopefully a newfound friend in the latter, not to mention our interest in the program he now heads.</p>
        <p>Kansas City</p>
        <p>Denver  42  33</p>
        <p>Indiana  34  41</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  34  41</p>
        <p>Chicago  28  47</p>
        <p>Pacific Division Saattla  4  27</p>
        <p>Phoedtx  45  30</p>
        <p>Los Angeles  43  31</p>
        <p>San Diego  41  34</p>
        <p>Portland  40  34  .541</p>
        <p>Golden State  33  43  .434</p>
        <p>x-cllnched division</p>
        <p>Saturday's Gomes Chicago 148, New York 143, 2 OT New Orleans 139, Cleveland 117 Houston 120, Atlanta 11</p>
        <p>Portland 100, Kansas City 98 Sunday's (Samos Boston 103, Philadelphia 94 Denver 123, Los Angeles 113 New Jersey 99, Chicago 88 Washington 11, Detroit 107 Indiana 121, San Antonio 113 Phoenix 111, (Solden State 95 Milwaukee 122, Portland 110. OT Seattle 111, Kansas City 101 Monday's Gamas No games scheduled</p>
        <p>Tuesday's (Sames Boston at Cleveland, n. Philadelphia at Washington, n. Houston at Chicago, n.</p>
        <p>Indiana at New Orleans, n.</p>
        <p>San Diego at Seattle, n.</p>
        <p>New York at Portland, n.</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>BuHalo</p>
        <p>Toronto</p>
        <p>Minnesota</p>
        <p>8Vz</p>
        <p>14Vj</p>
        <p>Notional Hockey Laague Campbell CoHferenee Patrick Dlvlskm</p>
        <p>W L T Pt* CF OA</p>
        <p>x N.Y, Islanders 4  13  14  108  331  195</p>
        <p>N Y. Rangers  39  25  9  87  29*  253</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  3  23  14  8  254  225</p>
        <p>Atlanta  38  28  7  S3  295  257</p>
        <p>Smyttie Divisin</p>
        <p>2  34  13  5  221  22</p>
        <p>22  41  11  55  204  279</p>
        <p>17  44  12  4  230  319</p>
        <p>14  51  9  37  190  312</p>
        <p>Wale* Conference Adams Division</p>
        <p>40  21  12  92  288  238</p>
        <p>33  25  15  81  248  237</p>
        <p>30  32  12  72  237  234</p>
        <p>27  34  11  5  241  249</p>
        <p>Norrl* Division</p>
        <p>47  1  10  104  304  187</p>
        <p>32  28  13  77  255  255</p>
        <p>31  31  11  73  259  20</p>
        <p>21  3  1  58  237  28</p>
        <p>It  *i  IS  S7  ISO  Ito</p>
        <p>clinched division</p>
        <p>Safurda/s Games Boston 5, Detroit 2 Montreal 3. Washington 1 Pittsburgh 3, New York Islanders 3, tie Chicago 3, Toronto 3, tie Minnesota 3, (Utlorado 1 Butfalo 3, Los Angeles 2</p>
        <p>Sunday's (ramas Chicago 3, Colorado 0 (ietroit 2, Toronto 1 Atlanta 8, St.Louls 2 Philadelphia 7, Washington 4 New York Islanders 2, PIHsburgh 2, tie Montreal 1, New York Rangers 0 Vancouver 2, Minnesota 1 Monday's Game Buftalo at St.Louiv n.</p>
        <p>TuMdAv'ft GamM Philadelphia at New York Rangers, n. Montreal at Atlanta, n.</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh at Minnesota, n.</p>
        <p>Chicago at Colorado, n.</p>
        <p>Detroit at Vancouver, n.</p>
        <p>?T'  Chicago  Cubs  and  assigned</p>
        <p>buquerque. NEW YOl</p>
        <p>him to Evansville of the American elation.</p>
        <p>MINNESOTA TWINS-Sent Terry Sheehan, Bob Vesalic. Kevin Stanfield and Brad Havens, plfchers, Sal Butera, catcher, and Steve (Jouglas, outfielder, to fhelr minor league camp lor reassignment. Signed Willie Norwood, ouHlelder, and</p>
        <p>YORK METSWaived Bobby Va lentlne, infielder.</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placed Randy MoHIH, pitcher, on the 21-day disabled list. Signed Bob Knepper, pitcher, to a three year contract.</p>
        <p>ST.LOUIS CARDINALS-Senl Joe Ede-</p>
        <p>play to a standoff in the national championship game billed as a battle of the two premier centers in womens college basket-baU.</p>
        <p>But the 24-year-old Nissen, an eight-year veteran of international play, subdued Griffin in the second half Sunday and t(^ranked Old Dominion posted a 75-65 victory over the No. 2 Lady Techsters. The triumph gave the AIAW national cham-piMiship to the Lady Monarchs, an early season favorite for the crown.</p>
        <p>1 was appr^nsive about playing her, said the lithe Nissen, mIk), like Griffin, stands 6-foot-5. I was surprised I could cwitrol her in the second half.</p>
        <p>Nissen drilled in 22 points</p>
        <p>and guard Nancy Ueberman added 20 as Old Dominion bdd Griffin to cmly two points in the second half. Griffin scored 14 points in the first half, and Nissen said she was forced to adjust her defensive strategy.</p>
        <p>James A. Manning Bethel, N.C. 825-5631 SouCfmestem</p>
        <p>Ian, Goorg* Frazlar, Jack Murpby, Dan O'Brlan, John Urraa, Paul Slefaert, Ray</p>
        <p>Danny Goodwin, daslgnatad hlttar.</p>
        <p>rANKEES-</p>
        <p>NEW YORK YANKEES-SanI Garry</p>
        <p>Saarange and Al dmslaad, pitchars; Oava Pai</p>
        <p>Smith, ouHlaldar, and Roger Slagla, pltch-itkmal</p>
        <p>X-/Montreal PIHsburgh Los Angeles Detroit Washington</p>
        <p>ar, to Columbus of the Intarna'.______</p>
        <p>League. Sent Tim Lollar, pitchar, to Hialr HoHywood, Fla., minor league complex for reassignment.</p>
        <p>TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Clalmad Bobby Brown, ouHlelder, on waivers from fhe New York /Met*. Releasad Clyde Wrighf, pifcher. Senf Bufch Edge, Mark Wiley, JeH Byrd and Mike Darr, pitchers; Brian Milner and Gene Petralll, cafchari; Butch Albert, Pedro Hernandez and Wlllle Upshaw; and Don PIsker, ouHleldar, to</p>
        <p>Pennlall and Jim Lentlne, out-fleldar*; Manny Castillo and Leon Durham, Inflelders; and Glenn Brummer and Dan Winslow, catchers, to Springfield of the Amarlcan Association.</p>
        <p>FOOTBALL NoHonai Football Laagua DENVER BRONCOS-Slgned Tony Barnes, tight end.</p>
        <p>HOCKEY</p>
        <p>WASHING^ ^oSflTALsi^Recalled</p>
        <p>their minor league facility for raat--  *  awekey..</p>
        <p>signment. Placed Tqm on the 21-day disabled list.</p>
        <p>AMke Marsoa leH wing, from Binghamton of the American Hockey Laague. COLLEGE EASTERN KENTUCKY-Namad Jim</p>
        <p>Tenere an 4</p>
        <p>Its That Time Again!</p>
        <p>Designate ^30</p>
        <p>Designation Dates Mar. 5-Apr. 6</p>
        <p>GROWERS WAREHOUSE</p>
        <p>500 Moore St.. QreenvHle N.C. 750-6658 J.L. Tripp  .  Tom  Moni  Frank  O.DaH</p>
        <p>Goif Scores</p>
        <p>Pro Baseball</p>
        <p>NBA West.6.</p>
        <p>(CoatimKdirompage 9)</p>
        <p>matched his career hi^ with 38 points as the Sonics won their fifth in a row.</p>
        <p>Nuggets 123, Lakers 113</p>
        <p>Denvers (Charlie Scott scored a season-high 28 points against his former Los Angeles teammates. But it was David Thompswi who keyed a third-period surge with nine points as the Nuggets erased a six-point halftime deficit with a 43-point quarter.</p>
        <p>Bucks 122, Blazers 110</p>
        <p>Brian Winters scored seven of his 24 points in overtime as Milwaukee outscored Portland 17-5 to win only its seventh game on the road this season.</p>
        <p>Suns 111, Wanios 95 Phoenix outscored undermanned Golden State 16-2 in a 5&amp;gt;/^-minute ^&amp;gt;an of the middle periods to break the game</p>
        <p>(^pi. Paul Westphal led Phoenix with 25 points and Walter Davis added 23.</p>
        <p>BuUets 116, Pistons 107 Washington clinched its first Atlantic Division title as frontcourt stars Elvin Hayes, Bobby Dandridge and Wes Un-seld combined for 68 point. ^;xirs 121, Pacos 113 Reserve Billy Knight scored 33 points as Indiana handed slumping San Antonio its fourth loss in a row at home and its sixth loss in seven games.</p>
        <p>Celtics 103, 76ers 94 &amp;gt; Rick Robey hit for a sqason-high 27 points and Bob MCAdoo added 25 as the Oltics snapped Riiladelphias five-game winning streak.  i</p>
        <p>Nets 99, Bulls 88 The Nets rafed to a 35-16 lead and wene never in trouble against Chicago, which was playing i^ thM game in three days in fliree cities.</p>
        <p>Monday'* (xoma*</p>
        <p>Boston vs.. Houston at Cocoa. Fla. Atlanta vs. Montreal at Daytona Beach, Fla.</p>
        <p>St.Louls vs. Cincinnati at Tampa. Fla. Minnesota vs. Los Angeles at Vero Beach. Fla.</p>
        <p>Toronto vs. New York (N) at St.Petersburg, Fla.</p>
        <p>^^^trolt vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater,</p>
        <p>rtHsburgh vs. Kansas City at Ft.Myers, Fla.</p>
        <p>Texas vs. Baltimore at Miami, Fla. New York (A) vs. Chicago (A) at Sarasota, Fla.</p>
        <p>San Dle^ vs. Cleveland at Tucson, Arlz.    .</p>
        <p>San Francisco vi. Milwaukee at Sun City, Arlz.</p>
        <p>C^alltornia vs. Oakland at ScoHsdale. Arlz.</p>
        <p>Seattle "A" v*. Chicago (N) at Mesa. Arlz,</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - The top 10 finisher's final scores and money-wln-nlngs Sunday In the *440,000 Tournambnt Players Championship on the 7,083-yard, par 72 Sawgrass links: Laimy Wadklns, *72,000  7-8 7-72-283</p>
        <p>Tom Watson, *43,200  70-72-75-71288</p>
        <p>Jack Renner, *27,200  73 70-71-75289</p>
        <p>Seattle "B" at Arizona St., (n) Tuasda/s (;am*s</p>
        <p>New York (A) v*. St.Louls at St. Petersburg, Fla.</p>
        <p>Boston vs. Los Angeles at Vero Beach, Fla.</p>
        <p>Baltimore vs. AAontreal at Daytona Beach, Fla.</p>
        <p>Kansas City vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton, Fla.</p>
        <p>Chicago (A) "A" vs. Cincinnati at Sara-</p>
        <p>*500 REWARD</p>
        <p>For infotmation leading to the arrest and conviction of person or persons responsible for the breaking and entering of 'Regional Auto Parts, Inc., Thursday night, March 8, taking a 12 gauge Remington pump gun, a 32 revoiver pistoi, and seilerai hundred doliars worth of mechanic hand toois. information wiii be kept confidential.</p>
        <p>Ctwctt M.B. Porter</p>
        <p>  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Eegleoel Aoto Pcwh' 7S-TllO Mid 7S^3 1</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>Shoe Sale</p>
        <p>300 Pairs</p>
        <p>Mens Freeman Freeflex, Walkover &amp;amp; Hushpuppies</p>
        <p>Buy 1st Pair At Regular Price Get 2nd Pair For $1.00</p>
        <p>11b Talk Ml Nr</p>
        <p>We Honor Master Charge &amp;amp; VISA Cards</p>
        <p>The Bootery</p>
        <p>301 Evans Mall Oowntowm Greenville Bob Thompson, Ownor</p>
        <p>Every Warehouse Firm Has A Guaranteed Sale Every Day</p>
        <p>THE GREENVILLE WAREHOUSEMEN INVITE YOU TO DESIGNATE YOUR TOBACCO IN GREENVILLE AND LOOK FORWARD TO SERVING YOU IN 1979</p>
        <p>In Greenville your tobacco will be sold on the day and at the time that the w a r e h o u s e man schedules your tobacco for sale and he assures you the top dollar and best service.</p>
        <p>REASONS WHY GREENVILLE IS THE BEST TOBACCO MARKET</p>
        <p>IN THE STATE:</p>
        <p>The Greenvill Market began sales in 1890 and has had 88 years experience in the tobacco business.</p>
        <p>Greenville has floor space totaling 2,054,280 square feet for sales. The Greenville Market has been scheduling tobacco several years and is experienced in scheduling under the designation program. Grade for grade youre better paid in Greenville. Every major export and domestic company in the world is represented on each of Greenvilles sales.</p>
        <p>^Designate </p>
        <p>Gieeiinlle</p>
        <p>Tht GrtBiwiHt Tobacco Board of Trade / J. N. Bryan, Sale* Supervisor</p>
        <p>March 5 Thru April 6</p>
        <p>Cannons Warehouse No. 528 Farmers Warehouse No.535 Growers Warehouse No. 530</p>
        <p>Hudsons Warehouse No. 532 Keels Warehouse No. 528 New Carolina Warehouse No. 529 New Greenville Warehouse No. 524</p>
        <p>New Independent Warehouse No. 537</p>
        <p>Raynor-Forbes &amp;amp; Clark Warehouse No. 523 Star-Planters Warehouse No. 531</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0011" />
        <p>Arab Peace Treaty Foes Hold Strikes, Bombings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press Arab governments prepared to Arab foes of the Israeli-Egyp- niount economic sanctions and tian peace treaty protested the a political quarantine against pact with bombs, demonstra- Egypt. Israel set nationwide tions and strikes today, and celebrations to coincide with to</p>
        <p>days treaty signing.</p>
        <p>King Hussein of Jordan flew to Damascus to talk with President Hafez Assad to coordinate opposition to the treaty. Two bomb blasts Sunday ni^t outside the U.S. Embassy in Damascus kicked off the wave of protests that spread today to other Arab or Moslem capitals.</p>
        <p>The State Department already had alerted U.S. missions in the Middle East to the possibility of terrorist attacks as the signing of the U.S. sponsored treaty approached. Israel and Egypt also have taken massive security precautimis.</p>
        <p>Almost every Arab government 1^ scorned the pact Sadat and Begin will sign today on the White House lawn. The other Arabs are opposed to the treaty because Sadat did not obtain a state for the Palestinians, the retuni of East Jerusa</p>
        <p>lem to the Arabs and the return of the Golan Heights to Syria.</p>
        <p>Irans Moslem patriarch. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, denounced the treaty Sunday, saying it was against the interests of the Arab world and increased the dangers that</p>
        <p>Palestinians staged general strikes in East Jerusalem, other cities in the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan River, the occupied Gaza Strip, Lebanon and Jordan. Thousands of threaty foes marched in Ku-wait.Palestinians and their leftist Lebanese allies took to the streets in Moslem West Beirut, firing rifle volleys into the air and setting fire to auto tires. They also ensured that shopkeepers observed the strike.</p>
        <p>Effigies of President Carter, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin went up in flames at Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut and Moslem cities in Lebanon. Palestinian spokesmen said the demonstrations were peaceful.</p>
        <p>raiATH THREAT  A woman wearing a veil stands under placard reading: Death to Sadat, Carter, Begin, the three authnrs of the peace treaty between Israd and Egypt to be signed in Washington today. Scene occurred during huge demonstration in fixt of the Egyptian embassy in Tdiran yesterday. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>The bomb blasts at the U.S. Embassy in Damascus shattered windows but caused no casualties or major damage. No one claimed re^nsibility for the attack. Syrian witnesses said one bomb was hurled into the embassy garden from a passing car and the other went off near the rear of the build ing. One witness said someone in the car shouted: To hell with the traitorous agreement!</p>
        <p>have always been posed by Israel in the region.</p>
        <p>Khomeini, who engineered the Islamic rebellion that pled Shah Mdiammad Reza Pahlavi last month, severed the shahs ties with Israel, cut off direct Iranian oil exports to the Jewish state and allied Iran with Yasser Arafats Palestine Liberation Organization.</p>
        <p>Thousands of Iranians massed outside the Egyptian Embassy in Tehran Sunday to protest the pact, and today scores of persons calling themselves Arab students took over the embassy, hoisted Palestinian flags on the roof and put up poster photos of Arafat and Khomeini throughout the building. Iran is not an Arab country. i Four Egyptian members of the embassy staff were held hostage in the building. The ambassador, Ali Samir Savfat, reported by telephone that a groifl) of armed men came to his suburban residence at 4 a.m. and told him they were putting him under protective</p>
        <p>custody because his life nught be in danger.</p>
        <p>Within 24 hours of the treaty signing, leaders of the other Arab nations will meet in Baghdad Tuesday to implement a series of secret resolutions censuring the Sadat government. They range from hardliners, including Syria, Iraq and the PLO, which want Sadat overthrown and are threatening a new war on Israels eastern flank, to moderates, including conservative Saudi Arabia and Jordan, which appear to favor economic and political action.</p>
        <p>SdMUpUtH'u (HI lunilcouiu is</p>
        <p>msiiuticc</p>
        <p>Call me about State Farm Newer Home Discount</p>
        <p>EMIL THOMPSON</p>
        <p>3111 SMilh Evmm St., Ext.</p>
        <p>6cros From Union CofbMo QfHeoPltwiem-MZZ</p>
        <p>COMPLETE y\intin^ SERVICES</p>
        <p>PRIITEO</p>
        <p>COPIES</p>
        <p>TIGHT WATCH ON TEMPLE MOUNT - A Palestinian Arab surrounded by Isradl border patrtd guards and infantry soldiers raises his cane in threat at entrance to Tenqile Blount in Israeli-occiqiied East Jemsajon. Stepped up</p>
        <p>security precautions are in effect because of Palestinian protest demofu^atimis against Israel-Egypt peace treaty to be signed today in Washington (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>MORGTAN</p>
        <p>PRINTERS, Inc.</p>
        <p>211 W. 9th St.  Greenville, W.C. a Phone 752 5151</p>
        <p>Donna Fargo Faces</p>
        <p>Challenge Of MS</p>
        <p>By JOE EDWARDS</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Singer Donna Fargo vows to battle multiple sclerosis the way she fought off a flustered mugger last year.</p>
        <p>Miss Fargo, 35, was diagnosed last year as having multiple scleroris  a neurological disease often called the mysterious crippler of young adults.</p>
        <p>About the same time, a mugger confronted her in a motel hallway in Ohio and demanded her purse. She refused, they scuffled and he fled.</p>
        <p>Im going to treat this disease just like I did that man, Bliss Fargo said in an interview. Im not going to let it ge;t me if I can help it.</p>
        <p>: Her prognosis is uncertain. TTiere is no cure.</p>
        <p>- Its a disease that has varied symptoms and outconres, said Miss Fargo, best known for her 1972 hit Happiest Girl tal the Whole USA. It can cause blindness, paralysis or loss of speech. Theres no way to know whos going to get it or ^at causes remission. Its all a big question mark.</p>
        <p>- You just have to do things day by day, take care of yourself and for the best. It hits everybody differently. Some persons are immobilized early by it, but others live and manage very well with it.</p>
        <p>Im going to continue looking on the bright side, take it easy and not overdo it. Im thankful that Im walking and talking. Im fitting it ^iritual-ly. The fear of it will scare you to death. I hope and pray a lot. But its d^ressing, and Ive had a lot of discomfort.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, shes continued her career. She taped her own syndicated television show and continued to make records and do concerts. Shell know in April if the television show will be renewed for the coming season.</p>
        <p>Her symptoms were numbness, stiffness and ^asms.</p>
        <p>People should be sensitive to their bodies, she said. People know their bodies better than anybody else. They should try to read their belies.</p>
        <p>Pecle always complain about being tired, but this was a different kind of tired. Its very hard to describe. Some days you just cant get up.</p>
        <p>She and actress Lindsay Wagner are national cochairwomen of the multiple sclerosis READ-a-thon program. Under the program, school children volunteer to read books and enlist sponsors who pledge a certain amount to multiple sclerosis for each book read.</p>
        <p>huilds a Centwede Lawn</p>
        <p>No Sprigging</p>
        <p>Now you can sow a centipede lawn without back-breaking sprigging. Thousands of lovely centipede lawns have been established from Centi-Seed and many lawn experts consider centipede the best all-round lawn grass in this area. Grows in sun and partial shade. Grows in any soil, rich or poor, and requires little mowing. Comes back every spring and requires a minimum of fertilizer. Plant your new lawn or convert your old lawn with Centi-Seed.</p>
        <p>Full directions m each package</p>
        <p>5 pound package OAlQC</p>
        <p>plants 10.000 to VWftlu</p>
        <p>it MT</p>
        <p>20,000 square feet</p>
        <p>BeginningWeek</p>
        <p>Of Services</p>
        <p>FALKLAND  A week of CMi-secration and dedication services will be held at Friendship Holiness Church this we^.</p>
        <p>The services will begin tonight and end Saturday, with each one hoginning at 7:30 p. m. A different member of the diurdi will</p>
        <p>bring the message eadt evening, and the pastor, the Rev. R. A. Griswdd, will close out the week by leading the Saturday service. The public is invited.</p>
        <p>1 pound package</p>
        <p>plants 2000 to 4000 square feet</p>
        <p>Buy from your seed or garden store.</p>
        <p>Centi-Seed is grown and packed exclusively by Patten Seed Co., Lakeland. Georgia 31635</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0012" />
        <p>IPmm</p>
        <p>UTlw Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.Monday, Mardi X, 197</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, MAR. 27,1979</p>
        <p>'/</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES: You can now successfully wind up important business matters and also set in motions plans that could give you added abundance in the days ahead. Be alert and alive today.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Get caught up on old work early and then you can delve into new interests. Sidestep a foe Who could cause trouble.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Give more attention to accumulated tasks youve been neglecting lately. Plan the future more wisely than you have in the past.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You are able to go after cherished aims and gain them at this time. Make sure you do nothing that could ruin your reputation.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Be sure to make the right arrangements so that you and associates can gain your aims. Avoid one who imposes on you.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Apply yourself more in career matters instead of wasting time on the unimportant. Study new outlets that could add to your income.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) If you adopt a different attitude where your obligations are concerned, you ORn get the results you want. Think logically.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Clear up any mistiijder-standing you may have with associates. Know what an important person expects of you and try to please.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) A day when you can accomplish a great deal, both at unfinished and new work. A co-worker will be more willing to cooperate now.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Give more attention to home affairs now and increase harmony with family members. Be careful in handling money.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) A good day to complete long-time interests. Handling communications well is important at this time.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Study your financial position now and know how you can have added prosperity in the future. Express happiness.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Think about improving personal matters today and get good results. Join friends at amusements that are mutually enjoyed.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will easily understand changing conditions and will know how to benefit from them and be helpful to others. A dynamic person here who will make a great future for self, and be an inspiration to others.</p>
        <p>"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!</p>
        <p>1979, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)</p>
        <p>GOREN BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p> 1979 by CtiteiBO Tribuna</p>
        <p>Q.l Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4J872  OKJ96 Q85</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: North  East  Soath  West</p>
        <p>1   Pass  2   Pass</p>
        <p>3   Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Partner needs help in clubs for you to make game, but its difficult to assess how valuable your queen isi The expert bid is three diamonds, which says you have some help in clubs and, if the diamonds are of any use, you want to be in game. If you think partner wont understand that, take your chances and bid four spades.</p>
        <p>Q.2  As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>473 ^Q92 0874 4AKJ82 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West</p>
        <p>1 4 Pass 24 Pass</p>
        <p>2 4 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A. You have barely the minimum the law allows for a two-over-one response, and partner has done nothing to indicate that he possesses more than a minimum. We cant see your combined holdings stretching to game, so we suggest you pass now while you are still at a safe level.</p>
        <p>Q.3  As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>4Q7 &amp;lt;;?K854 OJ952 4Q93</p>
        <p>I The bidding has proceeded: North East South West</p>
        <p>1 4 Pass 1 NT Pass</p>
        <p>2 NT Pass ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take? A.To invite game when you have shown no more than fl-9 points. North must have a hand that was almost too good to open one no trump. With 8 points and an important spade filler, you are near the top of the range for your initial response, so we suggest you accept by going on to three no trump.</p>
        <p>Q.4Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>475 &amp;lt;7AKJ83 OK95 4K72 The bidding has proceeded: North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1 4  Pass  2 &amp;lt;7  Pass</p>
        <p>3 4  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A. This is a close decision. North is showing a hand worth about 16-18 points with spades as trump, and a good six-card or longer suit. Therefore, you are in the slam range. However, one of your kings is probably wasted, for partner almost surely has a singleton somewhere. For the moment, we would content ourselves with three no trump. That protects our kings from a lead through, shows stoppers in the unbid suits and leaves us better placed to accept a slam invitation should partner act again.</p>
        <p>Q.5Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4Q7 &amp;lt;;?AQ8 0K982 4J743 The bidding has proceeded: Weat Noi^ Et South 1 ^ PUM PM ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.-We would not contemplate allowing the opponents to buy the haira for one neart. However, a takeout doubl^ight not work out well if partner gets rambunc-tious in spades. We suggest you bisoe no trumpin tne balanc-</p>
        <p>to see how the auction deve s.</p>
        <p> MILES WEST OF QREENVILU 0NU.S.IS4 -FAMmLLE MWY.</p>
        <p>SHOWINQ ONLY THE FINEST IN ADULT ENTERTAINMENT</p>
        <p>NOW SHOWING</p>
        <p>VALLD.RffOUtlltD CAU DO&amp;lt;mtOACNI:4l -iSjT tHOWrMWFMfiAO</p>
        <p>7564)848</p>
        <p>Cutting Out The 'Schlock' Not All That Easy For ABC's Brass</p>
        <p>1 The caama of peace 5 Exclamation 37 Drink of contempt 8 Flesh food</p>
        <p>By PETER J. BOYER AP Television Writer</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) -Now that ABCs No. 1, some of the folks there have taken to renouncing their heritage. Were getting away from that schlock, they like to say.</p>
        <p>Schlock is a Yiddish word meaning, roughly, junk. Its what made the network famous in its years as No. 3  superficial shows that go for the basest of instincts, the lowest of denominators.</p>
        <p>Just when you mi^t be thinking these trumpeters of a new order at ABC might be right, the family genes begin to show. Breeding will out eventually, Southern ladies used to say, and it has at</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT-TVCh.9</p>
        <p>ABC.</p>
        <p>The bad blood shows up in ABCs newest child, The Ropers.</p>
        <p>The Ropers, you might know, are the middle-aged landlords on ABCs Threes Company. They are singularly unattractive, which, I think, was supposed to be their purpose on a show featuring three pretty youngsters.</p>
        <p>TTiey served as a sort of counterpoint to the virility and good looks of John Ritter, Suzanne Somers and Joyce DeWitt. Whereas these three lived together but didnt ... well, you know (hee hee), the Ropers lived together and couldnt ...well, you know (ho ho.)</p>
        <p>The inability of Mr. Roper (Norman Fell) to satisfy the libidinous urges of Mrs. Roper (Audra Lindley) was the standing (and only) joke the Rq)ers ever offered.</p>
        <p>So, when this deli^tful couple was given its own series, it wasnt exactly a surprise that it was awful. How awful, though, couldnt have been predicted.</p>
        <p>Last weeks Ropers was great stuff, if you like to ^t your entertainment from bathroom walls. See, the Ri^rs have moved to a new neighborhood, into a too-ritzy-for-us townhouse that is equipped with a bidet.</p>
        <p>Wow! Great chance for some toilet jokes, and dont suppose for a minute that the writers ignored the opportunity. I still dont know why we need two johns, Roper quips.</p>
        <p>And then therie are the Ropers charming neighbors, the Brookes. Hes a snob who doesnt like the Ropers (a plus in his favor; maybe he sh&amp;lt;Hdd get a series) and she is a nice lady whose nice build makes for some really zippo</p>
        <p>sex jokes.</p>
        <p>Example: Brodce thinks his wifes dress is a little too revealing, considering that a (XNigressman and his wife are coming over. Theyre a very inqx&amp;gt;rtant couple, he tells her. I know, she replies, looking at her chest. Get it?</p>
        <p>The rest is the usual stuff  belch jokes, jokes about Ropers sexual equipment, and the like.</p>
        <p>Somebody at ABC mentioned the fact that "nie Ropers was the nations No. 2 show in its debut week; he said that as soon as the show is establii^ed, its creators are going to take it into a different direction  subdue it, class it i^, so to speak.</p>
        <p>ABC, he said, is trying to get away from all that schlock.</p>
        <p>Cmon, ABC. If youre going to dress iq) like the Vanderbilts, dont belch at the table.</p>
        <p>12 Midday</p>
        <p>14 City in Sicily</p>
        <p>15 Long-time resident</p>
        <p>16 Force</p>
        <p>17 Author Levin</p>
        <p>18 Chemical</p>
        <p>familiarly</p>
        <p>40 Alfonsos queen</p>
        <p>41 Voided escutcheon</p>
        <p>42 American flag</p>
        <p>47 Fragrance</p>
        <p>48 Saviour</p>
        <p>49 Kitchen utensils</p>
        <p>3 Square of turf</p>
        <p>4 Lure</p>
        <p>5 Kind of cotton</p>
        <p>6 Pindaric work</p>
        <p>7 Armorial bearing</p>
        <p>8 Moslem sacred city</p>
        <p>9 aty in Oklahoma</p>
        <p>compounds 50 New : comb. 10 English</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Newlywed 7:30 Joker's 8:00 Shadows 9:00 M*A*S*H 9:30 WKRP 10:00 L. Grant 11:00 News 11:30 AAovIe _ TUESDAY :00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 All In 10:30 Price Is 11:30 Loveof 11:55 PaitlHarvey</p>
        <p>12:00 9/Alive News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Young and 1:30 World Turns 2:30 Guiding Light 3:30 M*A*S*H 4:00 AAerv 5:30 Dating 5:55 Weather 8:00 9/Alive News 8:30 News 7:00 Newlywed 7:30 Jokers 8:00 CBS Reports 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>WITN-TVCh.7</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Hogan's 7:30 Kingdom 8:00 Little House 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 11:30Tooight 1:00 Tomorrow 2:M News TUESDAY 5:30 Arthur smitn 8:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 9:00 Shore 10:00 Card Sharks 10:30 Hollywood 11:00 Rollers</p>
        <p>11:30 Wheel of 12:00 News Noon 12:30 Squares 1:00 Days of 2.00 Doctors 2:30 Another WId 4:00 Doris Day 4:30 Superman 5:00 Battle of 5:30 AAcHales 8:00 News 8:30 NBC News 7:00 Hogan's 7:30 Name That 8:00 Chiffhangers 9:00 Big Event 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 1:00 Tomorrow 2:00 News</p>
        <p>WCTI-TVCh.l2</p>
        <p>ing seat, that shows a hand of only opening bid strength or slightly less.</p>
        <p>Q.6Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>483 &amp;lt;?Q7 OKQ1072 4A854 The bidding has proceeded: West North Eut South 14  2 9 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What action do you taka? A.To overcall at the two-level vulnerable, partner must have a pretty fair hand. Indeed, with a third trump we would feel justified in raising to four hearts. Lacking that trump, however, may present partner with some handling problems, so we think a raise to three hearts is ample. Facing a two-level overcall, your queen doubleton is sufficient support.</p>
        <p>Q.7North-South vulnerable, as South you hold: 49852 OK72 4AQ8742 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South 14  2 9 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.-Pass. Dont cry before you are hurt. There is no reason to suspect that anything disastrous is going to happen to partner. If you try to correct to three clubs you are simply sticking your neck out, for ^rtner promises vou no m&amp;lt;Hre clubs than you have hearts.</p>
        <p>Q.8Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>452 9AQ6 OQ872 49763 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South 19  14 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A. There is a temptation to respond one no trump, both to protect your queen of hearts from the opening lead and to show partner some values but scant support for his suit. However, you really should have a better hand for that action, so, for the moment, we recommend a</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Sanford 7:30 Races 8:00 The Captain 9:00 All-American 11:00 News 11:30 Police 12:40 Nifellte TUESDAY 5:55 Tidings 8:00 PTLClub 7:00 America 7:25 News 1:25 News 9:00 Donahue 10:00 Oougtao 11:00 Happy Days 11:30 Family 12:00 Pyramid</p>
        <p>12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Hospital 4:00 Tom a. Jerry 4:30 Six Million 5:30 Three Sons 8:00 News 8:30 News 7:00 Sanford 7:30 ShaNaNa 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Lavernea 9:00 Three's 9:30 Taxi .10:00 Ropers 10:30 aOOOQuwns 11:00 News 11:30 Movie 1:10 NItellte</p>
        <p>20 Mutual concord</p>
        <p>23 Secluded valley</p>
        <p>24 Ckinceming (L.)</p>
        <p>25 Card game</p>
        <p>28 Actress Rehan</p>
        <p>29 Supernatural being</p>
        <p>(Melanesia)</p>
        <p>30 French nobleman</p>
        <p>32 Ones wife (slang)</p>
        <p>34 Wine: comb, form</p>
        <p>35 Man or Wight</p>
        <p>form 51 Back talk DOWN 1 Up: comb, form</p>
        <p>queen 11 Makes lace 13 To weary 19 Office note</p>
        <p>Avg. solution time: 27 min.</p>
        <p>HHiaa nKag raara</p>
        <p>DDiiii sniis ma</p>
        <p>oan</p>
        <p>anas laiin a[afi asa</p>
        <p>Qg]aas]a</p>
        <p>anasfira aaniiias</p>
        <p>aai&amp;gt;io n^a</p>
        <p>aana as^n nnaa mansi aaaa a^aa</p>
        <p>3-26</p>
        <p>Answer to Saturdays puzzle.</p>
        <p>daughter</p>
        <p>21 Within: comb, form</p>
        <p>22 Inland sea</p>
        <p>23 Forest clearing</p>
        <p>25 Bom with certain rights (Teut. Law)</p>
        <p>26-fixe</p>
        <p>27 Late actor: James </p>
        <p>29 In addition</p>
        <p>31 Disease of sheep</p>
        <p>33 Eateries</p>
        <p>34 Papal veils</p>
        <p>36 Author of Bus Stop</p>
        <p>37 Croquet wicket</p>
        <p>38 R.C. book of feasts</p>
        <p>39 Blemish</p>
        <p>40 Root of the taro</p>
        <p>43 Author: Harper </p>
        <p>44 Medical suffix</p>
        <p>45 Thing, inlaw</p>
        <p>46 Time period (abbr.)</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUIP  3-26</p>
        <p>RLKRYLXJZN XHRKHZK TSYLGKO</p>
        <p>SKL DYGK OXLKTDJLN</p>
        <p>THE MAESTRO RETURNS  Boston Sym-conductor Arthur Fiedler returns with baton in hand to lead the Boston Symi^hony Orchestra fw the first time since be underwent</p>
        <p>extensive neurosurgery sevoal months ago. Fiedler was greeted by the crowd with a standing ovatk f(M* the sin^e 4-minute piece be</p>
        <p>conducted. (APLaserj^Mto)</p>
        <p>Winners In Science Fair</p>
        <p>WUNK-TVCh.25</p>
        <p>AAONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Gardening 7:30 Report S100 School 8:30 Consumer 9:00 Academy 10:00 Footsteps 10:30 Turnabout TUESDAY 8:tS Weather 8:30 Crisis 8:50 Readalong 9:00 Sesame 10:00 Inslde/Out 10:15 All About 10:30 Readalong 10:40 Cover to 10:55 Safety 11:00 Pests, 11:30 Child Life 12:00 Childhood 12:10 WrIteOn</p>
        <p>12:30 Elect. Co. 1:00 All About 1:15 Cover to 1:30 Readalong 1:40 With Liberty 1 :S0 Safety 2:00 Readalong 2:15 Metric 2:30 Experiments 3:00 AAaking 3:30 Over Easy 4:00 Sesame 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 Elect. Co. 8:00 Studio See 8:30 AAaklng 7:00 Assembly 7:30 Report 8:00 Orchestra 9:00 Methadone 10:30 Scarlet</p>
        <p>Pitt and Greene County students were among the winners at the Regional Science Fair held at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Gigi Edwards of Pace Academy, Greenville, won an honorable mention with her project, Effects of Heated Water on (Jermination. Richard Pace, also of Pace Academy, had a thirdplace winner, Analysis of Wood by Combustion.</p>
        <p>Bethel Elementary School student Lee Stocks project, Herbicides, won an honorable mention.</p>
        <p>Stephen Johnson of Aycock Junior High School, Greenville, was a first place winner with Rover the Robot; Ishen Sehgal, also of Aycock, second place with Asexual Reproduction, Jay Holley and Bill ONeal, also of Aycock, second place with Paleontology, and Catrina Logan and Jan Wheless, also of Aycock, honorable mention with Marine Algae as a Food Source.</p>
        <p>Christopher Croom of Greene Central High School received a first place and also a special first place U. S. Navy award for</p>
        <p>Saturdays Cryptoqu^)  CLAMOROUS DISCOTHEQUES CAN DISCONCERT MOST QUIET SCHOLARS.</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoquip clue: Y equals A</p>
        <p>^ The Cryptoquip is a simple substitutiwi dpber in whidi eadi letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, uxw r  ^  *^8  an  apostrophe  can give you clues to  locating</p>
        <p>solar Beer can  Solution  is  accomplished  by trial and error.</p>
        <p>(c) 1979 King Features Syndicate, Inc.</p>
        <p>his project.</p>
        <p>Furnace.</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Albritton, also of Greene Central, placed second with Mans Radiation Burden If He Survives.</p>
        <p>Tonuny Mozingo and Lou Ann Dildy of Greene Central received an honorable mention for How Music Affects the Blood Pressure.</p>
        <p>Good news, lunch eaters.</p>
        <p>,)acl&amp;amp; got good specials for you</p>
        <p>^uccaneei*MOVIISi 2 3</p>
        <p>If things like value, price, speed of service, convenience, no tipping, variety of menu, plenty of free parking, free refills on beverages, and all-you-can-eat salad bar (free with dinners) are important to you at lunch, then we'll be important to you at lunch.</p>
        <p>Greenville Square Sn&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>The story of a young man'6 greatest adventure...</p>
        <p>"'^InTraiseOf</p>
        <p>^ eiDERIIIRnilEN</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>Rnm</p>
        <p>POR</p>
        <p>iSvEDICONCERI</p>
        <p>MNNNMi 1Ni PMin ConWiM HMh And Wty Wtgv Ungmg* And Mw Bt ConNdmd Stwcfckig And OnmM. No Expdea an OrVUneohataML</p>
        <p>FUN FOR ADULTS SHOWS DAILY 3:30-5:20-7:10-9:00 Ui</p>
        <p>fffriS^MOPFIMO eNTI</p>
        <p>N-O-W!</p>
        <p>A UNIVERSAL PICTURE iSl TECHNICaOR* </p>
        <p>Shows 3-S-7-9</p>
        <p>W. Greenville Blvd. at 264 ByPass</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>STARTS FRIDAY!</p>
        <p>PLAZA 1 HARD CORE (R)</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0013" />
        <p>Speaking of Your Health...</p>
        <p>_  Lester  LColeman,M.Di</p>
        <p>Syphilis and Pregnancy</p>
        <p>Police Cars Slowed By Federal Requirements</p>
        <p>When I was 19, I can^t syphilis. I was Incky becanse my moUier and faUier knew ahont it and gave me moral snpport dnring Uie time I was treated hy Uieir doctor. I am now married. My husband knows that I had Uiis problem. My worry, however, is this: Is it possibie to pass on Uiis disease to my child? I am two months pregnant  Mrs. X., Va.</p>
        <p>Dear Mrs. X.:</p>
        <p>When syidiilis is recognized early, and treated intensively and without intoruption, the condition can be cured. Unless this is so, syiMis can most certainly be transmitted through the blood from a pregnant mother to her unborn child.</p>
        <p>I am certain that you have told your story to the doctor who will deliver you. He undoubtedly has made repeated blood tests in order to be sure that there is no longer any evidence of syphilis.</p>
        <p>You are, indeed, fortunate to have had the siqiport of your family. Unlike yourself, many young people who contract this disease are afraid to tell their parents or doctor. The result is that syphilis, a dread disease, can flourish and ultimately destroy the health and happiness of the victim.</p>
        <p>Venereal disease is now at a</p>
        <p>level of epidemic proportion among teen-agers and young adults. In these age groups, a sense of responsibility is diminished. Many youngsters are so afraid th^ parents may learn about their infection that they do themselves the great injustice of not being treated and allow the condition to progress to a dangerous degree.</p>
        <p>Doctors are pledged to secrecy and do not violate confidences. Young people, therefore, who are exposed to venereal disease can be treated without fear that their condition will be revealed. And facilities are available at the local board of health, even for those people who cannot afford private care.</p>
        <p>Educational campaigns are absolutely essential if young men and women are to be taught the need for immediate treatment after exposure to venereal disease.</p>
        <p>By PAUL CARPENTER Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -The high-speed police chase, dramatized in movies and TV</p>
        <p>They are ccHisiderably slower  changes in federal laws, which</p>
        <p>than the iarger-englned Fords  will be getting even more stri-</p>
        <p>and Plymouths used in the  ngent on emissions and mileage</p>
        <p>past.  standards over the next few</p>
        <p>Here, Ill show you the ac-  years.</p>
        <p>c&amp;lt;i) shows, is wheezing now be-  celeration, he said, jamming  Well  be  looking  at  a  fwir-</p>
        <p>cause anti-pollution devices and  the gas pedal to the floor,  cylinder  police car  by  1985, and</p>
        <p>a federal push  for better  mile-  About 13 seconds later, the  then a lot of violators will be</p>
        <p>age have bogged  down  new  pa-  Fords engine screeching in  getting away, said Warran</p>
        <p>trol cars.  protest, the car hit 60 mph.  Woodfield, an analyst for the</p>
        <p>Many older cars or souped-up Thats it... You want to get newer ones in the private sec-  out and push? Parker said,</p>
        <p>tor can outperform police cars.  The performance of new cars</p>
        <p>And state troopers and other  can be improved only with</p>
        <p>law enforcement officials, tired</p>
        <p>International Chiefs of Police Association.</p>
        <p>Woodfield said the association was urging Congress to exempt police cars from laws that say garages may not change emission controls or install four-barrel carburetors, special ignition systems, dual exhausts and other high-performance devices.</p>
        <p>But any self-styled mechanic can drastically increase horsepower by equipping engines with turbochargers, while police cant.</p>
        <p>An individual citizen can do it. They can sell you the stuff and you install it. But its against the law for a garage to</p>
        <p>do it, including a municipal or police garage, Woodfield said.</p>
        <p>Actually, the trend in recent years has been to discourage high-speed chases and to rely instead on radios, radar and aircraft. The Pennsylvania State Police Academy, for example, gives cadds more training in horseback riding than it does in pursuit driving.</p>
        <p>In that sense, one Harrisburg speed-shop owner said even the driver of a hot car would be stupid to try to run from a police cruiser.</p>
        <p>My moneys on the state police. They outnumber you 50 to dont send cops out with 1, and you cant outrun those caliber pistols, he said.</p>
        <p>radios, said John Maxwell of Maxwell Racing Enterprises. State police cars are no pooches. They definitely are not dogs.</p>
        <p>But Joe OConnell, manager of the Bash Speed Shop in Philadelphia, said Pennsylvanias police cars were hopelessly outclassed.</p>
        <p>He said a 1968 Camaro, with a little help from special manifolds and a four-barrel carburetor, could hit 60 mph. in six seconds. And its top speed is a blurring 140.</p>
        <p>I dont understand it. You 22</p>
        <p>PEANUTS</p>
        <p>of being left in the dust, want Congress to help reverse the trend.</p>
        <p>This is an unfortunate situation. The state police in Pennsylvania is not lone in this ... This is a conunon problem  power, said Francis Wolfe, head of the Pennsylvania State Police transportation division.</p>
        <p>Trooper Tom Parker of the</p>
        <p>Speech Meet In Wilmington</p>
        <p>HERE'STHlilOULPUARI FLVIN6 Ace POUIN BEHINP EMEMV LINES.</p>
        <p>The 1979 armual meeting of the N. C. Speech, Hearing and Language Association will be held in Wilmington on March</p>
        <p>Pennsylvama State Pote was 29-31 and has been planned as an ^ed to demoMtrate tbe per- educational event with sixteen formance of his new Ford continuing education sessions</p>
        <p>im fVtrkMAtit  ^</p>
        <p>6ET0UT0FTHE WAV, VOU STUPID 6EA6LE1</p>
        <p>' XT</p>
        <p>cruiser, one of slower thanew Fords purchased last year.</p>
        <p>Benefits Total $15.4 Million</p>
        <p>Blue Cross and Blue Shield of</p>
        <p>Im a nervous person to start with. When I get particularly upset my heart seems to skip a beat It terrifies me because it gives me a choking sensation in the neck. Is diis a serious condition? - Mr. D.W., m.</p>
        <p>Dear Mr. W.:</p>
        <p>Am I correct in believing that your anxiety is so great you havoit consulted a doctor about it? These skipped beats, or extra sy^les, are caused by a slight irregularity of the heartbeat. Tension, excess tobacco, excess alcohol or extreme fatigue are the common reasons for these extra beats of the heart.</p>
        <p>To be sure that there are no</p>
        <p>MUST BE ORDERLY</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP) - Shanghai residents have been directed to be orderly in demonstrations and refrain from putting up anti-government posters in undesignated areas, Xinhua (Hsinhua) news agency reports.</p>
        <p>Speech and language pathologists and audiologists throughout the state will be attending and representing speech and hearing clinics, university clinics and training programs, public schools and private practice.</p>
        <p>'The Greenville area will be represented by Robert A. Muz-zarelli, associate professor with East Carolina University. He will be presenting a session entitled Management in Speech and Hearing Systems .</p>
        <p>CCACK,P0ES IT eomR Ycp KNk2)WlNe THAT AS LEAPEf^ 0= the CLUB.yoj v\AK PEANUTS CPfAPAl^ Y&amp;amp;Uf^ PA^^PEP6P STAf^S P</p>
        <p>DO You ^</p>
        <p>punt&amp;amp;fitck</p>
        <p>IN</p>
        <p>C HM MTHMMn. MC</p>
        <p>eiTrtep fAoJOKf/om OK FISK-FAC6.</p>
        <p>NUBBIN</p>
        <p>NOW SHOWING</p>
        <p>DOCTOR; COME QUICKLY. TWINIK FELL AND SKINNED &amp;amp;01L HER ELBOW6.</p>
        <p>North Carolina paid benefits underlying physical reasons, a totaling $15,448,720 to hospitals, general examination, in-</p>
        <p>doctors, skilled nursing eluding an electrocardiogram, faculties, and home health agen- jje reassuring, cies in Pitt County in 1978, the</p>
        <p>not-for-profit health care plan announced today.</p>
        <p>Claims paid on behalf of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of N. C. subscribers last year totaled $376 mUlion, compared to $319 mUlion in 1977. An additional $350 mUlion was paid through federal government health care and other programs ad-nUnistered by the plan, up from 1977s total of $318 mUlion.</p>
        <p>Throu^ its underwritten and administered government programs, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of N. C. serves more than 1.9 mUlion Tarheels, rou^y one-third of the states peculation.</p>
        <p>Area Witnesses In Fayetteville</p>
        <p>I'M OM MY WAY, PIERRE.</p>
        <p>F1R6T...FILL OUT THEEE J6URACB fORM^,</p>
        <p>BLNBIE</p>
        <p>GRILLED</p>
        <p>All cwigregations of Jehovahs Witnesses in the area spent the past weekend in FayettevUle attending a twoKlay convention.</p>
        <p>According to. Lindy Corey, 1,325 people were in attendance.</p>
        <p>Stewart Joyner, a minister of FarmvUle, spoke Saturday. All rheetings at local Kingdom Halls wUl resume regular schedules this week.</p>
        <p>CHOPPED STEAK</p>
        <p>MON.-THURS.</p>
        <p>FRENCH FRIES, COLE SLAW, ANY SOFT DRINK</p>
        <p>SHOKEIS</p>
        <p>BEETLE BAILEY</p>
        <p>A yOUNS FELLOW LIKEYO?/ HOW 16 IT I DON'T SET TIREP?</p>
        <p>PHANTOM</p>
        <p>trader sjoe.. 0NAJUN6LB TRAIL...</p>
        <p>Hfc&amp;gt;lV..6UN6; \aMA40..SRUB1 TALK ABOUT EVERyTHNg. luck; V LOOK FOR</p>
        <p>HIS MONEyf,</p>
        <p>FUIW AID ERNEST</p>
        <p>X WENT n* the g|OA|2D OF 6DC.ATION TO COMPLAIN THAt AFTER</p>
        <p>TwEln Y6AR5, I WAi PRAcnoALUY ILL-lTEftATe.</p>
        <p>they tolo me to Pot</p>
        <p>IT IN WRlTINfr-</p>
        <p>PRIME TIME</p>
        <p>If you're planning a garage sale, there's no better time than NOW! There's no better day than today to make your plans. Put those no longer used items around your home to good use. Turn them into cash with a fast-acting, low-cost Classified Ad.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Classified Ads</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;bU WOULD TOO IF Kiur / ONLY 6H0W YOU HAP /  m IMF TOP TBN WAS</p>
        <p>NETV  H0U6E  OM  IHB</p>
        <p>EXECUTE"</p>
        <p>RM?KIH</p>
        <p>ONLY</p>
        <p> tnMCWcaeoTrun*-NV NwiBv*d </p>
        <p>----</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0014" />
        <p>iPJI</p>
        <p>14Hm Daily RcOwtor, OiMiivUla, N.C.Monday, March 86,1979</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>INDEX</p>
        <p>MISCELLANEOUS</p>
        <p>....3</p>
        <p>...,5</p>
        <p>....7</p>
        <p>....9</p>
        <p>...38</p>
        <p>InAAemorlam........</p>
        <p>Card of Thanks.......</p>
        <p>Speclaf|4ofices.......</p>
        <p>Automotfva..........</p>
        <p>Day Nursery ........</p>
        <p>Employment ............42</p>
        <p>For Sale.....................46</p>
        <p>Instruction..................60</p>
        <p>Lost and Found............  42</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes...............66</p>
        <p>Opportunity.................68</p>
        <p>Professional..............70</p>
        <p>Rentals.....................84</p>
        <p>01 PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Help Wanted......</p>
        <p>Work Wanted......</p>
        <p>Wanted...........</p>
        <p>Wanted to Buy.....</p>
        <p>Wanted to Lease... Wanted to Rent____</p>
        <p>...42</p>
        <p>...44</p>
        <p>...94</p>
        <p>..96</p>
        <p>...98</p>
        <p>...99</p>
        <p>RENT/LEASE</p>
        <p>AAoblle Homes for Rent......64</p>
        <p>Farms for Lease.............76</p>
        <p>Apar tments tor Rent.........86</p>
        <p>Houses for Rent.............88</p>
        <p>Lots tor Rent................90</p>
        <p>Office Space tor Rent........91</p>
        <p>Resort Property tor Rent  92 Rooms for Rent..............93</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>Autos tor Sale..............9-22</p>
        <p>Bicycles tor Sale.............27</p>
        <p>Boats tor Sale...............29</p>
        <p>Campers tor Sale............31</p>
        <p>Cycles for Sale..............35</p>
        <p>Trucks tor Sale..............37</p>
        <p>Dogs 8. Pets.................40</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment............48</p>
        <p>Garage-Yard Sales..........50</p>
        <p>Heavy Equipment...........52</p>
        <p>Livestock...................54</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous tor Sale.......56</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods..............58</p>
        <p>AAoblle Homes tor Sale.......66</p>
        <p>Real Estate.................72</p>
        <p>Farms for Sale..............74</p>
        <p>Houses for Sale..............78</p>
        <p>Lots for Sale.................80</p>
        <p>Resort Property for Sale.....82</p>
        <p>01 PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS</p>
        <p>Scaled proposals will be received by the Greenville Utilities Commission In the conference room of the Director's office. 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 3:00 P.M., March 27, 1979 and Immediately opened and publicly read for furnishing labor, nnaterlal, equipment and supervision tor re-rooflng the main oftice building.</p>
        <p>Complete Plans and Specifications will be on file at the toTlowIng locations;</p>
        <p>A.G.C. Plan Room, in Raleigh, N.C., F.W. Dodge Plan Room, in Raleigh, N.C., Office of the Owner, and Dudley &amp;amp; Shoe, Architects, P.A., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive any or all informalities.</p>
        <p>Charles Horne, Director Greenville Utilities Commission AAarch 12, 1979</p>
        <p>Perkins lot. 13.34 feet to an Iron stake; thence Sooth 4-11-07 West, 11S.SFfeet to an Iron stake In the nor thern property line of Howell Street; thence South is-44-30 East and along the northern property line of Howell Street, 03.34 feet to the point of BEGINNING, containing 9,433.27 square feet by actual survey and being In all respects Olspos^</p>
        <p>F-4, Southslde Project N. C. R-134, as shown on survey map by James E. White Jr., dated January 30, 1979, reference to which is hereby directed.</p>
        <p>The Evans Company, the proposed redeveloper, has filed with the Redevelopment Commission of the City of Greenville, a Radeveloper's Statement for Public Disclosure In the form prescribed by the Secretary of the Department of Housing a. Urban Development pursuant to Section 105 (e) of the Housing Act of 1949 as amended.</p>
        <p>The said Redeveloper's Statement Is available for public examination at the office of the Redevelopment Commission of the City of Greenville during Its regular hours, said office being located at 1103 Broad Street, Greenville, North Carolina, and Its regular office hours being from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., Monday through Friday each week.</p>
        <p>REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE Billy B. Laughlnghouse Chalrnym AAarch 19, 24, 1979</p>
        <p>NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Articles of Dissolution of KADIMA CORPORATION, a North Carolina coriioratlon, were tiled In the office of the Secretary of State of North Carolina on the 21st day of AAarch. 1979, and that all credrfors of and claimants against the Corporation are required to present ttielr respective claims and demands immediately In writing to the cprpora-tlon so that It can proceed to collect Its assets, convey and dispoae of Its properties, pay. satisfy and discharge Its liabilities and obliga</p>
        <p>tions and do all other acts required to liquidate Its business and affairs. This the 21st day of AAarch, 1979,</p>
        <p>KADIMA CORPORATION c/o P. O. Box 588 Greenville, NC 27834 AAarch 24; April 2, 9 and 14, 1979.</p>
        <p>LEGAL NOTICE Advertisement for Bids</p>
        <p>Sealed proposals will be received by Pitt dounty Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees in Conference Room A at 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 2, 1979, and Immediately thereafter publicly open and read, for the construction of a 140 employee parking lot.</p>
        <p>Each bid submitted must cover all portions of the work. Separate bids will be received for general construction and electrical construction. All contractors are required to have proper licenses. Bid bonds of 5% will be required and performance bond of 100% of the cost of the work will be required. Bids received after the hour named above will not be considered. The hospital reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive Informalities.</p>
        <p>Plans and specifications are available In the office of Ralph R. Hall, Jr., Director of the Physical Plant, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, North Carolina 27834.</p>
        <p>Telephone: 757-4489.</p>
        <p>Jack W. Richardson, Director Pitt County AAemorlal Hospital AAarch 24, 27, 28, 1979</p>
        <p>ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIOS Sealed proposals, so marked, will be received In the oftice of the Director of Greenville Utilities Commission, Greenville Utilities Building, 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 2:30 P.M. (EST), on April 4, 1979 and Im</p>
        <p>mediately thereafter publicly opened and read for the furnishing of: 5,000* 2" PVC Duct, and 10,000' 5"</p>
        <p>PVC Duct.</p>
        <p>Instructions for submitting bids and complete specifications for the equipment or materials to be provided will be available In the office of the Supertlndent of the Electric Department, Greenville Utilities Building, 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, during regular office hours.</p>
        <p>Greenville Utilities Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive Informalities.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE UTILITIES COAAMISSION</p>
        <p>AAarch 24, 1979</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD has dally at reasonable prices. Call 751</p>
        <p>WE BUY nice, used cars. Bulck-AAazda, Inc., 754-1877.</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>AMC</p>
        <p>AMC 1974 GREMLIN (4 cylinder, AM/FM cassette stereo, radlals, great mileage per gallon), $2000; 1959 El Camino (first year made), $1500; 1977 Oldsmoblle -Royale 88 (27,000 miles, loaded), $4500. 744-3719 or 744-3774.</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Florence J. Becker late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notlty all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix within six (4) months from date of the first publication ot this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 8th day of AAarch, 1979.</p>
        <p>Miriam F. Lilja P.O. Box 345 Bethel, N.C. 27812 Executrix of the estate of Florence J. Becker, deceased. March 12, 19, 24, April 2, 1979</p>
        <p>STATEMENT OF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE Notice Is hereby given that the Redevelopment Commission of the City of Greenville Is considering the proposal to enter Into a contract tor the disposal of project land and the redevelopment thereof to AAellnda Cousins ot Greenville, North Carolina, on or betore AAarch 29, 1979, said land being Disposal Parcel S-4, located In the Southslde Redevelopment Project, N.C. R-134, Greenville. North Carolina, described as follows:</p>
        <p>DISPOSAL PARCEL S-4: On the west side of Greene Street between Arthur and Elks Streets and BEGINNING at a point in the western pro-</p>
        <p>s.m.and4p.m.</p>
        <p>tions. Excellent condition. 752-0144.</p>
        <p>BUICK 1978 Regal. Silver, mileage. By owner. 758-1777.</p>
        <p>perty line of Greene Street (Greene Street being 50 feet wide) which point Is 200 feet northerly from the point of Intersection of the western</p>
        <p>Street being 50 feet wide) which OOleet</p>
        <p>ntersec  _</p>
        <p>property line of Greene Street with the nortneri</p>
        <p>rn property line ot Arthur Street, and from said beginning point running North 84-10 West, 110 feet; thence North 05-50 East, 50 feet; thence South 84 10 East, 110 feet to tlie Western property line of Greene Street; thence Sooth 05-50 West and along the western line of Greene Street, 50 feet to the point of BEGINNING, containing 5,500 square feet by actual survey, and being all ot Disposal Parcel S-4, Southslde Project N.C. R 134, ac cording to map of same made by Rivers and Associated, Inc., C.E.. dated January 19, 1979, reference to which Is hereby directed tor more detailed and accurate description.</p>
        <p>AAellnda Cousins, the proposed redeveloper, has filed with the Redevelopment Commission of the City of Greenville, a Radeveloper's Statement for Public Disclosure In the form prescribed by the Secretary of the Department of Housing 8, Urban Development pur suant to Section 105 (e) of the Hous-</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Cadillac</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Chevrolet</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Plymouth</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH 1974 Valiant. 4 door, 4 cylinder, automatic, air. power sfaerlng and brakes, 40,000 miles, new tires. Excellent condition. $3000. 754-9239 after 4.</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 1977 Grand Prix. Bucket seats, electric windows, stereo radio, cruise control, tilt wheel, 12,000 miles. Like new. $5995. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754-3115.</p>
        <p>GRAND PRIX 1974. White, red In terlor, cruise, tilt, FM stereo tape. Excellent condition. Call 944-3701.</p>
        <p>LeMANS GTO 1973 (350, straight shift, 50,000 miles, good condition), $895, 1972 Nova (307, 2 door, 57,000 condition), $400.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 1977 Grand Prix. Every option In the book. Extra nice car. Gold with landau top. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754 3115. Dealer #2827.</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>Foreign</p>
        <p>DATSUN 280Z 1978. Demonstrator, turbo charged, sunroof, 2000 miles. Holt Oldsmoblle-Datsun, 101 Hooker Road. 754 3115.</p>
        <p>condition. $1100. Call after 4 , 758-0488.</p>
        <p>PORSCHE 924, 1977. Second edition. 22,000 miles. Serious offers only. 752-5830or 758 2331.</p>
        <p>DATSUN 280Z 1974. Golden brown, black Interior, low miles, nice car. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754 3115. Dealer #2827.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA 1977 Celica GT LIftback. Blue with white Interior. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754-3115. Dealer #2827.</p>
        <p>tIon.SllOO</p>
        <p>luper . 754 1</p>
        <p>1103.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA 1977 Corolla SR 5. 5 speed, AM/FM, brand new set steel belted radlals. 753 4824 after 5:30, ask for Angle.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA 1972 Corolla. 4 do transmission and tlmlng-el accept best offer. 754-50OT.</p>
        <p>. Will</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Boats For Sale</p>
        <p>1974FIBERFORM 115 Johnson with</p>
        <p>trim and tilt, stainless steel pr pellor, Cox galvanlfed tilt tralle $2500. 758 4981.</p>
        <p>ir RENKEN open bow boat, 115 HP AAercury, Cox galvanized tilt trailer. 754-9577 after 5.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL 1974, 19' Glassmaster with 200 HP Evlnrude motor, tailored canvas Cover and Hercules trailer. ExcoUent condition. A bargain at $4500 Call 944-2298.</p>
        <p>1972 EVINRUDE 125 HP motor. Real good shape. $800. 753 4224 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>1979, 8 HP MARINER boat motor, 1979 galvanized Cox trailer, 1974 AAarlne plywood boat. 744-3575 after 1 p.m.</p>
        <p>14' RIVER OX, 50 HP AAercury motor, Vann trailer. Buddy bearings, depth finder. 752 1435.</p>
        <p>HOBUCKEN SPECIAL. 1973, 20 foot Sportscraft. Extra deep V, 115 HP AAercury, 32 gallon tank, dual wheel trailer (^just repainted) with electric wench, CB mount with marine antenna, power tllt-trlm, new seats, twin tops with side windows arxJ cover, new depth finder. Excellent condition. $4200. 754-1447.</p>
        <p>1972 THUNDERBIRD, 85 HP</p>
        <p>Evlnrude. Seats need repair. $1800. 754 7444.</p>
        <p>BUICK LIMITED 1979. 2 door, folly equipped. Beautiful car. Sticker price, $10,700, now $8895. 758-8750 betw/een9a.</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Campers For Sale</p>
        <p>CONVERTED VANS, all makes. Sasser's Camping Center. All types Ing equip ........</p>
        <p>1949, 29* HOLIDAY Rambler with penthouse. Fully equipped, 20' carefree awning, crank down stabilizers. Immaculate condition. $4795. 944-1132 days, 792-3784 nights.</p>
        <p>1974, 24' Starcraft travel trailer. Full deluxe options, like new. Must be seen. $5800. 792-1041 (Wllliamston) after 5; weekends.</p>
        <p>35 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1944, 4S0CC Triumph street chopper plus original frame. 752-7441.</p>
        <p>1975 HONDA 750. Excellent condl tion. Low mileage. Lots ot extras. Call 752 0192.</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>1974 DODGE CLUB Cab. V 8, povrer steering and brakes, AAA/FM radio, manual transmission, 37,000 miles. $3500. Call 752 3409 or see at Flem Ing's Furniture 8. A^^liances,</p>
        <p>Dickinson Avenue or call 754-7510 nights.</p>
        <p>1972 CHEVY BLAZER.</p>
        <p>drive, automatic, air, tires. $3300. 754-8157.</p>
        <p>CADILLAC 1974 Sedan DeVille. 40,000 miles, one owner. Perfect condition. Loaded. 754-5345.</p>
        <p>CAAAARO LT 1974. Real sharp with V-8 engine, automatic transmission, AM/FM radio, 8-track tape player.</p>
        <p>IMPALA 1947 Station Wagon. Good condition. Contact Russ Nicholson, 752-4110 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>1974 JEEP WAGONEER. Excellent condition. All the extras. Call AAonday Friday, 8to5. 754 7755.</p>
        <p>1974 CHEVY BLAZER. 350, 4 barrel, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, AM/FM, CB. Asking $4150. 758-1424.</p>
        <p>1974 SCOTTSDALE. 350, short bed, burgundy with rims and tires. 758-2W after 5, anytime weekends.</p>
        <p>1973 DATSUN PICKUP. Good condl tIon. Priced at wholesale, $1100. 753 4572 after 4.</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>HBlpWantBd</p>
        <p>SALES. Outside. Several experienced salespeople to work a six county area surrounding Greenville. AAust be ambitious, self-motivated and willing to work hard. Draw against comrmsslon forming potentlSI of $20,000 par year and up. Reply to Sales, pT O. Box 449, Greenville, NC 27834.</p>
        <p>AVON. ,</p>
        <p>Sell quail own hours and work with friendly people. For details, call 752-7004.</p>
        <p>Spring Into a new career I alfty products, choose your</p>
        <p>BARAAAIO needed for Saturday nights. Call Louie's Lounge, 752 1493.</p>
        <p>expeHienceo waitresses.</p>
        <p>Apply between 4 In mornings and 10 at nights. Waffle House, 304 Green ville Boulevard, Southeast.</p>
        <p>CASHIER AND GENERAL office worker qualified to operate computer terminal. Must be accurate typist. Benefits Include profit sharing, major medical and dental plan, ^ply in person at AAaxwell Furniture, 404 Greenville Boulevard.</p>
        <p>mediately. Wedco IlngtonC keWilson.</p>
        <p>ely. 1 Bypass, Aril Apply to Mi</p>
        <p>KEYPUNCH. Temporary. Most have good references. Betty's Personnel, 754-3404.</p>
        <p>waitress. Must be 18 or over wif police record. $M0 a week for the right person. Apply at 33 Club on East Tenth Street, across from RIverbluff (behind Fast Fare).</p>
        <p>CERTIFIED dental assistant or dental hyglenlst. Full or part-time. 522 4313 days, 522 2525 nights; Kinston.</p>
        <p>AAANAGER AND CREW wanted for</p>
        <p>self-service station. Call USA Gasoline, 754-9255.</p>
        <p>INVENTORY CONTROLLER</p>
        <p>wanted. Experience desired. Salary commensurate with experience. Call tor appointment, 754-7144.</p>
        <p>POSITION OPEN. Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency Executive Secretary. Health Agency seeking qualified Executive Secretary for advanced secretarial position. High school graduate with some college preferred. Excellent fringe benefits with ideal working conditions. Salary commensurate with ability. Send resumes only to:  Eastern</p>
        <p>Carolina Health Systems Agency, Inc., P. O. Dravrer 7304, Greenville, NC. An Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>PAINTERS. Skilled In the trade. Ap</p>
        <p>gly at 5 p.m., A. B. Whitley, Inc., Teenvllle.</p>
        <p>LEGAL SECRETARY. Experience preferred. Will consider others with experience In clerical skills. Salary open. Betty's Personnel, 754-3404.</p>
        <p>PROGRESSIVE company looking for a sales representative for the Greenville area to call on businesses and individuals, demonstrating and selling a new health and beauty product. Car essential. Send resume to</p>
        <p>Representative, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>P. O. Box 1947,</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON. Experience ireferred. Excellent company</p>
        <p>preti .  ________</p>
        <p>benefits. Draw against co Isslon. Apply to Smith-Waldrop Motors, Dickinson Avenue. 754-4247.</p>
        <p>DENTAL ASSISTANT. 5 days a week. Experienced. Good salary. 752 1337.</p>
        <p>WANTED. College student for part-time work in small school. Available now through summer. Call 752-2430.</p>
        <p>COOK TO ASSIST qualified chef. Must have experience In grill work preparing steaks, chops, seafoods ana other foods. Will train in all types of food preparation. Most be sober, dependable, willing to work and accept responsibility. Good starting pay with fringe benefits. Advance in salary commensurate'wlth skill and abillh</p>
        <p>lub, Wilson, NC. (919) 291-3815.</p>
        <p>perse</p>
        <p>tryC</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES</p>
        <p>and kitchen help. Apply In person. No phone calls please. Angelo's Seafood Restaurant, 710 North Greene Street.</p>
        <p>SHARP HOMEAAAKER PARTY PLAN PEOPLE</p>
        <p>Experience working with other women? Hire, train people from home 4 months a year. Free kit - absolutely no investment. Training provided. Can also manage retail Christmas store, November and December. Excellent opportunity for advancement. Call June collect at 814 743-7272.</p>
        <p>HOUSE OF LLOYD - TOYS AND Gl FTS</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE opening tor tield technicians in Greenville and Raleigh areas. Experience in sales, concrete or asphalt testirn desired. Inquiries call local, 758-4770 or collect (919) 874-0414.</p>
        <p>STUDENT OR ANYONE who likes infants needed for babysitting. Various hours, afternoons and evenings. Stanclll Drive. 752-8849.</p>
        <p>BRODY'S DOWNTOWN has opening for department head of missy sportswear. Congenial co-workers. Good corrwany benefits. See Mrs. Padley at Brooy's downtown.</p>
        <p>1974 FORD Ranger pickup. Power steering and brakes, air, solid \hite. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754 3115. Dealer #2827.</p>
        <p>Excellent running condition. New paint. Reai good buy. $1800. 753-4224 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>1978 CHEVY VAN. Fully customiz ed. Loaded with accessories. $4500 firm. Call 752 1524.</p>
        <p>1975 DODGE Power Wagon. 4 wheel drive, 1400 Monster Mudder Tires 754 7339 aHer 4.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1977 Camaro. Fully loaded. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754-3115. Dealer #2827.</p>
        <p>IMPALA 1943.  V-8,  automatic,</p>
        <p>povwr steering and brakes, air. Excellent condition. $375. 754-9532.</p>
        <p>AMONTE CARLO 1978. White, baby blue, less than 10,000 miles, loadecl. 752 2127 after 5.</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>DOGS &amp;amp; PETS</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED SAINT BERNARD puppies, will be 4 weeks old AAarch 21. 747 2223.</p>
        <p>AKC GERAAAN SHEPHERD puppies. Champion bloodline. 754-8413 or 758 9071.</p>
        <p>reloper public &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>examination</p>
        <p>ing Act of 1949 as amended.</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>is available for pt  ______</p>
        <p>at the office of the Redevelopment Commission of the City of Greenville during Its regular hours, said office being located at 1103 Broad Street. Greenville, North Carolina, and Its regular office hours being from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., AAoTKMy through Friday each week.</p>
        <p>REDEVELOPMENT COAAMISSION OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE OF LANDAND</p>
        <p>Notice is hereby given that the Redevelopment Commission of the City of Greenville Is considering the proposal to enter into a contract for the disposal of project land and the redevelopment thereof to The Evans Company of Greenville, North Carolina, on or before March 29, 1979. said land being Disposal Parcel F-4, located In the Southslde Redevelopment Project, N.C. R-134, Greenville, North Carolina, described as fol lews:</p>
        <p>DISPOSAL PARCEL F 4: At the northeast intersection ot Henry and Howell Streets and BEGINNING at the point of intersection of the northern property line of Howell Street (Howell Street being 40 feet wide) with the eastern property line of Henry Street (Henry Street being 32.59 feet wide) and from said beginning point running North 4-11-07 East and along the eastern property line of Henry Street, 115.59 feet to the southwest corner of the Odessa Perkins lot, a new corner; thence North 85-44-30 East and along the new southern line of the Odessa</p>
        <p>CHEVETTE 1974. 2 door hatchback, automatic. $1995. 758 4155.</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>CHRYSLER 1977 Cordoba. Folly loaded, silver with vinyl top, maroon leather Interior. Priced to sell. Call' either 754-5710 or 758-2384 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>MUSTANG II 1975. 4 speed, new tires. Excellent condition. 754-jl09.</p>
        <p>IF YOU'RE LOOKING for a good used car at a good price, be sure you look at the many cars offered for sale today in Classified.</p>
        <p>THUNDERBIRD 1978. Dove gray, power windows, steering and Drakes; tilt wheel. AAA/FM stereo tape, 14,000 miles. 754 5047 aHer 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>PINTO 1972 Station Wagon. Light blue, 45,000 miles. Real good shape. 753-4224 aHer 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>FULL BLOODED Chihuahua pup pies. Call 244-0451 or 244-0844.</p>
        <p>EQUAL OPPORTUNITY. The</p>
        <p>women in our business make as much money as the men. If you're looking for equal opportunity, call 754-3841. Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>sass.iii-'iiKiii.r.Sfsa,'</p>
        <p>Must furnish own transportation. Unlimited Income. Coll 754-3055 between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. for appoint ment.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY FOR well-established</p>
        <p>legal firm in Graanvllle. Write, stating quallflcaHons, to Legal Secretary, P. villa, NC.</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for young, aggressive automobile salesperson. Draw against commission. 758-8750 between 9 a.m. and 4</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER. 4 hours a day. $2.90 an hour. Must cook and drive. References required. 754-0544 all day Sunday and aHer 4 p.m. weekdays.</p>
        <p>REPAIR VW3RK. Carpentry, roof Ing, masonry. Call James Harrington, 752 7745 after 4.</p>
        <p>SEPTIC TANK Installation, lot clearing, landscaping, backhoe-bulldozer work. Cfall Sonny Cox, 744-2348 or 744 3414.</p>
        <p>WE CLEAN out gutters, put up gutters and do palntmg. 752-3074.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>position. Appi . Ex</p>
        <p>  iely  30</p>
        <p>per week. Experienced in typing, shorhand and bookkeeping. Call Bet's Personnel, 754-3404.</p>
        <p>FRAMING, SIDING and trim crew available. 758-4444 aHer 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO ken children In my home AAonday-Frlday. 4 months to 5 years old. 758-0851.</p>
        <p>WILL KEEP. Infants In my home Monday-Frlday. 758-1053 from 8 m. til lOp.m-</p>
        <p>WILL BABYSIT In mw home. Any age. Prefer days. Call 754 9731.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE LAWN maintenance, Including tree service. Tony Brown's Services, 754-4735.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED painter. Interior, exterior. Reasonable rates. Call 754-0528.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL house painting. Interior/exterior. Minor repairs. Expert work. Reasonable rates. Free estimates. 752-8584 aHer 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>HYDRAULIC CYLINDERS; double action, 2" X 8", $34.95; 3" X 8", $43.95; 4" X 8", $49.95. Other sizes available. Agri-Supply Company, Greenville, 752 3999.</p>
        <p>Tuesday, Aiprll 3 at 10 a.m. ISO tractors, 500 Implements. Wayne Imple ment Auction Corporation, P. O. Box</p>
        <p>233 (Highway 117 South), (Goldsboro, NC 275. NCi#</p>
        <p>SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN BE AAORE SUCCESSFUL WITH MUTUALOFOAAAHA</p>
        <p>1.Advanced Training. Our new and improved program Is among the finest in our field.</p>
        <p>2.Unlimited Income. How much you earn is entirely up to you.</p>
        <p>3. First-year bonus. You can qualify for up to $2,200 additional income.</p>
        <p>4.Advancemant Opportunities. We need people with management potential to fill key positions.</p>
        <p>s.OutstandIng Product Line. Nearly</p>
        <p>everyone you call on Is a prospect for one or more of our services.</p>
        <p>4.National Advertising Support. Our</p>
        <p>-am produces thousands of II on.</p>
        <p>See if you can qualify. Call me today for a confidential Interview.</p>
        <p>LEE WEAVER 758-3401</p>
        <p>progra leads t</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel Rabies and worm shots. $75.</p>
        <p>IRISH SETTER puppies. 8 weeks old, females. $25 each. 744 4832 aHer</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>PAINTERS. One permanent posi tion open for right person over 4'2" Top salary. 10 years experience in spraying and trimming. Call 752 215 or 744 2324.</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>TOP NOTCH SECRETARYAd</p>
        <p>ministrative Assistant for construction firm. Must be excellent typist, over 25, mature, serious minded and Interested In growth position. Great opportunity for right person. Send resume, stating past salary ar^ present salary requlren Greenville,</p>
        <p>ilrements, to Box 79,</p>
        <p>WANTED. Dental Hygienist, Full or part-time. Send resume to Dental Hygienist, P. O. Box 1947, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>RN'S OR LPN'S. You have discovered your speciality (caring for people). Now discover Nephrology Nursing. Learn and</p>
        <p>firow in a rewarding career by join-ng our progressive staff at Green-virie Dialysis Center. Excellent salary and fringe benefits. Contact Penny Spainhour, RN, Director of Nursing, 752 1520from8:to5.</p>
        <p>MAVERICK 1974. 2 door, automatic, povxer steering. Rons and drives good. $1100. 758 4347.</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Oldsmobile</p>
        <p>CUTLASS SALON 1974. 28,000 miles, air, velour seats, many other options. $4400. Call 758-2582 aHer 4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>CTLASS SUPREME 1975. Loaded with extras, new set of radlals, blue with black vlnyj top. Oie owner. 758-2984 after 5, anytime weekends.</p>
        <p>OLDSMOBILE 1977 Cutlass Supreme. 2 door, silver, automatic, V-8, power steering, air. Super nice. Call Holt Oldsmoblle, 754-3115. Dealer #2827.</p>
        <p>OLDSMOBILE</p>
        <p>Holt Oldsmobile, #2827.</p>
        <p>____________ 1975 Cutlass</p>
        <p>upreme. 2 door, fully loaded. Call   -..... '54-3115. Dealer</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Plymouth</p>
        <p>SATELLITE automatic, air.</p>
        <p>1974. AM/FM, $1100. Call 75S-47</p>
        <p>LOCAL FIRM wants experienced asphalt foreman and loot man. Send resume to 4(X) North AAemorlal Drive, Greenville, N . C. 27834.</p>
        <p>LICENSED practical nurses, 3 to 11 and 11 to 7 shiHs. ICF unit. Oak</p>
        <p>AAanor, Inc. 5238247.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill. 747 2848 or</p>
        <p>SHAKLEE PRODUCTS. Natural food supplements biodegradable, non-polluting cleaners, unique beauty aids, baby products. Distributorships available. Call 752-7493 between 11 and 4 dally.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED CARPET or vinyl Installer tor immediate employment at Carpets By George, 754 5718.</p>
        <p>PEIGNG CLIPPER Beauty Salon to open soon. Owner Torrle Hair,</p>
        <p>?gr7'.</p>
        <p>WANTED. Person with experience In curing tobacco with Roanoke bulk barns and some maintenance ability. 758-0520 days.</p>
        <p>DRYWALL HANGERS and finishers. 2 years experience. 744-2324, 752-2215.</p>
        <p>WORKI Ambitious person wantM to work In place of one who didn't. Call Equal Opportunity</p>
        <p>754-4711.</p>
        <p>Employer.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU READY ... to take that Important step that will lead to financial success? Wo have ar unusual sales opportunity In Green ville vrhlch can mean $10,000-$15,000 or more your first year. Excellent tralnirra program for the right person. Call for appointment:  Joe</p>
        <p>Lione, 944 0519, Friday from 1 til p.m.</p>
        <p>PRODUCTION LEAD PERSON</p>
        <p>Immediate need for Individual with at least 2 years college or related ex</p>
        <p>yeai</p>
        <p>perlence to serve as production lead person. Call 752-3 for appointment.</p>
        <p>product 10 between I</p>
        <p>PEST CONTROL TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>Needed for immediate employment Good pay arrangement. Experience desired but not required. Call for ap polntment 752 5175.</p>
        <p>DON'TMISSTHIS</p>
        <p>Guys and gals 18 and over, tired ot the same old routine. Large Atlanta firm has openings for 4 from this area. Must be neat, single and free to travel resort areas like Las Vegas, east coast beaches, westet states and even Kentucky Derby, weeks all expense paid training program, transportation provided i^ar round. This is a permanent job, above average earnings, plus annual bonuses of $0 to $500 plus you have a chance to win a trip to any country of your choice. If accepted, must be ready to leave immediately. For more Information, see Mrs Etheridge at the Holiday Inn, 1) noon to 4 p.m. AAonday, AAarch 24th No phone calls tiplease. Parents welcome at Interview.</p>
        <p>WANTED. AAeat market manager Good salary plus benefits and bonus 825-5441.</p>
        <p>HBlpWantBd</p>
        <p>person at 2804 East Tenth Sti</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>O. Box 1947, Green</p>
        <p>WdrkWantBd</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>MIscBllanBous</p>
        <p>TOP SOIL, fill dirt, sand, rocks, bulldozer work and lot Henry Worthington,</p>
        <p>i$jr' awik. Til</p>
        <p>landscapirm, bi clearing. Cat) 744-344T.</p>
        <p>PIANO RENTAL, as low as $15 per</p>
        <p>month. Cha-Rlch AAusic, 754-1212.</p>
        <p>NOW OPEN DAILY, 10 to 5. Antiques and stuff. 2 miles west of Chocowlnlty. Choco Flea AAarkat.</p>
        <p>FURNITURE STRIPPING arid reflnlshlng. Tar Road Antiques, 754-9123.</p>
        <p>FRONT-END loader and forkllH. Bush hog, landscape, cut trees; yard, garden work. 752-7411.</p>
        <p>TO SETTLE AN ES-^TE, Sterling silver flatware. Camellia by Gorham. Ellis Jewelry In Farmvllle or phone 752-1840.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL 23" AAagnavox color TV. Nice wood finish, (xreat picture. $195. 758-4940.</p>
        <p>tachments. 7:</p>
        <p>N garde</p>
        <p>54 95771</p>
        <p>COMBO ORGAN. Cordovox modal with built-in AAoog-syntheslzer. $995. 758 1984 aHer 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>SEARS REFRIGERATOR (gold, 15 cubic foot, frost-free); wedding dress (size 8-10, lace with matching veil). 754-0500.</p>
        <p>AAAAZIN6 NEW wireless home or</p>
        <p>office security system. Call 754-1944 tor free demonstration</p>
        <p>NEED FURNITURE? We have HI Brands you'll recognize. Financing available to fit your needs. Home Furniture Store, 701 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>PORTABLE dishwasher, $100; Hot point stove, $100; 10,000 BTU air conditioner, $200; 8000 BTU air conditioner, $75. 752-3899.</p>
        <p>5 HP RIDING lawn mower. Excellent condition. 744-4840 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>HOTPOINT WASHER. 2 years</p>
        <p>Good condition. $150. 7S1-773.</p>
        <p>COUCH AND CHAIR, $40 for both; nice print chair, $50. Good condition. 754-0108.</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Farm EqulpmBnf</p>
        <p>FARM AAACHINERY Auction Sale</p>
        <p>:#188. Phone 734-4234.</p>
        <p>Good condition. $210.749-:</p>
        <p>50 Garaga-YardSalB</p>
        <p>lAINT TIMOTHY'S Episcopal Ihurch sponsors a gigantic yard sale. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen Showroom, Greenville Boulevard, Saturday, AAarch 31 from 10 a.m. til 2 Wearing apparel, household urnlshlngs and</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>MIscBllanaous</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, builder sand, to and rock. J. L. McDaniel, 75 days, 754-2351 after 3: p.m.</p>
        <p>AAen's knit</p>
        <p>BOOTLEG PRICES: slacks and jeans, $9.99; sportcoats,</p>
        <p>  lady's pantsuits, $12.95,</p>
        <p>$5.99; tops, $4.99. Lar(</p>
        <p>$19.95,</p>
        <p>slacks, ______ ^  -  .</p>
        <p>selection. Mill Outlet Clothing, 244 Bypass (across from Nichols), Greenville.</p>
        <p>RINSE A VAC. $10 a day. Shampoo not included. Whitehurst Carpet Center.</p>
        <p>LARGE LOADS of sand, topsoll, I ield dirt and rock. Also lot clearing. Jim Hudson, 754-4742.</p>
        <p>CEMENT STEPS, horse trailers, utility barns, campers and truck shells. Call 944-0311.</p>
        <p>DO IT YOURSELF and save. Rent he professional carpet cleaning machine, Steamex. Call Larry's Carpetland, 10 East Tenth Street, 758-2300.</p>
        <p>LITTLE'S NURSERY. Fruit trees, zecan trees, most other trees, shrub-jery. Jackson and Perkins roses are here. LIHIe's Nursery, 3 miles west ot Greenville on 244. 754-3424.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE AUTO, furniture and boat upholstery. Also furniture repairing and reflnlshlng. Complete line of materials. Free pickup and delivery. Free estimates. Jackson's Cleaning 8. Upholstery Service, 758-3274.</p>
        <p>BALDWIN ORGAN, model 1R, with tape deck. Just traded In for new Lowrey. Beautiful walnut cabinet with tinted glass music rack. 9 rhythms, beautiful full organ sound. Like new. Music Arts, Washington Square Mall, Washington. 944-8191.</p>
        <p>LOWREY ORGANS and pianos available exclusively at Music Arts, Washington Square Mall, Washington. 944-8191.</p>
        <p>STANDARD ROYAL electric typewriter with correctable feature. Good condition. $425. Call Farmvllle, 753-2139.</p>
        <p>1980 CRAFT WOODSTOVES now In stock. Check out our spring/summer sale. Buy now and save $100. Tar Road Antiques, WIntervllle (one mile south of Sunshine Garden Center). 754-9123.</p>
        <p>25" ZENITH console color TV. $150 752-0104 aHer 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>ANTIQUE TABLE and chairs, t foot, leaf folds out, 2 four-footed legs. 805A West 14th Street.</p>
        <p>COUCH, LOVESEAT and Best offer. Call 752-0845.</p>
        <p>LOVESEAT AND 754-2847 aHer 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>CHAIR. Call</p>
        <p>EIGHT 14 X S inch mobile home tires, tour axles, hubs and rims Complete. $400. Call 744-4271.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>GOLF CLUBS for sale. Driver, 3 and 4 wood, 2 Iron through pitching wedge, putter and bag. All In excellent condition. $1. 754-27 aHer 4;.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>64 /Mobilo Homos For Ront</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM mobile home. Air con ditloned, good location. No pets 752 3284 days; 825-5391 nights.</p>
        <p>12 X 45. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, washer, dryer, air. Nice large lot. 754-7912.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOAA, carpeted. Ideal for singles or couples. Very nice. Call 754-9225or 754-1900aHer 2:</p>
        <p>12 JC 40, 2 bedrooms with air, $115, one bedroom with air, $85. No pets. 758-3444.</p>
        <p>TO COUPLE. 2 bedrooms, washer and air. $120 per month. No pets 752-0239 aHer 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOAAS with washer and air conditioning. Nice location. 756-0108</p>
        <p>Air</p>
        <p>12 FOOT WIDE, 2 bedrooms, fur nished, air conditioner, washer, dryer. Nice corner lot, AAarried couples preferred. No pets. 752-4051 aHer 5:.</p>
        <p>66 AAobilBHomBsForSalB</p>
        <p>1973 DOUBLE WIDE. 3 bedrMms, large utility room, storm windows, central air and heat, refrigerator and stove furnished. Excellent condition. 754-2109.</p>
        <p>1975, 13 X 40. 2 bedrooms, furnished with air conditioner and sheetrock construction. $550 down, 7 year financing at $119.18 per month. 754-0131.</p>
        <p>MOVING. Must sell by April 1. 1971 RItzcraH 12 X 45. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, furnished, air conditioner, oil heat, refrigerator and range. Price negotiable. 752 5392.</p>
        <p>1972, W. Furnished, on two beautiful acres In the country. All set op and ready to move In. Stack-Klger Realty, 7-3088 or Gary Klger, 74-2718. .</p>
        <p>13 X 45 FAIRWAY. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, all appliances, central air and heat, storage shed. Western style. Like now. 7M 0220 aHer 5.</p>
        <p>OAKWOOO 1979 Bonita 14 X 58. 2 bedrooms, one bath. Sale price, $10,425. Serial #9721. Price good rough March . Call or see Jimmy Langston, 754-5434, Oakwood AAoblle Homes, Greenville.</p>
        <p>X 44. 3 bedrooms, carpeted, stove, refrigerator and air conditioner, unfurnished. Call 754 3048 or 752 3925.</p>
        <p>1974HOMETTE 12 X IVz baths, partially c refrigerator and air i</p>
        <p>MUST SELL 1977 doublewlde. LIv Ing room, 3 bedrooms, den, dining room, kitchen. Storage shed, fence. Asking $14,500. Can be seen at Colonial Trailer Park or call 758 5780.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM mobile home with central air, completely furnished, les only. Call Tommy Williams,</p>
        <p>Coupli</p>
        <p>754-78</p>
        <p>15.</p>
        <p>WANTED. Consignment antiques, furniture and miscellaneous Items. Will take any goods on consignment at Tar Road Antiques, 754-91M.</p>
        <p>USED SUN TUNE-UP machine and other various equipment. Contact Johnny Joyner at Goodyear, 4417.</p>
        <p>REDUCE safe and fast with (SoBese Tablets and E-Vap "water pills" at Big Value Discount Drug.</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC shallow well pump. Vs HP. $100. 756-0528.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 4 piece, antique, solid walnut bedroom suite. $800. Can be seen at ABC AAoving &amp;amp; Storage by appointment only. 752-4500.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE miscellaneous Items for sale. 756 1035.</p>
        <p>POLAROID ID3 camera. Land iden</p>
        <p>tification system. Valued $2800, will 50. Systei used by AAotor Vehicle</p>
        <p>and can</p>
        <p>System Is the same as irtment be used for industrial</p>
        <p>Department, 823-6)26.</p>
        <p>___________ ^  SCO  Wet</p>
        <p>opiers, models 288 and Z22. Use roll r and liquid toner. Will sell For ) each or best offer. If Interested, call Personnel Department, 823-4126.</p>
        <p>METAL STORAGE sale. Leonard Utlll Greenville Boulevard</p>
        <p>buildings for Buildings,</p>
        <p>FOR RENT. Garden spots in city limits, at end of West Chestnut Street. 756-3194 after 6.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS DOORS &amp;amp; AWNINGS</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>FORK LIFT</p>
        <p>For Rent Day, week, or month Coll 758-0222</p>
        <p>For Lease Commercial Space Eastbrook Drive 752-1010</p>
        <p>bphind Kincj &amp;amp; Queen</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOAAS, furnished, washer and air conditioning. Located In Ayden. $125. 758-3276 days, 758-2219 nights.</p>
        <p>12 X 40. 2 bedrooms, air conditioning, washer, dryer. Nice lot. Good location. No pets. 756-0801.</p>
        <p>BEDROOAAS on private vi/ooded lot. 5 minutes from ECU. Couples. No pets. $150. 756-0070 aHer 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>66 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>TWO 70 FOOT, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Both 12 wide. Excellent condition. 756-7912or 758 3644.</p>
        <p>  -I'Y</p>
        <p>condition and clean. 754-8413 or 758-9071.</p>
        <p>$4100. Call</p>
        <p>12 X 44, 1973 General. Front kitchen, large utility room, 2 bedrooms, remodeled bath, refrigerator and air conditioner. $4200. 752 3944 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>1978 CHAMPION doublewlde mobile home. Heat pump, carpeted. Excellent condition. $14,800. 758-7605 aHer 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>13 X 40. 2 bedrooms, new furnace, sundeck, utility room, tiedowns, underpinning. $4700. 754-1911 aHer 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>1972,  12 X 45. Central air, 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, washer, dryer, (zood condition. 752-7982.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SM</p>
        <p>Chain Saw</p>
        <p>14 bar Model DUS *189.95</p>
        <p>Hendrix-BanAiilCo.</p>
        <p>752-4122</p>
        <p>Craft Wood Stoves Spring-Summer Sale</p>
        <p>Tar Road Antiques</p>
        <p>Wintervillc, N.C.</p>
        <p>1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center 756-9123</p>
        <p>BEACH COTTAGE for rent at Atlantic Beach. 825-5441.</p>
        <p>WRITER/EDITOR. NC State University is seeking a writer/editor with degree in English or Journalism. Department prefers 1-2 years experience in jour-nallsm/adltlng, science background. Radio/TV know-how a plus. Salary range, $10,294-$14,0S2. Submit resume and standard state application to Staff Personnel Services, NC State University, P. O. Box 5047, ^ 27450. E(</p>
        <p>Raleigh, ty Affirn</p>
        <p>NC:</p>
        <p>. Equal</p>
        <p>irmatlve Action Employer</p>
        <p>Ctoportun</p>
        <p>iployer.</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONtST/TVPIST and other secretarial duties. AAust be excellent typist and like to typel Shorthand desirable. AAonday-Frlday. Call Mrs. Anderson, 792-4114.</p>
        <p>HOLLOMAN</p>
        <p>BRICK, BLOCK, ANO CONCRETE SERVICE</p>
        <p>20 years experience Fireplace repair, chimney repair, chimneys, walk-ways, patios, porches, steps, house underpinning, house leveling, and all types of masonry repairs.</p>
        <p>Call Old Holloman 753-3503 Day or Night</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>shop In Farmvllle area. Wl Inventory and fixtures with lease take over. Reply to Woman's Shop, P. O. Box 1947, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>GROCERY STORE business for sale. In Simpson. Wish to sell stock amt7^ulpment. Good opportunity.</p>
        <p>70 PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP booths for ront. 754-4611 days, 754-4844 nights.</p>
        <p>CHMEY~SWIprio"'iPr^</p>
        <p>parlance with fireplaces and chimneys. Call GId Holloman, 753-3503 day or night.</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>NEW DUPLEX for sale or rent. E cellent tax investment or live In one side and rent other. 2 bedrooms, IVa baths, lots of closets, large Great room opens to petlo. All appliances, rustic decor, wooded lot. Exclusive. Etsll, Inc. 754-1377; nights or weekends, 752-2910.</p>
        <p>BAILEY'SAAOBILE HOME PARK</p>
        <p>5 acres, 9 lots. One 12 x 40 furnished home, 24 x 24 aluminum storage building. Farmall Super A Tractor and Equipment near Greenville.</p>
        <p>752-2884</p>
        <p>32 ACRES PARTIALLY cleared minutes north of Greenville on Ram Horn Road. 1400 feet paved road frontage, well drained, surveyed and beautiful. Ideal for residential or industrial. A bargain at $75,000. Call 944 2298 or 944-1^4.</p>
        <p>73 Commercial Property</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE</p>
        <p>or commercial buildings</p>
        <p>1400 Block W. 14th St. Four 900 sq. ft and One 1800 sq. ft.</p>
        <p>1100 Block Hamilton St. Three 12(X sq. ft. and One 2400 sq. ft.</p>
        <p>3000 Block E. 10th St. 700 H. office building and 800 ft. block storage building</p>
        <p>These buildings can be finished within 30 days for occupancy and finished to suit tenant. New con struction</p>
        <p>COAAMERCIAL BUILDING for lease. 2500 square foot building. 213 West 9th (now occupied by Eastern Office Supply). Contact 1. J. Edwards, Jr. at 758-2414 or 754-5024.</p>
        <p>78 Houses For Saie BRICK RANCH homa w'thrport</p>
        <p>8, Southarland nights, 754-5005.</p>
        <p>BY BUILDER. 2 new homes in Grit-on. Large family rooms with fireplaces, wooded lots, heat pumps, deck. 1350 to 1404 square feet. High 'S to low 40's. 524-5474.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 1400 square foot home. 5 miles east of Greenville. Central air, electric heat, lots of extras. Call 752-4947 aHer 4.</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>BY OWNER in Belvedere. 3 bedrooms, living and dining room.</p>
        <p>dan, 2 baths, 2 car garage.</p>
        <p>  yard.  High  50^s.</p>
        <p>days, 754-7278 nights.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SPECIAL PRICE</p>
        <p>Filing Cabinet</p>
        <p>$8450</p>
        <p>4 drwer</p>
        <p>Reg. $117.00</p>
        <p>aft Office Equipment Co.</p>
        <p>752-2175  569  Event  St</p>
        <p>All new  </p>
        <p>Spacious 1 Cz 2 Oedrooms.Wood Deck or Pono Heor Pumps  AC Loundiy IXoom in eoch-building From S185</p>
        <p>Left off 10th Street beyond fXiver Gore Moll onto River Oluff Rood</p>
        <p>Simnuns&amp;amp;Harris</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT</p>
        <p>215 Commetce Street 756-0351</p>
        <p>CAME LOT DRlVe-S.bsjtrooH'- W, bath ranch. Raducad to 2.5(. We points and closing c^ts. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realty, 7S4-3SOO.  _</p>
        <p>101 PINEWCX)D ROAD. 4 bedrolls.</p>
        <p>with (Iraplaca, corn^</p>
        <p>Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2415.</p>
        <p>lot.</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES. You will love this stylish French Provincial home on preHy wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage plus  *:</p>
        <p>tras. $44,900. Call Louisa H&amp;lt;xlge at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realty, 754-3500 or nights, 754-5005 for appointment.  __</p>
        <p>RUSTIC CHARM w'th Hon. Great room with flrep^^ff*; large kitchen, formal dining room, 3 bmlrooms, 2 baths, nnastar bedrjjom with dressing area closets, heat pomp. Cherry OaR&amp;gt;- D-P. Associates, Real Estate BrpkjM^, 758-1431; John Williams. 754-4490; Carolyn Sutton, 754-0734.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OF LEASE</p>
        <p>RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACES LARGEWAREHOUSEAVAILABLE</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL ON HIGHWAY .13</p>
        <p>Call Louis Clark Agency</p>
        <p>756-1592 (days) ot 756-2912 (nights)</p>
        <p>lAAMACULATE *R'CK RANCK 3 large bedroomt# 2 baths# prfTl areasz den with fireplace, eat-ln kitchen, outside storage# heat pump. 756-4500 evenings.  _</p>
        <p>LET PITT COUNTY REALTY SELL YOUR HOME TODAY 756-1306</p>
        <p>$47,900 - Tucker Estates Is  Nhe neighborhood and we ell know homes there sell fast and this one will not be an exception. Three bedrooms, two full baths, a gr^t room with fireplace, kitchen with custom cabinets.</p>
        <p>$44,900 - Two houses for the price of one In excellent neighborhood. Throe bedrooms, two full baths, kitchen, living and dining rooms, dan with fireplace and much more. Second home has two bedrooms, one bath, ktichan, and living rodm.</p>
        <p>room, dining room, kitchen witl built-in appliances, dan with fIrMlace and a oood location. Close to FHH Plaza andclty schools.</p>
        <p>$39,900 - Throe bedroom home located on Greenville Blvd., new heat pump, tvw decks, kitchen with an aat-ln area, and yard big enough for a garden.</p>
        <p>$35,000 - This home Is located In a commercial zoned district and has three bedrooms, one and a halt baths, living room, dining room and more.</p>
        <p>$29,900 - Over 2000 sq. ft. of heated area In this home. Four bedrooms, two full baths, kitchen, and aluminum siding.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 3 bedroom, 2 toth, brick ranch. Living room, kitchen, den, breakfast nook, fireplace, carpet over hardwood floors, 1500 square feet plus carport. Centrally located on fenced wooded lot. Upper 40's. 754-5478.</p>
        <p>4 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM. For</p>
        <p>mal living and dining area, all extras In kitchen, refrigerator, washer and dryer remain. Fireplace In don, 2Vj baths. Omni Realty, 758-6900 or 754-5454, 754-4171.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. Cherry Oaks. Custom built home. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, wooded lot. Many extras. Low 80's. Call 754-8284.</p>
        <p>DUPLEX FOR SALE. Located within city. New , construction. 754-7188; 752-0897 aHer 5.</p>
        <p>UNDER CONSTRUCTION. Fox</p>
        <p>Run. 3 bedrooms, I'/z baths, living room and kitchen. Priced at $34,900.</p>
        <p>RIHer &amp;amp; Evans, Realtors, 754-1111, David Henlford, 744-48 or Steve Evans, 7-4721.</p>
        <p>ARLINGTON BOULEVARD. 1500 square feet for lease. 107 (between Annie's Bridal and Moseley Insurance). Call I. J. Edwards, Jr., 758-2416 or 754-5024.</p>
        <p>HOMEOWNERS POLICY</p>
        <p>Call:</p>
        <p>Earl Thompson 3101 S. Evans Street Across From Union Carbide Phone 756-3422</p>
        <p>state Farm Fire &amp;amp; Casualty Company</p>
        <p>INVESTORS, DEVELOPERS. 37.4 acres In city ot Greenville. 4.55 acres highway commercial, 7.81 acres R-4, 23 acres R-T5. Close to new shopping mall and 2M Bypass. S300,0(&amp;gt;0 down. Owner financing, 754-5940.</p>
        <p>mately one acre. Call 754-5097 after 4p.m.</p>
        <p>THEY DON'T build like this anymore. You must see to ap-zreclate this beautifully decorated lome. Excellent location. 2 or 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Priced for quick sale. $42,900. Call Lily Richardson Gallery of Homes, 754-2570; nights, 758-4749.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Snow Hill Residents</p>
        <p>Ride needed In mornings from Hill area to Qreenvllle and return In evenings. Will pay liberal transportation fee. Weekdays Monday thru Friday. For more Information call 752-0277.</p>
        <p>lano Rooi</p>
        <p>A RUGGED ACRYLIC LATEX ROOF COATING designed to protect a wide variety of roof surfaces.</p>
        <p>RAPID ROOF IS SPECIALLY FORMULATED to provide a highly flexible unHayered film that stands up to the toughest punishment weather can dish out.</p>
        <p>RAPID ROOF is an energy saving roofing system</p>
        <p>Specializing in fiat commercial and industrial roofs.</p>
        <p>Approved by: UL 790 rated roof material. Interna tional Conference Of Building Officials RR No. 3489. Factory Mutual System JIOC7A3.AM</p>
        <p>For Free Eathnale Call</p>
        <p>756-1002</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENMtS</p>
        <p>Due to increased sales we have several positions open in new and used car sales. We are looking for aggressive individuals who are npt afraid to make money. Experience heipfut but not neceeeary. APPLY IN PERSON to Mr. Tom Massey or Mr. Bill Terry.</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYBTA</p>
        <p>109 Trade St.</p>
        <p>756-3228</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0015" />
        <p>HouMtP'orSal*</p>
        <p>MORE FOR YOUR MONEY</p>
        <p>Quality constructed oldar/stlll molarn In choice neighborhood. Close to city schools. Three big bedroom brick rancher. Fornuil llv-Irtg and dining rooms, big den, modern kItchM, lots of storage, paraoe, breezeway, two porches, big lot with trees and shrubs. Best buy In town. $55,000. Call Don Dancy, owner and realtor, 1505 Greenville Blvd., 756-1788</p>
        <p>BRICK RANCH. 1600 square feet, fireplace, all new exterior. Interior; ^^mp. Priced to sell. 756-8340 or</p>
        <p>im POPLAR STREET. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 fireplaces, 1600 square feet plirt large garm area. $51,700. Call Aldrid^ &amp;amp; Southerland Realty,</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES. New, 3 bedroom, 2Vj tath house with 2 car garage. Beautiful cedar farmhouse st^e. Large great room with fireplace. Many other extras. $78,000. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realty, 756-3500.</p>
        <p>NEW CONTEMPORARY HOMES. GrMt rooms with fireplaces, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, patio, fenced In yards, heat pumps. Several plant to choose from. Mid 40's. DP. Associates, Real Estate Brokers, 758-1631; John Williams, 756-6490, Carolyn Sutton, 7564)736.</p>
        <p>1HMO WAY FIREPLACE separates dining and great room. Large kitchen, laundry room, 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, wood deck, garage, heat pump. New home In Cherry Oaks. D.P. Associates, Real Estate Brokers, 758-1631; Carolyn SuHon, 756-0736; John Williams, 756-6490.</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>WOODED LOT. Nearly one acre. Area already cleared for house. Wqter and sewer has been run Into house site. Perfect for contemporary. $12,500. Omni Realty, 758-6900, 756-6171, 756 5456._</p>
        <p>VACANT LOT. 1206 Chestnut Street. Call 1-726-4950.</p>
        <p>too CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WE REPAIR SCREEN &amp;amp; DOORS</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>Lott For Sale</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFULLY WOODED lot in Candlewick Estates. 100' X 200*. $7800. Call for more information. Mavis Butts Realty, 758-0655, Mavis Butts, 752-7073, Ann Bass, 756-6666 or Nancy Wilson, 758-5231.</p>
        <p>3.35 ACRES near MacGregor Downs. 75% wooded. Suitable for division Into two lots. $12,000. Omni Realty, 758-6900, 756 6171 or 756 5456.</p>
        <p>BUSINESS LOT in Ayden. 110' frontage. $6000. Omni Realty, 758 6900,</p>
        <p>75jr5.  ^  -</p>
        <p>.-5456, 756-6171, 756</p>
        <p>ealty, 4364,;</p>
        <p>758-3078.</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY. Well drained Vz acre lot on cul-de-sac. $15,900. Omni Realty, 758 6900, 756-5456, 756-6171, 758 30ra, 756-4364.</p>
        <p>A80BILE HOME lots. $5350. Omni Realty, 758 6900, 756-5456, 756-6171, 756-4364,758-3078.  _</p>
        <p>WOODED LOT. Nearly one acre. Area already cleared for housq. Water and sewer has been run Into house site. Perfect for contemporary. $12,500. Omni Realty, 758 6900 or 756-6171, 756 5456.</p>
        <p>82 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT LOT. .6 acres, wooded, 114 foot shore line. Bath Creek. $19,500. Reply to P. O. Box 218, Bath, NC.</p>
        <p>UNFURNISHED oceanfront con</p>
        <p>dominium tor sale by owner. Smugglers Cove, Atlantic Beach. This top floor condominium also hds com</p>
        <p>manding view of the sound. Owner will finance 75% tor 20 years at 10'/3%. $82,000. Linwood AAercer, Farmvllle, NC. 753-3788 days, 753-4807 nights and weekends.</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>RENT A beautiful Currier Spinet piano for only $22 per month, as long as you like. First 9 months rent applies toward purchase. Plano-Organ Warehouse. 730 GreenvMIe</p>
        <p>86 Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apartments, carpet, drapes, dishwasher, pool. On Country Club Dr. adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869.</p>
        <p>WE HAVE CABLE TV</p>
        <p>too CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TOYOTA MECHANIC NEEDED</p>
        <p>Excellent pay plan. Excellent company benefits. Apply in person to Bill Cole, Service Manager</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTA</p>
        <p>109 Trade St.  Greenville,  N.C.</p>
        <p>86 Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>CHERRYCOURT</p>
        <p>Luxurious 2 bedroom townhouses and 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, drapes, compactors, washer-dryer hook ups, pool, sauna, tennis court, club house, etc. 752-1557.</p>
        <p>ASTBROOK</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments with heat, air condition, carpet, kitchen appliances, garbage disposals, nice laundromat tacllitias, 3 swimming pools, 2 tennis courts and heat and hot water furnished In some units. No pets or loud parties allowed. Rent from $145 $215 per month Eastbrook  Eastbrook Drive oft 264 By-pass. Village Green  800 Heath Street off E. lOth Street Call 752-5100.</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>The Happy Place To Live FREE AAASTER ANTENNA</p>
        <p>Office Hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Call us 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door. Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation.</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>CARRIAGE HOUSE Apartments, new Section 11.8 apartments for rent January 1. All electric, 2 bedrooms, unfurnished with cable TV. Call Manager, 756-3450.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM DUPLEX near downtown and ECU. Carpet, central heat and air. Call 752 7101 9 to 5.</p>
        <p>REDWOOD APARTMENTS, 802 East Third Street. One bedroom, furnished apartment. Heat, air conditioning, hot and cold water furnished. No pets. Call 756 0889.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM apartment. Furnished, extra large. $125 per month. 746-4520.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, air conditioning. 5 blocks from campus. No pets. 758 8167 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>ROOMMATE WANTED. Early 20's to share 2 bedroom apartment. V/i baths with swimming pool, tennis, near ECU. $100 a month plus Vi utilities. Call /Mark, 752 4693. 7 -11 p.m.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>86 ApartnMnts For Rant</p>
        <p>NEW APARTMENTS. 4 new 2 bedroom townhouse apartments. AM electric. Contact Bill Williams Real Estate. 752 2615.</p>
        <p>NEW DUPLEX APARTMENTS IN COLONIAL VILLAGE</p>
        <p>Two carpeted bedrooms, large carpeted living room, kitchen with dining area and plenty of cabinets.</p>
        <p>Appliances furnished. Brick veneer construction fully insulated. Heat pump. Across from Burroughs-Wellcome near school. $200 per month. Call 758 2558</p>
        <p>AZALEA GARDENS</p>
        <p>Greenville's newest and most unique furnished one bedroom apartments.</p>
        <p> All electric energy efficient designed</p>
        <p> Queen size beds and studio couches</p>
        <p> Washers and Dryers optional</p>
        <p> Free water and sewer and yard maintenance</p>
        <p> All apartments on ground floor with porches</p>
        <p> Frost free refrigerators</p>
        <p>Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles - no pets. $175 per month.</p>
        <p>Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815</p>
        <p>GEORGETOM/N APARTMENTS. 2</p>
        <p>bedroom townhouses tor rent. 752-7101, days; 758 1188 nights.</p>
        <p>NEW APARTMENTS. 4 new 2</p>
        <p>bedroom townhouse apartments. All electric. Contact Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Rd. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, disposal Included. We also have Cable TV . Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.</p>
        <p>756-4151</p>
        <p>NEW 1 AND 2 BEDROOM carpeted apartments. Heat and air by economical heat pump. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Cedar</p>
        <p>Unique Design. 2 Oedrooms, 1 Dorh W/D Connealons. Solor ossisred From 225</p>
        <p>Red Ooniss Rood a i4rh Srreet Exr</p>
        <p>Simmons&amp;amp;Harris</p>
        <p>professional management</p>
        <p>215 Commerce Srreet _756-0351</p>
        <p>FORD DEALERS</p>
        <p>(&amp;gt;EN HOUSE COME ON IN</p>
        <p>You are cordially invited to atteiTd our Open House to view the Special Edition Granadas, Futuras, Fairmonts and Explorer Special Pickups. And our other great 79 Ford values.</p>
        <p>AUTOVEST</p>
        <p>A New Thunderbird</p>
        <p>Excellent Selection To Choose From</p>
        <p>Some units are equipped with speed control, air condition, power steering and brakes, wire wheel covers, AM-FM radio, body side molding, WSW radial tires.</p>
        <p>Your Choice For The Remainder Of March For As Little As</p>
        <p>119</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>per month For 27 Months</p>
        <p>This payment is based on *1500.00 cash down or trade, a totai obiigation of *4715.70. Purchase Option Price is *4500.00.  ,  ,</p>
        <p>AUTOVEST OPTIONS:</p>
        <p>1. Trade the car, or seii it and keep any profit.</p>
        <p>2. Buy the car for the Purchase Option Price.</p>
        <p>3. Return the car to AUTOVEST and waik away from any ioss.</p>
        <p>Return Guideiines; 36,000 miles and no unreasonable damage  </p>
        <p>The fine sales staff of Hastings Ford wiii be glad to help you with all your small truck and car needs.  ,</p>
        <p>Stop By For More Information</p>
        <p>Tentti streets 264 By4&amp;gt;ass</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>86 Aparfmwift For Rnt</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES</p>
        <p>1401 Willow Street 752 4225</p>
        <p>1,2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook-ups, cablevlslon, pool, club house. Only 5 blocks from East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Check everywhere else first</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, GreenvtUe, N.C.Monday, March 26,197-15</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM apartment available April I. Unfurnished. Married cc^les ot^. 104 Stanclll Drive.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment. Furnished, utilities Included. Short term lease. 756-5555.</p>
        <p>Kings Row Apartments</p>
        <p>One and two bedroom garden apartments. Fully carpeted, furnishing drapes, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV. Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located (ust of? lOth Street.</p>
        <p>Caii 752-3519</p>
        <p>IN AYDE. 2 bedroom apartment. Air conditioning, kitchen appliances, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes. Quiet location. 746-6967.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, heat furnished. 6 blocks from ECU. $225. Call The Home Showcase, 752-5522.</p>
        <p>SAVE /MONEY this winter... shop and use the Classified Ads every day I</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>HouaM For Rant</p>
        <p>BRICK HOME near university. 2 bedrooms, sun room, one bath, nice yard. $250. Call Louise Hodge, Realtor. 756 3500 or 756-5005.</p>
        <p>BRICK RANCH home In College Court. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, deck. $350. Call Louise Hodge. Realtor, 756 3500 or 756 5005.</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS, 2 bedroom house and mobile home. Approximately t miles from Greenville. 746 3284.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY HOME. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths. All nrKXtern conveniences. 4 miles south of Greenville. Deposit. No pets, $350 per month. Avallabte May 1. 756 1111</p>
        <p>FDR SALE DR RENT. 2 bedroom frame house near Bethel. Approx-Imately 1 acre lot. 752 6330 nights.</p>
        <p>NICE CDUNTRY HDUSE 2Vi miles from Robersonvllle. Garden spot. Call 795 4305.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE TYPE home. 3 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, large family room with fireplace, formal living room and dining room, large lot and detached garage. One year lease and deposit required. $425 a month. 756-3677.</p>
        <p>FE/MALES DESIRE roommate to share 3 bedroom house. Call 756-7950 days or 758 0799 aHer 5 (ask for</p>
        <p>A(ice).</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM house. One mile from city limits on 264 West. Married families preferred. 756-0506.</p>
        <p>QUICK-ACTION Classified Ads are the answer to passing on your extras to someone who wants to buy.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSiDING C L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>Start your career With a RETAIL GIANT</p>
        <p>On-the-job training in all phases of retail managementbuying, selling, finance, personnel, advertising, public relationswill make you a total business executive.</p>
        <p>Personal recognitionYour progress is tollow/ed from the beginning, and you receive promotions and Salary increases as you demonstrate your capabilities.</p>
        <p>Unlimited opportunities to reach the topAs soon as you finish training you move into store management, with a share in the companys profits. From there you can move up to postions in the District, Regional, and Executive Offices.</p>
        <p>Company benefitsThese include company-sponsored group life and extended medical insurance, stock-purchase plans, plans, paid vacations, retirement pensions fully paid by the company.</p>
        <p>An equal opportunity employer M/F</p>
        <p>WOOLCO</p>
        <p>2405 N. Heritage St.</p>
        <p>Kinston, N.C.</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>vill*. 524 5507.</p>
        <p>South of Graen-</p>
        <p>91 Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE. Office or retail wace In naw Co-E-Co Building, 510 &amp;amp;uth Greene Street. Fully carpeted, park Ing Included. Owner will divide Call Blount 8i Ball Realty Company, 756-3000.</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE with plenty of parking. $3.50 p' square foot. Call 758 2300 days; 758 1742 nights.</p>
        <p>TWO INDIVIDUAL OFFICES with excallent view. Downtown across from courthouse. 300 square teat. $150 per nrKmth. Call Clark-Branch Realtors, 756-6336.</p>
        <p>DOMINTOM/N, lust off mall. 160 square feet. Available now. Mr. Lee, 7S5-5737, 756 2772.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE APRIL 1. Store/office. Upstairs overlooking downtown mall. Mr. Lee, 756-5737, 756 2772,</p>
        <p>OFFICES FOR RENT In the Duftus Realty Building. Utilities and janatorial service. Corner of Commerce and Clifton. Duftus Realty, Inc., 756 5395.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSII^IEDDISPLAY</p>
        <p>91 Office Space For Rwit</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>96 Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>CHEVY CORVAIRS wanted. Com plete or for parts. Call 756-2293 or toll free. I (800) 682-5426 (esk for Todd).</p>
        <p>WE BUY used mobile homes. Preferably 1969 1974 models. 758 4392 after 6.   1_</p>
        <p>or phone 756-9579.</p>
        <p>buylhg small your area, efeslad In</p>
        <p>INTERESTED</p>
        <p>n&amp;gt;otel/restaurant In Would also be Intel</p>
        <p>capacity of 15 less. Please reply to P. O. Box 762, Lexington, Kentucky 40587.</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Wanted To Lease</p>
        <p>WANT TD LEASE tobacco poun dage. To be moved off farm. WIII pay highest prices. 758-0332.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>. QUALITY .TJSED CARS</p>
        <p>At Cio6 Barbour Honda we offer you a better selection of dependable late model used cars than youll find aayWhere else. Here are some examples:</p>
        <p>76* Pontiac Grand Prix,</p>
        <p>with maroon landau ip, fully equipped.</p>
        <p>77 Chevy Monte Carlo</p>
        <p>Landau, silver, loaded, 13,000.</p>
        <p>77 Olds. Cutlass Supreme, silver blue, rally wheels, landau roof, fully equiped.</p>
        <p>'77 Pontiac Grand Prix, ginger with buckskin landau roof, loaded with options, 22.000 miles.</p>
        <p>78 Buick Regal, 0 8 litre turbo charged engine, tilt</p>
        <p>wheel, cruise, povcer v^indovcs and seats, power door locks, AM-FM stereo tape, landau roof, 15,000 miles.</p>
        <p>77 Buick Electra 225. Gold with buckskin top. loaded</p>
        <p>78 Pontiac Trahs AM,</p>
        <p>Black, power steering and brakes, air, AM-l'M radio, tilt wheel</p>
        <p>76 Oatsun B-210 2 door hardtop. Economy fighter.</p>
        <p>76 Ford Pinto Pony Real nice with only 22,000 miles.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL!</p>
        <p>78 Chevy Monte Carlos and Caprice Classics </p>
        <p>four in stock, all fully equipped, your choice for only</p>
        <p>$4795</p>
        <p>BDbBadMux</p>
        <p>HONDA</p>
        <p>117 West Tenth Street Greenville / 758-7200</p>
        <p>NEEDED HOMES &amp;amp; FARMS TO SELL</p>
        <p>TURNAGE</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY</p>
        <p>LesTurnage, Realtor Home 756-1179</p>
        <p>752-2715</p>
        <p>30 Years PALlOfi, Experience</p>
        <p>Q</p>
        <p>Buying or Soiling, For Best Rosults Try Our Personal Service</p>
        <p>D. G. Nidwls Agency B</p>
        <p>752-4012</p>
        <p>Anytime</p>
        <p>The Real Estate Corner</p>
        <p>For Quality New Homes In Greenvilles Finest Areas</p>
        <p>Call The New Homes Specialists.</p>
        <p>GROUP</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>756-6234</p>
        <p>COUNTRY LIVING</p>
        <p>ROSEWOOD</p>
        <p>One Of Those Nice New Homes In This Choice Area, And Its A Contemporary Too! Foyer, Great Room, Fireplace, Formal Dining Room, Kitchen With Breakfast Area, Three Bedrooms, Two Baths. Wood Deck. $45,900.</p>
        <p>NEAR FARMVILLE</p>
        <p>This Very Likeable Contemporary Is Almost New. Three Bedrooms, 2V2 Baths, Slate Foyer, Great Room With Fireplace, Sunken Shower, Workshop Or Office, Central Vacuum, Double Glass Pella Windows. $56,000.</p>
        <p>CLOSE TO GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>This Home Has Been Reduced In Price. Five Bedrooms, Three Baths And IV2 Acres Of Land. Living Room, Dining Room, Family Room, Recreation Room, Two Fireplaces, Carport, Heat Pump, Central. Would You Believe It? Now Only $58,500.</p>
        <p>NEAR EASTERN PINES</p>
        <p>Beautifully Landscaped, Fenced Yard. Three Bedrooms, Two Baths, Formal Living Room, Dining Room, Family Room With Fireplace, Recreation Room, Breakfast Area. $62,500.</p>
        <p>NEAR FARMVILLE</p>
        <p>When You See It, Youll Love It. Spacious Lot. Three Bedrooms, 2Vz Baths. Foyer, Living Room, Dining Room, Family Room With Fireplace. Recreation Room, Built-Ins, Deck. $65,500.</p>
        <p>SIMPSON AREA</p>
        <p>Put It All Together Here! Three Acres Of Trees, Beautiful Home, Stables And Kennel. Gorgeous Family Room With Curved Brick Fireplace, Beamed Celling, Living Room, Large Dining Room, Lovely Kitchen, Breakfast Room, Recreation Room, Three Bedrooms, 2'/z Baths, Beauty Shop Or Fourth Bedroom In Basement. Double Garage. $90,000.</p>
        <p>SIMPSON /\REA</p>
        <p>For The Country Gentleman Who Enjoys Quality Combined With Serene Living. Two Acres. Beautiful Trees. Four Bedrooms, 4V2 Baths, Foyer, Living Room, Formal Dining Room, Family Room With Fireplace, Double Garage, Flagstone Patio, Intercqm, Central Vacuum. $130,000.</p>
        <p>RpaIF.MaIp Group</p>
        <p>DUFFUS REALIV INC.</p>
        <p>756-5395</p>
        <p>MEMBER</p>
        <p>RELQ</p>
        <p>WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION</p>
        <p>JUST LISTED EASTWOODTired of the same old storylook at this trilevel with 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, tamily room with fireplace, study and a play room. Loads of hobby and work area. Private patio with rose garden and gas grill. Fenced in yard for the dogs and kids. Extra insulation, storm windows and doors, carpets and drapes. Must see to appreciatePriced in the SSOs.</p>
        <p>CAMELOT</p>
        <p>Rustic 2 Story with cedar siding, 4 bedrooms, 2Mi baths, super floor plan with the right rooms in the right places for maximum enjoyment and privacy. The warm and natural den features cedar siding and fireplace that looks out to a large deck. This one year old home is built for the nature lovers and out-doorsey family. It features the special warmth of the outdoors alorig with the very private wooded lot. Extra features custom built and tastefully decorated. $78,900.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?...Just listed large country farm home acre lot. This home is waiting for you...Your ideas ana decorating can make this old country tome outstanding. Charming farm home from the big, front porch to the quaint tin roof. In between sits a lovely old^stair-:ase and lots of rooms. 1 bath, large kitchen and spwious anclosed porch. Call for more details...ONLY $45,000.00.</p>
        <p>D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY</p>
        <p>il</p>
        <p>The Home Team 752-4012</p>
        <pb facs="00093953_0016" />
        <p>1The Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.Monday, March X, 19</p>
        <p>New Recycling Facilify Blame Bomblngs On Terrorists</p>
        <p>AT RIBBON CUTTING ... Greenville Mayor Percy Cox, R. L. Martin, chairman of the Pitt County Commissioners, and Howard Dawkins, executive director of the East Carolina</p>
        <p>Shdtered Workaliop, at cerenuxiy this morning opening a new $150,000 piq;)er recycling plant at the local woiicshop.</p>
        <p>A ribbon-cutting ceremony this morning formally opened a new $150,000 paper recycling plant at the East Carolina Sheltered Workshop here.</p>
        <p>The Sheltered Workshop</p>
        <p>Big Bootleg Still Raided</p>
        <p>ASHEBPORO, N. C. (AP) -State and local autboritieis destroyed a liquor still, capable of producing 750 gallons of moonshine, near Pisgah Sunday.</p>
        <p>State ABC officers and Randolph County sheriffs deputies lay in a wooded area for most of three days, weathering se-vere^ thundershowers and watching the still before raiding it and arresting a 58-year-old Randolph County man.</p>
        <p>Charged with manufacturing liquor was Elroy Vincent King, of Rt. 5, Asheboro. Officers said King came to the still and began tending it.</p>
        <p>Officers used axes to destroy the still, which was described as all copper and a very good still with no galvanized parts or pieces of radiator units or anything like that, Deputy Don Andrews said.</p>
        <p>A 100-gall(xi submarine unit and a dozen 50-gall(Hi mash barrels were destroyed along with six bales of sugar, Andrews said. He said state officers estimated that 40 gall(Mis of vdiite liquor could be produced with the mash that remained before the raid.</p>
        <p>Not only has the price of sugar gone down lately, but hard times have brought some former moonshiners back into the business, Andrews said.</p>
        <p>Check-Writers Being Alerted</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - The Farm-ville Police Department is asking everyone who gave a check to the Farmville Country Club between Mar. 12 and the Tuesday night robbery of the club to contact the department.</p>
        <p>Police Chief Ron Cooper said it has been ascertained that a number of checks were taken during the robbery. Some of the check givers have already been cmtacted, he said, but there are others the identity of horn the department does not have. He asked that contact be made with Sgt. Jeniqr Childers at the departmeot between 8:30 a. m. and 4 p. m. the earliest day possible.</p>
        <p>recycling operation uses cor-rugated containers, newsprint, and computer cards donated or purchased from local area residents and businesses, bundles the paper, and sells the recyclable paper to other industries for a profit.</p>
        <p>Tlie workslH^ is a nonprofit center designed to train handicapped individuals and provides gainful employment for clients while they train.</p>
        <p>The new facility, according to workshop executive director Howard Dawkins,</p>
        <p>replaces a facility that burned several mcmths ago.</p>
        <p>Dawkins noted that the workshop is planning to begin collecting aluminum and glass for recycling in the near future.</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK PORN.C.r Fair with a warming trerai, Wednesday through Friday. Hi^ in the 60s Wednesday and 'Diursdny and in the 70s Friday. Lows in the 30s Wednesday, 40s on Thursday and 50s on Friday.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - A suitcase on its way to the bdly of an airliner canying 181 people New up and two New Jersey buildings were bombed in what was allegedly a new terrorist assault by anti-Castro Cubans.</p>
        <p>The blasts Sunday night were the responsibility of an anti-Castro group known as Omega 7, according to a telephone call received by The Associated Press. The male caller, speaking with a Spanish accent, promised similar actions will continue.</p>
        <p>Plaice said a bag containing at least three sticks of dynamite exploded in the Trans World Airlines baggage area at Kennedy Airport at 8:48 p.m.</p>
        <p>N.C. Traffic Claims Six</p>
        <p>By Tbe Associated Press</p>
        <p>Six persons, including two pedestrians, were killed in North Candina traffic accidents during the weekend, according to the Highway Patrol. The deaths brought this years t(^ to 287, compared with 315 in the comparable period last year.</p>
        <p>Marty Elwood Hutchens, 16, of Rt. 5, Mocksville, was killed Sunday night when his car wrecked on old U. S. 421 &amp;lt;me mile east of Yadkhiville.</p>
        <p>Kimberly Qyde Pender, 13, of Wilmington was killed Saturday night on U.S. 76 whoi he st&amp;gt;ped into the path of a car.</p>
        <p>Mack Donald Brinson Jr., 33, of Washington was killed early Sunday on U.S. 17 in Beaufort County when he walked into the path of a car.</p>
        <p>Dale Randall Mintz, 33, of Zebulon was killed in a head-on collision on U.S. 64 early Sunday in Wake County.</p>
        <p>Myrtle McLavriwm Averette, 63, of Winterville was killed in a two-car collision Sunday morning on a rural paved road in Pitt County, about a half-mile west of Winterville. Ms. Averette was a passenger in one of the cars.</p>
        <p>Laney CJlark, 90, of Shelby was killed Sunday morning when the car in which she was a passenger ran off a rural-paved road and down an embankment in Geveland County, about two miles north of Shelby.</p>
        <p>SIMPSON MEETING SIMPSON - The VUlage of Simpson will hold an official meeting Monday, March 26, 8 pm., in the Simpson Educational Bldg. The minimum housing code will be discussed. All citize^ are urged to attend.</p>
        <p>The Good News And Bad News Sale</p>
        <p>At Harrps! Carpetlant</p>
        <p>Good News: 25% To 33% Savings On All Callaway Area Rugs-Oriental To Contemporary.</p>
        <p>Bad News: Sale Ends This Week.</p>
        <p>Undecided About Colors Or Patterns? Got A Space Problem? Come To Larrys Carpetland &amp;amp; Let Our Decade Of Experience Help You.</p>
        <p>Our aesigners know how to help you coordinate your home with ; rugs, and how to create solutions for your particular decorating prob- lems. Callaway area rugs, of course, give you lots of design options.</p>
        <p>They come in 80 patterns, each in 3 sizes and 3 different color combinations. That large selection means there's a Callawpy that's just right for every area of your home Come see what we mean. See our superb Callaway collection soon. And while you're at it, find out what our designers can do for you.</p>
        <p>Uarrp Carpetlanh</p>
        <p>Greenviiiss Carpet Department Store 3010 E. Tenth St. Greenviiie 758-2300 Whert You Gat A World Of Styting At Your Fast</p>
        <p>The suitcase was amcmg luggage workers were preparing to take to TWA Flight 17, waiting on the runway prior to its scheduled departure to Los Angeles at 9 p.m., officers said.</p>
        <p>Four baggage handlers differed minor Injuries from the blast, which police and airline officials said probably would have caused substantial damage had it detrmated inside the jets baggage compartment.</p>
        <p>Witnesses said the explosion sent workers sprawling and that bags and clothing were strewn over the area. Part of an outside wall also was dam-</p>
        <p>Passengers were evacuated from the plane as local and federal authorities searched for additional explosives and for the person who checked the bag onto the fli^t. Passengers reboarded and the plane left five hours late.</p>
        <p>Revival Begins This Evening</p>
        <p>Revival services will begin tonight at Morning Star Holiness (Tiurch and omtinue through Friday.</p>
        <p>Speakers for the week are: tonight, Missionary Wallace of Kinston; Tuesday, MissiMiary Moore of Ayden; Wednesday, the Rev. Denk Smith of Greenville; Thursday, the Rev. Garris of Vanceboro; and Friday, the Rev. Maye of Ayden.</p>
        <p>Services will begin at seven oclock.</p>
        <p>Several calls warning of the bomb were received by various police agencies and TWA, but all the calls came after the device already had exploded, prompting speculation'that it triggered prematurely.</p>
        <p>It was our intention to blow up the plane and not injure anyone, the caller to the AP said.</p>
        <p>In New Jersey, explosions about two hours after the Kennedy blast damaged the offices of the New Jersey Cuban Program in Weehawken and the Elmaceen Pharmacia in Unimi City.</p>
        <p>The three sites were attacked because they were (grating in mutual agreement with the tyranny of Fidd Castro, the</p>
        <p>Charged Theft Of Credit Card</p>
        <p>Kenneth Hartwell Brown, 21 of 1716 South Elm St. has bei arrested by Greenville Pdlce on credit card theft charges, (Tiief Glenn Cannon said this morning.</p>
        <p>Canmm said Brown allegedly stole a credit card belonging to Terri L. Bozard of Langston Park Apts, on December 9,1978.</p>
        <p>The chief said the stolen card was used to purchase $694.87 worth of merchandise from nine local stores in 13 incidits between December 11 and December 15.</p>
        <p>Cannon noted that Brown was taken into custody by officers about7:30p.m. Friday.</p>
        <p>caller said.</p>
        <p>TWA has flown to Cuba, the Cuban Program is working to free pditical prisoners in that country and Elmaceen Pharmacia exports medical products to Chiba.</p>
        <p>Similar actions will continue until we shut down this source of cash in the U.S., the caller said.</p>
        <p>Omega 7, a terrorist group made iqi of Chiban exiles, has been active in the New York City area during recent months, most recently on Dec. 29, 1978, vdien it claimed responsibility for explosions that</p>
        <p>caused extensive damage at the Chiban Mission to the United Nati(His and lesser damage to Avery Fisher Hall at Linorin Center.</p>
        <p>John Hanlon, assistant agent in charge of the FBIs Brooklyn-Queens office, said he did not think there would be any immediate arrests and refused to speculate whetho* the bombing was politically inspired or carried out for other reasons.</p>
        <p>On Dec. 29, 1975, a still unsolved explosion at LaGuardia Airport killed 11 people and injured 75.</p>
        <p>CORRECTION;</p>
        <p>SUPER OUTLET STORE</p>
        <p>400 Memorial Drive Greenviiie, N.C.</p>
        <p>DAILY HOURS ARE</p>
        <p>9 A.M. To 9 P.M.</p>
        <p>Hours were incorrectly advertised in the The Daily Reflector On Thurs., Mar. 22</p>
        <p>LIMITED TIME ONLY</p>
        <p>Get a U.S. Savings Bond direct from RCA with purchase of the eligible models shown here. Just fill out the "Bond Back" coupon you get when you buy the set and send it to RCA along with proof of purchase.</p>
        <p>RCA will send you a U.S.Savings Bond for the applicable amount. Allow six weeks for processing.</p>
        <p>U.S.</p>
        <p>SAVINGS</p>
        <p>BOND</p>
        <p>Direct from RCA on Remote Control ColoiTrak Models GC760R, 764R, 76SR, 768R, 930R, 935R, 936R, 938R</p>
        <p>RCA ColoiTrak gets the ,color rightautomatically.</p>
        <p>Automatic Color Control and Fleshtone Correction Automatic Contrast/Color Tracking Automatic Room Light Sensor Super AccuFilter picture tube ChanneLock quartz crystal tuningno need to fine tune ever RCAs energy-efficient XtendedLife chassis</p>
        <p>U.S.</p>
        <p>SAVINGS</p>
        <p>BOND</p>
        <p>Direct from RCA on ColorTrak Models GC702, 704, 705, 708</p>
        <p>U. s. SAVINGS BONO Direct from RCA on , Remote Control ColorTrak Model FC498R</p>
        <p>U.S. SAVINGS BOND Direct from RCA on ColoiTrak Model FC485</p>
        <p>Get a bond back on an RCA SelectsMsion Video. Cassette Recorder or Color Video Camera</p>
        <p>100</p>
        <p>U.S.</p>
        <p>SAVINGS</p>
        <p>BOND</p>
        <p>VCT400 VMto Recorder with 7-dey programmer and electronic tuning.</p>
        <p>Direct from RCA on SelectSVision Model VCT400 or RCA Color Video Camera Models CC001, CC002</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>Cox T.V. Center, Inc</p>
        <p>2313 S. Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Adjacent to Greenville Motel</p>
        <p>756-3110 '  -I---</p>
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